The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 13, 1936, Page 6

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cee en mT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIC-AY. MARCH 13, 1936 Saves Four Lives in 6 $400,000 IN GRADE , SEPARATION JOBS ~ TOBELETIN APRIL Plans Completed and Rights of Way Obtained for Various | Proposed Projects Nearly $400,000 in grade separation projects are expected to be let by the end of April, W. J. Flannigan. state highway commissioner, said Friday. Plans have been completed and rights-of-way have been obtained for the various works, which will include a number of highway relocations to eliminate some highway - railroad-| crossings. Three of four grade separation projects already let to contract and totaling $155,000 in costs, are under) construction, with expectation the fourth will move into the construction | stage within the next two weeks, Flannigan said. Laborers are working on grade separation projects at; Baden, where an overheard is being constructed over the Soo Line tracks intersecting U. S. Highway 52, costing $36,000; Belfield, where a $40,000 steel and| concrete overhead will span the; Northern Pacific railroad tracks at its intersection wtih U. S, Highway 85; | Petersburg, where $52,000 is being, spent to overhead U. S. Highway 2 above the Great Northern tracks, west of Grand Forks. mone rare BUUR-EYED DOLL IS. EVIDENCE AT TRIAL of Soo Line railroad at the intersec- Mother of Condemned Son jon with U. S. Highway 83. All of! the costs include those of grading. Pleads Not Guilty to Mur- der Charge Jimmy McDermott, 13, showr with his sister, Ruth, saved the lives of his mother and three sis ters when he found them overcome by gas fumes in their Toledo, 0. home by opening windows and get ting help from firemen. (Associateo Presa Photo, With a probable cost of $25,000, an | overhead project at New Rockford, which will include re-routing of U. 8. Highway 281, will be let to contract | March 20. The overhead will cross the Great Northern tracks. Other projects which Flannigan expects will be Jet to contract before the end of April include: ‘Mandan — Pedestrian underpass,| Dorchester, N. B., March 13.—(P)— probable cost $37,000; Rogers—Over-|A blue-eyed baby doll stared wide- head, intersection Soo Line and U. 8.|eved from the evidence table Friday Highway 1, probable cost $61,000; |8t Mrs. May Bannister, on trial for Churches Ferry —Overhad, intersec-|@ tragic kidnaping. tion Great Northern railroad and{ The life-size doll, the Crown con- U. 8S. Highway 2, probable cost $87,-|tends, was carried about by Mrs. Ban- 000, including relocation of highway |nister before she decided she needed between Nile and Churches Ferry, real baby to convince two suitors moving road mile south to eliminate a! that she had becoine a mother. second crossing; Inkster—Relocation| Then, prosecutors allege, she con- of five miles of U. 8. Highway 18,|spired in the kidnaping of 6-months- north and south, to eliminate two|old Betty Lake—an act which left grade crossings over Great Northern |Philip Lake dead in his flaming back- tracks, probable cost $62,000; Carring-|woods shack, his common-law-wife ton—Overhead and relocation of 14/clubbed fatally and Lake's tiny son miles of U. S. Highway 281 between |dying of exposure in a snowdrift. Carrington and New Rockford, elim-| Tearful, mumbling “not guilty,” the inating two crossings over Northern |45-year-old Mrs. Bannister Thursday Pacific tracks, probable cost $65,000; |heard her daughter, Francis, 15, tell Bowman — Overhead at Bowman, lof the trip to the Lake shack to gzt spanning intersection of U. 8. 12 and|the baby girl last Jan. 5. Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pa-| Her son, Arthur, faces the gallows cific railway tracks, probable cost | upon conviction of the murder of pope Raiiiteresct a secre Lake. Daniel, 20, the other brother, kee tracks and U. 8. Highway 12, faces a later trialon a murder charge. Probable cost $23,000. . BLAST WRECKS AUTO St. Paul, March 13.—(@)—An auto- alee te he gt Tod Negro Populace Jailed |Strect carly Friday. Police hunted its owner, E. J. Tomlinson, 31, unem- Jamestown, N. D., March 13.—(#)—|ployed bartender, whose wife said he Half of Jamestown’s Negro popula-|/had not been home since 9:30 Thurs- tion, Martin Ross, was bound over |day night. to district court here Thursday on a charge of carrying a weapon. Ross, who with his wife has lived in James- town for many years, furnished bond and was released pending trial. | Edward Bentz Trapped in His (G-MEN CAPTURE MAN WANTED FOR RAIDING BANKS IN MIDWEST Underwear Trying to Flee Through Dumb Waiter Brooklyn, March 13.