The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 28, 1928, Page 4

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from New York to the count’s drawing room in a foreign capital, is coming into wide us? here. Like the Recta beetle, it is y fet i Estab invasion against which immigration laws an edit) —|the army and navy are powerless. Will the| Published oy the Bismarck Tribune Company, |jingoes stand for this undermining of an old| on GA a mono at the postoffice at! established American idea by an alien idea? | 1 goge De ~ -eenb eet paatter. and Publisher} And when an American is deprived of his in- : " alienable right to sleep in an upper berth ‘ Subscription Rates Payable In Advance things have reached a pretty pass. The worst} - re ef eats pastes tk tears sort of suspicions are aroused. Compared with i (ny ty mall, pee bond a ck) it, calling “liberty cabboge” sauerkraut during > (in state outside Bismarck) the world war was a menifestation of pa- ; diy by mat}, outside of North Dakota triotism. Put that is what two of the largest {railroads in the country are doing when they substitute compartment sleepers for that other type of Pullman that is co peculiarly American. 1.60) No patriot can regard with complecence any threat against the “upzer.” ‘he Bismarck Tribune Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER sekly by mail, in state, per year ..... ¢q +.eekly by mail, in state, three years fo oe 1 © eekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ¢ Member of The Associated Press : The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the A. 2 for republication of all news dispatches credited to! fF not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the | | news of spontaneous origin published herein. All| > _.shts of republication of all other matter herein are +730 reserved, pte hrs Foreign Representatives Spring on the Way There are sections of this broad land where snow still lies deep. In parts of our country winter’s back, far from being broken, has hardly even been strained. Yet, for all that, we insist that spring is about here. No, we haven’t seen any robins. We have G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY been reading the sports pages. And the sports NEW YORK - «+ - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | pages tell us that the big league ball clubs have eon ott | begun their training in Arkansas, Texas, Lou- wihine H —_ and other — places. cr Now everyone knows that this means the __(ificial City, State and County Newspaper) —jend of winter. Ball players don’t start limber- ing up without cause. The opening of the sea- son is less than two months away. Winter is on the run; spring, howdy! | Editorial Comment Watchman, What of the Night? (Milwaukee Journal) A night watchman, we all know, must guard Welcome, Grainmen ‘= Bismarck is host to North Dakota grain salers this week and offers the key and hos-| tality of the city to this body of energetic isiness men. They control the basic indus- -..y of this state on their problems are most aportant to its welfare. | ~ The problems of marketing are many and, arplexing. Most experts believe that the) ifficulties that confront agriculture will be} = slved when distribution of the products of the ¢p, Arbeit 7. the building entrusted to his care against any wm are handled most economically. Grain) intrusion. And if he punches the clock faith- ; i zalers are eager and anxious to cooperate in| fylly on his rounds, he has done wh ‘ 3 ny plan that will facilitate the movement >f) charged with doing. But a night pelts Bic igs 3 rain to the great primary markets of the) may also guard the peace of the world. That m = orld. Their fortunes are linked with those! is what they are talking about now at Geneva, =_£ the grain growers and there should at all for that is what the night watchman at the ='mes be the closest kind of cooperation be-\ home office of the League of Nations did. 3 ven these two agents of an important bus'-| When he took it upon himself to open the mes- sage from Bulgaria asking the league’s aid to prevent war with Greece, he gained the time that was needed to call together the sectariat. We all remember what followed. How hos- tilities had already started, but the league im- mediately ordered that they be stopped and that the army of each nation return to its own territory. And there was no war. Perhaps ithe very fact that the watchman had a little exceeded his instructions gave the league cour- lage to act promptly and with authority. And when it did, how quickly it found that the opin- ion of the world was with it. Now they talk of an all-night session of the secretariat that no disaster may come because the guardians of peace are asleep. But will they not also talk of recognition for the man who took matters into his own hands and sounded the alarm? How far from war the world would be, how merely an evil black mem- ory it would be even now, if every man who is against war could be counted on to do just that much, just once in his whole life, to avert war. When they talk of the Nobel peace 2 __. |prize, shall they not consider the night watch- The Evropean style of telephone, with!}man of the League of Nations, whose one act nouth and earpiece in a single unit, which in|} beyond his prescribed work has plated him she movies and on the stage shifts the scege! with the sons of light? 7 * PEOPLE'S FORUM | _ ‘A QUERY FROM THE BISHOP & Peeters ess. & You are welcome to the Capital City of the; tate and may your stay here be pleasant.! ivery public facility is at your disposal. If| ou don’t see what you want, ask for it. Those who have not visited Bismarck within he last few years will notice a great improve-| aent in the city. Many miles of paved streets _.. lave been added, handreds of new buildings f ave been erected and increase in population 9 hows Bismarck the fastest growing city in the tate. Take a few hours off and look into the ad- antages of Bismarck, the hub of the great Jissouri Slope Empire, i usvaeotoas bers a Insidious + All good Americans will view with nsidious battering which their che! _ litions and customs have reccived in the pres- mt decade. There hes been, so to speak, a voring from within. Alien practices, if they tre not being forced upon this country, are at east being offered as a temptation to thoze ‘who are weak, each case different from others; and we must trust the press to exercise |discretion with decency. A. McG, BEEDE, which will be at the Eltinge Wednesday and Thursday. , The role portrayed by the dash- ing star is a departure from the Bismarck, N. D., Feb. 26, 1928. parts she has been identified with ‘Sditor Tribune: rr ee ee during the last two years. Is it not a kind of a good joke on} | Incorporations ||, The story by Howard Emmett you when in the Friday pe bee you | Rog:rs, “Feel My Pulse” concerns ‘orint an article which you consider | the activities of a girl who is a 1 refutation of what I had written near-invalid in her own mind. Cer- for Hardware Plumbing and Heating i i 5 company, Hebron, $20,000; V. I. Wil-| tain situations, how er if q ursday number in “The People’s Wilson. a _ Richard Arlen who was the lead- orum;” and then in the Saturday] Red River Valley Produce com-| ing man in “She's a Sheik” plays op-| death. posite Miss Daniels, Other mem- +| bers of the cast are Georve Irving,| Melbourne MacDowell, Charles Sel- lon, Heinie Conklin and William Powell who did great work in “The Last Command,” the Emil Jennings ion you bring an item about a ‘student of the State University of North Dakota, who had sent a letter to Hickman in which he expresses his high admiration for that filthy and horribly cruel murderer? pany, Grand Forks, $25,000; C. E. Sipple, Hazel Sipple and A. W. ristad. : Hedahl Motor company, Bismarck, $15,000; E. M. Hedahl, Clara Hedahl and H. Berge. i ji vi i ‘ try wrong: ciety folk feel the lure of the Broad- VINCENT WEHRLE, Turtle Mountain Supply company,| picture seen at the Eltinge last the vice preside cy only to be cle-| A party of Indiana motorists re-' kind took it up first urse i Bishop of Bismarck, | Bottineau, $50,000; R. R. Betcher,| week, * NsH|vated by. MeKinley’s sssassination.| ported that it had been chased by x dont mean ths society women you| sirick damsel of te sisbon counters -_-— D. C. Newberger and Spaulding} | —_—_———_ MEE aay, bone governor of Ohio. ghost. But in this case, the wraith speak of. They learned the habit Many luminuries of the Manhattan + PUBLICITY A GOOD THING |Howe. i River Surveys Are dier and. hi arrison was first a sol- was not to the swift, long ago in foreign countries. But| stage have stepped out of salons and ae Yates, N. D., Feb. 26,1923, | gar rmmencia! Stationers, Inc. Fargo, °, oer oiand later an Ohio senator. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service,Inc.) it’s astonishing that even some|drawing rooms, to toil in rehearsal Editor Tribune: : een ar. inl iat “Maddock, N earing Completion York. Arthur van. gived the See | The first legal executicn by elec- pee ey tae now pret sul end ctrursie a place if me ae > I think that a newspaper should te Tractor comp Far- ae presidential nomination in a political , tri j 4 . ow one|light as feverishly as the poores' ee its peptone the news, inctndine go, $1000; Raphael “Gress. Glad- Confidence that itt state high- cent apd ond have bran me moreifer af ee She ene Angust fey she’ will arias cording: And ins Gant ent in for ballet . a ee Ae ‘oil | stone; J. P. Gress, Fargo, and Jose-| Way department will be able t - not Garfield, ‘a soldier a 6, 1890. 