The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1929, Page 2

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Fea! | Mandan WATER IS FROZEN | | INTO GIANT BLOCK —INWOLE IN GROUND On This Cream and Other Dairy; Products Are Chilled and Kept During Hot Days CANADA ALSO USING PLAN! | _ Chunk of Ice Gradually Melts,’ but That on U. S. Farm Over River Outlasts Summer “Ice. wells” for cooling and storing! milk and cream on the farm may be | ® satisfactory solution of the refriger- * ation problem on many dairy farms * where the usual methods arc too ex- pensive or impracticable, according to Officials of the U. S. Department of | Agriculture who have just completed &, season's test of this unique cooling system. The Great Plains dairy sta- » tion at Mandan has been trying out this plan. ‘The ice-well “refrigerator” consists / primarily of a pit in the ground in which a large solid cake of ice is * formed by running a small quantity of water into the hole daily during ' freezing weather. The method has been tried to some extent on dairy _ farms in Canada, but so far as known no information regarding its adapta- fore been available. » Following closely the plans sug- | gested by the Saskatchewan depart- / ment of agriculture, the bureau of dairy industry, in cooperation with | the North Dakota Agricultural col- © lege, constructed an ice well last fall ) at the U. S. dairy field station at Mandan, to test the possibilities of the | method under conditions there. Nature of Construction On a well-drained spot near the milk house and convenient to the well, @ pit was dug, cight feet square and Mine and one-half feet deep. Th: sides were boarded up with chcap lumber and the bottom covered to a @epth of one and one-half feet with coarse gravel to insure good drain- . age. A small house was erected over the pit. The floor was of two thick- nesses of planking with building p: between the layers, and it was it in sections to permit easy re- i moval during freezing. Windows in "the house provided air circulation in the winter, but were closed during the \ summer. A wooden rack or basket suspended from a pulley overhead ferved for raising and lowering the ans of cream and other food prod- }j ects heid in storage. Freezing was started in January. small quantity of water—two to r gallons—was run into the pit each day. Some difficulty was ex- Perienced before the first layer of ice ‘was formed because the water drained ‘out so rapidly. By the end of Febru-; | ery, however, there was a solid cake of ice cight feet square and six and one-half feet deep. When freezing | “weather was over, the house was closed tightly and the floor replaced. Still 22 Inches Left ‘The mean average temperature in this vicinity for January and Febru- ary was 9 degrees F. and 4.6 de- F., respectively. The highest q Pempersiure for the two months was i‘ police ry lta a Hg ee Sie ina oven ieee tran - the dition ard Brent's coi ye nan: bee, sl "aco heap pei it means not to know anything gions where other met are im-| average year. The wheat and barley oO aepalt Hes Nie gel Mga ac pcr kc ll ng eyed ye plies cxcent ee aoe ers pas Songer [reid tal digg hapipio at ili ge g 4 polka ace on paying him an unex-|chcerfully, “he doesn’t dress you | 1 want to be downstairs when And I'm not even sure of that.” Peis casual ot aiehan onceeaent | nilahe erpabean ca - ns pected visit she had found him en-| in hoops and bustles. I can’t quite | comes.” Brent's lips took on @ cross de @ | only one season's trial. The work will | grains. allie, 2 sees | shane in tertaining a charming friend whom | ct his idea, An old-fashioned girl/ “You don’t want to lose a minute| termination, He spoke sharply. in the latest word in clothes.” before asking him about last Satur. | “Don’t be a nuisance and spoil our * tion in the United States has hereto- | _ 22 inches deep, or 58 cubic feet of the | Washington, D. C. ” 4 1 416 cubic feet in the original block. At | ——_____ oo pt eed is reported in some wanted to tell you was that he has| Helen. Cut out the tngenue, You're|the school had a reputation