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SLUMP IN STOCKS HAS BAD EFFECT ‘ON GRAIN MARKET Visible Supply Now Less Than at Corresponding Time in 1930 for First Time Chicago, Oct. 7.—()—Oppressed by untoward developments in the stock market, grain values gave way as much as 3c a bushel today. There was conspicuous dearth of thé big ‘buying which of late has stimulated advances in wheat values, and no ex- Port demand of consequence today for | # wheat from North America was heard of. The world’s available supply of wheat showed 5,762,000 bu. increase for the week, but for the first time in many months was less than at the corresponding time last year: Wheat closed unsettled 2%-2%ec, a bulletin lower than 's ish. December 80-80%c; May 86%-% | ¢ cents. Corn closed 1-1%c down, December 84%-%e, Oats 1%-1%ec off, and Mba from 35¢ Corn prices received late support today from some of the leading bulls and this checked the break in the corn market. bought and wheat sold for spreaders. Ing notable absence of active sup- port from buyers here, wheat Stage today fell quickly ton price records for the sea market at this juncture showed a break of more tha’ compared with yesterday's Meanwhile, further rains were re- ported both in drought districts of) southern hemisphere gountries and in domestic winter wheat territory, and there was plenty of evidence that prices for wheat and other grain were likewise being influenced a good deal by weakness of securities. "rhe first transactions. in next sea~ son's wheat iveries were witnessed in ‘Cnicage, toaay. July wheat, rej resenting the earliest wheat to be harvested in 1931, changed hands early at as high ‘as 92c a bushel, showing more than 10c premium over contracts for wheat now in store 30 delivarable during December, 1920. July wheat, however, soon developed a downward price trend that exceed- ed the action of nearby months. Corn and oats followed wheat. Provisions went lower with cereals, outstanding feature of the Ret much vf the time today. Pit trad- cfs were the best buyers. Predic- 8 that husking returns wou - ting ing formed the chiet basis for purchai ‘Wheat weakness acted as mo! pending Gevelopment of any factors. MINNEAPOLIS FUTURES SHOW LACK OF STRENGTH Minneapolis, Oct. 7—()—Wheat futures here opened weak today be- cause of poor cables and reports of rains through considerable southern hemisphere territory. A feeble rally followed the weak start but the trend was downward through the day. De- cember closed 2%c lower and May 2% cent lower. Corn futures opened % to 4c low- er and held in a very narrow range with shorts covering on declines. rOats trade was quiet to dull. Rye opened easy with trade light and featureless. Barley was weak in a moderate range. Flax opened firm for October, and 1%c lower for December. Cash wheat demands good and of- ferings were light. Prices were very firm compared with futures. Winter wheat was stronger and scant offer- ings continued in = demand. in steady de- Cash corn offerings were very light and demand was quiet. Oats demand | Fa was good, rye demand was improving. Barley demand was good and offer- ings were light. Flax demand was fair to very good, depending on qual- ity. ‘H ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK % AP)—(U. 8. ‘ally.steady k showing strength; dry feds scarces; few lots light ‘steers’ and yearlings held at 11.00 and up: desirable Dakotas 1100 to 1.200 Ib, st 3; Most rangers low grade na- tives down to £00 a under; most cows 4.25 to 5.50; best grass heifers 36; low cutters and. cutters 3.090 to ders and calves gely 10.00 to 10.1 iT F200 to 1250. logs 8,000; steady to 15 higher than “Moinday;, most, bide and ae rly salei 65: top 9.65; lig he pigs most] and sales and pac! ine $50: rough oF heavy. kinds ‘sow low; no directs average com Monday 8 t 217. Sheep 6,000; lambs opening strong foe Manes ows and wether lambs 0 to oat mostly 7.75 and up; buck 0 7.00: common throwouts best white faced id é CHICAGO Eavmpret - hicago, A, nes 0 23,000; including’ Soo0 ai- Fegte: ‘active: strong to die higher Reavies up most: ik, 180 to 310 Ib Toad to 10.35: few 10.40 to 20,50: ‘et packing sows 8.00 to 9. Light lights good ‘and ingice 140. to 160 Ibs." 9.65 to 10.263 Nene welght 160 to 400 Ibs. 9.90 to to 250 Ibs. Flin {loo 13.00% ‘She stock siow, stead tate ta. and veslers 25 to 66 ttle, and vealers: steers emhter cate “00 to 900 Ibs, 11.21 fo43.35; 900 to, 1100 Ibe. 10.50 to. 24, a5: 1300, Ibe. x es to . cut fo eiedtam ot to VEL Yenlers (milk fed) chol Tose to 12.50; medium. 