The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 31, 1922, Page 7

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, 4 > ea - VALUES HELD DOWN DURING -RARLY SALES (By the Associated Press) Chicago, Oct, 31.—Scattered com- ion houze’ selling together with lack of demand proved sufficient to s*hold down values in the wheat mar- ket today during the early dealings. \ Apparent stoppage of export buying counted in particular as a bearish mi! TUESDAY, OCTOBER 81,1922. News of the Markets | balanced by the sharp pressure against Studebaker and domestic oil shares, Sales approximated 1,050,000 shares, DULUTH RECEIPTS > (By the Associated Press) Duluth, Minn., Oct. 31.—Elevator receipts domestic grain--wheat 176,- 300 bushels; corn 1,500; rye 65,400; flax 50,400, Shipments—wheat 263,- 400 bushels; rye 11,700; flax 3,299, {Elevator receipts bonded grain—- wheat 8,400 bushels; rye 1,500. Duluth car inspection: Wheat Nos. 1 and.2 dark northern and Nos. 1 and 2 northern 61; No. 3 dark nor- \thern and No. 3 northern 5; Nos. 1 and 2 amber durum and Nos. 1 and 2 durum 26; No, 3 amber durum and No, 3 durum 9; other durum 38; influence. The fact that the Liver-| mixed 61; smutty mixed 2; all wheat pool quotations displayed fo new upturn was also a subject of com- ment. uitial prices which ranged from % to ie lower with December | 4\to $1.1456 and May $1.12% to were followed by a slight rally $1.14} $1 Yand then a fresh decline. Expectance of enlarged recjlipts of corn acted as a weight both. on | corn and oats prices, After opening 4se to be off, December 6%e to 66 “ec, the corn market continued sag. : Oats started unchanged to %c low- er, December 41%c to 41%e and later descended a Tittle all around. Provisions had a downward drift in response to lower hog values. ain in-the southwest increased world stocks and a further decline “at Liverpool led to a matezial .se be clon lower, % to $1.14, and back later in priecs her was heavy Ye to 1%e with December $1.1 May $1:12% to $1.12%. Trade was of smell volu the market eas: influenced, close was weak, 5% to ie net lov with December 66%¢ to CG%4¢. eet ee eee i NEWS OF WALL STREET oo (By the Asscciated Press) v York, Oct. 31 larity st: up 1% the outstanding weak spots. Early gains ranging from 1 to 4 points were largely cancelled later when heavy selling of Studebaker, which dropped more than 2 points turned prices downward again just before noon. May Department Stores, however, had extended its gain to 10 points before acute weakness set in throughout the list. Weakness also cropped out ip a number of special i General American Tank Car declining 4% points, Call money issu opencd at 5 percent. Buying in the belief that technical conditions warranted a rally caused Yun -upturn in prices in the early afternoon. Weakness, however, per- sitsed in Studebaker and lower pri ed domestic oils which ultimate! caused some recessions from ti vels in the strong stocks. ding sentiment was considerably ed one division holding to the ere still too high | y undergo fur- ther readjustment while another group maintained that fundamental h 1 ym view that prices w and mist neces Some irregu- ted upward in, response risk demand for oil shares and a faitly good inquiry for steels,! ipments, coppers and standard | Short covering promped by the ance met at today’s opening was largely responsible for the d trend, Mexican Petroleum ad- 2% points, Standard. Oil of California 2, General Asphalt 1% and Standard Oil of New Jersey 1%. Uni- ted States Steel, common, moved up a point in anticipation of a favor- vble carning statement following to- day’s quarterly meeting of the board of directors, while Crucible pushed ‘and Gulf, States Steel %. May Department Stores climbed 6% points, Adams Express and Virginia- Carolina Chemical, preferred, were 202; flax 30; mixed grain 2; corn 5; oats 10; rye 89; barley 30. All grains 341; on track 313, WHEAT FIRM TO STRONG (By the Associated Press) Minneapolis, Oct. 31—Taken on the average the market today was firm to’ strong @nd offerings