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be moi "SAYS PEOPLE MUST Heys «LEARN HOW T0 GET ‘Students Will Be Taught ‘Sci- - MARRIAGE MENACE GROWING ak Declares Present Youth Is Not to adjust differences. MARITAL HAPPINESS snce of Marriage’ in Schools, He Believes Prepared for ‘Hard-Boiled World of Reality’ Cleveland, O., May 6.—(NEA)—The | youth of the future must face mar- riage not in ignorance bui fully equipped to solve the problems which every couple meets. ! Education will bring this about. | Students will be taught the “science of marriage” in schools. And the picture of high school boys and girls, as well as college students, lugging textbooks on marriage along with their histories, algebras and biologies isn’t so overdrawn as it may seem. The influence of the home is admittedly waning. There must be a substitute. ‘With the divorce rate constantly mounting, Domestic Relations Judge Samuel H. Silbert of Cleveland is con- vinced that the institution of mar- riage is menaced. He declares we must delve deeply into fundamentals. urges education of our youth for mar- | riage. “We're too smugly complacent about it,” he declares. “We raise our children in a Garden of Eden, then; toss them out into a hard - boiled world of reality. They aren't pre- pared for marriage.” Judge Silbert draws his conclusions from a wealth of experience. He has been hearing divorce cases for sever years. During the past four months 1,400 have been before him. He has set a record of a divorce every 1 minutes in uncontested cases. He's sometimes called the “10-minute eo been ® confidante of thou-) sands. He has heard their troubles, | their unsolved problems. Perhaps he understands couples in the throes ot divorce as well as any judge in Amer- Admits Other Causes Although Judge Silbert admits there are many causes of divorces and unhappy marriages, he believes education is the remedy. He admits young people often re-! fuse to take marriage seriously, that economic conditions have cranged. that home doesn’t mean as much as it once gid, and that in the rush of fe couples will not ‘ake time But searching for truth—tre one great factor in destroying homes—h. finds that marriage often fa‘is be cause couples do not understand each air Ripon as a judge, honestly trying to save people from divorces,” he as- serts. “Not as a reformer. That is farthest from my thoughts. | “There’s too much false modesty,’ | he asserts. “I see the result of it every day. Men and women come to me with their only real information bout sex learned from poorly-edu- cated companions who probably have learned what little they know from others with as little knowledge.” Judge Silbert says modern inven- tions have cut down spare time in homes. Radios and automobiles and shows and social activities take up every spare moment. The old heart- to-heart discussions between father and son or mother and daughter are t. The youth often doesn’t Shaerstand what marriage really means. Education Is Remedy His suggested remedy is this: He would have intelligent ‘eackers in high schools, colleges and in rcligious schools instruct students in the inti- mate side of married life, not cloaking it all with mystery and idealism which hinders rather than helps. He would have them taught morally and spiritually as well. He would have competent men and women write text- books which would present thc sub- ject in a manner that could offena nobody. He would prepare young people for marriage as it really is, rather than as it is pictured by the too-romantic. “I can see no reason why parents should object to having their children taught the facts of life—when they are of proper age,” he says. “If stu- dents are of the adequate mental ability, they will realize it is for their own good.” Lutherans Planning aS ermare Rea 18 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1931 3s Urges Education i * JUDGE SAMUEL H. SILBERT and Rev. Livdahl secretary. The He! Women's Missionary Federation will | be in charge of the session the after- noon of May 18. Agriculture received some consider- ation at the hands of the late con- gress. The body provided appropri- ations, available July 1, for research in the following agricultural lines. Farm taxation and farm mortgage fi- nance, trends of prices, production and consumption in marketing and distribution of farm products. /RADIATOR’S HEATING | EFFICIENCY DEPENDS _ON SHAPE, LOCATION Theory That Good Heater Con- denses Great Amount of Steam Is Exploded Urbana, Ill, May 6.