The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1922, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE. BISMARCK TRIBUNE __ POWER | —— Steinmetz, electrical wizard, says , Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, | that the energy locked up in one} :N,.D., as Second Clauss Matter. | pound of coal is enough to operate GEORGE D. MANN. - Editor |4 radio receiving station 1000 years | = | without stopping. Foreign Representatives | Apparently, he refers to atomic G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY energy, mest of which escapes CHICAGO > DETROIT! without being used. The way we Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg.| hurn coal is like eating one potato PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | out of a bushel and throwing the NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave, BId&.| pest away. | MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED | When inventors discover, as they | , PRESS | will, a method ‘of scientific com- | bustion that will utilize coal with-| P usive- : ty entities to the use occ out waste of energy, 10 pounds of cation of all news dispatches cre-| coal will keep a house warm more, dited to it or not otherwise credit-/ than a month. ! ed in this paper and also the local; news published herein, ar All rights of republication wat FORD 4 i c ere! re i aes ean |_ Much talk in Wall Street, Ford ORT eee Company issues a financial | MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU statement showing that its profits | CIRCULATION | totaled about $58,000,000 in the 12 SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE) months ended last April 30. ih IN ADVANCE | Henry’s company, on that date, | y by carrier, per year... .$7.20 " by mail, per year (in Bis- marek) 1 Daily by mail, per state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of No} Dakota oe Dall: {had $149,000,000 in cash and debts; ‘due to it from others. | | Even in this day of high finance, | jit is rather staggering to think of j one company owned by one family, making $58,000,000 a year, Doubt-: THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWS- (fy), if John D. Rockefeller did as, (Established 1873) | well, | eS earn neta U. 8. AND US | BREWERS | Japan, with half our population,| The home brewer, making beer | now has only 12,260 autos. !and wine im his cellar, is techni- Here in America we have 10,500,-| cally as much a violator of the! 600 motor cars. In all other coun-| volstead act as the bootlegger ped- | tries combined cnly 2,500,000 cars! | dling “white mule.” The home! This is a revelation about our | brewer, of course, chlorofoi'ms his | comparative standard of living! conscience by imagining that ‘he For.the auto, more than any other operates under the wing of an un-| commodi is an index of pros-/ written law, | perity—that is, as Americans con~| Find a way to make tae country | celve prosperity. ; absolutely bone-dry for 90 days and | you'll get action on prohibition, one | | Way or the other, A final and defi- | nite decision is next to impossible ; jas long as prohibition is only ‘aj half-hearted attempt at weaning. te S Japan, comments,the Wall Street Journal, is passing through the bi- cycle stage, The Japanese are using 2,100,000 bicycles and about 111,000 jinriki- shas — the two-wheeled hooded! carts drawn by trotting coolies, in-! vented by an American missionary. | The bicycle in Japan is slowly créwding out the jinrikisha, Let’s| se@, it’s about 15 or 20 years since bigycles were all the rage in Ameriga. We are just that many years ahead of Japan — probably | more, for with its smaller national || heing discussed in the press of || resources it will take Japan longer}| the day, | to.catch up with our. present state | Hy of “automobilism. i ae In a general way, Americans are AND NOW THE BON It will be up to Warren G. Har-! frém 20 years to 20 centuries ahead! of other countries in conveniences, | ding to save the national finances | luguries and standard of living. | from the disaster threatening bonus | legislation. The senate has. at| length arrived at the moment for! States, when you give the subject) passing the bill. Among the sena- | a Jittle thought and a grain of ap-'tors voting in the affirmative are| préciation. We are,90 much better| several who do so merely for face-/ off than other countries that our! saving reasons, and who are ex-/| copstant grumbling suggests may-' pected to shift to the other side in| he=we have become so accustomed | case the measure comes back on al to the fat of the land that we expect veto, The experts say that, as mat-! tcé much. |ters stand, the bill cannot be EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opirion of The Tribune. They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are Not a bad