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PAGE TWO LIVESTOCK WHEAT PRICES | Market Influenced Unex- pected Firmness of Liver- pool Quotations by Chicago, * cations of corn appeared to h there was an improved c for oats. Wheat closed fir higher, corn 1% to varying Ie vance, ate arise of 12. Although ra of domestic \h some bearish ef. for strength of ket formed more ance during m a counierbal- » of the time. Meanwhile, repor's from some i tions of the s heat belt, South Dakota in d of thin stand in late f @ result of} ‘A Chie ago expert Watertown, S. D., heavy perman- ent loss. | WHEAT “AR aS tie AT MINNEAPOL 13, meapoliz, May 15,.-0P\—Re.| 1 fn oversold. teehnical | aged in wheat today rains and the fore- ctions where need-| cen bugs from a! nsas were a new) cents higher | Highs for the di y were edged up | he last hour 5-8 cents | and came back Barley cased d regained most of gained 1-2 cent after started firm ing 5-4 cent. seed vga quiet to fair. tein the market con- , ith high protein ats lower. Ordinary s steady with weight in = demand, Inter wheat was steady and} cee Offerings were small. Durum was quict and undertone! was casy. Corn offerings were larger and quiet and dragey. to good demand Arce. to 1 cent. lower. & * eround st ©) um grades 7. iward 8.50; stoc (ee. tena Calves 05 and feeders) and sort) or riore high- | mestly 13.00 panes 20 1 most lights and butchers to 1 9.00 @ 9.25; underweights 5 be £07 eae 75; average cost rie we ight 230. sng . 200; run very ight, market | lpominally steady to all clasces. a HICAGO LIVESTOCK pnicase, May a5. 0 rece) art to to oe lower than Mon-| day’s average light hogs showing most decline; choice 180 to 220 lb. averages. Too; “160 ii ‘bs "3.40 to, 10.00; a 130 I Sreatie2 ee quality ws | ty plainer; - market like about ’3 10 to 25c lower trade; heavy steers 14. ight yearl- { es 5 to 1 laughter nd choice 1300- 1500 ibs, rit) ves 3, killing to 15.00, 1100-1300 13.00 ie. 15.00; 950-: 100 lee ¥ to 15.00; common and m Bao hs. up 9.50 to 13.28. Fed abt good and choice 750-950 . 12.75 to a son pee good choice z Stoo; common and medium 8.57 to 12.25. to 12.00; common and medium 7.50 to 9.00; low cutter and cutter 6.25 to 7.50. Bulls, good and choice fhe?) 9.00 to 10.753 cutter to med- yfium 7.50 to 9.25. ? Vealers (milk fed) good and choice 12.50 to 115.50; medium 11.00 to 12.50; cull n 8.00 to 11.00; stocker) M Jind feeder. steers, good and choice| J ts) 11.50 to 12.75; oo Be weet) sifu 9.25 to 11.50. en 000; better grade fat springers mostly s and so: rts consi lasses, spriny bs, choice 17.25 to 18.25; med- to 17.25; ay and Sern tale Lami (92 Ib. down) 18 13.75 to 15.21 11.50 to 13.75; medium (92-100 ib) 13.00 to. 1600. medium to choice (160 lbs. p of 1 cent on seattered | offerings were light | MARKETS | HIGHER TODAY were in fair to good demand | [| stocks of the meial above ground “eight ae ete’ leadership of the 10.00 paid forjness of Wabash and Southern to} Cows, good and choice 9.00) July | operators working for higher price: jagain running close to 2,500,000 | | Shares. ‘. Call money gain in plentiful) By Associated Press Leased Wira CHICAGO GRAIN TABLE 13 3 —Toda Open Close Yesterday Yi ear wen y High 1.49 151% 1 @‘ 1.4075 a July, (old) July, (new) 89% 1 | FIN ANCIAL NEWS —Today Low 02 03%, 3 1.05% 1.06% | ADDITIONAL SPORTS ||: } HOUSE OF DAVID BASEBALL TEAMTO PERFORM IN BISMARCK ON JUNE 23 leeeeeaed ahd GONE “ay and another day nearer New York and the final terminus jof the longest trek ever attempted | by a group of athletes, Andrew Payne, Claremore, Okla., |who has covered the 2845.1 miles from Los Angeles in 469:39:10 to hold first place in the field of 55, | blazed the trail from Arrowhead | yanterday, 41.1 miles in 5:50:48. The 565 athletes who remain in the Pyle pack are an increasing source f wonderment to the thousands view them daily. Tanned and with their hair bleached by expos- ure, the men are questioned on their physical endurance from the time they start for control points until \they retire for the night. Mcst Colorful and Famous | Diamcnd Company in Semi-! professional Ranks Signed, Today—‘Dec’ Love Once De-| feaied the Bewhiskercd Ball Gentry were planning a reception for Man- dan’s newly organized ball club, the long-awaited Homecoming and Booster Day game next Sunday at ead local park, Neil Churchill, man- j completed plans for the ap-! i @*s 655% ‘ance of the famous House of | vid baseball team here on June | Pennant Progress } he most colorful diamond com- pany in semi-professional baseball, |® a team that ranks with many major AMERICAN A‘ ss pogo league clubs, is coming to Bismarck Pet. from the Pacific coast where they | St. Paul.. ee ae are touring at the present time. Kansas City 18 12 600 More epithets, compliments andj Milwaukee 18 12 601 descriptive phi s have been used| Minneapolis . 17 12 586 by sport w in describing this | Indianapolis . 14 14 500 famous be-whiskered clan thar. any| Toledo .. 17 A338 other team that annually tours the Louisville . 18 400 United States. It is undoubtedly | Columbus . 23 258 the strangest and oddest sight that America’s national sport offers. Baseball never es for the 18| men from the House of David colony at Benton Harbor, Michigan. They play the ycar around. In the win- ter, these foes of the razor and bar- as 's shears trek through the south. wing up cither Results Monday Milwaukee 3; Kansas City 2. Toledo 7; Columbu: No other games scheduled. Games Teday Kansas City at sc elas Milwaukee at St. Paul. STOCK MARKET | ipts W heat re 1 i New York, May 15.—()—Heavy | Profit taking in many of the stand- | ard industrial and railroad shares} turned the course of prices irregu- lar in today’s stock market after an| carly outburst of strength in the air- {1 plane, copper and motor sha Early gains of one to 11 poin' materially reduced in the late reali ing movement, although new leade’ were quickly brought upward 1 1 1 1 zs The volume of business again taxed facilities of the exchange, the | ticker falling 43 minutes behind market by early afternoon, |total sales in the first three hours | Supply at the renewal figure of 5 per cent despite the heavy month demand for funds Heavy; into new high ground, was saraulat ed by the decrease in the export ; price of copper, coincident with r ports of a brisk foreign demand fo; he red metal, and the t of a sharp decrease in durum amber du durum last month. Studebaker, w mant for some bing si price in fo and Hupp also were in fase dem: ‘hough General feta an General Match preferred, Victor hine and Consolidated Gas also re under presuu Equitable office advanced eight: point ; more points today by touching : top at 145. Foundation, Magma copper, American zinc pre ferred, A. M. Byers, Liquid Ca: jand International Business Machines jsold three to four points higher. Curtiss and Wright airplane issues. ran into heavy realizing after their} 4 early rise of about 11 points cach, {and fell back several points from} high level Is were mixed, strength "ot! Lehigh Valley and Delaware and Hudson being offset by the heav @105 @1.02 Louisville et Toledo. Indianapolis at Columbus. ie coast. In he northern tier Big Leaues Refused : u AMERICAN LEAGUE . 7 The quality of baseball that they Ww 4 Pet. | play can have no greater recommen-|New York. 20 5 8 i i dation than the fact that many of | Philadelphia 140 «17667 t the players have turned down num-/| Cleveland . 18 11 621 To crous big league offers. Because of |St. Louis...-sss. 14 16. 146 Rails and Industrials Down |1 px: house, they | Washington . WW 14 440 ‘ 1 refuse to don the 3 of any of | Boston .. 30 15M —Airplane, Copper, Motor, |; the major te: Detroit . 120 200375 v1 Chi 9 2 Shares Upward Pi pete es Se eee Results Monday New York 7; Detroit 5. Boston 3; St. Louis 2. Washington 4; Chicago 2. Philadelphia 6; Cleveland 3. Games Today Chicago at Washington. Cleveland at Phila elphia. Adjusters colle the House of Da is school to a ade vic St. Louis at Boston. Detroit at New York. NATIONAL LEAGUE Ww L Cincinnati . 19 11 633 ew Over’ Chicago 18 12 600 allow, ing |S . Games Today iladelphia at Cincit New York at Chicago. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. Boston at St. Louis. Pie rvas ena a ah nasa Yesterday's Games || PUZZ) ING LAYS eee NATIONAL LEAGUE RK H 00 | city commissioners he tion, issued this evening, reveals that a change of venue is under con- ideration. The entire question depends on the outcome of several suits insti- tuted in Paris courts by the treas- ury against tennis clubs for recov- ery of taxes claimed and_ which clubs have refused to pay. The suit will be heard before the end of May. Should the decision go against the tennis clubs, the federation will in- sist that the Davis cup challenge round be played at Wimbledon. Les Bolstad, King of Public Links, Works for Athletic Honors Minneapolis, “May 15.—P)—A former national public links golf champion, who now is the Western Conference title holder, is one of the hardest working athletic rookies at the University of Minnesota, He is Les Bolstad, who has been & wizard on the links. The blonde lad won the national public links crown in 1926 and added the Big ©! Ten title last year. But none of that turned his head and he has been out nearly every day of the school year struggling to make the football, basketball and baseball teams. So far he has failed, but Coach Arthur Bergman 0 of the Gopher baseball squad rates the youth as a promising candidate for second base. ‘The baseball season over, Bolstad will organize a golf team to repre- sent Minnesota in the 1928 Confer- ence meet. Paving Cover One More Block, Bids Asked on Sewers & Watermains (Continued from page on:) distance, the provivion ia, in question, in my Bar| ald is not violated,” and that “filling stations and like obstructions upon streets are sub- ject to removal at such time or up- on such conditions as the board of determine.” O. W. Roberts, who had previous- ly complained about the honking of horns at the Corwin-Churchill gar- directly across the street from 00 hls residence and had queationed the legality of permitting curb filling stations, told the commission that in view of the city attorney’s opin- ion he would insist that curb gaso- line filing stations be ordered out. “They create a nuisance and it must be abated,” Mr. Roberts said. The commission delayed action on the matter until later. Flyers Have Hard Battle 2,000 Feet Up (Continued from nage one) grabbed a hammer and began to Pet. | belabor him over the head. Anderson's Stor: “It was awful,” Anderson told Sheriff Harvey Teddler. “The first blow at me barely grazed my head. I tried to grapple with him and at the same time keep my machine from pitching. One of the blows made everything go black. Then I remember coming to. saw we were heading in a nose dive. I jerked the controls and tried to right the plane. Just as I was facts tee out of the dive, I felt the the ground for some distance and then the ship went over the nose.” Attaches at the asylum filled in the narrative. The plane approached Pontiac erui ne Tei peat at an al- titude of about 2, feet. Sudden- ly it Seis to spiral about. This continued for about a minute, then in 200 feet of the viata the ship | | 1 k! 0| 