The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 28, 1921, Page 7

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. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1921: ——_—_ WORK WANTED WANTED—School girl wantg to care or children evenings and Saturday. ; Phone 772-M, 10-24-5t AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE CAR—A Chevrolet 490. .In good condition wth starting batter- ies. Complete. Will sell for $100. Christ Oster. South side on Sweet St. on the corner from ,15th street. _‘House No. 1418. = 10-27-2t fOR SALE -OR TRADE—One 1920 inode] Ford Touring. In good condi- tion. ' May consider cows in trade. Address 302, care of Tribune. : ‘ 10.27-3t OR SALE—Dodge Sedan in first class condition; also a Ford Road- ster. Cash or Liberty Bonds. Mrs. NA. Hughes. 616 7th St. __10-27-3t *OR SALE—1 model 83 Overland Truck, U. S. Cord Tires. In good condition. Phone 725 or call at 812 Rosser. 10-24-1w FOR SALE—Dodge roadster, in first- class condition; bargain for quick Iyer. Call after 6 o'clock, 808 7th COS ea -10-22-1W OR SALE—Buick car in good run- _ ning order, cheap. Call 409 1st St. 10-28-3t i LLANEOOS FOR RENT— 2 garages, one on 4th and Ave« A and one on 2nd St. St. Also a Franz Premier Electric sweeper. for sale. Phone 905. — eae oe ea K SALE-All my household furni- ture intluding piamo, electric wash- ing machine and Victrola. Apply 602 Third street, or Phone 132-J. 10-27-3t a GELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—Boy to do dishes and few chores about house; good place and good wages to right party. Write Mrs, Lester Jenkins, Washburn; N. D., care Crescent. Lignite Coal pales 10-28-11 _ BOOMS FOR RENT ___ FOR RENT——Two rooms equipped for light house keeping; also 3 or 4 room apartment near ‘High. School, ‘Phone 442-M before 9 a. m. or after 4:30 p. m. on 10-27-1w (FOR RENT—Room in modern house, ‘$15 for one, $18 for two. Ladies pre- ferred. Close to capitol. E. G. Pet- erson, 700 10th St. 10-27-31 FOR RENT—Two furnished light housekeeping, rooms, modern. Close to high school and capitol. Phone 339-W. 907 6th St. ___10-26-3t FOR RPNT—Nicely furnished” room in apartnfent over Chocolate Shop. Gentlemen preferred. Phone 564-R efter 5 p. m. 10-28-31 FOR RPNT—Furnished or unfurnish- ed rooms for light housekeeping. _Bismarck Business College. 10-10-tt FOR RENT—Modern furnished. room 2 blocks from Post ‘Office. Phone 6584 or call at 201 Ist. St. 10-27-3t FOR NONT—Two furnished rooms in modern home. ‘Ladies preferred. Phone 729; 811 Ave. C. _10-27-3t FOR RENT—2 modern furnished rooms near capitol and high school. 924 7th St. Phone 9605 10-27-1w FOR RENT—Room in modern house. Close in. Gentlemen preferred. 525 6th St.- iPhone 213.M. BS ot ‘FOR RENT—Modern furnished house- keeping rooms. Apply 1100 Broad- way. Phone 646. 10-27-3t NNER HOUSE—Room and hoard $9.00 per week. Pwoms 50c, meals Steam-heated building, Phone 10-24-1w FOR RENT after Nov. 1, office room on ground. floor of First. Guaranty ank building. __2 10-26-1w FOR SALE—One 9x12 Royal Wilton Cait Mrs; iR. W. Sanders, es ot y 2 10-27- R SALE—Steel range. First class condition. Bismarck Gas Co, 10-27-3t We store household goods at 219 Main St. Phone 669. 0-22-2w —_ ND _ NO INTERE: $400 down and $40 a month for 71-2 years buys a quarter section located only one mile from the best dairy farm at New. Salem. Million tons of coal thrown into the bargain. NO INTEREST! J. Henry Kling, owner. Phone 682. “ 10-8-20t ee f" MARKETS | —__________"—- STRENGTH DEVELOPS, Chicago, Oct. 28.—Moderate strength developed in the wheat market today as a result “of the settlement) of the threatened strike of railroad em- ployes _Buying-was not of an aggres- sive character, however, and offerings increased on the upturns in price. Opening quotations which varied from unchanged to 11-4 cents higher with December,«$1.07 5-4, and May, $1.10 3-4 ‘to $1.11 1-4 were follewed by numer- ous changes within the initia] range. range. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK South St. Paul, Oct. 28—Cattle re- ceipts, 2,400. Generally steady to strong. Grass beef steers, bulk $4.75 to $5.75. Butcher cows and heifers largely $3.25 to $4.75. Canners and cutters $2.00 to $3.00. Bologna bulls $2.50 to $3.50. Veal calves strong to 50 cents higher. Bulk best lights $9.50 to $10.00. Stockers and _feed- ers fully steady, bulk $4.00 to $5.25. Hog receipts 7,000. Mostly steady with yesterday’s average. Range $5.50 to $7.25. Bulk.$6.50 to $7.10. Bulk better grade pigs $8.00 to $8.25. Sheep reeeipts 2,000 slow bidding $7.75 ‘on god. native lambs. Bulk lives all weight. $3.00 to $4.00. Good to choice 55 to 61 pound western feed- ing lambs late Thursday $7.00. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, Oct. 28.—Flour un- changed to 15 cents lower. In car- load. lots, $7.25 to $7.30 a barrel. Shipments 77,288 barrels. Bran $12.50. ‘ CHIEAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, Oct. 28:—Cattfe receipts 7,000: Steady to 25 cents lower. Hog receipts 24,000. Mostly 10 to 15 cents lower than yesterday’s aver- age. Sheep receipts 17,000. Fat lambs steady to 25 cents higher. Pigs steady. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, Oct. 28—Wheat’ re: ceipts 347 cars compared with 567 cars a year ago. , Cash No. 1 northern, $1.28 1-4 to $1.31 1-4. Dec, $1.22 1-4. if Corn No. 3 yellow, 41 cents. Oats ‘No. 8 white, 28 to 29 cents. Barley, 34 to 53 cents. Rye No. 2, 74 to 74 1-4 cents. Flax No. 1, $1.76 to $1.82 BISMARCK GRA \(Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Oct. 28, No. 1 dark northern . $1.10 No, 1 amber durum AT No. 1 mixed durum 67 No. 1 red durum No. 1 flax ... J PROHIBITION A HELP ‘Adelaide, S. A., Oct. 283—Despite the growth of the prohibition movement, vine-growers of South Australia re- port the biggest vintage season. they ever had. More than 2,500,000 gal- lons of wine have been exported this year. Grgat siphons from the Mississippi river enable Louisiana rice plant- ers to flood their fields with water. FOR RENT— ly . modern fur- nished light housekeéping rooms at_1012 Broadway. 10-27-1w FOR RENT—One modern “furnished room, barn and garage, 318 So. 11th St. Phone _463-J._ 10-27-1w FOR RENT—By first of month, room with board for two. The Mohawk. _ 401 5th St. ‘T0-26-5t FOR RENT—Room in modern house, five blocks from post office. Phone 137-5. A 9-26-t6 FOR RENT—Room in modern house $10 per month. 316 &th St. Phone 236-J. 10-22-1w FOR RENT—Two unfurnished front rooms on first floor. 316 3rd St. 10-26-3t FOR RENT—Small well furnished bednoom, 411 5th St. Phone 273. ah 10-26-3t FOR \T—Light’ house keeping rooms. Phone 877. ——_—:10-22-1w FURNISHED ROOMS for rent; 320 4th St. 10-27-2t SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. In District Court, 4th Judicial Dis- trict, Fay Freda Colebourne and Lucile Colebourne, Plaintiffs, vs. J.B. Murdough and Robert L. Beale, Defendants. THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA to the above named: Defendants: You are hereby. summoned to answer the complaint in this action, which will be filed with the clerk of this court, and to serve a copy. of your an- swer upon the subscribers within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of ser- vice; and in case of your failure to appear or answer judgment will be taken against you by, default. for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated September 6th 1921, MILLER, ZUGER & TILLOTSON, Attorneys for Plaintiffs, Webb Biock, Bismarck, N. F..L. MEEKER, Marshalltown, Towa. of Counsel. NOTICE The-Complaint in the above action was filed in the office of the Clerk of the District Court of Burleigh County, N. D.. on Sept. 6, 1921; and the obfect of said action is to foreclose a mort- gage on the North Half of Section Nineteen, Township One Hundred Thirty-Eight, Range Seventy-Eight, in Burleigh County, N. D. MILLER, ZUGER & TILLOTSON, 10-7-14-21-28-11-4-11 D. NOTICE }OF MORTGAGE SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That that certain Mertgage, exccuted and de- livered ‘by. Fred J. Argast and Cora Argast, his wife, Mortgagors, to Drake-Ballard Company, a corporation, Mortgagee dated the 10th day of Nov- ember, A..D., nineteen hundred and Seventeen