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edpert rane ro ° MANDAN NEWS 7 BRAVES ENTERED ~ IN BISMARCK NEET Track Men From Mandan Pre- pare For Tournament in Daily Practice Sessions Seventeen trackmen at the Mandan high school are participating in daily workouts in preparation for the Cap- ital City track and field meet at Bis- marck Friday and Saturday. Outstanding candidates are Ran- dall, a miler; Ernest Percy, a high jumper; and Eckroth, a weight man. Randall has beaten five minutes in the mile several times during practice and is regarded as having more than an even chance to walk off with first place in the event at Bismarck. A newcomer in track, Percy has shown steady improvement in the high jump since the start of the sea- son & month ago. Eckroth and Berry will carry the colors of the Braves into the field events and are expected to see action in the finals. Coach Leonard McMahan, who is guiding the destinies of the Warriors, said his team was inexperienced and probably would require seasoning be- fore becoming a serious threat in state high school circles. Mandan track men entered in the meet are: Eugene Berry, Casper Boehm, Arthur Brunelle; John Dahl- quist; John Dowrey; Lloyd Dietrich; Joe Eckroth; Jake Hecker; Robert Jarding, Vern Latton, Ernest Percy, Roe Percy, John Randall, Al Schwartz, Frank Stumpf, Pete Syvrud, and Clar- ence West. CREDIT PRODUCTION RECORD 70 STATION Heifers at Great Plains Dairy) Get National Honors For | Butterfat Contest Mandan is making itself known in! Keidel Funeral Will the dairy world. The latest honor is brought to the city by Beatrice Mer- cedes of the Northern Great Plains experiment station who ranks sixth nationally and first in North Dakota HOSIERY re es etal i Lirhegtied in the TERE junior two-year- eifer class. Previous honors were received when Two Queens Korndyke Saddie Hero led the nation | TTT ad in this class for the test period end- ing Dec. 31, 1930. Beatrice Mercedes in the same class during a test period produced 19,199.0 pounds of milk and 670.3 pounds of butterfat in 365 days. From the records of the Holstein- Friesian Association of America for the official testing year ending De- cember 31, 1931, the honor list of the association shows that only two herds in the United States have heifers with higher production than Mandan dairy station heifers “Korndyke” and “Bea- trice Mercedes.” “The Mandan station heifers were fed nothing but North Dakota grown feeds,” Supt. A. L. Watt declared. “Their roughage consisted of alfalfa hay and corn silage which were fed in quantities that were readily cleaned up without waste. The grain mixture was made up of equal parts by weight of ground corn, ground barley, ground oats, bran, and linseed oilmeal. When the concentrates were being mixed one per cent of salt and one per cent of steamed bone meal were added.” Be Conducted Friday Funeral services will be conducted in the Mandan Lutheran church at 2 p. m. Friday for Charles Keidel, pio- neer Morton county farmer and form- er state legislator, who died at his home south of Mandan Wednesday. Keidel died from a crushed chest and internal injuries sustained when he was trampled by a bull Tuesday. “As You LIKE IT” sets the stage for Spring with He leaves his widow and a son Carl} of Mandan and a daughter Miriam of Evanston, Tl. Pallbearers will be John Mason, William Borden, Fred Motsiff, Anton Olson, A. L. Watt, and John Loh- streter. chee ioe heres tae Seven New Stocking Shades Presenting SANDEE GRAIN PASEO CASINO SUNBEIGE BURMA TANBLUSH Just the right color note for Maytime—for June days, and the balmy Summer months ahead. Economy Hose for the Woman Whe Knews SARAH GOLD SHOP “Style Without Extravagance” 312 Main Ave. Beautiful! Serviceable! The body was to lie in state in the Keidel home Thursday. Burial will be in the Mandan ccem-/ ctery. ‘Mandan Police Begin Enforcement Drive James Buckley, who Monday be- ;came chief of the Mandan police, is directing a campaign aimed at the | drivers of cars with only one light. | After taking office Buckley ordered | that all cars be stopped whose lights | | Were not in working order and drivers warned. Second offenders will be! hailed into court, Buckley said. | More than 50 motorists have been | warned since the order was issued. Po- licemen are flagging down motorists with flashlights to issue warnings. iGolf Course Popular | Despite Cool Weather Despite prevailing cool weather, the number of golfers using the municipal | course at Mandan compares favorably with attendance figures last year, ac- cording to Arthur Olson, club pro- fessional. Women