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gee MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1921 ‘eNO WILL BUILD NEW APARTMENTS IN CITY OF MANDAN Ressler, Leonard and Chubb Back $50;000 Building Corporation . The. Architectural Home Builders and Construction company has been organized with a capitalization of $50,000, according to the announce- ment of the officers of. the company. The new concern will take over the buainess of, Ressler & Leonhard com- pany. ‘One of the first objects contem)! plated is an apartment house. It will be a modern, fireproof building of the best construction. Ressler Heads Company The officers of the company are: ‘Nick Ressler, president; H. M. Leon- hard, vice president, and P. W. Chubb, secretary and treasurer, Mr. Ressler is a well-known archi- tect and is at present supervising the construction of the addition to the St. Mary’s School at Bismarck, a new Catholic school and church at Gar- rison and several other biuldings, Assisted State Architect Mr. Leonhard was employed with Mr. Crabbe while the latter was state architect. He is an overseas veteran. Mr. Qhubb came to Mandan as dis- trict sales agent of the. Leyner Trac- tor & Manufacturing Company of Den- ver. He was one of a dozen men who sold in eight months the $2,500,- 000.00 stock issue of the tractor com- pany, TIPS EAST OFF TO REAL DOPE ON N. DAKOTA Secretary Thomas H. Sullivan of the Mandan Commercial Club, has tipped the East off to the real Sun- shine state. While Nebraska, Missouri, Ilinos, Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, Kansas and other states too numerous to men- tion Saturday were putting on their snowshoes and digging ‘paths through snowdrifts as high as buildings, Tom Sulllivan sat down on his machine and typed off the following cheering message from “Where the West Be 'ribune, Chicago. “We wish to call attention to this opportunity of checking the canard that North Dakota is the home of blizzards. We haven't had a blizzard all.winter. For three weeks farmers have been seeding in the fields and the. average temperature today throughout the western half of the state was 75. Clear skies mark free- dom from blizzards in Mandan, ‘Where the West Begins’,” Mandan Commercial Club,™ Thos. Sullivan, Sec’y. Leaves: for Home. Mrs. C. J. Gravning has returned to her home at Hettinger. She was called to Mandan by the illness of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Russell A. Young. LN RR MN NN [MANDAN N =WS anno Municipal Institution ; , Organization of the Mandan High School band and a municipal musical institution has been completed. Suffi- cient money has already been sub- scribed to guarantee a successful sea- son this summer. Joseph Bergeim will remain in Mandan for the summer vacation and will be the leader. Officers of the organization have, been selected as folltws: Joseph Bergeim, director and manager; J. \B. Racek, secretary and tresurer; J, P. Hess, William Ord- way, C, E. Edquist and N. E. Luther, trustees, Plans are being made for the erec- tion of a bandstand for regular week- ly. concerts. The band ‘boys will wear a, regu- lation uniform. Special band hats will be worn and white duck trousers with black or dark blue coats. SUGGEST NEW CLUB SITE Some enthusiastic Mandan citizens are suggesting a new site for a Coun- try club. There is a spot near Man- dan, they say, which would ‘afford ca- noeing, an excellent gvuif course and skating in winter. They propose, after the bridge is finished. to seek a union of Bismarck and Mandan clubs. \ May Reorganize Club \Reorganization of the Mandan Gun club has been proposed now that the cost of trapshooting has fallen. Enters St. Alexiuy, for several weeks, has been taken to the St. Alexius hospital, Bismarck, for treatment. He is improving slowly. Here for a Few Days, H. S. Clucker of Sioux Falls, S. D,, is spending a few days in Mandan. His sister, Mrs. E. W. Long is a patient at the Deaconess hospital. Recovers from Injury. Albert Seeman, well-known young farmer living south of Mandan, has practically recovered from the acci- dent last January when the horse which he was riding fell on him and broke his ankle. Will Return to Mandan The W. J. Mackin tamily will re- turn to Mandan in June, according to word received by friends of the family here. Both Mis? Muriel Mack- in and Miss Ellen Martin. who mukes her home with the Mackin) family, will teach in Mandan next year. Major Welch Talks. Major A, B. Welch, commander of Gilbert Furness post of the American Legion, talked at the State Training School Sunday afternoon, giving the Indian story of the Custer massacre. It was the second of a series of ad- dresses, BOYS AND GIRLS JOIN RED CROSS Chicago,, April 18.