The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 22, 1932, Page 3

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] THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1932 3 § Corn Show Great Aid to || oursosrpinc House *KINGRISH’ LONG IS {isis ih) ae Rt hae Naty 4 P. e e So have been enough to give each fam-! Martin, and Carl V. Chickawick, rogressive gricu ture Ai {ily an income of $3,100. We're not! Anamoose, came from Austria. A ¥ | ue for cau Cree ve cn SPREE MAS RAST f ¢——______________» en even ha’ istributed eac | Boosts Corn Show | By Ahern | NOW THAT YOU'VE FOUND Your # MONEY, DON'T GO HIDING IT IN TH’ VACUUM CLEANER Ole MEAT GRINDER For SAFETY! EITHER BANK IT,OR SPEND 1TP—I'D ~ SUGSGEST THAT You BUY A COUPLE THOUSAND HOMING PIGEONS ~~ THAT'S AN INVESTMENT , ge CAN'T LOSE ? oe A, aw, Lav~t am cone A, TO USE MY MONEY IN THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE! | | REFIT MY LABORATORY | FOR EXPERIMENTAL WOTeK / “A EGAD, VERY SHORTLY IT WILL SHOW You A SMOKING PIPE I HAVE INVENTED ,THAT DOES NOT ‘REQUIRE MATCHES fmally would Hinve had al nscbie of | Gastiy dene Gin ekete eae: x a ‘ome ©} a $1,600 for the year. But 50¢ men|cream now to Armour Cream made more money in 1930 than allj¢ries, Bismarck, the rice. wheat and cotton farmers oe put together.” HEAR Huey P. Long, U. $ Senator from i To- night a‘ 8:00 0” Auditorium, in behalf of Frank- lin D. Roosevelt for President. in Sheridan county, not one has been| Broadcast over KFYR at 8:30 i ist, pejee > M_ Ady. a ontirmed wily albbecat serge |e: The latest to be granted|P. M.—(Pol. Adv. | where he spoke en route to Bismarck. = — = He will speak at the City Auditorium here at 8 p. m. For example, Long says he always has good weather. It may rain be- fore he arrives or after he leaves but not while he is present. The per- Ppetual political sunshine of the Long | disposition will not, apparently, per- mit rain in its presence. At Fargo Long ripped into con- servative Democrats with as much gusto as he assails conservative Re- publicans. As for Franklin D. Roo- Sevelt, he asserted that the Demo- cratic presidential candidate is the “greatest liberal in the country.” That, he said, is why Senator Nor- ris is supporting him. And as for ‘Serves to Answer Many Ques- tions Regarding Crop Which Farmer Might Ask Louisiana Senator Who Speaks Here Tonight, Demon- strates Optimism Editor's Note: J. G. Haney, who wrote the following article, is @ director of the state corn show. | q Affiliated with the agricultural | experiment department of the In- | ternational Harvester company, Haney has been a practical farm- er for years. He makes his resi- dence at Grand Forks. He ex- us yPects to attend the corn show ~ next week, following a tour of the Missouri Slope area, during which he has been staging demonstra- tions looking to increasing the ™ farmers’ interest in corn, FOUR GET CITIZENSHIP McClusky, N. D., Oct. 22.—Of the| last 11 applications for cit zenship on which examinations have been held Senator Huey Long, Louisiana “Kingfish” who will add his bit to Bismarck’s political whirl tonight, is ! ¢ By J. G. HANEY The state corn show to be held here | # | next week has taken a prominent \ place among the institutions of our state that are helping to bring about |: @ more permanent and successful ag- riculture. While it is true, red men depended largely on corn 200 years before white men settled this region, it is only in recent years that corn LAST TIMES TONIGHT Tom Mix in “Rider of Death Valley” A Great Human Drama Lives on the J. G. HANEY has come to have a significant posi- Norris, Long said: “Norris is my cr tion in our agriculture, Canada. Seed of this same variety of leader in the senate. What Norris Screen With a rather tardy recognition of corn taken from the corn belt, would not have more than tasseled out on Me Cae iudslial Y Gaal ah these Canadian farms. By careful does, I do.” Long expressed both personal and ou small grains was hazardous, great- Political frinedship for Gerald P. selection and following good cultured er interest began to be shown in corn. = Nye, junior North Dakota senator e ‘This new interest raised pertinent | Methods we have adapted this corn and’ another Norris disciple. questions among the farmers of this |‘? the climate end need of these sec- He conceded Hoover only two region because many of them had | “ons. states, Connecticut and Vermont. never grown corn, particularly under Support Corn Show ve with a possibility that the president conditions as found here. What va-|_ The great value of corn was never may carry either Maine or Rhode riety, where to obtain sced, how and| ore forcefully demonstrated than in Island, and limited the president to where to plant, cultivate, harvest and | 1931, when there was almost a com- ~ A maximum of 35 electoral votes. select seed and how to use the corn | Plete failure seiraen eae chon order of thelr standing were: Seniors | "Not ® bit more than that. "Not one y . vote t's all. 