The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1925, Page 3

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v -+ WoNiday’s famous stage from’ MARKET NEWS . | Wire Markets By t Associated Press WHEAT SCORES LARGE GAINS Heavy Buying By Export} » Trade Boosts Price ed Press) / —Wheat scored after a waver- There were indications that the export trade was actively ern wheat and the ad- as also influenced | pring wheat ter- nd adverse winter crop re-| The opening, which ranged | from one to 1% cent advance, was | irregular assent. | ding a sharp reaction, Corn was higher, May wheat | 4 to M, and July} 0 $1.51. Fa) arose from wheat from CHICAGO LIVESTOCK The Associated Press) 0, May Hogs i 17,000, Slow opening, 23 to higher. Later sales show 25 cents | Heifers top $13.35. Cattle ; 000. Steady to 25 cents | higher. Tambs: opening around 25 cents lower. ‘ MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat receipts 95 ¢ compared With 195 car: Cash No, } northern $1,57 to $1.59. | No. 1 dark northern s 3 choice to faney $1.72 1-2 to $1. ; good to choice $1.63 1-2 to $1.71 1:2; 0} dinary to good $1.58 1-2 to $1.62 1 hard spfing $1.83 1-2 to $1.93 yeur ago. Mile. Regine Flory, one has insured her jev aring her ti 1, in itself wo FIND LOOPHOLE | IN NEW YORK’S *°) RUM BLOCKADE Only Ten Per Cent of Old Supply Gets Past F Coast Guard Boats No. 1 dark Montana on track $1.53 4-2 to $1 May July $1 Sept. $1.41. Conn No, 2 yellow 2 white 42 1-2 to .43, to .85, , $1.12 3-4 to $114 3-4. B 1-2 to $2.81 1-2, Too Late To Classify MEN wanted to take orders for 50 -suits and top coats. 423 h Street, Minneapolis, Minn.| New York, May 1 pee- 5-12-5t |cent of the liquor that formerly came tt into New York City through “ru FOR RENT—Four room modern|row”—the ocean refilling stations off apartment, furnished or unfurnish- |New York bay—-has been stopped by | ed. Phone 77 5-12-tf|the blockade instituted by the fed- — eral government. But the remaining { WORK WAN hauled,!10 percent is finding a way to fog! gardens plowed, black dirt and old|the coast guard and the fast boats fertilizer. Phone 957, 6-12-1w]at its command, See : Every night, rapid power boats take the long chance of running the rum blockade and make good on the effort. The, landing pointe are near Atlantic Highlands, in Ndw Jersey, and along’ the shores of Long Island The success of the boats that get by the patrol is due to their superior | speed. There is nothing in the gov-| ernment fleet that can eatch some of the liquor craft. Dispatches from Washington said that the government intended to put into effect the same sort of patrol all along the Atlantic Feoast, and to continue its operations all summer. : The current prices of imported | bootleg liquor have taken a bullish! turn because of the work of Capt.| W. V, E. Jacobs, commander of the | sea patrols in this division, and his | i men. | Graphic reduction of methods used | |to run the blockade and 6f the de- livery in a cove on Shrewsbury river, of 150 cases of House! d Ambassador Scotch jwhiskey, ‘direct from the distillery | jin Glasgow, was related by a rifin| \runner last night. |. The runner, with three compan- jions, went to sea on Thursday night | jin a forty foot Seabright dory, cap- jable of 40 knots an hour. Loaded jwith whisky at sundown, the boat |put directly out to sea, pursued by| a federal patrol boat. Speeding | from its pursuer the rum runner turned about and lying to until the moon went down, ran directly for Sandy Hook Light.. Before daylight he put up in a well protected cove in the river near Atlantic Highlands. MATTY ILL Braves’ Prexy Convalescing at Saranac Lake Health Resort i | 1 i CHRISTY MATHEWSON Christy Mathewson, famous pifch- of the most b; els for 2,000,¢ ed with diamonds and other preci OM uliful of the French stage 0 francs. In the photo she more than the total insurance rth At the mouth of the river the h powered dory, driven by two Liberty ;motors, was hailed by two men in a rowboat, but it them with out pause, Wit how rum runner says, the liquor juptown New York cabarc | DREAM CO} TRUE London, Ma Albert Lord, a | Magistrate, was aming that his office in London was being robbed. In the midst of his dream he wa informed that a burglar in his office had been caught. + CUFF TIES jes with long floating sry lovely on the sum- both at the neckline | | \ | | | LICATE TONE: vening gowns of cha but particu rly in | untrimmed with | | Snow dr 100 feet high are [found the year around on “Snow jReef Top” in Glacier National Park. a er of the Giants years ago and now president of the Boston National League club, is back at Saranac Lake, convalescing from a heavy cold he caught at the opening game. of the season. It was at the same resort | that Matty made a great uphill fight for health two years ago. Entire | fandom is pulling for his early re- covery. “LET THY LIG BLACK ROSE PETALS A very attractive evening gown of heavy pink silk erepe de chine is trimmed with black velvet rose petals. YELLOW SATIN GOWN A very attractive gown is of yel- Jow satin with g deep hem of yel- lew ostrich feathers . The cost of transportation on Bon St. Joseph, Mo., to California in 1861, was $2 f London _school children took out more than 2,500,000 books from the ity libraries last year, as compared « with 714,000 twenty years ago. Many ‘Parisiennes visit. the hair- ; dresser twice a day to have their coiffures set so that not a single hair will be out of place. receipts are now in excess of her expenditures, the January surplus, being’ 16,000,000 lire, as com- pared with a deficit of 33,000,000 for January, 1924. } m= Sareg ets Py . This is Harry: Gurian. He was - ELECTRIC COOKERY | watked a step: without: crutches and ¢ Italy’: HTS “| better, with the emphasis gh “tree awakened by the telephone bell and | culti se in| the suggestion of inere i Imy own short life I have seen farm | Poor. j importance of Muscle Shoals develop. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FOOD PROBLEM I$ NEGLECTED | EXPERT AVERS Declares U. $. Could Double: Her Farm Production If She Tried STEWART NEA Service Writer ington, May 12.<-Coi tin L. Davey of: Ohio it, gue: | America ebuld double her farm. pro- | duction if she tried. Few faraficrs,! even, have studied the soil as Davey as. He calls himself a “tree sur- .” I think “tree” doctor? fits he puts dietetics, aes Of course if a tree needs an op- eration, D operates. He has lo be something of a gengra},prac- titioner, Aboreal medicine Dung. {It hasn’t’reached the stage of: much lization, But in the main, it to me that Davey prefers doc- toring to the knife. Like most good doctors, he coneerns himself: pr: pally with what his | pe ding little on drugs. ’ bread and butter, meat and ake and ice cream are the h a little flavoring and a few made by which they absorb from the S as a ee eticia Jave o, as a tree dietician, “Davey am HAS aun BALL TEAM THIS YEAR Mis Foreign War: y the soil,’too, but to be more! (ne of the most promising looking thorough than th . For a tree te*ms in eastern college baseball | [Hag auch yantlunpetitel ; a cieles this season is that represent- Nl big: plant, after 1,” ob: ey ving Fordham, It won ‘seven games [Yes but’ whereas a plant. like a i! 4 tow. The other day it whipped stalk of grain requires’ only: eubie St Francis of Rrooklyn, 22 to 1. linches of soil, a tree requires cubic eine renee ee jvards. It follows that Davey has to SPEAKS TO KIWAN | NELSON Phe regular meeting of the Kiwanis club was held Monday noon at the {McKenzie hotel. The _ principal go into it mo deeply—in the literal as well as the figurative sense—than almost anybody, except a miner or a prospector drilling for oil. . Thus! sVeiker was Mr. Nelson of the Ar- what he knows about the soil is the Jan SEGTENCOM RNS RES we | last word, ia ciew company and its development in this As an expert, then, Davey points ‘istrict since he has taken charge of out that very little soil remains on it Music and stunts by the mem- earth which isn’t already being farm. b??s, and ding of the by-laws ed. As for this country, “all the land DY Dr. W. E. Cole ended the meet- ing, which was presided over by Wal- lable for cultivati ape on calusation ter A, MacDonald. ated,” he s nd not now about equal to the state of Mino’ When this} Re f . additional land is reduced to culti-! | /e, see anes ue ona 2 4 corded. was yphoon vavoninene pe noetiones Hongkong in August, 1923, when one gust was recorded as traveling 127 miles an hour. Americar? farmers are cold toward > duction just now, . With a } Several British motor car manu- ready—or what Davey n “aP- facturers have reduced the prices of parent surplus’—they ask, “WIiY their ears, Great Britain now ha: e more?” “Our present-day pro- 3-142]. A ARBERAEaY GE oniaat blem,” they say at the Agriculture ., cy the previous year. i Department, “is one of markéting,, Production will take care of itself.”| Pa ee “But our increasing population?”., DoWt forget the Yeomen Davey urges, “When we reach the’ Card and dancing party at A. subsistence limit—what then?” “That O. U. W. Hall tonight at S will be a long time,” answer some. 9’oclock. Admission 25 cents. “Less than a generation, judging from the past,” insists Davey, “In after that crops farm abandoned, exhausted, n my youth produced exceilent “At the worst we can trek else where,” argue the optimists. “In all § the world,” responds Davey, “there remains but one spot. capable of abundant production which is not un- dey cultivation now—the South American valley of the River Plate And that is being settled rapidly.” ; “As we can't spread out,” continues Davey, “we must intensify. Much of our exhausted land can be reclaimed. That which is unexhausted must be safe-guarded from exhaustion, that, as required, its productivity may be increased. “Otherwise, though the rich al- ways will be well fed, this will be- come a. country of famine for the ‘An abundance of cheap fer- tilizers!” Davey was discussing the ment. “That’s our need.” ose a But why“worry about what's in. the future, until we come to it? “It’s poor policy,” replies Davey, “to neg lect the question of your-food sup- ply until you begin to staeve,” The Path of - Thorns Alice had a home with her thriving little village. She bad the ospal nities - for wholesome amusement— frlends—a sweetheart whowas devoted to her. Yet she was discontented, Life was too slow. ,She longed fof romantic ture, excitement — of what’ ig called “the wine of life.". Had she known the hollow mockery, the utter emptinegs: of the | career of ‘pleasure: that. beckoned - ber, she would never. have made the tragic mistake-that was to. bring ber such agony of mind and soul. Hg; crippled at birth and has, never double braces. The omily ‘home he embroidering fine linens for Fifth ' MEANS ever ienew fe a aille vee ee orobauns sity bone mie ae vee: a But he has’a place in the eunny window of-an. institute for the crip- COOKING IN COMFORT | pled in. New ark: itd the works, pee Avenue mansions and. thus supports himself. Coal Burns}: ity) ‘Those- who see him marvel at his cheerfulness. Gives Heat! Oil a ' Flame: But: Gas is combusti- ble. Use The Super-Fuel. and:be of: good, nature, they. aay, so started with a great handicap. has world about ‘him. Thé-moral for you need not-be pointed. If the: ean-work dan we. And thus this’man who Set a lamp that lights the little ! CARS WASHED f AND -". 3 SIMONIZED ‘At “Low . 1925 BUDDY P .. el PPY GIRL a Dagmar Oakland, of New York, the “Buddy Poppy Git : sabled vets during the week of Memorial Day. selected by the Veterans of * to head the sale of poppies Regular meeting of Lloyd Spetz Post temorrow evening 0 p. m. Important busi- nes Bronze instruments were used by man long before he realized they were alloys. The Romans were the first to prepare cast iron. ' INGROWN NAIL Turns Right Out Itself aS A few drops of “Outgro” in the crevice of the ingrowing nail reduces inflammation and pain and so tough- tens the tender, sensitive skin under- neath the toe nail, that it can not penetrate the flesh, the nail turns naturally outwa almost over night. ; “Outgro” is a harmless antiseptic manufacturéd for chiropodists. How- ever, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle containing direc- tions.—Adv. rd Portia’s father was old-fashioned In the days of Shakespeare’s famous heroine, buying and selling were contests of wits. In Venice, haggling and dickering were the vogue. Along the Rialto, sharp practice was the rule. Every purchase of silk or spices was made at the buyer’s risk. One had to be a shrewd judge of values and one’s fellows to escape trickery. Portia’s father—a merchant—was used to the ideas of guess, luck and accident. seemed natural to him to entrust the choice af his daughter's husband to three closed caskets and a lucky guess! Nowadays, we do not transact business blindly—nor leave important decisions to chance. It is not necessary for us to gamble when we buy. Commodities are identi- fied for us by trade - marks. Manufacturers go to the advertising columns to tell us about their’ products. Merchants describe their m and service. } By reading advertisements, we get a knowledge of goods and stores that we can depend on. Advertising ‘ reduces chance, in buying, toa minimum. DO YOU READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS? PAGE THREE VETERAN WHEAT IS where he has done most of his fight- HITTING BALL HARD} ing. * Old Zach Wheat of the Brooklyn Dodgers has been hitting the agate at a good clip since the start of the season, At present he is batting well over 400. That's a pretty good figure for a fellow who has been in the main tent since 1909, Lawn Mowers sharpened at Ruder’s Furniture Exchange. CAPITOL THEATRE TONIGHT (TUESDAY) WHY DID SHE DOT IT? ‘ She was wealthy She was ambitious: She was free And he weathered the storm of lying lips and faise jibes to proclaim his love for her until the beauty appeared. PAULINE FREDERICK MICHIGAN HAS GOOD BOXER IN. PHILBIN| In Let Philbin, University of Mich- igan boasts % promising boxer. Phil- bin is 19 years old and has engaged in 40 bouts, half of which he: has won via the kayo. He is very pop- ular around the Wolverine state,! | For Colds Headache | | Pain Lumbago | I AURA | Neuralgia Rheumatism | LA PLANTE Accept only a | Safe Bayer package gin the greatest emo which contains provendirections ## tional roles of their Handy “Bayer” boxes. of 12. tablets ‘Peers, Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggista | ! Aspirin is the trade: mark of: Bayer Maan- facture of Monoaceticacidester of Balleylicacié “SMOLDER FIRES” Don’t miss this;drama of lost youth depicted with a ‘truly superb feeling and a vigorous emotional force. For Fire, Tornado, Automobile, Acci- dent and Health INSURANCE See Fox Sunshine Comedy “Up on the Farm” DR. R.S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. The Helling Agency | 1st Guaranty Bank Bldg. Phone 877 OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. 107 Sth St. Phone 428 Representing Leading Insur- ance Companies in America. So much so, indeed, that it erchandise — price, quality e

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