The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 26, 1937, Page 1

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sana Breitbach Willing to Move Fran- |” chise Here If Response Just- : ifies Action ‘|SIX’-GAMES "WEXT WEEK IS TAXPAYER CHIEF; DAWSON RE-NAMED Assessing Land on Rental Value Not Capital: Value- Favored T0 RESERVATION AS Closing of Indian School: Here Results in Superintendent's Shift to Fort Yates scealat Bismarck, ‘was announced Satur- 5 will be that of ‘were endorsed FH DUCE SAYS SPAIN'S WAR WILL: END ON Under Troop Protection, Scores of Workers Return in De-. fiance of CIO Forces Mussolini's Paper Asserts That Rebels Are Concentrating on Capital forthe first time after four weeks of strike, changed another shift of sill the Ai a et.7 a. m. Saturday without an ‘saltortal in” Pre "Benito ‘Mussolini's -own newspaper. Saturday the owift fall of Madrid and Predicted it would 'end the in. the newspaper Popolo ee ees et Dae Re self. é ‘ Insurgent Gen. “Tt geld Spanish 5 ‘Francisco would attack Ma- i i iE i or f ai H a FUGITIVES. DROP EVIDENCE EDUCATIONAL GRIER =: TWO SHOPLIFTERS i) Mrs. R. M. Bergéson, A. we Mundy Land Two Men in: Hands of Police Chief of Police Ebeling Hae Sus- pects Corralled Pending Thorough Investigation Mrs. R.'M. Bergeson and: A. W. Mundy turned: sleuths Friday and /eventually delivered two men, who later be char, with’ shop- lifting, into the of the police. The episode constitutes a ler which was enacted. right on the streets of Bismarck—and all in the best tradition of aa affairs. which Bergetot had brought Tgeson Ot from home with the intention of throwing. away, but he didn’t like the idea of lifting any better engat Mrs, Bergeson atenpad out-and put in a telephone call for the police. - A Woman's Determination - Bergeson kept the man’ in_ the atore as | as he could a the store: in pears ond ey ng wasn ’. set out to follow on" Down to Fourth and Broadway man—and there. the plot is} near here. Dr. Hickman was to have pect stopped ae not too Ce a sui rs. mn cal r attention to et corm man and asked Mundy to have the man turned over the police. Then she hot-footed (Comtinued on Page Three) =ITHREE MINISTERS ch for Re MARCK TRIBUNE Get-Together Is Planned for Scouts; Parents Preceding Farewell Banquet Everything was in readiness for the start of the journey to the first na- tional encampment scouts have ever Walter 8. mee (above) of Sisteraville, W. Va., was elected imperial potentate at the Shrine convention in Detroit. DROWNED IN RIVER Methodist Clergyme rish as Boat Is Swept Through Flood Gate of Dam : i i 8 5 tb Hs oe sy ponte v. L. D, Williams, pastor at Piher, C.F. Guse, pastor at Plain 44 Vv. \ Be - view, Mi eet ‘The three. mes. had gone. on the eve of the 0; Methodist conference at of a City ¥ ete {i led 5 bikers were ‘sosikag, br’ artage. ments. AH apparently pool reraatea at the gate, the craft was sucked underwater, rE leigh county. .. | .g A! W. Gussner reports that large areas of an alfalfa field on the river bottoms northwest of Bismarck have been almost ruined. County Agent H. 0. Putnam verifies his report, estimating that each square-foot of the area contains from 20 to 40 small hoppers. the tender new alfalfa shoots down to the ground. F. Gray Butcher, state entomologist, reports a heavily infested area near Baldwin with an average of 120 grass- _ hoppers to the square yard. Steps already have been taken to combat the menace. Mixing stations have been set up by the county at Bis- id plenty of bait is available. while the hoppers -still are small and while they are still concentrated in marck and Baldwin should be spread NO’ they hatched. : . Farmers should protect their own fields, using this free bait. It is to their own interest to protect their forage crops. Grasshoppers can eat a field of forage as fast as they can eat a field of wheat, Altogether about five cars of poison bait are available in Burleigh county. This is enough to at least greatly reduce the threat of destruction. It will do no good unless used. own—if not worse, No Time to Lose (An Editorial) : Reports coming to The Tribune from farmers indicate serious grasshopper damage already has occurred in Bur- According to Putnam, the worst areas are along the western edge of Burleigh county. The eastern part of the county is not seriously affected and bait now stored there can be used here. . The worst spots are those fields on which nothing grew last year. It was there the hoppers laid their eggs. The prairies are not badly infested. To poison hoppers now is relatively easy. They can- not fly and it takes-less poison to kill a little hopper than a big one. By cutting hay in such a way that a strip of green is left in a field the hoppers can be concentrated. Thus they become easy victims for the poisoner. But it will not be enough for farmers to protect their own land.: ‘Unless hoppers hatched on wild and unoccupied Iand also are poisoned they soon will be flying in to damage the crops of the man who did his full duty. Arrangements to poison unoccupied land should be made through the Resettlement administration. Efforts in this direction already have been started and it is sin- cerely to be hoped that red tape will not delay action. To ‘the farmer the other fellow’s hoppers are as bad as his & it z SEG4 They have eaten ipei if tee This COCHRANE THROUGH ASPLAYER, HE SAYS Detroit Tigers’ Manager Thinks Every Batsman Should Wear Protective Headgear the areas where New York, June 2%—(#)—In & interview Bat- copyrighted urday, Joe Williams, sports editor of the New York Wend reserees antes ith in Highway Crashes : League Baseball Here Sunday Rs sik, 8 Scouts All Ready To Start on Trip). rem ion He i isle . The Weather Generally fair tonight . and Sunday; some : what warmer Sunday, | SERIOUSLY HURT IN TRUCK-CAR WRECK Three-Way Crack-up Also Leave Wreckage Alive BLAME “AGITATOR? OCCUR ON MEMORIAL ROAD FORLABOR WAR A | os te HIDE, FUR HOUSES Off Highway Men Who Never Worked for Him. Started Trouble Says ‘Charles Rigier © Five men and a boy in five cara miraculously escaped death in two collisions on the Bismarck-Mandan Charges that the strike at Bismarck’s two The collisions occurred just west of the Memorial bridge on U. 8. Highway 10. In the first accident three vee hicles, one truck and two cars were involved. In the and more serious, « truck and a light coupe collided, # a z i + a3 “te 54g HH f ges SEB il i E i F ? j E : B E if | al g # [ elt i s i = eF H F ait i gH a ila! i : < F AG iB it iff ERE g i i H SSecrese! g 4 3 i hie zope 144 f5ge rai 3 f 3 Bismarck Will Be Central BOWESMONT WOMAN Clearing Office 18 AUTO UPSET VICTIM work the | J8mes Nelson, 52, who died Wednes- day from injuries suffered in an Suomonie popiaenh mane t her husband and Gurvivors are children. the central clearing ‘WPA matters,” Moodie declared, “but a staff will still be maintained in the Hl i : Ft 7 4 i f. a : E 5 8 : ! i Hy bi : ef i i I ' | pr i 5 : j i ot Hist i f i § F ae | if a li rf i ; Ly : i i mt i ht valle Hi fit fy H ? #4 ifs! + i d

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