The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 7, 1929, Page 2

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i Se tease beana toe RESSEsressousere “SERVICE CLUBPUTS ON OUTING EVENING | INSTEAD LUNCHEON Members Bring Wives and Chil- dren, Lay Aside Formality and Disport Amid Trees FORT INVITES ALL TWICE] Besides Brocop Ceremonies, Will Entetain in Training Camp and Later Be Guests Kiwanians turned their weekly luncheon into an evening watermelon Picnic at their children’s playground, youth of the baseball park, last eve- ning. They made it a real picnic by aaving their wives and children and the juvenile band there and topped \t off with a set of barnyard golf con- tests between the more dignified members. The formalitics of the usual noon luncheon in the den were cast aside. Out in the open they found room to spread out at park tables and on Plank seats resting over old nail kegs | or to shift about in groups making closer acquaintance, while the chil- dren found enjoyment in the swings and the merry-go-rounds. Luncheon was supplied from the Grand Pacific larders. It was of pic-, nic type—ham, meat loaf, sandwiches, | baked beans, potato salad, iced tea, | milk, ice cream, watermelon and cigars. Waitresses from the hotel dining room passed out the cats on paper platters and everybody found some coign of comfort to sit down in and enjoy this evening repast. ‘Will Visit Fort Twice Among the guests were Chaplain Suddeth, Captain Conmy and Colonel Conrad, of the training camp. The chaplain presented an invitation to the club to come down to the camp on one of the Thursday evenings and put on a program for the young men in teaining. He said the novelty of the military activity in time becomes routine, with some of the boring cf- fects of routine, and the boys get something like a homesick fecling and lose pep. What is needed, he said, is to turn on something in the way of entertainment from a source that implies an interest on the part of the community in the camp and ‘the men in training. As entertain- ‘ment and morale officer, he said, he was arranging for cach of the service clubs to give the camp an evening yisit of an entertainment character. He also asked the club to take Iuncheon at the camp Tuesday, Au- gust 20, both of the invitations being accepted when put to a vote of the Picnickers. Urges Closer Ties With Post The chaplain also suggested that the enlisted men at the fort were of the same character and type as the men of the training camp. but many of them had come from other places where there were more amusements and attractions, with the result that they lose spirit at times. He said the ity should do much to popularize the post with the men by giving them social encouragement at times and, especially, by making it pleasant for them when the men come into town fo spend an evening. In the absence (LE URES SS [Weather Report | — e ‘Temperature at 7 a. m. 56 Highest yesterday 16 Lowest last night . 53 Precipitation to 7 a. m. 0) Highest _wind velocity 15 Temperature este ae | ; Stations 2 k 28 33 3 z ES as North Dakota— 47 — Clear 53 — Clear 52 — PtCldy 49 — PiCidy 52. — Cloudy 52. — Clear 46 — Clear 50 — Clear 47 — Clear 50 — PtCldy 44 — Clear 56 — PtCldy 56 — Cloudy 4 — Clear 52 — PtCldy 80 53 — Cloudy 79 46 «09 Clear 79 47 — Clear 80 48 — PtCldy 7% 52 — Clear 72 46 — Clear 7% 51 — Clear 76 50 — Clear ‘Wishek .. 82 43 — PtCidy Moorhead, .M.. 80 56 — Clear WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Mostly “—and the waistline, Mr. Katz; what shall we say about that?” of a Y. M. C. A. they have no place to go outside the movies and cafes and nobody to mix with but them- selves, he said. He urged that the community learn to know its battal- fon and extend a social hand to the men. Score to Attend Brocopp Event Harry P. Goddard reminded the club of the ceremonies at Fort Lin- clon next Monday, when the dis- tinguished service cross is to be pre- He urged that as many members as Possible attend the military exercises at the post at 5 p. m. and then take part in the banquet at the G. P. aft- hands revealed about 20 members in- tending doing just what Mr. Goddard suggested. Dr. Charles Schoregge was intro- duced to the club by President Worth Lumry as a new member. He also introduced Gerald H. Burgess, Ki- wanian, and John Davison and Col- onel Conrad, all -of- Minneapolis, and Captain Conmy. Band Shows Its Progress Meanwhile the juvenile band under the direction of Conductor Clarion Larson, the new director of the or- ganization, put on a program of snap- py airs which added greatly to the picnic atmosphere and, incidentally, revealed splendid progress by the boys and girls in band technique. As the evening drew to a close, James Morris, attorney general, brought out several outfits of horse- shoes and put the supreme court, the big bankers and the town capitalists playing their favorite game of golf. Chief Justice Burke won the picnic chamiponship. Train Robbery Hero Debunks His Exploit Pawhuska, Okla.