The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 24, 1929, Page 9

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a “MONDAY, JUNE 24 MART SEBS SHARP [Rew vos toca ~ UPTURN IN WHEAT ———e Flooded Fields in Southwest, < Drouth In North, Give Firm- er Tone to Buying Chicago, June 24.— () — Flooded field in the harvest region southwest and dearth of moisture in drought districts northwest led to a sharp new upturn of wheat values today. A gen- eral rush to buy wheat was witnessed and the consequent rise of values was shared by corn. Starting with %c to rt to 2c gain, wheat reacted a little but afterward averaged higher than be- fore. Corn opened % to ‘sc up and kept near to initial figures. Oats were easy. Provisions held steady. ‘With torrential rains of two to eight inches reported in parts of Kansas and elsewhere carte c Cotisolidated Gas rysler coe lumbia Gramaphx Col. Gas and Eléctric bringing opera plete stop in various places, buy- | Curtiss Aero. ing of wheat t ‘future“delivery contracts ma de Ni took place on a big scale here much of the time today. Simultaneously, word came that no important relie! from ‘drought in the spring wheat re- gion was apparent. Kansas dispatches said it was diffl- cult to realize the enormous shrink- age of the wheat crop southwest un- Jess one hed actually seen the results. Another authority wired that per- sonal observation from Newton, Kan., south to Elreno, Okla., showed that on account of excessive moisture and’ other causes. wheat had recently de- teriorated one-third from what it was promising. International Mere. International Nickel Int. Telephone and Telegra; Johns-Manville . MINNEAPOLIS WHEAT MARKET CLOSES UNCHANGED Minneapolis, June 24.—(#)—The wheat market clesed about unchanged from the opening. Profit taking and selling, of wheat by floor traders caused a break near the close but the market showed firmness just be- fore the low for the day. Oats were quiet with a strong. un- dertone. Rye seems to have been overlooked in the bull market. Barley tone was firm with trade light. Flax was featureless early but picked up | under crusher buying pressure, Of- ferings are very light. Cash wheat demand is good with market tone firm to strong. Offer- ings are moderately heavy. Durum offerings are light to fair and demand is quiet. Winter wheat offerings con- tinue light with inquiry good. Demand is fair for cash corn. Oats are in generally fair demand. Rye demand was fair to good. The barley market was unchanged with Frags 3 rer es 5 to 20. Flax, “demand. is | Standard Oil of New Jersey holding fair to good. Dockage de- | Standard Oil of New York mand is holding excellent. Studebaker Packard Pan-American Petroleum Par. Fam. Las. ........ Pennsylvania Railroad Phillips Petroleum .. ition Texas Gulf Sulphur . CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Tobacco Products . Chicago, June 24—(?)—(U.8.D.A.)—| Union Pacific . Hogs—45,000 hogs, including 20,000 di- | U. 8. Rubber Market fairly active, strong to| U. 8. Steel Vanadium .. 250 Ibs $10.65 to11.25; 160 $10.50 to 11.25; 130 to ies 11.20; sows $9. 255, pigs ‘cateeaste choice 90 to- 130 Ibs $10.00 to 11.10. Cattle, 18,000. Calves, 3,000. Steer trade 25 cents lower, steer run with light kind at yearlings predominating, in between grades off most, early top $15.50, very little doing in butcher 1.14% 1.14% 1.194% 1.19% % 113% 1.24% pg ns classes, steers, choice 4 to 1500 Ibs $14.00 to 15.50; 1100 to 1300 93% lbs $14.00 to 15.50; 950 to 1100 Ibs $15.50; common and medium 850 Ibs we dual 10 io 980 Ibe #1880, to e end choic a3 | Dee. cutter $8.00 to 7.50. Bulls, good and | Dec. choice (beef) $10.25 to 11.50; cutter to suly medium $8.00 to 10.25. Vealers (milk fed) good and choice $13.00 to 15.50; ne medium $10.50 to 13.00; cull and com- { tive lambs held at $14.00 to 14.50; ngers above $15.00, yearlings steady $175 to 1200; fat ewes $6.00 to 6.50. good and choice 93" lbs down $1425 ‘to 1625; medium $1275, £] wnes i 44.85; cull and commen duly ...... 