of wheat of desirable quality were mod- erate, Durum wheat offerings were moderate and in. good general de- mand at firm premiums. Montana winter wheat was scarce and in good demand. : Corn prices were easy and there was no snap to the demand. ~ Oats market a‘little slower in tone and prices barely steady com- pared with futures. Rye was slower but prices held about the same compared with fu- tures. Rarlev was quiet and featureless with offerings smaller and demand indifferent. Flax premiums were quoted the same and demand was good on th? average. Offerifigs fair. POTATOES FIRM (By the Associated Press) Chicago, Act. 31.—Potatoes firm on whites, weak on early Ohios; re- ceipts 139 cars; total U. S. ship; ments 1,296; Wisconsin sacked roun?. whites 8c @ 95c cwt.; bulk 80¢c @ 90c cwt.; Minnesota sacked round whites 85¢ @ 95¢ ewt.; Minnesota sacked Red River Ohios 90¢ @ 95¢ ewt.; bulk 80c @ 90c ewt.; North Dakota sacked Red River Ohios 90c @ 95c ewt.; South Dakota sacked early Ohios 70c @ 80c ewt. LIBERTY BONDS «(By the Associated Press) at 1p. m. 3%4’s . First 4%’s Second 4%’s Third 4%’s ... Fourth 4%’s .. 4%’s uncalled .... 4%’s called ...... New U. S, Treasury 4%4’s . 100.30 100.02 99.80 MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR (By the Associated Press) Minneapolis, Oct. 31.—Flour un- changed. Shipments 98,216 barrels. Bran $23.00 @ $24.00. DURUM EASIER. Duluth, Minn., Oct, 31.—Trading in spring futures was negligible and the durum market was moderately easier locally today. Up to the noon hour j declines ‘of 1-2 to 5-8 cents were staged in durum. Buyiness in wheat, and coarse grains was draggy throughout the session. The market was easy at the close. October wheat closed lc off at $1.06 nominally; November le off at $1.06 nominally; December 1c off at $1.08 nominally and May ‘c off at $1.10'2 conditions were all in favor of a/ nominally. October durum closed %c¢ rise and that the short interest had pushed its operations too far. The closing was weak. Prices on the whole list in the final hour slip- ping off rapidly in all directions. Operations of opposing speculative forces imparted a decidedly naples lar trend to prices in today’s maj most of the active shares again show- ing net losses on a renewal of heavy liquidation in final dealings. Specu- s for the advancé succeeded in s g rallies in a few special shares which apparently had been oversold, but these operations were of lato off at 98%c; November %c off at 97%e asked; December ‘4c off at 91e asked and May %c off at 91%c ask- ed. Spot rye closed %e off at 74%c; October 1%c off at 74%c asked; No- vember %c off at 74%c asked; De-| cember %c off af 715c asked and} May %c off at 75%c asked. Spot oats closed \ %e off at 36%¢ @ 37%e and barley unchanged at from 48 to Gic for spot. Flaxseed market was easier with’ the winding up of trades in the Oc-! tober future. The quotation in that THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE : PAGE SEVEN THE OLD HOME TOWN BY STANLEY MARSHAL OTEY WALKER APPEARED JUST JN TIME To CHASE A GANG OF HALLOWEEN HOoDLumMSs ‘ WHO WERE ALL SET To WHEEL AWAY THE TOWN JAIL Germany demand| good 170 to 200 $8.30 @ $8.40; good and choice 210 50 pound butchers $8.40 to $8.50 bulk packing sows $7.00 ; desirable pigs mostl. heavy weight 5 future broke 10%c at the start. At Winnipeg October from $2.45 down to $2.18. October flax closed 8 cents off at $2.52% bid; November unchanged at $2.49% asked; December unchanged at $2.39% and May ic up at $2.25 cables 39,06; demand 18.18; Sweden demand 26. Denmark demahd 20.15; Switzer demand 18.04; Spain demand 12.15; Greece demand 2.05; Poland demand 00%; Czecho-Slovakia demand 3.15; Argentine demand 36.00; Br: Montreal 1.00 5-32. ight light $8.15 @ packing sows closed $7.30 @ 165; packing sows rough $6.85 @ $7.40; killing pigs $8.40 @ 8.50. Cat- MINNEAPOLIS POTATOES (By the Associated Press) 31.—Potatoes very light wire inquiry; almost no demand; market weak; little change in prices, Sandland district carloads New York, Oct. 31.