Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Industrial Situation a “ND, PRODUCE DROP RESULT OF LAGGARD | * BUSINESS FACTORS Industry Seems Readjusting It- self to Shifting Conditions Over the Country WHEAT OUTLOOK NOT GOOD Slax, Steers, Poultry Also Fall and Only Hogs Give Hope of Seasonal Advance By Rex E. Willard, Farm Economist, North Dakota Agricultural College. The general business situation has not improved materially during the past month in comparison with the early part of the year. All of the facts seem to point to a period of re- adjustment in industrial activities. Some further decline in retail price of industrial commodities is to be ex- pected. Some important tariff bar- riers erected by some European coun- tries against both industry and agri- cultural products tend to impede ex- ports of these commodities from the United States. Farm prices have generally tended downward during the past month. Of North Dakota products, steers, poul- try, flax and wheat have fallen in the last 30 days. Flax has dropped off sharply from a level of slightly above $2.60 to about $2.40 and even lower at some points. Farm products prices in North Da- kota have dropped from an index of about 114, April 15, to an index of 111, May 15, compared to the pre-war level of 100. Some improvement in foreign de- mand for American wheat may be in- ferred from the fact that recent de- mands have been comparatively small. The decreased activity of in- dustry in some foreign countries, however, may still be a deterrent to large demands for our surplus prod- uct. At best, the outlook for whea' prices in the immediate future is any- thing but bright. ‘World supplies of flax May 1 were the smallest in several years and 15 per cent Jess than a year ago. Cana- dian stocks virtually are exhausted. Linseed oll prices have been high, as has been the price of flaxseed. Sep- tember futures at. Minneapolis for flaxseed have fluctuated widely, ping from about $2.50 per bushel to a8 low as $2.17, Cattle ‘There seems to be peg sen that dairy producers are following oot al to reduce eorion re and evs slpughtert uring first quarter of 1980 show @ decrease of about. 2 per cent from 1929. De- creased consumption rather a ret creased supply was responsible for the ee in the ee a during ‘April. Both receipts at seven leading markets and inspected slaughter of cattle in April were 4 per cent smaller than in April, 1929, and slaughter was 10 per cent below the five-year average for April. of all kinds and grades of cat- tle declined during April. Coli storage holdings of frozen beef in the United States May 1 amounted to 57,000,000 pounds compared with 51,000,000 pounds May 1, 1929, and the five-year Guna of 44,000,000 pounds. logs Present indications are that the seasonal advance in hog prices, in late June or early July, will bé in- fluenced largely by material changes in the industrial situation. The lower level of prices this spring reflects the weaker demand for meats and lard. Larger demands are in prospect dur- Ang the next few weeks, when 1929 fall pigs reach market in volume. Lam ibs Lamb prices continued low during April, the average being the lowest for the month since 1914. The de- cA “That's Mra, Weiriche off for Paris; and er husband just come in from the coast this morning.” fs EPISCOPAL Holy communion, 8 a.m, Church school, 10 a.m. Holy communion and confirmation, 11a. m. Bishop J. Pantz Tyler of Fargo will conduct the confirmation services, FIRST LUTHERAN Avenue D and Seventh street. . Benzon, pastor. y school and Bible class at TRINITY LUTHERAN Avenue © at. Seventh street. 8. Rindahl, ie pastor. Sixth Sunday after Easter, June 1. in hour for 8) Thursday of the First rr if nm church. Choir rehearsal ning at . FIRST EVANGELICAL Seventh street and Rosser avenue, Ira E. Herzberg, pastor, Sunday school, 10 a.m. for all de- partments. Morning worghip at 11, Christian Endeavor, 0 p.m. Evening scrvice at 8, at the city auditorium. Sermon by Rev. C. Smith, Waterloo, Ia. Music will bi furnished by the Bismarck hospital nurses’ glee club. ‘Wednesday, 8 p.m., prayer service. Friday, 8 p.m., choir practice. Saturday, 1: m., catechism class. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST (Scientist) 7 Fourth street and Avenue C. Sunday services at 11 a.m. Subject, “Ancient and Modern Necromancy, Alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism, Denounces Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. Wednest ¥ cyenins testimonial meeting at 8 o'clock. re sding room maintained at 119% Fourth street is open daily, except legal holidays, from 12 to & p.m; junday, 3 to 5 p.m. Suni are welcome to attend these services and to visit the reading room. FREE CHURCH The Minnesota District Societ; the Evangelical Free Church will the Swedish of old v. Arthur Peterson o . D., will be in charge; r Ren Derg’ will be songleadér, and Mrs. erg organist. RO ihe Lith there will be @ Bible in connection with these Sunday, the vices daily, Caris church. * _ FIRS’ Church school, 10 a.m. with classes for all. Mrs. Howard McNutt, superin- tendent. ning worshi Piamiats sien Ber Pre s “On tl oa a Sermon, one Things That Endure’ —Mr. Jackson. June communion service, 12 m. B. Y. :30 p.m, Marguerite at 11. Pr erepowell) well. of ore, ely Wanderer” yetion—The choir. ‘he Game of Christian YTERIAN nd stree' Ga bala AA avenue. Floyd E. ee, pastor. Mornings service at 10:80, KFYR. "— Floyd E. Logee. Organ postlude, “Marche Nuptiale” (Gaune). Church school, 9:30 a.m, and 12 noon. Young people's Evening service Organ prelude, xen)—G Offertor: necke, Sermon, Pentecot t 8. Romance” (Svend- ‘Duryee Morris. (Rei- vening Prayer” ‘The Personal Question of Floyd E. Logee. (Gounod). 30, mid-week service. METHODIST EPISCOPAL iter E, Vater, pastor. Morning worship at 10:30. Organ prelude, “Magnificat” (Ash- ‘ord)—-Miss Ruth: Rowley, or- wanist, ™M’CAB! Wi Anthem, “Lead, Kindly Light” (Lo- rena). - Organ offerto: ‘Adieu” (Friml). Solo, selecte rs. I, A. Acker. n, “Coward or Hero, Which?’ —Walter E. Vater. Organ, postlude, “Postlude in. A’ an. school, 12 noon. Classes for h league, 7 p.m. Evening worship at 8 “Hymn of the Set- Lacey). junset Hour” (Lo- renz). Organ offertory, “Spirit of Spring” (Laurence). Sermon, “The Unconscious Minis- tries of Life”— i. Vater, Organ postlude, ostiude in G” Mendelssohn). Prayer service Wednesday at 8 p. m. RIVERMAN SURVIVES MAD DASH THROUGH RAPIDS OF NIAGARA Father of Eight Children Ready _ to Try Again if Anyone Of- fers ‘inducements’ Niagara Falls, N. Y., May 31.—(7)}— William (Red) Hill, Niagara river man, was a bit bruised and sore today from the buffeting he received in his dash through the rapids below Ni- agara Falls in a specially steel barrel On Decoration day. He said however, he would be fit for‘an- ; | other trip in 24 hours if any induce- ments were offered. é Hill started from the Maid of the Mist landing, on the American side, below the cataract and climbed out of his barrel at Queenston’ dock five hours later. The descent from the still waters just below the falls, through the tumbling waves of the rapids to the whirlpool was made quickly. The barrel, fortunately for Hill, rode near the center of the river and on the crest of the boiling current. It spun several times around the whirlpool and then drifted into a shore eddy, from which it was dis- lodged ‘and towed to Whirlpool point. ‘Hill opened ‘the cover and got out to one his legs and smoke a cig- “A short: time later he re-entered his contraption, and started on the long stretch of the rapids to Queenstown. When the barrel drifted into the still waters at the end of he rapids he paddied his way to the Queenston docks. . Probably the most interested the thousands Y -| women in Starke county's strange their eight -| Homemakers Clubs PRESIDENT PLEADS FOR TOLERANCE AND CHARITY IN NATION} Invokes Lincoln’s Vision of Mod- eration for Peace as Mar- tyr Saw It Amid War Gettysburg, Pa, May 31—(>)— Standing where Lincoln pronounced the immortal words of his Gett; Addréss ‘nearly thfee-score and ten years ago, President Hoover called on the nation today to go forward to its tasks “moved by charity toward all, by malice toward none.” = “His was the call of moderation,” said Mr. Hoover. “We shall be wise to ponder here what precious wealth of human life might have been preserved, what rivers of