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- a ” with 1,443,000 bushels a week ago ¥ iy ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1930 GRAN RRCOVERES « | New York Stock] MADEAS SOUR cans NART PRICES RMB = Early Collapse Had Carried duly) am Get arly Collapse Had Carrie uly,| aan poet Wheat ‘ein to Low- | An. = tera tion Wie ‘ ‘am gon, & i San. scored by securities quotations. The j Sugar Ref. . recoveries in cereals were after an: Am. Tel, & Tel. early collapse that carried July wheat ; Am. Wat. Wks. prices down to records not paralleled ; Am. Woo! Pfd. heretofore in the experience of most | Anaconda Cop. . traders. Highest points of the day | Andes Cop. Mi: for grain were reached during the fi- nal dealings, and were helped by eve- ning up of ‘accounts to prepare for | Atlantic Ref. the sovernment crop report due after | Perea Auto the close of the market. eee Wheat closed unsettled, ranging | Baldwin Loco. from sc net lower to 4c advance, ; Balt. & Ohio | compared -with yesterday's finish. | Barnsdall : ni : May new 81'2c; July 69% -t4c. oreo Corn clored at %-1%c advance, De- ; Bethl. Steel . cember old 6944-*sc; May new 75's: 4; Oats t-te uD. (a pe Pa v3 eset rr. aan from 5¢ setbac! a, ms | Cal aan Opening irregular. 1%c off to %¢ | Calume' ecla . off. Poly 68-68 tc: wheat afterward ee underwent a further tumble for July. |Gannon Mills Corn started ?-'«c down. rallied a \Gerro Be P: lithe and then broke lower before. Snes Se ‘Onn . Momentary flurried general selling ‘CheenGt Ww Js but almost complete absence of other , Ghee. a Wopt indications of anything unusual ac- 6 Rr St’ P. & Pac.” companted the breaks in July wheat (C aoe saa prices today to levels heretofore un- Gio: enor thwest. precedented for 29 vears. ‘osest Chee. i 3 comparisons were with July 1901. Chevalier when Chicago wheat_values plunged ‘Got Mruel en as low as 63%. cgi ag 3 to ‘Colum, G. & EL downward momentum of Chicago Solum, Gisatn., wheat today was the fact that the /GouM oTapee. Winnipeg market outdid all known {aca Saher. records. and registered more than 10¢ | Conta Gas ‘ ol. Gas .... 82% a bushel under curz:nt prices here. | “AP ay * Bret tallies “in. Chicago wheat |Cont. Bak. “A” .. Be quotations met with renewed tem- iGont, Motor 3 porary expansion of selling ana the | Cont, Oil of Del 9 market for July soon showed a break |Go'y products. 60% to about 2c below yesterday's finish. Gieam Wheat 28 The downward swings of prices Were (Grocioy Radio 4% in the face of reports that the AUS- 'Giicibie Steel 50% tralian wheat crop had of late been | Gryones, Ste 1 damaged 10,000.00 bu. Com and |Girtiss Wright... y oat Pans fat dae 8 * Bupoa at result of stop s ' . 149 Provisions were responsive to grain Eaton rags Be w (bes despite upturns in the jp] value on hogs. r “epowest a on the present mar- ciety R. ket movement came today in the Corn | Rivest. “ry, pit. Primary receipts of corn today iF a e totaled 1,097,000 bushels, compared | Auto Lite . Ww. & Lt. 1.094.600 bushels a year back. ie sah of corn in Chicago today were 131 cars. against 128 cars et this time | lest week and 80 cars on the corre- | @ sponding day in 1929. iGen Motors e Gen. Railw. Sig. WHEAT FUTURES DRAG Gillette Saf. ean THROUGH QUIET SESSION iGold Dust Minneapolis. Dec. 17.—(?}—Wheat ; futures dragged through another quiet and featureles session here to- | day with December moving in mod- | ee erate ranges. July was strong On | Gi" west, Sug. . short, covering. May was supported | Grigsby Grunow by government agencies and held | Fond Nicraney firm. December and May closed Un- | Fouston Oil. changed. and July 27%c higher. | Sydson Motor Corn futures dropped 1's:¢ before Hupp. Mot. Car any real resistance developed and irician Refin, then shorts covered. Ail other coarse | Tt’ “Combus. Eng. thems met with scattered December | tht: Sovvue | liouidations and ruled lower. int. Mate. Pte. Cash wheat receipts were smader | rot" Nick” Can. and there was a little competition for | It TOS re ° heavier weight low protein offerincs. | jonas Musvle Phere was virtually no whnter v.Aot | gos Me offerings and it was hard to move; Kelly-Spafd ‘ir, pak 2.6 » "Rye | Kennecott Cop. 1 vas quiet to slow. Rye ° Barley tanty really Speing ‘wanted, Ree can Flex demand was fair to ood and lteee ie. offerings were light. Mack ‘Trucks Mathieson Alk. Gukee oe | May Dept. Btrs, : Tec 27.000, 1 | Mex. a 4 Hogs: Receipts 27.00! ey sane D.Aj-— z 10,900 17.