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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BY sAME al TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1923. MAY 29, 1923 THE OLD URKET NEWS (ee QuD HOME TOWN iar m1 IN TRADING EARLY TODAY Shorts Evening up and Maxi- mum Crep of Kansas Dis- appointing, Prices Rise May 29.—With shorts holiday tomorrow d thts maximum crop in Kansas ed_at only 88,000,000 bush- s, Wheat averaged a little higher during the early evening up the market here reflected a downturn at Liverpool was ascrib- ed to reports that Argentine ship- were consigning more wheat Initial prices which lower with July $1.14 and September & were followed i rally to well above yesterday's finish for July and September, but Ww ith May inclined to sag. of speculative demand togeth- er with end of the month liquidat- ales on the part of holders of acts for May delivery weakened j the wheat market today in the last | half of the exchange s: closed’ unsettled, net lower with July, $1.12 1-8 to $1.13 and September, $1.11 7- afloat unsold. sion. Prices | y MARSHAL OTEY” WALKER" TRAILED THE cocprit WHOM HE SUSPECTS TOOK THE RED WHEELBARROW “THATS pega MISSING FROM geet YAN ORMA| STORE Fi SEVERAL DAYS . oe 2 lt May 29.—Wheat s, 196 cars, compared with the : No. 1 northern, OUT OUR WAY —By Williams Good to choice, Corn No. 3 yellow, 75 1-2 to 761-4 53 to 62 cents. 2, 665-8 to 66 7:8 cents. 0 LIVESTOCK Around 10 to 15 cents lower. of beef steers a trong to 15 cer Sheep Tecelpts 8,000. Active, Fair- Market Hee rradys of killing cattle about steady. : price tendency mon-to good beef steers, iF she-stock, $4. nners and cutters most- Bologna bulls largely, Stockers and feeders Bulk, $5.50 to $7. Market steady Best lights most- reer most- Packing § cane Ao Sheep receipts, 200 Fat lambs, 25 Choice spring Sheep, 50 to oa it iit hy $14.50 to $15. 75 cents lower. APOLIS FLOUR, May 29.—Flour 15 to Family patent quoted 50 to $7 a barrel. Bran $25 to $27. Wh H/ Hf a BISMARCK GRAIN. ereditors of, and all persons having|of this notice. Claims against said deceased, to pre- sent them, with the necessary vouch- lers, to the said Administratrix and ie her attorneys and agents, McGee & Goss, of Minot, N, D. at the office of said attorneys at 14 South Main Street, Minot, N. _ fo months after’ the first” publication NOTICE TO CREDITORS Saldark northern State of North Dakota, County of Yo, 1 northern spring Yo. 1 aniber durum. . 1 mixed durum . Lred durum . Dated this 7th day of May, MARIE tratrix of the J. Dixon, Deceased, & G cher Attorneys, First publication’ May 10th, 1923, Cor pray ‘the Matter of the Estate of H. & ** Notice is hereby, given by Marie Dixon, Administratrix of the estate f H. J. Dixon, Deceased, to CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS. 7 room modern few live men who can speak either } including 3 bed German or “Norwegian own a Ford. We carry a full line of the best western woolen ticulars. house, | front porch, east front, close in,| LOST Square yellow pocket book | and a bargain for $3000, on terms | Cash down and balan: partly modern house for $2650., 01 eash and balane Normal gp vice. Tri WANTED Housel $30 month, » Steele, N, for general hou: ay only. € 0 pom, work dur! 7:30 and 8 WANTED Girl to 1.0. WA eral housework, Phone 906, Compe housework. eral St WANTED—A compe! PERSONAL, i FAIRMOUNT MATERNITY HOSPIT- AL—For confinement, for part of expenses; adoption, Write for booklet. 4911 E, 27th St. Kansas City, Mo. 5 ROOMS FOR RENT. 2D TEACHERS: duates, ate teachers! 