Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 24, 1916, Page 28

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4D REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE J THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPT REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE On July 22, 1915, we platted a “Corn- field” of 126 acres, lying north of Miller Park between 24th and 30th streets, into Minne Lusa Addition. i Since that time we have moved 250,000 il yards of earth to make perfect grade for \ ' each street and every lot; put in six miles of water mains and the Gas Company put in six miles of gas mains; we put in twelve ¢ miles of sidewalk and five miles of conduit i for an ornamental lighting system; six miles ; of large sewer pipe, and the City of Omaha s is building a storm sewer twenty feet Wide and twelve feet deep of re-inforced con- : erete. All of these improvements are in Minne Lusa and are paid for by us. { Now ' Hugh Murphy is laying asphalt over 60,000 4 yards, on every street in the addition, $250,000 has been spent on homes alone and a dozen more were started this week. ; Over 300 different buyers bought over $400,000 worth of lots in Minne Lusa since platting. 1f you want to see the most interesting, busi- est and prettiest spot in Omaha Come Out Today and see these lots—on easy terms— $550 to $850 AND THEY ARE SELLING FAST. Chas. W. Martin & Co. 742 Omaha Nat'l. Bank Bldg. Tyler 187, DUNDEE HOME FIELD CLUB HOME e, b b L by o R WEST FARNAM HOME m, new n:g‘ ‘st No. 608 Bouth 40th Bt. ufl“ fine " NEW BUNGALOW, 8923 North 25th St. e e ol s W fur ™ 244 vore tusy NEW BUNGALOW, 6933 Florence Boulevard v ST 2N SRS LI NORRIS & NORRIS * Bee Building. Phone Douglas 4170, on the uflrmr& FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE Real Estate, Lands, Ete. strictly -Iln:u'n, l'lllhlh.::l two :‘:\‘: i encumbrance will ttade mu‘vnhll 3102 1) $4,000; equity for land o ac! 3 New §-room atrictly homs 8. 18th 8t, encumbrance $4,000. trade equity for land. A strictly modern in, lot 86x140 ft. Wil trade for western lots or acreage. Eaquity $12,000, ~ DESCRIPTION - roéma. basement, l:rr vl bedroome, kitehen 10514 witl 4 3 batltdn td, tront and rear porches A1 rooma itted Wwith brush brass NERL- tures, Tot-—a 19210 foot ehicken house, | . Bix apt. flat, woll rented, oot chick fenced With §: | on paved street and sariine. mest you at Central Park school automoblle from 1:40 to § p. m. A T el month, Reed, [ ? venta §140 DF B et Oaks o " L 'c.\‘u N8 -fia—;‘mfi-rm or \ For Sale “The Post Farm” 40 Acres with all Improvements Can be made the finest dairy farm in the west. Location near Benson and West Dodge St. Description of Improvements:— Two-story house of 12 rooms, 5 rooms on the first floor with bath and 7 sleeping rooms on the second floor. Has water system throughout the house. One dairy building—two stories—96x94-ft., 12-inch walls laid in cement 9 feet high, Has ce- ment floor the full size of building; room for 100 cows and 20 head of horses. Large store room kMBLR 24, : 1916. FARM AND RANCH LANDS FARM AND RANCH LANDS Missouri Lands. SMALL MIBSOUR] FARM—§10 cash and $6 monthly; no interest or taxes; highly pro- ductive land; close to 3 big markets Write for photographs and full Information Munger, A-119, N. Y. Life Bidg., Kansas City, Mo. Montana_Lands. 0 acres, combination grain $12.60 drees FOR SAL and stock farm For particulurs Dillon, Montan: FOR BALE—820-acre wheat farm, 320 per acre, including 3 horses and machinery, Address E. G, Farnsworth, Dillon, Mont. ew York Lands. X GREAT OPPORTUNITY—247 acres fruit, tock and alfaife farm, sbout quir- river frontage, dock 350x400 feet bank Hudson river; grand river and mountain views; about 2,000 fruit trees, bearing, best of condition; sol $3,000 fruit 1n one season and bushels rye, 100 tony straw, over 350 tons timothy hay, besides clover, corn, potatoes, 2’ tenant houses, , grand water supply; bgst, of ; by nice village, on stite road; $20,000; widow must sell, therefore sacrifice; come and see same. LLOYD M. HALLENBECK, Greendals, Columbia Co., Nebr: - a_Lands. DOUGLAS AND SARPY COUNTY O'’KEEFE REAL ESTATE CO, . 3716 1016 Omaha Nat. Bk. Bldg. EAR, FOR EXCHANGE ropair, enty fo . Owner wil flat or 2 o's| FARM AND RANCH LANDS worth. 1614 HARNEY 8T. LI r preperty Wwith us for sale, a e lllll!':‘,l for dwellings, in- wvestment properties and farms that ‘we cannot supply. J. H. DUMONT & CO. OMAHA. 416-10 Keoline Bldg. 17th and Harney Sta. L!o ‘:‘v: fm h: lw‘:mn:..ul':: vestment properties and farms that | we cannot supply, H. DUMONT & CQ. OMAHA. i Keeline Bldg. 17th and Harne: your property with us for lo. We have inquiries for sale. dwellings, investment properties and farms that we cannot sup- DUMONT & CO. OMAHA. esline Bldg. 17th and Harney Sts. CU. ux‘w."fi" gt g use and t on or .W‘.-‘“ strects between 40th GIVE LOCATION AND PRICE. Addréss Box 8136, Bes. property Tor out AQ! & NULSON, Neb, omal . o ba Write FINANCIAL iy, Jacob Backer, Investment Broker, 'St ul, Minn. A R “PETus TRUST Cos 1413 Paream ot for feeding purposes; also engine room, which has a 25-horse power Olds Gas Engine used for grinding and elevating the grain, which cost about $2,000. The second floor is used for stor- ing grain and hay. Has 20-foot ceiling and room for grain and other kinds of feed. Adjoining this building there is a milk house; enclosed driveway; tool room; bunk house and machinery room. Another large building, which has a hog house 20x60 feet on the first floor; all cemented and connected with water system. floor is used for a driveway; granary, corncribs ‘and room to store machinery. The total cost of the entire improvements is about $25,000. Will sell buildings and the 40 acres for a trifle more than the ground alone is Hastings & Heyden, _REAL ESTATE WANTED |pARM AND RANCH LANDS T80-ACH The second PHONE TYLER 650. Canadian_Lands. HUNDRED THOUSAND BUSHBELS-RANCH ~=5,000 acrea; best in Canadian west; 3,000 1,000 summer fallow, 1,000 grasing; rn_equipment and bulldl high te of cultivation; close to elovators; 1id reason for selling. Will yleld fine returns and double In five years: $100,- 000 will handle. Bruce Scott, Chamber Commerce, Detroit, Mich. cro| rado Lands. R BA! 30 acfes of emooth, level lunds, 8% miles of Sterling, Colo., a town looated between Omaha and Denver. 4 miles west of the Nebraska line, and the division point of, two rallroads land is unimproved except fence, and is on & rural mail.route and near school. The soll ln very productive, as crops in vicinity show, and -‘:l be seen to be ap- preciated. Wil sell for §30 per acre and ve ble terms. C. M. Morton, ng, Colo stock ranch near Collbran, Mesa county, Colorado; close to mountain range; well Improved; Ideal mountain home; good community; good roads; it you are looking for a place of real merit, %dr‘. Hox 26, Cellbran, Colo. ADO agricultural and indust: p those tions and iness tate Board of Im- Denver, Colo. free; new plan to h lands, factory opportunities, Write migration, § Capitol .__Plorida Lands. Palm Beach County. Palm Beach Farms Company. ‘Have S-actg, 10, 30 or 100-acre tracts for wale on easy terms. Are you interested in Truok Farming or Citrus Fruit Grove De- velopment? If you are, buy in Palm Beach county. The county that produces the banner erops of America. As shown in letters below, with a small eapital, energy and labor, & few years will place you in a position of independence. Grasp the opportunity, and become a sucoessful truck farmer. Hundreds are dolng It, same opportunity for thousands mors. 3¢5 growing days each year, you can grow two to three cropas of the finest vegetables; 'OMBEFE REAL DSTATE CO, 1018 Omaba Nat Phons Dosaits RBAL BOTATE losm ¢ per ovat 013 Omaha Besk. 10,000 made promptiy. ¥ D Weads Vit ‘e, fith and - wroam s & Trumbull, 101, GARVIN BROS.... ‘fionthte 6% 3 o mortgages foated by Buropean or panica. Amounts §400 to §20,000 We evl'l:cl‘ all the our record. LOKB INVESTMENT COMPANY, K ha Neb. wit house 13 rooms, close land or Omaha on | 801 Omaha Nat. N Koary Titis, Guafanies and Abatract Ce., | Kerr 5i%s i S "tiouna fioor d_ins. Ce. oldedt nmrfifl. 306 Brandels Thea.er _ Bonded by Mass_ Bu REED ABSTRA e# \n Nebraska » and in seres Squipped Inexhaustible b, roe per re, or raised any agriouitural erop. for Iteelf in two years. Bwitoh ‘Ffl:. Good nfldtu; I:C‘IOEQQ'L ac: cash. No tra 3 ;‘hl‘r:fllh Exchangsé <M, 'Al n southwest ruu-. 5 (o 830 per acre; on easy opms. Mild, hedlthy climate: no oro fallures, Send for large land bulletin. Stuart Land Co., DeQueen, Ark. [X rowing sect the . south; no awamps or overflow; ne hills; ful;, good roads and every rurs) mvnlmhmth gll ver lands at very low prices. full i tion ad- drees, Land Dept, Southern ber Co., arten, Ark. California_Lands, you Ta own terms. Call or Co,, 914 City Natl on ur T hone W, th Bldg. acre produces wonderful profits. No res. No frosts. No humidity, or de- pressing days, the tinest climate on the A an continent. Our customérs have oy send for their friends a to plenty, the Gard: Buy now. Prices are low. Terms, § i acre tracts, $10.00 down th; 10-acre tracts, $3 down and 0 _per month. Note~Teh acres will keep any family in ity co! lOM F. B. ENCELL'S LETTER. Speaking of the Palm Beach Farms company lands, Encell says: ‘They have some fine land for sale. Land as good as my own and some bet- land on which I have pro- net, over fourteén thousand acres ($14,000). In thet year I sold over ten thousand crates of at trom three to seven r. Encell is chalrman of the board of commissioners of Palm Beach county. Another satisfied client says: 1 have always noticed the interest dis- played by the several parties that you about 2,300 hamp f teans and they nged In price from $2.60 to $4.00 per hamper. During the first week I plcked one thousand and twenty-three hampers, which were sold at $2.60 to §4.00 per hamper. The fleld contains thirteen acres and ls located on section 36, back of Deertleld. I consider this very good citrus I The 1a also well adapted to truck being known 4&& a cabbage hammook. 1 think I will net at least $3,500.00 from b h this year from all present This is certalnly a good ry truly, (Signed) C. B. 8COTT. ~I have already replauted this expect to tiake more on:my spring crop thanl did on my fall crop. For particilars and literature call, write or_phone, { PARSONS & SON, Agents for Nebraska. Pm. Doug, 7846. 652 Brandels Bldg. Minnesota Lands per R baiance $1.00 per hore a yéar; 10 select from. Agents wanted. will make & low raliroad rate to Inspect.. Schwab Bros, 1038 Plymouth Bidg. Minneapolis, Minn, Missouri Lands. 'OU ene e many thousan farm- ers trying to _make a living off high priced land? Would you be interested in moving to & new mection .M’ sood solla, healthy eclimate, good rainfall, 35 t6 46 Inches annually, where you can railse all the crops you are now famlillar with and 8ome you have never attempted to grow? Whare there sre modern cities and towns, good #chools and churches, telophones and every comvenience of a 00! nity. Write today sation Dey 1 Al own, . 99 acres cultivation; 4-room frame ho fine spring; blenty frult for family \ falr barn, other bulldings; llea fine; I am f2 Ui ‘aranteie it | Weite B Wants, Shawave, OK A Fse:menx Advertising 18 the Road mpro of & ) near sehodl and town; well located. farm; {f you want a bargain me, Jease Caudill, Route 3, Belig- Mo. acres, Johin Schmitt, Route 3, Monroe City, Mo. At Auction 2:00 o'cloc ROOM ¥ TOR SBALE AND RENT. of land 80 ACRES, good improvements, loodbl.nl- 1, . cation; §140 per, only 33,000 M § yrs, 6% per cent. A BARGAIN. 40 'ACRES, several thousand d worth of irhprovements, main road, handy to cit $12,000; your own terms. b ACRES, well improved; 16 miles of Omaha; considerable alfal etc.; only $90 per, $500 cash, L $116 per acre, 5% per cent on part. 80 ACRES, IDEAL Iaying farm; proved; good location, 1% mlles to tion, 14 miles of O easy terms. 160 ACRES, valley, A PRODUCER; Omaha; §130 per. 30 ACRES, improved, corn crib, buj h $350 cash, §1, GOoOD BUY. handy to town; but rolling dandy stock and farm; slight improvements; $116 per a $4,000 cash, Bal, § yrs., 6 per cent. 160 ACRES, uplands; well laying, good location, ucer, $136 per. b yrs. 0 ACRES, lays ideal, good location; miles of good town, less than 20 miles of orchard, $160 per, extra §-r. house, barn, R. R. 160 ACRES, DANDY, upland, well im- proved, §130 per acre. 160 ACRES, within 7 or Omaha; well improved; §152 per. 8 miles of 60 ACRES, GOOD, but small improve- H miles of Oma- $115 per. ocation, fair improve- tight, wm: alfaifa. yrs. farm, improved; #1756 per; ASy mon 120 ACRI uplands town; ht improvemel A DANDY Imp, 10 scres; dandy 20 improved; good 18 acres, {mproved; 3 acres, 1 mile of good fine Im- SEVERAL good 40s and 60 ALL WORTH THE MONEY. andy % section and NUMER- OUS OT1.<RS. LET US SHOW YOU THE GOODS. Call mornings, if convenlent. ORIN S. MERRILL COMPANY, 400 Acres Improved day, Sept. 26. On the above date, on the premises, P. M., Tues- N. E. Cor. 33 and M Sts, South Omaha, 1 will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, regardless of price, the followin described real eftate: The north half an the north half of tl section 13, township 18, range 11, all | Greeley county, Nebraska, containin & Q R. 1 ‘way according to cated one-half mile south of Greeley, an: including all -personal property thereol 5t tield. about 200 acres of corn in ti TERMS OF SALE—I16 per chase price cash day of sale, on or before March 1, 1917, when pos: sion will be given, balance § years, inte § d southeast quarter of d B nt of pur- at 6 per cent annually. Abatract showin perfect title with warranty deed guaran teed to purchaser on settlement. IMPROVEMENTS-~Five-room house 28 48, room for 20 head of of hay; chicken house x33, cattlé shed 18x63. fenced, About 175 acres unde; plo! could be profitably farmed. Land to gently rolling and Is all g« sandy loam soll with clay s sider will the location, east central Ne- braska, one-half mile of good town, #chools and churches. Land will be sold in tracts or as a whole to suit purchaser. For further information address Nebraska Realty Auction Co., CENTRAL CITY, NEB. COL. MARK CARRAHER, Auctioneer. M. A. LARSON, Manager. W. W. McCREARY, Owner. DO YOU KNOW That few states offer better opportun th for diversified farming, d stock ralsing, Contrary to wi staté is not ranch land, or irri tion of the three. you are interested if diversified e farming, dalrying, _or stodl write to me, TODAY, for rell mation, which will be sent to R. A. SMITH, COLONIZATION AND INDUSTRIAL AGENT, UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. ‘We have a fine 160-acre tra table land ted land, but a splendid combina- , UNION PACIFIC BUILDING, with 112 acres in winter wheat, 7 miles from & alf_cash, 6 per will pay for ‘We ha {mproved 950-aci djoining tl wo will rent who buys the above quarter; 3. that we offer for 326 per balance 6 yeafrs at ‘The wheat on this quarter t one-half of the re to 20 m land, ready to farm; sture. Act quick If you want this THE RO N MORTGAGE Kimball, Neb. FOR’SALE o, 160 ACRES DOUGLAS CO. LAND. Improved, at 3160 per acre, to close estate, 3 miles south and 1 east of Ben- milés west of Irvington, § and 3 miles north of Omaha Leavenworth 8t. Price 3625 an aci O'KEEFE REAL ESTATE CO, 1016 Omaha Nat. Bank. for dairy To be wold at public auction on court house grounds, Geneva, Neb., P mber 30, 151! furthet informatio dress C. F. 1008 Becurity Mutual See the full page of used Auto Bargains on Page 6 of this section. 2 For . F. Ramey, Bidg,, Linecoln, Neb. -ACRE Johnson county, Nel tn Barpy county. STEWART, 316 B 17th A BARGAIN— §1 (one) per acré will buy tate school land in Loup . Ludwick, owner, FOR SALE—320 aci falfa land, all fence main line Milwaukee R. E. of Pukwana, Brule county, Xota. Small payment down, easy terma, Address owner, John O’Connell, 4907 Ful- ton 8t. Chicago, Il ) improvéd. A bargaln in im- i | DOG_CROUTONS, New complete dog food, orit makes h s stopped fishing long enougfl to _____ Wisconsn Lands. 280-ACRE stock and dairy farm in the great oy and hills of Crawford county Wis., 100 acres under cultivation, balance in pasture and timber; thres running springs, and other bulldings; orchard of 60 . ing apple trees, grape arbor, over fifty bearing walnut and hickorynut trees; plums, grap: essy terms; exoellent ds raising Ask Tor bookiet 35 on Wisconsin Central Land Grant; state acres wanted It Interested in fruilt lands. ask fur book- et on Apple Orchards Address Land Com- missioner Soo Raliway Minneapolls. Minn Wyoming Lands. 