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MINOT TAKES ANOTHER HARD FOUGHT GAME Nose Out Lo 7 to 6, in Hotly Contested Battle at | Local Park CROWD RIDE UMPIRE The Magicians and the Capitals | ) hours and twenty min the local ball park last night, | ind at the end of the nine innings Minot stood on tne long end of the | core, 7 to 6, Players on both teams | ere crabbing on the umpire, the! crowd was hot on Safro’s trail, the Minot base runners were tired out from stealing bi and « lot of fans nearly had heart failure at the | finish, With three men on and two | out in the la t of the ninth Bismarck didwt get the run needed to tie the | , a hard tusse] throughout. Indian Joe Day walked blithely out to the pitcher's box. Minot then be- gan just ag blithely to hit him and Joe walked a couple. He was pulled at the end of the third inning | AL B ame into the box. out and He held Minot in check throughout, | rnier and had the Minot base runners not stolen about everythi would have pulled th th by his pitching and hitting. f The crowd rged the loss to Um- pire Labe Safro, They rode him heartily and declared his close de cisions robbed Bismarck of some run At the finish Hester of Minot erabbed on a decision on first base, yelling at Safro that “you let the wolves get your goat.” It was a touzh day for Lube, for the fans rode him on his decisions from st to finish, both on ball nd in the He also and ation club. His pegging was nd Minot base runners. stole They literally stele the Bamber's regular posi- tion is ortstop, Me hails from Chicago Minot started as if to slaughter. Spranger spanked out a single, but t deuble play, Shanley to Nord Re r cut two down, Coleman got a hit and Walters smashed one to center which Zart misjudged and Coleman scored and Walters pulled up on third. Walters scored on a eq ball, Bismarck also scored in the first. ndall opened with a hit but attempted sacrifice put nd-and let him on ngled and Bernier did the oring Bamber, Minot scored two more in the sec- ond. i walked anq stole, Wor- ner and Liefer flied out but Sp ver hit for two bas seoring Hes- and Gunther singled, ger. Bismarck drew next blood in the third. Randall and Bamber flied out but Shanley producey a bingle. Ber- nier walked. Reider singled and seored Shanley, Bernter reaching third. Throckmorton ran for Reider. On a double steal, Bernier scored. Bismarck scored two in the sixth. Reider walked ang Zart forced | Throckmorton, running for him. Nord sacr but on the throw to second both were safe. Condon dumped one in the infieid and a try for third failed the bases were loaded. | Throckmorton and Zart were thrown | out at the plate, but Randall pro- duced a hit which Walters» presuma- bly, lost in the sun, and Nord and | Condon scored. Minot scored two more in the sev- enth. Gunther flied out. Coleman beat out a slow one which Nord didn’t handle. He stole second ana third, and scored on McKnight’s sin- gle. Bamber threw wild at secona to trap Walters and he scored. Bismarck evened the same inning | on Bernier’s three-bagger ang a wild pitch. Minot put the winning run in the eighth, Worner walked and Denison ran for him. Liefer went out to first. Spranger forced Denison. Spranger stole and Gunther dropped a fly near the left-field foul line for bases, scoring Spranger. Johnny Reider, Bismarck center- fielder, who was injured at James- town, was back in the game. He was limping but replaced Felix Fly, a worse cripple, on first. Reider made one sensational catch of a short bunt fly, rolling over ‘after he got it, han- died himself well on first and made two hits, Nord continued his fine work on shortstop. He held nine chances, He bobbled one but on a bad chance, and Goleman had the slow rolling ball beaten anyway. Al Bernier continues to be Bis- marcks’ demon slugger. He pre- duced two hard hits last evening, one a three-bagger, and walked twice in five trips to the plate. He also pitch- ed well. _ Oliver hurt an ankle in left field. A doctor was called but he resumed fi jot F [REDS’ SPURT FEATURES “NAT” RACE ) a v p> wee BY BILLY EVANS. Not