The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 29, 1925, Page 3

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FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1995 MARKET NEWS Wire Markets By Associated Preso WHEAT PRICE TAKES SLUMP Large Deliveries on May Contracts Lower Value (By The Associated Press) Chicago, May 29——Large deliver- contracts here led to an early downturn in wheat today. Th was the last day for month end set tlement of accounts and the fact] s were large was gen- taken to indicate that chances for any sharp bulge in the last. Knowledge that] a ¢ holiday ahead tended also to induce much selling out toj pre Opening prices Yee to “ec higher. May $1.70 to/ ind July $1.65 to $1.6 generals carried the market down to $1.6 for July. Wheat subsequently closing out of rades between wheat and corn had | s t on wheat touched ne of 5 1-4 settled, mote realize ts. T Minneapolis, } anged. Shipment n, opened v’s best pric ts lower than average. pound Cattle mostly Top $ hutehe 50. Sheep 8,000, fat lambs gen- crally steady. Good native springs, 16,00, ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK ress) .— Cattle nominally earlings in sor more. Bulk nd feeder: good low opening 10 to Weighty butche how most decline. 190 to 200 pound $12.00; top $12; desirable 200 to pound butchers largely $11.75. Pack-, ing sows $10.25; pigs steady odd lots of feeder Average Phursds veicht 229, 100; odd lots of fat lambs 2! higher; choice shorn lambs handyweight ewes up to $7. CHICAGO PRODU CE Ma! y Poultry higher, creamery extra 42 5 40%e to Alc, re- cipts 17,03 tandards Wirsts 38% c; seconds tse, Eggs unchanged, receipt cases. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat receipts 170 cars compared with holiday cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern $1.66 1-2 to 1 1-2. No. 1 dark northern spring; choice to fancy $1.78 1-2 to $1.84 1-2; good to choice $1.72 1-2 to $1.77 1-2; or- ry to good $1.67 1-2 to $1.71 1- 0. 1 hard spring $1.60 1-2 to $1.84 1-2. p 1-2. Corn No. 3 yeilow $1.11 to $1.12. No. 2 white .44 5-8 to .45 1-2. ep No. 29$1.15 1-2 to $1.17. lax $2.74 1-2 to $2.78 1-2. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, May 28, 1925, 1 dark northern ++. $1.55} 1 northern. spring ite AGS 1 amber durum . +145 1 mixed durum + 1.37 1 red durum . + 135 1 flax + 2.67 2 flax . + 2.52 Me Na 7 ers . a ark Hard Winter . d Winter Barley os Taste Ot We quote but do not handle the following: Oats eee speltz, per ewt. .. SHELL CORN Yellow White & 2 Mixed No. 0. . 33 80 ae oOoAMB. cent per pound discount under 65 pound. Ear corn 6 cents under shall. Sample grade Too Late To Classify FOR RENT—Two room -apartment,| well furnished, also single room with kitchenette and closet, nicely furnished, both apartments ; have new rugs and are newly decorated. 411 5th St.. Phone 273. ete 5-29-t£ | 60! LOST—Brown wallet’ containing check for $85.00. and $20 bill, check payable to-Guido Vedova, Return to Tribune: for reward.“ _5-29-1t Coal Biirns! rivity Gives. Heat! if eg. a ltion in connection with the /PAY TRIBUTE Flame: But Gas is combusti- ble. Use The Super-Fuel, LUTHERANS OF N.D.T0 ATTEND | SYNOD SESSION ee { Thousands Expected at Big Meeting in Minneapolis Early in June May 2! cores of North Dakota Lutherans are expected to be numbered with! the thousands from ai parts of the United St and Canada who will assemble, in Minneapolis early in June when the Augustana nod convenes fer its convention. Delegates from thirteen conferen- ce. nd three home missions di tricts as well as representatives fro foreign fields will be in session for ne week beginning June 11, ac- cording to announcement from Min- neapo! The synodical council will convene June 5 to prepare the jount of business to come the convention, he synod bership of 300,000. The Lutheran Brotherhood and the Women’s Missionary society of the synod will hold their (AP)- before as an meeting. Ab men June 1 the broth Vigorous op policy of centralization miistration of synod pected when the convention t educational problem aleo is $ on the side of the fundamentalists. | The centralization controversy which has engaged the synod for the st four years will be