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SUBVERSIVE ACTIONS! OUTOUR Way THREATENING FLEET CONGRESSMEN HEAR y Navy Now Has 86 Vessels Un- der Construction; Plans Drawn for 20 More Washington, April 30—(#)—Con- was advised Thursday that y “subversive activities” are “threaten- ing the security of our fleet.” Capt. William D. Puleston, chief of F naval intelligence, made that state- ment during hearings on the naval appropriation bill before a house ap- . propriations subcommittee. 1 in growing necessity for protec- against “subversive” activities, Puleston said, “is clearly evident.” Further details of his testimony were lacking because most of it was “off the record.” Admr. Emory 8. Land, chief of the ‘bureau of construction, told the sub- -committée the navy now has 86 ves- sels under construction and plans to start work on between 18 and 20 new ships of various types during the next fiscal year. Land said three aircraft carriers, three heavy. cruisers, nine light cruisers, 13 heavy destroyers, 40 light destroyers, 16 submarines and two | gunboats are now being built. Com- pletion of the vessels will require about $168,000,000. Principal items in the contemplat- ed 1937 fiscal year program include a start on construction of probably 12 destroyers to cost a total of $77,556,- 000 and six submarines to cost $36,- 402,000. ‘What other world powers are doing to build up their fleets was reviewed carefully before the subcommittee. Rear Admiral J. K. Taussig, assist- ant chief of naval operations, called attention to “an extensive program of naval air force expansion” under- taken in Japan. Under the heading “steps taken to curtail expenditures,” Taussig report- ed “none” for Great Britain, Italy, Germany, Russia, The Netherlands, Scandinavia, Eastern Europe and Latin America, PLAYERS 10 STAGE “THE SAP TWICE Comedy Which Won Success in New York to Be Interpreted Monday and Tuesday “The Sap,” recommended as © gloom chaser that can give ita d @ good time and laughs enough to last for months will be produced in the city auditorium Monday and ‘Tuesday evenings by the Bismarck Community Players. ‘The play is a hilarious comedy in which Raymond Hitchcock was the Selwyns’ Apollo thetdtre, New York, for a solid season. The play comes from the pen of ‘William Grew. A comedy of small town economic struggle, “The Sap” is built around the character of one Bill Small, a pad aac good-for-nothing scatter- brain who blunders in and out of trouble with equal naivete. Having outraged his nearest friends and relatives and nearly alienated the affections of his wife Pata dapady dan tious blundering, Small is condemned | are by them as a parasite and is forced to leave home. By a unique succes- sion of blunders, he acquires a vast fortune just at the time when his “home folks” are desperately in need of money. He returns home and, with characteristic generosity, re- Heves the situation of his in-laws. Emery Putnam and Herman Peters, co-directors, say rehearsals have been highly satisfactory. The cast includes two players new to Bismarck audiences, Mrs, Laurence V. Nelson, as Jane Mason, and Olga Christianson in the role of Betty Small. Pipa wedy salginn yg Piaggio 8’ vehicles, has the title role. Others conan C. Merwyn Freeberg as Edward Mason, Louise Sween as Kate Cambden, William Carr as James Belden and Richard Tiedman as = on OF B NORTH DAKOTA, COUN- UR: IN OistRier court, FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRIC’ John Daniel, Plaintiff. iT J. L. Clitford, Mrs. Adair, Emma *fouliver sumbrance upon the property | described in the complaint, ndants, Dete: | THE age OF NORTH DAKOTA TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEND- You are he: summoned to swer the. eee of the plaintitt in the above entitled action, a co of which said complaint is to nexed, and herewith served upon and to serve a copy of your Answer ppen the gaepeer bere. at their office pa ‘kota Nationa] Bank & Trust ad Building in the City of Bis- founty ar Burleigh, and Stat Nor rth Dakot: to appear Ge answer am fe required, intiff will take edarnant against bers by default for mere i anded in the complaint. ‘Dated tt Bismarck, N. D. this 24th fay of Maret, 4 am6 Hyland & Foster, Blamarck, N. Bx fonaentee (ee th the