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BETTER MOTORISTS” SUBJECTS WILL BE TAUGHT IN SCHOOLS Exams, Required for Gradua- tion, to Be Given on 12 Safe Driving Lessons A state-wide program to make fu- ture North Dakotans better motorists ds being launched by the state de- partment of public instruction through a new course of study at 600 high schools. Approximately °2,000 prep school students will be affected by the series of 12 safe driving lessons to be given this fall with a passing grade on subsequent examinations required before graduation, A. E. Thompson, state superintendent of public in- struction, said Tuesday. Pointing out that today’s high school youths are going to be driv- ing on the streets and highways in the next few years, Thompson said he expected a vast improvement in driving knowledge and a reduced ac- cident toll to result over a long time period, Highway Patrol Cooperating 8. T. Lillehaugen, director of sec- ondary schools in the state, said the new movement is being launched in cooperation with the state highway patrol. Beginning in May, 1937, all high school seniors must have passed the 12 lessons in safe auto driving and the concluding examination, before 20 MINUTES packed with New Ideas! Your first ride in a Lincoln. Zephyr is your first experience they will obtain their diplomas, Lille- haugen declared, “Safe driving should be instilled in the minds of drivers before they leave school and are on the road,” he asserted. “This will be done by requiring all seniors to pass the ex- aminations.” To Teach 32,000 in N. D. Approximately 6,000 seniors gradu- ate annually, but the lessons to be given by the school teachers from a Prepared textbook will in must cases be taught to all high schol students, numbering around 32,000. The course includes lessons on how to drive; the driver, his machine and habits; codes of the road; the art of driving; your car and how to main- tain it; accident facts and figures; school patrols and organization; first, aid; safety through education, emer- gency and enforcement. Members of the state board of ad- ministration said they knew of no such program being promoted at any of the state's institutions of higher learning. STATE SOCIAL WORK CONFERENCE IS SET North Dakota Program to Be Theme of Sessions at James- town Oct. 25-27 Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 8.—(?)— The North Dakota conference of s0- cial work will hold its annual meet- ing here Oct. 25 to 27, according to an announcement by Dr. J. M. Gil- lette, head of the department of so- clology of the University of North Da- kota, and president of the North Dakota conference of social work. The general theme of the confer- ence this year will be the social se- curity program in North Dakota. Spe- cial emphasis will be given to the social security program in relation to old age assistance, health and child wefare, including mother's aid, de- pendent and neglected children. So- cial legislation in North Dakota and emergency relief problems will also discussed, Officers and directors of the con- ference in addition to President Gil- lette are Rev. Opie 8. Rindahl, Bis- marck, vice president; Dr. T. ‘Cape, University of North Dakota, sec- retary; Mrs. Kathryn Wehlitz, Fargo, treasurer, and Rev. Vincent J. Ryan, Fargo, Harold Bond, Fargo, Dr. May- sil M. ‘Williams, Bismarck, and Mrs. Alice Bailey, Mandan, members of the executive committee. Representatives of the U. 8. chil- dren’s bureau and the national se- curity board will be in attendance at the conference to explain provisions ot the recent federal social legisla- jon. Arrangements are being made lo- cally by the Chamber of Commerce convention committee to care for 200 RAS eee eit ah LS. RECOMMENDS 7 TYPES OF TREES Announcement Follows 22 Years of Experimeriting at Mandan Station Was! , Sept. 8.—(A)}—Tests | begun 5 1914 at Mandan, N. D., have convinced the department of agri- culture that only seven of 18 broad- leaf trees on which experiments were made can be recommended for wind- break planting in the northern Great Plains area. They are: Chinese elm, green ash, chokecherry, boxelder, Siberian pea- tree, buffaloberry and American plum. Announcing the test results Tues- day, the division of dry land agri- culture recalled that plantings were completed in 1917, Willows, poplars and birches began to die a few years after planting and most of them gone by 1928., Of the popiars, the Norway survived best, but these were planted in “exceptionally favorable locations” and cannot be recom- mended where moisture is scarce, the announcement said. The men who conducted the ex- periments reported that nearly all of the seven species survived the period between 1915 and 1935, of which 1917 to 1921 was said to be the first consecutive period on record. They cited this as proof these trees were adapted to the dry climate, with its extremes ‘of temperature, high winds and high rate of evaporation. LANDON-KNOX CLUBS PLANNED FOR STATE Headquarters for Plans to organize local clubs in all counties of the state were announced Tuesday by Mrs. Selma Stenerson of Minot, president of the state organ- ‘w.| ization, as headquarters of the North Dakota Landon-Knox Sunflower club were opened in Bismarck. The organization will carry on the campaign through North Dakota for Gov. Alf Landon of Kansas as candi- date for president and Col. Frank Knox, Chicago, as vice president. Together with local affiliated clubs, the state headquarters will be main- tained through the remainder of the campaign, coordinating and supervis- ing the general campaign, Mrs. Sten- erson said. “An intensive campaign will be launched to acquant the people with the Republican candidates,” she stated. The North Dakota Landon-Knox Sunflower club was organized at Mi- not last Friday with Mrs, Stenerson as the head. Other officers assisting her are J. P. Cain of Dickinson, vice with a wholly new kind of mo- tor car. So prepare yourself to meet a lot of new ideas in rapid succession! Q The car's 12-cylinder engine performance, for instance. And the almost uncanny way it hugs the road, even on turns and over rough going. Then there’sriding quality that’s almost like flying. And—for all its modern stream. lines—the seats are wide and the roof is generously high— while visibility, from every seat, sweeps around to every side. This is not just ¢ new car—but a.completely distinctive one. In looks, in name, and in perform- ance, it represents a new meas- ure of satisfaction at medium price. Let us send a car around for you to drive todsy. LINCOLN ZEPHYR Vi2 "1275 cimin ee mer (Convenient U. C. C. termi ‘We por mouth on original wapsid belenes | Universal Motor Co. 122 First St. Phone 981 Bismarck, N. Dak. Y if AY The Morning AfterTaking Morning After Taking Carter's Little Liver Pills FASTER NE SCHEDULES rly to Umaha and save hours in travel. New schedules offer the fastest service to the livestock capital. Ride Lockheed Electra liners. Sloux Falls . Kansas City City Ticket Office Prince Hotel 800 L/ “WU HANFORD Ain lines Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can't afford to negiect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices opposite the G. P.' Hotel since 1914. president, Mrs. Gertrude Mackenzie, New Rockford, Secretary; J. E. Davis of Bismarck, treasurer. * Mrs, Stenerson announced two county units have been organized in Mercer and Williams counties. Of- ficers of the Mercer club are C. F. Schweigert, Stanton, president; C. B. Heinemeyer, Beulah, secretary, and L. L. Temme, Beulah, treasurer. In Williams county W. B. Overson 1s president, Mrs. Ivan Metzger. vice president; H. R. Lampman, treasurer, and Ben Meland, secretary, all of Williston. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS STATE HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION 1. Proposals for the construction of a State Highway in Bismarck will be received by the State Highway Com- missioner in the offices of the De- partment of State Highways at Bis. marck, N. Dak., not later than 9:3 o'clock A. Sept. 25, 1936, at which place and time they will be publicly opened and read. 2. The Proposals must be mailed to or otherwise deposited with the De- partment of State Highways at Bis- and shall be sealed marck, N Da’ and endorsed ing a State Highw: (NDUSPW Project No. NRS 564 (35) in Burleigh Count; 3. A certified check for 5% together with a bidder's bond in the full amount of the gross sum bid, must accompany each josal. Ail cer- tifled checks shall be drawn on N. Dak. Banks, and will be cashed by the Commissioner, and said cash will be returned to the successful bidder upon the filing of an approved con- tract bond, 4. Contemplated work consists of Furnish & Install Crossing. Signals involving approximately: 2 No. Automatic Flashing Light jes of the Proposal blanks may be obtained from the Department Highwe it Bismarck, N. Plans and spec! tions are on file in the Division Office of the Depart- ment of State Highways at Bismarck, N. Dak., and the office of the Depart- ment of State Highways at Bismarck, N. Dak., and also at the office of the County Auditor in the County where- in AR AP iad or pi cts are located. dders are invited to be present at the opening of the pro- rrr si The right is reserved to reject any and all proposals, to waive tech- nicalities, or to accept such as may be determined to be for the best in- terests of the County and State. . Bidders must bid on all items contained in the proposal blank. Any bid or bids received for any number of items less in those contained in the proposal blank will be consid- ered As Irregular and rejected ich. “The attention of bidders is di- rected to the Special Provisions cov- ering sub-letting or assigning the contract and to the use of Domestic is. 5 The minimum wage paid to all skilled labor employed on this proj- ect shall be not less than eighty (80) cents per hour. on! inimum wage paid to all in- labor empl this paid to all un- on this proj- than fitty (50) cents per hour. “Where board is furnished by the contractor, a deduction in the above epee be made for th tual cost may rd, pat mot to exceed eighty rr lon regulating hours does not apply shall not less than $15.00 per we Timekeepers not less than $15.00 ber. week. Clerks not less than $15.00 per week. Hostiers not less than $15.00 per week. Cook’ than $14.00 per wei board. Cook not‘less than $18.00 per week Barn Bo ae Boss not less than $15.00 per ‘pare sina wT Pigs chert Sawer commissioner 9/8-15 helper not 1 Be Dated: 9-3-36 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1936 ociely B.P.W. Club Resumes Activities Tonight The Business and Protessional Women's club will hold its first meeting of the fall season at 8 p. m., tonight in its room in the World War Memorial building. Members will tell their most interesting experi- ences during the summer. Before the meeting, which is being called a half hour later than announced in the notices sent out, Mrs. W. J. Targart, the new president, will entertain the club directors at a 6 o'clock dinner in her home, 705 Sixth St. ** 8 Evelyn Ruth Gaebe of New Salem Is Married A luncheon in the Bismarck mu- nicipal golf course club house follow- ed the marriage ceremony of Miss Evelyn Ruth Gaebe, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. O. C. Gaebe of New Salem, and Arthur Habener of Chicago, per- formed at high noon Monday in the home of the bride's parents. Autumn flowers and ferns formed the im- provised altar before which the couple stood. The bride had her sister, Miss Ruth Gaebe of St. Paul, as her maid of honor. Gilbert Ellwein of Mandan was best man for Mr. Habener. Black velvet with white lace trim and accessories in black costumed the bride. Her bouquet was of Talisman roses and gypsophila, The maid of honor wore blue taffeta with acces- sories in a burgundy shade and held a bouquet of red roses and gypso- phila. Among the guests at the luncheon were Miss Esther Wildy of East St. Sunflower | Louis, Il, and Miss Dorothy Smith ae of this city. Organization Are Opened A midnight blue wool suit with in Bismarck black mole trimming was the going- away costume of the bride. Mr. and Mrs, Habener, eoth grad-| uates of the North Dakota Agricul- tural college, are to reside in Chicago. ** * Harold D. Keller, who has been employed as merchandise salesman for the North Dakota Power & Light company, Mrs, Keller and their three children left Sunday for Portland, Ore., where Mr. Keller has accepted a position with the Portland General Electric company. The family resided at 401 Thirteenth St., since coming to Bismarck from Mandan, where Mr. Keller had been employed by the North Dakota Power & Light firm for five years. ** * Miss Mabel J. Culver, 321 Eleventh St., spent the Labor Day week-end in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. D, Culver of Dickinson. She drove there with her sisters, Mrs. Fred Bird- sall of Gladstone and Miss Gladys Culver of Dickinson, who were re- turning from a visit at Platteville,|_ Wis. in company with their father. Mr. Culver was delayed at Jamestown while attending a Farmers Union di- rectors’ meeting. ee Mr. and Mrs, Donald Dryden (Signe Syvrud) of Lafayette, La. are the parents of a daughter, Gertrude Ann, born Monday, Aug. 10, according to announcements received by friends. Mrs. Dryden, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, O. Syvrud of Mandan end a graduate of the Bismarck hos- pital school of nursing, her husband and their small son visited here and at Mandan during months. ee % Miss Luella Altringer, niece of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Trepp, 231 Thayer, west, is leaving next Sunday for Jamestown college, where she will be a senior this year. Also going to Jamestown college as a senior will be Miss Frieda Schlich- enmayer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Schlichenmayer. the summer COMB DETROIT PARK * FOR MISSING INFANT Boy Scout Army Mobilized in Search for 18-Month-Old Harry Browe Detroit, Sept. 8.—(P)—A boy scout army mobilized Tuesday to assist in the search for 18-months-old Harry Browe, who vanished from his peram- bulator in Clark park Saturday. Police decided upon a minute search of the neighborhood of the park be- fore pushing a more widespread hunt for clues, already begun in several nearby states. They sent out a call to scoutmasters for boys to comb an area ten miles square, under the direction of student patrolmen. The authorities were working on three theories: That the child may have been in- jured in a fall from his carriage, and his brothezs, Charles, 9, and Edward, 7, who were taking him for an air- ing, feared to inform their parents. The older boys admitted the baby had fallen when the incident was report- ed by a witness. That a childless woman, or couple, may have kidnaped him. The baby’s brothers told substantially the same story of leaving him in the care of a woman who gave them money for candy. They also described a man who was loitering nearby. That a degenerate had killed the child. Police attached little cred- ‘ence to this possibility, but checked their lists of such characters. Former Legislator Is Dead at Souris Souris, N. D., Sept. 8 —(?)—Funeral services will be held here at 2 p. m. Thursday for. E. L. Garden, resident of Souris for 35 years, who died Sat- urday. He had been in poor health for a long period and had suffered a stroke. Garden, a former state. legislator, was a hardware merchant and under- taker. He came to Souris 35 years ago, | moving here from Iowa. He served in the house of represen- tatives during the 1907 and 1909 ses- sions and then was elected to the sen- ate for one term, beginning in 1911. Methodist Leader to Speak on Temperance Col. Frank B. Ebbert of Washington. D. C., counsel for the Methodist board of prohibition, temperance and pub- lic morals, will discuss the liquor is- sue in an address at the McCabe Meth- odist Episcopal church here at 7:45 Pp. m. tonight. Col. Ebbert is widely known as a leader in the temperance movement and is one of the most distinguished dry leaders to appear in Bismarck in several years. Services for Lacher Infant Held Sunday Carl Lacher, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Lacher, 401 Tenth 8t., died Saturday at 4:30 p. m. at his home. Puneral and burial services were held Sunday morning at St. Mary's cemetery. Schilling pepper peichin tavor] Attention Workmen! Twins, Yes, But Not | Same Birthplaces o—— Rockwood, Tenn., Sept. 8.—(7)— Charles Max Rose and Beulah Maxine Rose are twins but they have different birthplaces. Charles Max was born to Mrs. Charles Rose at the family home in London county. The mother was brought 40 miles to a Rock- ‘wood hospital, and there the girl arrived, 12 hours later. Heir to Netherlands Throne to Wed German: (Copyright 1936, Ass Associated Press) ‘The Hague, Netherlands, Sept. | 8. — A holiday romance in Swit- zerland was climaxed Tuesday by the royal court announcement that Ju- liana, heir to the Netherlands throne, will wed a German prince. He is Bernhard Zu Lippe-Biester- feld, a smart dresser, an expert lin- guist and an ardent devotee of sports. Juliana, too, loves the athletic life. Tennis is her forte. The date for the wedding was not announced. Juliana, who is 27 years old, two years older than the nobleman, who is to become her prince consort, fre- quently has been the object of solici-) tude for Dutch matchmakers. They linked her name romantically | @ —for a time—with that of King Ed-} ward VIII of England as one of the five princesses “eligible” to wed the British monarch, IOWA RACER WINS St. Paul, Sept. 8—()—Emory Col- lins, the Canadian racing champion; from Le Mars, Iowa, broke the world’s| record for a regulation one mile dirt} track Monday, speeding around the oval in 39 and eight-tenths seconds; before 173,000 Minnesota state fair spectators. Collins’ time bettered that | of 39.85 seconds made by Gus Schra- der, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the Amer- ican dirt track champion, on the same track in 1935. | BATHTUB SLAYER IS CONSOLED BY BIBLE Death Sentence Mandatory for Man Who Tortured Wife With Snake Bites James was convicted of torturing his wife by subjecting her to the bites Los Angeles, Sept. 8—(P)—Robert| Of ratt , and then drowning S. James, convicted wife murderer, turned to the scriptures for consola- tion on the eve of his court appear- ance in which he is scheduled to hang. “Everything in this life is imma- terial,” said James. “I have no fear of death. What is to be, will be. The Bible is now my constant source of consolation.” James will appear Tuesday for sen- tence before Superior Judge H. C. Fricke. The court will be compelled to pass the death sentence, unless a new trial ts granted, since the jury’s her in s bathtub. The woman, Mrs. Mary Busch James, was his seventh wife. MINNEAPOLIS GOLFER WINS , Minn., Sept. 8. — (P) — Brainerd, Billy Boutell of Minneapolis Tues- day held the seventh Pine Beach Golf championship by virture of his one- up conquest of Bert Orne, Falls, in the finals Monday. beat D. Chapell, Winona, 4 end 2, in the semi-final in the morning, with Orne downing Morris ton, N. Bowral Cain, Wahpe- D. one up. 119 FIFTH ST. Round, Sirloin, Cube Steak, Ib.... Sliced Dried ahs 19c ... 19¢ Agee cic see sac pee Benen nee .. 18¢ Ree eee ALL MEATS U. 5 Food Market WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY SPECIALS OPEN EVENINGS TILL 9 O'CLOCK TELEPHONE 476 Vinegar, Fancy Assorted Cookies, 2 Ibs. .......... 35c Peas, Wax Beans, 5! Beans, No. 2 cans, 2 tr 2DC Soda Crackers, Bold. DOK .....0sseeee 553 Seedless Grapes, 3 Ibs. . S. INSPECTED CAN WE HAVE BOTH AIR CONDITIONING AND RADIATOR HEATING? The FIRST man to see about Air Conditioning... 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