The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 16, 1925, Page 3

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2 4 | { MARKETS MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN TABLE Wheat— Wy Open High Low Close Sep $1.48 42$1.50, $1484 $1.50 Dee. 151% 1.52% 1.50% 1.52% Oats— Dee, Cos 98M aus TN 8 pee .. 8688 86% TS Fiax— | ae 268, 266% 263 Dea. 2.70% 2. ecbaeeo : . it. 66', 66% Buying ty anes Eastern satnreaia| Dee oO. tote Forces Up Cereal | CHICAGO TABLE ‘ | Wheat- - Price | Open High Low Close panei | Chicago, Sept. 16 wheat opened lower toda) ket quickly scored gai ing on the part of hous ern connections had much to do with the upturn, and so likewise did re- ports of decreased arrivals from the domestic spring crop northwest. On} the other hand, unexpected weakness at Liverpool, together with estimate that the French wheat crop is 46,- 000,000 bushels larger than last! year’s total, was more or less re- the mar-| ‘Active buy- sponsible for the initial decline here.| Ma Chicago opening prices ‘4 to Ltsc lower, December $1.49%% to % May $1.52!» to $1.53, were followed bya rise that lifted December to $1.5143 and May to $1.64%. Corn was easier, influenced by advices that the bulk of the corn crop is free from frost, after opening at M4 off to 'y up, December 83'4 to | corn underwent a moderate general sag. Later corn tended to recover, ow ing to wheat . Corn clos steady, at the finish to Se cent 82% to 7s. Oats took its cue from wheat, ing unchanged to , cent higher, cember 41% cents. Oats held near} to the i 1 | Provision Subsequently ed as a result of including wheneve: prices bulged. However, with re- ports current telling of snow likely to delay threshing in Alberta, The close was firm, 1-4 to 3-4 cent net higher, December $1.50 7-! aA to $1.51) and May $1.53 7-8 to $1.5: | ———_—_— | CHICAGO hivge Toes i Chicago, Sept. 16—() 13,000; — slo’ spots strong to 10¢ highe kers inactive; bulk good and 160 to 210 pound averages 55; top $13.60; bulk de- pound butches majority 140 to 150 lower, December elections pound ns $13.00 to $13 bulk packing sows $11.00 to $1 strong killing pigs largel $ heavy weight hog! }; medium $12.80 to $11.85 to $13.60; | $: lights $1 to $ $10.60 to $11.60 | to $13. H Cattle 10,000; fed steers ni ac- tive than fully steady; spots higher on better grades of weight offerings; some held above $1 western gras strong; stock- and feeders active stock | y at Tuesday's advance; bulls strong to 10 cents higher; vealers easy; mostly 25 cents lower; largely $14.00 to $14.50 market. Sheep 22,000; fat lamb: desirable Kinds’ fully stead tween kind showing some weakness, several strines of fat western lambs 50 to $16.00; tly choice! ld; des largely |“ $15.75; few loads $1 one load to city butchers $16.15; fat strong to cents higher; y weight range ewes $8.50; de- rable natives $6.50 to § heav- | ies downward to $5.00; nothing done on feeding lambs; sentiment around tteady. | MINNEAPOLIS POTATOES | Minneapolis, Sept. 16.—()—Pota-| toes; moderate wire inquiry; de-| mand moderate; market firm; car-} loads de!ivered sales freight only de- ducted Minneapolis St. Paul’ rate sacked cwt. round whites U. S. No. 1 and partly graded mostly $1.85; | sacked ewt. early Ohios N. 8, No. 1) 3? : spring $1.51 to $1.71; 1 dark and partly graded $1.90 to $1.95 ne § i mostly $1.95; Red River Valley| Montana on track Nags att points, carloads delivered sales, $152: May Pie ae er freight onl ydeducted Moohead rate | * Goce cello bi ee 5 sacked Red River Ohios U.S. No. 1) ie magh, Mey es barley 6B to 10: and partly graded $1.85 to $1.90; | No.2 ably to BUM gee eine sacked cwt. cobblers U. S. No. 1 and | $363 tones * SEARING» partly graded $1.65 to $1.75. { 2: 6. t CHICAGO PRODUCE Xe) Range Chicago, Sept. 16.—(@). Butter| , Sicat ad dark higher; receipts 6,143 tubs; cream- 4 ‘ extr: 5 46; standards 45% northern ne AY bn ve 16% 3 2 do $1.47 firsts 42 to 4342; Pegs highers re: % to 33! x 0. Cheese ; 3 to 41%. 