The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 31, 1930, Page 6

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6 GUTWORM CONTROL - MEANS IN POISONED WN YY, La Ly SS BAIT, MUNRO ADVISES Other Methods Are Trapping Under Boards, or Protect- ing Plants by Collars All species of cutworms in North | Dakota, with the exception of the pale western cutworm found only in the western part of the state, can be | satisfactorily controlled with poison ; bait, according to Prof. J. A. Munro, | entomologist at the Agricultural col- lege. This statement is in answer to | a number of inquiries which have been received at the college on the subject of cutworm control. Following is a poison bait recom- mended by Mr. Munro: Field quan- tity—bran 100 pounds, molasses 1 gallon, Paris green 4 pounds, water to moisten. Garden quantity—bran 1 quart, molasses 1 tablespoonful, Paris green 1 tablespoonful, water to moisten. Mix thoroughly to the con- sistency of a crumbly mass. For best results the bait should be applied in the evening of a warm day and one application, if applied properly, will completely destroy the worms. The bait should be scattered lightly along the rows or broadcast over the infest- ed ground. The field quantity as given above is sufficient for about 7 acres of infested ground. Two other methods of control adapted to the garden cutworm are Suggested by Mr. Munro. These are trapping under boards and the pa- per collar methods. The former is carried out by laying down boards and allowing them to remain during the period of greatest activity of the worms. Each day the boards should be lifted and all worms under them killed. The paper collar method pre- vents worms from coming in contact with the plants, but is only practical where few plants are to be protected. The pale western cutworms cannot be satisfactorily controlled by the use of the poison bait, states Mr. ‘Munro, because they feed mainly un- Gerground. Proper rotation and soil cultivation appear to be the best con- trol methods for this species. A five year rotation or modification of it, which includes corn or summer fal- low for the first year; wheat as a nurse crop for sweet clover the sec- ond year; sweet clover, pastured or harvested third year; flax for fourth year, and barley, oats or wheat for the fifth year is recommended as control measure against pale west- ern cutworms. President Hoover, shown at his desk, is going to join the great tourist caravan this summer on his vacation. Visiting five national parks he will see Old Faithful geyser (left) in Yellowstone and possibly the scene in the Grand Canyon shown at top. Washington, May 30. — (#) — The great American vacation beckons to} President Hoover this summer. | Like uncounted thousands of folks | from seaboard to seaboard, he is go- | ing to “get into the car’ and tour; the heaped up wonders of nature around which the government has thrown a protecting arm in the na- tional parks system. Glacier, Yellowstone, Estes, Yo-/ semite, and the Grand Canyon are the national parks which the presi- dential party will tour in the cener:) named. P.E.O. CONVENTION | WILL OPEN TUESDAY Mrs. Zora Knight, Vice Presi-| A common impression among many people of the state is that the mix- ing of sulphur with seed before plant- ing will insure against cutworm in- jury, according to Mr. Munro. This supposition is erroneous, as sulphur or any other common repellent will soon lose its effect after coming in contact with the soil. Chicago Gangster i | \ Slain by Gunfire aR Chicago, May 31.— (AP) — Philip Gnolfo, known as a professional Chi- cago killer, was slain, two compan- ions were wounded and a 14-year-old boy was struck by a stray bullet in a gang attack on the west side today. Gnolfo’s wounded companions were William Carnedo, Toledo, O., and Joseph Fiannca, Rochester, N. Y. A machine gun, a shotgun and revolvers were used in the attack. Gnolfo was forced by the attackers, who trailed him in an auto, to drive his own auto over a curb. Nineteen bullet holes were found in his car. Fiannca and Carnedo leaped from the wrecked car and fled. They were found hiding a short distance away. The wounded boy, Edward Zlattos, ‘was caught in the fusillade of shots as he walked with his twin brother on the sidewalk. He was shot in the legs and arms. Gnolfo, police said, was a former member of the Genna gang, west side alcohol venders. He was known as a pal of Orazio de Tropea, who throughout the west sidé was termed “the scourge.” Also, he was a close friend of Philip Ababa, another notor- ious hoodlum. Both Ababa and de ‘Tropea have been slain in gang feuds. The attack took place in the Canal Port district, an. Italian section on the fringe of the stockyards district. ‘The slayer’s auto was believed to con- tain five or six men. English Peeress May Attend Legion Meet Crookston, Minn. May 31.—()— Lady Astor, whose activities in the. English parliament have furnished many a front-page story in the news- papers of this country where she was born, may attend the convention of the Minnesota department of the American Legion August 4, 5 and 6. State officials of the North Dakota Legion will attend. An old friend. of her girlhood days in Virginia, Mrs. A. E. Amundsen of Little Falls, president of the State Legion Auxiliary, has received assur- ances from Lady Astor that she will attend, depending on whether she will carry out her plan to visit this coun- try this summer. If she comes to the United States she is certain to attend the conven- tion and to make a tour with the of- ficers and delegates to Winnipeg. climaxing the sessions, she informed Mrs. Amundsen. Other distinguished visitors expect- ed at the Crookston convention in- Mrs. Donald Macrae, Des Moines, Towa; the national adjutant, Jim Barton of Iowa; Mrs. Ruth Bryant Owen, prominent in national politics; Mrs. Edith Rogers, president of the Canadian Legion Auxiliary of Mani- toba and a member of the Manitoba parliament, and notables from ad- joining states. AUSTRALIAN HEADS ADVENTISTS San Francisco, May 31—(7)—An Australian, the Rev. C. H. Watson, of Sydney, has been chosen the new head of the general conference of Seventh Day Adventists, meeting here in the 42nd annual session of the de- nomination. TO DRUM AT FUNERAL Grand Forks, N. D., May 31.—(>)— ‘The Grand Forks Legion drum and bugle corps expects to attend the funeral services in Fargo Sunday of ‘“Maruce D. Arneson, former Grand Forks business man, who died sud- dent Supreme Chapter, Will Be Principal Speaker Delegates from all 18 chapters of the P.-E. O. Sisterhood in North Da- kota are expected to arrive in Man- dan Tuesday for the sixteenth annual convention of the organigation. Ses- sions will continue through Thursday. Chapter H, of Mandan, is hostess to the convention this year, and the Mandan women have arranged t0| i; open the convention with a banquet Tuesday evening at the “Lewis and Clark. hotel. An address by Mrs. Winifred Benson, Valley City, state president, and a playlette by the B. I. L’s, organization for husbands of members, will be features of the en- tertainment which is to be followed by a reception. Mrs. Zora Knight, Tecumseh, Okla., first vice president of the supreme chapter, is to be the honored guest at the convention, and will give her ad- dress on “What it Means to be a P. E. ©.” at the Wednesday. morning ‘session. * Other events scheduled for the first morning are an address, “Opinion Forming.” by Mrs. Lucy Barber, Wah- peton; the introduction of the new chapter formed last week in Minot, by Mrs.. Elsie Hicks, Minot, state or- ganizer; and the welcoming of na- tional officers, past presidents, and state officers. Mrs. George F. Shafer, wife of Governor Shafer will extend greetings. A memorial hour, When tribute will be paid to members of the organiza- tion who have passed on during the year, will-be conducted at the after- noon session, and Mrs. Ross Young, Bismarck, will give the memorial. ad- dress. Mrs. Carrie Bonebrake’ Simpson, Grand Forks, a member'of the P. E. ©. record board, will address the) gathering, taking as her topic, “The Mecca of P. E. O.” Chapter H Will conduct a| model meeting. At both sessions musical numbers ll be given by P. E. O. members. Chapter H will entertain the dele- gates at a luncheon at the. Presby- terian church Wednesday noon, and that evening the visiting women will be guests at a dinner at Riverside inn, Routine business, committee re- ports and the election and installa- tion of officers will take place Thurs- day. Addresses by Mrs. Claudia Grif- fin, second vice president, Grand Forks; Mrs. Hartie Heimes, Valley City; and Mrs. Lenna Graves, James- town; will feature the morning meet- Mrs. Ollie parca Beach will report chapter act ies.” State officers who will attend are Mrs. Benson, Valley City, president; Mrs. Mary J. Hudson, Beach, vice president; Mrs. Griffin, Grand Forks, second vice president; Mrs. Hicks, Minot, state organizer; Mrs. Jessie Burnett, Fargo, recording secretary; | Mrs. Carrie Gowland, Dwight, cor- re#\onding secretary; and Mrs. Grace French, Bismarck, treasurer. Officers of Chapter H are Mrs. Anna Miller, president; Mrs. Luella | i $ . Char- clude the national auxiliary yeesident, | Watson, vice President; Mrs. lotte Stewart, recording 3 Mrs. Fannie Bowers, treasurer; Mrs. Inez Scothorn, chaplain, and Mrs. Agnes Lang, guard. Members of the two Bismarck chapters, F and N. will be in attend- ance at all of the sessions. BYRNE’S CAR STOLEN The Chevrolet sedan of Robert Byrne, secretary of state, was stolen Friday night from in front of the Paramount theater. Up to this after- noon neither he nor the police or sheriff had obtained any trace of the car. Tt bears license number 2332. CAR BURNED A Chandler car owned by Qscar Schneider caught fire at Fort Lincoln