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Petar eae MARKET NEWS Wire Markets By Associated Press SURFER SLUMP Rains Over Winter Crop Belt Leads to Setback “(By The Associated Press) Chicago, April 9—Rains over the domestic winter crop belt, together with lower quotations at Liverpool jed to an early setback, today in wheat prices here, Predictions, how- sver. that the United States Gov- Ainment report this afternoon would 3how a crop condition of only 70 to 7 per cent as compared with 81 in December, tended to rally the market efter the initial declines. The fact that tomorrow will be observed as a holiday was a deterrent to any ag- gressive selling. Opening prices, which ranged from 1 to 2 1-2 cents lower, May $1.48 1-2 to $1.49 1-4, und! July $1.35 1-2 to $1.36 1-4, were fol- lowed by numerous fluctuations within limits of about one cent and then by an upturn to $1.50 1-2 for May and $1.36 1-2 for July. Wheat advanced rather sharply at the last today as a result of even- ing up transactions ta prepare for} the government crop report this af- terngon and for a world holiday to- The close was irregular 1 decline to 2 1-4c 1-2 to $1.63 and morrow. sanging from 1 vain with May $1 July $1.38 1- MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Flour 25 cents lower to 30 cents higher in carload lots family patents quoted at $8.40 to $8.45 a barrel in 98 Ib. cotton sacks. Shipments 30,- 695. barrel: CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, April 9—(U. S. Dept. of Ayr.)—Hog receipts 20,000, Dull. Ten to fifteen cents lower. Mostly steady on desirable lights and light weights. .Slapper pigs weak to 26 cents lower. Shipping outlet nar- row. Big packers inactive. Early top medium weights $13.50. Cattle receipts 8,000, Weighty fed steers very slow. Others steady to strong. Top yearlings ‘$12.00. Sheep 8,000, Very dull. Few sales desirable weight lambs around steady. No weighty lambs sold. CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, April 9.—Butter lower. Receipts 5,045 tubs. Creamery ex- tras 40%c; standards 40%c; extra firsts 39%e to 40c; firsts 38% to 39c, seconds 36e to 37%c. Eggs un- changed. Receipts 23,318 cases. Poultry alive unchanged. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK So. St. Paul, April 9—(U. S. Dept. of Agr.)—Cattle receipts 2,000, Very little done ‘early. Bidding around steady with Wednesday's close. One load of 835 Ib. heifers $9.00. Top for season, Three out at $8.00. Bulk steers and yearlings considered sale- able around $8,00 to $9.00. Fat she stock steady. Bulk fat cows $5.00 to $6.50. Fat heifers mostly $6.00 to $7.50. Few lighter weights up to 9.75. Canners and cutters about steady. Bulk $2.75 to $3.50. Bologna bulls’ barely steady. Bulk $4.00 to $1.50. Stockers and feeders very slow. Calves $1,500. About steady to packers at $9.25 to $9.75. Bulk around $9.50, Shippers upward $10.20. Hogs receipts 9,000. Slow. Little done early. Better grddes 180 lb. weights mostly $12.90. 140 to 180 Ib. kinds largely $12.75. Few mixed loads $12.80 to $12.85. Packing sows « mostly $11:25. Few $11.50. Pigs steady. Bulk $12.25. Average cost Wednesday $12.84. Weight 222 Ibs. Sheep receipts 100. Nominally steady. Few odd heavy lambs $13.00, at wool ewes $7.00 to $9.00. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN \. Wheat receipts 136 cars compared ‘With 85 cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern $1.45 $1.49 5-8. No, 1 dark northern spring; choice to fancy $1.62 5-8 to $1.77 5-8; good to choice $1.50 5-8 to $1.61 5-8; or- dinary to good $1.46 5-8 to $1.60 . 1 hard spring $1.77 5-8 $1.87 5-8. é No. 1 dark Montana on track $1.41 5-8 to $1.70 5-8; to arrive $1.41 5-8 to $1.70 5-8, May $1.43 6-8. July*$1.44 1-4, Corn No, 3 yellow $1.00 to $1.02. Oats No. 3 white .38 1-4 to .39c. to 84c. $1.08 1-2 to $1.10. to $2.84. 5-8 to to BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, April 9, 1925, No. 1 dark northern . No. 1 northern spring . No. 1 amber durum . No. 1 mixed durum . No. 1 red durum . No. 1 flax MORE TROUBLE ms v. Leis Meredith, American movie actress, may add to the troubles of Colonel Dennistoun, which | al, ready shocked British so: It is rumored she will breach of promise. Mis: bases her case upon many letter: hey possession from the colonel, it is said. Babies in Argovie, one of the Swiss cantons, must be weighed, measured and their fingerprints taken within 24 hours after their birth. ELECTRIC COOKERY IS CORRECT COOKERY From School Teacher To Great Eminence A young man who was brought up on a farm in western Pennsylvania studied diligently and qualified district school teacher. Further pur- suing his studies and teaching, he managed to save up enough money. to put him through medical college. After the Civil War, he began the practice of medicine in the new oil section of Pa., and often rode horse- back through the woods to reaca and relieve those who were serious- ly ill, He was a student of nature, knew arid could easily recognize most of the medicinal plants growing in the woods. Later, he moved to Buffalo, N. Y. where he launched his _ favorite remedies, and, in a short time, they were sold by every druggist in the land, Today, the name of this man, Dr. R. V. Pierce, is known through- No. 2 flax . No. 1 rye . Dark hard winter . Hard winter:.. Oats .. We 21 1.24 the 63 bs 80 No. 6... o. b Sample grade . f 1 cent per pound discount under 55 Ib, Ear corn & cents under shell. Irritating acid, perspiration from the foot pores produces and ag- gravates cracked toes, itching be- tween toes, raw- nesy and tende! aching, swollen feet. The moment you apply — “Phillips Milk of. Magné- ” all this sore- ness is Pog es Mas BR in eal oo! Took sorene: mh foot so promptly as this harm- ss antacid, - Insist upon gentine “Philips Milk out the world. His Golden Medical Discovery is the best known blood medicine and tonic. More than 50 million bottles have been sold in the U.S. If your druggist does not sell the Golden Medical Discovery, in li- quid or tablets, you can obtain a trial pkg. of the tablets by sending 10¢ to the Dr. Pierce Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv? CAPITOL THEATRE LAST TIME TONIGHT May McAvoy Van Bibber Comedy “The Burglar” Coming Coming D._W. GRIFFITH'S “Isn't Life + [dicted on charges of having helped -!ing with the beauty, mystery, WHEELER HAS OTHER WORRY BESIDES TRIAL Enemies of Senator Could Not Pick Harder Time For Court Action i BY HARRY B. HUNT NEA Service Writer Washington, April 9.—-Senator Rur- n K, Wheeler, late progressive can- ute for vice president, twice in- | Montana oil land scheme, in vivla- ton of law, left Washington March 30 on his way to trial. Wheeler's friends have insisted that his indictments are persecu- jtions rather than prosecutions, in- spire political and personal Wether or not that is s seem that Fate has| nd in making the time trinl at Great Falls, Mont., 1 of extreme anxiety and dis- for him. or on the very day Wheeler is edug'd sto face Vie yourt for April 16, Mrs Wheeler is enemies had, with, nalice aforethonght, sought to force him to trial at a time most torment- | ing to him, they could not have pick- ed the day better. | As uv friend of the family vuts it: “While Wheeler will be fighting fo: his reputation in Great Falls, Wheeler will be fighting for her 1 here in Washington.” Washington will have its to bid for literary immortality late this month when several hundred literary ladies, some with long hair and many with short, some poe some novelists, some scenario writ and some dramatists, assemble here in the annual meeting of the League of American Pen Women. If the capital recognizes its op portunity and reveals its real selt, we y look forward to a new se- ies of novels, plays and poems deal- intri- gue and romance of Washington. Too bad Congress is away. Congress is the capital's mine of “local color.” chance __ For nichest Prohibition agents are getting set for spring ‘housecleaning, Spring, rather than seems winter, it is the time when the wave of contraband booze, both smuggled and-home made, reaches its crest. And it is this ‘wave Uncle Sam's 81 inch Pepperell sheet dressing. A wonderful worth in all retail stores Our price only colors. All sizes. the thing for Easter wear... Cut new color of light tan. leather welt Oxford .......-.+.26-- all leather sole. Ma Style? otek chiens ar 3} inch Hope Muslin, knows the grade....... ‘the good colors, ~This is hose- on, the market. dipped and» 6 not ‘dyed. Pepperell Sheeting Little Girls’ Oxfords All in Patent Leather and the light tan . Military heel, very Al neat and up to the minute Hope Muslin dressing. Every housewife 12 strand Silk, . $1.69 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE agents have been ordered to mop e A Increased quantities of Scotch and Canadian whiskies are reported to be coming in across the New Eng- land and New York borders. what threatens to be the spring drive by rum runn history of prohibition, Commissioner Haynes hag assigned additional men to the dry squads there. Warm weather, it is explained, stirs anew old appetites that crave the highball, the rickey and the julep, Spring-time fishing expedi- tions, too, swell the demand for potent bottled ‘fish bait.” And with an increasing seasonal demand, there is an_ ine! z activity by the bootleg brigade, than which no other line of trade reacts more quickly to the old law of “supply and demand.” Birth control advocates, who have just concluded a convention in New York preparatory to launching a drive for federal legislation on that subject next winter may as well mark one United States senator off ‘their calling list. A woman representative of the “Voluntary Parenthood League.” an agency working for birth control, sounding out members of the new Senate, recently called on Rice W. Means, new member from Colorado. Means laid down an ultimatum: “I don’t want to discuss it now or at any other time. Moreover, I wouldn’t discuss it with a woman,” As the F. b. L. worker lett, a clerk in Means’ office explained “The senator is a* little old-fash- ioned, you know.” New Summer Coats, Dress- es and Millinery at the Sarah Geld Shop, 312 Main St. Phone 566. :€ Hoskins-Meyer Victrola and Radio FLEES PRISON wi Members of ing on Tuesday mous aftexnoon ton western t ¢ county n Ulin, the N. the N. D. State Highway No. Req Tr in the state, entire distance tertainment of the chapter of the Amer and, who sentenced to 20 years imprison- t for murder of E. O'Connell, a} ‘carnival promoter, walked out of the | We vn’s veformatory at M vi ad a 10-hour start when her was noticed. Authorities the woman far as . O. Strawberry and Chocolate Ice Cream. Modern Dairy. | This Week's peae New Victor Records oa My Kid Belle Baker (1p Please Be Good to My Old Girl Shannon Quartet Victor Record No, 19605, 10-inch . Those Panama Mamas ‘The Blues Have Got Me ‘Victor Resosd No, 19609, 10-inch At the End of teRead—Fos Trot ‘Waring’s Pennsylvanians Born and Bred in Old Kentucky—Fox Trot. | (from “Big Boy") Waring’s Pennsylvanians + Victor Record No, 19603, 10-inch ‘When My Sugar Walks Down the Street—Fox Trot Waring’s Pennsylvanians Everybody Loves My Baby—Fox Trot Victor Racord No, 19610, 10-inch George Olsen and His Music ing, free from sheeting well out toe. Just . $2.48 Ladies’ Pumps Ladies’ low heel Blucher Oxford in the This is an all . $4.20 Ladies’ Pumps Ladies’ Patent Leather Pump, with an * $3.95 free from al! 15¢ Pure Silk Hose Ladies’ full fashioned Silk Hose in all one of the best $1.48.to $2.98 olden Rule OUR NAME ; Rs as | Tells its Story ND it is a tale of youthful modes in felt, milan, bangkok and faille, that jauntily portray the new -erushed crowns, and the longer brims that con- ceal the-shingle at the back. They are oft - times self- trimmed or with ribbon or feather ornaments. At our exceedingly moderate prices every woman or young lady who comes to this Store can well afford to buy a Hat that is becoming to her in every way. To appreciate our present display it is necessary that you pay us a visit. Ladies’ Hats 98 to $6.98 . Little Girls WAR MOTHERS MEET MAY Preliminary arrangements for er North Dakot War moth ers were made at a meeting of the! Mandan chapter held Tuesday after- noon at the home of Mrs. J.C. Bar- | MANDAN NEWS BUILD FEDERAL AID ROAD the Morton county board of commissioners at their meet- unani- pproved a proposal to build a federal aid highway from the Mor- boundary line hrough Hebron to a point east of Phe distance to be improved totals! 15.7 miles according to the survey of D. Highway commission includes some of the poorest road on 3 1, National Parks Highway— across Mrs. tram on Ninth Ave. S. W. | K. Hanson and Mrs. O, Anderson as- sisted in entertaining. and 19-20 ! the the EK. Golden Rule NEXT DOOR WEST OF SORENSON HARDWARE. ter Millinery OUR POLICY The annual convention of the War Mothers will be held in Mandan on May 19, 20, when between 50 and 100 delegates from the various chap- ters of the state will be guests of the local mothers of soldier sons. rs. McLane of Kenmare, state war mother, is ill and will be unable to be present at the convention. Mrs. Paul Cashman, Bismarck, first vice war mother, and Mrs, Max Hunke, second vice’ president, Mandan, will preside at the sessions which will open Tuesday morning, May 19, and close Wednesday evening, May 20. Sessions probably will be held in the Presbyterian church, RE-ELECTS PARK COMMISSIONER Charles Wyman was elected a mem- PAGE THREE ber of the Mandan City park com- mission for a term of five years at the election held Tuesday. A total of 102 votes were cast of which Mr. Wyman received 71; Geo. W. Brown 9, and George Brown 22. Mr. Wyman has been a member of the park board for one year, and his re-election will not change the mem- bership of that body. The other members are Jos. P. Hess, W. J. Gill Mrs. Wm. Simpson and Mrs. Anna Stark, “CLEAN UP Ashes and Garbage hauled. Wachter Transfer Co. Phone 62. to complete costume, Easter Hosiery For You Exquisitely sheer Hose in all shades are ready now your faster | Richmond’s Bootery and wear. Absolutely all leather. . will be for Men’s 220 Denim Overalls Men’s 220 Denim Overalls. full cut overall well made in every way with the high back or suspender back......... Men’s Oxfords Men’s light Tan Oxfords with the new toe, nice and wide, made for comfort A welt shoe leather lined. ~ Little Girls’ Oxfords Little girls’ Patent Leather, cut out Pumps, with a good wide toe. eee Ladies’ Chiffon Hose Ladies’ Chiffon Hose in all the good colors, mock fashion. This. hose must wear or you can have your money back....... Tissue Ginghams The new Tissue Ginghams are beautiful in design. You will pay in most stores anywhere from 59¢ to 69c. Our, price the SeaSOn.........eeeeesee This is a $1.39 $7.50 A cut $1.00 LTA a 48c