The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 31, 1929, Page 4

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_» PAGE FOUR > : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1999 DIVE CAMDAICNIC ESRESSemeos cee CUA PECTAIDINT [ice mimes mmm mm/47 VE—D ap DANG lneccee cnn cen = : BRIDGE CAMP AIGN iN by observers to gain the appropriation CHAIN RESTAURANT sei for the company, and the other 14-YEAR-OLD BOY Ny cuit court for “he murder of Ralph | from. the. house with a gun. Tt was Chicago —(>)—., SEEN AS MENACE T0 PROXY BATTLE FOR ovate eRe ACCUSED OR KING - HIGHWAY PROCRAN CONTROL FORECAST = Mullins, 35, at Wheelwright January that the other members of | easy reads: “We're in the Tacket, -byy Dunn county, favoring the Elbo- In the place of 8. Willard Smith, 2. His father brother already Ai, woods bridge, and Mercer county, president, Childs put his brother Lu- He pantera Sim are in the penitentiary serving mur- favoring Stanton, will both be rep- ther Childs. der seitaneat renting from other cases. His mother, Mrs. Dink Hall, 50; a sister, Nellie Hall, 16, and an- other sister, Mamie Hall, 19, are at liberty under bonds of $5,000 each, family joined in the attack. we don’t want any ¥ resented at the hearing by county commissioners. Oliver county, in which cone end of the Washburn bridge would rest, is noncommittal on magnate last year was his private} Prestonsburg, Ky., Jan. 31—(AP) its choice, though representatives secretary. A 14-year-old boy today faced a| awaiting trial in connection with the 9 a ans aheateel Nard ove pees ae the pepe Fug Childs anes ig coping A Raapeg cee a gt ‘ ae Bridge |the expense incurred by the - | Willi fT he not contemplate any marder cl », his father an = ig to testimony, ill feelin, Demand for Federal i 8 burn bridge would be too great. The William Childs, Founder of in the food offered in the restaurants/er are serving sentences in connec-|had existed between the sfulline an Money Will Cut Into Avail- | Washburn site will be supported by $37,000,000 Business, which has included meat dishes since | tion with other murders and two sis-| Hall families for some time. Youn; PHONE 279 ‘ d Gustav Lindell, Washburn attorney, "i the upheaval a year ago. ters are ch: with murder. Hall, it was alleged, struck Mrs. Mul- . able Funds for Roads and Ben Everson, Washburn. Ousts Officers An explanation for seizing control! The boy, Bennie Hall, was sent-|lins in the head with a pistol and Members of the committee on high- ways and bridges follow: Repre- i sentative McGauvran, Cavalier coun- With La Rg ogee er ty, chairman; Representatives Jar- up in the fig! f the legisla-| dine, Vietch, Shurr, Oberg, Lynch, tan! Ratetial tea gaa in| Brown, Aljets, Thompson, | Gilchrist, ture are sharpening their pencils | muus, Carlson, Bishop, ‘Steedsman, the hope of spiking the guns 0} Kapfer, Fettig, and Place. ore. HIGHWAY BOSS WILL of the management, Mr. Childs charged that Barber had been direct- 1 ing a stock jobbing pool in the stock of the company. Rumors that the DuPont interests had been buying heavily into Childs with the idea of gaining control and segregating the real estate from the restaurant business of the company were circulated about the time Mr. Childs was forced out of the By The Associated Press New York, Jan. 31.—(4)—A battle of proxies for control of the chain of Child’s restaurants seemed today to be imminent. It was forecast after @ coup was executed by William Childs, founder of the $37,000,000 company which operates 125 restaurants thoughout the country. The officers of the com- pany were turned out and replaced ORANGES, Sunkist, 8 dozen ..... re PINEAPPLE, Hawaiian, (large can), Libby PEACHES, (Carrol) in syrup, No, 2 1-2 can, 2 cans 47 CABBAGE, Fancy Solid, per Ib. ............0000005¥€ TOMATOES, No. 2 1-2 can (60c value), 3 cans ..,. 41e¢ « 5% " Clearance Sale of Rebuilt Typewriters Corona, No. 4 ......$35.00 Royal, No, 14 ...... 35.00 Royal, No. 10 ...... 30.00 Royal, No. 12. - 50.00 Their comment, and it is being heard with increasing frequency, is that the campaign for bridges is Hable to seriously cripple the state's by members of his immediate family. | Presidency. Royal, No. 10 ...... 45.00 Underwood, No. 5 .. 30.00 SPINACH, Del Monte, No. 2 1-2 can (60c value), Bey re ates cut down the BE POSTED IN PARGO Me, ‘Childs ‘was forced out of the} — : Royal, No. 10....... 