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—_ PAGE TWO Markets By ociated Press UNDERGO FALL Wheat Tumbles at Opening | ; | But Recovers During Day , i March 20.-AM grain un-| vere fall today as soon opened, wheat tumb- ag 6% cents a bushel Reports of | of a grainy Shiearo, rwent the mark much ye about 7 cents. impending failure an firm in Antwerp were in circulation | and today’s Liverpool quotation showed a big drop as compared with terday. Under such cireumstan- a selling took place here but peta r of buying developed and the market quickly steadied. Opening _ prices, which ranged from one to 5% cents lower, with May $1.58% to $1.60 and | July $1.38% to $1.39%, were follow- ed by many swift changes but with nu general upward trend that lifted May wheat to $1.61%. Subsequently the market scored 2 sharp advance influenced by reports dust storms in Kansas and Okla- homa and because of official figures showing less than 6,000,000 bushels a month left for export from Can- ada between March and September 1. Wheat closed strong, % cents to 4% cents higher, May $1.67% to $1.68 and July $1.45 to $1.45%. | CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, Mar. 20.—Hog receipts 23,000, Slow, steady to ten cents lower than Thursday’s low point or about fifteen to 25 cents lower than average. Extreme top $14.25. Cat- tle receipts 33,000. Most killing classes strong to 15 cents higher. Fairly ve. Killing quality of fed st largely medium bulk $8.50 to $10.00. Sheep reeeipts 8,000, Active, un- evenly steady to 25 cents higher. Mostly stendy. Bulk good to choice of 84 to 89 pound weights $15.00 to $16.00, Early top $16.00. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK South . Paul, Mar. 20.—Cattle receipts 1,400, Generally steady with "5 late close. Killing qual- Kew odd head steers early $9.00. Bulk $7.50 to ‘Thurs ity plai upwards to $8.75. Fat she-stock largely $4.50 to $5.50. For cows upwards to $7.00, for heifers. Canners and cutters 3.50. y active. sup to $4.25, feeders in light supply. Bologna bulls mod- Bulk around $4.00. Stockers and Nominally steady calves receipts 1,600, 25 to 50 cents lowes. Top sorts to pack- ers $9.50 to $10.00, Bulk $9.75. Hogs receipts 11,500. Very slow. Practically no early sales. Early bids sround 25 cents lower giving mostly $13.50 for 200 to 275 Ib. but- chers. Best heavyweights _ held around $1! Bidding from $12.50 for 140 to 180 Ib. averages 5 on most packing sows. Early je pigs mostly $12.25, Average cost Thursday $13.57, weight 218 Ibs. Sheep receipts 800. Fat lambs steady. Few sales matives $14.00 to $14.50. No choice fed lambs offer- ed: Sheep steady to strong. Run in- cludes two double deck direct to packers. MINNEAPOLIS. GRAIN Wheat receipts 107 cars compared mf 199 cars a year ago. Gash No. 1 northern Ah. 58 to $1.61. No, 1 dark northern spring; choice to fancy $1.78 to $1.89; good to choice $1.65 to $1.75; ordinary to good $1.59 to $1.64. : No. 1 hard spring $1.89 to $1.99. No, 1 dark Montana on track $1.57 to $1.80; to arrive $1.57 to $1.80. May $ July $1. Corn No. 8 1-8, yellow $1.05 3-4 to $1.08 3-4. Oats No. 3 white A2 1-2 to 42 3-4 cents. Barley .69 to .85 cents. Rye No, 2 $1.13 3-4 to $1.15 1-4. Flax $2.84 1-2 to $2.86 1-2. BISMARCK GRAIN (Farnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, March 20, 1926 No. 1 dark northern No. 1 northern spring No. 1 amber durum No. 1 mixed durum No. 1 red durum $1.46 1.40 141 1.30 1.25 No, 1 flax . 2.60 No, 2 flax . 2.55 No. 1 rye .. 94 Dark hard winter ' 1.36 Hard winter Oats 30 ‘We quote but net handle the following: Barley $ 65 Speltz, per cwt. .. SHELL CORN Yellow White & Mixed No.4. fs $ TT No, 5 . 12 No. 6... 66 1 cent per pound discount under 65 1b. Ear corn’6 cents under shel). Sample grade....... 56 CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, Mar. 20.—Bulk butter lower. Receipts’ 7,763. tubs. Cream- ery extras 48 cents: standards 48% cents; extra firsts 46 to 47 cents; firsts 40% to 44% cents; seconds 34 ,to 36 cents. Eggs higher, . re- ceipts 20,881 cases. dinpry firsts 28 to. 28%e cents. Storige packed firsts 30%c; poultry Baanones. , MINNEAPOLIS | FLOUR Minneapolis, ‘Mar. ~20.