The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 6, 1926, Page 7

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MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1926 Tribune Classified Advertisements . MALB HELP WANTED | GOVERNMENT — Patrol Inspector- Guards needed frequently for Cane- dian and other borders. $1680 year- ly. Particulars free. Write Oz- ment 3-P, St. Louis, Mo., immediate- ly. MEN AND WOMEN barbers in great demand at good wages. Short time required. Catalog te Moler Barber College, Fargo, N. D. Estab. 'ED—A first class all around || tailor. Write Tribune Ad. No. 73. ___ FEMALE WANTED WANTED—Compi for gener- al housework. Phone 189. WOKE WANTED ANTED—A lady wants work of any kind by day or by hour. Call _at 619 Front street or Phone 391M, “WOMAN will take care of evenings. Rates depend on hour and distance. Phone 872 class work shirts, blankets, } — and nurses’ uniforms, a specialty. Also family washings taken. We call and deliver. Marguerit Bul- ten’s Home Laundry, 31 Ave. A, cor- ner of Mandan Ave. Phone 1017. —————______— g RENT oR clean fur. nished light housekeeping rooms with pantry and closet. Also for rent: A furnished | three room apartment. Call at 622 Third street or Phone 132W. FOR RENT—Modern room, gentie- amen preferred, Also 6 room house with , $30.00 and a garage at $3.50 per month. Close in. Call at 222 Second street. Phone 905. FOR RENT—Large front room up stairs all furnished for light house- keeping. a month, preferred. FOR RENT—Warm, light house- keeping room, suitable for business women or teacher Large closet, running water. 422 Fifth street. FOR RENT—Two large rooms for light housekeeping in modern home. Cail at 213 Eleventh street N. E Y% block off Broadway. FOR RENT—Sleeping toom on grouna floor connected with bath. Close in and reasonable, Call at 120 First street or Phone 1096R. FOR RENT—Two large rooms fu nished for light housekeepi Phone 6543W or call at 924 Fourth street. ree FOR RENT—Good sized front room with closet and kitchenette. Well furnished, 411 Fifth street. Phone 278. Close in, Couple ladie: FOR RENT—Rooms for sleeping end also for light housekeeping. Call 23 Front street. FOR RENT-—Room in m LYS Call at 207 W. Rosser street. Phone TUR. ROOMS FOR RENT—With board. Call at 309 Eighth street, Phone 834d. ——— FARM LANDS a0 FOR SALE OR TRADE—Forty acre: in one piece, 37 acres in another piece of good fruit land near White Salmon, Washington. It is free of encumbrance. This land joins at corners. Will trade for Bismarck property North Dakota farm land, Address Tribune No. 79. ae FOR SALE—A quarter section of lend | ——. under cultivation, $30.00 per acre. Hugh Brown Place, Boyd Township. For sale; A house located in Bis- marek, ‘reasonable, Inquire Mrs. Minnie Baker, Menoken, N. D. ————————_—_——— DRESSMAKING = WANTED—General dressmaking, in- cluding mending and making men’s shirts. Call at 45 Thayer or Phone 4405. Misi tineson. LS POSE MRS TYTE Ww cans INTHE YARD, || AS BLY L GOTTA HAVE ‘THIS GASKET FoR Well heated, only $20.00; FOR SALE—Wrecked Ford, rorT FOR Cook and Miss Mar-|. 3 Tnserttons, 38 words or CLASSIFIED DISPLAY. RATES 65 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance. Copy should bs received by 12 o'clock to.in- sure insertion same day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 DEPENDABLE USED CARS, JUST BEFORE taking inventory we offer our greatest price reductions in Dependable Used Cars. Our in- ventory is taken in December so you can buy right now, Guaranteed Used Cars at prices about 20 per cent lower than in the spring. Come in to our special Used Car Sales- room and see the bargains we offe: Overland Sedan#@ Dodge Coup Ford Touring; Chevrolet Pane! Truck; Dodge Special Leather Si dan; ,Dodge Touring. Easy Pay- y ments. Easy time payments. M. B. GILMAN CO. Bismarck. good Priced for Phone any good parts. sale. E. W. Mills. tires, quick 233. APARTMENTS lod bungalow apt. four rooms, light, heat, water fur- nished and heated garage, hot wa- ter heat, gas stove and kitchen cab- inet. Phone 842M. Call at 624 Tenth street. : ENT—Strictly modern fur- nished apt. in the Rose apartments. LosT—Fir of bays with white face, weight; team of black weight ; about 1400; bay mare with white Phone 4F111. Jack Payseno, 5 miles rforth of FOR s FOR SALE—s FOR SAL FOR FOR