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‘ HOME BASEBALL CLUB WILL BE PUT IN FIELD, Baseball Committee Decides: Against: Putting All-salaried , i Team in Field | : if named = by! unday to oF By ut inate meeting the matter of a baseball! - the city during the coming s decided not to attempt | team in the ; rh the team f summer -h to » it i5 announ¢ decision t sommmit would be fe to attempt to raise; . y which would | to put a team in the field, | Mandan will not have all-salarie it team, i and Jamestown, are in the Dako’ i would make it diffi cult for an all-; salaried team to set good games. stated, ‘to obtain | s one or two in-} ind to put a good home team} field. Mandan probably will do | . Wilton and si ‘al other} yesiern North Dakota are| to have good home team Means for the of such a team now bein ered by the players’ com-! mittee. | | i WARD, JOSEPHS : ince the inception of mod: base- BOUT A DRAW ,, . betes casas dake pies a Jobby Ward, St, {have ever pitched a perfect game. nd Jack Josephs; ‘These three are: . went ht a nds to a} Charley Robertson, © ‘St. DP: who, for 1 30, In all, 27 men it one of whom reached the initial sack. 10 rounds. Both are & ntams, Al Van Ryan and Bud- dy McDonald, St. Paul lightweights, | drew in 10 rounds, and Al Francis, | ost sy jno-hit, no-run game for the Boston wrestler, threw Joo Millenbeck, boxer, americans against the Athletics. in their mixed set to. men. They are local Isties the Inception of the Modern Game No Other Burler Has Touched the Record Made By These Three ers Young's record, four years after. it the] ‘baseball history. Three ‘old-time Na- ording to! white Sox, allowed the Tigers neither | tional E n or a hit during the game of|similar to those of Young, Joss and faced him,| Robertson in the days of long ago. Cy Young, who, in 1904, pitched a] J. L. Richmond, Worcester, June 12, dence, June 17, ofthe same year. The late Addie Joss, who equalled s set for the Cleveland Americans, pitching against the White Sox. All this, as remarked, is modern Leaguers accomplisied feats The first was G W. Bradley,’ St. Louis, on July 15, 1870; the second, 1880; the third, J. M. Ward, Provi- WALLIEREID. | BASEBALL | OUT OF RACE|*———_____—* - Amer-can Association © Indianapolis, “May — ‘11.—We fallace } L Re moving picture a will Minneapolis . 7 0 ‘ Milwaukee 10 0 mile iitornaticnal sweep- | Indianapolis 13 10% | s Tuce to be run at the Indian-|Columbus . 3 10 55 | apolis: Motor Speedway May 30, it be-|St, Paul .. 1 10 came known here today. The reason! Kansas City 13 12 given wi hat the polders of his long} Louisville i term moving picture contract refused | Toledo 3 to per: drawal it him to conrpete. Reid’s with- announced today. Pet. x <5 “!New York 8 680} When You Score a |5t. towis . ee Oh sa » Cleveland . 2 2 5 ; Ball Game |icnieago 20000241" a ars | pees ' Philadelphia 1 12 Ae {Boston 2 A | REMEMBER— Detroit 14 417 * ‘ < -—@ | Washington . 16 360 If the batsman hit a foul fly to a \: player and’ the ball is dropped,.and the Ma Natlonal ‘Hea¢ae, Pet. batsman on his next effort.is retired | Y ‘before reaching first, the player. who leet ; an droziped the foul fly is charged with an | St. Louis ie 10 540 error. At one time such a slip was! Pittsburghe 4 10 545 not charged as an error if the bats- | Brooklyn man was retired before reaching first. | Philadelphia . te Cincinnati Napoleon was born on Friday-and | Boston was defeated Waterloo on Friday. Kills Tobacco, —Gold Seal No, 10—Kills the desire | for Tobacco, Snuff and Cigarettes. A, 10 1 ATG 8 ll A21 6 14 -300 CSA PS GAMES TODAY Amer-can Association Toledo at St. Paul. ‘Columbus at Minneapolis. (Louisville at Kansas City. Indianapolis’ at Milwaukee. Amerigan League Chicago at New York. guaranteed vegetable treat-| Detroit at