for| be simple, but not # simpleton. the same rate of melting the ice will | kections. Hay and feed supplies will | never arranged for me to meet any | 18, you know. I don’t approve at all worthiness that kept its enrollment} But she allowed her eyes to feast last until well into October, i rom. 0 20 per cent below last: of his friend: full and things went on as they | upon him and Brent understood her year. lends or acquaintances and | of your falling for Mr. Brent, but| were, as though she had spoken. He per- Cream Kept 14 Days i For the 17 western range states, I know he wouldn't want it to hap-|{f you want to get anywhere with; When Helen returned to don her | mitted no hint of his understanding Careful records were kept through- THS STATE Sages eocapenin tearebe Gi aa = pen by accident.” him you won't allow yourself to be | Crepe de chine dancing set and the /| to show in his manner. A long and well water to OES, degrins Fe and : Mexico southern Nevada and arisons, || | Shallimar ecotfed. “Afraid they |® football for bis notions. Not Wen well being and happy autir-| accustomed hun te thelr admires placed in the rack in the pit at 8:30 99 | eesti Jy and August caused | | will contaminate you probably. But while you have proot that his per-| pation, igh a ee 5. WL was Giaied te 4 deatoes Stbin DECLINE SINCE 28 | . The fall and win- | that's going to be pleasant for you | Sonal taste is contrary to all he is Helen’ ‘ ter feed outlook . Shallimar stood by and offered lelen's feet seemed ecarcely to three hours and to 42 degrees by 4.30 tay perl Sac alutetas ae ee | when you leave school, isn’t it? Who | Making of you.” well meant suggestions that were|touch the flagstone walk as they THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1929 Dairy Station Solves Farmers’ Refigeration With Ice Well [SIDE GLANCES- - - - By George Clark _||LIVESTOCK SHOWS SEASONAL DECLINE ONLY IN DRY SPELL Some Supplemental Feeding | Has Tided Cattle Through Withered Pasturage ae | SURPLUS HAY PROVES BOON | GHALLMAR laughed. “You don't mind his being with a knockout lke that woman we saw and yet you're so crazy about him that you have to tingle with delight over obeying his slightest wish. Some thing’s wrong with the picture, Helen. But tell me, has he for. bidden you to speak to him in pub- lic?” She ended tauntingly but Helen was invulnerable to the jibe. Delicate sarcasms, and broad, were favorite weapons of the girls at verbal grips with each other. “That's what I want to tell you i hltnoueh ranges, and pastures Lotte Shallie dear,” she sald quiet- roughout Nor’ a were in ly and Shallimar was instant; | Hentd od iy, Sao eee | armed. She opened her eyes iit than the usual seasonal decline in wider and (hen narrowed them fn | condition, according to the Septem- anticipation, Was Helen actually ber 1 range and livestock report of going to open up? bd federal agricultural statistician | “There's ‘s ‘or North Dakota. Pastures, where here's a reason, but I don’t overstocked, arc furnishing no feed know what it is, why Leno wants him, really. He's got you hypno-|behind @ cretonne curtain. She tized, that’s all.” prea Cheat of her choice. Helen was pinning her thick yel-|Her mind was not on the wraps. low hair up on her head tespire She came out with a bleck and tory to taking a shower bath. She|White one. Shallimar ped. smiled at her reflection in the mir-| “Helen, not that! With blue slip Tor, How little Shallimar knew | Ders? about the grand for | Helen regarded it, “It would be Bree eee and Passion her steat |. bad combination, wouldn't it?” glass, She pitied Shalimar, For | She threw it on the bed and turned no matter how much it hurt to be in| back to the closet, This time she live it was an experience not to be | Selected a gray velvet. missed. i tt And It made having a new dress|'THE nod of approval Leonard ever so much more exciting. “Shall Brent gave her @ few minutes I wear silver slippers or the blue | later rewarded her for her exercise moire?” she asked, facing about and | of taste. forgetting that her dearly beloved| Helen's hands trembled as