SALE Lost ¢ head of horses: Team about 1500 or 1600; mares, one with halter, star on forehead. ismarek on Black Trail. LOST—Black silk purse, bound with Contains change ne gold, gold chain. and receipts made out to Josep! Kositzky. __YURNITURE_Fo! LE: holstered chairs, cut glass, er household fixtures. used and is su le for Chri gifts. Phone 737R or call 40: Ros: treet. tres: table, electric vacuum kitchen rubbish burner. AW. 807 Fourth street. Edison Phonograph \ cleaner, records. room 508 Hotel McKenzie. —$——— Rollers, German Cages, seeds, treats, 1155. Jacob Bull, Dak. Box 728. One 5 year old mil coming fresh about Dec. 7th. ete. Dickinson, January. E. Bismarck, N. D. _ Men's ‘home wool hose. $1.00 per pair. at 210 Ninth street north, FOR SALE—Fur cap and fur coat, 218 At your own price, econd street. FOR SALE—An electric train in ex- Phone 694. Rob- cellent condition. ert Stackhouse. EIGH PARTI Phone 818 FOR SALI F. W. Murphy, 215 Third street. Phone 832. FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnis ed newly decorated city heated apartments. College Bldg. Phone 183. FOR RENT—Furnished for light housekeeping. Phone 329 iuwa--A fora apartmen un ,.ound ficor, Also for sale: iN auofold, Call at 980 Fourth street apartments Mrs. mes FOR ‘steam heated fur- eked ‘apartments. The Laurain, Apartrients. Phone 303. HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—Six room house bath. Stoves furnished. lose in. Also garage. For sale: Gentleman's __ fur coat, very cheap. Phone 905. FOR RENT—Three room house with large garage, chicken coop and run way. 417 So. Ninth street. Phone 804M. é FOR RENT—Eight room house with Call at 806 First unce, agent. FOR RENT—Warm well heated three room all modern flat. Close in. IEN—Build yourself a per- manent paying business with a chance for advancement by selling Singer Sewing Machines. Exper- ience not necessary, we teach you. Splendjd opportunity to man with car. Write Singer Sewing Machine Company, Bismarck, North Dakota. oH Gr cane| | FROM THE OTHER SIDE OF THE FENCE Phone 858. and mattress.’ Call 565. ES STATE PIONEER DIES inson—O; children. ‘dison phonograph and records, two beautiful leather up- hand embroidered linen, floor lamp, elec- trical appliances, pictures gnd oth- This is all new goods which has never been mas West tary couch with mat- white kitchen table, drop leaf. Phone. vith| Also owe floor Jamp. Call! Choice imported German Chappers and. Hartz Mountain, also native singers. Phone! Nw cow’ One 83 year old heifer coming fresh in er, 15 Front street, made all Call lined Call at ybody wanting sleigh parties call Clarence Hanson. 3 or 2193. FOR SALE—Kimball Player Piand; also modern residence with garage. Good Way sagless spring 8S. Kitchen, promin- t farmer of the Versippi commun- where he has made his home for the past 22 years, died Wednesday afternoon at a local hospital. followed an operation for gall stones. 620 Sixth, bh ef THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE GRAIN LIVESTOCK MARKETS By Ausuciated Press Leased Wire ‘WHEAT HIGHER | | FOR DECEMBER Accumulation: of: Wheat ue Canada Has Bearish Effect on Deferred Deliveries i Chicago, Dec, 6—)—Wheat here averaged higher today for December but lower for other months. vance in December was cue largely| to were being made tied up by ice in the Great Lakes. Un the The ait. reports that strenuous efforts to replace wheat other hand, accumulatton, of wheat in Canada due to ice had a bearish effect pn deferred deliveries. Wheat closed, 1% cent net lower. to Jone cent advance, corn unchanged to % cent up, oats at % cent decline) _ to,% to ‘i advance, and provisions unchanged to 30 cents down. One’ of the prime factors today jn wheat here was the amount of grain already tied up in the ice at the Soo, and the further amount held back between the Soo and the head of the lakes, the total being judged suffi- cient to disorganize the supply and demand market. Under such circumstances a reac- tionary trend of wheat at Winnipeg ‘was apparent at times today, but the effect here was more than offset by the upward slant at Liverpool. In addition, houses with connection east were conspicuous buyers here. MARKET DULL, DRAGGY, AT MINNEAPOLIS TODAY Minneapelis, Dec. 6—(@)—Wheat was dull and dgagey most of today. Futures at low points up to the last