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[jU nited States THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY Make Clean Sweep in Speed 19 WEATHER VAcaREs | NORTHWESTERN RETAINS LEAD IN BIG TEN BASKETBALL RACE Famed Wykoff Leads Move at Listless Gait Except When Burning Up Track R a) 1a M Ser onsOesnkiPHADAOsl a cf = Pas z 8 cs eeeom PIEAS BM PS SS sume PLAGUE ENTRANTS IN SLEIGH CLASSIC | Irving Jaffee, American Ace, Annexes Second Interna- tional Victory WOMEN ARE TO COMPETE! Canadian and U. S. Hockey | Teams Pull Away From European Competitors Lake Placid, N. Y., Feb. 9—(P}— Still exulting in victory such as the United States never before had known in speed skating, the throngs bulging the little village of Lake Placid turn- , ed again to the bob run slide on hazardous Mt. Van Hoevenberg and | the problem of the queer quirks of weather that have plagued the 1932 winter Olympics. Again a blizzard was sweeping the village, piling snow in the flag-draped streets, driving all but the natives in- | doors with its zero temperature. | But even the weather, after wiping out the scheduled start of the two, man bobs yesterday and then relent- | ing to thaw and soften ice on the Olympic stadium skating rink, could not maintain its vagaries long enough | to deprive the United States of the! last of a series of conquests such as! the winter Olympics never before | have seen. | Speeds to Record | In a snowstorm that followed a mid- day thaw, Irving Jaffee, ace of Amer- | ican distance skaters, sped to his sec- | ond Olympic championship in the! 10,000 meters final, giving the United | States its first clean sweep of the four peed skating races in the history of the Olympic competition. Facing as bad, if not worse condi- tions than Monday, the 13 two-man bob teams of Austria, Belgium, Switz- erland, Germany, France, Rumania, Italy and the United States were ready again to dare the steep slopes of Mt. Van Hoevenberg. In the indoor rink, their school figures completed but with no results announced, the fancy skaters of half| @ dozen nations stole a few minutes apiece for practice of the free-skating figures on tonight's program. The results of this competition probably will not be announced until Wednes- | day. | Takes Play From Champ Apparently a new Olympic cham-} pion is in the process of being crown-| ed. Karl Schaefer, world champion from Austria, is taking the play away | from Gillis Clympic figure skating since inauguration of games in 1924, Another legion of figure skaters, the women champions of seven na-} tions, joined competition Tuesday but | they were considered more of a back- ground than threat to the rule of Sonja Henie, brilliant Norwegian | Miss. | The women speed skaters of Can- | ada and the United States faced the | second of their exhibition series, a! 1,000 meters event today. | Canada and the United States pull- | ed farther away from the hockey op- | Position of Poland and Germany| Monday night and seemed certain to} battle for the Olympic championship the | OURBOARDING HOUSE ~ HOME “10 DINNER “TO DRAG Yau !~~ WE'RE HAVING NORKSHIRE PUDDING FoR SUPPER ! ~~ YORKSHIRE PUDDING ~~ DaESN7T By Ahern | WILDCATS RALLY 10 NORKSHIRE PUDDING 2 WITH ME,IF T HAVE (7 tr THAT LOOSEN YOUR BELT 2. c'mon, AGGIE HAS CaGLED OFF ABouT THAT NIGHT You BROUGHT “TH” ORGAN GRISDER AN’ HIS MoNK IN “TH? HOUSE ¢ UM-M ~ BY DOVE,BARRY , WAS ISVITED “To A BANQUET “TONIGHT, But” AH wuM-AH ~~ WHAT, WILL WE Do, RIDE OR RUN OVER To YouR Hause 2 Four Teams Win in City Cage Leagues Kieckhefer Wins Billiard Diadem At Chicago Meet ' Plays Brilliantly to Defeat Otto Reiselt For Three Cushion Championship Chicago, Feb. 9.—?)—Augie Kieck- hefer of Chicago, a southpaw shooter The diminutive Chicagoan, forced to change into a southpaw years ago when he lost the sight of his left eye, ascended to the throne with a convincing display of _mas- tery Monday night, by routing his old rival Otto Reiselt of Phila- delphia, 50 to 27 in 40 innings. Stroking along with his best artis- A. Kieckhetfer Spirited Play Marks Games as Week's Basketball Hostili- ties Get Under Way | Spirited play marked games in the city basketball leagues Monday night as four teams emerged from the fray ; With victories under their belts, | The Faculty aggregation won the most bitterly contested tilt of the jPected to add at least $10,000 more during the year with the proceeds of exhibitions. Reiselt was as far off his game last {strom of Sweden, !by necessity, was king of the three- | Night as Kieckhefer was on his. While champion |cushion billiard world for the tenth the Philadelphian missed compara- winter | time Tuesday. tively easy shots—usually easy for him—because of misapplied English, Kieckhefer played one of his best games. Patel tee If Quiet Gesture of | | Sportsmanship Is | | Made for Injured | o- Lake Placid, N. Y¥., Feb, 9.—(P)—A nice gesture of sportsmanship of the |kind that has nothing to do with |blaring bands and “Hands Across the | Seas” fellowship for the benefit of photographers, has come out of the | winter Olympics, but not through the Saturday, the final day of the games. | try and judging the pace of his shots |@dmission of any of those who had a Canada so far has beaten the Unit-| with incanny accuracy, Kieckhefer ed States once, Germany twice, and | gave Reiselt a fine billiard lesson in| Poland once. The United States has/| his rush to the top. He took the lead,|German bob sleds to crash on Mt. beaten Poland twice and the Germans |staved off a threat in the early inn-| Van Hoevenberg sent four German once. Part in it. A few days ago the second of two Last night Canada beat Po-|ings with fine defensive play and then |Tiders to the local hospital, two of land and the United States conquered | dashed off to a long lead that simply | them desperately injured and certain Germany, both by 5-0 scores. | billiard morale. >| Basketball Scores | |champion of champions of the three-| their own hospital bills, if accidents (LEIS sila ——— Towa 22; Minnesota 24. Wisconsin 18; Marquette 16. Concordia 45: Augsburg 40. ‘Morningside 17; Midland College 39. Paris—Maurice Giselle, France, outpointed Dan McCorkindale, South r Africa, (10). Miami, Fla.—Pete Nebo, Key West, His victory sent him into a tie as red head, whose also has captured the But the victory eceipts from the long tournament and a diamond emblem, emblematic | shattered his rival's technique and|to be there for months to come. It is jone of the rules of the Olympics that jinjured athletes must take care of cushion domain with Johnny Layton, | befall them. |the Sedalia, Mo., |magic cue crown ten times. won by Kieckhefer. was probably the own expenses to come here and com- most valuable of them all as it gave|pete in the Olympics, would have him an annual salary of $6,000, $1,200; trouble meeting the bills of costly in cash, 16 per cent of the net gate/treatments. Quietly a meeting was |,,4 stoup of American sportsmen, of- ficials of the Olympic games, learned that the Germans, who paid their , called. Today there is $5,000 available for of the title, worth another $1,000, A/their treatment, if that sum should outpointed Lou Avery, Tulsa, (10).|good attraction, Kieckhefer was ex-|be needed. | OUT OUR WAY SAY, BOYS, . YOu OONT NEED TO SADDLE WALK wiTH THE NEW GUESTS Good GAWSH! A MAKING THEM PEOPLE BELIEVE THUS 15 HIS HOSS! EF THer HAINT TH Lowest By Williams YAIS, BUT ITS TH’ HIGHEST FORM oO! QuicK THINKING, -| Castle, - nw erestritremenoia meses tian aay satonttidleionanmnpnemtniiiaitnanctee tin batch tinnn mnterchnesrontsomntaretry evening when they tripped up the Klein Cleaners in the last minute of play to win, 17 to 14. The Chrysler Phantoms staged a scoring rally in the last period to defeat the A. O. U. W. outfit, 29 to | 18, after the Lodgemen had battled them on more or“less even terms during the first three quarters. . | Company A held the soldiers from | Ft. Lincoln to two field goals and won handily, 17 to 5. . The Presbyterians added another ywin to their long list of victories in | the church league to hand the Meth- | odists a 14 to 6 defeat. The summaries: Phantoms (29) FG FT PF J. Spriggs, f . 2 F. Brown, f .. E. Spriggs, ¢ H. Brown, g . Benser, g .... ‘Totals A. O. U. W. (18) S. Goetz, f . Verdrun, f F. Benser, c . A. Brown, ¢ . ; Boespflug, ¢ | Becker, f Thune, f M. Goetz, i Totals .. \_ Faculty (17) cooungs| cowonnme Bl weme Anderson, g . Klein’s Cleaners (14) Croonquist, f .... hn, f Larson, g Martin, g .. Totals .... Company A (ii) ONell, t .. Tecoooon a] woonmngal comtn Beer, f .. | Toews, c . |Gorman, g¢ Papacek, & seceee Hedstrom, g ...+ Totals .........0.. 2 Presbyterians (14) FG Dunn, f ..... wt Munger, f . eel Shafer, c Samuelson, g Tracy, g ... Totals .......000c6 Methodists (6) Billigmeier, f .... A. Anderson, f . Youngstrom, ¢ J. Anderson, g . Finlayson, g . Erhmantraut, g wlooncoe wl ncoontelooonoce ol oonunntfel onoco wloncoon4alowoncnce alcoves elowmonn alownnoteloosmoncs wloncooeMal wuwen alonnoonMalrooumene wl wewor wleocoon aloro Totals Fi TS Last iGHT (By The Associated Press) Philadelphia — Harry Dublinsky, Chicago, outpointed Johnny Jadick, junior welterweight champion (10), non-title. New York—Izzy Schwartz, York, outpointed Jack New York (5). : Pittsburgh—Natie Brown, Califor- nia, outpointed Tony Galento, Jer- sey City (10). ‘Davie Shade, San Fran- cisco, omen Henry Firpo, New 5 New NOSE OUT HOOSIERS IN THRILLING GAME Minnesota Maintains Runner- Up Position By Beating Improved lowa Outfit PURDUE DEFEATS BUCKEYES Wisconsin Squares Early Sea- son Setback By Outpoint- ing Marquette Courtmen Chicago, Feb. 9.—(#)—The task of catching Northwestern in the west- ern conference basketball title race is just one game more difficult, and one more team, Ohio, is just about out of the running. Northwestern, playing some more of the kind of basketball that causes coaches gray hair, came from behind Monday night to defeat Indiana, 29 to 25, for its seventh straight victory. The Wildcats trailed by 14 to 12, at halftime, and it required some great shooting by Joe Reiff, leading scorer of the conference, to get Northwest- ern out in front at the finish, He scored three field goals in the clos- ing minutes, and added 11 points to his total for the season, which Tues- day was 67. The defeat was In- diana’s fifth in six games and left the Hoosiers tied with Iowa for eighth place. The other two games were just as exciting. Purdue went back into ac- tion and just managed to defeat Ohio State, 38 to 33. The stubborn Buck- eyes tied the score three times in the Editor’s Note: This is the last of six stories on “Japan's Sky- rocket Rise.” “What will you give the Emperor, the Lord of Heaven?” So runs the first question of a Jap- anese school child's catechism. And the child is trained to answer: “All my possessions, and my life when he requires it.” In the estimation of the Japanese, the sickly-looking and bespectacled young man who sits in the palace at Tokio today is not a mere human. He is a god—“The Son of Heaven”— and ‘so were all his ancestors in his heav- en-born line, which goes back to six centuries before Christ. They were kings long before the day of Julius Caesar, and 300 years before Alexan- der the Great conquered the known world. i Se Reverence for the emperor is in- grained in the cradle, grows through- out the years and makes death glor- ious when it promotes his cause. Wars are fought for the emperor. In the war with Russia, soldiers rushed to battle shouting his name. . . died with a smile on lips that gasped it until the last. His person is sacred. No ordinary commoner may touch him—not even his barber, his dentist or his tailor. The barber and dentist must wear silk gloves when working on him, the tailor does his fitting on another man of the same stature. Despite his enormous power and riches, the aged Emperor Mutsuhito suffered from lack of proper nursing during his last illness for this reason. The present Emperor Hirohito, 123rd ruler in the heaven-born line, has modified things somewhat. When, as prince-regent, he returned from an European tour several years ago, he Permitted a rousing public reception like those often given the Prince of ‘Wales, Old Japanese were horror- stricken; the custom of centuries had dictated that when a member of the royal family passed the people should stand in reverent silence with head bowed; that no ordinary mortal might look down upon the emperor from above, and to this end the cur- tains on upper-story windows of houses must be drawn before he ap- peared. Though Japan has had a constitu- tional government and an elected diet (congress) since 1890, the em- peror is still all-powerful. No czar of ‘Russia ever had more power over his subjects than Hirohito has today. The constitution says the emperor rules by, divine right in accordance with the laws made by the diet; act- ually, his imperial decree can set aside or make any law, even declare war. He is commander-in-chief of both the army and the navy, he appoints the cabinet that runs the country, his royal family draws $2,000,000 a year from the taxpayers, has a vast Personal fortune, owns 5,000,000 acres of land in crowded Japan where land is worth as high as $1,000 an acre. It is doubtful if there is a soldier in Japan's army or a sailor in Japan’s navy who would not be willing to fall upon @ sword, gladly, at a nod from this bespectacled young man in To- ‘kio. The gravest sin in the Japanese code is cleat £ Ae throne. ‘The Japanese people would no more think of putting the emperor's pic- ture on money or postage stamps than we would tifink of doing the same with a picture of Christ. picture is treated reverently and framed in every school. A few years ago two school teachers were fined heavily for drinking sake in a room in which his picture hung. In case the school catches fire, the emperor's picture is the first thing that must be saved. A favorite story -| Minneapolis, knocked out Vince Battaglia, cieicounmmainieacmen Minikel, ‘Milwaukee, (6); O'Neil, Milwaukee, (6). . (8); Mits Barney Mickey last period and forced the contest into overtime. They wilted under the pace and the Boilermakers popped in five points in the extra frame, Pur- due climbed into third place with three victories and one defeat, while Ohio was in sixth place with three victories and three defeats. Minnesota remained in second place, but found Iowa plenty tough. ‘The Gophers got started in time to win, 24 to 22, however, and made it five triumphs in six gamés. Howard Moffitt, Iowa’s scoring ace, was held @ newcomer, got loose for eight points. season setback by outpointing Mar- 16, at Madison. Saturday night. The three leaders will play again | will Towa’s improved ' band Editor's Note: ‘This is another of the Associated Press series of lity stories on personal young « ‘American athletes in the 1032 spotlight. Los Angeles, Feb. 9—(?)—Pick out to two free throws, but Krumbholz,|the slowest moving youth you can ee ‘Wisconsin squared up for an early! Evanston, while Purdue will meet ‘at Chicago. Minnesota will diana at Bloomington, and play at Ohio State. ‘PEPPER’ MARTIN SIGNS FOR ’32 pec ee John “Pepper” Martin, who batted and ran to baseball fame with the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1931 world series, is shown with Sam Breadon, president of the St. Louis club, signing his 1932 contract at a ap msinteeenenansamre ree tte reported “substantial increase” over the 1,500 he was paid last season. quette in another close one, 18 to} play its return engagement with In- will meet Northwestern at Skating at Olympics id record-breaker "and wor! - an the nation’s best hope in the 1932 sprint races. ‘Wykoff, in his third year at the Trojan institution, is seeking the kind of an education which will enable him to education in- i terests Wykoff. He likes to take over the controls, banking and guiding the plane through the skies. He attempts no landings or takeoffs, and is not ambitious for a pilot's license. Since Se ee te ae ‘isd sport pages by ig the tryouts for the 1928 Olympic team, Wykoft has submerged a strong desire to play football. When he returns to school next fall to complete his coaching courses, he proposes to satisfy this ambition. Although he weighs only 155 pounds, he might make the Trojan gridiron squad. Wykoff doesn’t claim to be an honor student. His chief in- terest is in his coaching classes, but he also-has fair marks in his other studies. Because injuries and illness have blocked his brightest hopes at times, ‘Wykoff is somewhat of a fatalist. He keeps his fingers crossed before & big race. ‘As a sprinter he sticks well to es- tablished form. He is not a brilliant starter. His terrific drive comes in the last 50 yards of the century race, in Japan is about a school boy who’ rushed into a blazing room to rescue the emperor's picture, found he was unable escape, ripped the picture from the frame, gashed his abdomen with a sword that he snatched from the wall, stuffed the picture therein and died in the flames with the prec- fous portrait in his body. This boy became a national hero in Japan, xe * Hirohito, the present emperor, wag born August 29, 1901. Because of the illness of his father, Emperor Yosh- ihito (the old man had softening of the brain) he was constituted Prince- Regent on Nov. 15, 1921. He succeed- ed his father upon the latter's death. He was married to Princess Nagako ‘Uni in January, 1924, Their first child was born the following December, and three others have since followed, one of whom died in extreme infancy. Since all of the emperor’s children are girls, and no woman may ever rule Japan, the heir-presumptive to! the throne is the emperor's brother, Prince Chichibu. He is a year younger than the emperor, and married a Japanese girl educated in an Ameri- can college. Unlike European royalty, does not. go abroad for royal match- making. Japan's princes of the blood are married into noble families; if there is no male issue, a male near- relative is called to the throne. The Japanese cabinet functions very much like President Hoover's cabinet, containing 12 ministers who are appointed by the emperor and are responsible to him alone. The Japanese diet, or congress, consists of a House of Peers and a House of Representatives, of equal power. The former are either elect- ed for seven years or are appointed by the emperor for‘life; the latter must run for re-election every four years. They draw $1500 a year, as compared to an American congress- man’s $10,000 a year. The peers are: hereditary mem- bers of the nobility, elected counts or | W: barons, men of education or dis- tinguished service appointed by the | w. emperor, elected representatives of the taxpayers, members of the im- Perial academy elected by that body. The representatives are elected from various walks of life. * * Governors and sheriffs of prefec- tures are appointed by the govern- ment. Mayors are chosen by the em- | peror from one of three candidates elected by the municipal assembly. | W. The elected chief magistrates of towns and villages must obtain the | w, governor’s approval. The American system or trial by jury has been in effect only three years. Prior to that, the presiding judge heard the evidence and decided the accused's fate, even in capital crimes which in Japan are treason | w and murder. Many years ago hang- ing was substituted for beheading. The diet, in session, looks very much like America’s congress. Little time is wasted on debate, as the Jap- anese language does not lend itself to brilliant oratory. There, as here, practically all legislation is decided in committee long in advance. The Jap-| w. anese solons, however, are honest enough to admit this, instead of wast- ing time on a lot of oratory for po- litical effect. ven the empire's old order perished be- fore the march of progress and from. His!which.s modern Japan arose with |}? Japan | 1931, SUMMONS of Burleigh. Fourth Judicial District. __ Lawrence C. Jefferson and Nellte Jeffersoh, Plaintiffs, vs. Rufus SYATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County In_ District Court, Cs Jefferson, Archie C. Jefferson, Dora E. Jefferson, Genevieve rane, Robert J. Cochrane, S Archi. j. Cochrane, Cyrus J. Cochrane, bal William M. Cochran Donald Ed- ward Cochrane, David Jerome Coch- rane, Genevieve J. Cochrane, Patri- cia Ellen Cochrane, Cyrus Merren Jefferson, Rufus Olney Jefferson, Marjorie Louise _Jefferson, Jefferson Baker, Louise D. son, Rufus C. Jeti |. Jefferson, Stener Persons unknown or who have ‘Dera Jeffer- rson, Fiorence Sveund, and all or claim any interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defendants, The State of North Dakota to the ‘above named defendants: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint in this actio1 which complaint will be filed with the the District Court in th Clerk of County of Burleigh in the State North Dakota, and to serve @ cop: your ‘answer upon the subscril mn, of of rs, within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclt of the day of service; and in cas our failure to apy judgment will be taken against by default for the relief demandes the complaint. . FAB! Attorneys for Plaintiffs, Dated this 7th day of October, A. D. * ZUGER’ & TILLOTSON, A. T. E. ive ear or answer ‘OW. State of North Dakota; 2 ‘The North Half of the Northeast Quarter, and the Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 4, Township 133, North, of Range 53, est; The Northwest Quarter and the Southwest Quarter of Section 17, Township 133, North, of Range 53, ‘est; The Northwest Quarter and the Southwest Quarter of Section 21, eeaene 133, North, of Range 53, ‘est; Southeast Quarter of Section 23, Township 133, North, of Range 53, est; Southwest Quarter and_the South- east Quarter of Section 25, Township 133, North, of Range 53, West; Northwest Quarter and the South- west Quarter of Section 27, Township 133, North, of Range 53, West; Northeast Quarter and the North- west Quarter of Section 35, Township 133, North, of Range 58, West; South Half of the Southwest Quar= ter of Section 33, Township 134, North, of Range 65, West: fll in Ransom County, North Da- ota. Southeast Quarter of Section 22, Township 156, North, of Range 76, West; subject to a contract for deed 0 Stener Sveund; Northeast Quarter of Section 27, Township 156, North, of Range 76, West; subject to a contract for deed. in|to Stener Sveund; Office and postoffice address, Bismarck, North Dakota, Morph Bradford, Cummins and Cum- mint 8, 360 Robert Street, Saint Paul, Minnesota, Of Counsel. OTICE TO SAID DEFENDANTS Nt ‘To the above named defendants: Take notice that the com int in the above entitled action ts on file in the office of the Clerk of the District Court of Burleigh County, North Da- kota, and that the ‘object of said ac- tion is to obtain a partition of real 16 estate which is the subject of the ac- tion and which is in said complaint and hereinafter described, to-wit: ast Half of the Northwest Quarter E of Section 2. Township 133, North of Range 51, West; Northeast Quarter of Section Township 134, North Rai of Range est; Northeast Quarter of Section Township 132, North est; Southeast Quarter of Section Township 182, North of Range ‘est; Southwest Quarter of Section est; Northeast Quarter of Section Zowmnahip 133, North of Range rtheast Quarter of Section Township 183, North of est; Northeast | Quarter of Range 5: Rownsee 132, North of Range 5: 5, 61, 5 5, 52, 5, 2, 33, 52, 35, of Section 3, Township 134, North of Range 62, est; Northwest Quarter of Section 3, Pompahip 134, North of Range 52, ‘est; Southeast Quarter of Section 3, RpUranD +134, North of Range 52, ‘est; Northeast Quarter of Section 6, Zomnship 134, North of Range 62, ‘est; Northwest. Quarter of Section 5, Township 134, North of Range 52, ter of Section 5, of Range 52, West; Northwest Quarter of Section momeblp 134, North of Range est; Northwest Quarter of Section aoeoenp 134, North of Range est; Northeast Quarter of Section Township 134, North of ‘est; Northwest Quarter of Section Bouthwest Quarter of Secti Township isa? North of Reni ce it Quarter of Section Section ee Range Southwest Quarter of Secti Township 184, North ‘of ‘Range. West; Northeast Quarter of Section Quarter of North of Northwest Quarter of Township. 134 North “ot “estes thwest. eat; All of Section North, of Range 62, West, All AA Sect Range 5: Township 184, Nort Township orth of Range 62, 184, North of -Range. 6: Range 52, est; North Half of the Southwest Quar- Township 134, North ate % 62, n, 62, 1%, 11, 19, se 62, 19, 2, 21, 52, 23, Township 134, North of Range 52,|the 29, 52, waship 134, jon, 238, township 134, ‘Richland, South Half of Southeast Quarter of Section 3, Township 159, North, of Range 78, West; East Half of ‘Southwest Quarter of Section 3, Township 159, North, of Range 78, West; North Halt of Section 10, Township 159, North, of Range 78, West; Southwest Quarter of Section 10, Township 159, North, of Range 73, ‘est; West Half of Southeast Quarter of Section 10, Township 15, Nore of Range 78, ‘West; All in McHenry County, North Da= ota; All of Section 29, in Township 147, North, of Range 68, in Well: 5 Neth Stat * ells County, uth Half of Section 15, Township 141, North, of Range 66, i County. aot Daicota; iaeiinaatie esi of Section 13, Townshij 133, North, of Range 77, West, in ‘um mons County, North Dakota; All of Section 25, in Township 141, North, of Range 76, West, in Bur- leigh County, North Dakota! 1 Sout \t (a8) core of Section Fifteen Southwest (SW%) "of Section Fourteen Qn ie Township 141, North, of West, in Case County, North Dakota.” af & _ TILLO’ A. t. FABER OO Attorneys for Piaintifts, Office and postottice address, marck, North 1/12-19-26; 272.916 kOe SUMMONS State of North Dakota, County of Bur- leigh. ‘In Dist: delghy in District Court, Fourth Ju fred 8. Dale and Jennie A. Dale, his wife, Plaintiff: a Maree "Dion He RoSAreE Bion, known claiming terest in or lien or incumbrance up- any estate or in- on the property. d. micorgplaint, ‘Defendants, wale ate of North howe Bofindasie Dakota to the wand each one of summoned to answer the compleine wy, this action, which is filed in the ofe fice of the Clerk of the District Court of Burleigh county, North Dakota, and & serve a copy of your answer. upon e subscribers at their office in the city of Bismarck, in Burleigh county, North Dakota, within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will bo taken against you by default for the rellet demanded in the complaint. ‘at Bismarck, Ni this ith day of January aD seo Geo, M. Register and ‘Attorneyetior reniee pishitiee Office ‘and postoffice address, We} Block, Bismarck, North Dakota’ oe. Verge claims to fo quiet title in said cae the pisintitts herein, dant t roperty and ‘sla fi im is made ite fi of the di ae ee and Gans pert posal been Sr Sealeat any inet action or i sctlone one a the defendants in january 11; rd ith A, p. 1932. Gi he ter Attorneys for nla Piatieite, _ MAteLbedt: Bb