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WEDNESDAY, APRI 7 "MARKET NEWS ‘Wire Markets By Associated Prose WHEAT PRICES LOWER AGAIN Rains in Southwest Tend | To Send Values of Grain Downward , * Chicago, Abril 8—Rains’ in the southwest likely to benefit. the new wheat crop tended to make wheat ptices average lower today during the early dealings. Selling was also gplarged on “account of opinions ich were current that the recent Advance in prices, especially for new crop markets, had been. unusually rapid and that a feaction was to be | expected. May delivery, however, represent- ing wheat already in storage, was responsive to a fresh advance in Liverpool quotations. Chicago op- ening prices, which ranged from one- half cent decline to 1% cents ad- vance, with May $1.50% to $1.50% and July $1.39* to $1.40", were fol- lowed by a decided sag for July and September, with May showing ral- lies after having touched $1.50, In the latter transactions May wheat acted tight, but advances failed *+ hold, the Minneapolis market hav- ng declined to a basis that would allow profitable shipments, to Chi- cago. Wheat closed unsettled at the same as yesterday's finish to 2 1-4e lower May $1.50 3-4 to $1.61 and July $1.37 1-4 to $1.37 3-4, CHICAGO_LIVESTOCK » (U.S. Dept. Agr.) Chicago, April, 8.—Hog receipts 15,000... Mostly steddy to 10. cents higher than Tuesday’s average. Ear- ly sales mostly to” shippers, _ yard traders and small sellers. Bulk de- wine 190 to 300 lb. weights $13.35 to $14 ‘attle receipts 8,000. ‘aM light. handyweights strong. Spots. higher. ed steers early $11.85, Sheep receipts 12,000. fat lambs fully steady, 5 Ib. wool lambs $16.26, CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, April 8—Butter Mgher. Receipts 6,192 tubs. Creamery ex- 42 1-2c; standards 42 3-4c; ex- firsts dic to 41 1-2¢; firsts 39 to 40c; seconds 33c to 88c. Eggs hér. Receipts 20,302 cases. Firsts 27c¢; ordinary firsts 26c; storage packed extras 28 1-2c; firsts 28¢. Poultry alive unchanged. Fed steers steady to Best matur- Desirable Some choice sT. "PAUL LIVESTOCK (By The Associated Press) So. St. Paul April 8.—(U. S. Dept. of Agr.)—Cattle receipts 3,000. Large- ly steer run. Very little done early. Bidding weak to unevenly lower. Quality plain. One load 1,266 Ib weights $9.25. Bulk considered sale- able around $8.00 to $9.00. _ Fat she stocks in light supply. About steady. Bulk fat cows $5.00 to $6.50. Fat heifers largely $6.00 to $7.50, Lighter weights up to $8.50. Canners and cutters about steady. Shelly kinds around $2.50, Bulk $2.75 to $3.50. Bologna bulls generally steady. Weighty kinds $4.50. Bulk down- wards to $4.00. Stockers and feed- ers slow; dull. Calves receipts, 5, 000. Veal calves 25 cents or more higher. Top sorts $9.00 to $9.75. Bulk, $9.25 to $9.50. Hogs receipts 15,000. Slow. Steady. Better grade lights and butchers mostly $12.90. ‘Some less desirable kinds down to $12.75. Packing sows $11.25 to $11.50. Pigs steady: Bulk ce pigs $12.25. Average cost Tues- “day $12.81, Weight 27 Ibs. Sheep receipts 1,000. Largely di- rect to-packers. Few dd sales steady to weak. Best native lambs around $15.00. Heavies down to $12.50. Fat wooled ewes .$7.00 to $9.00, MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR (By The Associated Press) Minneapohis, April 8.—Flour un- changed to 30 cents higher in car- load lots family patents quoted at $8.15 to $8.65 a barrel in 98 lb. cot- sacks, Shipments 24,674 bar- Bran $23.00 to $23.50. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, April 8, 1925. No, 1 dark northerit . - 31.30 No. 1 northern spring 1,24 No. 1 amber durum... 125 No. 1 mixed durum 1.14 No. 1 red durum . No. 1 flax . No. 2 flax . No. 1 rye Dark hard winter Hard winter We qi following: 1 Paps per pou: discount under , 55 Ib. Ear corn & cents under shell. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat receipts, 96 ae compared with 113 cars a year Cash No. (1 northern $1.44% to $1.46%. No. 1 dark northern spring; choice ‘to fancy, coe oo a. $ Pid good to %; ordinal sood, $ ri Bs Hy 49%. 1 hard $1. 18%. No. 1 dark Montana on track, $1.40% to $1.69%; to arrive 31.40% to $1.697%. May $1.42 7-8: July $1.43 1-8, Corn N@. 