ciuntry, these United This expecting “to much,” how-, ever, is what has raised us to our! present high average standard of living. No standard of livnig is too high, as, long as the national resources, and the productivity of the individ-: ual make the standard possble. All) a matter of production. We cannot eaf crops that aren’t grown) live in} passed over the veto in the senate, as more than a third of the sena-| tors. will support the President, After a long series of buck-pass- ing and attempted buck-passings, the final decision will thus rest; with the President. It is a resport- sibility he would gladly have es- caped—as who would not? But there can be little doubt that he houses that aren’t built, or burn! will shoulder it, because his posi- | coal that: isn’t ‘mined. tion has been plainly stated and be-| Money is just the medium of ex-! cause the conditions have not been/| change, the cil that makes the! met by congress. wheels of distribution turn. Real prosperity is in production. Whe- ther the standard of living is to go up or down from now on depends! onzwhether we work hard or loaf} cn te job. And this is true all) alomg:the line, barring the minority —thieves and parasites, WAGES Wages of factory workers in New York state average $24.77 ay week apiece, says industrial com-) missioner’s report. This is, within a few cents, double the wages paid in 1914 when the war was getting under way in Europe. Econcmists say that New York factory wages are a national wea- ther-vane. Are they right? 4 ROADS ‘ Some ‘big, national movemel doggedly ahead, indifferent; fem- porary industrial, setbacks, “For in- stance, the good roads program. ‘Around 600 itifles of highway a month are being built with fhe.ai of the national government, ss Good roads, however, involve something more than mileage. The biggest good roads problem is the motor truck as large a8 a box car, destroyer of pavements, BO. KEGS Keg: manufacturers say a great change,is taking place in their in- custry® The popularity of the five- gallon keg seems to be on. the wane, Apparently last year’s sample batch was satisfactory, for the de- mand, now is for 10-gallon kegs, with 15 and 25-gallon sizes crowd— ing Brother..Ten. The ‘current sensation among home brewers is the 52-gallon used whiskey barrel, direct from bonded warehouses. Some experts say a wl iff,at the bung is worth the price of thé. barrel. Mr. Harding’s cardinal and en-| tirely reasonable demand was that| any bonus bill passed must supply the means for its own enforcement, must specify how and when: the money to pay the bonus was to be obtained. He suggested a sales tax, but failing that, left the means of payment to congress, Cowgress has ignored: this de- mand, chiefly because it could find no safe way to comply. New taxes it did not dare impose, not even the, econcmically sound, but politically, dangerous ‘gales tax. The treasury | deficit bids fair to reach half a bil-| lion by the end of the year, The foreign war debts are as far from| settlement as ever. Even if the’ British empire pays the interest on its American loan, the money must| be used,to meet interest due on’ Liberty ‘bonds. If it should be taken to ‘pay bonuses, other moneys |must be raised to meet the bond payments.. But where? and how? The.goyernment is spending a million sgallers a day. onthe dis- abled veterans. No good American | jwould cut: down the allowance a single penny, so long as the money | is carefully spent for the best: in- terests of.these men Who have-suf- fexéd wounds or sickness in defense | 6fthe country. Our firgt duty is to! these patriot-sufferers: H ‘But a bonus for every service! man ig on a different footing. At} least, we have no business attempt-| ing its payment, untitthe country) is on a sound and prosperous foo! ing, and the treasury can ‘stand. the| strain ‘without jeopardizing our overstrained domestic economy. | The sinister thing about the bonus situation is that so many men in congress are ready to ignore the facts and to try to buy votes for themselves by passing a bonus that can be paid only at the risk of economic Journ: i | A VETERAN IN THE SENATE pd SHOWMAN Manuel Herrick, one of the brain- jest men in congress, changes his act.. He attends a sale of surplus armygupplies and buys 11 old air- planes “at $160 apiece, ‘Recently he was defeated for re- nomination. As he retires to his Oklahoma farm, with his flying craf®the country suffers an irre- parable loss—something really in- teresting in congress, It takes per- sonality to attract attention in a dull environment. CRIME Pennsylvania state police, check-, congress. ing up law-breakers, find that When Maj. David A. Reed of | Pittsburgh, took oath as a United; jelement was introduced into the upper .chamber of the national | legislature--an element which. is bound to becdme strong as years