The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 26, 1923, Page 6

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‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _ + . Cash No. 1 northern, good furniture at low pee Be sie q \CKS : Pe deere Te ne edie choiee. to, fancy, Ye, to $1.28 good to choite, $1,1 dinary to good, $1. c December, $1.14%; May, $1.19%. perintendency of the Grand Forks soa an haedsi peg ak ee a District is leaving Bismarck .and | fj . g 8 5 os : , | cents; oats, No. 8, 38 to 39 cents; 7 is offering for sale his beautiful $ 8 : barley 50 to 62 cents; rye, No. 2, new home in Riverview Addition. 64% 64% cents; flax, No. ‘1, There are 7 rooms, including 3 bed $2.40% to $2,431, rooms, fine sun parlor, large mo- dern front room and nice dining BISMARCK GRAD room; oak floors, full basemen’ (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) with garage in basement, electric Bismarck ,Oct. 26,° stove, lawn, trees and flowers, Im. 1 dark notthern FOUR CAPTAINS ON TEAM MANDAN HIGH mediate possession given. Geo. M 1 northern: spring son ‘05, Register. 19-26-1w 1 amber durum ...6+.5.... .79 1 mixed durum ........ 11 . 1 red durum ...... 13 MEE i 1 flax . 1.12 2 flax . 2.07 t { 1 rye AT i “How: that boy has changed say Graham. Foote and’Grose are out Are Out to OutyellBis- with injuries, but"Graham, the Ro- oe Nein ters WHE AT PRI ES cece ecnrctorimanties SYS watch “voster high school flash, is going a€|- Beulah Lignite Coal is Best, marck High Supporters on the man at quarterback in the games to 3° ooo.” Herb, Swanbeck end Pete|$4.75 per ton. Order now Their Own Field played on Northrop field this fall. Guzy, the latter a former captain of | Wachter Transfer Co. Phont med As against one last year the Gophers the Minneapolis East high team, are 62. have had_a round half dozen of quar- another pair of strong\contenders for *. . % Se ae i 3 E . terbacks since the sedson opened and the job of piloting what promises to TEAM IN GOOD SHAPE 6 LEFT TO RIGHT: CROSBY, MERRILL, JENKINS AND HUBBARD ight: if Old Man Injur SILVER LAME By NEA Service ‘ here are three of them, left to rigl be a great eleven if Old Man Injury Blouses: of wilver- lame: are tel = ay ni r i ; ; Malcolm ff. * | ostem. Macs. Oct. 20. here are four captains on the Harvard football squad this year. | But-all of |Initial Gains Aseribed to Va Loli Sis Shas Bys ie tured in the smartest shops and do . ve Cle . -|them are not captains of the football team. Natura ‘ed Crosby ig captain of the hockey team, Merril R — Le Lp nn OD be a Wonders toward making a costume .~ High Schools Clash for South lis captain of the ins of the baseball varsity and Hubbard of the football squad. ‘Quité a News From Washington | jower with Dec. 1.06% to -% and|$4 to $7.50. Bulk, $6.25 and down. | out of a very plain suit, western District Cham- | collection of dist ‘ ! May 1.11% to 1.11% to 1.2. Grass-fat she stock, $3 to $6. Bulk ee pa : — ’ under $4.50. Canners and cutters, i ane ionship Sz F | = ¢ \ BLACK AND WHITE pionship Saturday | Princeton at Baltimore. | millers, based on the latest estintate . Chicago, Oct, 26—Although wheat co avnbOk. $2 to $2.75. Bolognf bulls largely,| 4 payin guit of unusual charm — } Pittsburgh vs. Carnegie at Pitts-| of J. D. Diamond, crop sta N took a pronounced upward swing at cai ae orate vacelptat lights largely $3.25 to $3.75. Stockers |i." o¢ black. and white shepherd's Mandan high school rooters are} burgh. for this? territory. His estimate the opening today'a decline soon set aes oe ie grades steady, | 270, feeders quotable, $225 to §7-| check with a white satin over- reparing to win a battle over the| Far West , sito ates produced this in, Initial gains were ascribed to}33,000._ Desirgble grades sieeey-| Bulk $5.50 and down. Calves re-|Siouse