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A b ‘ % ‘ t is > f \ ‘4 8 nt) ‘ ‘a 4 » DAY, JULY 13, 1928 WANTED—Man and wife ‘for ranch work. Apply Grand Pacific: hotet chef. 3 7-13-3t WANTED—Dining room. girl at American Cafe, Bismarck, ae fi 11-3 WANTED—Farm hands. Bismarck, N. D. : Tel, 8F3."* 7-12-3t WANTED—Barber, inquire at Dolan's Barber: Shop. ‘ T-11-1w ——___WORK WANTED? _ WORK. WANTED—Hemstitching and picoting, cotton, wool and: linen, 10; cents a yard; all silk, 15 cente'a yard. Novelty pleatings up to 10 inches in width; :9 and 10 inches, 20 cents; 7 and 8 inches, 15 cents, 5 and 6 inches, 10.cents;..1 to 4 inches, 8 cents; all organdy,:6 cents. Mrs, C. P. Larson; 400 4th Ste). 6-30-20), WANTED—Work by lady, by. hour. or day, cooking‘or ‘maid. work. Call‘917, Front street. Phone 601-M. " 7-13-3t ——————— oo SALESMAN SALESMEN WANTED;— Something} different; every. business: man a prospective buyer; full information, writing. 39, Hotel Tweeden,- Fargo, N.D. 2 1-T--lw FOR SALE—Nine-toom modern house; including at least«four bedrooms, close ..in, full. basement, screened porch, .east front.of -100: feet and trees, on terms; six-room modern house, fine lot, east front for. $3,200, on terms; seven-room modern house, close in, comparatively -néw,. including three bedrooms, on terms: seven-room modern house, including, three bedrooms, east front of 75 feet, full-basement, good porch, for $4,200, on terms. Geo. M. Register. 7-11-2w $2625,—A very pretty bungalow all modern, 5 rooms and bath, hard wood floors. Lot 50X140, a good buy and a good home, $2625. Phone 961, Henry & Henry 7-12-3t FOR RENT—Suite of two rooms on second floor, nicely furnished fo light housekeeping... Also large front Toom on first floor. Phone 273. 412 5th St. 6-24-tt FOR RENT —Three-‘oom furnished apartment, modern; :, $50.00. Two- room. furnished apartment, $45.00. Apply F. W. Murphy. Phone 852. 7-9-lw FOR RENT—Fully ‘equipped’ light housekeeping apartment. Geo. W. Little; 801° 4th St.- Phone 404-J. T-12tt FOR: RENT—Strictly modern apart- ment in the Rose Apartments 216 W. A. Breen, |. 8rd: ‘street. F. W. Murphy. Phone 852. 3 3-3-4 FOR RENT—3-room fiat, modern in every respect, also rooms furnishe and unfurnished. Phone 183. 6-16-t FOR RENT—7 room_ modern hous2. 421-9th St._ Phone 541'W. TAL-30 AGENTS WANTED SALES AGENTS WANTED—Live rep- resentation by firm or individual. ou a commission basis, in North Central States and Canada. Must have facil- ities \and° experience ‘for handling refrigerating, ice making and deep well pumping machinery. Product has been on the market for over thirty years and ig manufactured by reliable and established firm. Ad- dress United Iron Works, Inc., Ridge * Arcade Building, Kansas City, Mo. 7-11-3t -AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—One brand new. Ford coupe with cord tires and other ex- tra equipment. Phone 932 or. write P.O. Box 521. 0 7-11-1lw FOR SALE—A Ford touring.car. He cently:over hauled and p:iated; also auto trailer and tent. Call 621M for appointment or 320 4th St. 7-13-lw FOR SALE—Willys Knight - touring. car, first class condition. Phone 172. ee TA1-5¢4 FOR SALE OR TRADE—Studebaker seven-passenger. Call 469-J. _ 7-9-3t NOTICE OF SPECIAL EXECUTION SALE. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUNTY of Burleigh. In District Court, Fourth Judicial District. The City of Burlington, Iowa, a muni- cipal corporation, Plaintiff, vs. Jakob Brenneise,. Juliana Brenneise, Karl Klein and Philipp Fisher, De- fendants. Whereas, on the 20th day of June, 1921, Judgment and decree in mortgage foreclosure were duly. entered’ an¢ docketed in the office of the clerk of the district court fee. th County, North ia said court wherein the abeve named The City of Burlington. Iowa, a munici- pal corporation, was plaintiff, and the above named Jakob Brenneise, Juliana Brenneise, Karl Klein and Philip» Fischer were defendants, and wherein it was adjudged and decreed that the plaintiff recover of the -defendants Jakob Brenneise and Juliana Brenneise the sum of $3,425.00, and decreeing that said claim was,a yalid mortgage lien upon the real ate herein de- scribed, and that said real estate be sold to satisfy the same and the said Hen foreclosed thereby. Now, Therefore, Notice. .is. Given that by virtue of a writ of spe- cial execution issued out of said court directed and delivered to me and now in my hands, and describing, sajd judg- ment _and decree, I, the undersigned, sheriff, shall offer for gale and sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the premises herein described. Said sale will be held on the 29th day of July, 1921, at two o'clock P. M., at the front door of the court house in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh County. North Dakota, to satisfy said judgment and special execution. The real estate above mentioned and to be sold is situated in the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, and is known and described as follows, to- it: The West half of Section Nine, Town- ship One Hundred Forty-four, North of Range Seventy-nine, West of the Fifth . M. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, this 22nd day of June, 1921. ROLLIN WELCH, Sheriff, Burleigh County, N.-D. Greenleaf & Wooledge, — Attorneys for Plaintiff, Minot, N. EOF MORTGAGE FO! Hereby |. oe two. —_ BELP WANTED—FEMALB WAINTED—Middle aged woman. or girl to-help on the farm. Phone 8F3. ‘Mrs. W. A. Breen, Bismarck, 7-13-2t POSITION WANTED. _"__ WANTED position ‘as manager «for. farmers Elevator. Best of refer. ences,.can- show: clean: State’ ; Salary first letter. . Have handled 21. crops. «C.-S. Kessel, Litchfield, Minn. Box 587." Abst POSITION WANTED—As manager of * farmers’ elevator, eleven-years ‘suc- cessful experience; competent book- keeper; -best..of..reference. Write 249, care Tribune. 7-8-5t ROOMS FOR SENT FOR RENT—Room in modern house; also have one sewing machine and " one gas, range for sale. Mrs. James Fogerty, 5th St. Phone 768-M. en PIA FOR RENT—Room, also. garage. Have "bicycle and ice box.for sal hh 672 M,or: call:.No. 1: Thayer, four blocks west-of-P. ao iw FOR ;RENT—Two furnished: rooms in modern house tor -Hght: housekeep- | ing... Call 620, 6th St. > T-12-3t FOR ‘RENT—Modern furnished room- Ladies preferred. “722-bth. . Street. Phone. 485R. : TAL3t FOR RENT—Large rpom suitable for Reasonable ‘rent: 522-2nd \St: 7-13-4t FOR~ RENT—Room ‘suitable: for-two. 309. 8th St; Phone. 236-W._7-12-3¢ FOR RENTRoom suitable for two: + 300-8th. St: Phone: 236-R,-_7-11-3t. pe bier an WOBBST a ree LOST—Buneh of keys on small-chain with tag marked. .J: ‘Horace Mc- Farland Co., Harrisburg, . Pa. . and four: leat’.clover emblem. Return: to George F.-Will. : TAL3t For rent.a large frame-~ two . story - store_room with .comfortable’ living . roams up stairs, Counters, show cases, shelving, separate cream station room, adjoining. All travel to and from. Sweet Briar must pass this building. Located in east Sweet Briar. One of the best farm- ing communities in: Morton County A.. man «. with the: reputation - of square dealing and a good stock of groceries, dry goods, boots. and shoes, could sell an immense ount of goods. -1 will rent. all this the first six months for $10.00 per month, thereafter for $15.00 per month for five years at option of lease... Possession--given | any time. ‘Next door: nearly new: two story frame. - building . 24-40. hotel, occupied as a res- ‘For rent \Oct. 1st..'$10,00 per <nionth.. G.’ W. Howe, Sweet _Briar, N. D, T-M1-at FOR SALE—Pacing mare, fine saddle horse, broke sitigle and ‘double; state’ your owir= price.= Phone> fomas} Hardware, cr.887, Chas. Gobel. Tn12-Ht PRB WAR PRICES: on cleaning; re- blocking d- remodeling men’s hats, Ea floring & Hat Works, Phone 68. opposite Postoffice, © aisis § ty, 1-18-1f FIRST CLASS. .WORK—Cleaning. pressing, repairing, ‘dyeing, ladies’ and ‘men’s clothing, Eagle Tailoring &,Hat Works, phone -58;: opposite _ postoffice 1-18-t¢ FOR‘SALE—Small hotel building with restaurant in Regan, N. D,, ata bargain, and on easy payments Write 915 Holly. St. N., Brainerd, Minn. 6-30-1m FOR, SALE—New fumed oak cabinet sewing machine, cheap if taken at once. Call 320° Mandan Ave., . or 623-W. : 7-91w DRY-CLEANING PRESSING and —te-| pairing -in our new~ and ~: modern cleaning’ plant. City Cleaners & Dyers, Office Klein's Tailor Shop, -ii-lw FOR SALE—One round reed Pullman TOM, YOU KNOW !HAVEN'T | MUCH USE FOR SAILBOATS! a) RATHER. NOT Go! AW, COME ON! 1T 1SN’T ROUGH TODAY! THE BISMARCK: TRIBUNE | NOW, WHAT, ARE. WE GOING +TO Do? “THE ‘BREEZE. HAS GONE DOWN IAND WERE: , TWO MILES FROM SHORE + 1 DIQN'T: WANT. VM NEARLY fi LSTARVED' AND. AT'S” ALL. Your) FAULT ! disbursements and ex- 1921, sides the costs, penses°of this foreclosure. Dated this and day. of Bismarck, North Dakota. ‘ARMERS STAT or BALDWIN, a duly, at G. F, Dullam and ©. L. Young, ‘Attorneys for. Mortgagee, Bismarck, Notth Dakotz 20, 27; 8-3, 10. No, 921. Report of the Condition of THE ARENA STATE BANK Arena, in the State. of ‘North Dak the close of business J RESOURC! Loans ‘and Discounts Overdrafts, . secured secured: s..+. Warrants; stocks. -tax certifi- cates, claims, etc........... Banking ‘house, furniture and fixtures Current expenses, taxes over. undivided profits....... Checks*und“other cash items. . Due; :drom other banks and cash..$ - 8,061.50 4 LYABILITIES Cépitak stock paid in Surplus fund 8,061 «$48,938.40 $90, 080-00 1,000.00 Individuaj. deposits subject'to check... 10,633.83 Demand «._Certifi- cates of deposit: 629.38 Time — certificates of déposit....... 7,718.27 18,981.48 Notes and bilis rediscounted.. 5,051.92 Bills payable Total .... 34 STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County. of Burleigh—ss. I, A, C. Isaminger, of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my. knowledge and belief. A.C. Igaminger, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn-to before me this Cashier Ath day of July, 1921 Walter M. Scott, Notary Public,. Burleigh County. ‘Arena. N..D. ‘My commission ex- Pires January 15, 1924. Correct. Attest :— A. M. Isaminger, A. C.-Isaminger, Directors. NOTICE. TO STOCKHOLDERS LUCKY STRIKE COAL COMPANY To the Stockholders of the Strike Coal Company You and each of you are hereby no- tified that the annual and special meet- ing of the Stockholders of the Lucky Strike Coal Company will be held at the principal offices of said company Lucky baby carriage, one mahogany rocker |in the City of Bismarck Burleigh Coun- with leather back and seat. 410 3rd/ty, North Dakota, on Monday, July 18th, St 7-B-lw | 921, at, three o'clock «p.m. “ That the object of such meeting will ‘WANTED=Someone to pit up hay on shares four miles east from Bis- marck. Thos. Garross. T-11--w) notice is hereby given, that that. certait mortgage executed and delivered by O. A. Berg, .a single man, mortgagor, to Farm- ers State Bank. Baldwin, N. D., a cor- poration, mortgagee, dated the 19th: day | of November, 1916, and filed for record) in the office of the register of deeds of.) Burleigh County, North Dakota, on the: 20th day. of-October, 1916, in Book 108 of; Mortgages, on page 784, will be foreclosed | by a sale-of the premises “in such mort-'| gage and hereinafter described, at the front door. of the courthouse at Bismarck, in’ the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour’of ten o'clock A. M., on the 13th day. of August,-192L, to. satisfy the amcunt due upon such | » day of sale. The prem. s described in such mortgage and- which will be sold to satisty the same are’ situate in Burleigh Count orth Da-, kota, and described as follo’ S West ‘Forty-two (42): Feet’ of Lot Num- | bered ‘Six (6), Block Numbered Five (4) Townsite of Baldwin, according to the, plat thereof,.on file and of reco.d in the! Office of said register of deeds. There will be due on said mortgaze at the date of sale the sum of $1,591 be- sides the costs, disbursements auc ex- penses of this foreciosure. Dated this-2nd Day of July, 1921, at) Bismarck, North Dakta. STATE BANK FARMERS OF BALDWIN, si a Mortgagee. G. F, Dullam and C. L.-Young, ‘Attorneys for Mortgagee. Bismarck, North Dakota. 7—6, 13, 20. 27; 8—3, 10. | NOTICE: OF MORTGAGE FORECLOS- | URE SALE. 3 | Default having occurred in the conditions | of the mortgage hereinafter described, | notice is hereby given. that that certal mortgage executed and delivered by Ole A. Berg, a single man, mortgagor, to Farmers State Bank, Baldwin, N: D., a corporation, mortgagee, dated the Ist day of March; 1918, and filed for record in’ the ‘office of the register of deeds ' of | Burleigh County, State of North Dakota. on the 10th day of June, 1918. and was duly recorded in Book 147 of Mortgages. on page 259, will be foreclosed by a sale of. the premises in such mortgage and. hereinafter described, at the front door) of ‘the courthouse at’ Bismarck, in the rcounty of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M.. | on the i3tt day of August, 1921, to satis-" fy the amount due upon such mortgage, on the day of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold” to satisfy the same are situate in Burleigh W 4 of Wi), and the West | Half of the East Half Cvs of EY) of | Section Thirty (30), Tow: 142) amount not exceeding be to take action upon the proposal to issue bonds of said corporation to an 100,000.00; for the election of. Directors of the corpor- E66 Nou HAD THIS: dred Forty-Two _( Sexenty-seve <0) Phen w) ‘UPTO THE HOTEL: AND: HAVE A‘GOOD DINNER THINGS, WILL LooK y ‘BRIGHTER! « 6] cit Freckles and His Friends GEEWUZSNou WANE” “To WASH Your FACE TAG - TCAN SEE SOME oF TH ation for the ensuing year and for the transaction of such other and further: business as may come before such meeting. H Dated May Sth, 1921 i By order of the Board of Director A. L, Farr, President. Attest: John Moses, Secretary. (May 17-21-25, June 1-8-1 July 6-13) 5-22-29, NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter Of the Estate of los Chance, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the under- igned, C. B. Little, Administrator of, 1 te of Josiah Chance. late of the i ‘emont, in the County of San- y of dusky, and State of Ohio, di nd, to the creditors of, and_all pe having claims. against,. said de ed, to exhibit them with the necessary uchers, within four months after the fi publication of IN THE, FIRST. PLACE! ah |. BY ALLMAN HOW DID | KNOW THE WIND WAS. GOING To DIE! IT DIDN’T Look SICK WHEN WE STARTED ouT! VLL ROW. BACK! To COME ‘You'RE Too LATE, THE DINING ROOM Js CLOSED! Sheep receipts, 8,000. Lambs weak, Good natives, mostly Sheep steady. | 25 cents lower. $8.75. Seconds, $4.25. Bulk éwes, $2.50 to $3.50. FLOUR. MINNEA Minneapolis, Shipments to. $9-80. Bran $13. Mour $8.85 | 58 barrels. RUSH TOOL _NELDSTHROUGH ALASKAN ROAD Juneau, Alaska, July 13.—First of thé fortune-seekers to make the round trip this year to new oil fields at Fort Norman, in the Mackenzie valley of northern Canada, nine men passed through Juneau recently enroute to Edmonton, Alberta, where they will record their location on oil lands. | “I believe the district will be « world beater,” John McDonnell, one of the “sourdough” leaders of the party sald. “One gusher at Norman produc- ed 1,500 barrels a day, according to ; Feports which I believe are below the correct figures.” Every member of the party said the -oil was of high grade and asserted it was used in the Fort Norman country for lighting and heating and even was used, without being changed from its crude state, in gas engines. The niae men “mushed” into the oil tields over a 750-mile trail, part of which was snow-covered, across the continental divide from White Horse, Yukon Territory. They made the trip to Norman in twenty-one days, whici: is considered very fast time, and used | thirty-five dogs to pull their sleds. Originally most: of the men came from Vancouver, B. C., which they left ; on March 5, of this year, coming north to Skagway, Alaska, and crossing the | White Pass trail to, White Horse by railroad. Leaving White Hors: 18, they took the trail to © on the Yukon River, and then struck out across the mountains for the big | Canadian basin. At Fort Norman they |found. themselves among the first stampeders of the year to get “inside.” Hundreds of men from Canada and the United States are planning to-go, to the new fields this year over the Cana- dian. route, through Edmonton, Fort McMurray and Peace River. Most ot this route is by steamboat down the Peace and Mackenzie Rivers. Althougi: | fast time can be made in summer over this interior route, the men who pass- ed through here declared the trail from White Horse was the best winter way to Norman. There is plenty of game along the route for food and the | going is easy, they said. ‘Chicago, July 13.—Cattle _ receipts | SE 7 7 oo 10,000. fuk ‘eet steers $7.25 Pre | 500 KILL SELVE DEATH PACT. $375. By Newspaper Enterprise. ‘Hog receipts 21,000. Slow to 25 Reval, July 13.—Five hundred pea ‘cents lower than ‘yesterday's aver-|@Nts at Novo-Ipatino, Russia, dug age. moat around their village, posted ‘Sheep receipts 19,000, this notice, to-said Administrator at thel-cents, lower First. Nj : National ‘Bank in the City of Bis- [| mai in’said Burleigh C« Dated ale Aw c. B. LI Administrator. First. publication on the 18th day of July, A.D. 1921. O'Hare & Cox, Attorneys for Administ Bismarck, N, D. 3 4 tor, | MARKETS | ——) o BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, July 13. No. 1 dark northern. No. 1 amber durum... No. 1 mixed durum. No, 1 red durum. 1 flax. ST. PA South St. Paul, July 13. ceipts, 3,300. Mostly 25, to 35 cents higher. Common to good beef steers $4 to $8.74. Bulk, $5.50 to $7.50. S yearlings, $8.75. Best heavy steers, "$8.25 Butcher cows and heifers most~ ly $3.50 to $6. Few up to $7. Canners and cutters, most $1.50 to $3. Bologna bulls, mostly $3.50 to $4.50, Veal calves, 50 cents higher. Packer top, $9. Stockers and feeders gencrally steady to strong. B Hog receipts, 9,000. Steady on best lights and handyweights, selling most‘ ly $9 to $9.50. Medium and heavy hogs, about 25 cents lower. | Bulk, such Kinds, $8 to $8.50. Pigs: weak. H HURRY UP TAG, WE'RE ttle re-| That’s Worse Yet, Tag. {REMARKS | REMARKABLE ¢—_____________—_-@ People will converse, laugh, smile Firm to 25 armed guards to keep away strangers and burned themselves to death, ac- cording to reports received here. “Yellow decay,” a strange malady brought to the section by Bolshevist soldiers, is said to have caused the | wholesale suicides.# * SCARED BY APE; ; Catford, England, July 13.—EKighteen and probably eat drink and sleep in| years ago a monkey leaped from 4 heaven much they do on earth.—|tree upon the head of Lewis Hector Tha tev c. MeKup Smock, Phi. (Clark, 7. The other day Clark died nities tf i from an epileptic fit. Physicians said adelphia clergyman. hs death could be traced directly to TTR Oe | the fright, Every prize fighter I ever exam. | he monkey righ inéd had a consumptive chest. None of them are really strong men.—-Dr. Woods Hutchinson, Boston physician and writer. YAP | By Newspaper Enterprise. ple cna Oe nd volitt- | ‘Washington, July 13.—Hughes diplo- cal questicns of the day. —The Rev.| macy is making definite headway to- KE. A. Corey, eastern representative, United Christian Missionary Society. Our domestic consumption 1s longer adequate to keep our enterprise and of ‘supervising committee, Trade Financing Corporation. ONE-LEGGED MEN BOX. Sutton, England, July 1 legged ex-service men fought thr rounds without a clinch at a boxing; exhibition here. « —_———— I —— LT By Blosser CMONWE GSC To GET I OUR BATHIN' SUITS ON AN RE INSPECTED BY SW SCOUT MASTER BEFORE WE Go AWW YER WRONG = TWAD-E66-. VESTERDAN # no pace with production.— George A, Coulton, district chairman Foreign —Two ote ward a satisfactory settlement of the Yap dispute. If nothing is done to complicate matters, America’s full claim to an | equal participation in the use of Yap as a cable center will shortly he ac- | ceded by Japan, it is said by those on the inside. 5 In dealing with the Jap situation, ; Secretary Hughes has moved informa- {ly-and in a manner calculated to give Japan the most graceful exit pos- sible from her position: of exclusive jurisdiction and control of the little | Pacific island, Japan's note dea‘ing with Yap was construed by Hughes asa statement of viewpoint from which consideration of the final status of the island could proceed. Informal steps have developed the | problem to a point where a solution may be expected in the very near fu- | ture, ee | Undertakers DAY PHONE 246 WEBB BROTHERS Embalmers- Licensed Embalmer in Charge EXHUME BODIES: OF SOLDIERS WHO DIED PRISONERS Berlin, July 13.—The work of ex- huming the bodies of the American soldiers who died as prisoners of war in Germany has developed such diffi- culties that some: unc inty attaches to the identity of the few which have been unearthed from among the un- named German and other dead in the cemeteries near the old prison camps, Many of the graves were unmarked and the names of the men buried in some places were unknown, so that much guesswork entered into the task of the American Graves Registration service, in charge of two American army Officers, which has superintend- ed the operations. “The bodies exhumed comprise what are thought to be the remains of Amer- ican soldiers who died in Germany,” gaid a member of the Registration Service, “We have shipped 15 from Leipsig to Antwerp for transportation to America. Our operations have been carried out in Strasbourg, Stockach (on the northern end of Lake Con- stance), Lindau-am-Bodensee, Munici, Darmstadt, Coblenz, Stuttgart and Hindenburg, Silesia.” To exhume and remove the single soldier buried near Hindenburg—in a flower-covered grave shaded by ches nut-trees—it was necessary to obtain permission from the Inter-Allied High Commission at Oppeln, the Polish rep- resentative there, the head of German Self-Defense organizations, and the leader of Polish insurgents, for the grave was in territory held by Polish insurgents and the trucks of the Amer- icang had to pass between lines ‘of fighting Germans and Poles. A mem- ber of the American, militaty mission in Berlin negotiated: anid obtained as- surances that the American party would not be molested. Two bodies were exhumed near Ber- lin, one at Tuchel, Poland, and an- other near Dresden. The work of the section, it is expected, will be com- pleted about July 15. Captain Eugene M, Dwyer and Captain G. Cole have conducted the work with a civilian personnel of 24 men, comprising chauffeurs, embalmers and technical assistants. SENTENCES CULPRITS, Minot, July 13,—District Judge John - C, Lowe today passed sentence oa Rena Margery Gullixson, who confess- ed to forgery, Charles Belanger, who plead guilty to burglary and Vasiley Shack, who confessed to transporting whiskey. The Gullixson girl, who is 17 years old. was sentenced to the reform school until she is 21; Belan- ger was given five years and sentence suspended and Shack was sentenced to serve four months and pay a fine of $1,000. Belanger’s family has been receiving groceries from the county since his arrest and would have been dependent on charity had he been given a jail term. . |HUGHES IS IRONING OUT FOREIGN TANGLE MEXICO By Newspaper Enterprise. Washington, July 13.--The Obregort government has a firm control of Mex- ican affairs. It has reached the point where it may be dealt with as a stable, well-organized administration, with full authority and the power to enforce that authority. That is the outstanding significance of the dispatch of George T. Summer- lin, former counselor of the Americ: embassy at Mexico City, to Mexico's capital with a definite statement of - conditions under which the United - States will recognize the Obregon gov- ernment. if fs Beyond admitting that a definite Mexican policy has been reached, Secretary of State Hughes declines to discuss Mexico. ‘The next move is up to Obregon and his government. and that may not be expected until Summerlin has reached Mexico City, delivered his messag been had for its cons Funeral Directors “NIGHT PHONES 246-887 | PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS | Day Phone 100 Licensed Embalmers in Chia rge * # ~ Night Phone 100 or 687 | BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY i LENE FORMS AT RIGHT. (Berlin, July 13.—Here’s some Ger- | man propaganda: | “Brewers here have been making beer with eight per cent as.the highest alcoholic content. They’ve increased it to 23. per cent. It only costs $75 to come to Germany from America, if ' you ride in the steerage.” CHINESE HOOTCH, MEBBE. Kofloon City; China, July 13.—A | strange nocturnal beast nightly ter- rifles natives here. It is variously de- | scribed.as a-fear, kangaroo and orang- outang. Ooo B 8, ENGE, D. C. Ph. C, Chiropractor 220 MAIN STREET Consaltation Free, CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Seathwestern North Dakota and ~ Southeastern Montana