The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 14, 1925, Page 3

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MARKET NEWS Wire Markets By Associated Press » WHEAT PRICES AGAIN ADVANCE Reports of Black Rust in| Canada Raise Values Chicago, July 14.—Although wheat prices had a downward slant at the opening today the early declines were soon much more than overcome. An- nouncement that biack stem rust was prevalent in southern Manitoba and was also attacking wheat in Sask- atchewan did a good deal to give the market a fresh upturn. On the other hand cooler weather in the spring wheat states, lagging cuotations at |. Liverpool and opinions! that consid- eiable damage to crops had been discounted by the récent sharp ad-| vance in values, were explanations given of the initial weakness. The opening which ranged from 3-8¢ de- cline to 1-4e “advance, September $1. to $1.52 3-4 and: December $1.54 to $1.55, was followed by nu- merous minor changes and then by an irregular rise all round with Sep- tember touching $1.55 3-4 and De- cember $1.56 1-8. Conflicting reports as to the ex- tent of crop damage done by black rust were more or less responsible for late set back in values today, The market closed nervous at 1-2 net lower to 1-2e advance, September $1.53 6-8 to 7-8 and December 31.54 1-4 to 1-2. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK .. Chicago, July 14—Hogs — 22,000, steady to 10c higher than Monday’s average; majority packers holding back, bulk better grades 170 pounds and more $14 to $14.25, top $14.30. Cattle 7,000, good to choice fed steers and yearlings 26c higher, lower grades steady to strong; best steers $1.10; yearlings $14;, handy weights $18.90. Sheeep, 14,000, early sales of na- tives steady to strong, spots higher, bulk desirable lambs, $16.25. CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, July 14,—Poultry alive, higher, fowls 20 to 26c; broilers 20 springs 3le; roosters 16¢; ducks 18 to 20e; geese 13 to 20c. Butter higher, receipts 28,245 tubs, creamery extras 42c; standards 42c; extra f 41 1-2 to 42c; firsts 39 seconds 36 to 36 3-8. gs lower, receipts 25.240 cases, sts 30 1-2 to 81 1-2c; ordinary s 30c; stosage packed firsts 32 ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK South St. Paul, July 14.—Cattle 1,500, largely cleanup from Monday. Fractically 2,000 cattle unsold, slow, about steady; bologna bulls steady to strong, little done early; bulk steers and yearlings mostly $6.25 to $7.75, “ ally all grassers; rom $4 to $5; heifers canners and cutters bologna bulls $4.25) ‘and feeders, steady, caws largely from $5 to $2.75 to $3.2 to $4.60; stock $4.50 to $6. Calves 2,000, vealers largely $10 to killers; few $10.25. Hogs 6,000, mostly 26c higher than Monday; some sales packing sows show some advance; sorted 150 to 300 pound average $13.50 to $13.75; top $13.75; packing sows mostly 0 $12.25, pigs steady with Monda close; bulk feeders $13.50,) average cost Monday $12.64; weight, Sheep 200, active, fat lambs most- pots 25¢ higher; bulk fat to $14.75; top’ $15. higher, light and weight ewes up to $7.60. handy MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, July 14—() — Flour 20 to 35 cents higher,in carload lots; family paterits quoted at $8.95 to $9.10 per barrel in 98-1b. cotton sacks, Shipment 44,574 barrels. Bran $24.50. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat receipts 63 cars compared with 143 cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern $1.60 3-4 to $1.64 3-4. No. 1 dark northern spring; choice to fancy $1.72 3-4 to $1.78 3-4; good to choice $1.66 3-4 to $1.71 3-4; or- dinary to good $1.61 3-4 to $1.65 3-4. No. 1 hard spring $1.62 3-4 to No. Montana on track $1.61 3-4 to $1.73 3-4; to arrive $1.61 3-4 to $1.73 3-4, July $1.58 3-4. Old Sept. $1.69 1-4. New Sept. $1.70 1-4, Dec. $1.63 3-4. Corn No. 3 yellow $1.69 1-4 to $1.70 1-4, Oats No. 2 white 43 to .44. Barley .73 to .88. Rye No. 2 .99 1-2 to $1.00. Flax $2.60 to $2.62, “DRIVING WHILE DRUNK” London.—A policeman didn’t like the way Maj, Andrew Hanks, 61, was riding his horse. He ordered the major to dismount, The major al- most fell off the horse, so the cop arrested him for “driving while drunk.” , RADIO CATCHES MAN Atchison, Charles Wyn- koop, farmer near here, was listen- ing to his radio. A Fort Dodge, la., station was broadcasting a descrip- tion of a young man charged with stealing an auto, The next day a! man applied for work at the farm. His. appearance tallied with the radio description and the farmer | called the sheriff. He admitted he was the man wanted, but denied the charge. CAN'T WI! HUBBY’S London—Capt. and Mrs. Oliver Hughes,Onslow recently filed suit against the London Sketch to stop jt from printing a picture of Mrs, Hughes wearing her husband's arm headdfes! Tt is @ wiolation o: army rules for a. woman to don any, part of @ military uniform. Too Late To Ciagaify. NTED—Gaod, capable cook for’ 5 wae Schipfer on Long Island. es $40" fer month, expenses Call Dr. Schipfer. 7-14-1t, Raita FOR SALE—Small_ walnut dresser, new; 86x10 Whittals Brussels rug; 8 sections Globe Wernécke book Pg mahogany fern. ies ‘name of their “home town” deal IRFECT SMILE os Mary Phillips would much than to be known as the girl with the won s U. S. RUBBER COMPANY HAS ANNIVERSARY In 1915 there were 2,445,666 auto- mobiles in this countr It seemed a trem Some people we: about “the saturation not far ahead. | But if there were some men who} couldn’t see the woods for the trees, thefe were others whose faith never faltered, It took a lot of vision for them to see that the true market for the auto mobile had hardly been touched It took a lot of courage for them to bank on the ultimate sue f the automobile in that marke They had both, Back in 1915, the United States Rubber Company said “The real fu- ture of the automobile is not in the big cities but away from them. “It is not in short runs on city streets, but in mile after mile on country roads.” So back in Rubber Company b for this movement In 1915—ten years U. S. Tire a pear in the “ Few people their true di: on, Few realized the influence had on what the people thought did and wore and bought. Because few people reulized the place they filled in the minds and lives of their readers. The United States pany saw. As clearly as it saw that the devel- opment of the automobile would be in the smaller communities, it saw that the people in these communi would have to have to measure up to the service and tire merchants to sell them. And it saw that in the “home town” newspapers it had, ready to hand, the medium toMelp jit put ti merchandising where it would hav to be in the new era of the automo- bile. So ten years ago people began to read the first U. S. Tire Advertising in their “home town” paper—over the dous number. already talkin point” boing B and to help it. ago-—the first y began to up| ne town” papers. y these papers in! they andl Rubber Com- ties They have been reading it ever since. They have seen these home dealers develop their little “side dine o tires” into real business—always with the support of “U. S.” Adver- tising in these local papers. Coincident with the tenth anni- versary of “home town” advertising by the United States Rubber Com- pany, this company announces an- other long step forward in the per- fection of automobile tires—-the greatest since the introduction of the cord itself—in its perfected Latex treated—Web Cord Royal Bal- loon Tire with the flat low pres- sure tread. Teddy there are 16,000,000 automo- biles in this country. ~ Eighty per cent of them are own- ed by men and women on the farms and in the smaller communities. Where there was one U. S. tire dealer in the small towns then there are hundreds today—real merchants. What was only a vision in 1915 has, come true in 1925, COOK BY WIRE INSTEAD OF BY FIRE ather play dr: | ment witn che cook, S. Ht. Hoey, which seed natic roles upon Broadwi arfect suaile, but the smile has of MANDAN YOUTH | SOUGHT ON ASSAULT CHARGE Mandan, D., July 14.—Frank Smith, Jr., local youth about 19 years of age, is sought by city and county officials on charges of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, robbery and grand larceny as the re sult of his alleged operations early Sunday morning. Entering the Owl pool hall and lunch room in the basement of the Aresde store buildine, he is alleged to have become involved in an argu- » to a climax whei zed vy skillet and struck Hoey on the head, knocking him unconscious. Smith is'then alleged to have rifled the till of about $50. W ts charging him with the various crimes were issued upon com- plaint of Heine Meyers, proprietor of the Owl lunch room, and Hoey, the cook, but young Smith had not been located up to a late hour yesterday afternoon. - PERFORMS OPERATION antung, China,— Miss Be Baty of London, Ontario, a nurse a Presbyterian’ hospital’ here, cessfully amputated the arm Chinese worker recently. | T. geon at the station a long trip and the girl pe: the operation to save the man’s life $e A TEST OF YEARS Is the Experience of This Bismarck Resident Are you miserable with an aching back? Feel tired, nervous and run down? Do you have daily headaches, spells and annoying urinary ers? Then why not take the acvice of a Bismarck resident who ffered as you do and found last- ing relief by using Doan’s Pills—a stimulent diuretic to the kidneys? Here is a Bismarck case that the years haven’t changed. Why not profit by it? . H, Steinmetz, 113 Second St. “I used a couple of boxes of Doan’s Pills, from the Lenhart Drug f¢|Co., and they cured me of a severe dull aching through the small of my back. I had been annoyed for some time with a lameness and sore- ness through my loins and a tired and languid feeling and got no re- lief until I used Doan’s Pills, 1 haven’t had backache and my kid- neys have been healthy site.” NINE YEARS LATER, Mrs. Stein- metz said: “The cure Doan’s Pills made for me is permanent.” 60c at all dealers, Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs, Buffalo, N, Y. Ady. Mortgaged? | How much do you plan to reduce. that mortgage every year? Could you do it if your crop fail- ed? Woukn’t it mean an increased * HM. TAIT, €11-2nd Avenue, South ~ ‘Minneapolis, Minn. Werld’s Greatest Tease! mortgage to cover seed, fertilizer and labor next year? Hail insurance written by H. Murphy and Com- pany. removes all chance of this—it is designed to remove the bail gamble from" the growing season, Ask us for information and rate: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE NEW. WHEAT VARIETY WILL RESIST RUST Durable and Heavy-Yielding! Strain Developed at Mandan Station A new variety of cross-bred wheat, | which will resist black stem rust and at the same time produce a yield {equal if not superior to Marquis | wheat, has been suc ully devel- joped at the Great Plains experiment station of the Ut S. Department of Agriculture, it was announced today | by J. M. Stephens, direct: Ceres is ‘the name of the new wheat blend. | The new strain, representing 12 lvears of intense experimentation by | Allen Clark, wheat culture expert, is a blend of Meramis, northwest snring variety, and Kanred, Kansas. winter wheat, and will prove particuariy | adaptable to clintatic and soil condi- tions in North Dakota, Stephens as- serted. Durability and heavy yielding fea- tures of Kansas wheat are crossed with high-grade milling qualities of Marquis to give Ceres all advantages phens said. Bearded Wheat A strain of Ceres, one of 1,500 plantings undertaken by the Great Plains station, today appeared to be the most promising stand of wheat growing at the government’s Mandan farm. h Marquis wheat i beardle: kered charact winter variety. Indications point to phenomenal success for Ceres as a northwest wheat within the next five years, cording to Stephens. If Ceres fulfils predictions, it will eliminate stem rust as a factor in the North Dakota wheat production, “This would mean av immense sav- ing to northwest wheat-growers by removing the rust menace as a seri- ous factor in wheat production,” Stephens declared. Experiments with Ceres wheat are proceeding at U. S. agricultural sta- tions in every section of the north- west and every planting has proved up one hundred per cent, Stephens }| announced. Many Varieties _There are approximately 1,500 va- rieties of grain grown at the Great Plains station, for experimental pur- poses, A four-ply wheat culture, de- rived by crossing s ises valuable possibilities, according to J. T. Sarvis, ‘eat Plains agron- rv of other cultures, of experimentation, lities which have yet to be tested, Sarvis declared. The greatest danger in culturing wheat lies in the problem of disinteg- ration. Persistent selection, y i and year out, alone spe! wheat experimentation, he stated. ——____. CAPITOL THEATRE —_————________ Tonight — Tuesday RAMON NOVARRO and BARBARA LA MARR —in— “THY NAME IS WOMAN” Also A Gogetters Comedy “A MISS IN THE DARK” DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Bik. Bismarek, N. D. DAKOTA AUTO SALES Co. 107 Sth St. Phone 428 3 | possible in North Dakota soil, Ste- || i News of Our ‘ | Neighbors | ————__——® BALDWIN Mr. and Mrs, Richard Borner en- tertained a number of friends at their home Friday evening. Refresh- ments of ice cream and cake were served. Those present were: Mr. {and Mrs. Arnold Rupp, Mr. and Mrs.' James McAvoy, Mrs, John Rinehart, Misses Florence Rupp, Emma Rupp, Agnes Rupp, Grace McAvoy, Irma McAvoy, Messrs. Ernest Rupp, Wal- ter Rupp and Gordon McAvoy and Miss Ella Rinehart, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Higgins and sons, John and Harry, and daughter, Evelyn, have returned home from a ten days outing at Lake Isabel. Mrs. Fred Rupp and son, Richard, end daughter, Frances, and = Mrs. Edmund Rupp have returned from a short visit at. New Rockford where they were guests at the home of their aunt. En route home they vis- ited with their sister, Mrs. Ja Many Snappy frocks added to these large re- priced groups. new six Make your selection early. GROUP A large assortment of and Summer styles. 