go by. | There is a considerable contin- | Sent of former service men in the ;heuse. One or two were elected j immediately after the war. The next year there were one or two ;more. The next session will find} | ten or a dozen men who saw service against Germany filling seats in But Major Reed is the first World war veteran to sit in crime; tendencies run in five-year the senate. cycles after the age of 30. That is, an individual’s danger years—the! ing of an old ‘order. periods when he is most apt to be- some come a criminal—are 35, 40, 45, 50,| majorit; 55, ete. Can you explain it? It is a sign, perhaps, of the pass- There are young men in the senate, The a however, are well past ;middle age. Some of them have Invisible| held their seats through many ses- emotional and mental waves pul-| sions. They are about to give wa: y, sate through people, with the regu- this year or next or the next year, larity of a pendulum or of ocean to younger men. tides. tricity? Most of these will Is crime a force like elec-| be World war veterans.—Washing- |ton Herald. i i | disaster. — Minneapolis, § THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘THE GREAT AMERICAN HOME Be 1 Tom "x fica BEGIN HERE TODAY Was the body of that gay young lieutenant, BARNEY LOUTRELLE, lying cold and stiffin’ the snow. and ice? This) was’ the, fear in the heart of ETHEL CAREW, when+she rushed from the home of her grim old grandfather, 2 LUCAS CULLEN, SENIOR, who had been struck with anger and ter- ror when he’ learned that Lou- "trelle was going to Resurrection Rock, that ghostly island in Lake Huron, with its unoccupied house. Loutrelle and Ethel had met in these northern woods" éf" Michigan, in London he had received, in a senace, message : (from! | Elthel’s father, instructing him to go to the Rock—a trip which he hoped would clear up his obscure parentage. Old Lucas Cullen, winner of mil- lions in violent! battles for timber land in the early days, tries to, pre- vent Loutrelle “from reaching the Rock and Eth@l fearsythat Barney has been killed by ; KINCHELOE, acting under Cullen’s orders. She tries to reach the Rock herself. ! GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER VI Ethel reached the lake and re- moved her skis, Kinocheloe was still far ahead of her, but he was exhibiting an uneasiness which restored to Ethel her fears of the night. Miss Platt’s husband seemed to be losing, determination; he no longer was husrying but was glanc- ing back often at her, and he was wandering off from the direct line to Resurrection Rock. ‘She noticed that something on the | EVERETT ‘TRUE BY CONDO | a & tS SveretT TRS NNER ESIDSAY OF THIS CONCERN, WyoULB DROP IN AND (IMPRESSED WITH THE ISTLE PACKAGE IN WHICH: Kou | "e ou CAMG IN, SIR] Ss‘tine To KEEP IK = =|TOUCH WITH —1 THE BUYING MANO L THOUGHT & SLL You HOW X_AM NEAT, ART OFFS YOUR F PRODUCT FOR SALS. H=| PUBL | States senator the other day a new |PACKACE So CLOSGLY THAT OF ANOTHGR F UNS WHO HAVE AD increasingly |EVERXWHSRE THAT ZT ALMOQT OM WPOoscunT PUT IT OFF, You've GOT To TAKE CAP - You MIGHT GET HIM AN oRROW, AND You CAN'T HIM DOWN AND HAVE HIS HAIR You WANT : CUT, BUY HIM A NEW Suit ANO Him REMODELED SOME NEW SHOES AND A NEW “en? fr ty N i | 7] " It WA WAL RCLITTIE Wy ):— Rock—a woman of positive and good tastes. Draperies hung in Bright, diffused light fell center of. the room; upon chairs and a couch on one side upon a grand | lamp and music: cabinet nearby. In the wall to Ethel’s left, which was | ble mantel. The room showed no sign of dis- shore seemed to disturb him and, looking about, Ethel observed that Asa Redbird- had emerged from the trees and was hastening after them.' Asa was ‘carrying his rifle. “You want me to stop him?” Asa! inquired when, he came up. Ethel shook her heady “Just: ¢ome with me.” De In silence they completed’ their journey to the mysterious house of! pomprehend her. esurrection Rozk. There were no’ ° F Pepsin: signs of life and when Ethel ‘ana! 1 Was plain to ler that this room 2 . {once had been part of a French Asa Redbird reached the main en- cae A \ a pte srst; PPuilding. French of the sixteenth or trance, the girl received the first teen shee g | jbeventeenth century... Ethel’s fecog- a‘ % nob had nition of this partly vexpained her nob had” % impression of fami..arity here; when iphe was a child at her aunt’s chateu,| iaunt! Cecilia: had taken her on visits) | to chateaux of many of uncle Hil-| disturbed her. She did not know ‘ened as by something uncanny, i, “Asa, I've been in this room, I’ve : “never been in this house before; but J’'ve been in this room!” Ethel ex- selaimed. The gia’y panel over the been broken, After a moment’s hesi tation, Ethel thrust her arm throug! the hole so plainly prepared’ for ‘a wide: doorway opening into a big room at the front.