The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 4, 1927, Page 7

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1927 Tribune Classified Advertisements PHONE 389== GREAT DEMAND for Barbers at. ed wages; men and women. be time required. Catalog free, ph 3. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE, ‘ar GOVERNMENT Forest Rangers need- ed often, $125—$200 month, Cabin! furnished, Enjoy the doors. Particulars free. Write, aa FOR RENT—Sleeping rooms, strict- ¥ modern and clean, in good loca; pg at ers . so be hud lor jousekeepin: 733-R or cail at 233 7 . iso Work wanted by young —man_for simmer months. | ge4 RENT—Two clean well furnish- eping rooms. Private en- becty close to bath and telephone, Two blocks north 6f. postoffoce. all at 410. Third bichon Phone 1 hnagiticn, $s Words of, ‘ wie oy ant os 3 inbertuin "38 words 1 week, 25 words ———— oe WANTED—A & by the month, ela Je Tesdkowa, cit Twelfth. street. ____FEMALI HELP WAN’ —A middle aged woman eae in_small hotel. Chas. Costello Woodworth, N. W. NTED—A wal wv itress at O’Brien’s b * Cafe. under ..........0335 125 Ads ores 3i wore, 3 2c‘ eddie FOR RENT=May | nished with pri Heat and water furnished. Owens, Eltinge Block. Phoni FOR RENT—Tv light hou: sen jing rooms in mod- ern home. rivate entrance, gas for cooking. Alse for rent: A piana. Phone 442-M after 6:00 p. m. RENT—Three unfurnished eis in model rooms newly decorat- in modern home. Heat and lights furnished. m per month, rE RENT—Sleeping-room in mod- erm home. Close in. Can accommo- date two. Gentlemen _preferred.| bsg ie 119 W. Thayer or Phone For” RENT—Two ro ales Fo leasant front rooms. Is arders or board ant ee 822 Main street or phone a FOR RENT—Nice pedtont room at 517 Sixth street. Be e privileges. For ladies only. Reasonable rent. “ saul evenings. Phone 613-LM. _ three un unfur- as, ping rooms) te bath on second floor. Price 421. WORK WANTED WORK WANTED— Young lady wishes to work for room and board this summer. Will do housework, di washing or care of children. Coun- try or city. Write Tribune Ad. 8 IT MAY CONCERN black dirt and fertiliz: er that is many years old, part sheep manure, Phone 977-J. at Seventh M. Burch. —Young ladies de- sire to do plain sewing at reason- able rate. Also work by the danas 637-LJ or call at 113 Mai Rebuilt Automobiles Satisfaction teed. Seven- day trial Each car priced in plain figut SO FAR as we know every ont of the many who have bought rebuilt cars here is still our friend. “Rebuilt Care With a Reputation” Lahr Motor Sales Co. | ji AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE OR TRADE—Moon 1024 Chassis Redseal Continental motor in good condition. Tires good. Disc wheels, 1927 license. Can be used for speedster or truck, Call at 423 Tenth street. FOR SALE—Big Six coupe 1924 mod- el. Good finish and neat model. Fooms, jo «day Callat ‘WORK WANTED Wiadis aged wom- an desires work as housekeeper, ee ae in city or country, Phone WORK WANTED—Young _ lad, sires work by the hour. + 219-LW. GARDENS plowed and ashes hauled. For good work call Wm. Ode. Phone Oy 734-W. — ie LAUNDRY HOME LAUNDRY—First class work done for men’s shirts, blankets and bed spreads, a cialty. Also fam- ilv washings taken. We call and deliver, Marguerit Bulten’s Home uuunary, 203 Ave. A, W, corner, rage, close in, je- hone 111 Rosser Ave, Private 1052-R or Fourth street. FOR RENT—Very nicely furnished sleeping room in all modern home, Always hot water. Call at 807 Fourth street. a NT—Two clean light house- keeping rooms, right downtown. ee telat furnished, Call at Spare tire, bumper and thotometer. $575.00 cash, Write Tribune Ad. No. FOR ae eee room in mod- ern home. Downtown location, Call at,112. Broadway...or Phone 195-W,. FOR RENT—Two furnished light housekeeping rooms. Modetn and close in. Call 528 Sixth. 1 RENT—Large sleeping room in modern home. “call at a6 Second street or Phone S83: jal courses for little beginners and adults. If at all possible, mothers of pupils between 4 and 8 years should be present at the hour of in- struction, which will be of great value to parent as well as to pu- pil. May Ist we open our regular summer es in Theory, Har- mony and Coimposition, For furth- er information call 1017 or call at our studio, 203 Ave. A, W, corner Mi % bed rooms, sun parlor, gar: basement, full basement, oak floors throughout, near school, 50 foot lot, trees and. shrubs, desirable home in tine residential district, offered very reasonably for quick sale. ‘EW BUNGALOW at 812 Eighth street for sale by owner at real bar- gain price. An extremely well- built home with nicely arranged Call _at 502 Seventh street. MISCELLANEOUS RR SALE—Choice imported German apes German so nate and | FOR RENT—June ist Apt. Fur ed, 3 rooms and bath. Phone 905. Also 2 furnished connecting rooms and bath, anda small room at 400 4th street. Phone 1052-L. Mrs. Cora McLeai a FOR RENT—Three room furnished apartment with electric range, pri ate entrance, also private porc! in all modern home. Call at rear at 1002-Fourth-street FOR RENT—Three room unfurnished apartment with private bath, For further information call at 616 Sévent 42. FOR RENT—Nicely furi room apartment on ground floor, private entrance, Call at 722 Fifth Box, 728. FOR SALE—Seed corn. — Pioneer White Dent, Falconer, Northwest Dent, Gehu. Test 75.to 82. $6 per bushel. E. Chesak, 12. miles southeast, of Bismarck, WANTED—to buy or rent a Set of Breaker Bottoms for Oliver Ford- son-plow. Write W. E. Scllens, Bis- ment, hot air heat. pile if if desired. ene o2. “SALE—A ige well located. Fifty ‘feot “ele Cheap if taken at once. Call at 417 Mandan _Street or Phone 858. _ FOR REN’ we low for $50 per sementhe fz Seventh street. FOR KENT—Three room house part- ly modern. Close in. Phone 64-W-2. BABY CHICKS KS POSTPAID: Barred, Buf! Wyandettes, - ingtons, White Rocks 16c; Orpingtons, Brahmas 17c; as: 9c, all heavy 12c. June Cl sels Leghorns ic, heavy breeds 2c Je! Bopp Hatchery, Fergus Falls, Mi FOR RENT—Small apartment Person “Court. Phone 796. ‘NORTHERN BABY CHICKS electric hatched. Incubators, coal and: oil brooders, Globe feeds, feeders, fountains, violet-ray glass, rem dies. Everything for the. poultr; and bee man. New price lists, f catalogs. Bee Suppl Matchery Dept. Moorhead, : MAY ABY CHICKS per 100 won| paid:{) Leghorns, eaeaete WRocks, Reds $15; Wy ingtons, Minorcas sie; Hea ed B12. " All other varietie: shipment, Ninth, annual free. Rust’s Hatchery, Fargo, N. D. WANTED—10-head of hors ture at the F. W. of! Write or see Fred W. Moff —_ fit, N. “at 221 Third _stréet for live Minnows. Rocks; fort tee uff Or, = ‘ite RENT—Nicely furnished ‘front | aa apartment on first floor, bath ad- joining. Mrs. Rohrer, 618 Sixth street. ‘OR RENT—Furnished nishéd apartment at.the Varney Flats. one 773. E—O) rella tent at $20.00, 1 library table $15.00, one child’s rocker $1. one ten volume Encyclopaedia of architecture, car- pentry and balling $7.50. Also for ii Two light housekeeping . i Also-a. ring Jane, yale pears ment june, July an ee ay lef at 710 Seventh oa Duptoid davenport ra oF ae Cann: aanephone, 1 cornet, 2-8) mixer in A-1 condition. "ae lannafin street. FOR. ae #rih. and two a8 or call 503 Eighth street. FOR ea ithe om. kitchenette. Hiseiburt. a vine j street rns fousd Door. ee y ist eat Teibune ne Bldg. Inquire’ at Tritsne office. FOR RENT—Modern Avan Lb Thompson, s. De 15, all in fine cenditign. Phone REN’ Court. Phone 796. LM GOING TO: MAKE (T A. NATIONALLY &NOWN PRODUCT— Two nicely furnished| we: treet.| S. =|medium weight and mixed yearlings, settee tery ore 1 MARKETS ; s My Aseeclated Presi Lease’ Wire WHEAT MARKET 1S IRREGULAR New Bepeit i Business ‘ial Bad Weather Reports Hoist Prices Despite Selling Chicago, March (P)—New. e: eo business totaling as much ‘a: 250,000. bushels, together: with) persistent adverse weather north- hoisted wheat prices’ at times today in the face o! vy. allie Further reports of a | favorable crop outlook in Oklaho: and else- where ‘southwest were ent, and the wheat market was also affected Oe Sd strength of corn: The world’s available wheat supply total showed a falling off of 6,863,000 bushels. La Wheat closed irregular % cent net lower to % cent advance. Corn 1% @1%s to 2% cents up. Oats unchanged to % cent down and provisions varying from 15 cent decline to 10 cent gain. Selling, which developed oh price bulges in wheat today was associat- ed with general notice of the fact that the wheat market was up 8 to Wheat— May duly Sept. Corn— May July Sept. retertay Yeur Ago on 1.39% @% My @* B% 80% 12,87 12.50 @2 18.60 13.35 14.85 14.63, mee ee Close tae aw 1.40% 1.34% 1.32% 1.59% we 18% 82% 80% % 16% 84% 87% 89% 14.65 14.90 1.10% 148 99 12.45 12.60 12.40 12.55 16.00 16.10 17.00 17.25 13.37 14.55 14.60 13.50 14.70 14.70 NEWS —Today— Low 1.38% 1.83% 4.31% Clone 1.89% ‘to % aires tole 1.31% @%to% 77% ext 4% 9% 33% 4 to% AT ATM! 43% 103% 1.06% 98 12.40 12.55 18. 37 i 55 14.55 10 cents as compared with the recent low point. On the other hand, ad- vices were current that large areas Ka northwest es and in Canada become a sea of mud and that ter jeveral days no field work in the territory affected was looked for. Comprehensive reports from Can- ada said spring plowing and planting in Manitoba is 11 days later than normal, Saskatchewan 15 days late, and Alberta 13 days late. Probable eage, nevertheless, was still said tb show a decrease of only one-tenth of one per cent compared with last year, TODAY'S MARKET CLOSES NEAR YESTERDAY'S LEVELS Minneapolis, May 4.—P)—Wheat scored further on the upside early today, but buying ardor cooled and rices fell back near yesterday's final levels, Surprising strength — in cables, good export sales, and a stiff upturn in corn futures took effect for a time, but profit taking was on an inereasing scale. Close was a shade lower to % cent higher here. Continued strength in ‘cables und sea-| board claims of good overnight ex- port sales, started futures higher but after a modest advance buying power weakened and profit taking brought a reaction. Trading basis in the cash. wheat market was unchanged on the aver- age: with demand good for desirable | 1 a! milling quality and slow for poor.| woi 3.103 Durum offerings were light and de-jysier’, GP te, 110 mand was quiet, with red durum again weak. Mill reports indicated | @ fair flour sales, the demand holding yesterday's provement. Corn buyers refused to féllow the sharp upturn in Chicago May and the trading basis was one cent lower. Oats were quict and steady, with of- ferings light and demand fair. Rye was in fair to good demand, with ‘offerings scanty. Barley was in light supply and de- d_spotted, better grades moving and feeding quality going 11.00; average cost weight 230. spots 25 lower; 8.00 to 8.50. tw pounds Chieago, May 4.—(U, up around than Ti lower than best price: | bots 108 bulk 150 @9. | Gani o does 10.00: weights 10.25 10.25; medium icking sows | Pigs 9.25@10.26. lings steady stron; to Sheep 14,000; fat day; lambs carly 15.50@1 16.35; good wooled sales around steady; Rr eyes 8.001 er or 9.00 \for Flaxseed was firm and unchanged. weight. 80. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK, jouth St. Paul, Minn., May 4. . of A.)