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32 Base RANTIC SWAPPING NAVE SETS RECORD “AND WIL CONTINUE * g Leagues Even Dip Into Mi-| hor Reaim to Extract Eight ‘Comers’ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNK FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1932 ball Players Have Figured in Trades Since Season Ended OUR BOARDING HOUSE TO BURN ME 2 “ENATORS, BUCS IMPROVE) \ ( ll Terry, Young Manager of| Giants, Works on Anoth- | er Big Deal New York, Dec, 16.—(?)—The wild- ; trading season in all baseball his- vy has come down to its climax th the close of the annual major ague meetings, but the end of a ighty effort to stir interest in 1933) th new faces in new places is by + means at hand. Loath to go home after three days wholesale barter, a half dozen agnates of the National and Amer- in leagues still haunted the lobbies the tread of ac! led with the bid, s on choice and odiocre talent. Compared to the activities of their anagers, the ponderings of the agnates in solemn conclave on the} righty issues of the day provided! ly faint sounds heard dimly off- age. 4 Terry Still Discontented pill Terry, young m of the WELL “TH? SMELL OF MOTH BALLS IN THIS RENTED OUTFIT WILL Z AZw OPERA To ME ts Suet “EF suut uPl-co A PAIN IN TH’ NECK, TO MUSIC PUL SAY DO Nou LAY AWAKE NIGHTS THINKING UP GAGS LIKE THIS JUST SET AND SEE IF THE TAX| HAS COME ' To ME! IF You START CRACKING DURING THE GA PERFORMANCE, EZ CORN OF YOURS ! 12-16 YET [AND LISTEN YOUR CHEWING GUM TLL COME .DOWN HEAVY ON THAT O INTERMISSION TO THEIR OPERA= By Ahern THEY'RE coInc 4 TO HEAR AN OPERA WITH A LOT OF FIGHTING AN’ YELLING IN 17,50 THEY'LL FEEL AT HOME! TH’ OPERA IS IN ITALIAN + BUT THEY ENJOY ARGUING IN ANY LANGLAGE 7 \ Gia ader in keup, athle! on anew the work Brooklyn odgers and the Boston Braves in a rec-cornered swap. This shift involved Catcher Shanty | ygan, who would go back to his first } Execute ‘About-Face’ to Deliber- ately Cross Kenesaw Mountain Landis ajor league love, the Braves, for sh and perhaps a player who could added to Terry's bid to Brooklyn ¢ Dazzy Vance, once the right- nded pitching marvel of the league. {nvolved in this same transa gion is Terry's offer of substitute First | «seman Sam Leslie for Johnny Fred- .cx, Brooklyn outfielder, once refus- | but still alive if the Giants will | row in more collat Pending | finite decision on this, Brooklyn has New York, Dec. 16.—(?}—Baseball’s “chain store” systems will flourish in the future without interference from Kenesaw Mountain Landis, high commissioner of the game. By unanimous vote, major league magnates, closing their annual ses- sions here Thursday, gave the sys- stually closed with Joe Judge for, tem a vote of confidence and dras- 3 first base services next season. [tically curbed the weapons with Judge has the permission of the which the commissioner frequently ashington Senators to make a deal! has attacked it. r himself with the Dodgers only.! The magnates ruled, in effect, that ie only hitch left in this deal is| player contracts negotiated by two idge’s reported demand of a bonus or more clubs of the same “farm | r signing. | system” shall be regarded as inde- Meanwhile George Gibson, already pendent transactions and in exactly e of the Prime David Harums of the| the same light as those negotiated zeting because of his shrewd deal/ by clubs having no common inter- at brought Freddy Lindstrom, crack | est. iants’ outfielder, to the Pirates,| An outspoken foe of “chain store” ack to his hotel waiting an answer | baseball, Landis heretofore has de- his bids for a right-handed pitch-/Clined to regard dealings among , aimed at several clubs. Charley | Clubs of the same chain as independ- cimm still is dickering for a south-|¢nt transactions, Under the new w pitcher for the Cubs. |rule, he will have no choice. AS (Ake Awaiting Reports | matters stand now the only curb on Judge Emil Fuchs and Bill McKech-| further development of the “chain 2 of the Braves waited to hear about ¢ purchase of Hogan, and Joe Cron-| , American League counterpart of il Terry in free-handed dealing, ex- | : cted an answer from Cleveland on |! the same league. proposition to swap catchers, Roy! i Tiny tneenected, served sudden as vencer for Luke Sewell. | it was unexpected, served to demon- Completion of the final deal Thurs- | Strate in striking fashion the about- Urs~| face most club owners have made in ese cent the