Brent Leno would very likely remain un-|took them in his own and kissed stirred by any choice she made|their fingertips. It was not @ seri- among the things in her plentiful|ous gesture, but it delighted the wardrobe. girl whose love of romance, and “Wear the blue—silver’s over-| love of love iteelf, had settled upon done,” Shallimar advised. “And |this handsome, worldly man. here’s a bar of that soap Aunt| As he bent his head and looked ., ‘ oie been i iment sb at her bend dark eyes that turned @ odor. It’s lasting but that|up slightly at the outer corners, whatever. ome, Supplemental feed- mo to grow up to be what he calls Helen Page won’t matter since your arbiter | following the line of his satanic ” Siar top = Boge oe a Indy, Please don't laugh. You! aierent? won't permit rh lead perfume.’ a her heart pounded alarm- crop is below average, but livestock know there fs a difference between 3 rt} "1 H men are of the opinion that with the girls who take refinement and good ic calltsth lbenno abit ae ‘i a sevrosted n| iart GOntipe pare eArUmm carryover of old hay, there will be form ‘lousl; vaconecizevertl ain Beton ok the sor elearovete wonp]| parvameerl, “et” Lascare’ "Brant sufficient feed, except in limited sec: | gn.» terlously and thove who /anawer was always the same. Leon-|anq ‘ttangheared into the Rell, Ste | could: hot’ be wholly laughing. at , to ci - 7 : me aw Hrd le rough the com: “What te eniete ter” ard—Leno—did not regard her as/ ran down to the bathroom but, early|her. Oh yes, she was aware that peest “ay 1s” Shallimar in-|she regarded him. He might not he knew of her feeling for him. icatas te qurenen on ranges in haces ently, “Is that any] be, in her mind, too aged for her |®nd showers in use and had to wait | There was something in his glance “What's a fraternity, Oscar? He says it will coit more money.” North Dakota, Where ranges are not || "uso" SHY you have to give up| fancy to weave a love dream about | Yum tonver nueiiive tho hatking| Hnowings something not altogether nt ae overstocked feed is plentiful. In even @ dab of rouge along with hin, bet tt wae bee great tex ns were forever upsetting tho bathing | knowing; something not altogether South Dakota, continued hot, dry cigarets?” os Senedd nies order established for them by the|of mockery and amusement. regal er as a child. house rules committee. It did no| “You're looking lovelier than Late Fall and Winter Feed Pros- pects Otherwise Poor; N. D. Sheep Doing Fine cates 169 NEA GEQviCE INC. EG U8 PAT OFF. 38 degrees F., and the lowest was —43 and the cheaper grades of lumber the degrees F. cost. will be vi fi weather has damaged range feed and iiciiiage Gr eimasnvaras scant ita’ - a Uinivanat citeeaatce will be fur-|T@duced the hay crop. In Montana, eee! She got up and move’ away to|K00d to grumblo even if you had|ever,” Brent sald to her and the a5 SORES OF crenun was started MAY wished by the U, 8. Dairy Pleld Sta-| "Nees are dry and short. There isa/ ff A TENDER smile wreathed| hide her taco from Shallimar's| te eur’, luce (0 Zour room and com | woretem jonged te say thee mer, and on September 1, after e stor-|tion, Mandan, N. D.. the state Agri. Lele TeM “Ba wiser “Toba atten Helen's lips before she an-| close scrutiny, Sle by ia: rakdowa-aite eoloens: was looklag very 0 be" hogeted ‘i vs, vas 8 ural College, 0, N. D.. or tl io “Don’ . is age period of 98 days, there was still ge, Farg or the Ranges in Wyoming are’ *Y¢Tcd. “Maybe Leno does carry it] “Don't be a goose,” Shalimar ex-| The facilities for luxurious living | felt tt would be too artless to com- a block inches si U. S. Department of Agriculture,| SFC Poor. = lock of ice 68 inches square and Agi dry and short. Moisture is needed. A @ bit far,” she agrecd, “but what I|claimed sharply. “Be yourself,|at Miss Spann’s were limited. Still, | pliment him. He might want her to Helen answered with a halt-sob. oye ignored. Na not even bs are way out to sh void “Sometii 4 int of lipstick, and certainly no long, narrow, convertible. To- all 8 nS reheetti: Jost matur- eye shadow. Helen was firm. night it was