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COM. BODENHANER, MACNDER, LANDIS EXPECTED GUESTS National Head of Veterans Is Pledged to Attend N. D. Encampment Here MANY ENTRIES FOR PARADE Annual Drum Corps Competition by Seven Music Bodies Indicated Preliminary plans for the greatest | American Legion convention ever held in North Dakota, July 28, 29 and 30, are rapidly being completed by local committees in charge of the affair. In addition to the colorful crowds which a Legion convention always produces, the local Legion post and the chamber of commerce have ar- ranged for a number of free acts which will serve to entertain both the convention visitors and others who will come here for the event. Posters advertising the convention are being placed throughout North Dakota, western Minnesota and east- ern Montana by a corps of Legion- naires who have volunteered for this work. Because of the central location of | Bismarck, the attractions which the convention will offer in the way of fun and frolic and the interest in the activities of the war veterans the crowd is expected to be one of the largest ever gathered here. Bodenhamer Coming ‘The highlight of the convention as far as Legionnaires are concerned will be the visit of O. L, Bodenhamer, na- tional commander. In a letter to Ad- | jutant Williams, the national chief; said: “Please be assured that I am definitely planning to attend your; state convention at Bismarck. I shall | be with you the entire day of July 29. | I look forward to the engagement with | pleasurable anticipation.” { In addition, another national high- ; light, one who has been appointed | minister to Canada by President Hoover and who is a former national commander of the Legion, will attend the meeting. He is Hanford Mac- Nider of Iowa. Department’ com- manders and adjutants in Minnesota, South Dakota and Montana also have been invited. Landis Invited Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the “czar” of baseball and a great friend of the American Legion, also have been invited to occupy a position of honor at the: convention. The big parade, in which the na- tional officers, visiting officials uni- formed organizations and Legion- naires from all over the state will! participate, will: be held - Monday | afternoon. Seven drum and bugle corps from Fargo, Bismarck, Willis- ton, Devils Lake, Grand Forks, Valley | City and Jamestown will be in the procession, as will the North Dakota ' state Legion band, composed of Le- | gionnaire musicians from all sections of the state. The annual drum corps competition will be held Monday. : Grand Forks won the contest last | year. i 40 and 8 to Meet i ‘The 40 and 8, colorful Legion so- | ciety, will hold its annual business session Monday afternoon and will hold FOR SHERIFF I hereby announce that I am ® candidate for the office of sheriff of Burleigh county at the primary election June 25. Your vote and support will be ap- preciated. JOSEPH WERNER (Pol. Adv.) FOR SHERIFF Burleigh County I hereby announce that I am @ Candidate for the office of sheriff of Burleigh county sub- ject to the will of the voters at the primary election June 25th. Your vote and support will be appreciated. JOS. L. KELLEY (Pol. Adv.) To ‘the Voters of Burleigh County: { hereby announce myself a can- didate for the office of SHERIFF at the primary election to be held June 25, 1930. Your vote and support will be appreciated. Albin Hedstrom (Political Advertisement) Victor L. Anderson Candidate for SHERIFF of Burleigh county at the primary election. June 25, 1930 A Former Representative of Burleigh County Your Vote and Support Is Solicited. | Six-Minute Care ah 2 Plans for American Le GOVERNOR TO OPEN the at.nual “wreck” or initiations of candidates in the early evening. Business sessions of the convention will be opened at 9 a. m., Monday, in the Bismarck auditorium by Harry Hart, Ray, department commander. Election of officers will mark the last business session on Tuesday. Committee chairmen appointed by the Bismarck post are: Hotel reser- vations, S. S. Boise; entertainment and speakers, W. E. Cole, parade and Police, Maj. Harold Sorenson; street and business house decorations, F. G. Bassett; transportation, R. V. Stair; band and drum corps, A. L. Fosteson; halls