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~~ Oe OR Oe te ti Boss eee Se ny ON or ese “oe =o PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Ladependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismurck Tribune C mpeny, Bi marck, N. D., and entereu at the postoffice at Bi marek ae second class mail matter. Ceorge D. Mann ..--.........President anc Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Ad Daily by carrier, per ysar .. Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ..... Daily by mail, sutside of North Dakota Weekly-by mail, in state, per Weekly by mail, :2 state, thr Weekly by mail, outside. of No! year years for . rth Dako s, re Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively enti! use for republication of all news uispatches to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin ublished herein. All rights of republication of al] other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg, CHICAGO DI Tower Bldg. ETPOIT Kresge Bide. (Official City. State and County Newspaper) A THRILL IN THE NEWS If our time were not so completely taken up just now with pol | maneuvers arising from the two party conventions, we surely would have appreciated the story of the Arctic plight of Captain Nobile and his men for what it really is—one of the most grip- ping, absorbing stories of the past year. For real drama nothing has happened in a long time to equal this northland tale. A group of men sets forth to conquer the ancient fastness in a great silver dirigible. They fly to the pole and start to return. Buffeted by storms, they are driven far off their course. The world loses communication with them and gives them up for lost. And then, suddenly, radio keys began to click. The fost men were alive—alive and on the ground, marooned on desolate ice fields far to the north. ‘Their dirigible was wrecked; they were trying to get Ashore but were being baffled by widening lanes of open water. They asked for help. Then began the attempts at rescue. Airplanes Boared over the ice and passed close to the wanderers, failing to see them although seen by them. And all the time came the messages from the stranded ex- plorers—messages that grew ever fainter as the radio batteries grew weaker. It {s a long time since the newspapers have had Anything more truly thrilling and interesting than this, There is something about an attempt to rescue anyone who is in dire danger that never fails to grip the human heart. When an ignorant Kentucky hill billy got trapped in a cave far underground the na- tion watched, breathless, for many days while men struggled to reach him. When the submarine S-4 sank, the pitiful undersea tragedy held the attention of everyone while the divers worked frantically to the tune of the faint hammer taps on the steel hull. We cannot read about such things unmoved. In- evitably, our hearts go out to the victims, and we pray that the rescuers may succeed. The inward necessity that makes us feel that way is a good sign. It proves that men are not quite as widely separated by misunderstanding and prej- udice as we sometimes think. There are common grounds on which all of us may meet. Extreme dan- ger is one of them. Perhaps the old theory that dif- ferent races, classes and nations must always b- antagonistic is mistaken. It is. We are making progress. At present we have advanced only a little way; we have to see a stranger in dire peril before we can open our hearts to him. But at least we can do it. And as the years. pass and men grow wiser and more civilized, under- standing will come more ly. Then people will begin to see what the word “brotherhood” means. REMUS, GREER, JUSTICE ‘We Americans, as the whole world admits, are stick- lers for the observance of laws. Whatever our faults, we insist that our statutes be respected and obeyed. The latest dangerous lawbreaker to learn this is named Heath Greer. Heath Greer lived in the Laurel Run region of moun- tainous Kentucky. He quarreled with a friend, one Luther Partin, drew a gun and shot him dead. He has been sentenced to a life term in prison. The murder ‘was not premeditated, so he couldn’t very well be hanged; but a life term will serve to teach him that America’s laws cannot be defied with impunity. led only trouble is that Heath Greer is just 13 years The judge that sentenced him did not let that stand in his way, however. Law is law, and the judge was familiar with it. Murder is murder. Life in prison, the judge said, was the only sentence he could give. On the day that Heath Greer left for the reform- atory, where he will live until he is old enough to enter the penitentiary to serve time with the other murder- ers, the doors of Ohio's hospital for the criminally in- sane, at Lima, swung open and George Remus walked out @ iree man. Remus had killed his wife, planning the deed in advance, and had been acquitted, according to law, by virtue of