—(AP- includin Hogs: Trive to 10 cents higher than direct dwn average. Top S.10 paid £7 | Mid-Cont, Pet. _. Xhofee 130 to 200. Ibs.: bulky sucl| Mo, Kan, a Tex. . eights 8.00 to 8.05; 210 to 200 Ibs. ae “Bali 3 " to 8.00: packing | 1.89 to. 810 Pees. Light lights, god | Mont, Ward . ana" choice, 140 ot 160 Ihe. 5.00, 19) Nash Motors . 8.10; t weight, lat. Biscuit .. a 1 meditin welght, 4 §.05; heavy S {9 63 to 7.90. Pag to 00 medium good, | Nev. Cons. Cop. a 7 igs, good and | Nev. . Cop. *4 eo aa) gly bee 7.65, {0 .8.10. | New York Cent. my cnet heceipts 7,500, Calves 2,000.) NY, NH. & Htfd. 1% Fad steers and. yearlings active and /Nort. & Western . mt) Etrong to. 25 cents higher, spots UP | North American . a more on better grades; other killing Northern Pac. 48% Moreen about steady, Best heavies | Horthero Fac. Is 232 °Slaughter cattle and veal- | Oliver Farm. . ;, good and choice, 600 to) Pac. Gas & Elec. . 43% 900 Ibs. 10. to 14.25; 900 to 1100 Jbs. Pacific Light . 49% 1o00 to 14,00; 1100 to 1300 Ibs. 9.25 t0| Packard Motor 85 14.00; 1300 to 1500 Ib: is Par.-Fam.-Lasky - 367% He ee -|Parmelee Trans. . 3% to ease eecpanee . an a dium 5,00 to jPenney (J. C.) . and meviee 6.00 to 7.25; common and % Sst jnedium 400. to 5.00; low cutter an the moder 3.00;to 4.00. Bulls, yearlings €x- | Proct, a “ good and choice beef 5.00 to | giuded. Fer to medium. 4.00 to. 5.15 Venicrs,, milk-ted, "good and choles 4.5 I edium 6.! 50; roe te raon 5,00 to 6.30, Stocicer and | cattle: Steers, good and choice, | £00 £0. 1980 Tox, 7.00 to, 9.00; common | 5.50 to 7.00. } Ang caltecelpts. 18,000, ‘Few: sales | steady Roee ae sterday; bidding 25 cents lambs'8.35 paid b} $9-1b, feeding lambs 7.25. Slaugb- 4% er sheep and lambs: Lambs, 90 1b 3914 down, good and choice 7.5 8.5 Hae qneditm 6.00 to 7.50; all weights com- 4% mon 3.00 {0 6,00. Hwes, 80 10 130 Ins ne medium to choice oF Seaboard Airline vw # cull and common 1.00 to Becling lambs, 60 to 75 Ibs., good 'Sears-Roebuck 50% choice 6.75 to 7.50. iServel- Inc. re |Shattuck (F.'G. 23 SOUTH ST. .PAU Shell Union Oli Hi South St. Paul, Dec. 17. eee it A.)—Cattle: Receipts | San 4 about steady. Best i$ 5.25; bulk short-feds , down. Cows mostly 4.00 to 10% fed offerings at 6,00 FH Butcher heifers largel. % low cutters and cutters td Feeders and stockers ve ordinary native: Receipts 8,400, Vealers stea and choice giades 7.50 to j oases Receipts 14,009. Fairly ac-| tive and fully steady. Bulk lights ae | 60 to 7.65: 3 | Bt 30 to 7.00; pigs 8.00 to 8.25: bulk | Shige * “light lights 7.65. Average cost Tuesday | Super! ee! 7.50; weight 233. | Texas, Corp, ee SPSSSte88 Sa, eRe ‘Sheep—Receipts 4,000; Packers talk- | Tex. Pac. Ld. Tr. M1 ine weak to lower, or from 17.50 down \tim. Roll. Bearing “ fat lambs; best fed offerings held | Underwood Elliott . 51% S . Run includes. nine doubles | tnion Garbide -.... 56% of fed. wooled tamb: ‘Union Pacific -:. + 1% vr TOCK, | United Aircraft . 21% siou! City, Dee, IE CCAP-US.D-A.) | Unit. Cigar Str. 3 Cattle: Receipts 2,500, calves 200. Beet | United Corp. . 16% ers and yearlings active, strong to| United Fruit 55 cents higher: fat she stock steady; bulls weak: to 25 cents lower; vealers 50 cents off; stockers and’ feeders | weak to 25 cents lower. Choice around 1000-pound mixed yearlings 14.00, sirable kinds mostly 10.50‘ to 11.30; bulk short-feds 8.50 to 9.50; short-feds | 50 down, Most beef cows 4.25 to 6.00. ! |Un. Gas & Imp. (US, Realty & imp... . Realty hers {U. 8 Rubber . U. S. Steel . Util. Pow. & Let. A’: Vanadium Corp. ... Plain stockers and feeders 7.50 down. | Packer vealer top 8.50. ; Wabash Ry. ..... ‘Hogs — Receipts 8,500. Moderately , Warner Pict. . active, 5 to 10 cents higher than Tues- | West Maryland . day's average. Early sales to 1b. butchers to shippers largely 7.65; packer bid: Dutchers. Packing sows emooth lighter weights 7 < Sheep—Receipts 7,5 fed 1 Western Union Willys-Overland . Woolworth MONEY RATES New York, Dec. 17—()-—Call money na largely salable easy; high 2 low 2. Ruling rate MOTE) cao Fear ‘219; close 2 per cent Time loans MINNEAPOLIS POTATOES ‘steady; 30 to 90 days 2%-3; 4-5-6 Mi lis, Dec. 17.—(AP-U.S.D.A.) | ie i potatoes. Very light wire inquires, months 2%-3. Prime ecmmercial pa- practically no demand or trading. |per 2%-3, Bankers acceptances un- market very dull. Practically no sal jchanged. 