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"MINOT ALDERMAN'S | VICTORY CONTESTED Elector Charges That Aaberg Electioneered; Swore in Illegal Voter Minot, N. D., April 23—Papers were served Tuesday in a brought in the Ward county district court 'in which the election of Arnold Aaberg as alderman of the first ward in Minot is contested by William Kane as an elector. The contest action is based on al- legations that Aaberg did electioneer- ing on election day in his own be- half and that he swore in as a voter & man who in fact was not a resident of orth Dakota. Aaberg has 10 days in which to file @ reply to the notice of contest which was served today. The purpose of the notice is to ob- tain a hearing of the issue before a district court judge. It charges aaberg “has forfeited any right or claim to the office.” It is asserted in Kane's notice, which bears the signature of R. W. Palda as state’s attorney, that Aaberg violated statutes of North Dakota relating to the conduct of elections as follows: That he “solicited votes and actual- ly induced and ersuaded voters and would-be voters to go to the olls in| your own behalf to vote for yourself,” and That he “induced and persuaded and prevailed upon .. BE, Myhre to make a false affidavit to the effect that he was then and had been for 12 months prior thereto a resident of North Dakota” when Myhre was “in fact a resident of Min- nesota and known to you to be a resi- dent of Minnesota.” Row With Policemen Costs Velva Man $20 Minot, N. D., April 23.—It cost D. L. Montgomery of Velva. $20 for a dis- turbance involving himself, two po- lice officers and a pair of passersby on a Minot street. Arraigned before Police Magistrate C. B. Davis, Montgomery pleaded guilty to a charge of disorderly con- duct and resisting an officer, paying $15 fine and $5 costs. Capt. William Bakeman and Sgt. A. W. Dolph were called to the cor- ner of Main St., and First avenue southwest, where Montgomery was reported “causing trouble.” The of- ficers stepped in with the result that Bakeman received a blow that knock- ed him down and Dolph had a tussle on his hands. Meanwhile, two youths, walking down the street, decided to take part in the battle. Not knowing that Dolph ‘was a policeman, because he wore u0 uniform, the two grabbed the sergeant and pulled him away. By the time that the officers were again ready for action Montgomery and his wife had driven away in their automobile parked nearby. Having obtained the license number. of the car, police learned Montgom- ery’s identity from the state motor vehicle registration department. LINCOLN GUARD DIES Kewanee, Ill., April 23.—()—Alex- ander Smith, 89, believed to have been the last member of the guard of honor which stood at the bier of Abraham Lincoin in Springfield, Ill, for 48 hours after the body arrived from Washington, died Thursday at his home in nearby Buda. FARGO WOMAN DIES Fargo, N. D., April 23.—(#)—Mrs. Mary Holge, 77, sister of Mrs. J. Slep- rud of Mayville, died here Thursday. Solid Leather | SHOES For Men, Women and Chil- dren, by “Friedman-Shel- by,” at a saving. Sold exclusively at People’s Dep’t. Store 1 KNOW YOUR DRESS ISN'T REAL SNOWY, DEAR. BUT IT WILL LOOK MUCH WHITER NEXT WEEK— (M GOING TO USE RINSO SEE, YOUR DRESS 1S 4 ORS SHADES WHITER. AND ALL 1DID WAS SOAK IT IN CREAMY RINSO SUDS! nN NSO safely soaks clothes 4 of 5 shades white: and much brighter without scrubbing or boiling. Clothes last 2 or 3 times longer. Rinso gives 8 lot of creamy suds—even in hardest water, The makers of 33 famous wash- ers recommend erotic, “a Easy on your hands. The senate lobby committee halt. ed its hearing to discuss possible contempt citation against Kurt Grunwald (above), organizer for the Farmers Independent Council, for his refusal to answer the com. | mittee’s questions. (Associated Press Photo) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TIIURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1936 