Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘ : - Daily by mail, with their rifles. BOW vrs PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1922 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE) planted in the cellar of “a wealthy’ morality of the ballot’ box, even) Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D,, as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN - Editor Foreign Representatives @. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - DETROIT Marquette’ Bldg. Kresge Bldg PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW, YORK - Fifth Ave. Bldg MEMBER OF 'THE ASSOCIATED Git PRESS The Associated Press is exclusive. ly entitled to the use or republit cation of all news dispatches cre- dited to it or not otherwise credit- ed iat, this paper and also the local news published. herein, ma All vights of republication of special! dispatches herein are alan reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF f ld CIRCULATION UBSCRIPTION RAT * IN ADVANCE Dally by carrier, per year....$2.20 Dail by mall, per year (in Bis- marc) 12 » State outside Bisrnarck) Daily by mail, outside of N | Dakota sae 6.00 FeHE STATE'S OLDEST NEWS- | 4 , (Established 1873) 3 LONG, LONG AGO 3 Do you ever wonder how modern life compares with long ago in America, when grandpa was a lad? ‘Eurn back 83 years and see wheth- & you would exchange places. Times were hard in 18389. Qnited States Bank, having over- speculated in cotton, was forced to guspend operations. The failure involved only $2,000,000 in deposits, Wut it. precipitated a financial panic in which over 400° banks were dhliged to close, many of them for dcod. Congress, as usual, shot off on a thngeht and got interested in gomething else. It raised a cy- Glone) of oratory against the “bar- barity” of using a pack of blood- Wounds, that had. been imported m Cuba to track down Seminole i in Florida, Before the alking subsided, the dogs were abandoned as inefficient. The cheer-up crew told the na-} : improved over what it was when, the! tion that its hope for prosperity Was in foreign trade. Great elation when Messrs. Baldwin, Vail & Hutty announced that their Phila-| Celphia plant had received orders; for several locomotives for Eng- lsh railroads. Tt was in 1839 that Charles Good- ¥orr perfected his process of vul-; Canizing rubber. Another inventive | nsation for the year was furnish-| da.by Prof. John William Draper! Gf University of New York, who an- nounced he had made “the first; fhotozraphic portrait ever taken! from life.” | W, F. Harnden, Boston plunger, started the first express service in| 1839; carrying packages between his ctiy and New York. ‘ The wilderness was far from com§uered: In’ Florida the Tndfahs were on the warpath, a bounty of $200 on their heads. “A row broke out between Eng-; 1 and America over, the-bound- of Maine. Regulars were rushed to the border and after a Wwinter’s “persuasion” . succeeded in calming the Maine farmers, who had decided to settle the argument; f A marvel of 1839 was that the cost of running the national goy- ernment was less than $38,000,000 for the year. The national debt; then was a trifle under $12,000,000, ‘Otherwise, the year 1839 was un- eventful, except for customary trotible with Mexico. Still, there’s a,certain glamor about those ‘old edys, and maybe the reason we moderns sometimes complain that life is dull is because so many sonsational things happen that we afte betoming jaded. Life today is a carnival—very in- teresting at first, then boresome after. a while, the spectators want- “to get away where it’s quiet. There is such a thing as life being so superinteresting that it’s dull.) Extremes mect. : / GARCIA In San Francisco a retired army officer gets the Distinguished Ser- vice Cross for an act of heroism nearly a fourth of a century ago. -He is Andrew S. Rowan, the man who “carried the message to Gar- cla.” War had broken out between American and Spain. Presidenty McKinley wanted.to get a letter to Garcia, Cuban rebel leader, address unknown. Rowan didn’t ask any .questions, but tackled and over- camé terrific obstacles and “de- livered the good.” | He was the original “go-getter.” His fame has. been sung over 20 languages—an universal admission that stalling on the job is a certain | “PAYABLE The} |to dispose of their wine cellar.” A few handfuls of dust, a little eauatle damping with the phoney | cobwebs, and another rum-hound lis ready to be parted from his | bankroll. Barnum was right,\ | arr eee = i | WOMAN. | Ben Franklin’s - great-great: hgranc-tliughter, Mrs. Ellen, Dusinc | Davis, 1 for