7 |ing was in large volume in the morn- a Atchison tumbled 3, “13 dark nor. MARKET CLOSING IS STRONG BECAUSE OF t) VIGOROUS COVERING Rally Follows Extreme Weak- ness in Early Hours; Net Gains Recorded New York, Dec. 17.—(@)—Stocks | closed strong today after moving up- ward throughout the afternoon under {the impetus of vigorous short cov- ering. The rally followed extreme weakness in the early hours when Boo shares dropped 1 to 5 points, ut these losses were converted into ‘net gains of the same extent. Ameri- can Telephone, Sears Roebuck. Amer- ican Can and Allied Chemical ad- vanced 5 net, U.S. Steel, Dupont and Atchison 4, New York Central. Penn- sylvania, Bethlehem, Steel and West- Selling of ‘rails, oils and miscel- laneous issues plunged the list further into new low ground during the morning. but soon after midday, a sharp rebound occurred. The list quickly recovered losses of 2 to 6 points, and several shares achieved net gains of similar extent. Trad- il | Sales approximated 5.200.000 shares. \ ing. but slackened after midda’ {Some of the commodity markets rallied in sympathy. Allied Chemical dropped 4 points, and rebounded 7 from the bottom. and bounded back 6. American Telephone sold off 4 points to the lowest in three years, then recovered. U. S. Steel declined more than a point to the cheapest price since 1928. but rallied to show a gain of 2. Other shares making net gains of 2 points or more includ- lehem. International _ Harvester, jean Can. recovered in part. sisted the morning selling. surged up more than 8 points. Call money came down to 2 per cent, after renewals at 2':, reflecting \the easing of the money market. {Money moved up from 2 per cent D Duluth, Dec Durum — Jan. May . - P Asn (A GRAEN M POL Minneapolis, Dec Wh 15% pro’ ein Delivered % 8) To Arrive Ms g ot 78) 1 dark nor 2 dark no 14% protein 1 dark nor. 2 dark nor. 3 dark nor. 13% proteii |1dark nor. | 2dark nor. 3 dark nor. | 120% protein 12% protein 1 northern. 2 northern: 13 dark nor. ! Monta | 14¢¢ protein 1DHW ATOMS 0 a ‘ Minnexotu and South Dakota Wheat 2 protein DH W or Ti Ch. 1 amber 708 13% protein |2amber. . Grade of 1 amber . 2amber . - Grade of 1durum . . 2durum . - 1rd. durum c 4 mixed 5 mixed - SMARCK GRAIN BIS) ALN (Furnished by Russell-Miller D « f Speltz Duladanes Dark hard winter wheat . Hard winter wheat .,., it i rages 3 and General Electric 2.) ed North American, Eastman, Beth- } American Water Works, and Ameri- jc: Coco Cola dropped 6, then | Case, which re- | last Friday for the first time in more | , |than two months. 75 '¢ | self, DULUTH CASH GRAIN Duluth, Minn., Dec. 17.—()—Close: Flax on track §1.5712-1.59'4; to ar- tive $1.57%4: Dec. $1,574; May $1,61%; July $1.63. Wheat No. 1 dark northern 75'4- | 78'%¢: No. 2 do 74'%-77'c; No. 3 do !70'2-7314c; No. 1 northern 75%-78'¢c; |No, 2 do 73%-7735c; “No. amber {durum 71%1-73%c; No. 2 do 70%- {73%c; No. 1 durum 69%-70%c; No, 2 do 68% -69%1c; No. 1 mixed durum 164% -71%¢e; No. 2 do 63%-70%e; No. 11 red durum 63% -64%c, i Oats No. 3 white 304s-%%c. Corn No. 3 yellow 63%c; No. 4 yel-| ‘low 6256 -65%«c. Barley choice to fancy 42-50c; me- ies good 35-41c; lower grades icago, Dec. 17.—( ea 5 hard eit: No. 1 yellow hard 79; iNo. 5 hard 69; No. 1 northern spring | 4%; No. 1 mixed 78. Corn No. 2 mixed 68%; ; No. 1 yel- jlow (old) 72%; No. 2 yellow 70; No, 2) had (old) 70%3-71; No. 3 white 69- 693 ‘. | Oats No. 2 white 31° -321%4 | Timothy seed $8.25-8.50. | Clover seed $15.00-22.75. | Lard $9.82. 1 Ribs $12.50. | Bellies $12.50. pereras 3 | CHICAGO cago, Dee. 17 tact we: [vent under pressure of h receipts and little buying. Ee I unchanged, and poultry was} lqutoed firm, . | Butter—Receipts 3,690 tubs, Weak. [Creamery e 2 29; stand= me score, 2 Y to2 58 cases, Steady. | ik wh graded firsts | receipts 25: ordinary eipts 20 to 22; refrigerator ‘ator extras 17. Cheese, per pound — Twins 17; {daisies 17; longhorns_ 17%; Young America brick 17%; limburger 14% i 7 to | Live poultry — cks, Firm. Fow si OT SALES 17. Range of d spring 78% durum $1; N: jo. 1 mixed dur-j} 4 white No. 1 Jorthert jamber woot 7.—(P}—Small quanti. | finer and 58-60s terri- being moved at prices htly inthe buyers’ favor, i 648 and finer terri- sell at 63 to 68 cents, Best offerings of orig- fl bring h comb lines 62 lo 63 cent scoured basi 5 Ww | Mini aho cons 31.39 to 1.60 nexota Round Whites 1.25 to 8 No, 1 1.70 to 1.90, No. 2 Colorado McClures 1.50 n carload lots, family 5.25 to 5.35 per barrel d cotton sacks. Shipments els. 0 to 16.59, middling: 6.00 to 16.50. Fore York, firm, Great cents; OVERNME! BONDS y York, Dec. 17-—(%) Liberty i about this deal, I'll kill you.” .