The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 1, 1929, Page 5

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Dates for P. T. A. Congress Are Set May 3 to 11 hasbeen chown asthe convention: of Topics taken up at the conferenec vc teh include public welfare, state ene Speakers of ‘note who will addressthe gathering are: Col. U. 8. Grant III, who will give an illustrated lecture on, “Beautiful Washington;” Dr. Jesse BH Newton, director of Lincoln School, Columbia University; Mrs. N. 8. M. Marrs, national P. T. A. pres- ident; Dr. Ernest R. Groves, profes- sor of sociology, University of North Carolina; Miss < tllian Gilbreth, con- sulting engineer, Montclair, N. J., and Mrs. Helen Field Fischer, landscape designer, Shenandoah, Iowa. Hon. William » U. 5. com- ytaissioner of educatic ‘is to be the ‘, chief speaker at the %.:aders’ dinner. Other entertainment adiairs will be several special luncheon and sight- seeing trips around the nation’s cap- ital. Review of Byrne’s Book Is Broadcast A resume of “Soldiers of the Plains,” by P. E. Byrne of this city, was broadcast this week during the Woman's club hour, by Mrs. Jane Gavere, over KFJM, Grand Forks. Mrs. Gavere also read a biographi- cal sketch of the author. The book, “Soldiers of the Plains,” has been approved by Lewis F. Craw- ford of the state historical society, be- . Cause of the wealth of historical data ." it contains, and because it presents the viewpoint of the Indian as few books of the Northwest have. eee ,Mrs. Tslieger Hostess to Double Four Club Mrs. C. L. Tslieger was hostess to the members of the Double Four card club last evening at the home of Mrs. Pauline Weist. Honors in the games went to Mrs. Weist and Mrs. Roy Mills and at the close of play a course luncheon was served by the hostess. Decorations for the rooms and tables carried out the valentine theme. Short Course in ‘Homemaking Offered A short course in homemaking for ‘women of the state given by the home economics department of the North Dakota Agricultural college, will open paced February 4, and continue for for suggestions on how to be well dressed. Special emphasis will be placed upon selection and care of clothing. Meal planning, ways of serving, as well as marketing, + will be @ part of the course. see ‘, Rev. and Mrs. G. W. Thom, Ca ye Ball, are the guests of friends ere today. They will leave tonight for Aultsville, Ont., where Rev. ica will be pastor of the E church. Rev. Thom has been located »t Mandan and. Cannon Ball during ¢the past three years. Serving will start at 5:30 at the annual lutefisk supper given by the ladies of the First Lutheran church thisevening in the Methodist church paylors. In addition to the lutefisk, there will also be meat balls, lefse, Potatoes, peas and carrots, prune pud- ding, rosettes, and foten: More tha the. sence ma A, god hell hood. Included Manion, members of the or- r and their wives. Hazel Johnson's 's entra furnished the music, ridge and ‘whist ‘will be_pla: sae evenin, pad by. the receive tickets entitling them to a chance on the quilt to be given away after the games. pe of the Rainbow Girls turday evening at mectit wilt be ‘hheld initiation, and \, white. ed has 4 arrived fn Blovarck to spends f ae a fe with Mr, Benson, who is cov- the sessions of the legislature ing for the Fargo Forum. ‘ th the he xu, is Heralds the Ladies’ Aid will hold s food sale Sat- Recital Is Given at Leibole Home Miss Annette Leibole, ti fle) Grosvenor studio, She was assisted-by Mrs. Otto Hanson. Fort Lincoln, who played several vio- lin selections. (Chopin). pata No, 8 (Bach)—Miss Lei- sqiteende (Wienlawski)—Mrs. Han- * Papillon (Grieg). Nocturne, Opus 55, No. 1 (Chopin)— Miss Leibole. Schon Rosmarin and Old Refrain (Kreisler)—Mrs, Hanson. Valse in D Flat (Chopin). Scotch Poem (MacDowell)—Miss Leibole. Romance from Second Concerto (Wieniawski)—Mrs. Hanson. Valse, E minor (Chopin). Prelude, C sharp “eae (Rachman- inoff)—Miss Leibol s . “e Bridge Party Held at Milton Rue Home Mr. and Mrs. Milton Rue enter- tained last evening at a bridge party. ‘There were guests for three tables, and high scores were won by Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bal » Miss Catherine Kositzky, and Floyd Sperry. The valentine motif was empha- sized in the table appointments and decorations for the rooms. A two-course luncheon was served after the games. This was the second of a series of ookeagg given at the Rue home this weel : Personal and Social News of Mandan Vicinity Rev. and Mrs. G. W. Thom, who have been in charge of the Episcopal mission at Cannon Ball during the past yerr, will leave today for Aultsville, Ont. Rev. Thom