Boston, ment. T from grateful | Cleveland ‘at Philadelphia. men wh ve;been cured, Full'treat-; St, Louis at Washington. mont. $' Our PRE book tells ; National League New York at St, Louis. Philadelphia at Chicago. Boston at Cincinnati. Brooklyn at Pittsburgh. why you 1d not use tobacco. Free. Send right now. Inland Chemical Co., Bismarck, N. D. It is | Dept. D. GAMES YESTERDAY American Association St. Paul 4; Toledo 0. Minneapolis: 11; Columbus 5. Louisville, 7; Kansas City 3. Milwaukee 7; Indianapolis 6. American League Chicago 2; New York 1. Philadelpltia 7; Cleveland 6. Detroit 10; Boston 9. Washington 2; St. Louis 1. National League } New York 3; St. Louis 2. Boston 9; Cincinnati 3. Standard and Portable. Underwood Typewriter Co. ]! | Sold. Rented. Repaired. ! Bismarck, N. D. Ty VE WRITERS All makes Philadelphia 4; Chicago 0. sold and rented Brooklyn at Pittsburgh, — wet Bismarck grounds. Typewriter Co. Western League Bigmarek, At Sioux City 2; Wichita 4, At Denver 11; Tulsa 7. IF THIS PLAY |. COMES UP LOWER PRICES On Cleaning and Pressing. ’, sos Bring ‘your cleaning and pressing Here’s Your Decision here and get our special prices. cman re — | | | Best work pagsible. Hats Block and Cleaned. Eagle Tailoring and Hat Works Opposite Postoffice. Phone 58 We Call For and Deliver. If the pitcher, with one or more Tunners on the bases, fp the act’ of delivering the ball to th> batter or in throwing to first drops the ball either intentionally or acgidentally it shall be regarded as a balk. “All run- ners shall be entitld to advance one base. If with no one on the bases the pitcher accidentaly drops the ball in delivering ‘it to the batsman, no Pponalty shall be inflicted. a If you wish to become skillful, Play Pocket Billiards at 114 4th St. M. W. NEFF [= QUERIES—’ a OF ALL SORT SE SPORT How does the United States com- pare with the foreign countries as re- gards golf.’ Do the American players 5 compare favorably with the stars of ‘the old country? Has golf made any inroads on baseball as a sport?—B. R. 8. , Golf has. developed into a major sport inthe United States. From a game that was at first believed was only for the wealthy, golf is now played by all classes. , “Scotland is the birthplac? of golf, but Anierica is ‘now the home of the game and bids fair to continue to hold that \position,”. is the way, a prominent golfer sizes pp the status of the golf game ia the United States. ‘Our best players are certainly right on a par with “the ‘stars of the old country. They have proven this in compe‘ition of the keenest sort. Perhaps next to baseball more 8 Ww 320) grownups play golf than any other sport. It is fast taking a hold on the’ younger set. It is a game that can ‘be played frony the cradle to the grave. Most sports lose their value after. dn individual reaches a certain age, but golf, never. ‘Golf has’ weaned some fans away from baseball, who, instead of merely being amused by watching a game play golf, get the amusement, and also the exercise that goes with it. CHANGE: ‘CLOTHES’ IN WHITER Animale and Birds ‘Birds Make Seasonal Shifts, Very Much as Does the Human- Family, Some animals » and. birds change their dress in winter just as we do. ‘the psarmigan, ‘a bird belonging. to the game family as the ‘grouse, and who tives. high up in the Scottish moun, tains, is one of the birds who wear a completely different dress in winter. In the summer he {s 9 pretty yellow- isa-brown all over, with white wings, but in winter ‘he is almost all white. This is because there is so much snow on the high hillg that if he remained brown he woul) ‘be easily seen against the snow, * A neighbor. of. the ptarmigan in, the Scottish mountains is. the blue. or mountain hare.: In summer he is grayish brown, but when,winter comes he sheds his hair .and..grows a new coat of pale gray and. white fur. Ptar- migin efen sleep-on the snow when there is. Mund free. of snow quite near, ‘and one finds the: little hollows made in the snow by thelr warm bodies. Some people ‘say that white. fur.and white -feathers are warmer thgn darker colors. So perhaps is partly why some animals and: bi | in cold «places have white winter eMthes. Far northt-in the arctic re-, gions, where there is always snow and ice all the year round, most of, the animals are white, For instance, the polar bear and the arctic fox.