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PWA COMMON LABOR WAGE IS ADVANCED 10 CENTS PER HOUR New Scale Set at Meeting of Board of City Commission- ers Here Monday Wages for common labor in the construction of the new presediment- ation basin at the city waterworks, being built under the PWA grant, has been raised from 40 to 50 cents for the maximum 130-hour month by the board of city commissioners. Agreement to advance the wage scale 10 cents was reached at the regular meeting of the commissioners Monday night after. a conference with representatives of the Hodcar- riers and Common Labor Union and the Burleigh County Labor and Bur- leigh, County Workers clubs. The wage scale.question arose at a special meeting of the city board held last Thursday at which the workers asked that the wages be raised to conform with the prevailing scale on WPA projects. Scale Has Changed Last winter, when the original wage scale was approved, the prevailing WPA wage for common labor was 40 cents but since then it has been raised to 48 cents, necessitating the change. The board ordered the Hageart Construction company, general con- tractors, to make the higher wage scale effective as of Monday morning. Present also at the meeting were H. C. Knudsen, state director of the PWA, Melvin Frazier, attorney for the PWA, and W. G. Davies, chief engineer. W. J. Noggle was awarded the con- tract for the construction of side- walks, curbs and gutters on his low bid of $4,977.50. Reinhold Delzer sub- mitted a bid of $5,036. Two applications for abatement of taxes made by L. R. Baird, as receiver of the old Bismarck Bank, and Frank Yeater were rejected because of lack * of-authotity to grant the relief ask- ed of the board. Permission was granted to the new Shell Oil company filling station at the corner of Sixth St. and Broadway Ave. to move the white way lamp post and substitute a new electric sign. Building New Bulk Tank Permission was also granted to the Standard Oil company to construct @ new oil storage tank at the bulk station provided that a dyke be built under the tank as a safety measure against fires. The March report of Police Mag- istrate E 8S. Allen, showing 49 cases in city court with $44.75 collected in fines, was read and approved. Subject to the approval of the park board, the commissioners decided to|of the University, will judge the glee let private persons tap the park board|clubs, vocal solos and voice groups; water main serving Riverside park atjand Mrs. H. A. McNutt of Napoleon jand Mrs, Obert Olson of Bismarck “1 ikinson, a fixed service charge. BRITISH NEED MORE TAXES COMING YEAR Chamberlain Advocates Larger Levies to Keep Empire's Budget Balanced London, April _ 21.—(#)—Neville Chamberlain, chancellor of the exe- chequer, declared Tuesday that the British government would have to re- sort to additional taxes to give the empire a balanced budget during the coming year. ~ He announced that there would be an increase in the.income tax-and in the taxon tea, that a surtax would be levied on lager beer imported from non-empire countries and that duties on key industries, which were to have expired this year, would be continued 10 years more. The chancellor said the government operated at a profit of -£2,941,000 ($14,700,000) last year but that the total estimated revenues from usual sources would put the government £21,219,000 ($106,450,000) in the ret during the next 12 months. With the new taxes, however, Cham*erlain estimated that he would balance the nation’s books with a surplus of £484,000 ($2,420,000) —figur- ing the coming ‘fiscal year’s income at £798,381,000 ($3,991,905,000). 