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TH as corn. In this ‘way the sand beds are cleansed for renewed use by alter- . Inthe decision of the case the supreme court, Tefused to accept the contention. of the plaintiff’ cities Bis- | by which Chicago would have been forced to dump its sewage into Lake Michigan, thus polluting. its potable water supply system. i} j Fy Need: Permanent Baseball ‘Policy ‘The Bismarck baseball problem seems settled for this season. With the selection of the Sioux City colored Players, the city will be represented by a strong aggre- gation of ball talent. There was more sentiment about 190! the prior plan of = team of college students both to play asa Bismarck-Mandan team and to coach the junior teams, but it was also:a more costly plan and did not arouse the necessary support. The big thing for the city to do is to encourage this junior playing. In time Bismarck then may have a worthy team of purely home. material. There is more appeal to local pride in such a team than when a town team is a combination of imported Rlayers—speaking of amateur ball towns. And why can't Bismarck develop talent that will fit in with the leagues? Most of the players on the big, circuit teams are the product of the (Official City, State = —— sand lots ‘of ‘comparatively. emit towis, Foreign Represent Bismarck has made'too may starts by fits. “It is time SMALL, Go ee | baseball here’ were placed on a policy of permanent basis ly G. Logan Payne Co. for future development. With the outcome of this year’s CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON experiment as a starting point, some such step should be Possible of discernment next season. It is worth think- Curtailing Acreage ing about all this season, and in thinking of it all possi- Gradually the importance of reduction in wheat | ble encouragement should be given the juniors, along acreage’ is being driven home to the farmers by the edu- | With proper support of the city team. _ cational movement within the federal farm board, such Saeeicar eae, The King’s Bench as the radio address of Chairman Legge, from Washing- ton, Wednesday. ‘ ‘The king of Spain needn't worry if he loses his crown. * Gurtailment is being made a necessity not only because | He can turn comedian, a la Charley Chaplin, for he has of conditions at home, but is being forced by steps of | shown that he can play the buffoon as naturally as any overseas countries which are consumers of American ! of the extinct tribe of court Jesters. In place of the cus- wheat and have been markets in former ycars for the | tard pie he has his trick bench, and the beauty of it is surplus grown here. There is the big-scale farming sys-1| that he needn't be'the victim of its wiles. He seats even tem being inaugurated in Russia as another situation to | his prospective son-in-law on it and, presto! = hidden meet, not so much now as in the near future when ‘it | spring turns on @ fountain and ‘drenches the hapless shall have been brought to efficiency. And Mussolini 4s | aspirant for the hand of the princess. EE LH é : I I ggg EL Lill g BF news of spontaneous origin pul all other matter b $8 ER i E BE g I = i Ee A a » & i f seeing to it that Italy grows larger quantities of ma-| «The Bismarck, Elka should cable the king to come over - on porn “” caroni wheat at home and later, possibly, in its African | and join their initiation team. His bench ts something J. P. MORGAN'S BIRTH re 7 indl- [able thing. colony. of @ goat-riding stunt and the Elks sre overrun with} @n April 17, 1837, John Pierpont he gave to the brary | Publisher. Chairman Legge in his address also called attention to|jiners.” Or the king might start a new lodge and in- Morgan, American financier and art complete set of auto- marketing developments in France and others threatened | corporate the bench in the secret work. a" ., was born at Hartford, © ot Ln ng Foe is in England, affecting the surplus wheat of this country. 2 a Folk his ed at the Eng- J while ing France at the present time is paying a bounty of 20 cents| 4 speaker says it is.a wife's. duty to make over the man lish high school in ‘and Uni- abroad | Indian @ bushel on the export of certain grades of wheat of |she marries, but perhaps it will be just as well if she versity ‘of Gottingen in G i “war Pan ars which it grows an excess supply and Great Britain is | doesn’t make too much over him. taking measures to retaliate. A few weeks ago Lioyd George, former premier, made the statement in parlia- |: ment that if the United States tried to ship wheat to England at a price, lower than domestic price levels, he ‘Morgan entered the banking business in New York. He at once disting- uished himself in the field of interna- tional banking. . Some of his more o—e fie There are no goose-stepping stones to greatness. t ‘would not be satisfied with a duty but that the remedy should be an embargo prohibiting the importation of any wheat from this country. This is not encouraging for the attempt to put wheat shipments from this coun- try on the debenture plan which the senate has been trying to saddle on the country despite the opposition of President Hoover and the house of representatives. ‘The chairman urged that all the countries of the world | men would be bad enoush Botely, oe oer et he are watching the American experiment of farm relief [state would never stand for what is going on now in the and are ready to take prompt measures to retaliate in | other party's ranks... They: ought to.make the event exporting is done on a basis they believe unfair to their growers. “ee +c +++eeedqpedl; they could just-follow their own best counsel. Curtailment brings up the question as to what to do . with land withdrawn from wheat. Mr. Legge believes Corn in 100 Days it could advantageously be summer-fallowed or turned (Popular Science into pasture. Better yet, the growing of more flax, as is urged in this state, is another remedy. Or more corn, sweet clover or alfalfa to be used in raising livestock can take the place of wheat. The withdrawn land is not real- ly a problem. The surplus wheat is—tremendously 60.. Chicago at End of Sewage Rope At last one of the big standing controversies of the country seems settled, at least the supreme court has made decision in the Chicago drainage district case by which the city is given nine years to put its sewage on a treatment basis and cut down its diversion of thé waters |" ” i of Lake Michigan. Incidentally, the court decision largely follows the lines of this new, early maturing variety of this vegetable. ‘New Rules for Movies Ee noteworthy. achievements were a syndicate to take negotiated President Berke- ley. Cloringa, DICK BERKELEY: Beris’s fance, EUGENE ARNOLD, chaufeer, ané GIGI BERKELEY, 18, whe unaccount: Crosby yesterday afternoon, and Dad said he was a wife-killer. Then this morning I asked Wick- Londoa by fumping off a roof. He sald Doris saw her do ft, and thet Mr. Crosby absolutely did not throw his wife over is, or push her, or anything Now, I think this Johnson crook He—' “Gigi, you must stop!” Lambert cried despairingly. “If you don't mind too much, Mrs. Lambert, I’'é rather hear Gigi’s theory,” Dundee interposed laid down by Charles Evans Hughes, who was special whe viclently denies charges quietly but firmly, master in the controversy before being named to the chief with the ig ae killed the saaia, ene Justiceship. He did not, for that reason, participate in may have Sea, SF "orenonnced nis | 66 the court's decision. Chicago now is diverting water from the lake at the if Hi ip Mrs. Lambert considered for a moment, ber tired eyes closed. = ‘Yes, I think she was. ‘was even more tender and voted th: on is back of it all! Don't you se0?| tig ackstairs alrs by ANNE AUSTIN “22 S225 “Alone?” Dundee asked quickly. consuming 40 eggs apparently kné : lew a thing or two about © Magic Lan- hes robbed Mrs. and “xe ite alone, rate of 7,250 cubic feet per second. Other lake cities to new Croeby, CAPTAIN STRAWS cone nee Tha: veot A New York burglar who disguised banding against this have fought the sewerage policy of clean. ieee eo: munder eeaved, Careren Prey niente ae tonainss inf hisealt ah acahect mate ten Chicago on the basis that this diversion tends to lower ape [eaves Dendes tn charge at was no éne at all but Phyllis when MM | hove neces gang seer ge, must the level of the great lakes, though the reply of Chicago wae CARBERT, scoretary te pave paniiganl fi selously rattled his bones oo” Mra. Berkeley. reques lo one: whom you saw, ; ret te sem ez aa? solution ot tre each | mean?” Dundee corrected ea Professor Altred od yt Michelson, must be reduced to 6500 feet next July 1, to 5,000 feet say and lezaity, ‘relia of ber own Dated scientist, gave @ luncheon the December 31, 1935, and to 1,500 cuble feet per second by sake if she can Give ety explaces |him—Just once, maybe, because See any Se fiat So attend it. December 31, 1938. ; Favilis Cresty's mistatere., [resus le meeting him secretiy. tess on the professor's par, ut my » geal tia ere ‘Then somehow she finds out he's 6 will fyetemer’s part, but many Policy cago is not only @ controver- NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY | crook and ditches him, and he’s| “AB4 yet—Phyllis Crosby com- Tegard it as right smart. sial matter as far as the great lakes are concerned, but CHAPTER sore. of courte, PRU ony ua's| mitted suicide,” Dundes remiuded ‘us tnaceie ae a also as to the Illinois river, which has been turned into ® 6¢PLEASE tell me frankly what|marries Mr. Crosby and Johason| *¢F sently. nd’ 1 scothed cher’ ts ‘est if [seut-minded as the ous who poured vast open, navigable sewer befoilling that of the |, fuse bobbins ep Se bieeianen) . °3: Anew!” Mrs. Lambect 7 opel wigabl ing Portion wane na pan a Lam- her. Trobe he hed fertece or sank | could—" See nro ils head and then scratched The social secretary got control | lovers—" ‘ (Copyright, 1990, NEA’ Service, ‘Inc.) of herself with an obvious effort.) “Please make ‘ler si ELECTRIC HOG CKER' She even managed to smile) Dundee!” Mrs. Lambert Munich.—The pooling, oy icker slightly. ‘She can't realize. what she’s say-| last evening? has been replaced in slaughter houses we ” .| ing. I was Phyllis.Crosby’s best here by electricity. This aystem of ‘You startled me,” she con. friend—" hog slaughter is fessed. “I know how Seymour—|_ .. G " humane than (ot Alena ‘That's enough, Gigi,” the’ stabbing method. ~ Mr. Crosby—treasured that minia-| agreed, but his smile at the ie be slaughtered are run down an enricher of its fertility, thus to be disintegrated into ture of Phyllis. It is an exquisite| cited girl had.admiration and. . where an electric current is its physical and chemical elements. While fifth in its thing, s remarkable likeness of} spect in tt. Turning to Mrs. rea ee | human relativity, sewage is really a luxury to the soil. one of the most beautifal girls I Eyre, he asked gently: “Wore 20m and. 00 of then have been are ever saw. But as you said, it isa “vad sal nmimantutss Lys tered in an hour. » seemed absurd to me that s bur- thing s byrglar could not sell, without betraying himself. It glar showld steal it.” »“To 1ae, too," Dundee assured Ber quietly. “But, please, Mrs. “T know!” Gigi | interruptea, steiking her small brown bands Lambert?” piled, her pale lips trembling. “You were visiting time of ber death?” - “Yes, Seymour wrote me—I —that Phyllis was was at Biarrits—tha! “Did she tell you why 6 unhappy, Mra, Lambert2": asked. ? “I was. We were devoted 4 friends, in spite of the difference in our ages,” Mrs. Lambert re- “Please bert, is &@ connection, uty to Doris—and F Es ji Hint