—()—A theory about steam radiators is upset in a bulletin issued Wednesday et the Universtiy of Mlinois. The theory holds that radiators should be installed according to the amount of steam they condense, which means their total heat emis- sion. But the Illinois experiments show that this does not mean so much at the arm-chair or “comfort” ievel of the living room. Shape and location of the radiator are more important factors in projecting heat where it is wanted instead of concentrating it out of reach overhead. The bulletin includes the last 18 months’ studies of keeping warin in & “synthetic home.” “Ever since we have had radiators,” says Prof. Arthur C, Willard, head of the department of mechanica: engi- neering, “it has been considered that \the more steam a radiator condensed the better the radiator. Now asa re- sult of university researches it has been shown plainly that this idea is erroneous. What we want is a radi- ator that will maintain a uniform jtemperature between the floor and the ceiling with a comfortable tem- perature at chair-level.” Window shades and curtains may affect the comfort of the occupant» of a room without changing the air temperature appreciably. This is not a track of the imagination, but the radiation. The cold surface of win- dows acts like a magnet drawing heat | from the body by radiation. Cur- jtains and shades over the glass may |reduce this to the point of noticeable |comfort. | Oil points are fougd better for radi- lators than the bright, metal bronze By WM. E. MCKENNEY Secretary American Bridge League Ace showing and the bidding of void Suits occasionally brings about inter- esting and peculiar situations. For example, in the following hand the declarer must play a game going de- claration without a trump in his hand, makes his contract. @None WK-7-5-2 @A-K-J-10-9-4-3-2 @A-K-J-3-2 WA-10-4-3 @None J-9-7-6 The Bidding This hand was actually played in a duplicate contract tournament and South, the dealer, at every table, opened with one spade. At the par- ticular table where this interesting situation arose, West had two and one-half tricks and a five-card suit, and certainly disliked to pass, there- fore he bid two diamonds. North could hardly believe his ears. After asking West to repeat his bid, North doubled the two diamonds. East passed and South, trying to tell his partner that he was void of diamonds and could support any other bid he made, bid three diamonds. When you overcall your opponents with their suit, this is —A Series Explaining the | Paints, olf otigrm gy, ft, Contract Bridge System— supposed to advise partner that you hold no losers in that suit, but it is also supposed to show slam possibil- ities and South was perhaps a Jittle forward in his bid. West passed and North reasoned as follows—his partner must hold the ace and king of spades and the ace of j and surprising as it may seem, he! hearts or the ace of clubs. The miss- ing ace should be in the West hand, and therefore North reasons that he can discard two losing hearts on part- ner’s ace and king of spades, and will lose only one diamond and either a club or a heart. North therefore went, to five diamonds, East passed, and j South, not wishing to make a bad sit- uation worse, finally passed. You can hardly blame West for doubling five diamonds, The Play While North has bid five diamonds and holds eight of them, don’t forget that South was the first for his side to bid diamonds, and therefore becomes. the declarer and must play the hand without holding a diamond. West opened the king of clubs, which is the proper play when hold- ing ace and king—the king is led to show the ace. On the second trick, West shifted to the queen of hearts, which the dummy won with the king. The ace and king of diamonds were led from dummy, and then the jack, which West wins with the queen. West. | is helpless—if he leads another heart, declarer will win in his own hand with the ace, discard thé two losing hearts in dummy on the ace and king of spades, trump anything in dummy and pick up the remaining trump, thereby making five odd at diamonds doubled and scoring 200 for tricks, 100 for hon- ors, 50 for making his contract as his side was not vulnerable, and as they were playing duplicate bridge, 300 for game, for a grand total of 650 Points. Z BOARDING HERE A IN UT AT NiGHt LISTEN ~You'VE BEEN TIME, HAVENT Yous 2 WTELL ME SOMETHING — WHATS: WRONG WITH “THAT ROOM OF MINE 2 ~~ I SWEAR I HEAR FUNNY KINDS OF NOISES \\ LONG w HAS ANYBODY ELSE EVER NOTICED ms) eA criti an ie "If =— anusauiill = yeseuut SS LE Uf PASTURE NETINAHITY Mh NINDICATES MY CLAIM oF “HE Now WILL You BELIEVE (72. AO8. U. 5. PAT. OFF. S: N. D. ILLITERACY: REDUCED SUBSTANTIALLY IN DECADE Census Figures Show Marked Advances in Education, Sociologist Says Fargo, N. D., May 6.