| She flinched. upon a large, heavy, carved table near the piano at the east end with a talt| the interior wall, was a high, miar- jorder or of violence done there; yet! ight of the room itself amazingly| Why, at first; she merely felt fright-| that hole bigger?” “Nobody would,” Redbird assured | positively, “for water.” | No,” sne said, “No; no; no!” She j meant, first, agreement with Asa; | then | amages in her own mind. ‘the 1n- | wiau and she) nuw understood te \‘same events alike; Ava, imueed, had | discovered more than she, i "What kept, you up: there?” she | agked him, ‘ale suid he would show Jer; and the Kock, he led her to the part of the floor where the dogs haa been sniffling. “Somebody washed right here, you i ITvT- : | OVERCOAT Too WHILE YouRE AT ; P see. Somebody did it last mghv, 4 He's GOT To BE FITTED OUT |] ik | think; onchoty serubbed, but no = Rae ill) co else, FOR SCHOOL w! HIN PiSomebody burned cloth in fire- place,” Asa informed, going to the hearth and producing a handful of | ashes which exhibited the woven tex-| ture of cloth; he produced also a chared bit of shaped wood which had been the. back of ‘a scrubbing brush. Asa offered it to her and she put out her hand to take it, and then she could not touch it. Blood had ‘stanied it before it had been burnt, Kincheloe had put it in the fire to burn away—blood. : Asa had let go of it, thinking that she was taking it, and it dropped to the ‘flcor between them. It was to make sure that such trifles as this were completely burnt, she thought, that Kincheloe wished to, come to the Rock early this morning. She could think these things; she could net say them. She told ‘him’ about the mat of blood in Lad’s hair, Asa went out and examined the dog. | “Nothing there now,” he reported when he returned. “Hair there all cut off.” This brought her to the door t witness for herself that, since her discovery early that morning, some, one had clipped the hair close under the dog’s jaw. Who had done that? Kincheloe? Or Miss Platt? Or—her, grandfather? “Somebody was killed here, Asa?! ; “What else tothink?” “But who—Asa, who?” Who was ‘here last night?” Asa | returned logically. He meant, of course, her friend of yesterday, Barney Lou- trelle. 4 i CHAPTER VII “Well,” Lucas hailed Ethel on her; return. “Well; you're back from your little sunrise expedition, Kin- cheloe tells. me. Tell me all about it” “Grandfather!” she cried, breath- less from her excitement and from hurrying. “He was just here. Kin- chgloe mustn’t go away; he—” | “What's the trouble with you?) her grandfather demanded, seizing her arm. “Step.in here and explain what’s come over you.” | He used just enough force to over- but { | revolt at, and denial of, tne! together they ascended the steps 1h] $280.10 (which: sum includes interest paid by mortgagee upon a prior mortgage and delinquent taxes paid by mortgagee), besides the costs, disbursements and expenses of this foreclosure. ‘PAUL C. REMINGTON, Mortgagee. NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG, 1 Attorneys for Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 9-7-14-21-28—10-5-12 NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Default having occurred in the conditions of the mortgage herein- after described, Notice is Hereby Given, that that certain mortgage executed and delivered by Paul 'Kramar and Anna Kramar, his wife, i mortgagors, to Paul C. Remington, mortgagee, dated the 6th day of No- vember, 1917, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds in and for the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, on the 12th day of December, 1917, at nine o'clock a. m., and duly recorded in Book 124 of Mortgages, on page 106, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and here- inafter described, at the front door of the courthouse at Bismarck, in | the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour of ten| o’clock a. m., on the 17th day of Oc-| tober, 1922, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the date of sale. The premises described ‘in such, mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are situate in the county of Burleigh and_ state of North Dakota, and described as fol- lows, to-wit: The Southeast Quart- er (SE%) of Section Ten (10), in Township One Hundred Forty-four (144) North, of Range Seventy-seven (77),,West of the 5th P. M., contain- ing 160 acres, more or less, accord- ing to the United States Govern- ent survey thereof, There will be due on such mort- gage on the date of sale the sum of $407,57 (which sum includes interest, a prior! paid by mortgagee upon mortgage and delinquent taxes paid by mortgagee), besides the costs, disbursements and expenses.of this | foreclosure, Dated this 4th day of September,: 1922, , PAUL C. REMINGTON, Mortgagee. NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG, Attorneys for