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torial Candidate Chosen at Session Tuesday ou Like it / Schilling | Coffee One for percolator. One for drip. Makes Old Cars Run Better Than New ‘Yes, the marvelous new K-W Graphite Motor Lubricant ac- There.is just a bit of the minx about Cecile Emelie, right, seems to be practicing “emoting,’ he peeks out from behind the hood that hides one eye completely, while Mari perhaps with her dark- fixed om @ possible Hollywood career. Here's a real picture of solid well-being and perfect contentme: Madonna,” gazes raptly upward -with wide already Americans Released SAYS BUSINESSMEN By Court in France -NBBDED BY CHURGH 2 xa for 16 months on Mrs. held Evangelical Bishop Tells Kiwan- is Club Character of Youth Most Important A plea to business and professional men to “stand by the church” was voiced in a short talk Tuesday noon before the Bismarck Kiwanis club by nT i i fits uh ie E vat ee B bil Hy 3 ii i ii i if i i 3 i E [ hase : . | made SCOUTS TO ATTEND NATIONAL JAMBORE 21 Area Council Delegates Re- gister for Anniversary Fete at Washington Area council have registrations for the National held ‘at Washington, D, ©, late in the id at Washington, D. C., summer. These and other scouts will he official representatives from this section of North Dakota at the larg- est gathering of boys ever to assemble in the nation’s capital. Local committees in charge expect the council delegation to increase rap- idly during the next two weeks. Scouts have been erie until Hemet 1 to file applications scout headquarters, to Paul O. Netland, area ‘scout executive. Neate vine Scouts from the expert camper, Mr. ‘well qualified to assist in the super- vision of the boys. He began his scouting activities in 1912, served one year as an assistant scoutmaster, seven years as scout- master and four years as district com- missioner. He has received the scout- masters’ key, an award given for out- jtanding service and Pfc several years he studied No longer is the daily “artificial sun” ‘With only a towel about the head as a “ new tooth on her thumb, while Annette’s grave eyes THE SUN | Copyright, 1935, N: Period a chore to the Dionne quintuplets. Now they enjoy it. hood to protect the s. Yvonne, left, roguishly tries out her reflect peace and satisfactiow leadership at the Itasca State Park jassigned the blame Wednesday by | Colorado and the Dakotas during the | land ecology, Prof. Shelford announced Prof. V. 8. Shelford of the University | war years, can not be replaced in less |the committee had received funds to Scouts already registered for the | of Illinois for the dust storms which |than 50 and in many cases 100 years, | hold a meeting early in June at Dick Training school. national jamboree are Willard Kunkel | have swept the west for months, The | he said. of New Salem, Norman Kamins of Bernard Kirchen of Garrison, Hames of New England, Sam Skaff of McClusky, Joe Thomas of Flasher, Arnold F. Meyer of Bentley, Eugene Ries of Hebron, Arnold Anderson, William J. McDonald, Warren Kraft, Bugene Fevold, Robert Clark, Wilson Davis, Fred F. Mayo, Rufus W. Lumry, Philip Constans, Jack McDonald, Robert Ackerman and James Spohn, all of Bismarck. Warrants Banned in Payments to State No school warrants will be accepted by state institutions as cash in pay- ment for tuition fees or other charges, the board of administration decided Wednesday. Various institutions of the state have been asked to accept the war- tants in payment of various types of fees, Nelson Sauvain, chairman of the board, explained. In the past the of- fer of warrants has been confined principally to ihe educational institu- tions, Recently, the state tuberculosis san- s|itorium at San Haven was asked to accept similar warrants in payment for treatment, which led to the de- cision of the board. Experts on Grass to Gather at Dickinson Urbana, Ml, April 17—()—Man’s destruction of permanent grasses Grasses, plowed up to permit wheat inson, North Dakota, where it will As chairman of the national re-| study grass land problems and sees Zap, Winston Cornell of begins seeding in western Kansas, Nebraska,|search council's committee on Possible remedies. There is no need for a lot of whangdoodle talk about cigarettes — just plain common-sense ‘When you stop to think about your ¢igarette—what it means to you—here’s about the way you look at it— . Smoking a cigarette gives a lot of pleasure—it always has. People have been smoking and enjoying tobacco in some form or another for over 400 years. Of course you want a cigarette to be made right. And naturally you want it to be mild. Yet you want it to have the right taste— and plenty of it. In other words—you want it to Satisfy.