76,000 acres sheep land, Wyomin W. L. SHELBY & BONS, Omaha, Neb. will locate you on Frank .00, WYOMING homesteads, cholce 320 acres for 50c per acre. Duft, Casper, Wyo. Muscellaneous. TRADE—800 acres Colorado from Eagle Hitehcock SEND YOUR NAME TODAY. R from land owners, agents, everywhere. UNITED REALTY ASSOCIATES, o Jollet, TIl. FARMS FOR SALE AND EXCHANGE. 419 ROSE BLDQ. TYLER 2487. FARM LAND WAN'I:Eb FARMS wa have 17,000 buyers; de- scribe your unsold property. 310 Farmers' Exchange, Denver, Colo. Horses—Live_Stock—Vehicles For Sale. Durham cow. good 8t, agon. Must be soid e POULTRY AND PET STOCK /G TADPOLES 10c EACH. ‘They are sca rs and will keep your fish globe in , healthy condition. MAX O ER_BIRD CO, PRREIAN Kittens for sale. Soid very rea- sonable If taken at once. Mrs, Max Ellas, West 17th St, Columbus, Neb, REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS John Thurman Mosingo and wife to M it Q Twenty-fifth street, south of Sprague, it sid . 1 Milan Sardanov and wife to Gluchowsky, R street, 178% feot west of Thirty-first street, south side, 25%x160 .. « 1,000 Columbian Investment company to Ar- thur N, Smith, Walnut avenue, 330 feet east of Fifty-second street, north side, 40x18 . John F. Morearty, refe: Eckles, Thirty-fifth street, nl! five feet south of Mason street, sid 60x126; ‘Thirty-fifth street, feot south of Mason street, wes A 200 us! %o, Bevente south of M 02| Lincoln avenus, west Sadle 1. Scribner and husband to Jol It sixty-six h - | down to the big ci!g. 0. | auditorium were 10, Tabloids of Politics Grist of Little Items About the Progress of the Campaign A letter from the Seward county re- publican chairman of the central com- mittee brings information that a Ger- - | man member of the democratic com- mittee of the same county nearly caused a riot when at a recent meetin of his committee he was frank enou fi to tell his fellow democrats that the German farmers of Seward county in- tended to vote fo rHughes. The c{lir- man gagged the talkative member and told him it was bad enough to think that such a situation could be tr e, but it was worse politics tc talk right out in meeting and made such state- ments to go out to the world. T. J. McGuire has returned from Archer, Neb., where he made an ad- drcl)l to a gathering of farmers. “I don’t want to be charged with being over-enthusiastic, but evidences of ljlu(hes’ popularity in the rural sec- tions of this state are plentiful. I ob- served this sentiment in conversation and also at the meeting I addressed.” Henry J. Allen, editor and orator of Wichita, Kan,, will arrive Monday di- rect from his home town. At the South Side station he will be met by Henry C. Murphy, P. J. Martin, Wesley Ad- kins, Guy Kiddoo and Joseph Kout- sky. During the noon hour he will address the packing house men on the west side of the Q street viaduct, fol- lowing which he will speak in the Ex- change building. South Siders are romised something more than a po- itical talk from Mr. Allen, who is a man of wide observations and learn- ing. James Walsh of Benson and Oma- ha has returned from a summer’s out- ing in Washington state and Alaska. “I read that Hughes was to speak in the auditorium at Seattle, ‘so I 0 Outside of tfie 000 people who could not get inside. Mr. Hughes ad- dressed this great overflow meeting. I was impressed by the force and sin- cerity of Mr, Hughes. He wins all who hear him make an address. He made a favorable impression all | through “the state of -Washington,” stated Mr. Walsh, who added that he has no patience with unfounded po- litical statements, but he is ready to bet money, marbles or chalk on Charles E. i{nghei. Yale Grid Hopes Assemble at New Haven for Orders New Haven, Conn, Sept. 23.—Old Eli's foot ball candidates have assem- bled here to Prepare for the approach- ing foot ball season. Captain Black expects to greet at least ninety men, with others arriving from day to day, until more than 100 aspirants for gridiron honors are at work. Unusual interest attaches to Yale’s season this year because of the installation of a new coaching system which it is hoped will serve to pull the Blue out of the slough in whicg it has been wal- lowing for the last few years. As the first step a foot ball advisory committee consisting of Vance Mc- Cormick, Brinckerhoff Thorne and John R. Kilpatrick was appointed to consider steps toward the revival of 1,876 Zuppke Has Work Cut Out to Make a Teg.x_q_at Illinois Champaign, Ill, Sept. 23.—Coach Robert Zuppke has a big job before him this year, as the outlook for the Illinois gridiron achievements is not the very brightest. Practice will be officially opened on September 20. The lose of such men as “Potsie” Clark, Harold Pogue, Captain Wat- son, “Cap” Squier, Halstrom and Brenneman was a serious blow to the Illini. To Bart Macomber the Illini are looking for wonders. Bart is the tree. | captain-elect and as a leader will be first-class. Macomber will be the only senior veteran on the team. Other veterans who will be out are Leo Klein, who played at substitute halfback last yeal . R. Kraft at end; Ross Petty and Ed Rundquist at tackle; Applegram and F. Hanachman, guards; Frank Pethy- bridge, halfback; H. W. Markwardt, end, and Potter at center. Promisin{ sophomores, graduates from Coach Jones' freshfian team, are: Ed Sternaman and C. S. Con- rad, halves; Paul Christensen and D. V. Snyder ends; Ross Petty's brother, Otis, t-ckfe; 0. Knop, tackle and cen- tetr; Schladerman and ‘Leonard Char- pier, guards, and R. C. Hass, center. Besides five conferece games, the Illinois card includes games with Kansas, October 7, and Colgate, Octo- ber 14, both here. Buffs Couldn't Lose. Having the best pitchers, batters and R.|form the nucleus winning foot ball. This committee gook advantage of the power vested in it to add to the number of committee- men by naming Waltér Camp and Joe Swan, and almost |mmediatef;' this lit- tle group was the storm center of an ardent campaign in behalf of various candidates for the post of head coach. _ Eventually T, A, D. Jones, a bril- liant quarterback at Yale and a suc- cessful coach at Exeter, in recent sea- sons, was chosen to shape Yale's des- tinies. As assistants, Dr. Arthur T. Brides, Michael F. Sweeney, Dr. Wil- liam T. Bull, Jack Cates’ William Marting and Nate Wheeler were chosen. South Dakota Has Rough_V_Vgrk Ahead Vermillion, S. D., Sept. 23.—Onqe of the hardest campaigns ever mapped out for a foot ball team is that framed bfi' the schedule makers for the eleven that will represent South Dakota “this fall. The severity of the card has forced Coach B{line McKusick to Iplan two complete lineups, and he expects to find good material among last year's scrubs. A squad small in numbers, but lorgf in weight, will fi or the eleven. It includes Harold Spraguye and Frank McCormack, half and full, respec- tively, the stars; “Dip” homer, tackle; Paul Carroll, tackle, punfer and drop- kicker; Ferdinand Duncan, full; Harold Hanson, end, and Don Mec- Kinon, guard, Johnson, of the 1912 Coyotes; is assistant coach. The schedule: October 7—Montana at Aberdeen, 8. D. uooclobfl‘ 14—Dakota Wesloyan at Vermil- n. October 21—Minnesota at Minneapolis. October 28—North Dakota at Or-l.I:vF'D:kn November 4—Michigan Aggies at Hast Lansing. November 11—Notre Dame at Sioux Falls, November 18—Morningside at Sloux City. November 30—Creighton Omaha. fielders in the International league, It fis sald Buffalo couldn’t do otherwise than win the pennant. - Persistent Advertising Is the Road to Success. b4l - 00t o DOt 8D P B Bee Want-Ads Are UNCLAIMED ANSWERS ~ TO BEE WANT ADS 8C 308.... 3 e et 80 13 1 DI b bt Hundreds of other answers have been called for and delivered during the last week. It is reasonable to suppose that all the above people have supplied their wants—therefore did not call for the balance of their answers. Sure Getting l)!esults

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