tears might never have flowed, what anguish of souls might never have been, what spiritual division of our people might have been avoided, if only our leader- ship had always been tempered by the moderation and calm vision of Lin- coln.” Delivering a Memorial Day address, the president said the passing years had brought new problems, and de- veloped new aids to progress, while the union of the states had become & spiritual one, based on common ideals. The Nation's Paths of Glory “The things of the spirit alone per- sist,” he concluded. “It is in that field that the nation makes its last- ing progress. To cherish religious faith and the tolerance of all faiths; to reflect into every aspect of public life the spirit of charity, the practice of forbearance, and the restraint of Passion which reason seeks the way; to lay aside blind prejudice and fol- low knowledge together; to pursue diligently the common welfare and find within its boundaries our private benefit; to enlarge the borders of opportunity for all and find our own within them, to enhance the great- ness of the nation and thereby find for ourselves an individual distinc- tion; to face with courage and con- fident expectation the task set before us, these are the paths of true glory for this nation.” The president said: “Every American’s thought of this great battlefield of Gettysburg flashes with the instant vision of the lonely figure of Lincoln, whose immortal words dominate this scene. No monu- ment has been or can be erected here 90. noble and enduring as that simple address which has become a part of A year as a bride has made Anne ee * THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, MAY 81, 1930 t Home and Abroad Has Affected Farmer Lindbergh 2 seasoned air traveler. i! * * * Anne Lindbergh a Sky Veteran : After First Year as a Bride revealed to us @ new understanding of forces and @ myriad of instruments of physical ease and comfort to add to the joy of life. The growth of communications, of education, of the press, have made possible a new unity of thought and purpose. But the light that guides our souls re- mains the same as that whereby out fathers were led. It ie ae ee kes knowledge, the great inspirations of men’s souls, the ideals which they carry forward. That have lifted the nation to ever greater heights. “The union has become not merely @ physical union of states, but rather is a spiritual union in common ideals of our people. Within it is room for every varity of opinion, every pos- sibility of experiment in social pri of such variety comes and this place. Greater than the tribute |' of granite or bronze remains that memorable message to the American People. That appeal for the unity of our people and the perpetuation of the fundamentals of our democracy is @ vital today in our national think- ing as it was when Lincoln spoke. Behind him were the 70 years of na- tional experience that had passed be- tween himself and Ws n.. His words from their span of the past Tang with courage and assurance for the future. Though no president has been so beset, though no time in our history has been so dark, though never have strong men been-s0 af- fected with doubts, yet in the midst of all that turmoil he found strength icted | to lift his head above the clodds and Proclaim that vision which the pass- ing years have so fully confirmed. “Tod ‘ 7 70 hay vassed “Today near! years have since Lincoln spoke. Ours"ig. a new day and ours new problems ‘of the republic. There are times when these Problems loom ominous and their solution difficult, Yet, great as our difficulties may sometimes seem, we Twelve Months Since She Mar- ried the ‘Lone Eagle’ Have Been Eventful Ones New York, May 31.