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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 7
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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 7

Location:
Bismarck, North Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The BISMARCK TRIBUNE Tuesday, October 28. 1975 Page 7 Area Deaths Banks May Lose Free Use Of Government Deposits WASHINGTON (AP) -After years of debate, Congress is moving to end the practice of allowing banks free use of billions of federal tax dollars deposited in accounts hat draw no interest. As of late September, the federal government had $2.5 billion in bank accounts that pay no interest. While the banks holding the funds for the government were paying no interest, they were able to invest it and make money on it. Rep.

Wright Patman, D- SHAGGY CARPETS have a lot of things going for them. Their thickness, the long pile, the touch and feel and look is one of casual elegance that makes any room more luxurious. earned up to $300 million a year by investing the idle federal tax and loan payments deposited in their interest-free accounts. Valor Awarded ST. PAUL, Minn.

(AP) A 26-year-old air traffic controller has recieved an award for valor from U.S. Transportation Secretary William Coleman. Donald Kidder, St. Paul, was recognized for the rescue of two small children and the attempted rescue of their father after the family's boat capsized during a storm on South Chisago Lake June 21. Texture is an especially appealing characteristic of shag carpets.

It creates plays of light and shadow that make a floor come alive. It has a bouncy resilience that is as delightful for the child at the crawling stage as it is for the adult walking across the carpet. And shags are wonderfully versatile. Quinlan's Judge Active in Church w.WXw.v.w.vava,.v.v.v.v.vv.v.ViWi.j 'far GfaJWtiJl By Vern Erickson Outside Dec oral Of Consultant WORLD XX I That thick and varied texture is a great cover-up too. Furniture marks are readily lost.

Ordinary soiling just doesn't seem to show, and footsteps are shrugged off the way a shaggy dogs shakes of water. has been fighting for more than a decade to end what he said amounts to an enormous government subsidy to banks and to get some interest paid on the so-called tax and loan accounts. Patman's House Banking subcommittee on monetary policy was to begin work Tuesday on legislation that would change the practice. Until this year, Patman has made little progress in pushing through legislation to change the situation. Policy-makers in the last two administrations have opposed changes, saying the banks give certain services to the government in exchange for use of the tax funds.

Now, however, the proposed legislation to give the Treasury some type of interest payments on the deposits is expected to clear Congress easily, and a system may be in place by the end of the year to start funnel-ing interest payments to the Treasury. The measure not only is supported widely in Congress but for the first time is backed by the Treasury. One reason for the new support for the bill is a study concluded last year by the Treasury, which said the tax and loan accounts were still a necessary mechanism but that they should be invested in some interest bearing program. The study said banks have And those luxuriously long strands, falling this way and that, lend themselves beautifully to color variety, either in the different shadings that seem to show in a single color carpet from the effects of light and shadow, or in the way shags take to multi-color weaves. You'll take to the happy showing of shags in our showroom right now shags in every length, shags in solids or color mixes, shags in nylon and polyester and acrylics and wools and in every price range to bring you the value you want within your budget.

Come in for shags! Discontinued 1 I Colors I TANK SETS I RUGS I VzJ2 OFF I I Bath and Kitchen Shop Cftnfin.V mi 201 E. Main, Bismarck 223-4282 CO. MEMBER PARK 'N SHOP Rites Wednesday For Adele Beaton Services for Adele Beaton, 56, 2030 N. 16th who died Sunday at a Bismarck hospital. Adele Beaton will be held at 10 a.m.

Wednesday from Trinity Lutheran Church here. Graveside rites are scheduled for 1 p.m. (MST) Wednesday at Dickinson Cemetery. Born April 5, 1919, at Dunn Center, she was employed by the Federal Housing Administration fct Portland, before 1 moving to Washington, D. where she was employed by the late Senators William Langer, and Thomas Dodd, D-Conn, before joining the staff of Sen.

Milton R. Young, as a secretary-stenographer. She had worked at Young's Bismarck office until 1973. Miss Beaton leaves, her mother, Mrs. Stanley Beaton, Mandan; three brothers, Clayton, Idyllwild, Donald, Bismarck, and Stanley, Dickinson, and three sisters, Mrs.

Dingeman Bogers, Albuquerque, N. Mrs. William Doherty, Bismarck, and Mrs. Don Sorlie, San Diego, Calif. Miss Beaton had been active in Republican women's organizations and was a past secretary of the Bismarck-Mandan Civic Music Association.

The family prefers memorials to Trinity Lutheran Church's radio fund. (Boelter Funeral Home) Caroline Schuhrke, Belfield Resident BELFIELD Services for Mrs. Richard (Caroline) Schuhrke, 46, Belfield, were to be held this Tuesday afternoon at St. Bernard's Catholic Church here. Mrs.

Schuhrke died Friday at St. Joseph Hospital in Dickinson. Born April 1, 1929, at Wibaux, she moved to Belfield after marriage to Richard Schuhrke, Oct. 16, 1948. She leaves her widower; a son, Richard, and a daughter, Judith, both at home; five brothers, Leonard and Tom Job, both of Glendive, Louie Job, living in Guam; Ralph Job, Billings, and Frank Job, Hodges, and seven sisters, Mrs.

Catherine Zinde, Red Lodge, Mrs. Mary Kramer, Missoula, Mrs. Rose Walsh, Billings; Mrs. Agnes Miesaloski, Wibaux; Mrs. Eva Parker, Los Angeles, Mrs.

Annie Peterson, St. Cloud, and Mrs. Olivia Barth, Glendive. Price-Lisko and Henning Funeral Home, Dickinson) Gustav Meschke Rites Wednesday BELFIELD Gustav E. Meschke, 82, Belfield, died Sunday at his home.

Services are scheduled for 2 i p.m. Wednesday at Mischel-! Olson Chapel, Dickinson. Mr. Meschke was born Feb. -3, 1893, in Minnesota, and homesteaded near Medora where he continued to ranch until 1971 when he moved to Belfield.

He married Dorothy McLeod in 1915 at Dickinson. Mr. Meschke once wrote a column, "Buffalo Stew," for area newspapers. He leaves three sons, Donald, Puyallup, Ralph, Belfield, and Herbert, Minot; a daughter, Mrs. The Quinlans and their two other teen-aged children listened without visible emotion during the five-day hearing as opposing attorneys urged Muir to rule against them.

In a similar case in Clayton, a hearing is scheduled Wednesday before the Missouri Court of Appeals on a circuit court judge's ruling that he has no jurisdiction in a Fenton man's request that his wife be disconnected from a life-support system. St. Louis County Circuit Court Judge William Corrigan had dismissed a suit filed by Gary Debro asking permission to allow his wife, Judith Ann, 33, to die. Mrs. Debro has been comatose for 12 days after an automobile accident, and her doctor says she is "dead" by all commonly accepted medical criteria.

AW. 1" ii yry IMAGINE Olga's George (Helen) Kary Mandan; a brother, John, Sidney, a sister, Mrs. Nick Paluck, Billings, 20 grandchildren and 17 greatgrandchildren. Herman Mees, 71 Herman Mees 71, Rt. 1, was dead on arrival Monday at a local hospital.

Services are tentatively scheduled at First Lutheran Church here with Nickisch-Ressler Funeral in charge ol arrangements. Instruction Chief Clarifies Position On Sex Education By The Associated Press Supt. of Public Instruction M.F. Peterson says sex education books he finds "surprising" or "terrifying" are not in North Dakota schools. Peterson had told members of the North Dakota School Boards Association they should be aware of what is being taught in their schools.

He mentioned sex education and referred to some books he said were overly descriptive. However, Peteson said Monday he had been reading a book reporting on what is being taught in some schools around the country "but not in North Dakota." Peterson said he did not object to sex education provided it is taught at the junior high school level by qualified teachers and with parental permission. He said even at the higher grade level, reasonable caution should be shown so that there is less empahsis on actual sex. He said there can be too much description. Peterson said such all-out descriptive courses "apparently aren't helping too much.

Illegitimate births and divorces are increasing, despite such courses." Ammonia Truck Moved Off Road HARVEY (AP) A section of U.S. 52 west of Harvey was to be reopened Tuesday following the removal of a trailer rig loaded with anhydrous ammonia, authorities said. The highway was blocked for seven hours Monday, opened for a short time overnight, and then closed again for the truck removal. The Highway Patrol said the road was blocked after a semitrailer rig carrying 8,000 gallons of the toxic anhydrous ammonia collided with an auto. The trailer broke from the cab and overturned into a ditch.

Although the trailer did not leak, a nearby diner and gas station were evacuated, the patrol said. Traffic was detoured a mile around the accident site. No serious injuries were reported in the accident. 2 Suspects Held In Haystack Fires JAMESTOWN (AP) -The Stutsman County Sheriff's Department said Tuesday two suspects were in custody following early morning haystack fires south of Jamestown. A Sheriff's Department spokesman said the men were being held in connection with the burning of 20 haystacks on the Lyle Sjorstorm farm, some six miles south of Jamestown.

Damages were estimated at more than $3,000. r- si I MORRISTOWN, N.J. (AP) A life-or-death decision in the Karen Anne Quinlan case is expected within two weeks in a legal battle that could go to the highest court in the nation. Arguments before Superior Court Judge Robert Muir Jr. ended Monday, but Muir said he needed time to weigh the complex medical testimony before rendering his decision.

The parents of Miss Quinlan, 21, have asked Muir to allow them to unhook a respirator which keeps her breathing and "let her die with dignity." The young woman has been in a coma for six months, living in what doctors have described as a "persistent vegetative state" with no chance for recovery. Lawyers for the Quinlans and for other parties in the case agree that whatever Muir decides, the ruling will be appealed. "I'm sure the case will go on to the U.S. Supreme Court," said Daniel R. Coburn, Miss Quinlan's temporary court-appointed guardian.

"The issues are too big and too important to stop here." The man who is now pondering a decision in the case is a church elder and former Sunday school superintendent at the First Presbyterian Church he attends in Mendham, N.J., where he lives. At 38, he became the youngest county judge in New Jersey history and as a Superior Court judge, now 43, he is known for his courtroom calm and for handing down quick decisions. CERTIFIED GEMOLOGIST MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY THE SECRET LIFE OF A GEMSTONE What you see in a jeweler's showcase, is not necessarily what the jeweler sees, certainly not if he is an American Gem Society Registered Jeweler. Oh, we see the beauty. You and I are both aware of what a gem is to the naked eye.

But knowing fine gems is like having a beautiful best friend. You know that what meets the eye is very pleasing. But what is also known are the inner qualities, the character, the hidden attributes which only intimates can know. I didn't learn about the interior qualities of gemstones through conversation or duration. I ascertained this information with more than a little help from my gem-testing equipment.

The first instrument I learned to use was a binocular microscope. It was basic to my gemological training. It takes me inside the gemstones I sell, and tells me a great deal about them. Diamonds, for instance, have an inner life, characteristics not even guessed at by the uninitiated. They are as different from one another as people.

These characteristics can be charted and used for identification. The interior life of a gemstone can reveal to the trained eye if it was formed in nature or synthesized by man. It can show the stones weaknesses, if it needs special care in setting. The best fashioners of gemstones study these inner characteristics before their cutting and faceting chores begin. Diamond cutters have been known to spend weeks seeking the inner secrets of their charges before the stone is even marked for cutting.

What is beneath the surface of a gemstone can be as fascinating, even as beautiful as that which we see on the face of it. Drop by Walkers n' Daughters Jewelers and we can share an excursion to the heart of a gemstone together. LfRoy C. Wmr, Ctrtlltt Of meltfitt Jcwtlrf fashions facts, factions 2f LeRoy C. I Walker WTO (fK WW No-Seam Freedom Front: A BRA THAT FITS SO WELL YOU CAN PHONE FOR IT vV.

1 i 1 pi v.v. I 1 i aw I Why waste energy bra hunting? If you're between 32A and 38C, chances are Olga's Freedom Front will lit you beautifully See the little "window" in front? It opens and closes, adjusts the fit to you. So call us for where to phone in your order. If you aren't within the above size range, stop by for a try-on, Olga has a bra for you, too Natural cup 6 00 Lightly lined 6 50. Padded 750.

White, nude, black, pastels. Introducing I Denice ra I Trauger I Denice is a professional wig stylist with seven I I years of experience. Stop at Linssen's and meet I Denice and while you're there check out the new i low prices on styling, setting and caring for your 1 W'9S- 208 N.thSt. 255-06J1 I If i behind every there really isan Olga For where to buy, call A.W. Lucas Co.

223 0200, Ext. 34. First Level IIIN.SfhSt. 22J.4V.

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Pages Available:
1,010,233
Years Available:
1873-2024