Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, APRIL IL 3, 1986 GERMANY REFUSES ity of the Franco-Soviet and Locarno| An Englishman has invented a pecs through diplomatic channels. | safety valve that provides room for It was reported that Germany had | expansion of household water pipes, protested against the publication ofj to prevent them from bursting when but that the British government was V arity delayed the publication of a new anxious to discuss permanent peace | white paper in which will be detailed proposals with Reichsfuehrer Hitler. the various British moves to give Ger- It was understood that the final an- | many an opportunity to settle the dif- SAY EQUALZATIN Gladys Gibson’s cgastta Stom pee FUND IS SALVATION OF SCHOOL SYSTEM Northwest Educators Told Sal- aries Are Up Slightly But Not Enough Minot, N. D., April 3.—(4)—Severa: | hundred teachers of northwest North Dakota, meeting in Minot Thursday evening at the opening session of the 29th annual convention of the North- west division of the North Dakota Education association, were urged by speakers to support a continuation of the state equalization fund law and to maintain a strong association to aid in securing educational benefits. The speakers were A. E. Thompson, Bismarck, state superintendent of public instruction; Dr. Augusta Ma- guire Wider, Mitchell, S. D., author and lecturer; Earl Abrahamson, Mo- hall superintendent of schools and president of the Northwest associa- tion, and Miss Hazel McCulloch, Minot Teachers college, retiring pres- ident. Many Arriving Late | A number of teachers were arriving ;in Minot Friday, delayed by poor roads in some areas. The conventior. will close Saturday noon. Supt. Thompson declared that funds from the sales tax have been a “God- send” to the public schools, have as- , sured 1,800 North Dakota teachers of +a minimum salary and have “raised the morale of all our schools.” He emphasized the “importance of con- tinuing the state equalization. funa for the next biennium.” Thompson reported a “siight im- provement in teachers’ salaries dur- ing the last year, ranging from five to 10 per cent in most instances.” He added that “we are still far from be- , ing anywhere near a sound basis in , this respect.” upt. Abrahamson, praising the state equalization law, said, “many of us ain not be drawing our salaries {now and many northwest schools/ f would be closed were it not for the equalization fund.” See Fight for Funds “Many other government organiza- tions are casting hungry eyes at this Sandy he dedlaeed, ais July, 199% ‘ when the law goes out of effect, un- less we make some new provision we ; will lose our funds.” f At sessions Friday the teachers are ¢ hearing Dr. T. V. Smith, University of Chicago instructor and Illinois state senator, and B.C. B. Tighe, j Fareo high school principal, in add!- f tion to the speakers of Thursday night. A number of educators from | northwest cities are leading sectional ¥ mectings and discussion groups. Political Meeting ( Called for April 7 C. Leibert Crum, Bismarck attorney and leader of a “state committee for + progressive Democratic action” group, Friday declared a state convention of the faction’s followers is “assured” at Jamestown for April 7. Crum said results of various meet- ings held at county seats on March 31 indicated supporters favored holding the state convention. At the Burleigh county meeting, Roosevelt and his administration were endorsed. Other resolutions “condemned” state Democratic party leaders for calling the state conven- tion May 12, because of “inability to shape party lines in that time.” “Regimentation” of Democrats under the 1935 law abolishing the presiden- tial primary and making existing party precinctmen holdovers in office, " aiso was scored by the Burleigh coun- ty group. Tourists Think N. D. Still Best of West North Dakota still is the best in the west to seven agents of the Great American Life Insurance company who returned to Bismarck Monday after a two-weeks all-expense tour to San Antonio and points in Mexico as guests of the company. Winning their vacation for excel- ence in a special contest conducted during January and February, the North Dakotans traveled by automo- bile to San Antonio, Corpus Christi, the Carlsbad caverns in New Mexico, ‘Colorado and the Black Hills. In the party were Carl B. Olsen. state agent, and Fred Mann of Bis- marck; P. V. Shefveland, Van Hook; Paul Whyte, Golden Valley; Walter Nelson, Grand Forks; Al Ueckert, Beach, and Robert Wand, Oakes. sup WOMAN BURIED 5 Jud, N.D., April 3.