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Er ence MEORARSES . c t e i t 1 1 Red River Project’s Plans Are Advanced Fargo, N. D., Apfll 6—(#)—A final conference for preparation of plans to be submitted to the national re- sources committee on development of the Red River project will be con- Greater North Dakota association, an- nounced Thursday. In addition to.representatives of North. Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota, an engineer from the divi- sion of agricultural engineering of the department of agriculture at Washington will attend. Following the meeting this engineer will make a two to three-week field ures released this week. The total for the state was $41,284,148.81. Wheat payments in Burleigh county totaled $499,722.48 and -corn-hog checks ‘amounted to $136,884.58. |Farm Record Auditing Still Available Here Assistance to farmers in Burleigh county with their farm account prob- lems will continue to be available for a fewimore weeks, Earl Hodgson, as- | @)SO Homemakers Will Vie Radical Spy System Mrs. H. F. Keller, 102 Avenue A, was an out-of-town guest when Mrs. E. F. Trepp, 231 Thayer avenue, west. ! Appointments for the luncheon andj In Growing Flowers A prize for the best display of Mowers grown from seeds which she distributed was offered to Capital Homemakers’ club members by Mrs. John O. Quinn when she presented the lesson on “Use of Perennial Flow- . ers” at Wednesday's meeting. The club voted to change its meet- ing date from the second to the first ‘Wednesday of each month. In keep- ing with the lesson to be given, mem- bers answered roll call with names and suggestions for culture of their favorite flowers. Thirteen members and two guests attended the session, held in the home of Mrs. C. P. Seelly, 114 Rosser ave- nue, west, with Mrs. Frank McCul- lough as assisting hostess. * * * Mrs. L. G. McDonald of Jamestown, who is visiting her parents, Mr. and | Richard H, Penwarden, Jr., 412 Ave- nue D, entertained her bridge club Wednesday evening. Honors at con- tract went to Miss Cora Marie | Strauss. Mrs. Leslie A. French is to | be the next hostess. x * x Four instructors at the state train- ing school at Mandan are spending their Easter vacations away from Mandan. Miss Betty McHugh left Thursday for Minneapolis, where she | will remain for a week. Others who | have gone are the Misses Goldie Law. and Catherine Ireland to Grand Forks and Dolores Bonzer to Lidger- wood. * 8 ® A quilt in the sunbonnet baby pat- tern which will be donated to Camp Grassick was completed by members of the American Legion Auxiliary Past President's Parley when they held their April meeting with Mrs. the foods served were in accord with | the Easter season. ee * | Henry Ruemmele of Ashley has; been elected grand master of the University of North Dakota chapter of Kappa Sigma fraternity. Eleven new members initiated by the group Tuesday night included Robert Fin- negan and Keith Crawford of Bis- marck and Leslie Kremer and James Barger of Linton. * * * Miss Jean Crawford, who has been | residing in the Hughes apartment building at Mandan, is moving to Bismarck this week. Miss Crawford! has been transferred to the local office of the North Dakota Power and Light company. ee # Miss Cleo Arness, who is attending a Fargo commercial school and _work- ing for the Greater North Dakota association, came Wednesday evening sistant county agent, said Thursday ‘The work was begun here recently with trained help going over the records supplied by the WPA ang approximately 200 county farmers have submitted their books for free auditing and suggestions for improv- ing the value of the accounts. Hodgson is taking particular inter- est in increasing the number of farms that keep accounts because of the fact that such accounts are of immense value to farmers in keeping their business on an even kee] and pre- venting losses. Debt-Dodging France Lyon, France, April 9.—(?)—Edou- ard Herriot expressed the fear Thurs- day that France’s refusal to pay her war debts to the United States had lost her forever the possibility of Has Lost U. S. Favor |>0 On Liner Is Reported New York, April 9. — (#) — Capt, Gregory Cullen, master of the Dollar Liner President Garfield was in port Thursday with a story of trouble with members of the crew and “a radical system, a veritable Russian ” which he said held sway on his ship. Cullen said he refused to bring two members of the “Black Gang,” or en- gine room crew, any further than Geona on the ship's round the world cruise, and left another man behind for insubordination. A fourth mem- ber of the crew, he said, was put ashore in Italy and sent to a channel Port ute passage to New York.on an- er . Cullen said he dropped the fourth member of the crew to protect him nd radical enemies aboard the ip. —= —— for an Easter visit until Monday with American aid against Germany. °. s her parents, Mr. and Mrs. K. ©.) The former premier, overthrown by| At Bite, Pneumonia Arness, 223 Thayer avenue, west. 'the chamber of deputies in 1932 for Fatal to Jowa Farmer Call 496 for xk * Miss Helen Ess, who has been teach- ing at Beulah, has completed the} school year there and has gone to/ 'Grand Forks to spend her vacation; |with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and/ holding out for the payment, declared President Roosevelt told him at the White House in 1933 that he would be “happy to aid France in all inter- national affairs” if only France had agreed to “pay something” on the “Mason City, Iowa, April 9.—(P)— Physicians here blamed a rat Thurs- day for the death of John Rust, 58, of Goodell, Iowa. Rust died in a hos- J pital of blood poisoning resulting FU R S 0 RAG E les we! of ‘ soe wile "he was. gathering eggs. fis | Miss Mildred Dietz is planning to 1 while he was gathering eggs. His spend Easter at Fargo with her par- F rank J. Langer Ill eee further complicated by —— : re ine eon eats 8. D. Dietz, | In Cass County Home 2 Danger threatens furs if they spend the summer | ee * ae AIR FORCE NEEDS CASH Casselton, N. D., April 9—(?)