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FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1925 MARKET NEWS Wire Markets By Associated Press WHEAT MAKES SHARP GAINS Upturn at Liverpool Causes Value Boost Here (By The Associated Press) Chicago, May 8.—Active trading | and much higher prices here devel- | oped early in the wheat market to- | day as a result of an unexpected | upturn at Liverpool. Based on the action of the Chicago market yes- terday, Liverpool was due to open at % to one pence decline, but in- stead started higher and before trad- ing here began showed 1%c to 2%c pence jump. A new wnofficial ex-| treme low estimate of the probable | yield of domestic winttr wheat 38%,- | 000,000 bushels, was also given a tention. zo opening prices % to 1% | cents higher, May $1.65% to $1.66 and July $1.54% to $1.54% were fol-| lowed by an ascent to $1.68 for May for $1.55% to $1.56 for July. Subsequently enlargement of ex- port business together with belief that the government reports would be bullish led to a further advance in Wheat closed unsettled | 2 41-4 cents net higher, May | $1,68 1-4 to $1.69 and July $1,56 to! $1.56 1-4. j ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK South St. Paul, May 8 (U. S. Dept Agr.)—Cattle receipts 1,400. Gener ally steady. Largely steer run. Tor | yearlings 19 head averaging 840 Ib $10.50. Seventeen head yearling 8 eraging 1,300 Ibs. at $10.25. Bulk fat steers and yearlings $8.75 to $9.75. Fat she stock largely $5.50 $8.50, Lighter weight heifers up $9.25. Canners and cutters $3.25 $4.00. Bologna bulls strong $ 4.75, Heavies up to $5.00. Stock- and feeders nominally steady Ives receipts 1,600. 25 to 50 cents higher. $8.50 to $9.50. Bulk good lights to packers around $9.00. Hogs receipts 7,500. 25 cents higher. Bulk butcher bacon hogs $11.85. Bulk packing sows $10.50. Pigs largely $11.50. Average cost Thursday $11.55. Weight 226 Ibs. Sheep 100. Steady. shorn lambs $13.00 to $13.! shorn ewes 8$.00. Best Good wooled ewes $8.50. CHICAGO PRODU (By The Associated P: Chicago, May Poultry alive, lower. Fowls 27c; roosters 15¢; tu keys 20c; ducRs 24 to broilers not quoted. Receipts 12,557 tubs. tras 39%c; standards geese Butter lower. Creamery ex- extra 3Te to 38e; higher, Re- Firsts 29 to firsts 301 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK qU. S. Dept. Agr.) Chicago, 8,—Hogs 17,000. Fair- ly activ to 35 cents higher. Big packers "buying sparingly. Bulk good and choice 140 to 325 Ib. aver- ages $10.25 to $10.40. Top $12.45. Cattle 3,000. General trade un- even, lov. Mixed’ yearlings $10.75. Bulk fed steers and yearlings $8.65 to $10.25. Sheep 11,000. Slow. Fat lambs opening strong. Good to choice 90 to 92 Ib. clippers $18.00 to $13,25. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, May 8.—Wheat re- ceipts 94 cars compared with 78 cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern $1.62% to $1.64; No, 1@Mark northern spring; choice to fancy $1.77 to $1.88; good to choice $1.68 to $1.76; ordinary to good $1.64 to $1.67; No. 1 hard spring $1.88 to $1.98; No. 1 dark Montana on track 1.57 to $1.87; to arrive 1.58 to $1.87; May $1.60; July $1.58; Sept. $1.47%. Corn No. 3 yellow $1.11 to $1.13; oats No. 3 white 42%%c to 43%c; bar- ley 72c to 85c; rye No. 2 $1.17 to $1.18; flax $2.78% to $2.82%. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russel-Miller Co.) Bismarck, May 8, 1925. No. 1.dark northern .. $1.47 No. 1 northern spring . 14t No. 1 amber durum . . 136 No. 1 mixed durum . No. 1 red durum . No. 1 flax No. 2 flax No. 1 rye . Dark Hard Winter . Hard Winter Barley ....... We quote but do not handle the followin, Oats Speltz, per ewt. SHEL! Mixed No. 4 .. BL No. 5 . 17 No. 6 72 Sample grade ....2.4.......... 63 1 cent per pound discount under 55 Ib, Earn corn 5 cents under shell, Too Late To Classify WANTED—Girl or woman to do ‘house work on farm, one mile from Steele, N. D. Must be clean, like children, Call 636J, Main St, or write Mrs, John Taylor, Bismarck Hospital. 5-B-1t WANTED—Young inan to worle by mene Frances:Jasskowiak, ptr | constipation since I was a child. No, eth Be 5-8tf| medicine gave me more than tempo- | FOR -RENTOFumished coom for| T#t¥ telief. I got so bad'I was afraid light house keeping. Closet and kitchenette. 411-5th St. Phone 273, iP Sie 5-8-tf STRAYED ‘from my farm 10 miles north of Bismarck, one bluish gray mare, hind legs and face a lighter color, no. brand. Weight 1350, age 4. If found, notify. Frank Pay. ‘ . 