110 Broadway, fargo, N. D. cluding 4 bed rooms liberal terms, Must be clean and Modern two room fur kind to. chil- ee rtment, ground pore | FoR SATE 1922” Oakland Sedan with board for two young ineaien: | and help with gene Phone 176.3 /arter aig orelber ment, ground floor, outside opening, 5 modern house; also another two- room apartment, furnished or un furnished, closet connection NTED—Competent girl, must be Rood plain cook, no breakfast, no or ironing. Two good waitre two dish washers; will pay good wages. Busy Bee Cafe, Mand: ance on easy p: D--Competent 1 | will close out at box, 50 | cigars in box. Erlenmeyer's Ci- ‘| gar ory, 423 Third street. caplet pen an Horn Hotel. work, Phone Ch irictiy modern, nearly | room bungalow, Addition and two blocks from the | new school buildtng. Phone 751 or 151. Riverview | WANTED — Expericneed waitre 5 ession by | 5-26- tr} housy, and! buildings on meyer, 423 rd St. 5-26-10 | FOR RENT—Very desirable . LOCKERS For ment, fully equipped for housekeeping; electric range for FOR Ri INT--Two loor, a front rooyy and a room for fight housekeeping if desired, very reasonable; also knitting machine, 409 5th St. Phone B12-R, FOR” RENT— FOR RENT houseke 517-2nd FOR T housek ing, 621 6H’ St. -Three in refined, home. ‘OR RENT—iwo ier ven, Rates or day. FOR SALE—160 ac too cheap to tell. car or city 1 Phone 74 FOR RENT 2138-79, Apple cooking, Plenty of sunshine from.| dipped with Yale lock. Call ot ‘ve windows, 801 4th Bt. Phone | write Telephone Office, 121 3rd St. ie modern 2-3-4 and 6-réom rnished either light houskeeping or-aleep- x. Phone 357W or call 71 Nicely furnished light- ng. gooms, . Phone 309-J. FOR RENT—Furnished for light housekeeping, Murphy Apts. BF LE—One team gray i i room modern bun- ping rooms. Gas for cook- Phoné 619- galow, furnished for Phone 689-M., or call at 22 Nice Modern Room to rent to lady Phone 974W or “| flat; with quick change to “A,” : ; | cl sek Z. “SO1W. large and two| light housekeeping small rooms, 404 Sth St. Bnone 7 = | our} room flat, furnished or unfurnish- T= Haraisked apartment ed, (Gélleze “building: Varney Flats. Phone 773. ___ BOARD AND ROOM BOARD AND ROOM reasonable Home cooking and b Phone | house, and 6-room house. room furnished apartment for three adults by June Ist. LAND and oil right. Fenced. wn, trees, walks in, abe will be valuable bef . \ For further i iB: 40;, WANTED—High school girl wishes a position in a department or other acres broke, the rest hay. Estate of | Ziegelmeyer. FARM WANTED—Wanted from owner of farm or good land for sale for fall i Jones, Box 39, Olney, Hazel Hammond, F A position by an experi- d bookkeeper and stenograph- Address Tribune No. 565, is Ln Many FH ea WELL, MOTHER. covLD You ee NEVER MIND, 1 SAID - JUST WAIT UNTIL WE GET HOME’ | FOR RENT —Quarter block, best) = WHEN WE GET HOME MoTHE! ARE YOU GOING To TRY IT? |James F. Shea, fargo, United States SSSSass3739 SSSssss | nually, Marshal Shea said. ! under my shoulder-binde. “My kid- BUSINESS CHANCES My’ iliterest’ in @ "good live paying business, takes an in- vestment of $6000.00 part of which must be cash, balance time pay- ments, this. ries with tion that pays $2100.00 ay will bear investigation, write 566 Tribune. 5 FOR "SALE containing $11.00) was, left in aj local store by elderly woman, Will store kindly return to Tribune office to avoid trouble. Mr M.} FOR SALE has run only 8,000 miles, looks and runs like new, equipped all | around with new Federal Co: tires. Can be seen at M. B. G man Co. Geo. L. Kilmer. 6-25-1w| Run less than 6,500 miles. In per- fect condition. Priced right. Ad-| dress P.O. 23-1w Touring in good dition, new top and newly inted, Phone 507-W, or cal SALE—Hup touring ¢ ss than 1,000 miles, For,cash or good paper. Address Box 448, city. 5-23-1w FOR SALE Cleveland motore good condition, Apply Western Union. 