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“(Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1878 > COLD EMBARGO SEEN va” AS BRST MOVE IN 1 PRICE RESTORATION © |President Seeks Controlled Price Level, Better Cred- it to Halt Deflation ¥ RESERVE BANK HEADS MEET Will Discuss Ways of Putting Into Circulation Money Already Available lish @ controlled price level and & controlled. credit to counteract de- flation. The word “inflation” is not par- ee : we Et one Esk it like i Te iy § i iH i € i ait ‘Aft THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE \ Chief of Gotham’s 20,000 ‘Finest’ EXPERT DECLARES CONDEMNED WOMAN fering From Fear and Thoroughly Frightened g +" ne i ; ff pet ull ' g8 I i Hs i i z 5 ? asl Fe. ih He k i : 3 clr Hs Hi i i é g i st | i i [ E g cf i ‘| BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1938 , arkets Boom Inflation Nears Sugar Added to Items in Farm FEDERAL CREDIT School Board Plans _|)EMCRATs DIVDE AGAIN AVAILABLE 10 FARMERS OF STATE Ban on Help For North Dakota Is Removed By Washing. ton Authorities INGER LIFTS MORATORIUM Governor Complies With Feder- al Demands Regarding Se- curity For Loans Washington, April 19.—(7)—Feder- al short term credit again was made wailable- to North Dakota farmers in @ decision late Tuesday by gov- to be made also as a result of the modification. The federal land loan board, how- ministration, will take over supervi- sion of agricultural credit corpora- tions and crop production loans on May fs if * 5 iste | gt iF AH < ve E i Rsv Fz ia H ARE SHAKEN UP BY ANTI- JEWISH LAW Hitler Newspaper Says Action Taken to Save Them From ‘Foreign Control’ Aryan law, which bars nearly all Jews from civil service and them ‘second class citizenship, is being voked in all German universities Chancellor Hitler’s cabinet. ine by Final action was postponed Wednes- day until Saturday because Hitler is Premier Mussolini and the pope in Rome. Dr. Wiltelm Prick, Nasi minister of Will Eliminate Cage Coach, Music Instructors ard Three to Seven Others FINANCES DEMAND ACTION Petitioners Told Work Must Be Curtailed or Greater In- come Provided Decision to eliminate between six and 10 members of the Bismarck ‘school faculty was reached at a meet- ing of the city school board Tuesday ht. Definitely slated to go because of or unless alternative plans for secur- the | ing additional revenue can be worked = TWO ENGINEERS ARE | ORDERED 10 PRISON | BY RUSSIAN JUDGES P| Lawyer Asks That Prison Sen- tences Be Changed to Permanent Exile i th ! : E i Ul ii i g. i g | : f tie i i | He [ i Te Hy : Pa at bi i i iss [ BEE, 3 588 | pEBEobe ents, officials pointed out, since op- costs of $18,000 have been cut bone. Comparative figures of collections for the general fund for the two years, July 1931 to June 1932 and July 1932 to June 1933, both inclusive, shown tle accompanying table are an adequate explanation for the 50 per) it salary cut this month and also the one contemplated next month, |. Figures for April, May and of this year are estimated on a F H I i A FE Gent Bitte gt 4a “hh ie ne ] 8 i i ft } 4 # Teaching Staff Cut! oy IssuR AS MANY GERMANY’S SCHOOLS IGNORE LEADERSHIP Ballot Is 44 to 37 as Western and Southern Senators Bolt Party FLAX PROPOSAL REJECTED Montana Solons Amendment Beaten 48 to 32; Peanut Growers More Fortunate Peanuts at the instance of Senator Glass (Dem. Va.) and Senator Wheeler (Dem., Mont.) immediatey sought to add flaxseed. ‘This, however, the senate rejected, 48 to 32, after Senator Robinson, the Democratic leader, bitterly attacked loading down the bill. Seek Early Vote With monetary inflation proposals put aside at least temporarily, leaders hoped that the remaining sections of the farm measure could be speedily Gisposed of and the way cleared for other parts of President Roosevelt’s Gomestic emergency program now pil- ing up in committees. They predicted the farm bill would be approved by the senate. ‘The house was not in session, but its committees were active. Miss Frances Perkins, secretary of labor, planned to appear before the labor jcommittee to go over her recommen- dations for spreading employment and establishing a federal minimum wage law in connection with the pro- Posed 30-hour work week legislation. The house military committee con- tinued work on the Roosevelt Muscle Shoals and Tennessee river valley de- studying a sugar quota allotment plan to improve and stabilize prices in this country with the economic rehabilita- relief legislation, with Cuban imports to this country set at 2,000,000 tons annually. in amendments. Montanan Favored For Interior Post i | H 3 ti i F efae Aid Bill Elopes With Swim Champ Honeymooning in Hollywood are Buster Crabbe, Olympic swimming champion, and his bride, the former Adah Virginia Held, bove. ig Crabbe, now s movie :player,* and Miss Held elopedtto Arizona. -/ALLEGED BANDIT IS KILLED IN SHOOTING _ Weather Report © Clon rai ccueowr ear STOCKS AND GRAINS MAKE BIG ADVANCES THROUGHOUT NATION Wheat Jumps From One to Three Cents a Bushel in Pit At Chicago GOLD EMBARGO ORDERED Step Is Believed First Move in Effort to Control Com- modity Prices The movement, inspired by Presi- dent Roosevelt’s program to halt gold exports as the first step in an infla- tionary program to control Prices, was accompanied by a flurry NEAR VALLEY CINY z= Ted Hedstrom, Son of Local Folk, Figures in Affray At Farm Hideout 1 Valley City, N. D., April 19—(P)—| One man was shot and killed and his companion arrested by a Barnes county deputy sheriff late Tuesday during an encounter with two al- leged members of a robber gang on @ farm hideout five miles north of Urbana, about 25 miles northwest of here. Joe Brown, Sioux City, Iowa, was killed and Pete Nelson, Sioux Falls, 8. D., surrendered and was brought to the jail here. The shooting and capture was puty Sheriff Ted Hed- an attempt to capture the operators of the farm on which officers said since last Wednesday. Tuesday was the first time in a week that anyone returned to the farm. Sunde had gone to Valley City for food, leaving hidden in a barn. Gets and Nelson . Hedstrom got the drop on them when they stopped before the a TO GRARTON POST ‘Londory . reflecting uncertainties over the dollar. DOLLAR IS DOWN ON MARKET AT LONDON that America might halt gold. DOLLAR Is LOW ON PARIS BOURSE November, 1925, closing at 24.60 francs. The Bank of France supported the ;| dollar through the official bourse ses- cerning embargo gold in the United States, causing fear that dol- lars would not be convertible, PARGOAN IS NAMED ° Aylen to Succeed Wylie as Head of Institute For Feeble Minded —_—— Dr. James P. Aylen, Fargo, has been named superintendent of the institute co ne rene seer lace A. Me, it was an- nounced by tat h