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2 FEDERAL COURT MAY | Young Mien at Fort ‘| HEAR MILITIA CASE ‘Adversaries of Southern Gover- nor to Seek Relief From Military Rule Atlanta, Ga., June 21.—(7)—Adver- saries of Governor Eugene Talmadge in the highway department war that led him to proclaim martial law at the capital to enforce his budget de- mands prepared to seek. federal in- tervention Wednesday. Attorneys for Capt. J. W. Barnett, ousted as chairman of the highway board under the governor's determ- ination to run things his own way, said they would petition the United States district court here for an in- junction against the military rule. Meanwhile, another federal angle cropped up as the bureau of public roads in Washington announced the $10,000,000 road allotment due Georgia July 1 under the industrial recovery bill might be held up until the situation here is cleared. In spite of the unusual circum~ stances, the highway department continued to function Wednesday and the new executive set-up headed by Judson P. Wilhoit, only member of the three-man board to support the governor, began to pay some $1,300,- 000 to workers who have gone pay- less since April. It was then the dis- pute began when Barnett and a sec- ond highway board member, W. C. Vereen, refused to accede to the gov- ernor’s demand to discharge Chief Engineer B. P. McWhorter and four other engineers, ‘| Weather Report oo FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Fair and Nightly warmer tonight; Thursday unsettled. FAIR For North Da- se Fair and slightly warmer tonight: ‘Thursday unsettled, some= what warmer east portion. For South Da- kota: Fair, slight- ly warmer extreme west portion to- night; Thursday partly cloudy, warmer east por- ny tion. "a For Montana: fair tonight and Thursday; warmer Tecremie northeast, slightly cooler ex- treme north-central portion tonight. For Minnesota: Fair, cooler in ex- treme east portion tonight; Thursday generally fair, somewhat warmer in extreme west. GENERAL CONDITIONS Low pressure overlies the Southern Plateau and Lake regions this morn- ing; with unusually high tempera- tures Sabet from the northern ky Mountain, the Mississippi Val- ley and Lake Regions. A HIGH cov- ers the Plains States and Canada with tome moderation in temperature over this area. Light showers fell over northern All , Sask., western N. & 8. Dak., 5. Minn. and Ic lowa. North Dakota —_ and Wheat Re- gion bor peer For the week ending June 20, 1933. Due to general droughty conditions in all sections seis 4 June, followed by unseasonably temperatures and occasional high winds, small eed See zanitly, Ge where poorly planted and on A Pastures and ranges also suffered con- siderably and hay will be reduc- ed. Corn continues satisfactory. Scat- tered showers the nineteenth relieved = an ivepis but rain badly sections. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 8.3 ft. 24 hour change, -0.1 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.36. Reduced to sea level, 30.13. PRECIPITATION REPORT For 2 Normal, Total, January Ist to date Normal, geiacy. Ast to date Accumulated deficiency to dat NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- area clear | ° Lincoln C. M. T. C. | Oe North Dakota Leland M. Alexander, Tolley; Hen- ry R. Anderson, Grenora; Leo M. Anderson, Fargo; Edward P. Arild- son, Alexander; Eldou M. Aupol, Fairdale; Allan R. Aufforth, Ken- mare; Forrest F. Aufforth, Ken- mare; Marlowe A. Axtell, Grand Forks; Hiram L. Banister, Napoleon; Joseph W. Beasley, Regent; Henry J. Becvar, Brocket; Earl L. Bjerke, Kin- dred; Kermit A. Bjerke, Kindred; Lynn M. Bjerke, Hatton; Theodore S. Bjerke, Hatton; William J. Blum, Parshall; Norman R. Boe, Hanna- ford; James Boltz, Belfield; David |C. Bowles, Pleasant Lake; Walter S. Bradley, Spiritwood. Philip Brandes, Fargo; Clemence W. Brauer, Bismarck; William 6. Buck, Fargo; Dale Buscher, Golden Valley; Clifford D. Butters, Warwick; Clarence A. Buttz, Tolley; Henry M. Byorum, Minot; Francis W. Christianson, Kenmare; Bernard M. Cohen, Grand Forks; Joseph H. Coles, Kenmare; Donald O. Couey, Kenmare; Charles J. Coyne, Reeder; Perey J. Dahl, Osnabrock; Vernon J. DeMars, Antler; Harold