The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 9, 1929, Page 4

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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1929 An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S ULDEST NEWSPaPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- ek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck } @s second class mai! matter. George D. Mann ................President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier per year . Daily by mail, per year (in + 7.20 | Daily by mail, per year, (in state, outsiae Bismarck) ...... + 500} } Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . + 6.00 | | Weekly by mail. in state, per year ..... ane 100) + Weekly by mail, in state three years tor ... + 2.50) ‘Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, ber year ssees 150 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the | focal news of spontaneous origin publisheo herein All tights of republication of all other matter herein are | also reserved. Foreign Representative. SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Official City, State and County Newspaper) THE MEDDLING AGE 7 i We live in a “meddling” age, according to Dr. Samuel | C. Kohs, executive director of the Brooklyn Federation of | Jewish Charities. We are meddler ys Dr. Kohs, in all sorts of fields where our ancestors were satisfied to let well cnough : alone. We meddle with all sorts of established standards, with ail sorts of established conditions. We are not con- tent to accept anything as final; instead we begin to tinker with it to sec if we cannot in some way make it better. All of this, quite naturally, has made for a lot of con- fusion. Sometimes, our meddling seems to have spoiled things that we shouldn't have monkeyed with, at other times the things that need fixing the worst don't seem to get much attention. And, besides, the meddler is usually @ big nuisance. Many people, in consequence, feel that the game has gone far cnough and that all meddling Should cease. Yet, civilization being what it is, meddling can't cease. Indeed, there is apt to be more of it, not less, as years go by. It was the meddlers who started the movement that wiped out negro slavery. Small children had to work 12 hours daily in the New England textiie mills until meddling busybodies got to work and got legislation that remedicd the situation. Havana and Panama were sink holes of disease, ravaged annually by yellow fever epidemics, until meddling U. S. army officers went to work, bothered people about sani- tation and drainage, and pushed yellow fever out of town. Smallpox would still be the uncontrollable scourge it used to be if health officers didn't meddle in people's private affairs and vaccinate and quarantine it into sub- mission. City dwellers could never be sure of the purity of their food and milk supplies if the cities didn't hire meddlers to inspect dairy companics, markets and storage houses. All of us could be gouged unmercifully for such neces- sities as electric Jight and gas if it were not for the med- dling public utility commissions, | Automobile traffic would be perpetually tangled if we didn’t have the bothersome, meddling traffic cop. And so it gocs. An age of meddlers? Correct—and there isn’t any way out of it. We live so closely together and use so many complicated machines and intricate Systems that without meddling we should be lost. If you i think it would be nicer to live in a more slowly-moving age, where people didn’t have to concern themselves about their neighbors’ doings—well, ‘you're just out of luck, that's all. You'll never get your desire. MODERN METHUSELAHS There is an engaging freshness of viewpoint in the lively generalization that “modern Methuselahs are of real interest only to biologists, statisticians, life insurance companies and tie villages in which they first saw the light.” ] Age has had its dazzling triumphs, but it is possible to wonder whether it is always worth it. A study of the biographies of contemporary centenarians fails to con- vince one either of their attractiveness or utility and re- calls to mind the terrible picture Shaw drew of what t the coming tri-centenarians would be like. It is enough to inspire to serious thought a civilization which some- times seems to have staked everything on comfort, safety and vital statistics, Those pleasingly romantic speculations as to what would have happened if Keats had enjoyed the benefits | of modern medicine too frequently overlook the appalling results in some people who have enjoyed them. Mauy are not in sympathy with the view that the main Job of the doctor and health department is to fill up the world by lengthening the life span. The disquieting re- sponsibility assumed by the physicians who keep us alive is