The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 28, 1922, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR TEE BISM ARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Sr} Matter. GEORGE D. MANN - - - - - Editor Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - -DETROIT Margqiiette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH i NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. > MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION : SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year... ....ec cece enn e eee ee BT20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota....... THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) THE EX-KAISER 5.00 . 6.00 -Pink shirts and pink collars are being sported by the ex- ; kaiser, reports a London Daily Mail correspondent after a visit to Holland. 4 : All around, Bill is perking up. He is emerging from strict seclusion, leading a freer ex- istence, and works daily in his garden in full view of anyone passing the castle home of the notorious exile. Chopping and sawing wood? Not these days. Instead, Pi is thinning out the fir trees along the road, clipping and trimming like a barber. His gang of helpers work with him, just inside the wire fence, in their shirt-sleeves. Occasion- niiy even Bill is reported to strip off the coat of his gray suit. “He talks incessantly’”—but his talk is limited to trees and landscape gardening. : The ex-crown prince “pays occasional visits to his father, and dashes all over the country in his new motor car. He sends much time playing lawn tennis and croquet, and he ‘sees many visitors.” = The story in Holland is that he would visit his father more often if it were not for the fact that Bill makes him help in the garden. : Recently he took a two weeks’ vacation while plumbers led a bath at his island home. What do you make of , Watson? Well, Sherlock, it looks as if the ex-crown ce expects to spend another winter where he is. Import- ? To some extent, since he is no anticipating any irmme- e return to Germany. *Tt’s getting along, now, near that historic date, Nov. 11.) “it The war soon will have been over four years, though seems like yesterday.” 2 Four years ago, the slightest authentical move by either tle kaiser or the crown pringe ‘was “‘big news.” Today in- terest in the Hohenzollerns:is at low ebb, in America. Never- theless, it is interesting to:getjassummary of how the two are reacting under exil sities Pict” a ed ? The ex-kaiser sporting a pink shirt while playing as a gar- dener! The ex-crown prince elated because the is going tO\they were moved fr have a real bath-tub! Gosh, haven’t times changed !' SHADOW-SHOWS ~ =:Will Day gathers up a museum exhibition showing the historical development of the movie. The start? Chinese shadow-shows, at least 4000 years ago. . ‘Ihe Chinese stretched a bullock’s hide parchment, thin . 7.20, || EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in_ this column may or may not express the opivion 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, | THE TRUE AMERICAN POLICY [ Chairman John .T. Adams of the Republican National Committee, has truly remarked that there never was a protective tariff which the opposition did not characterize a “robber tariff.” He also truly says! that “There never has been a pro-| tective tariff ‘that closed a factory! or threw a man out of a job.” H Our Democratic friends are al- ways howling about a “robber tar-! | iff,” but the only person who is | robbed, if any, is the importer of ‘foreign goods. who is accustomed | to make immense profits by buying cheap in.foreign countries and ad- ding to ‘his gains the amount which he should pay in import duties. ' The Republicans have never enact-' ;ed a prohibitive tariff, and so long} jas the tariff_is not prohibitive it cannot be @ robber tariff. | But the more important state-| ment by Mr. Adams is the one last | quoted above. Our Democratic op-| ponents cannot point to an instance | when a Republican’ tariff ever | elesed a factory or threw/ an Amer- | ican workman out ofa $6b: 7; We! can point to numierows instances -in | ‘which a» Demidcratic, itarie, threw! ; hundreds of thousands of workmen ‘out of jobs. It’ is clearly inevit- | jable that for every dollar’s worth} ‘ot goods we import, if they could) |be prédyced here, we deprive the| | American productr‘of pne: dollar's | worth of busine Tiere: dan be |mo-question whatever abeut phat.! | Protection is the true American ¢ | Polic .