hour were %5@% cent under Saturday's close Cash wheat was steady to firm in all markets, but local demand lacked Early demand for cash wheat was fair to good and most of the desir- uble offerings cleaned up before de- session, gz was 3@10 cents over December, No. 1 dark northern 3@9 cents over, and No. 2 northern 2@9 cents over. Winter wheat was steady. Corn offerings were large and the market ruled quiet but steady. Oats were steady, offerings light and demand was fair to good. Rye was in light supply and de- mand was good. Barley was firm to strong with Death] range unchanged. Flaxseed offerings were moderate ceased is survived by his wife|and. demand was fa ‘STOCK PRICES Speculators For Advance Re- gain Control After Early Irregularity New York, Dec. 6—()—Speeula- tors for the advance regained con- trol of the price movement in to- day’s market, after early irregular- ity. Call money renewed at 4%: per cent but advanced to five as bank called about $30,000,000 in loans to repair the deficit in reserve shown in the weekly clearing house state- ment. Another substantial increase in chain sore sales and the rising of the Lambert company annual divi- dend from $3.50 to $6 had a bullish effect. Year-end forecasts of lead- ing business men also are generally constructive in character, helping to Janay fears entertained a few weeks FINANCIAL | NEWS CHICAGO ee Dec. Close Close Yesterday Year Ago 1.39% 141's 1.33% Wheat— Dec, May July Sorn— Dee. AM Bi ago that a general business depres- izint. While the opening of congress in- varibly arouses fears in some quar- ters of adverse legislation, the pre: ent session is not generally ex- pected to produce anything would be harmful to busin Prospects of special dividend ac- tion continues to influence the buy- ing of mat stocks, Otis high in anticiaption. of a stock div dend this month. Railroad equipment and shares were bid up briskly on reports good trade conditions. 145 to a new record high at 152% und a similar recovery was register- South Porto Rican Sugar. U. t Iron Pipe, United Drug, Gen- s and Electric B. Loose Wil d second preferred also ed up four to six points while Continent Baking A. dropped nearly six points. The closing was firm. vance in gall money to per cent did not interfere seriously with con- structive operations in the most ac-| tive stock: veral of which were the day in the final hour. Loose Wiles Biscuit jumped & points and the second preferred while Schulte, Reynolds, “B” Radio “and Allis Chalmers were strong: nental phalt prefe ales approximated SO. ST. PAUL LIVESTOC K Paul, Minn., Dec. 6—(U. ‘Tattle 8,50; short fed arlings in moderate fully steady; number 7.50@! she stock 0 on cows, upwards 0 on heifers, with light weights moderate, mostly 7.25@ cutters 3.50@1.00; ockers and feeders Another ad- 10,000 ahiareh 0. vealers, quality con- d, steady; bulk — good 9.75. marke bulk butchers and lig! king sows 10.00@10.0; market not established; bidding mostly 12.00 on desirable pigs; av age cost Saturday 11.23; weight 214. idding 25 or more lower on fat lambs; no early sales; fat ewes steady, mostly 4.50@6.25. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, Dee. 6—(U. 8. D. of A.) Hogs, 52,000; generally steady to 10 cents lower; light Tight showing most downturn; top 12.05 paid choice 230 to 280 pound weight; bulk desirable 190 to 240 pound averages 11,85@12.00; most 140 to 170 pound averages 11.75@12.85; pigs mostly to 25 cents higher; gelected kinds up- ward to 12.00; bulk 11.75@11.9 most packing sows 10.65@11.1 heavyweight hogs 11.65@12.05; med- ium 11.60@12.05; light 11.50@11.95 that} Elevator} jgumping over five points to a record ; fof unsually International Harvester rallied from) sugar] lower; mostly lights! for, 15) 11.10: “Clove 1.40% 1.41% “Sa ue 141% 1.39% 1.42% al 1.34% 1.334 ova | handbook of facts and ,| million- dollar reclamation projects to ATS Ha Oke abnival TeBaet Of | Work. | Was doing, and asked review ‘of bustling interior de- ies that reach into y far nooks and desp below the ce of the earth was yiven today Seeretary It was one of the few annual ac- | countings of modern times in which aycabinet officer merely told of the mhiny important tasks his department for nothing. The 104 printed pages formed a figures de- | seriptive of departmental intere ranging from the conduct