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t-w "irtSti *f j£- /fe I f./ V*.»: V' PAGE EIGHT. Or S»- HOLLAND CAPTURES HIGH HONORS AT GUN CLUB SHOOT A regular shoot of the Grand Forks Gun club was held Friday night At the traps. The shooting at this meet was exceptionally good and a number of new faces appeared on the j" scene. Holland captured first place, with Nelson second. The results -of the shoot are as follows: Shot at. Broke. Pot. 9fl 94 94 92 92 IHolland 75 74 Nelson .-.. nrt 47 Wood E 0 47 ljeonard .... 46 Secord SO 46 Oostelle .... 50 44 Johnson .... 50 44 Farmer 50 43 (Fletcher .... 50 43 'J^roch 50 43 AMERICAN LEAGUE St. IxmUs Wins. DEXTER Smart.rGool and ^Gomjortabte 6'on(o]lars OLDEST BRAND IN AMERICA tfWTC S KMT A COLL AH GO. THOV. M. V. ,t if w% j?* iz ik r'x W'V it jte, v, Wild Throw Costs Game. by adding three more in the seventh, Boston, May 18.—Boston won from! won yesterday's game, 7 to 4, Score Chicago. 2 to 1. yesterday. The winning I R. H. E. run came1 in the eighth as a result of Indianapolis .. 003 100 000—4 10 0 Schalk's wild throw to catch Mesnos- Kansas City .. 000 310 30x—7 14 1 key going to first on a bunt. Score: I Flaherty, Murray and Henline Tu(?- 1 Flaegtcad Gets Two Homers. Philadelphia. May 18.—FiVe home runs, four triples and three doubles enlivened Detroit's 9 to 7 victory ever A Others not scheduled. R8 88 86 SR 86 AMERICAN ASSW W NEWS Philadelphia yesterday," Ira Fl&gstead returned to the visitors' lineup and knocked oi|t two home runs. Score: E Detroit 430 010 100—9 9 3 Philadelphia 000 011 023—T-10 2 Dauss and Stan age: Kinnej*. Rom mel. Bigbee, Moore and' Hyatt, Per kins. Hard Hitting Game. St. Paul. May 18.—St. Paul barely nosed out a 11 to 10 victory over To ledo xestorday. Merritt stopped the vis itors' rally in the eighth. Score: E Toledo 000 004 150—10 11 2 St. Paul 035 100 20x—11 15 3 Brady. Nelson and McNeill Wil liams,, Merritt and Hargt'ave. Homer and Two Doubles. Kansas City. May 18—Two doubles and a home run in the fourth and a double in the fifth equalled the Indi anapolis early count and Kansas City, R. H. E. I ro, Ames and Brock. •Chicago 000 000 010—I 3 Boston 100 000 01 x—2 7 0 Fifth Straight Game. Wilkinson and Schalk Jones md Minneapolis. May 18.—Minneapolis "Walters. I won it's fifth straight game yesterday defeating Columbus. 2 to 1. Score Washington. May 18.—St. Ijouisi Columbus .... 000 010 000—1 6 1 took a closely played contest from Minneapolis .. 100 000 lOx—2 8 1 Washington. 2 to 1 yesterday. Shocker McQuillan and Wagner White Iiroving effective. Score: 1 hduse and Mayer, R. H. E. St. TjOUis .... 020 000 000—2 2 Washington... 010 000 000—I 6 2 Shocker and Severeid Zachary. Erickson and Gharrity. New York— R. H. E. 001 030 000 000 002—6 12 3 Pittsburgh— 000 040 000 000 003—7 13 ^3 Toney. Douglas. Barnes and Snyder Cooper, Carlson, Ponder and Schm^t. Others postponed. AMERICAN DERBY CALLED OFF. Boston, Mass.. May 18.—THe $10. 000 American Derby, on the program of the Grand Circuit meeting at Readville in August, has been called off. it was announced today. Entries, which closed ten days ago. were too few to warrant a renewal this year. 1 CENSUS FIGURES. Washington. May 18.