—(?)—Funeral Services were held here Tuesday for Mrs, Thresa Podoll with Rev. J. ‘Baudler of the Lutheran church offi- j- ciating. Burial was in the Jud ceme- } tery with the following pallbearers-- ' G, J. Sperling, A. N. Ringham, C. L. “| heard by the state i i Heavy Calendar Faces Supreme | i Bench; Two State Liquor | Acts Attacked | Headed by the appeal of {Gladys Gibson of Dickinson for a {new trial of charges that she mur- dered her husband, Nathaniel, a heavy calendar faces the state su- preme court this month, First to be heard will be the appeal of Mrs. Gibson, convicted of second degree murder in Burleigh county district court in June, 1935, She was sentenced to serve 15 years in the state penitentiary. Mrs. Gibson was arrested Dec. 19, 1934, little more than a year after her husband was found shot to death as he lay in bed in their home, Dec. |, 1933, At the outset, Mrs. Gioson main- tained her husband had killed him- self. Later, the state claimed, she confessed slaying her husband, “to protect my daughter.” Repudiated Confession At the trial, she repudiated her confession, claiming it had been ob- tained under threats of a gun held by an investigator for the state. Eighty-nine specifications of error are made by Mrs. Gibson's attorneys, in support of their claims the lower court erred in not granting a new trial. Mrs, Gibson's appeal is scheduled to be heard by the state supreme court April 6, She is free on $15,000 appeal board. Two other criminal cases, both in- volving liquor violations, also will be supreme court. Both are appeals from Cass county. Cites Quirk in Law One, the appeal of Karl Kirsch from his conviction of a felony charge !of engaging in the liquor traffic, seeks |to have declared unconstitutional a {state law which declares if the court is satisfied the vehicle used for trans- porting of liquor is mortgaged or not owned by the defendant, the latter shall be deemed guilty of a felony, instead of a misdemeanor, the class into which the charge would other- wise fall. At the conclusion of the trial of Kirsch before District Judge M. J. Englert, the court submitted the ques- tion’ of truck ownership to the jury, gtating, “in effect that if this sta- tute conferred this right on the court it would be clearly unconstitutional,” the defendants brief claims. Kirsch was convicted of a felony March 18, 1935. A new trial was de- nied by the lower court. Another Fargoan Appeals The second liquor case revolves | around the appeal of Betsey Nedtvedt of Fargo, convicted of a second of- fense of violation of state liquor laws. She asks a new trial on grounds of claimed prejudicial error in admis- sion of evidence in connection with a raid in which a bottle of whiskey and one of alcohol were discovered in a man’s overcoat. She claimed the coat belonged to her brother who had.left it there two months before and that. she did not know the liquor was in the pockets. Among six other cases set for hear- ing are appeals involving: Asserted “filegal practice of law” by a Fargo bank; a suit by taxpayers of a Traill county township against the town- ship officials to recover funds lost in @ closed bank; an action to determine adverse claims to an area of Sheridan county real property; an appeal from the Walsh county district court, by the Great Northern Railway company from the court’s decision ordering a year-around depot at Nash, and an appeal involving a