of many “| the number of Portuguese admitted 90% BT | given | the space of the whole report. | during the y to the governmental | hospital at Kalihi, Hawaii, w of the fact that congress is occupied with a continuing reclamation program, that subject was barely one one-hundredth of | this was devoted entirely to a tabloid tie 11.25 M2 light light 11.40@11.85; packing sows 10.40@11.25; slaughter 11.40@ 12.00, Cattle 25,000; yearlings and desir pable early stec heavies $ light und medium weight kind pre- ating; stockers and feeders steady to strong; some casi- in fat cows and heifers; bid- ding lower on cutters; bulls scarce; and strong; vealers 60 cents 10,00@10.50; strictly 11.50 to outsiders. 24,000; very slow; fat lambs choice Shee er; carly bulk wool lambs 13.00@ 13.50; holding choice medium we fed westerns around 13.65; few culls around 25 ep steady; bulk fat 50; best tll above 6. dications about 8 ing lambs absent. MARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller o 1 dark northern. No. 1 northern spri' No. 1 amber durum No. 1 mixed durum No. 1 red durum. per ewt... SHELL CORN Hing Price at Bismarck) Ibs, or more 5 Ibs... per pound Fach corn, 70 Ibs., 5 cents un der shell, compared te 721 a 1. northern choice good to ch y to good 1 pring, FARGO | LIVESTOC Fargo, N. 160 to 200 pound weights 10.50@ 200 to 225 pounds 11.10; to 275 pounds 11.10; 275 pounds and over 11,00@10.00; packers 9.00@ 10.25. Sheep genuine spring lambs trim- med 12,00@12.50; bucks 11.00@11.50; over CAN YOU BEAT THar? THEN'VE Gor THE CRusT TO THRow W Back “THAT ~ IT SAVES ME FRO GETTING BAWLED OUT northern | 44% @16 D,, Dec. 6—()—Hogs | | unchanged. | patents quoted at 810 to 8.15 a bar- |rel in 98-pound cotton s | metns 41,852 barrels. { churning cream 51. Packing stock 24. al that the reclamation bureau | | had made certain surve: 4 | | by congress, pigs and carried construction authorized had provided complete irrigation for 1,802,970 acres and partial water supply to 1 out certain nd 16,000 miles of canals, bridges, 446 culverts, flumes. and 82 Pension Bureau The scarcely less conspicuous bu- reau of pensions recited its accom- plishments in three-quarters of a page. It paid during the year $207,- 844,348 in pensions, and received and classified 42,894 1 War and 72,- 37 Spanish War pension claims, All of this required the mailing out of 6,311,106 separate checks. The Alaskan Railroad reported an increase in earnings reflecting the growth of the territory’s manifold in dustries. The governor of Hawa recorded “normal and gratifying pro- "in territorial economic and 1 matters. The various and wide- tered hospitals and schools r the wing of the Interior De- partment all noted improvement, and | act submitted exhaustive statistical data | to prove it. heavy lambs 6.00@10.00; cull lambs 8.00@9.00; light ewes 5.00@6.00; s 4.00@5.00; cull ewes 1.00 3 bucks 3.00@3.50. MINNEAPOLIS RANGE Dec. 6 Open High” Low Close Wheat— Dee. 8942 .BYIL ellow 7 Oats No, 2 ¢ 50; No. 3 white Tye, Not quoted. Barley 56@ Timothy seed 4.75 Clover seed 24.50@: Lard 12.52. Ribs 14.00. Bellies 16.25. H RANGE Dec, 6—() High Low DUL Duluth, Open Durum Wheat— Dee. May Rye- Dec. May Flax- De 174 MINNBAPOLIS FI Minneapolis, Dee. 6 In carload lots, fan ‘jour ly ks. Ship- FARGO BUTTER Fargo, Dec. 6—@)—Butter fa’ CHICAGO PRODUCE receipts 8,885 cases: standards 49; extra firsts 50@5: firsts 42@45; seconds 37@40. E unchanged; Q + firsts 47@61; sq; refrigerator refrigerator firsts 3343341. CHICAGO POULTRY Chicago, Dee. 6 —M@)—Poultry| alive firm; receipts nine cars; fowls| 18@24; furkeys 34; roosters ducks 26; geese 20@21. End of Salacious Plays Is in Sight, x in the history of. the drama ye stage been in such h ‘|.