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PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE \ MANY AGGIE SENIORS LAND GOOD PLACES North Dakota Students Find | Jobs in Work They Have | Followed During Course ge i Fargo, N. D., May 25.—Many sen- iors at the North Dakota Agricultural college who will receive degrees in June have accepted positions in the line of work they have been follow ing during their college career, ac- cording to information gathered from s of the various schools of the de the college. Others have been offer- ed not yet de-/ cided which to accept. | Numbers of the graduates in the, School of Agriculture plan to return | to the home farm to put into pr e- | tical application the agricultural | principles learned while at school. / One student, Theodore Piper, has left for New Canaan, Conn., taking | a calf sold by the college to an east- ern stock m. He may spend the] summer there studying eastern farm ing methods. J. Ogden and Leslie Narum Gerard the Brauer, Archie will go into United States Marine corps in June with 5 on second lieu s Hull will engage in commi Fra ‘ads will teach in the | high schools of North and South Da- | kota and Minnesota during the next year. Suzanne Martin, Fargo, will teach in the Garretson, S. D., high school. Lucile Thompson of Fargo has contracted to teach in the L. high school. Ineq Freeman teach in the high sthool at Wadena, The Bishop of Bruges contain a cloth st: HOLY RELIC ON EXHIBIT himself bea’ town’s annual processio ined with the blood of Christ, in the old Belgian j the sacred coffer, believed to rs n of the Saint Sang. Minn. Helen Lindquist will teach at —— Aurora, S. D. G. W. Kappel is to be| rather than on the development of How much more emphatic -General principal of schools at Galesburg.|next year’s model | Billy would have been if he'd gone Charles A. Stroup of Williamsburg, “It is also evident that the devel-| Ohio, will be principal of schools at!opment of new designs, the experi:} Rhame, and Harry Bridgeford of| mental work on a new model and the} Larimore will be teacher and coach making of the dies and special tools| Detroit, Minn nd machines necess for the pro-| Some of the Home Economics gra-|duction of radically different chassis duates who have made definite plans for next year are the followin i Mary Rozs of Fargo will teach in the | ¢ Dickinson public schools, — Lydia|1 Bautz of Durbin will teach home economies in the Anamoose schools, |b and Agnes Johnson of Christine will teach the same subject at Ortonville, Minn, Letitia Jones of Kempton | will teach in Edgeley Euren of Fargo will have charge of Home Economics work in the Coop- erstown high school, which will be made a Smith-Hughes school season. Kenneth J. Keating and James D.|* McGlynn, graduates in the School of Chemistry, have accepted posts with | a the Acme White Lead and Paint com- | pany of Detroit, Mich. calf will join the Sewall Paint Varnish company of Kansas Mo. Carlton Rydstrom will be with the Valentine Varnish company of New York City. Einar Leifson has been given a graduate fellowship in chemistry at Iowa State college of Ames, Iowa, and will spend the next year there in study. Harry Erps, Orley B. Lane and Sophus B. Thompson have each taken} civil service examinations and have eceived notice that they will be cer- tified as junior mathematicians, up- on evidence of their graduation, with the United States Coast and Geodetic survey. Mr. Erps, though qualifying for this position, hag accepted a place offered him with the Michigan Highway department at Lansing. Verle Deach has accepted the post of advertising specialist with the Knight Printing company of Fargo and has already started his new work. Edward Yocum is sports wri- ter of the Fargo Forum staff. Both men were students in journalism. Ten of the pharmacy students have been definitely placed for the next year. Philip Boise has com- menced his new duties with the Cut- ting Drug company of Williston, A. J. Hentges with the F. J. Benson Drug Store at Michigan, E. A. Bjerk- lie in his father’s drug establishment at Gilby; L. M. Johnson, the Niles Center pharmacy at Niles Center, Tll.; Ansul Suckerman, .the Green Drug company of Dickinson; Theo- dere Wall, the Maser pharmacy at Glen Ullin; W. A. Ringness, the C. B. Sylvander pharmacy, Morris, Min i A. C. Bichof goes to the Cowan's pharmacy at Bismarck; N. A. Brocksmith to a drug store in| Nasua, Mont.; R. W. Theissen to! Haag’s drug store at New Ulm, Minn. Galen Oderkirk, also a graduate of this spring, has started his new work with the U. S. Department of Agri- culture. Oderkirk holds the posi- tion of Junior Biologist and is asso- ciated with R. Scott Zimmerman in rodent control work in North Dakota. Local Dealer Comments on Dodge | Brothers New Slogan “The slogan ‘Better and Better’ | which recently appeared on poster! boards and in magazines and news- | papers, everywhere, following closely the antouncement of the purchase of Dodge Brothers by Dillon, Read & Co., has aroused renewed comment regarding ‘one of the outstanding policies