less dramatic than the responsibility of the few who occasionally kill a human being. Life is valuable only for the fine things that can be created out of it. Safety first is not always the noblest maxim, and there are some who would still—upon occa- sion, prefer being sorry—in spite of what the anti-acci- dent publicity experts say. Might not society, and the individual, for that matter, Jose more than they would gain if science were to pre- serve human life for decades after the period of creative usefulness? Mm 24 FT Azavors seepme THE DEMOCRACY OF GOLF ry Golf, which used to be considered the rich man’s recre- ‘ ation, is a pretty democratic sort of game after all. L. B. Maytag, wealthy Iowa washing machine manu- facturer, has spent thousands of dollars on golf lessons. a Recently he entered the trans-Mississippi golf tourna- ment, his heart set on winning first place. Like all ener- getic golfers, he doubtless wanted that championship, tight then, as badly as he wanted anything on earth. But he failed to get it. He was beaten in the finals by & youngster who used to be a caddy, and who never was ‘ able to spend a dollar on lessons in his life. The democ- } acy of the game tossed victory to the poor boy instead of to the rich man. ‘There are, as the copybooks used to say, some things ‘that money can’t buy. Victery in golf is one of them. of political prey have their habitat south, according to the gentleman from New York, unfair to the south for the north is ready an furnish the worst as well as the The Bismarck Tribune $7.20 | in the south it undoubtedly migrates at certain sea. sons of the year north of the Mason and Dixon line. From the description furnished by Mr. Fish these creatures are more repulsive than destructive. As he puts pot. The congressman's maledictory appellation is a happy one, not because it distinguishes one particular type of | politician, but because it enlarges the vocabulary of in- vective employed by politicians toward each other. A RELENTLESS WAR In its heroic war on the yellow fever the Rockefeller | foundation | pursued the dread disease and the mos- quito which spreads it to darkest Africa. There is evi- q ¢ that this disease, long regarded as a New World | product, was 11 reality brought to this hemisphere from Africa by mosquito larvae which lurked in the water jars of the old slave ships. At any rate, it has been virtually ic, and if the doctors ze their hope of making it as extinct as the battle will have to be continued in Africa. It is one of the great heroic epics of modern times, one of those magnificent achievements which make despair of the human race impossible. It was only a quarter cen- tury ago that American doctors in Cuba proved that the disease was carried by mosquitoes. Until after the turn of the century it was one of those dread scourges which men fear the more for not understanding them. For centuries yellow fever had annually taken a terrible toll of lives in Central America and the tropical portions of North and South America. New Orleans suffered from periodic epidemics until 1905. Central America is free of it for the first time in two and one-half centuries. There have been minor outbreaks in Brazil in recent years, but even there the situation is in control. However, many difficulties will be encountered by the yellow fever hunters in Africa. It has a vast tropical arca and a suspicious native population of 30,000,000. Here surely, are romance and adventure enough to thrill the adventurer and to silence those who talk of “this degenerate age.” cr acicated on this side of the Atlant BAD MOTION PICTURES he contention by certain motion picture producers that the public is responsible for what is unworthy on the sereen, because the producers try to give the public what it demands, is only partly right. While the public must unquestionably share in some of the blame if it tolerates objectionable pictures, it also has grounds for complaint against them. The taste for improper pic- tures, may be, in part, an inheritance from the old Adam, but it is also, in part, acquired from poisonous offerings with which certain producers have bid for patronage. There are standards of decency in the “movie” art that should be observed by producers, regardless of what they may think the public demands. The fact that objectionable films are tolerated docs not excuse their production. The responsibility is on every producing in- dividual and organization and industry serving the public to ebserve the demands of propriety. They cannot shift this responsibility by pretending that the public is filthy- minded. THE RETURN OF THE BISON The American buffalo, or bicon, nearly exterminated a few years ago by the uncontrolled activitics of hunters and so-called “sportsmen,” is coming back. To be sure, the great plains of