5-28-3t OUS. a lot of odd all long filler , which we boxes of hand work, | | FOR” SALE — Refrigerator, enamel lined, hardwood, side icer, width, 33 | inches; height, 42 inches; ice capa- | city, 100 pounds. Slightly used, good as new, $25. Gamble-Robin- son Fruit Co. Phone 13 5-28-lw ?OR SALE—Complete coal mining equipment, including electric drill- ing outfit and sufficient machinery to handle 100 ton daily. Price $2,- 000, part time bo reliable party. Write Tribune 5 5-21-9t of steel lockers each having four compartments, — size 18x18x72y Bismarck, N. D. 4-1wk ‘OR SALE—Cornet, _C. Conn | ver with gold lined bell, B— flat; with quick change to Instruments can be seen at tl Dakota Fine Art 5-28-4t. FOR” SAL ry} Sidewalk Gasoline Pump with 500} gallon tank will be sold at a{ bargain. Write H. C. Lamb Melr e, Minn. w| one team black, | J. E. Chesak, | 2 Cornet C._ ¢ | silver with gold lined bell, B- Geo. L. Kilmer, 208 Third 1w/ directed by Paul Powell, will atic | Wednesday and Thursday LosT : 4 ‘} maga oo —______- AT THE MOVIES | THE ELTINGE An automobile story, “Racing Hearts,” written by Byron Morgan for Agnes Ayres, Paramount s and attraction at the Eltinge Theatre is one of the best pictures in| which Miss Ayres has appeared, She plays the part ofthe ultra-modern girl, firm believer in advertising a business builder. Her father’s cars, the Granada Motors, are in a bad way. Miss Ayres, bi series of cle ver publicity stunts, saves the firm from bankruptcy and wins the love of the son of one of her father’s competitors by her exploits. Richard plays opposite Miss A Theo- dore Roberts is the automobile man- ufacturer. CAPITOL Reginald Barker, director of big screen photodramas, has given pho- toplay fans something new-to enthuso | over in his t production, “Hearts | Aflame,” a Metro picture which was seen for the first time yesterd: the Capitol Theatre, His staging « the magnificent forest fire scene was tic to the extreme, and it sup plicd a thrill to the large audie whi wand applauded it yester othing as vivid and intense as this forest fire has yet been presented in form. The scene has been rraphed; one can actually flames lick at the trees which rapidly give way before the conflagration. Wolve frightened from their hiding p! ' leap madly before the nera in an attempt to escape the devastating flames. And through the bi forest, an old locomotive driven b young girl, slowly m its wa in an attempt to reach a powder ne. Director Barker has not been satis- fied to provide just this one big thrill ing the picture. There are several others which, in other —photop f would by themselves merit unusual jattention. In this case they simply add to the tense excitement which prevails in the picture. One of these “minor” thrill is the blowing up of a dam, releasing thousands of logs which go floating down a river. An- other is the dynamiting of a nty hillside, preventing the spread of the fire, fs RIALTO H, A. Snow's “Hunting Big Game in Africa with Gun and Camera,” which will be presented at the Rialto theater tomorow, is going to staygle folks whose only visualiza- tion of wild creatures is of the zoo or menagerie. The, big-game presented is from one-third to two-thirds larger than the captive cousins in the menageries. Means have been found of picturing many of the larger wild animals in close-ups. Actual combats are shown, and each hunt fs a thrilling continu- y from the first tritking to the opping of the charging anima) by Mr. Snow's rifle. The story begins on the west | coast of Africa, then South Africa lis visited, na ceremonies are recorded, the Kimber- ly diamond fields are explored, and soon the grand safari starts via Mombasa towards the Equator, Old elephant trails constituted the only roads into the jungle. One of these led into the vast crater or bow! bull, registered. Write Wilber! Fields, Bismarck, N. Dak. or} phone 9F 2. 5-26-3t. et of | viol. | ew dishes i R, W0-7th St. | Phone 35’ FOR RENT—Front office, 18x24 Second floor, Hinckley Block.| A. €. Hinckley, 410 ‘Thayer St. | 5-25-t¢ | YR SALE— Cheap for cash, an fdi- | son Phonograph, good as new, with | about fifteen records. Call 174-R,! Mandan. 5-26-3t | FOR SALE—One four-burmer and | oven Angliron gas stove. One electric chandelier. Phone 717. + FOR SALE — Household furniture. | J. E. Agnew, 203 Eighth Ave. N. W. Mandan, N. D. 169-. J. 5-23-1w | FOR RENT. ront room for office | use, 1191 th St. or call Rem- brandt Studios tf. | garden plot in city. F. E. Young, Phone 78. 