5-8-2w Dance at Menoken Satur- day night, May 9._ Desirable | ASK INDIANS BE BARRED | FROM RODEOS Depariment Chiefs Object’ To Red Men Showing Off Old Time Customs ‘ | Objection to Indians appearing as drawing card: nd round-! ups to slow o dtime da and customs in their old time finery has been made by superintendents of eight reservations in North Dakota, South Dakota and Montana, Declaring that they do not want the Indian to be con as a relic of barbarism and interest shown in, him as a curiosity or from the stand point of the ethnologist, the reser- vation superintendents — say they want him encouraged to take advan-' | tage of the present and face the fu- |ture armed with the best his white neighbors can give him. They have asked managers of rodeos and round- ups in the Northwest to dispense with the services of the Indians at the celebration j In a letter mailed out to all fair, associations and towns where rodeos, e ordinarily ng the sum-| formation of farm bureau chapters, women’s auxiliaries and recreation committees for the purpose of in- creasing the interest of the Indians in agriculture, stock raising and more modern community life. The officials declare they hope to make diversified farmers of all Indiana living on their allotments and to change their community life to fit into this plan, particularly since the j, Indians are now all citizens and if letter states. But there are also vast number who neglect their farm ing to travel about during the sum mer from one rodeo to another. An example is given in the letter of one Indian who has been known to leave a field of 25 acres of good it oats ready to cut to travel a long j, distance to a fair to be shown and 4) paraded in feathers and paint in old ‘time dance: ‘a are also know the letter mer and fall months, the reservation RG ; superintendents that the pro-; Rcbert P. Scripps, prominent pw) gram outlined by Commissioner, + on their return from a Charles If, Burke contemplates the ~——— - ‘U.S.TO OBSERVE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~ RACK FROM EUROPE i its aim should | W in umber 200th BIRTHDAY isd tiow. in. OF WASHINGTON |" "ts fe hingt nd for the's CANAD ington, May 8. ‘The Ameri-|OF NE le prob: will be given a] Ottayw to the character of the totalin 900 pounds and valu- which is to ed at crossed the inter- nMEeMe into p two-hundre ions » birth of Gerog hing) |the Unit ic they to become efficient and cap- ing to the d report of the Can- able citizens they must conform toj He calebr: >» held here, |adian pulp papeg industry. This the ordinary practices of successful jy the city wh ton found. Was an inercase of 16,000,000 pounds. farmers to enable them to make a oq, and will h direction over the exports of 1 ‘The Amer- able su 8 on their allot- of » commission the last in market now s 97 percent of ; Congress and of psident » total vilue r exports. | of the Indians throughout (ooiidge is the Practically all of Can: paper is the Sioux country are farming and gome suggestio: nature |used in North America, making a success of their work, the of the event now ceived cL Th MANILA COURT Manila, May &. IMS RECORD supreme court elebrati ual t Sponso: the will be pir alistic, stressing — the ter, /of the Philippine Islands st hievement institutions of the r with a cleat docket ither of his Country. Charles W. |« ch the liot, president emer 1, |haps never been equalled as expressed the view that the cele-|similar body under the Amer ration should be dire in large | flag. The court is composed of nine veasure to the rising tion, not | members, five Americans and four o the passing or the , when the bench is full. und that | Filipino velled practi of 1924 from one pl: att | various attractions. “We do not want the Indian to b paraded in paint and feathers while | he back to and! dances the old sz ” the superintendents declare in the lee te The better element among the Indians object to this and no good can accrue from it for the Indian. Such spectacles give the public the wrong idea of the Indian and what he is and what has been done for him and what he is doing. “Without doubt, the good people who encowrage these practices would be rudely shocked if t' able to see all the objectionable features of the common practice of encourage- ing and paying the Indian for trot- ting from one fair and show to an-j| other. | “Take for example, the young In-| dian girl just home from school. She} is forced by the circumstances to be come one of the rovers and campers | to be stared at and remarked about. Is it to be wondered at that she don her beads and paint and feather: and joins in with the others? Every- one is doing it and the white peopl around her think her far more teresting in her age dress than in her proper clothing in which she | returned from school. j “Many christian people doubtless ; watch the ani H s of the Indian as he, parades before them but they would | be surprised to know that all this! old custom spectacle is absolutely in-! imical to the religious welfare of the Indian as well as his material inter- ests, No missionary among the In- | dians ever approved of these pro- | ceedings. i WILD SEA BIRDS COME BACK 1 TO BALTIC BATHING RESORTS | Hamburg, May '8.—-Efforts to sa’ guard the bird life on certain island: in the North Sea are resulting suc- cessfully. Terns and mews are com- ing back to the islands of Jordsand, Ellenbogen and Norderoog. #A century ago the Frisian Islands were a paradise for bird life, Nau: mann, the celebrated ornithologist, described them as having the ap- pearance of a flake of foam float- ing on the sea because of the great number of mews, terns, dredgers and other birds. But in the meantime the islgnds have become bathing re- sorts and throughout the summer are alive with pleasure-seekers who have turned -them into noisy amusement centers. Until recent years pirds’ nests’ were ruthlessly destroyed. LITTLE MOTHER ‘HAPPY AGAIN “For the past nine years I have been very .much distressed with bloating and stomach trouble due to I would have to leave my three little children, But since taking a course of Mayr's Wonderful ~ Remedy two years ago I have been entirely well; no constipation or other trouble.” It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes prac- tically all- stomach, liver and intes- tinal ailments, including appendici- tis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Sold by druggists‘ every-, where.—Adv, oy . T There’s No Substitute— None Just as Good as CALUMET THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER Millions of Bake-Day Tests During the Past 35 Years Prove It. SALES 2'/, TIMES THOSE OF ANY OTHER BRAND Milk Leads Your Child on the Road to Health Just as the Pied Piper of Hamelin led the children in that famed legend, so the bottle of Milk leads your children today to health. Give the little ones plenty of this nourishing liquid, you'll be elated with the results. Get the best we can supply you. _ MODERN DAIRY COMPANY - 206 - 5th St. Phone 880 Lealled Storesand; Trondhjem wants {to return to the name of Nidaros, fand” Bergen hopes to be called | Bjoergvin. | Pieri) StL? ona earn !Women’s Clubs Out Against CROWDS FLOCK TO CHURCH FOR GIRL’S FUNERAL hc Saale ‘nominate a woman for governor of | Maryland is meeting with strong op- position from women. | An effort at a recent convention jof the United Democratic Women’s ‘Clubs of the state at Salisbury to ‘obtain the endorsement of Mrs. W. a Hoffman Buried in St. Mary’s Cemetery After High Mass Mary's Catholic Church was’ w, Hubbard, of Chestertown, for the this morning when school: gubernatorial honor, failed and sub- relatives and friends of sequently the Baltimore Federation Ive-year-old Zona Hoffnfin left o9¢ Democratie Women put its offi- daties to attend the funeral ojal stamp of disapproval on the for the child who died early yomination of women candidates for nesday morning. High mass W4s | the office. id 8:30 o'clock by Father John; ‘The federation . resolved “that who preached a sermon ad-| there be recorded as the unanimous 1 chiefly to the school chil-| sense of the Federation of Demo- uttendance. A floral display | cratic Women, Incorporated, of Bal uty und magni-|timore, in view of the recent public the death of any | reports wtih, respect to the nomina- | c official, testified to the affec-!tion of a woman for governor of | Maryland, ‘the federation’s. emphatic] opposition to the ill-timed and hasty thought giving rise to this ambitious proposal.” There will be no election for gov- ernor in Maryland until November, 1926, M. PS MAY BROADCAST London, May 8.—Broadcasting of the proceedings of Parliament is be- ing considered. The suggestion has been made that a microphone be at- tached to cach member's seat so that when he arises to spegk he can talk directly into the radio transmitter. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR (By The Associated Press) Minneapolis, May 8.