The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 12, 1930, Page 7

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A « EDUCATION CAMPAIGN ON WHEAT SITUATION URGED BY GOVERNOR State Executive Writes to Legge and Farm Board His Views on Grair Production ILLINOIS AIRMAN 1S. | HELD IN CONNECTION WITH MINE BOMBING Murphysboro Aviator, Arrestéd for Investigation, Says He Was Only ‘Sobering Up’ ‘HE POINTS. OUT SOLUTION Murphysboro, Ill, Aug. Paul Montgomery, local aviator, was arrested today by Sheriff William 12—()— |" be obtained to search a home without an affidavit that the liquor sold; and unless the latter is home is free from search. AND NOW COLD WAVE OVERSPREADS NATION |Frosts Reported in New England and Pennsylvania and Many Points Have Big Drop | Hog Cholera Gets Hold in No. Dakota | Fatgo, Aug. 12—)—Hog cholera gaining impetus with the advent ot cold weather, is menacing swine in St. Paul, Aug. 12—(?)—The weath- er almost all over the country took & long cool dive today, in some places almost to the freezing point. In temperatures reported to the As- sociated Press from all sections of the country there were a number of 30's Cass county, veterinarians and raisers in several parts of the county declared today. Seven herds in four townships ha shown evidence of the disease, with Shafer Declares Curtailment Program Must Be Amplified With Knowledge of Facts The need of amplifying the federal | farm hoard’s aoreage curtailment | Program with an*educational cam- paign, intended to give the American . People, particularly the farmers, ac- | curate knowledge of the wheat situa- tion throughout the world, was stress- ed by Gov. George F. Shafer in let- and her titled husband, live apart. She said they found it ie! ents and etill remain Gloria Swanson, film actress, announced in Hollywood that she Marquis Henri de la Falaise, had decided to “the beat of friends.” Se . a CNet Associated Press Photo possible to maintain separate estab- ters to Chairman Alexander Legge and Samuel R. McKelvie, grain mem- ber of the board, the governor said today. } To Chairman Legge, been | Shafer said there should be a “sys- tematic and intelligent educational campaign, giving our people the fun- damental reasons why an adjustment of our wheat production to our do- mestic demands is necessary to the solution of the wheat marketing problem in this country.” Need Accurate Information . “Such a program would give ac- curate information as to the controll- ing facts in this foreign market sit- uation,” he says because “for many years our farmers in the spring wheat section have been told through many sources, both political and nonpoliti- cal, that the trouble with the Ameri- can wheat market was all due to de- fects in our system of marketing and to conditions existing in the domestic market unrelated to production. “I apprehend that the present low prices of wheat will put many farm- ers in such a discontented state of mind that they will be inclined to lis- ten to political agitators and promo- Ss CHENGCHOW ters, who will urge them to resist the farm board's recommendations on wheat acreage reduction and to look to political remedies for the solution,” the governor writes to Legge. Looks For Opposition ? In his letter to McKelvie, Governor Shafer referred to the fact that North Palos, laden with American refugees, ‘Chis map shows the new trouble zone in China where Chinese communist armies are active against loyal Nationalist troops. left corner is held by them, with the captured city Hankow, Kiuklang, and Nanchang are also threatened. The U. S. gunboat, near Changsha. The territory in the lower of Changsha as their base, , Was last reported in the Siang river Dakota had favorably received the acreage curtailment program, but de- Government Troops clared he is “confident there will be considerable opposition to it before Evacuate Changsha long.” a “I think this opposition,” he said,] Hankow, Aug. 12.