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SLOPE FARM UNITS TOO SMALL. FORCING , TEASING OF LANDS Holdings in Northeastern Sec- tion of State Approach Desirable Acreage VALUES NEAR TO PREWAR Rex Willard Finds Increased Ef-| ficiency and Livestock Will i Bring Money Margin before he nt on to st » North Da ed their eff view: ke some money ove expenses. despite the ai s between what t uy and wh about equal to the pr any increase in land vai next few y are due to increa. ed operation of t on the} farms,” Mr. Willard told the land owne: Those engaged in the land busi- | q s$ or those who own land and de- to sell should make it their bus- sire iness to accentuate efficiency in farm- { ing,” he deciared, “because by this process chiefly the present values of + land can be enhanced. this being the only apparent process at the present by which increased profits an be made.” the pictures and t would be “RORITA FAILS TO CLICK IN BISIHAR 1K: ney of xt | Weak Interpreta b: Light. opera marck’s favorite s haps it ts an inherent heritage of ge theatre-going world pr THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1929 Real Drama in Sound Film of Murder Confession went upstairs .... I said. ‘Lee, nd pulled my gun and shot her talking movie shown to judges, in Phi de Iphia the other day. For it was! dof a murder confession, and part of the Peters, who admitted killing Miss Leona ne right are Philadelphia’s Detective vho questioned the prisoner, and an official ‘ded on the left of the film, between 's said such sound films probably and that they would be a great ach, appears or W: grapher. c ‘The cont admi score, catchy ditties, beautiful were weakened by presenta- {tion in amateurish fashion with the [seenee mentioned. NEW PRESBYTERIAN PASTOR IS LAUDED, ‘| Head of iBbenghans: Birmingham Schools | Writes H. O. Saxvik Com- mendatory Letter ca thaatiaty | y Sparkling Danscuse and Excellent Ballot MAC GREGOR long age naagn By J. € ch productions Kk like the rest of the Hi In speaking of the tenant situation | and mirth. We run to type. eee | in North Dakota, Mr. Willard said | "The town turned ot sat night for arek ann its Presbyterians a that in 1925 the total a ¢ of rent- '“Rio Rita,” operatic romance oi the : me li = om a9 ed land amounted to 17,180,000 acres. ; Rio Grande river Fone belie miner ae which was almost ex: per cent that separates one of the last ene ithe chiens sate vacant log tae of the land in farms t time. The | tiers of America’s west from ihe bit | the chure’. made vacant oy nies Greatest proportionate number of of Spain the conquistadors eft eee fete ri voi ar tenants is found in a belt of counties! Mexico. Both American and Me ding to a letter rece: y H. extending from Richland and Dickey toward the northwest including Cass, f Barnes, Stutsman, Ramsey and Bot- | tineau. In counties in the west and | southwest. cenerally from 18 to 30 per cent of the farms were tenant | operated, and in the northeast por- tion of the state from 30 to 38 per cent of the farms were worked by| tenants. | ike Hest wind vel dienne, Ellen Eckler prightly sequence of song and sto ry | (from falling tlat. ' fdancing and blues patter, GESEMAL = STATIONS — paatek. NOD, clear. it 1 Lee and Carl Richie | it failed to click here as its many pred Marybeth | Rogers Connolly as Rita at no point he interest of her audience. singing and may have tone voice and the personality was visible but subi ik. city superintendent of schools, rom Clarence Vliet, who holds that; {tice at Birmingham, Mich. It is from latter city that Pastor Logee is cke wounds were Fs lar Logee of the First Leads Are Disappointing Connolly and ate | were disappointing , tells me he pastor of stilted Captain movements i Jim effectual, nt so pre you may know ing about this new man in your town. “I have enjoyed my friendship with ‘lp Logee, since he came to Bir- mingham, very much. He is a big man phy ically, pleasant, and easy to meet. a good preacher. His so-called 1's sermons are gems. ° Rotarian. He is a het ter and ally of the ¥. M. das a charming wife and a boy and a girl rged. e and come who kept the | Delightful in bh her ed the audi pre nae | childven off a cooling and dulling of ,| tion that threatened trom the first curtain until Miss Eckler rescued the | | show with her Kinkajou dance. Passing over the heavy points, the | Albertina Rasche trained chorus ballet were exquisite in | Particularly delightful light ballet and Pirate interlude: ) Those who went to get eyeful of womanly fiesh re: | senoritas a little Scotch in the matier {| niture, embré oo Of coverage. “Rio Rita's” plot and lyrics are too | ists as well as enforcing traffic laws. M Toledo, V., yt Willisior, Winnemu Winnipeg, M eS tonight and. Sa ature tonight, and north por! is low over and it Ix high | tain | his at _ Blates westward to Or fornia, while warm wenther prevails iehout the northern border states: in the Canadian provinces, with inook. winds in Montana and Al: Bkies ure cloudy over th ky mountain region, and | ation ‘At acai Shlaces from Oklahoma north- | ward to bad eaggern Great Lakes |] Elsewhere te wenther is gen; wire yeti to co! mae, at ‘me 1.6 feet; ong Ww. perttiet RT! ie Jag Ss vendent to know. Your eity will ¢ a better city by reason of the com: ng of Floyd Logee. i BREAKS TRADITION | London.