The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 2, 1934, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

© GAINS COVER ONLY i ad STOCKS RALLY BUT ~” PORTION OF LOSSES; Trade Extremely Dull With On- ly Metals Attracting Good Following New York, Oct. 2.—()—The stock market displayed mild rallying ten- dencies Tuesday, but most issues were s able to recover only a small portion of Monday’s losses. Trading was ex- s tremely dull throughout and only the metals succeeded in attracting a very smaoderate following. The close was steady. Transfers approximated only > 375,000 shares. The proceedings were the slowest in about a month. Settlement of othe threatened seamen’s strike by the national labor board was « ignored and there was little other = lst. Continued heaviness of the grain : Markets was a dampening influence. Cotton was hesitant, although rub- ber improved. Bonds were quiet and narrow. Advances of around a point or more were registered by shares of U. 8. Smelting, McIntyre Porcupine, Howe Sound, National Biscuit, Montgomery na Ward, Continental Can, Dupont and Johns-Manville. Modest improvement was shown by General Electric, Gen- | Dec. «eral Motors, Chrysler, American Can, Sears Roebuck, Santa Fe, American Smelting, Cerro De Pasco, and Loew’s. Union Pacific, Union Carbide, Consolidated Gas and some others were a bit lower. U. 8. Steel, » American Telephone, New York Cen- tral, Southern Pacific and Western Union were virtually unchanged. — Dee. | Produce Markets | . —$————® CHICAGO Chicago, Oct. 2—()—Butter and eggs were easy in tone Tuesday. Poul-|* try was about steady. Butter 11,091, easy; creamery-spec- a (93 score) 24%-25%; extras (92) firsts (88-89) 22% -23%; (86- 78) 22; standards (90 centralized car- lots) 24%. Eggs, 1,140, easy; extra firsts 22% local 22; fresh graded firsts cars 21% local 21; current receipts 19-20's; refrigerator firsts 19%; re- frigerator standards 19%; refrigera- tor extras 20%. Poultry, live, 1 car, 29 trucks about steady; hens 4% lbs. up, 15%, under 4% Ibs. 12%; leghornm- hens 10; rock springs 14-16, colored 13-14; leghorns 13; bareback chickens 16; roosters 1) turkeys 10-16; young ducks 8%-14; ld 84-12; young geese 11, old 9. NEW YORK New York, Oct. 2.—(#)—Butter; 15 886, easier. Creamery, higher than extra 26-26%; extra (92 score) 25%; first (88-91 scores) 24%-25%; seconds: (84-87 scores) 234-24; centralized (8C score) 24%-25%. Cheese, 396,064, slow. Prices un- changed. Live poultry weak. Chickens, freight. 10-18; express 14-20; broil- ers, freight and express unquoted: fowls, freight 11-18; express 11-17; roosters, freight and express 12; tur- keys, freight, 11-16; express unquoted; ducks, freight 10-12; express 17-20. anged. . Dressed poultry steady to easy. ‘Turkeys, fresh 26.30; frozen 20-31; ‘other grades unchanged. x White eggs, Pacific Coast, f whites and all brown unchanged. - Miscellaneous FOREIGN EXCHANGES * New York, Oct. 2.—()—Foreign firm; Great Britain demand in dollars, others in cents: Great Britain 493%; France 6.63%; Italy 8.62%; Germany 40.60; Norway 24.79; Sweden 25.44; Montreal in New York New York in Montreal New York, Oct. 2.—()—Govern- ment bonds: Liberty 3%’s 102.31. “Treasury 4's 105.20. Home Owners Loans 4's 51 M. 96.2. WINNIPEG CASH GRAIN ‘Winnipeg, Oct. 2.—(#)—Cash wheat: No, 1 northern 77%; No. 2 white 74%; No. 3 white 71%. Oats, No. 2 white 40%; No. 3 white 37%. NEW YORK BONDS New York. Oct. 2.—()—Bonds close: Great Northern 7's of 1936, 88%. Tobacco Products 6%%'s of 2023, 105%. B. & O. 5's 2,000, 68. * NEW YORK CURB New York, Oct. 2.