—Scranton, Pa.. 137,783, increase 7,916, or 6.1 per cent. Galena. Til., 4,742, decrease 93, or 1.9 per cent. Norwichtown, Conn. 29.686, crease 1,466. or 6.2 per cent. Norwich City, Conn., 22,304. crease 1,937, or 9.5 per cent. Framingham, Mass.. 16.785, crease 3,837. or 29.6 per cent. sels. R. H. E. Louisville-Milwaukee—rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh Wins Lone Game. Pittsburgh, May 17.—Pittsburgh de feated New York, 7 to 6. in, 15 in nings yesterday. With the score a tie in the 15th inning. New York scored twice on a hit and wild throw by Grimm and Ponder. In the. last half I Pittsburgh scored three runs on Big bee's triple, a pass to Carey, singles I by Whitted and Caton, and a lpng hit by Grimm. Score: m- m- m- Woburn. Mass.. 16.565, increase 1. 257. or 8.2 per cent. Newbwryport. Mass., .13.609, in crease 660, or 4.4 per cent. For a^jg^SsiSSSS ,^-ir FORTH AT FIRST SESSION TODAY (Continued from Page sources, retarded settlement land cupation, decayed marketing, post poned credit settlements, hampered production, due to excessive costs of transportation, ill adjusted rate struc- the movement of surplus. "The story of the gateways will be told at Chicago, Duluth.-Superior, Mil waukee, Detroit, Cleveland and other points. These will show what hap pens and what is prevented from hap- continent is such ~that"tho Vrearacfri-j average of less than 200 miles, must United States Senator I HEREBY ANNOUNCE MYSELF AS A CANDIDATE FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR ON THE REPUBLICAN TICKET SUBJECT TO THE VOTE OF THE PEOPLE AT THE JUNE PRI MARIES. MY POSITION ON STATE AND NATIONAL QUES TIONS WILL BE SET FORTH IN THE PRESS AND IN PUBLIC ADDRESSES. -:-x, Frank ,1 raw r* A i, -s -Of Valley-'City, N. D. 'v uy? pening as products assemble at these counted points. will be told in terms of grain,, provisions, dairy prbducts, manufactures merchandise, et cetera. I Jake ports. It will inter- already introduced at the Sault as to channel conditions and time of ves- Needed By Northwest. "The northern Mississippi valley states need this great international waterway more than any other coun- 1 try, because.the configuration of this Af/'.j'V'f -u* 4 GRAND FORKS HERALD. TUESDAY. MAY 18, 1920: enin& 1_8 Xo coDunuea "The story of power will naturally come in for presentation in the east, as will also the national summing up. "We expect to show that great as I May the benefits of the lake system of £u'y ••••1.76% 1.76 communication has been to the coun- Sept 1.62% 1.63% try, its value will be doubled when Jt! Oats— becomes an arm of the ocean. We May intend to show that the benefits of July ftie improvements in the St. Lawrence -fork— will be as great as the benefits of the Ma,y improvements at the Sault. The Sault July canal paid for itself five times over I Lara— in the season of 1918. It saved more than $180,000,000 in freights and-the cost for the canal and river channel was but $32,000,000. "The real benefit, however, is not what this waterway saves, but what itimakes. We have no way of meas uring that. The nearest- way we can come to measuring is to guess what the loss would be if the Great Lakes system was blotted out. 15»00°i cultural producing areas of the United I heavyweights neglected in early bid- May States and Canada lie many times bulk, all weights, $11.25fa-13 July butcher catUe and calves, steady to strong light heavies active, with bulk at 9@11.25 bulk cows, $8.75© 10.50 desirable canners mostly $5.25@5.75 calf quality improving with bulk at $11@12.50 stofckers and feeders steady. farther frojn the sea and therefore in point of transportation costs, which are the measure of distance, are under a heavy handicap as against those countries with which they have to compete. "Central Asia alone shares with the northwest provinces of Canada and our Mississippi valley the unfortunate steady at yesterday's average top, handicap of a long and high costi ®14-50- $13.25ffi 14.25 pigs 25@ route to market, and is denied the ad- continue indefinitely so to do, with a northern spring, $3.25@3.32 natural waterway open to the sea but for the drowning out of a few tumb ling rapids? And as to these rapids, is it not a question whether they have not been put there by a beneficent Providence as an asset rather than a liability to the great nations of Can ada and the United States, because it is a well authenticated fact that the value of the power capable of being developed in connexion witlj the Im provement of the river for navigation will far more than pay the total cost of the joint improvement." Canton. O.—Mike O'Dowd. formed middleweight champion, won the newspaper decision over Jack Britton, welterweight champion, in twelve rounds. Candidate v4 CHICAGO. tures, inability to compete in the'jsas bank and from belief that railroad world markets, depression of local' labor difficulties would be settled prices because of the handicap against: shorty The Kansas bank failure at-j 'GRAIN AND PROVISIONS. Chicagd, May .'IS.1—General selling of corn resulted today .-from declines in Liberty bonds, the failure of a Kan-1 against grain shipments to Chicago hIm. cning to ^hi,^A am as a bearish factor. Op- prices, which ranged from 3-S 1 l-4o lower, with July *1.75 1-4 ^,@5-80 down, includ-^ 00 fu., 1 lock with phase three. shipping which will begineat8tt£ d£ da?k°W (Monu/:: ifr!? luth hearing with the preliminaiies 10 sag. .1^*1 ^Atiitiiinythe 0nS,£" Srai" essing efrect pro ket. Support was lacking. »2 steers opened steady, but Hogs—Receipts 16,000 mostly 50c lower bulk, $12@13.25. vantages'of ocean commerce. Is it I Sheep—Receipts 12.000 slow un thinkable that the rich soil of our! evenly lower good 84-pound shorn northwest, so rich indeed that up to lannbs, $16.50 short handyweight the present it has been able to pay the 1,800 mile rail haul to the sea board and still meet these compet •'tors in the world market who have an shpri) lambs, $17,50 la,t^ j^gterday. CASH SALES. Chicago, May 18.