The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 10, 1927, Page 3

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| TUESDAY, MAY 10, The people of Bismaren Thursday afternoon, May home, pictured above, which was and wafers will be served. Thursday evening the graduation exercise: Public Invited: and surrounding community are being invited by 12, which is nationally observed each year as completed during the past winter. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE torium, and the public is invited. ROAD REPAIR COST WILL BR OVER $100,000 Extensive Repairs Necessary _in North and East, High- way Officials State Between $100,000 and $200,000 will be needed to repair state highways as a result of the past three days’ rain and the recent spring breakup. This was the estimate made inday by T. G. Plomasen, maintenance engi- neer of the highway department. Damage to roads in the southwest part of the state was limited, al- though somg repair work will have to be done, but in the northern end eastern: part of the state extensive repairs will have to be made, Plom- wsen said. The “bottom has gone out” of many #of the gravel roads in the Red River gvalley, as a result of the heavy rains coming’ so soon after the spring: breakup, Plomasen said. Stretches oi road miles long near Fargo~and Grand Forks, where graveling had been done, may have to be complete- ly regraveled, he said, ut a cost of between $1.50 and $3.50 per yard. There are approximately 2,000 yards ; of gravel to the mile on these roads, he said. The approximate cost of repairing roads in the Valley City district alone, he said, will be over $25,000. Highway No. 10 between Bismarck and Jamestown is damaged, but he did not think the repair cost would be high on this road, Plomasen said. It will cost approximately $8 to $10 ja mile’to repair roads in southeast Slope,damaged by the rain, he said, and estimated the cost would be a proximately the same on the high- ay north from here to Minot. G, would be well repair cost $100,000. SEND CHILDREN TO BED EARLY SAYS SPEAKER Fedecation Head Advises|) Curfew Law Observance— Gives Means of Service Courtenay, N. D., May 10.—(7)— Observance of the early bed-time rule for schoo! children is one of the best services which North Dakota club. women can render to themselves and their state, Mrs. Cleve Koton Cross of Dawson, president of the feder: tion's eighth district, told club wom-, en attendin, the district conven- tion here this afternoon. Discussing the services which may be canting by women’s clubs, Mrs, Cross pointed out that’ they should be adapted to the needs of the com- munity and so designed as to make ithe community better. “Always near to the hearts of women are children and the school, so let us begin with them,” she said. “We e of. service to our com- munities if, as » body of women, we are sure that our children are phy- sically and mentally healthy when they attend scho that they obey the laws of health and the early bed-time rule. We are not only serv- ing thé: community but the’ move. 2 lor child welfare and child ealth.’ Teach Law Respect Good citizenship is best served by jwomen’s club members by teaching childeen respect for law and obe- picoee to law at home, Mrs. Cross f romition of a demand for good books, megasines, music, books nnd other amusements also cl Meare. of elab roe to Cs ie 8 sal 4 ee that “wo. ean create, the y Bnd fieea' iota vecvice to Hekth: ernment gauge showed toda: exvlained that the rain and continuously and most ed into the sou, very little running off thie a foot was recorded during the last 24 hours and the possibility of a fiped here is held to be extremely remote, state the weati.er was cloudy Roald The World’s Greatest Explorer _, LECTURE SUBJECT: WIDE SEARCH STARTED FOR OCEAN FLYERS (Continued from page one) while Commander John Rodgers and his crew of four men were adrift in navy airplane was forced down on a flight to the Hawaiian Islands. Haw- kez and Grieve were picked up near the Orkney Islands by a schooner that carried no radio. Rodgers and his men were found by a submarine. Other Flyers still Missing France’s apprehension was doubly increased by the mystery surround- ing the whereabouts of _Nungesser and Coli. Captain Saint Roman and his comrade, Commander Mouneyres, French airmen who hopped off from St. Louis, Senegal, last Thursday morning for Pernambuco, Brazil, also were still missing. In the face of rising fears for the safety of the four Frenchmen, one of the foremost American expeditions in its plans for a take-off. sors of the flight of the Belianca monoplane Columbia had announced its-projected jump to Paris would be abandoned if Nungesser and Coli su and Clarence D. Chamberlin, after a! test flight yesterday, said they were prepared to start tomorrow! Only unfavorable weather and the anti pated arrival of Nungesser halted the G. M. Bellanca, designer! said the plane could hours, mbi reach Paris in 33 STEELE BAND: TO BROADCAST PROGRAM HERE High School Group to Present Program Over KFYR To- morrow Night at 8 Members of the Steele high. school! band will come to Bismarck tomor- row evening to prondcast @ program over station KFYR, according to an- nouncement made here tod: The program will start at 8 o’clock and will be broadcast by remote control. The program is follows March, “Band Boys’ 7 g Overture, “Operatic Mingle’ Baritone solo, “Lilly Polka” .... Roy Omodt. ling sol Id Irish Rose.” Baritone solo, Polka”... . Roy Omodt with band accompani- Brass quartet .. a solo, rch, “Nifty” ... Saxophone solo, “The Lost C Cornet solo, “Chapel Echoes.” March, “Field Day Cornet solo Bismarck Escapes Snow: Storm— Weather Clears (Continued from page one) Tt was 1 slowly of it soak- into the river., A rise of only Rising Temperatures Although at some points in the the Pacific for nine days after their) the trans-Atlantic adventure revived! $044 The spon-| ¢ ceeded in their effort, but Bertaud’ ~| Quick Quake morning, a majority reported bright sunshine and clear skies. The pre- diction for. Bismarck and v is partly cloudy tonight and Wedne day, with rising temperature. No rainfal) was reported here dur- ing the 2f hours from’7 a. m. yester- day to 7 a. m. today. Rainfall at | other points was as follows: Am- enia, .17; Bottineau, Crosby, Minot, Larimore and Williston, reports mi ing; Devils Lake, .10; Dickinson, Dunn Center, .43; | Ellendale, Fessenden, .18; Grand F Jamestown, Langdon, bon, .17; ‘Napoleon, .31 Moorhead, Minn., had no rainfall for period. Pembina, Pembina the 24-hour | MORTON LEADS IN NUMBER OF . SCHOOL LOANS) (Continued from page one) 600; Mercer, $98,200; $148,010; Neison, $132,059. Pierce, $292,640; Rolette, $87,400; Sheridan,' Sioux. $21,000; Slope, Politely Refuse Substitutes if you séek the famous Quaker flavor TH Point to remember when ing breakfast oats is that only Drake Oats have the rich Quaker vor that you want. i One package of oats without that Lake may spoil your breakfasts for a weel ’ The price you pay is the same, Thus “trying” a substitute is a folly. ker flavor is the result of some years milling experience. No other oats has it. Quaker milling, too, re- tains much of the “bulk” of oats. And that makes laxatives less often needed. fo 9 minutes, or regular Oats as you have “iwigs known, ‘Your grocer has both kinds, SALESMEN With the broadening of Dodge Brothers tine into the six-cylinder field, and the increasing market for Graham Trucks, we need two or three energetic | ealesmen. Previous: expe-, rience nct necessary. This is a profitable, permanent connection. All applica- tions confidential. M B. GILMAN; CO. Capt. “From Rome to | May ith — 8:00 ‘Illustrated’ with 80 Slides and Three Reels of Motion es " Pleture’ Film Bismarck P, M. and 8:15 P, M. "Evening Maia, Floor a yg Amundsen, \ i, High: School Students,’ $1.50 « those in charge of St. Alexius hospital to visit that institution “Hospital Day,” and will be shown through the new nurses’ A reception will bé held from 2 to 5 o’clock in the afternoon, and tea s of the St. Alexius school of nursing will be held at the Steele, Walsh, 2,100; id Williams, $58,000, oston Dental Co, Specialize tn MONEY TO LOAN On Approved PHONE 434 Or call Room 10, Webb building or write P. 0. Box 623 An Intimate story of silk stockings With Madge Bellamy J. Farrell. MacDonald Lawrence Gray Allan Forrest Barry Norton She found out what girl knows—that business every business men, like most other me: —are never too busy to flirt. who discovered tha beauty is a handicap i IF she means business. ~ Comedy—“Last Word’ : Tomorrow “SPANGLES” "With Marion’ Nixon an Pat O'Malley } Al G. Barnes’s famou three-ring circus trans- ported to the screen city audi- Wells, ismarck’s Dental Clinie Security or Salary The story of a girl business, to a woman— | TORNADOES DESTRUCTIVE _| IN MIDWEST (Continued from page one) \non-rigid dirigible’ in the service, j Wits torn from its moorings and toss- ed 300 feet before it settled to the |ground. Release of the gas in the | {ship was all that saved it from total! taken no lives. In many places rain storms led to almost flood conditi At Fort Pierre, S. D., 16 pers were believed | marooned by town. A Svo Line train was and reports received by the North j destruction. No one Was on it at the time. a in the western part of North Da. Ten deaths were reported in cen- | kota, tral Kansas, 40 were injured and | 1,000 left homeless by a tornado Suat- | urday a washout which aukee train. Missouri Nears Flood Stage At Pierre, 8. D., the Missouri rive rose two feet in eight hours, bring. | precipitate: night. High winds continued yesterday, causing one of the worst dust storms in the history of the state. Much Property Damage . [ing the stream to within two and In Wisconsin, wind and electri storms did damage estimated al $450,000 to industrial plants at one + Ipoint alone, From Minnesota, South Dakota, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska {and Towa came reports of storms, varying in intensity, that did thou- ands of dollars worth of damage, The cars are Ad SANTA FE SERVICE BUREAU, $07 Metopelian Li 1 "Plame: Gera 9135, Meals, tan i Es } Please mail free picture foldere'Grand Can- Outings,” c ee were thought to have | half inches of flood stage, Residents s.| paring to evacuate their homes ax ns|the waters threatened to the raging waters of the Bad river, which burst through its dikes, inundating | nurse half the residential section of the | reported | with the dsaster, which is so wide- stalled in the snow at Plaza, N. D.,| spread that any attempt at organ- ern Pacific railroad stated that snow | was three feet deep and still falling | Legion posts were patrolling streets At Mahato, Montana, heavy rains | the farther western states, three per- i had 3 Performance recerds are making sales records! | Everywhere the Willys-Knight is winning acclaim for its efficiency, safety, economy and carefree operation. type of engine that improves with use. 7-Bearing Crankshaft—To eliminate vibration. Skinner Rectifier—Only way to prevent oil dilution. 4-Wheel Beakes—For maximum driving safety. _ 8 Timken Bearings have but four. This is the easiest steering car. Narrow Body Pillars at Windshieid— When all othe: what your height or weight. . Light Control at &: without removing your hand from wheel. Watson Stabilators. Air cleaner. Thermostatic temprr- ature control. Finest quality upholstery and interior fittin: “70” Willye-Knight Six, $1295 to $1495. Wi Prices £. 0. b. ification bé Mie wee A dh Se | bank while the driverYof thé car and his wife attempted to make their way through the blizeard to a ranch { house, and were frozen to death. Cavalrymen were ordered out to search for the children. Prospects that today would bring | relief from storms were reported by jthe weathers bureaus, who blamed them upon the coming together of a cold wave from the Rocky Mountain district, and a warm wave from the middlewest region. The storm area extended from the Rockies to the Atlantic coast. - ;of the bottom lands there were: pre- { a (4 i fl inundate 4 ction before the day is over. cue trains, bearing doctors, s, and supplies, have been sent o the; storm areas and the Red Cross is making every effort to cope the Re | | ized relief guard l be difficult. National American companies and -;in many towns, In the snow storms that blanketed were frozen to death, and others are reported missing. The deaths, which included one woman, occurred mi The system of 3 production was originated a0 ago among ithe ikon painters of Kholuy, a Rus- | rat) Fort Laram Wyoming. \ Two | sian village. By passing each ikon | boys, 11 and 13 old, were left} through 100 hands, the village was | in an automobile stranded in a snow | able to.turn out 2,000,000 each year, Another saticfied Willye-Knight owres. Engime—Better with every mile. The only Shackles—Keep your chassis lastingly quiet. in Front Axle — Most fine cars 80 equipped, accidents will be minimized: Frent Seat—Made to fit you, no matter Wheel—Lights dimmed Knight Great Siz, $1850 to $2850. to change without notion £0. b. factory and epeci ubject to Tornado Insurance A_ powerful _ twisting wind -comes along—up- sets houses — damages well - constructed . build- ings and leaves. a trail of serious loss. The small cost of ternado insur- ance will surprise you. The careful property owner always carries it. n t in ? This agency of the Hart- ford Fire Insuranee com- pany makes ‘a business of keeping people out of trouble. id Ss Write, call or phone for facts MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” 216 Broadway Phone 577 BISMARCK, N: D: It’s the safest,‘surest way,

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