—Valley City Times Record. | i ies ae eee | SHARP PRACTICES | Considerable dissitisfaction is; heard from the cattle shippers who | jreturned from Chicago last Thurs-| iday, especially about a certain} | Chicago commission firm who; handled a good share of the cattle shipped from here Sept, "th. One |of the returned shippers informs) | the Enterprise that to his personal | . Saar knowledge “scalping” was resorted; Philip Mattingly of Williston. firs: ito. He cites an incident whero two | cre Dea se of its Illinois buyers tried to buy his eat-| Proken eollar bone while al practice [tle direct from the commission |quosday evening. Ie was running firm but failed. A bunch of his} with the ball and slipped and fell in yearlings were sold in the morn-! such a manner as to fracture the ing to one Lawler at $5.80 per hun-| bone. Ai: a result of the accident | dred, who later in the day resold | he will be out of the game for the ;them to the Illinois men at $6.40,| rest of the season, the first buyer making 60 cents per hundred profit in.a few hours.; A! bunch of his 2-year-olds was sold} to the same man—Lawler—at $6.20, Who fesold them at,$7.25, or $1.05 per hundred profit... As soon as the cattle were sold in the morning he selling pen to another pen some 400 yards away which was well supplied with jhay and water. The eastern bUuy~) ing to the registrations of old timer jers were not allowéd to weigh or) who signed the registration boo {move the cattle until late in the! kept by the Mandin Town Crie! afternoon, thereby paying for aj club. | good “fill” besides a higher price than that paid the man who! the MANDAN NEWS Grid Player Injured * At Ball Practice Many Old Timers j. Attend Pageant Many ‘old-timers attended the Pa- geant at Mandan, Capt. John—Belk of Bismarck, who came to Dakota in "66, and George 'W. Payne of Shield who came in ’67, are two of the ear! jest settlers in the district, accord- Inte sixties, about, a scor Although onlyga few signed for; THAT HORRIBLE OLD PIECE AGAIN For Tre LuVA MuD ! 1 ThouGe}l Taina. was 7 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 Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 9-7-14-21-28-—10-5-12 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 Noth Dakota, on the bth day of 919, in Book 162 of Mort- gages, on page 14, will be foreclosed byje sale ofthe premises described in !said mortgage at the front door f 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 aie on said mortgage on the date of sale, The premises described in said ‘mortgage and which will be sold to atisty the same are as follows, to- wit: \ The Northeast Quarter (NE%) of Section Seven (7), Township One TAey DEADI | { 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, mortgagors, to Paul C, Remington, mortgagee, dated the Gth day of No- vember, 1917, and filed for record in| the office of the rogister of deeds in| and for the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, on| the 12th day of December, 1917, 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, inj the county of Burleigh and state of | North Dakota, at the hour of ten) o'clock a.°m., on the 17th day of Oc-| above named Respondents: tober, 1922;:to satisfy the amount due | upon. such mortgage.on the date of sale. The premises described in such juotiedge and which’ Will bes acld to | with the will annexed of the estate; 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 (38%) 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 to the United States. Govern- | real | NOTICE AND CITATION, HEARING at nine| o’clock a. m., and duly recorded in| | ing 160 acres, more or less, sere | | tration closed and he be discharged; | —— | NOTICE OF SALE { Notice is hereby given that under an by virtue of a Judgment and De- eree of Mortgage Foreclosure ren- ‘dered and given by the District Court of the Fourth Judicial Dis- trict in and for the County of Bur. leigh and State of North Dakota, | and entered and docketed in ‘the of-| ice of the Clerk of said Court in jand for said County, on the Twenty | | first day of September 1922, in an action wherein- Union Investment | Company, a Foreign Corporation, is’ | plaintiff, and Stephen N. Nolan, also known as Stephen Nolan; Burleigh | County State Bank, of Wing, North ! Dakoat, formerly German State Bank , of Wing, North