and a high coltar with a j ak high ‘rooters here Satur-| Washington State Ve, California st! y Sicnds of hard news from Washington about plans | Other grades weak to 15 ¢ ceipts, 1,200. Fully steady, quality| green chiffon kerchief fastened | Portland, Ore. . / © proposed for government finaneing | Top Sick ia anon treheeey considered. _ : about ‘the throat. A big “pep” meeting was held in ity of Southern Californi hundred million bushels of A J of flour exports to’ Germany ang Bel- cee Rie Sy lity plain, Fat | Hog reeeipts, 10,800. Steady to 10 Z Mandan vells practised for the] y at Palo Alto, Calif. | t, it is estimated, ure needed) a ‘* :{gium. Proposals for an internation. |steady. | Milling ually P o'ip-kind | cents lower. Desirable butchers to]' "Beulah a ener is Best. Sray. itors from cress the Ore, |for domestic requirements annus . al ‘economic conference also was a| Steers run mostly warmer OP-Cnd| shippers, $6.85. Bulk, $6.75. $4.75 per ton. ler now ee ‘i e of an average of 35] N, A val a ' ; le . Sib ut CnL SEE aT Aap let he Hl eden oh ra Act re teaea| No Better Way to Find Out |tullish factor buy selling broadened | Sheep receipts, 13,000. Active, fat| Packing sows mostly around $6.16. | Wachter hie Co. Phone ° 4 support their high school team when! Ney ie M Toner Heat WabunReC STARE Real Stuff in Man or on the upturn and caused a reaction, lads atrang’to cinta, Kighat: Few early sales of pigs around $6. 62 it clashes with Bismarck for the} Montana vs. Go 1 at Missouls, | trout 10,000,000 baehéla’ of Nogeuil ak Stull a id Sone SH oven rom an: seen cad Sheep receipts, 1,500... Fat lambs | °4* southwestern district championship] Mont. Dak a fd i ot Ne 1 viene a changed to one-half cen: igher z "i a strong to 26 cents higher.’ Bulk, here at 3:30 o'clock Saturday after-{~ Denver Univ. vs, Colorado Univ. at | /akpt! * patnoads CAMEL ‘Woman Dec. $1.071-4 to '3-8, and May MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR, $12. Few at $12.25, Sheep steady, ~ noon. | Denver. more’ than °00/000,000 ‘bushels. were ; ‘ aa Jo AGERE choke lf) eb aar Os Riven Sone Fat ewes to packers, $440 $5.50. Two IDDIES'C LD: s The Mandan team, under Coach} Wyoming vs. Colorado Mines at’ yroduced th oir, it is estimated.| Minneapolis, Minn., Oct. 25—If Ij cain of one cent a bushel in some j¢ Lah td Haar ies) a arre's: | double-decks Montanas in on through has been working steadily this Wyo. | ‘Whea eh $1160) want to find out the real stuff in’a| cases a) ues by a drop to below | Brand, $28.50 to $29. _ billing. should not be “dosed.” Treat but will rest tod Porter and Aggies vs. Colorado Agg The comn il value of gluten,! man or woman, I find it more quick- | Y°sterday’s finish.” ‘ Ly RNR aE pees soe or er aay m externally with— Arthur, Mandan’s star ends; oth , Colo. at the price of flour, the}ly in a poker game than any other Subsequently selling here against ST. PAUL betta . will be in the game, and Zahn who |. Middle West figures in the Wheat Grower show, aD purchases in Winnipeg and else-| So. Sti Paul, Oa 26.—Cattle re: __ MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN was crippled in the first Bismarck Ohio State vs. Towa at Columbus: | is cents per pound, based on data No, this isn’t a professor of] Where northwest, had a depressing ceipts, 1,600. Active, fully steady. Minneapolis, Oct. 26.—Wheat re- " Gussner, cen-! Wisconsin vs, Minnesota at Madi.| furnished by a neapolis miller.| psychology speaking—none gf your| influence on Chicago prices. Close) Several lots medium grade dry-fed | ceipts 338 cars, compared with 334 aon; Wis aay es With the so-called students of human nature| unsettled, 18 to % to % cents net} steers unsolg carly. Grass-fat steers, | cars a year ago. While the A.C. and Un hiversity are Northwestern ive olilingigsaeameans or of mental complexes—it’s a wo- battling one another HL. man! / GlakMandan team, coached’ by Fleer ieap Nae BAIT One of gluten in al Miss Emma Redell, whose swift / d | Chicago vg, Purdue a go. Eagtinle viuathallacettte nente as aaa aoa an Agricultural College produc NottesDane/-valsGeokula Deanne he article main-| ascent in the business world _ too the commer-} her from stenographer to assistant 1 value of wheat should be $1.60] secretary of a big railroad system in per. bushe 14 years—only woman in the world ck team, coache: Houser, a former t Notre Dame, Ind. Detroit Univ. vs. Washington and Perntowica tn tre: ttsle MR ESa eh Gare METH ELAGHL th Dakota product is classi-| to hold such a position on a railroad Missouri vs, Nebraska at Colum-} sieq by the Wheat G aaa aRE Ite of play between the two state/bus, Mo. d by the Wheat Grower as a spe finds poker not only a stimulating y crop, that is, a crop that cation but a valuable aid in bus- aes Tell Us Why. schools. Washington Univ. vs. Ames at St. uited for this country, and]iness. | ~ _The “Demons” were given an easy | rouis, Which has high value to millers. "Therels, nothing, more fascinating time today, after strenuous workouts aye oariaainn a i tome," She. up “han ane oe today. The team is in good shape , b game of poker.” and the men will gp on the field to-] Michigan vs. Michigan Aggies at Nominally, Miss Redgll is assistant morrow determined to win a decisive | ann Arbor, Mich. | Sugar Beets y dg | Tex [near Hal Mi are making| calls her the “best man on the pay- M NOR CHAMP | Vancerbitt vs. Tulane at Nashville.; big money’ from sugar beets, it is; roll” and all-round “trouble shoot- t Sewanee vs. Ogelthorpe at Atian-| reported by C. C, Leaf, who owns| er“ of the M. &°St. L. Baltimore, Oct. 26—The Kansas ion of land 8 miles east of Like Running Home | & secretary of the Minneapolis & St. vietory over Mandan Butler’ vs h at Indianapolis, | Bring Money Louis Railroad. Actually, she is chief 4 Sis > eee South assistant and “right-hand man” to | KANSAS CITY | Texas vs. Sduthwestern at Austin,| Fargo, 26.—Farmers} W. H. Bremner, the president, who " H Realizing the far-reaching : possible effects of Mr. Lloyd ae 's tour in Canada and the United tel Anor| ; sta inn., and who is transact-| She believes there is definite + City Blues are sitting atop the minor . I. vs. North (outa State r fone 5 2 4 f 5 * ™ : league baseball world today. They ngton, Va. ing business in Fargo today. cha muuceltaes ae railroad States, THE LITERARY DIGEST cabled to’ representative daily and weekly~newspapers in England usehold. i . and M. vs. Tennessee at! Mr. Leaf, who has farmed in Towa, s u ressee *"\rexas and Idaho, believes this to} .“I’ve been a business woman all be the grentest farming country of| my life aud haven't had much ex- climbed their way to victory over s. A. the champion Baltimore Internation- | Memphis, als in the ninth and deciding game| Universi and Scotland asking their opinions of the reason for his coming and what they thought he would ac- “ ¢ of North Carolina v: ii Pa cual iole | Maryla Age Ph them all, and predicts that within 5| perience in running a home,” she complish his “swin: und ircle.” ri of the Uttly world) series at (Oriol Maryland Univ, at College Park, Md.| the) Osa Nevth: Dakots and north. | says, “bot there cant be-cuyaitten, 1) by his. “swing aro the ec le. The illuminating responses of the overseas’ editors who \ cleat Atabiap a Jaa iae aeaDa {ern Minnesota will be more famous| ence if a household is managed cor- if ir verdi re 5% ore TOE acd fore oe Iai ib HIGH CLV EN doe divatack raksdastion’ thini May i Show eigss mano woman cabled.