The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 12, 1930, Page 8

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; jj q 8 STABILIZATION CORPORATION BUYS | WHEAT IN MARKETS c=" Purchase of an Unnanounced Amount Will Be Stored and Merchandised to Millers Chicago, Feb. 12—(#)—Government wallable by organization in , Minneapolis, ith, Kansas City and itchinson. Kan. = the wheat will be stored and mer- chandised, either directly to the mill. according er or abroad, to W, G. Kel- logg, genetal manager of the newly- organized corporation. ‘The stabilization company was or- ganized for non-profit and has no stock. All of wheat were ‘charged to the $10,000,000 credit ad- vanced from the revolving fund of the federal farm board. ‘The corporation, Kellogg said, was formed upon the recommendation ‘and under the supervision of the | Pe! ‘wheat advisory committee of the fed- eral farm board. This committee will have a guiding voles the purchas-‘ of all wheat surpluses. qa would give no inkling of the amount of grain purchased yesterday, but he said the corporation had ar- ranged for large storage facilities at principal terminals. Explaining his organization's pur- chases, Kellogg said: “The spring wheat now being mar- keted was shorter than usual, al- though the winter wheat crop is ‘about normal. However, there has been a much lighter foreign demand this year, giving us a large visible su A Precath as no other grain ad- visory committees have been named by the federal farm board, the stabi- lization ion is limited to ‘wheat purchases although it is organ- ized to handle all grains. Any effect upon trading the corpor- ation’s action might have can not be learned until tomorrow as the | Tet markets were closed toda! ESTOCK (AP)—(U. 8. D. e butch: 160 to 230 Ibs. 10. 200 Ibs. 10.40 to. 10. 9.00 to 9.73. Butchers medium choice 250 to 300 Ibs. 10.15 to 10.9 200 to 250 Ibs. 10.60 to 11.25; 161 200 Ibe. 10.66 to, 1138 130 to 16 i 85 to 11.10. Packing sows t 9.15. Pigs medium to choice 90 to 130 Ibs. 9.25 to 10.7 ttle 7,50 steer un. Ei heavies 14.35 in load lots; better grade fat cows higher; most other classes dy. Slaug! Choice 1300 to 1500 1100 to 1300 16.0 to 1100 Ibs. 13.00 to 11 common and medium 850 Ibs. w to 13.00, Fed yearlings goo choice 750 to 950 Ibs. 13.00 to . ‘Heifers good and choice 850 Ibs. down common and medium jows good and choice common and medium cutter and cutte a and choice a Snoiee 11.00" to 15.50 c 00 to 15.50; BO to 1100; cull and. common. 7.00 common and medium 8.00 to and choice (all weights) 10.25 lown. Feeding a choice 92 Ibs. dows edium 10.00 to 1! Medi choice 92 to 100 Ibs. 9. Ewes medium to choice 1! 4.75 to 6.00; cull and common 2.00 to 5.00; feeder lambs good and cho.ce 9.25 to 10.25. D. lings in moderate’ sui eady; quality fairly ely matured offerings with .163 pound weights bulk salable 10.50 to 11.7 warmed y ‘to averaging strong to 10 Tuesdays fairly active at 3 etter 1 to 240 ound Welghts 10.50 to 10. apes ae ooo to 3: ous packing sows ry and light lights 10.25; a cost Tuesday 10.24; weight 22 Sheep 1,00 done early, dicati ound stead: for best lambs; late Tuesday choice $6 pound feeding lambs 1: Jooked strong; ewes scarce, stead: MINNEAPOLIS POTATOES Minneapolis, Feb. (AP)—(U, 8. D. A.)—Potatoes, light wire inquiry. demand and trading slow, mar- ket dull, too few sales reported to quote. CHICAGO POTATO! 12.—(AP)—(U, 8, D. ‘receipts 73 cars, on 1 . S$. shipments 850 cars, trading slow, market steady; Wisconsin sacked Hound Whites 2.46 to 2.55, occasional 2.60; | Minnesota Tashe sacked Russetvs 3.00 to 35°" 4 NO PRODUCE MARKET Chicago, Feb. 1: (AP)—No butter or e or poultry market account of holiday, Walter Liggett Is Witness as Solons Examine Dry Laws if ait i ai fourths of the states must concur in the action of congress. 