4 rs 5 i / phine Gress, Gladstone” plete preliminary surveys. eis 2 [either is degrading it certainly is|dancing and finally became impres- seandal” and are pectant crimes, even murders; though I do think that ‘some accounts given of the execution of murderers are disgusting. Simple facts can be given without details. Though sometimes persons who} Kocourek, Stucky and Kocourek, wre not at all criminals in their! Lidgerwood, $15,000; Anton Ko- make-up do fall into crimes, without | courek, Frank H. Stucky and C. A. the vanities of the habitual criminal, | Kocourek. “yet I have observed that, nearly) Ww. D. A. Y., Inc. Fargo, $25,000; always, a confirmed criminal has!t, W, Hamm, E. C. Reinecke and uncanny desire to be paraded] k’ yf, Hanse. e before the public; and a newspaper) ‘Bankers Abstract company, Car-| Tegard to the character of the may well decline to assist criminals | son, $15,000; E. C. Helland, Carson; | Souri river bottom at these points in such vanity. T. J, Casper, Mandan, and D, M.| Should be availanic within a wee In school circles there is nowa-| Helland, Carson. or two, Johnson if days, a strong belief that youths| The Max Gas and Oil Syndicate,| An. appropriatica of $2,009 for ought to informed regarding | Max, N. D., $25,000; P. D. Podhola,| ¢@ch job was made at the last regu- many matters that were kept from|H, W, Hanson, A. W. Rice, Arthur| lar legislative session. Instead of ; themacoupleof generations ago,such|I Steinhaus, P. L, Ofdahl and| letting the work to a contractor, + matters as eugenics, sexology, em-| others, however, the highway ‘tepartnient ; bryonic development, evolution and| ‘The Corinth Mercantile company, | Purchased equipment of its own, to- + the like. The ideu is that unless | Corinth, $35,000; C. E. Burdick and| gether with a truck upon which the } such matters are cemulany taught, | Hildur Burdick, Alexander, and| equipment was mounted. When the ag will surely get hold of them! David Anderson, Corinth. jobs are completed Johnson said, he a vulgar and unwholesome way.| The Central West Utilities com-| expects to have remained within ‘ aa ie Ae viet Leactars A08ie: pany, Bismarck, $100,000; Joseph P. rte appropriation and still have the ‘ AB p ies, A. M. Brandt, Harold Hopton, | truck an sot ing | machinery | with but tiniest knowledge of the x ‘W. Simons, and Frank P. Gane syailanle for similar jobs in the ‘uture, + facts themselves teach as _ science ‘ what is far-and-away from_ being The soundings are made by bor- ing holes in the river bottom at t established or even ble; and 1) that such teaching should, above all, Points where it might prove desir- le to locate bridge piers. The be given by competent teachers, ! suffie ently mature to know the fluc- purpose Lie io suesreale Se sistance a tom of sufficient tuations and Breer tales Wres Fy Fc a generation of fluc-| who can be depended upon to turn| strength to sup the pier and te opinion is that | out a corking Ponedy-itamm when- bride, The aot practice, ohn. of ever he wilds the megaphone upon! son said, is to bore nine or more of|a luction of this ind has | holes at different along the bridges at Washburn and Elbo- woods and at the same time make a material saving on the appropria- tions for that purpose was cxpress- | here today by Clifford Johnson, chief of the highway cepartment bridge division. The work of making soundinzs at Washburn has been completed and the crew now is working at Elbi woods. All the technical data National Survault company, Bis- marck, $25,000; T. J. Anders, Wer- ner; M. IF. Plaggmier, Taylor, and George W. Janda, Bismarck. ——____—___—-——_ f At the Movies | CAPITOL THEATRE Albert Ray, Fox Films director tributed another rib-tickling story| rive near the site where it is in “Woman Wise,” a modern offer-| desired to locate a bridge. The ing laid in Persia, which delighted usually is placed at a point capacity audiences at the Capitol| where the hard bottom is rest Theatre last Bigs the surface, in order to reduce the story is by Donald McGibney | construction cost. K. McGuinness, two sure-' Soundings at Washburn indicated fi uthors who know comedy as that it will be necessary to sink | Sonred Knew. a the ex- idge, ries ak. tise mame frome £0 and bi is: June Coll-' to 75 feet river bottom. ei Russell tod Walter, A condition Was disclosed ri ee fund tone — iver was ELTINGE ‘anit get Pe, covered with sand under which was sation” Sete & 8 note that the title of her newest The and J. re ai cellent | BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington, Feb. 28.—If Herbert Hooveer should be nominated with- out the open support of President | Coolidge and subsequently elected he would be just about the first Amer- ican so honored who ever used a cabinet post as his principal step-| ping stone to the White House with- out previously having been elected to important public office. interesting to note that most mem- of the Hoover, ‘ut of course there are no sharply drawn lines among the gov- ernment branches in the preconven- tion campaigns. The fact that Hoover, who took over control of such vital new fac-|% tors as aviation and with his many other duties, has done a good job as an executive and has met with lesss protest than most of the other. secretaries is one factor of his present strength. He is charged with “the work of promot- ing the commerce of the United tates and its mining, manufactur- ing, shipping, fishery and traspor- tation interests” and he has devoted That he has never been a senator or a governor—or a politician—prob- | ably will not militate against him with the voters.. The point is that no other cabinet ‘officer has been able to make himself president, least of all a secretary of commerce and that Hoover may open up a new era of things if he makes the grade. His Democratic opponent is likely to be.a governor or a senator. Wilson was governor of New Jersey. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE —And He Used to Be the ‘Bad Little WASHINGTON & | LETTER nesee. It is cabinet are behind radio along desk, first presidential job to Harding’s a-half for overti Harding was a senator. “SPEAKING ABOUT “THRILLS ,~ AHEM, ONE“THAT STANDS OUT MOST VIVIDLY I Took PLACE IN ITALY, WHILE IS A BALLOON! A BRISK WIND ‘ CARRIED THE GIANT BAG DIRECTLY]]| HM-M wTHATS Jes | SON A. RUNAWAY OVER MOUAT VESUVIAS WHICH CHANCED -To BE ERUPTING AT-THE TIME, —* WHITE Hot UP PAST-THE EXPLOSIVE BAG, AND ONE FELL IN“THe WICKER, BASKET, BURMING OUT THE BoTTom,—~I HUNG Ons A ROPE UNTIL“THE WAPTED OUT OF DANGER, “THES PULLED “THE GAS VALVE AND DESCENDED £ Pd WELL, WELLWELL, PEDRO! IM GLAD To SEE” YOUVE BECOME SUCH A Goop BoY! .. You MAY GO TO THE HEAD OF THE CLASS! senator, been shot. Hayes was er ernor of Ohio and Tilden, who it him in all but the final count, was governor of New York. Grant, of course, was a soldier an Andrew Johnson had iven governor of Ten- Lincoln was a cot Buchanan had been successively min- ister to Russsia, senator, sec! of state and minister to England. Pierce was senator and soldier. Fill- more had been a congressman, a state official in New York ard a vice president. dier, Polk speaker of the Harrison a soldier and senator, so on back to Washinngton. o>—___————» BARBS | If you don’t think America is the land of the free, look up the number of divorces granted last year. eee Kansas City reporters who wanted to interview Frank his train at Kansas City found him still abed at 9 a. m. been thinking Frank was a farmer. Tayle Lindbergh, cagey, refuses to be caged. He knows he can’t see the world from the cockpit of a roll-top eee On and on goes the scundal brewed ;cause I don’t like it) I can’t hel i It's one of the wondering how if. few instances, though, when money ferent ot talked enough to bore us. from Teapot Dome. ime. rear the women’s stores reported record sales. ngressman. wass a sol- House, O, Lowden in And here we'd | think to see BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES Darling: Mom, I’m ashamed of you. If you wore your arguments. around your neck, as they say about men’s jjeach separate article of food. This Proved your skirt than it is all right. anyone howling about a woman smoking in Turkey? a main violently assert that he hates Boy’ of the Class! Se Yo wie iy ‘- ‘ and MOM! ir Letters Is it necessary for me to point out to you that there always has been an older and a younger gen- eration no matter how young women were when their children were born? If everyone would simply realize that the world’s really going spinning on its axis even after we're all dead and gone it would save a lot of fussing. Honestly now, Mom, you don’t your great-grandmother ap- any more of the length of rou do of mine, do leper that job with consider- ey ‘ body eee entirely ead even’ lon’t like change, — <8. | surrounded by ters. : . If a thing’ happy medium in all such things,| starring comedy is “Feel My Pulse” ee laces fen oene pteauae iene, aan Can you imagine When I hear @ woman smoke (I don’t be- tobacco can be di n he uses wi it or when a woman does. If it’s harmful or - wicked for her it’s harmful or But kit if ft i Coolidge aun eo eeac teiegikis ot at speal ig we graft, the wages wicked for him. And as far as the ve been time-and- moral side of it is concerned-if there sinful ‘aft, who was neither senator nor I that the well-dressed girl of the ground the same as the lettuce % ‘as saying that the w girl of I governor, stepped from his job as wears about tw inces of cloth-_ 01 wi : ; ; are it twenty ou f cloth- or tomatoes which we eat. only through Roosevelt’s influence. Roosevelt was a governor buried in| It’s HICCOUGHS for ALL ABOUT IT, CHUNKS OF LAVA WERE HURLED) \ ~u Heck, is a moral side—I can't see anything ina puffing on a little fue? that grew right out m inion that smoking got off toa tart ott fo peas among the women because BRAKEMAN FOOD CHANGES CENTURI. It has been little more than three centuries since the first important expedition of white men landed on our Eastern shores. The Eastern} Indian tribes, pure descendants of the primal American Indian, met the newcomers with little hostility at; first. Later on many of the Indian tribes became bitterly antagonistic toward the English and French vaders, but this was, almost in every | case, because of the harsh treatment which they received. These settlers found their food! problem was indeed a difficult one. The Indians, who had learned to} raised corn, potatoes, and a few other herbs and vegetables, had no com-; mercial instinct, and were accus-; tomed to raising only enough of such | food for their own use. With their bows and arrows they could secure enough flesh food*by bringing down deer, wild turkey and other wild fowl. The white settlers soon learned the necessity for establishing settle- ments and raising corn and other foods which would last them through the winters. They soon introduced and planted wheat, which came from Russia, but for several seasons their diet was principally the same as that of the Indians. 5 It might have been better for all) of us if our forefathers had not learned to over-refine the coarse food products from the primitive Indian. In the last three centuries we have gone the limit in denaturing our flours made from corn, wheat ‘and other grains, and have learned to prepare tasty but harmful conglom- erations of refined foodstuffs which have ruined our digestions and made us a race of dyspeptics. The Indians never fried their food; | it was either boiled, broiled, or roasted. The pernicious frying pan which was brought from Europe has had its share in the ruining of the modern American stomach. In the pioneer days of this country the coarse, unrefined food made con-, stipation an unknown disorder. We now overeat of tasty mushy dishes which bring on constipation, auto- intoxication, biliousness, and the whole chain of digestive and func- tional disorders which everyone is complaining about. In most restaurants we have either the American or European “Plan.” With the “European Plan” the diner is supposed to select the foods he desires and to pay a certain price for IN THREE ES x encourages one to sclect his food more carefully than by the “Ameri- can Plan” where the menus list fif- teen to twenty foods at a certain price for the entire meal. Most people eating “Américan Plan” at- tempt to order as many articles as they can from the menu sometimes in order to get their money’s worth, occasionally using fifteen or twenty different articles of food at one; the cocktail, for I've never seen any- one intoxicated on cigarets, but. oh boy, what gin mixed with orange juice can do to a fellow! . i Anyway, whether a man likes it or not he has no right to dictate what women shall do. Some of the dear boys actually appear to be still suffering under the delusion that they are our masters. It makes me hot when a big he-man comes right out and appoints himself our censor. Some day I’m going to-re- taliate by reading a list of do’s and don’ts for men only. And my first “don’t” will be, “don’t dictate to women.” Still in love with you, MARYE, NEXT: “Mom” on smoking. . >——_—_——__—____—_—__——_* IN NEW YOR \ °—-—_— New York, Feb. 28.—Scores of socially prominent and avealthy so- ario of her own movie fatre. Mrs, R. Bartow Read, I note, is on this season’s list of new stage arriv- als. Beatrice Lillie, one of the funniest gals on Broadway, is Lady eel—a London social figure—in rivate life and ~‘r Guy Standing an ever-popular performer. Julia Host is Darhapa the Bete eel of e stage-society res. rs, §. Gould. 3 the Edith King- don of the grand old Daly's theatre. The Princess Matchiabelli has woven in and out of the world of the theatre. And there have been many others, While innumerable stage _ beauties have married into the arictocratic and rich old families, is that of Manhattan's “official wel- corer” Grover Whalen is his name QUESTIONS IN REGARD TO HEALTH € DIET OR.MECOY CA Srceaee STAMOED RODRESSEO | hospital bi there was nothing to be Not the easiest job in New York| 19 __ TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1928 Dr. McCoy will gladly answer nal questions on health and diet addressed to him. care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. meal, The; i eraflechtvigeg ol doing this if they stopped to their yenty expense for doctors and ls. They would then find ined either from a financial or health standpoint in trying to eat everything from soup to nuts. . I believe that an efficient health conscience has been sufficiently de- veloped, and that the science of die- tetics has been so fully s' in the past few years that we can look for a new “Ameri ” on our tables, where each one will make a careful, scientific selection of the food which he considers the best suited to his own use. | Tomorrow’s article will be about this new “American Plan.” QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: R. 0, F. asks: “Could you advise me what to take when there are phosphates in the urine?” Answer; The important tl to do is to stop the mental overwork or any other nervous strain which is the cause of the excess of phosphates in the blood or urine. You can prob- ably get rid of the excess Ls ink- ing large quantities of water between meals, but the cause is a waste of nervous energy, and this cause must t. considered in a cure. Question: J. E. asks: “Is water a food?” Answer: Water must be consid- ered as a food, as three-fourths of the bodily weight is made up of this indispensable element. There could be no form of organic life without water, and although a man can live for many weeks without other foods, he cannot live more than a few days without water. Water is composed of oxygen and hydrogen gases, and when these gaseous elements are so combined as to form water, they are able to have a more important effect upon the metabolism than when they are extracted from any other kind of food material. Question: Jack writes: “I have a mouthful of perfect teeth that are all loose. I can brush them hard three times a day, still they do not bleed or hurt me in any way. Do you know of any way I can tighten them up again?” Answer: Go to a good dentist and get his opinion about your teeth. You are doubtless having some ab- sorption of the alveolar processes which are the bony structures hold- ing the teeth in place. Proper treat- ment will sometimes stop such ne- cros, or degeneration of bone, but it is best to rely on your dentist’s judgment as to whether the con- dition can be cured, or whether your teeth must be extracted. a quick speech, however tired he may be. Few visitors appreciate the pace set by the huge, smiling man who greets them. So large a man he is that in newspictures, he gencrally towers over the mayor and the various committeemen and all but hides them from the camera. And, in a sense, he typifies the sort of person that the average man-about-town of New York is supposed to be. Once, after a particularly ardu- ous week, however, I heard Man- hattan’s official greeter wistfully inquiring the whereabouts of a nice, quiet South Sea Island. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) CITATION HEARING PETITION FOR APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIAN STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. IN COUNTY COURT, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. In the Matter of the Guardianship of J. Lee Smith, a Darwin R. Smith, Petitioner, vs. J. Lee Smith, Mrs, W. C. Smith, W. 8. Casselman, J. Lee Smith, Jr., Respondents. The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Respondents: You and each of you are hereby cited and required to appear before the County Court of the County of Burleigh, in said State, at the office of the County Judge of sald County, at tho Court House in the City of Bismarck, in said County and State, on the 13th day of March A. D. 1928, at the hour o} afternoon of that day, to show cause, if any you have, why the petition of Darwin R. Smith, praying that the Court appone Ella O. Casselman of Bismarck, North Dakota, the guard- ian of the estate of J. Lee Smith Jr., a minor of Bismarck, N. D., should not be granted. Let service be made of this citation as_required by law. ated this 2ist day of February, A. Dy 1928. By the Court: (SEAL) = - beeing omen udge of the County Cour! Cc. LIEBERT CRUM, Attorney for Petitioner, (Feb. 21-28) CITATION HEARING PETITION FOR ALLOWANCE OF FINAL AC- COUNT AND FOR DISTRIBUTION STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burlelgh. COUNTY COURT, Before Hon. I. C, Davies, Judge. In the Matter of the otate of Albert and he was selected out of a vast director of a movie com,. title sounds. He is a robust, well groomed man in middle life, with considerable social background and vast experience in meeting people, rs wears dress clothes as casually ‘wears a bath robe. aes It is his strange task to officially + all important visitors. A portant visitors swarm’ in from every land and clime, this is no small order. He does not dare get eee nor does he dare be absent any He is presumed to represent the mayor— since was created to give mayors a little res ye can eX- to be called out at hours as gular as a fireman's. i If a daylight boat is bringing a x ust down’ the bass with ¢he brea! of day —though. the '| European. number of prospects as a casting! vs. : _Picks | Margarct Helen Clausen, Albert, V. acharacter. He looks quite like his comfortably as a home-man | nd|on the 13t lew York being what it is, with im- | fo »C. Clausen, Deceas: Jacob Fiel, Petitionor, Clausen, Gi . Clar 5 L i. Dyer oF BS Byer acpondents, The Stat Keove! Sothed Henpgadente: . = a cited and required to appear betors at el Bismarck, a said Cor ' the hour of 10, o'clock 6 forenoon of that day, to show cause, G repo! end ackount of tne adsiiniatyatee is @ clause, Bt. Paul, + ine- sota, Snd’aliowed, nd Gistigutign taba gt the property in the hands paid administrator to the persons entif Let service be made of this citation as_required by frag) ated tale 20th day of February, ty , as o HG Oey ie an Cor Gafarnaey “OUEY Court

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