The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 4, 1932, Page 11

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on Tribune’s Grain, Livest Market Report for Fri., Nov. 4 BEAR TRADERS RUN INTO OBSTACLE AND STOGK ART RISES sF Almost Complete Cessation of Sales Leaves Short Inter- est Uncertain New York, Nov. 4. — (?) — Bears; found themselves down a blind alley in Friday's stock market, and prices rebounded as they retraced their steps. The almost complete cessation of selling in the previous session left the short interest a little uncertain, and; as wheat developed 2 better tone Fri- day, bears found the market strongly against them. Prices surged up easily, with trading still in small volume. Gains of 2 to more than 4 points were numerous. Issues up about 2 to 4 points in- cluded American Can, American Tele- phone, American Tobacco “B,” Allied Chemical, Consolidated Gas, Case, In- ternational Harvester, Santa Fe, U. S Steel, Union Pacific, United Aircraft |S and others. Alcohol issues, and others regarded as speculative quarters as possibly likely to benefit from changes in prohibition laws, were strong. Gains of 2 points er more appeared in Owens Illinois Glass, Crown Cork pre- ferred. National Distillers, American Commerical Alcohol, U. S. Industrial Alcohol, and Liquid Carbonic. Gains of a point or more appeared in such issues as General Motors, General Electric, and ma’ Chrysler. others. Prices bulged up 1 to 6 points in Products... Bt many leading issues, but there were|Cream Wheat . 2415 numerous recessions of 1 to 1!2 from!Curtiss Wright . st the best in the late trading. The!Dia. Match 17% closing tone was firm. The turnover Drug. - uh approximated a million shares. ees oda HH at 9|Eaton Mig. . 5%! A El. Auto Lite. 16% Livestock EI, Pow. & Li Te —— te R. : ae SOUTH ST. PAUL Pirest: tr & Fe 12 South St. Paul; Nov. 4—(?)—(U. S.|First Nat Stores 485 Dep. Agr.)—1,700; trade nominally Film “A” . 3 steady on all lines; quality plain; Bed Gen. =: Tank 4 ; warmed- A I one cows |Gen. Foods . 275 15; low | General Malls at cutters and cutters $1.00-55; mostly|Gen’ Motors 13% 1.25 up; medium grade buils largely!Gen. Ry. Sig. 12% 2.00-25; feeders and stockers moder-|Gillette Saf. Raz. My ately active; several loads good to|Gold Dust 18% choice weighty mixed shorthorn calves Goodyr. ha & an . te 5.00-25; stockers 4.25; bulk ail weights|Graham Paige Mot. ..-.. AG 2.50-3.50; 1,800 calves, fully steady;|G¢° Nor! Pf any cael 12 better grades 4.00-50. Gt, West. Sug. Hn Hogs—6,000; market fairly active, |Grigsby Grunow 1 averaging strong; some lights and|Houd-Hershey 2% underweights 5-10 higher; good to|Houston Oil . “S choice 140-240 Ibs. 2.85-3.00; top 3.00; | Hudson aoe : rig paid by siippers for most’ desirable |HU RP. =. ar. - kinds; scaling 215 lbs. and down; pigs!tnt “Combus. Eng Se largely 3.00; few light sorts 3.10; thinitnt. Harvester -. 20%, kinds down to 2.50 and below. Pack-|Int. Nick Can. . 8 ing sows 2.00-40; bulk 2-15-2.35; aver-|Int. Tel. & Tel. .. 8% age cost 2.83; weight 208 lb. Jewel Tea ..... bind Sheep 4,000; sellers asking fully cg ied . iH steady on moderate supply of native | Bayser, (J) ae and Dakota lambs or mostly 5.50 On Kennecott Gop. 10% better grades; no early bids; buyers|Kresge (8. 3.) . 10% talking lower; late gh eta bulk Kreuger & Toll. . ut g ice lambs 5.25-50. Kroger Groce 1h good to choice oe bid 6 an ise CHICAGO w's Inc. . 7 Chicago, Nov. 4—(P)—(U. 8. D. A) ee uae 2 —Hogs, 10,000, including 3,000 direct: ingathieson Alk. 15 active, 10 higher; 140-280 lbs. 3.30-/ Miami Co) 34% 40; top 3.45; pigs 2.85-3.25; packing | Mid-Cont. Pet. 5% sows 2.50-90; smooth light weights to;Mo, Kan. & Tex. . ee 3.15; light light, good and choice, 140- | Mo. Pacific an 160 Ibs. 3.15-40; light weight, 160-200 | Ment. ee ie Ibs, 3.25-45; medium weight, 200-250 NOt? pioutt | 31K heavy weight, 250-350| Nat’ Cash Reg. 9% bs. 3.00-45; packing sows, medium /Nat. Dairy Prod. . 17% and good, 275-500 Ibs. 2.50-3.15; pigs,/Nat. Power é& Lt. . 165 good and choice, 100-130 Ibs. 2.85-3.50.|Nev. Cons. Cop. a* Cattle, 1,500; calves quality |New zone ed 2. plain; slaughter steers and yearlings |NY¥, NH. oe : HE fairly active, strong; light heifer and Northern Pacific 16% mixed yearlings strong; beef COWS|Onio Oil ..... 