—The beautiful daughter of the Maharajah of Burdwan has broken one of the traditions of India which says that persons of rank ined $0 :| shall not engage in any form of trade. At | She has opened up a shop in Berkeley | Square here and sells Indian fur- idery. and porcelain. Ballet Numbers Exccilent iy numbe! the Moon- | an upon colorful costumil one point were the Spanish lace and silver cloth. There | nothing offensive in the matter! ‘The state motor patrol corps in Texas gives first aid to injured motor- This sketch was made at Princeton University by a Hart 3 Schaffner & Marx style artist. The university authentic model, The favored colors are grey, blue and brown. $35 io $55 With 2 pzirs trousers Special values and prices Loves Sve Bergeson’s New Clothing Store on Broadway Bismarck, North Dakota ‘ erally, is and the usual pattern | | Presbyterian church of Birmingham | 4 RANGES INPROVED BY PRECIPITATION "AND MILD WEATHER as Fully as North Dakota in Gain; Feed Short Ranzes and pastures in North Da- kota show some improvement on November 1 as a result of above nor- mal precipitation and favorable tem- peratures during October, according | to the report of Ben Kicnholz, fed- cral agricultural statistician. Along with better ranges and pastures, live- stock has held up well in flesh, gen- erally. The possibility of a feed shortage, particularly of grain feed, depen is largely on the length of the! winter feeding period. With the pos- sibility of a short feed supply looming up before stockmen in almost all ais- tricts of the state, herds and flocks are being culled closely, resulting in a somewhat larger movement of live- stock to market. supply has been improved by the Oc- tober snow and rain, but soil moisture is still deficient in most sections of the state. Ranges Ranees continued to improve in western North Dakota as precipita- tion averaged above normal. In west- ern South Dakota range feed is fair but not up to average. Grass greened up rather late and was dam- aged some by frost. The hay crop is @ little short and prices are about $2 higher than last year. For the western range states, gen-/ ranges have been improved some by October rains and snow. but are still dry and short of food it. 'Caiifornia, Idaho and eastern Oregor: and Washington. Winter feed pros- Pects are very good in New Mexico | and Arizona. Cattle Catte in western North Dakota are in somewhat better flesh than one month ago. Feed shortage in a num- ber of districts has resulted in larger ‘marketings. Very little restocking is taking place. Feed shortage in a number of districts is forcing the movement of catile to market. This has also held down local buying. For the 17 western range states. generally, cattle are in good flesh al- though not up to last year's condition. |Particularly in the dry areas. Short ‘feed supplies and low prices have greatly reduced local demand for cat- | tle, and held dow en restocking activity. Sheep in neliven North Dakota are in about the same condition as on |October 1. ‘There is @ greatly reduced local demand for old and yearling ‘ewes and many old ewes are going to! market. Yearling ewes and youn; jot ewes lambs are being held to replace | Sheep "throughout the range area {are generally in good flesh. but lambs jin many sections are lighter than last fall. More ewe lambs have gone to {market than last year, and local de. |mand for yearling and young ewes is light. Many old ewes are for sale with few buyers. This has been an expensive year for sheep men with jreduced prices for sheep, lambs and [Wool. With feed prices going higher, there is little tendency to expand. but | instead to sell down to available fced | Our — -_————________y, | AT THE MOVIES | gated {all of us can tonight at the Theatre, Mandan, visit Norway see more of it in two hours could be seen in months of travel in that country. 8. O. Olstad of Minneay has crossed the Atlantic m show his film de, ‘, under the auspices of the local lodge of Sons of Norway. : - There are ten reels in all, and “Cradle Boa singing, dancing {ae ie ee The stock water! Dacotahs. \ Lloyd Myster, Egeland. sales man- | rate of laughter as the story unfold- | Three wives, determined bed Rear | their husbands a® lesson wht latter indulge in a little vente | out,” secure the services of as many | aooer boys to initiate them into the | modern technique. Without any | knowledge of the other's plans, both | the husbands and their chorus girl | sweeties, and the wives and their es- | eorts choose the same roadhouse for | | their evening's diversion. As it is a nouement is postponed for some! | somebody's mask drops and the riot is on. Walter Catlett, Sue Carol and Nick {Stuart enact the featured roles in {this uproarious and tuneful produc- | tion, with an excellent supporting