—()—Curb: “Northwest Banco, no trading. INVESTMENT TRUSTS Quart Inc 8h 1.17-1.29. news that might have stimulated the ay extra firsts (90-91) 23%-24;/1 fresh, |2 shell treated or liners, fancy 36%-38; |C! Pacific Coast, standards 33-36’. Oth- |! | Grade of 2 Tribune’s Grain, Livestock and Market Report for Tues., Oct. 2 ! ] Grain Quotations New York Stocks roi ihe Open ‘High Low Close retract 104 1.04% 1.08% 1.04 N% 72% 10% 2% RM 1H 10% 08% ‘Dec. _ . . 24 69% 51 49% Mh AT 182° 1.78 May .: CHICAGO RANGE Chicago, Oct. 2—(P)— ae 9 90% Wheat— Dec., old ‘Sori Ju 13% 1% ii 9.00 9.07 13.25 12.15 DULUTH RANGE Duluth, Minn., Oct. 2—)}— Durum— Open High Low Close M0 1.20% 119 11984 Le a 1.80 183 LIS CASH GRAIN Oct. 2.— (>) — Wheat Tuesday 95 compared to 125 eapolis cash wheat and ooarse| FOX Fil grain closing quotations tage poe 15% protein bs dk north. 2 dk north 3 dk north. 14% protein 1 dk north. 2 dk north. Minnea} receipts & i 3 5 7] Gt. Nor. Ir. Gt. Nor. Pf. iN etme RERRRE 3 i gare au Int. Nick. Can .... Int. Tel. & Tel. . Johns-Manville rina 2 aie Pe 5 ae W..... 1.10% 111% 1.00% 1.10% Os May Dept. Mid-Cont. Pet. 1.00% 00% | Midland Bt & eaparapanarane @89hs, RE OB MOR 0; ag 1.08% 1.07% 1.08% me 4g North American Northern Pacific Ohio Oil ...... Pac. Gas & El. Pacific Ltg. eRgerc mos 2 1.06% 1.07% % 1.43% 1.07% Packard Motor Par.- Publix Ctf. Parmelee Trans. Path Penney (J. Penn R. R. DULUTH CASH GRAIN Duluth, Oct, 2—(#)—Closing cash | gf prices: Wheat: No. 1 dark northern heavy 1.12%-121%; No. 1 dark north- ern 1.10%-1.18%; No. 2 dark north- | Std. Oil N. ern 1.08%-1.17%; No. 3 darx north- Bu ern §1.07%-1.16%; No. 1. northern | 7, heavy 1.12%-121%; No. 1 northern 1.10%-7.18%; No. 2 northern 1.08%- 1.17%; No. 1 amber durum hard 2.22 %-1.46'4; No. 2 amber durum hard 1.22%-1.46%; No.1 amber durum United 121%-129%; No. 2 amber durum} piiteq 1.20%4-1.29%; No, 1 mixed durum 1.16 %-1.39%; No. 2 mixed durum 1.14%- 1.39%; No. 1 red durum 1.05%. Flax: No, 1, 1.79%-181%. Oats: No. 3 white 50%-52%. Rye: No, 1, 71%-75 . Corn No quotations. Barley: Malting 85-95; No. 1 feed,| Vanadit 16%-78%; No. 2 feed 16%-78% ; No. 3 feed 12% -76%. CHICAGO CASH GRAIN wi Chicago, Oct. 2a-)—Wheat: No.| wool 2 red 99%-1.01. No. 1 yellow 19-79%; No. 2 PRET RHR K ARREARS Seb cketet tek tay tcetchett defekt ae ee ‘TOES Chicago, Oct. 2.—)—(USDA)— Potatoes, 32, on track 216, total U. 8. shipments 857; slightly weaker on whites, russets about steady; supplies moderate; demand and trading slow; sacked per cwt. Wisconsin cobblers and round whites U. 8. No. 1, 90- 1.05; unclassified 80-85; Minnesota reund whites partly graded 80-90; early Ohios U. 8. No. 1. sand land section 1.00; North Dakota triumphs fair quality and condition some moldy 115; Tdaho ritcsets U. &. No. 1, 1.50- 70, U. 8. No. 2. 110-35, Washington russets U. 3 No. 2, 1.28-30. Timothy seed 16.50-17.00. Clover esed 15.00-19.00 cwt. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Mihneapoiis, Oct. 2—()—Fiour 15 lower. Carload lots, family patents plc fd ® barrel in 98 lb. cotton sue! | %} dearly, were understood to be the % | wheat market. | cereals, 2|the blackboards all dollar quotations for future deliveries of wheat. 4 went to the lowest level since July 26 ,| last. when December wheat sold at 4] Since July 13. ,|nipeg wheat market was showing a % | WILD FLUCTUATIONS "4 | ianded in » fairly steady position be- +]of Winnipeg grain exchange opera- ‘4 | lower and May 5. 