The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1925, Page 8

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“toe PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MARKETING OF WHEAT IS PAST HIGHEST MARK ssion in Receipts at Ter- minals Is Noted During Month of December Re BUSI ESS IS GREATER 27 Per Cent Over | Year i it of Selected North- Cities west Minneapolis, Jan, 13.--The —high- lide of wheat marketing which pre has and November ed, the Dh lightly below to the mated crop. Marketing vailed in October recened. Ind ceipt were of ns were seasonably low- rs all other gri except corn, ripening, and in larger supply terminal elevator view of financial northwest by the Fe Bank of Minneapolis. continues: There was a record-breaking run South St. Paul in Decem- ber, ding 100,000 the highest point heretofore reached. | This is to be explained by the short | late out in er, owing to. its which came and piled up stocks, says a re in the Reserve report oats, The of hogs ex corn erop and high prices for corn. BERNARE Under these cireumstances, —light- weight hogs have sold at prices par- | BY ROY GIBBONS. if ticularly attractive to those able to NBA: Service Weiter This has | re sship- buy for feeding purposes resulted in_unseasonably Chicago, Jan, * Bernard ant ments of feeder hogs in December. | had another “date” with the hang There was also a heavier than nor-| man. It now is broken, mal marketing of calves and sheep. |, he boy from “hack o° the yards,” The median prices of all grains! wi gee qins w ed temporarily by as well as all kinds of livestock, ex- | Governor Len Small last ae ey cept feeder steers, advanced. The lowing a flood of appeals from all strength in hog prices is remarkable tha wie @eveuuledng in view of the heavy movement to Gristle ines ACHE Anais Wave el aN ug na oD sin bok county Ret of a ton of manure D th ail sales by rtment and product value of each cow is clothing stores in of this tely twenty — dollars district in December were not equal ion of this figure to the to last year, The decline, however, 10,000 dairy cattle in this county | has been slight. For the United jrings the total added value to the | States as a whole, retail trade in ..i1 fertility here to the almost un- December was percent better jctlievable figure given above. ay ago. All Federal Re-, in keeping with its better feeding} gerve Districts show gains, except program the Institute estimates that Cleveland, Minneapolis and Kai from 25 percent to 50 percent great- Pe, ._ er profit from eash ton of feed can | The linseed and lumber industries }¢ Inade hy local fi who milk ure more active than normal. Mill- ing production and building permits (4. granted were both at lower levels in jy cows through improve lone S, by ding meth- | This was demonstrated, | the experiment recent- December than in November and as jy concluded by the University of compared with December last year. inne Mie. vechouliay vaiiny aie “Banks in this district experienced Vision year: ago {garchenell the customary demand for currency | yy; ie vs with to be used in Christmas trade. Our records but without a Federal reserve note circulation ex- ing ration and by lynlacing panded 1% millions between Novem- them on a home-rown ration suite ber 26 and December 24, reaching | able to their needs, increased each the highest point of the year on the cow's production almost forly per later date. Banks in the Targer cont, ; cities lost in demand deposits and guined in time deposits. Redis- counts owing to this bank were re- duced about 1 million dollars. Com- | mercial paper outstanding in this | HAIR WHITENS > GRANT jail the morning of Jan. 16, when ve him a new reprieve he Grant, Was arrested when was but 19 for the murder of a liceman., In two ye turned entirely gr On his last e” public senti- ment saved him, Five thousand mes- suges to the governor said it would be inconsistent to carry out the death penalty in Grant's case in view of the Loeb-Leopold deeision. NEWOVERLANDS ARE SENSATION W. E. From Lahr Receives Word owing in New York Probably the greatest sensation of the year wag created in aatomobile circles Overland ices from nder mo- when the Willys y reduced their p 0 the four- nouncement the more sensational for the reason that jthe Overland Sedan which was as j duced to $715 at the fhas just begun coming through the factory with an all-steel body fin- ished in Duco as well as roomier, more comfortable, seating arrange- ments and other body improvements. |The chassis in this model remains [the same, sturdy, dependable —con- truction which has established the Overland ©: a place in the district increased nearly . one-fifth ! during the month and was about! double the volume outstanding a | year ago, Business Transactions Up niet “The total dollar value of business | Warning transacted in the Ninth Federal Re- | serve District during December Possible ven Against Rust Spread shown by the individual debits at | ; hanks in seventeen selected cities | St. Paul, Jan, was 27 percent greater than a year | there i still enough ¢ r | ago. The December t of debits } berry bushes in the spring | was 6 percent less than in Novem- |txien to account for by ber, whereas a seasonal decline is ust losses was sounded to be expected of not to exceed 2 agricultural authorities of 1 percent. There is now taking place dle West who arth a secondary turnover of crop money ,8nual meeting for prevention of through the hands of merchants, #rain rust. collections of back taxes by county | Delegates from 14 central-north- treasurers, heavier than normal col- Western states and Canada attended lections by wholesalers, the payment ‘the mecting. ‘They included Frank oO. oy of delinquent mortgage interest and Lowden, former or of Tli- some refinancing. This turnover, /Nois, and Dean H. L. Bolley of the of in the spring coupled with the heavy movement of , North Dakota Agricultural College. tially toward offsetting the effect on ference, Dean E, M. Freeman: of the debits of the precipitate decline o: University of Minnesota College of | timistic interpretation the rel- Fertility of utive absence of rust 4 ahod “Because we had comparative! Soil Increased little rust in 1923 does not mean th Ss Se: he said. Ls | proximately a million by $200,000 because of the soil fer. |©ommon barberry bushes were found tility produced as a by-product of |2"4 destroyed. Next season another livestock, has contributed substan- grain receipts.’ Agriculture advised against too op- jwheat region last season By Dairying ee shall never again suffer serious os Burleigh county is richer yearly | vif Blue |™illion probably will be removed dairying, according to the len. } : Valley Creamery Institute. The! Ke Bheeman's wining Wasi re figure is based on data resulting |¢¢ by Dr. Ball of the United States from many carefully kept records | Department of Agriculture and Dr. on a considerable number of farms, | © aD f c The average quantity of manure | the University of Minnesota College recovered for use on crop lands in |! Agriculture. the area studied was 7.4 tons pe cow, and since the fertilizing value i BANK AUDIT IS HE Ww G What My Neighbor | ELD RON The audit report of the Bank of Says North Dakota, made public yesterday j by the Industrial Commission, is in Is of Interest to Bismarck Folks. | error in referring to loans of state When one has had the misfortune institutions as advances to be met to suffer from backache, headaches, | by future appropriations and to cov- dizziness, urinary disorders and oth- | er deficits, according to R. B. Muv- er kidney ills—and has found relief | phy, chairman of the board of ad- from all this sickness and suffer- | ministration. ing, that person’s advice is of un- | Loans have been made to state in- told value to friends and neighbors, | stitutions each year for many years, The following case is only one of | due to depletion of the general fund many thousands, but it is that of a | at certain times of the year, he said, Bismarck resident. Who could ask |and loans obtained from the Bank of for a better example? North Dakota for institutions have ‘ “Mrs. N. F. Reynolds, 417 Mandan | been only in anticipation of tax pay- Ave., says: “I suffered from pains | mepts. through my back and kidneys and he board does not authorize ex- other symptoms of kidney trouble. | penditures on the expectation of pos- My. ankles swelled and I found it | sible future appropriations,” Mr. difficult to get my shoes on at | Murphy said. times. After trying several rem- edies without the least help, I fin- ally got Doan’s Pills at the Len- hart: Drug Co. After using them, all’ of the trouble disappeared.’ Over twelve years Ister, Mrs. Reynolds said: “I have used Dosn’s |boro, Towner county, which it since and obtained prompt relief.” |on special deposit November 23, “Price 60c, -at all dealers, Don’t! 1923, reopened today for business, it simply ask for @ kidney remedy—|was announced at the state bank get. Doan’s Pills—the same that examiner's office. The bank has Reynolds had. ,.Fo: feeMpbam capital of $10,000, surplus of $10,000 Mirs,, Butfato, N, Yad and deposits of $115,000. ao EY Bab Hansboro Bank Is Reopened The Bank of Hansboro of Hans- nae HES In welcoming members of the con- | C. Stakman, plant pathologist of | is is the seventh land model dur- nd Company hi [been improving its construction. un- til yeiir they have found no rea- making even minor ch: yt in the hody construe! that only