8 dull; bulls and vealers unchanged; no} pac, Gas & El. 21% load lots steers or yearlings on offer) Pacific Light . 37% eligible to over 6.75; slaughter cattle and vealers—steers, good and choice, 600-920 Ibs. 6.00-8.25; 900-1100 Ibs. 6,00-8.50; 1100-1300 Ibs. 6.25-9.00; 1300- 1500 Ibs. 6.50-9.00; common and med- jum, 600-1300 lbs. 3.00-6.50; heifers, | pe, good and choice 3.00-4.00; common common and medium, 3.00-5.75; cows, good nad choice 3.00-4.00; common and medium 2.25-3.00; low cutter and cutter 1.25-2.25; bulls (yearlings ex- 4.25; cutter to medium 2.00-3.00; veal- ers (milkfed) good and choice 4.50- 6.00; medium 3.00-4.50; cull and com- mon 2.00-3.00; stocker and feeder cat- tle steers good and choice 500-1050 Ibs. 4.25-6.25; common and medium, 2.75- 4.25. Sheep, 10,000; mostly steady with ‘Thursday’s average; desirable native lambs 5.00-75; latter price also bid for fed westerns; one load closely sorted natives 5.90 to city butcher; feeders absent; lambs, 90 lbs. down, good and choice, 5.00-6.00; medium, 4.00-5.00; all weights, common, 3.50-4.00; ewes, 90-150 lbs. medium to choice, 1.00- 2. il weights, cull and common, .50- 1.75; feeding lambs, 50-75 lbs. good and choice, 4.50-5.25. SIOUX CITY Sioux City, Iowa, Nov. 4—(®)—(U 8 Dep. Agr.)—Cattle 800; most class- es little changed; bulls weak; load lots medium and light weight steer: eligible around 6.50-75; plain short feds and grassers 4.75 down; medium short fed heifers held above 3.75; bulk cows 2.00-50; low cutters and cutters mostly 1.35-75; medium bulls 2.25 down; select vealers 5.50; few medium to good around 600 lb. stockers 4.40. Hogs 3,000; moderately active, steady to 10 higher; top 3.00 paid by all interests for 200-230 1b. butchers; bulk 170-270 1b. weights 2.85-3.00: 275-360 Ib. butchers 2.60-85; most 140. 170 lb. weights 2.65-75; few up to 2. fat lambs opening Sheep 6,000; steady;. feeders weak, 25 per cent of six loads range lambs 5.25; early sales clipped lambs 5.25; choice natives and fed wooled lambs held above 5.50. FOREIGN EXCHANGE ‘New York, Nov. 4.—()—Foreign ex- change ; Great Britain de- mand in dollats, others in cents. Great Britain 3.29%; France 3.93 3-16: Italy 3.11%; Germany 23.75%; Norway 16.79%; Sweden 17.3412; Montreal 89.75, | \ few 2.55; feeder a \Bur. Ad. |Purity Baking cluded), good and choice (beef) 2.75- , Radio New York Stocks | 4 Am: Sugar Ref. Am, Tel. & Tel. Am. Tob. “B” . Auburn Auto. . Aviation Corp. Baldwin Loco, Bethl. Steel. .. POU . riggs eat Meh. . Calumet & Hecla Canadian Pac. 13% Case, J. I. ... 36%, Cerro De Pasco 1% Chesap. & Ohio 22 Chi. & N. W. ; Par.-Publix Parmelee Trans. Pathe Exchange Penney (J. C.) Pub. Sve. N. J. - Pullman Rep. Iron & Reynolds Tob. Richfld. Oil Cal. ... Royal Dutch Shell ... Safeway Stores o 49 St. L.-San_ Fran. . 1 Seaboard Oil ... 13 Sears-Roebuck ... 11% Servel, Inc. . Shattuck (F.G.) . ™ Shell Union Oil ..... 6% Simmons ..... 1% 5h 3% 8 , ¥ 5 1% 6 3 Westgh. El. & Mf Willys Overland 2 Woolworth . 6% CURB STOCKS New York, Nov. ¢-—(#)—Curb: Cities Service, 3%. Elec Bond & Share, 22%. Standard Oil Ind., 28. United Founders, 1%. Buy or Sel) Throveh Thru The Tribune Want Ads «| ON CHICAGO MARKET UPWARD TWO CENTS | “ | with Winnipeg displaying a rallying trend there was a decided increase of a of 10 cents. , {sentiment were drought | Minneapolis, Nov. 4—()—The elec- fever srorero rome ryevoy WHEAT PRICES HOP Evidence That Mart Is in Sold- Out Condition Has Much to Do With Rise Chicago, Nov. 4.