{ul condition. as now, wher plays purpose and. moral ,uplift, as well as entertainments of joyfui constru tion, are ing patronized most lib- erally by. discriminating _playgucrs,’ iv the assurance voiced by Bertha Kalich, who will be at the Bismarck’ Auditorium Tuesday evening in Her- mann Sudermann’s “Magda.” “The number of revivals of fine old plays, the survi: fpentally sound dramas and the a beptance of wholesome musical coms} positions attest the accuracy of this assertion,” said Mme. Kalich. “Of course, there are many faults |to be remedied by theatrical man- opis # right Ariteing people are to blame f 1 Saree ing such presentations, a elty the , say, Chi- Even) Independence,” 0,000) bureau also into the shipping busi- acres, operated more than 100 dams! id built | | The bureau's | filthy *) agers jof straw 18; | So the report ran through the inti- mate contacts of the general land of- fice, which did an eleven-millfion: do}- ° lar business; the Indian office, whose ministrations to the Red Man includ- ed the erection of new schdols md hospitals, and the improvement of the old ones; the geological survey, which mapped the structure of the earth 43 states, located the point of origin of the Montana earthquake, and picked up the tril of valuable | potash deposits in Texas and New Mexico; and the national park ser- I vice, host during the year to a re ord national parks tourist horde num- bering 1,930,865. Bureau of Educattur” A resume of many conferences, studies and investigations was con- tained in the section devoted to the bureau of educatio: Among other things, this bureau distributed 000 copies of a pamphlet entitled “The Story of the Declaration of and cooperated with many cducational institutions and teachers’ and parents’ societies in the promotion of knowled, The Alas- | kan reindeer herd, which was assem- bled years ogo by agents of this bur- cau and which incidentally put the ness, came in for a paragraph, “The reindeer industry in Alaska, inues to prosper. 1, the Boxer, trans- ports considerable quantities of rein. deer meat to Seattle, where it is sold for the benefit of the native owners The volume closes with a recital of the internal arrangemenis of the interior department here in W. ington, down to the number of light and heavy delivery trucks in the de- partmental and the character of the new equipment installed in the cafeteria that is maintained for’ em- ploy The signature of the secretary then is appended without a word of boost- ing, or aw single hint that a few extra dollars might come in handy here and there to meet the far-flung de- mands of so great a load of public Merely, “Very respectfully, “Hubert Work.” cago or New York, there will always percentage sufficiently large to keep several salacious plays going for the entire year round, but that fact docs not diminish the argument that the stage is no place to wash linen, nor blatantly proclaim illicit relationship from the house- tops. Iam not a prude, but the law of common decency ought to in evidence where the younger eration apt to attend. “There are very few theater man- who are philanthropists; there- fore, the surest way to stop an ob- seene or indecent play is to cease patronizing it. The box office is the stethoscope that regfisters the pulsa- tions of public opinion, consequent! the moment that you sce the the box o sign that the public is on the Phis state o! irs is in evidence time when the pendulum is ually but surely swinging from alacious and ribald form of per- nee toward the opposite side; that is, to the sune and salutary entertainment, The day of sinuosity being flaunted br the teeth of the younger gene tion is past, and I personally hope never to retur! Bachelor Is Found Dead in His Farm House Near Urbana D., Dee. 6—John ’ Wenn bie an elderly bachelor liv- ing alot on a farm near Urbana, found dead with his face multi- flesh e: ’ y a cat foun the house with the body when neigh- broke open the door Thurs pmething wrong suspected when Mr. Simmons, ght the aged bachelor a load and got no answer to shouts. He investigated and found the house door locked then called the elevator man at Urbana and to- gether they broke open the door, A and a dog were in the hi ith the body but the indications were that the dog had not touched the body, and it is presumed that death was due to heart fi though a broken stove pipe indicated an accident, There are no relatives to the man known here but he is thought to have relatives in South Dakota and Canada with whom the authorities are trying to get in touch. He was known to be quite old but his exact age is not known. « A coroner’s jury decided that death had been from natural causes and burial was held at Valley City Friday. taste The mummy of a horse, estimated to be 3,000 years old, Was found re- cently Egypt. No poisonous reptiles and few wild animals are to be found in Japan.

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