insanity. Now he has demon- strated, again according to law, that the insanity which made him a murderer has happily left him; so Ohio’s law decrees that he cannot be confined any longer. It is from: such examples as these that we free-born bil Americans draw that admiration for law which dis- tinguishes us above all other peoples. Liberty, we are fond of saying, can only be had by respect for law. Heath Greer doubtless will absorb that lesson during the next three or four decades of confinement. One wonders, though, just where the states of Ken- tucky and Ohio stand in all this. Has no one brought any action against them? Ohio rears a bootlegger and sees him commit a shocking murder; it grabs at him and discovers its own law compels it to sét him free. Has no citizen of Ohio any ground for action there? And Kentucky. Kentucky rears a mountain white lad in the backwoods country; a boy who says he carried a gun “because all the other boys did, some of ‘em littler than me”; a boy who saw all his elders not carry guns carrying bottles who was sinned against by society birth. Kentucky sees this lad, in gun he was carrying. Kentucky finds that its own law his state? two cases, anyway— our methods of dealing with crime Are we 100 wrist j him free? When an ignorant backwoods boy something much less criminal must we jail him trying to find out what is wrong and “| big holidays of the year, especially in Charlestown. It THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Production and boom days on Wall Street. We have a few jobs to do. Ohio and Kentucky can tell you what they are. BLINDING HEADLIGHTS “Lights blind driver; three are killed,” reads a head- line in a current newspaper, It’s not a new headline; it has been printed over and over again in this country during the last few years, The manufacturers can invent non-glare headlights without znd; the responsibility lies in the last analysis on the motorist. Every man who drives a car should always have sense enough to dim his lights when an- other car approaches. If he fails he may have to go through the rest of his life bearing the knowledge that he has been the cause of a death or two. And such knowledge could hardly be comfortable, éven for the dumbbell who refuses te dim his lights. SOME PROHIBITION STATISTICS Gathering statistics on the effects of prohibition has been a great indcor sport for several years, Here's a new one to add to your collection. In Boston, Bunker Hill Day—June 18. is one of the is always featured by a big parade, speech-mak'ng and considerable revelry. This year, according to the Boston Po: Hill Day brought few arrests fer drunkenness thin ever before. Only 25 people were ta in Charlestown for that cf: furthermore, no ene was arrested for disturbing pence or disorderly conduct, also a record. . Bunker You can, as we said, add that to your collection of prohibitior. statistics if you like. BRONCKOS Verily, the hard-boiled glories of tern frontier are passing. The Department of Cor ree the other day issued a set of figures dealing with the ¢ nsimp- tion of candy in the United States. It iat everything tabulated by states; and what state do you suppeze led in the per capita consumption of chocolate bars, gum drops and the other dainties of the sugar shop? Why, Nevada, to be sure! Nevada, where the turn- ing sun beats down on thousands of miles of parched desert; Nevada, where in the he!] roaring mining camps of old, whiskey was rated a drink for babes, and bullet wounds were considered minor affairs like mosquit: bites; Nevada, where the hardy prospectors wore bear- skins for underwear and whipped their horses with rattle snakes. And the second state in per capita consumption of candy was Montana, possessor of a similar past. The frontier, gentlemen, has been tamed. DO YOUR OWN THINKING (Wadena, Minn., Pioneer Journal) Have you ever had exeprience with-someone in the back seat who insisted on doing the driving? No matter how carefully you drove, or at what speed, there was a constant whine and complaint, interspersed with helpful suggestions for the improvement of the service. Are we becoming a nation of back seat drivers? We are not asking the question facetiously, but in all ser- iousness. In these hectic days of jazz and radio we tush headlong into anything that comes along. Time was when folks refused to commit themselves on mat- ters on which they were not well informed, but we are no longer handicapped with such scruples. Now we love to congregate and pass resolutions on each and every eae that arises and the less we happen to know about it the more fervent we become. As a result of this condition, we now have with us the skillful and highly paid propagandist who seizes upon this modern weakness to'help in “putting stuff over.” Plausible speakers go about the country ad- | dressing groups of well meaning people who, while laboring under the spell that has heen cast