of Dodge Brothers, Inc. a leording to Mr. B. Gilman, local | Dodge Brothers Dealer. “Constant improvement of a basic design has been the established pol- jey of Dodge Brothers ever since their first car was offered to the public,” he said, “and will continue to. be under the new ownership. “Registration figures for last year show clearly the wide recognition) which has been accorded this sound | » Totals for the United States shew that Dodge Brothers made a) gein of 25%, against a los: sustsined by the industry / This’ year, week after week, all sales/ ponding periods of previou: have been excelled by of 11% sconbbite buyers today un- for in the Dodge Brothers, In this policy is faithfully the and Myrtle | va fer the high depreciation which in- variably next} of new er’s feeling that his constant betterment and refine- ment of Dodge Brothers chassis de- Improvements in ease of op Everett Met- | tails. and je City,| ance have ‘GEN. MITCHELL y costly. This expense, which | n modern volume production of mo-| ‘or cars m sily run into the mil ions of do! of course, The buyer. as a result of} returned to of greater buyer in the form in the car. Furthermore the car does not suf- the model follows annual announcement and the own- ar presents a ance!” rs there has been last year’s apy “During ten yi tion, rid gc d_appe: been without any radical change in the well tried, de- pendable chassis.” r- | MISSED CHANCE! TO AIR VIEWS | Sacrificed Job to Attention) on His Fight For Avia- tion Reform BY CHARLES P. Suicide, for generations, has been a recognized method in China of insisting on| needed reforms. A reformer works| and, toi No good. He's ignored.| Finally “I'll go the limi he de-| cides. Writing a letter, urging the! reform he's dying for, he bumps him- self off. “I wonder why,” observes the coroner. | The. letter is opened and read.| Pretty soon, all over town “Wuxtry! | Wuxtry! Wuxtry!” the news ki are hollering. “The Hon. So-and- kills himself for such-and-sueh a re- form!” Public attention is focused! forcibly on the reform. Everybody gets to talking about it. If it’s any good, often it's adopted promptly, whereas it might have lagged for! years otherwise, Occidentaliaed, this was General (now Colonel) Billy Mitchell's sys- tem. He sacrificed his job to con- centrate attention on his fight for aviation reform. But the Oriental automobil | 200 liv. up in an airplane and crashed, on purpose, from a three-mile altitude! having served notice previously what he was doing it for. On the same principle, Pres'dent missed a chance to do a n behalf of safety from when he dodged one of them the other day. It wouldn't be fair to say he did this from deliber- ate indifference to the National Safe-' ty Council’s cause. Probably he dodged thoughtless|, But what a roar would have gone up about drivers’ recklessness if one of them had hit the president! It would have meant a _ widespread tightening up of regulations that would have saved thousands of lives. Coolidge great work Well, that opportunity’s lost. But isn’t there some other way of ac- complishing the same result? Inas- much as no first-class notability is available for the experiment, can’t the individual prominence of the sub- ject be offset by numbers? We have those all right. Approximately 20,000 persons died under automobile wheels throughout the country last y The trouble is, they didn’t all die at once. They were strung along, one or two at a time and an hour-or two apart. The whole 20,000 never furnished one such peppy story as the loss, say, of a single thegtre fire’ would have done. It's all very well to foot them up and show the appalling total{ at the year’s end, but in that form it packs no punch, ' Obviously the killings must be bunched to do any good. So I propose this: Assemble 5000 volunteer dare-to-dies here in Wash-| ington, as a conspicuous. central point. Park them into Pennsylvania! avenue—children predominating, if, possible. Then turn all the city’s! autos loose on them—from east and west; from north and south at street intersections. Give the drivers carte blanche—to jump on sidewalks, to mount street car loading platforms, to disregard safely lines, just as they do now—to kill and maim, all day. L estimate the dead would number at least 1000; the marigled, all the rest. And it would arouse public opinion at last. At what a saving in the annual number of auto fatali- ties, too!—about 95 per cent. For there wouldn't be many more auto volunteer for 5 Somebody must be left to report the event. Besides, I'm so used to dodging autos that it's second nature to me. I can't help myself, The largest turbine ever built re- cently was set up at Niagara Falls. In a year it can do the same amount way is better. how much better it is for r ig and experimental de. its at the factory to concen: Lctiode efforts on 1b 0: ts a well tried. basic i of work as 9,000,000 men. i Wright, Jamestown, ‘field man , information until it is LANDMARKS OF NORTHDAKOTA 10 BE KEPT Apprcpriate Marks Will Be| Placed on Interesting - Places of Old Days Fargo, N. D,, May 25.—(AP)—Con- siderable interest has been aroused in the study of local history in; North Dakota and results are being | attained “that are very encouraging | to those who like to see the old landmarks preserved,” Major Dana for the state historical society said in another series of letters to The As- sociated Press. As North Dakota-is still compara- tively new, many of the old roads can, still be seen over which soldiers, | freighters, couriers, or emigrants made their way across the prairie, Major Wright said. “Not in sections that have been long well travelled are those old routes to be found, but in weedy grass-grown sections where the soil is too rough or broken for the culti- vator or sections that have escaped the farmers plow or the ruthless blade of the road grader,” said the historian. “The remains are only known to a few of the older pioneers who still linger among those of the younger generation, and with the passing of these settlers all knowl- edge of the old trails will be gone unless we soon take up the marking of these old thoroughfares.” Objections might be raised to such a marking program because of its ex- pense to the communities where such historical spots are located, Mr. Wright said, but “that all depends upon how the marking is done.” “If we plan on a marble statue or a bronze tablet at every historical spot, it would be indeed a burden, but there are simple and inexpensive methods of identifying these places without heavy expense,” Mr. Wright said. “Suppose the state historical so- ciety successfully traced a trail across a certain township, if the peo- ple in the community would like to make a permanent simple, inexpen- sive marker where the trail crosses each section line they can do so with very little expense aside. from the work of rolling up a big prairie boul- der at the place where the trail crosses a road or section line. “Most people in a community would be willing to assist in putting such a boulder in place if they were ask- hen to do so, and the historical society il gladly assist in the locating ils. “Many of the more important trails are already identified and should be marked before forgotten again. “These boulders should have a simple inscription cut upon them but even that is not necessary, a simple stencil with the name of the trail and a date could be used ‘to paint a sign on the stone to mark it ang give possible to have a stone cutter make a more permanent inscription. “There are many old abandoned townsites as well as old cemeteries, early settlements, first homesteads, sites of first celebrations or other spots significant that could easily be marked in this simple, appropri- ate manner. “Some townships have taken up this work through their local offi- cials. Others are working through community clubs or local volunteer organizations and all are pleased with the results.” + _____+ | SUPREME COURT | —_—_——_— + From Foster County Douglas County State Bank, a for- eign corporation, Plaintiff and Re- spondent, vs. .W. H. Sutherland, et al, Defendants and Appellants. Syllabus: 1. The question: of the validity (that is, as to whether there is in fact a contract) of a contract Although wife of no’ less a personage than William Howard Taft, Mrs. ‘laft waits in line at the White House, over which she once pre- sided, together with 250 members of the Colonial Dames gathered at Washington, to shake hands with facing camera.) TAKES HER TURN President Coolidge. (Mrs. Taft pletion of’any transaction of the sort contemplated therein. 4. A note is “renewed,” within the meaning of that term as used in Chapter 91, S. L. 1919, when a hew note evidencing the same obligation is executed and delivered by the maker to the holder of the ‘old note. 5. Where the illegality of a con- tract upon which suit is brought does not appear upon the face of the ccmplaint, the illegality must be pleaded in order to be available as ‘a defense. But when, though not pleaded, the facts establishing the illegality are disclosed by the rec- ord, the defense becomes available, for no court will consciously lend its aid for the enforcement of an illegal contract. ' 6. Where the illegality of a con- tract upon which suit is brought is not pleaded as a defense, but during the course of the trial evidence tend- ing to establish that the contract is illegal is received without objec- tion, it is error to deny an applica- tion to amend the pleadings to con- form to the proofs in that respect. Appeal from the District Court of Foster County, Honorable J. A. Cof- fey, J. Reversed. C. B. Craven, of Carrington and A. C. Lacy, of Fargo, Attorneys for Defendants and Appellants. Kelly & Morris of Carrington, At- torneys for -Plaintiff and Respond- ent. DUANE SQUIRES TO COMPETE AT LOS ANGELES Grand Forks, N. D., May 25.—J. Duane Squires, of Grand Forks, sen- jor student at the state university, is one of seven orators in the nation piexea to compete in the finals of the National Intercollegiate Orator- ieal contest to be held at Los Ange- les, Calif, June 5. Mr. Squires was selected as the best orator of the Midwestern regiqn, representing ele- ven states, in the district contest held at St. Louis, Mo., May 20. Mri Squires oration was on the McCoy’s Keeps Old Folks Feeling Young Try This New Cod Liver Oil Prepar- is to be determined by the law of the place where it is made. If there was no valid contract under that law, then there is no valid contract any- where. 2. A note becomes binding and ef- fective when it is delivered, and it is delivered when, nothing more re- maining to be done by either party, is deposited in the mails at the direction of the payee for transmis- sion to him. 3. Chapter 91, S. L. 1919 was en- acted for the protection of the pub- lie, and was intended to cover every renewal consummated, in the state. Consistent with this legislative pur- pose, the term, “doing business,” as | used in the statute, means the com- 4 7 “ation to Increase Your Strength, Vitality and Endurance. Money Back If It Don’t Help You. : Why should any old person let feeleness overwhelm them in these enlightened days, Surely everyone knows by this time that Cod Liver Oil contains more vitamines than anything else on earth and is the greatest body builder in the world. Any physician will tell you that. You'll like to,take McCoy's Cod Liver Oil, Compound Tablets—they are sugar coated and as easy to take as candy and they do help old people. Why not try being years younger again—why not grow stronger body, in mind, in’ vital in y? Why not constitution of the United States, its theme being so well presented as to merit his. admission into the dis- trict contest without further re- quirement. He is assured of a min- imum prize of $300 and will have opportunity for a $2,000 prize in the national contest. During his four years at the Uni- versity of North Dakota, Mr. Squires has won many honors, not only in oratorical lines but also in others. He won the state oratorical contest, was picked as a member of two na- tional honorary societies, one in for- ensics and one fdr scholarship. He has served on the University inter- collegiate debate teams, has won the University extemporaneous speaking contest, and is valedictorian of the present senior class, Last year he edited the junior class year book. CLUB FOR UNBOBBED Paris, May 25—And now it's a club for the unbobbed. Such a club has been organized by Paris women, who have not bobbed their hair and do not intend to. So far only a com- paratively few. members have joined. SHRINERS Arrange to. be on hand Northern Pacific Depot Tuesday morning 6 a. m. to greet Aleppo Temple Shriners Wear your fezzes. SSS OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO ‘ SALES CO. 107 5th St. Phone 428 “WHERE’S THAT KEEPER” take McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil _Com- pound Tablets and drop years from your age in 30 days? We believe that’a 30 days treatment will make you feel years younger—but at any rate try them for 30 days and if you are not satisfied get your money back—60 ‘tablets—60 cents at All droggists or any progressive drug- gist. Be sure and get McCoy’s—the original and genuine.—Adv. . EAGLE . prown cone? Cleaning Pressing * Repairing Remodeling Dyeing LADIES AND MEN’S F ihe Hats Cleaned and Service on Mail Orders, 24;Hear We Call For and Deliver. || BISMARCK Phone 58 6 :\ This is national cone week— GROCERY scapes. this organization cars. Willys-Overland CUOOOROOOOROOROOOOOO ORE ROD OOODIEODODORODNONRDOO RDO NNOR ONO DOOOOORRRbOOneD Distributors MONDAY, MAY 25, 1925 > \ In Living Those who buy an automobile now will find that their investment earns them delightful days and inestimably precious privileges. To come and go-as mood or convenience dic- tates is an especially valuable advantage when the open roads lead into Spring land- Those who buy Willys - Overland cars here will find that their investment has brought them not only. these present ad- vantages of car ownership, but an as- surance of year -’round ‘satisfaction in, the continued and sincere interest of in them and in their Fine Motor Cars. WwW oO WINS PRIZE AT “U” Grand Forks, N. D., May 25.—Lynn Woodward, of Jamestown, senior student at the state university, won first prize of $30 in the annual De- Remar art contest at the university this spring, results of which: have just been announced by Prof. E. 0. Christensen, head of the university art department. Second place, went to Miss Alida Jacobson, of Minot. Miss Olive Berget, Warren, Minn., and Miss Sylvia Sell, Bismarck, both received honorable mention. Coal Burns! Electricity Gives Heat! Oil Makes a Flame: But Gas is combusti- ble. Use The Super-Fuel. You're invited into a pair of nice new Cantilevers. A. W. Lucas Co. Invite Us to Your Next Blowout All Work Guaranteed OPEN EVENINGS. Service Calls. Given Prompt Attention. A. & M. Tire Service 216 MAIN ST. Cool! Refreshing! Delicious! What's half so satisfying as ice cream ina buy an ice cream cone e | Distributors GAMBLE ROBINSO crisp, crunchy, golden STACY BISMARCK ‘PHONE 356 “- [t's the nutritious and le way for every child under . fo psieve thirst, hunger fatigue — a good habit to get