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HOPKINS LAYS DOWN RULES UNDER WHICH WPA WILL OPERATE Reminds. N. D. Agencies Proj- ects Will Be Planned in Re- lation to Number on Rolls (This is the second of a series Of articles explaining the new federal works progress adminis- tration. iy ise Dakota _gove governmental agen- pro; planned with relation to the number, age, sex, and occupational character- istics of on relief within the loeality where the proposed project will be executed. Available shortly to such sponsor- of employable North Dakota persons fow on relief collected and compiled during the last few months by the Werth Dakota FERA. Plan Continuous Work Projects also should be planned, Hopkins declared, so that continuous ‘work’ may be available to such per- soms, the basic object of the WPA being to take persons off relief roils put them to work at their usual occupation in the shortest possib! the progress all projects authorized and con- lucted under the emergency relief a ition act of 1935. jects may include work relief jects submitted to the ‘and upon which work has not started. I A project may cover more than one particular job, but all. jobs included should be under the jurisdiction of the game sponsor, all of the same type, and, where the sponsor’s jurisdiction covers a large area, all in the same weneral location. In formulating such projects each governmental agency should confer ‘with the county FERA office until uch pes as WPA offices are estab- to obtain information concern- {ng the number and occupations of persons on relief rolls who are to be put to work. Utilize Local Facilities ental agencies should facilities of local and state boards in the formulation of the project will depend in part on the amount of such contributions and the extent to which they increase the ' proportion of labor cost to the total federal funds required for the project. Holt Assists Moodie ‘Thomas H. Moodie has been named ‘works progress administrator for Worth Dakota. He will be assisted by Wenry Holt. State offices are ex- < MRS. EVA COO Ossining, N. Y., June 26.—(?)—A lonely, embittered woman sits quietly in the death house Wednesday—disturbed more by the “faithlessness” of her friends than the penalty the state says she must pay Thursday night. She is Mrs. Eva Coo, 43-year-old convicted slayer of Harry Wright, handyman at her Otsego county road house. Nine months in a Sing Sing cell a few steps from “the little green door” have taken @ tremendous mental and physical toll, but she has regained part of her once iron nerve and consoles herself with the thought Governor Herbert H. Lehman will save her from the electric chair. ‘Word was received Tuesday night that Governor Lehman had gone to New York City without announcing a decision on her plea for clemency. No statement will be issued unless he decides to spare Mrs. Coo’s life. pected to be established soon. In- quiries concerning procedure should be directed to the local or district of- fices of the WPA after they have been established. Prior to WPA office es- tablishment questions may be ad- dressed to the county FERA offices in the areas in which it is intended to operate the projects. Only questions involving projects of a statewide nature should be ad- dressed to the state office, and in no case should a Letaued proposal be sub- mitted direct to Washington, Bred only resulting as the proposal will referred back to the local or district Offices, officials said. Governmental agencies desiring to formulate WPA projects must prepare their requests on forms that will be furnished by the WPA offices. These Eom forms are known as form wernese forms will not be available ‘until official announcement has been made by Moodie that the WPA offices are prepared to handle such requests. Direct Payments of Grain Men’s Claims ‘Washington, June 26.—(#)— The senate Friday passed a resolution di- recting claims payments to grain dealers in Minnesota, Montana, Iowa. North and South Dakota, Kansas and Nebraska. The payments, upwards from $134,- | 122, represent money paid out by the dealers for insurance and interest under contracts over and above the fixed price. It has been estimated that more than 3,000,000,000 persons ride New Yorks’s. subways annually. Fargo Legion Corps Retains State Title Grand Forks, N. D., June 26—(?)— \Fargo’s American Legion drum and bugle corps retained its state cham- pionship Thursday night in one of the jmost colorful spectacles ever seen in memorial stadium. Marching with machine-like pre- |cision on the stadium's greensward, |the Fargoans edged out the Grand Forks corps by four-tenths of a point. be | The final score was Fargo 85.7, Grand Forks 85.30, and Bismarck, 81.35. In the Minnesota contest, Bagley defeated Pelican Rapids by a score of 78.70 to 77.50. The drum corps com- Petition climaxed the three-day an- nual convention of the North Dakota | American Legion here. Judges of the contest were Charles Helmér, Duluth. for bugles; T. W. Thorson, Crookston, for drums; John Howard, University, and Dale Frank, Minot, for cadence, and Major C. H. Jones, University, Captain W. R. Hazelrigg, Fargo, and Captain P. M. Vernon, Fort Lincoln, for marching, appearance and maneuvers. Suits by Processors Cause AAA Concern Washington, June 26.