—(#)—Wheat scored ; ® maximum advance of about two! cents bushel here Friday. i Evidence that the market was in a; sold-out condition had much to do with hoisting of prices. In addition, securities were showing strength, and general buying here. Export purchasing of Canadian wheat was of good volume. Thursday's takings for overseas from Canada were estimated in some quarters at 3,000,000 bushels. Wheat closed unsettled 1%-1% above Thursday's finish. Dec. 43%-%, May 48%-%%; corn %s-1 up, Dec. 247s- 25, May 29%4-%, oats 14-% advanced, and provisions unchanged to a rise A let-up of pressure to sell came into the wheat pit Friday, with bet- ter buying power contrasting with re- cent persistent urgency of orders to stop losses on future delivery hold- ings. Partly responsible for change of complaints from large sections of Kansas, Okla-| homa, Texas, Colorado and Nebraska, | winter wheat territory. j Buenos Aires reports that high hu-j midity’ there suggested possibility of | tional bullish factor. New Yorw stock market counted also as a stimulus to wheat buyers, and advances of a cent a bushel were registered. Fairly aggres- sive buying of corn found offerings light, and aided rallies both of corn! and oats prices. Provisions reflected upturns in the value of hogs. WHEAT FEATURES 1 EXHIBIT STRENGTH tion eclipse seemed to be gone from the wheat market Friday, partially at least, and after a strong opening and slow creeping advance up to mid- session there was a strong flourish of strength based on improvement in the stock marget and more bullish senti-| ment abroad. Most of the news of the day indi-| cated relaxation of tension due to the! coming election. Trade was better. | and May 2%%c higher. gentine third official acreage report but did not hold all of the gain made. Other coarse grain futures were strong, notably rye, which followed wheat closely. December oats closed and May \c higher. tec higher, December rye ed 1 cent up. Decembe: 114c higher, and May 1%<c higher, De- cember flax finished 1%ic higher and May 1%c higher. Oash wheat for local unload was} slow and steady but there was strong-| er-interest in diversion point offerings and premiums gained Ic on the high | protein offerings. Durum was in very good demand and scarce. Cash corn was in very good demand | and firmer. Oats demand was fair to good again. Rye demand was strong. Barley of the better malting type was strong and in good demand. Flax of the better types was in good semane but the average run was quiet 0 slow. eo ry = 4 | Grain Quotations | . CHICAGO RANGE Chicago, Nov. 4.—(?) Wheat— 0; 7, | No. MINNEAPOLIS CASH GRAIN | Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 4.—(P)—j Wheat receipts Friday 153 compared to 183 a year ago. Wheat— 15% protein Delivered 1 dk north. 0% 5: 2 dk north 3 dk north. 14% protein 1 dk north. To Arrive} 50% 52% | M4% 46% 0. Montana Winter Wheat tein = 50% 52% 50% 49% 50% 49% 50% 3 KMOLTOL ATS 49% ATH 49% rarerareree MOS MU. : 45% ATM 45% ATS ata and South Dakota Wheat A4% 46% 44% 48% 44h 46% bt a e=gre ae rust in Argentina wheat were in addi- | N strength : Flax had a good rally on the Ar-/ finished 1%c higher, while May clos- | * | firsts cars 27, local 26% +|651, firmer. *|20; express 16- 12% protein 2 amber... 46 eeee a Grade of 1 amber.... 41 45 2 amber... 40 44 Grade of 1 durum... 41 43 2 durum... 40 42 lrd durum 40 ..... Coarse Grain 2 25, 25% 3 25 4 5 6 2 3 4 5 2 sees 3 4 Ch to fey 29 31 23 weeee led to gd.. .24 28 21 . Lower grds .19 24 see Rye— _ No. 2. 27% «29% «26% Flax— No. 1.. 1.05% 1.09% 1.05% ‘Minneapolis, oak 41—(P)— Wheat— nm High Low Close me ie 45% 438% AB 41% 4618 AT 2575 25. is QT 2TMe 2Ts 14% 13% 14% 16 15% 15% 1.03% 1.02% 1.03% 4 1.07 1.06 1.07 21% 24's DULUTH RANGE Duluth, Minn., Nov. 4.—(P)— CHICAGO CASH Chicago, Nov. 4.—(@)—Wheat No. 2 red 46; buckwheat No. 2, 87 per cwt.; new corn No. 3 mixed 24; No. 4 mixed 23; No. 2 yellow (new and old) 25%- 26; No. 3 white 24%; old corn No. 2 mixed 25% ; No. 1 yellow 26%4-%»; sam- ple grade 21; oats No. 3 white 16-1614; rye No. 2, 31%; barley 24-36; timothy seed 2.25-50 per cwt.; clover seed 7.50- 8.75 per cwt. (fancy higher). MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, Nov. 4—(#)—Flour 10 lower. Carload lots family patents quoted 3.85-3.95 a barrel in 98 pound cotton sack. Shipments 30,351. Pure Bran 8.00. Standard Middlings 7.50-8.00. DULUTH CLOSE December wheat closed 17sc higher} Duluth. Nov. 4—()—Closing cash prices: Wheat: No. 1 dark northern 48%-57%; No. 2 do 47%-52%; No. 3 do 45%-54%; No. 1 northern 48%- 57%; No. 2 do 46%-56%; No. 1 dark hard winter Montana 47% -4 No. {1 hard winter Montana 46% -48%; No. 11 amber durum 44-52; No. 2 do 42-52; No. 1 durum 44-45; No. 2 do 44-45; No. 1 mixed durum 43-48; No. 2 do 43-48; | No. 1 red durum 42. barley closed; “Fax on track 1.07!