1) JUDGING INFIELD FLY Are there any special methods used by major league umpires in guiding them as to what actually constitutes an field fly, when there are runners on first and second or first, second am: third and less than two out? New York . Chieago ... Fitzsimmons, Root and Gonzales, eee Major league umpires have no set instructions to guide them as to what constitutes an infield fly. The calling of an infield fly re- solves itself purely into a matter of judgment. A certain hit ruled an infield fly by one umpire might not be so regarded by another umpire. . Tauscher and Smith, na Hemsley. R | Peeves eons ames | 4. eA Boston .. St. Louis Delaney, Robertson and Taylor; righted itself and, after attainin, an e' keel, made as if to land, When it touched land, however, the underpinning crumpled, throwing the machine over several times. Anderson was found unconscious, strapped ia the pilot’s seat. Frech- ette. badly dazed, still clutched in his hand the handle of a broken hammer. ATTACKED FLYER FORMER ot PAUL, MINN., AVIATOR Paul, May” 15.—(”)—Harry ‘Aue 28, the attacked pilot AS Pontiac is a former St. Paul, Minn. avi His father, A Anderson, is resident of the Brown Studio, Ine., re and resides at 645 Grand avenue. When told of his son’s injuries. the elder Anderson said that he will . An infield fly is merely a fair fly sO aS Littlejohn, Haid, Reinhart and Wit pal other than a line drive, that| $2 oo fe Pee o, eeay Ht Bis tae N: APOLIS RANGE AMERICAN LEAGUE | ihe umpife, shoul reach hin de hugust when, his mother died,” sald 5 a 4 64 vicision as quickly as 8 on an BISMARCK GRAIN 5 1 and has been doing emer a one High Low Close (Furnished by Russell iNler Co.) Sb Tons 3 é ojinfield fly and ‘immediately let the pas May 1.45% 147% 143. 1.47% Bismarck, ‘lay 15 Gray and ‘Schang; Morris and! team in the ficld.as well as the base Charles “Speed” Holman, operat- July 145% 148% 1 1.48 1 dark northern Heving. runners know his judgment on the/ing manager of the northwest air- ried 45 1.48% 145 | 1.48% 1 northern ... play. x ways, Inc. was acquainted with jept. 1.45 48% 1, ABTS anki H E| If he doesn’t believe the fly ball! Anderson May’ 1260 1.28 126 128 1 mixed durum .. Detroit 11 [can be handled by an. intielder, hel “Anderson learned to pilot an air- July 122 123. 121% 1.23 1 red durum New 9 jsimply remains i plane at the Wold-Chamberiain eT OO yas ealaat ‘Sullivan, Vanaiider and Woodall; Neves Jt. cay, Be calla it an Satield|P Ficld in 10920,” said Holman, “He F 8 re ss ho) # Clevelanil . z A 2 egal the ramets and ee them vial ibs Co Fe to al : , 0 advance at eir peri] as on any May 2.38% 2.38% 2.38% 2.38% Philadelphia - 9 s 1 other fly ball, [At the Movies | ae 2.36% 2.37 2.36 2.3616 ee ane me. end J. Sewell; : ~ fe ; oe unpre nee rules fais At the Movies | a | ane, ——— f ly an ii y, it makes no Hoes ea tie R H_ -E/ difference who handles the ball. If CAPITOL THEATRE 4 oa “10% "7213 12% nt per pi Chicago ... ee s 3{an outfielder should make the play| France may well be 5 of the Sept. clo Masta ea der 55 lb. ear corn, 70 lbs., five cents! Washington 1/and muff the ball, it would not mat-| epic film rayal of Victor Hugo's ‘under shell, Hard winter wheat y NGE ovLuye mn Dark hard winter wi May 1 High Lew Close POTATOES Chicago, May 15.--(AP—U, S. D. —Potatoes—receipts 146, J. 8. shipments 660, on track 2: | ter. Once the hit was ruled an in- field fly, that settled it, the batsman was out. An infield fly must, of course, be 4 Blankenship, Connally and A Gaston and Tate. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION R H E,a fair ball. There have been times .2 1 gi where the umpire calls infield fly, 3 6 only to have the ball, because of a Jonnard, Sand-|high wind that is- blowing, fall on $1.28 | + 1.27 ansas City . ilwaukee ... Zinn and Peters tot to 108: Range of eull RANGE OF CARLOT SALES Minneapolis, 0/3 ancl nose Borhnera conn carlot grain sales: fon No. 1 dark northern 1.51@1.78; No. cars; old stock demand slow, mar- %|ket dull; Wisconsin sacked round 4{}whites 1.26 to 1.40; fancy shade higher; Idaho sacked russets 1.30 to 1.45; fancy shade higher; partly graded 1.10 to 1.25. New stock demand slow, market slightly weak- er; Louisiana, Alabama and Texas saeked Bliss Triumphs 2.75 to. 3.00, mostly 2.85 to 3.00; No. 2, 1.59 to 15.—(AP)— | 1.65. Wheat Minnse polis, May 15.—(?)—(U. 8. age 1.5913; No.jD. A.)—Potatoes—light wire ii % @1.77% ; quiry, demand slow, market weak. ee teen 1.71; No.|Carloads delivered sales, freight 1.79%; No, 2 hard|only deducted, Minneapolis and St. May %; No. 2 amber durum | Paul rate, sacked cwt., round whites, ian No. 1 mixed durum 'U. 8. No. 1, few gales, 1.0 to 1.20, Cae. 2 ‘ey whet | B A04 mostly around 1.15. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, May 16.—()—Flour unchanged. Shipments 42,523 bbls. Bran 35.50 to 36.00. ers and MeMenemy. foul territory without being touched | ¢ by a fielder. This would be a foul} n H ball and could no‘ be tegarded as Columbus 10 infield fly. That batsman would Toledo 9 simply hit over. Mee! ind Bird; Nomara, Maun, stead and O'Neil. Huntzinger, High Taxes May Force Davis Cup Challenge Round out of France Others open date. WESTERN LEAGUE Pueblo 9; Oklahoma City 2. Paris, I” y sm —The ev Denver 2 2; Tad 5 cup challenge round ma: pay .be maha 7; Amat io 9. Des Moines-Wichita, rain. in E glen instead of hip. tennis Pola. °, trophy. The French Tennis federa- Der*y Pedalers Hit __|tion is seriously cons stag- ing the matches in Lone typ -Wim- bledon pref Pavement for Erie pr ernment“abandons its Baad of Ashtabula, Ohio, Moy 15.—(™—|ing not only gate receipts at tennis C. €. “Cross Country” Pyle’s blis- tournaments but dues members pay tered bunions hit the pavement from| various clubs as well. An official phere tomay: for Erie, Pa, 45 miles statement from the — federa- e famous classic, “Les Miserable: which opened yesterday at the Ca: itol Theatre. ee, went belere bel the his- ry of motion pictures has s pro- duction been ae with such tlael- ity. The extravagant statements meade in advance of the showing are oy borne out ay, the picture, for can doubt, after seeing this al-Film de France produc- tion, that the towns in which the action of the novel, weve supposed to have taken place were recon- structed as they appeared a century ago. Gabriel _Gabrio, in the character of Jean Valjean, proves hit sterling actor. Hir role is a ‘aiff. cult one to portray, but he makes the part exist. He is first seen.in the prison scenes. , incident-| ally, were ae at the old ison at Toulon, convicts enacting roles. ighout the entire length of us is sym- thy hel toned pense. It a4 really ne at lcture, ELTINGE TH pene, ally O'Neil er Owen Moore are featured in . “ WKRC WGHP WMAQ GHP 8:30—National_ Grand ‘Ope ‘AM WSA 9:30—Dance Music—WEAF WHO El- stage life which comes to the tinge for Wednesday and Thursd: ally has the role of a little Iris! Jewish shop girl, discharged by an effeminate floorv:alker and thrown upon the tender mercies of the world at a time when she hasn’t a cent. Her yearnings to become a grand see singer seem about to materialize when she meets a crook, who promises to use his influence to get her on the stage. She does get on the stage—but as a slapstick artist who does eccentric falls. Her “career,” however, teach- es ker what real love is, regenerates & crook snd takes some of the con- ceit out of a self-satisfied society man with a stupid sister. of the undercarriage touch | tai it banked at an angle of about 45! Philadelphia’s 41, St. Louis’ 40, degrees and began a more plan noes Cleveland’s 37, New York’s 39 and earthward, nose down. with-| Detroit's extra) "8 story ls Daughter of Rep. Signalness Gives Teacher Black Eye Watford City, N. D., May 15.