open and Helen had ly uninspired,” she said, fishing | «Not that you need it,” Shallimar | #2 instant of regret that she was m. Cream in cai laced directly » on the ice was cooled to 34 deatbes u of old hay is small. re ren ees te eet Nantes the same period. Cream was kept in =: Cattle you going to do? He won't be able oh negro — commition for, 4 Wheat and Potato Diseases Led| Cattle in North Dakota show only | to create a set of Priscillas and ys Curt uly, the hottest part of i the usual seasonal decline in condi- Prudences just f @ fresh handkerchi “ q 1 32 to 42 degrees. Six inches above partment Found “He says we're going to travel,” | GUALLIMAR rushed over and put | tiful, And you want to look beau-| feel of a soft breeze, warm with the the ice it varied from 44 to 50 degrees; — Helen explained, , an arm about her, “No, you're | tiful, don’t you? Promise of summer, brought @ and a foot above, the temperature was a not, honey. Don’t you see? No one| Helen consented to having her | Surge of pleasure that held no place never higher than 50 degrees F. from North Dakota land owners con- Montana and Wyoming cattle, gen- ‘And show the world one Amer-| but @ person with @ lot of char-|slishtly watershined nose pow-| for regret, The mean average temperature for | cerning plant diseases of various kinds | ¢Fally, are holding up well in condi- fcan girl who is natural and un-jacter could do what you're doing, | dered and she allowed Shallimar to| It was a short drive to the inn— spoiled. I see, So that is what you | And that’s why I think it's a shame | @trange her heavy hair in a way/® drive in May-scented twilight. this region for June, July, and Au- tion, although showing some shrink. diminished from 300 in 1928 to a % :: o gust was 62.9 degrees, 73.6 degrees, The of a short feed supply be! roomed that you should try to be anyth: that permitted one adorable little | Helen's thoughts ed and 70.6 degrees, respectively. The | Proximately 150 in 1929, according to! will cause stock ve we Brn pt pond are ene sl but yourself. It just happens or ear to invite a caress, but that was| sheer del cht of tl vine in bee “I don't know, Shallie, Maybe it’s | ute. Brent wants you to be a throw. /84 far in modern allurement as she | face, the lift of her hair about her highest recorded temperature for the| W. E. Brentzel, plant pathologist, ly. three months was 106 in July. During | North Dakota Agricultural Experi-| For the western range states, gen- Just that Leno believes girls ought | back. If you thought he liked mod.) Would go. face, the racing hope that sped 14 days in July and 10 days in August, | ment station. These inquiries, prin- | tally, cattle are in good flesh. How- to be natural and unspoiled.” ern youth as it’s sometimes pictured| Finally Shallimar announced her. | With her. the maximum temperature was 90 de- | cipally in the form of letters, pertain | ever, some decline in condition has oc- Shallimar laughed again. “After |‘© make a story or a sermon you'd /sclf satisfied. Helen gave her a At the inn, before they left the or higher. to wheat diseases in particular. Sec- | curred in all states except Colorado, flame to high heaven to ” “it's 4 : . Sec- » , picase him.” | swift hug.- “It’s funny about you,” | car, saath, Cait eel reset, ot rar | Ona is. kmuertance, scoonting tee | (A AME ee ea ae el pamisae pow ger: Hic Foe came) gaticlen mibed her exes and blinked she sald Maeassitair, ciea hate 401 eeedipeagureaad ies coe the pit and kept perfectly. No of- | diseases. This work of answering in- |cause some forced marketing in a girls for himself.” Fog imme tomo penen| Pane rye p anger timed barter egy gga cee bach ¥ . “ “5 pretty hard being the ward of a| you do, and yet you do all you can| fully, “tonight yo what foes ue sors ee eres a gk quiries 1s one of the several services | humber of the western states, unless Helcn flushed darkly red. Shalli-|™& you were in love with—a man|to make me devastating to him.