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MARKETING EXPERT OF GOVERNMENT 70 TALK TO STOCKNEN Schedule of Wallace Meetings Includes Special for Hog and Cattle Men Here Livestock growers of the county are to get the benefit of James K. Wal- lace’s knowledge of grading sheep and of market conditions in sheep, hogs and cattle, next week, whén he visits here to demonstrate and lecture on theses topics for the U. S. Department of ture. A. R. Miesen, county agent, now is sending out announce- ments, inviting farmers to attend the Wallace meetings. Mr. Wallace is livestock marketing specialist of the department of agriculture. The achedule of the Wallace mect- ings, which are to include sheep out- look talks, is as follows: October 17, 10 a. m—Shcep grad- ing demonstration at farm of J. A. Norlin, mile and half northeast of Menoken. October 17, 2 p. m.—Grading dem- onstration at farm of Max E. Lang, two miles north of Sterling on No. 10 highway. October 17, 8 o'clock—Special talk to hog and cattle men at office of County Agent Miesen, in post office building, Bismarck. Subject to be present conditions and future out~ look in these lines of animal husban- dry, illustrated with charts. October 18, 10 a. m.—Sheep grading demonstration at farm of Charles Warmke, two miles south of Wilton on Highway No. 6. October 18, 2 p. m.—Sheep demon- stration at farm of Sig Rupp, half mile west of Regan on Highway No. 36. October 19, 10 a. m.—Sheep demon- stration at farm of Paul Linssen, Twin Butte ranch, 10 miles south of Bismarck. OFFER NEW SHARES IN BANCORPORATION Stockholders Will Have Priority Rights in New Issue of 180,000 Shares Minneapolis, Oct. 10--(@)—An in- Crease in capital stock from $75,000,000 to $300,000,.000 and offering of ap- proximately 150.000 new shares for sale was announced today by the Northwest Bancorporation, a holding company for financial institutions, Stockholders voted for the in- creased capitalization today, and the directors approved issuance of the ad- pula oe enable the Ban- to develop its program ot pee uder according president. new issuie will equal k outstanding at Close of business on Oct. 30, which, Reduced round trip rates to Fargo Oct. 19 for the annual football game i H tif: 3 H Ui — ' Man Claims Police | Chief's Purse His; | Case Is Dismissed af Fargo, N. D., Oct. 10.—()— Paul Copas was “foxed” here last night by Ed Madison, Fargo police chief, and today John Hardy and Ernest Ballard lare free of a robbery charge which |Copas had preferred against them. Copas identified a wallet and a roll of $250 as belonging to him and which he alleged Hardy and Ballard had stolen. erred, however, in his identification of the money. The wallet and the roll was the chief's own, Copas’ ready identification of the chief’s property led to the dismissal of the boys he had accused. Censias Bureau Posts Are Open, U. S. Civil Service Body States Applications for certain temporary positions in the Bureau of Census in ‘Washington, D. C., will be received by the United States Civil Service Commission until Nov. 2, it is an- nounced by Miss Alice E. Sales, Bis- marck representative of the commis- sion. Applicants will take examinations to qualify for junior cierk, junior cal- culating machine operator, and jun- ior tabulating machine operator, and @ card-punch operator. Examinations are open to all citi- zens of the United States, both men and women, who meet the require- ments. Length of service probably will Tange from one to two years in most cases but in no case will it extend be- yond Dec. 31, 1932. Full information regarding the exe aminations may be obtained from the commission at Washington or Miss ventas at the Bismarck federal build- Be The first mention of time which we have is found in the Book of Genesis, where it is written “and the evening and the morning were the first day.” — THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1929 TALKS FEATURED AT | EDUCATION MEETING Bertha Palmer Among Speakers | at Convention of North. | eastern Teachers Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 10—(AP)— Talks by Bertha R. Palmer, state su-| perintendent of public instruction; Carroll R. Reed, superintendent of the Minneapolis city schools; J. V. Breit- weiser, dean of the education depart- ment at the state university, and M. Beatrice