4.50" to 10.1 50 cull and common 7.50 to 8.50. jtocker ane feeder cattle: ee) good and choice 500 to 1050 Ib: - 00; common and mediu 4 ng. to 25 higher: eaostly on fat ‘lam to. city: hela mbs; bull pacers: ad ers 6.25 to jempe provisions | ¢:’ decline to a rise of on Besides corn was! ws | Continental Of of Delawai 8 tea bushel as/ © % Skelly Of) nge fo | about stea THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, New York Stocks | CLOSE, OCTOBER ' Adams Expre: piace eae ly leghany Corpor: Allied Chemical and Dy Rinorican Boch Magneto . American Can ‘American Commercial ‘Alcohol. STOCK MARKET IS ERRATIC AS BULLS AND BEARS CLASH -|Many Shares Touch New Lows tal American Power and Light’. American Radi ator and Rei American Su American Pelepn. an ‘and a telestaph American Water Works American Wool pfd. Anaconda Copper er Minit Andes Co! Atchison, Topeka & Senta: Atlantic Coast Atlantic ‘Refining . Auburn. Barnsdall A ..., Vendix Aviation Canadian ings Ca not Sa is yscene item nestsc etd sh mes pecans mcomearesm ants’ or00: [Eom Gs na wena anIs Guns sR SSEaoS oma we sme: S e Fer Chrys! jer lotor Colorado Fuel Columbia Gas and Electric Columbia Graphophone ... Commercial Solvents, new Commonwealth and South Consolidated Gi ca a a ROPE OE SK EE SE Eee Corn Product: Electric Auto Lite . Electric Power and Goodseer rire apa Rubber Graham Pats Great Northern pt Great Northern Great Western Sugar rigsby Grunow loudaille Hershey . Houston Oil . Hudson Motor’ :! Hupp Motor Independent Oi Indian Refining International Comi nibuation International H International Match” pfa. International Nickel of Canada. Int. Telephone and Telegraph latte -Manville . J. Helis: Springticid ‘Tire. Kelvinetor Corporation Kennecott Copper . Kolster Radio Mathieson Alka May Department Sst Mexican Seaboard Oil . Miami Copper Mid-Continent Petroleum - Missouri, Kansas & Texay Missouri Pacific . Montgomery Wai Nash Motors National Cash Register. National Dairy. Products": National Power and Light Nevada Consolidated ; & Norfolk & Western North American Northern Pacific Oliver Farm Equij Pacific Gas ers x Pacific Lightin Packard Motor merican Petroleum B ; Paramount-Famous-Lasky ~~ Parmelee Transportation . Pathe Exchange Penney, J. C. Pennsyivania Phillips Petroleum Procter (®) Gamble Public Service Corporation N. Pullman Compai Purity Baking ment lectric Remington Rand ../°: Reo Motor Republic Iroi Reynolds Tob: : Richfield Olt of Call Royal Dutch Shell . ‘Safeway Stores St. Louis & San Francisco Schulte Stores RoLtaitt tts JAAR FR USAR a Gee ane 2 Servel, Inc. . Shattuck, F. G, Shell Union Oli 77: Simmons Company” Simms Petroleum to} Sinclate, Consolida: 4 89 BER vgn go es sna ne Goette4 Southern Pacitic Southern Rail lard Gi Standard Ol of Calltornla® ‘ Standard Oj! of New Jerse: Standard Oil of New York . Stewart-Warner Corporation Studebaker Motor . ‘Texas Corporation Timken aller Sear Imken ler Bae Underwood Elli ne Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft Baited Cigar Store Uni ‘orporation United Fruit United Gas Imp! U. 8. Industrial Al Realt pe oer vement ohol Ww Westinghouse A‘ Westinghouse 2 Electric Willys-Overland Motor Wool worth Company BISMARCK GRA: (rurntshea by miusesit- Ml jer Co.) No. 1 dark northern lred durum No. I flax . No. 2 flax . , total sae rh matin W: Cobblers 1, 16.10 Be oe chet Nor ise mbs 30 tbs: down weoa ghar oice | North Dake .00; medium $.50 to weights common 5.00 t 50 Cl £0380 Pe ‘modiuns to’ choice 2.00. to jyeights, cull and. common eeding lambs 60 to. 7! id choice 6.50 to fina sci ASS si sow veak PROD’ pert Aas ew York, resned Ducks 18 to 21. Live t [poultry pot Lis ss Forage ie toe: ve light cena inguiry, de- iat Soho We ashe ee ‘arloads f.o: of 160: 0: livered sales less ng ene SN ion el Ba White er, sacked cmt. U. 1 and partly Faded, tow sales 100 “to 1.38. fi SES.D.A.) poultry” weak, pater--Receipts 35 19, 671 tubs, Steady: ge—Reci cases. Mixed golors, regula Sekt closely sclectod heavy’ 35 3 extras 31 to 34; re- 31 10, 38, Nearby re wntt Srvnies, 53% te ie vextra fa tliat 4 ut for Year Before Buying Starts Rally at Close New York, Oct. 7.