—Wheat, No. 4 rod- *3.06 No. 2 hard, $3.07 No. 2 ./ •U-r' t*C •vd- fc£ a M1NNBAi'oMS WRAlS tr&< ted special attention owing to ic-j rioKlmr ports that the collapse was due toi Closliw. Vnotation-,, burdensome loans on wheat. Notice that the Chicago and Northwestern road had cancelled all. restrictions No. 1 dark northern 1 ^orUxern° A"£Y® 1 oa spnni 5° $1.V6 ~and"sVptember "$1.62 1-2 ^to I j! ^rthern"1!!?! $1.63 were f„nowed The story first from the local angle further setback spring, in the interiflr will be told from a new Qats weakened with corn. After op angle at the spring by a material! rp1 „n r,-u llad ~de"ij 1.06% 1.06% .91 1 pressing effect in /the provision mar- rpQ la'ckir~ CHICAGO GRAIN TABLE. Corn— Open. High. Low. Close. .:.1.94% 1.04%. 1.89% 1.90% 1.69"% 1-69 1.60 1.60% .89% 36.65 36.75 July Sept. Ribs— May .. Sept. .. 20.80 20.sr. 21.60 IHJTATOES. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK. Chicago. May lS.—Cattle—Receipts To arrive 35.10 4 yeWow corn 36.35 36.40 5 yellow corn I 4 mixed corn ...... 20.80 5 niixed corn 21.65 1 3 mixed corn 20.62 21.47 21.65 18.55 18.55 19.25 18.37 19.12 Rye— May July .2.04 Barley— No. 4 north- northern spring, $3.00 No. 4 em spring, dark, $3.10. Cofn—No. 2 mixed, $2.06 No. 2 yellow, $2.06®2.08. Oats—No. 2 white. M.13@1.14 1-2 No. 3 white, $1.11 @1.13. Rye—No. 2, $2.18 1-4. Barley. 1.71 @1.86. 'Timothy seed. $10.00@ 11.50. Clover seed. $25.00@ 35.00. 1. Fori# "liom maS. Lard, $20.00. Ribs, $17.25 18.25. CHICAGO PRODUCE. Chicago. May 18.— Butter unchang ed receipts 16,081 tubs: creamery ex tras. 57 l-2c firsts, 54 @56 l-2e sec onds, 47@50c standards, 57c. Cheese unsettled twins, 2 8 No. Butterfat ^VV 2.85 spring hardarMonta'1ia arrjve amber durum To arrive 1 durum To arrive 2 amber durum .. 2 djirum 3 amber durum 3 durum No. 3 white corn No*. 3 yellow corn .. 1.04 .90 Other grades corn 18.45 2 (w white oats (Mont.) 19.20 1 3 white oats To arrive 4 white oats Chicago, May 18.—Potatoes steady Barley, choice to fancy.. 1.69 0® 1.75 receipts 17 cars Northern White, Barley, medium'to good. 1.62 @'1.68 sacked and bulk 7.25 to 7.50 Cana- I Barley, lower grade dian 5.0Q to 6.25 new firm Florida 2 rye barrels. No. 1 17,50 No. 2, 14.75 to I To arrive 15.25 Louisiana Triumphs 8.00 cwt. No. 1 flASsecd To arrive 2.04 1.96% 1.96% .2.04% 2.04% 1.97% 1.98 May 1.65% '1.65 1.61% '4' 30c dai 9 1-3® 28 l-4c: Americas, 2!) 1-2« dies, 29 30c long horna, 30c brick, 28 l-2@29c. Eggs unchanged receipts, 36,20 I cases. Poultry, alive, higher fowls 38c. MINNEAPOLIS. MAKKKI-S. Cttii:. 3.15 iv.'JA't 3.15 (rt 3.40 3.1-0 ?..8.ir 3.05 ft!!.!') 2.90 Cn- 3.05 3.10 (.!• o."Srr 3.05 ©3.10 3.00 3.00i 3.25 2.90 @3.00 2.80 @2.!)5 .3.'! 3.05 .3.05 .2.96 CjS.OS .2.94 ?('3.01 .90 0) 2.94 ,.2.90 (ft 2.97 ..-2.85 2.90 .2.0211 .2.00- 8 2.02 1.93n .1.98 @2.00 1.92 @1.95 .1.95 @1.96 ..1.90 @1.92 ..'1.98 @2.00 ,.1.60 @1.88 ,.1.03 @1.04 .1.01 @1.03 .99 .99 @1.01 1 6 1 .1.42 .2.08 .2.06 ..4.47 @4.52 ..4.42 @4.47 2.09 MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN TABLE. Oats— Open. High. Low. Close. .95% .95% .92 .92 .87% .87% .85% .86 .72% .72% .71% .71% Sept. 1.61% July 1.60 1.60 1.53% 1.52% Sept. 'Bran, $53. MVRSTOCK. South St. Paul, Minn., May 18.— Hut? receipts 9.2,00 steady ra.ngc ?13.60@$13.80 bulk $ 13.70@ $13.80. Cattle receipts 3.300 killers steady and weak fat steers $7@$13.50 cows and heifers $6.50@ $11.75 calves steady, $5@ $10.50 stockers and feed ers steady. $5@$12.50. N1B\V YORK. STdCKS. New York-. May 18.—'rhVh°M££ ket was duii and listless with acaKnSS on a very small soaJe. Trading cen ...1.38% 1.38% 1.34% 1.34% sterling sixty day bills 3.77 3-8. Franc.s d-emand 13.82 cables '13.80 lire der GRAIN AND FLOUR. mand 1,9.97 cables 19.95 marks de Minneapolis, May 18.—Flour un- mand 2.06 1-2 cables 2.07 1-2 gov changed shipments, 34,184 barrels, ernment bonds weak railroad bonds Sheep receipts 200 steady: lambs $8@$19 wethers $12@$15.50 ewes $5 @$15. 6 CHEESE. Plymouth. Wis., May 18.—Cheese higher twins, 27 1-4 double daisies, 27 1-2 ningle daisies, .28 1-4 long horns. 29 Young Americas, 29 squares, 29 1-2. LIBERTY BONDS. New York, May 18.—Final prices today were: 3 1-2's, 90.90 first 4's, 83.30 second 4's, 82.50 first 4 1-4's. 84.50: second 4 1-4's, 83.20 third 4 1-4's. 86.60 fourth 4 1-4's, 83.10 Victory 3 3-4's,^ 94.92 Victory 4 3-4's, 9,5.21). COTTON. New York. May 18.—Cotton fu tures closed steady May, 42.10 July, 39.32 October, 36.58 December, 35.56 January, 34.90. GRAND FORKS GRAIN MARKET. Dark Northern. No. 1 northern Spring Wheat. No. 1 northern spring, 58 fb No. 2 northern spring. 57 tb No. 3 northern spring, 55 1b No. 4 northern spring. 52 lb .13.11 $2.96 2.91 2.81 2.61 Durum Wheat. No. 1 .$2.76 2.73 2.68 2.57 Red Durum Wheat. .$2.64 2.71 2.66' 2.59 Oats. *lax. I $4.16 2 4.11 No grade 4 01 no.' No- 4 -... 1.'. Rye. $1.97 No. 1 Cream Market. JOHN BIRKHOLZ MOXEY ALWAYS ON HAND FOR FIRST FARM M0RTGA6E LOANS Grand Forks, N. D. ®*iulbM| Brothers Pbonc 1B13-W Wanted Scrap Iron Call or write for prleea. Oread Vorka, 801-axi riret Ave. HUES, FURS WOOL Bhtpplnir tace farniehed free GINSBURG BROS. «ret »r»U Tottm. B. lnnr rr to' nuecs p«0 FOR —1 HIDES, FURS •warn, Mt mm, XM. E I MKcrme*. ReuWIeKed 1M4. Qr^mi rerke u.n"V higher for a time, but inoj3 Mrs. McHaffle. ^dU Hqu!dXn^f2 'f°Oo0ft,000 4 1-4's and Victory 4 3-4's to new low points of discounts* Call loans -opened at seven per cent but virtually no time money \va: obtainable. The uneven course of petrokum shares measured the irregular move ment of prices at the quiet opening of today's .stock market. Mexican oils were one to two points lusher, while European issues of the s.ime as represented by Royal Dutch nn.fshPl! Tr-nsnort lost about that THE SHOE HOSPITAL. This larg and bliell rr^nsport iohi -1™ most up-to-date shoe repairing nvucli. Sugar share? weio imrtui.. reacted' fractionally. Nominal changes occurred in the railroad division. Reactions in coai shares ranging from large fraction.-: to 2 points at tended the apathetic trading at mid day. Industrials eased in sympathy. Oiis also fell back, Royal Dutch ex tending its loss to :J 1-2 points. A| few short time loans were negotiated on an 8 3-4 per cent basis, PRODUCE. New York, May 18.—Butter steady receipts, 6,078 creamery, higher than extras, 63 1-2 @64 creamery extras 9-2 score), 62 l-2@63. •firsts (88 to 91 score) Eggs irregular receipts, 34,312 storage packed extra firsts, 46 l-2@ 49 storage packed firsts, 46@48 fresh gathered extra firsts. 47@48 i— fresh gathered firsts, 44@46 1-4. CITY POSITION* WANTED—BY Cheese firm receipts, 3,435 'state1 whole milk flats held specials, 31@ Live poul.try steady fowls, 42c old roosters. 23c dressed steady fresh, 31 32c others unchanged. MONEY AND EXCHANGE. New York, May 18.—Mercantile pa per 7 per cent exchange irregular: heavy. Time loans strong, cent. DTTLT7TH. GRAIN. Duluth. Minn.. May 18.—Grain prices were on the toboggan today with' persisl«iht'selling and lack of sus t.ained support in any quarter. Flax seed prices broke sharply with crush ers out of the market for seed. May flax closed 12 cents off at $4.47, high $4.58, low $4.47 asked July 13 cents off at $4.42, high $4.55, low $4.42. Rye closed 7 1-4 cents off at $2.10 3-4 for spot May 7 3-4 ccnts off at $2.08 3-4 and July 8 cents off at $1.92. Oats closed 2 l-2@3 1-2 ccnts off at 99@1.03 for spot, and barley unchanged at $1.50@1.75 for spot. Closing: Whea.t—No. 1 dark northern, on track, $3.15@3.25: No. 2 dark north ern, $3.05 @3.20- No. 3 dark northern. $2.95@3.15 No. 1 northern. $3.00@ 3.15 No. 2 northern, $2.95@3.10: No. 3 northern, $2.90@3.05 No. 1 amber durum, on track, 2.93 No. 2 amber durum, $2.90 No. 1 mixed durum, on track, $2.91 No. 2 mixed durum, $2.88 No. 1 durum, on track, $2.91 No. 2 durum, $2.88. Linseed—On track, $4.47@4.52 arrive, $4.47 May, $4.47 July, $4.42. Oats—On track, 99 @1.03. Rye—On track. $2.10 3-4 arrive. 2.0$8 3-4 May, 2.08 3-4 asked July, $2.01 1-2 bid September, $1.92. Barley—On tra.ck, $1.50@l:75. Duluth. Minn.. May 18.—Elevator receipt domestic grain: Wheat 77.700 bushels oats 8.00) barley 40,500 rye 52,200 flax 3 200, Shipments: Wheat 85,300 bu. oats 5,900 rye 109,000. Duluth car inspection: Wheat, Nos. You Can Reduce The High Cost of Feed By Sowing More Millet and Corn 1 Per Bu. .$1.75 ... 2.00 Siberian Millet German Millet SOUTHERN GROWN Per Bu. Siberian Millet 92.75 Liberty Millet 2.50 Hog Millett' 2.50 Hungarian Millet 4.00 Canadian Peas ........ 3' ,iVUUs j»J ir^NIN€NEBfT ROOMS FO ONE FRONT f«OOS» 1KIR !RBN dies only, %85*SeMWleA TWO MODERfj'fRURNISH Ing rooms, ^jffione 679-J, FI/EA.SANT FRONT ROOM1 ,313 N. 6th. fphonj(|Ji3,6-Jyj ONE R0OM 06 FOR tet-ed in specialties Sugars enhanced „ut street Phone l985: their eariy gHins "11^a[otr1mprove-|FURNISHED HOUSEKEE^INQ baccos recorded modetau 1 downstairs. 302 So."4th sf. ment. Movements of ^eels, equ 1 ..., ments, shippings anl oilrf a.so ROOMS FOR RENT—AT 12 N. 6 olS 2 in blocks irom ?.10j,000 to *f» I par value forceO the aecoml ROOMS FOR RENT—7115 BEllj ond .4 1-4's. third 4 1-4 s, lourui ™™*NISHED *OOM3fOR Avfc ,., ,1. $ I A PRIVATE •HOME'''FpR iTHB^l for maternity wnd nOn-eoataglog es under the"manaKenient{lof a ^nurse^^Phone^6*8^-^3j^^ SHOE REPAIRING Grand Forks Best of m£urlaf si org wa:l 1. @rand"i parcel! pal^one^%vay^Qrand^^rys^I^| SITUATIONS WA^bEDf "W'—m* —,i WANTED: POSITION AS OA, steam engineer.