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i! DAKOTA PUBLISHERS TO MEET AT RUGBY {Annual Session of District,2 of Press Association to Talk, Shop Saturday Editors and publishers of district No. 2, North Dakota Press associa- tion, will meet at Rugby in annual vession, Saturday. The meeting will assemble at the Hotel Cramond for lunch. The busi- ness session will be held at Pleasant Lake, east of Rugby. Officers will pe elected for the ensuing year. Thi are 32 newspapers in the dis! the officers are appealing for representation. The committee in charge consists of W. H. Francis,) Fred Roble and L. H. Bratton. The discusssions will be of a round- table character and will pertain to the business of printing and newspa- per making, taking up such subjects as legislation, circulation audits, field manager's office service, trophy con- tests, back shop problems, savings: from mutual insurance, value of our state association, and many others. There will be no set papers on the subjects mentioned and mo set Bpeeches. M. I. Forkner, secretary of the North Dakota Press association, will be on hand to answer questions and take part in the discussions. President L. E. George and Mrs. seeking a home and office here to lo- cate as a representative of the Rural Agricultural Credits corporation, subsidiary of the First National bank of Minneapolis. cattle loans. It is interested in 9,000 | acres of farm land in this section parents and two children, a young son and daughter. AG. COLLEGE 10 AID EDUCATION CAMPAIGN School Officials Say Gov. Sha- {the farm board close cooperation George will also be present. R. Gil- bertson of Glenburn, third vice presi- dent, Nels P. Simonson, of the execu- tive committee, and recently chosen 2s legislative committee for the com- ing session of the legislature, Past President Glenn Colcord of Minot, Hal Davies of Minot, “Mif” Graham, of Devils Lake, and many others who are not residents of the district have been invited to “sit in” on the meet- ing and many have already accepted. ‘One of the features of the meeting will be a dutch lunch served at Pleasant Lake at 5 o'clock by the Commercial club of Rugby. Then there will be a game of “barn-yard golf” and other recreation. Jamestown Man Heads First N. D. V. I. Group Spiritwood, Aug. 14—(P)—P.” W. Eddy, Jamestown, was_ reelected president of the First North Dakota Volunteer Infantry, Spanish Amer- ican War Veterans, who served in the Philippines, at the annual picnic. Harvey Pray, Valley City, was named rag bot state penitentiary here, vice president. ASKS WATER PERMIT Washington, Aug. 14.—(4#)—Gover-| were sentenced Wednesday, nor Emmerson of Illinois appealed to- | 20 day to Secretary Hurley to permit an increase in the flow of water from Lake Michigan into the Chicago river. Big Loan Cotporation To Open Office Here P. J. Schmitz, of Minneapolis, is ‘The corporation deals in land and The Schmitz family consists of the fer’s Program Will Have Their Full Approval Fargo, N. D., Aug. 14.—(?)—North Dakota Agricultural college, with a campaign to reduce the North Dako- ta wheat acreage, will work hand in hand with the educational campaign Proposed by. Governor George F. Shafer in acreage curtailment, offi- Cials of the extension division an- nounced today. College officials have been giving since the creation of the board, and the new move will meet with the full aid of the college, President J. H. Sheppard said. N. D. Gorman, state county agent leader, while in full accord with the views expressed by the farm board members and by Governor Shafer, said steps must be more sweeping than to urge the farmer to curtail his wheat acreage. The farmer must be shown where he can profit more by slashing wheat crop, he declared. “He must be convinced,” Gorman continued, “that feed crops, with the accompanying livestock produced at the expense of the wheat crop, will more than fill the usual wheat crop om the farm program.” Members of the college extension staff would be glad to cooperate with | the farm board agencies in staging a huge campaign to replace wheat with feed crops, he said. Negro Bank Bandits Now in Penitentiary Forty-eight hours after they robbed the Lamb National bank at Michigan, N. D., Ozea Jim Sledge and