|moment one of them came up from ¢)to a liberal construction of the con- (®) —~ Flour | Wicks, McDonald and Nord staged a men old the women they had to make a business trip up near Minot and invited them to go along { Left in Two Automobiles | The party started from Mandan | and Bismarck in two automobiles. The girls knew the Minot road and j finally their escorts did not. hesitate to say they were not going to Minot. According to the afifdavit, offi- | cials said, the two cars drove to a where the girls were loaded into one car and told to wait there. This was about 11:30 o'clock at night. The men drove off in the other machine, returning in a short time with a third car. them on the floor of the car the women were sitting in. then split up and headed homeward in the three machines. an's affidavit recites, Deputy Wicks kept reiterating “If you ever tell sne | swore she knew it was money be-/| cause it jingled and sounded like money when the sacks were thrown into the car. She claimed that Wicks | admitted there had been a “deal.” May Have Hidden Loot Gildner, , assistant cashier of the bank, in telling his story, said that; he saw the car containing the four | men drive up before the bank. He saw two men enter and as he start- ed to enter the bank himself, saw one of them, whom he identified as Wicks, shove a gun against Haugen’s identified as McDonald. He could not identify the other two as at that behind him and pushed a gun in his back and ordered him to lie on the floor. - The four accused men were to be taken ‘to Fessenden this afternoon , where a preliminary hearing will be; held. Local officers, state peniten- tiary officials and the four women im- Plicated in the night ride for the loot are all to be witnesses. Go To Fessenden L. H. Connolly, Morton county state's attorney, who assisted in the interrogation of the men here, also will go to Fessender as he has been asked to assist the prosecution in | Wells county. Rules Ratification Of Dry Amendment Not Constitutional sContinued trom page one} ment. Those who know well the work- ings of the court hold the view that in matters of this sort it is inclined stitution’s provisions. The justices thus would be interpreting the amendment as an expression of the People’s will which should prevail over the narrower technicalities, Only District Affected The only direct effect anticipated from Judge Clark’s ruling was a pos- | sibility that in his jurisdiction author- ities might refuse to act against vio- lators. This was entertained by one government official here, while others were emphatic in asserting it could have no control over the actions of other district judges even in New Jer- y, and that it would not prevent ar- rests in that state under the nation- al act. | A suggestion was advanced by one {dry leader, Oliver W. Stewart, presi- dent of the Flying Squadron founda- jtion, that if the eighteenth amend- ;ment were held invalid, the thirteenth —it abolished slavery—must also fall. | It, too, was ratified by the legislatures jand not by conventions. i 2. Midwest Uti MINNEAPOLIS, STOCKS First Bank Stock—20. thwest Bancorporation-—32. yhoi Minnea | Failure of Spanish Revolt Signaled by King’s Appearance (Continued from page one) taneously in every Spanish city. The revolutionists hoped to paralyze the nation’s business and industrial life and they expected complete coopera- tion from the army. After three or four days of -the strike the plotters anticipated that the king would be ready to abdicate and Premier Berenguer to resign. Then the republic, with Zamora at its head, was to come into being. Zamora already had his cabinet list made out. It included a number of Socialist and Republican leaders, all of whom are in Jail. Result Quiet Different But what happened was quiét dif- ferent. The impetuous commander of the garrison at Jaca took things into his own hands and the rebel- | lion there last Friday let the govern- ment know that the -long-expected revolution was at hand. Then the army disappointed the revolutionists, plot was frustrated. Beyond that, however, the real rea- son for the failure of the plot appear- ed in these statements of the leaders t> have been internal disagreements in the revolutionary organization it- As the smoke began to clear away today it appeared one tangible result