Mortgage, | Bismarck, North Dakota. i 9. |4-21-28—10-5-12 COMPLETION OF MECHANICAL WORK OF MEMORIAL BUILD- ING—BIDS CLOSE SEPTEMBER 19, 1922, BISMARCK, N. D. Sealed bids will ‘be received by the State Board of Administration at Bismarck, North Dakota, up to the| hour of 10 a. m., Tuesday, September | 19, 1922, for the’ completion of the! mechanical work of the Memorial Building now being erected in Bis-| marck, North Dakota, according to plans and specifications prepared by | Keith & Kurke, Architects and En- gineers, Fargo, North Dakota. Drawingd will be on file at the Builders’ Exchanges in Minneapolis, THURSDAY, gage on the date of sale the sum of | | Dated this 4th day of September, SEPTEMBER .7, 1922 All loaf and no fight makes Jack a dull boy. Strikes are like war, Sherman. Dempse! \ * Nothing makes a cow hungrier than a man with an old straw hat. | A young bride tells us the op- ‘timist who writes seed catalogs also . writes cook books. ; A wise man never chews dyna- , mite caps or restaurant hash, Many a chicken acts a” goose. A dark past is much better than a dark future. There is a Sanskrit word of 152 syllables. Please do not tell the man who names Pullman cars. | Most fish yarns sound fishy. The only thing harder to carry jthan two watermelons is three. If lending money makes enemies, we know a man who certainly does want to be friendly. Health hint: Strangers cussed over the phone may be fighters. Shcemakers will mark the real size in women’s shoes. Heaven jhelp the poor shoe clerk. {| If living isn’t any fun why is ‘some tdken off for’ bad behavior? ‘ Writers are arguing over whether Roosevelt cussed in the White House. Bet Harding is interested. Bandit who cracked a coal:deal- er’s safe knew where the money was. In the parlor isn’t enough. Be- fcre préposing go back and see how she looks in the kitchen. Aviator who flew 200 miles an hour should have started earlier. 3s erat «London taxicabs are said to suf- fer from old age. The disease has spread to this country. Before you get through paying on your summer clothes it is time to buy winter clothes. Some towns have all the Iuck, In Ford City, Pa., ham sandwiches only cost a nickel. “Yes?” Asa’ inquired, unable to, | , “Who done?” come her physical opposition. She sy paul and Fargo, and the dffice did not struggle violently, as h'S of the Architects, Additional copies grasp warned her that if she exerted for the private use of contractors more’ strength, he would also eni-, may be obtained from the Architects ploy more and. overpower her. jupon making a deposit of $15.00, of He was angry with her for what which $10.00 will be refunded upon che had done in the night and for return of drawings and specifications ; g ;, in_good condition. having gona out early this mornins| “Bigs must be submitted in the but he was big'and'firmhanded 9"4 form given in the specifications, in ! so much as usual, that she cried Ut 4 sealed envelope, and accompanied confidently: “Grandfather, you don’t, with a bidder's bond equal to 5% of know what he’s done!” | the amount of bid which will be for- feited by the contractor should he fail to provide a satisfactory surety WECL, Yours IN tToucH Now's turning tha key from the outside, As she did so she realized that! neither Bagley nor Barney Loutrelle. would have need to enter in this fashion. he a “Bagley got key from Wheedon,” Asa explained. “Barney Loutrelle came yesterday and Bagley right here and let him in.” The hall was wide and pleasant, furn#shed with gay, bright wall pa- per picturing tall herons standing in! i reeds. There were pretty, p chairs in gray and gold, matching a table and a lounge which had cushions of black silk embroid- cred with gold herons, Underfoot was a handsome, silky sug in the blue and yellow designs of the Chi- nese weaver. It showed no wear) or soil; nothing showed use. Ethel stood amazed at the beauty; and. brightness; she found herself thinknig of a woman in connection on Resurrection with this house \YoUV ARG In Ae RSSSMBLES IRM IN THES SAMT VERUSSED IT j (ul ope cS PN, 4 A MSZ LR AA K/ Ss 4 aire’s friends. She might indeed have been in this very room before. It was hopeless for her to try to re- call from her, memories of when, she was five and eight. » Her'mind was not now dwelling upon what might have been her own association with this room, What was Barney Loutrelle’s? He hada Been sent across the ocean to the room. Why? She ‘moved nearer the mantel and gazed at the design incised over the fireplace; it bore a dignified, formal deivce like'—yes, very like—the de- vice wrought upon Barney Lou- trelle’s ring. They searched the house thorough- ly. ‘No one, living or dead, was in the house; nowhere had they come tipon sign of violence or indication of cause for Barney Loytrelle’s dis- appearance. “Where’s he gone, Asa?” Ethel ap-| pealed