The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1930, Page 9

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FOREIGN NEWS AND SCATTERED BUYING | LIFT WHEAT PRIE i New York Stocks CLOSING PRICES, SEPT. 10TH ane? Chemical and Dye . American Can. Liverpool Quotations heel Bower and Li Stronger and Russian Offers of Grain Are Withdrawn Telephone and Ly iter Works 10.—(AP)—Nervous price fluctuations dull market in characteristics of rick narrow range of ic a bushel and averaged slightly higher. incentives for higher prices, be- ing strength at Liverpool and. the crop report of the Free Press at Wig zi Aviation Corporation my como ye: eee Bendix-Aviati Bethlehem Steel Bal 6 wi the northwest by wa: hedging, ‘and liquidation. by, ens All buyers apparentl, f until after the. Un! ted nd Canadian govérnm = her’ erp estimates Corn was quiet ant Valles, were their official isco preanea and Ohio Wi M Ee giea aul a & M. Ss. Paul Stee and Northw: price changes narrow. generally a shade higher, late selling found buying power lim d_the September delivery w: foreed down to sell under yesterday Wieat closed nervous, 3.8-1¢ higher than yesterday's closing prices. Sept. Gorn was unsettled, ranging tye lower to 4e higher, Sept. 97; 9 Gata were tmo-YWe up, and provisions from 10c¢ decline to Coml. Sol. (new, Common ‘Wealti Consolidated Gas . Continental Banking A Continental Can. Continental Moto: Continental Oil of ‘and’ Soutiier showed a range ane advance of 2c. Wheat showed strength from the start. with Liverpool and Winnipeg |G market news encouraging to buyers. Liverpool wheat was higher because Russia had cabled that ir otters of wheat were withdrawn. of Australian wheat was f ounne tor D India where shippers have stopped Bh ie export because of politi- Advices from New xot concerning export business in wheat were mixed. With traders standing around the wheat and corn pits for minutes at a time without a single transaction Corn was a little efforts to weaken Cream Wheat Crucible Steel Cuba ae ieueee: Pt. Eaton Ax. and 8] 4 Electric Auto Lit Electric Power and Light’. | Brie Railroad being completed. but trade was small. were affected by other grains. Provisions were quiet soa Corn prices averaged a little strons- fr most of tho time with little activ-| qo) ie, Gillette ge Safety r Tasor ‘Arrivals were only 102 cars. ‘ dooayear. Tite Qraham Paige Great Northern ba” Great Northern Iron Great, it Western Sugar .... rigsby Grunow ondailte digraney FU DIseLay. MORE mar Ww ures started off with con- Beye and closed higher. emtancy, regardini extension of open trades because o the goverament reports due after the But there was improvement in siderable zip toga: There was some Tiopmonile Moto: indiana i 2 feeseres tom tsnt0: Stemesns mesion veane snes: Refin: Inter ational, "Combustion Eng. International Harvester International Match pf International Nickel International Tel Johns-Manville Rye snapped up at ithe clone while flax gained 3 to 3% ; September wheat Stosea ae oe, higher. rn futures opened firm and led but. settled cents higher, to hold the advance. with wheat. ‘There ‘en Chen buyin tures through commiss! “Gash wheat was sweeeG at the ° Al Borg Warner . Kennecott Cop comer Radio 8.8 Pectin ptriettop topertose ty fetey tert tt teet with the very werk c v low and easy. Mack Trucks h corn demand was quiet to fale, Mathieson. Al \d_was fair to good. : Mexican Seaboard Oil’: Miami Copper .. Mid-Continental et e Midland States Oil ctfs . Missourt Kansas & Texas Missouri Pacific arene Ward four, st, PAUL 2 Liv kes TOCK jept. gr.)