many managers have been able to rebuild a pennant machine thac has collapsed during the short period of four years. ‘The Detroit Tigers have never been + to return since their triumphant s of 1907-1908-1909. he Chicago White Sox have drop- ped back since the scandal] that strip- ped them of Joe Jackson, Eddie Ci- cotte, Claude Williams, Chie Gandil, le Risberg, Buck Weaver, Happy Felsch and Fred MeMullin. The Pittsburg Pirates have, won but one pennant since 1903, The Cubs have won only one since the days ank Chance’s great machine. And so it goes up to the present hour with Patrick Moran whipping the Cincinnati- Reds back on the pen- | want-winning track, Moran put over two master strokes, iving the Philadelphia Nationals and the Cincinnati Reds their first pen- nant. Like other managers he saw his 1919 Reds fade and disappear. While the Giants have not been beaten as yet, the Reds have been ted as the most dangerous opponent in the flock of opponents trailing MeGraw’s champions, along with the Pittsburg team, They're Sure Going. The spurt of the Reds really is the feature of the National League race. During the closing days of May the anvil corus in Cincinnati shouted for Mora scalp. His previous suc- cess had been forgotten entirely. Returning home from the first eastern journey, the Reds were, in seventh place—just a few steps in front of the mi: Phillies, Apparent- ly the Reds were bound for the cellar Booster Da; The box score: Minot. ABRH PAK Spranger, ss 2 21 ag} Gunther, 2b 032560 Coleman, rf. 2 00 2 10 d 0 uv Oliver, If ... 0 0 Denison, rf 0 0) Hester, 1b .... 1 0 Worner, ¢ . 0 i} Liefer, p 0 0 Totals ........ 2 Bismarck, ABRU PAE Randall, rf 2000 Bamber, ¢ D3 258 Shanley, 2b Oe 0) Bernier, If-p . AA a Bw Reider, 1b . 0215 0 0 Throckmorton 0.0'- O-) @ Zart, cf 0 1.0.02 Nord, ss 113,60 Condon, 3b 1 1 2°83 @: Day, p-lf . 001 0 oj Totals .x...... -.87 6112717 1 *Throckmorton ran 6th and 9th innings, Score by innings: for Reider ip Minot -220 000 210-7 10 2 Bismarck .102 002 100—6 11 1 Summary: Stolen bases—Spranger, Gunther, Coleman (4), Hester, Me- Night, Bernier, Condon. Sacrifice hits—Nord. Two-base hits—Spran- ger, Gunther. Three-base hits—Wal- ters Bernier. Double plays—Shanley to Nord to Reider; Gunther to Hes- ter; Gunther to Worner. Base on ball#-Off Day, 2; off Bernier; 2; off Liefer, 5. Struck out—By Day 2; by} Bernier, 1; by Liefer, 3. Hit by | pitcher—By Bernier, McNight. Hits! —Off Day, 5 in 3 innings; off Ber- nier, 6 in six innings. Time, Umpire—Safro. CRIQUI MAY FIND J. DUNDEE WORTHY FOE FOR TITLE By NEA Service New York, July 7—Johnny Kil- bane held the featherweight title for for ‘11° wecks. Criqui is there are many ‘who doubt if thy Frenchman will be able to win over play. Later he went out, Coleman went to left and Denison went to ee +The, teams play at 6:15;tonight, 3 pablus ot od the/Scotch wop. Criqui’s record is far from sensa- |fore July ‘Yankees Make ‘Showing Of Cincinnati Silences Knockers Of Manager Moran * fre 1923 REDS WERE HEADED STRAIGHT FOR THE CELLAR og tHe SPURT OF THE REDS SE FEAURE OF Sue NATIONAL LEAGUE HARMONY ISTHE KEY NOIe “TO THEIR Success and it was freely predicted that be- 4 arrived Jacob Daubert ed to the managerial would be e seat. Moran attended to his own knit- never saying a word, The first thing the critics knew the Reds were on a winning streak. Lap by lap was covered, The Keds were sixth. They were fifth. ‘They were in the first division and finally admitted to the field as a pennant possibility. During a period of-three weeks the Reds hud reduced the handicap be- tin tween themselves and the Giants from 13 full games to four full games. No Outstanding Stars, There is nothing particularly spec- tacular or sensational about the Reds, just a collection of athletes playing together, featuring with team play, harmony and _ intelligent baseball. Which after all succeeds more than home-run kings. Only Jake Daubert, Eddie Roush, Patrick Duncan, Ivey Wingo and Adolfo Luque’ remain from the 1919 champions, Sammy Bohne has succeeded Mor- ris Rath, Caveney sits in at short instead of Larry Kopf, Babe Pinelli is wearing Heine Groh’s shoes, Har- grave has succeeded Catcher Bill Rariden, Burns is in right in place of ireasy Neale, while: Pete Donghue, Rube Benton, Eppa Kixey, Frank Keck and Johnny Couch pitch in- stead of Hod Eller, Ray Fisher, jHarry Sallee, Jimmy Ring and Wal- ter Ruether. Having gained nine full games in three weeks the Reds feel that they can make up the necessary distance to the top between now and October, scoring | ———— ee, |p. m. Sunday and 6:15 Monday night, trouble outboxing Criqui, but lacked vitality. A dozen American feather- weights could have flopped Kilbane as easly as did Criqui. The dope shows that Criqui has lost the decision in a number of bouts that he has engaged in and twice has been\ stopped. Tommy Noble, who never rated very high, and the light hitting Pal Moore turned the trick in 1914. Criqui’s best fighting has been done in the last year and a’ half when he has won ‘practically every bout via the knockout route, which was topped off by his K. 0. of Johnnny Kilbane, giying him the world’s featherweight title, ONLY 3 BIG TEAMS PLAY it | Nine Straight by Beating Browns Chicago, July 7.—Rain all over the country yesterday permitted only three games in the big leagues. Of these the heaviest in the. way. of ac- tion tock place. in St. Louis, where the New York Yankees opened their western invasion by trimming the Browns, 6 to 2, thereby making nine victories in a row and putting them- selves 12 1-2 games ahead of the Philadelphia Athletics who listened to the pitter-patter of the rain in Detroit. Cleveland, on ‘the home grounds, defeated Hoston, 6.to 3. This victory ‘placed the Indians in a tie for second place with Philadelphia. In Philadelphia the Phillies beat 2:20.) the Pirates 5 to 2. JAMESTOWN IS AGAIN VICTOR * Jamestown, N, D., July 7.—James- 11 years. Fight critics are wonder-| town defeated the New Rockford-| to the under: ing if Eugene Criqui will retain it] Carrington team of fhe North Dakota scheduled ; state league ye: to meet Johnny Dundee shortly, and, 8 to 2. y terday at Carrington, CARSON WINS IK: GAMES, Carson shutout the Cannon Ball tional, His victory over Kilbane was| Indians at their celebration July 3, far from impressive. Ki: dow of he former’ self, 8 she-| 18-0. had no] Carson allo Necomer on the. mound for d only two hits. y FHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BOOSTER DAY TEAMS OUT TO I F. E. SELL TICKETS: Attorney toc Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 4 (7-7) Want to Dispose of 1,500 to 2,000 Tickets for the Base- ball Booster Day The Baseball Booster Day teams went out. today. A 10 o'clock this morning a score | of business men met at the Associa- tion of Commerce offices, received their booster tickets and started out to sel] them for the game Monday night at 6:15 with Minot. ‘Tickets ure sold at $1 each, The boosters planned to sel} 1,500 to 2,000 tickets to put the team in fine shape. ‘A gala day is planned for Monday night. The Bismarck atid Minot teunly are now in an exciting series. An overflow crowd is expected Mon- day. “Buck” Taylor, favorite of two years ago, may pitch’the game if he rounds into fine form. The Minot line-up was changed somewhat at the start, but Spranger, shortstgp, is back in the game. Reid- er was back for Bismarck last night, Chief Fly's injured 4eg is improving und Dougan or Roy Seibert probably will catch Monday. ‘ ‘MANDANIS - OFFERED BALL Necide Not to Take Franchise in North Dakota League A conference of North Dakota state league officials with representative: of Mandan civic and commercial bodies was held at noon today t offer Mandan the New Rockford- Carrington franchise in the state} league. Mandan men, however, indicated that they would not attempt to take over the team, indicating that they considered their home players league satisfactory for Mandan, and financ- ing of a league team might prove too heavy for them. f STANDINGS | a oe__——- N. D. STATE LEAGUE W. L. Pet.! Minot 23° 9 .718 Jamestown 17 14 548 Bismarck- 13 20 893 UP ARL New Rock. .10 22 312 I AMERICAN LEAGUE . oN W. L. Pet! Chicago, July 7—Possibility of New York 48 22 .686/plack rust damage gave something Philadelphia, 35 34 .607/ of an advantage to the bull side of Cleveland 36 35 .6O%\¢he wheat market today during the Chicago 32 82 4506}early dealings. Besides hedging St. Louis 33 37 47%] sales of new wheat were light and Detroit. 