The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 15, 1935, Page 7

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STOCK MARKET FAR FROM BEARISH AS INDUSTRY REPORTS Steel Production Climbing and , Carloadings Indicate Brisk Gains ‘New York, July 15.—(#)—Heavy in- dustry issues, backward for some time, came to the front in today’s stock market. Quiet buying lifted the steels, rails and equipments sub- stantially. The close was firm. Trans- fers approximately 900,000 shares. The news was far from bearish. ‘The financial sector expressed plea- sure over the estimate of the Ameri- New York Stocks PPPEEE EE phthalate] stl gk Sxexsiens i Reed BBEBRBRORBReBE -- | Bethl. can Iron é& Steel institute that cur: Bord rent mill operations are at an aver- ege of 39.9 per cent of capacity, a jump of -4.6 percentage points over last week’s figure. Early car load- ings statements indicated ® brisk up-|Caterpll. turn in freight shipments. ‘Wheat spurted at Chicago and oth- Chi er grains improved sympathetically. Cotton was inclined to lag. Second- ay) sae ee ee ee Foreign exchanges were quiet. Shares of American Locomotive preferred bounded up 3 points and bo ‘Crucible Steel preferred, United Fruit nd McKesson & Robbins preferred were 2 or s0 higher. Other advances of fractions to a point or more were tegitsered by U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Republic Steel, Acme Steel, Santa Fe, Union Pacific, Great Northern pre- | Greg; ferred, Delaware & Hudson, Northern Pacific, Southern Pacific, Pullman, Baldwin Locomotive preferred and | Deere & National Steel. American telephone was a contrary performer, dropping more than a point. Du Pont was down as much Tribune’s Grain, Livestock and Market Report for Mon., July 15 | Grain Quotations 13.95 18.85 13.77 13.67 13.40 13.35 12.60 12.57 Minneal » July nears ‘Whe: Oo; Low Close July see rest tohe 1.01% 1.04% 5 4% 81% 84% 86% A 8% wee. 40% co A1% SISRV NAN Tow following a preliminary second quar- ter statement indicating a small de-|El. cline in MM profits from the same 1934 quarter. The motors were only @ trifle firmer and the utilities were virtually at a standstill. — | Produce Markets | —————— ° CHICAGO Chicago, July 15.—(#)—Butter was easy Monday, and eggs were steady. Poultry was unsettled. Butter 21,339, easy; creamery spe- cials (93 score) 24% to %; extras (92) 23%; extra firsts (90 to 91) 22% to mone rs FERRE RRR FRE IR RR tt Meet Pict ++ 3 =3 RRR RRS 23%; firsts (88 tc 89) 21% to 22; sec-|Gt. Ni onds (86 to 87) 21; standards (90 cen- tralized carlots) 23%. Eggs 14,172, steady; extra firsts cars | Fr 24, local 23%; tresh graded firsts cars 23%%, local 22%; current receipts 22%; Hupp storage packed firsts and extras 24%. |) CHICAGO POULTRY Chicago, July 15.—()—Poultry, live, | 1 car, 27 trucks, unsettled; hens 4% | Johns, Ibs. and less 16%, more than 4% lbs. 17; leghorn hens 13; rock fryers 18,| Kel: colored 16, rock springs 18 to 19, col- ored 17; rock broilers 16 to 17, colored 15; leghorn chickens 2 lbs. up 13%, small 12%; bareback chickens 13 to 14; roosters 12%; hen turkeys 14, toms 13, No. 2, 11; old ducks 4% lbs. up 10%, small 10; young white ducks 4% lbs. up 15, small 11; small colored ducks 10; old geese 10, young 12. Butter 13,535, easier. Creamery higher than extra 24 to 24%; extra (92 score) 23%; firsts (88 to 91) 22% to 23%; seconds (84 to 87) 21% to 22; | Mi centralized (90 score) 23%. Cheese 98,169, steady. State whole milk, flats, fresh fancy 16; held 1933 specials 22; 1934 fancy to specials 18% to 19. Eggs 25,420, irregular. Mixed colors; epecial packs ur selections from fresh receipts 26% to 29%; standards and commercial standards 25% to 26; fitsts 