700 8; in D. C. Liggett special writer for “Plein Talk,” testified there are “not less than 700 speakeasies running day and night in the District of Columbia, and not less than 4,000 bootleggers.” by his magazine to make a study of Prohibition conditions throughout the country and that he had been work- ing on his assignment for the past eight months. Liggett estimated 1,600,000 gallons ‘of hard liquor were being consumed in the District of Columbia each year, and that six million gallons was the minimum amount of home brew that is made annually. Supported Dry Law In opening his statement to the committee, Liggett said he not only had voted for the dry law but had supported the dry law at the time of its adoption with considerable ex- mse in his own paper. He said he felt that state wide prohibitary laws would “measurably improve” condi- tions. “However,” he added, “I believed then and still believe in local option.” In his work during the last eight months Liggett said he had studied the District of Columbia, Boston, Mass. the state of Michigan and particularly Detroit, Kansas, and also his native state of Minnesota. In Minnesota he asserted he had exceptional opportunity to compare conditions as they are now with what they were before the enactment of the dry law. He explained he had worked in different activities in the three largest Minnesota cities and that his work had taken him on trips through the state at that time. Knows More Than Volstead “With all respect for Mr. Volstead,” he said, “I know conditions in Min- nesota better than he does.” Liggett asserted he held no brief for the saloon and did not wish its urn, Liggett said he had the facts to prove that after ten years of prohibi- tion arrests in Washington for drunkenness trebled, and every form of law violation had increased in the ik | national capitol. Turning to Boston, Liggett said there were 4,000 speakeasies with 15,- 000 persons in the booze business in had lar the office of the commissioner of pub- Ue safety. Prostitution Rampant Liggett declared prostitution was rampant in Boston and that a white slave ring existed in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and other eastern states. stat Referring to Detroit he said he had annually. He said 20,000 speakeasies in that city. Arrests for drunkenness in Detroit, he continued, had almsot doubled within the last ten years, while crime Colored Barber Re- vealed as One of Lin- coln’s erly Confidants (Continued from page one) BF a 5 i i e I ab 22 Bani E i E if & 4 LF E i e [ i 3 z fe iL 55 zt E E F 4 fi i | | | : 5 i i i s + [Fy ry E Gi | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1980 deepened and straightened instead 80 that steamboats could come to beck ‘Springfield. Lincoln was beaten in that cam- paign. A great many years later an Wichita Open’ ‘Liggett said in Kansas there was not & town in which he could not go as & stranger and get a drink of liquor within 15 minutes, He asserted that Wichita, Kansas, was “wide open.” Representative §Michener, Liggett if he would be prepared to furnish proof when called upon. “I will be glad to furnish the in- formation if I am called but I will not be called upon because I have the proof,” the witness replied. Then Liggett declared that he was “not @ snooper, informer or spy,” ‘and the audience yelled and applaud- ed, many of the women’s voices ring- He said that regardless of how much applause the witnesses received the decision of the members of the com- mittee would be reached only on the merits of the proposition at hand. Exposes ‘Beer Farms’ ‘The witness then said he would give all his information to the Detroit grand jury and would not have the slightest hesitancy in reporting the derelictions of duty of officials. Swinging his attack to the state of Minnesota where he said prohibition administration is under the direct supervision of Andrew Volstead, au- thor of the dry law, he declared there was not a “decent speakeasy” in the city of Minneapolis. Liggett then spoke of what he de- scribed as “beer farms.” He said one was about 50 miles from Minneapolis which had been raided while he was in the city. He added high school boys and girls of Minneapolis had driven down there for “debauches.” “All of this is taking place right under the nose of Andrew Volstead,” he asserted. The committee recessed at 12:30 p. m,, until tomorrow. DISASTER T0 LINER COST 2 LIVES AND $3,000,000 DAMAGE Tug Pilot Drowned When Hurled Into Harbor by Crash; Elec- trician Trapped by Fire New York, Feb. 12.—(#)—Heeled over against the pier with her stern Hudson river slip at the foot of Mor- ton street, off Grenwich village. The fire cost two lives and caused $3,000,- 000 damage. Feeding upon the highly inflamable cargo of nitrate of potash, shellac, fighters in an all day and all night battle. Fire ment officials and ofifcials of the line said the fire un- ‘was caused by spontaneous Disrupted Commuter Service The burning of the liner disrupted commuter’ service between Christo- pher street, Manhattan and Hoboken, Chicago Enforcement Staff Shake Up Seen In Arrival of Doran Chicago, Feb. 12—(#)}—The liquor flareup that attracted Prohibition James M. Doran to the Nodak-State Play by Play Reports Will Be Broadcast This Week Play by play reports of the North Dakota University-North Dakota State basketball games at Fargo Friday and Saturday evenings, Feb. 14 eye . Bulletin News 132 PERSONS INDICTED St. Louis, Feb. 12.—(7)—A fed. charging liquor pd violations under the Jones Wr ‘NO ‘SCRAPPING’ PLANNED London, Feb. National Bank Total Resources Show Drop During Year’s Period her latest battleships. NAME PARLEY BODY rad use of the submarine were taken by the naval conference today with the appointment of a draft- ing committee of experts to for- mulate yesterday’s American and French resolutions for embodi- ment into a treaty to be signed in London, DEATH ORDER STANDS Phoenix, Ariz, Feb. 12—(?)— The Arizona state board of par- dons and paroles today denied the petition of Mrs. Eva Dugan for commutation of the death sentence. She is under sentence to hang here Feb. 21 for the mur- der in 1927 of A. J. Mathis, aged ‘Tucson, Ariz., recluse, and will be the first woman in Arizona to die on the gallows. UNEMPLOYED CALLED of $871,496,000 since Oct. 4, but a de- crease of $1,573,887,000 in the year. Daniel Flores Liable To Death Punishment Mexico City, Feb. 12—(#)—Daniel Flores, who shot and wounded Presi- dent Ortiz Rubio shortly after his in- auguration Feb. 5, is Mable to the death sentence and may be executed for his crime. Secretary of the Interior Portes Gil, under whose direction as president the new penal code abolish- ing the death sentence for common crimes was drawn up, made this clear in a statement to the press. The code differentiates between litical and ordinary crimes, he point- ed out, and death may be inflicted as punishment for an attempt on a pub- Ue official’s life. : Flores has been held in the military prison here since the day of the shooting, subject to constant inter- rogation, in which both military and civil authorities have participated. 56 Students ‘Flunk Out’? at University Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 12.—Fifty- six students of the University of North Dakota fajled to meet the scholastic requirements at the end of the first semester and will not, there- fore, be allowed to enroll for the present term, R. O. Wilson, registrar, announced today. Any of these stu- dents may, however, to the university regulations, register after the beginning of the first semester of 1930. Of the number which “flunked out” 40 were freshmen;' 12 sophomores, and the remainder from the supper classes. This is a very small percent- age of failures for a school the size of the University of North Dakota, Mr. Wilson declared. ‘When asked the cause of the fail- 31 HAITIANS ARRESTED Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, Feb. 12— Economic Theories Of Supreme Court Nominee Criticized (Continued from page one) earth in consideration of the greatest champion of property rights as a nominee for chief justice of the Uni- ted States.” “Masses of-our people are finding it difficult to earn a livelihood and annual State Seed and Potato show, which got under way yesterday, today made Minot the temporary agricul- 500 Birds Exhibited At Northwest Event Minot, N. D., Feb. 12.—(?)