to give the public date body in steel and Duco. After hearing of the — sensation it the New York show upon showing of the new Overland 6- ‘cylinder sedan and the new Willys- linder line, the Lahr Mo- les Company, i for this Ov in up-to~ stributors, is ever to receive the s of the new models, W. E. id today. ‘The Lahr company cts shipments of both the Wil- lys-Knight and Overlang. sizes, as well as the new Willys-Knight fours the last of this month. In the mean- time the Lahr company is showing | the full line of Overlands 4-cylinder | models with the new steel bodies. Sees New Era in Automotive Retailing |, “Today for the first time in the history of the automotive industry the aggregate of money spent for maintenance and operation by car owners is a bigger sum than the sum spent for new cars,” says W. E. Lahr of the Lahr Motor Sales Co, “This means that the man who has only cars to sell is measuring up to I n 50 percent of his respon- to his community. “The big job before the car deul- er henceforth is to make the essen- of maintenance and operation | the car owner. “He must so build, equip, and man- age his organization as to er local responsi satisfaction in ownership.” COLDS Breaks a Cold Right Up Take two tablets every three hours until three doses are taken. The first doge | always xives relief, The second and third doses completely break up the cold. Pleasant and safe to take, Contains no quinine or opi- ates. Millions use “Pape’s Cold Com- pepnd.’ Price thirty-five cents, tee it. rs, his Hairshas | isily and economically accessible to| “Pape's Cold Compound” | SEE TOTAL Will Not Be Another in More’ Than a Century Say’ Astronomists (A.P.)-—Mil- Washington, lions of Americans will see, on Sat- nuary 24, something they never will again, a to- ital eclipse of the sun in some places and a partial eclipse over the greater) ‘part of the United States. There! {will not be another in more than a! / century, | Those who live within a belt 100 miles wide and 5,000 miles long rang- in from northern Minnesota across jnorthern Wisconsin and Michigam, ‘the Great Lakes to New York, Long Isiand, Connecticut and Rhodé Is- ‘land, parts of Pennsylvania, New Jer- |sey and Massachusetts —will see the ming sun blotted out on thd morn- ing of the twenty-fourth. Those who ‘live near this path across the coun- | try—a path that ends at sunset near he north of Scotland-—will see the un shadowed in part, the extent de- {pending on how near they live to this belt. In Duluth, Buffalo, New York City, w Haven and many other large j cities the eclipse will be'total, The partial eclipse will be ‘very large, !neaply total, in some of the largest | ingluding Boston, Providence, ¥°/"Philadelphia,, Baltimore, 'Washifigton and Chicago. As far south ap New Orleans, and as far westijas St. Louis and Omaha, the | partial seélipse will be large. In most’ of the central statds the jsun will rise more or less eclipsed; ‘but from Luke Erie eastward, all of jthe celipse will take place after the sun has risen, In New York City the total eclipse | will take’ place about 9:10 a. m, and ithe time of the greatest eclipse for | most of the cities in the east that keep Eastern Standard Time will ‘ Lut a few minutes from that. artial eclipse will begin about | leight o'clock in the same section and the eclipse will be over about half- past ten. When the eclipse becomes total the brighter stars and planets uppear and also the beautiful solar corona that | the astronomer is sa anxious to study, ) This is a magnificent halo of pearly {light extending to a great distance ‘trom the sun and different in shape rance at every eclipse, says | cial bulletin of the American} | Nature Association. It is never’ visi- | j ble except during a total — solar| [eclipse and can be studied only at | that timie because its light is s/ faint th e of sunlight in th gl the daytime hides it from view, It | when the moon obligingly comes between sun and earth and! shuts out the light of the sun that the! i the | never been see denser air is cold a ty. If one could look at the s' side of the| earth’s atmosphere, he would find} that they do not sparkle at all but tshine with a clear, steady light. We would see the stars in the ytime, too, as well as at night, for it is the atmosphere that scatters |Buy Furniture shines forth in all its wonders ty. those who find themselves within the path of, total eetipse should look out for the shadow hands, wavy bands of light and shade that ‘When You Catch Cold Rub on Musterole __ Musterole is easy to apply and it gets \in its good work right away. Often it | Prevents a cold from turning into “flu” ‘or pneumonia. Just apply Musterole with the fingers. It does all the good work of grandmother’s