—()—After bask- ing for 30 years in all the glory of a hero, James De Roche, now a police- man, has explained that the feat which won acclaim was an accident. De Roche was credited with prevent- ing a train robbery in 1898. A cloud of steam from the engine dispersed the robbers and De Roche, then a fireman, was hailed'as a hero. Now he explains that to the con- trary, it was entirely accidental. He kicked a piece of glass in the boiler head, De Roche says, in haste to obey the robbers’ commands to leave the tender of the engine. Shipments of electrical equipment were valued at $110,729,121, an in- crease of $8,213,664 over 1927. || OUT OUR WAY fairtonight and Thursday. Not much ture. sented to Capt. Herman A. Brocopp.) erward. A poll of the picnic by raised | from the United States during 1928} HEM MISTER EMPIRE, LI DIDN' Miss tT 3 WHUT ane |] AN'IT AiInT NO MOV. GONNA |/ BALL Coz Tt SWUNG CALL AT? AT \T—ANUIT AINT Scientific Forestry Aid in Flood Control Washington — (AP) — Forests of the Mississippi watcrshe: ‘even in their present, largely mismanaged condition,” were responsible for a regluction in the possible flood creat of nearly 15 inches, according to E. A. Sherman, forester, in a report to |the house of representatives. If all the forests of the drainage area were protected and managed in accordance with scientific fores- try principles, he declared, a further reduction in possible flood crests of 55 inches could be achieved. Albania Agitates for Division of Holdings Tirana, Albania. — (7) — Albania, struggling under the feudal system whereby land is. owned by the few. ‘land worked by the many, is debating @ proposed Jaw which would split up the vast holdings of the “begs.” or rich landowners, and give farms to |the peasantry. | At present the landlords have un- disputed land in the kingdom. Ths peasants who cultivate it do just enough work to produce the mini- mum crops demanded by their feudal chiefs plus enough to keep their own bodies and souls together. | Although the country’s chief foods are of agricultural origin and there are only 900,000 people in the whole realm, the native farms do not come close to meeting the demands. Al- most every year grain must be im- ported from America, Australia or Canada. One reason is that the soil is poor. Another is that it is incompletely cul- tivated. A third is that railways, roads and other marketing facilities are lacking. Division of the land among the poverty stricken peasantry would not, of course, cure all these ills. But it is being agitated as a necessary first step toward making Albania self supporting. | The practical difficulty in the way of realizing it is the fact that about two-thirds of the elected representa- tives in the national legislature are “begs.” They have indicated that they intend to fight strenuously any such revolutionary legislation so far as it affects land ownership. Two new oil pools were discovered by accident near San Angelo, Tex., when operators were drilling to dis- Pose of waste salt in shallow sand. WELLIT AINT NO STRIKE Coz No, Foul TIP Coz ITS STILL ON “TA BAT NER IT AINT No MIT cuz IT DION' GO’ NOPLACE, so I~ | size. Oo. M. T.C., Fort Lincoln, N. August 6, 1929. Dear Sister Suc: you about the dance last Saturday night. Yeah, a real honest to gosh dance, with GIRLS—red dresses, pink dresses, blue dresses, mixed colors, wind blown bo%s, frizeled bobs, boyish bobs, and one with no bob at all. Gee, but I {sli for that last one. Well, anyhow, some very nice ladies from Bismarck provided the girls; real niccs ones, too, like your | gang at home. And did we have a time. We did. The girls said | they did, too, but I'll bet their fect ache from being bounced on with these Army shoes we wear. Bet those shoes wear two pounds to the I'd hate to be one of the Bis- marck fathers who pay for the shoes we ruined for their daughters. Some ‘one ought to put those kids wise and | | tell them to borrow brother's foot- { ball shoes before they come here to dance. Say, you know old Jim never danced before in his life, but he fell so hard for a little sorrel top, that he got right up and danced ? ? ? with her until some looie shined his gold bars at her and swiped Jim's girl. Was Jim mad—Holy scat! But the look