The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 17, 1929, Page 5

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Social and Personal : Annamarie Jochim Is | Bride of D. Griffith Miss Annamarie Jochim, daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. John Jochim, Bis- marck, will become the bride of Don- ald Griffith of this city at a service | read at 6 o'clock this evening. Miss Agatha Beer and William Ka- vaney will be the attendants. The bride will wear a fall ensemble of maroon flat crepe, with close-fitting , hat, with her accessories in a har- monizing shade. Her flowers will be & corsage of roses, sweet peas and babies’-breat.. Miss Beer will be attired in green figured chiffon fashioned along en-| semble lines. Mr. and Mrs, Griffith will motor to | Mrs. Wilton this evening where a becoek and recepticn will eb held at the home | of Mrs. Griffith's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Serup. Mrs. Griffith has attended the Bis- marck schools and is employed by Many. North Dakota Women Will Attend National Meeting Mrs. James Morris, Bismarck, preal- dent of the North Dakota department, American Legion auxiliary, will head the state delegation to the national convention to be held at Louisville, Ky., Sept. 30-Oct. 3, at the same ‘ime as the legion convention. Others who have been named as delegates to the next national meet, and who plan to attend, are Mrs. G. Olgierson, Bismarck, Miss Hazel idiel- son, Valley City, national committee- women; Mrs. J. R. Pence, Minot, for- mer state president; Mrs. G. Fraser and Mrs. C. F. Phillips, Fargo: Eugene Fenlon, Devils Lake; Mrs. A. Kjelland, Hatton; Mrs. E. J. Huschka, Dawson; Mrs. Eugene Mor- rison, Granville; Mrs, Ray Rosseau, Crosby; and Mrs. L. E. Raisler, Beach. It is probable that a number of other auxiliary members will also at- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1929 Mrs. Berger May Run for Congress! vacated by the death of her husban Wisconsin Socialists are urging her to make the race. Mrs. Meta Berger, above, widow of the late Congressman Victor Berger, may become a candidate for the seat by a crooked Russian official heavily bribing @ corrupt Chinece one. China says also that an unjust majority of the officials was Russian. She scized the railway. So everything was stacked for a huge conflagaration. The expression of the world is for |Peace. Its desire that difficulties ; Should be settled without recourse to war has crystallized or rather, to peace around the world. The League of Nations, the Kellogg pact are fac- tors in the weaving, but the master at the loom is the will-of-the-people- that-wars-shall-cease. Now the world “s: Is the weaving which has been done sufficient? Will this net hold? And, if not, then must the cords be strengthened, for the net must hold. ¥ O. MYKING MEHUS. MOTHERS’ PENSIONS ? Baldwin, N. Dak. Editor Tribune: For a good and sufficient reason our state, in common with a number of others, has adopted the mothers’ Pension bill, whereby needy mothers are allowed a certain sum each month for the support of their minor children, The sum allotted each child is small enough, considering the high cost of d. j quote @ historic authority, that desire | {has woven a net o: organizations for | "Fashion Plague AN INTERESTING new necklaci for evening is made of two strands of crystals caught at the shoulder with a clasp of bagnette crystals. woman who has been left alone with ¢ \To Give Ledwues on ‘ Modern Palestine Fresenting modern Palestine in motion pictures, Gerald Renaas, re- cently a student at the University of Minnesota, will give an illustrated lecture Sunday evening at 8 o'clock | at the Trinity Lutheran church. The films and still pictures displayed by | Mr. Renaas depict the life of the) orient just as he saw it during his two years of residence there as a teacher in an American mission school. Mr. Renaas has an intimate knowl- edge of the orient, and because of this is able to add a personal touch to the lecture, and in addition, he will display many of the articles of dress worn in Palestine. 