—Chris- tian Science Monitor. GOVERNOR RETURNS Governor ‘Nestos. - returned last night from attending, the funeral. of j the late Senator A..J~Gronna at La- ota. For Sale. Choice Canary Singers. J. Bull, Dickinson, N. Dak. ber of visitors and the reports of cures THE BISMARCK TRIBU: THEY PITCHED PERFECT BALL ti) CURES WROUGHT BY PICTURE Virgin of Pompelt Credited by Devout Catholics in italy With Miracu- lous Powers, The Virgin of ‘Pompell,. to whose protection Pope edict asked to. be commended’ by Cardinal. Sill, is. the patron of a moderg ‘shrine which has become. one of’ the: most famoys in Italy. About 1875.‘Bartolo Longo, .4 wealthy Catholic layman ving in: the region of the -buried city of Pompell, near Naples, found:in’an ancient:,cas- tle, among a number. of other articles. of antique furniture,.a painting of the Madonna., The painting did not show its authorship, but its beauty attracted Longo, and he placed it on display in his home. An infirm, woman, visiting the house, knelt-before the picture and prayed for relief, and she at once de. clared that she. was cured of her: sick- ness. The news.,of. thig, cure: caused others to, seek ‘healing,.and after more cures were reported, Longo placed the pleture in a small chapel. The num. increased, and the picture 1s now. dis.’ played in, a large church in care ot. the Donjinican fathers, about two. miles: from the:Pompell excavations usually visited by tourists. Honor Betong: ‘ta’ Portuguese. Quiros, the Portugese navigator, fF. 1606, was the, *firstwhite ‘man-to see the rugged ‘outline: of the coast of the New. Hebrides, which ‘rises abruptly out of the deep’ sea «in ‘the® hurrican: zone of the tropics.:; Believing ‘he hac discovered. the: great! southern: contin ent which was at:that, time, the drein of navigators, Quiros may be com. pared’ to. Columbus,; whg/thought. hi had ‘found’ a: route, to: India .when ‘ht sighted the palm-fringed shores of the West Indies. a Hf, called his discovery Australl: del / Espiritu . Santo, Which’ has. beer shortened by. traders.‘to: Santo, anc is applied to the largest island of th group. Some of: the other large moun tainous and_partly volcanic islands are Ambrym, Annatam, Aurora, Api, Pen tecost, Eromanga, Mallicolo,.and Tan- na, the. home of. the “great. lighthouse of the southern isles,” Tanna: volcano. which. burst forth brilliantly every three or four minutes. How Could He Forget? Two men touring a remote part of Scotland ,put up for. night at the chief hostelry. At a loss for- any other entertainment to while away the évening, they asked their host if he hnd a billiard table. He had. After a long search a rusty-key: was found, and in a remote part of the building this unlocked a door which revealed a dust-covered table and a solitary cue. Several months: later one of the ‘guests ‘returned to the hotel and found that the landlord’s welcome was ‘some: what lacking in warmth. His attempt to, improve ‘thie ‘otcasion, by* recalling his earlier visit was received with this reprouchful remark; “Aye, mon I remember your game. o’ billlards, } only: found last week ye forgot to turn th’ Meht oot. ", y ‘ Ditticutties of Observing Venus. The’ ‘scientific onslauglit on the planet, Venus, to -try-to determine whether ‘there