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PAGE TWO DIPLOMAS ARE | PRESENTED TO NURSES’ CLASS St. Alexius Graduates Receive Diplomas to Impressive Exercises ZEAL URGED CHAKITY, © F. Kelsch, Speaking to Grad- | uates, Outlines Necessities | of Life Career | The Making of a Life Career,” was ubject of the address delivered Atty. ©. FP, Kelsch of Mandan to ug class from St. Alexius ining school Saturday ditorium, which was | Q with interested spectators. The | iker was introduced by Dr. V. Jt Rose, iskets of beautiful pink ang red s and ferns across the front of | age and large vases of roses at back of the stage formed a rose len back ground for the ‘eight luating nurses and Miss Cather- | Holehouse, who were seated on The class motto, “Every + Is Meant to Help All Lives,” in- | bed in Alice blue on a white card ended from the ceiling occupied center of the stage, beside which | draped the class colors of Alice and gold and two lurget Amer- v flags. Excellent Program. reliminary to the graduation ad- ss a number of beautiful vocal, no, and violin selections were orchestra played sev- lections. Mrs, Frank nes, Wilbur Targart and nk Gale each received hearty ap- use in response to beautiful solos. » skirt dance as given by a group little tots captivated their audi- », and Miss Roberta Best’ was en- isiastically encored at the conclu- n of a violin solo, Mmes, A. Bauer iH, Scheffer sang a duet and re- ynded with an encore number. Mis her Larson and Miss Irene Tay h yed charming piano solo: s. Bauer and Mrs, DeLiguori play- i the accompaniments for the vocal- s and dancers. In opening his address Mr. Kelsch ated that he did not presame to ve the members of the graduating ss any advise in regard to their ns because their medical ad- had done this with under- standing far superior to his, but that | © hoped to say a few things about THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Many Faiths United in Greatest of Humanitarian Accomplishment: a} Top row, left to right: Rev. Charles S, Macfarland, General Secretary, Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America. Dr. Edmund 'A. Walsh, Executive Head of Papal Kelief in Russia, representing National Catholic Welfare Council, Dr. John A. Morehead, Director for Europe; National Lutheran Council, C. V. ard, Associate General Secretary of the ¥. M. C. Center row: John fayne, Chairman American Red Cross. Herbert Hoover, Chairman American Relief Administration. Felix M, Warburg, Chairman American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. Bottom row: “Mrs. Elizabeth Boies Cotton, Secretary for European Interests, ‘National joard Y. W. C. A. George Repp, General Secretary; American Volga Relief Society. Rev. Levi Mumaw, Secretary-Treasurer, Mennonite Central Committee. Hoyt E. Porter, Russian representative of American Baptists. The American Relief Administra- | Joint Distributi tion credits no small part of its suc- | American cess to the fact that it has had the | Counci n Committee, the this depends upon the harvest itself, Bapt'sts, the Federal/The other forms of relief—medical MONDAY, MAY 14 192 (142) North, Range Seventy: (76) West of the 5th P. M. Bi leigh County, North Dakota. Said mortgage contains a clause authorizing the mortgagee tod clare the whole sum due if there 1s a default, and the whole of saia {mortgage is hereby declared due. There will be due on said mortgage on the date of sale the sum o! $169.37. of Intention to Foreclose was given as required by law, more than thirty days before the ‘beri ning of the proceedings. The 4d fault consists of the non-payment of the sum of $166.28. Dated this 2nd day of May, 1 Investors Mortgage Securit Inc., Bismarck, North Dakota, Mortgagee. « E.T. Burke, Attorne , Bismarck, 10-17. RIFLE TEAM full co-operation of other America | America, the N:tional Catholic Wel- philanthropic and religious organiza- | fare Council, the National Lutheran tions, representing many varying | Council, the Mennonite Central Com- phases of religious belief but solidly | mittee, the American Volga Relief united in their humanitarian pur. poses. Jews and Gentiles, Catholi andProtestants, all found a place in the non-sectarian, non-political, non- | that 11,000,000 Ru: in plan of | saved, Thi operation adopted by the A. R. A. end all worked together jn thorough racial and purely Ame: harmony. Society, the Young Men’s Christian Association and the Young Women’s Christian Association, it is estimated ian lives were s more than 90 per cent. , of all foreign relief given to Russia. Mr. Hoover stated in a recent let- By the united efforts of |ter to Mr. Hibbard of the Y. M. C.A. the A. R. A. and co-operating or-| that: “The first phase of relief—the ganizations which include the Ameri- san Red Cross, the American Jewish shipment of food—will, I hope, be over with the next harvest, . snough of the Churches of Christ in| poverty, reconstruction—will deserv- edly pull upon the heartstrings of charity for many years to come and offer an snipe field for those who can devote theinselves to such work, for the terrible suffering of a great | people groping for freedom from centuries of wrong must enlist the sympathy of every well-thinking person. But one essential is critic- aliy necessary; in order that such American effort shall be in respons- ible hands and not exhausted in propaganda, it should be adminis- tered through some of the above re- ligious bodies.” career that might be remembered them and used to advantage. art of noble thinking and ving is the greatest thing in aid Mr. Kelsch. In order to gain this he said that knowledge was the first essential and common an indispensable part. He said that if one had professional knowledge and combined it with a purpose or an aim in life, the indi- vidual could not but attain his goal. To accomplish this, however, he said | that honest hard toil and enthusiasm were indispensable requisites. En- thusiasm is the foree which compels you on’and up, declared Mr. Kelsch. Combined with will power is is the something which keeps you going after you think you @an go further. Urges Kindness, Charity. In his closing remar! emphasized the necessity of kindness and charity. He said that the class motto showed that the members of he graduating class had absorbed this spirit of helpfulness toward sthers and would undoubtedly be iven many opportunities in which olive up to the ideal expressed in heir motto. The graduates received their di- to} from the hands of the Rt. ev. Bishop Wehrle who was assist- i by Miss Holehouse. After the last selection on the pro- ram had been given by St. Mary's cchestra an informal reception for 1e nurses was held at St. Alexius sspital where many friends and rel- tives of the graduates assembled to ongratulate the nurses, who includ- 1: Mary DePlazes, Marion Heckel, . ill, Gertrude Mayers, Paula er M. Evangela, and Sister . Longina. Refreshments were served and a} cial time enjoyed by the guests. sOTICE OF INTENTION TO F@RECLOSE REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE NOTICE IS WEREBY GIVEN, hat that certain mortgage, made, «xeeuted and delivered hy A. IN- WOOD and STELLA B. INWOOD, 3_ wife, to BARNES BROTHERS, CORPORATED, a corporation of . Minnesota, dated March , filed record March 4th, 1916, at 4:00 P. M., and re- corded in’ Book 106 of Mortgages, ge 123, and assigned by the mort- y of March, 1916, by an instru- ment in writing, said assignment be- ing reeorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh Coun- ty, N. D. on March 28th, 1916, at (0 P. M., in Book 106 of Mort- ges, page 469, to secure the pay- mt of $1250.00 and interest, will bez;foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and here- inggterdescribed, at the front door. * of the court house in the City. of. . State of North Dakota, on z Bismarck, County of Burl ugh and e 16th 23, at the hour of two in the afternoon of said . torsatisfy the amount due on. mortgage on the day of sale. premises described: in id m and which will be sold to satisfy the same are describeg as follows, to-wit: » Southwest Quarter (SW%) of if an. Coe Hundred Thirty- on terms of $i8to, in this that th - fled and neglee Wy im sf en c rl 1st, 1022, and. a. farther ‘$87.50 due Ten Per Cent. of Funds Mobilized By American Relief Administration For Russia Went For Medical Aid When Herbeft Hoover, chairman of the American Relief Administra- tion, announced recently thatthesim mobilized for Russian Relief by the American Relief Administration,and its co-operating agencies amounted to: approximately $70,000,000, few persons realized that more than ten per cent. of that sum, or more than $7,000,000, was spent for medical purposes. ¢ In the face of the terrible famine conditions which existed and the fact that it fell to the lot of the A. R. A. to provide. food for upwards of ten amillion people, the.medical phase of the relief operations has not attract- ed the public attention that such a ‘life-saving effort would otherwise have received. It is difficult to say whether more Russians are alive to- ‘day beeause of American food which they received or because of the tre- ymendous and costly fight which the ‘American relief workers waged against the spread of infectious dis- jeases, and the improvement in hos- (pital and sanitary conditions which fthe rican gifts made possible. ,. It is ‘highly significant that\with in tion and vaccination of 7,000,000 persons in the areas Americans were carrying jon'their feeding operations there was ishing decrease in the high of cholera, typhoid, para- and small; ‘or example, ig the Kazan District where 350,000 ! try. men, women and children were in- oculated against cholera and other( enteric diseases, the cholera cases, which in the summer of 1921 had! been reported throughout the seasom at the rate of 170 a day, in the sum+ mer of 1922 amounted to 276 cases, not-daily, but for the entire season!: jut the inoculation campaign,: which was the most extensive single: preventive medical effort ever under- taken, was only a single item in the’ medical program of the Americah; Relief Administration. In addition, to inoculating 7,000,000 individuals. the Administration supplied more than 12,000 Russian institutions in- cluding hospitals, orphanages, dis- pensaries, etc. Many of these insti- tutions were on the point of closing. their doors for lack of the most ele- mentary necessities. Hospitals lacked medicines, syringes, clinical ther- momeéters, hot water bags, blankets, Soap, anaesthetics—some of them: had to resort to newspapers for, dressings because of the of ban- dages. ‘Gnited States surplus army medi-. cal supplies to the extent of $4,000,- 000, and medical and hospital mate- rials ane $3,600,000 were fui nished by American Red Cross’. to the American Relief Administra- \ tion in its effort to keep the hospitals functioning in Russia when the epi-- demics due to the famine were threatening to depopulate the coun- ret 2 vMiny i im l 10 HATCHES North Dakota Guard to Com- pete at Camp Perry The North Dakota ional Guard will enter a team of 12 men, and po bly a Civilian team will be en- at Camp Perry, Ohio, this year, Ad- jutant General. F announced The Guard team will be selected dur- | WANTED-—Competent maid for gen- ing the state encampment at Devils Lake, June 9 to 24, The matches will be of particular interest to rifle men this year, Ad- jutant Fraser said, for the reason that international rifle matches will Room, 321-8th ft. des 1 pro be staged at the same time, and in -14-3t.) One good serviceable Guerr addition ‘several new matches per-} WANTED—Sewing by the day or at! Bull—weight 1200 pounds—tubere mitting match rifles, will be held Challenges have been sent Car Great Britain, Australia, New Zea- land and the South American repub- lies looking toward a revival of the ma matches, the Adjutant Gen eral id. Two otner .nternational matches are scheduled, the free rifle matches, at 300 meters, representing the individual and team free rifle championship of the world; the small hore Dewar trophy match, represent- ing the .22 calibre team championship of the world TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED TO_PLOW or break with two plow tractor by acre Prices very reasonable. = Writ’ L. E. Heaton, Jr. | MeKenzie, N. D or] phone 535-R Bismare 5-14-2t., FOR RENT—-Two furnished rooms! for light housekeeping. Phone 241- J. 418, Ist St. 5-14-1wk, FOR RENT—Furnished apartment for light housekeeping, modern.} Murphy Apts. 2041-2) Main. F.! Ww, murphy. Phone 852. 5-14-tf.! MAKE $25 weekly at home furnish- and. does hereby declare the princi-|NOTICE OF REAL |pal Indebtedness of $1250.00 imme- Section Twenty-seven (27) Town- |diately. due and payable. assignee the mortgages paid it Range Seventy-five (75. e 4 rai ty, N. D., etatn, isd and tl aid amount is in-|tain mortgage made les c- eluded im this foreclosure. There will be due on. such mort-|Investors Mortgage Security on the day of:sale the sum of | pany, Inc., Bismarck, 4 r 00, together with the costs of |Mortgagee, which said mortgage is | satis: losure, and attorney fees. ] a iy A it. ga North Dakota,}|and filed for record in the office of this 7 apy of May Apel eee ‘< ignee of Mortgagee. the 6th day of January, 1917,. and darwe ssignee of Mortgagee |zages, page 01 kota, . 5 10-17-24-31 6. 7-14 ‘ATE the Court House in the City of MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE | Bismavck, County of Burleigh, State SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT | of North Dakota, at. the hour of Notice is hereby given that by|1:30.P..M, in the afternoon of the ‘amounting to|Teason of default therein, that cer-|20th day of June, 1923, to satisfy the and executed |amount due om.'said ‘mortgage on by Jacob Carlson, mortgagor, to the|the date of sale. Com-| The premises described in said North Dakotu,| mortgage and which will be sold to fy the same are as follows, to- it the dated the 8th day of December, 1916,| wit: . é "The West Half of the South- west Quarter (W% SW%), the Northeast Quarter of the South- west Quart®r (NE% SW%) and the Northwest Quarter of the Southeast, Quarter .(NW%SE% ) of Section Twelve \(12), Town- . ship One | Hundred. : Forty-two the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, State of North Dakota, on. 351923. J., MASTERS, duly recorded, in Booky143, of Mort- » will be foreclosed ny a sale of the premises described in said mortgage at the front door of} ing names and addresses. Ex- perfence unnescess Particu-, with a flavor Tea Sits Delicious and Refreshi Louis: tered, in the national rifle matches] ROOM AND BOARD—One room Quench it-with this beverage . —not from one vine or one tree, buta blend of pure prod- . ucts from nature’s storehouse served ice-cold. , SO THIS IS OKLAHOMA! y 13, Here's the Oil She has won many beauty entry—Miss Helen Jackson of Waggoner. prizes. And it's no wonder, lars free. United Mailing Co. St.]| LOST—Cireular gold pin lettered NF BPWC. Return to Tribune Reward Halgeet for two. “The Mohaw' th Ste 5-14-5t. FOR SALE CHEAP—If taken at once Maxwell Touring car in Al condi 401, tion. Phone 32 Tribu 5-14-tt housework. Only two in fam- ~ Mrs. R. KE. Bonham Phone] FOR SALE 5-14-1t] Sealed bids will be opened at they Five room modern house] Bismarck Indian School at 2:00 2 Phone 981-R. 5-14-4t.] M., M 19, 1923, for the following Phone} lin tested. it. 5-14-lwk| Prospective bidders are invited to T—Furnished orfeall and see the at unfurnished 4 or 5-room house or C. B, Dickinson, artment. Phone & B-1d-tt intendent Salesmen Wanted If you are foot loose or want to take on something for your spare moments we want to talk to you. Tf you are employed at the present time and not satisfied with your. ~ earnings, see us at once, This is a new purchasing plan that. is going to be sold in the entire State to the auto- mobile owner and is being handled in a mamer that the salesmen will like ‘and big money should be made if in- structions are followed. This is not idle banter and if you want to make from $100.00 to $200.00 per week with all leads furnished, write to W. H. Paulsen, Room 402, Grand Pacific Hotel, Bismarel N. D., or eall in person after 9 a. m, for an interview. allitsown. And ng *