Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
se HM, CREEL, PIONEER jj NORTH DAKOTAN IS DEAD IN FAR WEST Man Who Founded Devils Lake Succumbs in California Following Injury — +, Devils’ Lake, N. D., Sept. 19.—(P)}— Major General Heber M. Creel, 77, retired, founder of the town that is now Devils Lake and whose name is interwoven with the military rec- ords of North Dakota, is dead. He died at San Diego, Calif. Sat- urday, according to word received here by a brother-in-law, Edgar La- rue. Death was due to physical ills and an accident which caused a broken hip and dislocated shoulder. oritae will be at San Diego Tues- ay. The life of General Creel was an eventful one. Born in Waverly, Mo., he participated in the Sitting Bull campaign in 1881 and later accom- panied that noted Indian chieftain and his band to Standing Rock. As an engineering officer he built the military telegraph line from Fort Totten to Larimore. In July, 1882, he located the town site of Devils Lake, which was first called Creel City but assumed its present name in 1884, General Creel's name is insepar- ably interwoven with the military records of North Dakota and his ef- forts were an element in progressive development in the Northwest. He was born on a farm in Lafayette county, Missouri, Nov. 30, 1855, and is a representative of one of the old families of Virginia, established in that state in 1620. His grandfather served with the rank of colonel in the War of 1812 and his uncle, George Creel, was killed in the Mex- ican war. His grandmother was a sister of the mother of General “Stonewall” Jackson, and his grand- father, Dr. David Creel, acted as foreman of the grand jury which heard the trial of Aaron Burr for high treason, Served With Seventh Reared upon his father's farm, General Creel acquired his eleme: tary education under private tutor- ship and afterward became a student in Kemper’s academy at Boonville, Missouri. He spent a year in that school and also in Cooper Institute and next entered the Virginia Mili- tary Institute at Lexington, Virginia, where he remaned for two years. Then, through appointment of General John B. Clark of the sev- enth congressional district, he be- came a student at the U. S. Military academy at West Point, from which he was graduated with the class of June, 1877. He received a commis- sion as second lieutenant in the Fighth U. S. Cavalry and the same year was promoted to higher rank in the Seventh Cavalry, his service in that connection bringing him to Dakota Territory. After serving for five years he resigned in July, 1882. During his military experience he gained intimate knowledge of the state and its pioneer conditions and development. He had charge of the government property and the steam- boat, “Dr. Burleigh,” when Fort Rice was abandoned and the property moved to Fort Yates in 1878. In that year Lieutenant General P. H. Sheri- dan, commanding the division of Missouri with headquarters at Chi- cago, asved for a volunteer from the Officers af the regular army to take | 19 charge of the relief steamer to New Orleans for the yellow fever suffer- ers. Lieutenant Creel volunteered and was informed by General Sheri- dan that Lieutenant Benner had al- ready offered his services and had been accepted, also that he, Lieuten- ant Creel, had been detailed to per- form very important work on detach- ed service under the direct supervi- sion of the lieutenant general, as he was to accompany the Northern Sheyennes to the Indian Territory, to write a dictionary and grammar of their language and otherwise aid in keeping these Indians in the terri- tory. Lieutenant Benner died in the performance of his mission from yellow fever. Surveyed Devils Lake He was one of the expedition that! smounting to Thirteen Hundred One located Fort Meade, and in 1880 he surveyed Devils Lake and also made a topographic survey of the Fort Totten military reservation. In 1881 he participated in the Sitting Bull campaign and afterward accompan- ied that noted Indian chieftain and his band to Standing Rock. As engineering officer he built the mili- tary telegraph line from Fort Totten to Larimore. General Creel had been a resident of Devils Lake almost from its founding, and for a number of years engaged extensively in farming, owning and conducting a fine estate. He has also dealt largely in real estate and loans and engaged in the grain business. In public affairs, too, | 1°* he bore his part. He was chairman of the board of county commission- fers in Ramsey county in 1885-1886 and register of deeds from January, 1889, to January, 1897, and was act- ing county surveyor from 1889 to 1895. He was elected to the state senate in the fall of 1896, serving a four- year term. He was elected as an independent Republican and was a nominee for congress in 1898 on the fusion ticket. While a member of the state senate he introduced the bill requiring all applicants for mar- Tiage licenses to be previously exam- ined by a board of physicians as to their physicial and mental fitness for the martiage state. His bill was freely commented upon by prominent men and newspapers in the U. 8. and England. He has served as chair- man of the county Republican com- mittee and was a member of the state central and executive Repub- lican committees. He was a member of the national committee. for the Silver Republicans of North Dakota for eight years, be- ing chosen to this office in 1697. When in Indian Territory General Creel was married to Miss Alice H. LaRue, a native of Indiana. General Creel is identified with several fraternal organizations, in- F. cluding the Elks, the Odd Fellows and the Modern Woodmen of Amer- ica. NYE TO SUPPORT OLSON 8t. Paul, Sept. 19.—(7)—Campaign headquarters of Governor F. B. Olson, of North Dakota would campaign for the Minnesotan in his drive for re- election. jPal of the aforesaid mortgage to The | hrtd-22-29 9-5-12-19%, OUT OUR WAY C'MON, Les, PLAY CRACK TH WHIP. ER BoLuLIN TH, RING. WHUTRE YA _WASTIN' A GOOD RECESS HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1932 ES |Says North Dakota Now Is Bright Spot; LIVE No Six MILES FROM SCHOOL, ER You'd BE SAvIN'RECess/ S| FER TH’ WAU By Williams Go: FER TH TRIP HOME. IM STILL RESTIN’ FROM TH TRIP FROM, BORN THIRTY YEARS TOO SOON. oRWILLAMS, 1032 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. RES. U. S. PAT. OFF. Washington, Sept. 19.—(7)— New experiments in developing immunity to cancer, announced Monday by the United States Public health service, show mice can be made immune to one type of the disease by inoculating them with it. The experiments have no pres- ent application to human cancer, said Dr. H. B. Andervont, who conducted them, but were made in the hope of eventually improving treatment of the disease in hu- + mans, He found female mice to de- velop immunity more readily than males and that mice with some natural resistance to cancer de- velop complete immunity more easily than those that have no re- sistance. It was noted also that cancer cells apparently must grow in the body of the mouse for a certain length of time to build up im- + munity. Mice were made immune by in- oculating them with cancer in NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE i WHEREAS, Default has been made in the terms’ and conditions of that; certain’ mortgage hereinafter des- cribed by the non-payment of the three amortization installments of | Fifty-two and no-100 Dollars ($52.00) | each, due August 5, 1931, February 5, | 1932, and August 5, 1932, and ‘the | further sum of One Hundred, Fifty- | six and 52/100 Dollars ($156.52) paid as taxes for the years 1929, 1930 and NOW, THEREFORE, NOTICE 1S; HEREBY GIVEN, That that certain | mortgage executed and delivered by Maria Matson and Jakob Matson, her husband, mortgagora, to the Federal Land Bank of Saint Paul, a body cor- porate, of the City of St. Paul, County of Ramsey, State of Minnesota, mort- | gagee, Dated August 5, 1919, and filed | for record in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on August 13, 1919, and recorded in book 161 of Mortgages, at Page 275, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and | hereinafter described, at the front door of the Court House, in the city of Bismarck, County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock ..on the ith day of No- to satisfy the amount mortgage on the day of sale, for said defaulted indebted- ness. Said sale is to be made sub- ject and inferior to the unpaid princi- 4 Federal Land Bank of Saint Paul and 96/100 Dollars ($1301.96). The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are situated in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, and described as follows: South Half of the Northeast Quarter (S%NE) and Lots One (1) and Two (2) of Section Six (8), Township One Hundred For- | ne (141) North, Range Seven- ive (75) West, containing One Hundred Sixty-three and 20/100 (163.20) acres, more’ or less, ac- cording to the Government sur- vey thereof. ‘There will be due on said mortgage at the date of sale for sald defaulted installments and taxes the sum of Three Hundred Twenty-six and 99/100 Dollars ($326.99), together with cost of foreclosure as provided by law. Dated this 17th day of September, FEDERAL LAND BANK INT PAUL. Mortgagee. St. Paul, Minnesota. 9-19-26 10-3-10-17-24, ESTATE MORT- SURE SALE NOTICE OF RE. GAGE FORE! Notice ts hereby given that that certain mortgage, executed and de- livered by Ole Soderquist and Ida M. Soderquist, his wife, mortgagors, to The Federal Land Bank of Saint Paul, @ corporation, of the City of St. Paul, County of Ramsey, State of Minneso- ta, mortgagee, dated the 16th day of December, 1922, and filed for record In the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota on the 20th day of December, 1922, and recorded in ‘ine w 166 of Mortgages at page foreclosed by a sale of the pi in such mortgage and hereina scribed at the front door of th house in the city of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota at the hour of two o'clock p. m., on the 8rd day of October, 1932, to satisty the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. Pursuant to provision m mort, ‘et ‘ore dec! the whole mortgage and payable. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as fol- jows: Southwest Quarter (SW) of Sec. tion Ten (10) and the Northwest Quarter (NW%) of Section Fifteen (5), all in Township One Hundred (142) North, Range Eighty ‘ontaining ‘Three Hundr y ) acres, more or less, ac- | cording to the Government survey thereof, Burleigh County, North Da- kota. There will be due on such mortgage, at the date of sale the sum of Forty- seven Hundred Ninety and 51-100 Dol- lars ($4790.51), together with costs of foreclosure," . | Dated this 13th day of August, 1932 | |. THE FEDERAL LAND BANK OF, SAINT PAUL, ! Mortgage St. Paul, Minnesota. New Experiment Shows Mice May Be Made Immune to Cancerous Growths their tails, allowing the tumors to grow for a time on the tails, and then amputating the tail and tumors. About 60 per cent of the adult female mice so treated showed immunity to cancer when inoculated with the disease a sec- A kind of “back-handed” clue as to how the immunity works also was discovered by Dr. An- He found cetrain cells known as the “reticulo-endothelial system” that line the interior of such or- gans as the heart, blood vessels and lymph glands have something to do with immunity. have suspected for some time that when these cells are damaged, re- sistance of the body to cancer is Dr. Andervont confirmed this He damaged the cell by injecting India ink and Trypan blue dye under the skin of the mice. Mice so treated developed a much lower percentage of immun- ity than other mice. In addition, mice that had been made immune by growing tumors on their tails lost this immunity when treated with the India ink end blue dye. ESBS CET EN | Even a Bull Moose | May Become Lonely Rochester, N. H., Sept. 19.—(P) —A bull moose with a lonely heart drew a large crowd of Sun- day sightseers. He emerged from the woods to seek the compan- jonship of a herd of cows and seemed to enjoy having his pic- ture taken as hundreds of persons gathered around him. When the cows went home, he | vanished in the woods. Tribune Want Ad Bring Results Tuts picture will bring back ‘Boys in Blue’ Meet At Tomb of Lincoln Springfield, Ill, Sept. 19—()—The streets of Springfield, whereon, the Poet Vachel Lindsay wrote, the spirit of Abraham Lincoln walks at mid- night when danger threatens the union, Monday resounded to the tramp of silver haired veterans who Mine the emancipator’s call in *61-"65. Stirred by memories of their war- time’ commander-in-chief, at whose tomb in Oak Ridge cemetery they gathered Sunday, members of the Grand Army of the Republic assem- bled for their sixty-sixth annual en- campment. Enfeebled with age, weary with the fatigue, the veterans passed in review before the tomb which contains the mortal remains of him whom they called “Father Abraham.” But their numbers were not “fifty thousand strong,” as the old song they sang in Civil War days sald. Of the survivors of that once mighty host— @ few more than 13,000 names are left on the roster—less than 2,000 are here assembled. Oil Firm Executive Sees Clouds Lifting Minot, N. D., Sept. 19—()—Be- lef that the “low” in business has been passed, and there is occasion to feel better about future prospects, was expressed in Minot Monday by R. R. Irwin of Kansas City, presi- dent of the White Eagle Oil com- pany. Irwin and other officials of the company are in Minot for a meeting of agents and salesmen of the cor- poration. Between 300 and 400 per- sons, from all parts of western North Dakota will be in attendance. Jury Is Drawn for Minot Judge’s Trial Minot, N. D., Sept. 19—()—Draw- ing of a jury for the trial of the case in which State's Attorney Paul Campbell seeks the removal from of- fice of Police Magistrate Carl N. Cox of Minot was begun in Ward county district court Monday, with Judge ea Jansonius of Bismarck presid- Ing. State's Attorney Campbell, in a brief opening statement before be- ginning questioning of the jurors, said that the police magistrate is ac- cused of refusing and neglecting to} perform his official duties, as well as} misconduct in office. A general denial of the charges; has been filed by Cox. NO PLANET FLIGHTS Washington.—It would be folly to follow the plans of Jules Verne and attempt a flight to distant planets in a projectile fired from a cannon, Dr. John Q. Stewart, of Princeton uni- versity believes. The acceleration of such a projectile would crush any per- ‘son inside of it, he says. i and you canl JScal erm It was mildness that first at- Spider Chokes Snake For nearly month a black spider has been spinning its web around a 10-inch garter snake at St. Charles, tll, with the snake apparently waging a losing fight. The queer spectacle drew nation. wide attention. (Associated Prese Photo) ALREADY DULL London. — Even though Sundays are already dull, Rev. Ralph Gardner, vicar of Benfleet, Essex, is trying to make it duller in a humorous way. He says: “Remember the Sabbath day to keep it dull. Six days shalt thou labor, laugh, and be happy, but, on Sunday, the dullest of all the week, thou shalt not smile nor go to the movies Harry Herschieb Manford Parks Capital Typewriter Co. Underwood Elliott Fisher Agency 207 B ay—Phone 820 Bismarck, N. D. Ask our customers about our serv- ice, ask us, In fact ask everybody We estimate and give you the exact cost of overhauling a type- writer or adding machine before the work ts completed. All work fully guaranteed. EXPER E COUNTS Harry and Manford together have had 32 years’ experience on type- writers. New and used Typwriter: New and used Adding Machin Service and Supplies Minot, N. D., Sept. 19.—)—North Dakota at present is one of the brightest spots in the nation, in spite of the effects still being felt in some sections from last year's drouth, it was declared here Monday by Henry M. Baker, American Red Cross offi- cial of Washington, D. C., in ad- dressing approximately 100 local chapter officers from 12 northwest- ern North Dakota counties. Baker, recognized as one of the outstanding disaster relief experts in the country, based his assertion on a survey of relief activities of the na- tional organization during the last year. These remarks were considered by Baker to be substantiated when most of the delegates present reported @ marked it in conditions in the last few months. While prices are have a food supply and ample feed for their livestock. To supplement their requirements, the relief agency has distributed more than 25,000 bar- Tels of government flour in North Dakota since last spring, Baker said. COSTLY LESSON Los Angeles—Richard Scranton, 27, was unemployed with $3 in his pocket. Instead of using the money for food, Scranton bought a gun and attempted to hold up a cafe. A special officer, would-be bandit is now in the hospi- tal, paralyzed for life. LIKE COILED LIGHTNING THE PYTHON STRUCK] s0ren of: lashing fury hurled against the giant cat! While monkeys screamed in every tree they settled a grudge that started in the morning of the world! a thousand times more thrilling than the book that held the nation spellbound! TONIGHT Also Tues., Wed., Thurs. Daily 2:30 - 7-9 One of the great thrills in FRANK BUCKS Amazing Sound-Film Record of His Greatest Adventure“ by the Ven Beusen, , ” Directed by Cyto &, Etta Acttally filmed tn thé «= Mat. 25 e.Aine 35¢ Capitol Theatre When Household Help Is Needed Permanent or temporary help, a girl to take care of the children at night, a maid, a cook... you’ find just the kind of help you want at the time you want it with an ad in The Bismarck Tribune Classified Section. memories to a lot of people of the days when the boys went marching away with flags flying and bands playing. Chesterfields were very popu- lar with those men who went over- seas. They were “rookies” then. They’re “old vets” today. And that milder, satisfying Chester- field flavor is still their steady ~ choice ... after fifteen years! tracted smokers to Chesterfield. And it’s mildness and better taste that is winning new friends for Chesterfield today...all over the country. Next time you're short of ciga- rettes, ask for Chesterfields. They satisfied in 17, and you can’t beat ’em today. Chesterfield Radio Program— Every night ex- © 1932, Liccary & Mywas Tosscco Co. The ad-taker will help you formulate the ad that will bring the help you want, PHONE Bi ir UL