The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1925, Page 6

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PAGE SIX _ ir WO AANT BST anu Uti te Sickinsen Normal Sebooi, Boat St. Mary eam dd at Jame: amest ty night misketball I Wedne The will not it nt, will day 1 chedule rrow is an- be an- hounced Pavvo Nurmi Breaks Record The AL ga ark ecord her \ epoch-making estublis! as many nd and ace in Thursda in hicago nish Paavo, yors Ww Ritola ra team his rival for the ¢ crack f ground for world’s record the negotiating uk of Madison Sq i913, NOTICE OF ALE stofore WHE judgment preclosure Nor ts & Manuf State Bank, orporation, W tiff, and Fred Clark, Flor his wife, Andrew Ja MeWill In Big Race. nt und ‘ coming | to rely mort on expos ives to rol and eron- omically the greatest tunacl} achir all tir 1 complet begun, past year have depended or de- pend on explosives for their speed supply complete s the loi York Cit in the urly st tunnel in the having total length of The rock — eneountere 1 from shale, throngh si martzite, the last of which makes i cially Wi drilling. ‘The < dr y the n in regord bres use of moder t vehlewlar tr y the Ty il lich will acco: of two da hour at the uti At per onal ‘ows, j One fanning one three sec- | tion dra F itruck two cow sides all of the | cows, DAVID FE Agent JOSEPH COGHL. Aan Atto 1-19 claim is upon the eribed, a sold to sati and now ibing said judg signed, S: f, + and NOTICE OF ECUTION Whereas, heretofore judgment and in mortgag: eclosure duly entered in the Office of Clerk of the District Court for ‘weigh County, Nor of xt} sum rests, | hich is em d n dyna- ed that | , and the by. Is Hereb North Dakota, a cribed as follow The North Section Th On of Januar ALBIN HED Sheriff of Buel M. R, KEITH, Atvorney tor Kenmare, KOM NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE hereby given fault has been e tions of that certain Mortgage by E. F. Wheeler of Wing, County of | Burleigh, and State of North Dakota Mortgagor, to Anton Hanson of jotice is that de- Wing, County ‘of Burleigh and State | of North Dake Mortgagee, date the 28th d of ‘October 1920, to se ere the following indebtedness, to- wit: One Note in the sum of $100.00, dated October 18th, 1920, due. No- | vember Ist 1921, payable to Anton| ( Hanson and draw ng interest at 10 lepr cent, -and which Morteage. wa: duly filed in the office of the Regis-, i. ter of Deeds of Burleigh County, | k ‘State of North Dakota, on the 17th | day of December 1920, at 9 o'clock i and which default is of the ing . nature, to-wit: | interest when due, andsthat there is claimed to be due on said Mortgage £ dete cf this notice the sum of One | Hundred Thirty Two and ($138.50) Dollars for principal interest. And that snid Mortgagee will be foreclosed by a sale of the personal {| property in such’ Mortgage and here- inafter described, at public auction, agreeably to the statutes e Hans on’s farm, located on the South- east Quarter of Section twenty ae ce 137, Range 76, near Wing, ity, N. Dak. on account hie tfie Ity of moving said per- i and in’ such made and provided, at’ John g [eat Quart in the condi- | made | The nonpayment of said note and| f a writ of out of the id court ind deliver- to me and now in my hands, and t I, the un- for auction to t sh the pre ‘cael ARE Tees Tall th Dakot: bed as fo orth Half (NW4) Half (S%) of the Nortawe a (NW) Si Tw Township One Hundred (144) North of Range Seventy-nine| (79) West of the Sth P. M. ated at Bismarck, North Dakota this 20th day of December, 1924. | ALBIN HEDSTROM, ‘Sheriff of Burleigh Count k D | WILLIAMS & L! Attorneys for Pl | Washburn, North | 12 | LL, ntiff, Dakota. |, Burleigh County Board of Health fficial Notice SMALLPOX The epidemic of s | out the county has ubated. our citizens are protected, either by attacks of the disease or by succe ful vaccination, but as this disease usually prev: months, there is outbreaks. danger of pox. School boards are authorized pareats must be obtained case. F. R. SMYTH. Cook By Wire Instead of by fire, North | 2-19-26 | | nallpox through- Many of | most in the winter | further | Successful vaccinztion is the only 30-100 | reliable method of preventing small- ouhty Health Officer. 7-19-20 to} employ physicians to vaccinate un- protected pupils but the consent of in each af f explosives ing considered a sities 1s culture and the! ch importance ished schools ther > explosiv ng th ‘ight way requires hundreds of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNP r Another great enginecring feat | much ter comfort and greater under way is the co: ruction of speed a former the Moffat Tunnel in Colorado, — Enormous water which will pieree the Contin dependent for thei Divide and be the longest tion on explosives jtunnel in the western hemi A few miles cast It will sav 1 elev tucky, will open up an undeveloped upire, rich in coal ar hydro-e In_ this tunnel, has Dix Riv on is known as) vised the © in ot ‘inv ae ne explo: in used, ive tunneling elops 4 mh posse power 19 » STRAIGHT TALKS WITH AUNT EMMY) "ON SAVING. “AND INVESTING Aunt my and Maud were talk- ing about saving money. “What does a savings bank do with the money people put in it, Aunt Emmy?” inquired Maud. | “ft is invested in sound mort- tages, perhaps, or government and corporation securities. You see, the men who run savings banks are trained financiers. They know what securities are good and what are ionable, so they invest the bank's funds—that is, the money they receive from their depositors —in the best securities in such a way that they will be able to pay you interest on your deposits and be able to return your money to you when you want it. In order to do that they must invest in se- curities that pay a higher rate of interest than they give you to cover the bank expenses and set aside a surplus against emergen- 2 “But, Aunty, if the banks invest our money, why can’t we invest it ourselves?” “We could if we knew as much about investments as the bank does. Bankers are not likely to make the mistakes made by the ordinary person. They are not de-| ceived by impressive looking stock | certificates, plausible letters from] brokers charming voices over | the telephone nrginz them to buy| this or that. Your banker is a hard-headed business man who in- vestigates thoroughly before he invests tho bank's money. For this reason many conservative persons prefer to keep their savings in a savings bank, knowing that their money is in wise hands and that even though the rate of intefest they get may be moderate their money is far safer than it would be if it were invested less skill- fully.” “Surely, though, it must be pos- sible to get more than 4. per cent on your money and yet be safe,” Maud said. “It is under certain conditions,” Aunt Emmy agreed. “The trouble is that so few people are frank about their money matters with men who really ‘can be trusted for advice. They would rather take the advice of a glib stock salesman. No matter how small a sum a per- son is thinking of investing, ad- vice should be sought from a trust company or bank. Women espe- cially don’t seem to realize this. “The savings bank is always safe, It is a good plan to keep put- ting money in a savings bank until you have a good sum. Then with- draw part and invest it i> “8 aonvitwy maving a bic nents its one o interest. advice before you buy. you can alwe e cash on hand in the bank, yet graduaity convert most of your savings into high grade sccurities.”"—Anne B. Aymes. THE BURDEN OF GOVERNMENT The financial burden of govern: ment has become increasingly heavy in recent years. It has, at times, reached the point of oppres- sion. The Federal tax of 1920 ag- gregated more than five and one- half billion dollars. This year, after strenuous efforts to reduce the war- time peak, the total still exceeds three billion dollars—a sum far greater than the entire burden of funded debt accumulated ‘as a re- sult of the Civil War. State and lo- cal taxes have increased at an even greater rate. Taxation has become more than a problem; it is a threat of impending disaster, Nor is the burden of government limited to taxation. We are op- pressed by a multiplicity of restric- tive laws and administrative regu-- lations, It is estimated that there are over two million laws and ordi- nances in the records of nation, states and municipalities. One adult person out of every twenty engaged in business or industry is a govern- ment official, agent or employee. In the face of this record, despite the general recognition of the over- whelming burden of government, we find ourselves constantly wag- ng a defensive battle against plans ‘and programs which would transfer still greater duties to government, which would hamper individual initiative still further, which will— if put into practice—crush individu- al ambition and destroy individual opportunity. Under these circumstances it is our right—it is our duty—to affirm and defend sound principles of po- litical faith as we have, on other occasions supported sound princi- ples of -eonomic progress. The Constitution of the United States has stood for 135 years as the bul- wark of our individual and our col- lective liberties. The Constitution has been and is now the greatest existing restraint upon an arrogant majority. It has been and is now the greatest existing defence of the very minorities which, at this time, are being led to denounce its re- strictions. One of our greatest needs is to repel the attacks now being made upon the integrity of this charter of our freedom. We should—we must—oppose vigorously all efforts to give Congress the power to over- ride decisions of the Supreme Court—and thereby destroy the di- vision of governmental power which -is the inherent strength of our constitutional system.—Walter W. Head, American Bankers Asso- elation. But be sure to seek gooa. | In this way Elks Dance postponed until Caledonian Society Entertain- | Friday, Jan, 30th, acpount, ment Friday 28rd, | eee Ee ; NEERING ofl CHIE VIEMIEN rs cv fc AER /} at rica OF GREAT 82,090 pounds of vnamite were| fect in depth. MOND AY, JANTIARY 19, 195 losives fouth of Moffat runnel When the charges | placed in the cliff and detonated. | Were shot, no explosion took place It was done by loading the ex-|9M the surface, but the full force plosives in what are called “coy-|WaS coutined inside the bank, so ote” tunnels, driven into the pre-|that the dist was well loosened and | cipitous sides of the cliff. As the|fed freely into the dredge. ‘This; result of the shot, something like| resulted i increasing the | 150,000 tons of loose material were | 1 of Sand was an] thrown out into the dam and in| importsat ing the | addition . approximately — 25,000) ti t solid cubic s were broken up} of ex- to be trensf to fill in further, | plosi: y took A tunnel fifteen feet square,| place itor |jsirouek thirteen and one-half) id. pumping niles of solid rock, to tap a lake!» Ke to fill in bac | level, is being| of 3 rhe bottom ws ' Southern California) heavy clay aud marl and the The purpose of | dredg: having difficulty with work is to harness the lakes|it until an explosives expert ad-/are completed, the —_ passage) of the Sierr vised that dynamite be placed in through Hell Gate will be such} An uausual feature of the use| the material to loosen it. This was &S to make it possible for els | of explosives oc ed this year in| done so effe that efter the;to pass through Leng Island| ihe work of widening and deepen-|use of the tosive, the dredge|Sound and into the Atlantic| ine the Delaware and Chesapeake! pumped ont more material in the|Occan by another route than the} Canal. Af one point, the work con-! same length of e than it had|old Sandy Hook Channel, and it} i the removal of © blasting and| will give a n@w inside waterway | riz pow for ships coming up or do: pe work of great] coast to through the RAIL CLERKS ~ GET BOOST IN THEIR WAGES i9.—The Board, in a Chicago, Jan. States Railway today granted an annual increase in $3,740,000 to clerical service employees in forty- three railways of all sections of the affected do taken care of in wages of approximately country. not include The employe those Heh eee Mrs. Clarence Brown and _ little bac i i? daughter of Werner are visiting The increase ranged from 1c to 2c] with’ Mrs. Brown's parents, Mr. and | an hour for the classes include "Mrs. O. N. Nelson. | The principal railroad affected by - | the order include the Chicago Great | The W. ©. T. U. held its regular Western, Chicago, Milwaukee and | January meeting aturday at St. Paul, the Sault Saint Marieg the | the home of Mrs. . Anderson, A Northern Pacific and the Perre Mar- |very interesting session was enjoy-| | quette. ed. Reports on topice of interest, —_—--—-— the Union Signal, and a study of the | TO CHOOSE “WHO's Constitution were taken up, A deli- | WHO” STUDENTS} cious lunch was served by the hos- Grang Forks, NUD. Jan. 19—| tess. Election of fifteen students: at the _ = University of North Dakota to com-| January 16, the fifth’ anniversaty | pose the annual Who's Who section | of Nation: Constitutional Prohibi- | of The Dacotah, year book of the | tion was fittingly observed at school | University, is scheduled next week,| on A very good program | j Jan, 19-31, A committee composed | was given. The ‘teachers have the of one faculty member and two stu-| cooperation of the W. C. T. U. in ‘dents is to make the final selection |from the namesranking highest in “Instruction. | the vote. “Gold is shee you find it. | Wright’s | {greatest novel at the Capitol, | Theatre commencing tonight. | ee Harold Bell DIZZY? You're Bilious! Enjoy the nicest, perienced by taking , one candy-like . Ca: |physic your, bowels fully. | constipated waste and sour |move out af the bowels |eriping or pireeg you up. gentlest liver arid bowel cleansing you ever ex- Fets,| anytime. They News of Our Neighbors & DRISCOLL Mr. J: C, Hallum of Minn avrived Iasi week on Thur: the directors’ Merchants State son-in-law and daughter, | _————-_—_-——— | over the Dri ) —— game the apolis y for meeting of the Farm- Bank and} | Mr.| oe Mr. and . E. J. Anderson, United | Hallam returned to Minneapolis on| decision | Friday, | Morris Helen school in Thelma district. The L. T. L. be the making of posters. The basket ball game Frida? between Dawson last and For Constipated Bowelss Headache, Colds, Sour Stomach, Gases, Biliousness will be no bowel poison to or two ‘All the bile will without | There than all.other laxatives and 25 and 50 cent sizes, —Ady, | "taken hogl duties’ as teacher of the| their work in Scientific Temperance will | reorganized and their next work will | coll resulted in the following scores: | The boys of Dawson were victorious | Breath Bad? Your Stomach is Sour! colds, sick headache, dizziness, bil- iousness or‘sour stomach. More men, women ‘and, children take Cascarets arties combined, 10 cent boxes, also Any drugstore. up| be| weel Dris cause cath- | joint rapid pro- ir without going out ido and which depends Long nd. In the old! nsisting of ne valuc of madern ship out of every Althoneh no. exnto: hi ng out of | wreeked or damaged | exnlosive the the Hell} when the dangerou: ne removal, Gate Hast Tiver, | re Hell Gate passage. done by) New Y important} Since the invention and pea) well reef in tre Gato 1 ont| improvement of dy! fret manths the ch can be — detonated pinion fig eo Water, tire has becn an inereas- coll boys, however, defeates the the score being 8 to local high refreshments in the b: hall, dancing lunch. the son After school served ment of the, followed — the| iF and Mr. Ole Swee was in Sterling Saturday between trains. last Arann hare aie Bramall and Driscoll girls is scheduled for | Friday evening, the 16th, and a | game between the Freshmen and Sophomore boys of Driscoll. Melvin Johnson accompanied brother, Peter, who had been visit- ing here, back to Mott the first part of this week. Jol Mount motored fo jay and re- turned on Sunday, Mrs. E. L. Carr his recovered from 1 pox. Jane Jensog is recover- YOU BIG STIFF KNEB—Watch Your Finish Stiff, swollen, inflamed, rh ints should be treated with j edy made for just that purpo: Remember the name of t new discovery is Joint-Ease and it will také out the agony, reduce the welling and limber up any troubled after ordinary cure-alls have miserably failed. dust rub it on— G0c a tube at any drug store and all ruggists—ask for. Joint-Ease. EURALGIA orheadache—rub the forehead. 7) ic inhale the KS DR. R. S. ENG Chiropractor Consuliation Free Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D. ———— CRESCENT LIGNITE , “COAL, DRY ¥OOD. BALED HAY. STORAGE SPACE FOR RENT. W. P. LOMAS Corner Main & 9th St. - Phone 82 : Always remember, when Joint- | Ea: gets in joint agony gets out— quick.—Adv. ing activity in clearing out dan- gerous rocks and reefs in harbors and in deepening them. Harbors } have even b rreated by blastin s out of 1 through outly fringes of rock, making it po: for to boats to come in from the what were formerly rock uch a harbor jdug by dynamite at Ne | Richey, Florida, some mont extremely, y work whic do in so many lines of construe or Ww effective an ty has resulted in gi saving rian power and ineres prodvction during the | Engineers, contractors are perts, NTO roan fami | fever, Miss Thelmay Ros: ed to Moorhead whe ing Concordia Colle: feed gri went to Bismarck hiabach took medical car m up by auto. pes: He stopped over until Relieved at once by ANACN Physicians’ favorite a? i old prescription per- No narcotic drugs. Absolutely safe. Ask your druggist about it and get atin for 25c. Head Colds- AN- “A- CIN sae in new tablet form, Stops Pain, WEBB BROTHERS! Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-847 PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer in Charge. * __ Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484K. W. E. PERRY FUNERAL DIRECTOR Parlors 210-5th Street. Night and Day attendani Phone 687

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