'This income will be made up of the | ¢, usual revenues plus the new taxes. The expenditures during the coming year, he said, would be £798,381,000 ($3,989,484,000) this amount of ex- penditures includes £20,000000 ($100,- 000,000) for additional defense pur- poses. ‘The tar pits of La Brea, near Los Angeles, have yielded the largest col- lection of Pleistocene animals in the world. The area of the pits is about 25 acres, and the tarry substance therein has acted as a preservative for the skeletons. tent BUS_SERVICE es ~ Compo Grevnouno Lines To the convanience of well-timed departures end handy downtown depots, add the comfort of sturdy streamlined, new-type buses, thy skill of vetéran drivers, the scenic Beauty of Springtime highways and the dollar-saving economy of low fares throughout the U.S 4. ‘Bismarck -- -Greyhound Depot Broadway at 7th © Phone 501 NORTHLAND GREYHOUND { | ‘Call, shown in W. on the nous scandal and disrepute,” Contest Judges Are Announced for Music and Deelamation Events Wednesday Hundreds of Missouri Slope high School students will arrive in Bismarck ‘Wednesday to compete in the seventh district music, declamation and com- mercial contests, winners of which willbe entered in the State High School Week contests at Grand Forks in May. Judges for the district contests were named Tuesday by Supt. H. O. Sax- vik, contest manager. Prof. John Howard, band instructor at the University of North Dakota, will judge the band and instrumental events; Prof. Hywell C. Rowland, also wiil judge the declamation events. Contests will take place in the new high school, starting with the com- mercial and declamation events at 9 a. m., and following with the music contests beginning at 10 a. m. A complete list of. the entries to date follows: MUSIC Girl's Solo voice — Mandan — Margaret ald; W r jorothy Williamson; Violet Schultz. Low voice — Underwood —Dora Landgren; Steele—Rosella Berkvam; Wilton—Frances Hanwell; Mandan— Mildred Tavis; Turtle Lake—Irene Christian; Washburn—Carol Wilson. ‘Washburn— joy's Sol High voice —— Bismarck — Harold Smith; Hazeltan—Richard Weiser; Steele—Clarence Tollefson; Turtle Uake—Charles Park; Washburn— Charles Fisher; Underwood—James Eskes;. Mandan—Leonard Farr. Low voice — Underwood — Wyman Thompson; Turtle Lake—Osborne Bel- shein; Steele—George. Wood; Wilton —Norman_ Uglem; Mandan—Carl Ed- wards; Bizsmarck—Kenneth | Satter; Washburn—Herman Weber. Boys’ Quartet i Mandan—Leonard Farr, Don Smith, Kenton Kuebker, Bernard Helbling. Bismarck—Chester Johnson, Jack Mote, Harold Smith, Earl Benesh. Turtle Lake—Charles Bark, Rein- hold Zwicker, Harold Wohlegemuth, Osborne Belsheim. Underwood — Merville Thrailkill, Wyman Thompson; Harry Gogstetter, Edward Tornow. Washburn—Chester Fisher, Hugo Presnall, Orville Holtan, Norman Weber. Girl’ Trio Turtle Lake—Leone Wolitarsky, Irene Christian, Ruby Gett. Underwood—Dora Landgren, Velma Snyder, Myrtle Fitzgerald. Mandan—Viola Donesick, Grayce Frankl, Edna Mae Hulett. Wilton—Opal Olson, Amy Reding- on, Frances Hanwell. Washburn—Violet Schultz, Marjory Wilson, Tillie Gets. Mixed Quartet Wilton — Bertha. Bjorke, Verne Venaas, Pearl Bodner, Norman Uglem. Turtle Lake—Leone Wolitarsky, Charles Park, Ruby Gett, Osborne Belsheim. Mandan—Helen Farr, Leonard Farr, Mildred Tavis, Carl Edwards. Underwood—Velma Snyder, Wyman Thompson, Dora Landgren,’ Merville Thrailkill. Washburn—violet Schultz, Charles Fisher, Tillie Getz, Norman Weber. Hoya’ Glee Clab—Diviston B Wilton—Norman Uglem, Clarence Hoff, Verne Venaas, Dean Tatman. John’ Vincent, Rueben Pearson, Paul Brezden, Raymond Shel Quigley, LeRoy Anderson, Paul Wos- nick, Robert Heston, Herbert Paul, Herman Polonsky, Vernon Richards, Slyvan Torgeson,’ Marvin Johnson, John Zwarych, Martel Newman, Ron- | ald Smith. : Underwood—Edward Tornow, Sid- ney Zingg, Clarence Johnson, Richard Evans, Wallace Samuelson, Gogstetter, Jackie Zingg. quist, Roger Westmiller, Russell Hep- per, Wyman Thompson, Ronald Bart- ley, James Eskes, Allen Temanson, Merville ‘Thrailkill, Leon Wood. Girls’ Glée Clab—Divinion A Bismarck—Cynthia Dursema, bara Henry, Mary Davis, Doroth: Eleanor Lewis, ard, Patricla LaRue, Sue Olson, Pearl Schwarts, Hawley, Beulah Hedahl, Joan F Hedwig Husby, Betty Jacobson, Oli Johnson, Valdis Knudson, Lynn Frat zen, Marian Hyland, Audrey Better- Bar- ey. Mandan—Audrey. Barrys saree Johnson, Dorothy Blake, rgaret Kennelly, Margaret Buckley, Mary Kennelly;.. Josephins Conroy, Leone