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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) AO OR ae Ahh Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice -t Bismarck as 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 (iu Bisntarck) Daily by mail per year (in state, outside Bismarck) ....... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota , in state, per year .. Weekly , in state, three years for Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakot per yeal ... Weekly by mail in Canada. per year Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the tocal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (nooeporated ) 6 Formerly G. Logan Payne Oo. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON The Road Problem . vhich will face the mel One of the major questions whic ‘ bers of the next legislature—and they will face many—is how to meet the state's road problem. F | Governor Shafer and the members of his administra- | tion were hopeful, at the June election, that the proposal to increase the state gasoline tax from three cents to four cents would be approved and temporary relief given to the state highway commission in its financial difficulties. The voters, however, viewed the subject differently and n 11 majority. the proposal was beaten by a sma’ h noe the matter comes to the fore again. As a means of providing employment for workers, the federal gov- lable approximately $800,000 of ernment has made aval alte al aid money. These are funds contrib- additional feder: paliadeiaoudia hing he federal government t Pea tc use in building roads. The conditions nore which the money is allotted, however, require that a state and its counties match each dollar of federal ai f their own. vat faa nie to do this and the result is the ad- ditional federal money will pee Ue use in speeding y f highway construction. Luana ae these facts when they refused to sup- port the gasoline tax increase. And yet there evidently was a good reason for their disapproval. Probably it was of the fact that a gasoline-tax increase was real answer to the preblent. asoline taxes were raised the number and amount a Fae ade to persons using gasoline for uses nther than as fuel for motor vehicles, increased in direct pro- Some persons voted against it on the theory that this was no time to increase taxes of any kind. Others because they may have felt Lie the tax was not i all classes of people. shales oe the tax increase idea was defeated and the next opportunity to deal with the matter falls to the legislature. Fortunately, perhaps, the legislature will be controlled by the same political group which elected its candiate to the governorship. If that group can devise @ satisfactory plan it shayid have little trouble in putting the plan thrgugh. ‘There will he no division sibility. ieee ie an answer is seen in the fact that an increase in the money available to be spent on roads will provide more jobs and put more money into circulation in North Dakota. A substantial portion of that moncy would come from outside the state. It also is seg in the fact that applications for road {mprovements, now on file with the state highway com- mission, would use up more than the amount of money which will be available for new projects during the next three years. In other words, the construction program now is three years behind the demand and falling farther behind each month. If the legislature meets the problem satisfactorily it will receive credit from persons interested in more and better roads for North Dakota. If it fails to provide a solution it may be subjected to some criticism. A Cause for Pride North Dakota has received some splendid advertising from the fine showing made by the Enderlin Junior Baseball Team in the various contests sponsored by the American Legion. Having won the state title once, they were forced to re-play the championship game because of a technical error on the part of tournament officials. They proved their mettle by winning the deciding game all over vgain. | ‘Then, labeled as a dark horse and subject to the derision which persons living in large cities sometimes heap 4pon their fellows from smaller communitics, they went to the regional series at Sioux Falls, S. D. There the North Dakota club proved that it had grit as well as ability to play real baseball. It was a surprise to the teams representing’ Minnesota, Wisconsin and South Dakota when the lads from the Flickertail state demonstrated that they were outstanding in the area. ‘There was no small-town complex visible at Sioux Falls. Going to Denver for the western district series, the winner of which will participate in the “Little World Series,” the lads from Enderlin found themselves pitted aganist the streng Denver team. Advance dope made the Colorado boys the toyrnament favorites. Here again the true North Dakota spirit was in evi- dence. The Enderlin club played heads-up baseball all the way and when the final score was registered. the tournament favorite was out of the running and Ender- lin had won another battle. ‘The game Friday was a different story. The team had insuffieient reserve strength and Enderlin lost by a 14 to 1 seore. Enderlin had only one pitcher, an able lad named Hendrickson. 5 But the Nerth Dakota team was glorieus, even in de- feat. Its members proved that they are worthy repre- sentatives of their native state and all North Dakota can be proud of them. They gave the world to understand that there is a race of real men now in the making in this state; men who ean hold their own against any competition. m- | recognition only a makeshift and not @ portion. The Danger of Delay The fact that one person in every seven over the age of 30 now dies of cancer makes it extremely important that the general public take advantage of every facility that medical science offers for the .checking of this disease. In this connection the current bulletin of~the American Society for the Control of Cancer prints an article that is worth quoting from here. “If there is one fact of which we have clear and cer- tain knowledge,” writes Dr. David Arthur Welsh, “it is that cancer is often curable. Yet in this enlightened age one is astounded at the extent to which patients will allow cancers to grow before they seek advice. They hesitate and hesitate until they are indeed lost. Whereas, if they had consulted their doctor at an earlier stage, and the doctor had known what to do, a tragedy might have | new use for mercury. with cancer is darkened by those tragedies of ‘too late.’ I do not hesitate to say that many of the deaths now credited to cancer should more properly be ascribed to neglect.” This is worth remembering. If you ever find any growth on your body that might, conceivably, be can- cerous—see your doctor at once. In that way only can you hope to 1each safety. Mrs. Moody’s Wisdom It is probable that Helen Wills Moody's recent refusal to participate in a hig tennis tournament will gain for that attractive young woman a.good many new friends. By her refusal she has, in a way, emphasized the fact that she is strictly what she {fs supposed to be—an amateur player. The very essence of any amateur sport is that it is played for fun. There are times and occasions when it appears that some tennis stars make their tennis a regu- lar occupation. Nothing interferes with it. They travel from one end of the country to another, unceasingly, to play in highly-advertised tournaments. The implica- tion is that fun is not their only motive. Mrs. Moody has acted wisely. She has dgmonstrated that tennis to her, is just a game—and, thereby, has proved the genuineness of her amateur status. Now that the American Dental association has ap- proved whisky and brandy as medicinal agents in the practice of dentistry, the time is not far distant when the dentist's office will be referred to simply as a filling station. A prize of $25,000 is being offered for the inventor of a It must have lost a lot of prestige in the recertt heat spell. To many Canadians, the arrival of the R-100, of course, is the dawn of a new centul | Editorial Comment | Side Issues (Emmons County Free Press) A friend who recently attended a college commence- ment, made the following remark, which hits conditions in all towns including Linton. “Most of what these young people have learned in this college,” she said, “will soon be forgotten. But one thing they have learned, and college graduates usually have that power, is that they become able to distinguish side issues from really important things.” This gift is not confined to college graduates. A lot of people who have but little education }.ave it. But it makes all the difference in the world to g person or to a community. Take organizations. A society will be run- ning along fine. And then someone gets clected to some office, andpeople think that person wears the wrong kind of clothes, or fails to use good.gr2mmar, or does not go with the right set. If that person is doing good work on the job, these side issues make no particular difference. But @ lot of people can’t see it, and they get sore over these side issues, and qui: or lose interest and the organisation suffers a decline. ‘Take community progress. Someone starts a good Project, which ought to be put through. But some peo- ple think the one that started it does not belong to the right crowd, or they find minor flaws in his idea. They turn down the whole proposition because of some quar- rel about these little side issues, and the plan is wrecked: A lot of people in their own personal efforts are con- stantly being diverted by side issues from the real ends of life. Any one who keeps reading good books, maga- zines, and newspapcrs. and tries to associate with intel- ligent and thoughtful poonls. is apt to keep his mind on the main aims and objectives of life, and not waste rae and do harm by dwelling too much on the side ues, Citizenship for Balchen (New York Times) Bernt Baichen, the Norwegian American pilot, was one of the real heroes of the Byrd Antarctic expedition. His fighting “confused air currents” to lift the plane up through the Axel Heiberg gorge to the polar plateau vindicated his commander's judgment of him as “always true, @ capable and dependable man.” It is not pleas- ant to hear that Bernt Balchen, who wants to become an American citizen, having taken out his first papers in 1927, may be Penalized for serving two years under Admiral Byrd in the Antarctic. John Buys, a Hollander, who served as a seaman with the Byrd expedition, finds himself in the same predica- ment. He too had taken out his first papers. Absence from the country for one year breaks the continuity of residence, says the naturalization law. Commissioner Crist is reported as holding that both mien, if the law is strictly followed, must begin the term of five years’ residence again. Apparently it has not always been strictly followetl. An act of 1924 permits temporary ab- | sences from the United States of six months. In his report for 1926 Commissioner Crist said: The requirement of residence is susceptible of such wide latitude in its constructions that citi- zenship has been conferred repeatedly where the alien has been absent from the United States for from three to four and a half years during the five years, as evidenced by cases appearing in the published reports, In 1928 Commissioner Crist renewed his criticism of the courts when construing the five years’ “continuous” residence provision, He declared that there had been “no uniformity of rule in the interpretation of this most vital provision of the law.” It is conceivable that the courts might reckon service at Little America as in the nature of the “continuous” residence required, but @ short cut to the relief of the two applicants is pro- posed in the bill introduced in the house by Repregenta- tive Bloom of New York on May 20. It provided that if an alien proved to the satisfaction of the court that, while absent from the United States, he’had been “under employment by or contract with the government of the United States or an American institution of research,” and actually engaged in the work required of him, the period of absence could be counted as part of the five- year term of residence. They Give Us Too Much Credit (Beach Advance) We very much appreciate the compliment seme folks Pay the Advance when they cuss us for being optimistic as to crop yields, this year, because, as they say, the Chamber of Commerce or Chicago Board of Trade sees the items and at once drops the price a few pegs. None of the great grain exchanges nc: scan n2wspapers to see how things are here or elsewhere, for long ago they had their scouts in the field and have a better esti- mate than any loc3l newspaper can make; the railway company haé its employes all along the line making weekly or oftener reports; every elevator on the line is @ news bureau for the termi nd aly bit of optim- ism the home paper may c: in effort to help the morale of the people is ~ meyer noticed beyond the confines of the eount: We are not of the kind t':7! *- happiest when un- happy, for we do not believe unhappiness gets us any- where, especially in this year when conditions here are so much better than in most plzces over the entire eountry, and if this csv-ty *- 7 > 53-bushel erop it would cut as little figure on the market as a single proposi- tion as an added drop would affect a barrel of water. We of the Golden Valley really have much to be thankful for, even though conditions are ~-+ anyways near what we could wish them. Lamentations will not boos: nricas, increase the yield nor change the weather. If they did we would head the procession with a b--- ¢~um and a sledge hammer! It's a darned site better for us to fac? things as best me may, study the sit; ion, “"4 ty to hk: i another visits‘ion of like conditions, We have splenc’ ! farm land he: ers to till it. Even the famcus Nile valley has its disas- ters and crop!::3 years, iJ ‘Iture everywhere has its seasons of ups and c as the cotton raisers, the fruit growers and all who wzest a living from Mother Earth, so we must carry on with that spirit which has kept farircrs going from the beginning of cregtion— the cpinft that keeps them going in good times and bad and with a hopefulnzss beyond compare. We know of no other occupation that demands 30 much courage, and we know of no other business wherein ve id keep ~-‘~~ in the face of such trials . is often depressing ¢ 4 ‘orking overtime to make it worse, or imozining things that have no foundation been averted. The experience of all who had dealings in fact. | A Broth That Too Many Cooks Could Spoil! | SESE l Today Is the : Anniversary of PERRY’S BIRTH On Aug. 23, 1785, Oliver Hazard} Perry, noted American naval officer, whose celebrated victory on Lake Erie is regarded one of the most heroic episodes of the War of 1812, | was born at South Kingston, R. I. Entering the navy at the age of 14, Perry gained valuable experience but 10 years later in the war against Tripoli, shortly after the’ outbreak of the War of 1812, he was sent to Erie to take charge of the construc- lion of a fleet with which the Amer- icans hoped to wrest from the British the control of Lake Erie. By the end of the summer of 1813) he succeeded in. building and man-| ning @ squadron of nine vessels. He) sailed them against the British fleet, comprising six larger and stronger ships. The English so hotly attacked | the Lawrence, Perry’s flagship, that out of 101 men on it only 18 escaped | injury. At this juncture. Perry left} the Lawrence and: was rowed to the Niagara in a small boat. Resuming the conflict, he gained aj brilliant victory, taking all the British | ships. He sent the following dispatch announcing the result: “We have met the enemy and they are ours.| Two ships, two brigs, one schooner, and one sloop.” For this service Con-| gress gave Perry a gold medal. —_—_—_— | Quotations | ——— ee “It is the woman who pays. I am lost without Carol.”—Mme. Lupescu. ses | “No wife can endure a gambling husband unless he is a steady win- ner.”—Lord Thomas Robert Dewar. xe % | “Orange juice symbolizes some of the rush-hurry of the American peo- ple. They squeeze every bit of energy | | i The diszrammed photogra, _and Arizona, and gives the dime! Dodge, who has guided many By NEA Service Las Vegas, N. M., Aug. 23.—After years of discussion and planning, Uncle Sam's biggest constructicn job since Muscle Shoals and one of the biggest since the Panama Canal is soon to get under way. On or about Oct. 1, actual work on the $165,000,000 Boulder Dam project will be started when the Union Pa- cific railroad begins building 2 spur track from Bracken, Nev., just south of Las Vegas, to a pcint near t!:e dam site on the Colorado river. Following this will come construction of the great dam with its accompanying huge locks and hydro-elestric plants, a task that will require years, : Las Vegas is only 30 miles away and, of course, will benefit by this great improvement but about the last thing the city’s leading business men Work on Huge Boulder Dam, Nation’s- ph at the to sion from the things they do.” — Maria Germanova. se “Virture is its own punishment.”— Harrison Owen. s* & “I doubt if work ever killed any~ body.”—Arnold Bennett. ee “Morality for its own sake has no claim upon us."—Dr. Hornell Hart, of Bryn Mawr. se @ “The secret of my success is that I am really looking for my Dream Girl.”"—Rudy_ Vallee, crooner. * * “We must interpret a bad temper as the sign of an inferiority complex.” —Dr. Alfred Adler, psychiatrist. * * “The Anglo-Saxon conscience does not prevent the Anglo-Saxon from sinning—it prevents him fram enjoy- ing his sin.’"—Salvador de Madariaga. ed “Some negotiations have to be dis- cussed man to man, in private."— Henry L. Stimson, secretary of state. ee * ““T know, now, that those in the {high places are those first aitacked hy fate."—Norma Shearer, movie ac- tress. ~ *** “Books are too often asasaciated with the unattractive grind, the dry- as-dust .professor, the pretentious in- tellectual, and the sentimental school girl devouring the latest trash.”"—W. W. Norton, writer. * * * “I find life very beautiful. Heavens, ow beautiful sleeping is! I sleep feng and happily.”— Hans’ Moser, comie acter. BIDS WANTED The school board of Christiania School District will receive bids for ransporting children to school No. 2; all children to be transported that heretofore attended school No. 1 or would attend No. 1 All bids to be at J. W. Beyer's house on or before 8 p.m. August 30, 1930. A J. W. BEYER, 8/2 Clerk. shows the site The map at the right shows tb want is for it to become a hectic boom town, with the resulant unstable prosperity that goes with boom towns. They are more careful and far-seeing. Warn Against ‘Sharks’ In fact, they warn that the Union Pacific will not employ more than 300 men in building the railroad and that work on Boulder Dam itself will not start before next spring. They also warn against wild speculation in real estate, like that experienced at Muscle Shoals, explaining to investors that muck of the adjacent land is at too high an altitude to be irrigated, even after the great development is com- pleted. A number of companies to sell lots in the area have already been formed. | They want prosperity and they in- tend to get it, but they want the solid e to the scene, and, when completed. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1980 ———— | BARBS \ Some day a newspaper paragrapher is going to read a stary on escaped gas or hot air and not even think of making a ht ps3 about Congress. ** A waiter in Paris, a news dispatch reads, has become popular opera star. Proving again that all good things come to him who waits. ** * Tt will be just a stroke of fate, of | course, that will bring those mixed-up | babies together in a Pullman car) some day and have them argue about their gerths. ** * ‘Women are to wear skirts longer. And if the Qusiness depression con- tinues, they'll be wearing ‘em longer than they expect. xk * | The theatrical season is so poor} that many actors in Chicago are working in stores. Probably in meat, ‘stores; where they can rub elbows with the hams. xe * Men, according to the headlines, used to eng their lives over their fi- ancees, byt now it's because of their finances. * * * Maine went delirious oven Rudy Vallee when the famous crooner vis- ited his native state the other day. Many will see little appropriateness now in the expressio. “As Maine goes, So goes the nation.” (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘Wallpaper is said to date back to the year 1481. COAL BIDS NTED Sealed bids will be received by the school board of Gibbs School District No. 32, Burleigh County, for 20 tons of lignite coal delivered at school building. Bids will be opened on Tues- day, Sept. 2nd, at 8 P.M, The board reserves the right to reject any or all_ bids. tonplant. Only th plant are eaten, and make an appetizing dish plain water. The water and contains gaadly amounts of both sodium and lime, » making an alkaline-forming food. It is a very hol starchy property he enjoys the taste and finds it @ most agreeable vegetable. This quality is the basis of success of okra in the southern states. Okra is largely used in soup, in chicken gumbo, rice gumbo and ather equally famous dishes. If you cannat obtain the okra fresh in your district you can probably, obtain it in cans and it is good either way. Here are some recipes which you should try: Okra Soup 5 small carrots, 3 tomatoes, 1 large bunch of parsley, %% pound af okra, Celery salt end water. Boil until vegetables are tender, and serve, Okra and Corn Okra may be combined with corn, using equal quantities of both, and using either fresh okra and green corn cut from the cob, or using the canned variety of both. Place in a| tart! Sore Gish hed Oem Wnt She ore soft. Okra, Celery and Tomatoes A good vegetable stew can be made by cooking equal parts ef chopped okra, chopped celery and chopped to- matoes together. ” Yellow Teeth Question: J. C. L. writes: “I had white, clean-loaking teeth until about @ year ago, when they began turning yellow. I wash them after each meal, but within a few hours a yellow sub- stance collects on them which I car remove with a nail file. I would ap- Preciate your advice about this.” Answer: Yellowish teeth are the natural condition with some people. However, it is possible some other condition is responsible in yeur own case and I would advise you to con- sult @ good dentist. Do not use a nai! file te scrape your teeth because by doing so you are apt to injure them and make them subject to decay. Palate Falls Question: Mrs. T. N. asks: “How ean I keep my palate from being down so much?” Answer: You may be able to strengthen the cords af your palate by the use of vocal exercises and by fal- lowing the diet for overcoming ca- (Copyright, 1930, hy The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) NOTICE 01 PURSU Ex! Notice Is Hereby Given, That by virtue of a decree of the District SUART fo SPECIAL -ECUTION Court in and for the County of Bur- leigh, Fourth Judicial District of the and boil in slightly sajted water until soft, then remove the lid and allow the water to evaporate, and stir in a lump of butter. Prepared in this way okra may be used either hot as a fresh vegetable, or cald as a garnish for | ri; rice or fish. Scalloped Okra In the bottom of a baking dish ar- range @ thin layer of Melba toast. Over this place @ layer of cooked okra, then a layer of Melba toast crumbs and last of all a layer of raw sliced tomatoes. Sprinkle with cheese and celery salt and bake until the to- matoes are soft. Chicken Gumbo Soup t Chop up into small parts pieces of chicken. Add about equal amounts of okra, cover with water and cook until tender, then add a small amount of cream, chopped parsley and celery salt to taste. QUESTIONS. AND ANSWERS Gland Fanctioning Question: Mrs. FP. P. : “What is the function of the pituit gland, and in what way does it affect @ per- son? What are the symptoms of a disturbed pituitary gland? normal or abnormal one be deter- mined by the X-ray?” Answer: The pituitary gland is di- vided into two distinct lobes, each of which seems to have different func- tions. The exact difference of the interior and posterior secretions have not been definitely determined. An un- derfunctioning of the pituitary gland may produce a very obese individyal resembling a fat boy. An excess of the secretion may produce enlarge- ment of the hands, feet, lower jaw, and an increase in height, produ giantism. It is generally admit that the front lobe exerts most of the influence upon the bodily , and the posterior lobe upon the metabo- Dated Aug. location, Below, left, is the site as it, an righ The Union Pacific, trackage to a point called Summit—22 miles of grading — will cost approximately $2,500,000. From Summit, it is 7.13 miles to the dam site. This link will be built by the Union Pacific for the government on a basis of cost, plus 10 per cent. Because of the moun- tainous country it represents unusu- ally difficult enginering problems.. Elevators for Workers The dam will built at the mouth of the Black Canyon on the roaring Colorado river. On the mesas above the stream—several hundred feet from the bottom of the canyon—a lelty will be built to accommodate workers, Elevators will take the men to and from their work on the canyon floor. | Before the dam foundations can be |laid it will be necessary to “dry up” seen from the architect's drawing of how the huge development | lism. The normality or abnormality Long-Dehated $165,000,000 Project in West, Soon To Start of said Court on the 15th day of Feb- ruary, A. D, 1930, in an action where- in Company A, First Regiment, North Dakota National Guard” Training Schoo corporation, wag plaintif and the State of North Dakota, C. B. Little, Edmond A. Hughes y H ughes, Dakota Motor Com a corporation, H. P. Goddard, F." A Copelin, Red Fiame Publishing Com- pany, a corporation, Carl R. Koaitsky . ©. Hendricks. A. M. Landgren, A Pollock, and ail persons unkno glaiming any estate or interest in or Nen or encumbrance upon the prop- erty described ip the complaint, defendants. and George F. Shafer, vernor of the State of North Da G. A. Fraser, Adjutant Genera: akota. and L. the the State of North ‘Baird, Colonel R. First Regimen: Commanding xorth Dakota jorth Dakota; and First, Regiment, th decr 4 that all ular the prem! in said decree and hereinafter described be sold at public auction by the undersigned ay iherfit of the County of B h, «in the State of North Dakota, and ‘the person appointed as the officer of the Court to make such sale. and costs and disburse- ed. nd that the proceeds of said sale plied, first, ui the ments of sale: second, to pay the lien of the Si ef North Dakota upon said premises amounting to the sum of Five usand Dollars ($5,000.00), Yithout Interest: and. third. to pay the lien of said defenda: c. B. 4 tle and Mary H. Hugh upon said |. Hugi remises, amounting to the sum weive Thousand Nine Hundred Sigh- tysight Dollars and Forty-nine Cente (413,988.49). or such amount thereof as shali remain due thereon after spplring the net and profits, September, 19 nd t! la or adding to said sum any net that operat said joss. ay arise from the expense and ion of said premises during time: hats Rollin Welch. Sheriff of the County of Burleigh, Ni Dakota, in the State of North and the person ap- wil 1 sell a der scribed, the front door of the court house, in the City of Bismarck. in said nty of Burleigh and State of North Dakota. on the 22nd day of September, A. B. 1930, at the hour of two o'clock in the chosen for Boulder Dam, on the Colorado river, which forms the boundary between Nevada. this flow of water. To accom} this, four ditches will be dug; river temporarily and the water to be diverted around the dam site via these ditches, When completed, Boulder Dam will impound 26,000,000 acre-feet of water into a great lake. This will develop ® million horsepower of energy as it passes out for irrigation purposes. Flood control works around the Im- Perial Valley of California, and the construction of an all-American canal from the Colorado river to the fertile Imperial Valley are also provided in. the project. At present, the valley gets its water from a canal that runs mostly through Mexico. ‘The power generated will be dis- tributed over several western states foe ‘9 cig 08 fer Sway 98 LAE Abs geles. afternoon of 8: in said di rit of special jssued out at thi f said Court, sold as the idder for cash to satis high: said liens with accrued expe 5 aforesaid, and the expenses of sale, 0 much thereof as the proceeds of id sale applicable thereto wil! = isfy: that th id sale wil ue 6 said Court, the period of time mption allowed in and by said old as aforesaid pura e and writ and io this notice are situated in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota and are described as follows, tq-wit eNotes Zienty three | (23), and ‘Twen' four (24), Block Fifty- two (52), Original Plat of the City of Bismarck, in said County and State. ated this 16th day of August. A. D. 1930- e ROLLIN WELCH. Sheriff of Burleigh County, i North Dakota. ZUGER & TILLOTSON, Attorneys for defendants, CB. Lite end Mary H. Hughes. (Be. 16-23-30- BIDS FoR ROUTES he Menoken School District No. 33 will hy bids for t following route: ee Pres. Hy bea -2 38-15000 sie 7 a t We