about them, pass resolutions, the meaning of which they know little or nothing. The weakness for signing petitions without taking the trouble to read them, is even more prevalent. Resolve not to sign a petition or endorse a resolution, until you have read it with understanding and approve its contents. In other words, refuse to permit -your- self to be used as a tool with which to rake the chest- nuts out cf the fire for the other fellow, and that should go locally as well as nationally. Do your own| thinking. ENDING A FALSE PRETENSE (New York Times) The General Superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League, Mr. McBride, declared on Monday that his organization will not support the Democratic party no matter how drastic a prohibition plank it may adopt. This, of course, is on the supposition that Governor Smith is nominated. In that event the Anti-Saloop League will be for Mr. Hoover even if the Democratic platform promises everything in the way of enforcing the Volstead act. It may undertake to put the entire Army and Navy into action against violators of the law. It may pledge itself to appoint 500,000 addition- al prohibition agents. It may offer to dam the ocean against the incoming flood of I'yior, and to build a wall 1,000 feet high along the Canadian border to pre- vent smuggling. None of these things would move the Anti-Saloon League. It has already con:mitted itself to the Republican Party and to the candidacy of Secre- tary Hoover. Thus is destroyed in advance the League’s profession of political impartiality. It was going to wait and see what the two parties would do. Upon neither was it intending to put any pressure in favor of, or against, @ particular candidate. The Anti-Saloon League was to be severely non-partisan, provided it could get the platform declaration it desired from either or both the great parties. But now that false pretense is blown into smithereens by the boast, or confession, of | its General Superintendent. He lets it plainly be seen that he and his society are irrevocab:y hostile to Smith for the sole reason that the Governor is a Catholic. Thus we have the Anti-Saloon League, at this early date, putting upon itself the stamp of insincerity and igotry. LET THE EATER BEWARE (Duluth Herald) nm ints custe fy | | WE MORTALS HANE A HABIT OF FUSSING MOST OVER THE MORE “TRIVIAL THINGS OF Life --~ Marye, my dear: Sometimes I think I must be one of those women who have no sensg of humor—that I never know when people are being serious and when they are merely being amusing. last letter. If I thought you actual- ly were sfarting out on a fresh flirtation, I should be tempted to scold and preach. But I can’t be- lieve you are serious—that you ac- danger as you indicated. As a child, you loved to make people angry at you, just so you could exercise your powers of per- suasion, to make them love you again. I think you do this now. All of which is very charming for a time, but one can cry “wolf, wolf” too often. And I have a feel- ing, if you persist in your foolish flirtations in quest of some sort of excitement, that in time you may find that you have taken the fine edge off your nature. You may be- come just as reckless as you like to make people believe you are—be- come the mask you are always wear- ing. But I am not preaching—or I am not going to. The one thing I have learned is that I can’t live your life for you, and I can’t recut my own if you take a certain road, you must accept its destination. Yesterday I stopped in to see your friend Stella Myers—she has a dar- a child as I have ever seen. Of course, Stella and Bill are quite mad about him. I always thought Stella was a very superficial zirl, with the short skirts, her exaggerated boyish bob and her wild ways. And yet, when I saw her with her baby, it occurred to me that I had misjudged her greatly, and that I had allowed a rather hard exterior to form my estimate of her. I realized that there is a The common law upheld, and in a measure continues to uphold, the maxim, “Let the buyer beware,” mean- ing that the buyer without a special warranty and in the absence of false representations has to stand b his bargain. Now the maxim at the head of this arele looms, though to be sure it was always in the offing. A Philadelphia woman ordered a plate of straw- berries at a restaurant, and after a delicious mouth- ful or two found that she was chewing a short sharp nail out of a strawberry box. It cut her gums so that medical treatment was necessary. She sued for dam- ages and the jury awarded her a hundred and fifty dollars against the restaurant man. The state judge upheld the verdict. Then the case was taken to a United States court, which reversed the verdict and held that the eater must beware, as the restaurateur was not a guarantor that there were no nails in the strawberries he served. He had to take only ordinary reasonable care and then the risk