24% to %; mediums 40 Ibs. 23%; dirties No. 1, 42 lbs. 23 to 23%; aver- age checks 22. White eggs, resale of premium marks 33% to %;; nearby special packs including premiums 31 to 33; nearby and midwestern hennery, exchange specials 29 to 30; nearby and mid- western exchange standards 27% t0}pilis, Flot %4; marked mediums 27%; Pacific coast, fresh, shell treated or liners fancy 32% to 33; Pacific coast, stand- in ards 31% to 33; Pacific coast, sheli|5ure Oil treated or liners, mediums 29 to 30; brown, resale of premium marks 31 fo 32; nearby and western special| Remington Rand packs, private sales from store 29 to 30%; western standards 26% to 27. Live poultry slow. By freight: Chickens unquoted; broilers 15-21; fowls 15-19; roosters 14; turkeys 10- VW; ducks 9-12. CHICAGO CASH GRAIN Chicago, July 15.—(?)—Cash wheat No. 2 red 82%4-83%; No. 1 dark hard 90%-92; No, 2 hard 90; No.1 red 82%; No. 2 mixed 75-80% (last two tough and garlicky). s, Corn, No. 2 yellow 86%-87; oats No. 2 white 36-36%; no rye, no buck- wheat, no soybeans, barley, nominal; timothy Corn, No, 1 yellow, 80. Oats, No. 2 white, 33%. ee No. 2 malting, 59-60; No. 1, 57. No. 1, 155% -1.56%. Rye not quoted. CHICAGO Ctose | ¥ Wi 23% Ess Refrigerator Stand- ‘ ards, Oct. . 25% 25% 25% COMPLIANCE GROUP MEETS The county executive committee on ‘wheat compliance, composed of John Benz, Oscar Brostrom and Axel Sod- er, Tuesday will begin the signing of Bome 3,000 Burleigh county com- pliance contracts. Biome ahestasBaeeses Fo Sere FE 3 Sie os aes oe Packard Motor . Bie nea Hc Penney (J. C.) . ; Penn, R. R. RARE wouasotheseey, SB8aFSS.2- S88. SER RE E 4 wo, RASS SRS eo wr mS SiSeok FARE RE RES festingh. Air. Westingh, El. & M. Woolworth . 2 2 FOREIGN EXCHANGE New York, July 15.—()—Foreign exchange steady; Great Britain de- mand in dollars, others in cents, Great Britain 498%; France 6.62 %; Italy 8.23; Germany 40.37; Nor- way 24.93; Sweden 25.60; Montreal in New York 99.87%; New York in Mon- treal 100.19%. ae ory fotey er 37% 39% 32% 29% 29% SUID whois agi” 150% TINT 150i 1.50% 1.50 Duluth, Mame uly 1G Durum— Open High Low Close peer ti MINNEAPOLIS CASH GRAIN te et duly 15.—(?)—Wheat receipts 53 Monday compared to 102 ar AgO. . * Kfinnesp: lis cash wheat and coarse grain cl quotations today follow: ‘Wheat— 5 i Delivered 'o Arrive 15% protein 1 ‘ak north. 1.00% 1.11% + 1.08% 1.00% - 106% 1.07% .... in + 109% 1.10% ... 1.07% 1.08% - 1.05% 1.06% th. 1.07% 1.08% .. 1.06% 1.07% - 1.04% 105% .... - 1.06% 1.07% .... - 1.05% 1.06% - 1.04% 105% - 1.06% 1.07% - 1.05% 1.06% . 1.04% 1.05% 1.08% 1.07% 1.05% 1.06% 1.04% 1.05% .... + 1.04% 1.06% 104% 1.06% MOB MOR HOA MUA 1.02% 1.04% 1.02% 1.04% 1.00% 1.02% 1.00% 1.02% a. o 1° sevee 92% 97% 92% ST% Minnesota and South Dakota Wheat mos or z W..... 100% 1.02% Bag eny sa Ete} 98% 101% Durum 1.01% 107% 1.90% 1.06% 98% 1.01% 997% 1.04% Al% 42% 41% 152° 157) 152 DULUTH CASH CLOSE Duluth, July 15.—()—Closing cash prices; Wheat, No. 1 dark northern heavy, 1.10%-114%; No. 1 dark northern, 1.00%-1.12%; No. 2 dark. northern, 1.08%-1.12%; No. 3 dark northern, 1.07%-1.10%; No. 1 north- ern heavy, 1.10%-1.14%; No. 1 north- ern, 109%-112%; No. 2 northern, 108%-1.11%; No. 1 amber durum hard, 81%-107%; No. 2 amber du- rum hard, 81%-1.07%; No. 1 amber durum, 80%-1.02%; No. 2 amber du- rum, 79%-1.02%; No. 1 mixed durum, 76%-1.05%; No. 2 durum, 74%- 1.05%. Flax: No. 1, 1.53. Oats: No. 3 white, 33%-36%. Rye: No. 1, 42%-45%. Barley: Malting, 50-70; No. 1 feed, 41-43; No, 2 feed, 41-42; No. 3, 39-41. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, July 15.—()}—Fiour 10 lower. Carload lots family patents $7.15-7.35 @ barrel, in 98 Ib. cotton sacks. Shipments 19,813. | Pure Bran 17.00-17.50. | Standard middlings 1900-1950. . 