The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1925, Page 3

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a SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1925 _ MARKET NEWS Wire Markets By Associated Press GREAT RUSH 10 BUY WHEAT Market Advances Ten Cents a Bushel in Chicago (By The Associated Press) Chicago, April 11.—In an over- v whelming rush to buy wheat today the market here made an excited ad- vance of 10 cents & bushel. The United States government crop re- port was much more bullish than the majority of traders had looked for, and the entire supply and demand \ outlook was radically changed. Even without the probable big increased shortage of domestic winter wheat, as shown by the government's re- port, the adjustment of world sup- plies had been conceded to be a} close one. When, therefore, Liver- pool advanced today 7% pence, a rise greatly in excess of what had been expected, the market here went wild. Chicago opening price3, which r from 4 to 7c higher, with May $1.58 to $1.60 and July $1.43 to $1.44, were followed _by a reaction to $1.57% for May and then by a jump to $1.62% for May. In the late trading wheat held near to the day's top figures. The close was strong 5% to 9% cents net higher, May $1.62 to $1.62% and July $1.46% to % ‘OCK (U. 8. Dept. Agr.) Chicago, April 11.—Hog receipts 3,000. Uneven. Strong to mostly 10 cents lower than Friday’s average. Bulk 160 to 300 Ib. averages $13.00 to $13.20. Top $13.25, Cattle receipts 300, compared with week ago. Better grade fed steers mostly 50 cents lower. Lower grades steady to weak, Stockers aud feed- ers 25 cents lower. She stock strong to 25 cents higher, \ Sheep receipts 6.000.. Compared weak ago. Fat lambs 25 to 50 cents jower. Fat sheep steady. Shearing lambs 26 cents lower. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Flour unchanged. Shipments 56,- 631 barrels. Bran $23.00 to $23.60, CHICAGO PRODUCE April 11.—Poultry alive Fowls 28¢; springs 0c; roosters, 15¢; turkeys 38c; ducks, B0e; and geese 38c. Butter higher. Receipts 112,846 s. Creamery extras 41% to 42c; ards 42c; extra firsts 40% to irsts 39 to 39%; seconds 33¢ 4e. Eggs unsettled. Receipts cases. Firsts 27¢ to 27%¢; ordinary firsts 26c; storage packed extras, 294c; firsts 28%c. T. PAUL LIVSTOCK ° So, St. Paul, April 11.—(U. S$. Dept. Agr.) Cattle receipts 100, compared week ago. Fat steers, yearl- ings and stockers and feeders 25 to 50 cents lower, ‘Fat she stock firm. Spots 25 cents higher on bet- ter grades fat cows and heifers. Canners and cutters slow. Bologna bulls 15 to” 25 cents higher. Week's prices: Bulk fat steers and yearlings $8.00 to $9.00. Fat cows $5.00 to $6.50. Fat heifers $6.00 to $7.50. Lighter weights up- ward to $8.50. Canners and cut- ‘ters $2 to $3.50. Bologna ‘bulls $4.25 to $4.50. Stockers and feed- ers $5.00 to $7.00. Calve ‘ipts 100. Compared with week ago unevenly 25 to 50 cents higher. Bulk $5.00 to $10.25. Hog receipts’ 900. Generally . steady. . Desirable 180 Ib. butchers and up $12.00. Packing sows mostly $11.25. Pigs $12.50. Com- pared with week ago. Butchers and bacon ‘hogs 25 to 35 cents low- er. Packing sows 25 to 50 cents lower. Pigs 60 cents higher. Aver- age cost Friday $12.79. Weight 221 Ibs. Sheep receipts 500. Receipts to- day direct to packers. -~ Compared with week ago. Fat lambs nomin- ally 25c WMgher. Steady. Good and choice fed lambs upward to $16.50. One load medium grade natives $14.75. Fat wooled ewes $7.00 to $9.00. Insidé price tak- ing heavy offerings. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by .Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, April 11 ‘No. 1 dark northern. No. 1 northern spring. No. 1 amber durum. No. 1 mixed darum. 1 red durum. No. 1 flax No. 2 flax ‘No. 1 rye Dark Hard winter.. ‘Hard Winter ... MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat receipts 165 cars com- pared with 85 cars a year ago. Cash ‘No. 1 northern $1.54% to \ $1.56%'; No. 1 dark northern gpring; choice to fancy $1.71% to ‘\$1.86%. No. 1 hard spring $1.86% to $1.96%. (No. 1 dark Montana on track $1.50% to $1.79%; to arrive $1.50% to $1.79%. May §1.52%. July $1463%. Corn No| 8 yellow $1.05 to $1.07. Oats: No. 3 white, , 29% to 40%. Barley 70 to 86c. v4 2 $1.13% to'$1.14%, Flax $2.88% to $2.85%. READ TRIBUNE WANT ADDS $1.40 PRAIRIE FIRE » DOES DAMAGE | NEAR ELLENDALE Ellendale, ND. April 11—A | prairie fire, starting from the embers of a burned strawstack, and driven by a high wind swept over an area about fopr miles wide and 20 miles long, burning over parts of three townships, causing considerable dam- age. Originating at the Brook Ho- well ranch southwest of Forbes, the fire burned northward. The country- side fought the fire for » several hours, combatting flames often 15 feet high, before finally checking the blaze. The house and garage on the George Selzie farm were burned and a barn on one of the Howell farms as well as the barn and house on the G. A. Ryan farm were destroyed. According te information gathered, Ino stock wag lost, but an enormous quantity of hay was burned, T. R. Shimmin lost nine stacks of hay and almost every farmer in the area burned over lost some hay. No definite estimate of the damage has been made, but oldtimers de- scribed the fire as the most dis- astrous and spectacular which they have ever witnessed in this section. Richland County Commission Votes Road Improvements Wahpeton, N,,D., April 11.—Three road improvemént projects tb cost about $90,000, wer® authorized by the Richland county commission this week. They include graveling of the state road for 76 miles east of Hankinson; completion of the graveling on the Mooreton road from the end of the present gravel to the end of the fed- eral aid grade, and grading and graveling of a north and south high- way from a point on the present Mooreton road six miles west of Wahpeton through the villages of Dwight and Abercrombie, to a point north of Abercrombie. The federal government will pay more than $60,000. The commission has before it re- quests for 16 bridges. Too Late To Classify PAPER HANGING, kalsomining, in- terior decorating, house painting, expert mechanics, estimates fur- nished, city or country. Call at 307-4th St., or Phone 504-W. 4-11-1w DO YOU WANT A GOOD LAWN... -If so, phone 6385 or call at 418-3rd St. morning, noon or evenings. » 4-11-lw HAULING ASHES, black dirt, ferti- lizer several years old. Plowing gardens and can furnish good sand. ‘Also .wood for sale. Call morn- ing, noon or evenings. Phone 538J. —— 4-11-3t FOR RENT—Modern rooms, newly papered and painted. Gentlemen preferred. Call 307 4th St. 4 Bt AUTOMOBILE FOR MRADE—Wiill exchange late mode} standard make sedan for land. Run very little and good as new. Address Box 448, Bismarck, N. D. 4-11-3¢ FOR RENT—Pleasant room’ in_pri- home, 613 Third Street. Phone 434. ° 4-11 wk FOR RENT—Six room new modern house with 3 bedrooms, sun parlor and garage, Lawn and trees. Near fehool. Geo." M. Register. j-11-3t Drenched Good bursting be caught in the ‘you can soak it shape. 4 fice declares,” and the men identi- CLOTHCRAFT STANDARD SERGE y OU may never be drenched by a isfying to know that your CLOTH- CRAFT Serge Suit is so well madé that it—without the slightest change’ in color, shrinkage or loss of In CLOTHCRAFT “5130” Serge —hblue, brown or gray—you get both’Style and Service! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE son, Charles, who died in 1922 of intestinal trouble and only $130 af- ter the death of Walter, 13, in 1923. “All of them were strong and rug- ged looking,” she told Mr. Gorman, “but they died after illnesses of on- ly two’ or three weeks.” She said she had been in ill health for the last two or three years once was operated on for gall She had suffered from pressuye, she said, and at been unconcious. She also had been a. victim of hysteria until about two months ago, she said. ‘Phe death of her husband follow- ed only a few months after her son, Charles, had accidentally shot and NEW MEMBERS “ARE SOUGHT BY AUTO CLUB Plans Big Program For Coming Season killed a neighbor boy near Valpar- aiso, Indiana. Mrs. Cunningham talked freely but appeared dull men- tally, Mr. Gorman said, after declar- ing that she would be retained pend- ing de ion of the Indiana authori- ties us to future action in the case. d| Coolidge Asked To Attend Celebration The Washington, April 11.—An ii tion was extended to President Cool- Associated Press idge today to visit Ripon, Wis. dur- | ing the summer to celebrate the birth of the Republican Party. The of Ripon claims the party was initiated there. The invitation was extended to the president by Sen- Fargo, April 11.—Serving North Dakota as its most completely or- ganized publicity and development body and rendering a. particular ser- vice to (Nort Dakota automobile owners and visiting motor tourists are the outstanding purposes of the North Dakota Automobile Associa- tion, according to announcement made ‘from its executive office in Fargo today. The Association has approximately 1,000 members enroll- ed: for 1925 to date and within the next Tew weeks will endeavor to swell its membershin to 6,000, The executive office in Fargo maintains the state's most elaborate tourists information bureau in the Commer- cial club building while the state organization is co-operating with civic organizations in several of the larger cities of the state in main- taining branch bureaus, “There is a field for such an or- ganization as the North Dakota Au- tomobile Association in this state,” an announcement from the local of¢ 2 she's ‘Duy Yous too, can have the com- Peeetance of health. fied with it are highly gratified over the results to date in securing mem- bers, A realization that many of the problems of automobile owners, of visiting motor tourists and the task of advertising North Dakota can best be worked out by a state auto- mobile association has prompted a very ready response to the effort of securing members.” People of North Dakota can ap- peal to the Fargo office of the N. D. A. A. or its branch bureaus withit the civic organizations of other large cities in North Dakota for assistance in planning vacations by cay, Liter- ature and maps on North Dakota and other states, as well as informa- tion concerning national parks and other recreation grounds, are avail- able-to the people of North Dakota through the N. D. A. A. This service is not for members only but for the general public it is announced, The North Dakota Automobile As- sociation also plans to render a spe- cial service to business and profes- sional men by serving as a state vi- gilance committee with regard to! “advertising graft” incidental to the publishing of motor tourists litera- ture and maps. The association will hold itself in readiness to inves! gate and such proposition and ri port to the business and profession al men of the state the result of its investigation. Along the same line of «work will be the effort to co-or- dinate support of national trails, eliminating trails which seek finan- jal assistance in North Dakota with- out rendering any particular service in return, POLICE PROBE FIVE DEATHS IN ONE FAMILY (Continued from page one) lapse following an appendicitis oper- ation; $830 after the death of ber in his large practice. - - Pressed as New! hose — you may often rain. It’s mighty sat- in water, dry it, press A fa, E, Bergeson & Son Bismarck, North Dakota There is no reason for you to look or feel this way Ui CONSTIPATION SHORTENED LIFE When your bowels refuse to work and the poisons have to find other outlets such as your lungs, kidneys and skin, you are courting sickness and shortening your life. You are also running grave danger of dreadful disease. Do your bowels act at least twice daily? - If not you are constipated and must do something right 4way or you may be gravely ill. Dr. Caldwell’s SYRUP. The Family Laxative 8 will relieve chronic constipation, regulate your system, and for 30 years has assisted Nature in properly exercis- ing the bowels of America’s millions. A pleasing liquid combination of Egyptian senna, the tested prescription of Dr. Caldwell proven by years PEPSIN Pepsin and aromatics, Different Because It Relieves And Does Not Require Continued Use The mistreated bowels may be cleared with one dose, but to allow Nature to restore health and proper functioning, ever decreasing doses should be taken until your bowels are moving naturally Ly themselves. 10,000,000 bottles are used annually because it never fails. return your money to do as promised. PEPSIN SYRUP COMPANY Me jello, Hlinols who was accompanied to the White | Judge Roy Reed, and W. House by A. H, Wilkinson, Internal | of Ripon. EVERYTHING YOU NEED IN BUILDING Buy Paint Insurance This Spring : A coat of Good Paint will add many years to the life of your build- ings. ; It is the cheapest insurance in the world, Carpenter's Quality Paints Are bought in carload lots and the saving thus made is passed directly to our customers. They are sold with the positive guarantee that they will prove satis- factory. We specialize in quality paints at quantity prices. If they don’t make good we will. See us now about your spring paint- ing. We can save you money. I . H. CARPENTER LUMBER CO. S==0m= CO ee NOTICE Zz Enforced idleness brings trouble in Be wake 8 Ba appy-¢o-li typecike fellow who never coi see the use of Joy. ing money aside. Thé consistent Saver never BISMARCK BANK ; Bismarck, N, D. ‘apital $100,000 Incorporated 1291. See picture on Bank Building. MARK EVERY GRAVE : with : ENDURING MEMORIALS The tribute to the loved one who has gone to a just re- ward — the monument marking the final resting place — must be beautiful. But above all else it must be enduring. And so we suggest for your consideration. the most beautiful and enduring of all stones—flawless granite. Here in our showroom, you will find granite memorials that incite admiration. Here, too, is that ready and ‘sympathetic interest that will aid you greatly in the selection of the memorial you desire. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE : Bismarck Marble & Granite Works EVERYTHING AT A FAIR PRICE — PAGE THREE ELECTRIC COOKERY MEANS | COOKING IN COMFORT -; ’ | \f TONIGHT — Saturday | HARRY CAREY In Brete Hart’s thrilling | western story “THE FLAMING ~ FORTIES” “Our Gang” Kids in “Fast Company” COMING MONDAY _ D. W. (GRIFFIT™ Presents {‘iSN'T LIFES WONDERFUL, | a Simple Romance of Love and Potatoes CAROL DEMPSTER in her Greatest Triumph “Gives one of the greatest per- formances I have ever seen in motion pictures. It may be the very_best.”—N. Y._ WORLD. “Carol Dempster, as ‘Inga,’ 1s so wonderful that ‘I sat rooted to my chair.”’—N.g¥. AMERICAN. { ‘ || CAPITOL | THEATRE | } ie ERP Resurrection b: Charles Meas will be given at the Presbyterian Church Sunday Evening, April 12 ‘by the morning choir. MRS. BARNES, Soprano. Mrs. SCHEFFER, Alto. HENRY HALVERSON, Tenor GEORGE HUMPHREYS, Bass. With Miss Esther Taylor singing in the woman’s trio. Miss Lesher, Organist. The cantata is in three (parts: The Introduction: Part I—The Empty Tomb. Part II—Mary Magdalene. Finale, DR.R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. 107 5th St. Phone 428 .

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