The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 10, 1923, Page 2

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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE KEEP AMERICA’S BEGIN WORK WAMPUM SOUND THIS mee War Department Allots $25,- President, Savibls BERK Diva . | 1» Savin, ni 000 for Revertment Work | American pankits Aaspelatlgnc on Missouri River Although the United States ts today upon a solid gold basis, we Work on: the revetment of the Qevertheless know of our own Missouri river in the vicinity of the] . , knowledge what North Dakota Memorial Bridge will | @| infation means. It woult take begin during the coming season, ac cording to an announcement made | long to recall in from the office of the United S | detail the bit War department | ter experiences The following letter was received | which this na- by Capt. I. P. Baker from the offi | tion suffered of ‘the War department: earl during the Civil i take in informing you | Gee anh. GS hat the as ap-/ z rroved un allotment of $26,000 for | ” * years which fol- he revetment of the Missouri River 8. H. Beach lowed it, and in 1 the vicinity of the bridges on the | our present easy est side of the river above Bis- | Condition we might think such con- arck. The funds are to be expat! ditions could never again arise. 1! in conjunction with the funds to; But with such men as Henry Ford furnished by the Northern Paci- {and Thomas A. Edison talking Railroad Company and the Fed-| about commodity money there {a al Bureau of Public Roads and N. | no foretelling what may happen. te Highway commission. It is One of the plainest lessons taught by financial history {s that whenever @ nation issues paper (money with nothing back of it, sar Association |ehat aatlonlas oa (eheyrone to/dlbkE: iter. Look at Russfa with its Resents Attacks |worthieas rubles and Germany On Constitution! with its worthless marks. Think |of what happened in France dur ing the years ‘mediately follow. | tng our Revolutionary War. The common people of France pected that the work will be done ring the coming winter.” ishiville, Tenn. July 10-—Now, at apogee of the achievements Constitution of the United | 6 the ates, when its blessings are uppar- | Fose in their might, tore down the t to the most casual observer, it is | Bastile, and made reprisal for cei- ing most bitterly attacked from |turles of kingly crime and opprea- ny quarters, condemned ang even elon, The profligate court had ecrated as an instrument of op- | piled up taxes until they were un- ession and injustice, R. KE. L. San- | bearable. The enraged populace Chairman of the | killed King Louis XVI, and also his | Queen, Marie Antoinette. But they jonly threw themselves out of the ‘trying pan into the fire so far as finances were concerned. Unsound Money Tyranny At the very worst point of their . of Dallas, Tex., tizenship Committee of the Amer- in Bar association today told the mnessee Bar association meeting re. | “The Constitution that is being at- cked is the one under which this wernment has endured for 13% vars, has grown in wealth, power,|CUfrency inflation they found ‘stent of territory and intelligence | themselves under the absolute f its people beyond the Meee | aomishion of Robesplerre. In or- reams of its founders,” Mr, Saner |Ger to- meet the growing scarcity aid. “No other people since the | Of coln, paper money called assig- nats were issued. First 400,000,- | 000 francs worth, then 800,000,000 were added with the distinct un- derstanding that the 1,200,000,000 would be the full extent of the is- sue. This pledge was soon broken | and further issues brought the to- tal up to 3,700,000,000 francs. Frightful depreciation was the awn of time has been as happy. Un- er this constitution we have sur- ived the greatest civil war in his- ory, we have fought four great for- ign wars and carried them to tri- imph and a just and victorious seace, we have become the admira ion and envy of the whole civilized vorld. A French peasant after working the entire year to produce a ctop was compelled by law to accept payment for that crop in paper | money, which he knew to be worth: less, or go to prison. It was simply legalized robbery. When the penalty was increased to twenty years imprisonment the in- eyltable climax came., The Reign of Terror was at its helght. Robe- | splorre was in supreme power. He | suggested that more assignats be issued and if the people did not take them the guillotine ahould he| the penalty. Robesplerre’s End This unteard of outrage was more than the people could stand, An unkoown man arose on