Minot, N. D., April 23—Mrs. Anna Jones, Minot’s newly elected woman| Justice of the peace, is puzzled. ‘Two couples at whose marriages she officiated a few days ago, one on Saturday and one on Sunday—are they married, or aren’t they? Mrs. Jones was elected April 6, win- ning one of the largest votes ever accorded a city justice of the peace in Minot. Soon thereafter he filed her oath of office. Believing that she had thereby been fully qualified .for the post, when two couples came to her on Saturday to ask the privilege of being among the first to be wed by Minot’s first woman city justice, she willingly obliged them both. ‘Wednesday someone noticed that Section 3674 of the 1913 code of North Dakota laws provides that elected city officials in cities having the council form of government do not take their | Snell to Be Chairman Of GOP Convention Cleveland, April 23.—(#)—Senator Frederick C. Steiwer of Oregon, tem-| porary chairman and keynoter of the | Republican national convention here! June 9, will turn the gavel over to} Congressman Bertrand H. Snell of| |New York when he has completed | his keynote speech. Snell was rec-/| |Ommended for the permanent chair-| manship by the committee of ar-| posts until the third Tuesday in April. Under that statute Tuesday would have been Mrs. Jones’ first day in office, and the fact that she filed her cath of office some time ago did not, as she supposed, qualify her to act until now. | One attorney suggested that Mrs. Jones might call the two couples be- fore her again now and validate their marriages by new ceremonies. “As long as I was elected by the people, and had filed my oath, I think everything should have been all right,” said Mrs. Jones. “No one told me differently. How should a woman: know?” The couple married Saturday were George F. Lemke, of Minot, and Ruth G. Larson, of Foxholm, On Sunday Leonard J. Bijelland and Alvie B. Berg figured in the sec- ond ceremony, rangements Wednesday after a two- day session. Other convention appointments an- nounced by the committee included: John Q. Tilson, former Connecticut congressman, parliamentarian; Lehr Fess, Ohio, son of former Senator Simeon D. Fess, assistant parliamen- tarian; Maj. Robert E. O'Connor, West Virginia, sergeant-at-arms, Henry P. Fletcher, national com- mittee chairman, said the national committee would meet June 3 to pre- pare a temporary roll of the conven- tion. In Gamble’s G & S tires you will find long wear, excellent quality, modern construction and scientific b center traction Even in the face of rising tire costs Gamble’s tire prices have been re- duced. We have done this knowing that many of our customers are ac- tually in need of tires and that price, Previously, Fri. and Sat. Only! Cup Grease, 1 1b... Oil Filter for All Cars... 89* Tiger Wax and Cleaner, (reg. 2 cans for 40) 2 Cans Tube Repair Kit, Jumbo size 25° including the famous gives you scientific A husky, cellent , has been an obstacle. COMRADE RED TUBE , durable tube that brings you ex- ect ecru $9 03 LOW PRICED TUBE 30x3} de 67" 8... 79° FREE 5-GAL. PAIL With 5 Gal. 100°, Penn. Oil. ~ steel oit filled with this our -. #F Baie 6 Gallons. $ 39° hard use. S.A.E. 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A cant 1b. can Brake Lining xX OIL Distributor Caps For All ‘or Mi popaet OWNE Di BY EMPLOYEE S Arnt Njaa, Managing Partner, Mandan Agency Stores at: Wilton, Washburn, Underwood, Garrison, Turtle Lake, Steele, Napoleon, Wishek, Linton, Wing, Tuttle, Glen Ullin, Heb-on, Beulah, Carson, Mott, Elgin, Hazen and New Salem Two Minot Marriages |STUDENTS DISPERSE May Not Be Recognized | AFTER WAR ATTACKS Peace Demonstrations General- ly Orderly Throughout Nation Wednesday Chicago, April 23.—(#)—Thousands Of colleges and high school students turned back to the routine of class- work Thursday after expressing their organized sentiment for peace in the American Students’ Union’s third an- nual demonstration against war. Proportionate participation ranged from 400 students out of an enroll- ment of 700 at Lawrence college, Ap- pleton, Wis. to 50 out of 1,400 at DePauw, Greencastle, Ind. Joseph Lash, natinal secretary of the union, estimated total participation Wednes- day at not less than half 9 million. Most demonstrations were orderly but the atmosphere of peace was dis- rupted by a fist fight at Tulane uni- At Penney’s thirty-four years ago the first Penney s' Founder of the Handkerchiefs For Women § tr 10° White cotton with plain hem- itched hems. 11% 11% in. hes squate. For every day! LyF2 Chalk Finish Rayon Taffeta Slips 49° One of our most popalar slipsf. Nicely lace trim in V or straight top styles. 82 to 44. A Remarkable Value! CYNTHIA SLIPS Sizes 32 to 44 gS: Of fine quality seams, fect fitting. Ina style 3 suit ever e. Nicely” niahed. New For Bath Towels 15° An opportanity to buy your sum- Pipl Seu oe or borders! whirlwind wind up to the 34th.... Anniversary Thursday, Friday end Satur- day Penney's will celebrate Pounder’s Days , . . in honer of James C. Penney. who, e in Kemmerer, Wyoming. NOW, 1483 Penney stores, in every * state of the union, honor the valves YOU MUST NOT MISS! PENNEY 3 versity in New Orleans and a clash between police and parading students of Lawrence college. A free-for-all fight developed among 300 students at the University of Kansas and an assault on the speakers’ stand was made at Temple university by an unsympathetic fly- ing squadron, Demonstrators at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu and at Dakota Wesleyan University in Mitchell, S. D., ran a gauntlet of odorous eggs and overripe tomatoes. Smith W. Brookhart, former Iowa senator, told a University of Iowa audience he believed the United States should not join the League of Nations “until the competitive econ- omic system is displaced by a cooper- ative system.” Mother Must Die for Strangling Her Twins London, April 23.—(®)—A poverty- stricken mother, Mrs. Gladys Amelia Varley, 26, of Dover, was convicted and sentenced to death Thursday on @ charge of strangling her five- month-old twins. 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Stowater, 74, is convinced now that preparedness is a good Policy. When fire broke out in his apartment house Wednesday, Stowater saved himself by sliding down a rope from the fourth floor. As he was walking away from the building he was stopped by a newspaper reporter. “Say,” the reporter asked, “where did you find the rope?” “I didn’t find it,” replied the aged man, “I had it. I’ve kept a rope under my bed for 34 years. You see I've always been afraid of being trapped in a fire.” PEDALS 2 MILES AT 85 Fairmont, Minn., April 23.—(?)— Confident he, like his grandfather, | will live to be 105, A. E. Spielman, | how 85, pedaled into the city Wednes- j day from his home in Foxlake village, | 24 miles away. Sheer chif- heel, toe. Sturdy to 101%. Values! Cc Porto Rican Dainty Collars! Fine-count broad- : In ATT Collected Huge Sum Renting Phones, Washington, April 23.—(P)—The communications commission Thurs+ day received evidence that after col« lecting huge profits from operating companies in the rental of telephone instruments, the American Telephone and Telegraph company sold the equipment in 1927 at an additional Profit of $14,000,000. Testifying at a hearing in the coms mission’s investigation of the big utility, John H, Bickley, a committee accountant, introduced an exhibit showing that the A. T. & T. received profits on the rental of equipment from 1902 to 1927 which ranged from $50,000,000 to $216,000,000 in excess of a 6 per cent return on gross book cost. The exact amount of the excess profits, Bickley said, would depend upon the technical method used in figuring A. T. & T. accounts. GRETA GARBO SAILS Gothenburg, Sweden, April 23—(P) —Greta Garbo, motion picture ac- tress, sailed Thursday on the 8. 8. Gripsholm for New York. 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