The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 13, 1926, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TED, j Hil; hy te ii 18 IMMIGRATION needed for Canadi duty, $1680 year! amination soon, hee Mr. Ozment, jo. WANTED—Men and wonten to learn — beg Great demand, dig, Eatsiog, amt” 3 Mol ber College, Fargo, BRICKLAYERS~ WANTED — job. $1.50 per hou out two month: ly American Beet Sugar company, East G , Mi PIPEFITTERS WANTED—70 to 80 cents per hour. Ten hours. For first class men only. American Beet company, Hast Grand Forks, Minnesota. CARPENTERS cants per hour. ‘st class men only. Ame! can Beet jugar company, East Grand Forks, Minnesota, FEMALS HELP WANTED WANTED AT ONCE—Compctent giti for general housework. Good ages. Apply 209 W Rosser. Phone M net 7 p.m, Phone 113 dur- the day. eM SALESMEN = EXPERIENCED TAILORING ae guaranteed line to consumer: inge Freie all competition; aterials and work-| aa outfits ready, y, Herbert ‘Custom COLLECTION ri ENCY—Wants trav- cling salesmi Solicit con- betel Appoint sub-agents. $100.00) _ weekly. Give reference: Inter- national, 435 Mills Bldg., San Fran- cisco. $100-$200 WEEKLY. Big Cor. and weekly salary. Reliable house. Guarantee dealers turnover or money back. Rapid promotion. A- New Specialty Cv., Cedar Rapids,|° Towa. ee —_—— OFFICE ROOM FOR RENT FOR RENT—Dental tormerly occupied by Dr. Kers! suitable for any kind of an office Inquire City National Bank, Bis- marck. FURNITURE FOR SALE FOR SALE—1 Duofold, 1 kitchen cabinet, 1 library table. All prac- tically new. Phone 689J. 221 W. _ Rosser. write ‘ailoring crib and fun ed oak library table. Phone 1067. 618 First St. dry, wet wash, single men and women, apostal si i clothes of all kinds. One ron furnished for -light housekeeping, girls preferred. Phone 211M. Flapper a Says: Cheap matches all bt it happen to stike « ood one: ze BOARD oftice rovms,| me ANTED—i0 to wll Wi Fort" DEPENDABLE USED CARS WITH A CONTINUALLY CHANG- ing stock of used cars, we can of: fer you some exceptional values that will give you many thousand miles of good dependable service. Ford Ton Truck, Dodge eect Coupe;, Cadillac Touring; Brothers Touring: Truck, and values. Very easy time payments, LE—One 19% Dodge ing, balloon tires and dise ‘wheels; one ford Coupe; one Ford ster, ang. one Ford Bug. All cars priced very low to sell quick. Lock- eee aateee ry Co. Phone 187. ain be FOR RENT—Mod and a 6 room, unfurnished, heat ‘ind water. For eale: 7 room house on 50 foot lot. Also 100 by 150 foot lot opposite Roosevelt School, Phone 905, Cora S. Lean, after 5 p. m. USE ¥OR § good terms to horth of owe all newly painted 942R or 8625. right party. Just! ey a need rooms and b bath to responsible par- ies. Close in. Adults preferred. Write care Tribune No 83. FOR RENT—Comfortable furnished Oo hans for light housékeeping FOR RENT—Furnished— apartment. 930 Fourth’ Street.’ Pattee h nn) MISCELLANEOUS 3 FOR SALE—100 head yearling cattle, 1 haystacker; 3 mowing machines, and 1 bucker. 12% miles southeast of Bismarck. FOR SALE—Boston Terrier puppie pedigreed and ible for registra tion. Call at little house near the Memorial bridge. SAVE $60 on your tuition. for free, re at k, American College, Fargo, N. Dak. FOR SALE—Lioyd foom baby car- riage in good eondition, very rea- sonable. eared a action anteed. oo ¥. Let iRebinvone Box Box 7, Elgin, For SALE—Ten i foot soda in good condition, Write No. 82, : susoinee caANCe aed [) complete a station inclading one P13 eee tank, an equipment an track tank. Write care Tribune Jain. Tribune R SAL deal for quick sale. selling, poet ns bgalte John Lange- Ford eke Durw ~_| African tom-tom in | eutloner, all day working. jo. 81. tee comfortable room, het water at all times. Nea nee, Li Eocngee “ar line. Phone! m 5 oa a rrr close in table for in or _ two. 810 Ave’ B.. Phoné S74, grind foom jaraia Apts. s room fot RENT—Four rooms over F. A. NAL ‘iy Perason is fe- gunned aa geese, ob ae inheritatec! ee: Age cri the 13th or de Meany, 927, Ne solicitor Max Rothendort, Skindergade 38, Copens| pe, pTLA LY.” TC aaa (Continited from page ene, people must learn to Walk and. that they can learn, Kipling’s statement, truth’s younger sister.” Mose English dete le know of Louis XI ae aa Bade} FC somal France’ ‘and aot “Wanhoe cid taught 7 ol all they know about ancient Ei the brutal persecu- id the era of knight- — But if, fiction is truth’s Ape Ur-| sister, the moving picture real teacher for truth and history— hot merely a sister. “The Iron Hot “The Birth of a Nation,” “The Parade” are as ; aaa the ee a history in their power ich “history as Paganini’s violin was above a South power to in- terpret music. Scienists have found the. frozen body of a mammoth, twenty to thirty Citar all old, encased in ice— hair, teeth, meat, everything ' pre- sented, Scientists ‘actually bee the meat of a 20,000-year-old monster formerly discovered, found it fresh but “strong in flavor. — Ice, not so very cold, has preserved that meat 20,000 years. Think of the wonderful refrigeration Camel that we call the universe. A few hi miles above our planct, beyond out atmosphere, you come to the absolut zero in whieh everything could’ reserved fresh forever. It is in- resting to think We have to gd through that temperature some day ‘when the times comes to leave the earth. e Eskimos think their hell is freeé- ing cold. That is because they live in the aretic. We believe that our hefl ‘will be burning hot. That ts be- cause the description of our hell was written ih a tropical country. More rioting in India, more Moham- medans killing Hindus, and Hindus trying to kill Mohammed: Mohammedans hat¢é Hindus because they eat pigs and music . outside of Mohammedan mosques. Moham ns, ney 70m you must not eat pigs and play music. Hindus hate Mohammedans because they cat bees. The wise British eat pigs and beef, play all kinds of—music, and, guar-| with andful of men, rule 300 mil- lions in India because they know, among other things, that the ruler of the universe doesn’t care whether you eat pigs or beter what tune you play if you e another.” Good-by to our ‘our last hope of merchant marine. Bootl rs can be seized twelve miles from or 120 miles from shore, if they are. boot- leggers in American boats. Our ship- ing geniuses cannot compete with ingland, China, in or Argen- tine in_ legitimate commercial s| iP 'e might, by control ae tl have become good boot- leg sailors. This twelve-mile d as ends that. S=:/MARKET SHOWS of} vestment.demand was. apparent in sometimes’ play} @1.75' ARKETS hm veutstday Year Ago 1.38% 1.57 1.3642 1.53% 1.40 1.54% 1.06% 1.08% B84 Wheat July Sept. Dee. a uly Dec. Dec. NEW STRENCTH Brisk Demand Fo For Iidustriats and Specialties Gives Stocks Boost _. 98 New York, July 13—(AP)—A brisk 1.01% demand for several high priced in- 5 / 1.05 dustrials and speci i int rosea new! Lard. - ns ingtl ck market aft-| July 17.40 ad shown signs of tiring under 17.62, 8 rofit-taking ang ie tty selling of] Rib: brofessiopal traders. pep 18,80 ment was created by eg 18.90 orable trade ‘items. inclu * 22.257 22.17, 43% Al Ad Be July Sept. cop *) duction in the stock of refined envy an Lrg in the price Tretting stecl scrap at C 16.28 Naws..- =Teday—. lew ch 41.39% 1.431 1.38 142% 14 1:45" 725% te da; "High ‘14d Open 1.39% 1.38 1.42 78% 9% 38 40. 40 40% | 42% 437 ‘ 43% 1 20% 1.03 oon 1.07% Ff 10% 16.37 16.70 the announcement that the ore ceived by the General Electri pany in the first six monthe of 1926 were over 10 per cent greater tha in ‘the same last year. Fp; Calves veal calves stead rally in wheat and cotton prices also) 25 higher; good lights 11, 1.25. contributed to the more cheerful feel-| | Hogs 7, 500; market fully stead: ing in speculative circles. Although] good fiehts and butchers tet y0o@ia 90 trading in the rails has been re-| light lights up to 1 Ik _packin, stricted of late, by the uncertainty} sows and plain heavy mise kinds an regarding the interstate commerce|cnds of packing sows ‘11.00@11.50; commission's decision on an applica- tion for higher freight rates in the northwest, a strong underlying in- ith Mon. stockers and feeders steady I lable around day w time; bulk | 5.50@6.7 pigs mostly 14.25; average cost Mon- day 11.66; weight 270. Sheep 400; market steady; bulk fat lambg 22. 13.26; fat ewes to. pack- ers 4100@6.00 mosily. | WHEAT TAKES Big JUMP TODAY Prices Go Up 6! 6% Cents Per Bushel to Best Figares Since February. 16 man yissues. Nickel Plate common, however, lost ground on_ selling in- spired the determined opposition to the ke! Plate” merger plan but! the Chesapeake and hio issues mounted to new record high levels, coincident with the calling for re- demption of the company’s five yer cent convertible bonds on October: 1 Atchison was another strong spot, Strength of a number of the auto- motive issues was attributed to the buying of a small group of profes- sional operators, headed by William C. Durant. Fleishman lost ground despite reoprts that J. P. Morgan and company had purchased a minority interest in that company. The closing was strong. The for- ward movement, after being checked! Chiacgo, July (AP)—Wheat by another short lived spell of profit jumped up about €i4 conta.a Walguel taking. gathered fresh momentum inj today to the best figures since Feb- the late tradini under the impetgs of|uary 16. December wheat sold at saneraivs © for the stee}-and| the topmost figures yet this season. railroad ohutie: lalf a dozen inve: st An extremely bullish showing made ment rails touched the years y Canadian government crop report ices, W U. S. Steel, Sloss ot chiefly responsible, together Rivid and Guif ‘States, together with! With unfavorable weather conditions Dupont, Jewel Tea and Loose Wiles| oth northwest and southwest. In- Biscuit sold 3 to 6 points higher, be- A de binds wheat, ‘the corn market the close. Sales ae ces eee fre gue plone, Sales appresimated) Sica, closed excited 8° to. 66 cents net higher, corn 2'% to 3 cents catcaco GRAIN up, oats a shade to 1's advance, and sine IY IS -AP)—Cash:|PFovisions showing 10 cents to 32 wheat Ne. 2 hard 1.46; No. - mixed “Corn No. cents gain. 2 mixed 77; No. 2 yellow! 7% O78. Oats and corn advanced in sym-' wheat, with enlarged buy- Oats No. 1 white 41%; No. 2 white 40% @41. ing especially in'corn which was up sharply. Provisions were firmer in Rye. Not quoted. , Barley 69@72. sympathy with Timothy sced 6.00@7.00. ee 12.00@28.00. ins and hogs. HEAT FUTURES UP ON MINNEAPOLIS MARKET (Minneapoilsh July 13—()—Bullish Canadian crop estimates sent wheat, futures up sharply toda. Profit taking at the close resulted in minor recessions from the top Futures showed & net advance for the day at % to 4% cents, with July leading,| me at 1.66%, a new high for the re power closed at 1.50% up recember at 1.50 ,also new . é Bollies 18. NX MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Hy lis, July 13—(AP)—Whea' tHe receitps 140 cars compared to 6: ear. year ago. Cash No. 1 northern 1. in ea dark northern pine choice to Mae 1, 84%; good) ™ to choice eh oped ordinary to good 1.73% ‘No./ 1 hard spake 1.78% September rye advanced 3% cents ‘and oats were up to 1% cents on comparatively igh trade, rey. ‘was, mostly erected, but dled to, % cent higher. futures closed 3% to 4 (Bia higher, Cash whest showed a firm tone, except for low. ¥ protein variety, which ‘was. stightly.. dragey. Durum offer- ings were seant wit mills competing for, amutty stu: inter, at showed a better tonc. better demand characterized trade ing cash corn. Oats was gener- ae om in, good demand, Barley was “aut and firm, with prices unchenge tee: No .i'dark hard ntana on Sehck 1,60%@1.62%,; to le 158% 5 Jul; aly Las; ‘September, re Corn Ne 3 yellow THis, Oats ‘No. 3 white 38% @39h. Barley 58@68. Rye No. 2, 1.00@1. fy Flax No. 1. 