\—Cattle 2,700; fed and_ yearlings in moderate quality somewhat improve: froand steady: Minneapolis, May choice 1.42@1.44; yearling 10.00@10.50; with part load) 1.39@1 iG heavies at 11.00; she stock un- changed, mostly 5.75@8. cutters 450@5.50; bulls largely 5.75@6.00; With good hi 6.25; stockers and seeders" nofiinally ey Calves 3,200;: vealers quality con- 1o00 to “itad. to Bed ch ‘good lights slow, weak, 25 Taceday? early top i ts i pound averages: js. dewn 9.80. to 9.90; heavier butchers mostly 926@9.50; OFFICE ROOM FOR RENT RENT—Offict of living oomb ever Knowles Jewelry store, Apply te F. A. Knowles. Corn Ni Flax ‘No; 1, 2.23 > Hogs Chic er; tras 43% pig onds 34@: Egue cases. Cheese unchanged, receipts 8,106 tubs; doar; firsts 135% unchanged; MRS. The ~ UM NOT Go erat cmos S ~ RESIDES Ie TUgRE’S er Wee BE I Tus BOatess TM sows 8.25 to 8.50; pig steady; bulk Sheep 300; fat lambs slow, wuixs| few choice ‘clipped | lambs 15.50; odd head native spring | lambs 18,00; sheep nominally strong | to 25 higher; few strong weight clip- ped ewes 7.00 to 7.50; wooled ewcs | CHICAGO wehbe | logs 16,000; fairly Beciee 210 to 250 pounds 10.15 | day’ 60 to 300 pound butchers / briskly on the urgent retreat, of a 5; most packing sows 8.8 s fully 25 cents low few best heavyweight 10 05@10.50; 10.00@10.55 light Te 10.00@10.40; | ed to be governed by conditions with- | Was set. 8.60@: ttle 8,000; fed steers and year. strong to 26 cents higher ig most advance 25@50 cents hty steers 13.80; Har Pht it 12.00; yearling heifers 11.00; w medium bulls 6.60@6.95; very few sales of clipped lambs around 25 cents. lower than indications wooled lambs, weak to 25 cents lower; desirable clipped choice 88 pounders “to cit: 17.00@17.26 sheep slow; few opening 50; asking around 25 MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN receipts 105. cars compared to 149 a ¥| year ago Cash No. 1 northern 1.38 @1.40; No, 1 dark northern spring, choice to fancy 1.45@1.48; good to ordinary to good No. 1 hard 5) . 1 dark hitd 8@1.47; to arrive 1.38@1.47; oe 1:38;. Sept. ellow 80 Oats No. oh ghite 4655 @48' Bare Rye Mo. at 2 Te 1.10, 12.32. CHICAGO PRODUCE - May 4.—()}—Butter high- standards. Tuesday 9.68; D. of A. ulk ligh' Rally steady weights around 10 to 15 cents lowe day's averages or 25 cents top 10.65; odd ew York, May to 200 pounds ti: forces were ay overcrowded for a lowering of strong) newal rate to four light | ence the price mov: 5; slaughter | in the market itse! | The weekly stee orted practically she stock! production of and fat cows| The composite bulls strong; | showed a slight lower; several load up to/in 25 vi best ‘one to nearly v small Villers lambs open’ compan Tues- B 26; package of|/the seasoned butchers. ble lambs Ohio common desirable clip-|tion of heavy Chicago Great despite recent rumors involvirig chison, Readin; choice medium 4.—(P)-—Wheat | gains. ring 1.40@ lontana on} about that 1,35, cr ee good gains, ferred broke’ six points.. creamery ex: 41%; extra 36@38%; sec- receipts 26,577. jump of 18 ers, Pe Baldw ally. Total 2,100,000 shares. um compa short interes’ wy in the cle! many of Chandler and some iced motors also were strong. ng of the rails embraced both di and Baltimore & and. preterred were elevated to new peaks and a resump- the speculative issues. figure. ards % pot Fecapitattedtion Moats. sal ‘STOCK MARKET CLOSES STRONG: Briskly 4, gain at stock market, which fscep the call money per cent there 9.75@ | nothing: in the day’s news to influ- ich seem- | Were engaged. ement wi If. 1 trade rev on change i demand for st price of pig reduction, f four points. which re idend raving referred, merger Southern Pacific also recorded good Operators behind the risé in Gen- eral Motors encountered an. enorm- ous volume of stock around the new peak of 197 established during the morning, and appeared to be having difficulty in trying to push the price American Can, | sand & number of oth: recorded Kreaue