Plaintiff. District Court, D. and that this for the purpose of laintift and 11 leigh County, N. jon is iets Veting title p of wo. C22) to the, Clty of Bismatek, h Dakots. ‘And no personal claim against any of the said de- es! land & Foster, N. D., for Piaintitt. DO We ALL HAVE TO GO |/ TAKE TEN TO HELP KETCH HIM, PA? \ YES -YES- m’Le TO CATCH HIM, IN THE VACANT LOT YOUR FATHER RENTED ~ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1936 CowsBoys TS AS BIG ASA CATTLE RANCH S By Williams YOU SHOULDN'T GET SO SARCASTIC ~ YOU'RE THE ONE WHO WAS ALWAYS KICKIN' ABOUT TH HAY BILLS ~ 17S THE CLOSEST PASTURE L a aT YU My FeMURS 4-30, N. D. Relief Costs Are Cut $35,000 Cold Weather Departure Aids Welfare Board to Slash Its Expenditures Cost of relief in North Dakota un- der the state welfare board dropped more than $35,000 during March un- der the preceding month, E. A. Will- son, executive director of the board, announced Thursday. Principally, the drop was accounted for by amounts of supplemental re- lief to WPA and resettlement cases being decreased. Willson explained. Also, he said, the amount of relief ex- tended to relief clients of the board also fell off, because of decreased de- mands for coal and other cold weather necessities. The total case load fell from 14,782 cases in to 12,405 cases in March, a drop of 2,377, while expendi- tures during March were $246,358.76 as compared with $282,053.63 in Feb- Tuary. Employables Cost More Of the monies spent in March, $113,- ‘742.15 was expended for care of 12,833 unemployables, and $170,436.09 for 12,411 employables, while the board extended $38,440.26 in supplemental aid to 10,989 works progress adminis- bef clients, and 11,657 supplement- al Unemployables and employables cared for under county welfare boards took 69.18 per cent of the welfare| board dollar, while 30.82 per cent was | spent in extension of supplemental | relief to WPA and resettlement cases. By counties, the expenditures for! March by the welfare board, for all! cases, including supplemental relief, No. Amt.of Average of Relief Relief! Cases Per case} ia $ 1,802.69 $25.04 7,832.28 = 18.05. 5,828.34 = 17.50| 396.13 14.67) 6195.15 22.37 1,174.88 20.23 19.48 | 19.48! ‘Ay 63 | 16.45 | 16.37 17.16 20.54 24.55 17.91 23.89 19.12 21.89 16.79 23.90 12.12 13.42 23.01 PH Golden “Valley 2 168 Man Accused of ‘Hex’ Slaying Hangs Himself) Buffalo, N. Y., April 30.—(?)—John Tryka, 39, under arrest in what po- lice had described as the “Hex” slay- ing of Adolf Boettger, hanged him- self in his police cell Thursday. He Sykeston High School Graduates 16 May 29 Sykeston, N. D., April 30.—Com- mencement plans hold the center of interest for local young people. Tresa Garman and Marilyn Knud- sen have been named valedictorian and salutatorian, respectively, of the 1936 senior class, numbering 16, ac- cording to A. W. Larson, superinten- dent. Diplomas will be given May 29 at graduation exercises at which Dr. James Cox of the University of North Dakota will be speaker. The seniors will stage their class play, “Cyclone Sally,” Friday. June Kremer is director. Sykeston, Cathay and Heaton will compete in a triangular track meet here Saturday. MAN ADMITS GIVING FALSE TESTIMONY Former Justice of Peace Con- fesses; Accused Holds No Grudge Against Him Centerville, Mo., April 30.—(?)}— Joseph L. Huett, veteran prosecuting attorney of this Ozark hill commun- jity, indicated Thursday he would take no immediate steps against a man who “confessed” he had testi- fied falsely against Huett in the pros- ecutor’s recent trial on a murder charge. Huett, convicted of manslaughter and free on bond pending an appeal, declined to comment on the state- ment given at Philadelphia by Lee Bowles, former Centerville justice of the peace, except to say he had no plans for seeking Bowles’ return to| Missouri. Bowles walked into the Philadelphia city hall Wednesday and told author- jities he had given false testimony af- ter the shooting of Ruel Hunter, sawmill worker, in a street dispute with Huett last August. “After the shooting I told a story which made it look as though Hunt- er was shot in cold blood and Huett was the aggressor,” he said. Sykeston Ball Team To Play Eight Games Sykeston, N. D., April 30.