103. case: %; ordinary firsts a unchanged. i — i “MONEY 1 DON London, Sept. 16.—Bar silver 52% | * per ounce; money 3 per cent dis- count rates, short bills 3 1-16; three, month bills’ 3% per cent, | ‘DULUTH FLAX Duluth, Minn., Sept. 16.—Close; | flax on track $1.67 to $2.69; arrive} 2.67; September $2.67; October! $2.67. 1-2; November $267; Decem- DULUTH ~ CLOS ING GRAIN Duluth, Sept. 16—Wheat 1 dark northern $1.50 1-2 to $1.74 1-2, ar- rive $1.50 1-2; 2 dark northern $1.47 1-2 to $1.71 1-2; 3 do $1.43 1-2 to $1.68 1 orthern $1.49 1-2 to $1.74 ‘e $1.49 1-2; 1 amber} Gurum $28 3-8 to $141 3-8;-2 do| $126 3-8 to $1.40 3-8; arrive $1.26 3-8; 1 durum $1.26 3-8 to $1.27 3-8; 2 do $1.24 3-8 to $1.26 3-8; 1 mixed durum $1.24 3-8 to $1.35 3-8; 2 do $1.22 3-8 to $1.33 3-8; 1 red "durum'| $1.22 3-8. Oats 3 white track and arrive 37 5- 1 rye 84 1-4; barley choice! to fancy 62 to 67; medium to good | 54 to 62; lower grades 50 to 58. , | The close was strong, betiér than full recoveries being made on buy- ing laid to covering operations. Sep- tember wheat closed %sc up at $1.49 % bid; December %e up at $1.51% “bid and-May ‘ec off at §1.56% nom- inaly; Sept. durum Sec off at £1 6: % bid; December %e up at $1.29% bid and May 2 cents off at $1. Pr asked. Spot and September rye fell \c; May %c up; oats and Spot barley closed unchanged, September barley rising %c and December 1% cents. Flax seed receded eaily under sell- ing pressure in absence of crusher backing except on weak spot. Sep- tember flax fell 3% cents; October 4 cents. Nov. 4% cents; December 4% cents, May rising 2 cetns. Use Gas. It’s By Associated Press Leased Wire. -(P)—Although | “ s with east-| Se and | * { Oct. . | 10 to lée higher, p fern $1.49 to $1.54; | mixed 95 97. Sept. $1.50 96% 16.70 16.70 16.7) 17.20 : 16.85 Bellies— Sept. 20.45 138.85 sourt! '. PAUL SSTOCK South St. Paul, Minn. § y MUS D0 A) opening firm on all clas: fat steers and yi fat she stoc 5 f y to unevenly $5.00 to $7 rood lights 0 Hogs 6,000; to strong with Tu , Spots: uneven, steady lower; good pound ‘average $1 $13.10; des: 50 cents to top pound butchers $12 cking sows mostly H ht Sheep i cents lower, 00; better ives $10.00 to $10.50; 0 to $13.00; fat ewes to packers ut lambs open y bulk $14.00; iO POTATOES Sept. 16. ()— Potatoes, cars; total U. S. ship trading slow; | market, Wisconsin bulk round Minnesota and Ohios $2.10 to a.) A Colorado sack- ed people’s russets $2.50. NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Sept. 16.—(#)—Butter firm; receipts 192; creamery high- er than extras 48 1-2 @ 49¢; do ex- score 47 3-4 @ i 4112 @ ent make 18,660, storage packed fresh gathered storage packed sh gathered © @ Ble; Z Browns extras 45e ast whites extras 56 1-26 @ 58 1 -2e; do firsts to extra 42 1-2¢ @ 54 1-2c. se steady; receipts Eges firm; gathered extras f 120,0 cars a year ago. spring, choice to fancy $1.62 to $1.69) good to choice $1.55 to $1.61; ordin- to good $1.00 to $104; "1 hurd % to $1.68%; 3 do gray ae 4 do $1.41% to $1.69 1-4 winter $1.49%; 2 hard hee 3%; 1-amber durum $1.35%; '$1.58%; 2 mixed durum § mixed wheat $1 $1.50, 3 mixed ‘orn 2 yellow 92 i 39; 3 do 36 to outs 2 whit rye No. 1 85% . 2 82% to 86%; flax No. 1 4 CHICA IN Chicago, Sept. 16.—(P)--Wheat No. 1 hard $1.55% to $1.59%%; corn 2 to 96%; 2 yellow 96 Oats 2 white 46 to 61% to 41%. Rye No. 1 92% rley timothy seed $6.85 to $7.5; fresh: Financial News IRREGULARITY MARKS UPWARD’ Initial Gains Registered at; Opening; Market Nervous Sept. 16.-—(#)—Sup- appeared in large volume in the opening of today's stock market, and the general list] moved irregularly higher. American Bosch Magneto opened 2 points higher and initial gains of a point or more were recorded by Davison Chemical, Interborough Rapid Tran-| sit, and Consolidated Gas. Motors! were mixed, Ch: showing an initial gain of while Mack Trucks fell back %. Resumption of bullish operation in the Motors was one of the early features, Chrysler extending its sain to nearly 4 points before the end of the first half hour, White moving up 1 1-2 General Motors 1 and Mack Trucks concerting its initial loss into a gain of 3 points. Rails were slow in responding to reports of another ew porting York, orders | “Million car week,” in freight traffic for the first week of September. Heavy beying of Armuor “A” ap- parently inspired he favorable ruling of Secretary Jardine on the Armour-Mor ) sent that stock up to a new high around 25. There were a few heavy spots in the early trading, notably Jordan and Radio Coporations. Foreign — ex- nges opened easy, demand sterl- unw 484 616 and neh round 4.70 cent: Sharp re- k plaice in Norwegian and which were quoted 2438 cents, respec- and noon upward sweep of prices which carried some of the speculative fa- vorites into new high territory for the y General buying was stim- py an enormous demand for eral Motors, which sold at 100%, hivhest’ figure ever reached since the capital split up the re- newal rate on call loans was esti- mated at 4 per cent. gathered strength as sed in today’s market The apparent inability of bears to a further 1 's sharp break, ¢ of call money stimulated sortment pool of shares, Motors, equipment lic utilities and merchand i ve the best demonstrat strength. | General Motors crossed par for the first time sinee the recapitalization of the company. Before the end of ‘the third hour Chrysler had extended its yain to 7 1-2 points; American Can to 6, ‘k trucks to 4 3-4 and General Electric, Western Union and Fisher Body to 4 points or more | Trading was somewhat smaller volume, although the million share mark was crossed before one o'clock. pub- BISMARCK “GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) STREET TREND: ‘eline on e; in| Phila. & Rdg. Phillips Pet Radio Corp Pare Oil ne Air Line Roebuck Sinclair Con, Southern P: Southern Ry Standard Vil, Cal tSandard Oil, N. Stewart Warner Studebaker Oil {Texas Co. coeereereee & Pacific a Ye | Tobuceo Products Transcont. Oil Union pe nd. Alcohol . Rubber . wil -Overland Woolworth $5.70 for fine granulated. ARGO PRODU Fargo, N. D., Sept. 16—(A). fat churning cream packing stock unchanged. Butter- unchanged; MINNEAPOLIS CLOSING GRAI Minneapolis, Sept. 16.—(#)- pression followed an early firm turn in wheat futures here today, but strong recovery followed. Early s of 1 to 15s cents were regain-} d close was‘ to % cent high- er for the day, A help on the rally was an oversold technical position, Oats eased 4 cent with corn after being ‘ae off at low, Rye followed with wheat and finish was w ed. Flax futures hod a promt taking and un was up to and carly wheat was firm Durum was slow and e corn was nominally steady. Oats was unchanged. Rye was firm within an unchanged range. Barley was firm with range un- changed. Flax seed was strong tol 1 cent hij gher. Women C lubs | | Meet Next Month Winter and unchanged. C pt. 16 Mrs. Edwin Indianapolis, — vice president of the National Federation of Women's Club | session of state will address the 's clubs to be it was announe- we {held in Valley City ed here. Mrs. White is at present reporter of the and Appellate Courts of Ind hs iving been elected to that offi November by a ma- Jority of more than 148,000 votes. } She the first woman ever to hold office in Indiana, and one of four to be chosen for state offices in the United States this fall, She was formerly deputy attorney gener- al for her state, having had charge of all original appeals from the 92 counties of the state to the supreme court. ’ NEWS BRIEFS * See \¢-—-—- Bismarck, Sept. 16. No. 1 dark northern .. 1.49 No. 1 northern spring 1.30 No. 1 amber durum 1.0y | No. 1 mixed durum 1.06 No. 1 red durum ... 