143% 1.18% 1.12% 1.13% Ewes, medium to cholee 180 Ibe down | gent, Tises Lies Lape Lise $550 to 675; eull and common $250) D9 Ane AAR ties La choice $12.50 to 13.60. ae ‘ek ae Sept. ...... 20% (88% 89 SO. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK Oats— July ... 43 42% 42% St. Paul, Minn, June 24.—(P)— cab o-oo Fa SAN a extremely sew, Calting S| guly 249% 280 2.48% 249 EN gir diene) Bent 230% 242 230% 2.41% held around 1650; bule all Sates se Barley ese ge apprnpy ee cages July ...... 50% 60% 50% 50 Se nas: Ught weight and shelly [SP < mh ea me me medium grade bulls 9.50; light, kinds RANGE on wockare and Teadere: Onlves, 2.500; ‘Spe mak ae Yeni 242 te lore: 1300) Durum : duly 0% 1.11% ioe L1se0: opening teily active. ep, the Hit een steady; spots 10 higher than: meq, 08% 1.08% 106% Lor Friday's average; better grades 160 to} mye 20 — averages 10.65 to 10.75; P top 10:78 paid for sorted 160 to 210 ' pound ai 3; desirable 240 to 300 nt ‘mostly 10.26 to 10.50: | july ...... ; packing sows largely | Rent, 9.25; steady 11.00; 1.000 direct: Ineo, x cost Saturday 10.07; weight mostly 50 lower; ewes Haste: fat grades down to 1000; yeattags mocty . EFT SS 4 4 | 486 & month ago. 4 | soared 16 Cn ea ne CLASSIFIED - MARKETS {STOCK MARKET HIT BY SELLING DELUGE AY Beginning of Mid-Year Call i Money Stringency Fails to ‘Check Recovery, However New York, June 2¢—(#)—Beginning of the mid-year call money stringency today brought a flood of selling into the stock market which retarded, but failed to check completely the recov- ery in stock prices which has been 4|under way for more than a week. Trading showed a marked expansion in volume. Except for a sharp increase in Call- fornia crude production, most of the week-end trade news was favorable. Call money renewed unchanged at 7 per cent but advanced to 8 and threatened to go and commercial 4 | steady. higher. e money paper ie held Prediction of a big “railroad mar- ket” this summer appeared to be on the way to realization. Atchison, Pennsylvania, New Haven and Union Pacific all moved into new high ground. New York & Harlem, which ordinarily changes hands in small lots, ran up 8 points. Wide fluctuations again took place in the high priced specialties. Adams Express added 35 poin's to its 40 point gain of last week by touching 625, which contrasts with a low of 281 1-4, . Auburn Auto Points to a new high at 4 | 321, Allis Chalmers 7 to a new high at and Crucible Steel 4 to a new high at 100 7-8. R. H Macy, Marmon Motors, United Aircraft and Frank G. Shattuck sold 4 to 7 1-8 Points higher. New peak prices for the year also were established by Columbian Car- bon, Westinghouse Electric, Products and_a few other specialties. Baldwin Locomotive extended its ecline to 8 1-2 points and General Electric, Standard Gas & Electric, Anaconda Coprer, Johns Manville.) Commonwealth Greene Canazea, Corn Power and Public Service of New Jersey sold 2 to 3 1-2 points lower. MINNEAPOLIS CASH CLOSE is, June 24.