ierepreabie | thelr, attitude toward’ the “chain ‘onin, back in store” idea. Boe the “old Soe eren Once its only determined backers cher, ‘and Bruce Connateer, substi- were Sam Breadon and Branch in| Rickey of the St. Louis Cardinals. te first-baseman, from Cleveland in | vii hy change for the slugging rookie/ Now virtually every club in the ma- ‘stesacker, Harley Boss, trom Chat-| {5 one or more silty pene ns nooga, left only the world cham-| system now has come tobe vegan. oe celts’ without a" single deal |C%,7#ther generally, as of the ut- Gacloted since the close of the 1932| "7° value to the minors in their ason. In that short time, 44 major league ayers have changed berths, an aver- e of 13 per cent of the entire sength of the two leagues on the ‘sis of a 23-player limit for each any major league organization to hold stock, or have control, directly or indirectly, in more than one club ———— eee |the Red Sox are outfielders Robert Seeds and Bob Fothergil and Infield- ers Urban Hodapp and Gregory Mul- leavy. The Red Sox management in- dicated Hodapp would be used at sec- ond and Mulleavy as shortstop. The Brooklyn Dodgers announced the acquisition of Ray Benge, star right-handed pitcher, from the Phil- adelphia team of the National base- ball league for Neal (Mickey) Finn and Jackie Warner, infielders, and Austin (Cy) Moore, pitcher, and cash. m to this unprecedented ht minor league players we figured in deals. The Boston ‘aves purchased Al Wright and Dick 7selman from the Missions for $6 9 and Bill Walters, a third-base-/ an. The Cincinnati Reds bought) | store” idea lies in the rule forbidding | | | | | ! strips. arence Blair, former Cub inficlder,| om Los Angeles, and Irving Plum- er, outfielder, from Wilkes-Barre. ' ye Giants took Pitcher Bill Shores! om Portland for cash and Sam Gib- n, and Shortstop John Ryan from iffalo for Infielder Eddie Marshall. ‘ooxlyn bought Linus Frey, a short- 2p, from Nashville for Earl Matting- @ pitcher, and cash, for 1934 de- very. The Senators dealt Harley ass to Cleveland. Washinzten Has Gained ‘ The Giants, although Terry tore e team apart, seem to have gained tle, while the experts agree thad ashington, in three deals, has gain- tremendously in the pitching staff id ‘the outfield. ‘The Senators, prime favorites now battle the Yankees to a standstill ext season, gathered in two of the merican League's ranking south- ws, Earl Whitehill from Detroit ana ‘ally Stewart from St. Louis. and lded new right-hand strength in _ ek Russell from Cleveland to team ‘ith Alvin Crowder and Monte Wea- ir. Aitremendous punch has been add- i to the Washington outfield with je return of the old favorite, “Goose” jjoslin, from St. Louis along with “ved Schulte, a capable gardener. > the surface the Senators have up nothing vital in Sam West @ Carl Reynolds, only fair outfield- jiast secson, and pitchers Fred ” Marberry, Lloyd Brown and OW NOTHING MUCH, TST WOW! TH | OUT OUR WAY «Majors Indorse ‘Chain Store’ Plan TABERSKI’S SHEER GAMENESS FEATURES BILLIARD TOURNEY fight to keep alive, and an economic necessity, .as well, for the majors. Only one direct step was taken in the general direction of economy during the three-day sessions. That move advanced the player limit date from June 15 to May 15, thus saving each club a month's salary to a num- ber of players who might otherwise | be retained until the later date. A policy of “home rule” was adopt- ed with regard to radio broadcasting in view of the wide difference of opinion prevailing on the question of its effect on attendance. Competing clubs in the World Se- ries were given the privilege, if they desire, of selling tickets for single games as well as in three-game Pro Teams to Play On Short Gridiron Bears and Spartans to Clash At| Chicago Stadium to Duck =| Ill Weather Chicago, Dec. 16.—()—The Ports- mouth Spartans and the Chicago Bears will battle for the national professional football title Sunday night without competition from bit- ter winds and snow, their play-off contest having been transferred from Wrigley field to the Chicago sta- dium. The game was scheduled for Sun- day afternoon at the Cubs’ baseball park, where all Chicago home games have been played, but was shifted to a more comfortable setting be- cause of the condition of the field and zero weather. The field available is 80 yards long, 20 yards short of the regulation gridiron, but it is expected that no shifting of the ball’to make up the deficit will be made. George “Potsy” Clark, coach of the Spartans,! Thursday night suggested the size of the gridiron be ignored and George Halas, owner of the Bears, was in- clined to approve. The question was to be threshed out Friday. Deliberately Throws Away 43 Points to Make Rudolph Earn Victory i New York, Dec. 16.—(?)—Frank Ta- berski, the 43-year-old cue master from Schenectady, N. Y., rates only an outside chance of winning the na- tional pocket billiard championship but for sheer gameness he takes the honors. 5 The “Grey Fox” of Schenectady, N. Y., dropped his fourth game in seven starts Thursday night to Erwin Ru- dolph of Cleveland but seldom, if ever, has a loser staged a more brilliant! battles Shoved in the hole, when Rudolph ran 59 in the 14th inning and took a lead of 106 to 63, Taberski fell back | on his famed defensive play. He de- liberately lost 43 points through! scratches and then came back to car- } ry Rudolph to 34 innings before bow- | ing in defeat 125 to 93. j Taberski's perfectly-placed . safety | shots forced Rudolph to go scoreless | in all but three innings from the 15th} to the end of the game. The Cleve-/ lander also failed to register in nine/| of the first 14 innings. With Rudolph and the defending champion, Ralph Greenleaf, tied for | the lead with five victories each, two! of the three holders of third place, Pasquale Natalie, Chicago, and youns Jimmy Caras, Wilmington, Del., match strokes Friday night. Natalie re- mained in running for the title when he won his fourth game in five starts with a 125 to 62 victory over Bennie Allen of Kansas City Thursday. { Marmarth Five Has . Bright Prospects: 1 | Marmarth, N. D., Dec. 16.—(?)— With four lettermen in uniform, pros- pects for the season look bright at Marmarth high school, according to Coach Irvin C. Joos, who sends his cagers against Amidon here Friday in the first of a 12-game basketball schedule. The lettermen are Delange, Gust, Striebel, and Leonard. Niccum and Use the Want Ads By Williams INTHE ORTEST PLAce IN TH HOUSE -HAH 2? Leary are promising candidates. DICKINSON TEACHERS COLLEGE WIL SAVAGE QUINT WILL ENTERTAIN NODAKS IN TUESDAY FRAGAS Westerners Will Be Handi- capped By Lack of Height At Center Post MEINHOVER TO BE MENACE Four Teacher Lettermen Will Start Against Invading Veterans Dickinson, N. D., Dec. 16—()— Dickinson state teachers college Sav- ages will meet the veteran University of North Dakota basketball team in a game here next Tuesday, it was an- nounced by Coach Harry Wienbergen. Handicapped by lack of much- needed height and ranginess among candidates for the center position, the Savages have been training in defense with the knowledge that the tip-off in the game will go to Ted Meinhover, University’s six-foot-seven center from Bismarck. Wienbergen is selecting his starting lineup from men who showed to best advantage against Spearfish teachers Wednesday. He has four lettermen and a host of talented newcomers working out Larimore, Ross and Odegard are af- ter the Yivot post. Strongest bids for regular guards berths are being ad- vanced by McDonald, Swanson, Boy-; land, Gruelke and Maule while candi- dates for the forward positions include Eastgate, Hinman, Du Bois, Bennet, Doering and the Frederick brothers. Panther Cagers Invade Big Ten Pittsburgh Plays Northwestern Friday and Minnesota Saturday Night Chicago, Dec. 16.—(?)—Pittsburgh will open its brief invasion of West- ern Conference basketball territory Friday night against Northwestern 1, 2nd will finish it against Minnesota at Minneapolis Saturday night. The Panthers have won two out of three games played with Northwest- ern during the last three seasons, but may find the Wildcats ready to even up the count. In addition to the Pittsburgh-Min- nesota match Saturday night, Mar- quette will play at Wisconsin, Carle- ton will attempt to break Iowa's string of three victories, Purdue will meet St. Louis university at Lafayette, Michigan will play Western (Mich.) State teachers at Kalamazoo, and Illinois will entertain Wabash. Chi- cago will meet an alumni team. Michigan, which dropped its first two contests, to Western State teach- ers and Michigan State college, found iteself Thursday night and defeated Mt. Union, 36 to 27. Favor California To Defeat Tech Georgians’ Coach Thinks His Team Has Let Down Since Previous Tilt Berkeley, Calif, Dec. 16.