and signs, Myron Atkinson; ways and means, W. A. Sather; pub- licity and program, K. W. Simons, registration and badges, John Bowers, tree acts, carnival and judges stand, Frayne Baker. Morris Will Launch Campaign at Minot Attorney General James Morris, In- dependent Voters association candi- date for the Republican nomination for reelection, will give his keynote campaign address at Minot, tonight. He will continue his campaign tour following the Minot speech, with a talk at Bowbells the following day. He will speak at Killdeer and Halli- day Monday, and at Beulah Tuesday. Wednesday he is scheduled to give addresses at Center, Mandan and Bismarck. H. W. Swenson of Devils Lake, I. V. A. candidate for the Republican nomination for insurance commission- er, will accompany Mr. Morris. Highway Department Considering Bids, Bids for 19 contracts for work on state highways were considered to- day at a meeting of the state high- way board. The projects for which contracts are to be let include 94.87 miles of graveling, 14.29 miles of oiling, 33.705 miles regraveling, and 14.714 earth grading. Bids were also received for lubri- cating oils for highway machinery. | and for enlarging the maintenance shops here and at Minot. i «Glorious Hair! Six minutes now and then is plenty, {€ you shampoo your hair with this lovely glyc- in soap, Just rub mcake of Jap Rose on your ‘wet hai it way. It rinses out ina flash, And what a sparkle it gives your hair! How gloriously soft and ailks’ fairly atingle with healthy cleann ful, too, for bath and hands, Made by James S. Kirk & Co., Chicago T. P. Alien, Agent, Bismarck, N. D. (ol. Adv.) of Emmons and Kidder counties, will also be on hand. From Steele the governor will con- tinue on his campaign tour, with June 11 he will talk over the radio Shafer Starting on Tour of State Taking in the Guard Camp at Devils Lake Governor George F. Shafer will fire the opening gun of his campaign for reelection in an address at Steele, {Friday night. The governor is expected to discuss 'the platform of the Independent | Voters association by which he was endorsed for the Republican nomina- tion. Prominent Independent candidates will be present at Steele for the ad- dress. Among them will be Chris Bertsch, I. V. A. candidate for rail- road commissioner; Mrs. Della Ward- rope, for treasurer, and Laura B. Sanderson, for secretary of state. Mrs. EthelM. Cooley, woman's chairman for the Independent Voters association, has completed arrangements for a district meeting of women at Steele the night the address is given. Independent legisiatfve candidates |from the district, which is composed at Grand Forks from 8:30 p. m. to 10 |p. m. He will make another address at Minnewaukan, June 12, and at Towner, June 13. On June 14 he will speak over the radfo at Devils Lake, and on June 16 he has two addresses scheduled, one at Carrington and one at New Rockford. Besides the political talks, Governor Shafer will make addresses at Red Willow, June 8, at Grafton, June 9, @ commencement address at the Uni- versity of North Dakota at Grand Forks, June 10, and a luncheon talk before the Rotary, Kiwanis and Lions clubs at Grand Forks the following day. He will speak at Pekin, June 12. June 15 he will be present at the militia encampment for governor’s day at Devils Lake. MURPHY MAYVILLE SPEAKER R. B. Murphy, member of the state board of administration, has accepted an invitation to make the principal address at commencement exercises at Mayville Normal, June 12. The exercises will be held in connection with the 40th anniversary of the founding of the school. Listen, Housewives. / Clicquot Club PALE DRY GIVES YOU 4 EXTRA QZ. Thie glace shows hew mach more quot Clab Pate Dry. ond-one.” THE “TEN-ONE-and-ONE” A new Pullman with more room for each guest Lt modern ambition for “biggbr, better and roomier™ Pullmen cars, the Northern Pacific responds with the “Ten-one. ERE’S a bargain for you! And it’s a bargain you can’t afford to miss. A full pint of Clicquot Club PaleDry, that’s fourounces more than you get in the scanty 12-ounce bottle of ordinary ginger ale. And Clicquot Club is aged 6 months in the making to give it a more rare and mellow flavor. To insure its purity it comes to you in clean new bottles. Don’t wait for