The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 28, 1933, Page 3

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1933 ‘ACT OF GOD’ GUTS ~ WHEAT SURPLUS AND ation. The revived trading, too, means more work in brokerage houses. | KS AND RIVERS The “ultimate consumer” will be af-/ fected much more quickly than the; farmer. Flour prices at Minneapolis were up half a dollar Wednesday to ? $6.65 a barrel. Less than three months liams, Sterling, Crystal Springs, He- bron, Solen, Richardton, Dickinson, Mott, Sims, Raleigh, Hettinger, Youngtown, Powers Lake, and Crosby. Canadian wall-eyed fry went to Kensal, Mercer, Binford, 1,000,000 each; Sykeston, Hankinson, Fort Ran- ! Strange But True News Items of Day (By The Associated Press) fae aide nine Suchen Richardton Planned i | \ (Tribune Special Service) i Catholic Retreat at | \ i. July 4 Program at Regan Is Arranged | stk. sued 22 farmers for $25,000. Rea ND, Speclal Service) sh of |atticipate in the disturbance, which fractured by blows after he drove in- to Howard lake with a load of live- nm were dismissed as defendants when the judge decided they did not Richardton, N. D., June 28—A Cath- came when farm strikers attempted \otte layman’s retreat will be conducted | JUIY celebration has been arranged! to prevent marketing of the livestock. for the Morris farm, one mile south | by Rt. Rev. Abbot Cuthbert, O. 8. B..lor Regan, : | The program will include music by the Wing band, baseball game, rodeo, horse racing, foot races and a dance. The following business men art in- | jago the price was $3.80. | som, Lisbon, 500,000 each; McClusky, EXPLORER IS FIT ‘t Tuesday’: = es is New York, June 28.—(4)—Headlocks CAUSES PRICE RISE clare on the Gnieuee board of trede| Pike Fry and Other Species Are| Park, River, 250.000 each: Meville,| and tocholds are getting Lincoln Ells- 2 represented an increase since the be-| py i Lee ypston” Pao G00. Mstiggene | Worth into shape for. an aerial ex-/at Assumption Abbey here July 7, 8 souks aie ginning of the season of 53 cents a! aced in Many North ere 1 200,000; Incvis 950000, Ciesdon (Ploration over Antarctica next win-|and 9 under the direction of the Burning Prairie Sun Gives An- |Dushel. | Dakota Waters ‘and ‘Belcourt’ lakes, 300,000 each: | T: |Knights of Columbus of North Da- Dion Lake, Gravel Lake, 50,000 each; | 4°*, been wrestling daily for | kota, \ | New York, June 28—()}—Mrs. J, Hf. ‘ . : , » 50, * | weeks,” said the explorer, who is 53. mies ' |stitutions are assisting in arrange few York. June 23—(#)—Mrs. J. H, swer Which Economists 12 Are Convicted Crow pee Ue i sbutea |"1 ean do a apSHINE stunt now with.| Dickinson Council No. 1,515 and|ments: Andrew Fisher, H, L. Gram- | Slager and Fred Levy of Montgomery, Sought th Vain Local wall-eyed pike fry distributec Bismarck Council No. 1,604 have ap-|ling, J. G. Steinert, A. H. Lundberg, | Ala., are world bridge Olympic cham- Alabama Players Win Bridge Championship Approximately 14 million fish fry out being tired. I’m one who believes (By The Associated Press) An “Act of God” concerned itself ‘Wednesday with the price of wheat. Premier Bennett of Canada, at the world economic conference, used the “phrase. He was commenting on the rise of wheat prices in America to a dollar and more a bushel, and he sug- gested it might be due to “an act of God, providence or maybe Roosevelt.” 4 Whatever the cause or the combi- nation of causes, the price of wheat has been for a long time a matter of anxiety to hundreds of millions, of * . were distributed i Of Game Violations) reccrvoits over the state this spring | Jamestown, 1,000,000; Fort Ransom | Twelve persons were convicted of \violating the state game and fish laws | iduring the five weeks ended June 8 jand @ total of $165 fines and $57.10 ‘costs were imposed, the state game and fish department announced Wed-) nesday. Fines were imposed on Gedion Ket-/| terling, Benedict, for practicing taxi- dermy without a license, $25; Nick Hoffman, Zap, fishing without license, $25; Andrew Chaykum, Charles Cross | and Swan Peterson, Jr., all of Willis-| ton, seining in the Muddy creek, $10 — |by the state game and fish depart- ment, according to: Thorwald Swen- | son, commissioner. i Swenson announced the distribution Of 2,900,000 local wall-eyed pike fry,! 