—()—-Edward Bentz, sought in Vermont, Pennsyl- jvania and North Carolina on charges of bank robbery, Friday was cap- tured by four department of justice agents trying to escape through the dumb waiter of an apartment which they had besieged with tear gas. Bentz, the arresting agents said. had been mentioned in connectioned with the kidnaping of George Weyer- hauser in Tacoma, Wash., last spring. The raided apartment was occupied by a man who described himself as Louis Philip. With him were his wife and their three children, They emerg- | ed into the corridor of the first floor apartment when the first gas bomb was thrown over the transom. Agents dragged Bentz from the dumb waiter shaft on the third floor, clad only in his underwear. In Lincoln Robbery In Washington J.. Edgar Hoover, director of the the bureau of investi- gation said “Bentz was one of the participants” in the. $1,042,000 robbery on Sept. 17, 1930 of the Lincoln Na- tional bank at Lincoln, Neb. “Bentz, prior to this bank robbery,” Hoover said, “was associated with Harvey Bailey and Albert Bates.” Bailey and Bates have since been sentenced to life imprisonment for the Charles F. Urschel kidnaping at ‘Oklahoma City in 1933. Hoover said Bentz is under suspi-- cion in a number of other bank rob- beries. He will be taken to Rutland, Vt., to answer charges in an indict- ment for an $8,500 robbery of the Caledonia National bank at Danville, Vt. Wanted Other Places The justice department statement said Bentz also was wanted for rob- bery of the First National Bank at Brandon, Vt., and of the First Na- tional bank of Mooresville, N. C. The department said four guns and & bullet proof vest were found in the apartment occupied by Bentz and his associates. Bentz, 40 years old, was born in Pipestone, Minn. Department of jus- tice agents said his police record showed 20 separate arrests since he was first sentenced to the state train- ing school at Chehalis, Wash. in June, 1910, He escaped from that jail and has been repeatedly arrested and convicted on charges of burglary and jail breaking, forgery, impersonating‘ an officersand larceny. Male Quartet Singing On Sunday Broadcast Selections by a male quartet com- posed of John and William Martin, Richard Baska and Rev. William A. Lemke, all members of the Bismarck Male chorus, will feature Sunday af- ternoon’s “Heart to Heart” broadcast over KFYR from 4:30 to 5 p. m. Rev. Lemke, pastor of the First Evangeli- cal church, who is sponsor and speak- er for the radio services, will speak on “Has the Church Failed?” Indict Postmistress ASSASSINS’ ARMS Spain Moves to Protect British Against Threats of Harm to Foreigners protect said were made in Germany. Authorities, it was understood, as- sured the British embassy of protec- tion to English engineers working on the Zafra railway in Huelva province. The director of public safety said the police had obtained a list of per- sons possessing arms such as were used in Thursday's attempt to kill Luis Jiminez Asua, chamber of depu- ties leader and Socialist criminal at- torney. The arms, they said, were manu- factured in the reich. Jiminez es- caped unhurt, but his police body- guard was killed and seven Fascists arrested. $349,000 Shortage Blamed for Suicide Detroit, March 13.—(?)—A night of investigation into a $349,000 shortage __|in a City of Detroit bank deposit brought an accusation by City Treas- urer Albert E. Cobo Friday that the apparently self-slain Harry M. Tyler, a city accountant, embezzled the money. A few hours after Tyler’s body, a bullet wound in the head, Was dis- covered in the basement of his home, Cobo said that “absolute proof” Tyler took the money was in police hands. Tyler was chief accountant to the city Mrs. Anne Parsal (above), post- mistress of Benton Harbor, Mich., was indicted by a federal grand jury at Grand Rapids, Mich, on nine counts alleging conspiracy to collect political campaign funds from relief administration employes while she was head of the Berrien county emergency relief administra. tion. (Associated Press Photo) ‘Pastors Will Not | Claim Exemption If whiskers are voted in by the people of Bismarck as part of the gigantic municipal celebration July 3, 4 and 5, ministers of the gospel will claim no exemption on occupational grounds. This was the opinion Friday of | Controller. Rev. W. A. Lemke, pastor of the m ° First Evangelical church, who | Will Catechize Class said he personally would follow the lead of the community and assumed that other divines would do so. Barbers were pondering the effect on their business and were * coming to the conclusion that an epidemic of “whiskeritis” in Bis- marck might be a boon rather than a handicap. Their idea was that, with mod- At Evening Services Remaining Sunday evening services at the Trinity Lutheran church dur. ing March will be devoted to catechi- zation of the junior confirmation class preceding the administration of confirmation Palm Sunday, April 5, Rev. Opie 8. Rindahl, pastor, an- MADE IN GERMANY Madrid,, March 13.