The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 23, 1929, Page 8

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SAN TE TARR THE N.D. FARMERS REAP [Garrison Editor Sees Greater Human Endeavor in Ladies’ Sockless Style PROFIT IN WHEAT BY SELLING IN CANAD, After Paying Tariff Duties, Bor- der-Liners Get 10 to 13 Cents More OATS, BARLEY ALSO SOLD omen Gradually Disillusioning ‘Ww | Man of the Mysteries That Teased Imagination Hopes Fair Sex Will Continue Stockingless March to New Goal of Freecom “The sockless las -we say God American Line Elevator Op- erators Forced to Raise Price in Competition (Tribune Special Se Cavalier, N. D.. Au tracted by the higher prices p ing in Canada, farmers in counties of North Dakota are reaping fine profi ing tariff dutics. The wide spread between prices for grain, particulary w quoted in Winnipeg and Mir markets has caused reversal of tomary international trade due to Canada’s exceedin ‘t erop thig year. Wheat in th Winnipeg market during the few days has been 2 Minneapolis prices, and line eleva.‘ tor prices corresponded, Import Duty 12 Cents 1 River valley farmers, particu- ja the Neche distri hina county along the border linc discovered this fact and started hauling their wheat northward to Gretna, Man., for delivery. Import | duty on wheat into € da i cents per bushel as compared w 42 cents tariff into the Unite States. After paying the Canadian duty and standing lower in grading the Neche farmers h from 10 to 13 ahead of the home pr Similiar deliveries of cats and barley were m: but en a smaller scale than with wheat. Americans Raise Prices Alarmed by this unusual interna- § tional traffic, Amorican line clevator managers were instructed from th company headquarters to meet tie competition. It is reported from Neche that current clevator quota - tions are now cight cents above the list_ price. News of this increase has spread to regions further southward, and the question is being asked why wheat should be worth cight cents a bushel more close to the border than 50 miles away. WARPETON DRINKING WATER IS POLLUTED Wahpeton, N. D., Aug. 23.—Cit: of Wahpeton and Breckenridge are Startled at the result of an ana. which disclosed that Wahpeton’s wa is unsafe for drinking purposes Both cities have separate pumpi Plants and water systems. but t methods of handling water are the same. Some cases of typhoid in both cities have been reported, but doctors State that all cases reported have bz<r due to swimming in the Red river and swallowing water that has not gone through the filtering system. A warning was issued by Dr. O'Brien of Wahpeton, telling the Ple to boil all water used for drinking and culinary purposes. Additional chemicals are being added and other Precautions are being taken at tho Waterworks, he said. but boiling of the Water is advocated for safety. Seed Grain and Potato . even after pay- Scores Fatted Calf “We agree t for the practice t hope that the ladies con march on to t ch modern we ives de, wide-hipped, formed, ugly are not we agree Ty Further Reports to Soo Line In- : MAYVILLE COLLEGE { t Martha Wriggles i To Wrigley Lea Farm Board Is Sati Scores Hawley Tariff Bill and Chain Systems ei i Toronto, Aug. 23 — «) — Martha | Norelius, former world amateur} champion. glided swiftly into the lead ; as 45 women distance swimmers dove from the starting line at 12:15 p. m today in the annual 10-mile Wrigley marathon in Lake Ontario. Ethel Grand Forks, ed her by a few yards in the chase | farm bill for the $15,000 prize money. WHEAT AT PARSHAL 15 18 P. C. PROTEIN an addres \ the Kiwanis and Lions clubs here {th thi taxation. dicate Creater Yields Than Expected { wheat being har- nt 2 the Parshal area is high as 18 per cent, reports! py Line from along the road’ states. 1 average yields are | as 80 acres whea’ reports now give the iveeeel as 10 to 12 bushels. i rts 30 acres of durum! 18-bushel average; 160! es. 14: 40 acres of flax, 5. reports 60 acres of ry . 60 acres of bariey,; American Internal rye. 9; 100 acres of American Locomotive . oats, 38 bush- | 4m. Smelting and Refi a American Sugar cres wheat Am. Telephone an 16 papitata peal Tobacco “B” i res wi .| Anaconda ..... fict: 100 acres wheat. 12 bush | Andes Cop. Mii, Wheat running 10 to 18 bush- Atchison ¢. 5 to 10. | Baltimore Barnsdall “A” ... Bethlehem Steel ... Briggs Mfg. .... ie seat .| Calumet and Hecla Po ee eas ee tushels: | Canadian Pacific i Rahat, she Cerro de Pasco .. g Chesapeake & Ohio + 2 Chicago, St. Paul & Pacific pfd. Chicago & Northwestern Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific 1 |Chryslehr .. | Colorado Fuel Columbia Gra: Columbus Gas and Elec! Consolidated Gas . Du Pont de Nemou: Erie sof ; 40 acres of Max S acres wheat. 