100% 1.02% 1 WHEAT PRICES UP 3 CENTS ON RUST DAMAGE REPORTS Minneapolis and Kansas City Markets Stronger Than Chicago Pit Chicago, July 15.—(#)—Cautiously sympathizing with extreme. jumps of respectively 5 and 4 cents a bushel at Kansas City and Minneapolis, wheat 4 Prices in Chicago Monday scored Bains of over 3 cents, Disappointing harvest yields were the accepted Chicago version of Kan- sas City wheat market strength, and black rust reports were held to large- ly to explain the action of wheat prices at Minneapolis. Relative drag- giness of the Chicago wheat market was apparently related to prospec- tive increased receipts of new wheat in areas adjacent to Chicago. Wheat closed nervous, 1% to 2% above Saturday's finish, Sept. 82% to %, corn % to 1% up, Sept. 75% to %, oats % to 1 cent advanced and provisions unchanged to a rise of 10 cents. BULLISH NEWS SENDS MILL CITY PRICES UP Minneapolis, July 15.—()—Profes- sional buying along with generally bullish news raised wheat futures prices here Monday with July futures tight and particularly strong. Deferred futures were strong on the general news which included higher cables dry weather in Argen- tina and bullish weekly statistics, along with black rust and drouth news from the spring wheat belt. July wheat closed 44 higher, Sep- tember 3% higher and December 214 up. Coarse grains sympathized with wheat and closed higher. July oats closed 1c higher and September % up. July and September rye closed 2% higher. July barley finished 2% up, September 2% higher. July and ‘September flax each closed 2 higher while December was up 1%. Corn demand was better. Oats tone was quiet and featureless. Rye demand was steady and offerings were light. Barley was in better demand. Flax was in fair demand and firm. BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Date July 15. No. 1 dark northern No, 1 northern .... No, 1 amber durum No. 1 mixed durum No. 1 red durum .. No. No. Hard winter wheat Livestock SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK South St. Paul, July 15.—(AP—U. 8. D. A)—Cattle 4,100; slaughter steers slow, moderate supply grain- feds here; bids about steady with low close last week, asking firm; many salable around 8.00 to 9.50; some held around 10.00; thin cows steady; fat kinds weak to 25 down; little done on heifers; best held above 9,00; beef cows 4.50 to 5.50; few good above 6.00; low cutters and cutters mainly 3.50 to 4.50; bulls uhchanged; desirable sausage kinds 5.50 to 6.00; supply of stockers mostly iower grades; market weak; common to medium steers eligible about 5.00 to 6.50; good year- lings held above 7.00; best load lot Saturday 17.25; calves 1,900; veaiers arcund steady with low time Friday; desirable grades 6.00 to 7.00; selectiuns Hogs 2,700; fairly active, all classes mostly steady; top 9.75 sparingly; bet- ter 170 to 240 Ibs 9.50 to 9.65; slightly off quality kinds down to 9.25; 240 to 280 lbs. unevenly 9.00 to 9.50; 280 to 350 Ibs. 8.50 to 9.00; heavier weights down to 8.25; pigs scarce, odd lots 8.75 Sheep 15,500, five loads of ewes through, salable supply includes 42 loads Washington lambs; ten loads yearlings; three decks of ewes and balance largely natives; run mostly * |killers; no early sales slaughter lambs or yearlings; early bids on native lambs 25 lower at 7.75 down; bulk held around 8.00; best western held around 8.25; holding desirable range yearlings up to 6.25 and above; few early sales good to choice native ewes steady at 1.75-3.25. Dairy cattle little changed; good strong weights springer cows getting * |55.00-65.00; occasionally more; light- er weight and lower grades 30.00-50.00. CHICAGO Chicago, July 15.—(7)—(U. 8. D. A.) «| ~-Hogs 14,000, including 3,500 direct; fairly active, around steady with .|Friday’s averages; top 10.20 paid sparingly; bulk desirable 180-230 lbs. 9.85-10.15; few 240-290 Ibs. 9.60-80; bulk medium 150-190 Ibs. 9.25-65; bulk desirable packing sows 8.35-65; few light weights 8.75. Cattle 10,000, calves 2,500; market slow on steers; small killers and shippers buying light yearling early at strong to unevenly higher prices, but general undertone no better than steady; shipper demand narrow; kill- ing quality plain, there being a goud many southwestern grassers in crop. Early top fed steers 11.75; some held higher; tendencies lower on cows and butchers heifers; bulls strong, vealers red at 8.00 down; best sausage bulls Sheep 13,000; fat lambs slow; weak to 25 lower; yearling and aged sheep firm; native lambs upward to 8.25 ‘and 8.40; top 8.50 on selected lot to ‘trader interest; range lambs 840 down; six cars choice Idahos straight at that price; choice yearlings 6.75; natives ewes 2,00-3.25. SIOUX CITY Sioux City, Iowa, July 15.—(>)— (U. 8. Dept. Agr.)—Cattle, 3,500; early sales and bids. slaughter steers and | killing quality plein; Wttle done on CLASSIFIED ADS heifers; early sales beef cows weak to 25 lower; cutter grades about steady; stockers and feeders slow, weak; fed steers and yearlings salable 8.00-10.00; some held above 10.25; beef cows 4.25- 6.00; cutter grades 3.50-4.00; 380-800 Pound stocks 7.00-8.00; 400 pound Stock heifers 6.00. Hogs, 4,000; slow, early sales lim- ited to shippers; steady to 10 lower than Friday, early top 9.00; better 190-240 Ib. butchers 9.50-60; no action on heavier weights; 190-240 lb. aver- ages 9.00-50; medium and light sows 8.40-50; packers bidding 10 to 15 low- er or 83.5 down feeder pigs scarce. Sheep, 1,000; supply truck-ins most- ly native lambs and yearlings; packers talking weak to lower on fat native lambs around 8.00 for choice generally asking fully stead to 8.25; choice year- lings held above 6.25. I Miscellaneous CALL MONEY New York, July 15.—()—Call money steady; % per cent all day. Time loans steady, 60-90 days % offered: yearlings weak to 25 lower; gerers!|jam and 4-6 mos % offered. Prime Commer- cial paper % per cent. Bankers Ac- ceptances unchanged. CURB STOCKS New York, July 15.—(@)—Curb: Cities Service 15%. Elec. Bond & Share 8%. United Founders %. GOVERNMENT BONDS New York, July 15.—(#)—Govern- ment bonds: Liberty 4th 4%s 101.20. Treas. 4%s 117.2 Treas. 4s 112.2. NEW YORK BONDS New York, July 15.—(4)—Bonds close: Great Northern 7s of 1936, 98%. MINNEAPOLIS STOCKS Minneapolis, July 15.—(4)—Stocks ; close: First Bank Stock 10%. Northwest Banco 5's. INVESTMENT TRUSTS Quart. Inc, Sh. 1.37; 151. BOSTON WOOL Boston, July 15—(?)—(U, 8. D. A.) —Recent business transactions by Boston wool houses has comprised largely of the finer grades of west- ern grown average to short combing wools in the original bags but aver- age French combing 64’s and finer wool has been sold at 67-68 cents scoured basis while French combing has been moved around 65 cents. Good French combing wool of simi- lar lots of finer and territory wool of average to good French staples ae been sold at 68-70 cents scoured asis. CHICAGO POTATOES Chicago, July 15.—(%)—(U. 8. Dept. Agr.)—Potatoes, 103, on track, 229; total U. 8. shipments Saturday 649, Sunday 43; old stock, steady, supplies light, demand and trading light; sack- ed per cwt. Idaho Russets U. 8. No.1, from cold storage, 1.50; small 1.27%; new stock, slightly. stronger, supplies moderate, demand and trading good; Alabama Triumphs, U. 8. No. 1, 1.70; California long whites, U. 8. No. 1, 2.00; Missouri Cobblers, U. 8. No. 1, and partly graded, 1.00-25; Tennessee Cobblers, U. S. No. 1, 1.40; Bliss Tri- umphs, U. 8. No. 1, 1. Triumphs, U. 8. Nc Cobblers, U. Andrus Wahl Dies At Home of Son Here Andrus Edward Wahl, 69, retired real estate agent, died at 5:45 p. m., Sunday, at the home of his son, Har- old Wahl, 917 Sixth St., after a lin- gering illness, Born May 22, 1866, in Norway, Mr. Wahl came to the United States when @ young man. He has lived in Bis- marck for the last six years. He was a member of the Lutheran church. Puneral services will be held at 2 Pp. m. Tuesday at the Webb funeral chapel. Burial will be made in the Fairview cemetery. Besides his son here, Mr. Wahl leaves two other sons, E. A. Wahl of Washington, D. C., and V. F. Wahl of Lake Park, Minn. :| World War Veteran Is Claimed by Death John Herbert Arence, 48, World War veteran and a patient at the U. S. Veterans’ hospital at Fargo since June 9, died late Saturday, it was learned here Monday. Funeral ar- rangements have not yet been made. Mr. Arence was born July 18, 1887, at Calumet, Mich., of German-American Parentage. He was drafted into the army June 23, 1918, at Fargo and sent to Camp Dodge, Ia., as a member of Battery F, 339th Field Artillery, and served overseas, August, 24, 1918, to January 28, 1919. He was dischar at Camp Dodge on June 14, 1919, as ® corporal. FACES NON-SUPPORT CHARGE Harold Torland, arrested at Car- rington Sunday, was brought to Bis- marck Monday to face a charge of non-support of his family. He was to have been given a hearing before A. E. Shipp in justice court Monday afternoon. 1” Today’s Recipe i Cream Jam Roll The ingredients are % cup sifted cake flour, % teaspoon baking pow- der, % teaspoon salt, 4 eggs, % cup sifted sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla; % cup strawberry jam, % cup cream, whipped. Sift flour once; measure, Combine baking powder, salt and eggs in bowl. Place over smaller bowl of hot water and beat with rotary egg beater, add- ing sugar gradually until mixture be- ‘comes thick and light-colored. Re- move bowl from hot water. Fold in flour and vanilla. Turn into 15x10 inch pan which has been greased, lined with paper to within % inch of edge and again greased. Bake in hot oven (400 degrees Fahrenheit) 13 minutes. Quickly cut off crisp edges of cake. Turn out on cloth covered with powdered sugar. Remove paper. When cold spread with mixture of cream. Roll tightly. Wrap ih cloth. Chill about % hour. ——@ | state’s 225,000 children,” said H. M. . and playground layout, PLAYGROUNDS FOR ALL N. D. PLANNED Broad Recreation Program Is Mapped by State Plan- ning Board Recreation centers in every town and social center in North Dakota are envisioned in a broad program being mapped by the recreation committee ot the state planning board. “Relief labor can be utilized: to aid in the development of a playground system which will be permanent, and will add to the enjoyment of the Pippin of Halliday, state chairman. Pippin is preparing a model park copies of which will go to county planning boards, with a ‘suggestion that these recreational sites be located not more than 25 miles spart throughout the state. He said county boards are then ex- pected to frame their own work relief Projects for the creation of new units, or improvement of existing sites. Systems of county parks are recom- mended. On Pippin’s state committee are Vic Thom, Goodrich; Jack Williams, Far- go; P. M. Shefveland, Van Hook; Joe Rabinovich, Grand Forks; E. J. Jones, Fargo; H. E. Rilling, Fargo; and E. A. Willson, Bismarck. : A. E. Thomp- son, state superintendent of public instruction, is an ex-officio member. LAWYERS CONDEMN HAUPTMANN: TRIAL Los Angeles, July 15.—()—In a re- Male Help Wanted Female Help Wanted WANTED — Experienced mechanic. Must have tools. M. B, Gilman Company. WANTED—A! licensed barber. Write Fred Brodl, Bismarck, N. Dak. MAN AND WIFE—To run local cof- fee agency. Earnings up to $300 in @ month. I send everything need- { ed. No money risk, Ford Sedan given if you qualify. Details free. Albert Mills, 7234 Monmouth, Cin- cinnati, O. —E—Eee—e——Kxrxrz_—=x*{{{K[N[§RBESE=__"—> Gdn al for Rent FOR —4 room new modern apartment, 2 bedrooms; or 5 room Modern house, gas heat, electric refrigeration. Write Tribune Ad. 19832, FOR RENT—Furnished one room and kitchenette apartment. Also sleep- ing room, Adults only. 322-9th. FOR RENT—Modern _ unfurnished apartment, private bath, call at 306 So, 15th Street. Phone 1889. FOR RENT—3 room upstairs apart- ment. Water, lights, gas furnished. Call at 519-16th street. FOR RENT—Unfurnished and fur- nished apartments. Call at 422-5th. Phone 197 or 231. FOR RENT—One double room base- ment apartment. 1517 Bowen Ave. Phone 852-W. “ FOR RENT—New modern unfur- nished 4 room apartment at 617- 15th Street. x FOR RENT—2 room apartment. 1008 Broadway. FOR RENT—2 rooms and kitchenette apartment with sleeping porch, fur- nished, 519-5th St. FOR RENT—3 nicely furnished clean rooms to adults only at $37.00 per month, Call at 602-3rd street. Do not phone. WANTED—Two experienced beauty Operators, Must have good per- sonality. Apply Annex Barber TYPISTS, earn money at home. pay. Send 3c stamp for details. Typist Bureau, 91 Elm 8t., West- field, Mass, WANTED—Gitl with clerking drug store experience. and . Write Trib- une Ad. 10637, WANTED—Girl for light housework Preferably one who can go home nights. Call at Apt. 3, 206% Main or call 698-W after 6 p. m. ae —q fouses and Flats __- FOR SALE—7 room modern house in west part of city. Near school. Excellent condition and location. New 5 room bungalow, near capi- tol, $5300, 12 room modern house, ideal for apartments or rooms. T. M. Casey & Son, 518 Bdwy. FOR RENT—Rooming house at 422- 4th Street. Modern 6 room housé. Apartments furnished and unfur- nished. Adults only. Wanted to oo hand bath tub. Phone FOR SALE—Several houses from 4 to 8 rooms, For information call at 323 2nd St. Rooms for Rent FOR RENT—Large Reasonable. FOR RENT—Well furnished two room apartment, running water and con- venient to bathroom. 411-5th. FOR RENT—Unfurnished 3 room apartment, Bath, entrance private. Heat, water. $40.00. Adults. 614 port for submission at the opening session of the American Bar associa- tion convention Monday, the com- mittee on cooperation between the press and the bar criticized the con- duct of the Bruno Hauptmann trial and demanded sieps be taken to pre- vent a repetition of “such incidents” as occurred in the trial. “If press reports are accurate, the attorneys for the defendant, and the prosecuting attorney as well, took ad- vantage of the situation and by per- sonal interviews given to representa- tives of the press, and by talks over the radio, seemed wholly to disregard all the accepted rules of dignity and ethics with which the profession and the courts have sought to surround the trial of a man for his life,” the re- port said. HARMONY RESTORED AMONG DEMOCRATS Washington, July 15.—(%)— Back from a week-end of fishing and shovt- ing with President Roosevelt, Demo- cratic leaders faced a hot weather task of truly formidable proportions. ‘They sought to hasten congressional action on a weighty list of controv- ersial subjects. Although they still were mentioning Aug. 15 as a desir- able date for adjournment, they did So only in a half-hearted way. Most of them believed the session would go considerably beyond that. The week-end was reported to have restored harmony between Secretary Ickes and Senator Tydings (Dem.- Md.), who spent much time together, “laughing and joking.” 16-Cent Advance Is Given by Wool Pool Advances up to 16 cents per pound for top grade wool will be made by the Missouri Slope Wool Pool for fleeces received at the Northern Pa- cific freight depot in Bismarck, H. E. Wildfang, president, announced Mon- day. Two new state pools have re- cently joined the national organiza- tion of which the Slope group is a member. The two pools, at Buffalo and Bowman, have stored approxi- mately 300,000 pounds of wool, ac- cording to H. O. Putnam, county ex- tension agent. Austrian Premier to Keep Government Hold Vienna, July 15.—(#)—Thousands of black flags gave Vienna an aspect of deepest mourning Monday for Frau Herma Schuschnigg as her hus- band, Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, clung to the leadership of the gov- ernment. Ave. C, Personal HARRINGTON'S prices for real pure steam Supercurline permanents, re- duced, Regular was $3.50, now $2.45. Oil steam was $5.00, now $3.65. Super Oil Steam now only $4.65. Only at Harrington's. Phone 130. WANTED—Maternity cases. Licens- ed with state of North Dakota. Call at 504-9th St. Phone 1633-J. Mrs. John Dixon. Also have sleeping room, MATTRESSES YOUR old mattress renovated and re- built either regular or spring-filled. 408 9th. Phone 519. Miscellaneous STAPLING MACHINES LET US demonstrate the Markwell paper fastener. You will find this to be the neatest stapler you ever used. Staples sheets together per- manently or temporarily. Bismarck Tribune Job Department, TYPEWRITERS and adding ma- chines. Repairs and supplies. CAP- ITAL TYPEWRITER CO., 207 Bdwy.. Bismarck. N D. Phone 820. school boy. 1993. FOR RENT—Cheerful, well furnish- ed front room, Near park and pool, Gentlemen preferred. Phone 1739. FOR '—One sleeping room in modern home. Call at 1010 Thayer. Phone 1075-J. FOR RENT—Large sleeping room. Call at 520-9th. Phone 1890. FOR RENT—Furnished room. all at 315-10th Street. Wanted to Borrow WANTED TO BORROW—$2000 at 6%. Ample security. Write Trib- une Ad. 10601. Business Opportunity PROFITABLE chain store agencies available. $3,500 to $5,000. Good locations. Write Marshall Wells company, Duluth, Minn. FOR SALE—Grocery store, doing a nice cash business, good location. Tent reasonable, frigidaire equipped. Must sell on account of health, Write Box 126, Bismarck, N. Dak. Work Wanted EXPERIENCED Iswn mower shatp- 3 ‘ground, $1.00, oiled and eet for and deliv- WORK WANTED by middle-aged woman by day or hour. Phone 552-J. Mrs, Overman. 418-8th Street. Phone HAVE space to store piano for use. No children. Phone 1496, —eE=eE——xKX—X—X—X—X—KKXX—a—XaK_e=—_—_— WOOL WANTED WE PAY highest cash market prices for wool and sheep pelts. We also sell new and used wool bags and twine at low prices. Bring us all your hides and metals. Northern Hide and Fur Co., Bismarck, North Dakota. ws, 4 work horses or trade for binder. A, E. Nelson, 14 miles NE of Wilton, Box 315, Wilton. FOR SALE—3 young milk cows, all good producers. Write or see E. A. Thomas, Driscoll. FOR SALE—Power binder, also John Deere binder. Gate leg table. Phone FOR SALE—First $8.00 takes very| good Lloyd Loom baby buggy. Phone | 1335-W after six. j 59’ Household Goods for Sale FOR SALE—Ice box, radio, day bed including mattress, breakfast set, b chairs, fruit jars, miscellaneous articles. Call at 213- llth Street. FOR SALE—Large Monarch range. Good as new. For cash, $25.00. Phone 835. used floor samples slightly dam- aged. Reduced prices. Traded in machines $10 up. Singer Co., 212 Broadway, Bismarck, N. Dak. FOR SALE—$600.00 Packard piano for $100.00, party leaving town. Phone 383-M. An undertone of apprehension pre- ‘ged |vailed that the automobile accident in which Frau Schuschnigg was killed might have injured the chancellor more severely than was at first ap- Parent. Prince Ernst Rudiger von Starhem- berg, leader of the Fascist home guard and vice chancellor who would step into Schuschnigg’s place, has- tened back from a holiday in Italy. Local Men to Hold Meeting at Williston Sidney C. Johnson, special repre- sentative of the federal housing ad- ministration, Washington, D. C., and Robert Renden, field representative from the state office here, left Mon- day for Williston where they will con- duct an insured mortgage clinic on Wednésday. Titles one an two of the federal housing act will be explained in detail at the meeting. Similar clinics already have been held in Fargo and Minot and others will be held later in other key cities of the state, Johnson said. Leading Packer wants experi- enced salesman with good appear- ance to call on retail meat dealers. Prefer man who is acquainted with the meat business. Full time work. Real opportunity for right man. Give references, age and experi- ence. Address letter to No. 247, in cere of Bismarck Tribune. FOR SALE—Full sized bed and springs. Wanted—Small gas stove with oven. Phone 1488. Farm Lands FOR SALE—Fine 320 acres McLean County. Nice location, on graveled highway. One mile from good town. Good bi 8. Price very reasonable. Owner will be at farm for only one day shortly. For further particulars and appoint- ment address Box 61, McIntosh, 8. Dak. Instruction NEW plan Diesel training. mechanically inclined, fair educa- tion. Must spend two weeks in Minneapolis, after this your appli- cation is filed for employment. Write for your appointment to Tribune Ad. No. 10564. For Rent FOR RENT—Brick storehouse, size Must be |! 25x35. Rear 112 4th St. M. W. Neff. FOR RENT—July 15th, garage at 205- 1st Street. Phone 1727. Wanted to Rent WANTED TO RENT—Modern, small apartment with private bath. 2 bedrooms preferred. Phone 32. —>—>e—>=>=>—>Eee>~==—=>E~—»E=z—=EeEeEE=E== FIVE CONVICTS ESCAPE Jefferson City, Mo., July 15.—~e)— Using cotton to deaden the noite, five Prisoners Monday sewed their way Out of the Algoa intermediate re- formatory near here YOUNG MAN wants work of any kind. Handy at anything. Call 1976, WORK WANTED — Experienced seamstress wants sewing of all Kinds, reasonable prices. All work guaranteed, Mrs. H. H. Engen. Phone 748. EXPERIENCED lawn mower sharp- ening, knives, scissors and clippers. Call for and deliver. Phone 899. 821-6th, Lost and Found FOUND—Boston bull log. brown with white spots. We collar. Call at Tribune office. Wanted to Trade WILL trade business college life scholarship plus plan to earn liv- ing expenses while attending school for good used car. This proposi- tion is worth $400 and must be taken up immediately, Write Tribune Ad. 10787. Automobiles for Sale $225.00 Essex Terroplane Sedan 375.00 225.06 Sedan 295.00, Plymouth 7 Pass. Sedan 305.00 FOR SALE—Sewing machines, some | 1928 1% ton I. H.C. Truck.. 300.00 CORNDI-CRURCEE MOTORS, Phone 700 ATTENTION FARMERS Special Harvest Sale USED TRUCKS - WE have a complete stock of used trucks which we are offering at Special Low Prices. Come at once while the selection is good. 1934 cab 1934 1929 1933 929 2g° 1927 1926 1933 1932 A 1929 International ........... 150.00 1938 Diamond T 1%-2 ton .. 325.00 We will accept your used car int trade, easy terms on the balance. - FLECK MOTOR SALES INC. 55 Bismarck. DEPENDABLE USED CARS AT SPE- CIAL SALE PRICES 1930 1931 1934 i

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