—Liberty bonds} f. 0. b. usual terms, Minneapolis-St. Paul rate sacked per cwt. - $100.53] graded white varieties 70¢ @ 98.40] mostly 70c. Red River V: 98.33] carloads f. 0. b, usual terms Moor- 98.72] head rate sacked per cwt., partiy 98.58 | graded Red River Ohios 65¢ @ 70¢. PRICE RANGE (By, the Associated Press) Minneapolis, Oct. 31—Range representative cash sales—wheat No. 1 dark northerh $1.20% @ $1.29%; No. 2 dark northern $1.13% @ $1.29 %; No. 3 dark northern $1.13%4 No. 1 dark hard winter $1.22% @ $1.25%%; No. 2 durum 93c CALL MONEY (By the Associated Press) New York, Oct. firmer; high 5%; low 5. Time loans firm; mixed 60-90 days 4% @ 5; four. 5; prime commercial paper 442 @ sales native beef ern grassers about p quality plain; early dull, tending lower; early top matured steers 13.00; quota of long feds comparatively scarce; bulk na- tive beef steers of quality and con- at $8.75 @ $11.7 LIBERTY BONDS (By the Associated Pre: New York, Oct. 31—Libe al calves steady to 25¢ es about steady; bulk bologna .00; bulk veal calves to packers carly around $10.00, Sheep opening very slow; native lambs weak early top $14.00 to heavy feeders bulls $3.75 @ eceipts 21,000 ew carly sale to shade low city butchers; tly feeders; fat western lambsy $13.75 to killers; feeder de- Fourth 4%4’$ 4%'s uncalled New Treasury 44s \ Pa OATS Dec. .... 33%» 38% 33% May ..., 35% 35% 35% RYE Dea. i 71 70% May 3 72% BARLEY Dec, ..., 52% 52% 51% FLAX Dee. 9 239% 238239 May 4 28444-28345 2841s CORN Dec. .... 60%B 59% BISMARCK GRAIN (Funished by Russell-Miller SCo.) Bismarck, Oct. 81, 1922. No, 1 dark northern No, 1 spring No, L amber durum . No, 1 mixed durum No, 1 red durum . No, 1 flax .. No. 2 flax No. 1 rye . NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT Notice is Hereby Given, That that certain Mortgage, executed and. de- livered by Joseph W. Bull and Hat- tie B, Bull, husband and wife, Mort- gagors, to Van Sant Company, a cor- poration, Mortgagee dated the 20th day of February, A, D. nineteen hun- dred and seventeen and filed for ree- ord in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, on the 26th day of February, A. D, A917, and orded in Book 98 of Mortgages, page 44 and assigned by said Mor gagee by an instrument in writing to A. G. Norris, of. Chicago, Illinois, dated the 20th day of March, A. i). 1917, and filed for record in said of- fice ‘of the Register of Deeds on th 17th day of August, 1922, and recor ed in Book 174 of Mise Mortgages, on page 123, will~be forclosed by a sale of the premises in such Mort- gage 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 Da- kota, at the hour of two o’clock p. m., on the 18th day of November, 1922, to satisfy the amount due up- on said Mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in said satisfy the same, are thoge certain and described 2s _ follows, to-wit: Range Seventy-eight (78). terms and conditions of said Mor gage by the failure of the Mortg: the principal note when due on signee herein having been compe ed to pay taxes the sum of $484.5 tect his interest herein, the full attorneys fees allowed by law. Dated October 9th, A. D. 1922. ! A. G. NORRIS, Assignee. FLYNN, TRAYNOR & TRAYNOR, @ 95%c; No. 1 mi: @ $1.08%; No. 1 mixed wheat $1.18 No. 2 mixed wheat barley sample grade 51%4c @ 59c; No. 2, 58e @ 59c; No. 3, 54c.@ 58c; No. 4, 54c. Corn | No. 1 yellow 70c; No. 1 mixed 66¢ @ white 35%%¢ @ 89 %e; No. 3 white 31%c @ 39%e. Rye No. 1, 72%¢ @ 76c; No. 2, 72%¢ @ T6c. Flax No. 1, $2.44 @ $2.49. id’ durum $7%c mand fairly good; little doing early; ‘ound steady. SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK (By the Associated Press) GRAIN RANGE (By the Associated Press) Chicago, Oct. 31.—- receipts 4,500; market quiet, killing classes mostly steady; comnton and medium fat grass beeves $8.25; top today $8.00; $6.50; few good and choice dry feds held higher; grass fat butcher she 00 @ $4.50; few be 67%c. Oats No. stock largely ter offerings on up to ners and cutters $2.25 @ $3.00; bo- logna bulls $3.60 @ $3.75; stockers | and feeders slow, ! $3.00 @ $7.50; bulk $4:00 @ $6.00.