and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, on the 17th day of May A. D. 1918, and recorded in Book 151 of Mortgages, at page 293, will be fo closed by a sale of the premises in such Mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock P. M., on the 5th day of November 1921. to satisfy the amount due upon said Mortgage on the day of sale. The. premises drscribed in said Mortgage and hohe sold to satisfy the those certain premises | situ! the County of Burleigh, and State of North Daké and described as follows, to-w East haif of the Ne and Lots one (1) tion’ cishteen (18). in Te hundred thirty-seven “(1217). Range seventy-six (76), West. The Mortagee has paid certvin sums to-wit: Past due interest on “ ~ lien on said premises which witi terest thereon will on the date of amount toghe sum of $55.76, and which amount is- included in the sum here- inafter gtated to be due. ThereSwill be due on such Mortgage hundred seventen and 76-100 ($117.76) Dollars. * DRAKE-BALLARD, COMPANY, Mortgagece. Minneapolis, Minnesota. LAWRENCE. MURPHY & NILLES, AM OEREy SLOT Moree 0, North, Dakota. ae _9-28-10 5-12-19-, 28-11-4 ps NES, NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECL' E BY ADVER- TISEMENT. Notice is hereby given that by reason of default therein, that certain mort- gage made and executed by John Carl- son (a single man) mortgagor to The Federal Land Bank of St. Paul, Minn., ‘a body corporate, of the city of St, Paul, County of Ramsey, and State of Minnesota, mortgagee. dated the 26th day of June 1919, which mortgage was filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh Count North Dakota, on the 10th day of July, 1819, at 9:20 A’M., and Recorded in Book 161 of Mortgages on page 239, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises described in ‘said mortgage at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck North Dakota, at the hour of one o'clock in the afternoon of the 28th day of November, 1921, to at the date of sale the sum of One| Section 10, ty N. D. Kighty a to the Gove Said mor authorizing NOTI Notice certain livered imo hy, for record wit: The South Section Ten Quarter ( (il) Forty On gagors hav three princ cured respectively satisfy the amount due on said mort- BR. 8S. ENGE, D. C. Pa, C, Chizopracter Fre tt Suite Cesaultatlen 1—Larae Bleck—Phene 20°. gage on the date of sale. he premises described in said iorteage And which will be sold to satisty th ne are as follo West; of the 5th P, M. Burleigh Coun- the whole sum due fault, and the whgle of s or 3 is Eva Sehyittat. day of December gister of Deeds in ‘all in number Seventy Five West (75 W.) of the Fifth Principal Meridian, Default has occurred in the terms of said mortgage in that the said mort- by said ry tin the years 1919, 1920 and 1921 which : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE S OF THE DUFFS Wilbur Has Enough Expense ———. BY ALLMAN WHY ALL THE VAUDEVILLE ? —l WELL, THERES by A MOUSE IN SAY, JANITOR, WEVE | GOT RATS UP IN AND. PUT THEM XQ _AROUND a Township 140, Range 81 containing: ‘our Hundred s, more or | according | at the date of sale ‘the sim of Tight ernment sury. Hundred Fifty. Bight Dollar: nd rigage con Ninety Nine Cents ($858.99), whieh the morteazce Judes interest paid by the sai if there is ree Upop a prior mort id_morts upon said land Yn. the sum of $64 juired by lat, more than before the beginning of The default consists nent of the amort of $143.00 due on Dec- “ st day of October, 1921. al Land Bank of St. Paul, vid Mortgage. , De eae Attorne. NOTIC Notice certain liver is 1 by 3 FORECLO- HORTGAC SURE SA hereby rigage | ¢ Cornelius his: given that that and di schmidt and mortgagors, Bank portation, ed.in . D, 1915, and filed office of the R and, for the coun in’ the (76 W t Quarter (SE 1-4) of (10) and the Southy WeJ-4) of Section Ble Township One Hundred North (141.N,) of Range $ due TI on the Ist day of Janu Freckles and His Friends HE VERY IDEA!! WHAT DOYOU BOYS MEAN BY SIRACKING UP MY CLEAN KITCHEN FLOOR? GO OUT ON TME BACK PORCH AND PLAY- MY MOM DoN'T CARE HOW MUCH T RUN OVER OUR KITCHEN FLOOR. riled to pay