re-trial of a suit | for $276.34 before District P. G. Swen- son of Grand Forks. Norwegian Fishers Are Trapped in Ice Vardo, Norway, April 3. — (®) — Twenty-five seal fishing. vessels, bear: ing 450 persons, were trapped in drift- ing ice in the White sea today. “ The Norwegian government has asked Soviet Russia to send ice break- ers to the assistance of the endan- gered boats. They have been fighting the ice since March 1, 1 KNOW YOUR DRESS ISN'T REAL SNOWY, DEAR. BUT 'T WILL LOOK MUCH WHITER NEXT WEEK— I'M GOING TO USE RINSO Plea Before Court He'll Quiz OARP | Probe Witnesses Mrs. Playing a top role in conducting the special House committee in- vestigation into set-up of the ‘Townsend old age pension move- ment, amidst a flurry of rumors trailing resignation of Robert BE. Clements. co-founder, James Sul- livan, above, of Kansas City, Mo., attorney for the committee, will quiz witnesses in the probe. Concordia Debaters Eliminated at Meet Houston, Texas, April 3—(?)—St. Thomas college, St. Paul, Minn., Baylor university, Waco, Texas, and Drake university, Des Moines, were final contestants in the Pi Kappa Delta national oratorical and debat- ing tournament Friday. The St. Thomas men’s debate team went into the finals by defeating Em- poria, Kans., State Teachers colleg2 and Concordia college, Moorhead, Minn. The Drake universtiy women's team defeated Parsons college of Fair- field, Minn. She flavor lasts Schilling ewe nilla ehicious MACARONI! PRODUCT | 10 PLEDGE NOT 10 REARM RHINELAND jEden Prepares to Tell Com- mons Old Allies Ready to Fight Again If Attacked 1 London, April 3.—(?)—A pointblank German refusal to promise not to fortify the Rhineland, even tempor- arily, was delivered to the British government Friday. It arrived at the foreign office shortly before Anthony Eden, foreign secretary, went to the house of com- mons to announce that Great Britain, France, and Belgium were ready to fight as allies if attacked by Germany chim von Ribbentrop, Hitler’s special ambassador, in a five-minute talk just before Eden went to the house of commons’ to outline the conditions under which Anglo - French - Belgian general staffs will confer in London. | An authoritative source said that | despite repeated urging by Eden, von Ribbentrop told him that Hitler said Germany was unable to make any tribution” with respect to forti- fications. The military conversations iat will start next week. The text of letters which Eden gave | the French and Belgian ambassadors April 1 and their replies were pub~ lished in a white paper today. The assurances among the three governments. involve the staff talks and promises for mutual defense in case of an invasion by Germany. Authoritative sources indicated that Germany's objections have tempor- GUSSNER’S JUST PHONE 1060 FRESHEST FRUITS AND VEGETABLES LETTUCE Crisp, solid GREEN PEAS, tender, full pods, 2 lbs, CARROTS Crisp, tender bunches, each ... GRAPEFRUIT, Arizona, 5 for ..... soe RHUBARB - MUSHROOMS - RADISHES - BEETS TOMATOES - TURNIPS - STRAWBERRIES medium size, 2 doz..... Vote for your favorite Enjoy a cup of delicious Chase & Sanborn Coffee with us on SPECIAL PRICES. Saturday. SALE AND SAMPLING SUNSHINE CHOCOLATE FIG BARS— a Pure California figs surrounded by a rich, pie-crusty jacket and dipped in pure bitter-sweet chocolate HEINZ SALE HEINZ CATSUP, 14-oz, bottle .. CORN Cream style, No. 2 tins ... FRANCO-AMERICAN SPAGHETT isieg Large tin 15¢ Tomato Juice yr “Gentle Press” ......... 