—There are. 137,- 632 children in 2,024 schools in North Dakota enrolle’ ‘n ‘*e Junior Red Cross up to Ap.:! i, ‘his represents the enrollment for the past ‘seven months although the work for the present school year will continue until June. In the nine states of the Central Di- vision—Illinois, lowa, Minnesota, Mon- tana, Nebraska; North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Wyoming— there are‘ 1,055,522 Junior Red Cross members. The national organization numbers 4,606,379 according to latest statistics. This represents groups in country and city schools which are banded together in various projects for community welfare in co-operation with the schools. These local activities include—fi- nancing of sch0ol Junches; provision for dental clinics; furnishing school and play ground equipment and the carrying out of clean up, garden and thritt campaigns, Toys and garments are often made for sick and needy children, assistance furnished chil- dren’s hospitals and transportation provided for crippled children to at- tend school. \ Police Taught First, Aid Baltimore, Md,, April MS rere member of the Baltimore police de- - ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine. Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre- scribed by physicians for twenty-on2 years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bay- er package for Colds, Headache, Neu- ralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Tooth- ache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylica- ei@, partment has just received instruction in first aid methods from Commodore W. E. Longfellow, first aid and lfe- saving expert of the American Red Cross. Red. Cross first aid kits have also been installed in every police call box, precinct station and patrol wagon. Points along the water front have been provided with Red Cross life buoys, Sewing Bees Revived to Ald Suaffer- ing Bables. Chicago, April 18.—Old-fashioned sewing hees have been revived, They are among the Red Cross activities in a number of chapters in the Central Division which are aiding needy chil- dren in Central and Eastern Europe in connection with the work of the European Relief Council of which Her- bert Hoover is chairman, The nine states—IlJinois, Iowa, Min- nesota, Montana, Nebraska, North an@ South Dakota, Wisconsin and Wyom- ing have ben asked to provide 282,000 garments and 38,000 layettes df the 2,250,000 articles of clothing needed at once to partially care for destitute children. { , Although the work of garment pro- {duction is being carried forward to some extent by women in Europe with materials furnished by the American Red Cross this is entirely inadequate to meet the need. Red Cross Alds Manila Fire Victims. Washington, April 18.—Four hun- dred tents were provided by the Amer- ican Red Cross Chapter at Manila, P, I., for families ren®ered bomeless by the fire there on April 1. The tents cwere turned over to the loca] chapter of the Red Cross for distribution by the U. S. army. A feeding station was also opened and infant clothing distri- buted REP, ALBERTS St. Cloud, Minn., April 18——J. J. Alberts is another Nonpartisan leaguer | who has quit the fold Mr Alberts formerly was a resident of Divide county, this state, and in 1917 and 1919 served as a member of the state legislature. Subsequent to that he went to Stearns county, Minn., where he became an organizer for the league. MANDAN BAND “ORGANIZES AS. CIVIC. AFFAIR Famous High School Organiza.’ tion Led by Bergeim Becomes | Pat Tobin, who has been seriously ill} | | | | | 1 F { i. A. SPERRY AND THIE | By Newspaper Enterprise, New York, April 18.—If you're tired of burning up high-priced gasoline in | the ol’ flivver, why not try butter? It's practical—if your “jit” be | equipped with one of the new en- | Sines recently invented by ‘Elmer Am- | brose Sperry of Brooklyn. If you think butter’s a little high, try lard, or even powdered coal! | Sperry says they will work equally well. {. He has at length succeeded in per- | fecting the oil-burning Diesel type engine for automobile use, a task that | many other inventors have tried in vain, Sperry has worked on his en- gine for 25 years. “It will run equally well on any grade of crude oil, will digest lard or butter with astonishing ease and during a recent 36-hour test churned | off 3,200 revolutions a minute with- aut