60.00 tnderwood, No 5. 60.00 2 Cats sic s bisa sateen ORGS Seiterd Tas eiceoriations. ot PTUEt OF MOLEC ee bite Te aeatas Ne eae mi No. 10... 30.00 Pree HAMS, Mild Cured Picnics, average 5 Ibs., per Ib. ... 21c bridge appropriations or eliminate faction of stockholders who blamed ington. —(P)—Federal agen Remington, No. 10 .. 30. ood - é at some if them sie rei | his adherence to a vegetarian menu | estenne thor’ 95 to 98 per cent of the Remington, No. 10, Woodstock, No. 5 ... 35.00 PEAS, Early June, No. 2 can, 3 cans ........ seseee 87e for a falling off in profits. At a meeting of the directors yes- terday Mr. Childs trained his heavy narcotic drugs sold or dispensed illic- itly in the country enter through the Port of New York. 14inches ...... 32.50 L.C. Smith, No.5 .. 27.50 PORK and BEANS, Van Camp’s, large, 2 cans ..... 41c¢ WAK-EM-UP Coffee, 1 Ib. tin ..... - 58c tions have stressed the fact that @/ Governor Shafer Assumes the large share of the cost of these in- csi eo ster SESA79409 Pisgugs undoes ‘ates will be heard by.the committee- terprises will be borne by the fed- eral government, the money being taken from the fund allotted by the government to the state for road and bridge building purposes. Three- fourths of the cost of the proposed ; Missouri river bridge at Fort Yates will be paid from this fund. Prac- w suns idge at | Was reached at a meeting of the state i Hey ene oui come from this fund | Rishway commission today. ‘The new Office Specialties Co. and half the cost of proposed bridges | #PPointee will work under the super- Phone 322 300 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. 2. ft Stanton, Washburn and Garrison. | ¥ Two Bridges Possible ‘There is a possibility that the state ‘may build more than one Missouri river bridge by appropriations made ft this session. In such event, the fads with the sharp pencils say, the federal aid fund would be in a sore Condition and the effect would be to curtail the state's road building pro- a w hi gram. 3 ils |10Ws: seven miles gravel east and |ff : vag Tato the sharp pencils) ost ‘through Tioga, Williams county; ‘Three-fourths of a $600,000 bridge @t Fort Yates would take $450,000 from the fund. Bridges at Garrison, Stanton and Washburn would nick the fund for $300,000 each. A bridge | ¢ ft Elbowoods would cost the fun still more. The proposed bridge across the Red river at Fargo would 81 vi cost the fund $50,000; that at Wahpe-|‘enths of a mile on the underpass ton $25,000 and that of Grafton $25,- 000 more. The total reaches the neat Uttle sum of $850,000 which would be deducted from the federal aid fund for bridge construction during the next two years. But that doesn’t tell the entire Story. Any one of the proposed bridges, with the exception of those at Fargo and Wahpeton, will mean the construction of some new state highway to make the bridges useful. In the case of any one of the Mis- souri river bridges this would mean approximately $50,000 more, or a total pf $900,000. Cuts Road Funds be During each of the next two years |%anistan as involving a battle for the state will receive $1,197,000 in fed- | © eral aid money or a total for the biennium of $2,394,000. When $900,- intendent to be stationed at Fargo Valley City and will have mainten- highway under his jurisdiction. sat as chairman and the last for R. A. Ashley of Plaza, who is retiring from the commission. survey 14 miles on No. 30 north and south of Hamberg, Wells county; east, Nelson county; 16 miles from Lallie east and eight miles from Mad- from Hazelton part way to Hague miles of grading and graveling on routes 21 and 8 through Mott, Het- tinger county. AMANULLAH'S ARMY Russia today described Amanullah’s Afghan minister to Moscow to have Chairmanship; Ashley's Last Meeting Decision to appoint a state high- vay department maintenance super- ision of the district engineer at ince of approximately 400 miles of Today’s meeting was the first in ‘hich Governor George F. Shafer Requests from counties for state ighway work were approved as fol- raveling 10.7 miles from McVille lock north, Benson county; 25 miles ja Hull, Emmons county; five-. it Rugby, Pierce county and 1.7 SURROUNDS CAPITOL London, Jan. 31.