1,|Cash wheat became more aggressive. me | eae dn aaleO: good demand and , | demand. ye ~|born. Flax was in good demand and | %-1.18; No. 2 mixed 1.00%; -No. 1 % ber durum 1.29% -1.46%; No, 1 mixed 34 | © 5.00 or less; numerous thin CHICAGO WHEAT PIT POLLOWS CANADIAN LEAD IN DOWNTURN Liverpool Market Plunges to New Bottom Price Record for Season Chicago, Oct. 2—(7)}—With the Liverpool wheat market plunging downward to a new bottom price rec- ord for the season, and the Canadian government reported as contemplat- ing virtual suspension of the Win- nipeg grain exchange, wheat prices in Chicago worked lower Tuesday. Charges that there had been ex- cessive selling pressure at Winnipeg as @ result of the Canadian market being held at a big premium estimat- ed to cost the Canadian government main factor in causing the Cana- dian government to consider radical action. Wheat in Chicago closed nervous, 3s to 1% under Monday's finish; Dec. new 99-99%; corn % off to % up, Dec. new 76% to %; oats un- | changed to % lower, and pfovisions showing 10 to 15 cents decline. Talk current in the grain trade here was that the Canadian government had at least temporarily withdrawn buying support from the Winnipeg Rallies from early bottom prices in the Chicago wheat market today failed to hold well, and at times the market here showed an overnight fall of more than 2 cents @ bushel. Corn, oats and other grains went lower with ‘vheat. Provisions declined, responsive to downturns of hog values and of An immediate result of grain price tumbles in Chicago was to wipe from The Chicago market for wheat futures 98%, the lowest with that exception A big trade in wheat took place es- pecially at below 99 cents a bushel for Decmbe-. Simultangously, the Win- collapse ranging from 4 to 5 cents a bushel. GRAIN STEADY AFTER Minneapolis, Oct. 2.—(#)—Grain maykets had plenty of ups and downs Tuesday but wheat futures finally cause of improved mill interest. Early demoralization was traceable to threatened government supervision tions. ,Dec. wheat futures closed % Flax futures fluctuated freely and dropped but lost little in the end. Dec. oats closed % lower and May ‘% to *%. Dec. rye 4 and May %, Dec. feed barley % and May 1; Dec. malting beeviead unchanged; Dec. and May flax lower. Demand for choice high protein Other types were in good demand and firm. Durum was in good de- mand and firm to strong. Winter scarce, Cash corn demand was good with offerings light. Oats was in fair Rye was scarce. Barley buyers. tried to get the market down again Tuesday but holders were stub- firm. RANGE OF CARLOT SALES Oct. 2.—()—Range of carlot grain sales: Wheat: No. 1 dark northern 1.14 amber durum 1.34%; No. 1 hard am- considerably in early trade; TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1934 WHO wo FIRST; IN AMERICA ¢ By Joseph Nathan Kane Author of “Famous First Facts” ROCKING CHAIR ATTRIBUTED TO BENJAMIN FRANKLIN SILK THREAD MANUFACTURED FIRST AT MANSFIELD, CONN, 819. ATHOUGH 1760 has not been ~" veritied as the date of the rocking chair, no authentic ce of a prior rocker has come to light) The “Empress of 0-ton privateer 's than five months returning. The Hanks Brothers, made the first silk thread, it to housewives for use in sewing of hetter materials. about steady; otlfer killing classes lit- tle changed; stockers and feeders rather slow. about steady; part load desirable medium weight beeves 8.50; CLA large share salable 7.75 down; small lots fat heifers around 7.00; majority beef cows 2.25-30; low cutters and cut- ters mainly 1.60-2.00; limited quota good light stockers 4.00-5; common down to 3.00 and below. Hogs 4,500; slow, no early butcher sales; most bids around 15 lower; sows 5-10 off; better grade 210-310 Ib. butchers bid 5.60-75; sorted 240-250 Ib. butchers bid 5.85; sows mostly 5.00- 15; heavies down to 4.75; feeder pigs 1,00-2.00; strong weights up to 2.50. Sheep, 2,700 commercial, 1,300 gov- ernment; little done early on slaughter classes; undertone weak; generally asking steady to strong on choice na- tive lambs or 6.25 and above; feeding lambs opened about steady; few lots around 60 lb. offerings 5.25; late Mon- day lambs mostly 25 lower; natives 6.00-25; range lambs 5.75-6.10. | CHICAGO