passed to the customer. It really seems as if that had been the law for a long time, ause the Federal judges dig up a line of cases hol ig Seat way. For instance, if on s Poisoning from food eaten in an eating house, it is the customer's ptomaine. If one buys good food and gets &n unwholesome bite, he can’t come back on the land- pool —e he can prove neglect, which usually you can’t do. As the court points out, the landlord does his best. He orders pot food. If it happens that something hidden is the matter with it, how can the landlord know? The risk is one of the chances of living. As the Federal court 81 sts, it may be that the nail in this case got buried in a big.herr” ~ here no on? could see it. fen't at hand yet, déspite our mais voi eter Degen: Ate oh Seek, seal, So I don’t know how to take your |@ tually go out of your way to court |. | gap between generations that we can't bridge. And it occurred to me, Marye, that I would be the happiest woman in the world if I could ree you with your own child in your arms. Motherhood would be the best ex- perience in the world for you, It jwould give you an opportunity to expend that enerzy and initiative that is always getting you into trouble now. I'm glad you ave so pretty that you are sought after, and so gay that people lize to be with you, but you have so much that is good and fire that you conceal just for fear people wilf th'ak you have a heart or feelings. MOM. Marye takes issue. IN NEW YORK | + New York, June 27.—Random notes from a Manhattan ramble: Joe Rayens, who has been 1a stage-doorman for 17 years . .. Perched in the little cubbyhole “backstage” of the Winter Garden, Joe can tell you‘of a time when Al Jolson, Kitty Gordon and Stella Mayhew were all on the same bill and just “members of the company” ++ 6 « . or he can tell you of the time Gaby Deslys arrived from Paris and he earned more than his salary keeping back the curious crowds. . . . He knew George White when George was a hoofer. - + . . And Annette Kellerman was considered quite naughty be- cause she did a divine act in ver tight tights. . But that was all experiences so they will fit you. And |cracks and is inclined to be n | OUR BOARDING HOUSE “Po Joe, efter i7 Joe, years, a chorine is a chorine. ee, eis @ noisy creature who comes babbling through the door, chirps, ise- sy. ; +. He has learned to give Tittle heed to all the chatter about boy friends and sport cars snd week- ends at Atlantic City. . . . He’s ling little boy. At three weeks he|heard all that somewhere before. weighs 8 pounds and is about as fine |- + . doe smiles tolerantly as the cycle makes its rounds and old faces go and new faces fome. oe The telephone booths <t Joe La- blang’s ticket office. . . Partic- ularly about 7 o'clock, . . . . Which is the hour many of the boys suddenly. remember dates made at lunch, . . . . . . © Or when papa explains why he won't te home rr when mama does like- wise... BUT CONFOUND rT MAN, [ “TELL You T Am A HAWAIIAN DELEGATE FROM-THE ISLAND OF MOLOKAI, HAWAII fae ~u+ MY BOAT LANDED A DAY LATER THAN MY BROTHER { DELEGATES! EGAD MAN, CANT You SEE TM WEARWG “HE NATIVE LEIS, AND CARRY “THE UKELELE, OUR NATIONAL We coris ter ‘art A NEU GAVEL For HE Human Nature Is a Funny Thing After All [__Haston Nature tea \ i) SS anes try to fix up a last minute supper engagement . . Tattered tele- phone books each tell the tale of the battle . 2. To Sardi’s for lunch and note the walls are now covered with cartoons of what New York ‘pleases to call (celebrities, but few of whom ever have been heard of the other side of the Harlem river. . . . . 1 And there I learned that there are now more Broadway columns than there are blocks in the lengthy high- way. . . . Within the last month T am told, five magazines and gossip weeklies have added such dei art- ments, . « . . Every daily paper in Manhattan now has such a feature. To say nothing of young men, like myself, who cre try- ing to get along.”. . . If they don’t look out they'll put New York on the map. ae And fell to talking with Leslie Fenton, who has been down in Mary- land with the Cooper-Fay-Wray film outfit... . And thus I learned that the movies can have real poets in their midst for such he is,-for he has a volume of verse ready for the publisher. . . . .. And he i; most interested, I learned, in Countee Cullen, the young negro poet of Harlem. And he. told a dreamy, pleasan‘ yarn of a tiny pickaninny he had met on loca- tion in Maryland, who came up to him one night and said: “There's ja right pretty moon tonight, mis- = er:” . . . And the wav ‘he tiny darky said it told Fenton that here was a lad worth watching. . . . . So he snuggled the little fellow on the train, hiding him in a berth. «+ 6. All of which w: dis- covered and the little pic was sent back home. And so back to the office to « Or when the girlies|small' sums they GILBERT SWAN. ot | BARBS | ———— If Al is nominated apd the