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Saat daar | f . \ q eerie (amen U j f | } : da : » e MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1920 HELP WANTED—MALE EDD A LIVE SALESMAN IN your vicinity with a car to sell our established line of oil and paints, Can offer a very attractive proposi- tion to the right man. Give aga, present occupation and ’phone num- ber. INTER-STATD OIL & PAINT CO,. East Hennepin & 33d Avenues. ‘Minneapolis, Minnesota 6-15-2weeks. WANTED—A mine foreman, one who can get a license from state.’ ‘Also an en- gineer combination ‘and blacksmith. Several good miners and coal ghovelers. Good wages ‘at. Coalbank, N. D. ..On Mil. Ry, Steady employment. Good: ac- comodations, State “salary wanted. Cannon Ball Coal Co., Coalbank, N, D. Main office, Meliette. 8. D. _ 6-21-3wk CuLERKS—(Men, women) 13° waward: for Postal \Mail Service, $135 month. Examinations July. Experience un- necessary. or free’ particulars, write R. Terry ((former Civil Ser- vice Hxaminer) 137 Continental ‘Bldg., Washington. 6-26-1t. WANTED—Experienced mechanics, df you can’t do high class mechan- feal work do not apply. Good wages. Lahr ‘Motor Sales Co. _ G24ht ALL AROUND BUTCHER Wanted at once. Communicate with J. BE. Hoff- man, Beulah, No, Dak. 6-25-3t FLYING IN 8 WEEKS—Auto courses ¥. M,C. A, Auto Schools, Los Angeles. i mo —_— _.__ HELP WANTED—FEMALE __ WANTED—By July 1 good rellable ‘wom- an as housekeeper on farm. Wages $10 per week. Steady position year round. J.-A. Erickson, Blackwater, Nd WANTED—Girl between 10 and "2 te 6-28-31 old to take care of baby 3% vie. d4th St. WANTED—Ginl for general hous Mrs. Sam H. Clark, 36 Av 6 - ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished or unfurnished 4 room apt. in all modern house. Call at 801 7th St. or phone 300X. 6-18-tf FOR RENT—Modern furnished rooms suitable for ght housekeeping, good location, ‘Phone 4421. 6-22-71 FOR RENT—Two rooms suitable for light housekeeping at 517, 2d Street, o __phone 827. 6-28-31 FOR RENT—Two rooms, all_modern. Bultavie for Nght housekeeping, C can wk WILBUR, Look AT THe. SWELL BOX OF ROSES Uf, LOOK! OLIVIA The V7) \NONDEREVL FLOWERS “ME Younc MAN SENT You To WEAR To THE DANCE ToniGH LOST AND FOUND LOST—Wrist_ watch between Bismarck FOR RENT—Farnished room apartment. eoraan Court, for 2 months. Phone Seas ee Pees __ 6-28-3t aon ENT—Room suitable for two at 517, 2nd Street, or.phone 827. Hotel and 113 Thayer St, Will give re- ward for return of same to aipune Office. = 28-3t POSITION WANTED FOR RENT—Newly furnished roms. 300_9th_St. Phone 377K. 6-25-1wk FOR RENT—Room suitable for two, 30° 8th St. 6-26-3t AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—1 Overland, tnodel 90, excel- lent condition. Sell cheap. Address 76 Tribune. 5-22-11 FOR SALE—Ford Form-a-Truck, good condition, Price very reasonable. 77 Tribune. 5-22-tf FOR SALE—One new “Auto Kamp” trail- er; erie with beds and tent. Bar- gain, H, Brower, Parshall, en meee ROOMS. WANTED WANTED—Young man, wants one large unfurnished .room in modern house with private family, suitable for den. Best of Hace gat Address P. O. Box 415. 6-24-1wk |ALE OB RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—8 roomed house with 3 clothes closets. Full basement. Front porch. screened in. Hast front with garage and small barn, out buildings. All nearly new. Will sell on terms to right party. Located 4 blocks from new school, 6 -blocks from high school on fith Street. If interested, phone Sica HOUSD FOR SALE—House of ( and bath; one bed room down stairs; fwo bed rooms and’bath upstairs; hard- floors; full cement. basement; fir: class heating. plant; screened-in pore! east front; nice shade trees. $3801 half cash.’ I also have several bunga- lows. J. H. Holihan, 1st door east of post offi eo 6268 FOR SALE—Modern 6 room house, in- cluding 2 bed rooms, east ‘front, for $3,250 on terms; good 8 room house, including bath, 10 fots, fruit and shade trees, barn, ‘chicken house, feed and harness room, double garage, well and windmill and well house on terms, Geo. M. Register. 6-28-1wk FOR RENT—Modern furnished” apart- ment, for ligt ho housekeeping . Phone 852." 'F. jurphy. __ 6-28-1wk FOR RENT—My house, furnished, for two months. Call Mrs. T. E Fla herty 815 2nd St. Telephone 282 R. G28 ——— LAND. 320 acre farm, 16 miles 8. E. of Biamarel . Good location. Well im- proved. Nice grove oftrees. New eight room house. 175 A. in crop. If sold at once crop Included at $40.00 per acre. Will also sell horses, cattle. and machin- ery. B. G. Buckley, Glencoe, N, Kk. 6-23-1wk FOR SALE AT $10, PER “ACRE, 705 acres southeastern Saskatchewan prai- rie land. This land js. crossed by run- ning water, and is located three miles from good railroad town. Terms cas! Hanson Bros. Co., Ashland, Wis. ati Deen eal MISCELLANEOUS _ FOR SALE—My complete studio outfit and old’ photographic business, the only in” town with no competition nearer thee 28 miles east and 42 miles west on N. P. main line,-is for sale because 1 have to move to milder climate. Price $500. Address E. M. Holmboe, New Salem, N..Dak. The town is going to grow on account of coal mining. 6-26-5t WE_COLLECT CLAIMS, NOTES AND ACCOUNTS anywhere. | No charge un- less we collect. Our continuous, skll- ful, systematic, intelligent and per- sistent service gets you the cash, you need in your. business. Write or call. American Mercantile pee Room No. Re City National Bank Bldg. 6-710 -7-1m0 foe SALB—Pute Extracted Sweet Clov- “rooms er Honey. 10 fb. pail, $3.65; 5 Ib. pail, $1.90, by mail ‘to any post office in North. Dakofa, Case of 94 sections of choice comb /honey Aged 95, by mail. Cash with order, Clark Hen, Big _Timber, Mont. -28-1mo-1W! FOR*SALE—We will give you a bargain on one Oliver and ore Remington type- writer; also on. twelve reels of Motion Picture Films. Rembrandt Studio, at Fifth Street. FOR_SALE—2 one-row. corn canivata, and 1 two-row cultivator, and all other farm: machinery. at a bargain. See H. & Rhud or write Box 169, Bismarck. wk, FOR | aba bushels of select Early Ohio seed potatoes, at $6.00. Inquire at Menoken qametmer rs . State Menoken, N. D. 5-42-tt FOR SALE OR TRADE—22 lots, 3 sci from new high school in Fisher addi- tion, Will take car in trade. Phone 818, FOR SALE—Cheap, gas hoisting en- gine. A. Moorman & Co., irst Guaranty Bank Bldg. 6-26-1t, BARENR SHOP FOR SALE—Two chatre, ‘only shop in town of 200 for $350, in’ N’ Dak. Address Tribune 105, 8-1t WANTED—Bicycle for boy 12 years old Address Harold Gutman, 701 9th St. Bismarck, or nhone 609L. 6-26- FOR SALE—Practically new 3 burner electric stove, Call at 617 7th St, or phone 877. 6-24-4wk FOR SALE—One perfection oll stove, two burner. Call 509 Eighth St. or phone S34R. 6-25-3t WANTED: TO BUY—Four burner gas -Stove with oven. Call No, 103 Tribune. FOR SALE—Furniture. 617 9th St. 6-25-3t ‘ | 6-25-31 6-26-1) Bank. -26-31 . Ph 6-2 2t = 24-4 tf WANTED—Position by experienced _ste- nographer. Reterences, Address Lock Box 173, Bismarck, N. Dak. dente) oye dope | Washington, June 26.—The perpet- ual vacations that the various embas- sies and legatiohs here have been en- Joying yjll end about June 30, when the state department quits issuing passports to aliens who want to go back home. Foreign embassies will have to issue them, otherwise the alien cannot em- bark for other shores. This means the embassies will have-to go to work, as between 35,000 and 50,000 persons are departing every month. 6-28- at Incidentally, many of the natiopalsJ of countries that haven't embassies here will be left high and dry. For in- stance, the present Mexican govern- ment isn’t recognized, so Mexicans cannot go home. About 1,000 Ukrain- ians have been leaving every month, and they have no ambassador who is recognized. The same applies to the new states of Lithuania, Letvia, Es- thonia and the Caucasian states, It will be next to impossible for a Russian to depart, and, as America is still at war with Germany, Teutons will just have to “stick around” till Colby makes a new rale. The legal right to remain ignorant is granted annually to thousands of children in states where child labor and education laws are backward. Ac- cording to the children’s bureau of the labor department, which administers the Federal Child Labor law, only 783 children out of 19,696 to whom certifi- cates were issued, or less than 4 per cent, had attended or completed the ‘eighth grade, though completion of the eighth grade is generally regarded as necessary to secure even the rudi- ments of an education. Clifford Thorne, fonteaeniattve of the American Farm Bureau Federa- tion and the Farmers’ National Grain Dealers’ Association, has compiled fig- ures showing that, while grain traf- fic produces ton mile earnings about equal to other traffic, it gives the rail- roads earnings two or three times as great per car mile as does other gen- eral traffic. The full carloads and the through shipments make grain carrying par- ticularly profitable to the railroads. Rate increases asked for by the rail- roads, if granted, would make a raise of 60 to 90 per cent over the wheat- carrying costs of 1918. HOOVER WANTS ' TREATY SIGNED ‘New York, June 28.—Speedy. ratifi- cation of the treaty of Versailles after the elimination of article 10 of the league of nations covenant was urged by Herbert C. Hoover in a statement published here on theplatform on which the Republican party should stand on the coming presidential election. Mr. Hoover declared that sooner or later the United States must ratify the treaty of Versailles in some form and that talk of negotiating a new treaty was “bunk.” Vets May Reinstate War Risk Policies The special provision for reinstat- ing government insurance simply by paying two months premium and sign- ing a satisfactory health statement expires on July Ist, 1920. After that date term insurance may be reinstated only within’ 18 months after discharge. It is very important therefore, that all ex-service men who wish to reinstate their insurance do so before July 1st. For reinstatement blanks, information, etc., call at the Red Cross Office, Room 360 Federal building, Bismarck. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS | SupPOSE THERE From DOW MORTON -HE'S GonG, To TAKE HER “To THAT BIG, DANCE TONIGHT! | Boo- Woa-Hoo DON'T SAY DANCE To ME. BISMARCK DAJLY TRIBUNE BY ALLMAN | RCHITE TECTS OFS -- Falk About! Hard Luck MILITARIST SPIRIT MUST BE OVERCOME,. MARSHAL FOCH SAYS Paris June 28.—Allied nations are not masters of the situation in the Near East as elsewhere and in complete harmony can employ all forces at their disposal to carry out their policies which are “soberly proportioned to their interests,” said Marshal Foch in an interview today. “The allied position in the Near East,” the marshal declared, “is that of a liability company limit- ed in which no shareholder may say it was his capital stock which made the company’s operations successful. The Grek army is one of our assets and we are using it in the corporate interest. Discussing German disarma- ment he-asserted this matter was ener SILVER BOUGHT FOR MINTS AT | HIGH PRICES (Washington, June 28.—Purchase of 1,700,000 ounces of silver at $1 an ounce for delivery at Philadelphia and San Francisco was announced today by the, Director of the Mint. This makes a total of 3,200,000 ounces ac- quired by the government under the! at authority : of month. Treasury officials’ estimate that 207,000,000 ounces of silver must be purchased ‘tinder provisions of /the Pittman act, but they do not expect this to increase the: price of silver, as there is little demand for the metal abroad at this time because several governments have ceased temporarily the coinage of silver money. GOULD DIVORCE IN FRENCH COURT Paris, June 28.—The divorce case of Frank J. Gound versus Edith Kelly Gould came up in the first chamber of the French courts this week. Form- er Premier Viviani, representing Mr.| Gould, asked for an absolute divorce} on various grounds. Attorney Zurfluts, in behalf of Mrs. the Pittman act this AGERE BALL AN’ BNERNTHING, THe? On, THERE’, BEEN WORKING ON FOR THIS PARTY. “TONIGHT - Gost, SHE. OUGHT TO Knack. $Eta COLD IN THAY= WAIT UNTIL | SHOW HER THESE FLOWERS WONT : sve BE THE E MKER, Kio! |: AFTER SIP! UP Tht MIDNIGHT AIGHTS MAKIN’ “THAT DRESS AND GETTIN’ EVER TWING READY FOR “TUS PARTY | WAKE Twis MORNING WITH THis PIMPLE ON MY Nose! Dou, DANCE TO SAY or 'S THE NEW DRESS. SHE'S, not the distinction of 1.400 canuon but the overcoming of the “hos- tile ‘and militarist spirit of the German people.” “If such a spirit,” he continued, “should again be translated into action the agents it would use would be the. most terrible and swiftest on earth—the airplane. The way to guard against renewed aggression is to increase the dis- tance that separates us from the enemy. When we leave the Rhine Germany is within snatching dis- tance of Ostend, from which she could lay London waste in one i night, between. dark and dawn. Until that evil spirit dies out it is our duty to the next generation to see our precautions are never abandoned.” RRR Ree Gould, argued that the French trib- unals were incompetent to try the case | which he declared was exclusively the .province of thé American courts. Prosecutor of the Republic Wattine; will sum up on Tuesday, June 29. REDS TORTURE 30 OFFICERS | Washington, June ‘28.— Bolsheviki | .Ivanonvka, in southern Russia, shot 30 officers on June 10 and tor- tured other prisoners, according to aj; report to the American Commissioner at Constantinople received today at the state department. The report stated that one witness, | one Lieutenant-Commander Kohler, | saw hands and feet of some of the captured officers cut off and their eyes, gouged out. NOTICE TO PUBLIC ‘Phe City Commission will sit-as an equalization board Monday evening, June 28th, 1920. At this time any one; dissatisfied with their assessment may appear before them and make com- plaint concerning same., Published by order City Commission. | Cc. L. BURTON, City Auditor. June 22, 23, 24, 25, 26 and 28. The newest kind of mechanical milk- | maid milks five cows at once. STATE DEPLORE LACK OF METHOD Say Frazier Administration Has ot Played Fair With All Architects of State The ‘North Dakota Association, of Architects in session at Fargo yester- day passed a resolution in condemna- | tion of the policy of the board of administration in the employment of a single firm, oft architects to care for all of the state business opera- Uons, according to a dispatch receiv- ed here today. Upon assuming the Townley administration secured Wil- liam Kurke of Fargo as state archi- tect, later they associated F. W. Keith of Bismarck. These men are in charge of the state's: extensive building operations and according to the ossoejation of architects this ar- rarigement is adverse to the best n- terests of the state. he architects reason that this firm is not equipped to properly super- vise the state’s building operations and that the monopoly accorde:t them works a distinct hardship to all other architects in the state. They believe that the business should be distribut- ed! so that building operations in the northeast part of the state should be handled by architects in Grand Forks, those in the southeastern part of the state should be handled by architects in Fargo, and those in the western part of the state by architects in Bismarck and Minot--wherever there aré architects that they should be in charge of the work in that local- ity. The question of favoritism not the only one to which the ar. chitects object. ‘There appears to be no way in which the compensa- tion of this firm of architects can be estimated—like all other public af- fairs connected with the present ad- ministration, the public is not taken into the confidence of the board of administration, and whether these men are receiving ordinary compen- sation, or five times ordinary com- pensation is not known. The resolution adopted at the meet- ing at Fargo yesterday follows: “Resolved, that this association en- @orses the recommendation of the State Board of Architecture to the Governor and State Board of Admin- istration in favor of distributing state work among the various architects of the state instead of placing the planning of all state buildings in the hands of one man to the detriment of the state, and as being unfair to all other architects, residents of the state.” TOLD TO PROBE SLACKER’S CASE Philadelphia, June 28—With instruc- tions from Judge J. Whitaker Thomp- son, to “probe deep and spare no one,” ; a special federal grand jury began an investigation foday to determine who was responsible for the escape of Grov- er C. Bergdoll, wealthy draft dodger, who eluded a military guard at his home here after he had gained tem- porary release from confinement at Governor’s island. Bergdoll was given his freedom’to search for a large sum of gold he alleged he buried in the mountains of Maryland. JAPS MASSACRED BY RUSS REDS Washington, June 28, — Japanese forces sent to rescue survivors after the Bolsheviki captured Nikolaievsk, Siberia, in April, arrived June 3, only to find the town in flames and the survivors of the first massacre mur- dered, according to official reports ‘received from Tokio. The 120 Japa- nese who had been held prisoners by the Bolsheviki since April’ were put to death the day before the Japanese force reached the town. The Bol- sheviki then set fire to the place and fled. Toronto, Crop in Canada. June 28.—Prospects are etable crops throughout Canada, ac- cording to a report by the Canadian “WELL, WUERE ARE Vou Boys WEADED FoR Press and announced here today. OU- WERE, GONNA WANE A BALL GANE, SAV, DOD- DONT FORGET To CALL Me WHEN T bright for bumper grain, fruit and veg- | *— PAGE SEVEN CONALAN BREAKS WITH DE VALERA-IN NEW YORK AND Failure to Get Irish Plank in G. O. P. Platform Starts Battle it | is Whispered About by Those Who Are Watching Conflict Closely BY JAMES HENLE, N. E. A. Staff Correspondent. New York, June 28.—With a rattle and a bang the Irish have opened “Donnybrook fair” here, Shillalahs have been dragged out and the fight is on. One side is led by Eamonn DeValera, “president of the Irish Republic,” and the other by Justice| Daniel F. Cohalan of this city. Here's the battle “communique” to dati OPENING BOMBARDMENT in the “Gaelic American.” Charge made by John Devoy, editor, generally believ- ed to act in perfect synchronism with Cohalan, to the effect that DeValera spent $50,000 of the money raised by the sale of Irish Republic bonds to send to the Republican Convention “a nondescript aggregation of individ uals,” who there undid the work ac- complished by Cohalan. Devoy as- serted that this prevented the con- vention from affirming the right of the Irish people to choose their own gov: ernmental institutions. DESULTORY FIRING in which De. Valeraites charge that Cohalan is try- ing to force the head of the Irish Re public to leave this country. ol- lowed by— COUNTER ATTACK led by De- Valera himself, in which the Coltalan plank presented at Chicago was branded as worthless, GRAND ASSAULT by Dr, Patrick McCartan, envoy of the Irish Repub. lic here, who asserted: That Justice Cohalan had privately said there was no such thing as an Irish republic. That Cohaian had tried to “pan- handle” DeValera and get a grip on the money raised by the sale of bonds. That Cohalan plotted DeValera’s “destruction” and strove to get him out of the country. That none of the funds subscribed for the ‘Irish republic had been used for political purposes here. STRATEGIC RETREAT by Cohalan, who explained that there was “no dis- Sension in the ranks of the Americans who are interested in the independ- ence of Ireland.” Now McCarten says that’ Cohalan is “jealous of DeValera’s popularity,” and fears losing control of the so- called “Irish vote.” The scrap between DeValera and Cohalan is finding its reflection in the minor struggles between the two fac- tions that are going on within the ranks of the Friends of Irish Free- dom and other Irish organizations. On the whole, the clerical element is supporting DeValera, and the latter so far has had the better of the mill- ing. NORTON FORESAW HARDING CHOISE BY REPUBLICANS Mandan, N.D., June 28.—The fore- sight and keen judgment which P. D. Norton exercises in politics and in af- fairs of national import is well -evi- denced by a prophecy made in an open letter to the Mandan News more than two years ago, in wich he prophecied that Senator Warren L. Harding would be the next president of the United States. Mr. Norton was then in Congress, closing his sixth year as representa- tive of the Third North Dakota dis- trict. During that time he had be- come a close personal friend of Mr. Ifarding, as well as of many other leaders of the Republican party. He sent an occasional letter to the News, then an independent weekly, in which he made profound comments on na- tional and state issues. In this particular letter Mr. Norton spoke of a conference with Senator Harding, of the constantly increasing power of the Republicans and the pro- portionate decline of the democrats, and declared that every indication was that our next president would be a Republican and that Harding was the man. if SUPREME COURT | —ie From Hettinger County J. 0. ‘Horswill, Plaintiff and spondent, Re- vs. The North Dakota Mutual Fire Insur- ance Company of North Dakota, a corporation, Defendant and Appel- lant. . Syllabus: (1) Plaintiff brought this action upon a policy of fire insurance, in the sum of $2,000, covering a farm dwell- ing, which was totally destroyed by fire. The defenses interposed were: (1) That the application states the premises are occupied by the owner, whereas they were in fact occupied by a tenant; (2) That a vacancy oc- curred in the occupancy of the dwell- ing; (3) That subsequent to the is- suance of the poilcy, plaintiff placed! additional incumbrances upon the land; (4) Failure to make proof of loss; (5) No waiver by failure to re- turn unearned premium and a claim that there is no unearned premium, the rate for occupancy by a tenant being enough higher than the prem- ium, when occupied by the owner, that it equals the alleged unearned prem. ium; (6) Errors of law in the instruc-| tions given by the Court. The action! was tried to a jury and its verdict was in favor of plaintiff. Judgment was} entered upon the verdict and appeal therefrom perfected to this Court. (2) opinion, that the judgment should be affirmed. | Appeal from a judgment of the Dis- trict Court of Hettinger county; Hon. F. T. Lemke, judge. Affirmed. Opinion of the Court by Grace, J. Christianson, Ch. J. andj Birdzell. J. disSent. Winterer, Combs & Ritchie, Valley ¥ attorneys for defendant and ap- nt. pell Jacobsen & Murray, Mott, attorneys} y for plaintiff and respondent. H From Ward County Martha Steinke, Plaintiff and lant, H. J. Halvorson, et al., and Respondents, Syllabus; App Defendants Held, for reasons stated in the! IRISH “wa R” RAGES DANIEL F. COHALAN EAMONN DE VALERA (1) In an action to. recover dam- ages for personal injuries the com- plaint alleges that upon a cold day when the air wa: filled with flying snow as lo obscure plaintifl’s vision and distract her attention more or less, she approached a meat market situated in a building owned by one of the defendants and in part occupied by the other; that there were two doors abutting the street, similar in appearance and adjacent to each other, but some thirty feet apart, one leading tg the meat market and the other to a stairway leading to the basement of said buildi The plaintiff, mis- aking the stairway door for the meat market door, opened it and, stepping inside, was precipitated to the base- ment, sustaining injuri It is held, for reasons stated in the opinion, that the complaint states a cause of action, (2) Where a city ordinance renders it unlawful to leave open, unguarded or uncovered any subterranean pass- age, or to suffer any opening or place of like nature to remain in an insecure or other unsafe condition to that per- sons may fall into or be otherwise in- jured by the same, it is held, under the facts pleaded in the complaint, that a jury would be warranted in finding that the ordinance was vio- lated. Appeal from district court of Ward county, Leighton, J. Reversed and remanded. Opinion of the court by Birdzell, J. McGee & Goss, Minot, attorneys ‘for Blab and appellant. . M. Eithorpe, Minot, attorney for det fendant, H. J. Halvorson, Bangs, Hamilton & Bangs, Grand Forks, attorneys for defendants. Northern Telephone Company and pornwesent Telephone Exchange Company. . A, Prendergast, Minne- apolis, M of Counsel CULLING COURSE TO BE HELD AT ’ THE STATE FAIR n., he culling school ‘for poultry — will be Placed in the program by the ary of the state fair at argo, rding to information from Miss rk home demonstration agent igh county, . |, Hayes will put on the culling school at the fair. The school will’ open to any, person or persons in the state who are especially in- terested and desire to take the course. This will be a wonderful opportun- ity for those interested in raising better poultry,” she ‘said. “On farms. where culling has been done it-was shown that at least one quarter of the hens are non-layers. On some farms in Iowa all hens have been culled, again three fourths have been culled. This means that wita the elimination of hens that are non- layers a much larger return of profit will be available for the farm and the home. ‘Lets do away with the slack- ers and only keep hens that lay. The way to do this is to learn how to pick out the poor layers,” she added. NDIAN SCHOOL CLOSES SEASON The Indian school es this sea- son with a large class of graduates in the industrial departments. Twenty boys were enrolled in the carpentry department. This department includes painting and shoe repairing work. This department was in charge of Edward 'M. Still as instructor. The farm and dairy department ‘was un- der charge of Chas. Roy. He also | had a large class of boys. The en- gineering department under charge | of Lewis Bruce had several pupi!s | to finish this year. While many of these boys and girls were only, in the third and fourta grades in their school or academic work, theiy. work in the industrial department was worthy of recogni- tion. Many of the pupils will not return son to the government board- ing school because their parents have become freeholdrs or taxpayers, ———— Rk. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph, C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Sulte 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 260 Se |