The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 22, 1924, Page 3

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WHEAT LOWER BARLY TODAY Moves Downward | in Sym- pathy With Corn Chicago, Aug. 22.—Wheat weaken- ed as a result of sympathy with corn in today’s early dealings. At first, however, experts gave wheat a brisk upturn. After opening at %e off to Yc up, September $1.26% to $1.267% and December $1.31% to fi = * $1.31% wheat showed material gains nd then a fractional general loss. Subsequently bulges led to selling pressure and consequent downturns. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK ; Chicago, ( U. S. Dept. of Agri- % culture), Aug. 22—Hog receipts 2,600; firm at or strong to 5 cents higher than the average. Top $10.25. i Sheep receipts 1,200; active; fat native lambs strong to 25 cents higher. Cattle receipts 500; fed yearlings, and practically all grades of she- ts stock moving at strong prices, cows and heifers strong to 15 cents high- er f ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK South St. Paul, Aug. 22>-Cattle receipts 900, About steady. Best steers and yearlings in very light supply, Three loads spring year- lings 1,073 pound averages $7.25. Weighty steers of quality to sell i around $8.75. Grassers $5.50 to $7.00, Best she-stock $3.25 to $5.75. Canners and cutters $2.00. to $3.00. Bologna bulls moderately active $3.25 to $3.75, Few best heavies upward to $4.00. Stockers and feeders very slow. Calves receipts 800. 25c to 50 { cents higher. Best lights $11.00 to i $11.75. Bulk to packers $11.50 downward. Hog receipts 4,900. Steady. Bulk y(desirable 160 to 800 pound averages $9.60 to $9.75. Top $9.75. Packing sows mostly $8.25 to $8.40. Feeder i steady. Bulk better grades Best sows to feeders, buyers, $6.50 to $7.00, { Sheep receipts 600. Fat lambs steady to strong. Bulk natives .25 to $13.25. Culls $8.00 to $8.50. heep scarce, weak to 25' cents low- er. Odd head handyweight ewes around $6.00, CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, Aug. 22.—Eggs higher. Receipts 7,141 cases. Firsts 31¢ to 34c; ordinary firsts 29¢ to 30c; poultry lower, fowls 17¢ to 22¢. Springs 27. Roosters 15%e. Butter lower. Receipts 7,517 tubs. Creamery extras 37c. Standard 36 %e. Extra firsts 35%ce to 3 Firsts 34c to 34%c. Seconds 32c to 33%c. Cheese unchanged. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, Aug. 22.—Flour un- ; changed. Shipments 38,569 barrels. Bran $25.00. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, Aug. 22—Wheat re- @eipts 255 cars compared with 310 cars a year ago, Cash No. 1 northern $1.28%% $1.33%; No. 1 hard spring $1.3: . 1 dark northern choice to fancy $1,41% to $1.48%. Good to choice $1.33% to $1.40% ordinary to good $1.30% to $1.33%; new and old May $1.36%; new and sald September $1.28; new and old ‘ December $1.315%; corn No. 3 yellow oats No, 3 white 47c to 47 barley 70c to 84e; rye No. 2 B2%c to B8e; flax No. 1 $2.70%. to BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Aug. 22, 1924, No. 1 hard, 60 Ib. test . $1.18 No. 1 dark northern 6 lg No. 1 northern spring . ee lea No, 1 amber durum . » 1.04 No. 1 mixed durum 98 . 1 red durum 90 1 flax R No. 1 rye . 4 i We quote but do not handle tl following: Oats Barley Speltz, per cwt. . q No. 1 dark hard Hard winter DAVIS HITS KU KLUX KLAN Asks Coolidge to Join in Denunciation ie he \ ; j bs Seagirt, N, J., Aug. 22.—Calling the Ku Klux Kian by name, John W. Davis, Demoeratic candidate 4) for president, declared in an ad- : dress here today that this organ- ization or any other which raised the standards of racial or reli- gious prejudices must be condem- ned by all those who believed as he did in American ideals, Having thus made his position clear, Mr. Davis said he hoped that President Coolidge, as candi- date for president, would see fit | “by some explicit declaration” to join with him entirely removing the Klan problem from the cam- paign debates. Mr. Davis said that these mat- ters must not be permitted to di- { vert the attention of the public from the vital issues before them and declared that the Klan issue was not a debatable one, The radio operator in Tokyo who sent the first information of the W earthquake by radie has received a gold medal and $500 from the Ra- dio €orporation of America, Having lost all his teeth as young man, a German has developed hi: til he can crack nuts or @o anything with them that ordi- farily would call for , the use of tooth. : FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1924 MARKET NEWS || ATTORNEYSFOR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ing to the,new court house. Federspeail who says he is an ex- pert swimmer, appeared at the news- paper office and told of the stunt he proposed to attempt. He then visited | several clothing stores and asked to} borrow a bathing suit but was turned | down and warned against the attempt. The river is out of its banks and the | flow over the dam is terrific with a| five foot drop into a small Niagara. | = | WCOY PLAN TO FIGHT CHARGS Plea of Not Guilty Starts; Them Preparing Defense For Pugilist WOMEN TRAIN AS BANKERS Aug. 22.—Attorneys \ Los Angeles, for Kid McCoy, former pugilist, charged with the murder of Mrs. Theresa W. Mors, heré August 12, today were organizing their forces for an attack on the iron ring of evi- dence which District Attorney Keyes believes he has welded around the 51 year old fighter. While they would not divulge their “INCHINA 2. Peking, Aug. Thirty girl stu-| dents h: aduated from a “school | of banking” established in Peking | two years ago, and will be appointed : to posts as clerks and officers in the | plans, they took occasion yesterday | Peking Women's Commer and to deny categorically that these plans | Savings Bank, says the Asiatic News | provided for a plea of guilty by Me-|ageney, Siaces| Coy when he appears before Judge Charles §, Crail, Monday, The form- er motion picture actor and boxer was arraigned yesterday on the murder charge, as well as on three charges of assault with intent to kill and four charges of robbery growing out of a The banking school was establish- | ed by a Mrs, Woo who was impress: {| ed by the success attending effort: by Chinese women in SI ai to found a bank. The Peking bank is still in embryo, but it is pro- posed to start it with $1,000,000 and shooting affray staged in and nearlto be ready for business next Mrs. Mors’ antique shop several hours| spring. after her death. In an address to the graduates Before his attorneys could ask for| Mrs, Woo stressed the point that a postponement of the plen until Monday, McCoy shouted out in an- swer to the murder charge: “I did hould interest them in order that they their weste Chinese women selves in busine may not lag behind n EXPERTS DISCUSS HYGIENE IN. INDUSTRY Geneva, Aug. 22.—Problems of hy- igiene in industry were discussed re- jcently at Geneva by a special com- mission of experts, who met at, the international labor office. | The matters under study are deem- jed of considerable‘ importance to j World workers. They include poison- |ous infection contracted during the |exercise of employment, the possi- | bility of extending insurance privi- INSTRUMENT TESTS OVERTAX THE BUREAU Washington, Aug. 22.—Demands of private manufacturers of scientific nd engineering instruments for the government's official stamp of ap- proval have resuited in an appeal for additional financial support by the Bureau of Standards, which has just completed the fiscal year with approximately 140,000 tests, more than a hundred fold inerease com- pared with the accomplishments the first year of its existence 22 years ago. Upon the findings of the bureau depend millions of dollars of ex- penditures in the world of physical 8¢ ae ae Aaa A wave STOCKHOLM yovernment, examinations also are) HELPS ITS YOUTH Bh of commercial firms in- divid more than 40,000 test fold- Stockholm, Aug. 22.—The helping ng 600,000 such tests, for hand of this city has been extended charge is made, having been 1902. to assist young men and women in rence, however, and in some| the Vocational Aid Bureau, establish- ed by the Stockholm Board of Edu- cation, The bureau is especially designed to help boys and girls who are about. to finish high school, and must eith- er go to work without delay or take up special training in trade or ap- ull testing except that for the ment has had to be refused ause the demand exceeds the fa- ‘ilities for doing the work, Germans Stop not!” To the other charges he was | siste By cultivating an earning 4Q| Prentice schools, .It co-operates with indifferent. capacity ie Srenlapereutredeca Wares Sermons By Radio the city Employment Nae for Min- Meanwhile arrangements —were| may not be forced by their parents meas : 1 during the first month of its made for his examination by addi-} against their will. | Breslau, Aug. Sermons and 2 of the 657 applicants were nal defense alienists, although] Mrs, Hsiung Hso-lin, wife of ex- church es broadcast over the in positions, Among the suc- there had been no repetition of the] premier Hsiung, is said to be a pat- Tadio have been forbidden by order | cessful ones were 126 young women. anties which Tuesday caused police s of the new banking enter- {of the consistory of the Evangelical ron prise. detectives to express the belief that the Kid’s mind had cracked under the strain of the shootings and his subsequent arrest. The body of Mrs. Mors, it was an- nounced by Albert A. Mors, her form- er husband and heir to her $125,000 estate, will be sent tomorrow to her mother’s home in New York, Evidence unfavorable to the Kid's defense was revealed yesterday when $H000 worth of jeweis, which Albert A. Mors declared were taken from his wife, were recovered by police from Mrs, Jennie Thomas, MeCoy’s sister. However, Captain of Detec- tives Herman Cline indicated that no further charge would be placed against McCoy. Political Life Arouses Indians Of Montana i | Helena, Mont., Aug. 22.