-thei icts are reproduced in the leading article of THE DIGEST this week.: They run the Bete pots Hae ad aaah neg of the livestock sections in the is discourteous and cold-blooded another by Brief in the ninth, with | ehh acs ed the corn belt. | with employes and Til show. you gamut from good-himored comment to virulent assault, and -will make, entertaining reading for the r on first, won the minor lea- sota side| someone (who isn't very popular with | ; Many fields on the Minne p for the American of the river are yielding 15 tons of| members\of his own family.” sugar beets to the acre, it is report-| Miss Redell declares there is no ee ed by Mr, Leaf, and the price is| better avenue to success than sten- FE DENBY ones —— now over '$8 a ton, with another| ography for the young woman enter- i F “ | Taise in prospect. The beets are} ing business. At 16 she went to ‘ - IS ON BLOCK | North Dakota Wheat Growers} (i under contract to the beet sugar] business college and then held oth Te NT company, at Chaska, Minn. stenographic ~positions with several Orgdh Says it is Necessary Bee firms before going with the M, & SEED GRAINERS St. L. in 1908. In 1913 she was go, N D., Oct. 26. made chief clerk of*the law depart- American people. Other striking _news-features in this week’s DIGEST are: gue champions Association le Pinchot Puts Prohibition Up Ford Politics in Muscle ‘ How the press of the conttey ‘views the Penn- { s A . : The whys.and wherefores in his dicker with the _- sylvania Governor’s challenge to the President. Government for Muscle Shoals and his attack up- ‘ St.Louis, Oct. 26.—Reports in circulation in Chicago that Rogers = Hornsby, star second baseman for 26.—In_ spite | An en ra ne of the surplus in wheat grown in the] gency list of growers of high quality | ment and in 1917 chief clerk to: the 4 the St Louis Nationals, would be) United States, there is actually aj seeds has been issued by the North | president, And last year the board of : aay ; on Secretary of War Weeks. i ree £04. the ago Clubs, were |shortuge of i spring gluten} Dakota pure seed laboratory as an| directors made her assistant sde- China’s New Ten-Million- emphatically denied today by offi- A : ‘A Qn. a ath Gesthe casdinaly wheat, such as is grown in North to persons who wish to make| retary of the road. Dollar President ( a s fe inalsy\ Dakota, for patent bread flour, s of seed. She gives the following advice to ollar eside! * oT. 1 “a Tit eeTeallny, : and | cording to given in the ludes the Slathers of Soviet Gold. \ Branch Rickey, vice young girls who are learning sten- lent and| 7 ’ 4 number of the Whleat Grow of growers who ography: af it ‘ " >, manager of the lo aid the} official organ of the North Dakota|were inspected by rept Know Your Stuff pape cree rage about forget Chins it Spent where it should do the-most good to lc f + reported trade was absurd afd that] Wheat Growe ociation. | ofthe pare seed laboratory during} “Be an enthusiast ard learn all the AgAln WIth A New. D spread Communism in Germany, is said by- the i Hornsby neither for trade nor} North Dakota, South Dakota, Mon-!the summer and whose seed will be] detail in your office you can absorb. a new war, a new constitution, the celebration of : Kpae 3 y gale, Bresdon reiterated that Horns- tana and part of Minnesota, the four 1 providing bin inspections | “Never discuss a subject in which its twelfth anniversary asa republic—and an Communists to be yielding a good harvest at the y would be a member of the Car-| states in which “gluten” wheat. is|and laboratory analyses of the seed|you arg not thoroughly grounded i i Reeeiccii aext year ands Rickep ticieds roanecr ied Meer ne loner the necessary requirements as| unless for the purpose of obtaining election scandal. beeseup une: 4 declared he not interested in of this wheat that is needed y of variety, freedom from | information. You . will only reveal ‘ 3 : % the least