fianally. “How do I know?” the Indian re- turned ‘irritably, ‘and Ethel appreci- ated that his nerves were on edge. She heard scratching at the door and( remembering the dogs, she re-/ called the brown mat in Lad’s hair. “Let them in, Asa,” she directed. When the door was opened and the rogs ran in, she thought that they Thshed into the salon because she was there; but Lad only brushed against her on his way to the further end of the great room where | he thrust his head down and smelled’, of the fioor, whimpering and scram- pling about in a circle, Lass blundered about near-him so | excitedly that Ethel followed, to see what was there, only to find a space of bare, varnished floor, But her interest stirred Lad to leap upon ‘her and dash to the door on the south which communicated with the outside steps down the Rock to the summer landing. : When she looked through the glass of this door, Ethel .bserved for the first time that those steps showed the depressions of deep footsteps. The dogs jupmped into the snow and floundered down the steps to the ice where they shook themselves and rolled over, barking. She was fear- fuly expecting that Lad was leading her to the sort of horror which she had believed to be in the house when she came upon chunks of ice stand- ing beside a hole, about a yard in daimeter, which had been chopped through to the water. +4 Young ice had frozen over, not yet half.an inch thick. She knejt and leaned forward with her hands on the edge of the hole, peering down through the new, glassy crystal into the dark, deep water underneath. She felt footsteps on the floor of ice and, looking about, she saw that Asa after some delay had descended from the Rock. He came to her side and gazd into the hole. “Water hole.” he said quietly. “Bagley chop-_it here yesterday to fill buckets. Bagley did not chop it so big.” “Yes; that’s it; why? Why, Asa? she cried, suddenly losing control of herself. “Why should any one want | ‘Kincheloe!”. f |. «Well; well,” © he demanded. | | wwhat’s. he done that I don't! | know? Tell me all about it,” he in- | vited. 4 “You know, about it; all; all! she cried aloud. “Oh, grandfather!”’| | And she shrank back before him, | under her share, of the horror and | guilt of what had been done. | (To Be Continued) (CUT THIS pd 18. WORTH t MON Cut out this slip, enclose with Be | and mail ,it to Foley & Co. 2835 | Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Ill, writing » your mame and address clearly. | ; You will receive in return a trial | | package containing Foley’s Honey | 'and Tar Compound for coughs, {colds and croup;‘'Foley Kidney | Pills for paing in sides and back; ; rheumatism, ‘backache, kidney and) | bladder ailments; and Foley Ca— |thartid Tablets, a wholesome and | thoroughly cleansing cathartic for! |:constipation, " biliousness. head-| ‘aches, and sluggish bowels.—Advt. i |. Good Wheat Yield | On a farm of 340 acree near Van | Hook, Gus Sather threshed out 11,- | 585 bushels of No. 2 hard wheat, anj | average of better than 34 bushels to | the acre. Neary all wheat in that | neighborhood is running from 20 to 35 bushels to the acre of the best | |. quality. H | FIGURED. SILKS | Figured silks were never more } popular than now. Designs are being taken from rugs, hangings, wall pan- els and pieces of mosaic—the more | antique the origin the better liked. | NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- H CLOSURE SALE _ Default having occurred in the | conditions of the mortgage herein- lafter described, Notice is Hereby | Giveng that that certain mortgage l executed ang delivered by Oscar F.! | Johnson and’ Elise, Johnson, his wife, mortgagors, to Paul C. ‘Remington, mortgagee, dated the 20th day of | October, 1916, and filed for record in \'the office of the register of deeds jin and for the county of Burleigh and State of \North Dakota, on the! 13th day of December, 1916, at nine; o’clock a.m. and duly recorded in | Book 124 of Mortgages, on page 90,| will ke: foreclosed by a sale of the premises:in such mortgage and here- | inafter described, at the front door lof the courthouse at Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour of ten o’clock a. m., on the 17th day of Octo- ber, 1922. to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the date of sale. | The premises described in such | mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are situate in the county of Burleigh and_ state of | North Dakota, and described as fol- lows- to-wit: The Northwest Quarter | (NW%) of Section Thirty-four (34), in Townshin One Hundred _ Forty- two (142) North, of Range Seventy- | nine (79) West of the 5th P. M., con- ‘taining 160 acres, more or less, acs | cording to the United States Gov: | ernment survey thereof. | There will be due on such mort: | ‘swer the complaint {n this action, bond and