revived when the genera rd of education sub mits « proposal to place the nine ed: ucational institutions of the synod] and its conferences under direct synodical control. | President . A. Brandelle of Rock! Island, Ill, will report to the synod! that a satisfactory adjustment has been made with the German mission- ary socicties relative to the former German mission fields in British | t Africa. Following the world | war, the Augustana synod a charge of the Leips Tanganyika province man missionaries w Ad n of the field h made between the mans and the Augustana missionar- ies. Reports Augustana vince, China; dia and from Porto Rico. gustana mission in Honan has been the storm center for several years. Business pertaining to the ex sive charitable and inner ‘ork of the synod will occu derable tinte during the convention Among the charitable institutions if synod are 10 17 nquet of a thousand will be a feature of hood gathering, i} sition to a continued the ad- when the Ger- repatriated. s now been the pro- from Honan will be heard in presidency, In-| The Au province of China immigrant , 9 hospitals for nd a home ofr epilep- Total contributions for all pu the synod last year w ties. poses in 5,001,471. T0 SUBDUERS OF INDIANS Men Who Conquered Prairies | *' To Be Honored Saturday With Services Fargo, N. D., Mi 29.—(AP)— While North Dakota is honoring the soldiers, living and dead, of the Civil, Spanish-American and World Wars, tomorrow, two communities will reverse the memory of the sol- diers of another conquest-the sub-/ duing of the prairies and the hordes that once covered them. Near Valley City and Binford, North Dakota groups will gather to unveil memorials to the hardy Min- nesota Mounted Rangers and to one Ranger who died, as that division, under General Sibley, crossed the North Dakota, prairies to quell the India: At Camp Sheardown, a few miles southeast of Valley City the Daugh- ters of the American Revolution, Sakakawea Chapter, have placed a bronze marker to identify the)spot where Sibley and his "volunteers camped the night of July 14-15, 1863 when on their way north in search of the Sioux Indians who par- ticipated in the uprising in Minne- sota the year before. It was the custom, according to Dana Wright, Jamestown historian and field man for the state histori- eal society, to name each day’s camp after one of the officers of the com- mand, and to this camp is happened to be theturn of Samuel B. Shear- down, surgeon of the 10th Minne- sota Volunteer Infantry to be so honored. The surgeon was well liked and an experienced, capable doctor, according to old accounts, He was one of the two doctors who made the examination of the 38 Indians hang- ed at Mankato, Minn., the year pre- vious, for their implication in the murder of white settlers. ‘ Little is known of Doctor Shear- down’s family, according to Major Wright. His home was in Winona, He wag 36 years old when he enter: ed the service October 16, 1862. He was mustered out- August 19, 1865 after he had accompanied his regi- ment on its campaigns to the north and south, through this northwest country. During a large part of this tinte he was the only doctor in the regiment. An official history of the regiment, published by the state of Minnesota, says of Dr. Shear- down: “Eminently skillful both in sur- gery. and‘ medicine, kind hearted, but not often imposed upon, he perform- ed his duty, both ‘to the government! | which the camp wa ninth annual) © jof M | Thune, Ose and to the men in his charge, thor oughly and unostentatiougly. Hi professional superiors in? teem him highly, and hi comrades hold him in remen jbrance.” The bronze tablet following. gimpressive ceremonies starting at 4 p. m. on the Green Trail (ntimary road No. 9) three mile southeast of Valley City, The marker the cooperative eff chapter, Mr. ny owner surviving fectionate ill be unveiled | pro rt of the D. A. Wright and ‘Tho of the ground on pitched and who ded the plot on which the marker and made the project on the Sible ° dedicated on Meme vernment er eiled on t trail county HM omark in the £ expedition, Brent having ally himself on Ile was buried on a hill loo! ing down on the camp site and ti little Ia