Chicago, Oct. 2—(P)—(U. 8. D. A.) —Hogs, 20,000 including 10,000 direct; |marxet slow, about steady with Mon- ‘day's close; 220-300 Ib. at 6.25-35; top |6.35; 170-210 Ib, 5.25-6.25; most light lights 4.50-5.00; strong weight pigs 3.00-4.00; packing sows 5.00-50; light |1ight, good and choice 140-160 Ibs. |4.25-5.25; light weight 160-200 Ibs. |5.00-6.20; medium. weight, 200-250 Ibs. 1600-35; heavy weight 250-350 . lbs. 6.10-35; packing sows, medium and {good 275-550 Ibs. 4.00-5.60; pigs, good and choice 100-130 Ibs. 2.75-4.25. Cattle, 8,000 commercial; 1,500 gov- lernment; calves 2,000 commercial; 1500 government; better grade fed | steers and yearlings steady to strong; jinstances higher; other grades and \classes mostly steady with bulls 10 jto 15 lower and vealers easy; early top around 1225 Ib. steers 10.15; long lyearlings bid 9.75; holding best heif- lers above 8.25; weighty sausage bulls |3.25; practical top vealers 8.00; few {select 8.25; slaughter. cattle and veal- lers: Steers, good and choice 550-900 |Ibs. 6.00-9.50; 900-1100 Ibs. 6.50-10.25; 11100-1300 Ibs. 6.75-10.50; 1300-1500 lbs. 7.50-10.75; common and medium 550-1300 Ibs. 2.75-7.50; heifers, good and choice 550-750 Ibs. 5.25-8.25; common and medium 2.75-5.25; cows good 3.25-5.50; common and medium 2.75-3.25; low cutter and cutter, 1.75- 2.75; bulls (yearlings excluded), good ; (beef) 3,00-75; cutter, common and medium, 2.25-3.25; vealers, good and ‘choice 6.50-8.25; medium 5.00-6.50; cull and common 4.00-5.00; stocker and feeder cattle: Steers, good and choice 500-1050 lbs. 4.25-6.00; com- durum 1.40% -1.46%. Corn: No. 1 yellow 77%. | Oats: No. 4 heavy white 51% -52'4./ Fine No, 1, 1.09; No, 2 malting | Al, | Flax: No. 1, 1.89-192%. Rye not quoted. | Livestock 1 SO. ST. PAUL South St. Paul, Oct. 2.—(AP—U. | 8. D. A.)—Cattle 2,400; 500 govern- ment; slow, indications most classes about steady with Monday's weak to 25 lower prices on grassy slaughter steers, she steck and bulls; moderate carryover fat cows and common | '% | stockers; few loads fed yearlings of- fered around 8.50 down; short feds rough ers. Calves 1,700; 100 government; 25 to 50 lower; bulk better grades Hogs 6,000; moderately active; weight above 180 lbs, mainly 15 lower than Monday's average; lighter weights weak to 25 off; packing sows 25 lower; bulk good to choice 200-300 Ib. 5.85-6.10; early top 6.10 to packers; heavier butchers down to 5.50; bet- ter 160-190 Ibs, 5.00-90; 140-160 lbs. largely 3.50-5.00; few killer pigs 2.00- 3.00; feeder pigs mainly 1.00-2.00; bulk cost Monday 5. weight 203 lbs. Bheep, 6,500; 4,500 government; run includes six loads billed through; all classes opening active, fully steady; bulk native and Dakota lambs to 6.00; odd lots yearlings 3.50-450; native slaughter ewes 1.25-2.00; native and Dakota feeding lambs 4.00-50 mostly; two double good around 60 lb. Mon- tonas 5.25. Dairy cattle steady on better grades; uncertain outlet for plain springers and milkers; few attractive | Springers to shippers 40.00-50.00; bulk plainer kinds down to 25.00 or less. SIOUX CITY Sioux City, Oct. 2—(M—(U, 8 Dept. Agr.'—Cattle 3,000 commercial, 2,500 government; slaughter steers.and yearlings slow; scattered early sales 5.00 to 6.00; few best 6.50. {| mon and medium 2.75-4.25. Sheep, 8,000 commercial; 21,000 government; early trading slow, most bids and sales fully steady; best sort- ed natives bid 6.75; bulk natives and rangers 6.50 down; odd lot throwouts 5.00-50; sheep steady; bulk desirable fat ewes 1.75-2.25; few range feed- ing lambs early 5.25-75; slaughter srsep and labs: Lambs 90 lbs. down. good and choice 6.25-75; common and ‘medium 5.25-6.35; ewes 90-150 Ibs. good and choice 1.65-2.50; all weights, ‘common and medium 1.50-2.00; feed- ing lambs, 50-75 lbs. good and choice |5.35-6.00, | BISMARCK GRAIN | (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Date Oct, 2. 