Congress on the ' Hemocratic ticket, in Pennsylvania, If she is anything like old Ben— | and she looks as sensible, in her j picture—-she should be elected. | What this country needs most isa \few horse-sense leaders of tho lealiber of Ben Franklin and | Thomas, Jefferson. They weren’t fire-eaters or shadow-boxers. | FEET | As tight shoes and higher heels come back in the east, shoe store; wife was not a bonafide resident of | + 6.00! clerks discover that loose and easy, | flapper styles have made women’s | feet fat. The job now is to get a quart- foot into a pint-shoe. It will be {done Fashion stops at nothing in | its long-range tendency to keep women clad as uncomfortably as possible. The return of wasp-waists is not many years. off 4 EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this colump may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They are presented here ir order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which, are being discussed in the press of the day, T AN- INTERESTING SIDELIGHT Ralph Budd, president of the Great Northern, has an interesting thing to say regarding the condi- tion of the motive apparatus of the line he represents, He declares | that while this condition is not | what it was when the strike went into effect on July 1, it is very much the government turned back railroads of the country on Febru- ary 29, 1920. The Great Northern then had, he says, 26 locomotives in reserve compared with over a hundred reserve locomotives in government control \ag compared ident Budd apparently seeking to establish any disparag- ing parallels of that kind. During its regime as railroad to raiJroad employes and it had good working order now. This com-| parison is a significant comment On| oy her with private control, although Pres-| was not! king the government did not have a| they thotight the place deserted. general strike of shopmen or others| { to contend with. It paid big wages} paid big wage*! man tongue has only 11 muscles, more of them than were found nec-| egsary under private control, but: with these supposable advantages —|family, now out cf town, who want) though it was an offense which no| jangle of the law can _reach.—St. | Paul Pioneer Press. ' \ Broker Sued For | $200,000 Heart Balm by Seidel: (By the Associated Press) | Minneapolis, Sept. 12—Todd W. Lewis, broker, was made the defend- ant today in a $200,000 alienation it filed! in Hennepin county dis- | trict court by Paul R. Seidel, form: | er husband of Mrs. Lewis. The case is scheduled to go into court Octo-| ‘ber 9. | | In answer to the complaint attor- | rey for Lewis stated that the form-| er Mrs. Seidel obtained a divorce | , from Seidel at Reno, Nevada, Decem- | ber 17, 1919, after eight months | residence there. 1 Seidel bases his complaint on the charge that the divorce was not le- | | | i :gally granted because his former Reno. | INCORPORATIONS | Articles of ‘neorporation filed with | the secretary of state include: | Amenia Sced and Grain Co pac! capital stock, $100,000; in corporators, S. H. Higgins, E. W./ ‘ Chaffee, ete, ! Commercial Investment Co., Far-! | go: capital stock, $50,000; incorpor- | jators, B. P. Schmallen, W. D,” Wed- well; M. W. \Murpay. L. C. Whecler Co., Fargo; capital stock, $100,000; incorporators, Louis EF, Wheeler, Percy: E. Wheeler, Mar-| guerite Whceler, Fargo, Hamre Furniture Cu., Minot; cap-| | ital sta>k, “$25,000; |" incorporators, ; Dawson Braj . Frank, Stroud, inneapolis; W. J. Lorshbough, Far- Fo. ® We have been expecting to see in| the paper where some coal wagon} driver absconded with a’ ton. fade New York police have dangerous jobs. An actor tried to kiss one, | — ! The woman who. loves every hair| husband’s head hates every | hair on his shoulder. It’s about equal. Poor dodge autos | and rich dodge baby buggies, Some girls dress for town as if Truth has it on fiction. | The hu-| While driving autos or bargains it} is safer to keep to the right. Z t | other physical seizure | up. THE GREAT AMERICAN HOME (Continued From Our Last Issue) { So alarming ‘was the consequence | of this that Bennet could not at once realize it was simply a conse- quence, | He. jumped un_ in . fright, imagining that his grandfather sud- denly had suffered from a cramp on} “Why, grandfather, whisky? Pll get. you- Lucas controlled himself, and stood “Indigestion,” he mumbled. “Caviar here tonight. else happened?” When: Bennet u want some informed’ him® that* he thought for a ‘while that his it-failed to-prevent*a“generalde- than seven weeks.. Calling attention to these things at thig time might not be appros if it were