—(4)—Govern- “willecome from certain political ele- ments who are interested in making political capital out of the present low avheat price ,condition. While these elements will not openly attack the farm board, but, instead probably will continue to praise it in a limited way, yet they will tell the farmers an al- together different story as to the cauae of the present wheat price de- pression, and will dress the story up and make it appear as though the low prices are due to a conspiracy among the private grain dealers in this coun- try and abroad; in fact, this story already has been told here.” LEAGUE LEADERS ~-WININD-BALL Power and Light Wallops Wills; Gambles Run Roughshod Over Bismarck Dairy The league-leading North Dakota Power and Light team nearly scored @ shut-out in its game with the Oscar Will team Monday night in the Bis- marck Diamond Ball league, winning 27 to 1. The Capital Laundry crew got away to @ poor start but had little trouble in winning from the North- western Bell 19 to 5 while Montgom- ery Ward’s were defeating the G. P. Eat Shop 8 to 3 and the Gamble Stores were swamping the Bismarck Dairy, 32 to 2. Monday’s Games Power and Light ... +» 233 163-27 Oscar Wills .. +s. O01 OO— 1 Brown and ‘Cook; Swenson and Storlie. A Gamble Stores .......... 114 179—32 Bismarck Dairy + 101 00—2 Capital Laundry . 115 1200—19 Northwestern Bell 302 000— 5 Meinhover and®rown; Shearn and Zimmerman. Montgomery Ward . 003 011 3—8 G. P. Eat Shop . 003 000 0—3 Prenner and Diehl; Hummell and McCrorie. Team Standings Ww LséPet. Power and Light ..... 10 1, 909 Capital Laundry . a 32 818 Montgomery Ward... 8 3 .727 Gamble Stores .. a 636 Northwestern Bell... 5 ~ 6 455 G. P. Eat Shop ...... 2 9 .182! Bismarck Dairy . gue ee ARe | Will company 1 10 091 Peter Kunz, Farmer Of Kintyre, Dies, 59 Peter Kunz, 59, a farmer of near Kintyre, died in this city Monday morning. Funeral arrangements are for services at Napoleon at 10:30 Wednesday morning, with interment there, Kunz was % native of Russia and had been in this country 25 years. He was born February 29, 1871. Besides his widow, Augusta Kunz, he leaves One son, Joe. HUNT MOUNTAIN CLIMBER Mount Robson, B. C., Aug. 12.—(#) —Search among the ice crags of Mt. Robson for N. D. Waffl, head-mas- ter of Carteret academy, Orange, N. J., was continued today with ~little hope that he would be found alive. He set out at dawn last Tuesday with * two days’ provisions to scale the western rides of the 13,000 foot mountain, loftiest peak in the Cana- dian Rockies. Before departing he ment troops are reported to have evacuated Changsha yesterday and Teoccupation of thé city by commun- ists is said to be imminent. Thousands of Chinese are flecing in terror. Hochien, governor of Hunan, reports from Changsha say, has been tor- turing and executing daily approxi- mately 250 communist suspects. @ reprisal the Reds are said to have sworn to butcher all persons between the ages of 15 and 35, —— LOOT INDIAN VILLAGES Bombay, Aug. 12.—(®)—Looting of villages in the Sind is going on night and day without Ictup. Although troops have been poured into the dis- turbed area by platoons the lawless elements have cut the railway from Quetta making reinforcement moye- ments difficult. The wave of rest- lessness originated at Sukkur last week and spread quickly into sur- rounding villages. ee APPOINT STEVEN RITES Minneapolis, Aug. 12.—(?)}—Funeral services for Leslie A. Stevens, 44, Devils Lake, N. D., his former home, at 2:30 p. m., tomorrow. Mr. Stevens, general sales manager for the Inland Coal-and Dock company, is survived by two sons, two brothers, including ! Lioyd B. Stevens, Cando, N. D., and | his mother, Mrs. B. T, Stevens, also of Cando. —_—_—_—————- | SOUTHERN ARTIST DEAD | Augusta, Ga., Aug. 12—()—Joseph Cranston Johnes, 21-year-old silhou- | -|ette artist of international fame, is’ dead here. His were the delicately in- terwoven initials “JCJ” seen on so many silhouettes in art galleries and, homes of Europe and America. An in-| valid for 19 years, the prodigy whose | imagination, technique and accuracy | of design drew acclaim from the mas- | ters, died at his home yesterday, | , FARGO WOMAN HURT Fargo, N. D., Aug. 12.—(4)—Mrs. Anna M. Lee of Fargo was slightly injured in an automobile accident | near Staples, Minn., Monday, accord- ing to information received here. Minneapolis, who died yesterday att- | °8,0f the trip. er an operation, will be conducted at | EDITOR UNDERGOES OPERATION | offered free theater tickets to persons Mr. ‘Spread of red sorrel weed. lana Mrs. Lee left here Saturday for ioe and were en route home. ‘AIRPLANE MAY MEET ~ LEGGE AT BISMARCK Army Craft May Not Be Able to | Land at Dickinson to Hurry Him to Washington Omaha, Aug. 12.—()—Alexander | Legge, chairman of the federal farm | board, will be rushed tomorrow by jaifplane from Dickinson, N. D., to | Washington, D. C., for a farm relief jfonference with President Hoover | Thursday noon. | Major General Johnson Hagood, commanding officer of the seventh | COrps area. announced today that a, | plane has been sent from Fort Riley, | Kansas, to Dickinson to meet Legge tomorrow morning. He will fly to | Chicago, where another army plane | Will be at his disposal for the second The plane is expected to meet the train at Dickinson at 7:43 a. m. to- morrow. If it is unable to land there the ee beotion will be made at Bis- ee Fargo, N. D., Aug. 12.—(?)—Sidney W. Hooper, city editor of the Fargo Forum and former editor of the North Dakota Agricultural College press service, has been taken to the Uni- ted States war veterans hospital here to undergo a major operation. Hooper's illness is a recurrence of an ailment which nearly cost him his life four years ago. Fa The, Okmulgee, Okla., chamber of commerce, seeking to have every per- Son in the city ‘counted in the census, turning in an unenumerated name. Farmers of Missouri have been warned by S. M. Jordan, state seed investigator, to guard against the Here’s the new Mrs. Plutarco Calles, now on her honeymoon with Mexico's famous “iron general” and former _ presi- dent, whose bride she be- camie at a pri- . vate wedding at General Cal- les’ farm near Mexico City re- cently. Only a few relatives nd four of Cal- les’ closest friends attend- ed the civil ceremony, no religious cere- mony being held. No pic- tures were per- mitted, but this striking photo- graph shows the bride, for- merly Miss Leo- nor Liorente, a famous Mexi- can beauty a she appeared a: an amateur inger during a recent festival. General Calles' first wife died said, “I would rather die on a moun-. tain slope than expire in bed.” several years aro. On Honeymoon With Calles fi Flanigan for investigation in connec- tion with the airplane bombing of mining properties in the vicinity of Providence, Ky., yesterday. Montgomery's arrest followed re- ceipt. of a telephone call from Sheriff Overbeeof Dixon, Ky., that a warrant for the aviator in connection with the bombing outrage had been issued there. Three men “who came here this morning-from the Kentucky coal field conferred with county authorities, ad- vising they had some evidence on Montgomery. The nature of the evi- dence was not revealed. Was “Sobering Up” The aviator, who had talked of a Rome-to-Dallas, Texas, nonstop flight this summer, declined to make any statement other than to deny he had flown in the vicinity of Providence yesterday or that he had any connec- tion with the air raid. Immediately after his arrest he asked for permis- sion to engage counsel, Montgomery's orange and black monoplane answers the general des- cription of the ship that dropped nine bombs in the vicinity of Providence the plane up early yesterday when he was first questioned last night, but said he merely went up for a brief flight to “sober up” after having been intoxicated Sunday night He reported having been a “strange plane” answering the description of the bombing plane near Pinckneyville while he was flying, but said it was too far away for him to identify Pinck- neyville is near here and Murphy boro is about 90 miles from Provi- dence, Ky. May Be Other Arrests Montgomery is 24 years old. His plane is number 508M. Reports yester- day varied as to the number on the bombing plane, but one report was that it was 5088 and another had it 508H. Jackson county authorities + in- dicated Montgomery would be held for questioning by federal authorities. Union mine workers in southern Il- linois have been involved in a fac- tional strife over control of the union for months and recently the reorgan- ized United Mine Workers had at- tempted to unionize the non-union coal fields near Providence. At Dixon, Ky., the Webster county sheriff's office today declined to an- nounce the charge designated in the warrant issued here for Montgomery. out until other suspects were aj prehended. Further arrests were €: pected to be made today or tomorrow, It was said no news would be given| Fb yesterday He admitted having had! Members of Rumania’s turbulent royal family here are pictured together for the first time since the prodigal King Carol's return to the throne. Leaving a Bucharest church after an anniversary requiem in memory of the late King Ferdinand, the new monarch is shown at the right, in the foreground. At the left is the Dowager Queen Marie, and behind her, Queen Helene, who has been reunited with King Carol by official decree. Prince Nicholas, brother f of Carol, is shown in uniform, in the background, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Johnson and ROBBER PAIR MAY | Friday evening. | Mr. and Mrs. Nels Tosseth, Mr. and