-10%; to arrive 1.0612; Nov. 1.061%; Dec. 1.04's; May 1.07'6. Oats No. 3 white, 15's. No. 1 rye, 29%. Barley, malting 24'2-28':; special No, 2, 2412-26 No. 3, 2312-25'2; lower grades, 21 ‘2-231 RANGE OF CARLOT SALES Minneapolis, Nov. 4.—(?)—Range of carlot grain sales: wheat: No. 1 dark northern 47!2-50%; No, 1 northern 47'2; No, 2 mixed 44%; No. 2 hard winter 447%; No. 2 amber durum 50%s ; No. 1 mixed durum 4314. Oats: No. 3 white 14%. Rye: No. 1, 28-29%. Barley: No. 2 special, 26-29 2, 28. Flax: No, 1, 1.05%-1.082: Corn not quoted. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co) Date Nov. 4. 1 dark northern . $ 30) No. 1 northern .. 30 No. 1 amber durum 22 No. 1 mixed durum 21 No. 1 red durum . 20 No, 1 flax 81 No, 2 flax 78! No. 1 rye a1} Barley . 10 Oats .. . 08 Dark hard winter wheat . 2 ee eee | Produce Market: |) — @ CHICAGO Chicago, Nov. 4.—(7)—Eggs wer- firm in Friday's trading, but butter and poultry averaged steady. No price changes of consequence were noted. Butter, 17,685, steady; prices un- changed. Eggs, 2,433, firm; extra resh graded firsts cars 26, local 25%; current re- - |ceipts 22-25; refrigerator firsts 21%; | refrigerator extras 21%. Poultry, live 1 car 29 trucks, steady; pens 11-14; Leghorn hens 9; colored spring 10; Rock springs 11-11’; roosters 9; turkeys 10-17; ducks 10- 1244; geese 9%; Leghorn broilers 9. Sheese per Ib.: Twins 1114; Daisies ‘1/12; Longhorns 12; young Americas 12; Brick 10%; Limburger 11; Swiss, do- mestic 28-291; ifhported 26-37. NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, Nov. 4.—(?)—Butter 6,- Creamery, higher than extra 22-2214; extra (92 score) 21's; | firsts (87-91 score) 18%-21; seconds, 17% 18%; centralized (90 score) 20. Cheese 115,294, steady, unchanged. Eggs, 8,082, firmer. Mixed colors, standards (cases 45 lbs. net) 27-28; rehandled receipts (cases 43 lbs. net) 25%4-26; no grades 22-25; special packs, including unusual Hennery se- lections sold from store on credit 29- 34; mediums 22-25%; dirties 23-25; refrigerator, special packs 23!-24%; standards 22%-23; rehandled receipts 22-224. - Dressed poultry, steady. Turkeys, fresh 17-27; frozen 18-25; ducks, fresh 10-16; frozen 15-16. Live poultry steady to easy. Chick- ens, freight 12-15; express 12-17; broil- ers, express 16-18; fowls, freight 11- 18; express 12-19; turkeys, freight 16+ ducks, freight 10- 12; express 12-14. MINNEAPOLIS RANGE i Durum— Open High Low Close Nov. . seeks gnc’ gana: ue 40's 42 40's 42 7 42 42% 42 42% | at 214 AT 27% lov. 1.0642 1.06% 1.0542 1.06'4 eC. oe «1.038% 1.05 1.0845 1.04% 1.05% 1.0742 1.05% 1.07% —e | Miscellaneous — CHICAGO POTATOES Chicago, Nov. 4.—()—(U, 8. D. A.) —Potatoes 58, on track 207, total U. 8. shipments 388; dull, supplies moder- ate trading slow; sacked per cwt. Wis- consin Cobblers 60-65, few fine qual- ity 70; Minnesota Cobbiers 60-67%; i Michigan round whites few sales 65; North Dakota Red River Ohios, 70; Idaho Russets 1.05-15, few 1.20. MONEY RATES 60 days 14; 3-4 months %; 5-6 months 1 per cent. Prime commercial paper a a MINNEAPOLIS POTATOES Minneapolis, Nov. 4.—(AP—U. 8. Dept. of Agri.)—Potatoes: light wire inquiry, demand and trading, light, : {market steady. Carloads f. 0. b. ship-' ping point, (based on delivered sales, + {less all transportation charges) Min- jNeapolis basis, 100 Ib. | whites U. S. No. 1 and partly graded, sacks round 31-47c, mostly 40-43c. MINNEAPOLIS STOCKS CLOSE (By the Associated Press) First Bank Stock, 8%. Northwest Banco, 9%. Others blank. CHICAGO STOCKS (By the Associated Press) Midwest Util (mew) %. Others blank. GOVERNMENT BON! Liberty 3%8, 101.15. Liberty Ist 444s, 102.5. Liberty 4th 4%s 103.11. Treas, 448, 107.3. Treas. 