-Have 10-years'! shop practiq.e, ,.aJLso. lwid.,diploraJ the Four Wheel Drive"Auto C'.intonvjllR, Wis. Write 893 l] PAINTING DONE BY" DAY Oil tract, Work guaranteed. Phof or call 631 No. 5th St. SITUATIONS WANTED VI' 1 ®ry fcoMPlCTENT MAN WANTS Cl| in country banking, real estal insurance. A-l references. 908 Herald. rjphcr- 1—^ Ca11 32 ditto, average run, 30 state WORK WANTEDt^JIY^you whole milk flats, current make spe- Clerking preferred, willing cials, white and colored, 28 l-2@29 do average run, 27 1-2 ffi 28. 8 1-2 per •LIBERTY BONDS. New York, May 18.—Liberty bond prices at 11:55 .a., ni.. today were: 3 1-2's 90.40 first 4's 84.00: second 4's 83.00 first 4 1-4's 84.50 second 4 1-4's 83.40 third 4 1-4's 86.80. fourth 4 1-4's 83.70 Victory 3S 3-4's 94.90 Victory 4 3-4's 95.00. 4.50 Speltz a.25 Buckwheat, Dakota grown 3.Q0 SEED CORN Per Bu. Yellow Fodder $2.75 Minn. Early Yellow.... 3.00 North Dakota Grown Northwestern Dent 4.00 Minnesota. 13 4 00 Minnesota 23 V75 White Flint 4)00 -i Per .Lb. Sweet Clover ., 40c Alfalfa, Turkestan ......48c Timothy Seed, choice I4cl Sudan Grass .•.SOc Sorgum Cane ,Uc Rape .. v.,.. 12c B**ns 1 0 •. Jfhlte Seamless Bass'.. .78c Heavy Jute Bacs. f...../.S5c IMPLEMENT CO Bwt Onad Itatt, Mftm, 4tis-w or Experienced. Write, 89? Heral ASHES HAULED, DIRT OR RU1 gardens plowed, harrowed, Phq LAWN MOWEl® SHARPENED.! 297 3 W. STORM WINDOWS Phone ir,Sl\V. TAjKEN 1 STORAGE Household Goods Packed and PanovitS! Furniture and Carpetl SUMMKkl^ COTTAGES. FOR KA LIS—SUM MKR COTTAt| Lake Bemidji, Lgvinia, Mfnn. is fully equipped for house] Have fine row boat which- can with- .Evanrude motor attal Also have plenty of ice tin si summer use. Price $1500r terra] sired. Address, Henry L: Blaf vin-ia, Minn. FOR SALE—SUMMER COTTAGJ midji, Minn. Birchmont Beacl summer hotel. Beautiful sul ings—6 rooms, bath, large si porch, electric lights, phone, beach. Vehon, 2317 Hennepin, apolls, Minn. I WANTED TO BUY WAN PRIVATE PARTY No Agents State particulars such as locj size of lot,"description "of number pf rooms, how htfated^ cs, price, terms, etc: Wrifte 8S0 Hew WANTED TO BUY—ONE 8 O floor show case in good rof Write, Lock Box 185. Drayton, 1 and 2 daj-k northern and Nos. 2 northern 2 No. 3 darjj 110 arid- No. 3 northern 8 otller sr Nos. 1 -and 2 amber durum an 1 and 2 durum 8 No. 3 athber and No. 3 durum 4 othefr dut® 'H mixed S all 'wtieat 57f flax 3 1 barley 1. Air^r^'lns 7.^ qt tra !i Herald Want Ads Bring Rea Can Reduce 1 High Cd$t of C-t.'i By Buying High Qi NORTHERN GROWN Seed at Right Rrlc Per Bu. Per 60 Siberian Millet, Southern Grown Siberian, North Dakota Grown lif Hog .. 2.- Gerrhin (n^iliJLli^r! .ipSlctiy Southern^Grawnoua.A. .... 2 p0' Canadian I?«as ...........13. Speltz .. ... 2. Buckwheat Dakota rown. 2. SEED CORN. Yellow learning fo«^d«r, Dakbta Gtowti Northwest Dent ....,...... Minnesota 13 ............. Sweet CJlover, 'Gilby Grtn^n.10. Alfalfa, Soqth DaHota... ».. Ai/alfa, .. ..Jfortjv,, Dakota, A a a a a Fancy Tintotby „... Sudan Gr«pt3 ., a Bromus Western Rye Grass. Nortel Dakota pad CUbffer.. C*nad^n q_ tp sA 1.1 I Backs Extra. Beat Seamloss Bags Heavy Jutes .... ..... Table and Seed Potatoes V. Ovmmi Forka, N. D.