46. Values to $39.50. Price— morning in- spection is ad- visable in or- der to give more time in which to. make your selection. selected Dresses in Printed Crepes, either Light or Dark colors, featur- ing many of the very best Spring Sizes up to Warnar at Bowden.) Edmund Rupp motored to Bowden and accompanied the ladies home. The members of tie Senkens or- osten ssh have been nlaving at Painted Woods since the Fourth, are core ae uae Ueto mogue hone, —* * Mr. and Mrs, kiea Rupp and family and Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Rupp were Sunday evening visitors at the John Herdebu home. Miss Gertrude Friske has returned home from a visit in Wilton where she was a guest at the home of Miss Wilma Graham. Mr. and Mrs, 0. B, Olson and fam- ily of Bismarck motored. out to visit with Mrs Olson’s brother Otto Hogue and family Sunday and also to at- tend Mr. Bennet's funeral. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Borner, Bill Miller, il and Fred Hogue and Willie Greenberg were Sunday guests at the Richard Borner home. s Catherine Carpenter is em- at the Herman Kikul home 1 especially Printed Crepes, and every one good style. Clearance J as much Price— Chine, and Novelty Crepes. Colors are Green, Yellow, Blue and Peach, A good range of sizes in Dresses that formerly sold for as $32.50. Clearance Miss Carpenter, whose home is in Nebraska, has been spending some time visiting with her sister, Otto Hogue. Mrs. George Ward has for her guests this week her daughter, Mrs. Hernbloom and family of Omaha, Neb. Mr. and Mrs. James Watkins have for their house guests this week Mrs. Watkins’ daughter and family from the northern part of the county. Onc@ again the seonle of Baldwin have been compelled to pay. tribute to the Grim Reaper. The death of B. W. Bennet has left a pall over the whole neighborhood. Just in the prime of life he was stricken with appendicitis and passed away Satur; day morning after a brief illness. Mr. Bennet had been operating the Berger mine east of town during the n, and for several months he had been employed on the Henry Rupp farm, He had always been in the best of health and his death came as a shock to his many friends, There are left to mourn his death a wife and three little children, Funer- Plain Crepe de an exceptionally GROUP 4 Exceptional values for hot weather wear. Mrs. « PAGE THREE al services ‘were held in Baldwin Sunday, interment taking place in the Baldwin cemetery. EXCHANGE RATES ENABLE MANY SWISS TO ENJOY PARIS SHOW Paris, July 14.—(AP)—Profiting by the height of the Swiss france a5 compared with the French, entire clubs, chambers of commerce and other bodies of Swiss, with their families, have come over the bor- der to attend the exposition of dec- orative arts in numbers that com- pare favorably with the English and American visitors. ‘Switzerland's contribution to the exposition is one of the most im- portant, considering the size of the country, at the Grand Palais. All the old historic cities have sent imposing displays of their burgh- ers’ hancicratt. ELECTRIC COOKERY CORRECT COOKERY There are sizes on sale from 16 to 52. sure to find a You are fit at one of these prices. CLEARANCE SALE SMART SUMMER DRESSES You have three more months of hot weather ahead — plenty of time to get good service out of another dress, and these frocks are marked, in many cases, at much less than half the regular selling prices. GROUP 2 GROUP 3 New Challies Prints, Novelty Silks and Creve de Chines. Stripes and Plain colors of Green, Blue, and Orchid. All beautifully made gar- ments; specially priged for clear- ance at— Tub Silks with Orchid, Blue, Tan or Rose Stripes or Checks, Printed and Novelty Crepes for afternoon and street wear. Clearance Price— . this Rack up to $19.50. $Q.75 GROUP 5 Two large racks loaded with some of the bes bargains obtainable. Tub frocks of Voile, Gingham, Linens and Striped Broadcloth, in every color imaginable. You must see them to fully appreciate their worth. Values ‘to $12.50. Clearance Price— $550 GROUP 6 Hot weather Street and Porch Dresses of Ging- ham, Voile and Linene, also Novelty Materials. Colors. are Tan. 3ue, Green, Orchid, etc., Rose, 1» and sizes as large as 52. This lot goes at the spe- cial price of— BROTHERS “MEEVHANDISE OF MERIT ONLY” Values on All sales must be considered as final be- cause of excep- tional values

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