45, 103.29. INVESTMENT TRUSTS (By The Ashociated Press) (Over counter at N. Y.) Corp Tr Sh 1.65. No Am Tr Sh 1.72. Nat Tr Sh 4%, 5% Sel Am Sh 1.65, Sel Cumul Sh $} Sel Inc Sh 2%, 2%. United Fond Corp .01, .05. Univ Tr Sh 1.95. CONTINUED from page one’ Claims Backers of Moratorium Plan Are Contradictory enough reserve to meet all present debts and taxes, plus 20 per cent or more of added interest and penalty? The only answer is that the leader- ship must be in error!” Deseribed as Paradox Keller upheld the case in favor of the crop mortgage and against the moratorium by declaring that all at- ‘tempts to legislate econsinic laws j Just as paradoxically as the situation iin which he believes the advocates of the moratorium find themselves. “We need the crop mortgage be- cause it is a formal instrument of credit, just the same as the chattel mortgage or the installment purchase. To abolish it is to hamper normal credit flow, to place an obstacle in the way of farm aid, and to hamper thousands of our farmers in taking advantage of the proferred extension of 10 million dollars of government seed loans coming due Nov. 30, To open every channel for improvement and restore to the farmer his consti- tutional property right to manage his own affairs, we must vote yes to per- mit the mortgaging of crops.” “The moratorium measure, by cov- ering all existing indebtedness, throws every writ‘¢n obligation in the state of North Dakota into serious debt. Mercantile accounts, promissory notes, jcontracts, and every other credit in- ;strument immediately become open to question. The outside world will be afraid to do business with anyone in jthe state, because even the most hon- est and sincere will be unable to pay if their source of livelihood and col- lection is crippled.” Laborer to Suffer “While foreclosures are banned by the proposed act, there is absolutely }no provision in it to protect the wage {earner from garnishment. The work- {er who has been unemployed much of the time and has suffered drastic wage cuts, will find no relief from Payment under the moratorium. “Advocates of the measure simply contend that its results are worth the price, but the situation looks very much like setting the house afire to ; Warm your hands. “There is crying need for relief, but how anyone can gain relief from the complete wreckage of business and commerce, the closing of schools, the icrippling of state and local govern- ; mental agencies, and the abolishment |of the integrity of our state and every New York, Nov. 4.—(#}—Call money | # +1 steady; 1 per cent. Time loans steady; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1932 tock and person in it, no one has yet even triea | to explain.” SAYS MORATORIUM PLAN IS DOOMED FOR DEFEAT Minot, N. D., Nov. 4.—(#)—Confi- dence that the moratorium measure will be defeated at the Nov. 8 elec- tion, if every North Dakotan who is to it goes to the polls, was expressed in Minot Friday by O. Gun- valdson, Fargo, U. 8. marshal and a former sheriff of Burke county. Having traveled extensively through the state in recent weeks, Gunvaldson said he had found the sentiment against the moratorium to be strong. Lein oe | By OLGA M. RISE = Mr. and Mrs. Lewie Ambers and son Harold visited at Theodore Skogen's Saturday evening. Olga Rise and B. N. Lein beaahac)| to Driscoll Thursday afternoon. Selma Rise spent several days at the D. D. Borkman home last week. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Barkman mo- tored to Bismarck Thursday. Mayland Christensen who spent several days visiting relatives at Al- bert Lea, Minn., returned home Sat urday evening. His father accom- panied him here to visit. Constance Lein spent the week-end with Mrs. Harry Helgeson at Dris- coll. Mr. Christensen, son Mayland and Valdemar Lein wree dinner guests at Mrs. Harry Helgeson’s in Driscoll Sunday. Alice Arneson, Catherine Lein and Milton Severson, high school stu- dents, spent the week-end at their parental homes. The annual meeting of the Con- gregation will be held at the church basement Friday afternoon, Nov. 11. Mr, and Mrs, M. A. Lein, daugh- ter Leis and Evelyn Skogen spent Sunday evening at Alfred Arneson's. Eddie Arneson, Joseph and Clar- ence Rise motored to Tuttle Sunday evening. Eddie Arneson, Clarence, Ernest and Irvin Rise spent Sunday after- noon at Josn Birkeland's. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Barkman visited at the Alfred Arneson home Tuesday afternoon. George Pehl, Jr., spent a few days last week at the George Pehl, Sr., home near Arena. Ss \ Clear Lake | eerie By MYRTLE CHRISTENSEN Miss Della Olson and friend of Driscoll were Wednesday callers at the Frank Shoffer home. The Halloween program given Thursday evening ‘at Clear Lake school No. 1 by Miss Lillian Hall and her pupils was well attended. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Olson enter- tained Thursday at a goose dinner for Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Beyer andj family. Mrs. Helen Ipsen was an overnight guest Wednesday of Miss Charlotte Olson. ,. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Olson and family visited Saturday at the Burns Bailey home near Moffit. John Heisdorf was an overnight visitor Saturday at the L. B. Olson home. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Olson spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. John Steeg of Driscoll. W. Olson and daughter Charlotte had as Sunday dinner guests J. W. Preston and daughter, Mrs. Helen Ipsen of Huron, 8. D., and L. B. Ol- son. Allen Van Vleet called at the E. A. Van Vleet farm Wednesday morning. Andrew Dronen was a caller at the Peter Klucksdahl farm Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Schoon and family and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Schoon and son were Sunday call- ers at the Adolph Bassen home. Mrs. Helen Ipsen was a Bismarck caller Monday. Mrs. Albert Christensen and daughter Myrtle motored to Sterling Tuesday and visited with Miss Evelyn Thomas at the Sterling school. John Heisdorf is spending a few days at the John Seibert home in Kidder county. J. W. Preston took a carload of aueep to St. Paul the first of the \ week. . ConTINDED | Dr. Fannie D. Quain Named By Pioneers | At Annual Banquet tapers twined with bittersweet and bouquets of autumn flowers were used jon the four long tables where 182 ‘guests were seated. The dinner was {served by the Grand Pacific Eat Shop. | Waltzes, schottishes. polkas and cther old-time tunes were played for Danny and Eva, a pair of elep' (Atsociated Press Photo) ELEPHANTS WORK FOR UNCLE SAM authorities to help pull down buildings on Pennaylvania gvenue, ecene of the Yo Paty benys marchers and police @ few months ago CLASSIFIED AD RATES : All want ads are cash in advance.) Copy must be received at The Trib- une office by 9:00 a. m. to insure in- sertion same day in the regular; classified page. | Cuts, border or white space used on want ads come under the classificd display rates of 90 cents per column inch per insertion. REGULAR WANT AD RATES 3 cents per word for first insertion, minimum charge for 15 words. 2 consecutive insertions, not over 3 consecutive insertions, not ove! 6 consecutive insertions, not over 25 words .... All ads of over 25 word to above rates. ee Male Help Wanted BE A BARBER. Learn an easy pro- fession. Low rates. Free catalog. Moler Barber College, Fargo, N. D. —_—_—_———S Work Wanted LADY of 45, attractive, clean, neat good cook wishes housekeeping po- sition for gentleman in modern home. More for home and smal! __Wages. Write Tribune Ad No. 2847. EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING—At one-half price, All work guaran- teed one year. Regular $1.00 fancy crystal, 50c; watch cleaning, reg- ular $2.00, now $1.00. Wrist watches cleaned, regular $3.00, now $1.50. D. Kysar, 1216 E. Broadway, Bismarck, N. Dak. Mail orders given prompt attention. Female Help Wanted WANTED—Women chicken pickers Armours Creameries. Salesmen Wantea_ SALESMAN WANTED—The work is selling teas and coffees to an es- tablished house to house trade. Cash or real estate bond required. State selling experience, age, mar- ried or single. Apply to Grand Un- ion Tea Co., 18 South 4th St., Far- go, N. D. the dancing with the oldsters going through the lively measures with litheness which belied their years and there was considerable competi- tion for favorite partners in some of the dances. Donald Falconer danced a highlgnd fling during the evening. Guests Are Listed | Those attending the banquet were: | Mr. and Mrs. John Dawson, Mr, andj Mrs. Carl Eliason, Mrs. W. B. Fal- coner, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Fal- coner, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Faunce, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Flaherty, Mr. and