—()}—Advices from fforts to regain the throne of Af: ontrol of Kabul, the capital, His followers were stated by the 000 is deducted from this sum it cuts | SUfrounded Kabul. the amount of federal aid available for new road construction elsewhere They were planning to drive from the throne Habibullah Khan, who in the state to $1,494,000 or $757,000 | forced Amanullah’s brother to abdi- ® year. At its December meeting the state highway commission outlined its road building program. This program calls for using all of the federal aid money “in sight for new roads. The proposal to expend large sums for bridges may sl meet with opposition from those sec- tl tions of the state which are clamor- ing for roads. : would be broadcast by wireless and If the battle changes from one in t which advocates of various bridge sites. are opposing each other to one in which good roads enthusiasts op- Pose as a unit all or most of the » the result may be brought as close together as one one- hundred-thousandth of a second, he says, cate. The minister expressed confi- dence that Amanullah would soon be back in control. NO ALIBIS, THEN Berlin—A German inventor has uggested one clock to beat time for the world. Located in a central ob- ervatory, the ticks of this clock ‘he ‘*elocks throughout the world The above machines have all been rebuilt, equipped with new cylinders and ribbons, carry our regular serv- ice agreement. Terms if desired. All makes of typewriters rented and repaired. COCOA, Hershey’s, 1-2 Ib. tin ........... see 14c WHITE KING, 1 package, 3 Mission Bell Soap, 1 Ironing Cushion and Cover, $2.30 value at.. .$1.49 PANCAKE Flour, Never-Fails, excellent, it’s superior, 4 Ib. package ......:......ece002 39 A. M. — 9:30 - 11 — DELIVERIES — 3 - 5 — P. M. Ward’s Half-Price SALE. New fixtures have arrived for the enlargement of Ward’s Ready-to-Wear De- partment. This will make the Ready-to-Wear Departmentone of the best equipped in the northwest. All fashions and millinery are received direct from New York. Spring showings are already shipped. We must reduce the remaining fall and win- ter stock of coats. Therefore, this radical reduction to One-Half Price. Learn---Then Earn Women trained to take dictation the Bismarck Business College way land enviable positions as private secretaries to big execu- tives. Shorthand, typing, business , English, and other courses. f For free catalogue, write G. M. Langum, President. Group No. 1 Coats, fur-trimmed Broadcloth, formerly priced $19.95, now ..... rset a 8 Coats, fur-trimmed Sport-types, formerly priced $24.75, now Bismarck Proposals, the defeat of the bridge proposals, BRIDGE ARGUMENTS ARE STYLE TONIGHT House Body Hears Elbowoods, ‘Stanton, Washburn, and Fort Yates Pleas Bridge arguments will be. hashed Bnd rehashed tonight at an open meeting of the house committee on highways and bridges, if the number of entrants in the race for the bridge Means anything. Arguments in favor of structures Qcross the Missouri. river at Elbo- ‘woods, Stanton, Washburn, -and: Fort in, »-Request for a fifth bridge at ‘was: dropped when. Garri- roposed bridges at Elbowoods, Stan- , abd. Washburn would have their astern terminus in McLean county. Group No. 2 Coats, fur-trimmed Broadcloth, - and Velours, formerly $29.75, now ...... Coats, fur-trimmed Broadcloth, _ formerly priced $35.00, now ......... } Py : Coats, fur-trimmed Broadcloth, formerly. priced $39.95, now sarees 3 Group No. 3 Coats, fur-trimmed Broadcloth, formerly priced $45.000, now ......-+se0¢ Coat, fur-trimmed Broadcloth, formerly priced $49.95, now .......+..+04 3 Coats, fur-trimmed Broadcloth, . formerly priced $59.50, now ....e.v..0.. $22.95 $24.95 $29.95 As cheerful and gay as the new spring season ... these stunning dress models appear in smart profusion in a group that is remarkable at $6.75, Printed silks, geor- gettes, flat crepes and crepe de chines, in all the gorgeous new colors of the new season. Specially priced at You will readily concede: our wonderful advantage through our tremendous buying” power and our cash policy when you see these dresses. _ . WCRACKEN CASH STORES FOURTH and BROADWAY Most of these Coats were received direct from our New York buying office during the:past six weeks assuring you, the. latest in Babriés, Color and Style, = >. RD & ( “We Hill Ord

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