of Mints. pre: points: Closing was strong: Sweeping aside all resistance, General Motors forged upward to 198; a new high figure, in the final hour and Dupont, rose four Coca Cola climbed: nearly: 5 to 108%; a new high record and La- clede Gas went to 2! ny, les ~U GELIEVE IN BEG INDEPENDENT —/ NOBODY'S GOING To yy waar By Taylor re, iron Steel | it marriage, best | shares held relatively steady, Colora- jo Fuel mounting to the highest price, articularly Paige Detroit Motors was bid up to a new high, coincident with the announce-| S¥stoms authoritics. it Graham Brothers had ac-| controlling interest in the of the other ) an overnight on rumors of Allis: Chalm- Union Carbide, ‘in and Eric were lifted mater- approximated yy! ALLENE SUMNER IEA Service Writer it, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘ork, April 4.-Pola Negri, dane in expensive mburning even more becoming than /the jewcled robes of a Du Barry which she had so often worn on the silver sheet, swoohed over the coffin, of Rudo}; ‘ Valentino less than eight mont! ago, proclaiming unto all the world that she was his one and only fiuncee, that he loved her to the death, and that all joy had now fled from her life forever. “Pola is cursed with an unlucky Love star!” she moaned. That was eight months ago. a day or so now Pola herself be married “somewhere ‘neath waxy white chestnut flowers Paris.” The groom is Prince Serge Mdivani brother of Mae Murray's newly quired ‘husband, the Prince David Mdivani. Whfech Do Geiitlemen Prefer Thus will Hollywood's prize bru- nette beauty and one of * Holts woo s prize blonds become sisters-in-law, |and engage, perhaps, in. a friendly jcompetition as to whether gentle- |men princes really do prefer blonds jor brunettes, the answer being wi }one stays with her husband lon | , Thus, too, once more does | Negri, born Appolonia | tempt. the jealous Love Gods who have hounded her from the time, | when a young girl in her teens, she, had what she calls her “one great | love,” only to see him snatched from | her by death, | That -was the beginning. In sh | years that followed, Pola} beauty, charm, fascination, call it | what you will, brought her the offe jings of love from men of every | | elim » every nation, every walk in} fe (c “oy pyrigh In will the of Pol: Chalupec, | Constructive Forces Again) {eH Lave | at Work Today and Prices | Sometimes Pola ‘herself troubles If loved intervened. lost love, and return. But | threats, blackmail, | finally ‘death itself. “T enter this marriage with my! breath stilled,” Pola “Some- thing will happen, al-| a does.” Tt was while playing in the | Im-| Mt Petial Theutre of Warsaw, Poland, | hat Pola’s “first real love _came."| He was a young Polish painter who | begged to paint her portrait. They The wedding day Then he fell ill and died | A consumption, nursed to the end} ‘ola vowed never to love again never to be “so hurt by lo But love came again soon and with | Her Fitst Husband | | Pola was returning from her home! jin Warsaw to the theatre in Berlin} where she was playing. At the bor-| der town of Sassnowiece she was stripped of her jewels by the Polish Pola stormed and raved. She would not return to Warsaw for a permit. The customs men sent her to the commandant. The commandant kept her waiting| five hours, Thut was because she! haughtily sent word that she was! Pola Negri herself. After five hours she saw the com- mandant. He was Count Eugene Dombski. “The instant looked into his eyes | U knew my fate,” Pola told the tale, The jewels, ‘were returned. She delayed her ‘trip and visited his mother in her castle the: Four months later she was the Countess | Dombski. The honeynioon was spent in a remote hunting lodge. Then they returned to the ancestral castle. Remembers Movie Job | About this