whose us amp Was i For more than si rave of hie campaigner known and uncared for, but rec Major Wricht, with the Thine identified took steps to have it Hl 1 for. consisting of Greenlund of on, of Cooperstow unveiling hich the hot upon shore: mad nd uitably marked A com Mr Binford, of the ran of the No one has b lated to this man whose. fate to lose his life before he met the foc his brothers-in-arms had be ned to bag. But if they could reached it would be satisfying to them to know that his eternal camp ing ground is tenderly cared for hy those of the present generation who are not too busy to step for a moment from the hurry of to show respect at the lonely grave on Thunes hill. Willard J. Whitfield, of Sauk Con- ter, Minn, a member of the same company in which Brent served (Co. )., Ist Mounted Rangers) was in ed to be present for the dedica tion of the ground in which the body of his comrade lies, but his advanced age will prevent his being there to- morrow. en found who is re z : ‘GRAIN FORMS NOT CHANGED ‘BY COMMISSION Adoption of the present ket and the present form o house receipts is announced i state railroad commissio assumed of elevator reguls law, following United St cour the initiated grain grading La nstiputions |. commission personal supervici ioner W. C. MeDonn in ze. Mr. Hag s been by state ex-y miners from the he erated under the in personnel of the railroad conmi department has not ed. Rules partment are ware the which ha upervision rain the the that! ion 1922 was u The railro the work it with Commi immediate! The} ion} et been select-1 for the operation of the de- to for ated soon as possible, and a conference of | elevator men will he called for dune 12 here at which time rules will be discussed, /The commission will the attorney general’s in of the supreme court it has no authority a des, and the federal rule. The railroad commi cials say, will license elevat ervise bondin proceed on} rpretation de jon , sup ounting, and| receipt. There will be no dance at) the Heart River Pavilion to-j night account orchestra hav-| ing an engagement at Carson. Any Fuei Will Give Heat-— But: Gas Stands Highest in the Important Tests of a Fuel. Yow’re invited into a pair of nice new Cantilevers. A. W. Lucas Co. Prices $1 to $3, Plus Tax. ‘Seat Sale ‘Harris:.&.Wood- mansee, Saturday, May 30: great n Manilal outside THE BISMARCK TRIBUN _GANDHI'S SON é n of Ma- | Manilal M.G Le, Gandhi, is x the passive heesm » free India, famous fath where — the Indian natives, 20 miles There will be no dance at} the Heart River Pavilion to-| >" night account crehestra hav-| 5, an engagement at Carson. | * KE. Walters was here today Society Appeals | Satter Neat «thi of Baldwin y on business. was. Apple Creek was a visitor in Bismarck today. St, Alexius Hos | Fred Met ter Olson, Hazelt He, veob Kraft, Sel- ichter, H | ; Peter Schum Hazelloi | Mette'stodt, | Beach;' voun | Justine Brad- nee William Ed. Kovoalewski, Alton, Minneapolis; japoleon; Bismarck Mrs. Baby anton; Le rn; William Sehmeding iter E. Hewett, Minneapolis; even n; Cleo John- ny! : Clifford Beyer, Dr Louis Bevividse, Jlarold Pychman, ‘on, Dri coll; He! Roesch, Asi Engene | Pollock, | Ralph Mereers Mrs. J. G chwante ————————— ICA PHEA MAT! The Famous Romance of the West... a MERICA'’S most celebrated love story. It was one of the greatest theatrical suc- cesses of stage history. It has come to the screen in a blaze of glory—a drama of love and adventure in the great days of the old West. with ALICE TERRY CONWAY TEAR LE WALLACE BEERCY HUNTLY GORDON COMEDY of “OUR GANG” “The Mysterious AUDITO BISMARCK — TUESDAY, JUNE 2nd. turday, May 30th. Stationery Store. Seat Sale Next Sz Harris and Woodmansee’s - 1. Jones & Morrjs Gi nnounce The World Tou Ke Those Uniq Me gall re lot FO SORAVISHING. ARTIST MODEL PRICES INCLUDING TAX: PITOL RE Tonight — Friday and Saturday EE SATURDAY 2:30 J The immortal The mance of lawle: the Golden West. ENWICH Viqy LLIES * peittiant All’ Star Cas = ~ _ brilliant ‘tar: Cas ts30 stage play b: WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY ) ge play the Grand Canyon magnifiieent Ro- s days in Mystery” RIUM at A. Knud | MeClusk: Beulah; | dic » -$3.80'=- $2.75 —'$2.20 —-and.