240@2.42. 80. ST. PAUL LIVESTOC! South St. Paul, July 13—(U. 5. D. of A.)—Cattle 3,000; opening siow,| about steady’ with outas's average on all killing, classes; several be =| of mses ae A, seemed bids aroun -bes' ures Flaxseed ore a steady tendency. held around $:76; Bulk 8.50@0.25: she jes ech stock supply included a liberal hold- MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR over from ‘Monda: Ik fat cows Maney July 13--(AP - itters and canners| 10@20 cents lower; in carlond lots 4.25; bulls “mostly” 5.25@5.75; family vaténts uoted at wali a barrel in 98-pound cotton ments 33,074 barrels. ' ran 21,00@21.50. CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, July flower; receipts 21, tul x standards firsts 36@36, ee B@34. unehanged receipts 22,736 Cheese unchanged. CHICAGO POULTRY { ricago, July 13—(AP)—Poultry alive steady; receipts five cars in, one car due; spring ducks hea spring ducks small 24. MINNEAPOLIS RANGE al Open ‘High 1.66% 1.50% 1.64 every Lats, 08% 05% 67's 66" BISMARCK GRAI (Furnished by Russell-Miller ‘Bismarck, July 13 1 dark northern. 1 northern spring. . 1 amber durum. No. 1 mixed durum. No. 1 i vada Hard winter +... We quote but do no followin die the , | She ers weak to unevenly lower; buyers discriminating against weight in fed] di Steers; grass movement steady to weak. mostly. vealers strong At 12.00@ Sheep 10,000; fat void steady. to strong; several dots westerns unsold; two decks 78 pound eonlat 1435, to small killers; earl bulk 14.00@14.25 to packei oy mostly 13.75 tis te cegiitee hee: nos! 4 sheep bulk small supply. fat ewes bles mixed wether: 13.85; 26@60 cents lower than day pound kinds FARGO BUTTER Fargo, N. D., July 13—(AP)—But ter ass churning cream 38; pac! stock 26: ‘t geist | CORPORATIONS | Farmers Elevator Cv. of Cuba, co- operative; 5,000; John McIntyre, Harold H. riikeins, William Heras and Ernest J. Evert, Valley Cit; John Gruman, Oriska, TAX MAY GO DOWN The Canadian government is con- sidering the removal of the 5 per cent excise tax on passenger cars valued at no more than $1, from} countries allowed tariff concessions j in Canada. 1 o——. RETA TON | i| “SANDY” | % ° (Continued from Page 4) place, isn’t it? Nice ocean at your feet.. I'm hoping to leave on the carly train Saturday morning, and, invite me, will stay to dinner night.” 1 love you-love u'll make out—" flushed—read and reread the phrases that soothed her. In the lonely quiet of the room she drank them up. She saw Ramon as he had stacked the dishes, looking at her with «# boyish: “I've often pic- tured you here, Sandy. It seoms perfectiy natural... Does it to you?” Inthinkingly she pressed the letter against her lips. Immediately this aroused her, She scoffed, growing more and more fevere: im craty. I's so quiet here—-so still. But I love him. Oh, you do not! You're «ragy-~ She put her hands over her eyes, was distracted and there was & queezing and a burnin= that lay like a claw on her throat . . . that kept digging at h It was Murillo’s letter—one part of it that she tried desperately to ignore : . the one true thing he said. Tt was this: “You scem to have entercd mar- riage as lightly as you entered flir- tations. But you c not end it in this casual manne She nodded, her eyes hot and wide d hi cen See ley inking she could get by A husband! It was staggering to her now that she had been able to think in this manner—that no real effort been made to discipline het. Isabel had done her best, but she had never realized the complete im- maturity of a girl just 19. Sandy appeared grown: rsp And she was, as 0; ality of a girl of 19 goes-— +§ ‘al 5, ingly . 