of the excitement of the last week was the crowding of a lot’of jails to capacity. In all parts of the north it was estimated that 4,009 civil pris- oners were in cells as a result of their part in the revolution. - John Gates, Sioux County; Implicated In Hurdsfield Case (Continued trom page one) ‘Wicks, McDonald. and Nord into cus- today. . Two Said Identified The four were returned to Morton county, placed in jail and ruraded before three Hurdsfield men, G. L. Haugen and A. F. Gildner, cashier | and assistant cashier, respectively, | and Ed Benschool, a barber, who wit- | nessed thesrobbery from across the street. All three witnesses are positive in their identifiration of at least two of the men. Although the authoritics retused to make public a copy of the affidavit secured from the woman originally involved, they did tell of som> of tie details by which they link the fourmen with the Hurdsfield robbery. The remained loyal to the crown, and the | t0 His decision was based on the broad principle that such an amendment {could be ratified only by constitu- {tional conventions and not by the state legislatures. The immediate effect of the deci- j Sion, Judge Clark explained, would be in New Jersey, where any arrests made | for the retail sale of intoxicants would have to be made under the state en- | forcement act pending appeal of his | decision. Fs | The probability was that an appeal | would be taken by Federal District At- torney Philip Forman directly to the | United States supreme court. Judges Must Concur | Yesterday's decision will affect only | those states in which United States | district court judges concur in the| findings of the New Jersey federal jurist. The amendment was attacked after a study of two years by a group of |the New York County Lawyers’ asso- !cilation, who represented William | Sprague, an obscure New Jersey town- | ship official, indicted for transporting beer. By his decision Judge Clark quashed the indictment against Sprague. Judge Clark, eminent scholar of the constitution although he is the young- est member of the federal judiciary, devoted 15,000 words and called upon {almost a hundred authorities in his decision. ! If, Judge Clark said, the amend- ment to be considered is one designed transfer to the United States powers previously vested in the states the convention method must be fol- lowed. This, he held, arose from the character’ of such amendments and “from the character of the delegates to and deliberations in a constitu- tional convention as compared with the corresponding character of the point five miles south of Hurdsfield, | Pe" One of the men took a couple of |y sacks from the one car and tossed |} The party x i All the way to Mandan, the wom- side. The other man in the bank he |; ' became excited, and in jumping from f ¢ party in a Mandan beer “joint.” Four po: 1 women joined the party. four ! Weather Report + Temperature at 7 a.m. Highest yesterday . Lowest last night Precipitation to 7 JENERAL REPORT H Temptrs. Pre. Low High Inj 18 30.00 wo | 206 | 200 | 00 Bolse, Idaho, cloudy Calgary, Alta.. pt eld Dodge City, big Edmonton, Alta,, cldy. Havre, Mont,, clear. Helena, Mont., clea Huron, 8. D., cloudy. Kamloops, pt eld: <ansas City Ww e Hat, Al, clr. Miles City, Mont. clr. Utah, clean, ad, Minn,, cleat . udy S. Ste. Marie, Seattle, Wa: Sherldin, Wy Sioux City, Spokane, Wat Swift Current, The Pas, Man., Toledo, 0., pt'eldy... Williston. 'N.D., p Winnemucea, Winnipeg, pt cld: OTHER N, D. on — minimum {9 tity, clear cloudy cloudy. Grand Forks, clear ; Fargo, clear . WEATHER FOREC For Bismarck and vicini cloudy tonight and Thurs¢ N », Drob= ably ‘unsettled at times, No decided change in temperature. For North Dakota: Partly cloudy to- night and Thursday, possibly unset- tled at times, No decided change in temperature, For South Dakota: Partly cloudy to- night and Thursday, possibly unset- tled (at times. No decided change in ature Mostly cloud storms tonight or Thursday s cold tonight in central and east por: tions, : For .Minnesota: Mostly cloudy to- night ‘and Thursday, possibly “local snows. Not quite so cold tonight in east portion, slightly colder Thursday in extreme northwest portion. For Monta nerally fair tonight and Thursda Ider east of divide tonight. i WEATHER CONDITIONS low-pressure area is centered nitoba, while highs tures are quite lo sipp!