faltering once,’ says the in- ventor. Sperry is regarded by scientists as NAZIMOVA WILL THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE LOAD UP YOUR ‘JIT’ TANK WITH BUTTER—AND SPFED! TREE. CULTURE. PART OF WORK - OFU.S. STATION | |Box Elder and Green Ash Are Recommended for Shelter- Belt Planting (EXTENT OF THE WORK’ | _ i | The Northern Great Plains Field! ' Station at Mandan is one of the Fed- ‘eral field stations under the Bureau! of Plant Industry in the u. S, ‘Depart-| ment of Agriculture. At this station! are three main departments, grain, , and grazing experiments; fruit and) i shrubs; and trees. } | In the tree park, the department) ; through this station is placing dem-, onstration plantings with selected | farmers in the part of North and South Dakota west of the 100th meri- ; dian and Wyoming and Montana to/ | the Kocky Mountains in dry land} ! areas, unirrigated. i These demonstration plantings con-! sist of shelter-belts tor farm build-; ings, and are limited to an average of tive in each county per year, These demonstrators are selected through | the farm bureau and county agent, his other achievements are re! and on account of the necessity of searches in high-powered searchlight) visiting the farm before planting, it and electric mining machinery flelds.| jg required that the applications be ‘He has invented many appliances for on file at the ‘Mandan Station aj advancing the electrical industry. year in advance of planting. i Sperry’s new engine is the result} ‘The first demonstrations were Aut of 25 years’ work. .,.| out in 1916, and up to this time (in- ‘A remarkable feature about it {s| cluding 1921 plantings) will nu er | that it is no heavier per horse power] apout 825 plantings. Trees to the! than the common gas engine, he| number of 1,600,000 have been sent says, “And it costs no more. out. These demonstration plantings; It needs no spark plugs or ignition | i¢ placed in a solid block would cover system to operate . about 625 acres. “My engine is lighter per horse) The trees that have been found to ower than any oil-burning qhgine: he the best adapted for shelter-belt ever built, but I did not sacrifice @| work are the boxelder, green ash, bit of power.” ‘Northwest poplar, for the @main body Navy Department officials have| of the belt with caragana, buffalo- asked Sporry to’ install one of his) perry or Russian olive for the out- engines on a_ seaplane for experi-| side rows. Native elms are hardy, mental purposes, but do not make a good windbreak Experts who have viewed the ma-| tree on account of having sq few chine predict it will revolutionize the) branches along the side. Willows and auto industry. Norway or Carolina poplar have not proven hardy and should not be used, Other native trees that may be used in plantings are the cottonwood, and wild plum, and chokecherry. ENGINE HE INVENTED a second Edison. His contributions! to science include the gyro compass, which now guides ocen ships. Among jin Chicago, with an output valued at | $6,500,000,000, school. | Animals slaughtered in the Chicago! | stockyards annually number about |'18,000,000. The gross sales of Chicago's five big packers are said to exceed $3,000,000.- | 000 a year. | Thirty-nine railroads, comprising 40 per cent of the total rail mileage of | the United States, have their terminals in Chicago... \ There are more than 100 railroad \yards and clearing yards with,a ca-/ | pacity of 10,000 freight cars daily, to Chicago, Fi iS BE SEEN HERE IN GREAT PLAY “Billions,” French Play, is Ve- hicle for Remarkable Actress \ Fe “Billions” is the highly interesting | title of Nazimova's newest cinema pro- ITY f duction, and in this drama from iN French sources the brilliant actress will be scen as the feature attraction AREY 1 r \ at the Eltinge Theatre for a run of two a AA days beginning Tuesday. Advance re-| on) . ports on the picture declare it to be! the best that Nazimova has ever done, notably from the standpoint of the} e Us e great variety of emotional expression ; it permits to the gifted Russian star et ' Peers lavishness of its pictorial back | Several Hundred Representatives) | As may be surmised, the plot of! to Come to Bismarck May 18 | | | “Billions” revolves about people of; wealth and high position. Nazimova’s! role is that of a Fin ey cneeee| who is widowed when the Bolsheviki| i blow her titled husband to atoms with} MONTANA AFTER MEETING! a bomb. She has been estranged from | the Prince and is in New York, living |ODD FELLOWS Demonstration work in the planting of conifers (evergreen) has just be- gun, and has not been run long enough to give results. The best trees to use to results. The best trees to use to supplement the deciduous windbreak are the jack pine for light soils, and Scotch pine, Colorado blue and Black Hills spruce for the heavier soils, though the latter do well on almost any soil except pure sand. The Arboricultural department at the Mandan Field Station is also try- ing to cut a large number of trees both American and foreign in order to determine their adaptability to this western region, Experimentg in different methods of planting and culture are also under way. HOLD CARNIVAL; ‘The carnival held Saturday night at| Patterson hall by the Capital City lodge No. 2 1. 0. O. F., was a success- ful affair, The proceeds, will go to the entertainment fund for the grand lodge which meets here May 31 and June 1-2. The atmosphere with the clowns, horns and flying paper was typically Mardi Gras. The Patterson orchestra OPPOSES LEAGUE) in the heart of the uptown art colony of the metropolis, her home the meet- ing place for the cleverest members of artistic Bohemia, when the story op- ens. The princess has fallen in love with {a poet whom she has never seen, al- {though her soul has responded to his |verses. One day the poet is suddenly lifted from obscurity and the disarray jof his Greenwich Village studio into af- {fluence through the death of a fa- jbulously rich uncle. Now a million- jaire, he discards his identity as a poet jand sets out to see life and spend hie} jnewly inherited dollars. | The Princess, meanwhile, has be- ‘come wealthy through the taking off jof her spouse, and she meets the poet, jacclaimed as a multi-millionaire, at a fashionable southern California hotel. They fall in love, but some designing ischemers endeavor to blackmail the | poet-millionaire and the Princess comes to his rescue by sacrificing her jown reputation as a good woman. j__ “Billions” appeared first on the French stage under another title. Charles Bryant adapted the drama for Nazimova's use. Ray C. Smallwood di- rected the production. | Nazimova herself was responsible for the designing of some of the ex- ceptionally beautiful settings. Her supporting cast is headed by the adapter, Mr. Bryant, playing the poet- millionaire, and includes such sterling screen favorites as William J. Irving, Victor Potel, John Steppling, Marian Skinner, Bonnie Hill, Emmett King jand Eugene H. Klum. Nazimova made the production at the Metro studios on the Pacific coast. CHICAGOETTES By the census of 1920, Chicago has a population of 2,701,705. Chicago is the world’s foremost live- stock, grain and lumber center, There is an average of 675 conven- tions a year in Chicago. A new union station, costing $60,- 000.000, is planned for Chicago. Chicago has built a $5,000,000 pier for business and pleasure. The Chicago packing industry dates 1 According to the St. Cloul Journal-j back to 1835. Press, Mr. Alberts called upon the ed- itor of that paper a few days ago and declared that he was absolutely Chicago has built a $5,000.000 picr for business and pleasure, The Chicago packing industry dates through with the organization. He as- | back to 1835. serted to the editor that the financial Chicago has 52 miles of docks witu schemes of the league were such that | railroad facilities. he could no longer stand them. The extinct volcano Palolo, over-) There are 75,000 employes in the packing industry in Chicago. Nearly three-fourth’s of the coun- looking Honolulu, now furnishes 2.-| trv's supply of hides comes through 000,000 gallons of drinking water daily" to the city. . Chicago. played. Bismarck will entertain a big con- j vention, opening the morning of May LUTHERANS OF i 18, when the biennial grand lodge | session of the Ancient Order of United 1 Workmen for the jurisdiction of North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, ‘Wyoming,| - ‘ 5 | Nevada, Utah and California will be in " session. The convention will last two, q Several hundred representatives will be here. Most of the representatives | will be from North Dakota, but Mon-| Voice Tribute to Appearance of; tana will furnish many visitors, and 1 { some will come from Idaho and Cali-! Martin Luther at i The sessions will be devoted almost entirely to business, but local people ; — i! jwill endeavor to steal enough time! Lutherans everywhere in the coun-— from the sessions to show the visitors | try count today as the anniversary of | the city of Bismarck. one of the great days of history—the/| biennial session of the grand lodge of | of Worms. the Degree of Honor of North Dakota.| There was no general observance in} i The two orders have no direct connec- |the city, but Lutherans plan to ob- tion, other than friendly relationship. | gerye the memorable appearance of This is the first time the grand lodge | ¢ne founder of the church at the an- have been held in Fargo, the seat of | 1 Hi aid today. | the home office, or in Grand Forks. | LM Mi etaoaty really Mees Octo- Slop Mlace ani temesown 2 ner ee en ee ee be es . iu gospel of Christ and St. Paul’s inter- The Montana delegation will come to; pretation of Christianity, he arrived perhaps three days. aie Diet of Worms | At the same time there will be the! stand of Martin Luther at the Diet has met in Bismarck. Usually sessions! nya} reformation festival in the fall, | Bismarck to ask that the grand lodge | 54 the conclusion that practices of the eee of 1923 go to Great Falls, Mon-| poman Catholic church at that time The first grand lodge session in the/ were not my secord et me Lata Northwest took place January 24, 1877.| interpretation, and he walled ath : At that time fraternal insurance so-| ‘hese on the doors of; thezcathe- cieties were practically unknown in{‘ral_at Wittenberg. = These were the Northwest. The Ancient Order of | SPread all over Europe in a short United Workmen is a pioneer not only: time. Luther continued maintaining 20 North Dakota but also in the North- | his belief for nearly four years. A west. aos, ‘bill of excommunication was issued The Ancient Order of United Work-| bY Pope Léo. X, which bill Luther | men showed the greatest increase in| burned in Wittenberg square, As a re-| life insurance producers in the state | sult he was summoned before the Dict | of North Dakota in 1920. | of Worms, where he appeared on thej The net increase in the ten largest | 18th day of April, 1521. | life insurance producers in the statc| Luther refused to retract from his of North Dakota in 1920 follows: | utterances, declaring, “I cannot sub- A. O. U. W., $3,517.138.00; Provident | mit my faith to the pope or councils. Life, $2,879,000.00; Northwestern Na-} because it is as clear as noonday that tional, $2,867,538.00; Lincoln National,| they have fallen into error, and evea | $2,734,799.00; New York-Life, $1,706,-| into glaring contradictions of them-) 870.00; Guard Life, .$1,506,951.00; | selves. If then, I am not convicted by Great Northern Life, $1,374,531.00; | proof from Holy Scripture, or by co- Mutual Life, New York, $1,326,563.00; | gent. reasons, I neither can nor will Mutual Trust Life,-$1,235,720.00; Great | retract anything, for it is neither right West Lite, $1,109,781.00 | nor safe for a Christian to sin against | ; his conscience.” Owen Wister electrified the reading} DAILY PPA SERVICE public in 1915 with “The Pentecost vf | Calamity,” “If you want to succeed,”! © BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA wv Known all over the Northwest for Quality Stop hating your job. Stop being a} grouch. Stop habits. Work like the} devil and keep laughing” The latest use to which glass has} he says, “first stop hating persons. | @ MAIL US YOUR FILMS ® been put is in the manufacture of bathtubs, | There are more than 20,000 factories LANPHER MOCK WEDDING HELD AID FOR DIVORCE COURT Bishop Wherle Objects to Mock * Ceremony in Mandan High School Mock weddings. should not be per- mitted in the schools or elsewhere, Bishop" Wehrle declares in observa- tions on a “Tom Thumb Wedding,” which was held in the Mandan high) The bishop's letter to The Tribune on the subject follows: Mock Wedding in the Public High School Gymnasiam. Bismarck, N, D., April 15, 1921. In today’s issue of the “Tribune” we learn that: “‘Tom Thumb’s Wedding’ will be given this evening at the high school gymnasium by | sixty young- sters, under the direction of Misses Helen Greenwood and Andrey Miller of the school faculty,” etc. and that star performers will play the rolls of minister, groom, bride, best man, bride’s maids, ring bearer, etc. In regard to this I wish to state: In the endeavor to be fair to all re- ligious denominations and to men of no religious belief at all, it has be- come a kind of law to banish from the public school everything which should remind the children of any special Kind of religion. Delicate considera- tion for Jew and Heathen have heen given as reasohs why every positive Christian doctrine of faith is banished from the public school curriculum, Tgshould judge that consideration for the feelings of the Christian people of Bismarck who consider the wedding ceremonies as truly sacred, and es- pecially of the Catholics of Bismarck who consider matrimony a sacrament instituted by Christ and, therefore. a mock marriage a mean discretion and profanation, should refrain public school teachers from letting the pupils go through the performances of 9 mock marriage, and much more froin teaching them such performances. There are plenty other entertainments which the children may enjoy. Such mock marriages rob matrimony of its sacredness in the eyes of young and grown up people, and. are, there- fore, a kind of education for divorce. Divorce is, according to the) state ments of many of our best statemen. an evil which endangers our country much more than all ‘its outside ene- mies, True patriotism should, there- fore, be also a strong motive why such mock marriages should neverbe allowed in any public school building, Yours, VINCENT WEHRLE, Bishop of Bismarck. FEDERAL FARM” LOAN BONDS ARE: ON SALE TODAY Bankers Will Assist in Placing, Big Issue Before Investors of Nation 1 = | Forty million dollars of five per cent. | twenty year Federal Lank Bank bonds; were placed on sale this morning; through a group of 1,000 investment) | bankers from all over the country, ac- cording to an announcement by Secre- tary Mellon of the treasury depart-! ment. { The bonds which will be sold at par can be obtained also from Federal Land banks and farm loan associa-; tions. The bonds will be red¢emable, Mr. Mellon said, at the option of the issu-! ing bank at any time after ten vente from the date of issue. The manager: EAD COLDS Melt in spoon; inhale vapors; , apply freely up nostrils. | VICKS VAPORUB Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly | HATS The more you know the more ’ you know you ought to know . this splendid hat. ~ of the investment bankers group, formed at the request of thé farm loan board to handle the issue, will be’ Al- exander Brown and Son, Lee Higgin- son and company, National City Com- pany, Brown Brothers and Company, Forbes and company, and the Guaranty Company. A distinctive feature of the new is- sue will be that the right of redemp- tion by ‘the banks cannot be exercised until the eleventh year after their Is- sue. EXTENSION OF STATE SCHEMES . BEING OPPOSED (Continued from page 1) and shall in the five years preceding maturity levy a tax not exceeding one- fifth of the amount of the bonds each year, to provide a fund for payment. The law authorizing bonds of the North Dakota Mill and Elevator As- sociation provides that the bonds shall be sold at par, the maturity and in- terest rate to be fixed by the governor, and provides that mortgages on all the property shall be delivered as secur- ity fee for the bonds. LOFTHUS NAMES STROM. RECEIVER Williston, N. D., April 18.—Alex Strom, former state manager of the Nonpartisan league and later with the Consumers United Stores company. has been appointed receiver of the Wil- liams State Bank, which was closed a little over a week ago. WOMAN AVOIDS AN OPERATION Hope Nearly Gone, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Saved Her Star, N. C.—‘‘My monthly spells gave meé so much trouble, sometimes they would last two weeks. I was treated by two doc- tors without relief and they both said I would have to have an operation. I had my troublefour years and was unfit to do given up all hope of ever getting any Hbetter.. I read about your medicine in the ‘Primitive Baptist’ paper and decitied to try it. Ihave used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills for about seven months and now I am able to do my work. I shall never forget your medi- cine and you may publish this if you want to as it is true.”—Mrs. J. F. URSEY, Star, N. C. lere is another woman who adds her testimony to the many whose letters we have already published, proving that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound often restores health to suffering women even after they have gong so far that an operation is deemed advisable. Therefore it will surely pay any woman whe suffers from ailments peculiar to her sex to give this good old fashioned remedy Suits Guaranteed AN ee ; lew Sprin Patterns ‘ Made to Your Order $22.00 $75.00 All Work Guaranteed Frank Krall TAILOR CAR WASHING CORWIN A GTGR Ca. ELECTRICAL SPECIALISTS EXCLUSIVE Y Service and parts for Delco, Remy, Northeast and Auto Lite SERVIC K-W Magnetos, Exide and teries, and Klaxon horns. starters, Bosch, Eisemann and innesota bat- ELECTRIC SERVICE & TIRE CO. Bismarck, No. Dak.