| Calves receipts 1,800; market 25¢ @ | 50c lower; bulk. of bi @ $8.25. Hogs receip' 25e lower; range $6.75 @ $7.25 @ $7.85; Sheep receipts 3,000; lambs to 25¢ higher; bulk around $13.25; bulk ewes $5.00 @ $6.51 several loads choice Montana feed ing lambs $13.00, WHEAT RECEIPTS (By the Associated Press) 31.—Wheat re- jceipts 347 cars compared with 381 Cash No. 1 northern ; December $1.08%: May $1.09%. Corn No. 3 yellow 65% @ 67%c. Oats No. 3 white 35%e @ 3856c. Barley 47¢ @ 60c. Rye No. 2, 712%c @ 75%. Flax No. 1, $2.45% @ $1.12% @ $1.18% 000; fully | July bulk gooal pigs $8.2 FOREIGN EXCHANGE (By the Associated Press) New York,, Oct, 31.—Foreign ex- change steady. Great Britain demand cables 4.45%£; on banks 4.43%; MINNEAPOLIS. RANGE (By the Associated Press) Minneapolis, Oct. 31.— High. Low. Close. AT * CHICAGO LIVESTOCK (By the Associated Press) B1—Hlogs receipts 39,000; weak, 25e to 40c¢ lower; bulé France demand s 7.00; Italy demand 4.11; Belgium demand 6.48 Attorneys for Assignee, Devils Lake, North Dakota. 10-10-17-24-31—11-7 NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT Notice is Hereby Given, That that certain Mortgage, executed and de- livered by Joseph W. Bull and Hat- tie B. Bull. husband and wife, Mo gagors, to Van Sant Company, a co poration, Mortgagee dated the 20:h day of February, A. D. nineteen hun- dred and seventeen and filed for rec- ord in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh} and State of North Dakota, on the 26th day of February, A. D. 1917, and ree- orded in Book 98 of Mortgages, at page 43 and assigned by said Mort- gagee by an instrument in writing to A. G. Norris, of Chicago, Illinois, ch, A. D. 1917, and filed for record in said of- fice ‘of the Register of Deeds on tht i7th day of August, 1922, and record- ed in Book 174 of Misc Mortgages, on page 124, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such Mort- gage 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 Da- dated the 20th day of Mi Kota, at the hour bf two o'clock p. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS i ee! | i AW, T AINT GOIN' T! SUNDAY Scicol AGAIN, THATS WHAT. "RECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS» LOSE A FIFTY CENT / walt, "LL PIECE , TODAY ? Danny Is Keeping Books YES, | GUESS 1 DID LOSE .QNE= YOu FIND. ONE, Younle MAN ? ough Question SANTA CLAUS \S A 00D MAN, AINT HE, MOM ? \NUY, OF COURSE, WELL, How) IS IT THAT T NEVER SEE HIM IN SUNDAY ScHooL. ?? Lost ToDAY- Yours » MAKES | NINETEEN f BY BLOSSER ' d | WANTED— farm, marriéd or single. Steady ail| FORSALE D. year, W, F. Reynolds, Lark, 10. House—4 rooms and hath, east xperienced bookkeeper. front, close in. $2300.00. $700.00 Address Box 325 or apply Stacy} §CS4. Balance monthly, Fruit Co. House—8 rooms, east part of 10-31-tf| # city ,east front, 75 foot lot, good F- WANTED—Corn pickers, For fur-| Shade trees. $2600.00. $800.00 ther information, call at Richhold| J C28" Balance monthly or to Mortgage and which will be sold to premises situated in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, The Northeast Quarter (NE), North Half of Northwest Quarter (N%NW%), and South Half of Southwest Quarter (S%SW%) of Section Fifteen (15), in Township One Hundred Thirty-eight (138) of Default having been made in the gors to pay the interest coupons for $192.50 each due on March Ist, A. D. 1921 and 1922 respectively, and also March Ist, A. D. 1922, and the as- on said premises in in order to pro- amount of said mortgage is there- fore due and payable, and there wiil be due on said Mortgage on the day of sale the sum of $4673.67 besides thé costs and expenses of sate and |gors to pay the interest coupons, for BY ALLMAN; (M JUST FINDING OUT HOW MANY HAVE BEEN |and expenses of sale and attorneys (om 'TO EXCAVATE 10-28-1wk | Already Dr. Edmund Hatt, inspector of the Danish national museum, and | West Indian is! and Holland w ‘tribe in question emigrated from| Yoad Co. for $9 per acre. Geo. South America, but was wiped out of ‘existence by the Spanish