— (4) —Spain’s riot-vexed officials, stepping in to British engineers against threats of violence to “foreigners,” Friday traced assassins’ arms they nounces. The first service will cover the first part of Luther's Small Cate- chism. These services are arrang- ed to give all members of the church fn opportunity to review the funda- mentals of the Christian faith, the pastor states. . Six Pass Exams for Mine Foremanships Six of 11 contestants successfully passed examinations for mine fore- men, the state mine foreman’s ex- amining board announced Friday. The six are R. L. Walters, Donny- brook; Rodger Ehlert, Beulah; Robert Oliver, Burlington; Carl Hof, Minot; Stanley Ostoj,. Richardton; Frank Kokot, Hebron. Eighteen applied for permission to take the examination, but snow blocked roads prevented seven from competing. | Members of the examining board are-W. J. Ray, Medora; James Mur- phy, Zap, and 8. A. Binek, state mine inspector. | A Pro ern equipment any man can shave himself—and most of, them do. But trimming a beard is an entirely different proposition. Few amateurs would be up to it, As a result they would have to seek the services of an expert tonsorialist. . Barbers were not identifying their ballots but the assumption was that most of them were vot- ing “yes.” Ken Penner to Pilot Crookston Pirates) FRESH E Crookston, Minn., March 13.—( orate ae, we, 2 | STRAWBERRIES ......... Pint 23¢ er-m: c _ nels ‘Aneotin lon clit last aa Fri ORANGES Juice Size 2 doz. 33c Gay accepted terms to pilot the Crookston Pirates Northern League nine for the coming season. Playing with Louisville since 1929, Penner was LETTUCE 2 for CARROTS previously allied with the Chicago Cubs. Crisp, Solid 1 Crisp, Tender Heads Bunches Satisfied diners have built a bigger business at the Prince. ENDIVE, ASPARAGUS, MUSHROOMS, GREEN BEANS RHUBARB, GREEN ONIONS, CUCUMBERS, RED CABBAGE SPINACH, WAX BEANS, AVOCADOES, BEETS, TURNIPS, Electrical Classes Will Be Re-Opened Electrical classes of the adult edu- cation courses will be re-opened next Monday, according to an announce- ment made Friday by Harvey N. Jen- sen, director. George Iverson will act as instructor. A new class in business spelling and penmanship is being. organized to meet on Fridays in the east room of the Will school annex. A meeting of the play groups is also called for 7:30 p. m., tonight, As a typical example of the work being accomplished, Jensen pointed out that one typing student has al- ready completed the first unit, which consists of 20 exercises and has passed @ test of 44 words per minute without an error, Considerable interest has been shown in the classes on subjects of every day usage, arithmetic and hook- keeping. New students in the book- keeping class will be given an oppor- tunity to enroll next Wednesday anc new classes will be opened soon by Mrs. Pearl Nelson in social subjects consisting of geography, history and citizenship. Republican Campaign Chest Already Bulges ‘Washington, March 13.—(?)—Re- ports submitted to the house for the first two months of this year dis- closed Friday that sizeable contribu- tions are pouring into the Republican national committee, but that they are few and far between around Demo- cratic headquarters and the American Liberty League. During the first two months of the year, the Republicans received con- tributions aggregating $261,387. The Democrats, with few big gifts, col- lected only $49,053. The Liberty League, which got $483,000 last year, received only $64,702. ORANGES Sunkist, 288 size, dle ae or Brick, 2 Ib. womans Ls CATSUP Heinz’, large bottle, each .... 12c ..19¢ Always Brings a full equivalent in satisfactory returns on every pur- chase made at this store. Make your money work in- telligently for you by buying your MEATS and GRO- CERIES here. JUST PHONE 957. GRAPEFRUIT San BUTTER Swift’ 2-Ib, ee ot Bee APPLES Delicious or Rome Beauties, flame red; new shipment; full 40-Ib. box ............ PRESERVES Pure, all flavors, 16-oz, jars, 2 for BROOMS 5 sewed, good quality, each ........... 