82 87 .464| Liverpool quotations were higher. Washington 30 39 .436) Buying, however, lacked volume Boston .... 27 38 .416{and a forecast of cooler weather Northwest helped more or less to NATIONAL LEAGUE allay black rust fears. The open- WwW. OL. Pet He Vai marie al ee |teures to % cehts higher wi Nee. ore 38 25 om) September $1.03% to $1.03% and Cincinnati 30 28 617 Pecomber $1.06%4 was followed by Brooklyn 36: S40 eal eae ee ere) Siam end thena Chicago 37 36 .50%/ Subsequently the market rose St. Louis 34 $8 472) higher than before influenced to Boston 22 46 .824) some extent by gossip that farmers Philadelph 21 650 .296/ were slow to sell. The close was un- —_—_— settled at a shade to 3-4 cents net AMERICAN ASSOCIATION advance, September $1.03% to $1.03% W. L. Pct.| and December $1,06% to $1.06%. St. Paul ......... 46 25 .648 ———— Kansas City . 43 24 642 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Louisville . 84 .528| Chicago, July 7.—Hog receipts Columbus 84 .514] 21,000. Mostly 10 to 25 cents low- Milwaukee 33 37 .471/¢F. Top $8.06 early. * tadiacap sls 32 39 .461| Caltle receipts, Compared with Minneapolis + 29 41 .414/4@ Week ago most killing classes Toledo .... 25 45 .357| unevenly 25 to 76 cents higher. eee Lg ! RESULTS | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Minneapolis 11; Toledo 8. Kansas City 15; Indianapolis 6. Milwaukee 10; Louisville 3. Columbus 12; St. Paul 10. NATIONAL LEAGUE Philadelphia 5; Pittsburgh 2. Others postponed, rain. AMERICAN LEAGUE New York 6; St. Louis 2. Cleveland 5; Boston 3. Others postponed, rain. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate of John L. Hubert, Deceased: Notice ig hereby given by the un- dersigned Mary Hubert, Executrix of the Last Will of John L. Hubert, late of the City of Bismarck in the|’ County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, deceased, to the cred- itors of, and’ all persons having claims against, said deceased, to ex- ibit them with the necessary vouch- » within four months, after the ublication of this notice, to aid Executrix at the office o! Hyland, in the City of Bismarck 1n said Burleigh County. i ‘Dated June 28rd A. D 1023. Mary Hubert, Executrix. First publication on the 23rd day of June A.‘D. 1923. 2 (Gr28-80 7-7-14) 2 ee NOTICE Notice is hereby given. that, where- 85 defaylt has heen made in the con- ditions ‘of that chattel mortgage ex- ecuted by Louie Clooten to Georse Penkorn mortgagee dated Nov. 20, 1922, by reason of the failure of said mortgagor to pay the debt secured thereby and whereas there is now due and ufipsid on said indebtedness ned the sum of $56.65. Now Therefore the property des- ortbed in’ said emortgage to-wit: One Dodge Brother 5 Passen; Model, Car No. 27073 suant to the met mortgage contain 7) highest db the 16th day of jock in Burleigh County,, the city of fe sold pur- of sale {a such . at public aal "108 at 10 or nly a o- the forenoon of said day at fpurt house in jorth Dakota in Bismarck to satisfy the J. A.D! OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE |? SALE er ‘car, 1916; fe, |. No. 1 amber durum debt secured by said nfoftgage and ithe costs and expenses of these fore- Jelosure proceedings. * Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota this 6th day of July 1923, George Pepkorn, Mort- gagee, By E, M. Kafer,| Agent. McCurdy, [_ MANDAN NEWS | Mr, and Mpa, Hf.’ G! Taylor, Whowent to ols Angeles, Calif., about three weeks ago to meet their daughter, Miss Mae, returned Thursday evening ompanied by their daughter who in Los A has been attending school, Angeles. Mrs. J. P, Hess and daughters, Bathilda and Josephine, left today for Detroit, Minn., where they will spend about a month at Pettibone Lodge. Mr. Hess will join them at the lukes later. Mr. and Mrs, Cleve Kennelly and twin daughters left yesterday by au- tomobile for Stevens Point, Wis., where they will spend several weeks with relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Peters and chil- dren of Flasher, who have been suests of the former’s parents, Mr. und Mrs, L. C, Peters, returned ta their home yesterday. Mr. and Mrs, E, R. Loomis left terday by automobile for Olive ark, Ia., where they will visit with Mr. Loomis’ parents. Mrs. eoL Shay and daughter, Mary, of Malone, N, Y,, arrived in the city Thursday evening for a visit at the J. H. McGillic home. Mrs. Shay is a daughter of Mr. MeGillic. i | I. C, Mushik of Mandan, is under treatment in a Bismarck hospital for pleurisy and complications. The Cannon Ball Indians were de- feated 18 to 0, by the Carson team at the Indian celebrations Tuesday, and Carson defeated the state peni- tentiary team, 5 to 3, the Fourth, Willis Hazelton, former resident jof Mandan, declared that he found \a big change in the city upon his re- turn after fifteen years of absence. | MARKET NEWS Extreme top matured steers $11.50. Veal calves $1.00 to $1.25 higier. Stockers and feeders firm. Veal calves prices $10.00 to $11.00, Sheep receipts 11,000. Native offerings unevenly lower. Com- | People’s Forum Beulah, N. D., July Editor Tribune: When the human race was in its infancy, way back in the dawn of time each man acted alone and for himself only, except possibly for his immediate family, but through un- equal struggles, hardships sad experi- ence, he gradually learned the value of the strength of numbers. For reasons of better sclf defense or desire for conquest he joined forces with others who had similar aims and general desires. Other groups formed and there were clashes, these many small groups soon formed larger groups for still better pro- tection or for more strength in ag- gression, gradually leading to King- doms and other forms of Empires, and Nations. We find this paralleled in the field of industry in the way of combin- ations of Labor and of Capitol. We find combinations of laborers known as Guilds in ancient history, about the same as our Unions of today, but the Unions as we know them are of rather late origin. In the early part of the nineteenth century there were not many large manufacturing or other industrial establishments, the tools used were mostly simple and inexpensive, most of the work was so called hand work, most any- one could procure the togls and start work for himself, there re many owners and a correspondingly few employees, the employer or owner, if he did employ any help, had but one or two men and he worked side by side with them, he knew from actual experience their wants and needs, what they had to contend with their aspirations and their fears, he was in fact one with the laborers, under these conditions Unions were not needed and not thought of. When labor saving machinery be- gan to be introduced into the field of industry men with capital were the only ones who could procure it. Capital, in the hands of these men whom we may call capitalists in their small way, began to combine for better advantage, to secure cheaper output, to override compe- tition, to obtain many of the ad- vantages a large business may se- eure. This grew until immense for- tunes were wrapped up in an in- dustry under men known as Directors, or some other board of superintendents. As hundreds of these larger establish- meiits sprang up thousands of the little owners were crowded out and became wage earners, working for the big concerns. As this disparity between the Owners and the wage earners increased, as there became less and less owners and thousands more servants the Employers knew less and less of the actual needs and conditions, hopes and despairs of their men, The new type of Owner is an office man, or perhaps not even that, at any rate he is not one of the manual laborers. In “ye olde tyme” the workman could put his grievance directly before his er ployer in person and was talking to a man who realized what was