has accepted the pastorate of the Aultsville church. Rev. Thom was rector of the Mandan Episcopal church for two years prior to the Cannon Ball pastorate. Mrs. Thom has been engaged in mission work among the Indians. eee Miss Marie McCormick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willf&m McCormick, left last night for Los Angeles, Calif., where she will be the guest of friends for several weeks. see ehurch, visit the police chief, invited to dinner by the banker they intend rehoing, touch new Bignlight of comedy. id are ——— CAPITOL THEATRE Hoot Gibson comes riding into the Capitol Theatre tonight in what has been called his greatest screen vehicle. It is “King of the Rodeo,” a Univer- sal picture filmed when the recent na- tional rodeo at Soldiers’ Field. Chi- cago, was in progress, the stirring meet forming the background for most last | of the story. Gibson is recognized as the leading star in Western pictures of romance and action. In striving for new plots and ideas he thought of the heralded Chicago field, the largest of its kind in the rodeo on the tremendous world. He then signed B. M. Bower to write the story with this as back- ground. The noted authoress wrote “King of the Rddeo” in the nature of @ sequel to “Chip of the Flying U,” one of her former stories in which Gibson scored a great hit. 2 ° City-County Briefs Mrs. Anne Peterson, of the Peterson Music studio, is a patient at the St. Alexius hospital Mr. and Mrs. Staale Hendrickson, Coteau, and John Auger, Trenton, Ohio, who are spending some time in Bismarck, motored to Minot Wednes- day. Mr. Hendrickson and Mr. Auger are connected with the Truax-Traer Coal company. A son was born Tuesday at the Bis- marck hospital to Mr. and Mrs. R. D. McLeod of this city. E. N. Hedahl of the Hedahl, Motor company, left recently for Minne- apolis where he will attend the Twin City auto show. Today in Congress (By The Assoicated Press) FRIDAY House considers navy supply bill; senate cruiser bill. Senate interstate commerce committee holds hearings on Cavper grain rates resolution. House ways and means com- mittee continues hearings on cot- ton tariffs. House banking and currency committee considers farm loans to cooperative associations. THU2SDAY House voted to send first de- ficiency bill to conference; senate continued with cruiser bill. Senate interstate commerce committee ended hearings on nomination of Pat M. Neff to be member of the railway board of mediation. Senate passed independent of- fices appropriation bill carrying $541,450,176, increase of $863,968 over amount voted by house. John C. Lowe, Minot, district judge,|__ arrived in Mandan Wednesday to pre- ' side at the term of district court. | eee Mrs. William J. Sullivan enter-' tained at a bridge dinner at her home Wednesday. High scores in the games 100. couse attended last night at the y Trainmen, Guests 7:30 at the Masonic temple. There will be officers are urgently requested to be present, and to wear a will be went to Mrs. J. A. Murphy and Mrs. C. D. Cooley. (ar AT THE MOVIES | “~~ SLTINGE ; THEATRE The greatest trio of laugh-makers that ever combined to give an au- dience hysterics. ‘That is the work of William Haines, Karl Dane and Tully Marshall in the famous picture of laughter and tears, “Alias Jimmy Valentine,” which is now playing at the Eltinge for today and Saturday. The screen has brought many fa- mous comedians and several famous 1 | comedy teams to the attention of pic- ture-goers but it has never before brought together a screen trio that pra light the heart of America as do these three laugh-getters, Haines, of course, plays the role of the smart sophisticated bank lar who twits the police of half a dozen cities and escapes unharmed from their attempts to convict him. As associates he has Dane as the arena the “outside” man the approach of danger and Marshall as the inside man who handles the tools and generally makes himself useful. However the greatest part of the SPENT $1500 TRY- ING TO GET WEL) Then Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN Brought Relief This\ startling letter from an ex- service man will interest everyone who suffers from constipation: with heart trouble and bad stomach. I hed saved about $1500. Since than I've spent that sum and a lot more on doctoring and operations and medicines. I always was bothered with constipation. “I told my wife to get some kind of light breakfast food and I would try it. She came home with a small package of Kellogg's ALL-BRAN. I ate it for breakfast, lunch and dinner, about a common tea-saucer full with milk at each meal, I have been doing this for about a month. I have stopped tak- ing dope (medicines). I work 9 to 12 hours. Thave a good appetite. And now I am gain- ing flesh and believe I am getting well.”