1 dark northern . 1 northern ... 1 amber durum . 1 mixed durum . No, 'No. |No. | No. BOSTON WOOL Boston, Oct. 2.—(7)—(U. 8. D. A.) —Only # very limited volume of bus- iness was being transacted in the Boston wool market. Woolen mills comprised @ large part of the limit- ed current movement. Sales of comb- ing greasy average to good spot 12- months Texas wool have been re- ported at 58-63 cents scoured basis. Lots of similar wools offered direct from the country also were sold at il 58-63 cents scoured basis delivered east. Winnipeg Will Probe Winnipeg, Oct. 2.—()}—John I. Mc- Forland, general manager of the Central Selling Agency of Canadian SSI FIED ADS Tribune Classified Ad Rates Revised Effective Oct. 1 a 1934 To assist you in securing either tenants if you area landlord or apart- ments, houses and rooms if you are look- ing for homes, to locate employment or employes, to sell or buy business es- tablishments and miscella- neous articles of merchan- dise, to find articles you have lost which to give of The Tri or owners of lost articles you have found—in short, you the manifold services bune's classified columns at a minimum charge. Classified Rates Minimum charge for one ( insertion—45 cents for 15 words. First insertion (per word)...........3cents 2 consecutive insertions (per word) .. cents 3 consecutive insertions (per word) .41¢ cents 4 consecutive insertions (per word)...5 cents 5 consecutive insertions (per word) .514 cents 6 consecutive insertions (per word)...6 cents TRIBUNE WANT AD RATES ARE LOW Cuts and border used on want ads come under classified dis- play rates of 75 cents per column inch per single insertion. No clairvoyant, fortune te! er, matrimonial, or doubtful ad- vertising accepted. We reserve the right to edit or reject any copy submitted. ALL WANT ADS ON BA‘ A representative will call SIS OF CASH IN ADVANCE if you desire. Telephone 32 and ask for the want ad department. Real Estate 3 room house, north part of city, garage, balance, $20.00 month .. 6 room modern house, easy 6 room modern bungalow, $700 cash, balance to suit . Dozens of houses and hundreds of lots in all parts of city. | Nearly 4000 sales without a complaint! from any buyer. | F. E. YOUNG 3000.00: Wanted to Buy WANTED TO BUY—Sccond hand coal range and dinette or break- fast set. Must be in good condition. Write Tribune Ad. No. 8131. WANTED TO BUY—Small building about 10 by 12 or up to 20 by 20 fect. Call phone 106 or 1946 or write J. P. Schmidt, 323-10th St., Bismarck, N. Dak. Household Goods for Sale FOR SALE—Furniture, reasonable for cash. Washing machine, sew- ing machine, piano, $35.00. Beds, tables, chairs, gas stove, rockers, davenport, icebox, etc. Also fruit jars and canned goods. Phone 705- R or at 413-9th St. Instruction ness English, punctuation, spelling, grammar. These courses are in ad- dition to the regular courses in shorthand and typing. Brush-up courses for stenographers. Capitol Commercial College Night School. O. R. Bauer, Prin. Business Opportunity HOW WOULD YOU LIKE to receive 100 letters a day, each containing a dime? Will send three formulas and plan. Send 10 cents to cover mailing. Advertising Specialty Company, Bismarck, N. Dak. FOR SALE OR RENT—Grocery store in good location with fixtures. In- quire at Nicola Grocery, 104 Main Ave. _____douses and Flats FOR RENT—Upper duplex, 4 rooms and bath to reliable parties only. 414 Avenue A West, or call at 307 Broadway. _ FOR RENT-—6 room house to reliable party. Centrally located. Vacant Oct. 15th. Phone 1458-M. Alterations in Farm Program to Be Made Weshington, Oct. 2.