enter into the contract. The Board of Administration re- serves the right to accept or reject any or all bids, CHARLES LIESSMAN, Executive Secretary, State Board of Administration. KEITH AND KRUKE, Architects and Engineers, 8-31—9-7-14 NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECLOSURE Notice is hereby given that by rea- son of default therein, that certain mortgage made and executed by Ed- ward P. Heyn and Emma Heyn his wife, to John D. Siem and C. H. Siem, Jr., mortgagees, dated the 25th day of March, 1919, and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 5th day of April, 1919, in Book 162 of Mort- gages, on page 14, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises described in said mortgage at the: front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck, County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, at the hour of 1:30 in the afternoon of the 6th day ot October, 1922, to satisfy the amount die on said mortgage on the date of sale. i aee The premises described in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are as follows, to- wits The Northeast Quarter (NE%) of Section Seven (7), Township One Hundred Thirty-eight (138), North of Range Seventy-five, (75) West of the 5th P. M. 3 Said mortgage contains a ¢lause authorizing the mortgagee to declare the whole sum due if there is.a de- fault, and the whole of said mort+ gage is hereby declared due, There will be due on said mortgage on the date of sale the sum of $2908.40. Notice of Intention, to Foreclose | was given as required by law more than thirty days before the begin- ning of the proceedings. The default consists of ‘the non-payment the sum est, and the taxes for the year, 1921, Dated this 18th day of August,/ 922. JOHN D. SIRM AND C. H. SIEM Jr. E. T. BURKE, | Their Attorney, | Bismarck, N. D* | 8-24-31—9-7-14-21-28 © f ( SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- ty_of Burleigh. IN_DISTRICT COURT, Fourth Ju- dicial District. Ernest Rhonemus, plaintiff, vs, | Grace Rhonemus, defendant. i The State of North Dakota to the above named defendant: { You are hereby summoned to an-/ | | \ | \ which was filed in the office of the clerk of said court on the 9th day of August, 1922, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscribers within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of service; and in case of your failure to appear or answer,! judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. | Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, | August 9, 1922. i Newton, Dullam & Young, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Bismarck, North Dakota. 8—10-17-24-31; 9—7-14, of $2400 principal and $476.80 inter- | { | A-wise man never sleeps on a | Yailroad track or on the job. | _ Out of sight is not out of mind. Coal is and isn’t. |. It is hard to tell what or when the world ‘is coming to. Movie star usually keeps a diary. Then she can look: back and tell who her husbands were, Beethoven composed _master- ‘pieces after he was deaf. Our mu- sicians compose them just before. > —_—__—_____-—_4 ‘| ATHOUGHT || ——____-—_4 As we have therefore opportun! ity, let us do good unto all men— | Galat® 6310. " There is always someone to smile at, somebody to give your chair to, somebody to whom a book, a flow- ‘er, or even an old paper will be a boon.—Josephine Pollard, —— — || TODAY’S WORD | ee %, + aie ;. Today’s word is—GARRULITY. | It’s pronounced — ga-roo-li-ti, ; with accent on the second syllable. Tt méans — talkativeness, espe- cially concerning trifles, It comes from—Latin “garrire,” to chatter. It’s used like this—‘“Repeated at- tempts have heen made, both through outside criticism and by. effort on the part of certain of its ;oWn members, to check the gar- rulity of the United States senate, but with little or no success thus ——— WORN OUT AFTER - SHE COOKED A MEAL | i Took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound— ~ Read the Result Cincinnati, Ohio.—‘‘I suffered for a | year'withnervoustroubles andirregular- ities before I i housework. I was worn out if I cooked your Vegetable Com- pound and Liver Pills I would be re- lieved. After taking the first bottle felt better, and neglected it awhile, but found I could not do my work until I was stronger. So I took the Vegetable mpound again and now I am the mother of a 19 months old boy. He is fat and healthy and I am sure I could never have carried him if it had not been for your Vegetable Compound. I recommend your medicine to all women although I am young to be advising some one oldet,? rs,. CHRIST. PETROFF, 218 W. Liberty St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Lydia E. Pinkham’# Vegetable Com- pound contains no harmful drugs and can be taken in safety by any woman, By rs ~* tee ~

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