Mrs. A. ‘W. Gussner, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Halloran, Jacob Horner, Miss Rose Huber, Miss Dorothy Huber, Miss Christine Huber, Miss Mary Huber, Mr. and Mrs. Jason Hoover, Mrs. John Homan and Peggy Homan, Mrs. Ed- mund A. Hughes, Mrs. Chris Johnson, Miss Julia Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kelley, Miss Irma Logan, Miss Charlotte Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Logan, Mr. and Mrs. William Laist, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Lambert. Mr. and Mrs, John A. Larson, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Larson, Dr. and Mrs. V. J. LaRose, Miss Catherine McDon- ald, Mrs, M. E. Mossbrucker, Mr. and Mrs. Dan McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Marsh, Miss Catherine Morris, Miss Boniface Morris, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. O'Hare, Tom O'Connor, Miss Lavina Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. John Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Peter- son, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pearce, Miss Gladys Pearce, Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Patzman, Mrs. E. P. Quain, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Richholt, Mr. and| Mrs. C. D. Rodgers of McKenzie, Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Reade, Dr. and Mrs. G, A. Rawlings. i Mrs. George Robidou, Fred Swen- son, Miss Thelma Swenson, Charles Staley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Swen- son, Mrs. Oscar Selvig, Mrs. Thomas Sanders, Miss Florence Satterlund, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Slattery, Miss Anna Slattery, Miss Fanny Slattery, Miss Frances Slattery, Mrs. Minnie L. Shuman, Dr. and Mrs. F. B. Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Sellens, Mrs. E. H. Sperry, Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Sol- berg, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Spohn, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Titus, Mrs. J. B. Taylor of Wilton, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Taylor and Rea Taylor of Wilton, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thompson, Miss Bessie Thompson. Mr, and Mrs. B. O. Ward, Mr, and Mrs. W. L. Watson of McKenzie, and Mrs. B. D. Wetmore, Miss Julia Wetmore, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Webb, | Phil Webb, P. B. Webb, Mr. and Mrs. | P. R. Webb, Mr, and Mrs. M. G. Ward, Mr. and Mrs. E. Whiteaker, Miss Alice Cunz, Mrs. Nellie Evarts, Miss Gert- rude Evarts, Mr. and Mrs. John P. French, Mrs. Thomas Fortune, Mrs. A. M. Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Galvin, Mrs. N. O. Ramstad, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Halloran, Harry Larson, E.} M. Davis, Mrs. Rena Baertsch, Mrs. Anna Lenhart, Mr. and Mrs. William McDonald, Miss Hilda McDonald and ants, were resrulted by Waghi! August Anderson. IN CANADA, TOO Montreal—Passenger and air mail traffic in Canada \s increasing as rapidly as in the United States. Re- cent figures of the Canadian Col- onial Airways show that the line operating between Montreal, Albany and New York showed an increase of 51 per cent in the number of pas- sengers and 190 per cent in the amount of air mail carried in the past 12 months. SOUNDLESS WARS ‘A drum arrangement on the muzzle of the new gun invented by two former artillery officers, Guglielmo de Luce and Ferruccio} iO} Guerra makes the cannon very nearly noiseless and smokeless. Gun emplacements were formerly located j by their noise and smoke. The lifting power of hellum more than 90 per cent of that of \FOR RENT—In new modern home, Mr.|FOR QUICK DELIVERY on Back- Apartments for Rent FOR RENT—Two furnished ail mod- ern apartments in the Rue Apart- Prices $28.00 and $22.00. 711 if Phone 1256-W. ROOMS FOR RENT—Three rooms Can be used for sleeping or gr housekeeping. Also one room al kitchenette. Furnished or unfur- nished. Call at 400 4th. FOR RENT — Nicely furnisheé room with kitchenette. Suitable for light housekeeping. Also 2 room apart- 801 4th St. Leaving city will rent furnished four room apartment. South front. Has piano. Also three room apartment, private bath. Fur- nished house and other houses. Part of store and basement, heated. On Main Ave. 212 Main. Phone 905 after 5 p. m. FOR RENT—Three room unfurnish- ed apartment. Private bath and entrance. Everything furnished but lights. Also 2 room furnished apartment. 