—(P}—Share prices swung over a wide arc which carried pelted the so-called pivotal issues to lower, tock market before ilfting ine closing prices of the ssion in the hour of ~The late advance, however, attracted renewed selling, but fina Prices were. irregula! leh her, with the ee showing ‘iret. ‘Hour was rief rally in the ling. Supporting followed by aap a rd d a rat 198, only 1. point ovember’s. minimum, be- ig back above200, U. 5. iat bow above 154. General Pa and ‘Radio each drop} 5 aaa Lan ad potnts to record low levels for the present shares, then reeind Alli > foal, h tumbled 18 points yenter: rallied 7 points in the early transactions, tumbled nearly 12 points from the top, only to rebound 10 points. tanh Can, United Aircraft, Amer- er Works, Woolworth, and bout 1 Paint Wat jonal Biscuit, closed id in brokerage’ elfcles that the exchange was conceryed over such” unethical practices as: making eof stop-loss orders ooks as the bagis of or the spreading of ma- Helous or destructive propaganda. In the early trading a few large orders indicated. some efforts were being mate to support the market, but the list soon gave way. 80 far as could be learned, important bank- ing interests were unconcerned over the liquidation. Call money held’at 2 per cent. UL Ra} Duluth. oe. L—P— Whi Open High Low sifpal Bl B18 55%” 55% 53 1.80 1.82 1,80 Let 13d, 1-82 hare rou MINNEAPOLIS RANGE Minneapolis, Get. 7-— 1m Wh pen High ets 33% pibd ABM 53% By % at Chicago, oct Wheat— i 88% 20% 3% 38% 9 Fm Ah 49% 53% 5% MINNEAPOLIS CASH RANGE Minneapo (P)— To Arrive 15% protein 1 dark nor. 80% 82% PRR Re jon Winter Wheat 82% 82% B1% neers 81% Roget 3 stig atte +a, €2- <i ss 5. £ 2 80% 80% 80% ‘Dakota Wheat ero Re mOR iio 8 aS: S ae Et 19% 31% 79% .71% mug z 5. Bi an 15% nee] "80% 19% 67% 79% 16% 31% 30% GQ an i . 1 amber ct Re: DULUTH CASH GRAIN ee ie Oct. 7.—(P)}—Close: .80-1.83; to arrive 5 Rept. 81 $1.80; Oct. $1.82; Nov. sas: “Dec. $1.90%. Wheat No. 1 dark northern 82%- ‘85%; No. 2 do 80%-825%c; No. 3 do 14% -80% No. 1 northern 815%- | 84c0; No. 2 do 7954-81%¢; Np. 1 amber durum 73%-79%c; No. 2 do 72%-79% cent; No. 1 durum 171%c; No. 2 do 0%-11% No. 1 mixed durum 70%- { ENGLISH NEWSPAPER. prec No. 2 do 6914-74'c; No. 1 red |; CHARGES CARELESSNESS lurum 70% -71 ic, “or No/3 white 35c. c No. 1 rye 47%-49%c. Barley choice to fancy 48-51c; med- ium to good 45-48c; lower grades 40- Nas NO Fee Wo or CHICAGO CASH GRAIN Chicago, Oct. 7.—(?}—Wheat No. 1 pele iy Pra 80%; No. 2 northern Corn No. 2 mixed 90%-91; No. 1 yellow 90%-91%; No. 1 white 96%; sample grade 85. Oats No. 1 white 38. Timothy seed _7.75-8.00. Clover seed 16.75-24.25. Lard 11.45. Ribs 14.50. Bellies 14.75. CuICAGO PRODUCE Chicago, Oct. 7.—#)—No price change was recorded in butter and eggs. Moderate activity was disclosed and fresh arrivals were fair. Poultry was easy in tone but prices, as a rule, remained stationary. Chicago, Oct. 1— (Live. poultry: Receipts 5 cars, 2 . Easy. Fow! 16 {0 20, Now 2 19; springs 48 to, 20; roosters 15; spring turkeys 28; ducks 14 to 20; geese Rutter Receipts: 10,299 tubs, Steady, prices unchange Higge—iecelptn 6,446 cases: Steady, prices unchanged. Cheese, per -pound—Twitis 18%} orns 19: Young Amer- daisies 19 long, icas 19; brick 20%; limburger 21 to 22; Swiss 27 to 30. RANGE OF CARLOT SALES Minneapolis, Oct. 7.—(@)—Range of. carlot grain sales: Wheat—No. 1 hard spring. 85; Nov 1 dark northern 81% 7M 5 northern 80% 8 No. i Wines TSig; No. 3 hard winter 79;'No. 2 am- ber @urum 76%; No. 4 mixed durum ite 33%. "Be cample 44, i to 1.84%. {Buys Husband 1 Plane; L He Flies Away in It Los Angeles, Oct. 7.—(P)—Mrs, Na- omi Cecila Sprecht Scoff, daughter of the late J. S. Sprecht, founder of the German American Saving bank here, was granted a divorce yesterday from James T. Scoff, aviator. Mrs. Scoff inherited a fortune estimated at $4,000,000 from her father. On the witness stand Mrs. Scoff said “My husband always had 4 good job but he spent all his money on himself. I bought him an airplane ‘and he flew away in it.” Former Official of Ward County Is Dead Minot, N. D., Oct. 7.—(#)—Peter Vandenoever, 74, former Ward county commissioner and also former Minot city commissioner, died at a hospital Sunday night after an illness of sev- eral months. Nine sons and daugh- ters survive. Funeral services will be held at St. Leo's Catholic church Wednesday and burial.will be made here. Vandenoever came to Minot in 1902. He served on the county board for 12 years and as a member of the city board for six years. CHINESE CITY TAKEN Nanking, China, Oct. 7.