_ valley eastward, weather prevails over the states, Rocky mountain region, and | over the southern Canadian provinces. Ganerally fair weather prevails fr the Mississippi valley light precipitation occur laces from the plains ward to the Pacific coast, snow in northern Utah, w from the M but arek station b reduced to sei ORRIS W. F Official Verdict Brought in By Burleigh Jurors (Continued trom page one) | six small children have been county | charges since that time. Trial Began Dec. 12 Morck was brought to trial Dec. 12. In the absence-of counsel, B. F. ‘Til- lotson and Alfred Zuger were ap- pointed by the court to represent him. State’s Attorney George S. Register and. James Morris, attorney general, presented the case for the state. They introduced testimony tending | to show that Morck, motivated by | his hatred of Stephan, had deliber- ately planned the shooting and that he had admitted his guilt immediate- ly after the crime. It was further asserted that Morck had threatened to kill himself and his entire family to escape the consequences of his act. More than 20 witnesses were called by the state to substantiate their con- tentions. Morck, testifying in his own behalt, maintained that Stephan and a neighbor, Ed Schmidkunz, had ap- proached the wagon he was driving on the day of the murder and that their behavior was so menancing that he became alarmed. during the ensuing conversation he the wagon, accidentally fired the fa- tal bullet. The case went to the jury yester- day at 3 p. m., after a five-day legal battle. Resumption of cases on the civil calendar was on the program this morning. * | e Misfortune Brought | By Love and Honey oe Chicago, Dec. 17.—(#)— Love and Honey came into the life of Harry Somerfeld, but apparently he objected to their manner of arrival. Elmer Love and Haycraft Honey were in Love's car when it collided with Somerfeld’s. Ail \ three men alighted. | “Love,” testified Somerfeld, “hit me in the jaw, and Honey kicked me.” He said that |, CLASSIFIED AD RATES All want ads are casb in advance; minimum charge 75 cents. Copy must be recéived at the Tribune of- fice by 9:00 & 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 ......$1.45 3 days, 25 words or under ++ 100 2 days, 25 words or under 5 1 day, 25 words or under . 6 Ads over 25 words 3 cents additional per word. The Tribune reserves the right to, 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 Male Help Wanted MAN WANTED for Watkins route in Bismarck. Average earnings $35 weekly. Chance for reliable hust~- ler to make big paying connection. Write F. J. Martin, 555 W. 6th St., Winona, Minn, Eisen ers - DON'T BE a mis-fit. Qualify for good positions. Catalog Free. Mo- lar Barber college, Fargo, N. D. A Wanted to Rent WANTED—Pleasant room near bath, also board with good family if pos- sible, with no children for refined elderly lady. For appointment write Tribune in care of Ad. No. 72. WANTED TO RENT—Desirable 4 or 5 room apartment or duplex. Pre- fer furnished. Phone 837-M. NE Business Upportunity ped meat market in a good mining town. Still doing business. Write Tribune in care of Ad. No, 71. Lost and Found LOST—Saturday night a ladies Swiss movement wrist watch between the Paramount theatre and the First National bank. Finder phone 71 Flasher, collect. Mrs. Bell. WILL THE party that by mistake took a pair of size 9 rubbers from the entrance of the Mason apart- ments Tuesday evening between 6:30 and 7:15 please call 1333. Houses and Flats FOR SALE—Brand new five room bungalow with heated garage ad- joining, just being completed with best material and construction. Strictly modern, builtin features. Open for inspection at 711 Wash- ington, inquire next door. Reinhold Peleus d sigh FOR RENT—Newly decorated mod- ern seven’room house, stationary tubs, gas water heater and gas range, basement, new enamel gas range, kitchen. Regsonable rent. Call at 522 Second street after- noons. ‘—At 609 First street, mod- ern 6 room bungalow. Hot water heat, natural gas installed. Five rooms in basement. See owner at 100 Ave. B East. FOR RENT—Four room partly mod- ern bungalow $25.00 per month, close in, also five room modern house, $35.00 per month. Phone 460-M. FOR RENT—Four room modern bungalow, full size basement, out- side garage. For further informa- tion call at 503 Fourteenth street FOR RENT—Modern 6 room house, located at 418 Seventh. Gas heated. $55.00 per month. Immediate pos- session. Hedden Real Estat FOR RENT—Four room house, partly modern and garage, $27.00 per month. Call at 314 Thirteenth street or phone 90. aah FOR RENT—Nicely furnished mod- ern five room bungalow, Avaiiable January Ist. Write Tribune in care of Ad: No. 69. FOR RENT—Desirable eight room house at 515 Second street. Two bathrooms. $55 per month. Phone 1593-W. FOR RENT—A new six room modern house and basement, garage. Call phone at 1029 Seventh street or 1740-W. FOR RENT OR SALE—Four room modern house, very reasonable. Call at 1122 Ave. C. oes FOR RENT OR SALE—Cozy four room house. Call at 603 Twelfth street. Dead Animals Wanted DEAD ANIMALS WANTED—Quick service will be given removing your dead or undesirable live animals, such as horses, hogs, cows and sheep, all free of charge. We call He asked for $20,000, but the jury thought $5,000 would be enough. personnel. of state legislatures and their deliberations.” Judge Clark reached his decision after exhaustive delving into consti- tutional history and into the intimate history of framers of the federal con- stitution. Convention System Upheld “It seems indisputable,” he said, “that local self-government, popult sovereignty, and the convention 5: tem of drafting and amending con- stitutions were the very ‘warp and woof’ of the political thought of the whole period prior to the drafting and adoption of the federal constitution.” A convention, the court wrote, either because of “directly instructed or abler delegates, is, as we have seen, a better vehicle for the expression of ultimate public opinion than a state legislature.” Its ultimate acts, he ob- served, probably would get greater support. | The test of the prohibition amend-/ ment was based on the language of the fifth article of the constitution, fied “by the legislatures of three- fourths of the several states or by con- ventions in three-fourths thereof.” .“We are quite willing to stand flat- footedly on our thesis that the scien- tific problem of our government re- quires an approval and ratification of woman in the case, in making her affidavit, named three other women In recounting some of the details, authorities said the rocbery occured | Aue. 14. On Friday, Aug. 15, Gates, certain amendments by and in @ con- —_—_—_—_—_——————— 22? eee Want a cook, Want a clerk, Want a partner, Want a situation, Want to sell a farm, Want to borrow money, + Want to sell livestock, Want to rent any rooms, Want to sell town property, Want to recover lost articles, Want to rent a house or farm, Want to sell second hand “urniture, Want to find customers for anything, | Advertise in Bismarck Tribune| Advertising will gain new customers, Advertising keeps old customers, Advertising makes success easy, Advertising begets confidence, Advertising brings business, Advertising shows energy, Advertise and succeed, Advertise eonsisfently, Advertise judiciously, Advertise or bust, Adyertise weekly, Advertise now, Advertise Here! PHONE 32 vention,” Judge Clark wrote, “and that the lai ft article five can i le language of article tive 40! The Bismarck Tribune be taken as modified ciple of political science.” for one or more, large or small. Write or phone us_ promptly. Northern Rendering Company, Bis- marck, N. D, Box 265. Phone 406. Miscellaneous FOR SALE—Choice Canary singers, imported German Rollers, choppers and Harz Mountains. Cages, seed, treats, etc Phone 115-J Jacob _ Bull. Dickinson, ND Box 778 _ FOR SALE—Coal, $3.00 per . Cash in load lots. This 1s dry coal from Wilton. Help those that bring the price down. Phone 1132-W. T. M./ Burch. | FOR SALE—Job chases sizes as fol- low: 2-30"x40", _ 1-2614"x29%5”, 1-22"x30", 2-19"x231¢", 1-27"x21", 1-17"x2 Bismarck Tribune. WANTED TO BUY—Boy’s bicycle. Must be in good condition. Phone 597-R. VETERAN DOCTOR DIES Hollywood, Calif., Dec. 17.—()—Dr. Fred A. Dunsmoor, 77, founder of the old Minnesota Hospital college and one of the organizers of the Medical college at the University of Minneso- ta, died at his home here, About 50 years ago ie founded the Minnesota Hospital college in Minneapolis and it was there that in 1884 he founded the first eye, ear and nose clinic in the Twin Cities. . The average size of French farms is only seventeen acres, while farms Want Adv. Dept. acres. iS the United States average 130 please | Work Wanted EXPERIENCED young lady desires housework. Phone 1145-W. WANTED—To take care of children by the hour. Phone 637-M. Household Goods for Sale FOR SALE—All household furmture including General Electric refriger- ator, Easy