523 6th St. FOR RENT—Two room apartment with Murphy bed. Nicely furnished. Phone room well furnish- ed apartment. Sink in kitchen. Use uf laundry, $28.00. Inquire at 808 a. FOR RENT—Two room furnished second floor apartment, 1100 Broad- way, $23.00. One room furnished basement apartment, 1014 Broad- way, $12.00. Three room partly mod- ern house at 213% South 5th St. _ $13.00. Inquire 1014 Broadway. FOR RENT—Large five-room apart- ment. Call Logan's, phone 211. FOR RENT — Housekeeping room with kitchenette. Also small sleep- __ing room. 411 5th Street. FOR RENT—Two room furnished flat. $20.00 per month. Also one three room furnished flat. The Laurain Apartments. FOR RENT—Strictiy_m nished and unfurnished apts. Rose Apartments. 215 3rd St. F. W. _ Murphy. Phone 852, FOR RENT—Modern apartments in fireproof building at reduced renta. Inquire at Tribune. office. ______ Houses ana Fiatsa FOR RENT—Modern five room du- plex. Attached garage. Gas or coal furnace. Fine condition. Moderate _Tent. Phone 751 or 151. FOR RENT—Modern 5 room bunga- _low, 221 1th Street. Phone 646-R. FOR RENT—Small bungalow. Lights, water and partly furnished. Clos: in. Cheap. 515 4th St. FOR RENT—Completely furnished 6 room house, 414 3rd St. Phone 455. Mrs. M. L. Shuman. FOR RENT—Modern 5 room bunga low. Inquire 401 1st. FOR RENT—Five room house in good condition. Possession at once. Three blocks north of postoffice. Louis _ Larson, 416 3rd St. Phone 481-w. FOR RENT—Six room modern house with garage. Gas heat. Located at 415 Griffin. Close to school. In- _quire at 51414 Main Ave. FOR RENT—Modern six-room house at 808 Avenuc B with garage. Near Schools. Phone 839 or 108. Rooms for Ren. Pleasant warm room. $10.00; also basement room with fire place. Can be used for lighthousekceping, also a heated garage. Call ai 104 Ave. C. __West or phone 654-W. FOR RENT — Two newly furnished rooms in warm modern home. Al- Ways hot water. Reasonable rent _413 W. Thayer. Phone 1824. FOR RENT—Two furnished sleeping Tooms. 322 9th St. Phone 1054-M. FOR RENT —Nicely furnished room in modern home. Always hot wa- ter. Private entrance. Next to bath and phone, $12.00 per month. _ 921 § t. Phone 468. FOR Attractively furnished room in modern home. Suitable for one. or two. Hot and cold running water in room. Gentlemen preferred. _ Call at 413 Ave. B. FOR RENT—Large sleeping room. Suitable for 1 or 2. Hot water heat. Close in, Call Roy Mills 678-M. 412 5th St. FOR RENT—Warm room, good ven- tilation. Always hot water. Also basement room. Very reasonable. Good light, ventilation and shower bath. Call at 116 W. Tha: For Sale man coal, phone T. A. Milum, 1475-W. 514 7th St. FOR SALE — Blue enamel _nickei Plated range with reservoir. Pretty as a doll Very reasonable price. 415 8th St., or call Army and Navy Store. FOR SALE— TYPEWRITERS AND ADDING MACHINE. Sundstrand, Underwood Noiseless, Portable and Standard. Write for catalog and Prices. Rebulit machines all makes. SUPPLIES. We clean and repair all makes of office machines. CAP- ITAL TYPEWRITER CO. 207 Bdwy. Bismarck, N. Phone 820. ______ Wanted to’ Buy POULTRY ot all kinds: wanted, Highest market prices paid. Bring in your Hides, Furs and junk. “NORTHERN” HIDE & FUR COM- ANY, Bismarck, N. Dak. ILTRY of all kinds wanted. Highest market prices paid We also buy Hides, Furs and Junk. See us before you sell. Located in the O'Rourke Store Building. WEST- ERN PRODUCE COMPANY, East Main Street. Mandan, N. D. __ Automobiles tor Sale SALE—One Ford T ton truck, 1 1928 Chevrolet truck, one 1929 Plymouth coupe, one 1930 Plymouth sedan, one Durant 65 sedan. Hedahl Motor Co. FOR SALE — 1929 Plymouth coupe. 1930 Plymouth sedan, 1928 Durant hydrogen. The Mann act, commonly known as the white slavé act, was passed by congress tn 1919, Insurance Anhulties-Protection-Savings Sell elther or both. Tate for our a 0, are Phat Bigck Bldg. give terms. Hedah! Motor Com- Dany. Nash dealers.

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