—Flour 15 fits higher in carload lots family. patents asoted st $9.76, to 60.0 0 a ed pol cretaries then the prime minister. \ for parl Derbyshire, but was defeated. ‘turning to Southport div’ was elected and continued to repre- sent tha he was made a baron year in the House of Commons Cur- only eign aff he was made baron in 1898 he was sent to India as viceroy and gover- Firsts :29%c; or-|~ LORD CURZON NOTED ENGLISH LEADER, DIES! (Continued from page one) ng his own discoveries and impres- Returning home in 1885 ‘he enter- as one of the private se-| of sbury, | He stood | ely in South Then constituency of the n of Lancashire he Marquess ment imme the division until 1898, when In his sixth on received a post in the govern- ment, being made under-secretary of state for India. At that time he was 32 years old. His polit) brought him promotion} cretary of state for for- rs and a féw months after hievements nor-general, a post he retained until 1905. Lord Curzon made a notable record in India, his regime having been highly satisfactory to both the ruling race and the native. In the years that followed many honors were conferred upon ‘him. Oxford made him lord chancellor in 1907 and the next year Glasgow made him lord rector. The honorary de- gree of doctor of laws was conferred by Cambridge, Manchester, Glasgow and Durham. In 1911 the king raised him to a viscount and the Royal Geo- graphical Society elected him presi- dent, which office he filled for three years. Lord Curzon was named one of the imperial war, cabinet members in the Lloyd-George coalition govern- ment and was madq leader of the House of Lords in 1916. He con- tinued in that position throughout the war and the reconstruction per- iod. He became se of state for foreign affairs in°1919 and con- tinued in that office in the Bonar Law government after the Lloyd- George rule had been smashed by the Tories. Meanwhile he had risen two more steps in the peerage—to an earldom and then to a marquisate. There remained only a dukedom, to be obtained and Lord Curzon general- ly was credited with a burning am- bition to achieve this highest of titles for those outside of rdyal blood. It was at that time that his ac- cumulation of honors operated against Lord Curzon in his ambition to become the British prime minis- ter. When Bonar Law retired in 1923 because of ill-health there was besides Lord Curzon only one other man regarded as likely for the post— Stanley Baldwin. In Curzon’s favor there was his long and notable rec- ord in polities and the government THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE zon was severely criticized and in the grumbling that preceded the fall of the Tories and the rise of the La- bor government in the winter of 1923- 24 much of the dissatisfaction was directed against him. With the fall of the Conservative government Lord Curzon was obliged to relinquish his post as foreign se- cretary, Some persons thought that in the prime minisger's parting page of honors the name of Curzon would head the list, with a dukedom at But there was no dukedom in the list. Lord Curzon was born at Kelles- ton, January 11, 1859, the eldest son of the Rev, Alfred Nathanial Holden Curzon, the fourth Baron Scarsdale. He married twice, taking an Ameri can as his wife on both occasion In 1885 he married Miss Vict Leiter, daughter of %. %. Leiter of Washington. She died in 1906, the year after they returned from India, leaving three daughters. His second wife, whom he married in 1917, was Mrs. Grace Elvina Hinds Duggan, a daughter of J. Monroe Hinds, who had been United States Minister to Brazil, and the widow of Alfred Duggan of Buenos Aires, LOSS OF LIFE IN STORM MAY REACH 1,000 (Continued from page one) fort, DeSoto and Gorham, all in coal mining territory within a 25 mile radius of Carbondale, the relief center, the toll of dead and injured continued to mount today as addi- tional bodies were taken from the ruins. The death list was above the 500 mark while between 2,000 and 00 were injured. Relief workers said the loss of life might reach 1,000. The property damage in the area was estimated at $7,000,000. There the disaster fell largely on persons of limited means, some out of work because of shutdowns. of coal fields. Many women and chil- dren and a score of babies appeared on the death list. Entire families were wiped out. One man searching through a morgue for his wife and three children found the bodies of MOTHER! “California Fig Syrup” Dependable Laxative for Sick Baby or Child service, while Baldwin virtually was a novice in polities, but had proved a strong chiancellor of the exchequer who had settled the American debt question with honor and satisfac- tion. Weighing in opposition to Cur- zon was the new twentieth century tradition against appointing as pre- mier a peer who could not meet at- tacks on the government in the House of Commons. Hence, Mr. being a commoner, receiv- e, urzon consented