3 . Ad A cent per pound gseonht under 65 i ths corn, 70 Ibs. 5 cents under shell, CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, July 13—(U. ». of A— Hogs 18.00; desirable hogs suitable for shipment mostly 15@26 ecats higher than Monday's average; few outs a fully 25 P ig pack- ers eames, bulk desirable 160" to 220 pound averages 14.10@14.40; seeleted 140 to 160 pound weights upwards to +4 50; bulk 240 to 300 pouid bu 13,25@13.65; better grades ws 11.50@12.00; heavies antl, 00@ 1150; few slaughter vis 13.75) ‘than, heavy wei eats hon 8 12.90@ 3 medium 1 i High fect ing sows Pigs 13.50@ 14.25. Cattle ag FE he! draggy trade on general ri steers, grassy and wart ‘Dp ifitioe and grass cowe some action on desirable yearlings: best 10.35; mostly heifers; best ma- tured steers 10. sods stockers and feed- But to herself now, the Sandy of two years ago appeared an appall- half-baked individual. she had made promises with no con- ception of their real solemnity. And these promises were now toi ruin the rest of her life? Murillo could keep her bound. “No, he can't!” she whispered; hotly, reaching down and byrying her hands in the dog's neck. She could scarcely breathe. She opened the door. The sun was set- ting—a ball, magenta colored, riding} gently down the sky, touching the clouds with . co bp her bound! Her He couldn't life was her own---completely now. Live it as she pl Half of out on cha the thi In a closet lothes, spread drying before half she was she had found lounging robe. This was now ned rakishly about her. More be- se she felt hostile and wished to defy an imaginary Ben Murillo than because she was enjoying them, she lit cigaret*- after cigarette as she Pounded the iron ‘back and forth over the white silksport dress. She talked to hersel “He in advise ‘me Correct in matters of my unstemly ‘The iron swinging in vicious stroke: “Oh, what do I care! Why should I think about it?” The iron slackening—tucks pressed down with elaborate care. “Better do it well! -Only rag you've got a long. , She hunched her elbows on: the board, resting her chin on her pal: Saturday a week since she'd from her , home, life definitely behind her. :She didn’t .regre' few flimsy clohes, the rather terri- fying povert: of her equipment. for a new and different life made her suddenly very. still. “E can’t stay on here she whispered. “No—but you've got to stay until you get some. clothes—somewhere! hy. ha: you give Alice to under- stand that. you'd grabbed a few i 2 She would have sent you forever,” ge shruj “I wonder if I can started a new traén| Y hosent. She saw herself in the five and ten cent store earning $16.50) ; week, Bob McNeil said that was out the only thing she a nless she was prepared. ‘he ie ture was preposterous. Working be pina a sonatas all the rest 0! he es ikely! > borg inauatibly she now -whis: redr. ‘I. can. stay. he T gat} he teaing Lat stay here?” dmn rarm and: herby 12” she repeated it old bunk? Men 7 y: indin, a hla J largely a! 205 nin |B 4 rue,: she |, it's 8 any There were three letters. two from Al oe first caugh§ Sandy * wp, San a had this habit of, rok ra making mark, : followii W SP. wih ed A slowness. She & sense of dra- matics, extremely Fs hg to her listeners. “The fig up. You're _ id knows you’ ry all right. He s to get you back by Rook or epeoks Til tell you how it happened. Wednesday afternoon after he left here, I dashed to your house, get- ting Mame to drive me. Bat he'd evidently raced back himself, f he was there. I te Sandy returned? “His face a as he it was dyin of alarm: something. God it may have happened.’ murder in his cyes: ‘T ees ou also know, Miss (get the Miss) MeNeil! 1 propose to do some- i thing very quickly.’ “What do you rropose to do?” ““That's my busifiess ‘Well, it’s mine also. vivid can do as you please, Miss N a tnour 'No chance, of course, to get your things. Better buy some. Unless ae can break into your room when he’s asleep. I gave her the skeleton s and told her to try it. She's ng for you. I left and evidently he went at ‘e and phoned to mam Sh ¢ him the goods—innocen betieves ire hi t with Judith. I gather account that your. husband asked very considerately about her health and could he do Taathing for her. Of course, this touches her and she gets the weeps telling me Ben is such a good man and why isn’t Sandy happy. “I guess ma asked were coming home. He answers: ‘I'm not sure. Did she write to you, mother?” ja says: “Oh, yes—I had a lovely letter. She und Judith are having a wonderful time.’ - “That lets him see the lay of the land! He sees that ma hasn't a suspicion why, when or. how you left. But he’s dead sure I know all about it. He told ma he was going to th y to get you. “1 wouldn't put it past a detective on your tra Watch vour step, kid. He’s » mean hombre. It's pretty tough that you're tied to him for lif ee Sandy opened the second letter. It was sharp. It set her pulse fly- ing. Ehan't this red hot? I can hardly believe it—-the sanctimonious hypo- crite! But I suppose he'll say you dr him to it.” sed was a clipping from the Barbara paper with Sandy's on the front page. Across the top was the heading, “Narrowly Escapes Death.” There fol an account of automobile accident on Wednesday midnight. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Murillo, returning from Los An- geles, were struck by another ma- chine. By a mirgcle, it seemed, no one was hurt. Marillo and, hi wife were able to proceed homeward in their own machine. The informaton stunned Sandy. Ben Murillo driving With a: woman at midnight—passing her off as his wife-- Alice commented: rang up your house to find out about it and your husband fells her per made a mistake, that rand not bis wife was driving wita him. Some i, isn’t it? Wonder who the is? Gosh, if she doesn't get when you im to put Ene Santa picture ho i di fany more out of him than you did! Couldn't you use this against him? But I suppose his devoted Beatrice would swear by all the gods that she was the womal For a reason that she @idn’'t at irst analyze, Sandy felt as though a weight dropped from her. She told herself: “f’'m glad! God—I'm glad!’ She went almost running to the beach, She rubbed her hands along her arm as though she were pushing chains from her. he was free of him completely. His infidelity left her free. It dis- solved even the moral tics he might still have held. She looked at the wide stretch of ers. Far out a whale sent a sil- geyser upward. She thought lone. 1 belong to myself ver “'m now. These words made her cheeks burn. went with a still, tight ened expectancy back to the h She dusted it. She put poppies that she had picked in the glowing field on the tables and shelves.:Now and then she looked at the clock .To- wards 8 o'clock she kept going to the door, peering into the shadows— At 8 she heard fy rep. She closed the door quickly, clasping her hands against her chin. But she pulled it open, giving a quick, frightened laugh. Not Ramon. but a nensanger boy, was coming up the, wall, He had tele gehen ‘Ramon ‘wasn’t. eeuine. (To. Be Continued). WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers Embalmers Funeral iy can't

Other pages from this issue: