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FOR RENT—Nic Pmodern howe I Thayer incl sine an elu ree: seveb-1oumt ‘modera | abrep , amuse with garage; fq ‘Possession Phe investment’ i FOR. RENT—S-room ia m govery respect, also rooms ‘gad autaretated, Stoke 73. ith eel be ae Lon Dae oamers. between = and Bigéere) Findet iat urn to. AIM ee 4 yeaa: 3t DoaT—coaia ana! aie ae 13 BILE thew Fer to ‘ irst ‘clase ~ ps hye counter and ib ry hood pulling or WED, Wi T have ey vere or building may ood, chance on with the ile. aad” chairs, ed, kitchen cabinet, ca # jow. Call i Ptibune. id thet No. per= instsany of ue FOR: sitet PaNe ‘Spal imal, | TOM, HAVE You ; bal BEEN oP Teen, 4 WAS UP THERE With Him YoUD BE TAKING AN AWFUL CHANCE! Your LIFE, wobkowr 1 hy Worry Abont ‘ponlens Else. Look ‘aT THAT Guy! | . |: Let#S You AND: 1. 1Go UP: WITH HIM. ‘SOMEDAY! 5” “BE WORTH: TEM! sigh Cousity, North jay of uly: A jenl, cat ‘clock in ‘the forenoon of .| magket today. ORTH DAKOTA, Coun ‘of Rr A In she: Ketate of Gottfried rr mn, Pea as Gottfrid Hbber- . "Petitioner, vs. Elien on and Luther ors, Respondents, orn "paKota to the above and all persons in- je. of Gottfried Ebber- Das Gottfrid Ebberson, that a petition woe of Section raktp One Handvea Forty: of: mange Seventy-eight ‘i Ke eR ES County rt lor eee nat the» said “Gott-| CENTS! BULLISH , INE ‘LUE) Chicago, July 22:-—Reports tliat Ru sia. needed vast_quantities of: wheat had _a bullish influence on the: whext Opening prices which ranged from 1-4 cent off to 1-2 cent advance were, followed by ‘material A | S2ins all around. « Subsequently. hedging sales together -| with profit-taking on the part of hold- ers more than counter-balanced the ef- fect of seaboa ie The: market ‘to 2.1-2\cents* net Chicago, 22.—Cattle: receipts, 3,000., Beet rs steady sto strong. Bulk,’ $7.26 165 Hog recs 15 ‘cents side Sheep ‘eae uf 000i: “Generally steady, «ix on PAUL TIVESTOC! ke South St. Pye, July, 220#0nttle re- cejpts, Bay! Blow. ;,. “Platter grades beef at 3 otheriiweuk. Com- eteers. $5.20 'to ” $9.00. Butcher cows.@nd helfers steady ‘to weak,” $38-15 $0 i86.00. | Veal calves) Packer, stop $3.50. Stockers seady. P Hog rece 3,300, Steady to 25 cents ain ‘Bulk #8 a to §10.20. 00. ouesing 10; to po Good pij et ERY AEEAND Ue HERMIT rey League if v Bless hy a focome ter jasper Fa- Newiai, Bes Fahgasa, TRIEWNE: WARTS FOR RESULTS Sheep rec mostly $9.00, Sheep ‘searce and steady. Best ewes around $4,00,” MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR. Minneapolis, Jluy 22.- jour 5 to 50 cepts Jower, In carload, lots $ $9.20 a’ barrel. Shipments. Bl, rela.: Bran $t5. "WHEAT SAGA, Duluth, July: 22. Wheat’ atiftenca temporarily ‘today but (sagged later. July closed‘ upchanged. at $1.35. nomi- nal; spot rye closed 41-2 ¢enja up at $1.16; harley: closed unchanged at 50] $1000. to 70 cents and No. 2- mixed corn closed 1-8 cents up, at 567-8 cents for WELL WISH 1 WAS UP THERE : UTD ISSRINT -y™ | aristocracy are prominent in divores | court records at present.” -|ters Nicholson has obtained a decree "| Her. husband is contesting the suit. BY ALLMAN You'D. NEVER | GETME IN ONE EF | OF mueone sovol! spot. July flax closed 5 cents up at $2.05 bid. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN. | Minneapolis, July 22.— Wheat ro- ceipts, 253 cars, compared to 198 cars | a year ago. Cash No. 1 northern, $1.55 1-4; July, $1.28 1-8; Septembe $1.30 1-4; December, $1.31 3-4. ra No 3 yellow, 4 to 55 cents. Oats No. 3 ae 35,1-4 to 353-4 cents,” Barley, 48 to 68. cents, Rye No. 2, $1.13 1-2 to $1.14 1. ‘Flax-No. 1, $1.96 1-2 to $1.97-1-2, vos RISMARCK GRA (Furnished: by, RussellMiller Co.) Bismarck, July:22. No.‘1 datk: northern . No, amber. durum . Noi: mixed durum. No.1 red durum No, 1: flax No. .2 flax No; 2’ rye SOCIETY PEOPLE IN DIVORCE | RT i B Newspaper Enterprise i yt July. 22.—Members of the | ‘Marchiqness Ounningham, dasbing soclety benuty, Js ‘ disiclutton of'her marriage with Lord Cunning- ham, contracted during the war. Lady ‘Helen Alice Whitaker, sister of the Earl of Latham, has been granted a decree. « Vice Admiral Sir William C. Mas- ‘dgainst his, wife. Mrs. Moira Peckham, daughter of Baron Inchiquin, is seeking a divorce. ALL FOR SIX CENTS Honkkong, July 22.—A temple door- | keeper sold a clay image of the God- degs of Mercy to a peddler for, six cents. Inside the idol the peddicr ‘yund a goid chain, said to be,.worth ‘TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS $1.421-2 to], | beega bunch ,|for heem wot he calla steno;. | ting feenish. | ees too moocha | better I can hava da job answer hees | da boss, | for da boss I never see heem pay at- | tensh weeth da cheecken before. | boss he losa da head or somating. “RAY, VETERAN OF TWO WARS! | . | Commander of South Dakota Depart-| ment of the Legion Has Had Much Experience, F. B, Ray, commander of the South Dakota department of the American _ Legion, is a Nee | eran of both the! Spanish - Ameri- can and World| wars, During the | days of. '98 and ‘99, Mr... Ray served th 16 bat-) tles- and gcrim-/ mages, j After being; mustered out of the service, Mr. Ray enlisted in the South Dako-| | ta National Guard and was _a mem- ber of that organization when the! | United States entered the World war. Doring the latter war he served as commanding officer of the One Hun-! dred and Thirty-fifth and later the; Three Hundred end Fiftteth Infantry. | He is now cashier of a bank at Yank-| ten, 8. D. Anderson post, No. 12, of the Legion, | and served as its commander. He was| elected commander of the South Da-! kota department in 1919. | Gertrude Olmstead, winner of a re- japer and Elks’ beauty con. “movie” beauties to -be intro. dyced to the patrons of the motion pic- ‘ture houses.. Miss Olmstead won over a, large ficld of competitors seeking the prize in the meaty: contest, ‘oh | Y BOSS -ees preety’ bysy ‘guy alla! right, Every day he gotta maka plenta letter or he no maka moocha profeet. Meester Bulluson,. da man wot owna da post offeece, senda heem letter every morning. And da boss he gotta senda Meester | Bulluson some letter before can queeta | work at night, Lasa week he hire leetle girl worka | She ees preety gooda for look, too. But I tink da boss he talka weeth dat cheecken too mooch for getta somite | Now I dunno eef da boss ees gonna | craze again or wot’s matter. He say work answer too} many letter every day. He tella me eef I could speaka da Engleesh leetle mail. But I gotta suspish ees somating | wrong. beside dat letters. wot trouble Mebbe he’ gotta some more fight weeth hees wife, I dunno. 1 no wanta butt een hees beezness or telta somating he no like, but I_betta scexa bits he gonna getta trouble weeth da family over dat letters somaday. Before dat Miss Stenog come worka But seence she been worka our. place “¢ ‘da Everyday she go een da private of- feece and da boss he talka weeth her, One day I bust een dat place and da) boss was talka lika devil to Miss} Stenog, but she no care. ver miooch. | Mr, Rag ts a charter member of Roy! §. in. Chicago, is one of. the | jj She only seet down, maka somating weeth, da pencil and leesten wot he}; talk. Da boss he do alla da talk and | dat cheecken she no say. somating. Jusa between you and me and no for spreada round, I tink eef.da boss fire Miss Stenog or queet talka wecth her so mooch mebbe he getta-hees | letter wrote, I dunno. Wot you tink? { OLD BELL IS.BROKEN | Berlin, July 22.—The largest tel | on the cathedral here is bnoken. was one of the largest and oldest is | room crowd greeted the verdict val the wordy, Jt,wad Capt MISTI. con oc | sergeant. Bs Ma Ol. (Copy for This Department ‘Supvlied by the American Legion News Service.) FOUND VALUABLE WAR RELIC | Oregon Legion Man’s Best Trophy of Big Conflict, Is Worth Large Sum. Souvenirs varying from a chip off Eiffel tower to a German beer stein captured in. Se din, were brought back from France by the returning Americans, But few of the me- mentoes stored in a doughboy’s pack are as val- uable as that’ be- longing to George D. Foster, former- ly a corporal of ‘ the Fourth Engi- neers, Fourth Division, who found a rare Roman colin that {a perhaps worth several hundred dollars. While looking for « safe and soft spot in the ruins of an old house near S *, France, Corporal Foster, now a peace-loving member of the Amerti- enn Leglon in Cottage Grove, Ore, found an old gilt case containing @ coln, He usrust it into his pack aad recently turned it over to a college professor who pronounced it worth more than its weight in gold. _ Its. date is 806 A. D. On one side it bears the inscription “Magnus,”. the: title given the Emperor Constantine. On the oth- er side are the inscriptions “Voties XX," “Beatas Tranquilitas,” aud “Percursa _'Treveris.”_ | The latter words, the professor declares, indl- cate that the coln was minted in Trier, Germany, formerly a seat of the Ro- man empire. a LEGION MEN BURY COMRADES Organization Officiates at Almost Every Reinterment of Men:Who | Fell on Battlefields. With the thousands of bodies being! returned to the homeland from the} battlefields of France, the American) Legion has. justified. jts existence if for no other reason than. the, display, of proper respect for the remains of the country’s heroes, In almost every} Instance in ;which the body of. &) soldier who died overseas has been| reinterred in American soil, Legion i members have taken part. Funeral for Indian Comrade, The photograph shows the cere- monies of the military funeral ‘held by Carl Anderson Post of the Legion at Cloquet, Minnesota, for John De foe, the first American Indian from the state to be killed in action. The tribe to which the dead soldier be- longed was glad to allow his white comrades to bury hin in a manner befitting his brave career In the serve fee of his country. EX-SERVICE: BOYS GET JOBS President of Chicago Grain Concern, Trench Experienced, Does Not Forget His Buddies. When Private Paul J. Healy, 38rd Division, A. E. F., was waiting in the trenches of France for the shell with his initials on it, he vowed that if he got out alive he would never . for- get the bravery and sacrifice of his. comrades, Now President Paul J. Healy of the Chicago Grain Products com patty, Rockford, Tl, is living up “to the’ pledge he took on the field of battle, ‘The company which Mr. Healy heads recently began the construction of a new? distillery. Mr. Healy ordered that>none’ but ex-service men be em- ployed in the construction work, and informed all concerned that when the plant: is censtructed, veterans of, World war will be shown all the pref- erence. on the company’s pay roll. “My hope is to build an organization ef former soldiers,” Mr. Healy an- nounced. Mr. Healy enlisted as a private in the infantry and was discharged a He was gassed at Albert, He is one of, the 's of Brophy post gion in Chicago, on the B: most activ: ¥ of the American Li FIND BOY NOT GUILTY Abertillery, Wales, July 22.—Harold |Jones,.the 15-year-old lad charged ‘with killing his girl playmate, 8, has been found not guilty. A-huge court- At-palis. and shouting.