's the The state corn show is really a re- | * és * y , 1] Long was to speak at Steele at 2 sult of the demand for an answer to| hearty support of all commercial, in- | CWA LtEMS'O jay ‘Ethel Rolfson, Althea Hollensworth,| p. m., from a sound-truck which will these many questions. The most su dustrial and educational interests of —| Frances Cox and Salva Maly. carry his voice for three blocks or cessful corn growers and the best-|°UF state. It certainly is a revelation, (By The Associated Press) Juntors —- Harold Mork, telen| More, but does not expect to use this informed men of this region have been | #5, Well as an education, to view the True to His Name eS fork, Helen) equipment here unless he gets an attracted to these exhibitions and the |;Mibits at the annual state corn show. ChicazoThere's something im a|H#Umphreys, Emerson Logee, Ruth] overflow crowd. »¥ benefit. from personal conservation, | {an¥ mor id tare ’|Members of Scottish Rite to|name, sometimes. William Quick was|S@Xvik, Philip Gorman and Phyllis! Indications were that he will have 4 [> \iviewing the thousands of exhibits, and time to nieces abs a Seles, Tait GHOUgH 10 ontoh® Davie Colin's [Olah a near-capacity audience or better because of the attention which his ideas and methods of campaigning pare attracted throughout the coun- ry. The Fargo auditorium was jammed by persons who came to hear him there Friday night. listening to discussions from the plat- , form by corn specialists, is doing more peal Nee ra i Se vodriiniben than could be done in any other way | Steater. y M 5 js /cars of corn and send it in, and then} ‘Bo answer questions pertinent to this; * # great crop. A big value of the corn | Come and see how it compares with! show is to indicate what varieties and | ther similar samples. If you win, or methods of culture will produce the don't win, try to grow and select a Gather in City Novem- hand in his pocket while he was at- ber 15-18 | tending a baseball game and Judge |Mahiman, Peggy Jane Skeels, Donna ir Rudolph Desort in criminal court/Jean Davis, Marian Pederson, Ruth —_—_ | Sentenced Cohen to three months in| Rand, Esther Miller, Lillian Hedstrom, Scottish Rite Masons from all| Jil as a pickpocket. Ruth Christianson, Marion Little, Norma Peterson, Cornelia Tracy, Ver- parts of the state are expected to Expects Little Hippo | Sophomores—Eugene Fevold, Mary & better exhibit next year. The corn non Schroeder, Leland Kitchen, \ best crop. At the first corn show ever held in a community not far fram Bismarck, in 1930, there were over 100 samples of corn shown, representing practically every variety—many of ; Show has been a great help to North | Dakota, and will continue to boost | the best interests of our state just in |proportion to the support received from those whom it helps the most— them mixed—that could be matured | = in this state. In the older corn re- the good corn growing farmers. gions, there are only a few varieties; a a Suspect in Holdup shown, because experience has taught | that only a few are best adapted and | Deman ds Hearing| the others have been dropped. Also| N. D., Oct. at this first corn show, it was clearly indicated that few had ever before! Fargo, 22.—(P)—Ed had the experience of trying to select a 10-ear samp of corn for show pur- poses. Big Ears Attractive In many cases, the exhibitor—for the first time—brings in the largest ears of corn he can find—often with- out regard for any othcr qualification. ‘We believe there is too strorig a ten- dency among even good corn growers | to try to grow ears too large. They ripen successfully during exceptional years, such as the last several have been, but the greener corn is when frosted the “sourer” it becomes—lit- erally as well as figuratively. The corn show helps to answer the question that every ear of corn should be asked before it is planted—will it grow and mature a satisfactory