in any of the Cub players | for proper mixing of patent flour by eds and germination. tht you are superficial. ' mentioned in the reports as proba- ae “Dress neatly but ‘not flashily. . Now For a Wheat-Growers’ Union—Germany’s New Currency Plan—How Large Is the Universe? — People Who Hear and Smell Colors—Rembrandt In the Caldron—The “Hick” Farmer's Protest — When Philosophy Accepts the Cross—Gasoline and the Gospel—The Earthquake Seen Through Jap- anese Eyes—Department of Good English. An Unusually Attractive Collection of Illustrations pecan ing Humorous Cartoons. Don’t spend time powdering your nose when you might be doing im- portant work. Above all, pity the. girl who wants to be a vamp. There's only one place where the vamp gets away with it, and that’s on the bly coming to St. Louis in exchange for Hornsby. INVADING CHAMPS Rumors of the probable trade or = = selling of Hornsby, who led the Na-! ; tional League in’ batting for the | past three seasons, cropped out re- cently when it was. disclosed that differences existed between him and the Cardinal management, Champion Would Meet Jensen Jack Fische# of St. Louis, claiming to be the world middleweight wrestl- ing champion, would like to meet Thor Jensen of Bismarck, according to a letter from his manager, Tommy i Sullivan, to The*Tribune. os | Grid Games_ | New “"Yopk, Oct. 26——Principal foot- ball games scheduled for Oct. 27 in e various sections of the country fol- low: oa Remember to’ be Plesdent at all times. The pouting girl never gets anywhere. The pouting girl never gets anywhere. A, man can come to his office with a gronch, raise Cain generally and get by,-but the minute a woman tries it she becomes a/‘hen,’ PR ee ue, + Go to Theaters Showing “FUN from the PRESS” it all, pull down the shades and get on your carpet slippers. Young or old, you are in the: first stages of senility.” Too Late To Classify FOR RENT—Nov. 1st office “rooms over Knowles Jewelry store. Apply F. A. Knowles, Bismarek. \ October 27th Number—On Sale Today—All ‘aeciank Cents » Tf by any chance your favorite motion-picture fileker of the film. If you enjoy clean, wholesome, theater is not already running this'laughmaker, | and vigorous humor, you'll ‘never regret your ‘drop the manager a_line, or stop at the boxoffice, -action.. FUN. from the PRESS produced ar and tell him you would like to. see it. weekly. | The Literary Digest. Distributed by -W. Theretis a laugh i in every line—a aces in every | Hodkinson Corporation. = 10-26-t£ FOR REN’ Private garage, 409W. i eccg Rosser. 10-26-2t Harvard vs. Dartmouth at Cam- bridge, Mass, Columbia vs. Williams at New rk, ePenn State vs. West Virginia at] ‘ York. ~ Pennsylvania vs. Centre at Phil- adelphia, Yale vs. Brown at New Haven. LEFT TO RIGHT—SCHIKAT, STBHINKE, DOSTAL. «Amberst. vs. Oberlin at Amherst, Mass. Tee is the open season for invading European wreg‘ing champions, oo near-champions and whet-nots. Three cf these mat geniuses are now fn “eee Ny” ON? Wesleyan at Ham-| our well-known midst. Richard Schikat, weighing 225 poonds, is ealled 5 Boston College a; Marquette at|the “new German Hackenschmidt.” Hans Steinke is the European SS Divetean <2 pee raat champion. Hans is 6 ict 6 inches tall’ and weighs 260 2 pounds. e young man ate peppermit sticks in Le juth and stunted.’ wo vs. Rutgers at Easton, his growth. Josef Dostal, champion of Czechos!ovakfa, is another giant “tas Eabanon Valley at West | ae aia of 230 pounds. They are fe si form in Amen, S an vs, Bismarches FOR SALE—1 “bed complete in good condition, waysagless’ spring, Os- termoor mattress $35.00; one rug $12; 1 smal? ru; $5.00; } Princess dresser $12.00; Spanish. leather dining. chairs, $2.00 cach; “one Span- ish leather rocker $12.00,:: Other

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