—Marked ad- vances in education made by North Dakota in the 10-year period 1920 to ; 1930 are revealed by figures on the 1930 federal census, according to E. A. Willson, rural sociologist of the agri- cultural college. The percentage of illiterate persons in North Dakota 10 years of age and above decreased from 2.1 to 1.5 per cent. “There was no decrease in the il- literacy of the native white popula- tion, which remained at .4 of one per cent, but the percentage of illiteracy in the foreign-born white population decréased from 5.6 to 4.4 per cent. Illiteracy among negroes decreased from four per cent to 3.4 per cent, and in other races from 29.1 to 21.4 per cent. “This shows that the efforts of state and local educational officials iv de- crease illiteracy by enforcing tue com- pulsory education laws have borne fruit,” Mr. Willson declares. School Populations Grow The number of persons five to 20 years of age attending school in 1930 was 175,938, as compared with 158,259 in 1920. This is an increase of 11 per cent, whereas the number of persons in this age group increased less than six per cent. Persons attending school represented 71.2 per cent of the pop- ulation five to 20 years of age in 1930. as compared with 67.9 per cent in 1920, Persons 21 years or older attending school increased from 2.770 to 5,034, or 55 per cent, from 1920 to 1930. “These figures indicate that an in- creasing proportion of North Dakota boys and girls are securing high school and college educations,” points out Mr. Willson. “They also account for the difficulty high school and college ad- ministrative officials have had in re- cent years in providing facilities for the increasing number of students seeking admission.” It was noted that the number of children under 10 years decreased from 176,662 to 153,845, or 12 per cent, whereas the total population of the state increased 5.5 per cent. The (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) | number of persons 10 to 14 years in- WELL IF AT AINT HE PUTS A HAFFA O' THREAD 60'S HELL BE SURE HAFTA THREAD iT AG Baey Port TH’ Hettinger Meeting Hettinger. N. D, May 6.—()— Members of the Hettinger circuit af the Norwegian Lutheran Church of America will convene here May 17 to 19 for their annual convention. Rev. A. L. Livdahl, Hettinger pastor, will be in charge of the meetings. R. E. Hofstad, Reeder, is president STICKERS BY MAKIN’ HIM CRAWL BACH AN’ ZA). tivo Yt thy, XY MASTER PIECE OF LAZINUSS! In TH’ NEEDUL, AN!) NEN MAHES 7TH’ STITCHES UP HISSELF, A MILE T NOT NS WELL WHY NOT 7 THER WIS OVERALLS WT RiIPPEOH WHY SHOLLON HE Do SOME oO TH WORK 2 C'MON BACH. NOW, HONEY , TLL T TAKE A NOTHER OUT OUR WAY By Williams TRWILLIAMS §-b © 1995 By | creased less than 7 per cent, while the | number 15 to 19 years of age increased | 23 per cent. Birth Rate Decreases |. “Except in the cities where popula- | tion is increasing rapidly, a steady de- | crease in the number of children at- i tending grade schools may be ex- | pected, due to the decreasing birth- jTate. School boards and officials | Should be aware of this tendency and not provide school buildings larger than will be needed a few years | hence,” is Willson’s suggestion, “A complete reorganization of our whole rural and small town school eee may be necessary if adequate educational facilities are to be pro- | vided without an increase in the per | capita cost of primary education. In | some sections of the state there are at | present too few children to warrant maintaining schools in the ordinary Helge Leioe ar it is evident that | this cone become increasingly prevalent. |. “High school enrollment has been | Increasing very rapidly. This probab- | ly will continue as long as an increas- ing proportion of young people seek | secondary education, but as soon as | the decreasing birthrate begins to in- | fluence the population of high school | age we may expect a decrease in en- |rollment. School boards will, there- | fore, be wise, in building in the fu- j ture, not to plan for their require- ments on the basis of the increase en- rollment in the past.” KIWANS CLUBS VAUUE DISCUSSED Dr. J. G. Follette, Watertown, S. D., Tells of North Da- kota Club Projects Miami, Fla., May 6.