35c FRESH STRAWBERRIES, Bananas, Oranges, Carrots, Fresh Beans, Green or Wax, Peas, Cucumbers, Sweet Potatoes, Cauliflower, Celery, Lettuce, Tomatoes, Red Cabbage, Green Peppers, Green Onions, Spinach, CARROTS | to tr: ‘y siete STRICTLY FRESH EGGS, PRICED REASONABLY SHRIMP Large, fancy, 5%-o2, tins, 2 for For County Treasurer I hereby announce myself an a candidate for the office of Bur- leigh County Tr: er, subject e will of the primary electi ave paid taxes Wanted!! Y Million * Jackrabbit Skins We will buy jackrabbit skins all during the month of March. We also will buy whole jackrabbits, if they are Not Spoiled. Also, be sure to bring or ship us all of your hides, furs, sheep pelts, and metals. “Northern” Hide & Fur Co. Corner 9th & Front—Brick Bldg. Bismarck, N. Dak. Time for a : NEW LetTTrERHEAD We specialize in the printing of business and professional stationery, invoices, etc. Let us quote on your requirements and show you samp!es of the new Caslon Bond. Bismarck Tribune Co. FRUIT EACH 12c PEANUT BUTTER Minneopa brand, made from No. 1 Spanish afd Vir- ginia shelled pea- nuts, 2LB. JAR ONIONS Med. size yellow Denvers for cooking and slicing. 6 LBS. EEE Cabbage. Lb. de PEAS No, 2 cans, brand. Blended June Peas. 4 CANS LN COCKTAIL No. 1 tall cans, Libby’s fancy asst. fruits. 27¢ - Medium size, solid Texas Glo-Ray Foodstuffs... Throughout our store you will find generous displays of foodstuffs nationally adver- tised in magazines, news- Papers, radio and on bill- boards ... We truly believe in giving you the finest merchandise on the market and it goes without saying the nationally advertised mer- chandise MUST be the finest. EGG PLANT - = || GRAPEFRUIT "c%h2t* . 6 for 19¢ GREEN PEAS .............2 Ibs. 29¢ JUST PHONE 1060 KRAFT CHEESE—— PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Nationally Advertised BUTTER Fancy No, 1 quality from local creameries. PER LB. SALMON 1 Lb. Cans, McGovern’s Fructs & Ve ORANGES 252 size, California Sunkist Navels 2 dozen 39c SOUP 1044 oz. cans, of Van Camp’s Tomato Soup NOODLES 1 Ib, cello bags of fancy Early Fancy, Alaska Pink Salmon .. 14c EACH te {|| iti * CARROTS ‘Large bunches, fancy Cali- fornia green tops, Bunch 6c Grapefruit 100 size, sugar sweet, seed- less Grapefruit, 3 for 1c Crackers Manchester A-1 Sodas, fresh daintily salted. 2 LB, BOX 17ec Best, A Where QUALITY Meets ECONOMY arent Taree: im nal pound peckages, sera 2 for SOC ———— —_———— COCOANUT Fresh, moist, long-shred Coccanut, pound cellophane pkg. FELS NAPHTHA PEANUT SOAP BUTTER ete SLICED DE LUXE PEACHES PLUMS FREE—LIBBY’S RECIPE BOOKLET ae RICE DATES. DEL MAIZ NIBLETS hy Tedeetitedontiette MIRACLE WHIP ‘is preferred by thousands of critical hestesses to the finest mayonnaise! Quart jar ...........% JUST PHONE 1000 ——— ES MEATS THAT ARE BETTER YOU'LL APPRECIATE THEIR FINER QUALITY LARD LUTEFISK = gol... He Fancy, POT ROAST, Ib. ......----18¢ svi! ~~ PORK ROAST, Ib. ........-22e Fancy, SIRLOIN STEAKS, Ib......22c Fancy, ROLLED ROAST, Ib. ......27¢ tere’ FRANKFURTERS, Ib. ....23¢ eri BREAST patting, Ib. 2 ie pir SAUSAGES Seconea, m.. .27c tea BEEP, Ib. .. 2... 0260005. De Thuringer Summer Sausage, Ib....27¢ TURKEYS — STEWING HENS GUSSNER’S JUST PHONE 1060 IN THE MEAT MARKET Fancy Beef Roasts..." 122, 14¢ Picnics:=:":* 20¢ Ground Bee Rib Roas}2=s=-"="= Short Ribs =": Pork Roast". 18¢ |=" "23 Fresh Pike, Halibut, Salt Herring, Oysters, Fancy Hens MARCOVITZ Grocery . ar aal Ave. M. — Free Delivery Service — 2:30 - 4:30 P. M. Daily Sliced Bacon Lean, wrap., % Ib. Frankfurters nen 164c large, lb. Beef Liver Beef, bake 987 9 - 10:30 A. The Bismarck Tribune _ Bible Distribution COUPON Two distinct styles of this wonderful Book of Books have been adopted’ for this great newspaper Bible distribution. One is the far-famed Red Lejter Bible (Christ’s sayings printed in red for immediate identification), and the Plain Print Bible for those who can spare but a nominal sum. WF Only Three Coupons Clip this coupon and two others and present or mail them to this paper with the sum set opposite either style, and come into pos- session of your Book of Books at once. Style A—Red Letter Bible, over- lapping limp black leather cov- erg, gilt edges, round corners, gold lettering, large, clear print, three coupons and only . a Plus 4¢'saies tax Send amount for Style A or Style B, with Mail Orders: three of these coupons, and Include 13 cents additional for postage, packing and insurance. : Style B—Plain Print Bible, Di- vinity Circuit Mmp- black seal grain textile leather cover, red edges, medium large type, strong and durable, three 98 coupons and only ......, JOC Plus 2c sales tax steieiaceneereosmeenpesdernsmeesipueneesitmnneernmemet entreaties cL A Chance for Every Reader to Get a New Bible >»

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