was life upon it, has teaulted in nothing of a.satisfactory nature, ‘There have been. many: inter. esting observations and some new the: ories, -but:no'conclusion as to the pres. ence of life. Aithongh it is the nearest planet to the earth, nearer at times’ than Mars, Venus has thoroughly. baf- fled investigation heretofore. because it is in darkness, being between the earth,and the sun, when it 1s nearest to the earth. Such markings:as char. acterife. Mars are lacking. This. is suppoged. to be due to an A ‘elope of cloud jeoering. evenly theypurface of Venus Bas ARES ' The. Great sym \-.Myles—Don’t you think we'd all be happier if there was no.money ip this world? Styles—Oh, -no; my wife would never -be satisfied or happy to play bridge just ..for beans.”—Yonkers Statedmgn. 2 | NG Se ASA > ee Each of the continents has one of rae ‘towns beating the name of ome. Dance every Tuesday, Thurs day. and Saturday evenings a 8:30 at The Coliseum, 10 Cents per dance. ° : ve THURSDAY, MAY 111, 1922 ee) eae eee? Report of the Condition of ' THE FARMERS STATE BANK »t Baldwin, in the State of North Da- gore at the close of business May 5th, 1922, RESOURCE! uoans and. discounts $ 99,168.77 Dverdratiy, | secured unsecured a. > 450.26 Warrants, stocks, tax certi- fieates; claims,’ ete, . 1,976.87 tanking-hotse, furniture and fixtures. .1..... 4,300.00 Dther real ‘estate 4,009.28 syrrent expenses, t over uniivided profits .... 4,439.17 cheeks and. other % cash items, ...+.. $ 2,564.30 sash “and.due from other banks... 834.28 10,398.58 $124,742.93 Total ‘apital. stock paid He A $ 15,000.00 urplus funds 2,500.98 individual — deposi subject to riieates 412, 444.32 tuaranty fund jle- 432.50 deposit o+ 60,878.52 > javings deposits ... 5,921.87 ‘ashier’s, - checks oustanding ... 182.15 79,859.36 pile parable . 27,383.57 | $124,749.93 TATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of’ Burleigh—ss, » J. 8. Fevold, Cashier of the above tamed bank, do solemnly swear that he ‘above statement. is true, to the Jest of my. knowledge and _ belief. J..8. FEVOLD, ~_. Cashier, Subscribed and sworn to before mé his Sth day of May, 1922, ELMER MYHRE, Notary Public. My Commission expires Feb, 21, 1926. | “orrect a ttent sm F, A, LAH - AE CHRISTIANSON, Directors,’ , 5-11 NOTICE OF MORTGAGE. SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT Notice is Hereby ~Given, That. that “ertain Mortgage, -executed and deliv- red by C. Loyd.Gosney and Ellen Gos- ey, his wife, Mortgagor@ to Drake- sallard: Company, a. corporation, mort- ‘agee, dated’ the 2ist day of Novem- er, A. D, 1916,-and filed for. record. in he’ office of the Register of Deeds of he County of Burleigh and State of ‘orth Dakota on the Ist day of De- ember, A. D, 1916, and recorded in took 143 of Mortgages, at, page 495. nd assigned by said Mortgdgee by’ an istrument in writing to Dubuque Sav- igs Bank, dated the 2rd day of Feb; uary, A, D. 1917, and filed ‘for record ' \ said office of ithe Register of Deeds on,the 14th day of March, 1917, and rec. rded in Book 118. of Miscel.’ on page 35, and assigned by said Dubuque tavings Bank to Charlotte F. Carter, iy an instrument in writing, dated the th day of Mareh, 1922, and filed* for ecord in the office of. the Register of deeds of said Burleigh County, N. Dak.. n the 9th day of March, 1922; and uly recorded in Book 178 of Assign- ientsat page 1, will be foreclosed y a sale of the premises in such mort- age and hereinafter described at the ront door of the Court’ House in the ‘ity of Bismarck, in the County of Surleigh and State of Nonth Dakota, at j he hour of two d'clock P.M, on the ‘4th day of June, 1922, to satisfy the umount due upon said Mortgage on the lay of sale. ‘The premises described in gaid Mort= sage and which will be sold to satisty he same