—Cattle, 1.800 {bw early’ anten reflecting. fully steady to strong undertone, better grade killing’ cattle: \ improved basis but heifer & 1 one load fed medium w National Dalry Produc 1 N ora sorcencaiee Copper 1 NH, & Rortalk & Western North American Northern Pacific a Pacific Gas if Electric”: Sob: heifers to 6.75; offerings occasionally u pto 10-603 cutters and cutters largely bulla tending higher: little don erally asking 4 or better on feeders and stockers, Pathe Bychange Jue hts weak to Peni lane Teh yerwbent a Phillips Petroleum Proctor & Gamble Public Service Cor Purity Baking Sorporation ‘Ainerica Radlo-Kelth Orpheum . Remington Rand . Reo Motor xd 246. einupniae lambs fully steady considering quality; 8.25: buck lambs mostly 7.0 grades largely lambs on. offer nin doubles Montana ewes, lere and breeders; noth= Reynolds Tob 8: Schuite Retail Stores = Sear ‘#-Roebuck lower inostiy 8 'e' rn : r Sinclair Consolldal 73; Mant welghts 160-200 ea ly Oi Sparks W! ithington ” Standard Gas an i Standard Oil California 5 3,500; calves 3,000; ings active to | Liberal supplies her Largely steer in with better grad merous loads year! Best medium weight 8 weak to lower. Timkin Roller Bearing . (inset Voalerg, | Underwood illott steady. Slaughter cattle and vealer: if cand choles 699 1. steers it 50. 0 ea eca tes masesanse catsonesartecre cate United Aircraft United Cigar Store United Corporation er We ware 300: 4 smmon und medium 600- 50-10. ee. uelerh tae and 50 25; common and 8. Ind. Alcohol utter and ¢ut- yearlings ex- a choles: beet, 6 0 medium 4 (milk ted) good and choice 11.00-13.00 00; cull and commot Stocker and feeder cattl good and choice 500-1050 ; common and medium 5.00 Fare lity Power and Light ‘anadium Corporation . SRavonastwaawe se Noele ss Fhsuee Electric & Mig’. nd ISMABCK GRAIN iamaae * az Rverefin = Co.) No. 1 pare. ‘Sorthern’ 5.00. Tum to choice 2.50- 4 35. cull and 101 75 Ibs. nee choice 6. SRE AGO PRODUCE N 0, 10.—(AP)—There| No’ 7 was little ‘price vchange shown in bute Offerings were likewise was oe ‘easy in tone and poultry ruled Speltz’*: A, es Dark Hard Winter Wheat’. Hard Winter Wheat NEW YORK PRODUce New York, Sept. 10.—UP)— Eggs, 901; unsettled. Mixed colors, Tek ular nelected extras at xtra first Pires 6 Hy: Pee Bene Qaxvawarennes x sgh 825, easy, extra firsts 28%; raded fii 27; fresh current rdinary current re- packed, closel 9¢ Americas Berk Durger 21-22c; 8: juiter bene ey RRS y, higher than extra pica ble ard POTATO! score), 30% 09 ie: ADO 10. Score) 36-38%. 201,607; steady. ator a alow, market at aiciivered: wales leas dj turkeys, freight ducks, freight $2¢; express Dr _express iste: 10" . partly poe nt 2.10; sacked ct, No. 1 and partly g1 pa aoe STKEL ORDERS DI New York Sept. 10.—(AP) 11 orders of the United States Steel co poration decreased August to a total of 31. In July an ines 91 tons was shown ea ere éeation ‘een sritige ee si No ‘ in 5%. ou OPERATORS ARE GHEBRED BY BUSINESS TREND Continue to Dominate New York Stock Market But Public Remains Cold so Nt Tok, eR st cemeaenete ick ay to. atom bull Stimulation Toferstonal ae Which have tigodea ed et this t long. iiet of Lie oints, but Patel poe the advance was lost before Closing quotations were ferosulerly higher, with gains of 1 to 3 poin' numerous, but several tases blond moderately lower, t active sin: oun was al ugust with tra naaction, totallt about £,4t8000 shar ‘Trading. ‘was, fairly active in the cllen part of the day and.jotal sales, proximately 2,400, ren. were mong the largest tines ea Augus The closing tone was fitm but the advance, while fairly well maintained lost some of its vigor it the late tading. U.S Stoel, after selling up,moder- Stely, ont, moat of Its rife. The ad. vance embrace: but merchandising ana bite Tsues were in particular favor. Montgomery Ward. Safeway, Coca Cola, Western Union, American Power and Light, Byers, Spang Chalfant, Pacific Light: ing, ‘Atchison and ‘Union Pacific fialhed 2 or 3 points. A few erratic Issues made wider gains. American Telephone," Woolworth, Bears Roe- buck, Rado. General Blectric and Na- wortment up a point or more. The weekly steel reviews, while a Uttle contusing owing to different methods of computing rates of pro- duction and the effects of the Labor Pine holiday, were aguin cheerful. Bteel corporation reported Grsp of avout 440000 tons te une filed orders durin August. the larg- ést decline for that month in seven years, but Wall Street was inclined | 9. trading vi sacked Irish cobblers est 2353-85, Idaho sacked. russets 0, few early sales 3.10-3.16; to believe the corporation would not have increased its rate of production without confident expectation of bet- ter business in the fall. . The figures wero not interpreted bearishly, the Stock selling up to 