The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 25, 1929, Page 5

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1929 Louise Ankenman Is Honored at Party Asa compliment to Miss Louise ‘Ankenman, who is leaving the city soon, Miss Gwendolyn Jones enter- tained at bridge last evening, at her home, 519 First street. Garden flowers decorated rooms, where tables were arranged for 20 guests. High scores in the games were won by Miss Myrtle Haugen and Mrs. Kelley Simonson. Miss Jones served a dainty lunch- eon course at the conclusion of the games. Miss Haugen, McVille, was a guest from out of the city. see Mrs. Emma Harvey and children, Ruth, Clarence and James, Powell, Wyo., who have been guests of Mrs. Harvey’s brother and sister-in-law, Mrs. A. C. Harke, for a s, left this morning for Hackensack, Minn., where they will Social and Personal — the} Situation Fine, Says Maddock of Storage | And U.S. Farm Board | Walter Maddock, former governor, | B A d Sh Gi has returned from a Farmers’ Union | =) ;, | meeting at St. Paul. He reports the | ridge lower Given wheat and storage situations break- By Bernadine Fleck | ing nicely in tavor of the plans of the Farmers’ Union for relief of farming. Some of the union leaders are mect- ing the farm board, he announced. to talk over action toward working out | cooperative and stabilizing plans un- | der the farm board act. | Miss Bernadine Fleck entertained | | Tuesday evening at the home of her) sister, Mrs. Paul Shannon, 203 Fifth avenue N. W., Mandan, at a bridge party and shower for Miss Marie Mc- Cormick. Miss McCormick will be- come the bride of Martin Gronvold /Sedevic Given Year 1 Ft Adelle was played at ¢ tales cur-| In County Jail on $5.55 held by Mise Mecormick and Mis | Forged Check Charge Rosalind Brown. The guest of honor was presented with a number of pieces of crystal. John Sedevic pleaded guilty in the district court this morning io a Sweet peas: and baby's breath | Charge of forgery in the fourth de- formed dainty centerpieces for the | Stee. the charge being based on a tables when a course luncheon was : $9.55 check issued as made to “Marvin | served at the close of the evening. 'Magnus” by the Bismarck Hide and ‘Miss Rosalind Brown and Miss Aud-| Fur company. Charles Rigler was i rey Miller were guests from Bismarck, | the complaining witness. | | ‘The hostess was assisted by her Judge McFarland se sister, Mrs. Shannon. , vie to a year in the cou! y jail. * make their home in the future. * * *& The Birthday Mission society of the First Lutheran church will meet Friday evening at the home of Mr. id Mrs. C. W. Porter, 1714 Rosser avenue. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to all members and friends. Mr. and Mrs, E. H. Brewington and two sons returned yesterday from a two weeks’ motor trip to Minneapolis, Minn. Spooner and Elmwood, Wis, At the latter place they were the guests of Mrs. Brew- ington’s mother. eee Mr. and Mrs. John Knaus have re- turned from Rock Elm, Wis., and St. Paul, where they spent two weeks’ vacation visiting relatives. They were accompanied home by Miss Mary Van, Rock Elm, a sister of Mrs. Knaus. x * * Mr. and Mrs. Dyan Nuys, Mon-) mouth, Ill, who spent yesterday in the city, left this morning for Bill- ings and Livingston, Mont., where they will visit relatives before tour- ing picasa nse Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bihler, who have been visiting friends here the past few days, left today for their home at Strasburg, x * * Miss Mary Louise Finney, who underwent a minor operation Tues- day at the Bismarck hospital, is making a wien feadae | recovery. el- ing Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Reed an en Reed, Dickinson, are vi friends in the city this week. * * * oS | City-County Briefs | o———— H. Greene, of Nichols, Dean_and Gregg Hardware company, St. Paul, and secretary, are here today on business. Walter E. Maddock, Plaza, former governor, arrived here last evening for a brief business visit. Ray Beckwith of the Pence Auto- mobile company, Minneapolis, has been visiting at the Scotty O’May home the’ px:t few days. Gale Eastburn and E. J. Reich spent Sunday at Underwood visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. George M. Robinson and family, Coleharbor, are spend- jng a few days here with friends. Personal and Social News of Mandan Vicinity Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Mohn have re- turned from a motor trip to Minne- apolis, Gull Lake, and other points in Minnesota. * * * Mrs. F. W. McKendry and son Norman arrived yesterday from Glendale, Calif. and points in Wash- ington, where they have been visiting for the past month. * * Mrs. E. R. Griffin and her guest, Miss Nell Dooley, Aberdeen, Wash., have returned from a ten days’ mo- » They accompanied home by Mrs. Griffin's gon, Howard, who has been attending the summer camp of the Shattuck Military academy at Faribault. ee * Members of the Lutheran Mission- ary society entertained Tuesday aft- ernoon at a surprise party for Mrs. 4s leaving soon for an extended visit E. K. Hanson, who with Mr. Hanson in Seattle. FIRE ALARM TRIFLING SCARE PS ye Affiliation of the Citizens National of Wahpeton with the North- | nara a POSTPONE GARDEN cLus Spanish Trail to Be oar | Tree-Lined Boulevard The meeting of the Bismarc Garden club, scheduled for thi: ho rixaet San Antonio, Texas.—(AP) — ee evening has been postponed until | Thursday, August 8, according to task of making the Old Spanish the president, Mrs. F. C. Stucke. [one of the south’s most be: se Mrs. L. G. Eastman and daughter ¥ Ruth and Mrs, E. C. Martin and daughter Carol, Hazen, are spend- ing the week here visiting fricnds Raa attending the Missouri Slope ‘air, jtion has planted 10,000 trees \ward from El Paso. It is plann make the whole road a tree- ‘boulevard, from St. Augustine, Fla., to the Pacific coast. : | A section of the highway out ses Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wehlitz and daughter Barbara Jean, Portland, ‘ Ore., are guests this week at the San Antonio has led one phase | home of Mr. Wehlitz’s brother-in- beautification program by havin law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. fences sct back 100 fect from the road. Kamplin. ; Many structures along t' ¢ road follow * ek OK | the old Spanish type of architecture. Burg store employes and the ae ini Dolly Madison Well | managers enjoyed a picnic Tuesday To Become Memorial evening at Wildwood. Various games and contests provided enter-| Guilford College, N. C., July 25 —The old. weil that fu tainment for the 14 guests following the picnic suprer. ze Mr. and Mrs. John Wehlitz and, Madison her first dri vat children and Miss Mary Taylor, destined within a few months to be Hazelton, visited here yesterday at 4 granite shaft. the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. J, _The well stands on the edze of Kamplin, Mr. Wehlitz is an uncle Guilford college campus, at the home of Mrs. Kamplin. site of the Paynes, w! Dolly was: eee born May 20, 1768. Because of the Oscar Grant has returned from Distorical significance attached to the well the unveiling of its marking shaft will be feature of the annual state D. | AR. conference next March. Record of the birth of Dolly Payne | Madison, wife of the third president _, Mrs. M. Tooker »f near Menoken, trequentiy called “the most famous is visiting for several days at the! woman ever born in Nofth Carolina,” teas Ne rs eaagee W. Nelson, js found in the file vault of Guilford | nario yee college library. A short entry in Mrs, L. K. Th acdaus | volume 1 of the records of the* New ts, L. K. shompson and daugn- | Garden Quarter, New Garden Mect- ter Mary Lou are spending several ing House. reads weeks at their cottage at Shore-| “John Payne was born ham, Minn. Sheriff Bringing Duluth, Minn., where he was sum- moned last week by. the serious ill- ness of his aera ¢ 9 of ye Walter, their son, was born ye 15 of ye 11 Mo., 1762. Wm. Temple, their Sheriff Rollin Welch is going to Granite Falls, Minn., to bring back Milton Olson, charged here with | eeeigered an automobile out of | e state meme yand with obtaining it under) 5,455 city, — (AP) Olson, @ former resident of Drake ™2Y be to blame if Kan: who worked in a garage here, is 4fe,lean and haggard thi charged with obtaining the car on | ,, Cattlemen have cor ' a check which was not good, the com- | Kansas City Livestock ange that plaining witness being Eugene Shew- | planes fly low over cow pasture: heim. Olson has waived extradition that the animals are kept in a con- and will face the charge here. | stantly nervous condition, preventing ‘them from making no:mal gains in Low Flying Planes Make Cows Nervous | weight. | “In one instance a herd ran a mile after a plane passed over them,” an Jury in Wages Case Out This Afternoon 3iicccoe rote: ASK INJUNCTION A district court jury in the civil’ case of Henry Kozak against Adrian, Chicago, July 25—(#)—Suit asking Asbridge, the matter involved being | an injunction and accounting of thi wages claimed by Kozak from As-/| use of Professor Harry Steenbock’s bridge, was out this afternoon, trying | patented process of irradiating ultra- to arrive at a verdict. | violet rays in food and pharmaccutical Meanwhile district court took up| products was filed in federal district the civil case of Ronald Nichols! court today by the University of Wis- against William Langer. consin alumni rescarch foundation, - naming the solar research corpora- ' Old German Opera | tion and Sargents drug store of Chi- cago as defendant: | Gets Modern Slan, a eee rome S| Farmers Are Aided | Jazzage slang marked the tirst Amer || 10 Beautify Yards | icin performance of the eighteenth | @ ° century German comic opera, “The| East Lansing, Mich—(?)—O. I. sity by Phi Mu Alpha and Delta Michigan state college. He spends his Omicron, music fraternities. ; time showing farmers how to beautify The was translated by Prof. | their yards at small cost. poy Eschman, who substituted Amer- In the last two years Gregg has oe slang for old German sayings to given more than 500 home pianting P the spirit of the piece. demonstrations and has delivered Par ea riage ar more than 300 lectures on landscape ‘The cost of firing a triple-turret | gardening. e an in the case of the seafighter | Farm women, he says, are cager to 4 8. Nelson is about $3,500. dress up their outdoor living rooms. need Sede- |, Y trio of St. 2 Mo.. 1740, old stile. Mary, his b ht Back Garage Worker son, was torn ye 17 of ye 6 Mo. 1765. | Under Auto Charges eth ie was born ye 20 Doctor and the Apothecary,” when it | Gregg is one of the busiest men on was given recently at Denison univer- | the agricultural extension staff of | Maloney, manag Ann Wetzel, coniralto; and soprano, CONCERT TOUR BRINGS ‘ST. PAUL GIRLS HERE The Northern Pacific Singers Give Delightful Programs Over KFYR Today The Northern Pacifio Singers, A Paul young women aml their accompanist, gave a conct! over radio station KFYR this morn- ing between 11 and 11:30, and will go on the air again this evening at about 6 o'clock. Their program, which is composed of delightful song and piano nun bers, received much favorable com- ment from radio listeners this morn- ing, the piano numbe' Rosemary Matz, and Mis: Maloney's singing being y Included in the morning's ee the Water: co), “Who Was | and “To Sing , as well as Awhile” (Drummond) many others. Because of the popular demand for | their singing, which is distinctive be cause of its harmony, are employed in of the company s. They have their own studio, and broadeast cach Tuesday for one hour. | The tour which will be completed August 1, includes appearance at! Spokane, Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, Victoria, Vancouver and Mt. Baker. they have broadcast at ula, Helena, Billings, ic a four days tour Returning, Yakima, M and they ma Stomach Troubles Headache and oe Dizziness If your stomach is sick, you are sick all over. If you can’t digest your food, you lose strength, get ; Nervous and feel as tired when "es get up as when you went to bed. For 10 years Tanlac has restored to health and activity many thou- sands who suffered just as you do. Mrs. Bert Dikeman, of 4151 30th Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn., says: “The flu left me with bad stomach trouble. 90 lbs. was all I weighed. But Tanlac at once | began building me up. Now nothing can upset me.” Let Tanlac do for you what it did for this sufferer. It corrects the most obstinate digestive troubles— | relieves gas, pains in the stomach and bowels. It restores appetite, vigor and sound sleep. \ Tanlac is made of roots, barks and herbs. The cost is iess than 2 cents a dose. Get a bottle from your druggist today. Your money ack if it doesn’t help you. Tanlac 52 MILLION BOTTLES USED | all this week. =! This Coupon and $1.00 Entitles Bearer to ; PEARL NECKLACE Equipped with Beautiful Brilliant Set Double Absolutely 9 awe Hall’s Drug Cppesite Postettics Indestructible Bismarck, It is worth $4.00 if presented on or before Saturday, July 27th. Complying with Popular demand this wonderful offer continues One Regular Store | Northern Pacific Singers Broadcast from Bismarck Station | ’ through the Yellowstone park, sing ing at the various lyri¢ Fort Hari jUct, as all of the girls were born and reared the "Every' kind to us, and we find this a most McCarthy and Ann W l cone $5.00 Indestructible Safety Clasp \ Add 100 for No. Dak, Malling hotels. At Helena an cnicrtainment for the on veterans’ hospital. The organization is a St. Paul prod- hey gavi ir radio audienc re, of the same type of “We have had such a de! ehtful | We cach of us have trip,” Miss Maloney, the ma ongs which we enjoy she said upon her arrival this morn: dded. ere, people have been The trio, Irene Maloney Kathryn nd their | RIVERSIDES| The first ‘OU hear a lot of talk and read many statements now- adays, about how many millions of this or that tire have been sold... and why. 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