8 bushels; 3; 35 acres wheat, 11; 45 Wheat running 7'to 1 bushels. PLANS GRADUATION Bertha Palmer to Deliver Com- General Motors . mencement Address at | Great Northern, pid. Exercises Aug. 26 Great Northern Iron Orectfs. Greene Can. Cop. Hudson Motors 22.—Plans Int. Com. Eng. International Harvester a ¢ International Nickel .... ge are Int. Telephone and Telegraph. Cc. Cc, Jonns M’ville laureat: Kennecots Kolster Radi Kroger Groceries Mack Truck . |. Mex. Seab. Oil MK.&T... Missouri Pacific Montgomery Ward serve Nash Motors .... “poth | National Cash Register nq| New York Central .. N. Y.. N. H. & Hartford {North American .. {Northern Pacific | Packard |Pan American Petroleum “B” ‘Par. Fam. Las. Penn RR . Phillips Pet. Pub. Svc. Corp. andard course ar degree course will par- | grecs will be conferred by President Swain. Four persons, all from Mayville, will receive degrees in education. hey are John Benson, Iona Doroth Sears Roebuck .. Sin. Con. Oil ctory; N. D., Aug. 23.—Real | progress has been made in the fight to place agriculture on a basis of eco- nomic equality with other Neer the rt] re follow- through the recent passage of the Hertle, defending champion, follow y cbhntets United Stites Senator Gerald P. Nye brought out in before a joint luncheon of Senator Nye said the personnel of e farm board was very satisfactory. at the Hawley tariff bili as passed by the house, if passed unchanged, would be the most vicious tariff legis- lation in our history and that the | chain system in American business is | a danger to local community interests which can be met adequately only by | A hard struggle at the next session of congress was predicted by the sen- ator over a bill which he has intro- duced in the senate for the appropria. tion of $100,000 for distribution to the | States for educational purposes. the federal contributions to be matched similar appropriations from the New York Stocks ‘NYE SEES PROGRESS TO FARM EQUALITY, ?tever since. He has served under 13 2 | different governors and is the oldest = employe at the state capitol. ! of Billy's new uniform. For Billy the { |entered the employ of the state Feb- | i todian failed in 1927 but in 1929 it + Billy Laist, Custodian at Capitol, Gets Thrill With Brand New Unifo: Visitors to the state capitol building here are getting a new thrill and so is Billy Laist. i For visitors the thrill comes at sight thrill Hes in daily meeting scores of persons from all parts of the country | and escorting them about the capitol grounds. | The uniform and the title of “cus- | todian of the capitol grounds” which | goes with it, arc the result of 35 years of hard labor on Billy's part and he is proud of both. He enjoys a dis- tinction unique in the annals of the state, that of having a job created for him and of having the legislature designate him for the job by name. In a bill passed last winter and effective July 1, Laist was made cus- todian of the capitol grounds to serve under the direction of the board of administration. His duties are to act as overseer of the janitors, to dis- tribute supplies to state offices in the city of Bismarck, to act as official guide for visitors and to serve as a} peace officer about the place when necessary. The bill also provided that the state should provide him with ap- propriate insignia and uniform. | The uniform consists of a neat suit | of blue serge and a cap. Both are trimmed in gold braid and the trous- ers have a wide ribbon of gold down | each leg. etl The bill further provided that “Wil- liam Laist, now employed in the state capitol, be and he hereby is appointed such custodian and he shall occupy such position during good behavior but shall be removable by the gover- | nor for cause.” ' The bill was passed by the legisla- | ture as a tribute to Laist’s long and | faithful service as head janitor. He | ruary 1, 1895, when Roger Allin was | governor and has been on the job! passed with only a few dissenting votes. Veteran senators and repre- sentatives who had known Laist for years supported it and induced their younger colleagues to do so. Favors which Latst had done for them through the years were not for- Political squabbles came and went but Laist kept on with his janitoring and made friends with adherents of all factions. A bill to make him cus- SBISMAKUK TRIBUNE FRIDAY, AUGUS! 2%, 1929 i t Fond ats Po ST EAL RE SEES EDS PS ene EDS REP ET TET Te ONT NY eter Tener Nc ay gotten and they felt that his long | years of faithful service should be re- | warded with a lifetime job. | "In his capacity as official guide |Laist has discovered new attractions | for visitors. Chief among these is the view from the top of the capitol building. iia 0 Below in the foreground les the city of Bismarck and the Missourl river. Across the river Laist points out to visitors the spot where Fort Lincoln was located and from which Custer began his ill-fated march which ended at the Little Big Horn. The hills on the west bank of the Missouri attract the visitors’ atten- tion. Usually they are partly veiled jby a blue or purple haze and Laist says that many persons have told him they constitute one of the most beau- jtiful bits of scenery in North Dakota. FIREMEN NIP TWO MENACING BLAZES irie Fire Back of Country Club; Baffle Boys’ Ice House Mischief Two big fires were averted Thurs- day afternoon, when the department headed off a wide sweep of prairie blaze back of the Country club and later saved the old Pearson ice house, Broadway and Fourteenth street, from going up in smoke. P The prairie blaze started a short distance back of the Country club. It spread out a half mile wide and made @ mile and a half progress before it was subdued. Had it not been headed off, say the firemen, it could have continued north at least 15 miles, out over the golf links, so dry are the fields for that distance north. Sacks were used in smothering the blaze, and a shift in the wind helped some. The fire at the old ice house was due to some boys firing a barrel that contained asphalt surfacing material being applied to Broadway. The fire- men rolled the barrel out into the street and extinguished the flames there, UNIVERSITY OPENING | PLANS BEING MADE $386,000 Liberal Arts Building Near Completion for Regis- tration Sept. 16-17 Grand Forks, N. D., Aug. 23—Plans for the opening of the fall term at the University of North Dakota which begins with registration on September 16 and 17 are now being made, according to R. O. Wilson, registrar. ‘The new $386,000 Ifberal Arts "| building is now being completed on the campus, and no more classes will be conducted in the Arts Annex or Merrifield hall, it 1s announced. The interior of “Old Main” has been re- modeled throughout providing larger quarters for the administrative of- fices, extension division, the book store and postoffice. With the separation of the Uni- versity into junior and senior divi- sions this year, registration will be leonducted on a somewhst. differs", plan this year, Mr. Wilson an- nounces. Students in the jusor . vision (freshman and sophom: will register in the Armory under the airection of Dean W. G. Bek, while members of the senior divi- sion (junior and senior) are to enroll with their respective deans in the women’s gymnasium. ‘Wesley college will open its new year at the same time as the univer- sity, with several new instructors se- cured for places on the music facul- ty, it is announced. Robertson hall will be completed for use by the school of religion then, and the col- lege is to inaugurate a new four- year course le: to a bachelor of music degree time. CRASH VICTIM IMPROVES Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 23—Mrs. James M. Dodds, Devils Lake, injureci in an automobile accident west of here Aug. 9, is still in a serious con- dition in a hospital here, although she shows some improvement at times. She was unconscious for nearly five days following the accident. 38 3 5 Show to Incorporate Minot, N. D.. Aug incorporation are being drawn up for the North Dakota Sced Grain and Potato show which will be held in Minot annually h ii was anncun eretary of the Minot Aszociation ox Commerce. Detailed plans for th> first an: chow were discussed in. luncheon of int~ and Minot busine: ity Thursday. ‘The show is to be sponsored by the North Dakota Crop Imnroveme: sociation. recent The executi' ecciation is sbow in conn: of Minot men. a plans for the tion with a committce Prepare for Criminal | Court Cases at Minot. Minot, N. D., Aug. 23.—Announce- ment of a number of pending crim- | inal actions fot which it is planned | to file informations Monday, August | | 26, with Judge John C. Lowe, Minot, | for arraignments in distzict court, | ‘came from the office of B. A. Dickin- | }, State’s attorney for Ward county | > Among the defendants for whom yam tentatively | ‘Lind, i Articels of ste | the female leg, no matter ¥ her one ref- led to take the deception she is but killing the goose that has laid the golden eggs for her. But such a step leads to truth, leads away jality and pretense, leads toward a more wholesome sanity in the relationship of the sexes than we have ¢ C. Glamour in Mu: “Most of the glamour that woman © has for man, or that man has for woman, is due to the fact that about cach for the other there is a certain illusion, a certain mystery, that calls for solution. Remove the il- lusion, the mystery, the — arti- 1 appeal, and the whole matter will lose its glamour, its power to provoke unnatural interest. Before the short skirt came men alwa tertained the idea that the si ora legged colt. All legs that were once supreme mys- tery came out into plain view—and what a nobby morse et before the king. were skinny and tw: crooked; some were fat and sloppy bulgy and formless. Not one set i 10 proved to be worth a second look, Before the short skirt fad had been in vogue a month woman had lost one of her holds upon man, and ji that much nearer she was to hav: her brai called ‘it. “Now we believe that if all a Cee, at if all mys. is matter thet people could use illusion were strip; their in some constructive endeavor. ‘ould probably have to Bes own canoe, and woul able to captivate the yokel mind. fe ys en-! ight of | t leg i vas well w owing # sort of a two-headed calf | Then came the knee skirt; and the skirt that threat. | jened to make the sky the limit. 1 they were to| Some of them; ted, lumpy and! ing to make her way by the use of! as rather than by her so! of own minds more hours per day Then | B: be iy Schneau, Peter Arthur Egge, and Trueman Eugene Tryhus. | The 26 graduates of the two-year| course include Arnold Ernest Ander- son, Alsen; Olga Bernice Bentley, Northwood; Anna S$. —Bjornson, Mountain; Marion Bonlie, Manvel; Marie Clifford, Backoo; Martha, Conmy, Pembina; Anna Crummy,! in; Clara Egge, Buxton; Ida Enstad, Pekin; John Fadenrccht,| Munich; Verda Fogle, Linton; Alice Helgoc, Halstad, Minn.; Bertha Hochne, Jamestown; Caroline Ly- beck; Petersburg. Mable Mildred Mennie, Edmore; 'Anna Mickelson, Brocket; Beatrice |Olson, Antler; Gertrude Peterson, | j Climax, Minn.; Geneva Spriggs, Maddock; Agnes Standahl, Mayville; Ethel Sunderland, Fairdale; Agnes) Thompson, Niagara; Alice Twenge, Northwood; Ida Wirtz, Hankinson; and Amanda Orwick, Michigan. Radio Dealers Here | For Special Meeting More than 50 radio dealers from western North ‘ota and eastern Montana assembled in Bismarck to- day to attend a special sales and ‘ervice meeting arranged by manu- |facturers of Sparton radios and {Quanrud, Brink and Ricbold, dis- tributors of Sparto# products for western North Dakota, Delegates came from as far east as Jamestown, north as far as Max, and west as far as Glendive Mont. . Lectures on “Sales and Advertis- jing” and “Service” were on this aft- erncon’s program to be delivered by! two officials of the northwest dis- trict headquarters, Minneapolis, R. B. Cave, sales mai and W. T. ks, service manager, Tespect- roo! ively. 12:30 p. m. A luncheon will be con- ducted at the same hall at 6 o’cloc! this evening. Most of the visitors ‘are expected to leave for their homes this evening. JAMESTOWN RIED gamectoon N. ye D., - 23.—] services were pete te piaty James Catholic church here today for torn Bertel, sipesony business man many years, . Bertel die: lednesda: The group met at the Elks hall at| © South Pac. . Southern Ry .. ‘St. Oil Cal. .. St. Oil NJ. St. Oil NY . Studebaker . Texas Corp .. Tex. Gulf Sulphur Tob. Products ....... Twin City Rapid Transit. Union Pac. ... U. 8. Rubber h Wright Aero Amn. & For. Power Schulte Stores ........ Seaboard Airline ..... BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Aug. 23 No. 1 dark northern No. 1 northern ... No, 1 amber durum . No. 1 mixed durum . No. 1 red durum No. 1 flax No. 2 flax No. 1 rye Barley Speltz, per cwt. Hard winter wheat . Dark hard winter wheat .. CALL MONEY RATES New York, Aug. 23. — () — Call money: Firmer, 7 per cent all day. Time loans: Steady, ; 9; 60-90 days 8% to 9; 4-6 months 8% Price commercial paper 6 to 6%. to 9. FOREIGN EXCHANGE orsign exchanges steady; demead ‘orei x eady; at Britain ee 3-8; Franee 3.91 -8; Italy 5.22 3-4; Germany 23.79; Norway 26,61; Sweden 26.77; treal 99.37 1-2. RED CR Up and over the top in high! Her car seems hungry for hills —swallows them, softly purring. Away it speeds on the open road. Swiftly and smoothly the miles fly past. [Red Crown Ethyl gives it power and speed). Back to the city and the traffic jam. Cars stand panting to be sputter impatiently. Her sleek car in the midst of the jam waits with a well- behaved purr. The engine is quiet. It whits. we a steady chythmee wits easy unconcern of power. (Red Crown Ethyl knocks out knocks —keeps it in that well-behaved way, -ETHY!| The light says go! Watch her car shoot ahead! It could afford to be unconcerned. It has power to spare because it is fueled with Red Crown Ethyl and is therefore untroubled by the trying condi- tions that make other cars complain! - Red Crown Ethyl gives new life to any car. Made for high com- engines. Gives advan- other pression tages of high compression to engines, Be sure to ask for Red Crown Ethyl.: Other eth yl be offered you, but ethyl does not make the —there is only one made from the gasolines may temember, gasoline famous Red there is only one Red At any Standard Oil Service Station and at most garages ; ‘BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA ° "For quick service use oir mail.

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