eieehed today. The two negroes, who held up the cashier of the bank Tuesday morning and were captured the same evening, » Sledge JELLY GLASSES +> 43¢ JAR RINGS Bet Ov Dewtie tinpee DILL PICKLES Qorar te sssssssesssessse QO€ CLIMALINE JAP ROSE ett Seon, Bananas, 3 Ibs. . . . Seedless Grapes, 2Ibs...............27¢ QUAKER CRACKELS 2° 25¢ Jze New Cereal~~ Made of Corn Wheat and Oats (or Cake lelags aad Desserts Sugar 5222+ TWO STORES TO SERVE YOU TRADE AT YOUR NEAREST BED OWL STORE NO. 0 20> > e ‘A Water Softener, Golden Bantam Corn, dozen .........23¢ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1930 EXPLOSION ENTOMBS 46 CANADIAN MINERS | 32" Ea ER te Two Workmen Are Killed Out- right When Portal of Tun- nel Is Blown Out Princeton, B. C., Aug. 14—()}— Rescue squads toiled frantically today to reach 46 miners entombed in the Blakeburn coal mine, 50 miles east of Vancouver. Two workers were killed in an explosion last evening which blew out one portal of the main tunnel. One miner was released alive when rescuers dug through debris and found the bodies of Albert Cole and Red Smith. ‘Three hundred feet from the mouth of the tunnel a cavein blocked the and rescue workers were at- tempting to force their way through to the trapped men. The blast was attributed to marsh gas, @ compound of carbon and hy- drogen which is highly explosive. It was feared the entombed crew, if not annihilated by the fall of coal from the slopes, might be asphyxiated. The Blakeburn mine is six miles from Coalmont, B. C., on the Kettle Valley line of the Canadian Pacific railway. Dr. Piatt Dunn, another member, was in attendance from Shields. Other members of the regiment there were Col. F. C. Mudgett and General G. A./ Al Davis,.a former Bismarck iau| dent, was down from ,Fargo, and in the return home his car overturned and Mrs. Davis’ collarbone was brok- en. Former No. Dakotan Is Dead in Calif. Minneapolis, Aug. 14.—(4)—Puneral services for George Ganssle, 69, form- er North Dakotan and for many years president of the Custer State bank at Custer, Mont., will be conducted here Friday with burial in Lakewood cem- etery, Minneapolis, a former home. Mr. Ganssle died last Sunday at his home at Pasadena, Calif. Born in Germany. and coming to this country as a young man he lived in Minneapolis from 1899 to 1913. For many years he was engaged in the wholesale and retail farm implement business in North Dakota, later en- tering the banking business and be- coming president of the Custer in- stitution. He is survived by his widow and a son, County Is Removing Old Cage from Jail Bismarck Veterans At Jamestown Reunion ‘The reunion of the First North Da- kota infantry, at Jamestown, Wedne: day, was attended by Robert Ba former Bismarck resident who was a member of Company A and who came all the way from San Francisco to be Present with his old comrades of the slashing his| pany when it entered the Spanish- America war service. This was the first time in 32 years his old mates had seen him. Bismarck residents who were mem- bers of Company A, and who attend- ed the reunion included John Peter- son, Dan Slattery and Alex Louden. GAMBLE STORES Phone 390 Bismarck, N. D. Long hours of siin- shine... . less rain, wind and dust, make . this month the ideal time forinsideorout- side painting. ne" 41c 5c 423C STORE NO. 3 806 Broadway Interior Paints Ceeree cu. $2.75 me Wan 2 00 Qt... Shellac, water- Rubberset Varnish > 31/8 inch Walsomine Mrush, 7 inch. $1.95 Having razed the upper story of the old county jail, workmen today were to slide down the old steel prisoners cage. It is said bbe alt the cage is being removed by the county commissioners, separate from the contract awarded Hansot Sra of const and 1882. Mrs. Grace Kennard Is Dead at Minot Minot, N. D., Aug. 14—(7)—Mrs. Grace Kennard, 39, prominent club woman and wife of R. W. Kennard, nominee for sheriff in Ward county, died here Wednesday. lengthy illness. Mrs. Kennard, who was born at Wrightstown, Minn., was @ graduate of the State Teachers college at Moorhead, Minn., years was a member of the faculty of Minot schools. Mrs. Kennard, well known among club women in the state, was chair- man of the department of public) welfare of the North Dakota Federa- | tion of Women’s clubs at the time o! her death. She also had served two years as vice president of the state federation and has been president of | Redlinger and| the Minot Art club of which she had | N. Freeburg. superintendent ction for the county, is ue gineering the removal. Nobody seems to know how the cage got there, but it is assumed that it was built in at the time the building was erected, which was between 1878 the the passageway be Mrs. fall left, following a and for several|j Fy, been a member for many years. She leaves her husband, one son,! driving charge following a recent Robert, 15, and a brother, J. D. Aid- rich, Minneapolis. : City-County Briefs : Redlinger and Hanson are making | ». good progress on the new courthouse, Concrete for the foundations is being | poured, drain and other pipes have been laid from the site to Thayer ave- nue and Sixth street, and the middle portion of the site is being filled in with the excavated earth. as the floor of the building will be several feet above the surface of the grounds The only underground portion of building will around the foundations. Edward Ericson and M. H. Stand- ish, Underwood, were business callers in Bismarck Wednesday. A son was born Wednesday at the | Bismarck hospital to Mr. and Mrs.’ H. G. Hilden, 918 Seventh street. Mr. and Mrs. T G. Berg are spend- | ing the day in Bismarck. John Keidel, transacting business in the city. Ronald Harm, manager of the G. P. Eat shop since it was opened last today for Grand Forks, where he will be in charge of the Frederick Eat Shop for a time. John Chagaris, owner of the shops here and at Grand Forks and Devils Lake, | will manage the Bismarck shop. NEGRO PAYS F Joe Woods, Bismarck negro, was fined $20 in police court by » Campbell guilty to a speeding charge. Woods was arrested on a reckless- | crash on the Mandan-Bismarck paved highway. The charge later was re- duced to one of speeding and Woods pleaded guilty and paid his fine. AANIAYASEENUTUEAEEEETENEAEALAA | You’re missing a lot, if you don’t use — Dickinson, worry about. We Understand yy Judge when he pleaded Distributor Stone-Ordean-Wells Co. Mandan. N. Dak. Job Printing Dept. PHONE 32 PRICES REDUCED | TO PI0D.00 World's Largest Selling Eight Now $885 and up. ESSEX OTHER NEW HUDSON PRICES Rumble Seat Coupe . Standard ‘Sedan ... Touring Sedan Brougham . Sun Sedan ... Roadster .. Seven Passenger Sedan pale THE WORLD’S LARGEST SELLING EIGHT First in every competitive event entered—national and International. in America, France, Poland, and Australia, Hudson’s Great Eight 1s overwhelmingly victor, against largest and most distinguished Tields ever represented. These new low prices make it more than ever, the world’s greatest value among eights. seeeeeeeesece 8 925,00 + 885.00 895.00 +++ 1025.00 seeeee 1145.00 - 1195.00 +» 1045.00 «» 995.00 A Big, Fine, 113 Inch Super-6 ue Now $650 and up. OTHER NEW ESSEX PRICES . -8 650.00 - 650.00 685.00 715.00 775.00 795.00 695.00 Two Passenger Coupe ... Rumble Seat Coupe Standard Sedan ... Touring Sedan Brougham .... Sun Sedan .. Roadster ... aren ie 695.00 The surpassing values of all Essex halon. A big, powerful, adult- sized Super-Six—that looks and acts like a fine Fn et Nhe base 113 inches. Speed up to 70 miles an hour. Hill- bing record among .nost famous in motordom. Gasoline mileage without vival among cars of such performance ability. Already a great.value, these new prices give it sensationai position as greatest dollar for dollar bargain ever offered. All Prices, f. 0. b. factory, Detroit WORLD'S GREATEST VALUES — SUPER SIX SALES £&, Acto Service, Bowdon, N. |. Klinger, Chaseley, aweon, N. WU. Henry . Levi, Goodric’ . ‘W. Streitmatter, Glen Uliin, N. D. ‘Wills Co. Auto & Im. Co., Harvey, N. D. B. Mm. L. L. Hess, Di 118 Second weet Distributers Sismarck, N. Dak. eat AND SERVICE IN ADJACENT TERRITORY Kenuse Mere: Co. Hasen. N. D. Ott Bros. D. o,, Met tor Central cots peiitore. *y. Po. eg Biker iy, Cooksvilte Bracn, Zeeland, N. D. Deckter Imp. Co., Tattle Baum Motor Co. Carleck erie! Experience has given us knowledge. We know what to'do, how to do it, and what to avoid doing tn times of distress. We leave no detail for the bereaved to THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ei