Mrs, Arne ee Mr. and Mrs. Nick = | Holgerson, My. and Mrs. Gross Broste, Machine Stolen at Brocket Re- ae and hrs Elget Strom, Mr. and . | Mrs. Victor Strom, Mr. and Mrs. Jim sembles One Used in Holdup Loule, Mrs. Alms and children, Mr. chi and Mrs. Willis Gill, Forest and Dor- | of Bank at Michigan othy Little, Henry Anderson, Bert | Hedstrom, Mrs. Davis and children, Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 12—()—| Oliver Tosseth, Reuben Hilda, and Authorities here are of the ‘opinion| Ella Krause, Hank Magnuson, Mr. that an automobile stolen at Brocket|®nd Mrs. Louie King and Marie, Ellis | last night was the one used by the| Gill, John Olson and family, Mrs. two bandits who today robbed the, Carl Landerholm, Victor Coleman, Lamb National Bank of Michigan, Walter and Elsie were some of the N. D. The description of the car,| Ghylin shoppers Saturday night. | owned by ‘Albert ‘Thompson, tallied! Miss Ethel Holgerson is visiting | with that given by the cashier of the With her uncle, Henry Sunquist this bank. The machine, a dark blue coupe, last week. | was stolen some time last night, ac- _ Mrs? L. W. Davis and Eunice spent | cording to information received at the | Saturday with Paul Davis. 1 Sheriff's office. The theft was not-dis-| lL. W. Davis and Paul motored to covered until this. It had no license, Wing Wednesday evening. plates, and had several dents in the! fenders. | the cattle while Mr. Davis and boys While the general level of farm prices jumped up one point over the ——_—_—_—_—_————8 Previous month during the period FY | from March 15 to April 15, it is still i Wild Rose [st polite sbelow the index, of ‘April, | 1929. The pfesent index stands at 127 -|mum temperature of 46, the luwest | program, Leona are in Rock Hill taking care of | vy: are home heading their grain. | “covery was reflected by a sharp 000 every year that their 20,000,000 acres of unproductive forest land re- mains idle, according to Joseph Kit- tredge, Jr., of the U. 8. Forest Serv- ice. lowing procedure: in need of planting; protect it from lic agencies; expand public planting program, and encourage tree plant- ing throughout the state. from cattle tuberculosis. BY MRS. W. H. BROWNAWELL Sheriff R. L. Overby said. . Tom Marx of Braddock was deliv-' Late News i business call here inesday. | Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brownawell of Moffit were calling on relatives here Wednesday evening. TO SUE COMMISSIONER Austin, Minn, Aug. 12—(Pi— Dr. J. J. Morrow, chairman of the state American Legion boxing committee, said today he has en- gaged counsel for action against Ray W. Meehan, 8t. Paul, state boxing commissioner, charging him with slander. last week. Mrs. Ellen Knight left recently to visit her sister, Mrs. Milly Anderson, in Wisconsin. Bismarck visitors Saturday. | The general alarm reported a fire at Braddock Sunday afternoon. We are sorry to report that Ole Feltheim , lost his barn and Fred Fockler, a; valuable assortment of tools, besides | other losses. Jake Voll and Mike Glovais plan on starting threshing the fore part of the week, Reuben Feltheim will be the engineer. ‘ . The telephone man from Braddock was around last week, repairing the phones. i Misses Avis Carlisle and Louise | Bauer of Bismarck spent the week- end at the H. A. Carlisle home. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Saville were trading in Bismarck Friday. \ Mrs, W. H. Brownawell accompan: ied Howard Brownawell of Moffit to Bismarck Saturday, returning with Misses Helen Brownawell and Emma Bailey and Donald Snyder of Bis- marck who spent the week-end here. A number from here visited Pur- sian Lake Sunday afternoon. Sunday visitors at the W. H. Brown- awell home included Donald Snyder, Mr. Smith and Mr. Burgess and Misses Emma Bailey and Helen Brownawell of Bismarck, Mr. and Mrs. Har6ld Brownawell and son,| Bobby, of Sterling, Mr. and Mrs. | Howard Brownawell and small daugh- ter Joyce of Moffit, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Carlisle and son Roger and Miss Ada Saville and brothers Fred and. Lee. Ghylin e By MARGARET DAVIS“ HOOVER CANCELS VACATION Washington, Aug. 12.—(?)— Abandonment of his p roposed western vacation trip to remain in Washington and direct the drought relief program was an- nounced today. by President Hoover. The president expects to spend two or three days a week at his Virginia camp and, if the weather remains cool in Wash- ington, he may shorten the length of his stay there. BABE MAKES 43RD New @ork, Aug. 12.