about 9 o'clock last evening and was ruined. Schneider had no explana- tion of the fire, except that the gas pipe apparently broke. It is estimated that the moderniz- | ing of old buildings during 1929 cost West Virginia ‘Dead (Senly Wednesday in El Paso, Texas. | More than $00,000,000. ¥ The motor cavalcade of clerks, secret service men, photographers, and ‘newspapermen, will be part of @ summer procession of flivvers and limousines that will’ carry upwards of 2,000,000° tourists. That was the attendance at national parks last year. It is expected to increase this year. Each’ of the five national play- grounds the president will visit has @ personality of its own, from the richly colored rocks of Giacier, Pigmented by the upthrust of a world in the agony of formation millions of years ago, to the world wonder of the Grand Canyon. Glacier national park, where the president is expected to spend a week in fishing, is in northwestern Montana, and encloses 981,681 acres. From Glacier, the executive party will go to the Yellowstone and Estes’ parks, and then the president will continue to his home at Palo Alto, Calif. On the return trip, Yosemite and the Grand Canyon parks will be viewed. | Man’ Comes to Life | tics ail: > Logan, W. Va., May 31.—(4)—Five hours after he was believed dead, Edgar Cornelius, 23, Liberty, Ind., was resuscitated in a morgue today as undertakers prepared to embalm | his body. He was taken to a hospital where his condition was reported good. Cornelits had been in the Logan hospital suffering from hemorrhages. He left the hospital yesterday with- out notifying officials and was found unconscious last night by a physician at Taplin, near here. The physician brought him to the county jail here and planned to consult hospital au- thorities about his case this morn- ing. Shortly after Cornelius was taken into the jail, prisoners notified jailers he had died. . As no signs of life. were apparent, the man was taken to the morgue. When undertakers arrived to embalm the body they found Cor- nelius breathing faintly ‘tnd applied re aid treatment, which revived im. + | City-County Briefs | Sheriff John Gates, of Fort Yates, is in the Bismarck hospital receiving ; ronment for an attack of rheuma- H. L. Woll, superintendent of schools at Ashley, was in Bismarck today to receive his mother, Mrs. Magdalena Woll, of Vancouver, Wash., who came down, from Minot this afternoon to begin a two-months va- cation visit with her son. RHODODENDRONS' BLOOMING GALA TIME IN ASHEVILLE Asheville, N. C.—(?)—Asheville’s third annual rhododentron festival will be held about the middle of June, during; the. week when the rare mountain flower is at the height of . | its beauty. A mammoth parade, social affairs, sports events, demonstrations of mountain songs and dances all will have their place on the program in addition to tours into the mountains where rhododendron blooms will be found in profusion. One of the largest and most beau- tiful fields of the flower is found near the summit of Mount Mitchell, highest peak east of the Rockies. It also grows within the area of the proposed Great Smoky Mountains na- tional park and the Pisgah national forest. All these places are accessible by automobile. BERLIN RAISES FLOWERS AT CITY POWER PLANTS Berlin—(#)—Flower raising has become:a side line to generating elec- tric current. ‘The city of Berlin has built a num- ber of hothouses near its electric pow- er plants and pumping stations. These hothouses are heated with the waste steam from the power houses and in them flowers are raised. Results have exceeded expectations in that imports of flowers from Hol- land and Southern France have de- creased considerably. ‘The new enterprise thus helps to improve the German trade balance. NOTICE OF SCHOOL ELECTION (Special District—Annual Election) Notice Is Hereby Given, That on the first Tuesday in June, being June 3rd. 1930, an annual election will be held t Will School, in the Special School istrict of Bismarck No. 1, County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, for the purpose of electing the following member of the Board of Education: One member to serve for a term of three» Bg for the City of Bis- mate poils'will be opened at 9 o'clock ind -closed-at 4 o'clock p.m. of a.m. that day, u ‘Dated Bismarck, N. D., this 17th day of May, 1930. By order of t! <RICHA 24 he Board of Education, RD PENWARDE: 31; 6/2 Clerk. Sealed: proposals (with certified check of $50.00) are requested for painting of the William Moore School, full particulars furnished by Superin- tendent Saxvik. Bids to be opened at | the 4 | Dated at Bismarck, N..D.. May igh School June 10th at 8:00 P. M. LOWER STEAM RATES APPROVED BY BOARD Northwestern Public Service Company Continues Pol- icy of Reduction The state railroad board this morn- ing approved reduced steam rates filed by the North Dakota Power and Light company. For