—(#)-—- With pre-game odds favoring the home guard by 2 to 1, the Univer- sity of California and Georgia Tech held final practice Friday for Satur- day's intersectional football contest in Memorial stadium here. The Georgia Engineers held a long workout in the stadium Thursday and their coach, Bill Alexander, ex-| pressed disappointment in their showing. He declared he believed they had let down after the hard Tegular season. One man in each camp appears to be out of the picture. Jim Keefer, Bear halfback, still is suffering with chickenpox and Jack Cannon, Tech line coach, is in bed with flu. Gophers and Irish ‘ Plan Four Meetings Minneapolis, Dec. 16.—(#)—A four- game basketball series with Notre Dame and Minnesota was announced Thursday by Dave MacMillan, Go- pher coach. Minnesota will meet Notre Dame at. South Bend, Ind., Jan. 17, for their first contest in five years, Another game will be played this season at a date to be set later. The other two contests will be play- ed in 1933-34. | Fights Last Night | (By The Associated Press) Philadelphia—Bobby Dechter, Phil- :|Fuller Will Spot adelphia, outpointed Joe Foglietta, Philadelphia, (8). Evansville, Ind.— All Stillman, 8t. Busketball Scores | "(By The Associated Press) St, John's University 29; St. Cloud ‘Adolphus 38; Stout Insti- Teachers Gustavus tute 26. St. Paul Luther 24; Columbia 23. St. Olaf 21; Mankato Teachers 23. 9 ei game with Georgia, which closed the} 200 Golfers Influenza Is .Menace, Hitting Dutra Brothers and George von Elm Pasadena, Calif. Dec. 16.—(P)— Nearly 200 of golf's nomads, some from the ranks of the unemployed, descended on Brookside Park course Friday seeking a share of the Pasa- dena open tournament prize money of $4,000. While influenza hawked the foot- steps of at least three of the leaders, there was every indication when the final putt drops in the cup Sunday par he have taken considerable of a beat- ing. Practice rounds consistently have been under the 71 strokes considered as standard, promising a tough time for Harry Cooper, little Chicago pro, jin the defense of his title. |. Olin Dutra, Santa Monica, National |P. G. A. champion, and his brother, |Mortie, Long Beach, stiil are suffer- ing from influenza contracted in the San Francisco open, while George von Elm, Los Angeles, always a threat, returned from the east with a bad cold which might keep him from starting. Two former champions besides Cooper stand among the leaders. They are Craig Wood, Deal, N. J., pro, who won the San Francisco match’ play tourney Monday and who is back to seek the title won three years ago, and Horton Smith, Chicago, winner in 1930, Demons to Clash With Linton Lions In Contest Here Mary's Will Take Floor Against Napoleon; Prelim- inary Tilts Billed St. A clash between the Linton Lions and the Bismarck Demons will head- night which will see four teams swing into action on local courts. Also a feature contest will be a tilt between St. Mary's and Napoleon on the Saints’ floor at 8 p. m. The Imps and Co. A will meet in a Preliminary game at the high school gymnasium at 7 p. m., while the De- mons will take the floor against Lin- ton an hour later. Supporting the main event at 8t. Mary's will be a contest between the “Bachelors” and “Benedicts,” both teams being recruited from the em- ployes of the Bank of North Dakota. Following a week of strenuous prac- tice the Demons will go into action as favorites over the Lions. The Linton contingent is expected to offer stub- born resistance, however, with a line- jup that includes all but one of last |season’s players. The Lions gave the locals a stiff battle last year. and showed considerable power in tourna- ment play. Bismarck will be deprived of the services of Gus Schlickenmeyer, whose injured ankle has not yielded to treat- ment and remains badly swollen from jan injury sustained in football. It | was Schlickenmeyer’s stellar play.that led the Demons to victory against Tuttle last week and his absence from {the team is expected to be keenly felt. | Coach George Hays has made no (definite announcement of starting |lineups but indicated that Finnegan jat forward, Olgierson at center, and Green at guard would be sent into the game at the opening whistle. Either Owens or Lee was expected to fill the {other forward berth while either | Woodmansee or Schneider probably will be picked as a running mate for Green. Starting lineups in the threé other lengagements have not been an- nounced. - Shine In Hockey Art Somers of Rangers and Obs Heximer of Boston Figure in Scoring New York, Dec, 16.—(#)—Chunky Art Somers, who has adapted Bert Metzger's famous saying that he's little “but a little bit tough, too” to hockey, has scrapped his way not only into the favor of New York's hockey fans but into a place of importance in he See, great goal-getting ma- j chine. Almost alone, Somers turned the tide in favor of the Blue Shirts Thurs- day night as they took a 3-2 decision from the Americans. Twice the aroused Amerks came from behind to. tie the score and each time Somers put the Rangers in front again, Another player of much the same build but even smaller, Orville “Obs” Heximer, of Boston, figured in Thurs- day night’s scoring. The counter gave Boston a 1-0 victory over Chicago. It gave the Bruins a safe hold on sec- sie Place in the American division ond in the Canadian division with a 4-1 victory over the battered Ottawa Senators. 4 eg Several Pounds Boston's Fistic Pride Faces Greatest Test in Fighting Jim M'Larnin New York, Dec. 16.—()—Boston’s istic pride, rugged little Sammy Full- er, returns to Madison Square Garden Friday night to face the greatest test * L PLAY NODAK CAGE TEAM After $4,000 at Pasadena | couver seven or eight pounds as well. Few boxers are beating McLarnin at even weights and the betting fra- j ternity has made him a 2 to 1 favorite over Fuller, who is hardly more than @ heavy lightweight. The match, a 10-round affair, was made at 147 pounds and McLarnin will scale close to that. Fuller, a sensa- tion among the lightweights earlier this year, probably will not tip the ! May Head U.S. Golf | line a basketball program ‘here to-| the hoi ‘Little Fellows beam at more than 139. Lidgerwood Defeats Forman Cage Team Lidgerwood, N. D., Dec. 16.—Lidger- wood’s high school Cagers defeated Forman 20 to 14 here Tuesday in the season’s cage opener. Both teams Played ragged ball, although the For- man crew rallied in the last quarter to score 11 points. DRAGONS BEAT UNIVERSITY Grand Forks, N. D., Dec. 16—(#)— The Grand Forks Dragons handed the University of North Dakota a 5 to 2 beating in the first game of the city hockey series here Thursday night. It was a stubborn battle, with the Dragons sweeping through the Nodak defense for two goals in the closing minutes of play to make the lead safe. Al Purpur scored two goals for the Dragons. TWO OF A KIND Knoxville, Tenn.—“I have a cou~ sin named John Humphrey,” said John Humphrey as he bought a mar- riage license from “Uncle” Harvey Hall, deputy clerk at the latter’s home. “Yes, he was in here a few minutes ago and bought a license,” Hall replied. Neither John Hum- phrey knew that the other was get- ting married. BICYCLE BANDIT Alberquerque, N. M.—Claude B. Donovan walked into his home and found a burglar snooping around. The burglar ordered him out of the house and into his car at the point of @ gun. Donovan drove around the block and the burglar rode away on @ bicycle. Nothing was missing from use. Pineapples are about 87 per cent water. — THIS CURIOUS WORLD Herbert Jaques (above), one time @ famous Harvard cross country runner, is slated to become the next president of the United States Golf Association. He has been a member of the execu- tive committee of the U. S. G. A. {since 1925 and resides in Boston, |where he is president of a hosiery ! milling company. i YOU CAN'T DRINK IT i Leipzig—Here's a liquid you can dare anyone to drink. It was recently established by Dr. Peter de Bye, Ger- man physicist, that glass is not a solid, but really liquid. He said, “There are no crystals in glass until it is a hundred years or so old. So "you see your glass windows are ac- j tually liquids, but of a very high vis- cosity.” An ideal Xmas Gift—Foley’s “Way of Smiles.” A neat lit- tle book, leather cover. Only a limited number left to be closed out at below cost. Each 50 cents, postage paid. The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, CAPTAIN HORACE 6B. WILD MADE A 200-FOOT JUMP FROM A BURNING DIRIGIBLE AND LANDED ON THE BACK OF A SWAN, IN A PARK LAGOON. TAMPA, FLORIDA ..