the floor cf the convention and de nounced Robesplerte, reciting the heinous crimes he had committed, and s0 worked upon the feelings of the audience that Robesplerre, the tyrant, became Robesplerre, the convicted criminal. Two days later he was led to the guillotine. France had learned her financial lesson well—that money must have value back nf it. The fallacy of unsound money fs sure to confront us again. Never fg there enough of everything for all the people. The struggle for existence is a real struggle, and those who find themselves in the lower strata of human society are ready at any time to grasp at fiat | money or any of the other things | | which misguided politicians hold | out to them. hate My whole purposé in tof ative home the fact that danger lies | ahead and to urge every one tolet no opportunity go by to use voice and influence toward keeping the wampum of these United States, as it is today, the soundest currency in the world. SOME BANK SALARIES Investigations made by the ‘Mis- sour! Bankers Association have re- vealed that 368 banks in the state: in towns of under 2,000 population! are paying their cashiers and chief executives an average of only $110 a month, Only 873 of the 1,162 re- porting banks in towns under 5,000 population pay the president a salary. The report says: “It indicates that, even allowing for the economy of living In small communities, the cashiers and managing Qfficers of those 1,162 banks, who receive an average of $140 per month, elthes must have personal means to begin with, or must maintain the standards neg- essary to their positions as the “But from many quarters it is being issailed. The criticisms come from | various classes. From below, the an- inevitable result; and legislation ‘was passed making it a crime, with six years’ imprisonment as the penalty, if any one should refuse to take the paper assignats at their face value. Just think of it! PAPER MONEY PIPE DREAMS By JOHN OAKWOOD arehists, who would tear down all government, assail it with open vio- lence, however. This is the last of our danger, We can cope with the an- “There is another element, the par- Jor:sociglists, who combine with half- baked educators in a more insiduous propaganda, Many of them are pco- ple of wealth ang position, some of them with humanitarian ideas, some with simply lunatic notions, but they have the power to invade our schools and in our schools, all the way from | the first gradg up to the highest collegiate institutions, we find here and there a half-baked professor who insidiously instills int othe minds of our youth these socialistic ideas. “They would infuse into the mind of ‘America the same ideals of gov- | ernment, that prevail in Russia. They are filling our schools with text books that contain this propaganda. It is so elusive, so skillful, that it is harg to reach, “But above all, the chief danger lies in men highly placed, men in the Senate and House, lawyers who should know their constitution and its fruits. These demand that the safeguards of the Constitution, the interpretation by the Supreme Court, should be withdrawn; that the legisla- tive branch should be sole judge of the constitutionality of its acts and their conformity to the Constitutio: The moment this is done the judici- ary and the executive would be prostrate at the foot of the ‘ma- jority in congress, But they even go farther than that. They demand tha the decisions of the court shall be“submitted to a vote of the people upon constitutional questions. “Where two proposals, urged by a minority bloc in congress would as efféctively destroy this Conditution as anything that the anarchists or secret socialists could do; and still if these two proposals were submit- ted-to the people today they wouid find thousands of advocates. “The truth is we have so long en- + joyed the blessings of freedom, that we have grown indifferent to them. Th@ founders carefully protected the rights of the minority by this writ- tem. constitution. It was the first tinfe in the history of the world that certain fundamental rights of the in- dividual ang minority were guaran- teed them by a written instrument superior to the legislative power or the,wil] pf the majority. It is an astonishing thing that intelligent people should deliberately attempt to teag down ther feguards and turn the country over to mob rule. he American Bar Association ay FE ily ‘a work of education, r these dangers. A committee is wowking through every organization thet will assist, through the great and beneficial organize- tiois, through women’s clubs and the ;of