are those centain premises situated in the County of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, and® described as follows, to-wit: | ‘The Northeast, Quarter of the South- west Quarter; the East Half .of che Northwest. Quarter; the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter; the south half of the Seutheast Quarter; the Southwest Quarter of the No east Quarter, of Section twenty-six (26), in Township one hundred thirty- seven (137), Range Seventy-five (74). ‘There will be due on such’ Mortgage | it the date of sale the sum of Thirty | Nine Hundred and Twenty: seven and 10-100 Dollars, ($3027, TE K CARTER, - ‘Assignee of Mortgagee. JAWRENCE, MURPHY. & NILLES. Attorneys, for Mortgage. Fargo, North Dakot Be11-18225—6-1-8-15 PAVILION MAY BE FINISHED Lakota, N.,D., May 11.—Comple- tion Of a pavilion, the floor of which has been. laid -for dancing . purposes, at Stump lake, is planned by the Nel- son County ‘ Old ‘Settlers association, if sufficient funds can’be raised, A farmers’ picnic is planned to be held on the grounds the latter part of ‘June and'a vay” 4th celebration’ will be held, CHILDREN IN SPRING TIME.. Mrs. C. Osborn, 7812 Hilisile Ra., Jleveland, O., writes: daughter ‘was’ troubled with a cough for nearly two years, She took Foley's Honey and Tar and her cough is now gone. It loosened the phlegm so she ld raise it. easily.” Foley’s Honcy Tar is just what children should ve for feverish colds, coughs “snuf- s” and tight, wheezing breathing. sure to get Foley’s. ‘It checks croup and whooping cough, too. SALESMEN WANTED — By Fargo branch ‘of, large manufacturing com- (pany., Rapid promotion assured the man that can qualify. Must ve hard iworker. Sales experience desired, > ‘but this fs not ‘essential. We show you how. See Mr, Haining at Grant Pacific hotel after 5 p. m. BlLt FOR RENT—Large pleasant room,|; suitable for man and wife, or two young ladies, 208 3rd, 513 FOR SALE—Dark blue baby cab, in excellent condition. 121 West Thayer. 5-t-lwk “My grand- A THRIFT WON’ HER HUSBAND id Telte'o? Reward That Came to French Girl ‘Through Her Cheese-Paring. / While. the expression ‘“cheese-par- ing” isa: recognized equivalent for thrift er economy in the management of household: affairs, it is apparent the saving effected by the paring of a cheege depends entirely upon the man- am ".If one’ removes the rind of the Shivers -carelessly, waste instead of economy results, According to a French legend, there was-a man who.was in love with three sisters:at the same time. He could not; make up(his: mind which of them he ought:to:marry. _ The ability to be a thrifty:housewife being the principal fully, and in order to make a test pre- sented. each of them with a large cheese, | Two of them removed’ the rind in sucha manner that a considerable Portion .of’'th® cheese was thrown away, but the youngest pared it with a very sharp knife, and did not waste a scrap. The man decided that she would make the best wife, and they were married, “HOSPITAL” FOR SICK FISHES Are Successfully Treated for Minor Ailments. At Kremnitz, in Hungaria, there ex- ists a.model aquarium, to which a hos- Pital for the fish-has been added. Some of the fish are t@ated in groups, while others, more‘affected, get their treat- Ment. in. individual vats. ' In: this’ way.was treated a salmon suffering “from gangrene, and also an unfortunate pike. of 18 pounds, on Whose’ fing enormous _ wens had been found, A gigantic bream has been freed of @ ‘goiter, the origin of which was at- tributed: to the bad quality of water in:which he had lived’ in his youth. The best operation performed: by the fish doctors ‘was unquestionably ‘that upon the air-bladder of a giddy tench, This is not an aspersion aimed at thig: terich, The proof. is that it had wanted to leap higher than it was able to ;and thus made. extreme efforts, damaged its: alr-bladder and incurred danger. of death. It needed only a cut with the bistoury to give this little Madcap back his health and good hu- jor.