1.02 No. 1 flax 5 | {No. 2 flax 40 No. 1 rye .... a Dark ‘hard winter neat winter We quote but do not handle the following: Oats . smmAnd 26 Barley .. . aT Septz, per ewt 80 SHELL CORN Yellow White & Mixed | No. 4 2 No. 5 “10 No. 6 67 Sample 58 1 cent per pound discount under 65 Ib. Ear corn 6 cents under shell. NEW YORK STOCKS (Closing Prices) All. Chem. & Dye . American Can ... Am. Car & Fdy .. Am. Locomotive Am. Sm. & Ref. ... Am. Sugar . . Tel & Tobacco . Water Wks. Am. Woolen Anaconda Cop. Atchison At. Coast Line Baldwin Loco Balt. & Ohio . Bethlehem Stl. California Pet. Cent, Leath. pfd. Cerro de Pasco Chandler Motor Chesapeake & Ohio Ch & Northwestern Chic., Mil. & St. P. pfd. 16 Chic. R. I. & Pace... Cocoa Cola ed $18.00 lard 16.1 ribs $17.87 5. EW YORK POULTRY New York, Sept. 16.—(#)--Live poultry firm, chickens by freight 28 to 29; do by express 28 to 34; fowls by freight 2 Gto 30; do by express ;23 to 34; roosters’ by freight 18. Dressed " poultry irregular; un- changed. CHICAGO POULTRY Chicago, Sept. 16.-()—Poultry alive weak; receipts 9 cars; fowls 20 to 26: sprines 2432; roosters 16; turkeys 20; ducks 20 to 23; geese 15 to MINNEAPOLIS FLQUR Minneapolis, Sept. 16—()—Flour 10 cents higher; in carload lots, fam- ily patents quoted at $8.45 to” $8.65 # barrel in 98 pound cotton sacks; bran §23.00 to §23. DULUTH CLOSING GRAIN Duluth, linn, Sept. 16.—()— Wheat prices ran off today after a show of steadiness early. The weak- ness was laid to the absence of ex- port demand to absorb continued heavy receipts, ‘At the end of the first three hours, spring wheat futures were from 1% cents off. Durum futures showed de- clines extending to from 1 to 2 cents with the near futures the weakest. Interest in durum for export was the Scentifie Fuel, Vi ER DNESDA absolutely negligible offers being] refused at any price, Colorado Fuel Congoleum-Nairn 23% Consolidated Gas 90% Corn Products ... 35% Crucible Steel aa 1b Cuba Cane Sug. pfd. .. 45 Davison Chem. Dodge Bros. pfd. Du Pont de Nem Electric Pow. & L: Erie Ist_pfd Famous- PI General Asp! General Electric General Motors Gt. Northern pfd. Gulf States Steel | Hudson Motors Mlinois Central .. Independent 0. & G Int. Harvester .. Int. Mer Mar pfd Int. Nickel. Kelly-Springfield Kennecott Cop. Louisville & Nash Mack Truck ‘i Marland Oil Mex. Seaboard Mid-Continent Pet. Mo., Kan. & Tex. Missouri Pac, pfd . Montgomery Ward . Nat. Biscuit Nat. Lead ... New York Central... N. Y., N. H, & Htfd Norfolk & Western ... Nor. American Northern Pacific . Pacific Oil .. Judge Green Peoria, 11—()—“Inquire into the operations of these lone wolves and jhungry doys who have been poured | Se | upon you from that cesspool of ini- quity, Washington,” said County in charging the grand | jury to investigate raids by federal dry agents. 4 New York—lIzzy Einstein and Moe | Smith are disgusted for keeps, the ‘new local dry chief has ordered names of raiding agents withheld from announcements. | Newark, N. J.—After having a man ‘arrested ‘for smoking on a trolley jcar, Mrs. Elise S. Mlingworth must pay him §216. He won verdict be- Jeause of mental angu PI NEW YORK BY HEAVY MARGI (Continued from page one) Hall, interpreted the victory forerunner of a greater suc- in November. hough hard fought, the primary will go down in history as a betless election, There was less actual cash riding on the outeome than i ally staked on a week-day bas game. The closing odds were Watk- er, five to one. Even money is be- ing placed that Hylan will rua as an independent Less than half a dozen arrested for illegul usu- persons oting and al of them, were released. Po- lice reported no disorders. | ‘A statement printed today in the, New York evening Journal, Wm. R. Hi a third ticket would be placed in the field and that it could be “taken for granted that Mayor Hy! the Independent ticket.” owned by Ch er New York 16.