conquerors | MISCELL during the two generations th: lowed the discovery of Amer: Chile, more than 100,000 square | miles along the coast were raised /;— | permanently from three to four feet. | "SBMA) | phone department recently i telephona; for 850 people who had made application for them in 1907. with the lighted ends in their] Phone 364-J. 10-31-3¢ mouths and their tongues adroitly tucked out of | | i stroys house flies in considerable numbers, ae store, 223 7th S .98.a¢ | g suit. s -atore, 223 ‘7th St, 40-2870 F.E. YOUNG WANTED- Delivery man. 5. A. Phone 78 _ Browne 10-81-8t 1st National Bank Building. MELP_WANTED—FEMALE ane BRIGHT girls wanted—Stenograph-|______ BUSINESS CHANCES __ er's, Typists, Telephone Operators,] TAILOR SHOP FOR SALE—On ete. For work in offices, shops or] count of sickness. Located in factories. Full or part time, pleas-| division point of N. P. Railway, ant, profitable work for bright in-] county seat. Population of 7,00. dustrious girls. Several openings} Fully equipped. A good place for girls now employed. No can- for practical Tailorand Cleaner. vassing. Address Tribune 481. Will sell for invoice. Write Tribune 482. $2) AY paid one each town to distribute free cir- culars for Economy Non-Aleoholie Flavoring. Permanent position. F.} If you suffer from “RHEU E. Barr Co., Chicago. TISM,” CONSTIPATION, INDIGI 10-3i-1t| TION, ECZEMA, BRONCHITIS, EARN §20 weekly, spare tine, at} BOILS, or your nerves are affecte! home, addressing, mailing, music,] in any way; or you desire to have a circulars, Send 10¢ for music, in-] fine clear, healthy complexion, we formation, ete. American Music] Want you to try a package of our Co., 1658 Broadway, N. Y. MARVELOUS REMEDY, YEASTO- 10-30-31—11- 4) LAX. Among its various elements ‘WANTED—xperienced stenograph- | YEASTOLAX contains the highest and er. Apply Bismarck Hide & Fur] Most potent VITAMINES, which the Co. Corner of Front and 8th St.{ Scientific world has found to be ab- 10-28-3t| solutely necessary to bodily vigor. WAN) Girl for general house-} People all over the country have work. Good wages, Mrs. W. B,|found great relief through its use, Lahr, Phone 657. 10-28-5t and | Row, feel the joy of perfect Win talon ick seh SSl SE aie yg | hewlth anc i YEASTOLAX ay se et Grace Du | also has the properties of being nen- Deere BRGae Tae: toast | stipingly and mildly laxative, yee ours. eS its action is sure, WANTED—Girl for general house: In order to quickly introduce work, Mrs. Harry Woodmansie, YEASTOLAX into every community Fourth ‘street. 10-28-3] we will give for a limited time to i cet Ae ate a any person who will mail $1.00 to enous! > PORT... ____. |eover Wescost of a liberal sized packs LOST—Purse ind ‘check book con: | ogc, taining diamond ring and smal" apgonureLy FR watch, Reward will be given for a woe 08 RUBLE return same to Tribune office 10- The Russian Ruble reeently was worth 55¢ per ruble, giving th ee t FOR SAZ2 OR RENT a value of $27,500.00. HOUSES AND FLATS. Save this money; many a gr fortune has ‘been built‘up by bu FOR SALE—We have a number of nice modern houses and bungalows price from $3,200 to $9,000. Some are new. Terms from up.| Also partly modern houses, $1,000 and up. Don’t buy a heme unti! you have looked over our houses. We never over charge. J. H. Holi- han, 314 Broadway. Phone 745. 2 foreign money after The Chi- cago Tribune on September 12th calls attention to the new canal which has just been opened for shipping be- tween Russian, Germany and Central Asia, affording a new source of raw materials for the Russo-German com- bine, especially oil, maganese and cop- per and opening up the rich Persian and Centra Asian trade to German: D and Russia. Think what this means; ment of three rooms and kitch-] surely you cannot afford to pass up enette, partly furnished for light} the opportunity to acquire these Ru- housekeeping, couple only. In-| ples, ¢ __ quire 795 6th St, 10-30-2t) Send in your name and addr FOR SALE—Block of 24 lo:s with] gether with a dollar remi ce, to- small house and good well, fenced,| day; the package of YEASTOLAX black soil. Cheap at $1,650. Terms.] and 50,000 Rubles will be delivered J. H. Holihan, 314 Broadway. Phone| to you at once. 3, to- 745, Lo- YEASTOLAX CO, FOR RENT—Five room house. Phone | 202 S. Clark St. Dept. 26. Chicago 658W. 108 Thayer St. seo WORK WANTED __ PHONE 398 to get your storm win- BOARD AND ROOM dows put on or repaired. Guaran- WANTED—Table boarders, also gar-| teed first class work. ~ age for rent. 620 6th St. Mrs, Ada} __ 10-30-5t Rohrer. 10-31-3t| HOUSEHOLD work and ‘cleaning wanted by the hour. Call 820 4th m., on the 18th day of November,|_Strect. Phone 6275. _ 1922, to satisfy the amount due up-| WANTED—Work in evenings on said Mortgage on the day of salc.} for children, Call after 5 p. ™. The premises described in said Phone 638-R, Mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the admit, ae sthose certain ROOMS FOR RENT. remises situated in the County of] ion RENT ONiccly fumiched lanee Burleigh, and State of North Dakota,| OR RENT—Nieely furnished Tange and described as follows, to-wit:| modern front room, suitable for Phe East Half (E%) of Section] two or more. Call at 309 8th St. Twenty-eight (28) in Township One] or phone 236W. Hundred Forty (140) of Range Sev-| FOR RENT—By Nov. Ist large n ent nine Wing heen made in the} TB, front room with kitchene terms and conditions of said Mort-| 0% first floor. Call at 217, Ht gage by the failure of the Mort oF Tene eee $220.00 each due on March Ist, A. D.| modern front room, suitable 1921, and 1922 respectively, and also} two or more. Call at 309 8th the principal note for $4000.00 due] gy Phone 236. 10-2 March Ist, A. D. 1922, and the as-|— ene signee herein having been compelled|*OR RENT—Partly furnished or un- to pay taxes on said premises in the} furnished rooms, also apartment, sum of $204.01, the full amount of| Bismarck Business College, Phone said mortgage js therefore due and| _ 185. 10-3tf payable, and there will be due onl—pop-RENTo Three yooms pa said mortgage on the day of sale the LS HL et esi 2 cost D C sum of $5078.11, besides the costs 512 15th Street or phone 570W. “fees allowed by law. = 10-31-3¢ Dated October 9th, A. D, 1922. | FOR RENT—One large modern room A. G. NORRIS, with private family. 602 3rd St. Assignee, ine aA FLYNN, TRAYNOR & TRAYNOR, Phone 415i Attorneys for Assignee, See ees mois. ZI Devils Lake, North Dakota, FOR RE! e furnis room 10-10-13-24-31—11-7-14] suitable for one or two. Call at_ 402 5th St. Phone 836J. | FOR RENT —Room in modern home IN WEST INDIES) suitabie tor two girls; close in, 402 ard. 10-28-3t Copenhagen, Oct. 2*.—The remains | FOR RENT—Two rooms, all modern, ‘ain Indian tribes of the West} 506 2nd St. Phone 790-X. Indies, who became extinct 10-31-1w enone socks et FOR RENT—Room suitable for man, stud # muon downtown, 4th street. 10-31-3t FOR RENT—Two large front modern room, 52202nd St, : Professor I. P. B. de Josselin de Jong, of Holland, are on their way FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, 203 ito Saint Thomas, Virgin Islands, to Thayer, | embark upon the work of digging for | records of the habits and doings of LAND this inexistent race, FOR SALE—Section of land, -partly The Virgin Islands and some of the| cultivated, comparatively rR nds of Great Britain] R., not rough, in North Dako 1 be visited. The; Subject to Reservations of Ra Register. 10-24-1w EOUS. FOR SALE—A good short order restaurant in’a good location, do- ing $1500 business per mont! Reason for selling, can’t get help. M. E. Ruddy, Killdeer, N. Dak. _ —10-30iw FOR SALE—AIl wool tailor maae The Japanese vovernment tele-} Suits and overcoats, at lowest illed| Prices. See A. V. Papacek, tailor, 3rd St., Bismarck, Bank Bldg. 10-2: fol- By seismic movements in 1922 1] Kaffirs habitually smoke cigars} fré:h milk cows, Herman Od FOR SALE CHEAP—Practically new big game rifle, W. E, Lahr. 10-31-3t FOR SALE—Coal box in good-shape, Herman Ode. Phone 364-J. m’S v The common house centipede de-

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