The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 26, 1925, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. “GEORGE D. MANN - - : : Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - Marquette Lidg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH 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 : otherwise entitled in this paper and also the local news pub- _ lished 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.............. is oes $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... i eves, G20) + Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck)... 5.00 : _ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ? (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Publisher DETROIT Kresge Bldg. L: PRESIDENTIAL SOONERS It is not always the early bird that gets the worm. Sometimes progress is made slowly, in fact nearly always. Senator Willis of Ohio believes that if you have presidential! = aspirations the sooner you declare them to the electorate the :_ better. He will utilize the vacation between sessions to + make speeches—forty-five of them—so that the republicans of the middle west can size him up and judge for them- selves whether he is of presidential calibre. Probably the best way to seek the presidency is not to * seem to be seeking it. ‘There have been so many bitter dis- : appointments in history attending the “presidential sooner ; Hiram Johnson, LaFollette and others who went after the *; presidential nomination vigorously and unabashed are splen- did examples of the self seeking candidates. Already politicians are speculating whether precedent _ will be reversed and Coolidge be given a third term. Mark * Sullivan, a keen writer and a student of American politics, does not think that there is as much opposition to a third term for presidents as obtained twenty years ago. Writing in a recent issue of the World’s Work, he says: “Just why our apprehension has become dissipated it would be difficult to say positively. Probably the fact that tf, ° things have gone so badly with kings and dynasties during re ; recent years, the clear fact that they are a passing insti- pe * tution, may be the cause for our having so little apprehen- te . Sion about one arising in our own country.” th th ay MINNESOTA’S LEGISLATURE gr Efforts of Gov. Christianson of Minnesota to cut down = the state expenses evidently are doomed to failure. j Probably the hardest task in any political subdivision, e fi, ~ State, county or city is to put across a program of efficiency of | and economy. il The Minnesota governor as did Gov. Sorlie in this : made specific recommendations along the line of effi Vi In Minnesota the chief executive had a well defined plan be- cause of his many years of legislative experience. In this state Gov. Sorlie asked for a modest sum that might have saved many times the appropriation involved. Governors on ne fre an fa : _You get more or less of a line on comparative costs of living in a big city and living in the country from the per capita tax levy for 1923 in New York state (New York City included). This was $49.90. MONUMENT FOR J. J. HILL St. Paul is thinking of erecting a monument to James J. for Hill. Rather tardy recognition for the man who did so much ade to put that city on the map. i The Elks propose to erect a fitting memorial at Rice Park th» Which is flanked by the Elk’s Hall, the Postoffice and the tay Library. the Probably some of the bench warmers in that well known ear nook will take inspiration and hitch their wagons to a star if such a creation in stone or bronze is there to inspire them the @ in their waking hours. ga Th str the wa haw str tea enc 1 TOO FAR Prohibition, being the law of the land, why more power to it. But let there be no fanaticism in its enforcement. Investigation is now being made of the death of a farmer in Cedar Rapids, Ia., who died the other day after drinking home-made liquor into which dry agents had poured kerosene to render it unfit for use. ry If the liquor-caused death, there probably will be a cution for manslaughter. And there should be. most ardent ptohibition sympathizer is fair enough to ac- knowledge that dry agents frequently overstep themselves. “DRUNK” Sir James Purves-Stewart, senior physician at the West- minster Hospital, London, gives an official idefinition of drunkenness: “A drunken person is one who has taken alcohol in suffi- cient quantity to poison his central nervous system, produc- ing in his ordinary processes of reaction to his surroundings a temporary disorder which causes him to be a nuisance or danger to himself or others.” In other words, a man who has had “one too many.” \ # AUTOS Number of motor vehicles in the United States increased twé and half million in 1924. the end of the year there were 17,591,981 — one to 6.4 persons. Exact figures: one passenger car for 7.8 personss and one truck for every 69 persons. test increase in total, registration was shown in the ? dont expansion of that part of the country. Have you heard a meadow lark yet? These harbingers jpring are on the job again. French women are wearing the masculine tuxedo in Paris restaurants despite the veto of Dame Fashion. of |THE UMBREL th Sorlie and Christianson seem to be in the same boat. an tH NEW YORK fre It cost 429 million dollars to run the city of New York te in 1928, according to Department of Commerce figures just th, ~eleased. pe ___ This means about $72.38 for each of New York’s six mil-| we lion citizens. 