5-28-1t. FOR SALE—Tent 10x12, jointed poles for, auto - touring. Address 448, city. 5-24-1wk. DOPE ADDICTS | CROWD | PRISON! Fargo, May 2 “29—One out of every | three convicts in the federal peni- | tentiary at Leavenworth, Kan., is there through dope, according to | marshal for North Dakota, who said this information was given him by. the institutional atthorities at the time of a recent visit to that place. Figures in the o#ice of the warden at Leavenworth showed that 800 of the 2,400 inmates were dope fiends or users of dope in some , degree,” Marshal Shea said. That the importation of narcotics has reached an alarming stage in tho opinion of these men was substan- tiated by a statement which showed that the importation of nine or ten tons of narcotics before the enact- ment of the federal prohibition act had increased to 900 tons today. This does not account for the dope smuggled into the United States an- KIDNEY TROUBLE BECOMES SERIOUS “Suffered with severe headaches, backache and “pains in my legs and neys ‘and bladder were in bad condi- tion. I was weak and nervous and felt tired. and worn out. Walking made me short of breath. Every morning my face and hands wer? bloated. Medicines failed to help my condition and doctors advised an operation,” writes: Nelson, Mossdale, Fla. “Fortunately I read about Foley Kidney Pills, tried them and got relief.” | other prowle ‘but out of St. | of an extinct voleano, where the par- ty nearly lost their lives by an ele- phant stampede. Attacks on their camp by lions, leopards, hyenas and were an almost night- ly oveurr When an ant army invaded, refuge ‘was found only by placing the sleeping cots in the river! There were many other hardships, privations and breath-taking escapes, it all the Snow party emerged in 1922, with the most com- plete collection of museum specimens ever made and a series of pictures that for the first time portray the Kingdom of Beasts in * matchless splendor and reality. This picture comes here after an engagement of there solid months in New York.City, where it played to capacity audiences, averaging 20,000 a week, AUDITORIUM. They tell a good yarn about Jimmie Turfler, who plays the cabin boy in Elmer Clifton's newest production, “Down to the Sea in Ships,” which | comes to the Auditorium.on Wednes- day, May 30. One day, Captain James A. Tilton, the veteran whaler, who was skipper of the-ancient whaling vessel used in the picture, couldn't find his sho He always slept with an his clothes on, only taking off his shoes. He be- {gan yelling if stentorian tones for the cabin boy, finally locating him far up on the bow of the ship. “Coma here, boy. Come here I say,” yelled Capt. Tilton. “Doggone him, he'd get off this ship if he could, but he can't, Turfler, who along with the other actors in the production had been forced to sign as an ordinary seaman, was forever getting into mischief with the captain. One day when the skipper was shaving, an unexpected roll of the vessed caused Jimmie to drop a pile of plates. Down’ they * |yent with a bang. The captain rush- td up, his face lathered and half shaved. Instantly his superstition of the sea made itself manifest. “Four dishes broke,” he said. “Six times eight is forty-eight; we'll be out two weeks, and sad won't be a dish left.” NEW SALEM BEATS MANDAN New. Salem defeated Mandan, 5 to 3, at Mandan Sunday in the slope ’ league, while Stanton was defeating Carson by a score-of:3 to 0. rfc KICKED BY HORSE. New Leipzig, N. D., May 29.—Pa- tricia, nine year, old: daughter of . Mr. ang Mrs, Oliver Hurtley who- farm near Burt, is recovering from a brain concussion sustained when’ she was kicked on the head ty) horse. while playing in. the, her home. “The ‘scalp: cut requiring nearly es to close the wound.