mustard plaster without the blister. Musterole isa clean, white ointment, made of oil of mustard and other home simples. It is recommended by many |doctorsand nurses. Try Musterole for | sore throat, cold on the chest, rheuma- tism, lumbago, pleurisy, stiff neck, bron- jchitis, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pains and aches of the back and joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet —colds of all sorts. To Mothers: Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Children’s Musterole. ‘35c and 65c, jars and tubes; hos- pital size, $3.00. wie coron WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers | Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 ao Ser PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in ' Charge. ; Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484R.9) W. E. PERRY FUNERAL DIRECTOR Parlors 210-5th Street. Night and Day attendant | 3. See 7 MILLIONS WILL | tit ovet the tundageme and buildingsd. tor: jgetBUtlding,’ exclusive ofthe! | | i just before and after the to eclipse,” the should look out for phenomenon “known : Beads,” which are seen as the thin, thread-like solar crescent breaks up} the into beads light as bulletin the says intere “Look also for the scarlet solar} prominences during the total eclipse| which flames of glowing ¢: of hydrogen and helium rising fr hidden surface of heights of thousands of miles and] visible beyond the edge of the moon inn queer forms and shupes. “The brighter stars and appear during the total eclips even a little betore and after it. j three planets, Venus, Mercury, and} Jupiter, should be seen in a close} group some distance to the south west of the sun, But above all else Mill do not fail to make the most of your | gu opportunities to observe the wonder ful and mysterious corona which ¢: except when the sun is totally eclipsed and which very fi few people ever have the good for-| tune to see. i moon to “Although the event of this one day | fi dwarfs all others by comparison in the January skies, it is in midwinter | that evening skies t their best, | the Ameri Nature tion | points out. There are more | nt stars in view t any other time of the year, sparkling more when the the light of the son and’ makes.the glare of light all over the sky9that hides the stars from view by-day. If we could do our star-gazingfrem th moon, we would be surprised to find the sky thickly studded with-stars in the daytime, for on the méén there is little, if any, air.” My For I. 0. 0. F. Home Devils Lake, N. D., Jan, 13.-~The contract for furnishing the new state home of the Odd Fellows, located in | this city and recently completed, has been arded to Goldberg’ a urniture store, Devils Lake, and ucob Goldberg, proprietor of the i | store, leaves tonight for Chicago and Grand Repids, Mich. to secure! Mi the nece: furniture, . Gold-; Mi \ berg estimates that the fumitwe PPR RRR RE RR RRR RRR Ree EEBBEBH 1a en Eats Aiea RaaTiiN et ie wince ieaientienliotionl al! top floor, hey | completed, will He | shipped to the home ¢ that there will be nothing in the | way total) Which will take place there N ECLIP stim is about to begin, and which! when the grand lodge of Odd {are seen again just as it en holds its annual meeting << SERRE RRR RRR RRR RE a TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1925 COL RED, ‘the ne? Wilton wis” powéitess) to COLEHARBOR 4|stop the tide, and Coleharbor won TEAM WINS, the score of 28 to 11. Knutson |playing for Coleharbor had the Wil- é which has not yet been! ti have yut $4,000, furnit yin) to plans h, | D., Jan. team di Coleharbor fast ton here Friday nightsin Ww ton offense guessing and time after “itime broke up their plays with his 1 June fast hard | stellar guarding. Great things are Hows | fought game. . However with such |expected from the Coleharbor all iveterans as Bairey and Knutson in | star aggregation this season. of the dedication nies | Colehar! avert cerer | Our January Clearance Sale IS STILL IN PROGRESS AND WILL CONTINUE DURING THIS WERK. | \ | WE HAVESIZES TO FIT EVERY- BODY IN MANY ATTRACTIVE ~ STYLES. ZA OUR PRICES FOR THIS FINAL CLEARANCE ARE $3.95 $4.95 $5.95 LQOK THESE VALUES OVER IN OUR WINDOWS. Alex Rosen & Bro. “The Men’s Clothes Shop” ee 10* ts coolness and mellow —— - “body” are a tevelation | _. to pipe smokers " | Back about1870, developed a secret tobacco: which won instant.and wi favor. It yiclded a fuller-bodied “Wellmanis Method”and richness, mildness and Granger Rough Cut tne Comeqy James N.Wellman which just seemed to“go’with process. a pipe. No one else ever knew / read his secret until we acquired its nd fragrance means made*GrangerRoughCut” : ae. — —

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