— Guonos C. O'ConnaiL, Barker, N. Y¥. Cleanse your system of constipa- tion’s poisons. Thousands have re- sain their old-time vigor and vim, stopped gee pation. forever, by eating Kellogg’s BRAN. Eat two eee daily— in chronic cases, with every meal. Pei is guaranteed. ALL-BRAN is 100% bran. 100% effective—doc- tors recommend it. Ready-to-serve with milk or CTeA Use in cooking. - eae, ree 8 Om the package. g in Battle Creek. Bold by all fates | Served in lead- ing hotels and restaurant picture is concerned with the efforts of the three to turn themselves into ° Fashion Plaque event will be the toasting of variour oe officials and the lampooning litical and «ther situations wnkb hive held interest during the current legislative session and during shy" a cal ign. roximately 150 persons are on te vitation list of the Fryars and few of, these are aspected to be ab- sent. The dinner is given at each legis- lative session by che Fryars, an or- ganization composed of newspaper- men covering the legislative session. The entertainment at the dinner will be modeled after the national gridiron club at Washington which each year lends cael tad to politics at the national capital. Attempts to Force «|meetings. Frank H. Brown, scout {]commissioner, will be scoutmaster of {the troop, W. G. Fulton will be *| sistant scoutmaster, and John siewicz will be senior patrol lead- er and scribe. Wesley Sherwin, Al- bert Cordner, and Clayton Finlayson will be oe! leaders in the troop. Judge W. L. Nuessle, president of the council, will give an addr o! welcome at the opening meeting and Mr. Kolberg will describe the nature of the course. The troop wil then be organized. Mr. Fulton will speak on Scouting Objective and Program. Biocked Roads Halt Stock Feed Schools Booth’s Fitness to Be - Decided a at Hearing London, Feb. 1.— (AP) — Formal decision to hear ~ representative or General Bramwell Booth on the question of ‘is fitness to remain as commander in chief of the Salvation Army was made 2y the army's high natin in a meeting here this morn- Ing. The decision took the form of a resolution. When the action it con- templates is concluded the high court will have rectified the mistake it made, according to the chancery court, in the first place when it ad- judged the aged commander unfit uilder luce your weight. Treatments by the month or week, Beauty ie A. W. Lucas Co. Ald. Luli. Supper, tone tonlgat utel iu Methodist Chureh basement, serving from 5:30 to 8 o'clock. Blocked {roads called off the series Man to Take Drink ene giving him a chance to be Paral cafhec fi €. Newcomer; Moron county agent | Bring Fatal Wound), ™:ol atiournea sie ae out Butter, meat. balla, potatoes had under way. He was unable to At WES ESD etree yee, te oh eee ‘ peas, carrots, eg prune pud- ding with whipped cream, rosettes and coffee. Dr. R. S. Enge the representative of the general would be present to participate in it; proceedings. NOTICE The city ordinances require sidewalks to be cleaned within hold the Flasher. So far, 131 farmers had attended the schools, which were held at He- bron, Glen Ullin, Mandan, Judson and Almont. S. G. Denner, livestock agent at Fargo; Earl Cooke, extension agent meeting scheduled for Waco, Tex., Feb, 1—(?)—It was considered a grave social error in the “shootin’ seventies” era of the wooly west to spurn a round of drinks, but custom today generally decrees a man can take it or leave it. Chris Bolton was dead today be- cause he didn't take into account the WHITE VELVETEEN, so smart for the south, is used for this beret with partly tucked crown and deftly fold- ed brim, ornamented with two smali |°f the Mandan Creamery and Fro-| changing times. | 24 hours after snowfall. Chiropractor chic!:s of strass. a sHtughes ‘neue Gaver baa ‘With a companion he entered Her- M. H. ATKINSON, Drugless Physician bert Mayr's filling station yesterday and proposed Mayr join them in a drink. Mayr declined and Bolton, a cafe owner, drew an automatic and fired five times in the geheral direc- tion of the gas station’s proprietor. Mayr went for his rifle, and killed his insistent visitor with one shot, A technical murder charge was filed but it was said at the district attorney’s office that the charge would not be prosecuted. Auditor Lucas Block Bismarck, N. D. assisting in conducting the schools, which emphasized the feeding of more protein to livestock, in the form of alfalfa and clovers. City Had Coldest Morning in State Bismarck had the lowest tempera- ture in the state at 7 o'clock this St. George’s Episcopal ladies will hold a food sale Saturday afternoon at the Lucas store, beginning at 1:30. SCOUT SCHOOL T0 COMMENCE MONDAY FINDS BANK LIKE SCHOOL JA. Zahradka, 6 sent by Dakota Business College,” Fargo, to bend Farmers State Bank, Amherst, say Dr. A. L. Kershaw Dentist Room No. 4 Lucas Block Phone 514 morning—23 degrees below zero. + Th 1 ing, he hardly knew where school jefe | 32 Men Will . Will Be Tra Trained on ikawever; aud "sig therottietar’ read’ Marshal Foch Shows off and work began. This is the “I was discharged after the World War | urdsy afternoon at Hoskins-Meyer's, commencing at 1 o'clock. Lane returned yes- from Minot where she was Slight Improvement Paris, Feb. 1.—(#)—Physicians at- tending Marshal Ferdinand Foch this morning announced that his condi- tion, after a slight relapse yesterday, was “quite satisfactory.” It was said that if the Marshal really had a slight congestion of the lungs yesterday he certainly had none today. Dr. Heitzboyer said that the Mar- shal had merely had a touch of grippe and that his lungs had not been af- tected. result of D.B.C. ACTUAL BUS- INESS training (copyrighted—un- obtainable elsewhere). The school conducts a real bank and offices, eight hours a day, six days a week. Graduates start work with exper- dence, get better positions, better pay and advance faster. ‘Watch results each week. ‘*Fol- low the Succe$$ful.’? First Spring ClassFeb.4-11. WriteF.L.Wat- kins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo. , below at noon. North Dakota will be mostly cloudy with probable snow tonight at Saturday. The temperature will rise slowly tonight. Other temperatures in the state today follows: Devils Lake, 18 below; Jamestown, 11 below; Grand Forks, 15 below; Fargo, 15 below; and Wil- liston, 22 below. Roads are in poor condition in the eastern part of the state after a wind yesterday whipped snow into drifts on state highways. Roads are also in poor condition in counties south and west of Bismarck. Methods of Scouting by ~ Competent Teachers Mrs. Frank Aughnay will have a ten weeks’ term of kindergarten at her home, 504 Ave. E, begin- Thirty-two Bismarck men will at- tend the first meeting of the Mis- souri Valley area scoutmasters’ training course at the high school auditorium Monday night, according to W. G. Fulton, scout executive. The meeting was postponed from last Monday to enable instructors to make further preparations. The training course will be con- ducted by the training committee of ning Monday, Feb. 4th. Terms - $10 for ten weeks. al is made up of ‘0. W. Kolberg, | Fryars Club Will Put Thomas Galvin, and Charles Leis- Solons on the Griddle mann. Methods of teaching scouting tech- nique will be taught those enrolled in the course. All who are interested are invited to take the course, The students will be organized in- to a regular scout troop for the ae ae * Fun, frolic and comedy with a kick will be served to guests at the Fryars club dinner Saturday night at the Patterson hotel. There will be a dinner but the main Economy in coffee alone is no virtue. TONIGHT MATINEE . i Friday and Every Day But economy with vastly increased Saturday at 2:30 flavor isa boon indeed. Expect both in Nash’s Toasted Coffee. Nash’s Toasting Process by saving a valuable percentage of thetrue coffee flavor, lost to youin the usual roast- ing process, “steps up” the thrill of taste enjoyment. It is impossible to judge the flavor of this new- day coffee without trying it. Only comparison, cup for cup, will prove to yoy its delightful: strength and mellowness. Economy is bound to follow, because you will use less ; Nash’s Toasted Coffee per MAN. “oll He’s Here! Bill Haines in the most delight- ful and entertaining picture you’ve seen in a long time, bar none . . . as Jimmy Valen- tine, the crook who will steal your heart. . . with laughs and wisecracks ... not guns and bullets. . . . Karl Dane and Tully Mar- shall assisting . . . that’s entertainment . . . and it’s personally recommended by the man- agement. A Metro - Goldwyn - With Lionel Barrymore Leila Hymans Karl Dane Latest News Events Comedy ... “Hop Off” ‘ e Notice Diphtheria Prevention Bismarck City Health Department A supply of Toxin-Antitoxin for the immunization of all preschool children between the ages of 1 and 6 years is now available. Phone - City Health Officer - 742 _ NO MORE DIPHTHERIA IN BISMARCK AFTER 1930 City Health Dapactindint Cooperating with the State Department of Health. a All the latest malades music—Teachers’ supplies and stan dard music:are here awaiting your call. , Portable Phonographs - $14.75 to $30.00 Pianos, Hapaon R a

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