The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 4, 1929, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1929 6 t WINSTERS BATTLE {| pay eo in i) IN COURTROOM RING \ ‘Family’ Accident 4 | Black Eyes and Bruises Left on toy ‘coy severe | juries received in a “family” automo- Four Men in Fight Start- | bile accident at Sixth street and Ave- ‘nue E shortlv after 2 o'clock yester- Marshall Wells company; and A. G. Nordmarken, Grand Forks, field rep- resentative. = | Today's school is one of 15 being | held throughout .the Northwest. The | ;area which it covers extends west | to Glendive, Montana, and east to | Jamestown and from the South Da- kota line to Minot. Among those attending the session | Hold School of Instruction in a {are Paul Schilla, Dickinson; John | Lions Den; Duluth Staff Rovig, Mandan; John French, of | French and Welch, Bismarck: 9. 1. { } absence of some of their prospects from the ¢ The canvass was continuing today, and tomorrow still is left for clean- | ine up. COMMUNITY CHEST DRIVE SHOWS SPRRD = Some Teams About Complete Spanish War Veteran, Canvass; Total Is Not Yet | Wilton Drayman, Dies ALL THE BRAN YOU NEED ALL THE FOOD YOU NEED vi th “b early frosts. he green flax plant} The yields on the Williston s contai iustance which decom- | station as reporied by Superintend- pi pose. is prussic acid, one of | ent Schollander are: wheat pe the m0: nown, The 18 to 28 bushels; su young gree contain as 9 bush- Ro much 23 3 sic acid ot s—10 to fj tre while in the fg yiaturcd. thered the prussic vields in the varietal neid comteat nost neshgibie end E ubstation by 8 ent j Superintendent Sturlaugson ot ei in catile were re- bread wheat 2 to 33 bushel: , yj © i=. Los Angeles, Oct. 4—? fr mn en t nm wi ar thereby dan: he 2 co the : ing After Hearing —Four men |. today bore marks of a physical en- counter in the courtroom where two Los Angeles ministers are being tried for contempt as a result of remarks they made about the recent trial of Mrs. Alexander Pantages, wife of the theatrical magnate. Those involved in the clash and the injuries received arc the Rev. Robert P, “Fighting Bob” Shuler, pastor of ‘Trinity Methodist church, h, Ji it cheek and Ir trial of Mr. juror in t Pantag Gay. « Ject of re radio remarks by Shul- er, in which the minister charged that “the Lois Pantages jury was hung be- fore taking of testimony was begun. and IT can name the man who will hang it.” accosted the pastor at ad- journment of the latter's hearing yes- terday on the contempt charges. Gay blackened Shuler’s eye. Shuler missed a return blow and caught Costello on the cheek. nearly floor- ing him. Shuler in the contempt charges, whose case was en under advisement, stepped between the antagonists and was jostled and bruised. Gay's face * was scratched in the melee. GREEN FLAX STRAW POSONS LIVESTOCK Piant Cecniains a Substance Whict Decomposes and Pro- on flax Caution should be used in feeding fall and comin: A. F. Scha y deperiment, dof ¢ ie Con! y sections of the state t caught by the pings from ni involved. micel analys to cause the ous for livestock. If any farmer 13 compelled from searcity of feed to rcecort to feeding flax screenings or straw, he should first select cn2 a:.imal only and be- gin with small quantities of the flax. In this manner he can see if there mptcms and are any unfavorable sy if so, the burning oz removing to a place away from the farm stock. Care should be taken not to pasture livestock on late hailed-out flax or in fields where the flax was too im- mature or too short to cut. The farm flocks and herds sould be kept away ss they ad found eafe for stock feed. Arrest Made on Old Hit-and-Run Charge Minot, N. D.. Oct. 4.—A warrant Antler, by Deputy Sheriff R. L. Dier- dorff of Minot. the charge being that he willfully and feloniously crove away without stopping at the scen.: of an accident in which a car driven by kim struck and injured a young wornn. ‘The charge is made under a state iaw which went into effect in 1927, whereby such an act was made to constitute a felony. the maximum penalty for conviction being five years in the state penitentiary. ‘The acciden: on which the charge ged to have been the sub- | Briegleb. co-defendant with ta Experi- | o head ef: should be destroyed by | was served cn William Kelly. 22, of | {day afternoon. | Delzer was thrown to the pavement 'through the door of his sedan when ‘the car he was driving collided with one driven by Miss Lydia Bertsch, ‘602 Sixth street. Miss Bertsch is a | daughter of Chris Bertsch, who is a cousin of Delzer. The contractor suffered three se- {vere scalp lacerations, a severel jwrenched shoulder, and numerous {body cuts and bruises. He was knocked unconscious when he struck the pavement. Neither car over turned but both were badly dam ‘aged. Both drivers were alone in their bruised eye; the Rev. G. A. Briegleb, h re alc n pastor of Paul's Presbyterian ‘s. Miss Bertsch escaping without church ches and bruises; inju ‘A passerby rushed Delzcr to a local * doctors’ clinic immediately after the rash. Ai! three scalp wounds were closed with stitches. Delzer today is at his home at 512 Rosser avenue but may be moved to a hospital. ‘TEST WHEAT YIELDS APPROACH AVERAGE | 25 Plots Average 14.1 Bushels; | 21-Year Average Is Re- | ported at 18.1 | Threshing results