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iy ry g- n gO he us sh ps ed or ps n- ve ne ok se al ee gemrearer DEALERS BELIEVE REAL ESTATE SALES WILL RISE IN PALL Inquiries Indicate Increased De- mand For Both Farm and City Property | A few sales of real estate recently have been made in Bismarck and Bur- leigh county despite talk about a crop shortage, according to records in the office of the register of deeds. Real estate men report that it is harder to sell property now than ever due to the laws passed by the last session of the legislature. The law extending the time for foreclosure to two years instead of one has made trading in real estate extremely difficult. ‘When the legislature passed that and other laws they were of the opin- jon that they were helping the man of little means, but realty dealers say the application of the laws has made it more difficult for a man with a sal- ary or little capital to purchase a home. They assert that sellers are requiring purchasers to pay a sum equal to at least two years rent of the Property in advance before making 2 contract to sell. The reason is that a purchaser paying a small sum of money as a down payment can live in a house for two years under the law without making any further pay- ments. * Some dealers have tried to get around the law by issuing leases on property, but such leases have not been tried out in the courts in North Dakota and their validity is doubtful. All real estate dealers report that they are having numerous inquiries for city property and farm lands though the sales are not in propor- tion to the inquiries at present. It is believed that business will be much better in the fall and that there will ‘be more money in circulation then. However, the following sales have been reported during the past week: Agaton Sundby has sold his house on east Main Avenue. to Peter Jahner; W. C. Wiley has sold his home on east Rosser St., to Fred Heiser; Charlotte ‘Weaver has sold a quarter section of land west of Ft. Lincoln to Chas. A. Snyder; Ida W. Friske has sold quarter section east of Baldwin to G. Rupp. Crop prospects in northern Burleigh county are from fair to good as far as small grains are concerned. South of a line running east and west of Arnold the small grain crops were badly hurt by the hot weather though there are some fair fields south of that line. Corn is about in the best condition ever seen at this time of the year in every part of the county. Despite the prospects for a reduced yield in small grain in the county there will be more money in circula- tion than for several years past due to the high prices of farm products. Hogs, cattle and sheep are higher than for some time and will probably be worth more later though livestock has not advanced as much as grain due to the fact that farmers in Iowa, Ne- braska, Kansas and Illinois and other states to the south have rushed their stock to the market as they have little feed to keep them. There is a shortage of hay in the neighborhood of Bismarck but the corn crop is so exceptionally good that, farmers who are able to keep their livestock until late in the season will Probably profit, as prices should ad- vance in line with grain prices by that time. Minot Judge Here For Civil Actions Judge John C. Lowe of Minot was 4m Bismarck Wednesday to hear sev- eral bank receiver cases in Burleigh county district court. All of the cases which Lowe heard ‘Wednesday involved actions in which L. R. Baird, receiver of closed state banks, was a principal. John Moses of Hazen and John F. Sullivan of Mandan were attorneys in the actions. Judge Lowe expects to return to Minot late Thursday or Friday. With him here is his reporter, Miss Ella Van Berkom. Judge Jansonius and his reporter, Clifford Jansonius, were in Fessen- den Wednesday for litigation in Wells county district court. Tuesday they were at Jamestown. They are ex- pected back in the Capital City late ‘Wednesday night. . Her step-father slain in a bandit massacre and iailed on charges of complicity in the crime, Seven-year-old Dardanella Luce is being cared for by relatives at Wenona, Ill., innocent of the tragic tricl fate has play upon her. The child's mother is the widow of Frank Nash, mail robber slain in Kansas City by pals attempting to liberate him. Fate's Innocent Victim | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 1938 3 aS Dardanella Luce TWO N. D. MEN ARE KILLED IN MISHAPS Team Runs Away With One While Other Is Victim of Auto Accident Two North Dakota men were dead Wednesday, the victims of accidents in which a team of horses ran away and an automobile overturned. Albert Eitel, 69 years old, died at Jamestown Tuesday night from in- juries suffered when his team ran away near Montpelier. Eitel was busy placing his rigging in preparation for drilling a well when the horses ran away, dragging him a considerable distance over the ground, Jack Phillips, Dunn Center imple- ment dealer, was fatally injured when the automobile he was driving turned over in a roadside ditch near Kill- deer. Phillips suffered internal injuries and died before a physician could be reached. Emil Lindbeck of! Werner and Ingwald Holt of Dunn Center.) who were riding with him, escaped with minor cuts and bruises. The mishap occurred Sunday. Rye Harvesting Is Becoming General Harvesting of rye was reported from ila sections of the state Wednes- lay. In Stutsman county rye cutting is general and the same is expected of barley by the end of the week. The crop is estimated from good to very Poor. No combining had been done in that part of the state. | From Cass county reports came that harvesting of rye is general, with one field of rye northwest of Fargo being threshed Tuesday. Many fields of bar- ley and oats are being cut and the harvest of these cereals will be gen- eral before the end of the week. Some wheat in Cass county will be ready for the binder early next week, with reports indicating wheat har- vest will be general throughout the southeastern part of the state the lat- ter part of the week if the weather is favorable. Score of Bankers At Hebron Meeting More than a score of bankers from Burleigh, Morton and Grant coun- ties, members of the Tri-County Bankers’ association, met at Hebron Tuesday evening to discuss the Glass- Steagall banking measure and federal land bank and commissioner loans. It was a quarterly meeting of the association. Among those present were Kurth Krauth, G. H. Keick and T. J. Roth of Hebron; John C. Fischer and Adolph Kuehn of Glen Ullin; Fred Ellwein, Ed Temple and Pete Bau- man of New Salem; O. D. Sprecher and E. P. Danelenko of New Leipzig; SOMETHING TO REME «2-2 Fhe people of icq wert Loe ucese ..» crecl s00, WHE BLUE RIBBON MALT SEES AMERICA'S BIGGEST SELLER ems VER YOU GO, YOU FIND and comfort, Good Food DINE IN COMFORT Why not dine where the air is always pure and clean. Our water cooled, washed air system maintains that even cool temperature of 75 degrees. This system has been installed for your convenience ; THE SWEET SHOP /| ,Cool — Comfortable — Alwars Excellent Service | John G. Sept and S. A. Hfas of El- gin; ©. Tollefson and Dr. R. H. | Leavitt of Carson; Joseph P. Hess, A. R. Weinhandl and W. J. Watson |of Mandan; J. E. Davis, A. A, Mayer, |N. I. Roop and E. W. Leonard of Bismarck. Guests at the meeting included 8. | P. Rigler, E. O. Jenkins, H. T. Aske, | H. B. Wittenberg and A. B, McMil- | |Says Towns Cannot Aid Diversion Plan | __ A city council has no authority to make a donation to a fund for pro- |Mmoting the Missouri River Diversion Project, P. O. Sathre, assistant attor- | Rey general, has ruled on an inquiry | from Harvey, N. D. Sathre said the statutes provide that jthe city council shall have power to | appropriate money for corporate pur- | Poses only and to provide for the pay- ;Ment of debts and expenses of the | comporation. | “The Missouri River Diversion Pro- | Ject could not be considered a corpor- |ate purpose,” he said, “and it is my opinion therefore that the city coun- jell would have no authority to make | such @ donation.” ‘Two Are Killed When Plane Hits Mountain Mangum, Okle., July 19.—()—Two Passengers were killed and the pilot critically injured Wednesday when an airplane crashed into the side of a fog-veiled mountain 28 miles from here. The dead: Don Tinsley, of Shamrock, Tex. Jarrett Todd, Jr., son of a former county judge here. The injured pilot is W. F. Hearne. He is believed to have little chance for recovery. Communists Rapped In Klan Resolutions Valley City, N.D., July 19—(R)— Condemning Communism, a state con- vention of the Ku Klux Klan discuss- ed ways and means of combatting “evils of Communism” at the closing Session here Thursday. More than 500 persons attended the banquet Tuesday night, according to Martin Olson of Valley City, grand officer in charge. A blazing cross was lighted on a nearby hilltop, ending initiation of a class of new members. GETS SPECIAL JOB Appointment of O. R. Vold of Minot a8 a special deputy examiner to ex- amine the records of the City of Mi- not was announced Wednesday by Gil- bert Semingson, state examiner. Sem- ingson said Vold’s work will be con- fined only to examination of the Mi- not records. QUITS BY REQUEST Washington, July 19.—(7)—Dr. George Otis Smith Wednesday resign- ed as chairman of the federal power commission at the request of Presi- dent Roosevelt, who designated com- missioner Frank McNinch of North Carolina as his successor. ‘The Leaning Tower of Pisa has added nearly a foot to its inclination in the past 100 years, and is now over 14 feet out of plumb. Mate Says Negro Stole Her Love Pretty Mrs. Margaret Fay Des- > mond, 28, above, is the central figure in a $100,000 suit brought against Dr. Eugene C. Nelson, negro physician of Loe Angeles, by her husband, Leo F. Desmond, who claims the doctor stole the affections of Mrs. Desmond, the doctor's sec- retary. Dr. Nelson recently was divorced from Helen Lee Worth: ing, former Follies beauty. BURLEIGH RECEIPTS ARE SINKING FASTER THAN EXPENDITURES Collections This Year Drop 30 Per Cent; Payments 24 Per Cent Lower Burleigh county receipts. for the first six months of 1933 were 30 per cent lower than those for the corres- Ponding period in 1932, it -was an- nounced Wednesday by Treasurer Er- nest Elness. For the same period, disbursements by the county were 24 per cent lower in 1933 than in 1932. The county collected $399,063.65 in the first six months of this year com- pared to $577,505.14 for the same per- jod last year and disbursed $434,803.94 bed year compared to $573,651.36 in 1932. The decrease in receipts was $178,- 441.49 while the decrease in disburse- ments was $138,847.42, Forty-four per cent of current tax- es were collected in the first six months of this year, Elness said. The tax levy for the city of Bismarck, school districts and townships for 1932 was $765,818.61 while receipts on current taxes during the first six months of 1933 totaled $337,127.45. Elness’ table: Collections % Gain or 1932 1933 Loss January ..$ 29,268.02 $ 11,753.54 59 February . 262,180.96 108,707.92 61 March .... 212,626.55 233,587.90 April 27,893.42 16,830.89 39 May 13,907.25 13,365.71 June . 11,628.94 14,817,69 27 $577,505.14 $399,063.65 30 Disbursements January ...$ 48,570.90 $ 37,461.20 22 February .. 32,124.61 27,885.56 1. March .... 176,424.99 100,040.54 43 April . + 128,135.62 185,072.28 30 May . + 129,864.01 51,530.00 60 June ...... 58,531.23 32,814.66 43 $573,651.36 $434,803.94 24 U. S. Bridge Team Behind at London London, July 19.—()—Ely Culbert- son’s contract team began to be a bit perturbed Wednesday over failure to overtake the British lead in a match ee Charles M. Schwab's international 0) After 96 hands, with 204 left to Play, the lead of the British quartet ‘was 1,400 points, the totals being 30,- 550 for the British and 29,150 for the Americans. The British lead was ac- cumulated in two afternoons and two nights of play with three afternoons and three nights to go. STEEL BUSINESS DROPS New York, July 19—(#)—The na- tional average of steel production has declined to 58 per cent of capacity from 59 per cent a week ago, “Iron Age” reported Wednesday. SS No. 615 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF The Sterling State Bank at Sterling, in the State of North Dakota, at the close of business June 30, 1933. | Resources Loans and discounts . $ 99,423.75 Overdrafts, secured and un- BECUTEd ooo nena : Warrants, stocks, tax cer- tificates, claims, etc. 12.60 1,286.63 Banking ‘house, furniture and fixtures 5 .00 Other real estate . 16.23 Current expenses, taxes paid, over undivided s profits ee 1,131.38, Checks and other — cash items $ 42.24 lash and due from Rroiner nanie 11,198.28 11,240.52 Total : eevee $122,761.11 Liabilities Capital stock paid in .........$ 15,000.00 Surplus fund - 6,500.0 depo: subject Individual its to check ... $33,488.44 Demand certifi- eareenoe par esle a si1U0 35 Time cert of deposit 41,132.11 7,129.05 Savings depos Bills payable $4,466. 16,794.1 $122,761.11 unty of Bur- Total Btate of leigh—ss. I, H. E. Wildfang, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. H. E. WILDFANG, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 8th day of Tuly, 1933, FRED PILLSBURY, Notary Public. My commission expires July 19, 1935 Correct Attest: { H. P. GODDARD, HE. WILDFANG, H Directors. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY The California Wave Nook, 102 Third Street, Bismarck, specializes in com- bination permanents at $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 complete. Our patrons send their frie Phone 782. YOUR HAIR, les down dripping wet, from a REAL STEAM SUPER- CURLINE PERMANENT. Every wave an oil wave. Special to Sep- tember st, $3.50 Harrington's. Phone 130. KEEP IN TOUCH WITH ANGLES It's nice when you're away on va- cation to know what the folks back, home are doing. Why not call the circulation department (Phone 32),) and have The Bismarck Tribune sent | to you while you're away? Then you can keep in touch with your neigh-: bors, The Newfangles! TJ | Births and Deaths | i Reported in June | ——_—_—____ __+4 BIRTHS. May 31—Mr. and Mrs. John Michael Caplice of Bismarck (now of Seattle, Wash.,) son. June 2—Mr. and Mrs, Carl Toliver jf 1922 Avenue D, Bismarck, daughter. dune 3—Mr. and Mrs. Emery Town- send Putnam of Bismarck, son; Mr. and Mrs, Jacob Ketterling of Heil, daughter, June 5—Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Nicholson of Glencoe, daughter. June 6—Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Schoeneman of 707 Avenue A, Bis- marck, son. June 7—Mr. and Mrs. Gottfried Gebhardt of 1028 Eighth St. Bis- marck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Sher- man Edward Deragisch of Bismarck, daughter; Mr, and Mrs. Charles Thomas Ryan of Sterling, daughter. dune 8—Mr. and Mrs. Walter LeRoy Renfrow of Turtle Lake, daughter. June 10—Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Johnson of 302 Griffin St., Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Newton Mansfield Daffinrud of 917 Sixth St., Bismarck, daughter, June 13—Mr. and Mrs, Nicholaus N. Boehm of 415 Twelfth St. south, Bismarck, son; Mr. and Mrs. Noyce A. Norton of Bismarck, daughter. June 17—Mr. and Mrs, Charles Mc- Cormick of Menoken, son, June 18—Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Shepard of 600 Tenth St., Bismarck, son. June 19—Mr. and Mrs. George Avery Neideffer of Bismarck, daugh- ter; Mr, and Mrs. Chauvin A. Belile of Sterling, son; Mr. and Mrs. Henry George Graves of 804 Avenue D, Bis- marck, son; Mr. and Mrs, Robert M. Welch of Menoken, son; Lieut. and Mrs. Woleoth Kent Dudley of Fort Lincoln (now of Fort Monmouth, N. J.), daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Attas Boutrous of 212 Avenue A, Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fernon Albrecht of Emmet, son. June 20—Mr. and Mrs. Leo H. Walf 31 of Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Melvin Pederson of Driscoll, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Aloysius P. Simon of 420 Avenue B, Bismarck, son; Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Funston of Menoken daughter. June 21—Mr. and Mrs. Edward Earl Harper of 623 Front 8t., Bismarck, son. June 22—Mr. and Mrs. Robert Horning of Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Collins of Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Anton J. Kutchera of 701 Ninth St., Bismarck, daughter. June 23—Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Earl Olmsted of Bismarck, daughter. June 26—Mr. and Mrs. Adolph D. Klein of 522 Twelfth St. Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Edward Neuharth of Washburn, son; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Peter Mahoney of Bis- marck, daughter. June 27—Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Miller of Krem, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel J. Fischer of Glen Ul- lin, son. June 30—Mr, and Mrs. Karl Bauer of Golden Valley, daughter. DEATHS June 1—Mrs. Charles F. Albrecht, 48, Goodrich; Edward Vining, 23, Hal- liday, Mrs. Malcohm Stewart, 88, Bis- marek, June 2—Frank Paris, 73, Bismarck. June 6—Gottlieb Oster, 55, Hazen. ———— Notice Of SALE OF LAND: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That in pursuance of an order made on the 11th day of July, 1933, by the Hon, I. ©. Davies, Judge of the county court in and for the county of Burleigh and state of North ‘kota, the undersign- ed, the executrix of the last will of Greenbury A. Rawlings, late of the city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, deceased, will, on or after the 3ist day of July, 1933, offer for sale and sell at private sale to the highest bidder for cash, or upon such other terms as are permitted by law, subject to con- firmation by the judge of said county court, those certain lots, pieces and parcels of land, situate, lying and be- ing in the city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, and described as follows, to- wit: Lot Seven (7), and the Fast Twelve and one-half (E. 12%) Feet of Lot Bight (8), in Block Eighteen (18), Northern Pacific Addition to such city, together with the easement appurtenant thereto consisting of the right to pass and repass over and across the South 10 Feet, otherwise described as the South One-fifth, of Lot Three (3), in Block Eighteen (18), and across the South 10 Feet of Lot Eighteen (18), in sald Block Eighteen (18), of Northern Pacific Addition to said’ city. Dated: July 11th, 1933. Lucile H. Rawlings, Executrix of the last will and testament of Greenbury A, Rawlings, Deceased. Dullam & Young Attorneys for Executrix Bismarck, North Dakota July 12-19, Worlds Fair Excursions Round 6S Trip to Chicago from "16°35 Coaches only. Correspond- ing rates from other North Dakota and Minnesota Points. On sale every week- end. 10-day return limit. Also reduced fares daily, good in Pullmans. Special Service We'll make your Chicago hotel reservations, if you wish, Ask about All-Ex- pense Tours. T. P. Allen Northern Pacific Depot Bismarck, N. D. Avoid Hazards of the Highway and Chicago Traffic Turmoil— June T—Donald Carl Nickel, 3, Judson. June 10—Gwendolyn Hostetler, 21, Brisbane; Mrs. Ferderer, 30, Mandan. June 13—Mrs. Margaret F. Parker, 53, Hettinger; Mrs. Selma Lindell, 56, Washburn. June 16—Delores Jean Wyngarden, 2, Pettibone. June 17—Mrs. Mary Schock, Tappen. June 18—Genevieve Kelsch, 44, Lin- a, mn. June 21—Mrs, Henry Erbele, 58, hr. i June 22—Mrs. W. G. Dow, 64, Man- jan. June 25—Fritz Johnson, 48, Regan; Willard L. Roberts, 4, Bismarck. June 30—Mrs. Jennevieve V. Fude, 41, Braddock. Bismarck Woman, 77, Breaks Her Knee Cap ‘Tripping over a garden hose while working in the yard last Saturday eve- ning, Mrs. W. A. Baker of 820 Man- dan St., suffered a fracture of her left knee cap. Mrs. Baker, 77 years old, is the} mother of Lyman A. Baker, former | deputy North Dakota tax commis- sioner. Mrs. Baker was taken to a local hos- pital Tuesday. Her condition is fair, according to her son, but it is expected that the fracture will take a long time, to heal because of her advanced age. | Mrs. Baker last February suffer-| ed a fractured shoulder blade and) broken wrist when she slipped and fell on an icy sidewalk. She recov- ered from these injuries rapidly. She is the wife of a retired minis- ter. In seating guests at dinner, it is customary to separate married cou- ples but to allow an engaged man to take in his fiancee. CAPITOL —s=THEATRE ==—. Daily 2:30 -7-9 This Attraction 25c¢ Last Times Tonight “A GIRL MUST LIVE! . «and what I mean by living os the girl who took a short-cut down the prim- rose path, to make herself o ; ‘BED OF ¢ ROSES’ hin rae - Comedy ALWAYS COOL = a y “No wonder more people buy Buicks than all other eights in its price range combined!” , GO BEST BY TRAIN ‘ as Public preference for 10 cars combined. To the man or woman who is not familiar with the new Buick Eight, such dominance may seem almost unbelievable; but have driven this car, and gained even the most - casual acquaintance with its capabilities, the reasons for Buick’s leadership are crystal-clear. “What,” you may ask, “is so different about Buick? Why do so many people consider it superior to any other car selling at similar prices?” The answer lies chiefly in design. WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE New a In the early days in the west it! was necessary to drive spikes in tele- | graph poles to prevent buffaloes from pushing them over. The building of the Vatican was Started about 480 years ago; almost every pope since then has made ad- | ditions to it, NO~-/#s two AA Diapepsin tablets ! Many men can eat anything and everything without any distress because they have learned how to regulate digestion. Each tablet of diapepsin saves half an hour's labor in the stomach. So you can actually correct slow stomach, harmless stimulant again. You can really control digestion this way, A lot of men and women who once had the “soda” habit have found lasting relief through Pape’s Diapepsin. Some need only one tablet; others as many as five. Just. experiment until you can eat and drink anything and everything without any sign of distress, Get some diapepsin today! Remember, a “cast-iron stomach” just means onefthat empties in six hours, If you have gas, any sourness, or feel a “lump” an hour after eating, take two tablets of Pape’s Dia- pepsin. Do this until the stomach empties as it should without aid. When it slows down, use this same so overwhelming that—with 11 eights in its price range to choose from— more people buy Buicks than all of the other GENERAL NEW FALL MODEL PATTERN 1518 Along with the latest news about fabrics comes an equally exciting frock . . . we've sketched it today! It boasts such smart seaming, an in- triguing yoke with sleeves tucked and joined at drop shoulders and a chic neckline. Yoke and collar might be of contrast, too. Wool-like silk crepes are the newest fabrics and they're stunning! Pattern 1518 may be ordered only in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4% yards 39-inch fabric. Illustrated step-by- step sewing instructions included with this pattern. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly your name, address and ate number. BE SURE TO STA’ SIZE WANTED. THE NEW SUMMER EDITION OF THE ANNE ADAMS PATTBEN BOOK IS READY. Afternoon, sports, golf, tennis dresses, jumpers, house frocks, special beginners’ petterns, styles for juniors, and cool elothes for youngsters, and instructions for making a chic sweater are the fascinating items. SEND FOR YOUR COPY. PRICE OF CATALOG FIF- TEEN CENTS. CATALOG AND PATTERN TOGETHER TWENTY- FIVE CENTS. Address all mail orders to The Bis- marck Tribune Pattern De) ent, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. Cool Breezes with the Fisher Ventilation Systens Buick today is Because of its more enduring design and its finer quality, you will enjoy driving a Buick more years and many more thousands of miles than you would want to drive most cars, And a Buick is easy to pay for on the liberal G. M. A.C. plan. As a result, selection of a Buick is an economy as well as an assurance of thorough satisfaction. Come in and inspect the new Buick Eight and take a trial drive. When you have done this, we believe you'll say, “No wonder more people buy Buicks than all other eights in its price range combined!” Visit the General Motors Building Century of Progress BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM BUICK hight van to those who MOTORS Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. Phone-55 Bismarck, N. Dak. 100 West Broadway ———BUICK- GIVES MORE AND BETTER MILE Smee