—(P)—S to) James J. W lead over Standard Oi Ind. John F. in the Demoeratie mayoralty primary was 88,734 at 9 NEW YORK SUGAR \ o'clock today, with districts to New York, Sept. 16—UP)—Raw | be heurd from out of 2,968, The vote sugar was unchanged early today at| was: Walker 267.4 Hylan 178,744. $4.21 duty paid. Futures at midday | Frank D. Waterman, Republican m were 3 to 6 points net lower. Re- | oral didate was leading fined was unchanged at $5.55 @ ompetitor, John J. Lyon votes. The vote was Wa- 1,941; Lyons 18,099; Wm. M. Bennett 48 There were 138 districts mi: PROGRE SSIVE MACHINE WINS BY LANDSLIDE (Continued from page one) the election was La Follette, Hing the victor father, the former Badger Senator, in other of the of the elec-) gen passed the 0,000 of, tion was the owing made by) more than twos million oldiers bur Francis E. former Gov-| jed in this vicinity, she said. ernor. He by Wood-| Miss Haugen visited Rome, P: ward, ani gev-| London, Antwerp, and the ernor nted warden of the state} Alps. She was present in the Holy City vetion was fatal to the dem-! at the height of Holy Year festivi state. William | ties. George Bruce, selected to make the © by the state democ conven tion, was unable to poll sufficient yotes to carry his party into the race. His count did not reach he required five per cent of the at the last election Lines Drawn Tight There is some doubt about the ility of John M. Work, the so- | ciulist. candidate, to make the re quired sroal The issue in. the gn wa str La Fol nd anti Follette fight. La Follette made a walkie of the but will be opposed at final election by his most formidable op ponent, Roy P. Wileox, who ran as. ACROSS MARNE. ust, made it Known that | an will head! crats out of the picture and the so- cialists also out of the running as they probably are, the race will be | Y attle, a fight to the fin. n Wilcox and Lu Follette. Scholar ships in n Agriculture Ames, Iowa, Sept. 16,—-()—Busi- ness men and large organzations in- | terested in the study of agriculture |have offered 99 scholarships to lowa | State College worth $110° each, to young men of lowa, President R. A. Pearson has announced at a planned to allot one gale each county. They are good Pa hove who wish to enter the eol- legiate or non-collegiate classes at the college. In each county it is planned to | have a local committee make the lechoice of the most deserving appli- ‘ant. |, Among the out-of-state organiza- Yions that have made the gifts po: sible are the Hlinois Central R. R RELATES TRIP | BATTLEFIELDS Miss Carrie apex Tells of! Visit to Devastated | Areas ( | Chicago & Northwestern R. Rj Chi- { years after the Arnustice,| jthe battlefields of northern France| Hretain the gaunt, desert aspect caus Miss Carrie etury of the North Dako Tuberculosis association, declare following her return trom two-months trip abroad Miss Haugen visited France, Eng-| en, | “LOOK AT YOUR CLOTHE land, Switzerland, Belgium’ and Italy. During a short stay in Paris, Miss| Haugen in company with a party of Amefican tovvists visited the old] battle fronts along the Marne River | Belleau§ Woods and — Chatteau) Thierry, | T never to be forgot | ten by . veterans who remem: | ‘ber this death-stricken sector, have ly all filled. Immense slicholes pock-mark the landscape, ging from two to Vegetation now hides the horrors brought on by in the country | but the towns in this rej ion | ¢ in ruins and are slowly ing from the tremendous ustation of four years of fight In one day feet deep. Let us clothes. Switzerland is the most charming country in Europe, she stated Early in July, Miss Haugen at- tended the convention of business jand professional women at Portland, Me. She joined a of en tourists, on Continent of Europe. party tour seven of the (cA PITOL| THEATRE guaranteed. Blue Valley Creamery Co.; Separator Co.; Advance , and Ralf Van Vechten, vice-president of the Continental and Commercial) National Chicago HEAR APPEAL | IN BANK CASE Appeal from «the decision of the Mountrail county court in Mountrail cases against the Farmers State Bank, Scandinavian American State Bank and Blaisdell State Bank was filed in the supreme court toda: The lower court sustained actions by the county to recover from sure- ties as the result of failure of the banks to pay county deposits which had been entrusted to them and for whose payment they are under bond. ter Co; De EVERY ONE If you wantthe best for Fall make your Satisfaction MADE FOR YOU by Bergeson’s SCOOT OVER TO NEIGHBOR republican, but also filed oa an in| pedal naar dependent, and will run under that aE can a desimation in the final election, Sep- LAST TIME TONIGHT (CovPLe or ts 1S Bors 10, tember 29, >a Two other republicas may enter | Tr eh GET THIS the list in the final race under inde- | BUST ER KEATON WAY UP BEFORE pendent designation. They are EF. | F. Dithmar, former lieutenant gov- | i ernoi Barry, the only} =in— avewed \ A conference is sched- | rT; uled for tod , after which Mr. Wil- | THE cox proposed to make a statement. | It is not known what his statement | ” night that I that Dithmar and Barry are Soman Tomorrow Alright esti Shjons toraae ‘URES ON TRAINS | Prague—-Moving pictures, inform ative in character and displaying the | scenery, the industries and other| features of interest to foreign trav-| elers, are to be shown on two of the Crechoslovak main railway lines. COURT ORDERS BANK TRANSFER} Fargo, N. D., Sept. 16. court order authorizin;: A.W. John son, receiver of the closed First Na- tional Bank of Lidgerwood the assets of the bank to the F National’ Bank in Lidgerwood, wi signed late yesterday by F. Amidon, Judge of the States District Court for the ‘ist of North Dakota. Too I Late To Classify WANTED—-Fxperienced girl for gen eral housework. Call’ at 416 5th it. 9-1 FOR RENT: lodern sleeping roon with -or without board. 1 nic large room with two beds in and| one single. Phone 977W or cull! 419 7th 9-16 Bt! = i FOR RENT mfortable, well fur-| nished room in modern home. Call 324 14th St. Phone 1128LM. 9-16-3t The United States had 24294 men Milled in action during the World far. i CORKECT COOKERY COOK BY WIRE INSTEAD OF BY FIRE | | LITTLEJOE | OMETIMES DINERS ARE THE WAITERS Qoe-third the regu: pegnid the. ceee peas ingredients, * then candy coated. For ebildren and adults. SOLD BY YOUR DRUGCIST, JOS. BRESLOW DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. BOWMAN UNDERTAKING Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484R. Undertakers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge, Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 au" | The funnies comedy ever filmed. TOMORROW i The Wild Horse « Black Cyclone There was Death in his hoois—but - a Love Light in his Eyes! “Black Cyclone” men called him! Wild! Fearless! Un- conquerable! Who loved hi ‘Lady,” fought for her wita “The Killer’—battled wolves und mountain lions and then, when understanding came and the need of a friend found him in a Man whose sWeethteart, too, was in dan- Authorized “IouCcO Refinishing Latest modern method. We also do automobile Top and Curtain work as well as all kinds of Upholstering. Work Guaranteed. PAINT SHOP 8rd Floor at LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. rain was about loads of hay had to be put under cover, meen Mon., Sept. 21 Matinee and Evening TIME: MATINEE 4:15. EVENING 8:15 P. M. Prices—Matinee, Children 25c. Evening, 50-75c-$1.00. Reserved Seats on Sale — Harris & Woodmansee. Each Kiddie in a Single Number. £2——SNAPPY VAUDEVILLE NUMBERS——32 “‘Handy’’ Beats the Storm! to break! Several So “Handy Telephone” brought help from a neighbor's in the nick of time. The telephone brings help quickly in any emergency. Its value far exceeds its cost. NORTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE Co. BELL SYSTEM One Policy - Ouse System - Universal Service Adults 50c. Include Tax. ,

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