tomorrow. Buy your ginger ale this money- saving way today! The label guarantees a full 16 ourices. Stretch-Joyous Traveler! There ore no “lower 12's” or “upper 16's” on the North Cocst Limited. Each cor of this newest of new American trains has bu: ten sections. Consequently, there are fewer passengers to the cor and the ladies’ ond gentlemen's dressing rooms ore very roomy indeed. ‘The newly-created “Ten-one-and-one” Pullmen hos, in addition to ten sections, one drawing room ond one compartment, v0 luxurious in appointments, 20 convenient In bridegrooms Acti, thet, eccesionolly, engoge them, NORTH COAST LIMITED» THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1930 Settlement Is Made By Adjutant General Devils Lake, N. D., June 5—(P)— Adjutant General G. A. Frazer, Far- go, paid damages and costs for a car which he struck Memorial day. He appeared voluntarily before Justice A. C. Wehe, Lakota, after learning a warrant had been issued for his ar- rest on a charge of violating traffic A misunerstanding bet lerstandin; wet 7 a Bundy, Michigan, ND. ana"a a) E Fair Grounds perform immediate heavy service. Lucky Lucky Strike, throat. Registered Herefords 37 BULLS - -- 11 FEMALES 2 PURE BRED BELGIAN STALLIONS AT AUCTION, JUNE 9 AT ONE O'CLOCK PATTERSON LAND COMPANY will offer 37 head of royally bred, selected Hereford of a number of real herd bull prospects. The reminders il be setae bulls of the big, strong, rugged, heavy-boned, FOR CATALOG WRITE Patterson Land Company Bismarck, North Dakota Fred Reppert and Frank H. Hyland, Auctioneers Bismarck Race Meet - - - June 18, 19, 20 and 21 When tempted. to ever-indulge too well, if you will “Reach for a L that cause excess weight and, by a: driving the car at the time of the collision, resulted in the issuance of the warrant. ——_———_ bees bates! BIG SCHOOL BIDS » N. D., June 5. will be reopened Saturday ae cine tracts for the construction of the teachers training building of the state normal school here. Previously bids were rejected because they were higher than the $115,000 appropriated by the legislature for the structure. istration will come here for reopening ration come here for of the bids. Mandan, N. Dak. ie type, ready to <SUNCOUCOORAEONERONENENOGUCREEEULoanNEAOAconOneRUAceregedecacconaucucaanccugnaed: “Reach for a instead” if you would maintain that modern, ever-yout ful figure. “Reach for a Lucky ithe instead.” the finest Cigarette you ever smoked, made of the fin- est tobacco—The Cream of the Crop ="IT’'S TOASTED.” Lucky Strike has an extra, secret heating process. Everyone knows that heat purifies and so 20,679 physicians say that Luckies are less irritating to your gion Convention Count on Notable Guest Thompson to Lead Jamestown’s Lions Jamestown, N. D., June 5.—(P)— George M. Thompson, secretary of the state hospital for the insane, was lll aUGUOUAUEHOONOEHONOOUOUOGeNEONGuOUCUOOeONGEOOONOtG Summer clothes. “It’s toasted” Yeur Threat Protection—against irritation—against cough *In his book, “Get Rid of That Fat,” Samuel G. Bl 7 woman i pounds overweight is sick.” We do not represent — pe otis if icy Strike ssaagled vad modern figures or cause the reduction of flesh. We do declare et ete to do yourself instead,” you will thus avoid over-indulgence in things over-indulgence, maintain a modern, graceful form, © 1930. The American Tobacco Co., Mira. Soc Seainenee cain intnateetencasdae eaenmemaamianeeteiooe eeaeeaae Feel better — look better — work better in new lighter Summer weights take a weight off your, shoulderss—and the new styles bring you up-to-date. .Men’s and Young Men’s Two-Trouser Suits $20 to $45 Prepton Hall Suits for the Older Boy, sizes 12 to 20 $8.50 to $22 Suits for the Younger Set (ages 4 to 12 years) with one short and one long or two-pair regular or Knit-Grip knickers | $7.50 to $14 $1 Values in Boys’ Playsuits — 85¢ and 90c Dahl Clothing Store “Coming events , cast their shadows before” |etectea President of the local Lions club. Other officers elected include: \3. H. Kohnen, C. 8, Buck, and Elmer | Willett, vice presidents; L. H. Everett, |secretary; L, E. Wright, tail-twister; |Floyd Grahem, Lion tamer; and By- {ron Olsen, E. C. Warming, E. J. Fish- Ihe and L. U. Muenz, directors. Clothes ng 3 5 A EU UUOUE Orchestre, end Thursday wahoo