—()—Of- ficial announcement was made today that government forces last night captured Chengchow, headquarters of the Feng Yu-Hsiang, leader of the northern coalition which has been in military revolt against the Nanking government. Airplanes Hover Over Cortege for Dirigible’s Dead (Continued on from page one) lieved to be parts of the same body, Previously identified as two corpses. 7 Explode Stowaway Theory The body, badly burned, had fallen apart when retrieved from the ruins and had been mistaken as two. The discovery made it appear that only 46 persons died in the crash. There were eight survivors, of whom one died yesterday, the total, §4, conforming with the air ministry's total of 54 aboard ship. The discovery apparently disposed of the theory of a stowaway aboard, which police, unable to explain the “extra body,” believed yesterday to have been the case. The ruins gave no further clew to significance of a woman's burned shoe, with buckle at- tached, which was found in the de- bris. It was suggested it might have been a talisman of a romantic ad- venture catried by one of the crew or Passengers. Five bodies have been identified, all those of members of the crew. +| They are: Assistant Coxswain W. 51K 78% 1.83% 1.78% pyres = wooL sca Ge BF — The eee | wool sales ¢ toad. ‘on Oatober Twit posi eh me Pate of ‘all, ‘of wool from 5 to ‘oe, sales on ainda My 1.81% % per cont at the open- ing ly, and some Sols are 2 Kr 25 per cent lower. According ee cultural Commiisstoner ext need | ter rm rohased amare cans uring The. wah ene ae JEW YORK CURB STOCKS Citles Service—26 jectric Bond ee hare-—62, jtandard Oll~44%. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, Oct. Flour un- changed, Shi barrels. nchanged. which take week-end trips into near- Potter, Rigger E. G. Rudd, and En- gineers R. Blake, W. H. King, and S. E. Scott. ‘The Franco-British investigation of the tragedy proceeded today, with in- vestigators searching for the log of the ship. All a British expert would say as to findings thus far was that the investigation probably would be jong and extremely complex. Al- though not attributing loss of the ship to that alone, Commander Holt said it was probable that the altime- ter functioned imperfectly at the time of the crash. As the coffins were taken from the “| city hall and placed on the caissons, Premier Tardieu of France and Wedg- wood Benn, secretary of state for In- dia in the British cabinet, stood wi uncovered Seon “incarnation of bureaucracy.” QCTOBER 7, Rte tins Ge ae ee infantry. Then the caissons, a com- pany of aeronauts, representing Ughter than air aviation, a company representing heavier than air avia- company of: the Republican guard, Finally there was a great company of French school children, hoth boys and girls, Bedford, Eng., Oct. 7.—()—With the caption, : “Indictment,” torial appearing in a local newspaper, the Bedford Record, today asserted the disaster to the R-101, which cost the lives of so many,residents of this region need not and ought not to} Hi »j have happened. The paper declared the airship was; sent on her long hazardous flight before having been properly tested, with one engine out of order, bd after she had shown a tendency to dip at the nose and with weather |; conditions unfavorable to the flight. ‘Our brave men were sacrificed to mprovidence if not even to improv- ae concludes the arti¢le. “Who lid it? The record says first accounts ot the disaster “confirm in cruel fashion | s the worst. forebodings of many who watched with anxious interest the all- too-rapid execution of her alterations and all-too-casual preparations after- ward for her flight. mistake about this. .The one point which struck the casual and ignorant observer when the R-101 returned from her one inadequate test was the dip at the nose.” The newspaper comments on the airship’s “behavior as she got away, her low flying and apparent sluggish- ness.” Why did they let her go? They kn.w she was dipping at the nose, and they knew, as the man in the street did not, that that spelled danger. They knew she had not been tested properly and they knew that one engine at least was out of order. They knew that she was too heavy to begin with and that climatic condi- tions were against them, and yet they Jet her go.” TESTING OF R-100 WILL BE DELAYED % London, Oct. 7.