washer with dryer, piano, electric radio, violet ray electric ex- erciser, Marr oil burner, Willye Knight sedan and many other ar- ticles too numerous to mention. Phone 1319-R. W. J. Reibold, 601 _Seventh street. FOR SALE—Lloyd Loom baby car- riage, in excellent condition. Light tan, dark blue corduroy upholstery. Good tires, $8.00. Phone 1339. FOR SALE—9xi2 blue Axminster rug, pictures, oak dresser, vases, jar- dinieras, new pillows, mattress. Mason Apartment No. 3. _ For Sale—Radios FOR SALE—Five tube Gilfillan ra- dio with Temple speaker, new A and Heavy duty B batteries and battery charger. Cheap. A $250 Victrola with records $10. Postof- _fice box 503, Bismarck. FOR SALE—Six tube Freed-Eise- mann battery radio in excellent condition. Will sell cheap if taken at once. Phone 464-W or call at 523 First street. CE For Sale R SALE OR TRADE for ranch or farm land, theater, 550 seats in live North Dakota town. Write Ad. No. 67 in care of the Tribune. Room and Board ROOM AND BOARD—Two _ nicely furnished rooms with good board in warm modern home. Conven- {ently located. Reasonable rates. Homelike privileges. Phone 1389 or call at 608 Second street. Rooms for Rent FOR RENT—Exceptionally nice large sleeping room, suitable for one or two and a single sleeping room, im- mediate possession. Also choice two-room light housekeeping apart- 610 _ment Janual is modern home, hot water at all times, suitable for one or two gentlemen only, close in. Call at 501 Sixth street. Phone 1066 after 2:00 p. m. FOR RENT —Nicely furnished front room for light housekeeping, suit- able for two or three in modern home, also basement apartment. Right downtown. Call at 222 Third _ Street. FOR RENT—Completely furnished light housekeeping room, also front sleeping room in good home, ex- ceptionally warm and always hot _water. Call at 623 Sixth street. FOR "Nicely furnished large room in new home, hot water at all times, also room suitable for light housekeeping and garage. Call at 307 Tenth street or phone 921, FOR RENT—Light room with bat! quiet, gas heated, central, near high school, with board or part time meals. Phone 1166 or write __Tribune in care of Ad. No. 68. FOR RENT—Well furnished room with Kitchenette, gas for cooking. Also small sleeping room with closet, $10 per month. Hazelhurst, 411 Fifth. Phone 273. FOR RENT—Cozy warm sleeping room suitable for one or two, cen- trally located, one block from car line. Mrs. Wm. Baker, 602 Third Street, Phone 1352. FOR RENT—Sleeping rooms. Also four room modern house. Respon- sible adults -only, for not less than one year. Close in. 309 Seventh street. FOR RENT—Cozy warm sleeping bedroom, large closet, newly decor- ated. All modern. Also garage. er. Phone 1303-J or 1612. 813 Thay FOR RENT—Furnished sleeping room in a modern downtown home with or without board. Call at 311 Fourth street. Phone 627-M. FOR RENT—Four room modern house, reasonable. Fred Svaren, 600 Sixteenth street. Phone 1462-M. FOR RENT—Furnished sleeping room suitable for one or two. Close in. Apply at 522 Second street, FOR'RENT—Furnished sleeping room at 320 Second street. Phone 1606. Apartments FOR RENT—Three room apartment with sun porch, private bath, water, hardwood floors, furnished as desired. street. Phone 360-M. FOR RENT—Two or three room fur- nished apartment. electric refrigerator, Possession. Also furnished sleeping room. Phone 1095 or call at 816 A 5 city heat, always warm, also {ur- nished sleeping rooms for legisla- tors, single or double. The Lau- rain Apartments, B. F. Flanagan. Prop. FOR RENT—Furnished two room apartment, gas, heat and lights furnished. $30.00 a month, also a large sleeping room for rent. Phone ll at 622 Third street FO! T- three room and bath apartment, city heated, also a 6 room house, bath and fur- nace, Second and Thayer, $37.50 Phone 905. i FOR RENT—Completely tionally well furnished modern apartment, ground Call at 120 West Rosser after 6:30 Pp. m. FOR RENT—Three room furnished apartment on second floor. Gas stove for cooking. Rent $32.00 per month. Phone 499-M or inquire at 1014 Broadway. FOR RENT—Apartment, furnished, city heated, 212% Main Ave., also 6 room house, bath and furnace, $35.00, at 212 Second street. Phone 905. Adults only. Phone 967. FOR RENT—In modern home, sun- ny two room furnished apartment. Call at 924 Fourth street or phone 543-W. e FOR RENT-Furnished apartment, ground floor. Also kitchen cabinet | for sale. Call at 980 Fourth street,