to remain Lord in the foreign office in the Baldwin government. He went to Lausanne to lead the Allies in making their peace treaty with the Turks, who had re-entered Europe and avenged against the Greeks the expulsion of the crescent from Europe in the World War. The treaty let the Turks back into Europe and returned to them a large part of what they had lost in the war, For this Lord Cur- A Banquet That Was Almost a Tragedy “Three years ago at a banquet I was stricken with acute indigestion. Two doctors worked over me for an hour before I came to. I had had severe colic attacks before, but noth- ing like that. No doctors or medi- cine gave me permanent help until a friend, who was at the banquet, ad- vised me to take a course of Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, which I did with wonderful results.” It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the in- testinal tract and allays the inflam- mation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ail- ments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refund- ed. Sold by druggists everywhere. — Adv. COLDS Break aCold Right up with “Pape’s Cold Compound” alw: doses take, Contain Ee ee t Take two tablets every three hours until three doses are taken, The first dose 's give The second ‘and third completely break up the cold. Pleasant and safe to Ro quinine or opistes. Millions use “Pape's, Compound.” thirty-tive Hurry Mother! Even a cross, fev- erish, bilious or constipated child loves the pléasant taste of “Califor- nia Fig Syrup” and it never fails to open the bowels. A teaspoonful to- day may prevent a sick child to- morrow. Ask your druggist for genuine “California Fig Syrup” which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say “California” or you his babies side by side it oné room, his wife in another. Many of the bodies were mangled, scarred or burned, some beyond rec- tem combined in the huge task of caring for the injured, giving shelter und hunting bodies while additional workers and state troops, including medical units, were due today, Fun- eral plans had not been made, but it was expected that multiple services would be held. In Murphysboro where 147 bodies had been recovered up to last night 8,000 persons, Or two thirds of the Forty- at population were homeldss. five bodies had been recovered Desoto which virtually was oblit ated, At. DeSoto a woman with baby in her arms was blown to the top of a tree where she clung until the storm passed and then descended virtually wnhurt. Witnesses described the . deadly visitor as a greenish black funnel slanting at an angle of 45 degrees, A deluge of hail followed in its path. Seven hundred and fifty-two of antitetanus serum, the last avail- able supply at Indianapolis was be- ing rushed to Carbonsdale and Mur- physboro. In Indiana, relief measures also were going forward rapidly un- der the direction of Governor Ed. may get an imitation fig syrup.— Adv. $12.50 to-$35.00 Many New Gowns for Spring and Easter In Coats and Dresses we offer an exceptionally wide selection. Even if you are not quite ready to buy, you will enjoy-seeing these new Frocks. Coats Dresses Silk Underwear A most complete assortment of Rogers : ‘Underwear — Sparkling with Dainti- ness, await selection here. CORSETS — CORSELETS AND BRASSIERS * --" Specially Priced For.Saturday A complete Easter outfit calls for new: underthings ‘as well as outer | things, go, come and select your wante chia 4 new garments. 3 ing,” “CASCARETS” 10c IF DIZZY, BILIOUS CONSTIPATED | $5.00 to $30.00 work at rescue was held up for a time because few were left un- injured in lines have been drawn about the én- the village. Military ognition. Identifications in many in- stances had to be made by rings or| tire area. other personal belongings. At Princeton which counted 20 The government, Red Cross, pri-| dead, the $2,000,000 shop of the vate institutions and “individuals| Sourthern Railway was destroyed throwing 400 persons out, of work. Most of the homes destroyed were those of working men. ty of the storm was revealed-in, the An eecentri- hine, an engineer of the Southern Railroad, who rode his engine through the tornado receiv- ing only a few scratches, blew the cab’ from over his head but he held on. ‘he said. The storm “I saw the storm cogti “It was black as. mit ———- To clean yeur bowels without = crampiug or ov- eS acting, take SS > “Cascarets.” Sick. head- ache, dizziness, biliousness, gases, indiges- tion, sour up- Jackson. Of five towns struck inj set stomach and all such distress st ay Choice lot Chickens, that state, Griffin, a Posey County|gone by morning. Nicest laxative , action and thrills. aap anit Hag village, suffered most, With 47/and cathartic on earth for. grown-|f™™ Comedy Pathe Comedy pe BOSD COD aaa ee bodies recovered, it was believed the|ups and children, 10c, 26¢ and 50c]| Arthur Stone Monarch Kraut, death list might mount to 125. Grif-|boxes—any drugstore—A2z. . 2 large cans............... cet i ret ee 4 pounds Fortify yourself against winter germs by eating Shredded Wheat Biscuit with hot milk. Nothing so nourishing and sat- isfying, and nothing so easy to prepare. Supplies warmth and strength for work or play. Better than mushy por- ridges for children because it makes them chew. Two Bis- cuits with hot milk make a good, satis- Shredded Wheat “It's All in the Shreds” ipl a fin Virtually was wiped out and sys- FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 1925 fight and moving faster than | intimated that many of the dead/Kristine Bonnevie of the Royal Wen ae were pupils. | Frederik University of Norway. She iS announces rom ‘ashington ~4| also believes there is a relation be that onational headquarters of thel cig mt ae een ae ey {tween the finger prints of related city has been established. It may require Level days to remove the dead. Due to lack of communication the first report had placed the number of dead at from 2 to 10. HEREDITARY PRINTS Christiania, Norway, March 20.— Finger prints are htreditary, and each family has a distinctive pattern which differs in a few. details for the various members, says Mlle Richholt’s Cash and Carry The Original Cash and Carry Store. Strictly Fresh Eggs, Red. Cross with its chief, President Covlidge, taking the initiative, had set-in motion its entire machinery ‘of mercy to the injured and home- less, races. Attend the Free Baking Demonstration Saturday be- tween 1 and 6 p. m. at the Bismarck ‘Gas Co. ELKS ATTENTION Regular meeting tonight. Important business. 5 | 3 NINETY PERSONS- DEAD Cairo, I1l., March 20.—Ninety dead is the. latest estimate of casualties caused in and around Gorham, ag- cording to a message received late last night by the local agent of the souri Pacific from the Gorham office of the road. -The school build- ing was destroyed and the message CAPITOL THEATRE Tonight and Saturday * BOB CUSTER ia “FLASHING: SPURS” A Western Filled with [ ten & Thayer | Ith & Thayer “Are Blond Men Bashful” Monday - Tuesday 6 The K ‘ Unknown” Seedless Raisins. Monarch Catsup, per bottle......... Monarch Baked Beans, 3 large No. 2 cans. California Peache 5 large cans.... _Pineapple, 3 large cans... “Quality guarante ed, California Pears, GUIAVGCLCANB )s .. dha ts beac Quality guaranteed. FARMERS! Now is the time to look over your harnesses and have us oil Standard Peas, or repair them, putting them in 2 cans. : first clasa condition for the Tomatoes, hand packed. ee ees heavy spring work. We handle 5 No.2 Beans ‘ 85c a complete line of New Har- PTE ee uaa ea i eum nesses and leather repairs. cee Quality , G fee, Prices very reasonable. Harnesses oiled per set ‘$1.00 to to $1.25. Saddles repaired, shoes half soled. Also a 30 day Special Sale of New Harnesses. A. B. REIF, Prop. Corner Bdwy and 6th Street. NASH COFFEE in 3 pound can with | 1 can Del Monte Fruit Free. Crystal White Soap, 25> BABB ici cics inst sic “i” $1.90 BUTTERMILK — SWEET CREAM AND MILK HOT CROSS BUNS We hope you'll compare ours with any others offered. Ready at 11 o’clock Saturday morning. MODERN DAIRY CREAM MEANS ‘HEALTH Date Pies Meringue topped. These pies have made a hit with our customers. Angel Food with Fruit and Nuts An exceptionaly good combination. Also indi- +, vidual angel food cakes. Every drop of Modern “Dairy Cream carries with it a drop of health. This is the cream that comes from the cleanest herds of high grade cows. : ‘ Spiced Drop Cakes : ‘Small cakes for small families. French Donuts CREAM HORNS, APPLE TURNOVERS, CHOCOLATE ECLAIRS. Serve more on your , table. —Steadily but surely gaining good will_—’ BARKER BAKING & CANDY CO. MODERN DAIRY 206-5th St. Phone 880 ‘MAKE MORE AND BETTER BREAD \ ; BY USING GUARANTEED FLOUR CLIMAX - OCCIDENT or LYON’S BEST or WONDERFUL GOODNESS NEVER. VARIES. No matter how good. your. bakings are now, we guarantee you can make them better with our - -flour. Better flavor, better pee are whole- some, more satisfying.‘ plea erclet Try a sack! You are. the judge. If you are not satisfied your grocer will refund youy money. without argument, RUSSELL - MILLER MILLING co. “OF NORTH DAKOTA