—(?)—Further exper- iments with the R-100 probably will be held up for some time in conse- quence of destruction of the R-101. Parliament already has voted an © | appropriation of 342,000 pounds ster- ling for airship development this year, the sum being intended to include experiments with both big ships, in- cluding the Indian trips, but it was not expected today that much would be done in the near future beyond maintenance of the airship stations at | i: Cardington and elsewhere. Official inquiry into causes of the R-101 disaster may be prolonged, and it is believed the R-100 will not fly again until they are concluded, so that results of the investigation may apply to her. Aside from this, the airship force has been dealt a severe blow by loss of the experts who perished at Beau- vais. There are now, it is stated, barely enough trained men left at Carding- ton to form another crew, and train- ing fresh men needs time. Speculation as to a successor to Lord Thomson as air minister is somewhat premature, but indications point to Undersecretary Fréderick Montague, a keen airman and a confi- dent believer in airships. President Warns U. S. Institutions Must Be Shielded|: (Continued trom page one) would provide neither training nor umpire. Despotism or class govern- ment picks those who run and also those who win. “Whatever the merits or demerits of these other systems may be, they all mean the destruction of the driv- ing force of equal opportunity, and they mean the destruction of our constitution, for our political frame- work would serve none of them and many of its fundamental provisions are the negation of them, They mean the abandoment of the nation’s spiritual heritage. Need Religious Faith “It is significant that some of these systems deny religion and seek to expell it. I cannot conceive of a wholesome social ‘order or a sound economic system that does not have its roots in religious faith .... we can not permit any foreign person or agency to undermine our institu- tions, yet we must look to our own conduct that we do not by our own failure to uphold and safeguard the true spirit of America weaken our own institutions and destroy the very forces which upbuild our national greatness. “It is in our own house’ that our real dangers lie, and it is there that we need to summon our highest wis- dom and our highest sense of public service.” Asserting that “this. country is supremely dedicated, not to the pur- suits of material riches, but to pur- suit of a richer life for the individual, ‘Mr. Hoover said that in a large sense the open channels of opportunity have been maintained, constantly re- freshing the leadership of the na- tion by men of lowly beginnings. “We have no class or caste of aris- tocracy whose privilege limits the hopes and opportunities of our peo- ple,” he said. have been spread until they are the universal tools of the common man. rth, Bismarck, | ‘ahi They have brought to him the touch) FOR SALE—One-half section of land of a thousand finer things of life. They have enlarged the horizon of our vision into the inspiring works of “Science and education Wants no Bureaucracy Mr. Hoover held that government in business, except in emergency, also ‘dizes opportunity and is the tyranny through “Tendencies of communities and states to shirk their own responsibill- Sarlice in ths morning a. storm ties.” he sald, “or to unload them up- broke over the town. Hail-stones as ‘on the fedetal government, or of the lorced. thousai federal government to encroaca upon et eee é the thous the responsibilities of the states, are faa al aig A lane Heaped With Flowers artillery famous’ big siege guns ing the reign of the time the cortege railway station, where there was imposing honorary all caissons, which bl- | institutions if we hold the ‘tal sain of "God Save knowledge of Soe is a destructive of our whole pattern of ». The test and of the guard, buried with flowers woh eaas through this great na- upon nich peasants and others had laid | ti wi its ant ers: ion . them. tions ‘of demagoguery, there are today . despite the misrepresenta- - ‘After a detachment of cavalry,|more chances for