—() —Details of a fistic encounter be- tween a 16-year-old girl and a man school teacher in which the peda- gogue came out second best with a black eye, were aired and the dit- ferences settled at a public hearing here yesterday. The girl, a daughter of Repre- sentative R. O. Signalness, gave George Barringer, her teacher, the black eye. The teacher then re- taliated HB striking the girl. The girl’s parents asked that the teacher be discharged, which the school board refused to do after the hearing and signalness agreed to drop the matter and send his chil- dren back to school. eo | NEWS BRIEFS | ° 200, 8, Chicago—John J. McGraw, man-| ¢ r of New York Giants, was slightly injured when struck by an automobile, Washington—In a coalition of the south and west, Senator Nye of gh Dakota sees a means of end- what he terms the “rule of ab- He utism” of industrial northeast, inj an article in “Plain Talk.” D.—Three men ing robbed a store at Grassy Butte were taken into custody near here. Eastland, Tex. izens here ob- @ court order against sealing of a horned toad in the cornerstone of @ new courthouse. Although London has a reputa- tion for rain, a careful record shows that it has much less than many American cities. London's 25 inches compares favorably with FEATURES ON THE AIR Wednesday, May 16 (Central Standard Time} § Fhe tab Foresters; Vocal—WJZ KDKA KYW. o—trana ‘Troubadours; Smile Program—WEAF was: WGY ay LA 1 WEAl WL Win KSD WRHM \ WHO WOW WDA! KVOO WB. AS WSM WMC WSB KOA Ws ie—Gperatte, in iinistaees relat ceatures oy Wh Sonate walu wi 7:30—Goodrich Hgur a he Opera of tit EW WTAM WWJ AR WO: IN KSD WCC 8:00—~Coluebla. feu ie oan waas Weal Weise arc bc Hour: Musleat re WwMAG WOWS DEMON Raine Wo) ss 1KSD ro WHO SvOW KVOO WHAS WSB KPRCG EAR We wae way wi roan mmbule "—WEAF WRC WGR mixed 1,52 to 1.54, Corn No, 2 mixed 1.02 3-4; No. 9 yellow 1.04 to 1.05 1-4, Oats No. 2 white 67 1-2 to 69c; No. 3 white 64 to 68 3-4c. Rye No. 2, 1.33 1-2, Barley 95c to 1.08. Timothy seed 4.10 to 4.85, Clover seed 19.00 to 26.00. aver 11.87; ribs 12.00; bellies 75. CHICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, May 15.—(AP)—Butter higher receipts 12,815 tubs; cream- cry extras 44; standards 44; extra firsts 43@431: firsts 42@4212; seconds 38@41. Eggs, lower; receipts 42,997 cases; firsts 28% @29; ordinary firsts 27@ 28; storage packed extras 31%; firsts 30%. —— FARGO LIVESTOCK Fargo, May 15.—(®)—Cattle: Good steers 11.50 to 12.50, medium steers 10.50 to 11 fair steers 10.09 to 11.00; steers 9.50 to 10.50; good heifers 10.00 to 11.00; medium heifers 9.00 to 10.00; fair heifers 8.00 to 9.00; rae heifers 7.00 to 8.00; good cows 8.25 to 9.25; medium cows 7.50 to O80, fair cows 6.75 to 7.25; plain cows 6.00 to 6.50; cutters 5.25 to 5.75; good bulls 7.! 50 to 8.00; medium bulls 7.00 to 1.50; common bulls 6.60 to 7.00; calves top veal 12.00 to 13.00; cull veal 7.00 to 9.00; light heavy calves 10.00 to 11.00; heavy calves 6.00 to 8.00; canner calves 5.00 to 6.00, Sheep—Top lambs 16.00 to 17.00; heavy lambs 14.00 to 15.00; cull lambs 12.00 to 13.00; light ewes 9.00 to 10.00; heavy ewes 7.00 to lao ub ewes 3.0 to 6.00; bulks 6.00 to 8.00. eet 8.00 to 9.10; 180- .80 to 9.00; 250-1 300, 0, 5. 300-350, 8.60 to 8.7 755 leet 7.00 to 8.00; stags 7.00 to Tender, Aching, Perspiring Feet Amazing Relief in 5 Minutes or Money Back Don’t worry about how long you've been troubled or how many other preparations you have tried. 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