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Nena. BL WHEAT PRICES FALL AFTER EARLY RALLY : FAILED T0 HOLD UP; Visible Supply Total and Broad! Selling Pressure Blamed fer Sudden Drop Chicago, Nov. 18. — () — Wheat prices failed to hold an early ad- vance, and tumbled to well below Sat- urday’s finish. The reaction set in after announcement that the United States visible supply total showed but 529,000 bushels decrease, a disappoint- ingly small amount compared with 2,384,000 bushels decrease a week ago. Late setbacks in wheat prices were also ascribed to the fact that the market at today’s top showed as much as 12 cents a bushel advance above last week’s bottom level and that this circumstance provoked a big reduction out of pressure to sell. ‘Wheat closed unsettled “ic to 1%c per bushel under Saturday's latest figures. (Dec. 1.197% to 1.20; Nov. 1.26% to 1.27; May 1.30%: to %). Corn closed “ic to ‘xc off, (Dec. 88% to 2; Nov. 93% to 4; May al to 12). Oats ‘xc to “sc down, and provis- fons varying from ‘7c setback to a rise of 12c. Profit taking in the corn market caused a late reaction to below Satur- day’s finish. Oats eased. Provisions a lower. Active buying here of wheat future deliveries was promoted today not only through Liverpool price upturns being much sharper than looked for and as a result of continued decrease of world supplies afloat, but also be- cause of advices from Chicago crop experts in Argentina telling of crop/o damage from black rust. with late wheat damaged the heaviest. Losses of probably 15,000,000 bushels were MINNEAPOLIS CASH CLOSE Minneapolis, Nov. 18.—(?)—Wheat receipts today 147 compared to 442 a . Minneapolis cash wheat and coarse grain ‘closing quotations today follow: Cash Wheat— 15% Protein— 126 @ . 1% @ 26 @ 1 @ 12% Protein: 1DHW or 1HW... 12 @ To arrive . 23 @ Grade of- 1DHW or 1HW.. 122 @ - 122 @ Minn. & S. Dak. 1DHW or 1HW. 1.78 41.19 - 118 @119 + LIT @118 -1t @11e ++ 1.93% 1.18% + 113% @118% Grade of 2 amber Grade of 1 durum. 1.03% @1.04% estimated as having been brought about in Santa Fe and Cordoba prov-/ inces alone. On the price bulges, however, in wheat values today, the market here was called upon to absorb enlarged selling to realize profits. There were also sizable standing orders met with to make spegulative offerings on all advances. Meanwhile, good export business in North American wheat was noted, shipments being an- nounced as taken readily at half of Mexico ports and the Atlantic as well. MINNEAPOLIS WHEAT FUTURES RISE, SLUMP Minneapolis, Nov. 18.—(?)—Wheat futures opened strong today and held so for a time but when the visible supply figures were announced prices weakened and began to creep down- ward. May closed 7-8 cent lower for the day. Oats futures prices reacted grad- ually from a@ strong opening. Rye trade was light and featureless with prices declining from the start. Bar- ley was without feature. Flax start- ed strong and advanced sharply but fell back with wheat on profit taking. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, Nov. 18.—(?)—(U.S.D.A.)— Hogs, 48,000, including 23,000 direct; market mostly steacy with Friday's average; top 9.25; mostly 9.00 to 9.20 market for hogs over 180 pounds. Packing sows 8.00 to 8.50. Butchers, Grade of 2 durum. 1 red durum. 1.03% @1.04% To arrive . 1.03% @ Coarse Grains 89% D 91% 8540 281 1.03% @ 1.03% CHICAGO GRAIN TABLE Chicago, Nov. 18.—(#)— Open High Low medium to choice 250 to 300 lbs 8.75 to 9.25; 200 to 250 lbs 8.85 to 9. 160 to 200 Ibs 8.60 to 9.15; 130 to 160 Ibs 8.35 to 9.10. Packing sows 8.00 to 8.60. Pigs, medium to choice 90 to 130 Ibs 8.00 to 8.85. Cattle, 21,000. Calves, 3,000. Light yearlings scarce, steady: others slow with weighty steers in liberal supply and tending lower early; top year- lings 15.00; some held higher. Slaugh- ter classes, steers, good and choice 1300 to 1800 Ibs 11.50 to 14.50; 1100 to 1300 Ibs 12.00 to 15.25; 950 to 1100 Ibs 12.50 to 15.50; common and medium, 850 Ibs up 6.50 to 12.75. Fed year- lings, good and choice 750 to 950 Ibs 13.25 15.75. Heifers, good and 00 to 15. Cows, good and choice common and medium 6.15 to 7.75; low cutter and cutter 485 to 6.15. Bulls, good and choice (beef) 8.75 to 10.25; cutter to medium 6.50 to 9.25. Veal- ers (milk fed) good and choice 12.00 to 15.00; medium 10.50 to 12.00; cull and common 7.50 to 10.50. Stocker and feeder steers, good and choice (all weights) 10.00 to 10.75; common and 3 FS o igs 1.33% 1.30% \ 124 1.26 + 193% 1.34% 1.31% 131% « 134% 136 1.32% 133 93% 94% 321% 3.22 317 3.17% 61 6615 93% 95% 91% 91% \ so # mor nig : Close | « 123 1.19% 1.19% 1G) 1.30 1.26% 1.267¢|¢ 133% 1.30% 130% THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1929 STOCK PRICES TURN | DOWN{ TOSPOINTS DUEPROFT-TAKING Setback Regarded as Correc-) tion of Temporary Topheavy Condition of the Market New York, Nov. 18.—(#)—Stock prices turned reactionary today on what appeared to be a heavy volume profit-taking, and some short sell- ing. Net declines of 1 to 5 points were quite general, with a few larg- oe declines and also a sprinkling of gains. Trading showed a reduction of about one-third in volume from last Friday's session. Today's sct-back ‘was regarded more as a correction of @ temporary top heavy condition than the beginning of a fresh decline. There were no signs of any large volume of distress liquidation. Call money renewed at 5': per cent, and dropped to 5. Failure of a New York exchange house, the first as a result of the re- cent drastic break in prices, was an- nounced just before the market closed. Some of the fluctuations in today's market were rather erratic in charac- then dropped k to 160. Allied Chemical dropped 8 points and rallied 10. A. M. Byers converted a gain of 3%; points into a loss of sim- ilar extent. i Auburn Auto broke 14 points, J. 1. Case and Columbian Carbon 9 each. General Electric and Johns Manville 8 and Pere Marquette. Brooklyn Un- fon Gas, American Can, American Telephone and Westinghouse Electric, and Eastman Kodak sold down 4 points or more. ' | | NEW YORK STOCKS Allegheny . American B American Cs American Meta’ American Power and Ligh’ Roll. MIL. mer. Smelting and ¥ Amer, Telephone and Telegr: American Waterworks Bethlehem Steel - Burroughs Adding M Canadian Pacific nnon Mills n Products Curtiss Wright Pont . International ¢ International Harvest International Hydro-E International Nickel ¢ Int. Telephone and Telegraph Johns-Mai le nm : May Depai ts i Ramblers May Be Forced to Dramatic Laurels Of Football Year Go to Rockae Men: ‘by Coach “Pop” Warner, abandoned | tlie drab, khaki-colored breeches for {flaming cardinal paints with white ; Stripes running down the sides. ‘Fargo No Match { Share National Honors With Pittsburgh, However By ALAN J. GOULD St. Louis, Nov. 18.—(#)—Notre Dame, if it continues along the un- beaten football trails, may have to share a full portion of the national championship least one other team, Pittsburgh, but the dramatic laurels of the season al- ready belong to the Ramblers and Rockne. Football has witnessed few such !l- lustrations of inspiration, few such : Additional Sports ||| Stanford Players *—____——*|| To Wear Red Pants ' 1 ee honors of 1929 with “| Stanford University, Cal., Nov. 18— (?)—Red pants will be worn by Stan- ford football players when they clash with the ‘University of California team in the annual “big game” next Saturday. The innovation, announced today For Sioux Falls South Dakotans Outplay Midg- ets and Romp Off With 26 to O Victory Sioux Falls, S. D., Nov, 18—An in- spired Sioux Falls football team, held examples of magnificent team spirit | scoreless in the first period by a de- as that manifested so far by Notre | | Dame while their guiding genius, Knute Rockne, has been fighting a battle of his own against a badly in- This was the year that “Rock” Predicted the boys would come termined eleven from Fargo, crashed through in the last three quarters run up a score of 26 to 0 over t! | North Dakota team here Saturday. It was 2 closer game than the score indicated, for the Sioux had their hands full every second in the game with the fighting Midgets, but the through and if they make it a clean ;South Dakota team excelled in prac- sweep, as they seem likely to, it will be one of the greatest tributes of all ;)time to any football coaching skill. tically all departments of the game except in the last quarter when the desperate Nodaks took the air in an If “Rock,” bundled in a cot on the jeffort to cross the marker. sidelines, needed a tonic Saturday he got it in the spectacular 13-12 victory his. scored over the gallant Tro- Jans of Southern California. So far Notre Dame in succession has whipped Indiana, Navy, Wiscon- sin, Carnegie, Georgia and Southern California. Four of these teams beat the Ramblers last year. In turn Wisconsin, Carnegie, Georgia Tech and Southern Cali- fornia has felt the avenging rush of the blue-shirted Rockne horde. No team in the country has played any stiffer schedule than Notre Dame. No teams except Pittsburgh and possibly Purdue can show a rec- ord of sweeping triumph as convinc- ing. It would take a hardy critic, who has seen both the Panther and the Rambler, to say which had the better * |defense, which the larger punch, From end to end, Pitt has perhaps a 4 | stronger line. Caridee Is Best Pitt has no field general to compare with Frank Cariedo, regarded now by many experts as greater than Harry Stuhldreher, famous leader of the four horsemen. But Toby Uansa is as slippery and dangerous, even if not quite as fast as Jack Elder, and Tom Parkinson, the Pitt fullback, hits the line with just as much drive as Mul- lins or Savoldi. preparation for the Thanksgiving day finale with Penn State. Notre Dame faces Northwestern this week and Army next with no chance of a let-up. ‘This week's biggest spectacles will be staged with all traditional pomp and panoply at Cambridge and Palo Alto, though neither can measure up to the amazing turnout of 123,000 Spectators for the Notre Dame-South- ern California battle at Soldier field. Harvard and Yale will win their sea- sons before 58,000 while California : {and Stanford will battle in the far west before 87,000 with the Pacific Coast Conference title at stake. Purdue Sophomore Hero Wins Praise te Missouri, nsas & Texas Montgomery Ward Miami Copper he di Ce oa Remington Rand Republic. tron_an Kehulte ‘Stores Sears Roebuck Ny Oil Southern Pacitl. fouthern Railwa; Standard Brands Standard Gas and Standard Oil of Call Standard Oil of » 92% 92% 17 1100" 1.00% 98 98% | Mn 0 a 49%] EI 485 49 ATi 47H | Enited G 3.21's 3.28 worth Yellow Truck and ¢ MONEY RATES New York, Nov. 18.—(?)—Call money easier high 51; low 5 ruling rate 5%. Time loans easier 30 days 5 00-00 days 5%5-5% 4-6 6% to 5%. Pry Commercial Paper 515 dddddddd arte Z ae ‘Woerner Is the Greatest Pass Catcher—but Worst Run- ner,’ Says Phelan Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 18.—(#)—Coach Jimmy Phelan of Purdue's first West- F E i 5 ' 5g Hf 3 i i é se z g g8 z This week, Pittsburgh rests up in| Fargo showed a stubborn defense for the first half of the struggle stop- ping the Sioux on two threatening in- vasions, once by knocking down a pass over the goal line and again by Presenting a stone wall line on the one foot stripe. In the second half, however, the Sioux backs smashed their way through a rapidly weaken- ing line to run up three touchdowns and two goals for points. ee —————— | Students Scalping ! | Tickets Is Charge | CO ———————) Stanford University, Cal., Nov. 18.— (@—Charges that undergraduates openly are scalping tickets to the Stanford-California football game, profiteering at the expense of less fortunately placed alumni, were made here today by Alfred R. Marsters, graduate manager. Sum? | Football Results j, OO "6 Falls (3. D.) high school 26, Fargo 0. Westhope high school 19, Botti- neau Forest; ied. Michi- St. Ma Quantico Rowling Greet Heidetber, Grove Cit Colgate 21, New Hamp: Foran 1 ham 40, Thiel Union 25, Hamiiton 6. geen 14, Waynesburg 7. Rhode Island State 19, Connecti- cut Aggies 6. Middlebury 19, Vermont 0. Davis and Elkin 2, Villanova 6. Lowell Textile 2 ala 0. y 19, St, Bona- Niagara Univ , Brooklyn City Col- venture 7 St. Joseph's lege 6. ‘Temple 13, Lafayette 0. 14, Lehigh 0. | Ruigers N.Y. U. 14, Missouri 0. Kent State @ neinnati 0 Baldwin Wallace 18. Ohio Wesleyan 53, Dartmouth 18, Cornell 14, Bucknell 27, Penn State 6. Toledo U. 12, Central State Normal shington ®, Juniata 32. ‘ginia Wesleyan 51, Beth- any 0. Muskingum 21, Wooster 19. Providence College 19, St. Johns (New York) 6. | Willams 19, Amherst 0. larvard 12, Holy Cross 6, Buffalo 13,’Hobart Rochester 13, Clarkson. 0. Boston University 13, Geneva ‘ashington and Jefferso: ittenberg 0. Dickinson 7. gh 34, Carnegie 13. Manhi és 23, City College of New York 0. Long Island University 18, Mont- clair Normal 6. Alma College 33, Kalamazoo Col- lege 0. Yale 13, Princeton 0, Dartmouth 18, Cornel! 14. Plone a" aisfRewn fa Earroll 6, Yysilanti State 20, Columbus 0. College 6, Baltimore ity 6. his, Harvard Frosh 0. ‘est Virginia State 12, Hampton Institute 0. FAR WEST Denver, University 13, Utah Ag- Washington State 13, Montana vtah $f ‘yoming 0. Colorado School of Mines 2, Re- iderson 12, Morris Harvey 0. Austin Coltewe 6, Simmons Uni- Colorads “College 54, Western ge fe ore Mount Bt.’ Chi te - 78, Intermoun- Poly 47, Montana Nore °. ho 14. a AS ee fornia at Los Universe of Nevada 0, St. Ig- ty State ‘college 8. ? = || LEARN Barbering iow at the Oldest | of the blood with Great men live longer than or- dinary individuals, statistics show. MALE HELP WANTED Accredited Institution of its kind. | Catalog Free Moler Barber College. Fargo, N. D., Butte, Mont. rere eneeereneteneenen eomwnanes ____ FEMALE HELP WANTED HOUSEKEEPER WANTED—Middle- | aged Protestant woman, to care for children and home on farm about 45 miles from Bismarck. sonable wages. No objection to one child. Write Tribune, in care of Ad. No. 87. WORK WANTED to work for small salary to learn business. Write Tribune, in care of Ad. No. 84. WORK WANTED—Compctent young | woman, bookkeeper and calculating Ten year’ | . s ite ‘Tribune Ad. No.| CHIMNEY SWEEP—Firnaces and, chimneys cleaned, work guaranteed { _ Price reasonable. Phone 398. LAUNDRY WORK, and will take care of children. Call at 313 Ave- __hue A. Phone 426-J. | CAPABLE GIRL wants housework in | homelike place. Call or write at| 319 First street |E Quiet he lies in his shroud at rest His lids closed tight in the slecp of peace After the surgeons iad done their BEST i John Doe's activities sure did cease. BUT—If John Doe had visited the Clinic of Dr. T. M. MacLachlan (Harvard) he would still be an ac- tive member of the community. He made the mistake of being bulled into a surgical operation, and he| F was very fool: not cure dis blood. How c ‘ou al ? ec DO cure disease because we remove the acid poisons from the blood. With our Alkaline Blood Treatment and our Vitamin Herbs, Roots and Bark and our Scientific Food Combina- tions we remove the CAUSE of your trouble. By our system of BLOODLESS SURGERY we have CURED HUNDREDS and we can CURE YOU. Clinic Rooms 6-8, Lucas Block, Bismarck, N. Dak. | (NO KNIFE). McEver Creeps Up on Marsters, (By the Associated Press) | Although Al Ma injured Darthmouth quarterb: till leads the nation in individual football scoring, Gene McEv ‘Tennessee halfback, is making threatening ces- tures that may carry him past Mar- | sters’ total of 108 points before the end of the season. The leader in cach of the cight | groups follows: East—Marsters, Dartmouth, qb: | after touchdown; total points 108. Southern—McEver, Tennessec, hb: 7 games, 16 touchdowns, 1 point after touchdown; total points 97. Pacific—Schwartz, Wash. State, fb: 8 games, 13 touchdowns; total points 8. Southwest—Miller, Arkansas, Hb: | 8 games, 12 touchdowns; total points 72. Missouri Valley—King, Drake, qb: | 8 games, 9 touchdowns, 5 points after touchdown; total points 5°. Big Ten—Bergherm, Northwestern, fb: 8 games, 8 touchdowns, 4 points after touchdown; total poi 52. Rocky Mountain—Clark, Colorado college, qb: 5 games, 6 touchdowns, 6 points after touchdown, 2 field goals; total points 43. Big Six—Bausch, Kansas, fb: 6 games, 4 touchdowns; total points 24. Cox, Kansas, hb: 6 games, 4 touch- downs; total points 24. Student Riots May Be Cause of School Split East Lansing, Mich., Nov. 18—(7)— ‘The continuance of athletic relations between the University of Detroit and Michigan State college depended to- day upon an investigation of the stu- dent riots that followed Saturday's | football victory of the Detroit school here. Twenty-three persons were arrested during the rioting and some property damage was done in Lansing and East Lansing. Starting immediately after the close of the game in which Detroit defeated State, 25 to 0, the rioting continued well into the night. FOR SALE—Leather STOLEN—Oct. 10, 1 small FURNISHED FOR” RENT—Furnished or _unfur- APARTMENT 6 games, 16 touchdowns, 12 points | .. MANY OTHER Classified Advertising Rates Effective Jan. 3, 1928 words of under. . per word. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES r 90 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in ad- vance. Copy should be received by 9 o'clock to ie. insertion same y- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE BARGAINS in used furniture. Ken- nelly Furniture Co.. Mandan. N. D couch and chair, Phone 0. er STOLEN ‘electric drill, 1 grease gun, 1 hacksaw. $10 reward for recovery. F. Jaszkowiah. ————— APARTMENTS W1GH CLASS—Very desirable ail | furnished 4 room apartment, strict- ly modern, electric stove, built-in | features, steam heat, Baby Grand piano, rent reasonable to right par- ty, references required. Write Trib- une No. 74. FOR RENT—Apartments just com- pleted, private bath, hot water heat, equipped with General Electric re- frigerator and electric stove, close in, furnished or unfurnished. Call at 518 Fifth street or see Dr. R. S. Enge. bn ‘OR RENT—Two room furnished light housekeeping apartment on ground floor, extraordinary warm, rent reasonable if assist with fur- | nace. Call at 623 Sixth street. APARTMENT—Two rooms, large closet, gas for cooking. Light and heat furnished. Suitable for married couple or two girls. Call 705-R after 5:00 p. m. FOR RENT—Three room unfurnished apartment. Private entrance. Heat, lights and water furnished. Phone 1175-3 or call at 313 Fourteenth street. FOR RENT—A warm three room partly furnishéd apartment on ground floor. Private entrance. Hot. water heat. Inquire at 111 Ave. A west, nished apartments at the Rose Apartments, 215 Third street. F. W. Murphy. Phone 852. FOR RENT—two or three room furnished apartments in the Lau- rain apartments. City heat, al- ways hot water. B. F. Flanagan. phone 303, FOR RENT—Modern apartments. Furnished or unfurnished. Reason- able rent. Call at 211 W. Rosser or phone 982. °QR_RENT—At the Woodmansee apartments. Inquire shed or unfur- ‘@ apartment in Varney Apart- Phone 773. FOR SALE A MODERN FIVE ROOM BUNGA- low, just completed, garage at- tached, oak floors, large rooms, good closets, full basement, furnace heat, good neighborhood, close to schools. Sales price $5300.00, $500 cash, balance monthly like rent. SIX ROOM MODERN TWO STORY house, hardwood floors, fireplace, three bedrooms, built-in features, south front, near school, good lo- cation. Sales price $6250.00, $400.00 cash, balance like rent. TEN ROOM MODERN HOUSE DI- | FO! vided into apartments, two bath- rooms, full basement, furnace heat, south front, close in. Present monthly income $180.00, This house for sale completely furnished $7000.00, without furniture $5800.00. Good terms. FIVE ROOM MODERN BUNGA- LOW, hardwood floors, full base-| _ << ment, furnace heat, outside gar- age, reasonable taxes, near schools. Sales price $3850.00, good terms. And ATTRACTIVE houses with prices and terms to fit any purchaser. Eleven years active city selling. AND BOARD street. Phone 431. POSITION WANTED | WANTED—Position doing light + in exchange for room and bd Phone 978-R. _____FOR SALE—RADIOS FOR SALE—Two good radio ing sets. A Columbia and a Str: berg Carlsons, cheap. Come and them at G. G. Beithon, 112 Tht Ave. W. a PRICED FOR QUICK eight tube all electric radio e plete with speaker. Phone 201 LT a HOUSES AND FLATS NOTICE FOR SALE—Four new nine residences. Stucco, hardwW@S floors, hot water heat, stucco g ages attached, plastered and ished, heated. Houses have # large sunrooms, 5 and 6 bedro with large closets, finished ments with insulated walls, ¢ one extra toilet. Eight foot cell with complete electric Large bedroom, 2 extra rooms coal room, furnace room, hall s fine stairways to basement. Fi floor. Very large living room, d ing room, kitchen and one sunroom that can be heated. have two buildings with on first floor. Four large and 4 closets and bath, on floor. Front porches with fine beveled plate doors, sun room Ww; French beveled plate doors, livie. room with beveled plate windogge Ail houses very highly di located between Avenues D ah Very best to tion in town. Close to schools, ea! ital and 4 blocks from hi These houses all have hot wates heat. Will take smaller in trade for their values. : buildings are the finest and bet buildings built in Bismarck years. I will sell them for money than they can be built On monthy payments. No pa ment down requested to relist parties. Buildings will pay then s by renting out apar. ments and rooms, because of tt 800d location. Have also a new room house for sale on Mande street. Complete in every way lit the nine room houses with finis} ed basement, sunroom, hardwoc floors and hot water heat. & owner, J. J. Rue, 711 Avenue A¢ at the grounds where buildings a: located from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. Fir one gets the pick of them all. buildings are all ready for Pancy except one which will ready in about 3 weeks. FOR REN’ € roon ern house, lights and water. ed at 213 south Fifth. Rent Per month. Phone 129-W or inqui at 1100 Broadway. FOR RENT—A modern seven oot house on Fifth street. An eigk room modern house, with hot ter heat on Ave. B. G. F. u FOR RENT—Four room moder. house. Close in. Cheap rent. Ca° at City Cafe or 405 First stree’ Ready for occupancy ber FOR RENT—A > room house at 70S Fourth street, witi pe water heat. Available by th 186. 1 erence eee wee a n room moderi house at 902 Sixth street for $42.5° per month. George M. Register ‘—Six room house wit! bath, 421 Third street. For infor mation call at 423 Thi a et Phone 872. FOR RENT—Four room furnishec house, suitable for small family Call_at 1210 Broadway. —- FOR RENT—Seven room moderr newly decorated house. Call at 813 2 SALE—O: oak roll top desk. 2 oak office chairs, 2 oak swivel chairs, I oak table 6 ft. long, 1 typewriter desk and chair, 1 mahogany flat top desk with glass top and mahogany swivel chair, 1 steel letter file four drawers. All of the above in first, class condition. P. C. Remington &. ne 1192 Fourth street. Phone and cutters at great savings. Guare ‘anteed. Wrist. and pocket watches at bargain prices. Liberal allo c offered on old watches. Cash or ap-: proved credit. Watch repairing (exe pert work). Mail orders ae eg eS James W. Le | al Third street, south Hotel Prince, Bismarck, N. Dak. FOR SALE—Stamped on grade of muslin, and Martha. Police prevented the destruction of] HEDDEN REAL ESTATE the goal posts at one end of the AGENCY stadium while students uprooted posts| webb Block at the other end. They were recov- ered later. Twenty-two Detroit students paid ROOMS FOR RENT fines this morning and were released. | FOR RENT—Rooms bes or bagel . large room Pola Negri Listed Too | tuit-in ‘cuptoara. Many Tax Exemptions Los Angeles, Nov. 18,—(7)—Pola Negri, screen actress, has been icin es errs ame Inte: enue two, board if desired. Collector Galen H. Welch. ‘The government alleges Miss Negri location, reasonable terms. listed too many tax deductions dur- and to inch patie iis roaleed as a movie star woman The treasury the additional pay- for 1924; $13,491.74 119.46 for 1926. ‘TON PIONEER DEAD Buxton, N. D., Nov. 18.—(#)—Fun- Broderson, eral rites for A. , resident in this locality since 1874 who died at his home in Stavinger township Friday, will be held at the Grue church Tuesday afternoon. He leaves son, a daughter and a broth- er, all living in Buxton. VATICAN GETS TELEGRAPH Vatican City, Nov. 18.—(P)—A tele- Italy and FOR RENT—Furnished light ag “keeping rooms with piano. water heat. Ground floor. Phone _619-W or call at 610 Bixth. Washington” pillow tops 18x18, 50c wreaths, woodbine, birds in the nest and daisy horse shoe wreaths, 12x12, for $1.00. Carrie J. Palck, Bismarck, North Dakota, Phone