—New York ‘Tribune. Legacies Left to Cats. ‘About a century ago a Frenchman, Pierre: Grosley,: left '£24 a year to his two cats, to be paid as long as either lived; but he was a lawyer, and his will proved valid. Ten or 12 years ago: a poor. woman in Paris left : her property. for charity after her cat Bis, a beautiful young Maltese, had been maintained till the end of his -natural life. The amount was so small: thet: principal as. well as inter- est would have to be used, and there was some close calculation, based on the average Jength of feline life, be- fore the legacy was accepted. Had Bis possessed the traditional nine lives, it would assuredly have been de- curred an obligation, without receiv- years, but there was still something left. “Mousepower.” ; “We have horsepower, water power, ¢andlepower; so why not mousepow- er?” reasoned a thrifty Scot, and straightway put. his mice to work. He selected two promising young mice and set them up in business in a minia- ture tread mill, where they were to earn thelr board and keep by the, manufacture of sewing silk, For more than a year the mice kept their little factory going on.a day and night shift. ‘The ingenious thread mill was so con- structed that each mouse was enabled tp twist, twine and reel on an average of from 100 to threads a day. paid;a penny) a hank, consequentiy each: mouse: netted a saving of six shillings per annum for the owner of the tiny threadmill, * i | Regrow Lost Parts. Newts. and salamanders and the tad- poles of frogs and toads have, grea powers of regrowing parts that have} been bitten off, but, so far as known, | lizards are the ‘only backboned animals that show surrender of parts.; Among backboneless animals it often | occurs. “This peculiarity is found; among sea sidgs.and other molluscs: and in many kinds of worms. In the | Palolo worm, which burrows in the! Coral. reefs, nearly the whole of the! body is broken off at the breeding sea- | son, and it bursts in the water, liber- | while the: head; remains in the Tock : and makes a new. body. te Gtoves Once Unpopular. A hundred .years ago stoves and fireplaces, generally seemed..to be the thing that. gave decorators. of houses | the .greatest ‘concern. speaking of the house furnishings a hundred years ago, “was quite_in-| dispensable in a northern climate, but wherein’ the whole of antiquity was any reference to be found to a tiled stove? The universal altar had again to’ be called into service. At) Worlitz,| for instnce, the stove was, named: the altar of winter, or else) was converted into some kind of mon- | ument. Isabey hid the stove in his house in Paris under the figure of Minerva.” +MINOT PAVING WORK BEGUN Hanlin & Oakes, of Minneapolis was begun’ here Saturday. Aproximately | mothent We dissect the term that they clined, as ‘the. clty would have in-| ing any benefit. He died ‘advanced in| Women doing the game work were | in which the operation is conduct-|_ requisite ofa wife at that time, the! : man decided to watch the three care-| ' Where Members of the Finny Tribe| ; ating tens of thousands of germ cells, | “The stove,” says a German writer, | Minot .streete~probably will, be. fin- ighed_ by July.1, according to Day Okes, ‘superintendent. The contract price Pf tho! work is $3.78 a square yard,-said tp! be the cheapest iprice that has ever been paid for bitulithic work in the state. LEADS LEGION IN MICHIGAN ‘Paul Martin, Newspaper Man, State Commander, Son of Former Gov- ernor. of Kansas. eee Another newspaper man has risen high in Amergean Legion affairs—Paul A. Martin, com: mander of the