—(#)—Chairman Marvin Jones of the house agriculture committee said Monday night some changes would be made in the admin- istration’s farm program to simplify and strengthen it. Asserting that “no one claims that the farm program has been perfect,” the Texas Democrat who handled the legislative end of it in the house de- clared it had done “magnificent work in this emergency” and cited increased prices for farm products and benefit payments resulting therefrom. Jones said the program “has been a tremendous undertaking” and that it called “for the best skill and best thought of all those who are interest- ed in the program.” $28,000 Allotted for Watford Water Plant The public works administration Tuesday allotted $3,831,700 for 25 non- federal projects in 17 states. included: North Dakota: Watford City water works, $28,000 loan and Wheat Futures Sales} crant Increases in 27 allotments for non- federal public works projects also were approved by PWA to permit re- cipients to expand their developments wheat pools, Tuesday urged an in- vestigation “to find out just what has been the nature” of “huge” sales of wheat futures on the Winnipeg ex- ¢ during recent weeks. “I should like to know who has any moral right to sell huge quantities of futures in the Winnipeg market at la time when Canadian farmers are delivering and selling only very mod- erate quantities,” he said. or to meet construction costs higher than the original estimates on which the allotments were based. These in- ‘cluded: Almont, N. D., $9,000 loan and grant to $9,400 for street improve- ments, Department of Justice files now con- tain more than 4,400,009 fingerprints. the largest and hest fingerprint col- lection in the world. + They _Apartments for Rent ANTED by gentleman, recently resident Panama, pupils. Spanish and Latin. Adults ferred. Write Tribune Ad. No. 8118 or phone 1477. EAL STEAM Supercurline perma- nents? reg. $3.50, oil $5.00; electric permanents in combination, spiral top, ringlet ends, all prices. Sham- poo finger wave, Palmolive soap, Vernon lotion, 50c. Harrington's. | Phone 130. ea ie MATTRESSES YOU can haves your old mattress re-! novated, made soft and fluffy and rebuilt into our finest sateen cover, cheaper than you can buy a new one. 309-8th St. Phone 1962. Male Help Wanted |YOUNG MAN WANTED to work by month. Phone 823. F, Jaszkowiak. SOE CS UD tall RI Female Help Wanted WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Go home nights. Call morn- 104 Avenue B. AMES WANTED—Capable, experienced girl for general housework. Must be able to cook. Call at_ 901-10th St. SELL XMAS Card box assortments. ! Big earnings. Full or spare time.! Finest in America. Sample on ap-| proval. Engraveo Craft, Kasota! Building, Minneapolis, Minn, __ | WANTED—Girl for light housekeep- | ing. Go home nights. Must be handy with baby. Phone 1859-W after 3 p. Wanted to Rent WANTED—Small house or apart- mept, walking distance. Phone 953-W. Travel Opportunities YOUNG LADY will share expense on trip from Chicago. Phone 1203. Work Wanted HAULING—Will collect ashes or gar- bage once a week during the win-j| ter months. Prompt service, with 7 years experience in this work. Henry F, Swanson, 514 Avenue F.! Phone 1683-R. WANTED—2 Commercial college girls want places to earn board and room. Phone 121. | FOR RENT—One room and kitchen- ette. Close to hath. Suitable for two adults. 