1 bu In 1922 the per capita cost was $67; in 1917 it was $44. | fe The more we grow the more it costs to keep the machinery ad} going. prose. {= | Atlantic states, reflectirlg the swift growth and busi-'| a Editorial Review. Comments reproduced in tii column may or may aot express the opinion of The Tribuue. Thay are presented bere in order that our readers may bave both sides of important issues which are Being disc io the prese of the day. MICHAEL VALt it ance thet we fail to perform those light duties, like going to the poi | which citizenship calls for. How different it might be if we had to pass an examination before being granted the right to vote! TURE OF THE TWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON MAKER D AND THE MENDER UMBREL » are two people we mus ie dot eh ave indeed.” K Nick er and the Um- mbrella M brella Mender, “April showers are coming. Piease, {get on, both of you, and we will go} and see them.” The Twins jamped on the ck and away he hopped. By they came to the place where the Umbrella Maker and the Umbrella Mender lived side side, Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee ‘The two old men, like the boys, were always’ quarreling, though they were the fastest friends The Umbrella Mender si Umbrella Maker made = brellas that he never to do, And the Umbrella Maker said that the Umbrella Mender mended them | so well that they never wore out, and | so people neve new one And so, as neither of them had] anything to do, they decided to spend their time playing chess One day they played in the Um- brella Maker's house and the next day they played in the Umbrella Mender’s house And so, things went on, and all the umbrellas in the world were getting lost, or Worn out, or being forgotten, anypody had one Dee al-| of that the} good um-| d any work | was cold and bright— » nobody complained. as cold and dusty and] Still nobody complained. Fo nobody needs umbrella: much in Mareh. That not awfully So the two Umbrella Men s played chess, and played ch day after passed. Mister Sprinkle Blow, the weather: man, must have gotten his dates! mixed up on his calendar, up in the sky,-and thought it said April Ist. Instead of that it was only the 2ist of March. “The world is pretty dirty after a hard winte o Vil give it a thorough washing, he. And he rolled his barrel marked “Regular Pourdowns” to the edge of a cloud and turned on the spigot. Down came the rain like hose. But the Umbrella Maker and the; Umbrella Mender played right on. jand sunny. March blowy. and and| a fire- ;. The Maker moved a pawn and jumped a‘ bishop and took it, Then the Mender moved a knight one square straight and one square cater-cornered and took the Maker's} queen. The Maker was so mad he nearly had a fit. And then they began to quarrel as usual. They never saw the rain. And not | six good umbrellas in the world that hadn’t been lost, or broken, or for- gotten! Lippity, loppity Hare and the Twin: the Umbrella’ Make: house just as the pourdown started, And all the time the old men were quarreling, they kept knocking to get in. Finally they just had to walk in. And then the March Hare gave them a piece of his mind. Quite a large piece of it—about being two silly geese—although it was a better dav for ducks. The Umbrella Maker and the Um- brella Mender put their chess-board away and got right to work, (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Ser —_—___—_—_*+ In New York | came They reached | —+ New York, March 26.—‘Beauty, Even tbe Ty self-preservation, is the first law of nature to women today,”| reads a message sent to me by a beauty laboratory. It goes on to say that a woman of 27 was discharged from her position because she had wrinkles and that a double chin was the cause of an- other losing her job. ; Even laundresses have lost posi- tions because of the lack of beauty, to say nothing of telephone opera- tors, chamber maids, waitresses, nurses, models and stenographers. With the spread of such propa- ganda this beauty parlor has had more than 200 women apply at its free beauty clinic—and already three girls have new jobs because their beauty has been increased. Which all goes to prove that you can get away with any kind of bunk in this man’s town. Plants’ budding in the old Portu- guese-Spanish graveyard just’ off Chatham Square .form the. only bright spot in the neighborhood. The graveyard has been there since the Seventgenth Century., Battles. of the 'Revolution were fought over it. Now irty ements border it on three sides. Washings hang above the tombstones, Dahsdihe g the; tops. of markers of graves of the fitst aris- tocracy. New York had. the Now lowliest’ of the low live in the neigh- | J. bor! wand the few bits of in the graveyard sre as verdant fis to them. A gee : Much fs made of the fact that ‘Governor Al Smith was born on Oli yer street, Just Aroynd. the corner aesar (Detroit News) Michael Cwiertnia tried four times to pass the examination tor citizenship papers, and failed four times. He tried a fifth time, and succeeded. There must be something worth while about a countr citi |zenship therein — is sivered ; worth such an effort, thing worth while about a man who makes the effort until he wins. Many of us who were born here, and thus cbtaine itizenship through no straggle our own, are sometimes inclined to under- | value our pos on. Often we consider it of such small import aid the March Hare. | hare’s | -~ and | like } the March ¢ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO | '~AND ACL THIS Town NESS, MR. TRUG, IS COMMUNITY COYALCTY, THE SPIRIT Ot TEAM PLAY, AND A GOobd SLOGAN To Be VYSED IN ADVERTISING THE TOWN — ¢ How wouce THIS DO FOR. 4 SLOGAN IN CONLONS Trees 1S STRENGTH et LETTER FROM JOHN ALDEN PRES- cun be in love with one wo- corr 10 LESLIE a fu while being very much interest- CONTINUED | ed in another, and a woman may be A little later, ie, perhaps Jim | interested in many men but she can mie Condon cun carry on the vnly love one of them at a time. ness, but you know that your father! Leslie, do I have to tell you that did not think he wits capable or he! the woman in a man’s arms is not Would have put him in instead of always the woman in his heart, Have me. Besides, it is madness to re-| you not yet learned from the modern ward a man who, like Condon, ‘had| stories and from the lives of your prepared to ran away with the pa iends that, however tragic a wo- roll by bringing him back and m an regards the seventh command- ing him general manager of the ment, to a man it has always seemed firm 4 mething like the eighteenth amend It will be some years before I will) ment—a law that may be necessary feel that Iscan fully trust him, He| for the other fellow, but not for Jis very young and very impulsive. | one’s self. In the meantime we can not shut! You see, dear, I am being perfectly down the mill, frank and honest with you. I am Leslie, in some Ways you are one! not trying to gloss over anything, lof the most innocent women I have d yet | want, oh, how I want you ever known, All women ure most!to know, that I love you with all unforgiving of those sins they know the intensity of the male animal as nothing about one old French-| well as with the admiration and man said, “The temptaticn to which, reverence of which my soul is cap- we think it is most sinful to suc-| able. cumb is the temptation which does not tempt us.” T think you will find this true 1 thought, dear—yes, you are still the mine, dear, However » may chafe against your ua are mine. proud of my possession, and dearest woman on this earth -\ strange as it may seem to you, I that you might at least come to} want you to be happy. understand that men are queer crea-| Of course, there are times when I tures, slightly monstrous perhaps,| forget you utterly. Men have minds in the eyes of the delicately minded | of oply one track. When they are woman, Such a man's complex| using it to further their business, or heart tiat he can love a woman with| any other activity which does not his whole soul and be untrue to her all the time. That is the dif between a man and a woman concern | them. (Copyright, 1925, their wives, they forget NEA Service, Inc.) brick house, one of several in the neighborhood that reflect a certain peaceful comfort, an anachronism| among the tenements. | who think they have too many peo- ple, A man raises cain with the waiter about burned food because he can NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLO- SURE SALE Whereas default has occurred in the payment of interest and princi- pal of the obligation secured by the Mortgage hereinafter described; and whereas the holder of said mortgage does elect to foreclose on the past due and unpaid principal and inter- est of said obligation only. Notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage executed and de- livered by Gilbert B. Lewis and Doris E. Lewis, his wife mortgagors, to the Manager of the Bank of North Dakota, Mortgagee, dated the 10th day of May, 1922, and filed for rec ord in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, on the 29th day of May, 1922, at 9:00 o'clock A. M., and recorded in Book ‘‘174” of Mortgages, at page 70, and assigned by said mortgagee, by an instru- ment in writing to the State Treas- urer of North Dakota, and his suc- cessors in office, in trust as security for bonds issued by the State of North Dakota, which assignment was dated the Ist day of June, 1922, and recorded in said office of the Regis- ter of Deeds on the 2nd day of June, 1922, at 9:00 o'clock, A. M., in Book “174” of Mortgages, at’ page 75, 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, County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock P. M., on the 9th day of May, 1925; to satisfy the amount due upon the past due in- stallments of said mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are de- scribed as follows, to-wit: Northwest quarter of the North- east quarter (NW% NE%) North half of the Northwest quarter (N% NW%) and the Southwest quarter of the Northwest quarter (SW% NW%) of section twenty (20), Township one hundred forty-four (144) range seventy-eight (78). There will be due on the past due installments of such mortgage on the dav of sale the sum of Two hun- dred fifty-seven and 27-100 Dollars, together with the statutory costs of foreclosure. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, this 18th day of March, 1925. C. R. GREEN, As Manager of the Bank of North Dakota, as Agent for the Treas- urer of the State of North Dakota, as Trustee for the State of North Dakota, Assignee of Mortgagee. G. OLGEIRSON, ‘Attorney for ‘the Manager of The Bank of North Dakota, Bismarck, North Dakota. 8-19-26—4-2-9-16-23 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT Notice is hereby given that default has been made in the terms of that certain mortgage executed and de- livered by Joseph Bullock and Lydia Bullock, his wife to Dunham Lumber Company, a corporation dated the 4th day of January 1921 and filed for record in the office of the Reg- ister of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota on the 16th day of March 1921 at 4:30 o'clock P. M. and recorded in Book 171 of Mortgages on page 59; which said mortgage was thereafter recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Emmons County, North Dakota on the 21st day of March 1921 at 9 o'clock A. M. and recorded in book 39 of Mort- gages on page 111 will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises described in such mortgage and hereinafter described at the front door of the Courthouse in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota on the 31st day of March 1925 at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of that day to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day| of sale. The premises described in such mortgage,and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as follows: An undivided one half: inter- est in lot-three (3) in Block fifteen (15) in the townsite of Moffit, in Burleigh County, North, Dakota. There will be due on such mortgage at the date of the sale the sum of $469.92 for principal and interest in addition to the costs and expenses The Waldorf-Astoria has just cel- have that kind at home. ebrated the 32nd anniversary of its opening. The only employe who has} The Mad Hatter seems to write been there all that time is Osear.| the price tags on spring bonnets. Until last summer when he went ~- abroad for a three-months vacation he had not been away from the lio- tel for more than 48 hours. No telling what you could hear eyery day with the energy you spend talking about nothing. Another sign of spring is when the small boy hides the rake and the carpet beater, A young fellow working in a neur- by office is frequently absent on illness. “What’s the matter with him?” a worker asked. “Nothing but Tenth malar. another answered. It might help if we worried less about what we are after here and more ubout what we are hereafter. “Eats well, sleeps well, but just can’t: work.” Doctor.news today. Sickness costs —JAMES W. DEAN. $1 500,000,000 yearly in the United pe ee States. Isn't worth it. Language is a peculiar thing. When a man comes after dinner he usually comes before dinner. The Salvation Army is collecting old clothes, which should be sent to the bathing beaches, Only thing yoy can tell by some watches is what time it isn’t,” _flere’s a bit of refreshing news. The United States eats almost $300,- 006,000 worth of ice cream Coolidge is so quiet we are think- year, ing about inviting him to go fishing with us. every Golf won't take the place of base- ball