Women Voter be eh societies and above all, th h. the American Legion. close scrutiny will be made of xt books used in our schools leges to eliminate this danger- nd; treasonous matter. In this we hope to check the propa- ‘It is the duty, of wre Ate tor repeal by every means ~ i power | these soapults upon our Hitting the pipe seems like the greatest way in the world to get something for nothing,—a whole paradise full of joy for a few whiffs of opium smoke. But— ° . By the way, the big lure about flat money is that it seems to promise about as mucb for noth- ing as a whiff on the p!pe. They are just coming out of such @ dream now in Germany. eee Here is the way that German soft money dream goes. Say in 1918 a man put a ten year mort- gage for 20,000 marks on his farm. Marks were then worth, in gold, about four to the dollar. The debt, therefore, was equivalent to about $5,000, eoee In the ten years since that debt was contracted, the German Gov- ernment has published, so to speak, trillions of paper marks. What happened? What would happen to the price of eggs if they had a hen at Washington laying a billion eggs a day,—even if they put a government stamp on them jaying eggs were worth a quarter @ piece? German marks have gone down from {our to the dollar to 120,009 to the Gollan. oe Here el eihra the pipe dream gets particularly good. The 1913 mortgage is now due,—20,000 marks are to be paid. Marks are quoted 120,000 tothe dollar. Twen- ty-thousand marks, one-sixth of that, therefore equal one-sixth of @ dollas.—16 2-3 cents. On the thee ry that “a mark is a mark,” th debtor could wipe off bis $6,000 mortgage for 162-8 cents,—less than the eal od ch a eosen eggs. ‘That fs, he can unless the pipe dream’ comes to a sudden end, For one thing the German courts are ruling that the theory “a mark 1s 9 mark” doesn’t go,—that a debtor hag to give back a fair equivalent for what he received and that present paper marks FOR ice of the Board of Adm North Dakota, for the State Training at Mandan, Penitentiary af marek, Hospital for the Insane at Jamestown, Institution for Feeble Vag pap at. fauaaeeeD Eeheok er the at? Devi. Tae, Siete ise ding at mari piercalan Sanato. rium at Dunseith, oo! of fal Beience of aeabpeien, Netmel par Ine chook Elles "dustrial © le, ‘ares ie te at Valley rrp ea State Hepleacel Sen Oe a are, State nivers! ie vile ted ‘and the he gate fo ePiopgsals will be received in leaders of their communities and the builders of the commonwealth by means of ‘side lines,’ such as selling insurance, eollecting com- missions on farm loans, and trad- ing in real estate.” worth 120,000 to the dollar are na the fair equivalent of former gold marks at four to the dollar. ese Furthermore all pipe dreams are too good to be true. They are not what they seem. The smoke is wearing off in Germany and they are coming down to earth with a dull thud. It 1s beginning to be realized that the net result of a paper money nightmare is that producers are robbed and speculi tors enriched. Farmers are unable to raise prices for their products fast enough to keep up with the falling purchasing power of* un- sound money. The value of money slips away from them likea handful of dry sand. It brings back to them leas in pyrchi than they gave of thelr products to get it, ee The farmer as @ result can't make ends meet and when he gets into difficulties the unsound money speculator steps in and buys up mortgaged farm lands cheap—and thus it fs mostly the speculator who profits by paying off the mort- gages with currency worth less than a dozen wp wale is the courts stop him eee More than that, if farm mort gage debt can be paid off with al most worthless currency, so can corporatjons pa beige debt,—the bonds in which many a farmer's savings, \ Before the war, with marks worth 24 cents gold, the of the thrifty in German savings banks were worth over five billion dollars. Today, although these de- posits have multiplied many fold in terme of marks, thelr real value fs only about half a milifon dollars | 5 gold. That is° what a “loose fener” “Pina Sosy for common Pipé dreams are woudertal while | y, they Jast-—but- shattered health, misery and despair are the fina) penalty, The ones who. profit bd the dope sellers, Ungeund mo: is a pipe ine pir the pel 1s economic ruin, misery and de Normal School at Dickinzon, for far- nishing coal for one or more of all institution for a.period of not. less! than one month, shall be provided at all times, Railway company's weights at points nearest each institution will govern. ‘Yhe quantity of coal on which bida are asked may be increased or dimin- ished at the will of the superintend- ent of the institution, and the Board |~ reserves the right at any time to change the grade of coal by paying the price stated in the bid for the grade used, Bids for coal are requested for the |different grades, the several chief executives of the respective institu- tions to order the grade desired. Each bidder must specify the mine 3 the coal he proposea to comes from, and must fur- analysis of every grade of coal on which a bid is sub ed5 showing per cent of moisture, per cent of volatile matter, per cent of fixed'earbon, per cent of sulphur, per cent of ash, per cent of kers, and’ also state its calorific value in or mi U. The right is reserved to reject any or all proposals and a sufficient bond will be req cessful bidders to insure the f: performance of the contract. Specifications of tne kind and quantity of coal will be furnished py this Board on application. Payment will be made each month check drawn on the Treasurer of. the State for coal furnished for the preceeding month, * Approximate amount of coal want- ed at each aruren is as follows: State Training School at 1,200 tons; ‘State Penitentiary at Bi marck 13,000 tons; State Capitol Bismarck, 1,800 tons; State Hospital for the Insane at Jam tons; State Teachers College at Val- ley City, 4,900 tons; Agricultural Col- jlege at Fargo, 7,000 tons; State High School_of ‘Science at Wahpeton, 900 tons;- Normal and Industrial Schooi at Ellendale, 1,200 tons; State Normal School at. Mayville, 1,600 tons; Uni- versity at Grand Forks, 6,000. tons; Institution for Feeble’ Minded at Grafton, 4,500 tons; School for the Blind at Bathgate, 600 tons; School for the Deaf at Devils Lake, 2,000 tons; Tuberculosis Sanatorium at Dunseith, 2,500 tons; State Normal School at Minot 2,500 tons; State Normal School at ‘Dickinson, 1,000 tons. Envelopes must be endorsed “Pro- posals for Coal” and addressed to the undersigned at Bismarck, North Dakota. Ernest G. Wanner, Executive Secretary, Board of Administration. Dated at pac ice North Dakota. NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE ,| Notice is hereby given that that] 192 certain mortgage, executed and deliv- ered by John Howard Ozmun, an_un- married man, mortgagor, to The State of North Dakota, mortgagee, dated the 28th day of April, 1919, and filed for record in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds of the County of Bur- leigh and State cf North Daketa on the 28th day of Arril, 1919, and re- corded in Book 29 of Mortgages at page 264, will be foreclosed: by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described at the front door of the court house in the City of Bismarck, in the County of ar leigh and State of North Dak the hour of two o'clock P. M., the lith day of August, 1928, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in. guch mortgage and which will he gdh to satisfy the same are described = follows: The East One-Half of the West One-Half (E%W') of Section Num- ber Twenty-two (22), in Township Number One Hundred Forty-four (144) North, of Range Number ty-nine (79), West of the Fifth cipal Meridian, containing 160/ acres more or lest according to the GOV- ernment survey thereat. There will be due on such mort- gage at the date of sale the sum, of Twenty-four Hundred Bist tone and 24-100 Dollars ($2464.24), together with the costs of this foreclosure, Dated this 23rd day fof June, 1923. The State o: orth Dakota,. Mortgagee. George F. Shafer, : Attorney General. of The State of North Dakota. ch | Rheinhart J. Kamplin, Assistant Attorney General and Attorney for the Board of University and School Lands of The State of Norte Dakota Attorneys for M T.| North Dakota, deceased, to the cred- fhe 16th day of July 1933 at 10 o’-/filed for record in the office of’ the clock in the forenoon of'said day at} Register of Deeds of the County of the front door of the court house in| Burleigh and State of North Dakots, Burleigh County, North Dakota in/on the 2ist day of December A. the city of Bismarck to satisfy the}1917, and recorded in Book 144 of debt secured by said mortgage and| mortgaged, at page 472, will be fore- the costs and expenses of these fore-|closed by a sale of the premises in closure proceeding: such mortgage and hereinafter des- , Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota| cribed, at the front door,of the Court this 6th day of July 1928. House in the City of Bismarck, in eorge Pepkorn, Mort-| the County of Burleigh, and State of ore By E. M. Kafer,! North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'- Agent. clock P. M. on the 13th day of Aug- McCurdy, ust 1923, to satisfy the amount due orney for Mortgagee, upon said M the day of Bismarck, North ‘Dakota, le Se eee oy (re sale. The premises described in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are those certain remises situated in the County of jurleigh, and State of North Dakota, and described as follows, to-wit: The East Half! of the .East Half (B% of E%) of Section Twenty- eight (28) in Township One Hundred Forty-three (143) North of Range Seventy-seven (77) West, of the Fifth Principal Meri containing one hundred sixty acres, more ‘or less, according to the U. S. Government after the|survey thereof. notice, to There will be due on such Mort- A.|gage at the date of sale the sun NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate John L. Hubert, Deceased: Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned Mary Hubert, Executrix of the Last Will of John L. Hubert, late of the City of Bisfharck in the County of Burleigh and State of of itors of, and’ all persons having claims against, suid deceased, to ex- \hibit them with the necessary vouch- F, é (Seal of the Courty of Two Thousand Two Hundred fifty and 74-100 ($2,250.74) Dollars. Seth G. Wright, Mortgagee, Lawrence, Murphy & Niles, Attorneys for Morsaseees Fargo, North Dakota (6-30 7-7-44 28 "B-4) NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE; NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that that certain mortgage, executed and delivered by. Victor Koski and Mary Koski (signed Marija Koski), his wife, mortgagors to Union Invest- ment Company, of Minneapolis, Minn- esota, a corporation, mortgagee, dat- ed the 2nd day of November, | 4916, and filed:for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Da- kota on the 6th day of December, 1916, at 9 o'clock, A. M. and record- ed in Book 30 of Mortgages at page 601, and duly assigned by said mort- gagee by an instrument in. writing, to Emil H. Schmidt, of the County of Calumet, State of Wisconsin, dated the Gth day of March, 1917, and filed for record in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds in and for said County of Burléigh and State of North Da- kota on the 26th day of April, 1923, and recorded in Book 175 of Assign- menty at page 70, will be foreclosed by a@sale of the premises in sucn mortgage and hereinafter described at the front door of the Court House in the City of Biemarck, in the Coun- ty of Burleigh and State of North Da- kota at the hour of two o’clock\P. M. on the 23rd day of July, 1923, to sat isfy the amount due upon such mort: gage on the day of sale. The pre- mises described in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as follows, to-wit: The West half of the Southwest quarter (W% SW%) and the West half of the Northwest quarter (W% NW%) of Section Thirty-two (32), in Town ship One hundred forty-two (142), North of Range Seventy-five (75), West, of the 5th Principal Meridian, situated in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota. There will be due on such mortgage at the date of sale the sum of One Thou- sand six hundred ‘ninety-six 63/100 dollars, together with the costs of foreclosure. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, this, 2nd day of June, 192 Emil H. Schmidt, Assignee of Mortgage, eid Burleigh county. Dated June 28rd A. D, 1923, Mary Hubert, Executrix. rst Lyi on the 23rd day of June A. D. 1 (6-23-20 7-9-14) BANKRUPT’S PETITION FOR DIS- CHARGE AND ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON District Court of the Unit- es, For the Southwestern District of North Dakota. In the Matter of Elias Elleflood, Bankrupt. No. 4224 in Bankruptcy. ‘To the Honorable Andrew Miller, Judge of the District Court of the United States for the District of Division Elias Elleflood, of Driscoll, in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dgkota, in said District, res- pectfully’represents that on the 16th day of April, 1923, last past, he was duly adjudged bankrupt under the acts of Congress relating to bank- ruptey; that he has duly surrend- ered ‘all his property and rights of property, and has fully comp! with the requirements of acts and of the orders of the court touching his _bankruptey. WHEREFORE, He prays that he may bi creed by the court to have a full discharge from all debts prov- able inst his estate under said Bankrupt acts, except such debts as are excepted by law from such charge. Dated this 28th day of April A. D., Elias Elleflood, Bankrupt. ORDER OF NOTICE THEREO: District of North Dakota, ss: *On this 14th day of June, A. D., 1923 on reading the Petition for irge of the above-named Bankrupt, is ORDERED By the Court, that a hearing be had upon the same on the 14th day of August, A. D. 192: before the said court, at Fargo, suid district, at ten o'clock forenoon and that notice thereof be published in The Bismarck Tribune, a news- paper printed in said district, and that all known creditors and other persons in interest may appear at the said time and place and show cause, if, any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be. granted. And it is further ordered by the Court, that the Referee shall send, by mail, to all known creditors, copies of said petition and this order, addressed to them at their places of residence as stated. WITNESS The Honorable Charles ion, Judge of the said court, and the seal thereof, at Bismarck, in’ said district, on the 14th day of June, A. D. 1923. G. Olgeirson, Attorney for Assignee of Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That default has been made in the terms and conditions of that certain mort- gage made, executed and delivered by HE. Wildfang and Bessie Wildfang, his wife, mortgagors, to The North- ern Trust Company, a corporation, mortgagee, dated the bth day of March A. D, 1917, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Decds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on the 23rd day of April 1917, at 2:30: M and duly recorded in Book “132” of Mortgages, on page 496, and assigned to Ransom County Trust Montgomery, Clerk ; by Ae R. Steele, Deputy ee NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT Notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage, executed and deliv- gred by Michael B. O'Connell and Maggie O'Connell, his wife, mort- TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1923, fice of said Register of Deeds of Bur- leigh County, on the 20th day of No- vember 1917, at 1:30 P. M. and duly recorded in Book “106” of Mortgages, on page 566, and assigned to nedore W. Oliver, of Lisbon, N. D., by in- strument in writing dated the 26th day of December 1917, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on the 9th day of May A. D. 1923, at 1: M. and duly recorded in Book “174” of Mise. Mtges., on page 319, and further assigned to The jorthern Trust Company, a corpora- tion, by assignment dated the 3rd day of May 1928, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of said Burleigh County, North Da- kota, on the 9th day of May 1923, at 1:30 P. M, and duly recorded in Book “174” of Misc. M., on page 319, und said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and ‘hereinafter described, at the front door of the court hose; in the City of Bismarck, in the Coun- ty of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, at the hour of two o’elock in the afternoon on the 20th day of July 1923, to satisfy the amount due ‘on_such mortgage at the date of sale. The premises described in such mortgage, and which will be sold to satisfy the same are situated in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, and are described as follows, to-wit: The South half of the ‘South- east quarter (S% of SE%) and the Northeast quarter of th Southeast quarter (NEM of SE %) of Section Ten (10), in Township One hundred. thirty enty-six (76) West, of the Fifth Principal Meridian, containis., 720 acres more or less, according to the United States Government Survey thereof. There will be due on stch mort- wage at the date of sale the sum of One thousand two hundred eighty- three dollars and fifty-four ($1283.- 64) cents, together with the costs and expenses of foreclosure. Dated June 9th, 1923. The Northern Trust Company, A Corporation, Assignee of Mortgage, Fargo, North Dakota. Albin Hedstrom, Sheriff of Burleigh Cou..y, North Dakota. Pierce, Tenneson, Cupler & Stambaugh, Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgage, Fargo, North Dakota. \ > G-11-18-25 7-2-9-16 TO THE POLICYROLDERS OF E PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA Pe is hereby given that » mecting of {THE PRUDENTIAL isda CE COMPANY OF AMERICA Tp held at the Homo Office of anid Com- any'in the City of Newark, New Jersey, on Konany, r, the Third day of December, 1988, at twelve o’clock noon, for the purpose of selecting four persons to be voted for by tho policy- holders’ Trustee as members of the Board of Directors at the annual election of Directors of the Company to be held on the Fourteenth day of January, 1924. At such ‘meeting every policyholder of the corporation who is of the age of twenty-one Jost! oF upwards and whose policy has been for at least one year fast past shall be nine (139) North, of Range Sev- | entitled to ast one vote in person of by proxy. on the Great Lakes “Tionesta” jalue. Cruising Lake Great Lake . ‘every three dayast Ste. Marie, Ma: Clevel ‘Best dining inch Have you Company, a corporation, by assign- ment dated the 19th day of Novgmber 1917 and filed for record in tke of. gegors, to Seth G.’ Wright Mortgagee ‘dated the Sth da: ey of December A. D. néneteen hundred and Seventeen and THE WORLDS F FINEST CRUISE ransit Corporation Steel Steamers “Faniata”™ Cet Duluth ta Buffalo and Re: JUXURIOUS comfort, beautiful scener vi ‘Superior—Str Lake Huron—Lake St. Clair—Detgoit eae Erie and numerous other bodies of @ater mi Passenger 9 ice ww, a. ing at it Marines folend Detrcit, land, Bi Li and ‘accommodations in, the world in fi a Dancing ‘Tickets and Reservations at All R. R. and G. C. WILLIAMS, G. L. T. Corp. Duluth, Minn. ? JULY TENTH ? something? TO PROMPTLY PAY IS THE BETTER WAY BISMARCK CREDIT BUREAU EDWARD D. DUFFIELD, President. @ and. educational raits of Mackinac— forgotten i f noe OF REAL man (eae GAGE FORECLOSURE, 8: Notice is hereby given thar’ Nhat mortgage, executed and deliv- ered -by Charles B. W: son and Ruth Esther Wi n, his wife, mortgagors, to The State of North Dakota, mortgagee, Aston the 26th day of February, 1919, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and Sgate of North Dakota on the 19th day of March 1919, and record- ed in Book 29 of Mortgages at page 256, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described at front door of the court hause in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota at the hour of two o'clock P. M., on the 11th day of August 1923 to satis- fy the amount due upon such mort- ' ears) on the day of sale, premises described in ence Bs age and which will be sold ti satisfy the same are described 8 follows: The, Northeast Quarter (NE%) of Section Number Twenty-four (2) in Township Number me Hundred Forty-one (141) North, of Range Number Seventy-eight (78), West of the Fifth Principal Meridian, contain- ing 160 acres more or less aecording to the Government survey thereof. There will be due on such mort- gare. at the date of sale the sum of ‘ighteen Hundred Fifty-three and | 39. 108 Dollars ($1,853.89), together} bbe costs of this foreclosure. d this 23rd of June, 1923. The. State of North Dakot Mortgagee. George F. Shafer, Attorney General of The State North Dakotas. ‘t J. Kamplin, nt Attorney General. and Att Fee for the Board of. “University and School Lands of The State of North Dakota Attorneys for Mortgage. Bismarck, North Dakota. (6-28 7-5-12-19-26 8-2): institutions named for the term end- June 30, 1924. Bids are request- on each grede of coal jesig- hated end the right: is ‘reserved: to accept the bid on Any of these aie or in e coal must. be of the best qual- ia fee an or heating purposes and ped at te, institut Fel ss Sierepar dp ta for where is A ree ition; where Mra sthere is n a pwitch, at the conveni: int for unloading, the location at ne ore are to to, be named the Aes nt 93 the ae a pal apa arte e be deli elivered o ord-, in ie) nf sup- piy the wants eg ee an reserve supply - of Goal sudficient meet the ey of en ch| to the highest pide? NOTICE OF oe MORTGAGE Hes is. pera given, thi as defaylt ha: fs Heoassiane ditions o! hat, tS penta ny: to rtgagor to pb ed tl ay ai and oe fers a tox due and unpaid on sai Tadahtedn to the paar poet the sum of ied in said cr in Hodge Bane poet ee Model, Car No. 27072 sold mer of ‘sale in jt public the con- Abel i do se ie by meres of or iad tela ye of said of their former volume. becited. | , 1 FTIR TTT: for cash, on. oR PEO "Published by the Bismarck Dally Tribune in co-operation ie The American Association of Advertising Agencies. How Business Depres- sion Tests Good-Will Many a manufacturer during the past two years has. had an opportunity to measure as never before the real worth of his advertising investment. He has seen his trade - marked line.keep up in sales and his unadivertised goods shrink to a small fraction Innumerable instances could Dealers can tell a similar story. The number of makes. carried of each item have shrunken to a very few—the best known and: most frequently called for. ; ? + have changed.their point of view; they no longer stock ay lightly -with many brands, but substantially with a few. : "Quick turnover is their only salvation in a depression and their real source of profit in a prosperous period... e a IEE AF Dealers aye aie

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