—(4)—One year ago, May 27, in the living room of her parents’ home in Englewood, N. J., Anne Morrow became the bride of the world’s foremost birdman, Charles A. Lindbergh. She wore a simple white frock fashioned by the village dressmaker who had made her clothes since ‘she was a little girl, and she carried a bouquet of garden flowers picked by her future husband just a few minutes before the ceremony. Since that day the quiet and un- assuming young woman, remembered by her college classmates as studious, dreamy and.so shy that even as a senior she suffered when she had to get up before a class and recite, has: | Lone Learned how to fly and navigate ap e. “Acquired:a glider pilot’s license. Photographed from the air ancient “Ghost Cities” in the Mayan jungle. Attended a birthday party for the while | President of the United States at his reason seeks the way; to lay aside blind prejudice and follow knowledge together; to pursue diligently the common welfare and find within its boundaries our private benefit; to en- large the’ borders of " all and find our own Within ‘them; to enhance the greatness of the na- ‘tion. and. thereby.find for ourselves and individual distinction; to face with courage and it expecta- tion the task set before us, these are would be of little courage if in our| ; concerns we had less. of faith than Lincoln had in his far greater task. “Lincoln’s counsels sounded strange-"| ly when spoken in the midst of war. His was the call of moderation. Our history would be even brighter than it is if his predecessors and his con- temporaries had spoken as temperate: ly as he, if they had.-heen moved. by. charity toward .all, by malice toward none. s -be wise: to-ponder here what precious wealth of human life might have been preserved, what rivers of tears might never have flowed, what of souls need never have been, what spiritual divi- sion of our people might have been avoided, if only our leadership had among | always been tempered by the modera- Lincoln, Since tion and calm vision of age children. .They were the | tiest tor embrace him’ when he set | seed Improving Kitchens] 1: That ay Dakota sore women are quick to grasp ideas for making themselves more: efficitnt and their work lighter is evidenced by He 45 ree ers’ clubs. The record books of these clubs reveal that 312 im- ght color to increase the light in 19 kitch- ens, 13 kitchen stools made or pur- chased, eight kitchen cupboards built, miscellaneous articles, two kitchen drains put in, one kitchen sink pur- chased and a gravity water system in- stalled.in another. In six kitchens | Plans @re under way to put in run- ning water. Twenty-six Starke county home- makers’ club members made a tour of 17 kitchens May 15, 16 and 17 for the purpose of gaining additional ideas on kitchen conveniences, ac- | to Miss Jessie Marion, home | demonstration ,agent of the Agri- | cultural college. HAWAII HAS LONE AVIATRIX Honoluiu.—(?)—Marguerite P. Drew, ® school teacher, is Hawaii's first and ; only woman pilot. | Alebama’s iron deposits will 1 | $90 years, according to a recent esti- mate by engineers. 3 may which we enunclate these-great ideals, whatever the new conditions to which six shelves made for hats, rubbers and | ete! great. paralleled in all human history. .- “The weaving of freedom is and always will be a struggle of law against lawlessness, of individual lib- erty against domination, of unity against sectionalism, of truth and honesty against -demagoguery and misleading, of peace against fear and conflict. In the forming of this pat- tern, the abuse of politics often mud- dies the stream of construct! thought and dams back the flow of well-considered action. Our New Lights in Science “In the solution of the problems of our times we have some new lamps{ cation. The hearing will start at 10 a.m, |WOMAN WINS FLYING TROPRY \ London.—(#)—Lady Mary Bailey, ip recognition of her 18.000-mile flight {to South Africas and return, was awarded the Brittenia trophy to guide us. The light of ecience has 41929 by the Roval Aero elub: : summer ‘camp. 5 Navigated the airplane in which ‘she and her husband on Easter Sun- day set a new transcontinental flight record. Flies 30,000 Miles In all, Anne Morrow Lindbergh has flown nearly 30,0000 miles in these last 12 months. That includes: aoe flights to Los Angeles and re- ‘One 7,000-mile jaunt down over the Mayan jungles and all around the Caribbean sea. A trip out to the Cleveland air races and return. — , ‘ A trip up to Maine and back late last summer after the air races. A swift race as far west as Wichita, Kas., to hunt for the lost T. A. T. Innumerable short hops. Practically all of this flying has been done with the same pilot—her husband. Once she was a passenger on @ comparatively short trip in a T. A. T. transport, and several times she has flown solo. Aside from those occasions, so far as is known, she has never flown with any other pilot. Suffers One “Mishap” Mrs. Lindbergh has experienced one crack-up, which her husband de- scribed as “not an accident, Lote decline to dignify by calling them even mishaps. The “mishap” occurred before they were married when they lost a wheel while in the air and turned over on landing at Mexico City, Feb. 27, 1929. Twice last July, once at Newark airport and once at Columbus, O., they ground-looped on landing. The Lindbergh honeymoon started adventurously enough. All alone in a 38-foot cabin motor boat they cruised for nearly a month after their mar- riagé around Long Island sound and up the Atlantic seaboard. Attend Guggenheim Tests On June 20, back from their cruise, they appeared at Mitchel field, for the beginning of the final tests in the Guggenheim safe aircraft com- petition, and Mrs. Lindbergh went up with the colonel for a short flight. Their next flight carried them across the country in Colonel Lind- bergh’s blue and orange biplane, on an ceca trip of the T. A. T. rout They returned from this trip July 30, ground-looping as they landed at Newark, and a week later hopped down to Washington to be guests at President Hoover's week-end birth- day celebration at his summer camp on the Rapidan river. On their return, Mrs. Lindbergh started learning to fly from the Avia- tion Country club at Hicksville, Long Island. Aug. 23, after nine hours’ instruction, she made her first solo first nd the eit aipioaneal rad and then with a Bly Up to'Maine Next they hopped out to Cleveland for the air races, returning in time to borrow a fast ship and speed out to Wichita to help in’the hunt for the City of San‘Francisco. They returned from that trip Sept. 11. The following day, in a small, low-winged red monoplane, which the colonel at stopping at Nassau en route field after one of her solo Another Solo Flight Jan. 27 Mrs. Lindbergh made a solo flight over Los Angeles—“just to brush up a little on her flying,” the colonel said. Jan. 29 at San Diego she went up in a glider, stayed up six minutes, and won her glider pilot’s license. Until April 18 the Lindi re- mained in California, hopping all up and down the coast in airplanes and gliders while Mrs. Lindbergh boned away on navigation. Then came the record-breaking flight home. Three years ago this month Charles Lindbergh soared out over the At- lantic to Paris and world wide fame. And Anne Morrow, then a little col- lege girl, quiet and shy, with a pen- chant for writing poetry, undoubtedly read about it in the papers up at Northampton, Mass. Two years ago this month, she en- Joyed a triumph of her own—a triumph that would seem much more in her line than breaking aviation records. She was a senior at Smith college then, and she was awarded two prizes for scholarship and Iiter- ary achievement. One year ago this month—Anne Morrow, the poet, laid aside her books and papers and became Anne Mor- row Lindbergh, ‘one of America’s bet~ ter women flyers. Hearings Set for Rail Applications Authority to discontinue its regu- lar agency at Buttzville, and to sub- stitute caretaker service is asked in an application filed with the state board of railroad’ commissioners by the Northern Pacific Railway com- Pany. ‘A hearing was set for 10 a. m., June-5, at Buttzville. The Northern Pacific, in another application, asks authority to discon- tinue its agency at Glover. A hearing will be held at 5p. m., June 4, at the town hall at Glover. Lipstick to the value of $1,750,000 was imported by Germany in 1929. HOME IMPROVEMENTS you can make for as little as*10 a month NO DOWN PAYMENT NEEDEDI All home improvements and. each item ga lepcaped in heed. im SENN psentan ot Naseer © your job st no obligation to you. Phone us todey, : -F.-H. Carpenter Lumber 101 Seventh Street Co. Bhope 116 CLIP AND MAIL THE COUPON TODAY Pchhahubepertroulerpeiety rrasereersinteiepetareiotat~tar decane | | Sechprchensen ted informasion | tin ge eli laa i | Address... Om,