—Nearly 500 chickens, turkeys and geese are being exhibited at the Northwest of the seed show Friday afternoon. OE | Naval Parley Briefs pee ee j BE 5E ie ge H & we i i | : | z i 3 5 i 3 5 i 8 § 3 i ik gSEe z | g Ge 8 4 i i | : i iz : | E se i E : i gs g t 8 é 4 : i § i : i i | E [ E E H tt i g ; & u f i i Ht ef iH t ay H fi FT sf Hl j z < g g E [ abut ele ie tet af a | WANTED TO BUY WANTED—If you have & good 5 or 6 with particulars. Geo, M. Register, WORK WANTED stenographer wishes temporary or part time work in office. Good recommendations. Write Tribune,.in care of Ad. No. 31. MIDDLE-AGED lady desires to take children afternoons or eve- Also willing to do work by . Phone Mandan FIVE ROOM modern house on pav- ing, well located, east front, for After Shooting Rubio |F‘V= 200 garage, gas range, gas laundry stove, gas heater and screened porch, FIVE ROOM modern dwelling, at er leaving city. OTHER houses and lots for sale. GEO. M. REGISTER. DOCTORS Some sections use the ground-hog And others have the bear To change, But when the surgeon leaves his Jair And comes out in the open And the sun shines on his knife, ‘Though feeling “under the weather” Run, John Doe, for your life. RUN UP to the Clinic of Dr. T. M. lan (Harvard) and you will be able to escape the knife, for ‘we cure diseases without operations, With our Alkaline Blood Treat- ment, Vitamin Herbs, Roots and Bark and Scientific Food Combina- tions we have CURED HUN- DREDS, we can CURE YOU. Clinic, Rooms 6-8, Lucas Block, Bismarck, N.D. (NO KNIFE). CITY LISTINGS | 8IX ROOM modern two story dwell- ing, well located, in first class con- dition, not old, fireplace, February 15th. Sales price $6300. small cash payment required. VERY ATTRACTIVE new modern bungalow, well located, two bed- rooms, large living room, convenient, kitchen, full basemen, laundry tubs, many built-in features. For quick INCOME ‘PROPERTY completely furnished, desirable tenants, monthly income $180.00. Sales Price $7000.00. Terms. FIVE ROOM modern bungalow, con- venient to Catholic church and schools, nice lot, trees, reasonable taxes. Offered for quick sale at A VERY FINE new modern home having six bedrooms, which in- cludes one bedroom first floor, one in basement, basement ONE OF Bismarck’s most modern bungalows, now under Former Ward Deputy Sheriff Is Arrested ‘In Prohibition Rai Minot, N. D., Feb. 12. mer Ward county deputy served b El HF eit ee - Six room bungalow, 3 bed tt} sleeping porch, south front. neat, refer= start ences. Earnings to about $36.00 per week. Call at No. 9, Hos- kins-] Bik. APARTMENTS FOR RENT—On ground floor, two room furnished apartment with private bath. On second floor, one , furnished room with convenient street. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished small modern apartment, suitable for one lady. Electricity furnished for cook- ing, lighting, washing, ironing, $25 -® Month. Clean, warm and always hot water. 807 Fourth street. FOR RENT—Two room apartment. age. tion, immediate , Phoni 751 or 151, or 117 Main Ave. FOR SALE—At very attractive price, my new modern home A. Flowers, shrubs and a trees Phone 110. FOR RENT—Four room partly mod- ern house, excellent tooesion: in quire at 111 Ave. A West. me Fale tint Hear) a Third street, infore mation phone 278. FOR RENT—New modern Y San en haeted earene, Phoes FOR RENT—Six room modern house at 701 Front strect. Phone 321, PERSONAL or | LOYAL ORDER of Moose will admit FOR RENT—One furnished and one unfurnished all modern apartment. in the Rue Apartments. Call at 711 Ave. A or phone 1256-W. FOR RENT—Two room apartment, nicely furnished. Plenty of heat and hot water. Call at 120 W. Ros- ser. FOR RENT—Ground floor apartment, two rooms and kitchenette, FOR RENT—Furnished apar on ground floor. Call at 930 Fourth ee REAL ESTATE 00 $5500. Eight room house, right down town, income $70.00 per month, besides owners apartment, modern, cheap. $2400.00 Five room cottage, bath, furnace, gar- age,close in, cheap. . rooms, $300.00 Five room modern bungalow, south front, reasonable terms. .00. $4500. i from postoffice, facing park, garage. h } i Z " i oa : i i i ! if - ft : ton Chevrolet truck with grain tank in good condition, Inquire at the South Side Grocery, Phone 571. ee FREE * A RADIO ra by ets nti from, n Su indays and STEEN MARMON Co. Distributors Marmon and Roosevelt Automobiled 116 Second Street. Phone 1453

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