Legion in Michi- gan and editor of a paper in Battle Creek. ‘Newspa- per men now rank next to lawyers and doctors in the ranks of those who hold posts of responsibility’ in the Legion, Martin comes of fighting stock. His father, the late ex-governor Johp ‘A. Martin of Kansas, commanded the Eighth Kansas regiment as colonef, in thé €ventful service seen by that putfit part of the army’ of the land. Martin also comes nat- by- his journalistic ability, the Rolonel having been a militant free- ‘Woll editor in the days of the slavery (Rontroversy. { Thus equipped by heredity, Martin fs carrying on in his territory. He has been in the thick of battle from the start, having organized the Legion post! at Battle Creek at the close of the war. In addition to being. a fighter} and an editor; Martin. is an. engineer.|, He served withthe Three Hundred and)... .Eourteenth engine through the ft Mihiel and. the,.-Argonne regions, the. Armistice finding him on the banks, gf the Meuse at Stenay,° the crossing “0 of which had been forced that night.’ BONDY, GOOD LEGION ‘KICKER’ New York Grievance “Officer Hae Settled Many Claims-With Veterans’ Buitau, The divine right to kick is a pre rogative of the American citizen. The U. S. soldier used to. kick when he didn’t Hke some thing—a tralt which distin- guished him from the stolid, satis- fied Prussian, and wiftth made him a good fighter. Joseph Bondy, as grievance offi- cer of the Ameri- ean Legion and war risk officer for Onondaga county, N. Y., hears thousands of kicks every year and passes them on with added zest to the proper authorities, He has set- tled “thousands and thousands” of claims with the veterans’ bureau and proved a great friend to every dough- .. boy ‘with an ax to have ground. Besides being a high kicker, Bondy | is a skilfull recruiter. New York has the largest Legion membership of any state in the Union—due in a measure to Bondy’s intensive efforts, He has assisted in the formation of 57 posts,- and has spoken upwards of 200 times In 142 different cities and towns in the state. ‘LEGION SEEKING LOST BOY Widowed Mother Calls on the -Or- ganization to Aid in Finding Her Young Son. The “lost and found” department of the American Legion usually has to work overtime. Every. year the Legion has hun- dreds of cally to orp «fone Tg0n,;"or to gpme wandering ynfor- tunate who}. through mental war = disability, |: has forgotten who) and what he is, ! A new kind bff appeal, from a widowed mother,-has resulted-in-a- cally: (0. every | state’, “adjutant|”’ throughout the¢duntry. to ald f the search for Walter H. Weyrauch, four-| teen years old, who disappear! from his home in New York city last Sep- tember. The boy weighs about 125 pounds, is 5 feet 4 Inches tall, and has sandy hair and blue eyes. Information as to his’ whereabouts should be com- | munticated to the headquarters of the } Legion at Indianapolis, Carrying On With the American Legion Applications for the Ohio state bonus were handled through posts of the American Legion. The posts aided needy soldiers in getting prompt pay- ments, wae Five ‘thousand acres of land in Herkimer county, N. Y., will be re- ' forested by the Afnerican Legion, as Minot, N. D.,.May 11.--Prelsiminary | ;work.on the paving contracts held. by | a living memorial to men who served dn the war. ese @ One ex-colonel is now a buck, Ed- / | mund: S. Sayer, formerly lieutenant colonel ,with the One Hundred and Tenth field artillery, has enlisted as a private in the marine corps. se © ty To help jobless ex-soldiers, a Legion post commander at Charleston, W. Va., took over the construction of eight apartments, the work to be done from start to finish by former service ~ Phone 683J. 10,353: square. yards of bitulithic pav-| men, Pease ling along designated portions of three!