Johnstone of the university faculty ‘featured today’s session of the convention of the northeastern division of the state education asso- ciation. A large number of teachers from| all parts of the district were on hand when the convention opened last night and again today. John C. West, | superintendent of Grand Forks schools, spoke last night on character education and Reed reviewed the Progress of education during the last hundred years. Sectional meetings scheduled for today included those on home cco- nomics, rural schools, grade and con- solidated schools and secondary schools. At tonight's session, Miss Cornelia Adair, Richmond, Va., will discuss “The New Education,” and Dean Jo- seph Kennedy of the state university will discuss “Citizenship.” The convention will close Friday afternoon. Reeder Man Will Open BowmanConfectionery Bowman, N. D., Oct. 10.—B. W. White, proprietor of a Reeder confec- tionery store, will open a similar store here, the local store having been closed for several months. Mrs. White will manage the Reeder Sweet |LaBossier is to be held at Mandan Miss Inez LaBossier To Meet Clubwomen in Bismarck October 18 Miss Inez LaBossier, of the N. D. A. C. extension service clothing depart- | ment, will be at Wing, Friday, Octo- ber 18, and in this city next day, to hold other clothing demonstrations among club women of the Homc- makers organization and the junior clubs, The meeting here will be held in the Association of Commerce rooms. Another meeting scheduled by Miss Tuesday, October 15. Car Stolen in Minot Returned by Officer, Minot, N. D., Oct. 10.—Sergeant S. P. Nielsen of the Minot police force has returned from Tulsa, Okla., bringing with him an automobile which was stolen several weeks ago from the Stearns Motor company in Minot. Francis Chesmore and Willis Dinger, | who were in possession of the ma- chine when apprehended in Tulsa, jhave been turned over to Wisconsin j authorities to answer charges of hav- ing held up two depots. The automobile had been rented from the Stearns company by Ches- more and Dinger, and the two faiied to return the machine. The arrest of Chesmore and Dinger in Tulsa resulted wher two plain {clothes officers became suspicious of 'the pair, Sergeant Nielsen was told. |The officers questioned the pair and when they were unable to show a bill of sale for the car they put them in jail, Both Chesmore and Dinger were armed. Juneau county, Wis., authorities asked for the custody of the two men, accusing them of two depot holdups in which the station agents were kidnaped and left tied to trees. Nevada is the least densely popu- Two men, giving their names as|_ a ADD FOUR BANKS 10 STOCK CORPORATION New Institution Formed at Hu- ron in Addition to Merger With Four Others Minneapolis, Oct. 10.—()—Further expansion of the First Bank Stock corporation in South Dakota through organization of a new bank at Huron and acquisition of four other banks jin the state was announced today by P. J. Leeman, vice president and gen- eral manager of the corporation. ‘The new bank at Huron, to be named the Security National, will be capitalized at $200,000, with a paid-in surplus of $60,000. It will begin opera- tions in the spring, on cOmpletion of a building for which plans are being drawn. The four banks added to the First lated state. It has only .7 inhabitant Shop and Mr. White will have charge of the store here. per square mile, Alaska Territory has only .1. ‘ It’s asto tone COLORFUL TONE is not duplicated in any other radio atany price! Listen to a Majestic Just Once and You'll Want No Other Radio! Close Your Eyes - Just Listen Listen to the colorful tones of Majestic reproduction, music that touches the velvet depths and crystal-clear heights of tone. A man talking—just as if he stands beside you. it’s entrancing—it’s the finest, sweetest, clearest It’s what is convincing 6,500 people every day that Majestic—and nothing else—is the radio they want. Dahners-Tavis Music Co. Mandan, N. Dak. Bismarck, N. Dak. But it just i: And because it is living tube care, the 1 Bank group are the First National of Miller, the First National of High- more, the First National of Ree Heights, and the First National of St. Lawrence. These banks have been as- sociated for years through control of | Stock by Fred D. Grecne of Miller and C. P. Swanson of Highmore. Affiliation of the four brings com- bined resources of $2,862.41 nd_de- ‘posits of $2,419,852 into the First Bank Stock corporation, which now | controls 56 financial institutions in | the ninth federal rese: rict with | total resources of $399, 0, The First Bank Stock corporation now controls 56 financial institutions in the ninth federal reserve district, with total resources in excess of | $329,020,610. FARGOAN WIN Fargo, N. D., Oct. 10—(?)