3 yellow 97c to 99c. Oats No. 8 white’ 39c to 39%c. Barley 67c to 88e. |~ Rye No. 2 $1.09 to $1.10%. Flax $2.79% to $281%. Too Late To Classify WANTED—To rent garage near 411 avenue A. Call 200 during 00s ger ime. ‘OR SALE—One’ fnale canary. Sates faction guaranteed. Also second- pee cage wanted. Call ef 622 ird. Street, -8 St WORK WANT! Flowing. argu removing ing dirt away nae dirt, also, r7 p excavated cellars, ‘Phone 364 Dantey, ‘Wanted — An : Pete eee why. by L 8, 1925 EVERYTHING The young Karl of Kincardine won cost BUT TOP HA the hurdles at Eton, in spite of his ume, MELLON COMES | OUT OF SHELL Younger And Happier Man Than For Years BY HARRY B. HUNT NEA Service Writer Washington, April 8.--“The Meta- morphosis of Mellon” might well be the title of a character study of thé slender, soft-spoken secreta treasury, dealing with him a when he came to Washington years ago and as he is today. Official life has brought Mellon “or of his shell.” As a__ private capitalist and financier, Mellon led a life of seclusion. His detachment was well-nigh ironclad and impene- trable. Even7in his home town ittsburg, he was more of a tra dition than a flesh-and-blood hu man being. He frequented no clubs. He attended few functions. jecre- retaries and functionaries hedged him about witha wall of exclusive- ness that made him wellnigh inacces- sible. As a member of the cubinet, Mel- lon’$ human contacts hav r0% ened. Not only have his offi ties brought him in direct touch with a@ greater number and a more varied range of individuals, but the social necessities of his position ha sisted in the thawing out Dinners, receptions, public public functions of many kinds have cldimed his attendance. And while these are understood at first to have been the bane of his life, they are so no longer. Where he first endured four them, he now actually enjoys them. rarer) i Friends who have watched tl metamorphosis in Mellon declare that} ~. he is today a younger and happier man that he has been for years. ‘The fey reserve of the private capitalist has melted. The hard exterior the chille inanci lowed. He is shedding his exclusive- ness. He is mixing more with men. He is getting to like folks and ‘airs. And—what in Mellon is regarded as-final and co: ve proof of the change that has taken lace in him—he is even making pub- jic_speeches! Within a -week, this month, Mel- lon spoke at a banquet at Richmond, Va., was guest of honor at a p> tion at the Cosmos Club, Washing- ton, and officiated at the burning of the mortgage on the National Press Club here. No one can imagine the! Mellon of four years ago participat-| ing in any such gregarious festi ies. In the light of Mellon’s apparently increasing interests in life, few folks here feel that he is even con- sidering resigning his job, as is ru; mored from time to time. While a mitting that he was reluctant to en- ter public life, they believe he would leave it now with even greater re- gret. nee Anti-Prohibitionists are up i over what they term “sacriligious” changes made in the Holy Bible in a 4 {Fecent “shorter version” of the Holy Writ, recently issued. The effort, according to wet ad- vocates, has been to make a Bible to conform to what a prohibitionist thmks the Bible should be, rather than to present the true teachings of the biblical sages. “In every instance where the word ‘wine’ is favorably mentioned in the Bible? says Captain W. H. Stayton, “it has ‘been deleted or the meaning completely changed in the of | day, of} “| Geo. Brittin lost sal his pasture land ‘shorter Bible’ “But in eve! nd strong dr nstance where wine re mentioned un- avorably, these references are re- ned. All reference to the marr t at Cana, including Christ’s first miracle, the changing of water into e, has been suppressed by these censors of the Lord’s works, “Undoubtedly,” says Stayton, “it is the plan of the drys to replace the Holy Bible in the home with the censored Bible. But if that is true the d are doomed, for the original Bible » in thé Jast chapter of Revelation: ‘If any man take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the Boge of Life.” «| SPECIAL HOLY WEEK SERVICES AT ST. MARY’S|: Special services for Holy Good Friday, and Holy day will be held at St. Mary’s C iests having ly for these Thurs- ,.and the plac by the Rt. Rev, Vincent Wehrle 1 oveur. In the evening at 7:30 lock the Lamentations will be sung the fujl choir of men’s and boys’ voices. On Good Fr morning the Mass of the Presantified will be said at 8 o'clock, and the Passion will sung by three pries During the mass the Unveiling and the Adora- ticn of the Cross will take place. In ing at 7:30 o’clock the La- 3 will be sung again, as on} Oil ‘Thursday. The coe onies of the Paschal, Pi ultet, the Blessing of the and the Propre- 30 o'clock on Saturday morning, mass being at about nine o'clock. No eve- g devotions will be held on Satur- News of Our 7 Neighbors MOFFIT CORRESPONDENCE, The nesiria fire which broke out ‘m on March > eight sec Hoover saved his buildings, stacks of hay and all burned over. Fred on the Briscoe Val Benz’ lost many jhay stacks, feed, corn and cornfod- ider, hog house and some machinery. ‘his pee Eat op Moffit lost all h. si but eee all hi rses out. Fred Ar- ai lost seieeal state of hay. The! fire was finally stopped on the Her-| bert Asseltine quarter just south of the Soo Line tracks. The people of Moffit were greatly alarmed as the ote got pretty close to town. The started on pasture land, Ori- in unknown. A large crowd attended the Mod- ern Woodmen dance held at Moffit on March 25. A splendid crowd turned out’ for the bazaar which was given by the Methodist church and Sunday school on March 28, A nice sum of money was realized for the benefit of the church. When it comes to bread— There’s none so good as that of the Frederick Cafe. and Bakery. A HIGH. H. ONE ROR A BLUE BInRON spring $1.76% to 3 Mie Emalita Duncan of Englewood, N. J. is winner at the Ormond Beach Horse, Show: at Ormond: eee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE HOME SERVICE T0 USHER IN JEWISH FEAST Passover To Be Observed Over Entire World on Wednesday An elaborate home ceremony, known as the Seder, will usher in the Jewish Passover Wednesday eve- ning at,sunset. The festival is one of a cycle of three which are desig- nated in the Bible as “Pilgrim Fes- tivals,” on which all males were in anciént times duty bound to make a pilgrimage to the Holy City. Ac- cording to the Bible, Passover is to be kept for seven days, but orthodox Jews in the lands of the diaspora ob- jserve it for eight days. The Jews of Palestine, however, strictly follow the ordinance of the Bible. In ancient times Passover had an agricultural significance, markin the very beginning of the harvest season, Since post-exilic days, how- ever, Passover has largely lost its agricultural meaning and it has come to be primarily the great Festival of event in el’s history when it cast off the chains of Egyptian slavery and became a free and independent people. Passover then may well-be spoken of as Israel's birthday. It is this story of liberation which is told in great detail at the Seder service. A special feast is served at the home in which all the members and friends of the family partici- pate. ngers, too, are invited, i an ancient Jewish tra- dition that none shall.suffer want on this great night. The feast is rich in symboli all of which are explained by the head of the family from a special ritual prepared fo that eve, known as the “Haggadah.’ In this ritual the entire story of the ancient liberation is explained in a teresting manne ‘The Book of Exodus lays stress up- of the Exodus to the childre: This idea is carefully carried out in the with the purpose of interesting the children in the Seder service. At the beginning. of the ceremony the young- est son asks four traditional ques- tions relative to the mode of observ- ce of the festival. The rest of the Haggadah is practically an answer to these four questions. This is done in a quaint and charming manner, the ritual being filled with anec- dotes and fanciful tales. The Jew has always been very scru- pulous about the observance of Pass- over, since this festival has ‘brought home to him the unique purpose of his tinctive existence. When Moses sought the liberation of the Israelites he, speaking in the name of God, proclaimed to Pharaoh: “Let My people go that they may serve Me!” Israel was to cease being a servant of men in order that he might become the servant of God. Liberty, jaccording to Judaism, implies re- | sponsibility. The Jew in Egypt was unable to devote his life to the ser- vice of God, but this cannot be said of the Jew of today who is free to discharge his mission in the world. potloreover, Passover also brought jope and cheer to the heart of the ae throughout the ages. It taught hin that just as God freed the en- aelites from Egypt, He | will rine freedom and salvation to the Jews of all benighted lands, and to oppressed nations everywhere. The leaders of Jewry are very anx- ious that the message of Passover, which is so strikingly bréught home through the Seder ceremony, should | reach the Jew of today. Since there jare Jews who do not always possible to have a Seder service at their homes, the tendency in modern Jewish communities is to arrange public Seders in which several hun- dred people often participate. Just like on all other festive occa- sions, special Passover services are held at all Synagogues. Passover, however, is primarily a home f val. Jewish homes are especially renovated for this oceasion, and un- leavened bread is used during the en- tire week. This “bread of afflic- | tion, ” which is made of only flour and water, reminiscent of the time when the Israelites, being driven out |from Egypt, had no time to bake bread and they had to be satisfied with this improvised form of food. REAL ESTATE DEALS The residence property on the cor- ner of Eleventh street and Avenue B, owned. by J. L. Jangula, has been sold to R. S. Clark, who has taken possession, The lot on the corner of Rosser and Ninth streets has been sold to Freedom, commemorating that great | | and frocks to choose from right before Easter. TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1925 EASTER Only three more days to select your Easter costume. You have. never had a more varied or more attractive selection of coats The combina- ‘tion of style, quality and moderate prices is just another dem- ‘onstration of our supremacy in serving: the publie with the right goods at the right time. Colorful Dresses on the necessity of relating the story |' Haggadah which has been designed | Elizabeth Volk. Two or three houses will be erected on the property. The deals were made by the Hed- den real estate agency. The United States produced more than a million tons of brimstone last ore than five times as much , the principal source of Eu- rope’s supply. Army experts found that the best gas mask could be made out of the charcoal resulting from burned co- This substance ab- any other coanut shells. sorbed more gas than found. ’ CLEAN UP Ashes and Garbage hauled. Phone Wachter Transfer Co. 62. ELECTRIC COOKERY Is CORRECT COOKERY shown jumping a a. costuine. Easter Hosiery :. For You Exquisitely sheer Hose in all shades are ready now to complete your Easter Newness! Is Dresses. the keynote of our Such materials as Luminette, Satin Crepe, Chine, are sure to lead the parade, Flat Crepe and in figured or plain materials Crepe de ster fashion Bright colors too; will be the rule; such as Castillian Red, Watermelon, File, Rust, Lucille and Biege. are Prices $25.00 and up Easter Coats Everything the well dressed woman demands in fashion rightness is shown in these new spring coats that also meet the economical woman’s de- mands. Cleverly designed models of Poiret Sheen, Deer- ona, Twill cord, Kyma, and Kashoni come in the season’s favored colors of Agate, Sandalwood, Sheik, Lucille Green and Golden Oak; some with fur borders, others with dressy braid or embroid- $29.50 ered trimmings. and up The “Prince of Wales” tailored coat of Polo or Downy Wave in four or six button style with velvet collar is shown in Agate, Almond or Tan at $29.50 Webb Brothers “Merchandise of Merit Only” READ TRIBUNB WANT ADDS DOCTOR M.E. BOLTON Osteopath Specialist in Chronic Diseases Telephone 240 11914—4th St. Bismarck, N. D. CAPITOL THEATRE - Tonight (Wednesday) ’ May MeAvoy and. a brilliant -support- ing cast including: Jack Mulhall, Barbara Bed- ford, Myrtle Stedman and George Fawcett. Sunshine Comedy. “The Burglar’ COMING COMI D. W. GRIFFITH’S “Isn’t Life Wonderful” TOMORROW APRIL 9th Mr. Davidson of Hormel & Co. will give a demonstration of Hormel’s products at the Central Meat Market * WEDNESDAY AUDITORIUM “xz. SEATS NOW SELLING The Seat Sale For Otis Skinner begins today. Our Mail: or- ders have been won- derful, but there are plenty of good seats. — Mr. Skinner has been packing theatre's | every. place ahd’ Bis- marck is going to do the same. % To miss seeing “San- cho Panza” would be to lose the ‘greatest Ne GREATEST yah bon a ise treat of: the OF Gs GREATEST No One Seated During. ikaw. SETTINGS,