215 Teachers Take Annual Examination | Examination papers from 215 teachers of North Dakota who wrote e | in the recent examinations have been | received by the department of public \instruction. Of these 200 were for the second grade elementary, and the remainder for first grade. Work of grading the papers is ment is making @ special effort to get the papers graded. Teachers’ examinations are now given only once each year instead of three times as | formerly. { Miss Mabel Aaberg ‘Teacher of Piano Announces opening of her studio for coming season. Phone 1240-3. 423 Fifth St. We will pay $5.00 for the best and most appropriate name. The person suggesting the most appropriate name for our shop will receive $5.00. Place name in a sealed envelope your suggested Capital Commercial College 314%, Main Avé. Phone 121 Bismarck, N. Dak. FALL TERM Our Fall Term will begin Monday, September 2. En- roll early, as we will not have room for all that will want to attend. TUITION RATES In the Day School it is $20 a month or $50 for three months. This is a very low rate. It is worth more. EVENING CLASSES Two evenings a week, $6 a month. Three evenings a week, $8 a month. Four evenings a week, $10 a month. We have evening a) under way, and it is expected that it ni i iv the Northwestern Bell Telephone |" seh Sea — | everything nowadays, but it is 9 buts#~ | family of little ones to car for has| will be completed within two weeks Barer Uigp elas ae classes all the year round. company. my : roic male appeal in the play, carryin werne other- | enough to endure without this! Due to many schools opening early . Mr, Griffith, the son of Mr. and| Bridge Party Given off the role of a college proscesor with | Wise be compelled to break up thelr FLORENCE BORNER, | in September this year, the depart- || August 19th. POSITIONS Mrs. John Griffith, Morristown, N. J., & delightful intelligence. He is dark- | The name chosen will be We place our students in posi- rt homes. By Mrs. K. Simonson ‘What Tam getting at ts this: The is the Mandan and Bismarck sales- haired and handsome, and his di- man for the Nash-Finch company. Mr. and Mrs. Griffith will be at government thinks nothing of paying rectors did well to choose him as the announced to the public on tions as rapidly as possible. There Mrs. Kelley Simonson entertained lover. a pension to widows of deccased sol- Tuesday, August 20th. In will be plenty of positions this POCO PCDD ECL ECOOCSTOE, x Mrs. Blanche Marie Molleur fall; six were placed last week. WRITE US For our new Course of Study and Circular of Information. Our school is growing rapidly. Give diers, regardless of the financial | % condition of the woman, but when we | ¢ allow the widow of our unfortunate | ¢ soldiers of life a pension the name of | % the “beneficiary,” together with the | ¢ last evening at the second of a series of parties she has given this week. he affair was given at the home of her mother, Mrs. George A. Welch, Person Court. home in Bismarck after August 25. xk Informal Gathering At T. Gordon Home A dazzling group of “baby stars” su} the inimitable Clara in truc “hey-hey” style, furnishing an “It” complement that rounds out ths film in the full curves of wholesome fem- S| ff case of a tie the money will be divided equally. SIGNED: OP oe Six table tor bridge, | ininity. amount she receives each month, is] % % Joseph Brasseur and bie ths a and appointments. my in pastel i cies broadcast to ereey nook and corner | % Manager and Proprietor Sy Erick Chesak, Props. us a visit. irs. Thomas Gordon entertained n| shades, with baskets and vases of | ¢——————__________g/of the si yy newspapers | § ° ° F ‘ PROF. R. E. JACK company of neighbors informally yes- | garden flowers throughout the rooms. through the bills allowed by the ormerly Erbe’s Barber » RE. terday afternoon at her home, 614 whet peas outitered the tala when | PEOPLE'S FORUM county commissioners. P Lf of fessional Sewing School Shop. Principal Bell street. a luncheon was served at the close of |* ©] It seems to me that this is need- Fall Term Opens Sept. 2nd. Full sewing course—6 weeks Diplomas given with each completed course, A Millinery Course will be taught at the school this year, The time was passed socially, and a buffet luncheon was served at the close of the