Killen, Violet Cotton, Carlene Larson, Gwen’ Dahners, Marion Lyman, Viola Donetick, Frances Madsen, ‘Norma Edwards, Elaine Nelson, Helen Farr, Parsons, Barbelle Fairman, Peggy Virginia Sagmiiler, Grayce Frankl, Lorraine Scothorn, G Gould, Mil- dred Tavis, Edna In? Glee Cl ivinion B uby Hanson, Frieda Glarum, Mary Rohrer, Rothacker, i Elsie Viola Zweigle,’ Lavon. Frit Herr, Hagel Dahl, Viola Bi Person, Molly Gehring, V Althild Person, Wilma Rohrer, Dorothy Hub! Turtle Lake—Dorothy Chapman, Helen Harris, Irene Christian, Ruth Lee, Sylvia Grabinger, Rub: Shirley Johngongaugh, Helen Adeline Keel, Gertrude Sackman, Sophie Korner, Leona Singer, Emma Klinger, Wolitarsky, El Kundert, Ruth Zwicker. Underweod—Lillian Sayler, Jeanette Sayler, yrtle Fitzgerald, Bernice Federal Judge Halstead Riiter of the southern district of ‘Florida ington with his wife after being convicted by the sén- impeachment charg Ritter, automatically -emoved b: 3 tion, was acquitted on six other charges. (Associated ren on S District High School Adams, Elaine Rosberg, Dale Norland, | Phi Wilton—Bertha Bjork: Carol Wilson. Piano Duet Turtle Lake—Amy in and Willabring Boehm; McClusky— Marian Finstad and- Ellen Mae Hub- bell; Washburn—Marjorie Handy and Helen Handy. Band—Di Bismarck—Only Band—Division B New Salem—Emily Arndt, Evelyn | Klusmann, John Button, Russell Kru- ger, Erwin Bumann, Gwen McCor- ick, Edward Christiansen, Alvin lottzen, Ruth Ellwein, Edward Nagel, Berton Fromm, Velma Nagel, Herbert Gaebe, Alice’ Purfurst, La- verne Grebe, Clara Rud, Alvera Grosz, Calvin Tempel, Meranda Harris, Phyl- lis Toepke, "LeRoy Hein, Edwin Ullrich, Lois Hoffman, Audrey Claflin, George Hoherz, Arnold Maier, Lillian jon A merer. McClusky—Alvin Berg, Marian Fin- stad, Emil Riha, Ruby Hanson, Glenn Oliver, Helen Dahl, Robert Hegg, Wil- liam Hagel Herr, Mary Rohrer, Esther Roth- acker, eda Klundt, Harry Dickinson, Roy Engel, Ruben Gehring, Elaine Glarum, Donald Ham- ilton, Leland Rohrer. Underwood—Harry Gogstreter, Ivar Johannes, Dalton Unumb, Jadee John- son, Roger Westmiller, Dora Land- ren, Paul Nordquist, James Eskes, Edward Tornow, Wy- man Thompson, Quentin Sayler, Wal- lace Samuelson, Velma Snyder, Ber- nice Adams, Robert Splelman, Eloise Wilson, Allen Temanson, Harold Snyder, Tvar Engler, Estella Isaac- Milton Temanson, Zella | Lee, Kenneth Enockson. Viotin Solo. Underwood—Edward Tornow; Man- dan—Robert Wiebers. Saxophone Solo Underwood—Robert Spielman; Man- dan—E. Cecelia Schmidt. Clarinet Solo Hazen—Wallace Stolting; McClusky Vera Snyder, —Stanley Riha; Mandan — Bernice ‘Johnson; Underwood— Wyman ctompront Bismarck—Jeanne Ren- wick, Brass Instrument Solo Bismarck—Chester Johnson; Under- wood—Quentin 8: Chamber iP Mandan—Robert Wiebers, Margaret Kennelly, Maurice Young, Helen Farr. Underwood — Harry Gogstetter, uentin Sayler, Roger Westmiller, idward Tornow. Cornet or Trumpet Solo New Salem—Erwin Bumann; Under- wood—Harry Gogstetter; McClusky— Alvin Berg; Mandan—Wilmer Just. COMMERCIAL Novice Typewriter Event McClusky—Esther Rothacker; Steele —Chester Zeck; Mandan—Edna Mae Hulett; jazelton—Phyllis Heinrich; Rhame—Bethel Soderling. Novice Typewriting Teams Mandan—Fstella Tool, Grayce Frankl, Viola Marvel. McClusky—Robert Peters, Caroline Brackett, Frieda Klundt. je that he brought his court “into hoto) Plans Made | 1 Alta Pfaff, Velma Snyder, Maric Shilling, Marcelle Sayler, Jacqueline Hunstad, Vera Snyder, Cecelia Kowasch, Dora Landgren, Ione Say- lor, Angie Gergen. jame—Bethel Soderling, Arlotte Wilton — Pearl Bodner, Frances |Svendby, Donald Dahl. Hanwell, Amelia Hanwell, Thelma Amateur Typewrt: Event Hanson, Mary Sawicki, Doris Johnson, McClusky—Viola Z 3; Steele— August Hanwell, Catherine Schroeder, Marjorie Peterson, Opal Olson, Mabel Flinn, Neva Noon, Margaret Law, Dalyne Flegel, Pauline Bodner, Violet Mandan — Mildred Phyllis Loerch; Tavis. Amatear Typewriting Te: Mandan—Marcella Blake, Volkman, Amy Redington, ‘Bertha | Madsen, Rhoda Fox. Bjorke, ‘Viona Anstrom, ‘Margaret Novice Shorthand Event cai: Mandan—Bernice