—()—Dr. James G. Follette, tertqwn, 8. D., gover- nor of the Minnesota-Dakotas Ki- wanis district, Wednesday pointed out the value of active Kiwanis clubs in the state of North Dakota before 4,000 delegates and visitors attending the 15th annual convention of the or- ganization here. “The 17 clubs in North Dakota com- pleted hundreds of community and welfare activities during the last year and all are now engaged in\ projects for community development. The value of Kiwanis easily can be ascertained when we consider the | work our clubs are doing,” Dr. Fol- lette declared. A part of a large statistical record _|from the official monthly reports of North Dakota clubs shows the follow- ing activities, and the number of clubs engaged in each: Playgrounds, recreation, athletics, 14; vocational and educational work, 14; aid to business and industry, 13; juvenile work, Boy Scouts, 13; agri- cultural projects, 13; general charity work, nine; improvement of civic con- ditions, nine; citizenship and patri- otic, five; assistance to under-privi- leged children, three. international officers, years theatre- | goers have waited for “City Lights.” it is a fast-moving, romantic barrens with numerous dramatic high-light ‘Wednesday delegates were to elect | slow acters are all natural and that which transpires rings with realism. ‘There are but three characters vital to the story. The leading male por- | trayal falls to the comedian and he presents himself in his familiar tramp get-up. Of next importance is a flower girl who is blind; the other is an eccentric millionaire. Three other by Florence Lee; the millionaire’s but- ler, portrayed by Allan Garcia, and a Prizefighter, enacted by Hank Mann. A new personality comes to the Her performance is excellent and she gave every evidence of a bright future CONTINUED DRYHE 1 ISCOURACING NORTHWEST TILLER Southern and Northeastern North Dakota Have Excel- lent Outlook, However Continued dry weather, particularly | in Western North Dakota and Mon- tana, with only fair soil conditions in eastern North Dakota and Minnesota has caused a wave of pessimism as re- gards the spring wheat outlook in the northwest, to the Farmers’ Union Weekly Review issued Wednes- day. “Seeding of wheat is from one-half completed in the northern part of the territory to practically finished in the southern districts,” the review says. “The planting of barley and feed crops ig expected to start in a few days. “The spring wheat crop is entering the critical period of the growing year. Moisture conditions are far from sat- isfactory and grain planted for two weeks hardly is showing abcve the ritory. ‘The crop outlook can improve rapidly if rain comes within a week, but light showers will bring only tem- crop into May, there is not a visible evidence of ger- mination above the surface and spring grains will be starting under @ handi- cap, @ report from Sheyenne, N. D., “From Forbes and Hope, N. D.,come | reports that there is no reduction in | wheat acreage in those areas, but gen- ions sxe thet the area be 20 per cent below the year since an elevator D., writes. rapidly are drying out Stanley, Plaza, Willis- ary rand Forks ithern North The Q ; i ai ee “3 Bg 5 i. Hy | fs ul E z ge 83 £ lit Faekl E if i] i | ' i in i i Ee Ee a i i g i i l fi i i i : t i ii i 3k & i FE sein ons SCHOOLS 70 ENTER ATHLETIC CARNIVAL Three Cups Will Be Awarded to Winning Teams in Play Day Festiv' rs and girls throughout the county have been in- 'vited to participate in an athletic car- nival to be held in Bismarck May 15 under the direction of W. H. Payne. ‘Bismarck high school principal, as- sisted by H. E. Howitson, Moffit; H. E. Hermanson, McKenzie; and Mau- Herum, Driscoll. Tbe carnival will be held to fea- ture the annual Burleigh county Play Bove and girls of all ages will have ‘an opportunity to compete. Contests will be open to any student attending school in the county with the excep- ion of those in the Bismarck schools. Each school may enter two pupils each event and preliminaries will run off the morning of May 8 to determine what contestants will rep- resent their schools in the finals at! Bismarck. Three cups will be awarded. One will be given to the school whose team wins the greatest number of points. The second will be awarded to the rural, graded or consolidated school, whose grade school team makes the greatest number of points. The third cup will be presented to the winning sh school team. et entrants will be divided into groups according to ages. ‘They are: Class 1, six, seven and eight years; Class 2, nine, 10 and 11 years; Class 3, 12, 13 and 14 years; and Class 4, all girls over 14 years. Boys will be classified by weight. Class 1, weight up to 70 pounds; Class 2, weight from 71 to 95 pounds; Class 3, weight from 96 to 125 pounds; | and Class 4, all over 125 pounds. | Events follow: Girls Class 1—50 yard dash, running broad jump and three-legged race. 2—50 yard dash, running broad jump, and three-legged race. Class 3—60 yard dash, running broad jump, baseball throw, and run~ ning high jump. Class 4—1, 75 yard dash; 2, running broad jump; 3, running high jump; 4, baseball throw and 5, relay race, 200 yards, 4 girls. Bo; ys Class 1—50 yard dash, running broad jump, running high jump, three-legged race. Class. 2—75 yard dash, running broad jump, running high jump three-legged race. Class 3—100 yard dash, running broad jump, running high jump, eight pound shot put. Class 4—1, 100 yard dash; 2. relay| race, half mile, 4 boys; 3, running! broad jump; 4, running high jump; 5, twelve pound shot put. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Wolff Jr. and sons Henry and Julius were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mertz and family. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Neff and son fd Jee Hazlegrove | — By MRS. RAY HAZLEGROVE Alex Jr. were Sunday visitors at the! p’ Adolph Wegeners. Mr. and Mrs, John Wutzke were Sunday evening visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Christ Wolff. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Wolff and daughter Irene were Sunday visitors at the Neff home. The Misses. Letha Burgermeister and Hilda Rosenau and brother Theo- dore and Gerhard and Emil Wutske were Sunday visitors at the Christ ‘Wolff home. Adolph Weber was a business call- er at the Christ Wolff and Alex Neff homes Tuesday. + ©. J. Olson, the Rawleigh man, was @ dinner guest Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Christ Wolff, Jr. Christ Wolff was in Arena Thurs- day on business. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hazlegrove were aftersoon callers at the Milt Gold- smith and Fred Wagner homes. Miss Minnie Wagner was shopping in Tuttle Monday. Dale Goldsmith and his mother, Mrs. Milt Goldsmith, were shopping in Tuttle Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Thoren were in Tuttle Monday. Mrs. Emma Virgin called at the Ben Klangenburg home in Wing ‘Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Kennedy arrived Monday from California to spend the summer with relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy drove over} to visit at the Rell Nusume home pene Hurdsfleld Tuesday, for a few ys. were supper and over night guests Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hazlegrove. Jack Stewart and son, Wallace, called Tuesday at Ray Hazlegrove's. Henry Uifers was in Chasley Thurs- day on business. Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Kennedy called t the Ulfers home Thursday. Owen McIntyre called at Ray Hazle- i Hl i i & new baby daugh- April 18, at Bismarck. Pounds and 14 ounces, Fred Wagner and daughter, » Were shopping in Tuttle Fri- Mrs. John Peterson were shoppers in Tuttle Sat- 5 i Hf & 3 B Mrs. Friday night at her home Pneumonia was the cause hhas lived here in Fr Ethel, ind Edyth; Martin, Chester, Austin, and El- and other relatives and many Frank Gray and Miss shopping in Tuttle Mrs. R. P. Kennedy at-) i from schools | Emil Sattler are the| ; ucation Will Curb Divorce, Domestic Relations Judge Believes PUPS IN COUNTY WHY, AH Alo! TH” CHANCES ARE (Tis GUST TH’ PLASTER») R CRACKING, OR TH? HOUSE SETTLING ! ~\'SEE, A FEW YEARS AGO “THAT in Tuttle a and were also guests of friends there. Mr, and Mrs. Ray Hazlegrove were dinner guests Sunday at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Frank Gray. Elvin Gray of Binford, N. D., drove down Saturday night for an over Sunday visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gray and sister, Opal Gray, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hazle- grove, sister and brother-in- Elvin Gray and his sister, Opal, jcalled Sunday afternoon a few min- utes at the Hazlegrove home. FIRST HIGH SCHOOL CONFERENCE INN. D. HELD 29 YEARS AGO Track and Field Meet Held First; Other Branches Added Year by Year Grand Forks, N. D., May 6—Con- trasting the approaching May state high school conference at the Uni- versity of North Dakota May 20 to 23 with the first conference held 29 years ago, Prof. A. H. Yoder, director of the extension division, said that the contest was started upon