afternoon. Mrs. Maude Owen, San Francisco, who made her home in Bismarck for a number of years, was a guest from out of town. Mrs. Gordon was assisted by her daughter, Miss Edith Rickel, and by Miss Bernice Dehne. * * * Arrangements for the second Sat- urday night dance for the boys of the Cc. M. T. C., to be held this evening at the hostess house at Fort Lincoln, have been completed, and the event promises to be one of the mest pleas- ant of the week. Chaperons for this evening will include Mrs. G. Olgier- son, Mrs. A. M. Christianson, Mrs. F. H. Waldo, Miss Mary Cashel, and Mrs. Cc. B. Whittey. An invitation is ex- tended by the committce in charge | .to any mothers and fathers who may wish to come and watch the dancing for a time. less cruelty, and that it would be much better and more humane to merely head the funds distributed in | § this manner “Mothers’ Pensions” and give the lump sum used for this pur- the evening. High scores in the bridge games were awarded Miss Ruth Pollard and Mrs. Paul Halloran. Miss Jane Ellsworth, Oshkosh, Wis., was a guest from out of the city. * * DOES THE NET HOLD? Maryville, Missourt. Editor Tribune: On July 23rd President Hoover pro- claimed as effective the Kellogg Pact for outlawing war. That pact had been signed by 56 different nations and all of these had pledged them- selves to seek some other means than that of war for settling their differ- ith other nations. China and Russia, lately on the brink of war, were among those signatory powers and the United States conveyed mes- sages to them reminding them of their pledges. Great Britain and France joined the United States in that reminder. And the two coun- tries, though at a most dangerous e * & ir controversy, replied Mrs. Louise Wright and son Billy ner they. Temenbered ‘and would \have returned from Fargo and De- jtroit Lakes, where they spent a two-| heel. made effort, to adjust oe weeks vacation. se 6 St. George's Evening guild will mect | Monday evening at the home of Mrs. | A. E. Shipp, 123 Mandan strect. x ek Oe Miss Margaret I. Moran, Lodge Grass, Mont., is spending some time in the city visiting friends, Now is the time to buy Cities Service Company Common Stock and Arkansas Natural Gas a subsidiary of Cities Service Company. Earnings increasing every FOR SALE BY P. C. REMINGTON & SON The Pioneer Investment House. BY The only North Dakota firm that is licensed by the State to sell approved securities. Write or phone 220 for further informa- tion, Pose. ‘Under our present system needy | & mothers are made to appear as ob-| ¢ jects of charity, and if I understand | \ the bill rightly this was in no man- ner the intention of its sponsors. Any THEATRE * Captain and Mrs. L. H. Crowell and daughter La Verne, and Morris Agre, who have been guests at the home of Mrs. Crowell'’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Agre, for the past 10 days, will leave today for their home at Abilene, | Kansas. They will be accompanied by Miss Esther Agre, who will visit at the Crowell home for a time. Orders for Sewing Suits and Dresses are accepted at the school as usual Good demand for good seamstresses—make your appointment by phone 865 or write for full xk * information.® Miss Irene Mary Irvine has re- turned from Winnipeg, where she spent a two-weeks vacation as the {guest of friends. New location 408 2nd St. Bismarck, N. Dak. Bismarck, North Dakota. SOO GE OVO OEGL IEE IOVOIY “A Big Fellow surely likes those extra-wide doors ” Today and Saturday 2:30—7:15—9:00 P. M. Matinee Daily ** * Miss'Catherine Bader, accompanied by Miss Grace Elness and Ernest El- ness, left today by car for Fargo, where they will visit over the week- end. Miss Elness and her brother will go from there to Minneapolis for a visit with relatives, Miss Bader, ac- companied by her sister, Mrs. E. G. Nixon, Fargo, will leave the early part of next week for aes in Saskatche- ‘wan, where they will visit their % mother and other relatives. Personal and ee ; Miss Gertrude Smith, Cecil Ryan Social News of and Adeline Will returned last night Mandan Vicinity ‘from a two-weeks trip by motor to various places in Minnesota. They vis- Here conflagaration which would immedi- ately affect a great part of the world —China, with her population of a fourth of the world's people, her Provinces barely united under the president Chiang-Kai-Shek, the Na- tionalistic spirit aflame, the general Feng a refugee in’ Moscow, the old Manchurian war lord, Chang, dead, and his son and young successor not yet tried out—and a controversy over Manchurian interests! In Manchuria les much of China’s future. The eastern provinces, like Shantung, are overcrowded. The ited friends in Minneapolis and spent several days at Duluth, returning through the Iron range by way of Hibbing. Stops were made at the lakes near Bemidji and at Itasca park, and ; they spent a few days in Fargo and Valley City with friends. * * * Mrs. B. R. Wegleightner of the Erbe beauty shop, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Mary Bannister, and her niece, Jane Bannister, Superior, Wis., will leave tomorrow for a motor trip to points in the east. They will visit relatives and friends at Superior and Milwaukee, Wis., Chicago, and New York city. Mrs. Wegleightner plans :o return about September 15. xe Oe Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Conley, Wash- ington, D. C., are here for a visit with Mr. Conley’s sister, Mrs. W. B. Heaton, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Conley, McKenzie. Mr. Conley, who is a student at Georgetown university, is employed in the department of Mr. and Mrs. Earl D. McBride and daughters Joyce and Beverly Jane of Sheboygan, Wis., have arrived for a short visit at the home of Mrs. Mc- Bride's sister, Mrs. L. B. Curtis, * ee Dr. and Mrs. H. L. Diebert and Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Cooley will motor to Nevis, Minn., today where they will spend several days at the cottage of western provinces are barren like those towards Tibet, or they are 50 remote and with such poor transpor- tation that their natural resources cannot be called upon in the time of China’s need—as was proven in her recent famine. But Manchuria is altogether dif- ferent. She is traversed by rivers, has open ports and tremendous nat- ural resources, both mineral and agri- cultural, moreover the country is crossed by one of the most important railways in the Far East—the Chinese Eastern railway. Japan desires these resources for her island people and she looks with appreciative eyes the stretches of unoccupied land: Russia looks longingly at the rivers, the open ports upon the Pacific, most of all upon that Eastern Ratlway, which links up with the Trans-Siber- ian railway and so crosses the Siber- ian plains into Russia itself. China needs Manchuria and is determined to hold control of it. Dr. F. E. Bunting. xk OR J. N. Noakes and son Parkin have gone to Brycelyn, Minn., where they will visit Mr. Noakes’ mother. They will also spend a short time at the Minnesota lakes, eke Mrs. J. C. Brinsmade, accompanied by Miss Velma Maltby, Burton, N. D., left Thursday evening for a trip to; Glacier National park. eee Hear and See this absorb- ing drama of a beautiful girl who fought society’s snares only to become the central figure in a murder mystery which set all so- ciety aghast at its scandal —and its daring. A Talking Picture EXTRA! EXTRA! Mr. and Mrs. Chris Sakarissen Jr. and daughter left Thursday for Bowl- ing Green, Mo., where they will be commerce, and Mrs. Conley is with the department of the interior. * * *® Mr. and Mrs, Fred Hedstrom and daughter Dorothy, Chicago, Ill., and Walter Vandenberg, Chicago, arrived last evening by motor for a week or ten days’ visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hedstrom’s son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Stadler. ‘They made a tour of the Black Hills on their way here. zee Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Snyder and daughters Lois and Phyllis, Chicago, who have been spending a week ut the home of Mrs. Snyder's brother-in- Jaw an¢ sister, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. \ Stadler,’ will leave tomorrow by car for Lincoln, Neb., where they will visit kefore Teas iY taelt home. Miss Gertrude Eichorst will leave tomorrow morning for Seattle, Wash. i After a short visit there Miss