173%. duplicating |" the high for the current movement. Several issues wore helped by cor- porate news -deyelopments, Oil well supply pre: onthe sale of @ taking checker cab was announcement of terms of the pro- posed merger with Parmelee Trans- portation. Continental Baking shares were firm on announcement of the sale of its inte in| Commander- Larabec Corporation. Wi Baking “A” sold up a few point Diamond Match sold off further, reflecting de- intention of purfehasing a large in- terest in it. Call money held at 2% per cent, with an easier undertone. bo Duluth, Sept. burum— Open H ae 16634 $3 MINN. Minneapo! Fe UW heat receipts today 510 compared to 422 a year ago. Minneapolis cash wheat and coarse grain closing quotations today follow: Wheat—- Delivered To Arrive 1 dark nor. 86% .89% 89% ‘84% (87% jccee 35% x AG%% 89% rk n ia protein 1 dark nor. 2 dark nor, 3dark nor. 12% protein 1 darkn or. 2 dark nor. 84% 86% 9% 88% |. ‘Winter Wheat hi a 86% oes BE veces BP vcore Oe: 2g We a =~ a % 20c patos’ $4% wise. 8 et 508. 2. F pms au. S$3%e 81% 83% rum . 1 amber rotein- ess 3 Zea 2 3! Fe] By > Ey wesee CNS em MOONE aim 9 1 pie. grade 93. 8 Ni ed out bi Close flax on t: onal Biscuit were among a large x ordinary money steady, 2% Time | oat Ss Bes exchanges. irregular. nial by the Krueger interests of any |= aes died evening. day morning. Stephanus. anus and Theresa near Strasburg. Mrs. Baumgartner was born July 24, 1891, at Strasburg in Russia. She came to American in 1910 and was married the same year. CATCHES HAND IN WRINGER Beulah, N. D., Sept. 10.—Miss Irene Lautermilch suffered a severe injury to her right hand here recently when the bones were crushed in the wring- {| er of an electric washing machine. Northwest Flyer Is Preparing for Hop Over Atlantic (Continued from page one) Atlantic flight for a long time. his letters to his uncle he referred frequently to some aviator of his ac- quaintance who had water in & single jump. “I think I'll have to try that stunt myself,” Ammel had said in one ot his letters. Dr. Humphrey had taken it as @ joke at the time. Captain Ammel was born at Ganby, Minn., 33 years ago, the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Ammel. now of Dodge Center, Minn. The family moved to Garry, 8. D., while Roy was young, and he finished his grade schooling there. He went to Moorhead.to high and soon after entered the North Dakota agricultural here. Soon after came the war, and he He was attached to the seventh air squadron, stationed at the Panama cana]. Following the war he was detailed as one of a group of United States aviation officers loaned to Peru under the recently deposed President Leguia, tc organize and train army and navy air units. After his return from Peru, Ammei went to Chicago and entered business there. For the past year ie has de- voted his entire time to flying. At resides with William Humphrey, a brother of Dr. Hum- phrey. ares 82% 847% 82% 84%} school, enlisted. Chicago he CURB STOCKS New York, Sept. 10.—(@)—Curb: Cities Service 9%. Standard Oil 49: %. Electric Bond and Share 84%. , bars rg sTOCK First Bank Stock 26%. Northwest Banco 4344. Greyhound Corporation 6%. Others blank. LIBERTY BONDS er York, Sept. 10.—(@)—Liberty *Eiscrty 314: iol. First 44's Fourth 4 Treas. 4's 107.28. CHICAGO CASH GRAIN Chi Sept. 10.—(AP)—Wheat No. 1 90%; "No. 1 hard 86 No. 1 | haa spring 86%; mixed 99%; No. 1 _yel- 1 white 1.03%; sam- ¢ Yereuris ; (weevlty: Bye Ne: Seed 6.75-7.0 Clover seed 16.00-23 mat 4 7 Ribs 50. Betlies. 1 BOSTON WOOL Boston, Sept. 10,—(®)— Wool, pu. Duluth, Min: .. Sept. 1 Fack $1.98-2. 16% Oats No. 3 white 37c. No. 1 rye 56%e. Barley choice to. fancy CHICAGO POTATOES gnieees: ept. 10.—(AP)—(U. Agr.)—Potatoos, 91; on track MONEY RATES New York, Sept. 10.—(AP)—Call er cent all day. LER Oe ES days 2%4-2%5 4 nos, Prime commercial paper 3-3%. ces unchanged, Bankers acce| MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapo Sept. 10,.—(@)—Flour unchanged. Shipments 48,858, Bri 34.00-25.50, Standard middiings 24.00- 50. New » Sept 81% OMIT DIVIDEND New York, Sept. 10.