are availing themselves of the opportunity to play in greater |nurabera than in former years, he said. TO START PROJECT A construction program, calling for the building of five new hard-surfaced Here's a pair that won the honors in the University of Missouri beau- ty sweepstakes. Estelle Kermott, Kappa Alpha Thcta, of Kansas City, top picture, took first honors, and Kathryn Fenstermaker, Alpha Chi Omega, of Elizabeth, La., placed sec- ond. As queens of the yearbook, Savitar, they will be introduced to the student body at a junior-senior prom in their honor, tennis courts at Riverside park, is ex- pected to get under way within the next few days, members of the park board announced. WIND UP CAMPAIGN An immunization campaign against. diphtheria in Mandan and Morton schools was completed this week. More than 1,000 children were inoculated against the disease. COMMISSIONERS MEET Routine business occupied members of the Mandan city commission at their regular weekly session at the city hall Wednesday night. Anton Beer, Glen Ullin, was admit- ted for treatment at the Deaconess hospital Wednesday. SHAFER TO SPEAK Venora, N. D., May 5—(?)—Govern- or George F. Shafer is scheduled to deliver the principal address at grad- uating exercises for the Verona high school class to be held May 26, Super- intendent W. A. Eggert said today. BISMARCK, N. D. R years there has been generally a striking avoidance of the word “inhale” in cigarette advertising. Why? Goodness only knows! For everybody inhales—knowingly or unknowingly! Every smoker breathes in some part of the smoke he or she draws out of a That's why it’s all-important to be certain that your cigarette smoke is pure and clean—to be sure that. you don’t inhale certain impurities. Lucky Strike has dared to raise this vital question—for it bas solved the “Why bring that up?” —the cigarette trade asks! problem! It gives you the protection you want...because certain impurities concealed in even the finest, mildest tobacco leaves are removed by Luckies’ famous purifying process. Luckies cre- ated that process. Only Luckies have it! “Fifty million smokers can't be cigarette. wrong!” So whether you inhale know- ingly or unknowingly—safeguard your delicate membranes! “It's toasted” Your Threat Protection--against initationagalast THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1932 {}MADRIGAL CLUB 10 SING HERE FRIDAY Proceeds From Concert at Audi- torium Will Go to Girl and Boy Scouts The University of North Dakota Madrigal club, mixed glee club under the direction of Prof. Hywell C. Row- land, will present a concert at the city auditorium at 8:15 Friday eve- ning. Proceeds from the concert will go to the Girl Scout and Boy Scout proj- ects in Bismarck. Members of the organization, made up of 49 young men and women, will be housed in Bismarck homes to re- duce expenses. Feature numbers will be given by Miss Lillian Morck, dancer, whose home is at Jamestown, and a male quartet will sing several numbers. Only two students from the Missouri Slope area are included in the club's personnel. They are Merle J. Schroe- der, New England, and Lucille Cogh- lan, Bismarck. Members of the organization are listed as follows: Boys Winston Bilsbad, Fargo; Phil Chap- ple, Bathgate; George Boyer, Grand Forks; Ed Loppnow, LaMoure; Vernon Fering, Grand Forks; Harold Pond, Crary; Harold Mulinex, Tolley; George Hynes, Michigan; Philip West, Mentor; David Haney, Grand Forks; Frederick Sand, Grand Forks; Erling Lodoen, Alvorado; Gene Coghlan, St. John; Bud Fisher, Rolette; Orville Gryte, Hoople; Lloyd Nelson, Web- ster; Basil James, Page; Merriam Jones, Hankinson; Mervin Berg, Hal- lock; Robert Thompson, Crookston; John Halcrow, Bowesmont, and Blaine Gunderson, Ray. Girls Jean Hill, Grand Forks; Marion Abbott, Grand Forks; Louise Johns, Velva; Bettie Hamlin, Minneapolis; Nellie Robertson, Argyle; Eunice Iwen, Arthur; Merle J. Schroeder, New Eng- land; Ella Blumhagen, Anamoose; Lillian Morck, Jamestown; Jeanette Anderson, Hatton; Mae Sundeen, Grand Forks; Elizabeth Day, Judson, Wis.; Lucille Coghlan, Bismarck; Ann Louise Olson, Grand Forks; Dorothy Fodness, Grand Forks; Louise Thomp- son, Stanley; Helen Fodness, Grand Forks; Barbara Buechler, Kulm; Leota Jones, Enderlin; Frances Fering, ‘Towner; Lorna Thompson, Crookston; Grace LaBrant, Stanley; Barbara Ince, Kingston; Laura Christianson, Benson; Ruth Remele, Hillsboro; Ethelyn Jorve, LaMoure; Dorothy Krug, Valley City; Virginia Lee Best, Hillsboro; Helen Kunde, Minot. TO MEET AT BOTTINEAU Bottineau, N. D., May 5.—(?)—Ar- rangements are being made for the district meeting of Lions clubs here May 12, Cando, Rugby, Fessenden, and Bottineau clubs are in the dis- trict. W. Murray Allen, of Grand Forks, district governor, is expectea to address the gathering. Cortez, Spanish explorer and con- queror, discovered that the Aztecs of Mexico brewed and drank chocolate 400 years ago. Name Fargo Dentist To Head State Body Minot, N. D., May 5.—(#)—Dr. L. 1. Gilbers Fargo, was elected president of the North Dakota State Dental as- sociation at the annual convention Wednesday. He succeeds Dr. R. S. Towne, Bismarck. Dr. G. P. Jorgenson, Grand Forks. is president-elect. Dr. W. S. Shaw, Fargo, and Dr. L. E. Musberger. Jamestown, were reelected secretary ‘and treasurer, respectively. , Members of the executive commit- tee are Dr. L. C, Anderson, James- town; Dr. V. E. Sandberg, Minot, and Dr. V A. Bousquet, Maddock. Dr. A, Hallenberg, Fargo, and Dr. Towne, Bismarck, were elected dele- gates to the national convention and Dr. W. E. Heller, Fargo, and Dr. F. J. Hrtl, Minot, were chosen alternates. Valley City was chosen for the 1933 ‘convention. State Is Advertised By Exhibit in East Fargo, May 5.—(#)—North Dakota received fine advertising and will get more as a result of its exhibit and the speech of B. E. Groom of the Greater North Dakota association be- fore the executive council of the ‘American Bankers’ association at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., re- cently, said F. A. Irish, Fargo banker, on his return from an eastern trip dnesday. Winch, chairman of the agricultural committee of the North Dakota Bank- ers’ association, also addressed the group, telling of the work of Nort Dakota bankers in cooperation with the Greater North Dakota association, the North Dakota Agricultural college and other agencies. “Because of the great demand for the facts which Groom presented, his address will be revised and abridged and then will be published in pam- phlet form by the American Bankers’ association and sent to each mem- ber,” Irish said. ceca SEEK CONGRESS POSTS St. Paul, May 5.—(#)—Theodore Christianson, who served three terms as governor of Minnesota, and Con- gressman W. J. Nolan of Minneapolis, who before going to Washington served with Mr. Christianson as lieu- tenant governor, filed Wednesday as Republican candidates-at-large for congress. Last year more aliens left the Uni- ted States than entered it. Gamble Stores Buy Trainload of Tires A solid trainload of 50,000 tires has been distributed among the 180 Gam- ble Stores throughout the Middlewest, Fred Sorkness, manager of the Bis- marck branch, said Thursday. “This is the largest single order ever assembled on track and shipped to one firm in the history of the tire bus- iness,” B, C. Gamble, company offi- cial, said. “Six hundred twenty-three trucks, in a continuous line approxi- mately two and one-half miles in length, would be required to transport these tires. The selling price of the shipment, measured in silver dollars, would fill six trucks with six wheel- barrows full to spare.” _ The shipment consisted of first, sec- ond, and third line tires. They will be on sale at all Gamble Stores, be- ginning next Saturday. ‘Tests of a new French anti-aircraft gun have proved that it is effective at an altitude of about seven and a half miles. ‘To convert observation balloons into dirigibles, a German inventor has perfected detachable motors that can be fitted in short order. ALICE: a box of dishes in ALICE: I declare—I use up these chips on my no time! BETH: A big box of Lux lasts me more than a month— For heaven’s sake = it’s real economy then! BETH: Yes, and it gives your hands beauty care right in the dishpan! SINCLAIR MINSTRELS... Tune in NBC Network Monday evenings B Why don’t you use“that fast-steppin’ gas’? And a “fast-steppin’ gas” it surely is—that Sinclair ~Regular, Gasoline Its new nickname comes from the men in the Sinclair refineries who are refining It to @ formula originally developed for quick aetna ‘enl tadat ides A, ‘the congested traffic of great cities. Sinclair Regular Gasoline is refined for keeping traffic policemen ; pleasent, W's a fast, light gasoline with a world of punch—@ gasoline you"ean rely on. whenever you need a quick, responsive surge of i in your own city traffic— then toke it out on the Pg ol spin. Here's a new motoring enjoyment for you! Ask for Sinclair Regular Gasoline.: / NOTE: For best results, use either Sinclair Opaline -” Motor Oil or Sincleir Pennsylvania Motor Oil, These oils have been de-waxed, arid freed from petroleum jelly at es low es 60° F; below zero, Copyrighted 1932 by S.R. Co. (Ine.) CLATRYREGULAR o~