Eichorst will go by boat to San Francisco and Los Angeles, Calif. She plans to make an extended stay at Los Angeles, Long To Manchuria in 1927-28 went a great body of Chinese, mostly from famine-stricken Shantung, and in such numbers that the movement has been recognized as one of the lane the guests of friends. x ke Mrs. George Haines, who has been visiting relatives in Mandan for a few days, has returned to her home in Jamestown. se 8 Mrs. A. W. McLean and daughter left last evening for points in south- | standmothers, % ern Wisconsin where they will visit pole mise JO is REAR. TN sienna facilities for handling them and for looking after their needs at over- crowded points, for the migrating people turned away from the eastern part of Manchuria, and towards the uncrowded, unclaimed lands of the west—as the pioneers of a century ago sought western fields in the United States. And it is hoped they also have found food and home and safety. This l.nd China must have. Its provinces must be kept to fill in for worn out fields. ‘The Chinese Eastern railway not only links up with the Trans-Siberian “The Collegians” TALKING, SOUND, MUSIC and FOX NEWS (pi Starting Monday The All-Girl Hit— —The All “It” Girl eee Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Richardson have gone to Chicago where they will be guests of relatives for a short time. sh * Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Means and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gauer are making a tour of the Black Hills. : WHIPPET 6 COACH down payment only . $300 , Balance in 12 easy monthly payments. Line includes Sedan, Coupe, Roadster, Commercial Chassis. All Willys- Overland prices f. 0. 6. Toledo, Ohio, and specifications subject to change ———_—__________ | City-County Briefs | ° fed ing, Sunday, on a trip east to Duluth, ing, Sunday, on a trip ut Milwaukee, Chicago and Sioux City | railway; it is the heart of Manchuria. and other Iowa points, to be gone | This railway was under joint control about 15 days. Mr. Tauer is making | of China and Russia. The new Na- the trip principally because of some | tionalistic China claims that the de- ranch deals he has under way and | tails of this arrangement were made ane will require personal develop- ment * ROOMINESS AND COMFORT IN THIS LOW-PRICED BIG CAR The new Superior Whippet, with its longer wheelbase and larger bodies, has roomy interiors, comfortably upholstered and nicely appointed. Exceptionally wide doors on all models afford easy entrance and exit. The broad, deeply cushioned seats have form-fitting backs, so that pas- class, while engineering features usually found only on higher-priced cars are giving thousands of owners an advanced idea of what “full value” really means. Mrs. George Duemeland and son Loren are spending a few days in Minot visiting Mrs. Duemeland’s cousins, Mr. and Mrs, Henry M. Gay, and her uncle, John Stoudt, who is in Minot from California for a visit with relatives. Bernice Joslin will have see Mr. and Mrs. Otto Stadler and have been guests at the home of Mr. . i George J. Helming, Mott, Gas » 308 Broadway West, for the past weex, | Susiness visitor here yesterday. The new Superior Whippet is the only low-priced car to offer ail these important advantages: Full force- WHIPPET 4 SEDAN down payment only One-half credit given each year towards High § sengers enjoy restful, relaxed posi- 3 Dan ‘aan gp PAT THE MOVIES {|} 5°00! sradustion. a ee feed lubrication, silent timing chain, qhiae, Mahala ‘cove mertsey,| | Jf zor teadon appotntanents call 118 INVITES YOU TO $290 iver strat pitooh Geeaien ballad ng a catalog of the books ze = ae AT THE CAPITOL Outstanding beauty of design has _ tires, “Finger-Tip Control,” and, in won for the new Superior Whippet the Six, a heavy seven-bearing the position of style authority in its crankshaft. Balance in 12 easy montiily payments, * Line includes Coupe, Coach, De Luxe Sedan, Roadster, ¢-Pass. Roadster, Col- Uegiase Roadster, Touring, Commercial Chassis, WILLYS-OVERLAND, INC., TOLEDO, OHIO we have ice cream and oy ye oie a , I | , { they will spend a week or more with t rat NEW SUP. 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