the west are not getting back the big herds they once had. But in Alaska and Canada colonies of bison, established in the open range lands a few ycars ago by nature lovers, are multiplying and thriving. Northeast of Fairbanks, Alaska, a large herd is said to be in existence, while northwest Canada counts its bison by the thousand. These, it must be understood, are buffalo living in the wild state, as distinct from those maintained on ranches and in parks. Probably it will never be possible for the western United States to swarm again w:th bison as it once did; neither possible, nor altogether desirable. But no American who likes his country’s colorful past can fail to be glad that in some places, at least, the animal is coming back. One-third of the accidents in building construction are due to falling objects, says a statistician. The rule ap- Plies 100 per cent, however, in the stock exchange. London newspapers made a great to-do about the fact that an English lord swallowed a collar button. Not so remarkable. Some English lords who have visited Amer- ica bound on matrimony have even been known to swal- low camels, Editorial Comment NEW LIGHT ON C. C. (World's Work) New light on Christopher Columbus is shed by a burial record of the discoverer, to be exhibited at the Seville Ex- Position. It has been pronounced authentic by Spanish history savants. According to this document Columbus did not die in poverty as has been supposed. He had means, although he was not wealthy. Until a few years ago it was difficult for research students to delve among Spanish archives, photostatic copies of records being for- bidden by the: government. Restrictions have been re- moved now, and a large number of scholars, many fi. naced by American patrons, are at work in dusty alcoves. THE COOPERATIVE BASIS (Minneapolis Journal) While some of the successful cooperative organiza- tions seem distrustful of the federal farm board act, oth- ers are confident that it will accomplish its declared pur- Pose. Officers of the North Dakota-Montana Wheat Growers association, in a statement to its members, hail the new law and lay claims to a conspicuous part in bringing it about. One fatal defect of the equalization fee plan was that it would have broken down the cooperative movement. By extending an equal status to all producers of a com- modity, it would have withdrawn all incentive for pay- ing membership fees in a cooperative marketing agency. The new law, on the contrary, makes the producers’ own cooperative associations the keystone of the system. Its benefits will accrue mainly to those who work through the cooperatives and take advantage of the sound mer- chandising methods of the stabilization tions. There is a danger in exploitation of the cooperative idea by promoters, and this is a danger the new federal farm board must be on the alert to forestall. GAMBLING WITH SIGHT (Duluth Herald) It is @ curious reflection on the state of public intelli- gence that the Minnesota legislature should have found it necessary to pass a law, which will become effective in September, that will make it impossible for a person who is having trouble with his sight to go to a store and let a clerk sell him a cheap pair of glasses, ‘That can be done now, and it is being done, hard that is to believe. » have been necessary to pass such a ought to be intelligent enough to know safely be it, they only succeed in stirring up a tempest in a tea- | = | The Globe-Trotter! WELL, ITS GETTING NOW So “THE SUN NEVER SETS ON OUR BUSINESS EMPIRE: Bi yANS AY Loyalty end love of her dead hus- band explains that most phenomenal of all modern women, Aimee Semplic. McPherson, according to a writer in Nation. “When her husband's death in China, two years after their marriage and one month before the birth of their daughter, sent —her back to America stricken with grief and lone- liness, her one solace was to carry on his work. Henceforth loyalty to his religion was loyalty to her beloved dead. Her second, unsuccessful, mar- riage threw her back once more upon her early loyalties and her former work. This is the emotional history which prevents Mi McPherson from questioning her husdand's religion— the religion of her childhood,”+ Jul Ludlong writes. Mebbe! zs* * BEAUTY CONTESTS “Ten drunks for every beauty,” is account of the international beauty show at Galveston. Only she calls it “the great American stock show.” She tells of the girls fainting under a blazing southern sun, of their des- Pperate attempts to live on the three dollars a day allowed them and. worst of all, the fight to evade all the drunks who congregated from miles around in order to try to drink with the beauties. If women's clubs who vaguely ti- rade against bathing beautics would salt away some of these facts to use in their next anti-bathing-beauty campaign they might accomplish more than by merely prattling about “im- modesty,” “spoiled girls,” and so oa. * * * HERE TO STAY! “All the argument in the world will not take wage-earning mothers out of industry,” writes Eudora Ramsay Richardson in the Woman's Home Journal. “The time has come for some adjustment to be made between extra-home work and the traditional tasks that have been laid upon women.” The writer tells of the attempt of Dr. O. Latham Hatcher, president of the Southern Woman's Educational alliance, to find out the success of the trained woman in combining a western newspaper woman fri¢nd’s; H marriage with her own job. She called | Several dozen of them together before | she wrote her book, “Occupations for | Women.” Not one of them had really solved the problem, the writer records. se & ON THE WAY “The very fact, however,” writes |Miss Richardson, “that women are ' attacking the problem and that fewer ‘and fewer are bowing beneath the ; yoke of complete domesticity is en- couraging. }_ Mrs. Richardson, among other sug- | gestions, suggests that working hours ibe lowered for the married woman worker, and wages accordingly, of course. In other words, part-time jobs !for married women. xe * FAIR ENOUGH Her title, “Every Wife to Her Last.” proves her tolerance and her belief j that it's all a matter of doing your own job. home and has the satisfaction of knowing that she is doing so through ‘invaluable contribution to society. In | this hectic age she is the only person | who has enough leisure for cultural | Pursuits. If she feels, however, that ‘her Position is in need of constant j defense she is defeated at the outs2t.” if BARBS i> “ Pedestrians shouldn't kick. them get wonderful breaks. see Sports writers think it just as well that Paulino lost. They won't have any trouble now trying to spell his last name. ** * Postmaster General Brown 4; a | 00d cook and offezs $5000 to anyone who can find a string in his Welsh rarebit. Several pcople are planning to offer $5000 reward to anyone find- ing muscilage jon stamps. * % Lots of : pieces, BRADDOCK’S DEFEAT One hundred and seventy-four years ago today, on July 9, 1755, Gen- cral Edward Braddock was mortally wounded and his British regulars routed in a battle near Fort in the French and Indian war. England sent Braddock to Virginia to lead an army of British troops against the French who were claim- ing the Ohio valley. Accompanied by Colonel Washington, who was later to lead the continental army, Brad- dock advanced from Fort Cumber- land and began to climb the rough ridges of the Alleghenies planning to “The woman who stays within the; attack Fort Duquesne. Three hundred ax-men cleared the way. Behind them came the British choice and not compulsion makes an! regulars, a glittering army of scar- let and steel. Braddock despised the back-woods method of fighting and disregarded Washington's warning of Possible ambush. Suddenly, the English advance was sreeted with a terrific war whoop and was fired upon from both sides by an unseen foe, while the French attacked in_ front. Braddock fell, mortally wounded, and the British regulars were cut to ‘The Virginians, with Wash- ington at their head, saved half the British army of 1,200 men. “The greatest drawback to flying in England is the lack of landing ds. The establishment of suf- | groune Henry Mason Day has decided to: ficient of these will give a great im- get away from it all for a little rest, | petus to flying.”—Sir Alan Cobham. * like Messrs. Sinclair and Capone. * * * Ghost writers often fail to catch the spirit of the Re. A * * “The purpose of higher education is not to reform young men or to amuse them, or to make them tech- nicians in any field. It is to teach Among 21 persons arrested by fed-j them to think, to think straight if joral agents in raids in Arkansas re- cently was one clergyman. bad showing for the ministry. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) Twenty-four girls between the ages of 15 and 16 are married in |England every ycar. Not a; themselves."—Robert M. Possible, but to think always for Hutchins, President, University of Chicago. eee “The bearing of responsibility in maturity is much easier if one has grown gradually into it and has had {the execution of smaller responsibil- OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD MY MAN, ~~ T CAN'T HELP Zi EXPRESSING MY EMOTIONS "To You AS Rte 1 GAZE AT THE FAMOUS OLD “TOWER OF LONDON! ~~ HAR-RR-UMF ~~ (Tt MAY INTEREST You “To KNow SIR. THAT SOME OF MY NOBLE ANCESTORS LIVED IA “His HISTORICAL DWELLING ~ Ves SIR! ~ SusT FANCY ~~I CAN RIGHTFULLY CLAIM “THE TowER AS A SORT OF ANCESTRAL HoME-~ EGAD! S H HOW TO USE POULTICES Poultices are valuable home reme- dies to be used whenever one desires to bring about a more rapid discharge of pus from an inflammatory infec- tion. They are valuable in bringing boils and carbuncles to a head, and in bringing about a discharge of small splinters or thorns, and in serving to prevent blood poisoning from punc- HEALTH~DIET ADVI Dr Frank Mc nits Mee Fast Flay. Ler WEALTH © DIET WIL OF MENERED CE Coy. sania P08 RePLY newed. Applied in time, poultices wil often prevent serious complications QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Cereals With Fruit Question—Mrs. H. G. K. asks: “Are cereals with sliced fresh fruit a good combination?” Answer—Cereals should never be combined with acid fruits. However, Dr. McCoy will gladly answer = = ry ry personal questions on health and | diet, addressed to nim, care of the Tribune. ! Enclose @ stamped cddresced envelope for reply. H ture wounds by rusty septic objects. Through the use of the poultice, one has an easily applied method of secur- ing continued heat and moisture to a part. The heat causes a dilation of} the capillaries and a greater supply of blood and in this way strengthens the | a glass of orange juice taken about defenses of the body. The moisture|an hour before a cereal breakfast ir softens the skin structures and helps | all right, as this fruit juice leaves the to dilute toxins. The discharge tends] stomach almost entirely within that to work outward through the action | time. of the heat. Always Clearing Throat Many different substances may be Question—Mrs. K. B. writes: used for the preparation of poultices, | have to clear my throat real often, the most commonly used poultices | although I don’t bring up any phlegm. being made from cornmeal, flaxseed, | It doesn't seem to be a habit. Could potatoes, bread and hops, but prac- | you tell me what causes this?” tically any substance of a mushy na-| Answer—Such symptoms are often ture~ may be used if these are not | forerunners of tuberculosis or bron- available. Leaves may be boiled and |chitis. Any irritation in the lunge applied hot. Mud may be boiled and | may create the desire to cough, even used, rice, etc., the efficacy being not | when there is nothing to cough up, so much in any substance contained | If the cause of the irritation is not in the poultice material es in the ef-| removed, there may finally develop fect of the heat and moisture. The | enough degeneration so thet phlegm consistency should be quite soft but | and pus will gather in large enough not enough to run. quantities to be coughed up. Every The usual way of making a poultice | tickling cough, without phlegm, is to spread out a piece of old muslin | should be carefully considered and the or cheese cloth. The area of the} cause removed. muslin should be nine times as big The “Bland Diet” as the finished poultice, and the hot] Question—A. E. R. writes: “I get mush shovld be poured in the eenter | much from your articles in the Paper, of the muslin, which is then folded! but I scem to be troubled with con- over from each side so that the two | stipation, and someone has suggested overlapping edges are on top. The|I try the “Bland Diet,” as roughage poultice may then be tied upon the ;seems to irritate. I want to know Part with the free ends or with an-| what you think of this dict.” other piece of muslin, allowing the! Answer--I know what you mean by mushy substance to come as close to/ a “Bland Dict,” but I do not recom-- the affected area as possible. mend it. Rather, I advise you to take Poultices should be applied just as} plenty of exercise, cat a large amount, hot as can be borne. If the poultice | of cooked and raw greens, and take becomes cold, it may be removed and| an enema daily, if necessary, until dipped into boiling water for a minute | your bowels mov naturally. Drink or two and then re-applied. To keep | only a moderate amount of water, and the poultice warm, it should be cov-| that between meals, and not at meal- ered with oiled silk or waxed paper, | time. and over this a heavy folded towel or piece of woolen and, if the patient falls asleep until | rect for the treatment of diabetes?” morning, the moisture continues to be Answer—I do not recommend any cane after they have be- Sapper for diabetes outside of live come 5 on 8 carefully planned diet. Stop A properly prepared poultice will| using strong starches and sugars, and not stick to the skin when it is re-| write me a personal letter, giving moved. the skin/ me your name and address so I can should be washed with warm water send you more information on this Diabetes and the pus or splinter can be| subject. squeezed out. If the pus has not come to a head the poultice should be re- (Copyrigi ht, 1929, by The Bell Syndi+ cate, Inc.) ities than if the burdens are suddenly dropped on inexperienced shoulders.” —Mrs. Herbert Hoover. sane “The best work in the world is that not done for money, nor necessity but | NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Whereas, Default has been made in the terms and conditions of that cer- tain mortgage hereinafter described by the non-payment of the one amor- tization installment of Forty-eight and 75/100 Dollars, ($48.75) due De- and th for fun."—Rev. Harry Emerson Fos-| cember 3, 1928, further sum dick, of 0: ty-five and ee paid as ta Apri “It is practically useless to enter- 27. tain at dinner in Hollywood because | ,.NSW. ,Theretore, Notice is Hereby the movie stars are more interested in| Give"; That that certain morteage executed id deli d a *, retaining their figures than in eat- | Berndt, unmarried, mortgevor eres ing.”"—1 Del Rio. Federal Land Bank of St. Paul, a body ese * corporate of the City of st. Paui, But if the ola: mortgagee dated Tine Sr ENS, “ newspapers are gener- » mortgagee, dated June 3rd, 1919, ous with eritcism, the youth of the| ius letter neRt in, the sitic of ree ae Prodigal. Prseoaneapnd is this Comnty, orth Dakota, on gen 1919, e of . "ecordes in boo! 01 Mort= Teeter ee Jouth, who go beyond | Fakes at Poe ee oT He teers questioning the church and its min-|fy"a' sale of the’ premieee ie such istry.”"—Eugene Gordon. (Plain Talk.) | mortgage and hereinafter described ** * at the front door of the Court House, in the city of Bismarck, County of “To fall in love, a man must have | Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock P.M. on the illusions. A young man has illusions; a man over $0 has illusions. In be. | 5th,49y Of August, 1929, to satisty the amount due upon’ such mortgage on tween he is too busy with other thi the day of sale, f id 5 for falling in love: he is fees indebtedness. Said tale 15 to be eae care ane jiterior to ae unpaid @ aforesaid mort De Peche, French poet. to ‘The Federal Land Bank of Saint ss * Paul amounting to Thirteen Hundred i on “No one can be liberal in everything, | The premises Gener i as every individual has certain things which he considers beyond argu- ment.”—Father John A. Ryan. headed; he has no illusions.”—Vicon’ Alain e gai the lot kot NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- RE SA! Whereas” pt It has bee: fault has ad In the terms and conditions of that is certain mortgai 4 ‘ain mortgage hereinafter describ-| two and» 68/100 (152.68) acres, ment of the one| more or less, accordi 4 lment of One Hun-| government survey thereof.” “* Seventy-five and no/100 Doll: ($175.00) due November 26, 1926, and’ and 40, ($100.40) Dollars paid as insurance premiums, and the further sum of Seven Hun Seve 76/100 ($772.76) Dollars paid as taxes for the years 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926 and Now, Therefore, Notice is Hereby Given, That that certain rts executed and delivered by Ole Swee | ZUG! re will mn said mortgage at the date of sale for said defaulted installment and taxes the sun of Two Hundred Fifty-five and 59/100 Dol- Jars (255.59), together with statutory attorney's fees and cost of foreclosure wa ated this Tote day: of J ater is tI lay of june, 1929. THE FEDERAL LAND BANK OF SAINT PAUL ty be ILLOTSON, waSee. and Oline Swee, his wife, mortgagors, ¢ fo the Federal’ Land Bank of Saint | “Bismarck, Nore puree ly corporate, of the City of St, Paut, County of Ramsey, State of Minnesota, mortgagee, Dated Ma: 1922, and’ fi arck, Nort! (6/18-25 7/2-9216-23) TOUGH ON TRAMPS toon, office of th Forty Burleigh County. Ni bled Saieibe ho May 31, 1922, and 166 of Mortgages, foreclosed by a sal te ne i in such mortgage a ereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the city of Bismarck, County of 'B ‘and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock P. M. on the 29th day of July, 1929, sal 'y the amount due upon such mortga for said defaulted indebtedness. Said sale is to be made subject and inferior to the unpaid principal of the aforsaaia forced to stand on chairs and cots most of the night. In Portugal political arrests out- number those for criminal offenses two to one. mort eo te ‘he Federal La r ah auee Pasi aiountine te-Fouceig| FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: Hundred Nine and 55/100 Doll Seo 9 cat or. ($4609.55). ‘Shy mises described in fovtatistyeihe some ace Mued™t the County of Burleigh. aud State of ota, and lescribed as fol- jovernment Lot Southwest ‘Quarter of bird ihe west Hine ‘of tite Bodthenaes warren, WeeW 3° of ‘Bection Nu sigue ap jNortn Hane ling to tue doveme ent si thereof. re wil jue on sald e at the date of sale for said defaulted sum of welve Huctred acety tne ui renty-i "16/100 Bollars ($1236.79), tomsiher with atatuto attorney’s fees and coat of foreclosure as provided by Ww Dated this 8th day of ANE 1929, THE FEDE! ings BAN! OF BAL 7 AUL . 2v08rR @ TL Hisdeates ahe »|v we 3 iY we

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