cast that includes David Rollins, Dixie Lee and Richard Keene. PARAMOUNT THEATRE In public, a “hot mamma”; in pri- vate, a loving mother. This is the dual characterization of Sophie Tuck- er, renowned singer of torrid ditties, in “Honky Tonk”, Warner Brothers latest talking and singing Vitaphone | production now featured at the Para- mount for today and Saturday in which she makes her first screen ap- pearance. During the progress of the story it is revealed that though apparently a carefree entertainer at the “Honky Tonk” night club. reveling in the swirling gayety, she actuaily hates | the life, and pursues it to maintain | her daughter in a fashionable Europ- | ean school. The exceptional cast supporting Miss Tucker in “Honky Tonk,” in- cludes George Duryea, Lila Lee, Aud- rey Ferris, Mahan Hamilton and John T. Murray. Among the Sophie Tucker sonzs ‘m Doing What I'm Doing for i Around” and “I'm the Last of the Red Hot Mammas.” Other entertaining features on the Paramount program for today and Saturday are an all-talking Para- | mount-Lois Wilson comedy, “A Bird in the Hand,” Screen Snapshots in Which favorite players are introduced jon the screen and Paramount News | events, | University Students Elect Popular Coeds Grand Forks, N. D.. Nov. 15—A pre: liminary election to select 20 candi: ates for the honor of being the most | popular coed at the University of ' North Dakota will be held Friday | under the auspices of the staff of the | 1931 Dacotah, school yearbook, Leslie | Watson, Grand Forks. business man- ager of the annual announced today. | An elimination of these candidates so that 10 will be listed for the final choice will be held Nov. 2. The final election will be in connection with the Dacotah sales campaign and votes n only to those purchasing will be gi ager for the Dacotah, will have charge f the drive and final balloting. RELIEF FROM ‘DREAD COouUGR Hard coughs thats strain and weak- en, resulting from colds and recurr- ing bronchial atiacks, are very quick- ly eased and relicved by reliable; Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, | that dislodges irritating mucus Pith: | tressing . Mrs. F. A. Racine. Wis. says: “Coughs never | jlast long in our family—Foley’s | Honey and Tar puts a quick end to ioe and heals the sore spots. druggist recommended it.”—Sold at ‘all drug stores.—Adv. Gibson, The time, but before the evening is over, | out effort, and clears up the dis- | upsets of NORWAY | PAST_AND PRESENT A WONDER TRIP TO NORWAY Latest, Newest, Greatest Motion Picture from the Land of the Midnight Sun. Sting Sts Soling "Aries Kei Each: . UNDER AUSPICES SONS OF NORWAY (Tonight Only) [EASIER WAY LOOMS TOREVAMP NORMAL : SCHOOLS OF STATE! _Western States Do Not Share, masquerade affair, the inevitable de- ‘Letter From Secretary of Na- tional Association Encour- | ages Miss Palmer | Support for the plan to reorganize is seen by Miss Bertha Palmer, super- intendent of public instruction, in a | letter received from George F. Zook, | | Akron, ©., secretary of the North! Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. ; Ina letter to Zook Miss Palmer in- quired as to the prospecfive status of students taking four years of work in North Dakota teachers’ colleges as | now organized. She pointed out that degrees of bachelor of arts in educa- | tion now are granted to students upon | completion of two years of elementary work plus two years of training for [high school work. In his reply Zook said the confer- ence “does not look with favor” upon | the practice of granting degrees for ; four years of work in such courses, | but added that “there may be vari- {ations of this plan which may be ac- ceptable; but, in general, any four- year curriculum should be defimfitely coordinated for its specific purpose.” Zook said that a numb-r of teach- ers’ colleges in other states «hich pre- viously granted degrees ‘ « comple- tion of such mixed courses have changed their policy and “adopted Gefinite four-year curricula in order to meet this objection of the North Central association, an objection ‘which most teachers’ college men agree is well founded.” Zook’s statements, Miss Palmer | said, are regarded by her as further! evidence that the plan to revamp! | teachers’ college courses will benefit not only the schools themselves but j the students and the schools into | which the students go as teachers. Her idea is to continue the four- year courses at state teachers’ col- leges, but to reorganize the work so hat students graduating from them senior high schools to other institu- tions, | A. C. Faeulty, Alumni | To Vote on Sites for New School Building | Fargo, N. D., Nov. 15.—A poll of all administrative and faculty members of North Dakota state college. the experiment station and the extension | division together with those alumni ie the Fargo-Moorhead distric:, will be taken at a meeting in the Little | Country theater at 1 p. m. Monday he means of aiding in the perma- | nent location of the proposed $210,000 auditorium and physical education | building approved by the 1928 North \ Dakota legislature. The meeting has been called by Acting President J. H. Shepperd to speed up preliminary work on the {new structure looking toward early approval of the site and building plans by the state board of administration. S. M. Houkum, architect in charge, is eager to begin work on the speci- ications in order that this contract ;Mmay be given careful consideration Prices: 26 and 50¢ { Will be fully qualified to teach in the { | grades and junior high schools, leav- jing the work of training teachers for courses offered by state normal schools ; land study before actual building be- sins. Excavation for the basement jand foundation is expected to begin as soon as the frost is out of the ! ground in the spring. One-half of | the legislative appropriation is avail- ;able in 1930 and the remainder the {following year. The completed plant | will be ready for occupancy in Sep- tember, 1931, under present plans. Botanist H.L.Bolley | Going toS. America | To Study Its Plants) Prof. H. L. Bolley, botanist at the | North Dakota Agricultural college and | experiment station, has been as- | signed by the state board of admin- istration to study botanical and agro- |momic relations of native and crop- | {ping plants in South America for a | period of one year. On retufning to | the college he will carry on investi- | gations based upon the observations made in his explorations and studies there. Professor Bolley will probably sail in the late spring or carly summer of 1930 in order to arrive there early enough to lay plans und make con- tacts which will allow him to best | understand conditions during plant- | ing time and he prepared to study | Growing crops and native plants in regions similar to ours. Mr. Bolley will be accompanied by Mrs. Bolley and his daughter Ann, who will es- tablish home relations at such cen- tral points as will be most convenient. Capital Park Trees To Be Produced from 13' Pa. Horsechestnuts| i, The state forest nursery at | tineau recently received 13 horse- chestnuts which are to be propagated | and returned to the state capital.! where they will be planted to form a | “friendship grove,” one of which is to be established on the capital grounds of each state. These nuts are originally from, Pennsylvania, gathered from a his- torical tree that was presented by George Washington to a friend who carried it over the mountains from | Mt. Vernon and planted it where it * now stands. Last year a severe storm { almost destroyed the tree, which | _______ADVERTISEMENT__ FOR STOMACH SUFFERERS Stomach sufferers in Bismarck and ity an ate, glad to learn that ‘3 Dr . Third and Broad- appointed exclusive Piunder's | Tablets, | ble repu- Jnited States Uave Mr. Hall tell you about them, vr write F. H. Pfunder, In i914 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, In What Month Is Your Birthday? On your Birthday send soar Hoskins-Meyer Home of KFYR itewart | eves that one in the family is enough Agricultural Welfare of North Dakota Involved in Tenant Policy ° heads the list in the “hall of fame” and the idea was conceived to gather the nuts and send them to the Gov- ernor of cach state to form friendship Groves. The number 13 is to represent tl-< states of the original Union and the nuts for replacements will be fur- nished so that 13 trees will form this | friendship, grove on every capital ground, according to L. S. Matthew. extension forester, cooperating with ithe North Dakota agricultural ex- tension division, Fargo. WHY SHOULD HE WORK? San Francisco.—Leo SI be- to work. When his wife Emily went ‘to work, Leo quit, and refused to gc back. So Emily sued for divorce and was granted an interlocutory degree ‘I'll support myself,” she said. ‘LAWYERS ENGAGE D. B. C. GIRLS Graduates of Dakota Business College, Fargo, are much in de- mand in law offices. Atty, Temple engaged Sadie Rindahl on her grad- uation day. Dorothy Baltus went to Atty. Collett, Sidney, Mont.;Nadine Friend, to Atty. Porter, at La z es oan Positions lead to ighly paid court reporting, a goal achieved by many Dakotars. = D.B.C. ACTUAL BUSINESS training (copyrighted — unobtain- able elsewhere) means better open- ings, better opportunities. “‘Follow Ce, SucceS$ful.”” Winter Term be 2-9. Write F. L. Watkins, Pres.. 806 Front Se., tke ic lncaseof fire it pays your profits A use and occupancy policy in the Hartford Fire Insurance com- pany pays the profits that fire cuts off.’ continues in force until reconstruction is com- -|pleted and production starts. It Be Insured Right Call on this agency to go over your plant and consult with you as to the proper insurance you need for found protection against loss. You are under no obli- gation to buy in bring- ing your problems to this Hartford agency. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows 218 Broadway Phone 517 ences, or call us on the phone 220 for inform- ation. We have moved our office to 1194 Fourth street, over Knowles Jewelry store. P. C. Remington & Son BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA 5