—/ London, April 9. — (®) — Neville at home. Sunlig! them ... dust menaces them .. Send them to us for full protection at only them! ht fades them .. . heat dries . moths DESTROY 2% of your valuation. We COLLECT Them A ‘phone call will bring messenger to your door to carry Easter aaa api ia your furs safely to their cool Sum- iggy Seb TT EN . ete: Charles Schoregge, son of Dr. and/ The large formal silk print eve- | County AAA Benefits Mrs. C. W. Schoregge, 507 Sixth St.| ing gown above is typical of the is home from Carleton college, North-| &xcellent modes for mature fig- Were $630,607 Jan. 31 field, Minn., for the Easter recess. stejcch feral has Hues: three- es ror ae ail ————— “s Total benefit and rent ments We INSPECT Them ia made to farmers in Burleigh. county $4.95 an alert Scrutinizing experts give them the Mr. and Mrs. Herman Raabe of Dickinson, who passed the winter months in Florida, visited in James- town and went through Bismarck this |week while en route home. * * * Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Kempf and their two children of 1209 Rosser avenue, accompanied by Miss Eva Weigel, are leaving Thursday evening for Ashley, where they will spend the Merchants Prepare BONDS OVERSUBSCRIBED | include William Langer of Bismarck, | Frank, Jr., of Seattle, Wash. and four Frank J. Langer, prominent, pioneer of Cass county and member of the first North Dakota legislature, is se- riously ill at his home here, suffer- ad with pneumonia. He is 87 years old. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Langer have been called to the bedside. They daughters. since the AAA began its program Chamberlain, chancellor of the ex- chequer, told the house of commons Thursday that additional estimates of £10,000,000 (about $50,000,000) prob- ably would be required for the royal air force for this year. ducted Monday and Tuesday at St. ©, Ryan, secretary of the Paul, survey of the Red river watershed. H 4 Washington, April 9.—()—The farm ‘icultural luction control a” For Business Pickup ij: scministration ld. Touraday |Sfay igus" antounted to. 990/87.06 up Cie ad : — a refinancing bond issue of $180,000,- forma Debutante to Jan. $1, 1936, according to informa Fargo, N. D., April 9.—(®)—North ' 999 had been oversubscribed several tion based on official t fig- Mod Dakota retail merchants are prepar- lion on government fig: es feel ee prepar-/ times before the books were closed We CORRECT Them ing for the greatest spring business| wednesday. The new issue by the - Fabrics! Kid- since 1930, J. H. DeWild, manager Of! Federal Land banks consisted of 3 per Worn spots, torn linings . . . even the trade extension division of the| cent bonds and was offered at 99%. | complete remodeling is taken care (“7 Minneapolis Civic and Commerce as- gl areamatlarcicichi oC ers | tel for you at s surprisingly low ~ See reed ater, i hated MRS. FAUST GETS POST In treating children’s colds price. Estimates given. winding up a tour o wns in the! Killdeer, N. D., April 9—(P}—Mrs. state. E. J. Faust has been named ee don’t btate I nisihe the best line of ee ee ee postmaster here, succeeding Richar ~ chances.. *. We PROTECT Them LIQUOR DEALERS GUILTY. |Rhodes, who resigned, sccording”t0 VapoRus Tailor peg Suits Minneapolis, April 9.—() —Two| 0, H. Larson. PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS < After careful preliminaries, your liquor dealers pleaded guilty in dis- oC Te : is m an furs are put to sleep for the Sum- trict court Thursday to charges of! Spring Coats mer in a healthy, cold tempera- perjury for failure to list previous t lowest pribes i ture. Insured against theft, fire convictions in liquor sale applica- ey e at lowest prices in and moths, tions. They are John Vezzeso and W f admits she North Dakota . Rose Muskota. 1 e Satisfaction guaranteed er —_—_— money back RICKEY OUT OF HOSPITAL s iced f Columbus, Ga, April 9—>)— ates work: does Suits pri rom Branch Rickey, vice president and 9 $22 to $50 s general manager of the St. Louis “ ” ith ext: t Manufacturing Furriers Cardinals who was injured painfully wi extra pants. near here April 1 in an automobile was no-scru way 202 Fourth St, Bismarck, N. D. Phone 496 [i |accident, was released from the city FRANK KRALL hospital Thursday. os TAILOR ‘ @ Mrs.Helen Henrich here is only one 510 Main A Bismarck, N. D. é of the millions of women who have changed Cienntng, Posing: Rigaizing to Rinso for whiter clothes and “no-scrub” washdays, Frankly, Mrs. Helen Henrich admits that she hates to work hard when there's an easy way to do a household task. And that explains why she uses Rinso. For Rinso gives tich, lively suds that SOAK clothes 4 or 5 shades whiter and much brighter and capegriers THESE ACCESSORIES ACCENT YOUR. SMART EASTER SUIT! They’re Getting Gayer for YOUR FAVORITE TYPES... Swagger ¢ Dressmaker * Man-tailored Bags in every shade to match your Easter outfit... $2.00 to $2.95 Gayly matching gloves... 59c to $2.95 Glinting cop- / per tones, navy @ and_ gorgeous $1.35 | i chats apd eats every variety... $1.00 to $2.00 $10.00 to $45.00 Here are fashion’s exclamation points! The accent is on accessories this Spring! These bright, beautiful final touches will make Easter delightfully colorful! : You'll find that new Easter Frock in our Dress Department. a Bright, Colorful Easter FASHION PARADE! Whether you swing a swagger or dash about in a severely tailored coat or suit, you must be gay in your acces- sories. Printed. lin- en hankies to peek from pocketbooks. 25c All the flow- ers from spring’s gar- den for your coat lapel.. 39¢c to Assortments .in Nevys, Grays; end Tweeds at. sw : ta Dosens Just Unpached for Pro-Eester Selling ‘im Browns . 418%