not for the fact that there is a considerable group country that would like to substi- tute government ownership and op- eration. Some of this group have been counting on the present dis- turbance to bring about a realiza- tion of their hopes—Minneapolis Tribune. SCANDAL POINT UNTOUCHED no_ better, abler and more convinc- ing advocate than Hughes could have been selected to of public opinion which has been adverse from the beginning. the people have faith in Secretary Hughes—faith in hig honesty and sincerity, personal and_political— edge is vague and general at best. Obviously the Republican Natign- al committee appreciates that the Newberry e is a very damaging that the letter of inquiry addressed been arranged to draw out the re- view in which the Michigan Sen- ator is given a clean bill of health. The next step will be to deluge the country with the admittedly able acquittal and endeavor to acquit the partisan vote by which Senator Newberry was seated.. It will be conceded Secrefary Hughes makes out a strong legal case for Newberry, but after all it moralization of railroad equipment. | The present showing as to loco-| motives compared with that, of two/| and a half years ago om the Great. Northern, as set forth by Mr. Budd,! is'made in the face of a strike that; has been in progress for longer) ; ; pared to cussing out a waitress, in this} 5 six more months until March. Whether as defender or apologist, } | Secretary j take the Newberry case and make| the attempt to turn beak the tide For} and will accept his conclusions in| “has 152 syllables.” It is a case of which their own knowl-} party liability; and it takes no} stretch of imagination to conceive; to Secretary Hughes might have} road to failure. We all know the! is doubtful whether the moral as- price of success. Few are willing | pects of the case have been changed to pay it. | Or improved. ,Senator Newberry CIGARETS ; of the Supreme Court, but the fact Cigaret smoking, after a long and} that large sums of money were steady’ slump, is coming back) spent in his election never was and strongly. American factories now; never could be denied. Whether are turning out packaged “coffin—/| he spent it personally and whether was acquitted by a reversal finding | When you see a man climbing the! ladder to success you. can bet a woman is holding it, ; | Slit sleeves look as if the dress-! maker didn’t have enough goods. | Since worrk makes one bald, what a pity a man caxt, worry with his face instead of his head, Beating up a burglar is safe com- Better national anthem than “Keep the home fires burning” would be “Darling, I am growing cold.” Skirts are longer; but it is only | Health hint: If you get slecpy during church do not try to use a| pillow of the church. i What makes an old maid madder | than the‘ harvest, moon? { The last rose of summer is notshbretl yet; but our Palm Beach ‘suit looks | like ‘it, A serious shortage of,,g00d times is reported.: Don’t waste any. | he knew all; and (he, went to his grandson was concealing somethings but at Mast he satisfied himself that room, : For Lucas never did anything at all at Galilee except .mect James Quinlan ‘there’ and’ there direct J. Q. to the deed that was to be done. It was marvelous how, throughout the forty-six years which had passcd sinee that meeting, Lucas had car- ried consciousness. of his own guilt always associated with the place of necting, “Galilee”. He had not known that Quinlan had done so too. He had supposed that Quinlan had lived out his life with a differ- ent association. And yet’ this was natural cnough. ; “Natural enough!” Lucas. mutter- ed to himself, “Galilee!” But J, Q was dead; Kincheloe had put his body in the lake. Who, then, knew about Galilee and could asso- ciate it with a flaming torch? No one else in all the world but Lucas himself! “Yet Ethel and that Lou- trelle and Bennet had found oxt. By God, if they drew til | EVERETT TRUE IN -YouR AD “Orie single word,” aap Al Apple, gfenough | to be a married word. ; | | | A woman putting up preserves tells us sugar prices are, Undanny. | Three’s a crow party. two's a petting | . | If she doesn’t rouge, it is because | she thinks discretion is tie better | part of pallor. | Who will temper the winter winds to the shorn consumer. RACED | When the worm. turns he is look-| ing for a chestnut. ‘ There seems to. be tio place like away from home. Only seven more months until the next, coal strike. | | | | | | | pe SUMMONS | STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- ty of Burleigh. In District Court, | Fourth Judicial District. | Hjelmer Thor, Plaintiff, vs. Nets ‘Johnson, Louis Lind, Hans Johnson, ‘Arthur Oyan, L. Saby, Defendants. | The State of North Dakota to the | above named Defendan'y nails” at the rate of 60,000,000,000/ he knew and approved of the ex- a year, or nearly two-thirds more, penditures figured strongly in the than last February. ‘legal aspect, but not at all in the One reason is lower prices! moral aspect of the case. He got the «brought by the price-war. | vote necessary to elect him, the Nerves also have something to dc court ‘exculpated him on legal with it. Is a man nervous because | groun¢s ang the Senate voted him he preees or does he smoke be- hig seat. Practically this is what cause ‘he’s nervous? Doctors dis-| Secretary Hughes points out—that agree. | Senator Newberry personally was = ‘not guilty, : oe, COBWEBS | But what Mr, Hughes does not ~"Bootleggers rejoice. Some gen-|deny is that a lavish and unusual jus has discovered how to manu-/jist‘ofmoney was made in the New- facture artificial cobwebs. | berry electién:+.That is what sticks A stock of new wine, bottle with|in the public_consciotgness. On of- mildewed counterfeit labels, ua toage Was comfittted ‘against fhe: You are hereby stimmoned and ‘required to answer th2 complaint of the plaintiff in this rction, a copy of | ; which is hereto | i with served upon you, and to serve! 4 copy of your answer - upon j subscriber at his office in the c of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota within thirty days after the| service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service and in case of your failure so to ap- pear and answer judgment will be taken against you by default for the | lief demanded in the complaint. | Dated July 2ist, 1922. ¥. E. McCURDY, Attorney for Plaintiff. Residence and .P. O. Addres: | Bismarck, North Dakota. 9-13-20-27—10-4-11-18 i | | exed and here- |, | the | sHOW A CGRTAIN PICTURE. FOR CIRCUS -ADIGETIVES PARED. TH STATEMENTS AND FI MISLEADING $ 30 on; ve nothing else transpired at the séance, | r M AND ALSO. DESCRIBE IT IN E COMMODITY WITH THS and the torch from him, what else could they draw? If they obtained it from the dead, how much more would the dead tell? ..That was a staggerer for Lucas who had acted upon the simple and effective formula that dead men tell no tales. “Galilee sind a flaming torch!” Lueas winced and’ swang back to his window. Sorold J. Q., though dead, had told? Wow could Luc‘’s shut up a ghost? An ‘idea, half formed, seized him; nd be stood stark, ‘It progressed n his mind; and he laughed. In a ion, it revolted himself; he dis- carded it; but it came back to him, mor! convincingly, more complete, and’ it, promigedy him, triumpb. | It was after nine the next morn- ing ‘before Ethe! awoke; and then it was so delightful to lie in bed, dreaming over the’ hours of the evening, that she: made sno stir, and it was ten when a maid knocked at her ‘door. She ‘answered joyously. “Some one for me?” ; “Y6j,' Miss: Carew. Mr. Lucas Cul- len, your grandfather.” Ethel’ hastened down and found her. grandfather, wth his overcoat onjand holding his hit is in gloved hand, standing in the center of the, ‘drawing room and gazing critically | about. 5 “You little foo ” he accused her commiserati “Can't you feel! even when your own flesh and blood } trieg to protect you?” | “From what, s:andfather?” { “Had it ever occurred to you that! the reason your fatucr never came to my house was that he couldn’t?”! “No,” Ethel said “Think over it a minute.” “Why?” BY CONDO i IN TODAY'S PAGER You, || COMMODITY —IN 2° >T BAVE Gomes]! NO THe Cattce ~*~. |! DON'T You REALIZE! | Me titi = ESS Do, MERCHANT POUNDED INTO HIM to PUT SOMG OF IT AND % REAUZE Has SOMG STRUTH THat'—THaT’s THAT IG \ HE'S MoRS CIKGELY WTO HIS ADS s | 1 i | | OH, WHAT A RELIEF, WITH THOSE THREE KIDS IN ScHooL! a ticket and boarded a train for Sheridan, Wyoming, She had been unattended and plainly under the stress of strong emotion. What Ethel had told Barney was ~ | brief and simple in its final state- ment. ’ 1 "Dear Barney: | “T have found that I must leave Fat once. for my home, ‘later, I shall know how to explain | what must scem madness to you. [Now I-can not, | “Where you are and how you are jand what you ere doing remain with ime the most important things in my life; so you must let me knew all | about yourself, My address will be |'Sheridan, Wyoming. y “ETHEL.” It was several days later * that | Mrs. Wain, the housekeper, phone “LT speak to you, sir,” Mrs, Wain | said breathlessly, after she had sunk ‘|into.the seat, “upon my own respon: | sibility, sir, ent | you, before I say another word, to give