time Pola remethbered | that she had a movie job in Berlin. | She had been “in between pictures” when ‘she met the count. Now came a summons to return to Berlin at once. The count was obdur i had married no picture actress, She would stay in his castle. The climax came when, at the height of the quar- tet; he dtew a revolver and told her she: would riot leave the castle: “In the dead of night,” Pola sneak- ed from the castle, went to Berlin, wrote her count that she would never | Friashagl and a divorce was granted jim. He came in the picture once more when, at the time of his exwife’s re- ported engagement to Charlie Chap- lin, ‘he invited via cable that worthy to a duel, declaring that the final his dark-eyed actress betrothed. | - divorce papers had not gone ‘npbiighs and that Pola was still his wife. Pola is said to have proved other- wise. : Meets Chaplin in Berlin The Chaplin engagement was but one in a long chain of love affaits forged by Pola when she came to ricu in 1924. Pola had met Chap- lin in Berlin the year before. Th friendship was renewed in Holly- wood, It was not long before Pola announced her engagement. Charlie had little to say about it. Then one day, wet with tears ngry, hurt, Pe announced that there was no engagement—that she was not a rich enough girl for | Charl Me must marry much Still) Charlie said nothing and very shortly married Charlie was but the” beglbining. Pola was rumored engaged to Rod LaRocque, the Prince Trougetsky, Bill Haines and Tadd Styka, a Polish painter who refused to exhibit Pola’s portrait when he heurd of her en-* gagement to Chaplin, And then came Rudolph Valen- tino. They met_at a bal masque given Marion Davies a few weeks after ha Rambova had gone to Ew ope for her divorce from “Rudy.” Pola said of this meeting— “Our souls met upon our lips, and we were one. Two aching hearts tir- by ed of the battle,” Tragedy Again tragedy again death ending intervened. their en- But Valentino gagemen And nowromance, love, marriage again. Pola in her second marria | acquires an old-world title as did in her first. Countess Princess now. The Prince Serge Mdivani is two urs younger than 31-year-old Pola. They have known one another since childhood. Will her follow her? e then. “unlucky love star” still BISMARCK GRAIN (Paralehed by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, May 4 Ne. 1 dark norther No. 1 northern. No. 1 amber dur 1 mixed durum.. 1 red durum 1 flax..... Speltz per ewt. SHELL CORN No, 3, 56 Ibs, or more No. 4, 65 lbs 1 cent per pound discount under 55 Ib. Ear corn, 70 Ibs., S cents un- der shell. Hard winter wheat.. . $1.16 Dark hard winter wheat... Lt MINNEAPOLIS RANGE lay 4 Open High Low Close 1.87% 1.87% 1.36% 1.87 1.88% 1.38% 1.37% 1.381; 1.35% 1.35% 134% 1.35 1.04% 1.04% 1.03% 1.04 1.01% 102% 1.01% 1.02 AC% 46% 45% 4615 46% 46% 45% (4614 44% AM A4% 44% 220 2.22 220 2.22 226 228 226 227% 2.3016 TB% 18% i be 17 18% 11% 11% —_—_—_—_——_ DULUTH RANGE May 4 E ib HR Liha any 1.80% 1.31% 1.30% 1.30% aad om 9. Hn % 6.08% 1.09 2 he (08% 1.07 100.13; third 4 1 4 1-48 100.31; U. U.S. G. 4s 108.2 CHICAG! Chicago, May 4 red 1.40%; No. 4 ps ee 2 mixed 80; No. 3 yellow Ry HO Not quoted. Buriey 15@39- Timothy’ secd 4.35@5.35. Clover seed 29,.25@36.00. Bellies 14.75. CHICAGO -POULTRY Chicago, May 4.—(P)—Poultry alive unsettled; receipts 4 cars; fowls 24 @36; broilers. 25@40; ‘turkeys 30; roosters 15; ducks 28@33; geese 17 MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis,- May 4.—4)—Flour unchanged; shipments 32,162 barrels. Bran 28.00@28.50, eneo. BUTTE! Fargo, N. D., May Be Bathe Site not quoted; packing stock 24, Too Late To Classify "ORs, ANT at tag Mowat: MOB john juan omuny. | ate nd 2 practical new. zara one, 470 pF |

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