Dem- ocrats want a good campaign slogan, we are able to offtr only: “Sip Slightly with Smith.” e A small town is one that remem- bers when Amelia Earhart was vis- iting: a cousin for two days there in 191 eee Turkish beggars, scorning the ive, are de- By Ahern »~YEH, IF You RICE ON YouR ® , L SPost You'D BE A CHINK (THEY ME “To KEEP AN FOR ‘Yots fo. HULA AWAY “FROM. HERE, ~AN“TAKE “THAT NOSE. OF NouRS Dou To GALVESTON 4 CONSTRUCTIVE VACATIONING Many people take vacations to ob- tain a rest from their work and then discover that it takes about two months of work following the vaca- tion to rest up from the effects of the vacation. This is vacation time all over the North American continent. It is a season when the office seems dull and one has visions of the “great open spaces” with green trees, ¢ool breezes and fishing poles. Vacations are usually planned with only one object in view and that is to have a good time, with pleasant amusements. Frequently one finds, after resuming his cus- tomary daily grind, that he is much worse off than before in health and spirits, with sunburn and tired limbs, But there is no reason why there should be any unpleasant after ef- fects of a vacation, . A change from the habits to which one is accustomed during the rest of the year should be productive of marked benefit. Here is a splendid opportunity fo~ us to adopt a health- ful regime which will prepare us for the heavy work of the coming win- ter. It is advisable during vacation time to put aside all thoughts of worry. i ‘ot as easy to do as to advise, but it is good to amuse yourself with simple pleasure such as swimming, rowing, or perhaps, fishing. The mental worker would do well to become an ardent physi- cal culturist turning his thoughts to peice development, taking long ikes, measuring the distance each day until he is walking five or ten miles daily. It is a good time to perfect the new swimming strokes you have been so anxious to learn. Do not labor under the delusion that during vacation time you can stuff your body with “hot dogs” and candies which you do not eat while doing your regular work. Dietetic discretions must be observed if one is to return to his regular work with a new leare on life. If you “feed up” too much at this time you will be months in recoveting from the poisons you generated in your sys- tem through this foolish gormandiz- ing, and diseases may start which will take a long time to cure, even with careful dieting. * This is the season to eat plenti- fully of fre.h fruit, green vegetables and to cut down on heavy foods, such as starches and meat. Do not try to keep cool with ice cream. You will find that this food is very rich in heating materials, and will only cool temporarily. Drink plenty of plain water, neither too hot nor too cold, and thus give your eliminative functions a chance to flush out the execessive impurities and wastes. Seek healthful amusements, but do not spend your time sampling the tempting confections a: the corner candy store. If between your swim- ming and exercise period, time hangs manding more money. they copy the American methods, rent offices and buy a sucker list? 86 An Italian cats 400 miles of spaghetti annually, according to statistics. We hope the people who promote the dance marathons and pie eating contests don’t read that. so _ People who think the weather is warm should wait until the dele- gates who heard Heflin speak re- turn from the Democratic conven- tion. see A driver who neglects precautions at a railway crossing and is struck by a train is not entitled to recover, according to recent decisions, Not only entitled but not likely. | en EEERS EEE | At the Movies ELTINGE THEATRE Harold Lloyd, whose visits to the ¢ { Why don't | seseen have been a little too in- frequent of late to satisfy his host of followers, will be seen for the first time in more than a year when his latest release, “Speedy,” comes to the Eltinge for Thursday, Friday and Saturday. This picture was about eight months in the waking, in a large part of whith was spent New York, where many of the ex- teriors were filmed at such famous spots as Coney Island, Yankee stadi- um, the subway, Times square, Bat- tery, and, in fact, most of the show places. of New York. Lloyd has ‘been making about three -pictures every two years for | ° the last four years. s have become the most trying of all motion jictures to produce, for in no other Field of entertainment has the com- petition been so keen, and so much demanded from the stars by the pub- lic. The bespectacled: comedian has never been found wanting ‘with any |G. picture he has ever produced, and in ‘Speedy” he again ri the bell with a Sat A, hly amus- ing entertainment that ranks with Bs tome efforts in the laugh-mak- ing line. CAPITOL THEATRE Vienna, \ hailed by poets and novelists as tl fascinating city in the world, and an interantional capital of culture, music and art, has been reproduced on the screen in all its color, its gaiety and its abandon. the city of today roceling with verty, political struggling Por > Pol turmoil and. readjustment following the War, but the gay and brilliant city of alt, bes been tht to the screen in “Love Me and World Is Mine,” which is co to the Capitol Theatre for three days com- mencing Thursday. The pice, Mode by men who have all lived in that city, some them for many years, is as authen' and giadaa as the human mind can Norman Kerry and Phil- in, the romantic lovers “The Phantom of the Opera” “Mer- BURNED WHEN GASOLINE EX. PLODES Hazelton — Mrs. Robert Mitchell of northwest of Hazelton verely burned recently most colorful and | 1; heavily on you, it is well to rest under the cteen tres, reading light magazine stories of romance or ad- Dr. MeCoy will gladly anemes l person: uestions on and ae a, “addrenned "Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. venture, but nothing too deep or philosophical. Rest periods with an occasional short nap will refresh you and make you all the more eager to get back to some healthful exercise, but do not allow yourself to get that “lazy feeling,” since physical rest is not as much needed as mental and phy- sical diversion. You can recreate yourself not so much by idleness and gluttony as by participacing in joyful games, and in the observation of the ways, pow- ers and harmonies of nature. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Qustion: Subscriber asks: “What causes excessive nose bleed in a boy nine years old? Has continued since he was three years old. Never a day goes by without at least one.” Answer: Your child oa has especially sensitive nasal membranes and treatment may be necessary to bring about a firmer tone to these structures. Go to a doctor who uses the localized ultra-violet light treatment. This treatment consists in raying the inside of the nose with actinic light. It is just the same as using concentrated sun- ke If you cannot find a doctor who has this equipment, go to a nose specialist who can give you some remedy you can apply several tim daily to toughen the sensitive mem- branes. Question: Housekeeper asks: “Will you please eae instructions for making the fruit whips given in your weekly menus?” Answer: e fruit whips may be made of cooked apricots, ches, apples, prunes, figs, etc., by first mincing the fruit and adding to the whites of well beaten eggs. Do not add sugar or any other seasoning. For a change, the whip may be laa in the oven and slightly rowned on top. Question: J. M. B. asks: “Can an inherited venereal infection cause insanity in a child? He is a strong, healthy child but acts strange at times and has terrible temper tan- trums. His father died from an in- fection he thought cured in youth.” Answer: It is possible the boy’s bad temper could caused by a hereditary blood disease, but it is better to believe that hig tantrums are caused from digestive disturb- ances as this is usually the case.| If you teach him to eat correctly and live with other good habits, you will also have done everything you can to eradicate any inherited tendency. was brought to Hazelton for medi- cal treatment. _ is date in JUNE 27 session of the Conti- nee fn nenta! ingress journed after 272-day pose 1800—Population of the States estimated at 483; center of ulation 18 miles west of timore. 1829—James L. M. Smithson, found- er of the Smithsonian Insti- tution, Washington, died in Genoa, Italy. 1884—Bureau of Labor in the De- partment of the Interior es- tablished by Congress, 5,308,- CITATION HEARING PETITION TO ESTABLISH HEIRSHIP, State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh. 1 et Court Before Hon. I. Cc, 8, Judge. latter of the Estate of ‘Wright, Deceased. Gray, Petitioner, George 'B. Wright, Marg P. ‘Wright, Murray 8, ‘Wright, ail other persons unknown, ing any estate or interest in or lien or incumbrance upon the prop. erty described in the petition or against the estate of said de- ceased, Respondents. The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Respondents: ‘You and each of you ai cited and required to appear before tl unty Court of the County of wh, in said State, at the office on the lith ony of July A. D. 1! at the hour of 2 o'clock in the aft noon of that ay. to show cause, if any you have, why the praver. of the petition heretofore filed in this court by the above named pet should not be granted a dec: re tered by this court establis! in jeor B. Wri nd Murray 8. Wright, above nai as respondente, the right of succession to the prem- fees of the esti of Charles D. ‘Wright, of Fergus Falle, Minn., ribed in said petition as follows, to-wit: Lot Ten (10), Block te, ed (12), Sturgis Addition to Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota. Let service be m: ef this citation as_requ! ined by law. orntes thle Yorn day of June A. D, i By the Court: of ie Cor yu oat (Beal)