yield before frost. Any winning 10-ear sample of 1932 corn shown at the corn show must have these qualities. Many varieties are early, but too small, while others are large, but too late. Corn Easily Improved \ Corn is relatively a new crop, as compared to the small grains, and de- sirable qualities can, by reasonably- careful selection, be improved; such as wtime of maturity, height of stalk, * depth of grain, etc., and it is only by careful selection and following pro- per cultural methods, that we can hope to preserve or improve the value of this great crop. ' ‘We speak from 20 years’ expericnce in growing and selecting a pure strain yellow corn in North Dakota, when we say that we believe there is greater possibility in following careful selec- corn, not only at our Larimore, N. D., (Overall Slim) Vandiver was back in the city jail Saturday after arraign- ment at Hatton on charges of first-| degree bank robbery in connection | with the Merchants National Bank} ‘holdup Sept. 14. Date of the pre- liminary hearing he demanded was set for 2 p. m. Oct. 25. Reasons for Vandiver's return here were two-fold: Safety, the Hatton jail having no night watchman; and ‘for further questioning in the mur- der of Leif Erickson of Fargo in 1930. ; | At Hatton bond was set at $5,000 by | Justice of the Peace R. W. Johnston. Under questioning, the atcused man clings to his story he knows nothing of either the bank robbery or the slaying. COLBY ATTACKS HOOVER 1 Aberdeen, S. D., Oct. 22.—()—Bain- | bridge Colby, New York attorney who; served as secretary of state under} Woodrow Wilson, in a Democratic) party campaign address here Friday night, attacked the leadership of; President Hoover and criticized the government's operation under the Re- publican administration. MONTANA MAN DIES Bozeman, Mont., Oct. 22.—(#}—Nel- son (Bud) Storey, 58, former lieuten- ant governor of Montana and prom- inent business and mining man of Bozeman, died unexpectedly after a stroke of apoplexy Friday. He suf- fered the stroke while at the wheel Broadcast over KFYR at 8:30 ; be exemplified. gather here Nov. 15, 16, 17. and 18 for the annual reunion of the order in the Valley of Bismarck, accord- ing to announcement Saturday. Numerous degrees will be conferred during the four-day session and, in addition, there will be numerous so- cial functions. ‘The program will begin on the jmorning of Tuesday. Nov. 15, when the fourth to the eighth degrees, in- clusive, will be presented by the Bis- marck-Mandan Lodge of Perfection, ) of which John O. Lyngstad is vener-|°¥@9ky and very aristocratic. He able master. Following lunch in the temple din- ing room, the ninth to 13th degrees will be presented and in the evening, following dinner, the 14th degree will! The Bismarck-Mandan Chapter of | Rose Croix, of which George F. Dul- lam is wise master, will have charge of the program for Nov. 16. Follow- ing lunch in the temple dining room! the 15th, 16th and 17th degrees will be presented and the 18th degree will be exemplified following dinner. The philosophic and chivalric de-j grees, from the 19th to the 30th, will; be given by the Bismarck-Mandan| Council of Kadosh Noy. 17. Louis F.| Smith is commander of the local council. This program will begin at 9:30 a. m., and continue until evening, with intermissions for lunch and{ dinner. { The Bismarck-Mandan Consistory. of which Supreme Court Judge A. M. Christianson is Master of Kadosh, will exemplify the 31st degree during | the afternoon of Nov. 18 and the 32nd degree in the evening follow- ing the traditional banquet in the temple dining room. What is said to be the world’s largest plow cuts furrows from 36 to 42 inches deep, and three feet wide, inj California. | NOTICE { Registration date for No-' A. C. ISAMINGER, Hollywood.—Lotus has lost her job as Hollywood's biggest star because she soon will become a mother. The director of “King of the Jungle” is in a fix, for Lotus will not be easy to replace. Lotus is a hippopotamus. Brand Drew, Robert Vogel, Edward Cole, Florence Rupp, Wilson Davis, John Guthrie, and James Taylor. Freshmen—John Oswalt, Raymond Yeasley, Emma Langer, Alvin Ode, Hollace Beall, Homer Corwin, Mar- garet Mundy, Dorothy Patton, Carl Timbo May See Kruger, Dorothy Manney and Frances New York.—Timbo may see again, at thanks to medical science. Timbo is/= @ $2,500 Sealyham terrier, very flowing with milk and honey while millions suffered lack of food and clothing—the whole evil, tained, the tesult of improper dis- tribution of wealth. is knocking at the door in the person of Franklin D. Roosevelt.” a He pictured America as a land he main- Long told his audience “liberalism “In 1930, and 1930 was not a good Monday Tuesday went blind in both eyes, so his heart- broken master, Edward Hershey, brought him to a prominent eye spe- cialist, who operated on him for| cataract just as if he were a child.) It will be 10 days before the result is known, High School Lists 50 on Honor Roll Fifty students at the Bismarck high | school have been placed on the honor roll at the close of the first.six weeks period, according to W. H. Payne, high school principal. Highest average rating was given Mary Louise Nuessle of the sophomore class, Junior Birdzell of the junior class was next with an average of 96.75. Freda Schlickenmeyer and Vic- tor Westbrook, with averages of 92.50, led the senior and freshmen classes, respectively. | OTTO DIRLAM Gunsmith, Electric Motor Repairing and Rewinding 218 Main Avenue Phone 251 The Corn Show Is Bigger and Better Than Ever Thi Movies and Other Amusements FREE WELCOME VISITORS OCTOBER 26-27-28-29 Locksmith, General Machine Repairing, Others listed on the honor roll in the Furnace Cleaning We will vacuum clean your furnace with a Sturtevant Vacuum Cleaner, paint the castings, inspect the grates and smoke pipes, all for $3. All Repairs at Reasonable Quality Seed Corn Pays with poor seed. For 50 years is Year. She was not without honor, not without pride, not without LOVE. «Try to deny hera place among the real wives and sweethearts of men! BUT SEE IT Tenth Annual North Dakota State Corn Show BISMARCK f his motor car. * +. . | tion from pure strains to improve our | ° ily vember 8th General Election! Es com, than any other, and we believe,! i AR Huey P. Long, U. S.| will be on October 25th and| Brlees) Oct. 26-27 28-29 ee can eee Senator from Louisiana, To-| November Ist, 1932. The regu-| Phone 141 The cost of seed corn per acre a every good farming region. As proof| night at 8:00 o'clock, Bismarck] lar voting places will be the French & Welch is small, too small to take a of this it can be said, that we have| Auditorium, in behalf of Frank-| place of registration in City of chance on losing your crop , saved a good quantity of mature seed | jin PF), Roosevelt for President.| Bismarck. Hdwe. Co. Community Memorial Building demonstration farm, but also at Oak ‘[ake, Man, and Gull Lake, Sask., BERGESON’S MEN’S SHOP we've been originating and improving early maturing corn for northwest farmers. P. M.—(Pol. Adv.) County Auditor. b Come and see what Your State is doing in the pro- duction of Corn, Alfalfa and Sweet Clover. The 4-H Club Grain and Potato Section Exhibits will amaze you. Band Concert on the show floor Thursday, Friday and Saturday at 3:30 P. M. Exhibitors’ Dinner and Entertainment Friday noon in gymnasium of Community Building. Princi- pal speaker, Dr. H. L. Walster of the State Agricul- tural College. Grand Pacific Hotel Bismarck Hotel Prey Men’s hard finished worsted suits with two pairs of trousers Will’s Pioneer Brand Seed Corn Is Grown on this Missouri Slope, Is True to Type and a) ae 22.50 P ‘ Special Features will be the State's Traveling E rod 3 Special Features will be the State’s Traveling Ex $ e' and the MOEA Money Making Crops hibit of grains and vegetables. The Greater North Send for Our 1933 Catalog Before Ordering Your Seed Dakota Association’s “Wheat to West” exhibit which : attracted widest attention at the Chicago Interna- Warm, Comfortable Overcoats G P Eat Shop Ait nah Ota FAA a0 Gentes: Hadte. tional Stock and Grain Show last winter. e e VISIT OUR BOOTH AT THE CORN SHOW F $1 6.50 $22.50 $29.50 i OCT. 26-27- 28-29 Special Moving Picture Films on corn culture, dis- Invite You to Attend the y eases, etc. Attractive mercantile and machinery booths, etc. Oscar H. Will & Co. 1882 1982 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA SEEDS FEEDS TREES PLANTS FLOWERS Make Your Fall Trip to Bismarck Now BERGESON’S ||| State Corn Show d \ MEN’s SHOP . Memorial Building, Bismarck, N. D. Opposite Postoftice Bismarck, N. Dak. Oct. 26-27-28-29 Doors Open From 10 A, M. to 10 P. M. ADMISSION FREE We will serve Fresh Sea Foods: Lobsters, Crabs, Oysters, Ete. FRED SVAREN Have Been Engaged FOR YOUR “ACES” ‘eo You — SUNDAY SWEET SHOP 408 Main Avenue ‘

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