—Flour — un- changed to 10 cents lower, In car- load lots family patents quoted at $8.90 a barrel in 98 Ib. cotton sacks. Shipments 29,181 barrels. Bran $25 to $25.50. SKIRT WAS A LIFEBELT Brighton, Eng., May: 8—A woman who fell into the sea here recently owes her life to the fact that she was wearing a loose skirt which fill- ed with air and acted as a life belt until help aprived. PAGE THREE Gir?’s Balloon Dress Explodes; Several Injured The Associated Press) aes ngeles, May 8.—The Los An- geles Times today prints the casual- ty list of an explosion which it said was caused at Midwick Country Club Wednesday when a dancing girl clad in toy balloons brushed against the lighted cigaret of a club member. Dr. A. D. S. Jonson, director of the club, was seriously burned, says the Times, and five others present at the dinner party being given in honor of the Midwick golf and polo teams had to be treated by physicians. Use of illuminating gas instead of air to inflate the costume of the balloon dancer was blamed for the explosion. : The property damage was slight. The balloon girl’s injuries, oddly enough, were less serious than those inflicted on spectators in her imme- diate vicinity. f NORWAY TIRES OF BUES fe) wet baking soda— pathy of hun treds of the] Siccourie aneiy gents © body was buried in St. Mary's \ | S$ K Ss te re: onorar; bearers cho | ° i. ‘ canetern: Honore patoorens 3: Congtipation destroys beauty—get pos - VI NOU ends were: Effie Rosen, Rose-| op¢ li f ith Kello "s AL -B AN Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly My Healow, Auverine Olson, Ver-|Hthwe relier W gg ie Doild, “Ardith Gussnery and nature works. It sweeps and cleans Marian Jensen. James Walsh, Harry he intestine. If eaten regularly, |/ Homan, Paul Homan, Paul Halloran, Beware of co cde permanently relieve the most| stipation’s many dread disea chronic cases—is guaranteed to do] id Thos. Thorlson | ' so or your grocer returns the pur-| aches; rs. Hoffman, grand- chase, price. \ | child, and Miss Lu- Congtipation backs —Keflogg’s ALL-BRAN is ready-! Go -—. le Hoffman, an aunt, came from \ Jom the poisons of the in- to-eat. You will like its nut-lil ene nnexpolis to attend the funeral. it testine up into your flavor. Try the many delicious: KX tablet or two of Mis. P. Birmingham of Beach, an old body. Constipation leads recipes.on every package. Eat at end of the family, was also pres-} to over forty diseases. east two tablespoonfuls daily—in| chronic cases, with every meal. ki f Kelloge’s ALLBEAR today. Made in Batile a ‘chy complexions, sick head- acto ircles under eyes, un- leasant breath, etc., are caused DANISH NAMES ipation. Rid yourself per- Creek, Michigan, and sold by all Oslo, Norway ce Chris- Py coenerae this dangerous illness. grocers. Served by all leading res- tiania changed its name to Oslo for| Do it the safe, sure way, taurants and hotels. the saad doctors recommend—eat Keltoge’s ALL-BRAN regularly. the purpose of wiping out all s gestions of the time when Nor ug 4 was under Danish control, many Only ALL-BRAN can be wholly ¥ other cities have also expressed 2] g@ective. That is what Kelloge’s BRAN desire to return to their original} §s°100 per cent bran, It works ag ALL-! Norwegian names. Christinnsand now wants to be 5 night and Saturday ‘Suggestions for ;Mothers’ Day” ~ MOTHERS’ DAY Sunday, May 10th - In memory of the child, you used to be — give mother flowers this Mother’s Day. For flowers are the perfect gift for her. We have ROSES, CARNATIONS, PEONIES, TULIPS, NARCISSUS, DAFFODILS and Blooming Plants in variety. APITOL THEATRE Romance of a~ Telephone girl DELIVERED ANYWHERE YOU WISH AT THE DESIRED TIME -OSCAR H. WILL CO. 319 - 8rd — Phone 784 OPEN UNTIL NOON ON MOTHER’S DAY ————E——— “The Haunted Honeymoon” WHO? WHAT? WHY? When a man marries a woman older than him- Footwear Fashions y] ii 9. alt, who,-fiaks, moet Many new models; one equally as smart as the other man or woman? are shown in Blonde Satin, Twotone patent leathers, A New White Sandal Fashion WHITE for | SEE— Pauline Frederick Black Patents and Black or Tan Kid. There’s a choice of heels for any foot, Cuban, Military, Spike or Span- sponsors summer and ish; in all heights. Many novelty effects add to the Ran wear: ane wien Laura La Plante gracefulness and attractiveness of these clever models Uidedly dittent “eros —in— > anything yet shown. . priced from og $60 to $10: WEBB BROTHERS “Merchandise of Merit Only” : ASK ABOUT THE “PROTEX ARCH” PUMP OR OXFORD. Moderately priced at $8.00 | The same model may be had in Black or the new Tans. Sizes 3 to 7. “SMOULDERING FIRES” A story whose stirring theme’ will ‘reach the heart of every man and { woman. i | CAPITOL THEATRE Monday - Tuesday Wednesday