me your word as’ a gentleman | T shall. tell—unless £ allow you.” 4}' Barney felt his pulses pounding |again. “What is it?” he demanded. | you're sure’ you're not followed?” “Where?” | “At the corner of Tenth and Wa- Barney went immediately downtown. He had to wait en the corner only afew miinutes before Mrs, Wain in. ji “St, Luke's Hospital,” said said to a|the driver; and when the door wa - | She's had another operation; it was| | performed the day before yesterday. She rallied at first but sank later.” mation of who “she”, was; and Bar- :|ney was aware. that direct inquiry | would be vain, ‘ ak : “|the nurse, who had ben beside the “Why wouldn't) hayg him there?” hed, moved away, and Mrs, Wain He couldn’t tell you, I wouldn't. 1] hgid back and. Barney’ advanced foréed me, This fellow you call| having seen the woman who lay on Dontrelle... i ‘her: side with her profile plain ‘You, believe that your father—s0; seainst the pillow. Yet a fluttering touch with this fellow called Lou-| over him as he halted silently beside trelle after your father died? That! the bed, started your interest in him?” | Her fate, as she lay turned toward “Why, do: yeu; suppose your father | and intense suffering she had surely did that? Why did he pick him, ( endured. Her skin was clear and mean: lovely even in its deathly pallor; a request for him to call, ee y. “So I must ask te = that you will make no use of what |: “You. will meet me, sir—when | bash.” drove up in a taxi: and invited him \ | closed, she vouchsafed to Barney, Still the housekeeper gave no inti- Barney did not know her; when thought I'd never have to; but you've| alone, he was not conscious of ever Bennet’s “been telling me—got in| of awe—of more than awe—came “Yes,” |him, was beautiful, though illness “Why-—why, grandfather; he was|her hair—black and abundant—had going to met me. Father knew/ clung to its luster as had her dark thas! sonia” way brows and the lashes which ‘lay on ‘Tomfoolery! Look here, your her cheek. Exen wow the indomita- father was killed, and after he was/ ple soul of her— ‘zat essence of her dead—so you thnk—he tried to talk! spirit which persisted though con- to this Loutrelle, So let's just tak. | sciousness long ws.s gone—was keep- your own information; your father’s! ing. up the fight, Barney felt. And spirit, the first thing after he was! he. wanted her to win; oh, how he dead, goes about luoking for a fellow! wa ! 0 nted her to win! named Barney Loutrelle. Now spir-| jt semed to him he had never its—all I've heard of—usually go wished so for anjther’s life; and; first for those. closest to ’em, don't why? Because, for the first time, they?” z he was beside some one who be- “Why, usually, grandfather.” Some time; is an exception?” 4 .”_!Jonged to him by blood? Because Well, what makes you think this! she was his—Mother (To Be Continued.) Ethel shrank back, comprehending aera Jess his words thun the ugliness of his inflection, — “Why do you’ mean?” she de- manded. “Well, who more ‘natural for a father to seek than his son?” | Dak., Plaintiff, vs. A. A. Johnstone, SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- ty of Burleigh. In District Court, Fourth Judicial District. ' Farmers State Bank of Regan, N.! Defendant. her “My father!” Ethel said. “You're talking about my father?” “Before he was your father. 1 knew him! He was about St. Flor-| entin quite a little in the old days—} quite a little! You may remember i! would not have him marry my a copy of your answer ‘upon the daughter. So they ran off. I knew—| Subscriber at_his office in the city there was a girl to go to Resurree-| of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North! tion Rock.” | Dakota within thirty days after the Ethel flung herself at him and} service of this summons upon you, with her little fists clenched tight; exclusive of the day of such service she pummeled him on the chest./ and in case of your failure so to ap- “You lie—you lie—you lie! My | Pear and answer judgment will be fathei! You lieonec lel? | taken against you by default for the i Ad | relief demanded in the complaint. He caught her fists and held her! Dated July 2ist, 1922. brutally before him, He saw that he| F. E, McCURDY, had not at all convinced her; but he! _, Attorney for Plaintiff. had not expected so simply by this| Residence sand ar Address: statement of the false before com-| Bismarck, Nori Vater 148 bining it with what was true. Hv —— The State of North Dakota to the; above named Defendant. You are hereby summoned and required .to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in this action, a copy of