—()—Babe Ruth connected with Waite Hoyt’s delivery for his forty-third home run of the season in the third in- ning at the Yankee-Detroit game today. The ball went over the right field screen scoring Reese ahéad of Ruth, and giving them the game. BOMBS ROUTE TRIBESMEN Bombay, Aug 12—(P)—British military airplanes took a definite offensive today against the Afridi tribesmen who are menacing the northwestern frontier in the vi- cinity of Peshawar. So heavily did the bombers score that the hill warriors withdrew from sec- tions of the Peshwar area. HEADS OF P. Tampa, Fla. Aug. 12.—/P— Leslie E. Crouch, Portland, Ore- gon, attorney, today was elected supreme chancelor of the su- preme lodge of Knights of Py- thias. Miss Hollis Alms has returned to her parenetal home after visiting | with her sister, Mrs. Wilbur Noon of near Wilton. Mr. and Mrs. August Krause were shopping in Wilton Saturday evening. | Eunice Davis spent last Thursday with her cousin, Iva Farley, in Rock | Hill. | Several of the young people spent, | Sunday afternoon at the Rocks. Oscar Magnuson’s children, the Davis chil- aren and Oliver Tosseth were among | the crowd from this part of the/| neighborhood. L. W. Davis was on the sick list Saturday and Sunday. | Oliver Tosseth is staying with his | brother Nels this week helping him head his grain. | Leona Davis spent Friday night and | Saturday with her sister Iva, in Wing | township. | Miss Ida Tosseth -is spending a! short time with her sister Mrs. Ben- | ton Backman of near Wilton. | Mr. and Mrs. Earl Davis and sons | STOCKS TAKE TUMBLE New York, Aug. 12.—()—Re- newed nervousness over the ef- fects of the severe crop damage on the prospects of. business re- decline in the last hour of trading in todays’ stock market. Share prices dropped $2 to more than $15. Three lake states are losing $20,000,- Kittredge suggests the fol- Survey the land ire; plant public-owned land by pub- Oklahoma has its first county free It is Cana- Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Carlisle were! - | Per cent of the pre-war level. American fruit growers can look for keener competition from European | | growers according to a recent report | of the U. S. department of agricul- ture. American ‘apples and pears, which have expe- )tienced minor competition in Euro- | pean markets, are to be challenged Adolph. Renee snd cons threshed | more extensively this year. European |orchardists are planning a drive to sell more of their own fruits in their | own countries, fruits, especially | | and most were 50's and 60's. The highest was 85 degrees at Miami and the lowest 34 at Burville, Conn. Frost was reported in New England approximately $1,000 loss sustained through deaths of the animals. A number of herds west of here have been “posted” for cholera, a new and Pennsylvania and in many places | outbreak is threatening in territory new low records for the date were | near Casselton, where cholera was re- established. The drop was precipitated | Ported about a week ago, and one or in most places trom the extreme heat | more large herds are being watched of the past several weeks, in some assel| instances amounting to a degree an‘ ther territory near Casselton. hour for the past two days. | In some sections there was crop damage by the sudden cold, but this was less than it would have been { the preceding heat and droughi inad |not already done about all the dam- | age there was to do. | Continued cool was the forecast. ‘TORS Rain in a number of sections, low- | DIRECTORS MEET hanging clouds and cool weather to-| Directors of the chamber of com. day promised to alleviate the drought {Merce met last night. Only routine situation in the northwest. business was transacted, Secretary W. At Thief River Falls and Austin it | 4. Furness said today. was raining this morning while light | precipitation was received in thy: past | 24 hours at Campbell, Moorhcad and New Ulm. Duluth reported a mi Mr. and Mrs. Allan Acker and two small daughters, who have been vis- iting W. A. Purness and family, left yesterday by motor for their home in Ogdensburg, N. Y. Mrs. Acker is Mr. Purness’ cousin. PARACHUTE DROP FEATURE Garrison, Aug. 12.