of relief on that girl's face was marvelous to see. Til bet old man Sloan's liniment company will declare a dividend on its Bismarck sales alone. Then Jim wanted to dance with my pick. You know, the one whose hair wasn't bobbed. But sorrel top had put her wise and she was “So tired. Let's sit this one out.” I will say those girls are real sports, ‘cause they danced with fellows like Jim who had never danced before except when they got barley beards in their shirts at har- vest time, and not a squawk out of the ladies. e Moe was there. Didn't you hear the crash at home? Yeah, he danced with all of them. One tall, slim blonde danced like Pavlowa (grace- ful, you know), and Moe got the idea he was Ted Shawn and started cut- ting some fancy capers. He forgot that Army shoes ani waxed floors don't “stick together.” Down he came, Boom, and those shoes of his looked like stranded submarines tied to a sack of khaki clothes. He snuck out and ate ice cream and cookies. He said the ladies giving out the re- freshments took one look at his face, and just couldn't refuse him. The “appeal of beauty in distress,” he calls it. You know how I am about my + chow, Sis. When they said ice cream and cake, I clean forgot I had the |mext dance with that swell looking brunette in the pink and_ white checkered dress, and when I came | back—OUCH—I thought ice cream was cold—but that girl was 60 below zero and still going down. But I should worry about girls. Me for the chow, every time. Your loving brother. BUCK. -. YOUR | CHILDREN Wise Rberts Barta (©9728 by NEA Gervicetna “But how DO you make bad chil- dren behave?” asked a certain young woman. Just like that! “You don’t make them. You teach them,” I tried to tell her. “Just as you instruct them in playing the pi- ‘ano or doing problems.” “But you write about child train- ing, and after all when we have bad children you don’t tell us how to make them good.” ‘What Child Training Is “Occasionally I do turn doctor or surgeon, but see here,” I said, I'm afraid a bit impatiently, “child train- ing consists in building up, not tear- ing down. It’s taking a young child very, very early and by telling him, explaining to him, and showing him, and resourcefully getting him to do what you want and to be what you want him to be, that counts; child- By Williams MES, MISTER EMPIRE ~ + Tihewed Limras, ©1005 Gt wah sometime. You know, I clean forgot to tell jchain store systems. training instruction is to show moth- ers the way to do that. “There is no cut-and-dried poultice or plaster that will cure a ‘bad’ child. The parents of such & child could probably have avoided a great deal of j trouble and unhappiness for them- selves if they had known to start carly—and watch him closely as these little wrong traits appeared, and to coax out the good ones. Now the best thing they can do is to appeal ‘to his sense of justice and reason, and put his common sense to work as well. They can't cure him ex- actly, but he can cure himself if they tell him how.” Explaining Punishment “And you don't believe in punish- ment?” she asked. “Who said I didn’t believe in pun- ishment? Of course I do. But it’s the castor-oil of the training diet. It can't take the place of the food. When it becomes necessary too often, some- thing's wrong. Also like castor-oil, it has an unfortunate reaction. There is too much punishment; that’s what I maintain. And too little time spent thinking things out.” My friend paused and considered. “Then when children are bad and disobedient and hard to control it's their parents’ fault.” Then, There's Heredity “Well, no, I don’t like to say that. ‘My sympathy is always with the par- ents. Most parents would do any- thing on earth for their children. Besides I believe too strongly in heredity, in spite of the behaviorists, to lay the blame there altogether. A child may not inherit bad traits, but he can inherit a will stronger than that of his immediate predecessors, his parents, a will so strong that when these small habits put in an appearance, they are not easily brok- en. But even then, if taken very young, as he should be, he can be trained into the habit of never doubt- ing that his parents know best. Then he'll mind them almost certainly. “So many things enter into it. The parents themselves, for instance, and their ability to bring out the best in their offspring. It's a very big thing and there is no royal road. Courage and patience are the guide “Yes, I guess it is a big thing,” she finally admitted. “And we're only started,” I supple- mented. Chain Stores Show Increased Earnings Chicago—(AP)—An analysis’ of the investment possibilities of chain stores, prepared by F. A. Brewer and company, reveals that almost every branch of retail trade is rep- resented by systems of chain stores. Chains selling groceries lead by a wide margin in the number of separate stores. The largest com- pany has 17,000 stores, and some of the other grocery concerns have branches ranging in number from 5,368 to several hundred. Other chains dea! in drugs, to- bacco, shoes, furniture, women’s apparel, general merchandise by mobile accessories. There are sev- {eral big restaurant chains and a growing number of “luncheonette” systems, usually in cojunction with drug stores. 4 The survey covers 68 different t Fifty of them report increases in net earnings dur- i. : the first half of 1929, compared with the same period last year. The increases range from two-tenths per cent by a restaurant chain to 312 fer cent reported by a chain dea! ing in apparel for men, women children, The prices of chain store shates, in every one of the 68 items, show a considerable decrease frem the highs of the year. One issue is selling at 64.7 times the earnings for 1928. This figure ranges over a wide area for the various systems, down to 5.9 times carnings for a radio and sporting goods chain, Hordes of Pilgrims : Hail Ibn at Mecca Djedda, Arabia.—()— More than 54,000 pilgrims already have reached the Hedjaz this year to visit the tomb of Mohammed and the other sacred Places, and so gain for themselves admission to Paradise. In addition pilgrim trains are com- ig from Palestine, Syria and the (raq. - King Ibn Saud has returned to Medina from the Hedjaz. Following his victory over Feisal el Dowish and his rebel supporters, Ibu Saud was hailed as a veritable conqueror. When he makes his entry into Metca the occasion will be celebrated with great pomp. America Loses Lure In Irish Free State Dublin. — (#) — The emigration quota to the United States from the Irish Free State is likely to be re- duced next year there are not sufficient Irish people wishing to go to Cornelius American consul general in Dublin, said that he ex- pected the quota, which is now 28,857, will be reduced to 17,857, with perhaps even a@ figure next year. |. In past years the waiting list has been long, but now the number reg- | &! istered for emigration is far below the quota. ven that the fol- je Bi ea of these numbers ve said agency, accordi the Com} LA should any: have thelr posses- sion anv p hese num! please communicate immediately with JOS. McCANN, State Agent, Rochenter American Insurance’ Co., fe Por; Office Box No. 1085, FAWO, NOTH DAKOTA, —_———— CALL For BIDS mail order, candy, meat and auto-|R a ouns, misiald, or destroyed to 'Noe DBT-i008, in~ | ular hell... .’ ing | “Zip!” Molly darted from the bed where she had crouched, and flung | slone with Ruth, ‘Kiwanians Enjoy Family Picnic With Band and Lunch at P [Ale MATS E] ESCOLY Hoole he {A oA J THIS HAS HAPPENED MOLLY BURNHAM, sob sister on a metropolitan paper, is renew- ing college friendships with her old BOB NEWTON. iy to which she also invited WOODS, and Ruth's husband, ZIP. But Ruth protested that she was not feeling well, and that Zip w: working late. Ruth has changed lot since her marriage. Within a few months she lost her little baby. And then all her dreams and gaiety seemed to have embittered Rita. While Molly, who has made a re- markable success during her brief career, has indefinitely Cy ge er marriage to JACK WELLS, a struggling young architect, whom she loves devotedly, but who scarcely a penny to his name. During the dinner party, the door bell rings furiously. Bob — to see who it is, and returns with Zip, Ruth’s husband. Zip is crying and talking incoherently, and the girls are afraid he is drunk. Molly asks hee who shakes his head sorrow- tally. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XV Bob put his arm about his wife's Saltese, and reached for Molly's and, “Ruth’s dead, girls,” he said. “Poor little kid.” Zip raised his swollen face from Molly’s shoulder. His soft brown hair that Ruth had loved clung to {his forehead in moist strands, and his. pits amie tke a coy ay “Ruth's 1,” he rej .* you hear tell youre They drew him into the apart- rient, and Molly wondered if the gay, pretty background of her lit- tle dinner party would wound Zip more deeply. She Knew that when one grieves extravagantly, the gaicty of others seems harsh and heartless. She was sorry that Zi d found her making merry wi Rita and Bob. It would have been Siva bad ng the ee | and now she brought & steami cup. “It wilt make you feel better,” she said. “Buck you up. I know.” He took it obediently, and held it on his knee. His hand was shak- ing so he could not raise it to his mouth, “She died in her sleep,” he told them. “When I came home she looked like a ghost. And her eyes were red. I knew she'd been cry- I told her”—Zip’s voice broke, he buried his head in his ha: —“I told her that other women lezt babies. I told her there wasn’t sorrow, hurt her”. . “Yea,” he fiercely. “I want to tell you. I told Ruth I was sick her sniveling and crying. I told her she was making my I le a reg- her knees before him. herself on “Stop it! We don't want to hear those things. Don’t torture yourself, Zip. Ruth doesn’t want you for dear. She always wanted you to ry. EY ae in Ruth died, Zip, Mave tha'e why’ ahe died,” Maybo|. Molly. in the Kitchen, put bet chool ‘s why si . tl 3 pean Fe Blenmes chat “Dintsit she's with that litle baby nowt fingers tn her Pg oe trict with coal. . 5% dae Ee a “He'll drive me crazy!” she whis- mt) creer the right to reject Zip tae ned. es cd her, ‘fi Hee And Rita nodded through 4 * le A he: ie by"onthe ot heed Botte E ‘white ang tremply, pas put “pe yea eee e re Eiji, ber hand ever hte Reart, then | ontly, Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle ELEANOR EARLY’ 18:27, RITA MELNOTTE, and! opening UTH | ope better if she had been alone. But | “ nds |dishes in the had hegre 6. fn this place 1 Tip 8. Pi MGBOOCD AICIALUIDIALL] », vie LTT a Aeue 8. Jews @. Corrupt 4%. The herb dill “a ne INING- LEN was frightened. And pretty soon she let me put her to bed. “She lay there so white and still. But she wouldn’t let me call a doc- ‘tor, She wanted me tc sit beside her, and hold her hand. And she kept her eyes and smiling. a while she wanted to sit up. She was very weak. Whisper- ing then. . My God, I ought to have know: pillows behind her back. And put my arms around her. I asked her if she was comfortable that way, and she said yes. “She was quiet then for a long time, and I was frightened again. “‘How are you fecling?’ I asked. “ ‘Beautiful!’ she said. And she opened her eyes and smiled again. “By and by I thought she was asleep. My arms were numb, and I was afraid I might let her slip back on the pillows. I wanted her to sleep, you see. I thought she would be better when she woke. So I uae my arms away.” ag ita was crying now, wi er head against Bob's shoulder. “And when I stoud up,” Zip was her forehead. And ske didn’t mo Then I—” Rita screamed. “Stop! Zip, don’t!” “T kissed her lips,” he concluded simply. “And then I knew. I don’t know how I knew. I just knew. Ruth was cead.” “And the last word ghe ever said,” moaned Rita, “was ‘Beautiful’. Wasn’t that just like Ruth, Molly? Oh, a r little Ruth!” “You called a doctcr?” asked Bob. “Somebody did,” Zip said. “The woman upstairs came down. And her husband. Yes, they got & doctor. He said she’d been dead an hour. He was wrong though, you see. And put her fingers in my hair. . And when I her how she was, she said ‘Beautiful.’” Rita’s big dark eyes were staring mad. Bob caught her to him. “Steady, Rita. Steady, dear,” he besought. areful, darling.” “Zip\” Rita‘s voice was plazelne: “Don't you see?—Ruth lived to make you happy. And she died to make you happy. . . . And she came back from the dead to com- fort you.” He shook his head miserably. “I killed her,” he oaid, “with words.” Molly had begun, nervously, to clear the dishes away. Presently Rita came to help her. They folded the table cloth, and stacked the od Then Molly ing. about her '. That other pte had ore tra: Lge aoe Sig aie ba} mind that, Zip. “How in town, us,” wi iapored ‘Molly. comforting! asked Bob Practleall . if “Ruth knows you never meant “Drove. in.” -“Good Lord!” They shouldn't have + you out tonight. You should have telephoned us. We'd have gone to you. What was that doctor thinking of!” “He didn’t know,” said Zip dully. “They'd all cleared out. Left to get away.” . looked about him wildly. “Ruth wanted me to tell Molly,” he Molly sent her -flowers today. She fed some of them pinned on her ress, tT lifted her, and put|® saying, “I bent to kiss her. I kissed 5a Because she sntiled at me,| ‘"t. me| 2 I got scared. Had said.) . Ppeeattes Stila | fst Will you and Bob stay with Zip? 2 want to phone Jack. It some minutes to put the call, and when at last Wak atten his voice, she felt that she throat. “Oh, Jack,” she cried, “Ruth is dead and I want you!” * ad?” he exclaimed incredu- re, sae accident, ens An tedly, lover-like, “Are all right? You're not hurt?” “bing “Oh, it wasn’t an accident, dear. Heart failure, I think. Zip is here now. He came ® few minutes ago. ‘We've just heard.” interrupted, “You're telling’ me. the You’ me the truth, Molly?” “Jack, darling, of course I'm all Ped But poor Ruth. And poor p.” She choked back tears, the feeble ’ © impulse of women to be weak when they would be strong. “Poor Ruth!” he repeated. “Lord, * that's tough! How's Zip taking it?” “Oh ,” she moaned. “He's simply all broken up... .. Listen, Jack, I want you more than I've ever wanted you before. Can you come over?” “Why, of course I can. Surest thing in, the world, ppspectal T can the midnight. “But it’s after 11 now,” she re- minded him. “That's all right. How long do you think it takes to chuck a clean shirt in a bag. Listen now, Sweetheart, get to bed as soon as you can, and get, @ little sleep. You must be all shot, you poor little kid. Why don't you , get hold of Bob Newton?’ Bob's here now. Bob and Rita.” “That's good,” he approved. “They'll take Zip off your hands, Take good care of my girl, won't you, Molly? Do it for me, Sweetheart. Don't stay up all night. Let Bob take care of things. Will you be able to sleep, dear?” “Oh, yes,” she lied. “I will. And Til meet your train in the morning. Hurry now, or you'll miss it. Listen dear, can you hear me? I love you.” “And I love you!” he cried. “More than ever, Molly. I was thinking about you when the phone rang. I * don’t ever do anything but think about you, I guess. It’s wonderful to hear your voice. Do you honestly love me as much as you used to?” “ Goodnight, dear.” Bhe slipped the receiver slowly in place. One of her dearest friends oa sages fee ne still talk al jove! ‘as there something wrong with her? Something cold and i ‘Were other people like t “Tomorrow!” her heart kept sing- ing. “Tomorrow!” But she thrust the anticipation from her. And conjured, instead, s vision of Ruth. Bob and Rita took Zip home with them. And Molly, when they had ° gone, found the memory book of her Freshman year, with all its heart- wrenching memories of Ruth. For she and Ruth had roomed together that year, and that was the year Zip gave Ruth the moonstone she called her engagement ring. All night Molly sat with the book across her knees. ‘When dawn came, she put coffe on, and while it was boiling, she took shower. Then she lay quietly down. not to sleep, but to relax, so that Jack ‘would not know she had not slept all the night. ‘When his. train she was waiting. (To Be Continued) came, NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Notice Is Hereby Given That virtue of a judgment and decree in foreclosure rendered and given by the District Court, Fourth Judicial Dis- trict, Burleigh’ County, North Dakota, and entered and docketed in the office of the Clerk of said Court on the 14th day of June, A. D. 1929 in an action wherein Gate City Building and Loan Association, a corporation, is. plain tiff, and Carroll D. Kin King, his wife, are defendants, in favor of said Plaintift and_ against ne Hundred Twenty-four and 43/100 ($2924.43) Dollars with interest thereon from June 14 . D. 1928, according to the terms and conditions in mortgage contained, which judgment and decree, among other things, 4i- rected the sale by me of the real estate hereinafter describe to satisfy the amount of said judgment with in- terest thereon and costs and expenses of such sale or 80 much thereof as the proceeds of such sale applicable thereto will satisfy and by virtue of a writ to me issued out of the office of the o rt in and for xaid County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, and under the seal of said Court, directing me to sell said real property hereinafter described pursuant to said judgment and de- e. I, ‘Rollin, Welch, as Sheritt of Burleigh County and the person pointed by raid Court to make fale, will sell, and judsi and after described real estate to the h J * by ¢ ighest bidder for cash at public auc- , tion at the Front Door of the Court- house in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 3rd day of September, A. D. 1929 at 2 o'clock in the after- noon of that day to satisfy said juds- ment, with Interest and costs thereon and the costs and expenses of such sale, or so much thereof as the pro- ceeds of such sale applicable thereto will satisty. The premises to be sold as afore- sald, pursuant to said judgment and decree and to said writ and to this re described as follows, to- Thirty (30) and Thirty-one Sevent: ht (78) of ‘offin's Addition to the City of Bismarck, County of Bur- Dakota, ace cording on file in the office of t! in and for said County r with the buildings Ww. Ww Plain- att ont Bthice anaress He28 Breas, Fare Born Pas NOTICE TO COAL BIDDERS jealed Falta Neorttied a Be rs t ‘ a

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