which| is hereto annexed and here- with served upon you, and to serve | was, too old and sirewd in’ expcri-| NO'TICE OF FORECLOSURE OF; ence to fail to know how a truth told may carry with it a lie. “Who was his father then?” he demanded of his granddaughter, half shaking her, “Do you know? Then REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE Notice is hereby given that that | certain mortgage executed and de- | livered by James W. Gramling and Annie E. Gramling, his wife, Mortga- 1st day of November, 1915, and filed | for record in the office of the Re- gister of, Deeds of Burleigh County, | North Dakota, on the 4th day of De- |cember, 1915, at the hour of 3:10 | o'clock p. m. and recorded in Book 108, at page 165, and which instru- ment was thereafter by an instru- ment in writing duly assigned to Minneapolis Trust Company, a cor- poration, which instrument was filed for record in the office of the Re- gister of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota. on the 4th day of Jan- uary, 1916 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock a, m. and was recgrded in Book 110, at page 504, and thereafter was by an instrument in writing duly as- signed to the Northwestern Fire and Marine Insurance Company, which instrument was filed for record in the office of*the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota on the 8rd day of February, 1915 at the hour of 5:00 o'clock p. m. and recorded in Book 110 of Mortgages at page 518, and was thereafter by an instrument in writing duly assigned to Paul C. Remington, which assign- ment was filed for record in the of- fice of the Register of Deeds of said Burleigh ‘County on the 10th day of July, 1922 at 4:00 o’clock p. m. and recorded in Book 175 of Assignment of Mortgages at page 16, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in said mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck, in the County of ‘Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 30th day of September A. D. 1922, at the hour of Two o'clock p. m- to satisfy the amount due on said mortgage at the day of sale. Pea oe The premises described in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as fol- , lows, to-wit: Southeast Quarter (SE%) of Scc- tion Thirty (30) Township One Hun- dred and Forty-four (144) Range Se- venty-seven (77) West, Burleigh County, North. Dakota. There will be due on said mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of $1184.84 together with taxes paid on the above described premises snd interest thereon in the sum of $60.69 making a total due of $1245.53. Dated this 22nd day of August, A. D. 1922. : PAUL C. REMINGTON, | Assignee of Assignee of Assignee of Mortgagee. SCOTT CAMERON, # ‘Attorney for said, Assignee, ji ck, North Dakota. Pigmarcly Novg 28-30--9-6-13-20-27 a NOTICE OF SALE A Notice is hereby: given, that by vir- tue of a judgment and decree in fore- closure, rendered and given by the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District in and for the county of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, and entered and docketed in the of- fice of the Clerk of said court in and for said county-on the 9th day of August, 1922; in an action wherein The Lancaster Savings Bank, a for- eign corporation, was plaintiff, and Mary’ T. Craig and Raymond W. Graig were defendants, in favor of the said plaintiff and against. the said defendant, Mary T. Craig, for the sum of Eleven Hundred Seventy- two and 36-100 (1172.36) Dollars, which judgment and decree among other things directed the sale by me of the real estate hereinafter de- scribed, to, satisfy the amount of said judgment, with interest there- on and the costs and expenses of such sale, ér so, much thereof as the proceeds of such sale applicable thereto will satisfy. And by virtue of a writ to me issued out of the | office of the clerk of said court in and-for said county of Burleigh, and under the seal of said court, direct- ing me to sell said real property pursuant to said judgment and de- cree, I, Rollin Welchy. Sheriff of said county, and the person appointed by sajd court to make said sale, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the hereinafter de- scribed real estate, at the front door of the court house in the city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 16th day of September, at 2 o'clock in the P, M. of that day, to satisfy the said judgment, with interest and costs thereon, and the costs and ex- penses of such sale, or so much thereof as the proceeds of such sale applicable thereto will satisfy. The premises to be sold as aforesaid pur- suant to said judgment and decree, and to said writ, and to this notice, are described in said judgment, de- crge and writ as follows, to-wit: The East Half of the Southwest Quarter (E% of SW%); and Lots Six (6) and Seven (7), all in Section Six (6), in Township One Hundred Thirty-eight (138), Range Seventy- seven (77), Burleigh County, N. Dak. ROLLIN WELCH, Sheriff. | Kvello & Adams, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Lisbon, North Dakota 8—9-16-23-30; 9—6-13 !gors, to Paul C. Remington, Mort- eager, which mortgage is dated the your father’s friend—Agnes!” “Qh! Oh! God!” Ethel cried. | Her grandfather said not another | word; he stood for only a moment | more, looking at her; then, satisfied, | he pulled on his hat_and stalked: to/ the door. In the whirl of her emotions, she was endeavoring to fasten thought upon Barney only as cousin Agnes’s son; but against her will, and revolt- | ing her, thoughts of her father would | tell me! I don’t know, of course; paternity’s net like maternity; but his mother— Do you know. who ‘she was? Agnes here!” Suddenly he dropped Ethel and gestured horrdly with both hands. “Your father and US AND HALF-SICK WOMEN |These Letters Recommending Lydia E. Pink- jham’s Vegetable Compound Will Interest You come in. ; | For Your Own Good Please Read Them father’s? She was here in Agnos's | weban 74 feel wigan and my baelc hurt eas ne mght have een of housework, I was played out bs a 4 | when I would just starting up, she saw cousin Agnes’s/ to put a cushion behind me when I housckeeper. Mrz. Wain, usually so} would sitdown andatnightI could not calm, so completely in control of peleep unless I had something under herself, advanced under a nervous| My back. I had awful cramps every tension’ which visibly shook her| Month and was just nearly all in. slight body. .Her words confessed | Fi inkully my husband said to me one she had been listening. | day. “Why don’t you try Lydia E. “What was he saying to you of| Pinkham’s medicine?’ and I said, ‘I Mi iv. pd besought, | 2M Willing to'take anything if I could rs, Oliver Cullen?” she besought, | arg hands trembling on Ethel’s| 8t well again.’ So [ took one bottle shoulder. “What was he telling to Siil'a devond Gre and felt Detter and ss ‘i Nine ‘x | the neighbors asked me what I was you Pie Hope a doing and said, ‘Surely it must be do- CNothing about her now!” Ethel | [@ You Rood all right.” Thave just anes ‘ eerie | finished my eighth bottlé and I eah- a 8 —but,’ a ike to. you can use denly she collapsed in the house- | this letter you are welcome to it and keper’s arms, “{’m\ going away; | if any woman does not believe what I home to Wyoming, Mrs, Wain. You) havewritten to be true, she can write must help me off. And if Mr. Lou-| tome and I will describe my condi- !trelle calls for me or telephones, I) tion to her as I have to you.””— Mrs. can not speak to him! I’ can’t see. ELMER HEASLEY, 141S. Jackson St., him! Perhaps—perhaps I ean write.| Youngstown, Ohio, I must never meet him again!” | | ‘I was very nervous and run- CHAPTER XVI, ; lown,”’ writes Mrs. L.-E. Wiese of Early that afternoon, Lucas's de-| [06 Louisa St., New Orleans, La. “I pendable operativs reported that he} had followed Ethel Carew to the; Peculiar to Women” will be would often sit down and cry. and was always blue and had no ambition. 1 was this way for over a year and had allowed myself to get into quite a serious condition. Oneday I saw your advertisement in the daily paper and began to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at once. | have improved ever since taking the thir bottle and find it is the be8t medicine Thave ever taken.” Benefited by First Bottic “I was completely run down and not able to do my housework. I just dragged myself around and did not have energy weet upwhen once I sat down. I read. advertisements of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound in our paper ‘The Indiana Daily ‘Times,’ and learned all avout it. | re- ceived results from the very first bot- tle and now I am doing all my own work, even washing and ironing, ar] I never felt better.in my life. I tell all my friends itis duc to you.’’—Mr: ELIZABETH REINBOLD, 403 N. Pinc St., Indianapolis, Indiana. You should pay heed to the experi- ences of these women. They know how they felt before taking the Veg- etable Compound, and afterwarcs, too. Their words are true. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text-Book upon “Ailments nT sent you irec upon request. union Station where she purchased | to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, ‘Massachusetts. Write