—Local business men met to make plans for }@ baseball team which will play an eight-game schedule this summer. NOTICE OF SALE. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That by virtue of a judgment and decree in foreclosure, rendered and given by the District Court of the Fourth Ju- SAND HILLS PROJECT REPORTS PROGRESS 250 Men Being Paid $10,000 a Month to Speed Work Along Sheyenne Lisbon, N. D., April 30.—(4)—Work is progressing rapidly on the Sand Hills Park project along the Shey- enne river in Richland county under the resettlement administration, ac- cordnig to H. R. Danielson, project manager. There are 250 men employed now with a monthly payroll of $10,000, he said. New park roads are being cleared, diseased and dead trees thinned out, stumps pulled from the Proposed roadway, boundaries sur- veyed and marked, and logs peeled for park structures. Work on this project was begun under the old land policy section of the AAA and an office established at Lisbon in January, 1935. After the tesettlement administration was cre- ated the project was transferred to that agency. Appraisal has been made of 120,000 cers, part of it submarginal farm land to be returned to grazing and part of it the section along the Shey- enne river which will be converted to recreational and park purposes, Dan- ielson said. The government now has title to 880 acres in Richland and Ransom counties and expects to pur- chase a total of 62,500 acres. Option has been made on 69,602 acres. The average cost of the land was $6.18 per acre, he said. Scouts of Sykeston Will Honor Mothers Sykeston, N. D., April 30.—The local Girl Scout troop will give its annual Mother's day program Sunday. Troop 59 of the Boy Scouts under direction of A. W Larson, scoutmaster, recently staged a circus. Proceeds will be used for a camping trip. NOTICE OF ame REDEMPTION STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- ty of Burleigh ss. OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR, Bismarck, N. Dak. To Caroline M. Smith Estate, Alex- ander MacDonald, Executor, Glencoe, N. Dak. You are hereby notified that the tract of land hereinafter described and which was assessed in your name for taxation for the year 1930 was on the 8th day of December, 1981, duly sold, as provided by law, for the de- linquent taxes of the year 1930, and that the time for redemption from said sale will expire ninety days from | 19 the completed service of this notice. Said land is described as follows: Lot 9, Block 41, Northern Pacific Second Addition to the City of. Bis- marck, County of Burleigh. State of North Dakota. Amount sold for, $64.24. yo taxes paid by purchas- er Amount required to redeem at this date, $297.31. In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice and inter- est as provided by law and unless you redeem said land from said sale be- fore the expiration of the time for re- demption as above stated, a deed thereof will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificate as provided by dicial District, in and for the County | law. of Burleigh and State of North Dako- ta, and entered and docketed in the office of the clerk of sald court ie and for said county on of Ma in an action wherein Home Own Loan Corporation, a corporation, was pla: ff and E. shman and lores Cashman were defendants, in favor of the id plaintiff against the said defendants for the sum of ten thousand el, F hundred thirty-one dollars and fift: ight cents ($10,831.58), Avhich juds- among other things sufficient of said judgment, ereon and the cost of such sale, or ae su law. ‘WITNESS my hand and official seal ne Fong day of ate 1936. (SEAL) ir G. Derby, Auditor Burleigh cesuaiy? North Asie 4-3 EMENT FOR sealed bids for the construction of a six inch watermain on By nerea ney Street from Thayer Avenue to Broad- way, all in Watermain District Num- ber Thirty-one of the City of marck, North Dakota, will be recelv- ed by the Board of City Commission- ae ot the said City until eight o'clock . May 18th, 1936. P Diane ‘and specifications are on file in the office of the City Auditor or ina may be obtained from the City En- directing me to id prop- erty pursuant to said judgment Pritt decree, I. Fred E. Anstrom, tl f said Ce urt sale, will the lereinatter roperty to the high at public aucti it door of the court hou: tof ‘Bismarck, Count: of aie State of North ney id on 9th day of May, A. a o'clock A. M. of that “aay, said judgment, with costs thereon, and the costs pen 8 of such e for cash ron! Cit; looped his handkerchief about his | Své"t, neck, stood on a corner of his cot and tied it to the crossbar above his cell Police accused him of beating Boettg- er, 63-year-old masseur, with a wrench because, they quoted him as saying, Boettger had put him “under 3 door, then stepped from the cot. | ,¢ e (32), Northern Pacific og erie tion to the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, according to the pia Shen of on file in the office of th Regi ot sad of Burleigh County, North ‘red E. . Apatrem. Sherire of Burleigh County, N. 'D. 08 itera: tet for Srainesee, ieissde. approximate gineer. The fogiven PI mtd jor the guid- quantities are given ance of bidders 392- near feet of six inch cast iron bates eee in plac a, - hydrant, with ‘tive inch valve, in P ee, etx inch gate valve and box, in ‘All bids shall be made upon a basis ‘ gf cash payment for all work to be "Work shall be commenced on or be- fore June ist, 1936, and shall be com- pleted not later than June 15th, 1936. Each bidder ‘must state in his bid the rate of interest the warrants shall bear (not exceeding seven (7) per cent per annum) which shall be re- celved and accepted by him at par in payment for work. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified ‘cheek’ for Five Hundred ($500.00) Dollars, made payable to the order of A. P, Lenhart, President of the Board of City Commissioners of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, as a guarantee that the bidder will. if successful, enter into and execute @ contract for the performance of the work. Each bid must also be accom- panied by a bidder’s bond in a sum equal to the full amount bid as pro- yided in Section 3707, Compiled Laws of,North Dakota, Board of City Commissioners renaves the right to reject any: or s. all bid M. H. Atkinson, City Auditor. 4-30 5-7. i 1 ST, MARY'S LISTS 85 ON HONOR ROLL Sister Magdalene Announces Names of Honor Students in Upper Four Grades Eighty-five grade pupils of &t. Mary’s school have places on the honor roll for the seventh month of the term just announced by Ssister Magdalene, principal. Of these, the fifth grade had 21, the fourth and sixth 18 each, the sev- enth 15 and the eighth 13. Names of the honor students fol- low: Fourth Grade Angelica Roether, Adrian McDon ald, Edna Rose, Madelyn Helling, Margaret Roherty, Nadine Longbot- tom, Nora Zita Hoerner, Genevieve Orchard, Fern Logan, ‘Alan Kast, Richard’ Revell, Francis Webb, Rob- ert Maassen, Robert Nelson, Margaret Halloran, Gerald Bair, John Wagner and Elynor Nelson. Fifth Grade Roy Deardorff, Dorothy Elsemann, Phyllis Fleck, Mary Heaton, Royann Kennelly, Virginia Lacey, Donna Mae Logan, William Murphy, Aloysius Simon, Josephine Vallie, Virginia Walcher, Mary Valeda Rutten, Wil Nam Cunningham, Leo Fischer, W: ter Garske, Mary Jean Leahy, H man Slag, Bernard Slag, Arthur Bauer, Louis Carufel and Leo Keller, Sixth Grad Magdalen _ Schneider, Margaret Webb, Betty Lou Bartley, Jean Slag, Dolores Cavasino, Ethel Ehli, Robert Doll, Teresa St. George, Jack Wood- mark, Martha Dunn, Eleanor Ressler, Elizabeth Gelermann, Gabriel Brown, Virginia Fossum, Rosemary Krier, Rosemary Volk, Jean Fairman and Charlotte Knudson. venth Eileen Wallricnn Mf Halloran, Wilbur Doll, Willlam Webb, Patricia, Leahy, Josephine Talx, Jordice God- trey, Betty Jane Baker, Alice Leahy, Mary McGraw, Mary Meinhover, Mary Murphy, Irene Free, Catherine O'Leary and Eva Schatz, Eighth Grade Harold Free, Katherine Wai Amelia Schneider, Marjorie Ehll, M donna Clarey, Robert Garske,’ WI Mam Gelermann, John Maddock, Evelyn Nelson, Eugene Hendrickson, Beatrice Rothschiller, Linus Volk and Mary Jane Krier. Lutheran Minister to Hold Service at Wing Lutheran services will be conducted at Wing at 3 p. m., Sunday, by Rev, Opie 8. Rindahl, pastor of the Trinity Lutheran church of Bismarck. Fol- lowing the devotion, there will be en- rollment for a class of instruction in the Christian faith preparatory to baptism of confirmation. This class will be open to anyone 15 years of age or older. Our galaxy of stars is moving fast- er than 200 miles a second, approxi- mately north at 45 degrees in the general direction of the star Vega, astronomers have estimated. “MY SKIN WAS FULL OF PIMPLES AND BLEMISHES” Says Verna Schlepp: “Since using Adlerika the pimples are gone. My skin is smooth and glows with health.” Adlerika washes BOTH bowels, rids you of poisons that cause a bad com- plexion.—Advertisement. SESE “NOTICE TO CREDITOR: IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF HENRY L. READE, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned, Mabel Reade, executrix of the last will and testament of Henry L. Reade, late of the city of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and’all persons having claims against the estate of s a de ceased, to exhibit them with cessary vouchers, within six months after the first publication of this no- tice, to sald Mabel Reade, as executrix, at her residence at 412° Rosser nue, in the city of Bismarck in Bur- leigh county, North Dakota, or to the Judge of the County Court of Bur- leigh county, North Dakota, at his of fice in the Burleigh county, North Dakota Court House in the ‘city of Bismarck, in Burleigh county, North Dakot: You are hereby further notified that Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge of the County" Court in for the Dakota, has fixed the 12th day of No- vember, A. D. 1936, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of sald day, at the Court Rooms of said Court, in the sald Court House in the city of Bismarck in Burleigh county, North Dakota, as the time and place for aring and adjusting all claims gainst the estate of the said Henry Reade, deceased, which have been duly and regularly presented as here- inbefore provided. pated the 16th day of April, A. D. Mabel Reade, the execu- trix of the ot will and o} Grad testament of Henry L. sed. mice pubiteation on ‘the 16th day of pril, Dullam & Young, Attorneys for Executrix, a North Dakota. WANTED ! 1000 WORKMEN to try our solid leather Friedman-Shelby WORK SHOES “Every pair guaranteed” People’s Dep’t. Store NORTH Ga RDEN CHAT DAKOTA S By VICTOR LUNDEEN N.D.A.C. Extension Horticulturist About May 1 is the proper time to plant such vegetables as garden peas and radishes, Leaf lettuce and tur- nips should also be seeded then. Early cabbage plants which have been well hardened off should be transplanted into the field, and such perennial crops as asparagus and rhubarb should be started if you do not al- ready have them in your garden. Wrinkled dwarf varieties of garden peas which require no staking are the most practical. High table qual- ity and good yielding ability should be considered in selecting varieties. Choose varieties with large pods. These are easier to pick and shell. In order to prolong the season of fresh green peas it is a good idea to plant several varieties which mature at different dates rather than to - |make successive plantings. If you do not plant more than one variety suc- cessive plantings should be made. The following varieties, if planted at the same time, will produce green Peas of good quality for more than a month. Extra early crop, Radio; med- ium early crop, Laxtonian, Pioneer or Lincoln; and for the late crop, Stratagem or Alderman. Peas should be seeded in rows about 2 feet apart and should be planted at about a depth of 2 inches. About 1 pint of seed is required to plant a 100-foot row. Radishes may be planted as soon as the soil is workable, and will usually furnish an edible product in 4 to 6 weeks. Plant them in rows 8 to 12 inches apart. Use about % ounce of seed for a 25-foot row and seed to a depth of about % inch. Early varieties of radishes become pithy in a short. time and are unfit for table use. It is, therefore, a good plan to make successive plantings about every two weeks of varieties which will furnish your table with NEW IMPROVED edible radishes throughout most of the summer, The earliest varieties of radishes are the round ones—Saxa, Scarlet tur- nip white tip and scarlet globe. Crim- son Giant and Icicle are late varie- ties which will stand longer without becoming woody or pithy. Early cabbage to be transplanted, should be “hardened-off.” This pro- cess usually consists of exposing the plants to low temperatures for a week or more and withholding water. The hardening-off process should be grad- ual and care must be taken not to in- jure the plants by freezing them. Re- moving the hotbed sash or transfer- ring the plants to a coldframe about 10 days before planting them are the most common methods in hardening- off plants, Early cabbage which has been started in the hotbed should be trans- Planted into the field about May 1, if weather permits. If the plants have been well hardened they will stand considerable frost without injury. If the plants have not undergone the hardening-off process it will be nec- essary to delay planting until about the second week in May. Cabbage plants to be set out should be soaked thoroughly in the plant flat for an hour before moving them to the field. Turnips do best when grown under rather cool moist conditions. They mature quickly and are a very desir- able substitute for rutabagas before that crop is mature enough to use. | 29%. 11 ¥|Every home garden should include a small planting of turnips. They may be planted as soon as the ground can be worked, —— + Additional Markets CHICAGO POTATOES Chicago, April 30.—()—(U. 8, D. A.)—Potatoes, 106 arrivals; 259 on track; total U. S. shipments 561; old stock. Supplies moderate; demand slow; slightly weaker; sack sales car< lots outweight and invoice weigh sacked per cwt. Idaho Russet U. S. No. 1, 2.10-15; U. S. No. 2, 2.00; Col- orado Bliss triumphs U. 8. 1, 1.75; Wisconsin round whites U. 8. No. 1, for fine quality large size 1.70; Minne- sota Cobblers and Early Ohios, part- ly graded 1.45-55; North Dakota Red River sections cobblers U. 8, No. 1, 1,60; Zliss triumphs U. 8. No. 1, 1.75; new stock, supplies moderate, de- mand moderate, steady; Alaboma 100 Ib, sacks U. 8. No. 1, Bliss triumphs 2.55-75 per cwt.% U. 8. No. 2, 1.65 per Louisiana Bliss triumphs U. S. » 100 Ib. sacks 2.50-70 per cwt.; 50 Ibs. sacks 2.80; Texas 50 lbs. sacks og triumphs U, S. 1, 2.90-3.00 per cw RANGE OF CARLOT SALES Minneapolis, April 30.—(#)—Range of carlot grain sales: Wheat, No. 1 dark northern 1.27%; sample grade dark northern 68%-88%; No. 4 hard amber durum 1.024%; sample grade hard amber durum 90%; No. 2 mixed durum 1.06. Corn, No. 3 yellow 57. Oats, No. 3 white 22%-22%. Rye, No. 3, 44%-46%. Barley, No. 3, 48%- 53%. Flax, No. 1, 1.73. WINNIPEG CASH GRAIN ‘Winnipeg, April 30. — (#) — Cash wheat, No. 1 northern, 79%; No. 2 northern, 77%; No. 3 northern, 74%. Oats, No. 2 white, 32%; No. 3 white, STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CO. LEGAL RESERVE COMPANY RATED A-PLUS ‘We can save you money. Call us for RATES. More cars insured with) us than any company in the United States. Hundreds of satisfied custom- ers in Bismarck and Mandan. Let us figure with you and save you money. Gerald Craig — 207 Bdwy. Phone 820 — H. C. Hanson SINCLAIR SUPER SERVICE FOR Now Open BROADWAY AVE. AT MANDAN ST. You can depend upon Bismarck’s newest and most modern “one- stop” Sinclair Super Service Sta- tion to have: 1, Sinclair HC Gasoline 2. Sinclair Pennsylvania tor Oil 3. Sinclair Opaline Motor Oil 4. Complete Line of Sinclair Specialties Bismarck SINCLAIR-IZE FOR SUMMER ! LET US SINCLAIR-IZE YOUR CAR FOR SUMMER Mo- and refilled, and front pulled and what we do: wheels repacked. When you say “sinclair-ize my car” here's -L Transmission and Differential drained, FLUSHED and re- filled. 2. Front wheels pulled and re- 5. Sinclair Lubrication Index Plan—approved by all car manufacturers — greasing your car at all vital and supplementary points. 7. Oil filter checked. 8. Battery tested. lubricated. 6. Spark plugs cleaned and ad- justed. “USE YOUR SINCLAIR CREDIT IDENTIFICATION CARD” Free Sinclair Dinosaur Stamp Albums Complete With First Week’s Issue to Every Child, When Accompanied by Parents. Listen Every Monday at 7 p. m. (CST) over KFYR to the Famous Sinclair Minstrels! Bismarck’s Finest Service Station Complete Facilities for LUBRICATING — WASHING — POLISHING TIRE REPAIR — MINOR ADJUSTMENTS SINCLAIR GASOLINE AND OILS GOODRICH TIRES AND BATTERIES WILLARD BATTERIES Let us “Sinclair-ize” your car for summer at Bismarck’s new and most complete One-Stop Super Service Station. SINCLAIR SUPER SERVICE STATION BROADWAY AT MANDAN N. H. WOEHLE—Attendants in Charge—W. C. YALE