— $1.10. . D.; John Pesonin on, Wing; Driscoll; Henry Mrs, H. Roth, Against Needless Use Or Furs Springfield, Mass., May 29—(AP) that the craze for summer is on the wane is expr American Blue Cross Society its third annual appeal for the pro- Belief sed by in tion of animal life, and the e ition of waste and cruelty in trap- ping wild animals. The campaign this year is based on a plea for econ- pmy in the use of furs. “President Coolidge’s principal of ¢ ny, brought to bear upon uses Of tony Miss Maud Phillips, to will cruelty rye to restore sanity on it he waste and not in- volved in the wearing of animal pelts for mere di The s tal obstinence in the wearing of fur, she use as a decoration, LONDON BIDS ACTIVITY London, Napoleon are 8 here, and bring good prices whene- ever offered under the hammer. The famous d leon’s sti Italy sold at auction recently for $750. Three letters which Napoleon dis- | patehed | August 15, 1 Nile distster, were disposed of for $370. ed the admiral upon his fortunate es- cape from the catastrophe, president of the organization, “should | gave instructions as to the fleet, and public | the third letter ordered that 15,000 francs be distributed among the dis- heartened officers, , PAGE THREE Allen A. Company’s Guar: antecd Silk Hosiery. Niel- oration,” ety does not advocate to- sen’s Milliner- but strongly opposes FOR NAPOLEONIC RECORDS May 29.—Mementoes of in demand ft manuséript of Napo- ing appeal to his army in in his own handwriting was to Admiral Ganteaume, on upon learning of the The first of these congratulat- another SATURDAY Special Values in DRESSES Lovely high class Dresses, beautifully made, embodying all the season’s favorite fabrics in prints and plain colors, at— Tremendous Reductions At $15.75 Here is a group of special values that must be seen in order to appreciate the v atin and Canton Crepe Dresses with embroidery elty Prints, in a good range of colors. and cuff: abots or Sizes for Miss or Matron. A number especialy chosen for rapid ¢ figured or plain silks of Satin Crepe, Canton Crepe and Sating in good styles and colors for Summer wear; with the new Jabot or Lace trimming. Values in this lot up to $35.00. lues. (Nov Lace collar trimmed. Our Store Will Be Closed Saturday from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. For Memorial Day Exercises. Phoenix Hose Medium weight Silk hose with wide garter top and narrow ankles. A good ser- yiceable hose for all around wear, shown in popular spring colors, $1 .00 at only.....++.. Prints English Prints for cool sum- mery frocks; small dainty figures on colors of Blue Or- chid and Brown, 36 inch wide. Special for Saturday, Bed Spreads Fancy striped Bedspreads with separate Pol- ster cover, size 81x90, colors Blue, Rose and Geld. An excellent spread for . Summer. use at only:... COATS Dress Coats of Poiret Twill and Deerona, colors Navy, Agate, Tan and Grey with exquisite Crepe de Chine linings and carrying all the style of the new season. Sizes 16 to 44. Specially priced at— $29.75 Tailored Coats A large group of new high 5 class sport and utility coats in plain colors or plaids, fully lined, and in popular colors. All sizes greatly reduced to. . Percales Dainty patterns on light back grounds in 36 in. Percates, for ‘house frocks, porch frocks and Bungalow Aprons or iplay frocks for the xid- at _19e Special per yard.. Bath Mats Large heavy weight Bath Mats in lovely designs, col- ors Blue and Rose. Size 22x40. You can’t afford to miso these Lingerie Materials Sheer, cool lingerie fabrics of Barred and Dropstitch Voile, Silk stripe Voile and Dimity, in dainty shades of Orchid, Green, Peach, Flesh and Yel- tow. ‘Specially 48c priced at, per yard. Turkish Towels A ‘big hit in the May White Sale. To be repeated for Saturday only. Plain White or Fancy Turkish Towels in all sizes. Regular 50c Tow- els, for only Table Covers 54 inch Sanitas Table Covers—with large Blua patterns; ideal for summer use at home or the lake. While they last, Saturday special..... .... 69¢ UY WHERE YOUR DOLLAR DOES FULL DUTY. , Big Value Shoe Sale Continues Saturday. Webb Brothers “Merchandise of Merit Only?

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