young men to rise, Néw York has severg! hiking clubs | which rode at the head of the cor-|and for young women too, than there tege, Premier Tardieu walked, bare- | were 30 years ago.” headed. Behind him came Wedgwood “The world about us is tormented,” ‘Temperature at 7 a.m. . tion, two battalions of artillery ana a | 1! an edi- | 5, Let there be no| \ Fargo, clouds Oc sional showers tonight or Wednesd Somewhat cooler Wednesday. ers tonight or Wednesd: cooler west ers tonight or Wednesday. Somewhat cooler extreme west portion Wednes- ay, tions Yarmer in southwest portion Wednes- tonight and Wednesday. change in temperature, Wednesday. Colder W der Wednesday. centered this morning over the north- Ph Rocky mountains (Calgary 29.30). 29.55, \ KFYR i 1930 oF | Weather Report ‘ Precipitation to 7 a. Highest wind velocity GENERAL REPORT Temprtrs. Pre, Stati Low High tn, 47 53.68 cloudy Moines, Ja. rain... js Lake, WEATHER FORECA For Bismarck and vicin For North Dakota: Occasional show. Somewhat ortion Wednesday, For South Dakota: Occasional show- ‘or Towa: Showers tonight, and pos- sibly in north and extreme ‘east por- Wednesday morning. Slightly “For Minnesota: Probably showers Not much For Montana: Showers tonight and WEATHER CONDITIONS A low of considerable intensity is { has been accompanied by showers fromthe d he showers were very light to moderately heavy at some stations. There has been a general rise in tem- Perature over the region excpt for slight falls that hav occurred in the lower issippi valley and western jrouthern Alberta and Sas- River stage at Tam. today, 1.3 feet; 24-hour change, none. Bismarck station barometric pres- sure at 7 a.m., 27.79 inches; reduced, ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Official in Charge. oJ ° WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER & ka Kilocyclen—545.1 Meters 7:00—Farm, flashes. Washington. —Sp: J. 8. depart- ment of agrici antares \—Meditation period. 00—Shoppers' guide program. 00—Sunshine hour. :00—Opening grain markets; weath- er report. 10:10—Aunt Sammy. 10:57—Arlington time siguals. 11:00—Grain markets. i10s—organ- program: Clara Morris, 12:00—Grain markets; Bismarck Trib- une news and weather; lunch- eon progra: —Voice of the Wheat Pool. 15—Music. P.M, ‘ott Leavitt, congressman, Montana, 2:00—Grain markets: high, jow, and cloye: Bismarck ‘Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock. 05—Farm notes. 110—Musical matinee melodies, '30—Siesta hour: Good News radio ck Tribune sports items. —Bismarck Tribune news, World Bookman. ‘Your dinner hour, ‘Newscasting and newsacting. 00—Studio program, 0—Music. EE he said, “with the spiritual and eco- nomic struggles that attend changing ideals and systems. Old faitns are being shaken. But we must ‘tollow our own destiny. Our institutions are @ growth. They come out of our his- tory as a people. Our ideals are a binding spiritual heritage. We can ie | HOt abandon them without chaos. We can follow them with confidence.” SS Salesmen EARN $50- $75 WEEKLY Sell HERTEL PERSONAL CHRIST- MAS Cards. Weekly pay! Exper- jence unnecessary. Outfit FREE. Hertel Co., 318 Washington, Dept. K-341, Chicago. Position Wanted WORK WANTED—Gentleman ex- perienced in bookkeeping and gen- eral office work desires position. Phone 403-J. Farm Lands LAND FOR RENT—S% of Sec 25 Township 140, Range 76, eight miles | 5; northwest from Driscoll. Terms: Owner will furnish land and seed and receive % of crop delivered. Mrs. Anna Knauss, 502 Seventh street North, Bismarck, N. D. south of Steele, Kidder county Close to Pursian Park. Land is all tillable and soil‘is very fertile Has a nice grove of trees. Down pay: ment, some cash, balance on terms. Mrs. Anna Knauss, 602 Seventh street, Bismarck, N. D. Livestock FOR SALE—500 hesff of breeding ewes in lots to suit the purchaser Also 500 head of lambs. Inquise of P. C. Remington & Son, Bismarck, North Dakota. Lost and Found a| EaeT=os Friday afternoon between Third street en- CLASSIFIED AD RATES All.want ads are cash tn advance m.nimum charge 75 cents Copy must be received at the Tribune of- ficc by 9:00 a m to insure insertion same day in ‘the regular classified page. Cuts. border or white space used on want ads come under the classified display rates at 90 cents per column inch per insertion. REGULAR WANT AD RATES 6 days 25 words or under A 3 days 25 words or under .. 2 days 25 words or under 1 day 26 words.or under .. Ads over 25 words ” cents additional ‘per word. The Tribune reserves the right to s | reject any copy submitted, also to re- vise any copy to conform with make- up rules of Classified Advertising. Phone 32 The Tribune Want Ad Department. ae Aine aelenensaean Male Help Wanted AT ONCE—South America or United States. Permanent positions; cler- ical, mechanical, salesmanship; ex- perience unnecessary. Salaries $25- $100 weekly, transportation fur- nished. Box 1176, Chicago, 11 DON'T BE a mis-fit. Qualify for good positions. Catalog Free Mo- ler Barber college, Fargo, N. D. Female Help Wanted ADDRESSING ENVELOPES—Work at home during spare time. Sub- stantial weekly pay; experience un- necessary. Dignified employment for honest, sincere, ambitious per- sons. Workers League, Naperville, ml. WANTED—Women and girls to dec- orate greeting cards, 5 per 100; ex- perience unnecessary; no seiling. Write Quality Novelty Co, 6 Franklin St., Providence, R. 1. WANTED—Business college or school girl to work for room and board at the Mohawk. Call at 401 Fifth * street or phone 145. Work Wanted WANTED—Children to care for, at your home or mine, 121 E. Thayer Ave, day or night. Prices reason- able. Call Fae Roberts, 1111-J. CHIMNEY SWEEP—Furnaces and chimneys cleaned. Work guaran- teed. “Price reasonable, Phone’ 308. HIGH SCHOOL girl wants place in private family to work for room and board. Phone 7-F-24. Apartments FOR RENT—Apartment on second floor, consisting of four large room, bathroom and kitchenette. Not fur- nished, hot water heated. At 306 Thayer Ave. A West. Phone 262-J or call G. G. Beithon, at 112 Thayer Ave. W. FOR RENT—In modern home, clean and comfortable furnished 2 room apartment, also for sale, gas range in good condition and one table. Call at 614 Eighth. FOR RENT—Modern two room apart- ment, partly furnished for light housekeeping on first floor, private entrance, downtown. Call at 118 _ First street. corner flat, also a two room flat. The Laurain apartments. Phone 303. B. F. Flanagan, Prop. FOR RENT—October wo room furnished apartment on ground floor, close in, Call at 405 Fifth street or phone 1093-M. FOR RENT—Two room furnished light housekeeping apartmént on ground floor. Close in, Call at 315 Fourth or phone 1691.0 FOR RENT—Partly furnished base- ment apartment. Call at 602 Twelfth. Call at side door, also a small heater for sale. FOR RENT—A three room newly decorated all furnished apartment. Must ve seen to appreciate. Call at 602" treet. FOR RENT—Two room furnished apartment in modern home. Vacant October 6. Call at 924 Fourth street or phone 543-W. FOR RENT—Three room modern apartment with bath, frigidaire and gas stove. Phone 1063. FOR RENT—Furnished basement . apartment, three rooms and bath, private entrance. Phone 1250. Room and Board BOARD AND room in modern home at a reasonable rate for gentlemen only. Call at 808 Ave. B. Wanted to Rent WANTED TO RENT—By relfable party, adults only, furnished five or six room modern house with gar- age, close in. Can furnish refer- ences. Phone 375. Used Cars ‘SALE—Two new Chevrolet cars, one coupe color green, one coach color black. Will sell for factory price if taken at once. Chevrolet Motor Co,, Hazelton, N. D. USED CARS With An O, K. That Counts 1928 Chevrolet Coach, runs and looks like new. Down payment $140.00. 1629 Model A Ford Coupe. Down payment $150.00. 1927 Chevrolet 4 door sedan. Recent- ly overhauled. Down payment $120.00. 4 1929 Chevrolet Six Coach, completely reconditioned. Down payment $180.00. 1929 Model A Ford. Coupe, good run- ning condition. Down payment $140.00. 1926 Dodge Brothers screened side % ton delivery truck. Special price only $125.00. 1928 Chevrolet Coupe. Down pay- ment $130.00. 1927 Ford one ton truck with grain box, enclosed steel cab, auxiliary transmission. A real buy at $195.00. buys. We Many other attractive trade and give terms. CAPITAL CHEVROLET CO. Bismarek, Nv. REAL ESTATE .00,, SIX ROOM bungalow, facing east eon: big lot, bates ROOM Y peseatan marie big lot, ‘only $2100... EIGHTY ACRES, adjoining city lim- its, 60 acres under plow, splendi¢ piece of land, make offers. I ADVERTISE NO HOUSES which were built just to sell. 1 HAVE TWICE THE BUSINESS on’ hand now that I had last year at this time. F. E. YOUNG. SEES Household Goods for Sale FOR SALE—Three burner electric range used one year, 3 piece set Fiber reed furniture, 9x12 rug, See- ger refrigerator, sanitary cot and mattress. Phone 1084 or call at 412 Ave. D. FOR SALE—Full sized “brass bed with Way-sagless spring and mat- tress, oak rocker with leather seat, Columbia phonograph with records. Call at 619 Second str FOR SALE—Almost 1 washing machine, also walnut din- ing room furniture. Very cheap. Phone 237. FOR SALE—Kitchen range, $40. Used yery little. 