at time will 1 notes of $60 at the mortgage maturing Afuna he’ mortgage Louis, Waller his : Mechar ‘oll North Dakota! a doinest mortragee, a day of April, 1919, ang cord in. Ute ‘office of yt deeds in and for -) of the 3th 27 f sum of $27.10 of _ | WELL GET SOME AUR APARTMENT RAT BISCUITS is hereby declared due, The: inclus be due on said mo of this. foreclosure, date of sale the sum of $4716 Dated Intention to F 6 was} October reby wife, to Farmers & Merchants State ; of Driscoll, North Dakota, a domestic [leigh, and state of ‘No corporation, mortgagee, dated the 31st | 18th day of Anrihag19 the on said note on 3 ($906.71) Maybe She'll Adopt You, Alek! exe the ($214.74), all of which remains owing and unpaid on said mor There will be due on ¢ of interest’ besides the at Bismarck, North Dakota, ™ Six on such mort- a sale th =|You'D BETTER | Pu TELL GO DOWN AND. TRAT WE HAVE, MICE. UP HERE! = I WILL NoTY THEY'LL EAT WHAT WE DO ’ OR “THEY'LL STARVE: uch mortgage Bee, costs LYRICS OF & Merchants roll, reigns. a But youth runs ou vottgatore ta | Aud finds in storms a Bank of warns: cor- 161b re- of t I county each new inspire? ! (Copyright.) | Or storm Gen. Henry Knpx wa: when George Washington command of the artillery. Dolls AW-TAG, C'MON AN’ STAV= GEE, WE CAN PLAY OUT HERE AN’ NOM, WON'T SCOLD. GUESS T'LL T WISH T HAD A NICE DIRTY MOTHER UE YOU'VE Gor, ) HIM MORE TELL THE JANITOR] THAN THAT & North Dakota, The- South Half (S$ 1-2); the West} with thé interest accrued and aceru-| Dated marek, Half (W 1-2) of the Northwest Quart- | ing to date of sale thereon «mount to | October er (NW 1-4) the South Half (S$ 1-2) of | the sum of Two Hundred Fourteen Farmers the Northeast Quarter (NE 1-4) of | Dolkurs and Seventy — Four Cents State Bank of Driscoll, Mortgagee, kota, 8-11-4-11-18-25 LIFE By DOUGLAS MALLOCH ‘ THE CONTEST. LD age complains when Winter it to play thing that Its pulses all\the way-— It is the contest so intense With Winter's ‘angry: elements, The weak. perspire beside the fire And shiver with the cold; The sturdy go to meet the snow made stronger by the} le Sky 5 not doubt, ively met. raver yet. of Burleigh, and s of North Dako- described,-at the fr With hearts increasing bold, ta, on the 25th day of March, 1916, and ourt house in the city With hearts duly recored in Pook 138 of Mort- . in the county of Bur ee gages on‘ page 31, will be foreclosed by of North Dakota. at the hour of gale, a sale of the premises in such mort- lock A, Myon the 6th day of | Whatever arrows may assan, gage and hereinafter described, at the mber, A. 1D. 1, to ve the front door of the court house in the | amount such mortgage on the | ally, on Bismarc in the county of | dav of The timid groan, the timid moan, Burleigh, and s' of North Dakota, bed in such vhen troubles ¢l at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M..on the Abe MDI Hor eee mae merc oud st 6th day of December, A. D., 1921, to ca in. the | ‘Bhe brave go out ind do satisfy the ainount, due on such mort- ite ol North Unfriendly fate defy, encom the day OC se a ei ollows, Land’ find each contest bra mortgage and which 1d to rier (NW 1-1) of | Makes each contestant. br satisfy the same, are situated in the] Secti 4) in Town- county of Burleigh, and state of North p One Hundrea aso 7 Dakota, and described as follows, to Range number . WwW When thunders roll befor re your goal, What will your answer be? Will you go forth to face OF from the norther flee? Does Winter drive you to your fire, hew © the north, strength 20 years old put him in By Blosser Merchants | | ing innovation in | | ‘$10,000,000 AI FOR VETERANS Red Cross Provides Friendly Service of Many Kinds to Army of Disabled. @LEGION® (Copy for This Department Supplied by the American Legion News Service.) LEGION IN LOAN BUSINESS. Fargo, N. D. Post Adjutant Works Out! Plan for the Benefit of His Buddies. The first instance in which the, American Legion has gone into the; trust, savil and loan business is reported from Fargo, N. D. To — encourage! thrift and to help the needy, the post, on January | 1, 1921, instituted! an American Le-! gion Bonus