—(#)—Directors of the Gulf States Steel company of Birmingham, Ala., today omitted the quarterly dividend of $1, due on the common stock at this time. Mrs. A. Baumgartner, 39, Strasburg, Dies| Mrs: Anton A. Baumgartner, 39, living five miles west of Strasbure, in this city at 9:05 Tuesday The body is being sent to Strasburg this afternoon for funeral services at the Catholic church Fri- Interment will made in the parish cemetery. Rev. Father August Fix will officiate. irs, Baumgartner leaves her hus- band, eight children, two brothers, a sister and her parents. dren are Christina, Max, Theresa, Elizabeth, Alphonse, Joe, Irene -and Her brothers are Steph- and Joseph Roehrrich, Strasburg. Her sister is Mrs. Phil- omena Heidrich, of Banhart’s parish, near Strasburg. Her parents, Joseph Roehrrich, also MOTHER CONFIDENT SON WILL SUCCEED Dédge Cente:, Minn., Sept. 10.—) ident her son will span the At- man continues steady with the move= ment moderate in volume, mostly on 64’a and finer wools. re being reported on Ohio and sim- ilar strictly combing 64's and better quality wools at 31 to 81%¢c in the grease. Territory original bag fine wolos of bulk good French combing staple sells at 72 73¢ scoured basis. Similar pines with clothing woot grad- 78 to 7c, scoured basis. CASH GRAIN Further sales No.'2 do rie 79% 16%Kc: No. 2 do 74% ed durum 73%-77%e; tac; No. 1 red durum EACHANGH 10.—#)—Foreign Demand Grent S rntreil 100.15 94. Canadian Crop Is Larger Than 1929 Winnipeg, Sept. 10.—()—Western Canada's wheat crop for 1930 is esti- mated at 335,812,000 bushels by the Manitoba Free Press. The estimate is considerably larger than the outturn of the 1929 crop but only a little more than 60 per cent of the record crop of 1928. Total western wheat acreage is placed at 23,960,000. | It is estimated the three Prairie Provinces will harvest bushels of oats from 8,286,000 acres; 119,060,000 bushels of- 4,755,009 acres; 25,650,000 bushels of rye from 1,370,000 acres and 4,305,000 bushels of flax from 571,000 acres. 287,242,000 barley -from The chil- spanned the _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1930 jantic by air, Mrs. Agnes Dodge Center, anxiously awaits the time when Captain Roy W. Ammel, former army flier, will take off on his adventure across the ocean, “I am sure he will make it,” the aviator’s. mother, 58, said today. “I will continue to think he will cross | the Atlantic without mishap.” First intimation that Captain Am- mel planned to cross the Atlantic by air came to his mother here four sii weeks ago when the aviator sent a let- ter briefly detailing his plans. The | D: communication requested Mrs. Am- mel to say nothing of the preparations ioe until Captain Ammel wrote again. dust before he took off, the aviator 1|Promised, he would write his mother Ka again. Mrs. Ammel lives alone. Blease, Ransdell Suffer Defeat in Party Primaries (Continued from page one) feated for renomination in the sixth congressional district. Returns from 441 of 690 precincts in the district gave State Senator Seymour H. Person, Lansing 185,762 against 49,288 for Hudson. Although 299 precincts were not re- Ported virtually all were in Wayne county. Detroit, where Person was consistently adding to his lead. Hudson’s candidacy was strongly endorsed by the Michigan AntiSaloon: League, of which the Tepresentative |B) formerly was superintendent. Wet |} sentiment centered on Person. Complete unofficial returns from : ae seventh congressional district show that Representative Louis C. Cram- 2) ton, Republican, was re-nominated by a margin of 75 votes over Jesse Wol- cott, Port Huron attorney. The vote was: Cramton 25,525; Wolcott 26,450, -52c; | Cramton is a dry and Wolcott a wet. ee to good 46-49c; lower grades 460, In_the gubernatorial race, Wilber claiming victory on the basis of a .| plurality of approximately 74,000 over Alex J. Groesbeck, former gov- ernor, in 1,878 out-state precincts. BLEASE APPARENTLY BEATEN BY BYRNES Columbia, S. C., Sept. 10.—(P)— Coleman Livingston Blease, for 40 years a storm center in South Car- olina politics, has apparently lost his seat in the United States Senate to James F. Byrnes, Spartanburg at- torney, whom he defeated six years ago. Returns from yesterday’s Demo- cratic primary gave Byrnes 119,310 votes to Blease’s 114,340 when Mg ports from 1,379 of the 1,422 cinets had been tabulated. Nomina. tion is equivalent to election, ONE CANDIDATE WINS 2 NOMINATIONS Concord, N. H., Sept. 10.