3 FOR MEATS HAMBURGER POT ROASTS Tender, young, grain-fed beef, .14c .19¢ WIENERS, fancy, lb. SAUERKRAUT, bulk, quart .. PURE LARD Snow 43c | THE TELEPHONE NUMBER IN BISMARCK IS 8000. Ready to serve, home-style soups 2 tine” 29 ws 2 FORZOC Fresh pound ....... eee eee e ces enns Rendered . CABBAGE Solid, crisp, green heads, Ib. amateur on Sunday night. delicious varieties pun $1.69 sperma % pint PEAS Tender, size 4, No. 2 tins Small tin 10c Pineapple “Just the cen- ter slices” ale PORK CHOPS Tender, juicy, medium large, SUMMER SAUSAGE, pound VEAL STEW, White 25c .13¢ 2 ws. 23c GUSSNER’S JUST PHONE 1060 Cook’s Grocery 512 AVENUE D PHONE 564 Where Your Dollar Buys More Than Ever Before SATURDAY SPECIALS swer was delivered to Eden by Joa- | ficulties concerning the incompatibil- ing you the certain material hitherto kept secret. | frozen. KRAFT’S Macdroni and Cheese Dinner. Four generous servings. dine on the market and it go 1 . without may: ionally Tavertined merchandize MUST be the finest. Hershey’s pure for bak- ing and drinking. Full Longhorn. CARROTS— Calif. green tops, 2 large bunches Bismarck ‘The Honor City. Major Bowes’ Amateur Hour, om ke. % LB. CAN . LOC CEREAL white or ona wheat cereal, 28 PER PKG. Chase & Sanborn, the Honor Coffee in Piggly- Wiggly Store, 1z¢ The all purpose short- ening. 3 LB. CAN cream, Wisconsin POUND 14¢ Fruit-Sale The Economical Buy Just Add Sugar No. 10 Peaches .....45¢ No. 10 Piecherries ...53¢ No. 10 Fresh Prunes 28 57e No, 10 Blackberries 49c No. 10 Pears No. 10 Apricots vooe 8K8 BAKING POWDER K. C. Double Tested and Double CABBAGE— New Calif., solid, APPLES— Fancy, crisp, juicy ‘Winesaps, 5 Ibs. . Manchester A-1 Sodas, crisp and bert GRAPEFRUIT— 100 sise Aris., sugar sweet seedless, 3 for llc Action. 23 OZ. CAN 19¢ Ie HIGHEST QUALITY IS A GUARANTEE seme 24 for 49c Stokely’s Finest 2 “ter 23C Cut Beans Stokely’s Finest EMPEL’ JUST PHONE 1612 BANANAS Golden Heel tipped tr 15¢ tipped Cabbage ‘Cauliflower iameaaloc | New Texas, per Ib. 5c good size, each a Strictly Fresh DOLE’S Pineapple Demonstration and SALE 55c 19c .24c 70c 65c ..23€ .24c 70¢ No, 2 tin 6 Cans $1.05 $1.35 $1.25 $1.35 Green Sliced, No. 2 tin .. Sliced, ieighg: No, 2% tin “tor 2OC Spears, No, 2% tin GRAPEFRUIT No Needa Sugar iewe .... 12 tor 450 as Potatoes 100 Teo Ib. ba ‘te 29¢ | BUTTER .=2, Lb. ~ Lb. 800 te Bartlett's, Libby's Large No. 2% tin only 15c Kidney Beans Stokely’s Finest Catsup 14 Ox. Bottle Extra Value ‘INitschke, Carl Edgsinger, Aloert anc 55c 65c $1.05 $1.25 No. 2 tin .... 19c Ne tu'tn . 23C xegin....14c 40c 68c: 10c 28c pa 2 tin. 55c¢ all Dole’s No. 1 Quality Ask Us About Free Groceries Given With Above SPAGHETTI, MACAR- ONI, Jenney Lee, 1 Ib. pkg., 2 for 35c ST U. S. Inspected Corn Fed MEATS BEEF, PORK, VEAL, LAMB Everything in Fruits and Vegetables FOLLOWING WEEK _ SEE, YOUR DRESS 1S 40RS SHADES WHITER. AND ALL {DID WAS SOAK IT IN CREAMY RINSO SUDS! Crackers A-1 SODA 2 Ib. caddy Ce Chase & Sanborn Dated COFFEE Dated Fen an..; Toilet Tissue 1000 Sheet 5 tw 25e FANCY RED SALMON, 1 Ib. tall 27 c can, per can .... PUREX, quart bottle .... 18c TOMATO JUICE, Camp- bell’s or Swift's, 25 c 3 cans .. PEARS, Rosedale, No. 2% can, 2 cans for PLUMS, Minneopa, DeLuxe, 3 5 c 2 No. 24, cans .. BAKING POWDER, Calumet, : 21 c 1 Ib. can BLACK PEPPER, 9c 2lc VEAL CHOPS, per lb. BEEF POT ROAST, per Ib. LAMB CHOPS, 19c Amateur Hour Sunday and Vote For Your Favorite Amateur Apples ta $1.85 “Big Ben Soap Hr. 2Be Swift’s Premium for Easter Whole Ham, Half Ham, Ib. 33c GRAPEFRUIT, "36 lorida, 2 large, 3 for .. ORANGES, Sunkist, medium size, 39 c | seerarmnecoseasmn Salad ‘Dressing £7... 19¢ SUGAR Granulated 53c ix $1.32 Tomato Juice finest, 18 oe. LOC wa Corn »-25¢ Mille Tall m9 Re safely soaks clothes 4 or 5 hades white: and much brighter without scrubbing or boiling. Clothes last 2 or 3 times longer. Rinso gives a lot of creamy suds—even in hardest water. The makers of 33 famous wash- ers recommend Rinso. Grand for dishwashing. Easy on your hands, FLOUR Occident or Dakota Maid 2416 Ibs, 40 Ibe. T3e 99c $1.85 $3. 60 French’s, 4 oz. tin .. CHEESE, Long- horn, per Ib. .... BEAD LETTUCE, ip 8, 2 heads ........ 19c CELERY, Well Bleached, each .. LOC CARROTS, Green 9 tops, 2 bunches Cc ASPARAGUS, Freeh, perib.”.. LDC CAULIFLOWER, White, per head 1 5c GREEN ONIONS, 5 per bunch ........ c teas, pint. box .... 1 9 Cc Turnips, New Cabbage, Beets, Cucumbers, Ripe Tomatoes Ne. 1 Cream- 33¢ ery, per tb. 2b. roll .........s65¢ Prades! ” NATIONAL BISCLITT COMPANY I