Fairaizl and No ma Edwards: Steele—Phyllis Loerch: Mixed Cherus—Division A McClusky—Frieda Klundt and Viola Mandan—Orlando’ Andvik, Jose- ,Zweigle. phine Conroy, Peter Culbertéon, Ev- ‘Amateur Shorthand Event elyn Dahl, ‘Carl Eawards, Gwen} McClusky—Robert s and Violet Dahners, Leonard Farr, Viola Done-|Froehlich; Mandan—Rhoda_ Fox and zick, Ralph Ferderer,' Helen Warr,| Jean Peake; Steele—Alice Hild. Robert Freisz,.Grayce Frankl, Wil- lard Griffin, Grace Gould, Billy Heis- ler, Edna Mae Hulett, Bernard Helb- ling, Bernice Johnson, Kenton Kueb- ker, Margaret Kennelly, Edward Miluck, Mary Kennelly, jordon Pet- erson, Leone Klein, Raiph Reldinger, Carlene Larson, Bill Reko, Marion Lyman, Don Smith, Frances Madsen, Al Spielman, Blaine Nelson, Burgess. Thysell, Betty Pennington, Bill Wil- Lorraine Scothorn, Audrey Berry, Mildred Tavis, Margaret Buck- ley, Estelle Tool. ECLA MATIO: Boy's Serious Reading Hazelt Elmer Gutensohn; Steele —Kenneth Sederstrom; Wilton—Ver- non Richards; _ McClusky — Melvin Wahl: Mandan—Farl William Carl: son; Fort Yates—Weston Hateh; Bis- marck—Lennie Laskin. Girl's Serious Reading McClusky—Ruby Yates—Eleanor Stewart; Bismarck (St, Mary’s)—Beverly Bauer; Mandan —Bernice Johnson; Steele—Juanita Burton; Hazelton—Esther Roesler; ‘Wilton—Catherine Schroede hame —Bernice Hande; Bismarck—Doroth: Fort 5 Mixed Choras—Division B Haselton—Myrtle Beseler, Corn ; aad, Zunkel, Ruth | Bibetheimer, ; Hograna | Slgurason: Sentinel Butte—Rut er, Lenna rt le, onal uck,. of My Ruth Colburn, Alan. Chaitin, Esther og taaeener eer’ Crawford, Charles Gregory,’ Adeline| Bismarck — Richi Gantka, Lloyd Gregory, Phyllis Hein- rich, Elmer Gutensohn, Constance Koch, Tom Hendrix, Rosemary Lands- berger, Reinie Maier, Marjorie Mes- selt, Harmon Mandigo, Esther Roes- ler, Warren Messelt, Shirley un Ri Bismarck (St. Mary’s)-—S! gen; Hazelton — Constance holtz; Wilton—Bertha Bjorke; Yates—Esther Wilkie; Mandan— Peggy Parsons; Rhame—Mary Dahl. Boy's Forensic Reading Schneider, Beri Thompson, Eunice co Wehlits, Paul Weiser; Margaretta | yary's)- kody ele + pie eater, Richard Weiser. : tin ; Steele—Alice Baer, Dorothy wil-|Cogper: Hazelton—Pat Shea; Rhame Namson, Rosella Berkvam, Kathryn Girl's Verne Reading Wilson, Leora Brown, Allen Bower-t pigmasek (St Mary's Janet Fer- jman, Juanita Burton, Robert Brown, guson; SteeleMarewerite, Lambdin: Nellie Gavin, Melvin Fossland, Beu- lah Haase, Merlin Gavin, Helen Henry, Alfred Goettertz, Florence Johnson, F. Hochhalter, Phyllis Loerch, George Merkel, Helen Mead, Roy Mode, Hil- ma Person, Lest hie, Gertrude lips, R. aler, Vivian Helen Bismarck—Alice Knowles. Remboldt, . Seder Ritchie, Charles Shipley, Clare Smith, Doris Smith, Clarence Tollefson, Jean Swett, Winston Wol- pert, E. Mae Thornton, George Wood, Evelyn Thornton, Chester Zeck. Turtle Lake—Dorothy Chapman, Irene Christian, Slyvia Grabinger, Ruby Gett, Osborne Belsheim, Adeline Keel, Earl Brokofsky, Sophie Korner, Howard Constable, Elsie Kundert, Clarence Hanson, Ruth Lee, Charles Park, Helen Paulson, Emi! Schock, Gertrude Sackman, Harold Wohlge- muth, Leona Singer, Reinhold Zwick- oe, Amy Jean Wasson, Leona Wolltar- sky. Candidates, Attention! ! We have petitions for nomina- tion for all city, county, state and no-party tickets. Bismarck Tribune Company Piano Sole 222 Fourth St. Telephone 32 Mandan—Jane Watson: Hazelton— Earle Sparks; Steele—Juanita Bur- ton; Turtle Lake—Amy Jean Wasson; Armour Creameries Announce that the slight fire of Saturday night in the poultry house did no damage to the creamery or its operations nor to the hatchery and its operations. _ Wish to announce that this small fire made no change in the service to our patrons whatsoever. Keep your cream shipments and baby chick orders coming in the usual manner. Armour Creameries want to take this opportunity of thanking their many friends. Armour Creameries BISMARCK, N. DAK. NOTICE To Motorists The Police Department has been instructed to enforce the one hour parking ordinance immediately. "Board of City Commissioners. Jeb, Milton