—()—John G. Winant of Concord, former gover- nor, is the Republican nominee for governor of New Hampshire. With returns from 25 scattered voting dis- tricts missing out of 294, his pluraity over Arthur P. Morrill, also of Con- cord, was 2,948. Dr, Hugh K. Moore of Berlin was third. Albert W. Noone. of Peterboro ap-| q parently won Democratic nominations for both U. 8, senator and governor. Noone’s success in the primary caused an unprecedented situation in this state since never before had a candidate been nominated both for governor and United States senator, although under the law a candidate may run for both offices. The situa- tion gave rise to considerable conjec- ture as to what would be done should Noone accomplish the theoretical feat. of winning election to both offices, It is presumed that, in such an event, he could take his choice of either of- filling the office thus left vacant. WASHINGTON LOSES DRY CONGRESSMAN Seattle, Sept. 10.—(4)—One . of hington’s five dry congressmen. seeking renomination apparently defeated by a militant modificatfon- ist and two others were having close races on the basis of returns today from the state primary election, With only nine out of 460 precincts unreported, Ralph A. Horr of Seat- tle, who campaigned as a wet, had 32,045 votes and Representatives John F, Miller, who ran on a@ prohi- bition platform, had 28,495 for the republican nomination for congress- man from the first district (Seattle). New Government Of Argentina Is Friendly to U. S. (Continued from from Page one) ter-revolutionary tactics by friends of the ousted administration. Rule by martial law was tightened. Heavy guards were maintained over the city; troops moved through the streets, and fighting planes man- oeuvered overhead, A censorship more rigid than has been known heretofore was imposed The chief of the Argentine Press sec- tion advised all foreign correspond- ents that no messages could be sent out of the country which had not been approved by authorized cen- sors. The prohibition applied alike te cable, telegraph and telephone, The correspondents were told that any one violating the order would be expelled. No code messages were accepted. WEDDING FIESTA BLAMED FOR RIOT Des Moines, Ia., Sept. 10.—(#)—In a copyrighted story by Harlan Miller, staff writer, the Des Moines today says a misunderstood wédding revel toucued off the riots which left dead and wounded in the streets of Buenos Aires Monday night. Miller, who is making @ 20,000 mile flight to South America and back, for his newspaper, was in Buenos Aires when the rioting. “a comic opera counter revolution with a tragic end- ing” began. His story reached Des Moines de- spite a strict military censorship which was clamped on Buenos ates because. “Sotth American ingenuity forgot the radio telephone as a me- dium for transmitting news.” Calling his wife here by telephone he dictated to her the story of the rioting. “Buenos Aires is disposing of its dead,” his story says, “and caring for |: its wounded because a fashionable wedding in the Plaza Colon ended with the conventional separation ot the birde and groom following the 1 ceremony. “The marriage fiesta was under way when the bride and groom were torn apart for the sake of carrying out the wedding night tradition. The separ- ation of the bride and groom caysed Shore and in the melee a shot was “The wedding melee threw fear into the hearts of that 6 counter- night Precipitation to 7 a. Highest wind velocity . GENERAL REPORT emprtrs. Pre. ia ty, Mo. pe eid iron” p 4 6 No. Platts; Nebr ‘cd Qkianoma’ city, clay § ol rince Albert, cldy : Cit; Histg Mai NORT DAKOTA . sleeping room on ground floor in ‘ Bismarck, clear Amenia, pt clay Beach, pt cldy . Bottineau, clay Carrington, clear . Crosby, clear .... Devils Lake, cidy '] Dickinson, tty" ald; Ente liendale, cidy” . ‘exsenden, clear . Grand Forks, vied Hankinson, clea: Hettinger, pt eldy Jamestown, clear Larimore, cldy . Lisbon, clear . son, Pembina,"pt clay ish, fogs M. Brucker, attorney general was | Williston, ones Moorhead, Minn. WEATHER FORECASTS Bismarck and vicinity—Partly glow, tonight and Thursday; cooler r North Dakota—Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday; cooler Thurs- ry For South Dakota—¥air to locally unsettled tonight and Thursday; some- what cooler pene ais Montana—Local showers tonight; cooler in northwest and north central; Thursday unsettled. lowa—Partly cloudy or cloudy to- night and Thursday, possibly showers in extreme south portion; iinet tonight in east: ‘Minnesota—Partly cloudy in south, mostly cloudy in north portion tonight probably showers east portion; cooler Thursday in northwest portion. warmer tonight in southeast portion; seireme nor GENBRAL CONDITIONS Low pressure, Accompanied by light, seattered showers, prevails from the Plains States westward to the Pacific er is also somewhat unsettled in ish ead Valley and Tessure prevails ilar those districts, Femperatures aro moderate in all sec- CORN AND WHEAT REGION Scattered showers at opening and close of week delayed threshin, siderably, but improved fall p conditions and fall f finished and consider: Potato digging well enerally light yields, rom frost, much Some rye seed- mostly out of dan being cut for fod ing Accomplished, but acreage lower than normal. River stage at 7 a. m. today 1.7 ft., 24 hour change non Bismarck station barometric pres- Reduced 29.36 in, RRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorologist. sure 28.10 in. 0! revolution had begun and from the roof of the Casa Rosada, the govern- mental palace, a machine gun ripped out @ huridted bullets. ae are reported to have fice, re exists no precedent i k. Hee eee Rr 3 “Riot burst upon this city of nearly 2,000,000, spreading like fire into the civilian population, which thought it saw in the night sky the figure of The surprised {Weather Report *| CLASSIFIED AD | alesmen OH Temperature at 7 a. m, Highest Abt le . RATES EARN $50- reer $15 WEEKLY AU want ads. are casb in advance | Sell HERTEL PERSONAL CHRIST- minimum charge 7 o@nts Copy} MAS Cards. Weekly pay! Exper- 7| must be received at the Tribune of-} ience unnecessary. Outfit FREE, fice by ¥:00 a m to insure insertion| Hertel Co. 318 Washington, Dept, same day tp the regular classifieo| 2-341, Chicago. oage tr Personal Cuts. border or white space usea on fant .ade come under the classified | WANT to hear from party driving to iisplay rates at 90 cents per colump| Minneapolis within ihe, bexk weak tneb per insertion who would like passenger to share expenses. Phone 1186, eee > days jan Work Wanted 4 cs: WORK WANTED—By woman ‘exper- ike ov "i fenced in doing general housework, work by the hour, clerking or as a waitress. Call at 312 First street. CHIMNEY SWEEP—Furnaces and chimneys cleaned. Work guaran- teed. Price reasonable. Phone 398. —_.. Phone 82 Rooms for Rent The Tribune Want Ad Depastment | FOR RENT—Large ni ly furnished modern home, well ventilated and Male Help Wanted hot water heat. Also small sieep- __| ing room, private entrance. ‘Close LEARN BARBERING now Take ad-| in, right downtown, corner Rosser vantage of our LOW SUMMER| and Fifth street, 402 Fifth street RATES. Catalog free. Moler Col-|_ or phone 246-M. : _lege, Fargo. N. D. FOR RENT—Large bed room down- WANTED—30 Gravel trucks. Pay 09} stairs, in modern home, attractively per cubic yard, mile long haw In- furnished, hot water at all umes. terstate Construction Co., Napoleon,| Suitable for 2 gentlemen only. Call Ie at 601 Sixth street or phone 1066 DOI a misfit. Qualify for | _Siter 2p. m. good positions. Catalog Free. Mo- | FOR RENT—An attractively furnish- ler Barber college, Fargo, N. D. ed room with large clothes closet in a new downtown apartment, _ Stee thir preferred. Call at Female Help Wanted nest, Sparse 1. ROE Pp FOR RENT. mm in modern new WANTED—Experienced maid for} ome. Clean, quiet, always hot general house work. Must be able| Water. Gentlemen only. Puone to cook. Call at 614 First street. 120-R_or call at 503 Fourth street. Siete pipes attractively furnish- ed quiet room on ground floor, Agents suitable for one or two. Inquire at 813 Ave. B or call 1377-M. EARN BiG MONEY—Pull or FOR RENT—Furnished sleepin time, sell Ohristnas assorturents|FOR RENT—Furnished sleeping and personal cards; experience un-| 0M with or without board, right necessary; generous commissions. downtown. Call at 311 Fourth -/ Write Artistic Card Co, Elmira, N.| Street or phone 627-M. York. FOR RENT—Neatly furnished room ‘ibe Aan Heat and light fur- nished. Phone 1426-M or call at Apartments 122 Ave. B. = ROOMS FOR RENT—In an all mod- A obs sehr ipakeebrenettato ern home, near business section. Chey fever cepitsth frolic Use ot phone. At 213 South Sixth 4 A igidaire street, servics. Also sized single room Beane ees es with Atco pre FOR RENT—Large pleasant room on Apartments, 411 Fifth. Phone 273.| §8round floor to two neat ladics or FOR RENT—Desirable furnished | Scntlemen._At_309 Seventh street. FOR RENT—Desirable room, aiso housekeeping apartm t ya foot privace "tate grees good kitchen range for sale. Phone for rent. “Rent reduced for care of | _242-M or call at 810 Sixth strect. furnace, Phone 512-M. Fol RENT Comfortable sleeping FOR RENT—Furnished 2 room apart-| 00m, si or two, close in. Call ment, private entrance, gas, hot|_®¢316 Third street. water heat, close in. Phone 611-J | FOR RENT—Very nice sleeping roo or call 217 Eighth street after 5| 610 Ave. A or phone 613-M. pm aE Seca FOR RENT—Furnished three room uses Rains with tes bath. st Bo and Flats 00 per month. Call at FOR SALE—Five room modern house Third street. Phone 1213-w. orion ep eet eee mes m1 erartcten anid dla wie luding 2 bed rooms, full base- FOR RENT—Nicely furnished 3 room| ment with double heated garage in apartment, adults only, at 120 W.| good condition, near school, in Rosser. Inquire+ at 322 Ninth} Riverview addition, on very liberal Street. Phone 1054-M. terms. The 6 room stone house in- FOR RENT—Two room furnished} Cluding 3 bedrooms, modern except apartment and kitchenette, modern| heat, newly decorated, for rent at conveniences. Phone 213-M or call} $30 per month, situated on West at 523 Sixth street. a Pr . eh FOR RENT—Two room apartment, | FOR SALE—Five room bungalow also one room apartment. Phone paren on Dealer Kis 1063 or apply at room 304 oF le. Located at Ave. wt “an FOR RENT—Furnished one room ied is Company, Bis- apartment $16.00 per month. Call Hera N. D., or phone N. 1. Roop at 618 Sixth street. rs We FOO ry ent,|FOR RENT—Five room modern Inquire of FE. McCurdy. house with garage attached; 6 Irigoyen crushing down the new pro- vincial government of Uriburu, just ag | that day inducted into office.” “Soldiers and citizens carried the false news of the counter revolution to the guards on the central postoffice building. In the plaza machine guns and artillery began the supposed de- fense of Uriburu’s government est. “Streets a few moments earlier packed with the shouting thousands emptied as the citizenry sought cover.” Early Tuesday morning, he said, after the terrific confusion had sub- sided, the government learned that there had been no revolt. ADVERTISEMENT. FOR B Sealed bids for the construc Storm Water e bankment and concrete dam, Improvement District Number ‘Twenty-five of the North Dakota, will be Frecelved by the Board of City Com- missioners of the said cit, k p..m., September Plans and specifications een ole mith the City Auditor or may be ob- tained from the City Engineer. The following approximate quanti- {lee are given for the guidance of bid- City of Bismarck, A sores cloarin of earth embankment. f reinforced concrete spillway. ed concrete dam. this contract mus un ‘not later than September 2 ater than No- dder must state in his bid of interest which the war- e to bear (not exceeding seven 7) per cent per annum) which shall BY received and accepted by. hilm iat par in payment for the work. inust be made upon & basis of cash pays ment forall work to be d: a must’ be accompanied by a Ned check for Five Hundred 00) ee payable to she ont ler of A. P, of t rel Gity Commissioners, as that the bidder will, {¢ successful, ens beget contract for the perform- Each bid must also bidder's bond in I amount bid as be <necompanled by @ sum equal to rovided' in ‘Section f North ¢ City Commissioners of the ¥ of Bismarck, teserves Et to reject any, oF all b City Auditor: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11TH 7:00—Furm flashes, 7:10— Weather report. 15—Farm repo 7:30—Special bulletins, U. S. er in Pepa neion, t | members of the park board. ~ i Your meditation peric 8:00—Shoppers guide. progr: 9:00—-Qpening grain market our. :00— Weather report, grain markets. 10—-Aunt Samm: 57—-Arlington t! 60—Grain markets, 105—Organ program, Clara Morris. 2:00—Biamarck Tribune news. and 5 Luncheon program. j——Voice of the wheat pool. ies markets, high, low, and Bismarck. <7 ribune news, weat! ind St. Paul livestock. — busta matinee. a Bieste iRQUE Good news iygido pass iiss: Sports items, r , . FOR, RENT—Modern apartment Ti] Garages for’ rent, Tor salen annie Person Court. Phone 796. tary couches and bed davenport. Phone 905 after 6 p. m. Household Goods for Sale | FOR RENT—Modern bungalow, five Caeite de _| Yooms and sun parlor, enclosed FOR SALE—Three piece leather set,| front porch, full basement, garage, 2 big rocking chairs, sewing ma-| possession October 1st. Inquire at chine, dining room table, library} 1015 Fourth street. table, bed, dresser and daybed. Call | FOR RENT—One six room modern at 714 Main. | home with garage and full base- R SALE—Enameled d_nickle} ment, at 808 Ave. B, for $55.00 per coal range. Practically new. Must] month. Inquire at office or home be seen to be appreciated. Good| of H. F, O'Hare. baker. Call at 511 Ninth or phone | FOR RENT—Attractive 5 rooms and ‘ bath, all mod-rn, natural gas heat if desired. See this. Phone «1313 furnace stove used only one year,| or call at 211 W. Rosser. cost $120.00, will sell for $50.00 | FOR RENT—Five room modern bungalow, newly decorated. Immed- jate possession. Inquire at 502 Seventh. ‘i FOR SALE—Modern home in good condition. Call at 516 Fourteenth FOR SALE—Hamilton piano in ex-| street. cellent condition. Price reasonable. 220 Fourteenth street. Miscellaneous ° Lost an und FOR SALE—1000 head medium ante wooled white-faced yearling ewes LOST—Near entrance of Prince Hi for delivery at Rosebud, Mont., on tel, a lady’s small yellow gold El-| Northern Pacific or Milwaukee gin wrist watch with engraved railroads. W. L. Kennedy, Big hunting case. Initials P. L. H. on outside center of case. Reward tor | FOR SALE—Good registered Oxford return to Pauline Hall ioseeg very and Rambouillet rams, yearlings Towner, N. D. or to Bismarck Tril and two year olds.. Registered poll- une. ed Shorthorn bulls, 15 months old. LOST OR STOLEN—A part Terrier| Strutz and Nagel, Bismarck, N. D. and Bull dog brindle pup with bob| FOR SALE—Canoe in good condi- tail and ears. Reward. Return to| tion, equipped with oar locks, a 402 Mandan street. good bargain for hunters. Call 1006 Fifth or phone 896-J. 6:00—Your dinner hour. FOR A few good rekuilt 6:45-—Base scores. tractors, various makes. Bismarck Implement Co., 201 Main Ave., Bis- FOR RENT—Office space over Har- ris & Woodmansee’s store. Apply Fargo Park Boar Board at Harris & Woodmansee. Consults Engineers FOR RENT—Three nice officc rooms over Knowles Jewelry Store. Apply Fargo, N. D., Sept. 9.—(@)—Two Iry store. Minnesota nena toured perec’s af evens parks and playgrounds today wit! members of the park board to deter- + Used Cars mine how the most can be gained *| trom the land owned by the city. USED CARS—Just the car that you The engineers are Arthur «. Nich-| have been looking for and at a price ols, Risen: and George L. Ni that will move it quickly. To see it means to want it. A 4 door Pon- son, St. Paul. ihey conferred with Hao alan, late. 193° mode iaee chanically and otherwise in fine condition. $375 cash or terms. May, be seen at the Olson Garage. 110) Eight street. FOR SALE—Pontiac coach in For Rent condition, six good tires, front rear bumpers, guaranteed valt $150.00, C. E. Knudtson, 810 Eighth street. Apartment, all modern Dead Animals Wanted ON ACCOUNT of hot weather Inquire at 8 made The Bismarck Tribune Sr onto in emoving ou) dead animals. such as horses, cat Office tle, hogs and sheep Call us fe ly. Northern Rendering he 265, Bismarck, N. Dak,

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