said, and as this one man, or possibly six or a dozen others, was all the help the Owner had he naturally listen- ed closet and considered carefully, because it was a big thing, some- times ‘a vital thing to lose this one servant. Now conditions are entirely differ- ent, one man, or a mere handful, sits at the managing end of the es- tablishment, thousands obey orders at the labor end, the complaint of one or a dozen, the quitting of one or a dozen would make practically no difference, one is too small a unit to notice, a dozen can be re- i eee) 5 the management ofj dealing with the working man on one or perhaps a small group of] somewhat equal terms. placed without disturbing the daily| routine. The only self protection the labor- cr has is to combine, as capitat’ has combined, then he can delegate one man to reprosent the thousand work- ers as capital has one man repre- senting thousands of dollars. This worker can approach the office man on somewhat equal terms, he can say “You represent the numerous, or the wealthy owner, I represent the entire bunch of workers, let us reason together”. The — dissatists tion or quitting of this thousand workers is a matter of moment, @ grave concern, and this representa- tive gets a hearing. There are large establishment wherein the Owner or Manager willing to do the right thing by his employees and. where the Manager knows by experience what is needed or where he depends upon, the judgement of some one from the ranks of the workers, but these cases fare really exceytions ‘and, more- over, the working man does not want to be in a position’to take conc: sions as a gratuitous matter, a gift only, he must be in a position tz de- mand fair play ag a>right, and to demand it on a business basis. Most of the large concerns are managed by men who—the fair minded in fact are brought up, so to speak, in the atmosphere of the Money side of the question. They have an uncon- scious “Capitalistie squint” a biased perspective, they cannot sympathize with the worker because of having! had no experience along the line of the working man’s life. Without | experience one cannot actually real- ize anything. This combination need of labor, called the labor movement, crystaliz- ed into Unions and_ Federations, possesses such elements of strength and of benificence that we may read- ly admit and acknowledge any weak- nesses and deficiencies. To seck to destroy the Unions because of de- fects would be a foolishness equal to trying to overthrow our Govern- ment because of some abuses and shortcomings, some imperfectious. Unions are a necessary forward stride in the scheme of our civiliza- tion—the only requisite being ths food sound judgement and moder- ation be exercised in their manage- ment. The much spoken of “Dig- nity of Labor” can ofly be maintain- ed, and the rights of the workers respected through the necessity of This brings us down to a point where we can take up the matter of the particular strike condition pre- vailing at Beulah and give it a pre- liminary survey, advancing some. ideas upon which issue may be join- e That the original request, culmin- ating in well defined demands, of the miners, were within reason and just, cannot be gainsaid. That the Company had a perfect right to re- fuse these demands is also true, the Sky Bow. “Come along, hiddi Company was under no obligation to respect and comply with any de-|(¢, mands of the men except to pay them for what services they rend- ered in accordance with the Manag- ers orders. If the Statute eight hours should be ing period in and around bo said days work- a mine and tect a man for complying with it only punishes him for non-com- pliance, there is no law prohibiting a “boss” from discharging you for unwillingness to violate our laws, provided he does it under some other] | pretext. And if the miners were convinced that thé check-weighman was either negligent about weighing the output, or was absolutely guilty of defrauding them by underweights then they could, on being refused corrective action, quit, either singly and individually or as a body, th ! the boss said work ten hours, ten hours goes—the law does not’ pro-|| RDAY, JULY 7, 1928 will be‘ conceeded. This quittitty ps an unorganized body was not, in a technical seme, 4 strike, it was~an invalid strike, just as a contract entered into by me for you—as our Agent would be invalid if you had given me no authority to enter into contracts for you, but it became a valid and actual strike when on forming a local branch of the Union the proper authorities of that Unien ratified the action and sponsored the strike, just as the yoidable con- tract becomes a valid one when the one acted for ratifies it. There is no question about its being a strike, We will now (in a subsequent is- sue) consider why all business men in the town should be in favor of a Union, in preference to a non- union operated mine. D. E. CONE. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Roberts Barton oner had Nancy and Nick and ‘Mister Sky Bow stepped through tac big rainbow doorway than the big rainbow door slid down right out ot the sky behind them and shut them in, They last, No were in Rainbow Land at here's another name for Rain- bow Land,” said Mister Sky Bow. Itsy Happy Land, No matter waat gocs wrong, the Rainbow Landers see the happy side of it. Why, here comes one of my friends, It’s one of the Noseys.” . “One of the Noseys!” Nancy couldn’t help saying. “Why what a funny name! How did he get it?’ “Wait till you see him and then you'll know,” smiled Mister Sky Bow. “It’s as plain as the nose on your face. I mean on his face.” “Well, how do you' like me?” asked the Nosey. coming nearer. “You're all looking so hard, I suppose you're admiring my long nose.” As he came close, the Twins could hardly keep from laughing, for the Nosey’s nose was quite a wonderful affair, coming down quite to the mid: dle button on his coat. sia “You mustn’t be jealous,” he went on happily. “We can’s all have long noses. But ‘it certainly is wonder- ful! Oh, how I love to smell din- ner ceoking, I can smell so much it’s almost like eating it.” “Even when you have onions! asked N “And cabbage? Ant hoiled vinegar?” “We don’t have those thin Rainbow Lund,” said Mister N “But if we had, we should learn to like them. We make the best of everything.” “Very good advice,” nodded Mister in ye (To Be Continued.) ‘opyright, 1928, NEA Sevice, Inc.) The early worm gets the peach. pared with a week ago good and choice fat lambs 25 to 60 cents lower. Closing native top $15.25. Fat ewes $5.00 to $6.25. Top $7.00: MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, July 7—Wheat re- ceipts 122 cars conipared with 108 cars a year ago. Cash No. 1 North- ern $1.08% to $1.16%; No. 1 Dark Northern spring choice to fancy $1.25% to $1.35%; good ,to choice $1.15% to $1.24%; ordinary to good $1.09% to $1.15%; July $1.07%;. Sep- tember $1.08%; December $1.10. Corn No. 3 yellow 75% to 76%; Oats No. 8 White, 35% to 37%; bar- ley 52 to 61; Rye No. 2 62% to 62%; flax No, 1, $2.71 to $2.72. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK =. So. St. Paul, July ~7.—Caitle re- ceipts 100. Compared with a week ago,, killing’ classes generally strong to 25 cents or more higher. y rHpes $7.60 to $9.50. Grass fat ers, cows and ‘heflers $3.60 to $7.00.: Cannery and cutters $2.00 fo $3.00. “Bologna buils $4.00 to $4.25. Stockers and feeders $4.50 $620. Calves receipts, none. with week aso 25 cents nighier ge $9.00 to $10.00. Hog recctpts 1300. Steady witd ker trade of Friday. Butk $T26. Ewes about 25 cent: Higher. To tof Jombs $14.75, Vat ewes $3. to $6.00." i = (Furnished by Russell-Mil! Bismarck, July 7, 1923. No. 1 dark northern ... Wo. } northern spring Ne No. 1 red durum ‘No. No, 1 rye .. t's one of the main reasons they have suc- | "ll tell ll you so themselves. For local advertising The Bismarek Tribune is the best haat Wat ty ttre yy ogy the ads in The voice their psreement by using its columns. itear Tribune and see edium—going into hundreds of homes of-all mes that constitute the buyers you wish to the advertisers The Tribune, Bismarck Covers the Slope Like the Morning Sun. a.