- 1907 ‘THE NATIVES SLEEP ON MERE MATS, WHILE ALL ABOUT THEM FLOURISH THE TREES, WHICH FURNISH THE. KALOK FINE SILK COTTON FOR AMER/CAN MATTRESSES. SOUND travers Foun nmes As Fast THROUGH WATER AS THROUGH AIR, ‘AND FIFTEEN TIMES AS FAST Notice ts hereby given that by vir- of a judgment and decree in fore- Di District in and for the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota, and entered and docketed in the office of the Clerk of Court for said Burleigh County, on the 17th.day of November, 1932, in an action wherein Elizabeth F. McGillis, plaintiff and David Fryer and Rosa Fryer, was the defendants, in favor of the sald plain- tiff and apaion said defendants, for the sum of Eighteen hundred seven dollars and ninty eight cents ($1807.98) and which judgment and decree, among other things, directs the sale by me of the real property hereinafter described, to satisfy the amount due ‘The Toronto Maple Leats took sec-| re and owing the plaintiff, with inter thereon, and the costs and expen: le, or so much thereof of sald sale ‘applicable thereto will satisfy, and by virtue of a writ to me issued out of the Office of the Clerk of the District Court for Burleigh County, North Dakota, and under the seal thereof, directing me to sell said sald judgment and decree; I, J. La Kelley, Sheriff of Burleigh North * D: door of Bismarck, County of Burl of North of December, 1! o'clock in th it: \ Lot one (1) in Block Twenty one (21) Northern Pacific Addi- \ tlon of the City of Bis rek, Bur- | “leigh County, North’ Dakota, to satisfy the ‘amount of ald juds- ment and decree, with on and the costs and expen much the ceeds of such sale will satis J. Sheriff of Burle|; CAMERON AND HE! Attorneys for the plaintif! P. O. and Office Addr Bismarck, N. D, 11-18-25 12-2. 6, NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that by vir-| B: tue of a judgment and decree in fore- 1 property pursuant to property to the highest bidder for cash at Public auction, at the front of the Court House, in the City. d|leigh and State of North Di afternoon, of said day, | and which property to be sold as aforesaid is described as follows to- eof as the pro- C plicable thereto ry. Dated this 18th day of November, 1933. L, KELLEY, th County, N. D, JESON, r by the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District in and for the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota, and entered and docketed in the office of the Clerk of said Court on the 8th day of December, 1932, in an action where- in First State Bank of Chatfield, a corporation, of Chatfield, Minnesota, was plaintiff, and P. P.’ Bliss, L. R. Bliss, H. P. Goddard, M. F. Goddard, The Northern Trust Company, a cor- poration, Northern and Dakota Trust 4 corporation, and Burleigh y, North Dakota, a municipal poration, were defendants, in favor of sald plaintiff and against the de- fendants, P. P. Bliss, L. R. Bliss, H! P. Goddard ‘and M. F. Goddard, and each of them, for the sum of Two Thousand Four Hundred Thirty-five Dollars and ‘Twenty Cents ($2,435.20), which judg- ment and decree, among’ other thin directs the sale by me of the rea’ t | Property hereinafter described, to sat- isfy the amount of said judgment, with interest thereon and ier cene and expenses of such sale, or so much thereof as the proceeds of applicable thereto will s: virtue of a writ to me issued out of the office of ‘the clerk of said court, under the seal thereof, directing me to sell said real property, pursuant to said pidement end. fedree, ah + J. elley, Sheriff of Butleigh County, North Dakota, and the person appointed by said Court to make sale will sell the hereinafter describ- ed real property to the highest bidder for cash at public auction at the front door of the Courthouse, in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Bur- akota, on the 12th day of January, 1933, St the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon of said day, to satisfy the amount of said judgment and decree, with inter- est thereon, and the-costs and ex- Denses of such gale, or so much there. of as the proceeds of such sale appli- cable thereto will satisfy’ The prem- izes to be sold as aforesaid, pursuant. to sald judgment and deer. said writ and to this notice are uated in the County of Burleigh State of North Dakota, and are d ine Marnier : e Southeast Quarter (SE: of Section Six (6), in ‘Townsh! 4 Qne Hundred Thirty-nine (139 North, of> Range Seventy-seven “OD, tg of the Fifth Principal Meridian, containing 160 acres, more or less, according to the alee, Stat jovernment Survey ered? Dated December 9, 1932. J. L, Kelley, Sheriff of B peers jurleigh County, North Tenneson, Cupler & Stam- Plerce, baug! Hay a for, E26 tite, Cs i. 12+9-16-23-30 I i id sale ify; and by Attorns A