Dakota, -a corpora-| tion; and Burleigh County, North: Dakota, a Public Corporation; defendants, in favor of said Plain-| ' tiff and against said defendant, Ste-' phen N. Nolan, for the sum of fif-| teen hundred eighty-five Dollars | and Forty Cents, which Judgment | and Decree, among other things, di-| rects the sale by me of the real pro-' perty hereinafter described; to sat- | isfy the amount of said judgment,! with interest thereon and ‘the costs | and~-expenses of sale, or so much thereof as the proceeds of said sale! applicable thereto will satisfy, and by virtue of a writ of execution to me issued out of the Office of the: Clerk of said Court; under the sea! thereof, directing me to sell said! property, pursuant to said Judgment and Deeree, I, Rollin are! | Welch, Sheriff of Burleigh County, | North Dakota, and the person ap-j pointed by said Court to make said sale, will sell the hereinafter des- | cribed real property to the highest | bidder for cash at public auction at) the front door of the Burleigh; County, Court House, in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Datoka, on the} First day of November 1922, at the, hour of One o'clock in the afternoon ; ‘of said day, to satisfy said Judgment | with interest and costs thereon, and! the costs and expenses of such sale, | or so much thereof as the proceeds | of such sale applicable thereto will satisfy; the premises to be sold as aforesaid pursuant to said Judgment and Decree, and to said Writ, and to this Notice, are described in said Judgment, Decree, and Writ, as fol- lows to-wit: The Southeast Quarter of Section Eight, in Townshi~ Hundred forty-three North, of Range: Seventy-six West of the Fifth Prin- cipal Meridian, in Burleigh County,! North Dakota. Dated September 26th, 1922. ROLLIN WELCH, - As Sheriff of Burleigh County, North Dakota. ADRIAN E. BUTTZ, Attorney for Plaintiff, Leeds, North Dakota. 9-28—10-5-12-19-26 OF FINAL ACCOUNT AND DISTRIBUTION OF ESTATE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- ty of Burleigh—ss._ In County Court, Before Hon, I. C. Davies, Judge. In the Matter of the Estate of Rosa | | P, Vincent, Deceased, | American Security & Trust Com-; pany, a corporation, Petitoner, vs. | Rosa C. Potter, Mary Swayze, Mary Vincent and Rosa Vincent, Respond- ents, The State of North Dakota to the | You, the said Rosa C. Potter, Mary | Swayze, Mary Vincent and Rosa Vin- cent, are hereby. notified that the final account of :the administrator of Rosa P. Vincent, late of the city of Washington, in the District ‘of Columbia, deceased, has been rend- ered to this Court, therein showit that the estate of said deceased ready for fina] settlement and di tribution, and petitioning that his ‘account be allowed, the residue of | said estate be distributed to the per- sons thereunto entitled, his adminis- zal SEPTEMBER 28, 1922 Turkey, the sick man of Europe, ix really. the slick man, A nice fall is predicted, Not, how- ever, in prices, More factories will burn soft coal, so laundrymen are happy. Kipling claims he was misquoted. It is true he often ‘is. One man lived in Chicago 56 years before he got shot. Funny things happen Mexico will will pay the interest on her debt. We can’t a%jord to pay the soldier bonus because we have got to sup- port the new’ tariff. Talk is cheap. That is why they call it the gift of gab, All’ men are born helpless, bu’ some help less than others, The height of discretion lies som where between the short skirt and long skirt peril. \ It is not too early to wish aloud for what you want Christmas. The dead letter office is swamped with political circulars—and that ‘s their right address. October 9 is Fire Prevention Day, but there is no law against prevent- ing one in advance, Einstein will lecture on his the- ory in Japan. Imagine trying to u2- derstand it in Japanese! Golfers and woodpeckers are tho only birds using their heads to get into the hole. Tecointe flew 212 miles an hour, but a weekly pay check, hold; the world’s speed record Every now and then Bryan re- members President Harrison was 68 when he was inaugurated, In New York, the city of oppor tunity, a watch is pawned every 45 seconds, Upon regaining her speech a wo- man said “Where is my husband?” This wes only natural. Near Petaluma Cal, jazz music speeds up the. hens. So far none have laid scrambled eggs. Every man is entitled to a living wage except the’ one who refuses tu pay it, ‘An express driver caught with 56 suits was arra:ted. He should have poséd as a landlord. Some ‘men argue with their wives. Others are single. Soldiers of fortune are more often soldiers of misfortune, and. almost transparent, before a brightly burning lamp. On this parchment the audience saw shadows of wax figures, moved like puppets in front of the flame. At took thousands of years to develop that lamp into | taised.and shipped the cattle. This kind of “square §hooting” is what) }makes bolsheviks; it makes our! the | | ‘signed for the early seventies. |farmers lose faith in our govern- | ,, ‘Hundred Thirty-eight (138), North sof Range Seventy-five, (75) West of he bth P.M. * Mr. and Mrs. A, J. Berdahl left] today fer Dunn Center, where they Ke thir home during the win- the whole sum due if there is a de- : Said, mortgage contains a clause! authorizing the mortgagee to declare: | $407.57 (which sum includes interest | oo oms ‘of this Court in the court! paid by mortgagee upon a prior) 4 a ms : or | house, in the City of Bismarck, Coun- | mortgage and delinquent taxes paid key of Burleigh, and State of North | Report of the Condition of THE FARMERS STATE BANK at Regan, in the State of North the close of business Sep- besides the costs, modern moving picture projecting machine and to evolve the moving shadows on the parchment into the figures that en- chant us on the silver screen.) Time amounts to very little, inthe long history of progress. “TOYS” F Will Day’s museum exhibition in London shows one of the early attempts at moving pictures, Sir John Herschell’s | “Thaumatrope,” or spinning disk. A dog is drawn on one side of the disk, an empty kennel on the other. Hold it to the light. Revelve it. kennel. “The Thaumatrope was.sold on the streets as a scientific toys: That’s all that most people in those days thought the moving picture idea ever would amount to. It isn’t long} since people had the same notion about radio, flying machines | and autos. | DIGESTION - A “glass stomach that digests foods” is perfected by chem- | ists of the Department of Agriculture. Food is put into it, | pepsin is added, also hydrochloric acid to the amount exist-| ing normally in the real stomach. An incubator keeps the| mixture at stomach temperature, 37 degrees centigrade. | By experiments the glass stomach is expected to teach us} alot about what to eat and how to cook it to make it digest. | The stomach and other organs are nothing but machines. | Do you take as gcod care of your body-machine as your) fliyver? | ; i REUTENBERG J | Sad days for Pinhas Reutenberg, Russian engineer. He: has_a concession from the British government for a monop-_ oly in Palestine for the production of electric light and pow- | er, with exclusive right for 70 years to utilize the waters of River Jordan and Yarmuk. The Turks may keep M. Ruten- berg very busy for the rest of his natural existence. Yet! when the House of Commons voted him the monopoly last July 4, the sailing looked clear. You never can tell what the morrow will bring forth, anywhere, these troublsome times. SLEEP " ; Lord Leverhulme, king-pin of British manufacturers, | who made his money in soap, says that American ownership | of=three-fourths of the world’s gold is not as great an asset as_our habit of early rising. | ‘Yes, and our national debt is not half as great a liability | as Satan’s invention, the alarm clock. SKYSCRAPERS “London makes a concession to its merchants and permits the erection of buildings 140 feet high. The tallest building over there is Whitehall Court, a clubhouse, 110 feet high. We Americans wouldn’t have anything taller if high land values didn’t force us up into the air. “Police tell us that ginger ale often has the accent on the fixgt syllable in ginger. hat’s in a name? Among well-known pugilists are Pancho Villa, Wilde, Lynch, Wolfe and Curtin. The dog appears to jump out of the} | ment; it makes the firms smell to the high heaven with ; graft and sooner or later will put |the commission firms out ‘of busi- ness. One thing is certain —the | commissn firm referred to is a “dead one” in this section Shields | Enterprise. -———® ze — , ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS | oo By Olive Barton, Roberts Twelve Toes, the Borchger, was fur‘oy; when Light. Finger returned without the Fairy Quecn’s automo- bile. Just furious! My, how he did storm up and down with rage and stamp his foot and tear his hair and bite his nails and gnash his tecth! Poor Light Fingers, the bad little fairy who worked for him, didn't know where to lvok.. He had done | the best he could It wasn't his fuutv that, jwt at the very minute he was going to seatter the tacks on the ad) in front of the magic automobile that Naney and Nick were taking to the Fairy Queen, someone grabbed hint by the ‘collar and stoped him, “Pil try again,” he said when Twelve Toes got/over his rage, 4 “Very well,” said the Sorcerer. “ll whistle for Comet-Legs to come and give us some good advice.” So he put two finger: in his mouth and whistled like a fire whistle efd pretty soon there was a whizging in the air, Comet-Legs appeared, his crooked legs wrapped around the star’ he always rode | He tied t | tres: and ¢ star to the top of a bed down. ; “What's wrong?” he asked when he had shaken hands with Twelve Toa: the Sorcerer, and Light Fin gers, the bad little fairy. “What can I do for you?” Twelve Toes answered: “Light Fingers here stole | the | Fairy Queen’s ‘automobile for me, ‘and then the Twins, Nancy and} Nick, got it back ‘I'sent Light Fin-| gers back for it by way of a magic| bean-stalk, but the apple-tree fairy | ‘caught him and stopped him, Now jwe don’t know what to do. Qan con help us?” ‘ ¥: “Sure!” nodded Comet-Legs, posi- tively. “I've got un idea already.” | (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) | pntine 3: | Consignments of 100,000 trout eggs have been shipped successfully ifrem the bureau of fisheries in Washington to the Swiss govern- | jment! at’ Berhe. 1°) | i commission | ter, Mr, and Mrs, W. F.) Reko, and son, “Billy, returned Tuesday from an au- tomobile trip to various points in the east port’on of the state. s Eva Reko, who has atives 2b Gackle accompanied parents home. Four young Indian girls, pupils the government school near Bi marck, started out Monday for thei homes in the. Berthold reservation but only completce 15 miles of the journey whon they were taken, They were sighted by a section crew and authorities near, who had commenced a search for the girls. been visiting with re!- her Robert Curtis, son of Mr. and Mr. E. P. Curtis, who fias returned from a short & wis. relatives inthe castern part of the state will leave in a few days for California, The ladias of the Christ Episcopat church will meet in the rectory this afternoon. Miss Anna Reich of Carson, is a guest for a few days at the home of Mr. and ¥ Walker. 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- consists of the non-payment the sum sof $2400 principal and $476.80 inter- est, and the taxes for the year, 1921. jones this 18th day of August, OHN D. SIEM AND C,H. SIEM Jr. ._T. BURKE, Their Attorney, , Bismarck, N. D, 4 8-24-31—9-7-14-21-28 AAR nnn L AM APPROACHING “WHAT Do You ConTRIBULTE § ning of the proceedings. The default | INTEREST OF A FUND LOOKING To THO ERECTION OF A_ MONUMENT To THE MGMoRY OF OUR LATS DEPARTED INFLYVENTI GU CITIZEN, MR, GOTROEKS. ; by mortgagee), | disbursements and expenses of this | foreclosure. Dated this 4th day of September, | 1922, PAUL C. REMINGTON, Mortgagee. NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG,, | “Attorneys for Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. | i £4-21-28—10-5-12 aréstated never to ~emove a petti- | coat, iclean ones beinginadded ag (re- quired, ‘some rare credited | with as many ‘as-40 of jthess gar- | ments, fe i You, "MR sTRuE, IN THE ecec You CouLcD NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Default having occurred in the ‘after described, Notice is Hereby Given, that that certain mortgage executed and 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 in and for the county of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the h day of December, 1916, at nine o'clock a. m., and duly recorded in Book 124 of Mortgages, on page 90, will be foreclosed by a sale of the | premises in such mortgaga 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 j 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, conditions of the mortgage hercin-| VWELL, WHEN 1 uy i. FESC THAT THAT'S CONTRIBUTION « ten|. HE WAS ALIVE AND BYSINGSS, & BROKE THREE UNBRELLAS lover HIS HEADS AT VARIOUS TIMG | In S,; AND eA Svnousen Chola’ women’ “of South America |5i4 account should not be allowed, | Dakota, has been duly appointed by this Court for the settlement there-, of, at which time and place any per-| son interested in said estate may ap-' pear and file his exceptions, in writ- ing, to said account, and petition and contest the same. | And you, the above named res- pondents, and each of you, are here- by cited and required then and there | to be and appear before this Court, ! and show cause, if any you have, why | t the residye of said estate distribu-| ted, the administration of said es-: tate closed and said Alfred B. Leet; be discharged. Dated the 13th day of September, | A. D. 1922. » By the Court: (SEAL) I. C. DAVIES, | Judge of the County Court. ' NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG, i Attorney for Administrator. el Bismarck, N. D. i 9-14-21-28—10-5 | SWS BRIEFS N —— Steubenville, Ohio.--Acserting that the sereen has entered “polities, the ! Rev. B. F. Lamb cuclared Will Hayes | has been employed by the motion! picture intcrests for personal, pur- | poses, and not to clean up the movies.' Bills payable ‘ \ Carlinville, Ill--John Folgy, of; when his mount in a steeplechase, fell at the last barrier. | Regina —Police said they be-, lieved an organized band of rurt-\ runners and bank robbers with head-, quarters in a border state, probably North Dakota, are responsible for a} series of daring holdups in Western Canada, | St, Louls.—Richard King of Corpus | Christie, Tex., member of a wealthy amily of cattle and horse owners in Texas, died, Honclulu.—Professor Jaggar, Vol- cano-logist, reported unusual activ-| ity in the Kilauea voleano during; last week. ‘ | Dakota, at tember 15th, 1922. RESOURCES Loans and discounts ....$164,164.37 Overdrafts, secured and unsecured 533.20 Warrants, stocks, tificates, claims, etc. .. 1,075.60 Interest accrued, not col- ted 20.6665 seaeeeseee 11,500.00 Banking house, furniture and fixtures seeeees 5,886.60 Checks and other 5 cash items ..$ 281.86 a Cash and Due from other banks ........ 3,786.62 4,018.18 Total . sacs + $187,178.25 “LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in ....$ 15,000.00 Surplus fund .. 3,500.00 Undivided profits, penses and taxes paid ..° 1,103.17 Individual depos- its, subject to check ........ 40,697.57 Guaranty fund deposit ...... 296.70 Time certificates of deposit .... 67,480.21 Certified checks — 800.00 Cashier's chacks oustanding .. 2,700.60 111,975.08 Due War Finance Corpor- ation .. 33,600.00 on 22,000.00 Total aeteeceoeees $187,178.25 | Springfield, TH, was fatally injurea! on ane op NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- ty of Burleigh—ss. I, Jno. Langdahl, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement*is true, to the best of my knowledge and be- lief. JNO. LANGDAHL, x Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 26th day of September, 1922. (SEAL) ARNOLD GERBEDING, Notary Public. My Commission expires April 20, 1923 Correct Attest: J. F. DRAWER, J. F. DROWER, Directors. 9-23 ——* >—_—_____—. | TODAY’S WORD | ¢—_______—_—__ {in Township One Hundred Forty The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are situate in the county of Burleick state of North Dakota, and described as fol- lows- to-wit: The Northwest Quarter (NW) of Section Thirty-four (34), two (142) North, of Range Seventy- nine (79) West of the 5th P. taining 160 acres, more or les cording to the United States Gov- ernment survey thereof. There will be due on such mort- gage on the date of sale the sum of $280.10 (which sum includes interest paid by mortgagee upon a prior mortgage and delinquent taxes paid New York.—The #ev. Dr Wmn.! Austin Smi editor of The! Churchman, } tional weekly of th.} Protestant Episcopal ‘church died. | om Seas 2! | ATHOUGHT |, oO For we hear that there are sonic | | which walk among you disorder!y. | working not at all, but are busybod- | ies—2 Thessalonians 3:12. | Work earnestly at anything, you | will by degrees learn to work at al- | most all things——Thomas Carlyle. t Today’s word is—TENTATIVE. It’s pronounced—ten-ta-tiv, with accent on the first syllable, and the “a” touched but lightly. It m@ans—pertaining to ‘or based on a trial or test; experimental. It comes from—Latin “tentare,” to try. It’s used like this—“The tentative acquiescence of the British in the most important of Kemal~ Pasha's demands promises a great diplo- matic. triumph for the Turkish leader, following his military suc- cesses over the Greeks.” . . As

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