the sug- gestion of several high school super- intendents that a track and field meet be sponsored by the university. The first high school contest was organized in 1903 when four schools participated in the first annual track and field meet, which Grand Forks high school won with 58 points. In 1904 the first declamation con- test was held in the Baptist church of Grand Forks, with nine schools participating. Carrington won the contest. Nineteen schools entered the first debate contest in 1910 in which Leeds won, defeating Carrington in the finals. The fourth contest to become an annual state event was music, started in 1911. Grand Forks carried off the major honors in music events that year. Other events which have be- come part of the state contests are the Junior Playmakers, 1922; tennis, 1928; publications, 1928; commercial contests, 1929; and golf, 1930. The grand championship trophy, offered each year by the Grand Forks commercial club, was first won by Grand Forks in 1922. Fargo was the victor in 1923 and 1924; Grand Forks, 1925, 1926 and 1927; and Fargo again in 1928, 1929 and 1930. At first, the contestants were not required to pass any elimination con- tests, but the field became so large that in 1924 the state was divided in- to the 12 districts which are in use at the present, Mr. Yoder said. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- LLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage, executed and deliv- ered by Hlmer 'E, McCullough and Emma Izelda McCuilough, his wite, of the county cf Burleigh, State of North Dakota, mortgagors, to the Investors Mortgage Security Company, Inc., of Bismarck, North Dakota, mortgagee, dated the 22rd day of November, 1916, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds in and for said county of Rurleigh and state of North Dakota, on the 13th day of December, 1916, at 1:30 o'clock P. M, and re- corded in Book 90 of Mortgages on page 169, and assigned by the said mortgagee to George Schneider, Sr., ot Sweet Briar, Morton\County, North Dakota, now the owner thereof, will be foreclosed by a sale of the prem- ises'in such mortgage and hereinafter described at the front door of tho courthouse In the city of Bismarck, county of Burleigh, and state of North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock . M. on the 9th day of June, 1931, to satisty the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as follows: ‘The Southeast Quarter (SEX%) of Section Twenty-two (22) in township One Hundred Forty-two (142) North, Range Seventy-eight (78) West, con- taining 160 acres, more or less ac- cording,to the United States Govern- ment survey thereof, situate in Bur- leigh County, North Dakota. There will be due on such mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of Seventeen Hundred Ninety-four and 50/100 ($1794.50) Dollars. Dated this 28th day of April, 1931, GEORGE SCHNEIDER, SR., Assignes KELSCH & HIGGINS, — Attorneys for Assignee, Mandan, North Dako! 4/23 6/6 NOTICE TO CONSTRUCT sIDE- WALI To Fach of the Owners and Occupants of the Respective Premises Herein= after Described: WHEREAS, The City Commission of the City of Bismarck deem it neces- sary to construct a sidewalk in front of, or along, each of the following. described premises as herein set forth, 0- wit: Along the east side of Lots 7 to 16, inclusive, of Block 58 in McKensle and Coffin’s Addition to the City of Bis- marck, and have directed the City Au- ditor to notify you, and each of you, as provided by law, to construct such Sidewalk in front’ of or along sald Premises which are owned or occu- pied by you, at your own expense: NOW THEREFORE, you and each of you are hereby notified and re- guired to construct such Sidewalk In ront of or along, as above set forth, the promises hereinbefore described, which are owned by you, subject to the approval of the City Engineer, and in strict accordance with ordic hances now in force and otfect, ‘our own expense, within 10 atter the date of this notice; and if you fail to so construct the same, such Sidewalks will be constructed by the contractor employed by the City for that purpose, and the expense thereof Wil be assessed against sald prem- You are required by said ordli before commencing work “on aint Sidewalk, to make application to the City Engineer for line and grade of for @ per walk and Permit to construct N.D. Dated, Bismarck, .. May 5, SEAL) ie. ATKINSON City Auditor, City of Bismarck, N,'D. j-13 = Bargains Every car in A-1 Condition, Terms if Desired. Sunday School