commercial and domestic use the new rates will be: First 100,000 pounds, at 70 cemts per 1,000; next 100,000 pounds at 60 cents per 1,000; all over 200,000 z.. at 50 cents per 1,000. her reduction is In addition, a to be applied to consumers reaching @ total of 700,000 pdéunds from and after September 1 each year. When the accumulated consumption of any customer reaches 700,000 pounds, then the entire bill will be computed at 50 cents on months. prior to that in which the 700,000 total is attained. The same 50-cent rate will apply to succeeding months of the year also. The steam rate reductions are part ; of the policy of the new holding com- pany, the Northwestern Public Serv- ice, to reduce all rates. The electric ‘rates already have been cut, Mexico City, the capital of Mexico, dates, traditionally, from the year 1325 or 1327, when the Aztecs settled on an island in Lake Texcoco. NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that that cer- tain mortgage, executed and delivered by John L. Baker, mortgagor, to J. L, Bell, mortgagee, dated the 2nd day of November in the year of our Lord, one thousand nine hundred and nine- teen, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh County and state of North Dako the 15th day of November, A. D. and recorded therein in book 159 | Mortgages on page 140, and assigned by said mortgagee by an instrument in writing to Bismarck Loan & In- vestment Company, @ corporation, dated the 10th day of December, A.D. 1919, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on December 24th, “A. D. 1924, and duly recorded therein in book 175 of Assignm on page 192, and which said mortg: was thereafter assigned by an-instru- ment. in writing by said Bismarck Loan and Investment Company, a cor- poration, to J. L. Bell, as the admin- istrator of the esti Taylor, also known as Caroline nelly ‘Taylor, deceased, dated the 17th day of January, A.D.’ 1930, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on January 20th, 1930, and duly recorded therein in book 175 of Assignment of Mortgages on page 510, will be foreclosed by sale of the premises in such mortgage and here- inafter described at the front door of the Burleigh County, North Dakota, court house in the city of Bismarck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota, 'a the hour of 10 o'clock A.M., on ‘the 12th day of June, A. D, 1930, to.satisty the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same ai as fol- lows: the south-et irter (SEK) of section twenty-one (21) in town- ship one hundred and_ thirty-eight (188) north, of range seventy-six (76) west of the fifth principal meridian situated in Burleigh County, North pavers will be d h mort: ere will be due on such mor! rs sn om ribs at the date of sale the sum of e hundred ‘and thirty-four dollars fifty-eight cents ($834.58), besides the costs of this foreclosure. Dated May 3, 1930. J. L. Bell, as assignee of mortgagee. George M. Register and « George S. Register, Attorney: for said assignee, of said assignee of said mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 8/3 10 17 24 31; 6/7 PROPOSALS Sealed proposals for the erection of | a frame addition to the L ‘School Houne, will be received fhy 1 Board of.Lincoln School Di ‘38, Burleigh County. N. D., at ftice of Van Horn & Ritterbush, arehitecta. 209 Seventh St., tamarck, N-D. until not leas ount of in renerved to reject any Fe on file at the office of vy chitect Privilege reserved to reject any Gr all | 31st, 1930. offers. By order of Board of Educa- tion. > . PENWARDEN, +B/ 29-31; 6/4-7-9 Clerk. | DANIEL McDONALD. Pres. WM. B. FALC y » Clerk, 6/31; 6/7-14-20 N SESSA SSS SSSR SS SASSER Subscribe Now to the Bismarck Tribune ‘And secure the World’s important events daily through The Tribune leased wires of the Associated Press, the daily market reports, and the following ‘The daily Gumps, Freckles and His Friends, Mom’n Pop. Salesman Sam, Boots and Her Buddies, Gasoline Alley and Our Boarding House. In addition to these you get Four Big Pages of Sunday Comics Every Saturday which include the Sunday Gumps, Harold Teen, Moon Mullins, and Gaso- line Alley. 1 year -(in'North Dakota) .....$5.00; by carrier in Bismarck .......$7.20 6 months (in North Dakota) ... 2.50; by carrier in Bismarck, 6 mos... 3.60 8 months (in North Dakota) ... 1.25; by-carrier in Bismarck, 3 mos. .° 1.80 SUBSCRIPTION BLANK The Bismarck Tribune, ’.. . Bismarck, N. Dak. Enclesed find .+.....for- which send:me the Daily, Tribune for ............... Months .......cec0cceceee, Name .... * Cut: out: this-coupon—Fill in and mail. to. the circulation department of - The Bismarck Tribune BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Sys ~ SSS eee eccone Postoffice Address ..................State......ssee PLEASE WRITE PLAINLY TO, AVOID MISTAKES B 1 1 aa ( ra 5 i 4 a “4 a P 4 a Be 1 4

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