Loan association from! plans worked out| by Arthur I, Col; Four hundred | tar, of the, post’s 700 members already post adjutant, have deposited sums from $5 to} $25 on which five per cent inter- est is paid. A Legion man wishing to borrow assigns his state ecompens tion claim to the Legion—it. will quire eight years for North Dakota to pay all service menfthe bonus awarded them. The borrower may obtain up| to 50 per cent of the amount to be} awarded him by the state. He pays} interest at 8 per cent. Business {s transacted through a Fargo bank. ‘To date more than fifty loans have been made and more than $20,000 has been pald into the savings fund, A dividend {ts paid semi-annually to depositors, Immediately upon be- ing granted @ loan, the person to whom it is made must open a savings account to insure proper expendituré of the money. Legton posts In many states have written the Fargo post for in- formation upon which to base a simi- lar system. © THINK HE WILL BE GOVERNOR People of Washington State See Bright Future for Their Soldier Lieutenant-Governor. rovernor, who they claim, is: the youngest man in the world holding that office, Coyle has been a ‘matural ath- fete” since kin: dergarten days. Wor four y he was Gil Dobie's quarterback on the famous Uni- versity of Washington team. pitched and fielded for the farsity! “He's just’ naturally lucky,” the people of Washington say of William| Jennings Coyle, ! cheir — lieutenant- { { baseball team and he was a star) hurdler, Following graduation he! was a reading clerk in three sessions | of the’ Washington legislature, Duhing the war, he claims, his luck | held. promoted from second | lieutenant captain for bravery, to was wounded in the Argonne while serving with the 868d Infantry, and was awarded a Distinguished Cross for gallantry, He is 38. years old, the father gf two girls and s farm tractors when not occupied \ his official duties as leutenant-gov- ernor. ‘The people wf Washington declare he will be Jucky enough to be the youngest governor in the United States after next election, PROBLEMS OF THE NAVY MEN Conference of Legion Committee to Devise Ways for Benefit of Mem- bers of Branch, Problems of the navy men who are members of the American Legion and! policies affecting naval ex-service men generally will be discussed at a con-! { ference of the naval affairs committee of the Legion in Chicago this fall. The meeting has been called by Edward F. Spafford, New York, chairman of the comnittee, who will announce the date of the conference later. “The fact that there were eight times as many. men in the army as| there were in the navy during the World war has tended to minimize Uh needs of the navy ex-service men,” M Spafford declared in announcing the conference. Few persons know of et the high percentage of tubercular cases developed by men in the sub- chaser. and submarine service, for in- stance.” The members of the committee, be- sides Mr. Spafford, are: Benjamin Briscoe, Michigan; Philander Briscoe, and; Claudius G, Pendiil, Wis- consin; Fred A, Tillman, California, and ©, W. Neville, Jr., Louisiana, The members ranged in rank from lieu- tenant commander to petty offieer. Legionnaires Respond. { When a post of the Amer | gion in Ja mn, Miss., asked for vol- | unteers to save the life of Welton A./ Crawford, ovet veteran, by blood transfusion, 12. legionnaires respond- cd. Crawford, séviously injured in a surect car accident, is recovering. DEGREE IN BREWING Birmingham, Eng., Oct. 23—A nive in the science of MERICAN | benefit from the Government’: PAGE SEVEN BULK OF WORK BY CHAPTERS , 2,397 of These Are Helping Ex.| Service Men Obtain Bene- * fits U. S. Provides. j One, field of Red Cross service alone, that of assisting disabled veterans of the World War, entails expenditures $4,090,000 greater than the aggregate receipts of sthe Annual Roll Call of 1920, the Armprican Red Cross an-_ nounces in a Statement urging a wide-: spread increase in membership at the Annual Rol? Call, Novémber 11 to 24. At the present time National Head- quarters and the nation-wide chain of Chapters of the Red Cross is spend- tug approximately $10,000,000 annual- ly for the relief of disabled ex-service men and their families, while the ag- gregate receipts from last year’s Roll Call were approximately $6,000,000. It is in the 2,289 of the 3,600 Red Cross Chapters which still are helping solve the veteran’s problem of adjust: tng himself to a normal civilian status that the greater part of the cost of this’ service is borne. Of the total sum spent for veterans’ relief last year, National Headquarters expended a to- tal of more than $2,600,000, while the remaining disbursement of approxi- mately $7,000,000 represents the con- tribution of Chapters in this country- wide effort to assist the Government in providing the aid sorely needed by these men and their families. An €ver Expanding Problem That. the problem of the disabled service man is ever-expanding and probably will not reach the peak 1 fore 1925, is the assertion of well-in- formed Government officials and that 2,397 Red Cross Chapters regard it as their most important work is ¢ dence that the expansion is in nowlse confined to a particular section but is, on the contrary, nation-wide, At the end of the fiscal year, June 30, 1921, there were 26,300 disabled service men in the 1,692 United States Public Health Service, Contract and Goyern- ment Hospitals and Sold Homes, and that number is increasing at a rate of 1,000 a month, Thousands of these men recejying medical treatment, compensation and vocational training from the Govern: ment today, started their efforts to obtain them through the Red Cross The Chapter, acting as the sabled man’s agent in claims against the Government, informs the man as to the procedure nec to gain for him that which ts provided him by Federal statute. His applications for compensation, medical treatment and training are properly filed with the aid Af the Red Cross Chapter. 4 Many Forms of Assistance If there is delay before the man's claim is acted“ upon, the Red Cross Chapter lends the man money to meet the imperative needs ‘of himself and | his dependents. Most vital to the man’s gaining full are 18 about keeping his mind free from worr his home. Keeping the veteran's fam- fly from hardship of every kind and informing him of its welfare is aan other province of the Chapter, Free from fear on this secre, the man's re- covery and advancement usually 1s rapid. Every month during the last year, the American Red Cross has. given service of one kind «2 another to an average of 129,215 former service men and their families. “An indication of the oxtent of the faith reposed in the Red Cross Chapter is to be found in the fact that there were quests for friendly aid in the solution of personal probler 448 Workers in Hospitals While the man prior to entering Government eare cars largely wih the Chapter, afte he comes into con. Anct with the se provided by N: al Headquarte There are 418 Cross workers ia the Un * Healih Sery nd « als and othe itutions men are being cared for, whose duty {s to provide for his recreation, help him with his compen- sation claims, keep him in touch with his fami in short, meeting his every need outside of that provided by the Government. While these ar of the responsibilities of the Organization, they are by no means all. Among other Red Cross accon- plishments for the year are: It handled 70,732 allotment and al- lowance claims. It deltvered throszh its Chapter or- ganization 63, allotment checks to veterans who had moyed from the ad- dresses furnished to the Bureau of War Risk Insurance. It provided a special fund of $10,000 for medical assistance to men under vocational training. It made 32 loans totaling $: to men taking vocational train! which $5 per cent has been re tract hos) in which thes 50,000 g, of Metz, France, Oct. 28—The statue of trik- the former kaiser as Daniel, which education stands outside the famous cathedral ntrodiced at Birmingham uni- here, will be removed and a likeness The college officials plan to of Daniel will be placed there. TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS

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