6,250,000 Canadian wail-eyed fry, and| 1,300,000 local northern pike fry from the Lisbon hatchery. He also said 3,500,000 Canadian wall-eyed fry were distributed from the St. John hatchery and 3,868 assorted pike, catfish, bull- | heads, fresh-water drum, and sheep- | head transferred from the Cannon | Ball river. Allotments from the Cannon Ball, 500,000; Lisbon hatchery, 400,000; Hat- ton 300,000; Ashley 200,000; Forman 5€,000. Local northern pike fry, Hatton and Ashley 200,000 each, Fort Ransom 150,000; Lisbon hatchery, 100,000 and Fort Ransom 50,000. Edgar Allan Poe and William Wordsworth occasionally wrote the last stanza of a poem first; Poe's “Raven” and Wordsworth’s “We Are Seven’ were composed in this man- ner. healthy minds are found in healthy | pointed committees to make arrange- Monarch Elevator, John M. Hanson, |Pions. The National Bridge associa- bodies.” CHICKEN HAS PROBLEM Farmingdale, N. J.—Edmund Corts, a poultryman, has a chick that doesn’t know which way to go. The chick, just hatched, has two pairs of legs, one pair goes east and the other west. INSULTING HUSBAND Chicago—Among the things Mrs. Helen Warak told a judge her husband | tions for admittance with the Rt. Rev. |did was to take her for a boat ride | Abbot at Richardton: just so he could toss his wedding’ ring ments and Rev. Father Robert A. Fee- han, pastor of St. Mary’s procathedral ; in Bismarck as well state chaplain of | the K. C., will be in general charge. The retreat will open at 7 p.m. (M. S. T.) Friday, July 7 and continue through Saturday and Sunday. Laymen attending the retreat will be welcomed by the Rt. Rev. .Abbot and will be guests of the monastery during the retreat. Those planning to attend are instructed to file applica- Members of all K. C. councils of the Farmers Union Elevator and Mercan- | tion announced Wednesday that they tile company, Lein Motor company, | had the best score of north-south Sanger Mercantile company, H. £. pairs in a world wide contest May 1 Rannestad and Lawrence Hopkins. Farm Strikers Must Pay $1,500 Damages June 28.—(P)— Twelve farmers must pay Archie L. King of Grove City a total of $1,500 for injuries he received during a farm strike disturbance last October, a dis- trict court jury decided Wednesday. jim which more than 100,000 players Participated. Leo D. Craine and J. Frederick Ben- edict of Sherburne, N. Y., were tied with Otto Krefting and Isak Neilson of Oslo, Norway, for the internation- al championship of east-west pairs. Among the state championship win- ners were the following: North Dakota: Howard H. Strack, Fargo. East-West: people. When the Canadian premier |each. river in May were sent to Lake Wil- | in the water in her presence. state are invited. King, who claimed his skull was| LOWS A. Johnson, Valley City, and BFeRC CS LO Fe ibee Rael & te i es ga BeGRee Ges said “maybe Roosevelt,” he undoubt- edly had in mind the various meas- ures the United States government has taken toward meeting this prob- Jem. ‘The government's concern, however, » 4s merely the reflection of the deep interest of many groups of its citi- zens; the farmers, who grow the wheat and who must grow it at a profit if they are to prosper; the mill-! ing industry, the railroads who trans- port it, the elevators, the dealers, the merchandisers who sell its products; and (always) the millions who depend upon it for food. Seek Business Revival All these human agencies have wrestled with the problem of wheat, and they have hunted an equitable, workable way to put it at a price which might, by satisfying the farmer, start a general buiness revival. On the burning wings of a prairie sun, however, comes the promise of gn answer to the probiem. That was what the Canadian premier meant whert he said “an act of God.” The sun is burning the wheat in the field, acres and acres of it; destroying it. The economists had said: “There is ‘too much wheat.” As though in answer, there have come uyon the grain fields of Kansas, Nebas! the Dakotas and Minnesota scorching temperatures. There was no rain; only the unrelenting sun. Wheat has been destroyed by the hundreds of thousands of bushels. What Premier Bennett called an “Act of God” was, in the words of one midwest financial writer, “the worst spring drought in history.” Farmers Gnash Teeth It is in that situation that the farm- er views the rise of the price of wheat fyom around 42 cenuts—its lowest mark tor a great many years—to above one ¢ollar, and gnashes his teeth. What good is dollar wheat, or two dollar wheat, to him who has no wheat to sell? To the farmer, therefore, the ad- vance in the price of wheat may mean little in comparison to what it means to other groups. Grain dealers are immediately affected by each fluctu- CAPITOL ==THEATRE == Last Times Tonight Wipsy radio hour was sick of milk ; “I wont to be like girls” she ‘to drink smoke ond love EVERYTHING!" The love life of a radio storlet GINGER ROGERS NORMAN FOSTER ZASU PITTS Lovable Villain Ahero who was av'e ain... A lover who was a devil... 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