as long as most men think golf scores are typographical errors. Distances at sea are deceptive. A man may think he is all at sea over ae something when he isn’t, The world could be worse, Lots and lots worse. Suppose, for in- stance, chewing gum was like chew- ing tobacco, Still another sign of “Use Blank’s Chill Tonic.” (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) spring is Lots of novels are written for stenographers to read during busi- th be ticat- ness hours, and few spelling books. | reueanar Honey bees are domestica ed animals and that therefore their owner is liable’ for any damage which they cause. The court award- ed a man $250 for two mules stung to death ‘by bees of a neighbor, What tickles a man more getting out his summer suit finding a dime in the pockets? than and Only a short time now until we will be too sick to work und too well to stay home from fishing. Aman with a big heart was found recently in Great Britain, when an autopsy was performed on his body, after a sudden death. The A cynic is a man who A who . mistakes cheerfulness for ignofance. weighed nearly two pounds, instead of*the usual weight of from 15 to 18 ounces, FABLES ON HEALTH HOW GERMS TRAVEL In addition to being carried about by insects and animals, such as mo- squitoes, flies and rats, disease germs,often are transmitted from one person to another in the air, Mr. jor learned from his wife. And, sometimes, instead of trayel- ing by air, they are left on door plait faucets, push buttons, or any obanet wiih which bie infected per- may come in contact, 7 all 80} The mo: jireet type of transfer, aun pon however, is that which occurs whi R ns fo asian S08 es AAR Se NT RNS The French birth rate is declining because they have too many people This often. happens in street cars, and in crowded buildings. “Stay away from crowds if you want to escape colds, influenza and many othey maladies,” doctqrs ad- vise. Most. everyone is familiar with the meaning of the word epidemic, There epidemics of col les, Whooping Sones cent np ernment or of sate including attorney’s fees. DUNHAM LUMBER COMPANY, a ecrporation, Mortgagee. F. E. McCURDY, Attorney for Mortgagee, Bismarck, N. D. 2-19-26—3-5-12-19-26 No. 615 Report of the Condition of THE STERLING STATE BANK at Sterling, North Dakota, in the State of North Dakota, the close of business March 14, 1925. RESOURCES Loans and discounts ..... $129,167.98 Overdrafts, secured and unsecured ............. 1,950.22 Warrants, stocks, tax cer- tificates, claims, ete. .. 1,611.82 Banking house, furniture and fixtures ... 8,100.00 Other real estate . 4,156.91 Checks and oth- ercashitems$ 61.21 Cash and Due from other banks ...... 7,778.75 7,839.96 TOTAL .... . -$147,826.89 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in ....$ 12,500.00 Surplus fund /. 6,500.00 Undivided profit penses and taxes paid . Individual — de- posits subject to check ., $28,308.67 Guaranty fund deposit ..... 575.19 Demand ce! ficates of de- posit ....... Time _ certifi- cates of de- fo posit ., 68,368.44 f Savin, dep 4 its aon 18,008.57 116,202.01 Due War Finance Corpora- 2,624.88 5,946.14 HOM ee eeeeeeeeeeeeees 10,000.00 TOTAL ...........-- $147,826.89 STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh, ss. ‘TH. E, Wildfang, Cashier of the abor solemnly do swear that the ‘above statement is Srue, £0, oe best of my knowledge and belief. H, E, WILDFANG, Cashier. Subscribeg and. sworn to befére me this 24th day of March, 1! Archie 0, Johnson, . .. Notary Public. ** #urleigh County, N. D, My commission expires Sept. 20, 1930. bh ecae ot Correct Attest:— ‘ LITTL! THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1925 Some Can Do It And Some Can’t By Chester H. Rowell ) Walter Camp, who kept himself fit and taught the rest i of us how to do so, dies suddenly at-the comparatively youth. ful age of 66, while Chauncey Depew, who has eaten three generations of diners-out into their graves, is still hale and 8-19-26 4-2-9, hearty at 90. Some people can survive Some can’t. There is a tremendous boom on in Florida—may a Californian hopes that it will not be as expensive to Florida as some Californian booms have been to those who reaped the imme- diate first profits. Anyhow, whether with or. without its re-actions, it will in the long run make for new people and new money in Florida. A more interesting speculation the effect of the general intercst the whole south, of which thie boom is merely the most visible symptom, on the desectionalization of America. The south is the next part of the country to experience a great in- crease of population. That means a new sort of people—northerners with contrary traditions and Europeans with less racial prejudice. The manufacturing districts of the south have been partly “Yankeeized” already. Now the same movement of population is started toward the hitherto agricultural districts, And simultaneously there is a great migration of negroes to the north. We shall, therefore, see the negro problem faced by a people without the background of the south, and the south itself with a population a large element also without its tradi- tions. ‘ ‘ It will take a whole generation to see how these forces will work out. But one result, certainly, will be a better understanding, in both direc- tions. is MILESTONES IN OUR PROGRESS Knowledge becomes exact when it is measured, So every epoch-mak- ing measurement is not only news, but a real mark in the advancement of_man. The two newest are interesting, the one for its vastness and the oth- er for its exactness, The shape of the earth is at last known exactly. It is a globe a little further through across the equator, than through the poles: | If it were 24 feet 8 inches through Ithe polés, it would be 24 fect 9 inches through the equator. These dimensions have been meas- ured with a limit of error of not over a hundred feet. And at the same time a new star has been measured which the dis- patches tell us is 30,000 times the size of the earth. The fact is that it is 27,000,000,- 000,000 times the size of the earth. Twenty-seven thousand billion earths to make this one star, And Man, a tiny ‘microbe in this atomic earth, measur THE WRONG WAY TO LOOK AT IT The newest version of the eliminates all. references to “wine” except the condemnatory ‘ones. Wine is still a mocker and strong drink is still raging, but David's “flagon of wine” becomes a “cake of raisins” and the Children of Israel, instead of “loving flagons of jwine” like to eat raisin cake. Doubtless the “good wine” which, by Christ's definition, was such as the guests might get “well drunken” on was a large box of Sun Maid rai- sins, ~ All of which demonstrates chiefly the lack of historic perspective. The eighteenth amendment and the moral sentiment that made it possible are # modern product. Drink may be an un-Christian sin now. But it has become so in re- cent years. - So far as the prophets, dr even the founder of Christianity, are con- cerned, the idea of wine as necessar- ily a sin was still undiscovered. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE Notice. Is Hereby Given that di fault has occ of that certain real es! mortgag made, executed -and red by Marie Norton (nee Hage) and R. 8. Norten, her husband, as mortgagor: to Farmers & Merchants State of Driscall, mortgagee, dated the 2nd day ‘of January, 1920, and filed in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on July 1st, 1920, and there recorded in Book 162 of Mortgage: on page 832, .. which mortgage was duly assigned by said mortgagee by an instrument in writing to The Norwegian Lutheran Church of Am- erica on August 24th, 1920, which signment_is. recorded in. the_ office county in Book 155 of Assignments on page 193, which default consists in this that said mortgagors have failed to pay the principal and in- terest secured by said mortgage which is past due, and the taxes up- on said mortgaged premises which have been paid by the owner of said mortgage, and that said mors eee will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in said mortgage and here- inafter described at the front door of the court house in the city of Bis- marck, Burleigh County, North Da- kota, at the hour of two o'clock P. M. on the 4th day of April, 1925, to ‘isfy the amount due on said mort- on said day of The premises described in said mortgage and ‘which will be s6ld to satisfy the same dre described as follows, to-wit: ert The Northeast quarter (NEX) - of Section Twelve (12) in Town- ship One. Hundred a Blety seks (138) _N. of Range Seventy Six (76) W. of the Sth Principal Mer- idian, in Burleigh County, North _ Dakota. i There will be due on said mortgage on said of sale the sum of $1319.94 es pa di princtpal, interest, and tex- id by the owner of said mort- jogether with the costs of this and statutory attorneys ICA, ‘Assignee of : GEO. P. HOMNES? ° Mortensve Attorn for Assignee of Mort- page Ottite and Post Office ‘ at Crosby, North Davors, “crett! t 2-19-26—8-5-12-19-26 NOTICE Will not be responsible for. any bills indebted to me by my wi Jessie Olson, 9° °° L B. Olson.” The moral of which is—there isn’t any. good. So are the pleasures of life. : red in the conditions| iste of of the Register of Deeds of said/ ( Keeping fit is a hundred years of either. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLO- SURE SALE Notice Is Hereby Given that de- fault has occurred in the conditions of that certain real estate mortgage executed and delivered by F. Walford and Regina P. Walford, his wife, as mortgagors, to Farmers & Merchants State Bank of Driscoll, as Mortgagee, dated the Ist day of May, 1915, and filed in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on nee ee re there recorded in. Bool of Mortgages on page 535, which mortgage was duly 4s- signed by said mortgagee by an in- strument in writing to The United Norwegian Lutheran Church of Am- erica, on May 26th, 1915, which as- signment is recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of said county in Book 110 of Assignments on page 487, and assigned by said assignee by an instrument in writ- ing to The Norwegian Lutheran Church of America on the 2ist day of August, 1917, which assignment is recorded in said office in Book 175 of Assignments on page 186; that said default consists in the fail- ure of said mortgagors to pay the principal and interest secured by said mortgage which is past due, and the taxes upon said premises, which have been paid by the owner of said mortgage, and that said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in said mortgage and here- inafter described at the front door of the court house in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota; at the hour of two o'clock + P. M.‘on the 28th day of March, 1925, to satisfy the amount due on said mortgage on said day of. sale. The premises described in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as follows, to-wit The Northwest quarter (NW * %) of section Twelve (12) in Township: One Hundred Thirty Eight (138) N. of Range Seventy Five (75) W. of the 5th Prin- cipal Meridian, in Burleigh Coun- ty, North Dakota. There will be due on said mort- gage on said day of sale the sum of $1685.01, principal, interest ‘and tax- jes paid by the owner of the mort- gage, together with the costs ‘of this foreclosure and statutory attorneys fee. Dated February 17th, 1925. THE NORWEGIAN LUTHERAN CHURCH OF AMERICA, Assignee of Mortgage. |GEO. P, HOMNES, Attorney for Assignee of Mort: Gage, Office and Post Office Address: Crosby, North Dakota, 2-19-26—3-5-12-19-26 CITATION HEARING PETITION FOR APPOINTMENT OF AD- MINISTRATRIX. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. In the Matter of the Estate of | Katherine B. S. Appleby, Deceased. Caroline H. Addison, Petitioner, vs. Mary C,. Morris, Franklin Steele, Sarah .S. Wiltse, William E. Steele, Tuckerman, Ann Lee, Mary McCauley Howard, Ed- ward McCauley, ose Carolotta Potter, Maud Swayze, Marv Vin- cent, Rosa Vincent, Respondents. The State of North Dakota to the above named Respondents and all Persons interested in the Estate of Katherine B. S, Appleby, De, ceased. You and each of you are hereby notified that Caroline H. Addison, the petitioner herein, has filed in this Court a petition, praying that letters of administration upon the estate Of Katherine B. S. Appleby, City of Washington, in ithe District of Columbia, deceased, be granted to Caroline H. Addison, and that the said petition will be heard and duly donsidered by this court on ‘the 2ist day of April, A. D. 1925, at 10 o'clock in the fore- noon of that day, at the Court House of this Court, in the City of Bismarck, County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, and you, and each of you, are hereby cited to be and appear before this Court at said time and place, ‘and ‘answer petition, and show cause, if there be, why the prayer of Petition should not be granted. By the Court: Z SEAL) 1,6 DAVIES, | judge of the ; Dated the 12th day of March, A; Let the service of the above cita- tion be made by publication in the Bismarck ‘Tribune once each week for three successive weeks, all not less than twenty days before said hearing. (SEAL) I.-C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. Burleigh County, N. Dak. 8-12-19-26 CERTIFICATE OF. PARTNERSHIP DAHL CLOTHING STORE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh—ss, We, the undersigned members of the partnership doing business un- der the firm name and style of DAHL CLOTHING STORE at No. 410 Main St. in the City of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota, and engaged in the clothing busine: that place do hereby certify that the names of the niembers of said part- nership, and their places of resi- dence are as follows: Helen E. Dahl, Lucille Dabl and Helen Dahl, ali residents of the City of. Bismarck, Burleigh County, North’ Dakota, our hands this 1 oes. Oth day MBS. HELEN E, DAHL, LUCILLE DAHL, HELEN DARL, Dolng Boelnes under the rm name and styl * Clothing Store, "71° of Pahl STATE OF NORTH DAKO‘ County of Burleigh—as 0 On this 10th: day of March, 1925, the undersigned Notary personally appeared Helen » Lucille Dabl and, Helen Dahl, known to me to be the persons de- seribed in and who execu: the foregoing, Lestraoant and severally ae adh ake -s

Other pages from this issue: