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a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1930 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second clas mai] matter. George D. Mann .....sscceseee President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per Year ......esseeeee: Daily ie mail per year din Daily by mail per year in state, outside Bismarck) . $7.20 eos 1.20 ceeeee, 6.00} But Lieutenant Goddard had successfully taken a pic- Daily by mail outside of North Dak 6.00) ture of the sleeping city, even though its sleep was dis- Week! mail in state, per year .. $1.00] turbed by his methods. Weetly uv mail in state, tare years . 2.50] Thus a new development in the photographic art comes ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .. Member Audit Burean of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein All tights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER nea LEVINGS Q ated) ‘ly G. Logan Payne Co, NEW YORK BOSTON Former! CHICAGO Why Men Go Exploring The explorer’s job has fallen upon evil days. Most of the blank spaces on the map have been filled in, and it is a dismally long way to an authentic frontier. In a very few years there will be nothing left on earth to explore. Nevertheless, exploration is still a live issue. Admiral Byrd is still busy telling people about his trip into the Antarctic. Sir George Wilkins is getting his submarine ready for an Arctic voyage. And a full translation of Andree’s diary is now on sale in the book stores, It is really this diary, which is included in the book called “Andree's Story,” that sets one thinking about exploring. For it provides, probably, as good a glimpse as we shall ever get into the mind of an explorer on the job. It enables us to see just what an explorer thinks, what his hopes and fears and ideals are, while he is actually in the midst of his adventure. Andree’s balloon trip into the northland was as daring as any bit of polar exploration ever attempted. It ended, as everyone knows, when Andree crashed on the polar ice. Then came three months of desperately difficult hiking over the ice, with barren White Island as the goal, and with death coming not long after this lonely bit of land had been reached. : And Andree? Most of the time he thought simply of the job at hand. He remembered that he was in the northland as a scientist; so, even while he and two com- Panions were fighting a losing fight to stay alive, he collected specimens, made scientific observations and indulged in speculations about the submarine animal life and the make-up of ice floes in the Arctic sea. Even toward the last, when he must have seen that he was playing a losing hand, he took the time to jot Gown a list of suggestions for some future aerial expedi- ‘tion to the pole, summarizing the lessons that his own flight had taught him. Nowhere is there much thought of death. Only oc- casionally is there any trace of personal ambition. Once he mentions that he and his companions, sailing at mid- night over the silent ice floes, are “very proud”; once he.remarks that they are not afraid to die, if die they must; but for the most part the entries are strictly businesslike. All of this is just a little bit disappointing. What we stay-at-homes would like is a complete and detailed ex- planation of the force that got Andree up into the Arctic in the first place, But that is just the sort of thing we never get. The explorer moves in obedience to an inner voice that the rest of us cannot hear. If his exploration cost: him his life, he does not complain; and his reward, probably, comes in those brief moments when, like Andree, alone in a vastness where no man has been before, he is “very proud.” The Dreams of Youth The boy who runs away from home is always a rather Pathetic figure. The vision that leads him to run away 4s usually so glittering and exciting; the reality that he actually gets is so miserable and disappointing. A few days ago a high school youngster in a small: city in Pennsylvania decided that it was time for him to leave, This lad planned to enter college next fall, but he was having a great deal of trouble with his algebra; so much trouble, indeed, that he concluded he could never get into college. So he announced that he ‘was going to quit school and get a job. His parents pointed out that jobs are very scarce these days what with skilled workers tramping the over the sleeping city of Rochester, New York, one night, set off the terrific flash and threw the whole place into ®@ panic. The flash exploded with a blinding glare; a rumbling echo as of distant gunfire roared over the city. The terrified householders ran into the streets in their nightgowns, yelling that the town was being bombed. Windows were broken in stores below and the tinkle of glass was added to the scream of fire sounds, the wail of burglar alarms and the whistles of a dozen cops on a dozen beats who thought a bank had.been blown up. It took the police and the telephone company sev- eral hours to restore quiet. into being, even though the residents of Rochester might have wished the army man had given warning or had chosen a pastoral scene to make his test. Water Power and Coal A special committee of the U. S. chamber of com- merce recently issued a report on water power develop- ment, showing that water and coal are staging a neck- and-neck race to supply the electric power which is revolutionizing industry. Thus, in 1912, water power produced 6,585,000,000 kilo- watt hours of electricity—37.5 per cent of the total elec- tricity produced in the nation. Last year water power Production had risen to 35,000,000,000 kilowatt hours; but this was only 36 per cent of the total—a slightly lower ratio than in 1912. This is a striking tribute to engineering genius. More efficient methods of extracting power from coal have been devised; 25 years ago, for instance, it took nearly four times as much coal to produce a kilowatt hour of electricity as it takes today. So it is that despite the increase in water-driven power projects, water and coal today have the same relative positions that they had nearly 20 years ago. Prohibition in the Courts Thirsty citizens looking for the return of the legal- ized sale of alcoholic liquor would do well not to reiy too heavily on the decision of a federal judge in New} Jersey that the prohibition amendment is invalid. However, one imagines that the supreme court may not look at the question eye to eye with this Jersey justice. A decade ago the status of the amendment was pretty thoroughly argued before the supreme court and that body upheld it in every detail. Whether or not any change in the prohibition law is coming is something that only the seventh son of a seventh son could say. However, if a change does come it will, and should, come by legislative action. There is very small likelihood that the courts will turn us from a dry nation into a wet one. Editorial Comment Fditorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Trib- une's policies. Revolution Comes North (Washington Star) Guatemala becomes the fifth Latin American republic in 1930 to upset a government by revolution, taking her Place alongside Bolivia, Peru, Argentina and Brazil, The northernmost country of Central America, with Mexico for its neighbor, is no stranger to government upheavals, by force. A year after Manuel Estrada Cabrera was turned out of office by a revolution in 1920, following 22 years of presidential dictatorship, his successor, Carlos Herrera, was himself overthrown by a coup d'etat. Now: the regime which was headed by a constitutionally elected president, Gen. Lazaro Chacon, has gone the way of Babrera and Herrera, There is nothing new under the blazing Guatemalan sun. In 1923 the Central American states, more or less under the auspices of the United States, entered into a treaty whereby it was thought that the revolutionary system would be repudiated. Our own government is not a party to the treaty, but, as to recognition of Central Ameri- can administration set up by revolt, has usually ad- hered to the spirit of the pact. The treaty provides that @ revolutionary government shall not be recognized until it holds office by virtue of assent by elected rep- resentatives of the people. To meet this provision the new Guatemalan provisional president, or. any per- manent officer, must be in authority with the consent and approval of the national congress, which is now in session, Gen. Manuel Orenalla, who is the third president Guatemala has had within a week, appears to be in- stalled with some prospect of durability, though that, in the light of Guatemalan history, past and current, is only a relative term. One of the ephemeral govern- ments of the past few days contrived to secure Wash- ington’s recognition. The foreign diplomatic corps at the capital seems to have lent a mediatory influence and eat in on conferences looking to the reestablish- ment of peace. A congressional statement declares that “the critical period is over” and calls attention to the tact that “the recent political difficulties resulted in a minimum of blood spilling.” Unfortunately, the outside world is confronted with the obvious necessity of re- Prepared, at almost any moment and almost streets and factories closed. But the boy knew better—: as all boys, in such circumstances, do. With him, things would be different. He would go away, get a job, earn his own living, and show ‘em all. So away he went; and a week later he was discovered. in a Cleveland breadline, shuffling along the sidewalk with a hundred other hungry job seekers to get a bow! of soup and a cup of coffee. His money was gone. So was his hope. And shortly thereafter his parents came to take him home. By now this young man is a good deal wiser than he was before he left home; and wisdom gained as he gained it, at 18, is hard to take. It is the sort of wis- dom we all have to get, sooner or later, of course. But ‘one can’t help feeling sorry for him. For at 18 one is ready to take the world at its face value. One is, moreover, very confident of one’s self. All of these solemn warnings that older folk pass out—| what are they but the mutterings of people who have never really known how to go after what they wanted? At 18 one dreams dreams and sees visions; and those distant battlements that rise beyond the horizon, gaily beflagged, with the sunlight on their turrets—will they not surrender at the first assault to a youth who knows how to attack them? Of course. And so it is that lads in their ‘teens ge: restless with school work and want to strike out for them- selves. Sometimes they make the break, and sometimes they do not. In either case they learn, sooner or later, that things aren't just as they had imagined them, and for @ time after that life is sure to look rather dark vo them. indeed, all of us have somewhere a shadow in our hearts, put there by that first disillusionment. All men, even the luckiest, carry with them a dull resentment against a world which always refuses to conform to the dreams of youth. And so we are always ready to listen to those impractical idealists who have schemes in their heads for reforming the world; and we are ready, too, maining anywhere beyond the Rio Grande, for the adjudication of “political difficulties” through “blood spilling.” They are not our ways, and we deplore them, but as long as they remain the purely local method of composing differences in Latin lands. America’s role can be only that of a sorrowful and always well-wishing observer. Manufacturing Crime News : (Christian Science Monitor) It is difficult to find any slightest justification for the action of a Chicago newspaper which recently trumped up a fictitious murder, staged a sham trial, put it on the air over its own radio station, and then blazoned it over its pages with lurid “screamer” headlines. To make the illusion as complete as possible, the paper On the surface, this is an epoch-making decision.| ¢, 19S o Today Is the Anniversary of DEWEY’S BIRTH On Dec. 26, 1837, George Dewey, an American naval officer, famed for destroying the Spanish Asiatic feet in the Spanish-American war, was born in Montpelier, Vt. After gradating from the United States Naval Academy in 1858 he be- gan active service on the Mediterran- ean station, On‘his return, he par- ticipated in several Civil War engage- ments under Farragut. In 1898, at the outbreak of the war with Spain, Dewey,then a commodore, was appointed to the command of the Asiatic station. On May 1 he entire- ly destroyed the Spanish fleet at Ma- nila Bay without the loss of a man in his own fleet. In recognition of this achievement he was appointed a rear admiral and was especially honored by Congress. He later cooperated in the capture of Manila. He received an enthusiastic reception on his return to the United States and in the same year was made admiral of the navy. He is the only officer who has ever held that rank. eee Oe | Quotations | ——— > Sex appeal is the foundation of life. —Dr. John B. Watson. * * * Anyone who supposes that man is the highest thing in creation can have little idea about the universe—Sir Oliver Lodge . xk * America has produced many dishes worthy of a place on the roll of cul- inary masterpieces, but never a great cook.—Ralph Hitz. > xe * ‘The source of most of the ills of the world ‘lies in glib optimism.—Rev. Reinhold Niebuhr. s * * Modesty is the best policy—Fred Astaire. * oe OK A man in public office is measured by his accomplishments, not by the time he spends in office—Mayor James J. Walker. * OR OK I don’t think I'll every -marry again. —Peggy Hopkins Joyce. t BARBS If a man bites a dog New Year's Eve, that’s booze. * * * ‘The acrobat’s son turned out to be @ disappointment. He couldn't even balance an equation. xe Folks in Germany are %uying Christmas geese on the installment GOOD NIGHT “TH' SECOND IND enlisted several prominent attorneys and a well-known Judge of the city, engaged actors to take the part of Principals and published numerous pictures and special articles by eminent alienists, while almost the only clue to the suprious nature of the affair was an occasional reference to the “radio jury” that was to decide the case. Possibly the newspaper felt there was not enough actual crime with which to regale its readers, and there- fore it must invent more. At all events, the phenomenon has certainly furnished convincing evidence that the Purpose in overplaying crime news is simply the wish to exploit sensation for its own sake and for commercial gain. Andrew R. Sherriff, a member of the Ameri- can Bar association and chairman of its committee on the cooperation of the press and the bar, said of the concocted trial: This “first radio murder trial” reveals as per- haps never before the motive behind much of the sensationalism in the handling of crime by the press. It indicates that this motive is the desire for the sensational. For it is clear that the various stock arguments em- ployed to vindicate the sensationalizing of crime news crumble before this instance of broadcast trumpery. That the “playing up” of crime news is necessary to arouse the public to the gravity of the crime problem, that it is advisable to print all the unpleasant details about @ crime so as to aid in the apprehension of the perpetrator—what validity have these arguments when there has been no crime, and no criminal? And even that timeworn excuse of “giving the public what it wants” is hardly applicable here, for has Chicago to look with a sympathetic and indulgent eye on young- sters who run away from good homes and fetch up at the tail end of a bread line, Air Photography at Night A new and revolutionary invention has now made it Possible to take pictures from airplanes in the black of night. An article in World's Work on serial photography tells the story of the experimental work. Lieutenant Goddard, the inventor, was trailing a flashlight bomb ‘hich would generate 40,000,000 candle power. He flew not sent delegations to eastern centers of news dis- tribution to protest against exaggerated reports of crime in that city? yi The “stunt” invented by this newspaper raises the question whether a great deal of what is published bout actual crimes, beyond their bearing on public safety, is not equally as unreal, foreign and unnecessary to a large majority of readers as was all that was published regarding this fabricated one. . Above all, is it not highly desirable, essential even, that unsuspecting radio listeners, particularly children, be protected from such an insidious infiltration of de- pravity? Public sentiment should certainly see to tt that this “first radio murder trial” is also the last, YouR Ooty . | plan. 1 1 11:30—Organ program: Clara Morris, | Betz Rites Will Be COMMAND HAS DISCOVERED YoU GUYS AINT DOIN’ HES stocr’ HS MITT Here's a goose-step they'll cheer. * * & You don’t have to be a connoisseur of painting to know when a woman has been too liberal with her make- up. ses Many a boy called a “chip off the old block” has grown up to be a con- gressman wise in the arts of log-roll- ing. * ee “We hope,” as the Israelites said when the Egyptians were engulfed, “that this will tide you over for a while.” . (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) \ KFYR { o 7 report. 7:30—Special bulletins: U. S. Depart- ment of Agriculture. 7:45—Meditation period. 8:00—-Around the Town — Radio Floor Walker. 9:00—Sunshine Hour; Myron J. Ber- nett, conductor. 10: ening grain markets. 10:30—Children’s Playtime Club. 10:57—Arlington time signals. 1:00—Grain markets. 12:00—Grain markets; | Bismarck Tribune News and weather; luncheon program. 1:15—Old masters hour. 1:45—Grain markets: High, low and close; Bismarck Tribune News, weather and St. Paul livestock. 2:00—Musical matinee melodies. 2:30—Slesta hour: Good News Radio 3 Magazine. 0—Music. 5 Kusic, 5 ‘World Bookman. 5 Stocks and bonds. 5 Bismarck Tribune sports items. 5:40—Bismarck Tribune news. 0—Music. :00—Dinner hour Clara Morris. ewscasting. 0—Studio program. 8:00—Music, 2 9:00—Dance program (remote). recital: organ TAKEN UP 5 Five hores with the following de- scription: one iron grey mare, weight 1300 Ibs.; one roan gelding, weight 1300 1bs.; one bay mare, weight 1200 1bs.; one white mare, weight 1000 lbs.; one bay mare, weight 800 lbs, ‘The owner may get his horses from the H.R. Wright farm, four miles north of Sterling, by paying for this ad. and also the-damages they have gone: A. F. Eckel! . .F. Eekell, .” “aterling, N. D.. Dec. 26th, Jan. 2nd and 9th Held on Saturday Funeral services for Almond Bets, former McKenzie girl, will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock in the community hall at Menoken. Reverend F. E. Logee, of the First Presbyterian church of Bismarck, will conduct the services. \ WELL, HE'S ALSO DISCOVERED TH’ Ov MAN AINT Cow’ His PuTY, So WHATS HE Goin’ T Oo ABOUT wT 2 IN A PAN ANT FOoNo o1AT: —- ‘FINDERS. WEEPERS' Say, How About'a Little ‘Depression’ Here, Too? EXPENSES OF STATE Ast ,. bag VERNMENT. Ss re GENERAL AV! NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF REDEMPTION heats) id North Dakota, County of Bur- jeigh.—ss. Office of County Auditor, Bismarck, To isaac A. Courtney, Chester, Iowa; Chester Savings Bank, Chester, Iowa; T. P. Hermanson, no address iven, Fou" are hereby notified that the tract of land hereinafter described and which was assessed in your name for taxation for the year 1925 was on the 14th day of December, 1926, duly sold, as provided by law, for the de- linquent taxes of the year 1925, and that the time for redemption ‘from said sale will expire ninety days from the completed service of this notice. Said land is described as follows: Ni of SE% and NEX of SW% and SE% of NW% Section 26, Town- ship 144, Range 76. Number of acres, 160. Amouunt sold for, $62.82. Subsequent taxes pald by purchaser, Amount required to redeem at this date, $282.21. In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice and interest as provided by law and unless redeem said land from said sale before the expiration of the time for redemp= tion as above stated, a deed th will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificate as provided by law. Witness my hand and official seal this 11th day of December, 1930, AMINGE A. C. Ti % (Seal) Auditor Burleigh County, North Dakota. (First publication December 12, 1930.) 12/12-19-26 NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF REDE 10N State of North Dakota, County of Bur- leigh.—ss. Office “ot. County Auditor, Bismarck, To Northern Pacific Railway Com- pany, St. Paul, Minn. You are hereby notified that the tract of land hereinafter described and which was assessed in your name| that for taxation for the year 1926 was on the 13th day of December, 1927, duly | t sold, as provided by law, for the de- linquent taxes of the year 1926, and that the time for redemption from said sale will expire ninety days from the completed service of this notice. Said land is described as follows: Strip of land South of Main Ave, & North of N. P. Right of Way, tween section line and 16th St., City of Bismarck, N. D, N. B. Leased Sites. Amount sold for, $24.09, Amount required to redeem at this date, $32.63. In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice and interest as provided by law and unless you redeem said land from said sale before the expiration of the time for redemp- tion as above stated, a deed thereot will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificate as provided by law. Wipe my hand and official seal this 11th day of December, 1930. A. C. ISAMINGER, (Seal) Auditor Buses County, jorth Dakota. (First publication December 12, 1930.) 12/12-19-26 Crepe.paper soaked in a small amount of water and then squeezed out will result in ink that can be used in an emergency. Police in Boston are equipped with new type vision glasses enabling them to see both before and behind. | OUT OUR WAY By Williams | THAT SHOWS HOW TH! HUMAN MIND worKs. HE'S COMB ENOUGH HO GT Hs FNGER DIRTY AN! THEN BRIGHT ENOUGH O SAY NOTHIN! ABOUT 1T— TRL LIAME, 12-26 ©1990 BY NEA SEAVICE. INC. BY OR.MICCOY WHO.CAN ENCLOSE $1 K ms COY ; Wag lo bale I ¢ DUET wl 9 MEWERED AOORESSED ENVELOPE FOR REPLY +LOS ANGELES- 2 © 1926 MECOY HEALTH SERVICE Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for|chop fine. Add Melba toast crumbs, ¢ the week beginning Sunday, Decem-| butter, and a bit of chopped parsley, ber 28th: SUNDAY Breakfast—One kind of fresh fruit; dish of cottage cheese. Lunch—Lima beans; cooked lettuce; celery. Dinner—Roast pork; small carrots cooked with meat; string beans; salad of stuffed tomatoes; baked apple. MONDAY toast; stewed raisins. Lunch—Oranges, with a handful of Pecans. Dinner—Broiled steak; rutabagas; small green peas; salad of lettuce; Jello or jell-well. TUESDAY Breakfast — Re-toasted breakfast food with cream; stewed dpricots. Lunch—Celery soup; spinach; com- bination salad. Dinner—Leg of mutton; tomatoes and okra en casserole; salad of cold cooked beets; lettuce and cucumber; prune whip. WEDNESDAY Breakfast—Coddled egg; toasted cereal biscuit; stewed figs. Lunch—Buttered carrots and peas; salad of .shredded spinach and parsley. i Dinner— Baked whitefish; string beans; beets; McCoy salad, no dessert. THURSDAY Breakfast—Glass of grapejuice 30 minutes before breakfast; crisp bacon; well browned waffle. Dinner—Celery; ripe olives; celery soup, artichoke salad, baked ham or chicken; *stuffed eggplant, brussels 8] ; baked peaches a la mode. Supper—Minced chicken in tomato Jelly; or cold sliced ham; combination salad or lettuce; tomatoes; cucumber and cooked beets. FRIDAY Breakfast—French omelet; toast; stewed prunes. Lunch—8-Ounce glass of butter- milk; 10 or 12 dates. Dinner—Broiled fillet of sole; oyster melba, ou}turnip salad plant; baked tomatoes; stuffed celery; dessert, no SATURDAY Breakfast — Cottage cheese and ‘pple. Lunch—Baked squas’: rings; string beans; salad of chopped raw cabbage and parsley. Dinner—Vegetable soup; roast beef; escalloped celery, baked ground beets; (cold cooked turnips stuffed with minced vegetables; jello or jell-well. *Baked Eggplant: Boil eggplant un- til tender, cut off top, scoop out and ‘You may also add any other chopped , Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and care of diet addressed to him, The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. non-starchy vegetable you like, Mix well and fill shell. Cover with melba toast crumbs and bake about thirty minutes. Serve with butter. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ¢ Urticaria ical Question: Mrs. J. C. B. asks: “What is the cause of an itch that comes in a red blotch on my eyelids and on the front of my neck? Have had this frequently within the last three months. Worse in the mornings, as.my eyelids are then terribly swollen. I consulted a doctor, but he did not tell me the cause, so I am at a loss to know what to do. A urinalysis showed normal, with the exception of the “specific gravity” being low. What does this term mean?” Answer: You are probably suffering from a form of urticaria and are not eliminating enough poisons from your body. The urinalysis shows this. Leave starches and sugars out of your diet and increase intestinal elimination through taking one or two enemas daily. Leg Troubles Question: Mrs. M. K. writes: “I wish you would tell me what causes my left Jeg to shake and tremble so, from my ankle up through the leg, into my spine. When I walk around just to do @ little housework, it makes me trem- ble all over.” . Answer: Have an examination made of your lower spine to see whether or {not you have a faulty position of the vertebrae. Any osteopath or chiro-y practor would be qualified, by his training, to make such an examina- tion and give you his opinion, Me Throbbing in Head Question: 8. L. writes: “When walk- ing hurriedly, I have a violent throb- bing in the back of my head. Woula this indicate that I might be due for @ ruptured blood vessel some day?” Answer: You may be suffering from high blood pressure, but this can only be ascertained through an examina- tion by a physician. The ache in the back of your head may be caused by prolapsed organs which are still far- ther crowded into the pelvis when you are walking fast or running, NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF REDEMPTION State of North Dakota, County of Bur- leigh.—ss. Oftice, of County Auditor, Bismarck, . Dak. To Northern Pacific Railway Com- in. any, St. Paul, Minn. ‘ou are hereby notified that the tract of land hereinafter described and which was assessed in your name for taxation for the year 1926 was on the 13th day of December, 1927, duly sold, a8 provided by law, for the de- linguent taxes of the year 1926, and time for redemption ‘from will expire ninety days from he completed service of this notice. Said land is described as follows: Strip of land South of N. P. Right of Way, North of Front Ave. be- Section line and 16th St., twee: City of Bismarck, N, D. ease. Amount sold for, $24.09. Amount required to redeem at this date, $32.63. In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this n interest as provded by law ai you re- deem said land from said sale before the expiration of the ti lor redemp- tion as above stated, a deed thereof will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificat 8 provided by law. ‘Witness my hand and official seal this 11th day of eae eS A. C. ISA! Ry (Seal) Auditor Burleigh County, 0} rth Dakot (First publication December 12, 1930.) 12/12-19-26 NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF REDEMPTION mints of North Dakota, County of Bur- leigh.—ss, Orfice “or County Auditor, Bismarck, Courtney, Ches' 75 ik, Savings ‘T. P. Herman: . Dal To Isaac A. Chester. Tow: ive 5; ou are hereby notified that the tract of land hereinafter described and which was assessed in your name for taxation for the year 1925 was on the 14th day of December, 1926, duly sold, 4s provided by law, for the delinquent | @ taxes of the year 1925, and’ that time for redemption from said will expire ninety days from the c pleted service of this notice. Said land is described as follows: 5%, of 8% of 26-144-76 (Section 26, ‘ownship 144, Range 76). Number of acres, 160. Amount sold for, $72.21. eee taxes paid by purchaser, Amount required to redeem at this date, $361.83. In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of tion as above stated, a he will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificate as provides iy law. ‘Witness my hand and official seal this 11th day of gre 1930. A. C, ISAMINGER, (Seal) Auditor eae County, orth ota. (First publication December 12, 1930.) 12/12-19-26 NOTICE TO CREDITORS In_the Matter of the Estate of John F. Horthan, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned Martin J. Horihan, admin- trator of the estate of John F. Horihan late of the township of Wing, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons ha’ a the estate of sald 61 3 dent agent, at the office of Scott Cameron, Attorney, in the City of Bix- marek in Burleigh County, North Da kota, or to the Judge of the County Court of Burleigh County, North Da- kota, at his office in the Court House in the City of Bismarck of Burleigh County, North Dakota. You are hereby further notified that Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge of the County Court within and for the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, shas fixed the 7th day of July, 1931, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock in the fore- noon of said day, at the Court Rooms of said Court, in the Court House in eCity of ‘Bismarck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota, as the time and ei place for hearing and adjusting all claims against the estate of the said john ¥." Horihan, Deceased, which nd regularly presented as @ provided. Dated Dec. 11th, A.D. 1930. MARTIN J. HORIHAN, the Ad ministrator of the estate of John F, Horihan, deceased. First publication on the 19th day of December, A. D. 1930. 12/19-263 1/2 y NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF REDEMPTION State of North Dakota, County of Bur- leigh.—ss. sie ar County Auditor, Bismarck, To Albert Johnson, Kiron, Iowa. You are hereby notified that the tract of land hereinafter described and which was assessed in Jour name for taxation for the year 1926 was on the 13th day of December, 1927, duly sold, as provided by law, for the delinquent taxes of the year 1926, and that the time for redemption from said sale will expire ninety days from the com- pleted service of this notice. Said land is described as fo! 3 BE% Section 2, Township 113, Range 77. Number of acres, 160. i, Amount sold for, $35.43. etc gS taxes paid by purchaser, Amount required to redeem at this date, $211.54, In addition to the above amount you Will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice and interest as provided by law and unless you re- leem said land from said sale before the expiration of the time for redemp- tion as above stated, a deed thereof will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificate as provided by law. my hand and official this 1ith day of December 1990, "ee A. C. ISAMINGE (Seal) Auditor Burlelgh County, forth Dakota. (First publication Decemb: . 1a/2-18-26 0 1 1980.) The first rivetless cargo vessel, f 2,500-barrel tanker came rena, ly by the arc-welding method, hay been launched in Charleston, 8. C, workmen only were employ building the boat. nee Japanese exports to France in the first half of 1930 increased f: e 799,000 francs to 150,500,000. = Even the girl who likes to be a shinin; example bspiag dle oa her nose 4 one, - a