W. DePue, Kenmare; Wilmer E. Dike, Fairdale; Merle Doherty, Killdeer; Boyd L. Dreveskracht, Golden Valley; Louis H. DePuis, Denbigh; Rae A. Eber- hardt, Casselton; Richard L. Ellis, Glen Ullin; Donald W. Enochson, Warwick; Manford H. Erickson, Adams. Joel M. Fedje, Makoti; William S. Fish, Bantry; Richard E. Fisher, Bantry; Olaf L. Fosmark, Dunn Cen- ter; Ro&ie O. Fosse, Ray; Howard E. Fraser, Walhalla; Jay C. Germain, Linton; Evald A. Gilseth, Harvey; Johnny H. Glaspey, Lignite; James E. Glock, Davenport; Willard C. Graham, Bismarck; Kermit C. Gul- bro, Pekin; Vernon J. Gunderson, Maxbass; Edward H. Haag, Heil; Norman L. Halberg, Adams; Elton O. Halvorson, Rolla; Alvin L. Han- son, Hamar; Clifford N. Hanson, Sanborn; Merle K. Hanson, Hamar; Carl O. Haukedahl, Wildrose; Hugo P. Heitsch, Rugby; William M. Hen- ty, Crocus. William C. Hess, Wahpeton; Astor L. Hilden, Reeder; James L. Hinds, Wahpeton; Max Hinman, Alexander; Milton J. Holtmeier, Leonard; An- drew W. Hull, Ellendale; Austin E. Hulbert, Fargo; John C. Hunter, Crystal; Ralph S. Jamieson, Crystal; Simon T. Jensen, Kensal; Byron W. Johnson, Donnybrook; Clarence V. Johnson, Grenora; Delmar O. John- son, Maxbass; Walter J. Johnson, Rugby; Rolland F. Jurscewsky, Mc- Clusky; Leo D. Kalisiak, Scranton; Morton H. Kamins, Dodge; Jerry P. Keohane, Beach; Oscar Kjelstrom, Pleasant Lake; Harry J. Kline, Ant- ler; Kenneth B. Krogstad, Rolette; Louis M. Kurtz, Wahpeton; Alvin L. Lampert, Makoti. Harvey L. Larson, Wildrose; Mark J. Lenertz, Grand Forks; Mervin J. Liedtke, Robinson; Mylo E. Lien, Fairdale; Rolland E. Light, Noonan; Robert H. Lundquist, Adams; John T. McGarry, Alexander; Ralph V. Matson, Makoti; Curtiss D. Mead, Lisbon; Harold Miller, Kensal; Hen- ry C. Moore, Casselton; Alvis L. Morse, Marmarth; Harry W. O. Mow-. ery, Napoleon; Walter 0. O’Brien, Bantry; Arthur H. Olson, Finley; Darwin L. Olson, Finley; Raymond A. Olson, Bowbells; James D. Pat- terson, McHenry; Denver F. Peter- son, Hastings; Leroy A. Peterson, Harvey; Gordon G. Pettit, Langdon; Ervin A. Pietz, Streeter; Harris E. Rahlfs, Bantry; George R. Ram- stead, Beach; Charles H. Reilley, Lisbon; James A. Rextraw, Kloten; ae Rice, Hatton; Harold L. Rood, O88, George L. Sanders, Velva; Garvin Sandsmark, Watford City; Raymond F. Schammel, Kenmare; Charles G. Scharf, Wahpeton; Robert L. Schu- mar, Grand Forks; Harold O. Sel- land, Rugby; Edwin K. Sheaffer, Jr., Carrington; Lester H. Simonson, Scranton; Harold T. Sletten, Pekin; Randall G. Slocum, Fairmount; Ells- worth A. Smith, Jamestown; Arnold J. Spidahl, Maddock; Milton G. Sponhem, _Northwoos Earl W. Stakston, Noonan; Bjarne N. Svare, Grenora; Glenn B. Swenson, Kin- dred; Ramon Thomas, Egeland; .{James G. Thompson, Linton; Ben- jamin K. Toby, Bowbells; Paul E. Troseth, Hannaford; Richard H. Turk, Glen Ullin; Lawrence L. Vad- nais, Noonan. John A. Voelpel, Jr., Kenmare; John L. Walen, Glenfield; Roland E. Walton, Antler; William M. Weis- gerber, Golden Valley; John W. Weiss, Spiritwood; Clifford L. Wells, Fairdale; George A. Wengler, Calio; Frank J. Lawrence, Eagle Butte; Le- roy Ludeman, Mitchell; John W. Mc- Clanahan, Belle Fourche; Thomas A. McClanahan, Belle Fourche; John F. McCoin, Mitchell; Bruce L. McIn- tyre, Huron; Elwyn L. Molcolm, Custer; Burr B. Markham, Turton; Harold L. Marlow, Redfield; Casi- mir H. Meredith, Lead. Ivan L, Miller, Lane; Clair R. Mor- rison, Armour; Mark E. Nicksic, Mc- Laughlin; Clarence W. Pierce, Ips- wich; Horace J. Quimby, Onida; Manuel H, Reintsma, Huron; Viator C. Roache, Woonsocket; Roscoe H. Rollins, Mobridge; Lloyd F. Roush, Huron; Chester R. Rudd, Miller; Gerald L. Sielert, Cresbard; Ralph W. Smith, Rosebud; George E. Thei- mer, Huron; Sylvester H. Thomas, Belvidere; Preston W. Turbiville, Camp Crook; Donald W. Webber, Herreid; Frank B. Williams, Spear- fish. James S. Bailey, Mobridge; Jay T. Barbour, Belle Fourche; Allen H. Beals, Belle Fourche; Glen B. Clute, Fourche; Paul A, Dupras, Lead; Clyde M. Halverson, Wood; Lloyd C. Harmon, Belle Fourche; Guy H. Houchen, Jr., McLaughlin; Clarence A. Huffman, Belle Fourche; Donald f. Keown, Rapid City; Girdon W. Lane, Chamberlain; Ralph S. McKim, Fruitdale; Donald H. Mills, Belle; Fourche; Ira D. Sankey, Belle Fourche; John M. Truman, Belle Fourche; Thomas G. Truman, Belle Fourche; Edward Turek, Hisle; Rob- ert G. Turek, Hisle; John T. Waite, Belle Fourche; John W. Twito, Isa- bel; Garrett N. Zenk, Eureka. Glenn T. Beelman, Gann Valley; Maurice C. Henricksen, Gann Valley; gigas F. Srb, Belvidere. Strange But True ‘ | News Items of Day | (By The Associated Press) THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE Towa City, Ia., June 21—(?)—The good sound - spanking still has its Place in this modern world. In fact, said Dr. Esther L. Rich- ards, professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins university, science has found no substitute for it. “If you find that your child has scattered the contents of the ice box over the kitchen floor, give him a sound spanking” she said in address- | ing the seventh annual conference of child welfare. “There is no use,” she added, “try- ing to reason with a small child. The child will listen because he has noth- ing better to do, but it is time wasted in telling him why he should or should not do a thing.” SNEEZE IS FATAL Fremont, Neb.—Frank Som- mers, 59, sneezed and as a result he is dead. The sneeze caused him to lose control of his motor car which turned over on a highway near here. Sommers, a former travel- ing man, died soon afterward in a hospital. His chest was crushed. MISTAKE IN JUDGMENT Grain Valley, Mo.—At the big Tars- ney Bass Lake south of here is mount- ed an 11 inch bass with a 10-inch bass in its mouth. Edwin A. Morrow, investment com- pany executive of Kansas City, said he found the two fish recently while row- ing on the lake. Apparently the larg- er fish misjudged the size of its prey and, unable to swallow it, choked to death. No Progress Made in Hamm Kidnaping Case St. Paul, June 21.—(}—The Hamm kidnaping case was in a virtual stale- te in so far as police were con-|{s |THE BABY IS MOTHER’S RESPON- SIBILITY; JOB CAN'T BE LEFT TO THE FAMILY Too many “willing hands” in the baby’s care aren't good for him at any time, especialy in summer, de- clares Olive Robert Barton, widely known child rearing expert in this article, the second of a series of six on summer care of babies. In summer one of the most neces- sary things for the baby’s welfare, I think, is the personal supervision of the mother. Of course in many families that can afford it there is often a train- ed or @ graduate nurse to assume this responsibility. And there does still exist the other type of nurse who puts her duty to the baby so conscientiously first that his mother can leave entire responsibility in her hands and feel assured that all will be well. But there are two things I be- lteve should be guarded against re- Chamberlain; Fay EB. Couch, Belle:gardless of means. One is to trust the baby to a young nurse who ob- viously is more interested in other affairs than her charge, and the other is to divide up the baby in the, family—mother to make his formula ‘one day, auntie the next, and twelve- year-old Suzy the next. Evenness and observance are necessary for this rite. It is a one-man job. Details Require Watching Of course a busy mother needs help. To change the baby is almost any- one’s job. To see that his cart is kept out of the sun can be done with- out @ king’s equerry on hand. Even to hold his bottle up so that it doesn’t get air and the weight does not rest on his mouth needs no diploma. But take eyen these simple duties and unless there is a generalissimo to keep an eye on details, trouble can re- sult from any one of them. ‘When the baby is changed it is @inecessary for him to be washed and slightly powdered or oiled so that he doesn’t get chafed. In hot weather too many little babies cry all day long from itching and chafing, often not enough to be seen, but maddening just the same. The change should be made at once and the same ritual gone through each time. The diaper should be an entirely clean one, never dried and used again. The soap in washing it should be rinsed out thoroughly. Clean diapers, washing, oiling in the creases, quick changing, all these things prevent raw skin, exhausted nerves, and keep the appetite going. A suffering baby won’t eat. What is shady one hour is sunny next. ‘Will Suzy remember to move it? The mother’s eye again! Baby’s Care Must Come First The baby’s bottle—there is a trick about this too. After he has finished and is held up over the shoulder to “get the gas up” is just anyone in the family to be trusted to do it prop- erly, will she watch his little back and lay him down gently again so’ that he does not “spill up’? Every- thing about a baby has to be done Tight. The more important routine du- ties of a baby’s day come before any- thing else in the house. These are the things best done by the mother her- self. If Suzy or her aunt are to help out, it is better for them to spread the beds, make the salad and iron the shirts, even if Dad. gets a bit fussy about it. This is the best plan for the sum- mer months. One all-seeing eye, pref- erably the mother’s, and no mistakes made; nothing overlooked, and no trusting to a secong or third person who may forget. One more thought. Twelve-year- old Suzy, herself a child, needs some Playtime. Don’t turn the baby over to her and hold her responsible. It pitoo much and is fair to neither of em, cérned Wednesday. They pinned their chief hopes on an effort by William Hamm and two} detecitves to find the hideout where the 39-year-old millionaire president of the Theodore Hamm Brewing com- pany was held prisoner almost four lays. Hamm and the detectives ‘were somewhere in northern Minnesota. They hoped to find the two-story house set back off a traveled road where Hamm was held in an up- peeessegagssesrarsasessass Bebeessessesseseasasesekss Wishek, clear .. Otis D. Weydahl, Killdeer; Richard A. White, Walhalla; Jack W. Wil- born, Egeland; Moses E. Wilkie, Fort Yates; Francis H. Wood, Gold- en Valley; Henry Zeien, Fessenden. Gordon 0. Bakken, Northwood; Benjamin E. Buck, Streeter; Floyd H. Clark, Cogswell; Robert J. Crow- ley, Hebron; Verne A. DeForge, Lawton; Gilbert W. Ellwein, New Salem; Leslie W. Fields, Carrington; Stanley F. Flagstad, Robinson; Gil- bert M. Groseth, Aneta; John C. SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. 00 00 O1 Hi clear . 60 Pierre, clear .. . 88 60 Rapid City, clear . ~ 80 54 MINNESOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pct. 86 56 (00 98 66 «12 OUT OF STATE POINTS Moorhead, clear St. Paul, clear Hanson, Streeter; Robert M. Jacob- son, Sims; Roy D. Kerzman, Emmet; Wilbur H. Klusmann, New Salem; George Lehner, Denhoff; Walter E. Lybeck, Tuttle; James A. McConkey, Bismarck; Oscar M. Mellin, Turtle Lake; Kenneth D, Myhre, Sanborn; Russell Nelson, Northwood; Law- rence S, Ness, Belfield; Alfred H. Petermann, New Salem; George Schaff, Belfield; William J. Schneié der, Hebron; Lloyd V. Strand, Hast- ings; Edward A. Vasichek, Brocket; stairs room whose windows at that time were boarded. Hamm was ran- somed for an undisclosed amount, though his attorneys said it was not the full $100,000 the abductors first demanded. Meanwhile, police were seeking identity of three men and a wi NEXT: Baby’s room and bath. Civil Case Against Meyer Is Dismissed A civil action in Burleigh county district court brought by Carl Eliason of Bismarck as administrator of the estate of the late Gustav Eliason against Julius Meyer and Sophie Meyer of Baldwin has been dismissed. The dismissal motion was made by the plaintiff, according to Meyer, whc acted as his own attorney in the case. Costs of $14.30 were assessed against the plaintiff. The plaintiff had brought action to oman, e who occu] a he in -|recover $500 and 5 per ‘cent interest three weeks before departing hurried-|>Y the Meyers to Gustav Eliason Aug. ly early Tuesday, 16, 1926, and due a year later. Hover claimed the note,had been ‘ paid but that his receipt for ent Use the Want Ads had been destroyed. sisal SOMETHING TO RED RIVER CLAIMS LIFE OF FORKS MAN Victim Is Seized With Cramps While Swimming Only 20 Feet From Shore Grand Forks, T. D., June 21—()— John 8. Leonard, 43, Grand Forks, drowned while swimming in the Red river, just below the business dis- trict, here Tuesday night. He was seized with cramps and went down 20 feet from shore, ac- cording to Joseph Fhole, Grand Forks, Leonard’s companion, who was watching from the bank. Unable to swim, Poole could not go to Leon- ard’s aid. The body was recovered about an hour later by Arvid Busche and Ru- pert Smith. Leonard lived in Grand Forks all his life except for six years from 1923 to 1929, which he spent in Chi- cago, Milwaukee, Florida and Cuba. He worked as a for the Grand Forks Herald before leaving here and was a substitute in that department since his return. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Leonard, his wife and two children, Dorothy and William, who live in Fargo; three brothers, James of Minneapolis, Duncan and William of Grand Forks, and four sisters, all of Grand Forks. Funeral services have not been ar- ranged. CONTINUED Chiefs at-Parley Consider Move to Halt Money Talk force President Roosevelt's hand on the stabilization issue. The fact remained, however, that in other conference circles this move was described as a highly disturbing factor in the conference at a time when some of the opposition to Am- erica’s apparent stand against im- mediate stabilization seemed to be passing. Premier MacDonald of Great Brit- ain, as president of the conference and one of the main movers for calle le resist all efforts at adjournment. He was using all possible means to ry to sidetrack the continental cam- paign, the Associated Press learned. It was authoritatively stated, mean- wilile, that what the British fear is not so much adjournment, which consider unlikely, as that the confer- and drag on without a perhaps until Prof. Raymond Moley, assistant secretary of state, arrives from America. DEFINITE RESULTS EXPECTED BY MOLEY New York, June 21.—(?)—Assistant { THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1988 our Children By Olive.Roberts Barton = ©1931 BY NEA SERVICE INC =» Mellon Denies Dodging Taxes the instructions I received were not in the nature of specific orders. “I can be useful to the delegation in giving them background. There have been mahy developments here since Bernard F. Baruch was at the pier to see Moley but missed him through @ misunderstanding. Moley and his party boarded the ship without re- Porting to the passenger agent. Qon- sequently when Baruch asked for Mo- Jey he was told he was not yet aboard. In a brief statement issued amid confusion of motion picture taking and crowd gaping on the ship’s atfer- deck, Professor Moley said: “Tam looking forward with pleasure to seeing Secretary Hull and the other ¢|.|members of the American delegation. |. {I feel that the two weeks of prelim- W. L. Mellon, nephew of An- drew W. Mellon, is shown here at his Pittsburgh home as he denied charges that he had failed to pay income taxes to- taling $2020,132. The charge, was made in a claim against Mellon for double that amount filed by David Olson. Secretary of State Raymond F. Moley sailed for London Wednesday .saying that America may expect “definite re- sults from the work of the American ‘delegation to the world economic con- ference, Professor Moley sailed on the liner Manhattan as a special representative of President Roosevelt, with whom he had @ conference Tuesday. He was accompanied by Herbert ‘Bayard Swope, former newspaper ex-, ecutive, Professor Moley said there was no possibility thé president himself might. go to the conference. i “I talked the whole matter over with him yesterday,” he said, “and rr inaries at the conference have been useful in the direction of explgring the possibilities of action, and the delegation is ready to vigor- ously the plahs which they developed in the week before they sailed. (When he read this statement Moley inter- Polated “and America may look f ward to definite results from their ef- forts.”) “I am, as the president stated yes- terday, serving as a means of contact between the administration here and the delegation.” Moley declined to discuss the sta- bilization problem. EARLY REVELATION OF STRATEGY IS EXPECTED Washington, June 21—(7)—Capital observers following the international muddle over current stabilization ex- pect an early revelation of strategy back of the American administration's moves, An airplane dash of Assistant Sec. retary Moley to President Roosevelt's schooner for last-minute instructions, before ‘Wednesday's sailing for the London conference, was generally taken here to presage new life for that hitherto somewhat stumbling parley, Evensbefore Moley completes his transatlantic crossing results of his contact with the president may be revealed. What he was told will be relayed to Washington through Bernard M. Baruch, now the officia), policy spokesman of Roosevelt in” Washington, to confer in New York with the assist- ant secretary Wednesday. Moley also has been in continuous touch with the American delegation at London by. cable, Speculation in the meantime turned” on the motive behind Tuesday's new! assertion by Dean Acheson, uhder- secretary of the treasury, that the ad</ ministration did not see any reason! for quick stabilization. |Export Clearances Of Wheat Are Lower Fort William, Canada, June 21.—(7) —Export clearance of Canadian wheat from all ports last week werd 8,539,005 bushels, out of 5,204,000 for all North America, compared with 4,111,735 @ year ago, according to a report of the board of grain com- missioners. Visible Canadian wh ‘at all points is lower by nearly million bushels. WHEN YOUR STOMACH Most “indigestion” has been found imaginary! The pains and gas and all that misery are real, of course. But nine times in ten they are symptoms only of slow stomach. Did you know you can regulate your stomach to empty in six hours, as it should? That this is as easy as moving the bowels? One box of Pape’s Diapepsin will test your stomach.and correct your digestion time in a couple of days— at a cost of twenty-five cents! Each tablet of diapepsin save’ the stomach half an hour’s labor. If your stomach is an hour slow, two tablets will remedy the trouble. Then eat anything. Baked beans every noon if you like them, and lobster at midnight suppers. They will digest like crackers and milk in a six-hour stomach! Pape’s Diapepsin is good for you, because it stimulates the gastric flow. Use it freely until the stomach is working right without any help. When it slows down, take diapepsin again for a day or two.! This helps coffee drinkers and hard smokey, too. Pointing the Way The advertisements in the Bismarck Tribune are sign posts that point the way to better buying, more economical buy: the saving of shopping time. ing, and to High- Low- Jerome M. Walsh, Garrison; Harold est est Pet.|L. Ward, Streeter; Clarence A. + 90 00! Wentz, Streeter. Ernest J. Helm, Beach; Richard $9)G. Hotten, Wales; Clair L. Manning, ‘00 | Sud; Melford W. Peterson, Scra: 02] Everett W. Sisco, Kintyre; Fi i nee H. Stroh, Jud; Gustave A. Stroh, 08 | Jud. South Dakota John F. Ahifs, Conde; Robert E. Ald- 00 ridge, Ipswich; Roscoe K. Appletoft, ‘00 | Redfield; Robert C. Bakewell, Plank- ‘00|inton; J. N. Banigan, Belle Fourche; 14|Mark E. Barber, Alpena; David T. 00| Bates, Redfield; Glen W. Bauman, 00|Huron; Richard J. Benson, Ipswich; Robert J. Bentson, Alpena; Kenton 20'H. Bird, Jr., Draper; Raymond J. ‘99|Blasen, White Lake; Daniel L, ‘90 | Booth, Ridgeview; Ray L. Branaman, ‘00|Faulkton; Howard V. Burg, Woon- .24| socket; Gideon H. Carlson, Blunt; 00/Ernest M. Coleman, Mission; James 00/H. Fick, Cresbard; Basil L. Foley, 80/Rapid City; Floyd H. Fuglsang, Huron; Clarence B. Halter, Corsica. Casper H. Hanson, Veblen; Charlee 96 ‘00|M. Harris, Gettysburg; Granville G. 9: Herold, Mobridge; Carl W. Hicks, 2 1B .00|Martin; Bentley L. Holt, Isabel; Leo R. Houchen, McLaughlin; Clarence an average of one type-)W. Kludt, McLaughlin; Karl V. every 100 person in the Unit-|Kludt, McLaughlin; Paul F. Kogel, : Woonsocket: Jediah A, Lane, Onida; Amarillo, Tex., clear They point the way to better buying for they keep you informed as to the value of new products and to the new uses for old ones. They point the way to economy in buying by telling you the cur- rent market price of goods and by telling you the how, why, % where and when of unusual bargains. SSISERSSSSSE SIISSSRLLSRSSSTSVSSSSASSSSVSVSASSS They point the way to a saving of shopping time because they give you information by which you can plan your shopping trips ‘systematically from an easy chair in your home. The Bismarck Tribune The Home Newspaper in Bismarck, Burleigh County and the Missouri Slope ee . ©1983 by P-P Corp, ERE 78 WHEREVER You CO, YOU FIND IBBON MALT AMERICA'S BIGGEST SELLER aueemeems