322-9th St. FOR RENT—4 room unfurnished apt. Private bath. Frigidaire. Wa- ter and gas furnished. Gas heat. Call at 813 Avenue C. Phi FOR RENT—One furnished room upstairs with kitchenette and large closet. Also one furnished room in. basement with gas heater and stove. Reasonable. Call at 818-7th St. ______ Rooms for Rent FOR RENT—Sleeping room. Next to bath. Rent reasonable. Call at 418-8th St. Phone 1993. FOR RENT—Sieeping room. Twin beds, radio. Private entrance. Gentlemen preferred. Phone 1538- LR, 11445 Bdwy. FOR RENT—Room in modern home. Close in, 418-2nd St. Phone 360-J. FOR RENT—Room in modern, clean _ home with good board, 614-8th St. FOR RENT—Fumrnished large sleep- ing room. Suitable for two, Also gas plate. Over Bismarck Furni- Gi eS FOR RENT—Two large light house- keeping rooms in strictly modern home. Newly decorated. Rent very reasonable. 213-11th. 14 block ifully furnished sleeping room. Beauty Rest Mat- tress. Hot water at all times. Close in. 111 E, Rosser. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room with private family. Gas heat, private bath. Hot water at afl times. Near capitol. Gentlemen Preferred. 522-8th St. FOR RENT—Warm, nicely furnished room in home one block from court house. Always hot water. Call at 501-6th St. FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod- ern home. Young lady preferred. Phone 644-R. Close in. FOR RENT—Room in new home. Next to bath. Hot water. Call at 832 Mandan St. Phone 1705-M. FOR RENT—Modern cozy room. Close in. Gentlemen preferred. Phone 1628-W or call at 316 Man- dan. __—_—_—_—_——— WORK WANTED—General house- -work wanted by girl. Can give ref-; erences. Phone 538-W from 2 to 7| o'cloc! For Sale FOR SALE—Beautiful red fox scarf.) Cost $125. Perfect condition. Cheap for cash, 608-3rd St. Upstairs! Apt. eens FOR SALE—Lady’s Laskin lamb coat. Size 16. In good conditjon. Ma- jestic 7 tube cabinet radio. Phone 1410. ee edt octal FOR SALE—Used 4 burner Automa- tic Hot Point Electric range in per- fect condition. See it at Melville | Electric Shop. ah FOR SALE—Smooth top gas range.; ‘Almost new. Will sell cheap if! taken at once. 405-South 12th. FOR SALE—Potatocs at 90c a bu. or 80c per bu. in 10 bushel lots. Onions, $1.25 per bushel; carrots, $1.25 per bushel; beets, $1.00 per bushel; pep- pers, $1.50 per bushel; cabbage 3c Ib. or 2%2¢ in 50 lb, locs; parsnips 5¢ 1b. Also tomatoes and rutabagas. Kunz Grocery, 222 So. 9th St. Phone 1317. FOR SALE—12 new complete stan- dard windows with frame. Cheap if taken at once. Suitable for porch inclosure. Call 735-M after 6 p. m. Farms for Rent _ WANT RENTER with tractor; % 20 miles SE Bismarck; 1% crop plan; buildings; cattle-hog pas- tures; wheat-corn allotments. fef- erences required. Kratt, Sheldon,’ N, Dak. For Sale or Trade : FOR SALE or TRADE for beef cattle or hogs, 50 choice white face breed- ing cows. Cut rate Meat Market. OUD EA MI 5 8 0 EXCHANGE SE% section 209-148-100 ' McKenzie Co. for 160 acres Mah- nomen or Becker Co. Minn. land. Automobiles for Sale USED CARS 1933 DeLuxe Plymouth Coach $525.00 1930 Ford Coupe . 250.00 1932 Chevrolet DeLuxe 1931 Chrysler Sedan .... 1928 Packard Sedan 1929 Franklin Sedan 1933 Chrysler 8 Sedan 1932 Chevrolet Coach .. . 1933 DeLuxe Plymouth Coach 500.00 1933 Standard Plymouth coach 475.00 CORWIN-CHURCHILL FOR SALE—Auburn 12, 1932 model Custom sedan. Perfect condition, 5 new tires. A bargain. Call at 318 Main 8t., Bismarck. CHEVROLET CAPACITY WEEK BARGAINS 1933 Plymouth Sedan . 1929 Ford Coupe .... 1931 Chevrolet Coach 1930 Chevrolet Sedan 1927 Buick Sedan .... 1927 Chrysler Coach . TRUCKS 1927 Chevrolet grain box ......$135 1928 Chevrolet, stock rack, large 1932 Chevrolet, new 34-7 tires, Platform .......ssseeeeeere 1933 Chevrolet, 157 10 ply duals.. 495 We trade and give terms. CAPITAL CHEVROLET CO. Bismarck, N. D. Lowest ed Truck Delivered in Bismarck Half-Ton Pick-Up $550.15 Capital Chevrolet Co. A German has invented a paste that, when squeezed from 8 tube and ‘exposed to the air, ignites end can be |used for lighting cigarets or start- Paul E. Simmons, Fargo, N. Dak. ing fires. : 4 ‘

Other pages from this issue: