The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 1, 1926, Page 12

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BRADDOCK (Continued from page eleven) Mr. and Mrs. S.A. Engleman Dana. “Uncte Bill Yeater” of Hazelton city welfare work. Mr. and Mrs, J. G, France have been enjoying a visit with Mr. De! France's father this week. wit and Mrs. Roy Sparks and Mrs. “ "s-| Milo Sparks drove to Bismarck Sun- ddock friends, Wednes-| jay to visit. Lee Sparks, who has! ‘been confined in the Bismarck hospi-| tal, for the past two months. They} found Lee getting on fine and-if he; keeps on improving will soon be able to iceve the hospital, Tuesday afternoon Mrs. S. S. Tracy) gave a miscellaneous shower for Mrs, Ruth Shepard, who was married June 28th. The house was prettily deest- ated in pink and green. A mock wed- ding took place with Myrile Fe bim aeping as groom and Evelyn arton as bride. ‘The bridal company advanced from the stairway with the minister, Mabel Koenig, and the little | ower girls, Olga Naaden and Helen, ie and the jlittle ring in advance. of day. Mrs. George Ivey ‘A’ number of Braddock people at- tended the Swedish picnic at Peter- son's Grove Thursday, June 24, This is alwnys a great treat for the Brad- dock people and all who can possibly do avail themselves of this 0} portunity of this splendid treat, & good time as well as fine eats a always assure Mrs, H. Allen was a passenger | to Bismarck Tuesday afternoon re- turning home Thursday morning. ts, Frank Long returned home Tuesday after several * visit with whter at Per Long was illness of her di Mr. and Mrs. Frank motored to Bis Marion dinner w 3 Long streamers hugg from the cen- ter of the ceiling to the table and| ch guest drew “the truth in a nut-| which — furnished The presents received yo and very aunty supermten- ck caller Friday , Lesher met with whut might a very serious accident Wednesday evening. As he was plowing with awe horse team, one of the lines b by ling the Study and » home of Mrs. June 23. Kieven] Visitor were pre . who attended the ntion at Atlantic City, le Civic embers and one y were rag ‘him into the creek he let go. hor in over him but being 1 enough to the outside he eseaped the plow passing over him. who saw the accident, \ going to Th was planned for of the cl jured man to town where Was at once summoned. It was found that no bo en but on ac- count of the tramping on him he re At present writing he is imp: nicely. Several of the men from town went ‘out to the farm and took care of the horses. Alfred Junge tute rural cai vig, who is taking his vacation this week. Bert Irvine, date for regist of deed: Braddock Fi being invited was presented with a sou’ ‘ minder of club fri Anyone having books th using or no longer care fe leave with Mrs, Long, who will col- lect books to send to Dunseith, That institution is greatly in need of light reading material, The club has also ja number of “Out Where the West Begins,” books which they are sell- ing for $1.00, Any one wisaing a book may obtain same from ‘club! { Long. || Next club substi- er ding James- this year and is now] fish home for her vacation. Dorothy won the Jamestown rship awarded to Braddock high school |; Chas. De Witte, rural carrier from[at the E Temvik was a Braddock caller Friday |day evening. afternoon. Mr. and Mrs, Joe Varley, Mr. and Cards are out announci . George Whitted and Mr. and riage of Miss . Geo. Ne nd families, Mar- daughter of Mr. tin Nelson ence Starr at- fouuee of <lMendale to Alfred Mor-|tended the | at Joe Sor- Ken-0f Pekin, N. Dak. at Aberdeen,|ge's Wednesday n ‘Wednesday, June 23rd. Mrs. Mor-| Several ken is weit known here, as she spent|attended the w the most of her life on the farm at] win of Mr. We extend congratulations. |stein. Mr. Mrs. Falkenstei nk Irvine of Linton, who|plan on moving into their home siting relatives at 'Mon-|home northeast of Baldwin in July. pped off at Braddock to] Mr. Mrs. Joe Varley were from the vicinity dding dance in Bald- and Mrs, Ralph Falken- cousin, Mrs, Geo. Dexter,| shopping in Bismarck Saturday. Mr. Irvind met her here.| Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Schroeder and Jalmar Juhola and family, Eriek|daughter Gertrude returned from Juhola and mother, John Rousu, Jr.,|their motor trip thru various points ‘and family returned Friday after-|in Minnesota where they visited with noon from a week's visit at Lake Nor-| friends Saturday night. They re- den and other places in South Dako-|turned by way of Aberdeen. ta, Mr. Rousu says that there are] Mr. and Herman Ehrke of practically no crops in the places|Wadena, Minn., parents of Mrs. they visited and that the country|George Nelson, and Mr. and Mrs. around Braddock looks goad to them] Albert Luddke of Febbeka, Minn., after what they bad seen. motored here to visit with the Harvey Weber went to Fargo}George Nelson family. Mrs. Luddke Thursday to take in the circus and/is Mrs. Nelson’s sister. Sunday, in visit friends. company with the George Nelson A number of Braddock people at-|family, they visited the capitol tended the band concert at Pursian}grounds and the Bismarck-Mandan Lake Friday evening. It was a joint|bridge and other points of interest concert put on by Kintyre and Steele|to tourists, starting for their homes bands and reflects great credit on,in Minnesota Monday morning. Prescott of Steele, who has had} Mr.. and Mrs. Joe Varley and ree of them. We wish to make] nephew, Clarence Stair, Mr. and Mrs. ipecls 1 mention of.a selection which| George Whitted and children, Nl rendered by the 12 years old|Stephen and Florance,, motored to Prescott. Driscoll Sunday and spent the -day Mr. ay Mrs. Frank Long and Mr.|with the Hubert Ward family. and Mrs. Ras Aarvig motored to] Mr. and Mrs. George Whitted and Bismarck Saturday morning. children were Baldwin visitors Mon- Miss Ila Mauk of Moffitt the|day morning. guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.) Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Morris and J. W. Mikesell. daughter Dorothy, together with Mr. Miss Avis Carlise spent the week-|and Mrs. Edw. Morris, were shop- nd with Miss Marion Barton, ping in Bismarek Monday. They i. and Mrs. E. F. Savage, Mr. and|were supper guests at the Mae Covey and Mr. Carl Han-| Morris home. Gon motored to Bismarck Sanday aft-| Mrs. W. J. Jiras, son Will and ernoon. daughter Lillie and Mr. Joe Airs Mr. and Mrs, 0. M. Vie and chil-jspent Monday in in: Bismarck, dren drdéve to Napoleon Sunfay uft- ‘ernoon to be present at the daily va- CLEAR LAKE cation Bible school demonstration| Mrs. Oren spent Tuesday — wizh * held in that city. Mrs. Tom Olson. Robert Koenig visited friends in] Mrs. Frank Shaffer and daughter, Valley City over the week-end. Mrs. Harold Hargrave, were Sicele Warner and Eldon Sempel niotor-| callers Wednesday, Miss Vivian, ed to Bismarck Sunday evening, re-] who had spent the past week at turning home | Monday. Steele, returned home with the:n. Floyd and George Martin were} E. A. Van Vleet drove to ‘luttle Bismarck ‘callers Sunday’ afternoon.| Wednesday on business retuzning Louis Gruber of Minneapolis ar-| home Thursday. rived in Braddock Saturday after-} Mr. and Mrs. Faunce Luyben call-| noon to visit with his sister, Mrs.}ed on Mrs. Begeman Wednesday. Mis. A. Amundson. * | Bergeman is very poorly. Mrs. C. Nelson of Chicago, who has| Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shatter and been visiting for several wecks’ at] Miss Vivian called o a Albert the home of her brother, 0. Peitheim,| Christensen home Fr left for home Saturday. Miss Gale Erickson of Fargo 13 iting her parents; Mr. and_ ifr: Ed. Erickson. ‘ The program for the daily Mrs. Edward Thomas and son ‘Do tion Bible schoo! of Braddock was| ald, also brother Carl Erickson, drove | mn in the high school auditorium] to the Ed, Erickson homte Friday aft- | jorning under the charge of| ernoon. Great credit ia due} A large number have been uttend- ene Re ing the United Chautauqua at Dris- her in her work irs, O. M.} coll. Vie, Mrs. W. W. endies, Mrs, Robt.| Mrs. Marie Olauson and . Mrs. M. F. Shepard and| and Mrs. Albert Hammer The following| church services in Lein “by child: Chi gee He Ol: 5 ren; salute to rs. Hen: son was a Sierlin, "a Doxology, all; Salute eal! Saturds ite, morning. Sheticds Ping. sit Amevicas ail; E. A. Van Vieet also Mei rses, all; prayer,| Mr. and Mrs. Warren Belile and fam- Memory Verses,| ily attended the Shippers’ Assoc Verses, boys:|tion picnic at Sterling Saturday. A\ forld, all, Bible} good time, repo lerses and Song, Praise| Chalven Belile is employed at the pine Him, Primary grade;| Christ Schoon farm at present. and Song, What a Child| Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shaffer attend- fo. Bt agar grade; Books|ed the Sheep Wool meeting at Sterl- Bible ‘Apoaties. C ing Friday evening. ‘en Comman¢| 8B. F. and Bennie Oren Let us Away, sao were on a fishing trip Saturday, re- #en-| turning Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Christensen and Miss. ‘spent Sunday after- 3 bop we E. A. Van some of the family attended township Ny mm school held in # Browent, the Albert nearer the Viel where she has been engaged in the! much! - [aussie ocmone ve soeayaieenen te Here is Magnus Ichnson, the’ rdaking of whose slumbers led Miss. Elia Mary elcaning’ rold Johnson and son Mr. Torkelsen and sis- and mother, H: and daughter ter. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Schoon were Bismarck callers Monday. 7 TRYG John Kruger and their mother, Mrs. to Bis | M numb: A. Krage business, and Mrs. Gecrge Nelson and a ; of relatives from Minnesota turday in Regan, shopping. f the Kruger fam’ Tuft and J. Parsons trom townshi and Martin Nelson with Mrs. 's relatives from Wadena, Minn., were guests for supper gate: rge Nelson home Sunday George Nelson and family ‘attended the exercises at old Fort Abraham Lincoln Sunday. . . Word has been r ved of the death at North Bend, Oregon, of a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Fetch. Mrs. Fetch is the daugh: of Mrs. A. Kruger and visited her mother here only a short time ago. A Sunday school has been organized which wily have its ‘meetings ‘at school house No. 1 in Trygg township. seed Nelson visited at’ Reg Fri Nels Nelson and family entertained a number of friends at their h me Sunday, i CRISIS WILL MAKE LIVING COST HIGHER Expert on cuaiteidae Prob- lems Says Present System Is Vicious Seesaw (Editor’s Note: This is the fifth of a series of articles by David Dietz, special writer for NEA Service an The Tribune, dealing with population problems.) BY DAVID DIETZ The United States is moving stead- ily toward another “high cost of liv- "period in which the cost of living in cities will tend to outrun earning capacities. It will come about: 1935. And it will be the direct result of,/present critical conditions on the farms. This is the opinion of Dr. Warren S. Thompson, director of the Scripps Foundation for Research in Popula- tion Problems, and of hi socinte, Dr. P. K. Whelpton. It Happened Before, Dr. Whelpton explains that this tendency ‘is in line with what: has happened in the past, when hard imes for farmers have been followed y big jumps in the cost of living several years later, “The present years are bad ones for the farmers again. we will have a period from 19: 1940 in which the cost of living in cities will tend to outrun: earning capacities.” Under the present system,’ Dr. Whelpton declares, things are on a vicious. seesaw. First the farmer wets the worst of it, and then the city, dweller does. It is impossible to strike a happy medium. “Our present system is to neglect the farmer until low prices cause him to curtai) production and, in many cane go out of business,” he says, Shooting Production Up “Later on, when food nuts ure smaller, we tempt. the farmer back into production with high prices. In- creased production after a'time he- gins to force prices. dawn, and the Process begins all over again. It is wasteful und expensive all around.” Dr. Whelpton hag statisties to em- phasize his statements. ‘The farm, population of thé count. try, he shows, fell from 31,134,000 on pen 1, 1926, to aoea pan on Jan, vaateen this .exadys from farms is still going on Ranietad. The buying power Meee dollar is omy, A fhe ing pee of the do tar Hf, the nation wor Nas? bank fait ank failures between 1920 and+1 a Vn tae baa Place iq. agri: jome why must be found to itabil- ize f ‘ices, Dr. nd nage ai Bs ‘helpto: gravel hauling will/ low of the Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. to call a state meeting in response to this demand, doesn't say whether she will o A Speech by Magnus Johnson ;— ster Elsie, with ; farmer's of the:buy- |: at 2 a. m. Raises Issue as to How Equal Equal Rights Should Be Minneapolis, July ing Shriners, Rotarians or firemen the right to parade in their of sleep at convention time, not the dear, delightful ladies. same right? And, if the convening Elk, Moose, Kiwanians or Woodmen of the World choose to cut ap, after convention business is ended, by roaming the streets seeking what they may play —If the visit- mew arise and not go and do Furthermore, if any lady or group of ladies chooses to demand that a candidate for the governorship of a @reat state abandon his cot at 2 a. m: that they may probe his views on predatory privilege, the feminine touch in the workaday world or the big price gouge on Swiss chard, shall jany human be. bold enough to com- mand them peace? | Anyhow, They Did Well, whether the ladies have the same rights to nocturnal sports as ‘the visiting Bakery Watchmen of the World, or whether any one shall say them nay nor not, they have gone and.done it themselves, God ‘bless ’em. So, when the American Federation of Business and Professional Wo- men’s Clubs meets in annual session at Des Moines, law July 13, there'll be something heavy said about it. And here’s the reaso: Picture night folding’ her starry curtain over the community of Wi- nona,. ‘Minn. Magnus Johnson the Great has laid aside the burdens of ‘the empire and folded the mantle of sleep about ‘him. Away off on the prairie a dog howls, Or is wolf? A Tapping at the Door Suddenly there is a tapping at by the financial and engineering pranks upon, shall any man among| h sit al ti loy Mrs. Emma. Hill Perkins, who has the power will not. Magnus’ ‘cabin door. The valet, sergeant-at-arms and factotum twin- kles his tootsies across the bare floors and asks who it be. “Open, in the name of the Business Professional Women’s Club. of! Minnesota!” is the militant Majesty, the gubernatorial aspirant, is deep in slumber,” replies the outpos e ladies only laugl i him up, kind sir,” say they in Now. Magnus Johnson has not won his way to the threshold of Minne- sota’s governorship by napping whenever there was a handful of lose ballots to be garnered. And, we is one to know well when he is beaten. So Magnus erose. The Genial Host , hat” said he, “I see you are ake ladies.” That Feder ty wh @ man loa witl » didn’t you think, girls? iagend “A busi ess man must always meet business women.” Cheers shook the walls. Magnus scratched his uncombed head, There seemed nothing more to be said about t Good night,” he said, in his mést gharnfing manner, and that’s ail there ‘was to it. * Ngw, wheres the harm in that? None, of course, but—did you see that slinking “figure with a pad and penei] steal from behing a tree just itter the ladies had tripped away? Up Comment dd speech for EW president of the Minneapolis Busi- ness Women’s Club, heard all about it, And she sent a letter to the president of _ state federation. ¢Mrs. Emma Perkins is ie dent of the Ee board. Should i occur to hér to call a meeting of ihe federation, there could be lots of le. But Mrs. Perkins is holding, her peace. ‘Minneapolis business women are demanding that some form of disci- General Motors is back of Frigidaire ‘Your satisfaction with Frigidaire is guaranteed resources of General Motors, fey its ranpeation be ali Pence anentity productiin, greet sagt value, low THE CURTIS HOTEL ‘TENTH STREET AT FOURTH AvEencs MINNEAPOLIS, U, 8. A. Largest in. the | Northwest prices Street Car Connections with all Railway ano Bus Line Stations. Tazi Cab rat ery reasonable from ay epsre. ; Le Bo Mie re : joms, Pri Single $2.00" Double’ $3.00, sania ier Bona ‘Guest Ps King” > say the ladies of ed have just as much ri conventions as men. ‘And who shall say them nay? it to cut up at ‘LEAG! u.—The. annual con’ of the: Ec f agg PLE cireuit. ‘oung Peo} Luther oe ale be held pod 4 aly’? | 2, 3, and BABY NEEDS SHOES Bobet geet teriff fate on satin, rg Riva alo and silk baby shoes has been reduced by a decision of the United States Supreme Court which held that these articles, em- broidered in’ part of braid, are not dutiable, at the higher rate ‘that pre- vails on shoes. The soot di "LES CONFERENCE je’s confer. | Washington. ence and fellowship fsa under thé| worth aQspices of the Con ional con- ference of North Dawotar will Mt be held here July 12 to 19, inelusive. ington.—More than electrical est monthly stall sin was exported yin Ay ‘the Department of Boao 7 ‘was an increase of more than a mil- id into the at- ritain each yeer coal output of INCE MORE eh What! You back Any letters for Paris. HOME Chief Werden: ror rRaaa) 3 Teer 1 In the i of. Glame be- vpresénty three we sd Bettaln, ate alf the British mi : . A cooling drink |. . for the glorious Fourth WHATEVER you do on this holiday —wherever, you go—remember “Canada Dry.” It is the coolest, ‘most refreshing drink of all in .summer-time. You will like its delicate, intrigu- ing flavor. The gleam and sparkle’ of it. The joyous exhilaration in its delicate, enticing bouquet. ‘But there is a deeper and even more substantial reason thap this for the po pagent of “Canada Dry”— something that makes men and women prefer it above all other ginger ales. Do you know what it is? It is the healthful zest of “Canada Dry.” The keen, brisk refreshment that comes from pure ingredients. The _ "CANADA | DRY" Reg. U.S, Pat. Off, Extract imported from Canada and bettled in the U. 8. A. ” Canada Dry Ginger Ale, Incorporated, 25 W. 43rd St., New Yer! N.Y. In Ge red J. J. McLaughlin Limited, Torente. Est, 1890, Sold by Bismarck Grocery Co. way it lifts you up and invigorates. The very spirit of the northern pines that waits for you in every glass. -No other ginget ale will bring you this same refreshment because there is no other ginger ale like “Canada Dry.” It is a real ginger ale, made from real Jamaica ginger —-the yuren, finest, best. ginger ale that it'’is possible to make —the choice of great hospitals in this ‘country and in Can- ada—a safe drink even for children. Keep it in mind for your Fourth of July holiday. . : Pabr pirtatorin your ings? ‘In or gt aps ae i home in 9 few: aultoes, ciitean Telncinn,afo od teay toners hestermaneinyodl also destroys psec yee on. "Co. Offering excellent accomodations at very. ‘moderate sake

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