—(?)—The AAA Wednesday watched with con- | siderable concern the rapid piling up jof suits for recovery of processing taxes, filed since the supreme court |invalidated NRA. These suits were interpreted as an indication that legal attacks upon the constitutionality of the pending AAA {amendments will be started immedi- ately upon passage of the amend- ments—if they are passed. __THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, bias! RDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1935 CHINESE FORCES ON FRONTIER IN CLASH Japan Presents Fresh Demands for Establishment of Peace in Chahar (Copyright, 1935, by the Associated Press) Tokyo, June 26—A Manchukuan frontier patrol of 80 men battled a Chinese force of 700 soldiers along the sanguinary Jehol-Chahar frontier Wednesday, advices to the war office reported. Rengo (Japanese) news agency dispatches from Hsinking said the) Manchukuan patrol was that which | first encountered 500. Chinese troops Monday, 200 more Chinese having ar- rived from Tushihkou while a larger Manchukuan detachment was under jorders to hasten to the battleground. The advices to the Manchukuan war office, also coming from Hsink- ing, capital of the Japanese-advised state of Manchukuo, said the bloody conflict was taking place north of Tushihkou on the ill-defined north China frontier. Japanese regulars in garrison at Jehol City sprang into readiness, but the general headquarters which con- trols the army high command in Manchukuo was depending on the Manchukuans to chastise alleged in- vaders. Major General Kenji Doihara, chief political negotiator for the Japanese military, was instructed from Hsink- ing to present fresh demands to the Chinese “for establishment of peace and order in Chahar,” including with- {drawal of, all Chinese troops in Cha- \har to points “south of the great wall.” Which section of the great wall was meant was not specified. One section crosses Chahar just south of Kalgan while the other skirts the | Southern border of the province. If the latter was meant, the Jap- nese were demanding that the entire province be cleared of Chinese troops. The fact that Manchukuan forces were detailed to punish the Chinese aroused speculation. as to whether the Japanese army in Manchukuo had been ordered by the Tokyo high command to stay out of North China territory in order to avoid interna- tional repercussions. Other St. Paul Police Disclosures Promised St. Paul, June 26. — (® — Public Issuance of Drivers’ Licenses Is Delayed Drivers licenses will not be issued for approximately a month, it was de- |clared Wednesday “by officials in charge of distribution of the new per- (mits. First licenses will be, issued after | all applications have been checked} with permits now being completed, it was explained. W. J. Flannigan, state highway commissioner, under whose control distribution of the licenses will be made, said all licenses will be de- livered to the various sheriff's offices ad time, rather than in varying lol A total of 167,128 applications for vision, with a total revenue of $33,476. N. D, PENSIONERS 70 GET CHECKS JULY 4 5,000 Will Receiv Receive F First Pay- ments of Year From Fund of About $28,000 Approximately 5,000 aged persons in the state will receive their first old age pension checks this year, short- ly after July 1, the office of commis- sioner of agriculture and labor Theo- dore Martell said Wednesdayy. Payments will be made to the pen- sioners for a six months’ period from January 1 to June 30 of this year out of a fund of approximately $28,000. The average certificate will amount to $8, although others vary from one month's check to six months. Those eligible to pensions will re- ceive amounts dating from the time their applications were approved by the respective county board of com- missioners. Such approval must have been made not later than June 1 of this year. Punds for this period’s payments come from the one-tenth mill levy set up under the old law, which will be superseded July 1, by the new measure by the last legislature which Provides that $100,000 of sales tax money shall be set aside for old age, July 1, with the cashed by the state treasurer's office. | Largest amounts will be paid ini world ts the Yeomen of the Guard, a Cass and Grand Forks counties, tt [British troop responsible for safety| 600 to 800 eggs at one time, "| matting the warrants to pensioners | was pointed out, while the smallest be Hhetoseet) will got to Sioux county. Probably the oldest regiment in the warrants to licenses have been received by the di-| ° board. mothers’ and blind pensions, distributed under the state welfare Last year a total of $26,000 was distributed to the various counties. The state auditor's office wil begin to be WHY AMERICA PREFERS BUDWEISE Roce Slender * -Women should value it for HEALTH and BEAUTY Beauty and slenderness owe much to proper food and drink. BUDWEISER belongs in the diet of the woman who chooses wise- ly. BUDWEISER in itself is not fattening. Its calorie count is lower than that of milk and compares favorably with that of orange juice or soda water. BUDWEISER is invigorating and strengthen= ing. It stimulates with a pleasant, friendly glow, but it does not dissipate. It has a vivid, spirited taste that is found only in BUDWEISER. It makes good food taste better. ANHEUSER-BUSCH e ST. LOUIS Wherever gen ask for it= be sure you get the genuine Order it by the case for your home, Budweiser On Atuntartes KING OF BOTTLED BEER Bismarck Grocery Co., Distributors Safety Commissioner H. E. Warren, whose charges of “corruption” in the St. Paul police force brought whole- sale eviction orders, Wednesday prom- ised further disclosures. Police untouched by the startling ouster moves against Chief Mike Cul- ligan and several subordinates oper- ated under new administrators while Warren, commenting on three sepa- irately projected investigations, sald “the situation is getting better and better.” City Attorney John L. Connolly ad- vised by Warren to proceed “‘care- fully” in view of announced inten- tions of the affected police éfficers to fight charges, Grew up the dismissal orders today. The department operated under orders of Gus H. Barfuss, deputy commissioner of public safety, whom Warren appointed chief of police to replace the suspended Chief Culligan. Safety First Tires for that 4th of July trip—2 Roadgripper Tires at little more than the Natl. Adv. 1st Line List Price of One Tire at all Gamble Stores. Two 30x3, $7.32 — Two 4.75-19, $9.99. Get a set and save double. - HIGHEST-PRICE Styling ..IN THE LOWEST-PRICE TERRAPLANE No wonder Terraplane owners often find it hard to convince their friends that this is really one of the lowest-priced cars. For it is hard to believe that a car so big, so beautifully styled, still costs solittle. And Terraplane beauty is more than “‘skin deep.” It proclaims the “high price” quality built intoevery ENJOY A RIDE TODAY . . . THER pert. It edds extra value to this combination of important features that you can’t get in any other lowest price car. For example: 88 to 100 horse- power . . . record-breaking per- formance ... Americe’s only bodies ail of steel . . . police-tested Rotary-Equalized brakes .. . the Electric Hand (optional et small extra cost)... proved ruggedness and economy. Before youbuy,com- pare the Hudson-built Terrapisne with other lowest-price cers for style. Then compere the way it rides and handles. and up, f. 0. b. Detroit A DEALER NEAR YOU WILDE MOTORS, INC. 304 Fourth St. Phone 1500 On — More inside body lengths by Si; to T-lnches than sedans costing $189.00 to $375.00 mer! Drive far—drive fast —without a worry! With Conoco. Germ Processed Oil in your crankcase, you KNOW the strain won’t hurt your motor! Tests prove this new alloyed oil has 2 to 4 times greater film strength than plain mineral oils and resists heat better! On July 4th or week-end and vacation trips, you'll want to drive far and get there in a hurry. And you don’t want that nagging worry of “I wonder if this speed and heat will hurt anything in my motor.” You can’t always be sure when you use plain mineral oils, for they have little film strength and oils over-refined by new cleansing processes have even less. Moreover, as motor heat goes up, these oils rapidly lose film strength. Film strength is the load-carrying ability of an oil, the quality that keeps bearings and cylinders from wearing out. Lack of film strength results io costly damage: You can drive without 4 worry when you use Conoco Germ Processed Mo- tor Oil! It has 2 to 4 times greater film strength than any plain mineral oil. Heat does not lessen this advantage.* Supervised road tests—over good and bad roads, at low and high speeds, in all kinds of weather—give practical proof that Germ Processed Oil pro- FILM STRENGT veash PLAIN MINERAL OILS *HERE’S THE PROOF Note that 2s heat increases, the plsin min- eral oils continue to lose film strengtb, but that above 225° (Mioimum Summer crank- case temperature) Germ Processed oil's film strength is not affected by beat. Tests made with Timken machioe: ERM PROCESSED vaearrim ase MOTOR OIL CONOCO GERM PROCESSED MOTOR OIL tects motors better. In every test, gravi- metric measurement of motor bearings showed that Germ Processed Oil pre- vented wear far better than plain min- eral oils. Tested in 2 fleet of cars equipped with the new alloy-metal bearings used in many 1935 cars, @ high-quality plain mineral oil per- mitted 45% more wear on connecting rod béarings than did Germ Processed Oil. Conoco Germ Processed Motor Oil is the first alloyed oil—alloyed, much as metals are, by adding concentrated oily essence to highly refined oil: It is the only oil made by the Germ Pro- cess. It is the oil with the “Hidden Quart” that stays up in your motor aod never drains sway! Say “O. K.—Drain”—Aill with Gees Processed Oil: Drive far—drive fest —without a worry! CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY’S 60TH ANNIVERSARY OR REFILL YOUR CAR AT EITHER M. B. GILMAN COMPANY In Downtown Bismarck Broadway at Second LOMAS OIL COMPANY “Bismarck’s Newest Super Service Station” On East Main Between Ninth and Tenth: will Jay frem' 521 Main td