—()—Wheat receipts today 392 compared to 178 a ,|year ago. Minneapolis cash whcat and coarse grain closing quotations today follow: Delivered Arrive | 1.3476 @1.4275 1.31% @1.39% 132% @1.40% 13% @ 1.11% @1.13% Montana Winter Protein— 113 112 §Raa5 9°9°898° 3 i aa 3 dep = neon wo DOM te 2 rye... i CHICAGO PRODUCE 5 1 5 standards gesesut’ 132%@ + 121%@ 1.24%@ 1.23%@ oe 115% @1.16% + 11840 er 112%. @1.1475 12%@ *|75 te 8 1.09% @1.11% 1.08% @1.10% 1.097% @1.11% 1.08% @ 1.20 @113 @119 @1AS @1n pe 86% | money firmer: 43%@ 45%|_ New Y @ 43 | OU —P)—Butter un- | ton. Cream- yj extra 43; packing 1.16% @1.18% | 32 to 5: 1.16% @1:17% 114% @1.16% 114%. 01.26% 113%@ 112% @1.13% + 114%61.16% THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, JUNE 28 (By The Associated Press} Central Standard time. lengths on left of call letters, kilocy ind chain programs with list P. M. unless otherwise cles on right. Clear chan- associated stations in detail, 348.6—WABC New York—860 Serge! Koltarsky and Mathilde Hardli v. Rares’ Kou. WHK WCCO W BBM be WISN? Wea Stor! ind ee Ne Also WADC WOWO KMOX KOIL €:30—Fiy! 7:00-—Baul, Whlteman'e Hand in Davee at ul eman's ind in Dance Music—Al: Ww. v4 Ww, 'O KMOX Ree ki KOIL WSPD WHR Wee. aah Wine 8:00 Voice of Columbia Orenestts and SolsHta -AIS WADE: WES WORE 5 bs a loist [Ww vi KMOX KOIL WSPD Woco WISN WFBM WHE” of 484.3—-WEAP New York—e60 00—Genla Forariova with Concert Orchestra—Also KSD WEJC_W :$0—Popular Halt Hour—Aleo WWS WAT KSD Wis WHO WOW Wong, 00—Diversifted Hour, Feature—Aiso WGY WTAM WW WGN KaD Wi WDAF KSTP WEBC WHAS WSM WMC WSB KVOO WOA 8:00—Eskimos Dance Orchestra directed by Harry Reser—Also WGY WWJ WSAl WOW KYW KSD WHO WDAF KSTP WHAS Waal WNC WS vp WTMJ KPRC WKY WEBC WBAP 8:30—Harbor Lights, Dramatic Tale of an old See Captain—WE. 00—Recital Wowo i AF 9$:00—Radio Vaudeville Hour with Stars of the Stage—Also WGY WT. M WW3J KS) WHO KYW WDAF Ki J > vi i WP NEURO RY a gTOAR ROTA WTA Wane want Wile Won 10:00—Bill Scotti's Hotei Orchestra (one hour)—Also KSD KOA WOW * ‘i aicai 394.8-—WJE New York—760 :30—Master Musicians, with Frank Relisen—Also KW! 00—Edwin Franko Goldman Band Concert—-Also RUKA EWE WOR Saw KYW WREN KSTP WTMJ WEBC WHAS WSM WMC WSB '90-—Louis Katzman’s Orchestra—Also KDKA WJR KYW KWK WREN 7:00—College Drug Store—Alno KDKA WJR KYW KWK WREN a enereeie— A iso KDKA WLW KYW KWK WREN WJR WTMJ :00—Syncomatics Orchestra—Also KDKA WLW KWK WREN WGN 8:30—Orchestradians—Also KDKA WJR KYW KWK WREN KSTP WBAP 9:00—Siumber Music Hour, String Ensemble—Also KDKA KWK WR GENE STRIKES BACK Shore Virginia bbl. Irish Cobblers 4.50 old stock trading slow, market dull; Wisconsin sacked round whites 40 to 55, few fancy shade higher. nee CHICAGO POULTRY Chicago, June 24.—()— Poultry alive, steady; receipts 4 cars; fowls 24% to 25; springs 38; broilérs 34; roosters 20; turkeys 22 to 30; ducks 17 to 20; spring ducks 20 to 26; geese 18; spring geese 25. RANGE OF CARLOT SALES Minneapolis, June 24.—(#)—Range of carlét grain sales: Wheat: No.1 northern 1.1713 to 1.49's; No. 2 mixed 1.14%; No. 1 dark hard winter, 1:32% ; No. 1 hard winter 1.27%; No. 2 am- ber durum 1.07% to 1.12. Corn, No. 2 yellow 89%; No. 4 Former Champion Declares Fort Worth Woman Signed Re- lease on Claims Bridgeport, Conn., June 24—(P)— James J. (Gene) Tunney’s answer to the $500,000 breach of promise suit brought by Mrs. Katherine King Fo- garty of Fort Worth, Tex., and New mixed 83%. York was filed in superior court here Oats, No. 3 white 4275. today, together with a counterclaim. Rye, No. 2, Tunney’s answer, filed by Homer Bariey, No. 2, 87; sample 56 to 58. Flax, No. 1, 2.53'2 to 2.68. NEW YORK EGGS New York, June 24.—(/)—Eggs firm; receipts 20,47". Fresh gathered extra 32 1-2c; extra firsts 31 to 31 1-2c; first 30 to 30 1-2c; seconds 29 to 29 1-2. Nearby Hennery White, closely se- lected extra 37 to 40; nearby and nearby Western Hennery White, first to average extra 33 to 36 1-2. Nearby | The answer alleges that Mrs. Fo- Hennery Brown fancy to extra fancy | garty’s suit is an attempt to damage 35 to 40; Pacific Coast White extra jthe reputation and “vex” the former 39 1-2 to 40 1-2; do extra first 38 | pugilist, and charges that before both to 35. the second Dempsey-Tunney fight and the Heeney-Tunney fight she “spread libelous statements regarding” her relations with Tunney and his affairs. Another allegation is that she is seeking notoriety and financial gain from the publicity attendant on the filing of the suit and its public trial. Cummings of Stamford, his Connecti- cut attorney, reveals that Billy Gib- son, the former heavyweight cham- pion’s trainer, paid to Mrs. Fogarty the sums of $1 and $35,000 “to re- linquish her claims on the defendant.” On receiving these sums, says the an- swer, Mrs. Fogarty signed a release. The answer does not say, however, whether her charge that Tunney asked her to marry him, and was ac- cepted, is true. NEW YORK BUTTER steady; receipts 9,725. Creamery high- er than extra 44 to i4 1-2; extra 92 score 43 1-2; first 88 to 91 score 41 to tock, current make, No. 1 32 to 32 1-2; No. 2 31. IN ANSWER 10 SUIT)"s GELP WANTED MALE WELL established high grade line of work gloves, mittens, sheepskin footwear, leather helmets and coats. Have mid western territory open on commission basis. Will consider working with other established “ non-competitive lines. Write Trib- une, in care of Ad. No. 46. BE A BARBER— in easy. prof= itable profession. Great demand, good wages, catalog free. Moler Barber College, Fargo, N. D.; Butte. Mont. FEMALE MELP WANTED he HELP WANTED—Wo: gener- al housework on farm southeast of Bismarck. - Modern home and con- veniences. Write Tribune, in care of Ad. No. 48. WANTED—An experienced practical nurse. Write Box 105, Hazelton, N. Dak. 9 experienced wait- Tesses at the Mornii WANTED—Girl for work. Phone 189. mist FOR SALE—Choice Canary singers tmported German Rollers, Choppers and Harz Mountains Cages. seeds treats, ete. Plone 115-J. Jacad Bull. Dickinson ND Box No 728 "25x80 foot business space next to Woolworth store on Main Avenue. Rent reasonable. Inquire of David P. George, in care __of Sweet Shop. Bismarck, N. Dak. FOR SALE—A complete threshing out, Nichols & Shepard mz steam power, 20 horsepower engine, 36x64, separator like new. Write Box No. 3, Stickne; TAKEN UP—One brown curly Water Spaniel. Phone 219-J or call at 406 Cl tooms over Knowles Jewelry store. Apply to F. A. Knowles. @00MS FOK BENT next to bath. Suitable for one or two. Board if desired. Attractive location and reasonable terms. Call 374-M. : a FOR RENT—Well furnished ‘single room with kitchenette and closet, including use of frigidaire. 411 Fifth street. Phone 273, FOR RENT—One nicely furnished room, all modern, hot and cold wa- ter, close in. Phone 342 or call at 108 Main Avenue. _ FOR RENT—Furnished sleeping. room, also room for light housc- keeping. Call at 619 Sixth or phone 619. FOR RENT—One furnished sleeping room, suitable for one or two. Close in. Call at 400 Third street. Phone 1361-W. RENT.- rooms, also a piano for rent. 808 Seventh strect. FOR RENT—Furnished rnished housekeeping Call modern CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 90 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are casb tn ad- vance. Copy should be received by 9 eelock to inrure insertion enme day. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PRONE 82 SOUSEB AND FLA‘ FOR RENT—Six room modern house with garage. Immediate possession. __Phone 751 or 151. FOR SALE—New English type stucco bungalow, five rooms, breakfast nook and fireplace. Southeast cor- ner, close in. Apply to L. P. War- ren, 622 Fifth street. Phone 460-M. FOR SALE—New home just com- pleted, six rooms and bath at 619 Eleventh street. Inquire 211 Second street. : 8 FOR RENT—New modern six room furnished house. Garage and gar- den. Write Tribune, in care of Ad. No. 47. bss ; FOR RENT—Two room house at 1213 Thayer Avenue. Inquire phone 1404-J or call at 1210 Thayer Ave- ei FOR RENT—Two flats in my butld- ing, 118 Sixth, second floor. Call H.L. Reade. Phone 239. WORK WANTED - LADIES alterations on suits, coats and dresses. Now is the time to have this work done before vaca- tion. Work guaranteed. Prices reasonable. Alberta Wentz at Kral) Tailor Shop. Phone 1383-! WANTED TO RENT nicely furnished sleeping room in modern home by July Ist. Write at once Bismarck Tribune, in care of Ad. No. 44. eee Dependable Used Cars IF YOU want thousands of miles of low cost transportation, buy one of these: Pontiac 1928 Coupe. Chrysler 1928 Coach. Ford 1927 Coupe. Chevrolet 1926 Sedan. Dodge 1926 Sedan. Chevrolet 1927 Truck. M. B. Gilman Co. Phone 808, Bismarck. USED CARS SALE—The state highway de- North Dakota for Burpee sealer and pressure cooker. local agents. Liberal commissions. A business with a future. Addition- al lines later. Canners Supply Co., Mason City, Iowa. FOR RENT—Completely furnished downtown apartment during. the during Can Also summer months. Phone 298 working hours or write Tribune, in care of Ad. No. 45, -| FOR” RENT—Purnished apartment, suitable for man and wife or two ladies, no children. Also garage for rent. Call at 422 Fifth street. FOR RENT—Two room well fure nished apartment for light house- keeping. Also a single room. lege Build! FOR RENT—Furnished and unfur- nished apartments at the Rose apartments. 215 Third street. F. W. Murphy. FOR RENT—Three room nicely fure nished apartment, $32.00 per month. a 1014 Broadway. Phone bath, 618 Sixth, About $35.00. FOR RENT—Furnished apartments Phone 794 or call at 801 Fourth st Geo. W. Little. FOR RENT—Strictly modern four room furnished apartment available Phi Furnished or unfure Ee eae ee ‘Furnished apartments on ground floor. 930 Fourth street. LT HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE FOR QUICK SALE—Library, dining room and kitchen table, small desk, sideboard, chairs, rockers, victrola, piano, beds, daybed, dressers, chif- foniers, stand, commode, ice box, tubs, fruit jars, pillows, hose, hip boots, etc. Phone 1163-J or call at 216 Second street. | FOR SALE—Full size bed, half size bed, five burner oil stove, kitehen table and other household furniture. Cheap if taken at once. Call at 1112 Ave. D or phone 616- Cheese steady; receipts 102,625. State whole milk flats fresh, fancy to Heed a 24 to 25; do held 27 1-2 Mrs. Fogarty, in her suit, alleged that in 1925, shortly after she had ob- tained a divorce from John 8. Fogarty of Fort Worth, Texas, Tunney, then in training at Hot Springs, Ark., had asked her to marry him. Subsequent- heat} 49. according to the Fogarty com- red 1.2: i: rd 1. Plaint, he asked again, and was ac- sample grade hard 92; No. 4 mixed|Cepted., Then, he married “another 1.07; corn No. 3 mixed 92 3-4 to 93| Person”—Polly Lauder. ;No. 1 yellow 95 to 95 1-2; No.| Colonel Lewis L. Field, New Haven 2 white 971.2 to 98; sample grade | 8torney for Mrs. Fogarty, said that 8, No. 3 white 43 to| “# general, the Tunney allegations No| ate untrue, but on Mrs. Fogarty’s be- half, 1 will make no statement.” CHICAGO CASH GRAIN ve icago, Juye 24.—?. 46 3-4; sample grade 40 to 42. rye. es Colonel Field said Mrs. Fogarty still is in hiding” and he would not make @ statement until n® had conferred with her. : BISMARCK LIONS 10 CHARTER WASHBURN Capital City Service Unit te In- stall New Club at the Mc- Lean County Seat LIBERTY BONDS CLOSE New ioe June 24.—(%)—Liberty cl ’ Liberty 34's 96. rst 98.28. 's 107.1. Treas 4's 103.18. ——___—_ BOSTON WOOL . Boston, June 24.—()—Wool: Mills displaying little more interest in and finer domestic wools. The ceipts of domestic wool during the week ending June 22, amounting te 9,968,800 Ibs. As compared with 7,770,- 900 Ibs. for the previous week. FOREIGN EXCHANGE New York, June 24.—)—Foreign| Bismarck Lions will install a new exchange steady; demand: Great|chepter of Lions International Britain 484 5-16; France 390 7-8;| Washburn Wednesday. Italy 522 3-4; Germany 23,82 3 |. Granting of a charter to the Wash- Norwa: 62 burn group followed presentation of & petition to the national office by 20 bysiness and professional men of the McLean county seat under oe sponsorship of the Capital City clul H, A. Fisher was elected president of the newly organized club at a meeting held last week. Arrangements for the charter night program are in charge of the Bis- marck club under the direction of Dr. F. B. Strauss. Representatives of Lions clubs from Minot, Steele, Fes- senden and other points in central NEW YORK POULTRY New York, June 24.—(#)—Poultry dressed irregular. Chickens fresh 30 ; frozen 50 to 46; fowls fresh frozen not quoted old reost- 25; turkeys fresh 25 to 45; rozén.30 to 46. CALL MONEY RATES York, ne 24.—()—Call 10; low 7; rul! rate 7; close 10; time loans, ‘ice 30 60-90 . ST ARD OIL CLOSE » June ». of Indiana, curb today at 55 3-4 Children Collect Bugs In Insect Exhibition New York—@)—An admonition fn an ann it of > test for children. by” the "Ainorieas is: “Each exhibitor must care for his own live insects during the exposi- reference is to exhibits in the insects” section of exhibite, which Il the way from ed Honal subjects to ventures Into uch closed on ths /son, Members of the club are: Fred F. feris, H. E. Wahl, G. C. Hoffmann, |, J. Schweizer, H. Schulz, Jr. z Bickert, Ben O. Schlichenmayer. Home Economic Clubs To Vie at Coleharbor ‘Thompson, W. J. Everson and J. sleeping room at 510 Fourth strect. ST Steele and Jamestown on Highway No, 10, brown leather suitcase, con- wearing apperel. Finder kindly notify FP. H. Trygg, R. F. D., Bis- marck, Phone 12-F-12. LOST—Ladies scarf, half of scarf tan and half black, lost on Fair Grounds Friday, valued as a gift. COBT—Biack purse Friday afternoon containing money, vanity comb, keys, etc. For reward return to Tribune office. Washburn Chautauqua To Last for Five Days Washburn, N. June 24.—Wash- burn’s five-day Chautauqua program will open July 2, C. W. Poe, manager of ticket sales, has announced. Plays, musical programs and lec- tures will feature the entertainment to be offered. Officers of the local Chautauqua association are: G. C. Hoffman, pres- ident, and A. Archie Nelson, secre- tary- treasurer. MLEAN MEMORIAL BUILDING PLANNED Washburn, N. Dak., June 24—The city of Waghburn and McLean county have signed an agree- ment for the erection of a World War building. ‘The memorial will be constructed as a community building and will contain an assembly hall, library, rest rooms, and memorial rooms. Under the agreement the city will furnish the site and 25 per cent of the the county will contribute 75 cent of the costs, the cost not to ),000. definite date for construc- agreement 5] at memor! be completed by July 1, 1933. Comm! signing the agree- ment were: Ben O. Everson and J. Snipper. City council members sign- > ing were: C. M. Diesen, E. I. Schulz, Louls Bergquist, » R. O. Everson and H. ©. Nelson. Shooting by Guards Arouses Bulgarians patch to Neues Wiener Tageblatt to- Hf it avid ? taining man’s grey suit and other) — Mrs, Chris J. Hill, Washburn, N. D.| H.| rected by Joe Rines. Next Friday's the Vienna, June 24.—()—A Sofia dis- partment has for sale a number of used cars and one White truck. lo- cated at the Highway Shops. 19th and Front street, Bismarck. Phone 766, Mr. Young in charge. GOOD USED CARS 1928 Durant four coach, in excellent condition. 1928 Durant four coupe, runs like new. 1928 Durant six coupe, overhauled and in first class shape. -. 1926 Olds sedan, overhauled. MANY others to pick from including Ford, Overland and Star tour- ings. We trade and give terms. HEDAHL MOTOR CO) ——— | Bits of Broadcasts | * "(By ‘The Associated Press)“ Russ Russell is a new announcer at WGN, Chicago. “Redemption,” Tolstoi’s drama, 15|Southern Cross recently in eastern to be enacted Saturday night, June 29, on WJR, KWK and WREN. Tommy Monroe and Bob Allen have resumed their tri-weekly broadcasts from KPO, San Francisco. An orchestra under the direction of Dick Cherwin is to play on the WOR coast to coast chain next Wed- nesday evening. Bobby Brown, who began with WDAP, Chicago, in 1922 and later was with KYW, is on the announcing staff of WBBM. A new Sunday morning program is being heard from KMBC, Kansas City. It is by P. Hans Flath, staff or- ganist, and assisting vocal artists. A musical melodrama of the old south, “The Girl in Crinoline,” is to be the presentation of the garden theater players on KOA, Denver, the evening of June 24. Paul Whiteman and his band will play their next Tuesday night concert on WABC and coast to coast chain from Los Angeles. KMTR will be the key station. A new program is being presented on WJZ and stations on Friday nights. It contains an orchestra di- soloist is Mildred Hunt. Lewis James, tenor, is to be guest artist in the broadcast of the Nathan- iel Shilkret symphony orchestra on WEAF and coast to coast chain Sat- urday night, June 29. FOR IMMEDIATE SALE—Dining room table, library table, rocker, piano bench, bed, complete in good conditior R SALE—Gateleg le, walnut chairs, living room table and other household furniture. Call Mrs. H. __Jess, Mandan. Phone 353-M. _ BARGAINS in used furniture. nelly Furniture Co. Mandan. N UD. BABY CHICKS FOR SALE—Sixty Ferris strain White Leghorn yearling hens. Priced right. 715 Sixth street or Phone 1425. Committee Approves Southern Cross Crew Melbourne, Australia, June 24.— (@\—The committee of inquiry into the forced landing of the aeroplane Australia announced its report to- day. There was nothing in it to in- dicate Captain Charles Smith and shipmates had at all pre- arra ged the landing which ended their flight in western Australia. The report stated that there was no inference impugning the crew's honesty. The committee considered the crew justified in standing by the machine in preference to for the Port George Mission was in that region. TRAINS AID PLANES Chicago.—The of rail- cooperation roads and airplanes is speeding up the Schedule of -the American tray Port, RADIO POLICEMAN Berlin—Police stations in towns throughout shortly be equipped with paratus enabling them pa phs of cri e PI stations in the principal from towns along the fi SF pick Ff é iL I i mit i fi

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