—Jeane | Simmons, Fargo girl, has been award- ed a $500 scholarship at Radcliffe col- lege for outstanding academic work. She was Fargo high schor “out- standing girl student” last year. SCHOLARSHIP | The French Bastille was founded in 1369 and destroyed in 1789. Slow Built Excellence If radio tubes could be made entirely by ma- chinery—almost anybody could buy the equip- ment and make a perfect tube. isn’t that way. "t that way—because long- quality implies exquisite human jlong-trained Sylvania craftsmen (never are worried by hurry, Their skill isn’t And so you get ri tubes that earn and keep your confidence. the DealerWhoseW:ndow Displays The Flashing S— en a Green Oak Leaf. should be sold and not kept as feed- |: era, About 50 steers will be sorted, hd U Combined Glee Clubsam On Educators’ Program Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 10.—Th combined men’s and women’s senior: glee clubs of the University of N x Dakota made their first public a Demonstration on Best Methods of Marketing Steers Set for Oct. 16 (Tribune Special Service) Washburh, N. Dak., Oct. 10-—-A demonstration on the best marketing of steers. will be conducted in Mc- Lean county Oct. 16, it is announced by A. L. Norling, county agricultural arance this afternoon at the meet agent. ing of the Northeastern North James K. Wallace, of the U. 8. De- | ta Education sasoclation whiel was held in the city auditorium. The club sang three numbers: They were directed by Hywel Rowland, university music inst: tor. partment of Agriculture, will conduct the meeting at 1 p. m. at the George M. Robinson stock farm eight miles west of Coleharbor. 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Power on Tariff | Do we want a Mussolini in the White House? demanded a Southern Demo- cratic paper while the fight was on in the Senate to take away from President Hoover his power to change tariff rates under the “flexible” clause of the law; and a Southern Democratic Senator assailed the President’s plea for the retention of this authority as a “reassertion of the divine right of the King.” At the same time the eight Democratic members of the Senate Finance Com- : mittee issued an appeal to the American people “to take a broad public view” 4 question “strikes atthe very roots of constitutional gov- f Republican papers generally ridiculed the idea that President Hoover would prove a “tariff autocrat” if allowed to retain his present power over rates. “The attitude of Pres- ident Hoover whether he wins or loses in the long run, is the proper one,” says the Phila- delphia Inquirer (Rep.). : / The outcome of the Senate vote—47 to 42—overrode the President’s expressed wish and transferred to Congress the power to change tariff duties on the recommendation of the Tariff Commission. “The Digest” this week presents all sides of the case clearly and brilliantly. Other outstanding features in this number are: ' The Master Propagandist Stages His Show William Baldwin Shearer, “American, Christian, Protestant, Nationalist,” f Tosses Bombshells Into. American Shipbuilding Groups a A New York Church Draws the Color Line Franco-German “Alliance” Through Ger- man Eyes Britain’s Premier Clasps Hands With Hoover China’s Outcast Emperor An Author Who Ran Away from His Success A ‘Bang in the Nose’ for Movie Exhibitors The New Town of “Benito Mussolini” A Feast of Striking Illustrations Colored Cover Reproduction of Painting by Mathias J. Alten—“Cabanal Fishermen” Get October 12th Number—On Sale Today—All News-dealers—10 Cents ~ it is a mark of distinction to be a reader of Fifty-Fifty Marriages in Russia A Four-Room House in One / “Debunking” the Apostles i Baseball World Bows Its Head for Hug, “Milking” Poisonous Snakes This Doughboy Got a Break and Six Medals Filming Fur Seals and Their Harems Labor’s Specter of Unemployment - __ Investments and Finance # = aan @. ie i