—-Montana| Indians, apparently aroused by the! recent enactment. of the Indian citi-| zenship bill, are’ taking an increas- | ing interest in polities. S 1 in dians, educated in the + schools, have filed this year f ty offices, while Robert Yellowtai three-quarter blood Crow Indian, of | Lodge Grass, on the Crow reservation, | has announced his desire tu attend the white man’s Congress at Wash- ington as a representative from Mon- } tuna, Yellowtail, who is 35 y completed his edueation by pri tutoring after his graduation from | the reservation schools. couraged | by his tribesmen, he recently filed} for Congress from the second dis-! ject to the primary election) He is opposing Cong: A MICROBES NOT WAR WEAPON League of Nations Find no | triet, auld ug. 26. Need to Worry About It ee man Scott Leavitt, of Great Falls, who is completing his first term. mt . Montana’s Indian population is es- timated at 13,000, of whom 7,000 liv! in the second congressional district More than 2,500 Indians from the | reservations will be allowed to vot | this year. Yellowtail, who gives his; occupation as a rancher, announces he will base his campaign on his knowledge of Indian problems. Berlin Bars Actors Under Three Years; | The chief of po- decree prohibiting old, | a Paris, Aug. 22.—Poison gas holds all its old war terrors, but the buga- boo of microbes is not an imminent danger, according to the report of the League of Nations subcommittee appointed by the temporary mixed commission for the reduction of armaments to consider the progress in chemical warfare so as to warn the world what war really means. The subcommittee, composed of Viscount Robert Cecil, Admiral Au- brey Smith, General De Merinis and Colonel Reguin, drafted the report, which will be submitted at Geneva, but which was published here today. The report was based largely on detailed statements given the sub- committee by the leadtmg chemical experts of the world. They agree in general that microbes were too diffi- cult to spread and that preventives were too adequate to make bacteriol- ogical warfare a menace of the near future, Berlin, Aug. 2: lice has issued a children under three years of from acting in the movies. Special dispensations must be cbtained fory children more than three years of age, and even with this granted the children are prohibited from working for the movies before school and af- ter 8 o’clock in the evening. TEN-HOUR DAY | Warsaw, Aug. 22.—The cabinet has introduced a 10-hour working day for three months in the metal and iron industry of Upper Silesia, after a series of conferences with repre- sentatives of labor unions and in- dustrials, The labor unions made this concession as a means’ of en- abling Poland to produce more cheaply and compete on better terms with foreign industry. Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Aug. 22H. J. Federspeial, of Fort Wayne, Ind., de- fied death here when he plunged in- to the Cedar river above the dam and was carried over the dam and three blocks down stream before he could save himself. Women stood on the banks scream- ing when the raging torrent at the dam tossed him like a cork and ropes were thrown him as he bobbed from beneath the waterfall but he declined them all and floated with the cur- rent until hereached the steps lead- SAVE 1934 A STRONG BANK. WILLING TO SERVE \ ‘A Bank That is a Friend “Friendship,” wrote Richardson, “is the balm as well as the seasoning of life.” And friendliness plays a large part in; mak- ing the efforts of the City National Bank to Church of Prus When news reached the ecclesias- tical body that a pastor of this ci delivered such — sermpns with success, but without asking lin, the prohibitive eed, and will become throughout all Germany, APITOL. THEATRE Tonight and Saturday See It—and Tingle with It’s of all newspapers, the Pek- ing Gazette, was founded during the T'ang dynasty and ceased publication in 1300, Olde: much permission at B ord effective Most farmers from’ the South African veldt wear evening dress when going to a theater. s dee MRS. CARLSON COULD NOT _ EVEN DRIN DRY CLEANING DYEING REMODELING RE-PAIRING PLEATING FUR REPAIRING CITY BISMARCK | leges enjoyed by the victims of acci- dents to persons who contract a ma- lady during service, and the studies | to be carried out to attain a uniform. | ity of tests in the determination of }eolors by railway employes and sail- ] ors. ' The experts form what is known as | the committee of correspondence for | industrial hygiene, and include spe- | cialists.from Germany, Austria, Bel- jgium, France, Great Britain, Italy,! japan, Poland and Jugo-Slavia. Four postcards recently delivered in Heyling Island, England, were posted in Germany 22 years ago. K COFFEE Her Stomach Was So Badly Upset. | “The makers of Tanlac will always have my heart-felt thanks for the good health Tanlac has brought me” states Mrs. Enock Carlson 2109 22nd | Ave., So. Minneapolis, Minn, Before taking Tanlac I was ter- ribly run-down. My appetite had lost its edge and indigestion gave | me a lot of trouble, Even a cup of coffee in the mornings would hurt] me and at times gas pains nearly, doubled me in two. T had bursting headaches and was in such a bad condition that my husband, as well as myself, was worried about me. “IT am now on my fourth bottle of Tanlac and can eat most anything | I want. The headaches are gone, I sleep fine and feel so well that I #0 about my housework singing, for \I feel that Tanlac has given me a! new lease on good health.” Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 40 million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills, for consti- pation made and recommended by the manufacturers of Tanlac.—Adv. CLEANERS and DYERS Too Late To Classify LOST on trail No. 3 about six miles east of Bismarck, a suit case con- taining woman’s clothes, baby rompers and men’s blue serge trousers. Finder please return to Box 447, Ashley, N. D. 8-22-1w FOR SALE—Modern six room house, excellent condition, three bed rooms, bath, full basement, hard- wood floors throughout, birch trim, fireplace, garage. Beautiful location, gine lawn and trees. Price $5,000, Phone 230-W. 5 8-22-1w FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room. this Good Hf twé girls would* occupy room, would give board too, location, 617-7th ‘St. Wireless has developed the news- papers on trans-oceanic liners to a high degree of completeness. Food Sale—The first divis- ion of Presbyterian Ladies Aid will hold ‘a foot sale at Bis- marck Food Market, August 2, at 2 p. m. PAGE THREE Operation Not Successful “Sixteen years ago I was operated for appendicitis ‘and later operated again for gall stones. Neither did me any good and I suffered all kinds of tortdre since. Five years ago I took Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy and have felt no symptoms or pain since. All stomach suffeters should take it.” It ise simple harmless prep- aration that removes’ the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation’ which caus- es practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments including appen- dicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded.—Adv. Fall styles in Cloth Coats, fur trinimed. Bismarck Cloak Shop. Come in and see the new fall dresses — they are beau- tiful. Bismarck Cloak Shop. While the music hall is gaining popularity in Germany, it is almost x thing of the past in England, Fall and Winter Smartest Styles in Coats and Dresses you will find at The Bismarck Cloak Shop Select your fall garment stocks. now from our beautiful We are showing a large collection of smart cloth coats, fur coats, dresses and millinery. Sev- eral weeks have been spent in New York and other eastern markets by our buyer in search of the new- est and finest garments procurable. They are for your inspection and approval. We are always glad to have you come in and look whether you are ready to purchase or not. BISMARCK CLOAK SHOP Main Street, around the corner of McKenzie Hotel. Hoot Gibson In His Greatest Aetion Romance Hook and Ladder Big pieturesque _ thrills, breathlees excitement, spi tacular scenes and unro: ious comedy are crowded in- to this actionful love story of a fire-laddy and his sweet- heart. Don’t miss Hoot Gib- son in his greatest hit! Mack Sennett Comedy / “Shanghied Lovers” Coming Monday BETTY COMPSON =) “WOMAN TO WOMAN” Matinee Every Day At 2:30 TONIGHT Friday and Saturday WANT A LAUGH? Here’s your treat— A tear in it too—but mostly laughs! provide satisfying service a source of pleas- ure to the customers who are served and those in the bank who serve them. Make this friendly bank your financial ally and adviser! UT Gone’ BISMARCK, ' P. C. Remington, President. J. A. Graham, Vice President and Cashier, C. M. Schmierer, Assistant Cashier. NO. DAKOTA ~- mI Ben Alexander and ' Lloyd Hamilton most pride themselves. Arabs love bargaining Eloquence is the accomplishment on which Arabs They are continually hurling rhetoric, proverbs, poetical quotations at each other. Of course, there are many opportunities for speechmak- ing: but they enjoy it most while engaged in buying and selling. No matter how simple and staple the article may be, fifteen minutes is the least that can be taken over a, transaction. And then it has been greatly hurried! Just imagine if we had to bargain for fifteen minutes over everything we bought! Yet not so very long ago, every purchase was a matter of bargaining. thanks to advertising that it is no longer so today. We sometimes forget how important advertising is. We do not realize all it is doing for us. achieved nothing more'than to do away with bargain- ing, it would be a boon to mankind. But it does more. It puts purchasing on a business basis. It protects you against fraud and inferiority. You can plan your shopping according to your pocketbook, and not accord- ing to the patience and bargaining ability of everyone you will have to face. When you think it over you must. realize that it pays to read the advertisements. THOSE WHO READ WISELY READ ADVERTISING Yet, if it had It is

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