on the substa- ‘tions in the state have been reported to Dr. P. F. Trowbridge, director of the North Dakota Agricultural ex- periment station. The unusual dry Iweather permiited an early chcek- up on the experimental grain trials these substation The vields at the Dickinson sube on tation reported by Leroy Moo- Bac: a intendent, are wheat aft- Prussic Acid bushels; after disced bushels; after green rhore is, bushels; after spring danger of pe k on the bu and after fall bu: frostod fiax _ Twenty-five plots on the main Screenings ov on the green , field averaged 14.1 bushe' These imma‘ure irosted plants in the fieid me plots mn 192% averaged 26 bush- for the last . was 18.1 bush- ng brought to the by the farm to 17.6 per hile the average % The wh clevator. ranging from stein content. H. Plath, | Hettinger subs’ é Di it p uperintendent of the tion, reports yields 2. follows: Wheat on nental | plots ranged from 19.7 bush- he unusual | els with a test weight of 58 to 62 itions have led to ir- pounds per b ts yields rang- iderable | ed from 17 to & els; barley | yields ranged from ; bushels, to urum = wheat— lev—11.5 to 28. bu: shels; d pea vai se cattle. Undoubtedly there are many fo specimens cf ilox throurhout the}, . , ~~~ Peper pr state this year equal! us and) Dickinson Rainfall Is ON, | Not Far Below Normal | (Tribune Spscial Service) Dickinson, N. D., Oct. 4.—, to the figures by U. S. Weather Ob- peo Moomaw at the Dickinson ex- periment station, this district is now | but .14 of an inch below; normal pre- | cipitation for the year. | From Jan. 1. 1929. to Sept. 30 pre- |Saaeation here totaled 13.6 inches, | while the average over a long p2riod | is 13.74 inches. | For the month of Sepiember pre- | cipitation here totaled 1.67 inches, ; against an average for that month | over a period of 28 years of 1.17, mak- ing the month wetter by half an inch than the average September for 28 | years, Pfunder’s Stomach= Tablets | can now be obtained at ig HALL’S DRUG STORE | ‘Third and Broadway ; Misnnunuosnenuanvencauecncausscncngecssagsacad vx_ee____ a ——=——-s I i | i onnnnnn 34.3 Visitors Give Lectures A school of instruction for distribu- tors and salesmen of the Eveready radio was being held in the Lions den | jat the Grand Pacific, today. About | 15 dealers and representatives were | in attendance. Luncheon was served | there at noon. ! ‘The role of instructors was filled by | ; Ed Collins, Chicago, assistant sales manager; Tom Jones Meek, Duluth, ‘epresentative of Marshall Wells, dis- tributors in North Dakota; John Par-' lie, Duluth. vice president of the Du- uth Merchants Discount corporation; ie ‘W. Matze, superintendent of the ow eeningsre- | © * be vealed the presence of 0.3385 per cent | Thompson wi = prussic ce! ins per pound. | report yields on wi «(This quan. wrily is sufficient | ba barley varieties | tail ny for ied in age hh day’s Wahpeton, where funeral services and | en calls. Some of the teams alinost com- interment will tak i iturday. | Harvey Once World’s pleted thelr solleltations. D. H, Johnson, cf Wilton, sesaine | N woan sd |, In fact, the work was so swiftly nied it as escort. Largest Grain Market done pea as Guia e com Gassen was a native of Iowa who ss | Swam} larry P. ard, the Chest ‘had been in thi: y y years. Harvey, N. D., Oct. 4.—Twenty years | secretary, and he did not have time |He was a Spain Ainerioan: war vets or Harvey was the largest primary to tabulate the cards and totals. eran and was single. be in market in the world, according Very few prospects argued about the; Relatives whom he leaves are a sis- s . Ff ie er Hace ee ie Beas 95 Ls cent sighed ter, Mrs. Jacob Simonetch. in Min. Eat it with milk or cream and you have a complete, . e 's * eir pledges or handed over checks n lis; G. H. Z. Pwo iced “ean ¢ kin: bones eration at that saat ti and the city an- for their total at once. Some delay alpetia. sir ice lions a stay, perfectly-balan: FY meal calcium hatha 1d fey marketed 2,000,000 bushels of in closing their canvass was ciicoun- at Foss, Okla. und a sister in Cali. and teeth—vitamins for health and strength--bran for grain, tered by several teams because of the fornia. needed roughage—and so tasty and easily digested. , e PED kan q *e nt 4 | WORTHY SUCCESSOR TO A GREAT SUCCESS : ' IWIN-IGNITION EIGHT { Priced from $1625 to $2260 be.b. fectory IWIN-IGNITION SIX : Priced from $1295 to $1695 bab. fectory : Priced from $915 to $1075 Lo, b. factory Introduci ntroducing a completely new group of motor cars with the richest new body designs that ever delighted the eyes of motor-wise A se Amer- ' “eg Tabulated b Jarrell. Bismarck: Mr. Burdick, Cor- | etal inth, N. D._ William Norris, James- | town; Mr. Thorsrud. Minot; and N. J. Ness, Steele Hardware company. Fine progress was made by the 30 Community Chest teams canvassing George Gassen, 54. a Wilton ‘ray- man for 28 years, died in this ci | Thursday night. The body is being’ sent by the Capitol funeral parlors to SHREDDED ica, and with impressive new engineering of the most advanced character. § When you view the 1930 Nash “400” models on display you will instantly recognize the fact that Nash SERVICE MOTOR SALES | PHONE 180 - - - MANDAN, NORTH DAKOTA 28) today is decisively ahead of the entire industry.

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