—()—Featuring ini- | Garrison's twenty-fifth anniversary Miss Garnett Jacobson, in the state | Minot, made a parachute jump. Dick In North Dakota, precipitatio: Boden, 54, local resident, also made a ranged from .01 of an inch at Bis- {parachute descent Saturda: marck to .32 at Devils Lake. Rain fell | {also at Bottineau, Ellendale, Fessen- | MO: isaarer Crip f supecinad aie State of North Dakota, County of Bur- Milbank, Mobridge and Rapid City | in D |in South Dakota reported light rains,| tric }Lemmon, with a minimum tempera- ee | ture of 56, reported the lowest mark. |* { Billings, Bozeman and Glendive,| Mont., also had light rain. rict Court, Fourth Judicial Dis- Cordner and Nell MM. Reid, , V8. Sallie H. H.” Lowe, Rogers, Alexander McKen P.’ Flannery, John Eber H. Bly, Call, N Cal Call, | erine Raymond, Rachael M. Raymond, John F, Fort, Joseph Leighton, Joseph Leighton, Jr, Alvin C. joligaton, My joseph Leighton, D. M. inman, Darwin yman, Adele L. Inman, W. H. In- yan Mark W. Sheafe, BM. W. Sheate Shoef » C. Burrows, Charle: Duncombe, Cyrus H. Perry, Joseph R-100 to Cruise Over jae Company, a corporation, Newark Provinces, and Hopes to | Home Builders Company a con Ora. Hon, Fran nk B. Al. Make Return Record len, on a Fleuchaus, m, A. J. Conover, 1. G. Bentley, Alice Bent- ley, and all other persons unknown claiming any estate or interest in, or lien or encumbrance upon the Property described in the complaint, Defendants, SUMMONS: he State of North Dakota to the above named defendant: You are hereby summoned to swer the complaint in the above ej titled action, which is filed in ¢ office of the Clerk of the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District in and for the County of Bi St. Hubert Airport, Montreal, Aug. | 12.()/—The British dirigible R-100| will cast off from its mooring mast at! 9 o'clock tomorrow night, eastern | standard time, on its return journey to Cardington, England, it was an- neunced ‘nday. It is believed the airship will cruise over the maritime provinces and put | out to sea over the Grand Banks, and |!) that the journey back to Cardington | 3'{9,0f North Dakota and to serve can be made in record time with fol-| complaint on the subscribers at there lowing win | of ice in the, City of Bismarck, in u, exclusive of the day of such west crossing on her trip to Canada| service and in case of your failure to last week. Liquor in Home Not | Violation of Statute| | Miami, Fla., Aug. 12.—()}—Posses- sion and use of intoxicating liquor in the home by the family and guests does not constitute a violation of fed- eral law, Federal Judge Ritter ruled here today. The court also held that liquor may be manufactured in the home for the use of the family and guests. While manufacture is a technical violation, Judge Ritter decided no warrant can appear or answer, judgifent will be taken against you’ by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated this 15th ER’ and E. WALLACE, Attorneys for Plaintiffs, Post Office Address Bismarck, North Dak: |'To the above defendants 1 please take notice that the itled action is brought to auiet_ title and determine adverse claims to the following described real property: Lots 6, 7, 8 9, 10, 11, and 12 in Block 43 Flannery &' Wetherby Ad- dition to the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, WILLIAM LANGER and The usual IT IS DIFFICULT to imagine the world today without some of the things that make our living in it so pleasant and com- fortable. How into an automobile, and look for the news of the world in the newspaper—every day of our lives, Another of these usual, invaluable things, accepted as part of the routine of existence, is the guidance given by the advertisements wants from day to day. We read them. They help us to save time and and more fully. Every day we can get things we want with the greatest possible satis- Yaction to ourselves. They tell us of new conveniences and comfort of whi They help us to get down-to-the-dollar satisfaction. assure us of proved values. Advertisements are among the necessities today. . . read them regularly Bismarck Tribune things naturally we lift the telephone receiver, step in The Bismarck Tribune in supplying our money. And our lives go on—more easily the advertisements suggest ways in which ich we would not otherwise have known. They Phone 32 Advertising Department dian county, and was one of the 20 new counties in the United States to be added to the modified accredited area in March, having hot more than 0.5 per cont ef bovine tuberculosis in iti spent Sunday with Earls parents, Mr. | and Mrs. Luther Davis. | Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Alms are vis- | ing Mr. and Mrs. Nels Alms. Paul Davis spent Saturday night | its herds. me Sunday. with his parents. rs: L. W. Davis, Margaret ana |

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