Gaebe, Mildred’ Kerch-} success. Onions, head lettuce and NORTH By VICTOR The late spring will delay planting early garden crops. Some vegetables require an early start to insure their spinach should be seeded as soon as the ground will permit working. Seeding directly in the field and Planting sets are the most common methods of growing onions, For the small garden plot, sets are most de- Sirable, For a large plot or for onions on a commercial scale, direct seeding 4s the most profitable method. Onions grown from seed are bet- ter keepers than those from sets. The ! cost of producing onions from seed is | also lower than when sets are used. Starting onion plants indoors or in a hotbed has been found to result in | larger yields, but the advantage of | the larger yield is offset when you! consider the time and labor involved. For the small home garden, however, onion transplants are to be preferred to direct seeding into the field. Onions should be planted only in tich, weed-free soil containing a quan- tity of organic matter, supplied by plowing down well-rotted manure in the fall. Weeds are the worst pest in the onion patch. Hand weeding and frequent shallow cultivation are nec- essary. Onion seed should be planted in tows not more than 14 to 18 inches apart. Plants should stand 2 to 4 inches apart in tthe row and should be thinned to this distance. However, modern improved onion seeders sow the seed so evenly that very little, if any, hand thinning is necessary. Good varieties for field seeding are Southport Redglobe, Southport White- globe, Yellowglobe Danvers, South-| port Yellowglobe and Early Flat Red. | ARDEN CHATS N.D.A.C. Extension Horticulturist i DAKOTA ooeeee @ LUNDEEN | Plant only fresh seed of known qual- ity secured from a reliable seed house. Whether you produce onions for the commercial market or grow a few in the’home garden you will find U. S D. A. Farmers Bulletin No. 354 and N. Dak. Experiment Station Bulletin No. 173 helpful publications. Copies may be secured from the N.D.A.C. publications department. Head lettuce is a cool season plant. It is important that the crop be planted early so that heads have formed before hot weather comes. If the home gardener is to succeed in growing head lettuce in North Da- kota the seed must be planted as soon as the ground can be worked or else seeded in the hotbed early and trans- Planted to the garden about May 1. Spinach is another crop which pre- fers cool moist conditions. It is early maturing and runs to seed in a short time when hot weather comes. If you plan a planting of spinach, sow the seed as soon as the ground can be worked. Selection of spinach varieties is im- portant. King of Denmark is a fav- orite because it grows for a long time without running to seed. Norfolk Sa- voy is another recommended variety. Its earliness provides greens for a longer period of time. Other varie- ties which have been found success- ful in North Dakota in most seasons are Bloomsdale Savoy, Giant Fill basket, and Eskimo. New Zealand spinach, a plant sim- ilar to common spinach, will produce all summer from one planting, but it is more troublesome to gather than the common kind. Successive plant- ings of the common varieties should be made if you do not grow New Zea- land spinach. WARMER WEATHER FOR N. D, FORECAST Mercury Falls 5 to 20 Degrees Below Freezing Through- i | | out State } Cold weather clung to North Dako- ta Tuesday, but weather bureau offi- cials forecast warmer weather Tues- day night and Wednesday. Skies were cloudy in much of the eastern section and increasing cloudi- ness was predicted for the western area after a night of freezing temper- atures, The mercury dropped from 5 to 20 degrees below the freezing point with @ recording of 10 degrees above zero at Napoleon the coldest in the state. On the minimum side, all weather bureaus recorded freezing tempera- tures. Maximum temperatures never reached above 50 degrees Monday. S. M. Brown, state highway main- tenance engineer, announced a five- ton load restriction of U. 8. highway 52 from Grandin to Fargo and from Junction with No. 13 and 81 to Wahpe- ton. . Three ton-gross load mits remain rs ?, Snyder’s Transfer Long Distance Hauling Ship by regulated trucks, The Most Ecohomical Way. PHONE 474 {on U. &. No, 2 trom Temple to Tioge with a detour available for overweight trucks; Berwick to Churchs Ferry and from 13 miles east of Devils Lake to Michigan with a construction detour from Larimore north; 3 from Rugby to Harvey; 11 from Fairmount to Lidgerwood; 17 from Grafton to Park River; 20 front junction with No. 17 to Webster; 23 from Watford City to the Indian reservation; 46 from En- detlin to junction with No. 81, Brown also announced 52 is under construction from Grafton to Minto; and there is a three-ton restriction from junction with No. 85 south of Ambrose to junction with No, 52 south of Portal and from Dunseith to Rolla. The restriction will be lifted between the west junction with No. 83 to the west junction with No. 14. HUGHES HOPS OFF Miami, Fla., April 21—(@)—Howard Hughes, millionaire aviation enthu- siast who holds the west-east trans-| continental record, took off for the north from Miami at 10:49 a. m. (Central Standard Time) Tuesday on a ve mile speed dash to Newark, —_—_—__ Suppose this were the heading of a newspaper article about YOUR car! LOCKING devices help, but | you should make doubly sure by having enough theft insur- ance, A clever crook waits until you are off guard—then a few minutes’ quick work and your car is gone. Don’t take any unnecessary chances. Call on this agency of the “Hartford Fire Insurance Com- pany and make sure of your complete protection. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck o Phone 577 218 Broadway The Capital Commercial College (tneorporated) 314% Méin Ave. Phone 181 Bismarck, North Dakota A Practical Office Training School, completely equipped JOHN WANAMAKER, 2 great merchant, sald: “In these days the young man or young woman without business stands little chance. A great, gtand work is being done by the busi- ness colleges.” MORE THAN FIFTY STU- DENTS have gone out to posi- tions since January Ist, 1936. Five went out to positions last week. We have students ready for employment EVERY MONTH IN THE YEAR. OUR STUDENTS GET THE POSITIONS. OUR BUSINESS is giving young People the right start in life. A commercial course gives perma- nent positions, a salary every month in the year, and the best opportunities fer advancement. Several of our students have held the same positions for 15 years or more. CONDITIONS FOR SPRING AND SUMMER STUDY have been improved greatly over for- mer years. We have improved lighting, improved ventilation, improved air cooling and other improvements to make summer study a pleasure. DO YOU KNOW that here tn Bismarck, we have one ef the best furnished and equipped Commercial Colleges in the Northwest? Come up and look it over; you'll be surprised. We have splendid furniture and equipment for two hundred stu- dents. THE SPRING TERM fs now in session and the Summer Term will begin June 1, but students may enroll at any time. Our faculty of ten competent instruc- tors is the largest of any similar institution. Call on us or write for our finely illustrated cata- logue. ROBERT E. JACK, President WM. G, ELLIS, Secy.-Treas, N R&G yu automotive values. On OW you can know the facts before you buy. There’s no need to rely on someone else’s opinion, or trust to verbal claims. You know what you're getting for your money when you select an _ R&G used car or truck at your Ford dealer’s. cars represent an entirely new standard of each one you will find the blue- and-red R&G tag which tells you in plain words what specifications have been met in offering this car for sale. In your Ford dealer’s judgment, the R&G used car of your choice will pass your own driving tests with flying colors—and to back his judgment, he gives you his guarantee of satisfaction or your money back! You may drive any R&G used car for two days. 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