109 Fourth Ave. N. E. Mandan, N. D. Ce Rooms for Rent ENT—Room partly furnished in a modern home, suitable for light housekeeping or sleeping room. Good location. Close in. Call at 415 Eighth, FOR RENT—Very nice warm sleep- ing room, also two very nice rooms for light housekeeping with electric stove and refrigerator. 610 Ave. A or phone 613-M, ROOM FOR RENT—Nicely furnished front private sleeping room and new garage, opposite St. Alexius Nurses Home at 307 Tenth street or phone FOR RENT—Light housekeeping room with kitchenette and large closet completely furnished. Call at 812 Ave. B after 5:00 p. m. FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod- ern home, with or without board, right downtown. Call at 311 Fourth street or phone 627-M. FOR RENT—Well furnished room with small kitchenette. Call at 411 Fifth street or phone 273 “The __Hazelhurst.” FOR RENT—Sleeping rom ina modern home, close to high school. Phone 487-W or call at 523 Seventh street. FOR RENT—Furnished sleeping room in new home. Call at 317 Tenth , street. CY Houses and Flats FOR RENT—Five room ‘duplex, ; tached garage; every modern con- venience including natural gas tur- nace. Inquire 117 Main Ave. Phone 751 or 151. FOR RENT—Six room modern house at 501 Third street, 6 room bunga- low, 313 Ave. A, also modern 3 room and bath furnished apartment, city heat, available Oct. 15. For sale, bed couches. Call 905 after 6 p m. FOR” RENT—Eight room modern house, 4 bed rooms, close in, $50; 5 room modern house, Riverview ad- dition, hot water heat, $50; 5 room partly modern house. Geo. M. Register. FOR RENT—Bungalow flat, living Toom, bedroom, 2 closets, bath and kitchen, electric stove and kelvina- tor. Call at 409 Fifth street. Mrs. Kindschy. FOR RENT—Beautiful new five room bungalow located in choice section of city, on pavement. For informa- tion inquire at 502 Seventh street north. FOR RENT OR SALE—Five rooin all modern house on pavement, right across from Roosevelt school. Re- sponsible parties only. Phone 1276. FOR RENT—Choice unfurnished five room bungalow, to adults only. Gas heat furnished and garage room for Call at 72315 Mandan street. ve room bungalow in good condition. Hot water heat, heated garage. Located at 233 West Rosser Ave. Phone 504? FOR RENT—Seven room modern house, newly decorated, three blocks from postoffice. Immediate posses- sion. Harvey Harris & Co, FOR RENT—Two cheap flats in my building at 118%% Sixth street. Some furniture and partly modern. H. L, Reade. Phone 239, FOR RENT—Furnished six room house, modern, close in. Write Trib- une, in care of Ad. No. 23. FOR RENT—Partly furnished four room bungalow, four blocks west of postoffice. Phone 203. FOR RENT—Oct. 1st five room new modern bungalow at 221 Eleventh street. Phone 646-R. Miscellaneous NATIONAL CASH REGISTERS— New and second hand. Over 500 styles and sizes. We have one to fit your business. W. E. Stitzel, rep- reaentanlye, Phone 1409, Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Two suits men’s new % clothes, size 42, extra trousers, one dark blue, pair high top boots, new, size 8%. Buffalo robe. Sell cheap. oe at Mason apartment 6 or phone FOR SALE—Good registered Oxtord and Rambouillet rams, yearlings and two year olds. boll- ed Shorthorn bulls, 15 months old. ° Strutz and Nagel. Bismarck ND. CARROTS $1.50 per bushel, sweet purple topped rutabagas $1.25 per bushel. Call at 421 Third street, rear door. Mrs. Wm. Erlenmeyer. FOR SALE—Hundred or more tons good wild hay at buyer's Lag 4 Write or call George Dickson, 6 miles north Kintyre N N. D. FOR BALE EnOY. case, cheap. In- quire at Dahner Tavis oe Co. Phone "762, Bismarck, N. Dak. FOR RENT—Three nice offic: rooms over Knowles Jewelry Store. Apply at lewelry store. FOR SALE—Home Agia Early (aw potatoes. Wachter Transfer oration. FOR RENT—Stall in | 724 oF call at 710 Fourth.