| you promised?” acai ets ' hroug! |elven by the plant pathology depart rains come soon. mar had found the chink in her who had loads of fascinating women | Why is it, I wonder?” “Tonight?” Brent repeated. Sheep friends—and to know that you w Shalli ahi d, * 't wall ” cts, “ you were mar shrugged. “I suppose| “I can't longer, \s Neots Denined Bke terfere wlth the regular experiasental) | The-condition of sheep in North armor, either by accident or design. | just a... a sort of experiment with | it’s because when. two women| Urged. “You ps tell Reger While the department of agri- oe hii otani Suidingiaas is slightly above last month ‘This woman they spoke of was not | him; but hard or not Helen hated | aren't after the same man they are| promised, when I finished . culture officials belleve the ice well | drop-in cases of head bitgnt coger five-year aver- the first sophisticated, modish fe-| tars. They were too much in keep- | allics against all4nen.” That will be soon. I've tried to be i ' male that Helen had seen in Leon- ing with the character being thrust} “I hope I can do as much for| patient, but you've no idea what well or in any of the stored prod-j| ment, and does not in any way in- I gE 5 Precipitation to 7 a. m. » 0 wind velocity . 12 il Clear Clear 50 51 30 51 27 — PtCldy 55 30 — PtCldy 50 22 — Clear 55 28 — Clear 54 28 — PtCidy $1 20 — PtClday 52 19 — Clear 49 18 — Clear 55 4 56 30 — Clear oun — 418 — 55 12 — 5324 — $326 — » & 20 — 417 — 52 19 — 56 32 $836 52 16 — ou — ne E i H be continued, however, with some| If a reason for the drop off slight variations. quiries on plant diseases were if fk he had hurriedly sent away—after-) «1 don't get it either,” Helen con-}day, do you?” Shallimar teased. |evoning, Helen. Ill tell you every- promised, when to be Pe atti eon Lepage ces age fo, ane one sane 4 Shige 5+ wom 8 — scolding Helen for her sur- coon Pio a ane rd ie “No, I pene are Ae. shan ee st you the selection of a well-drained site | plant pathologist. It is important to| tion. In And Helen had not been blind to| ‘0 look funny. h promised to do for|~ Helen ‘sat very still, facing her oe soe eee a dessgerc cies airainage ithe foes, however, that diseases | little lighter the fact that his choice of triends| ,, Bye A nee oe wanted you | me. ious to remind him | disappointment. Breat put at arm awa} usual. be hope bout “There thiag f are. lene Uvnirage. Shan pall among the gentler sex was quite] never fall tn love if this 1 whet it sin in the. clesst sow, sun: lmeee to kkeet ak Mi ee A i 5 3 the bottom of the pit. paiiditacatimaaiibees-g Also the pit should be located as PLAN LONG NONSTOP near to the milk house as possible} London.—In the same plane whic! and, for convenience, near to the weil | flew from England to India in a for water supply. The floor of the | stop flight earlier in the year, house should be tight so the air cir- | ron Leader Jones Williams culation can be reduced to a mini- | Lieutenant N. Jenkins will mum during the summer months. | nonstop flight from Cranwell to Sou! The cost of an ice well will vary with | Africa. The planned journey will cover conditions, but by using home labor | 6,000 miles. Shi decidedly for the women of today. | does to # girl. But honestly, Helen. | ning her finely modeled hands ‘a Why then, did be want her to be eo! 1 don’t think you're in lo the row of wraps that hung there ‘eit 708 (Se te Coat i | f E ! : i : : Hil Se335 fl Hl i a | : i i SALE AT VALLEY CITY Only High Quality Animals Best Breeding, Condition and Health to Be Sold OUT OUR WAY ° GOOD SuFFRIN' Goo ! YOU AINT GOT A BIT o' TASTE! IFIT aan. 5 ig oh Prepatations are now under LOOK LIKE A OSTRiC INSIDE. DIDN' You | | fama ‘re sccording to KNOW You HAD A * BANDIGE ON ONE O THEM FINGERS YOU'RE EATIN' z i nH wee Bee #E z A ; si ia Lid 8 < il i i g g I EB u FRE i A i fi i ESSege ie ae 4 ines et carded i stein-Priesian, ‘Then simple matter 18.—Advis- Red Poll wil hand, of eure, © ‘Met- tt is But usually the erowe who puts Se the new arrival & course of er £ et i ieelttral a Seegs Hite a ne Te rE: ‘ F i a i i | ii i f at g i g & ife 4 : "t. wees i, fal i o | | ! 4 { i { : ’ qj , hus | 4 + \ { {

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