The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 6, 1930, Page 7

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ARTHUR PILLSBUR NOTED NATURALIST WILL LECTURE HERE Photographer Of Growing Plant And Animal Life To Show Pictures January 15 Arthur C. Pillsbury, Berkley, Calif., famous naturalist, botanist and in- ventor, will’ come to Bismarck Janu- ary 15, when he will show his moving pictures of plants, flowers and ani- mal life at the city auditorium, under the auspices of the Business and Professional Women's club. Mr. Pillsbury made a hobby of photography when was a student at Leland Stanford university, back in the nineties, and perfected a pan- oramic camera which could be moved ina semi-circle without blurring. Later he began photographing flow- ers with a moving picture camera, and in his lecture here will show scenes requiring six months to make, in as many minutes, allowing the plant and flower to grow before the cyes, exactly as they do in the na- tural’ state. Other remarkable pic- tures will show habits of insects seed germination the ways of pollen, and several biological subjects which re- quired the use of the X-ray in their making. Mr. Pillsbury possesses the only X-ray movies im existence, and these together with his other movies wiil be particularly interesting to Bis- marck flower growers. ee ® Delzer-Lewis Wedding Announcement Is Made Announcement of the marriage of their daughter, Lillian Delzer, to Kenneth N. Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Lewis, 300 Avenue B, in August has ‘been announced by Mr. and Mrs. Chris Delzer, 512 Rosser avenue. Mr, and Mrs, Lewis were married Aug. 17, 1929, at Duluth, Minn., and had kept it @ secret until last week- end, Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Toule, Fargo, attended the couple at the ceremony. Following the wedding, Mr. and Mrs, Lewis took a short boat trip on'the Great Lakes. They are now at home in their apartment in the Bismarck Business College building. Mr. Lewis is em- ployed by the F M R Electric Sesvice. | Service. *-* & N. D. Auxiliary Wins In Contest With S. D. With 40 per cent of the units hav- ing reached their membership quota, the North Dakota department, American winners in a membership contest withthe South Daketa Auziliary, which closed December 31. The South Dakota department has 32 per cent of its units completed. The contest was arranged for at the Auxiliary présidents’ conference in Indianapo- and a similiar one between North kota and Texas is now in pro- ress. At present 64 of the 158 units in this state have equalled or more than equalled their last year’s mem- bership, according to Mrs. R. M. De y, Jamestown, membership chair- man, ‘the second district, Mrs. A. A. Kjelland, Hatton, district committce- woman, won the five dollar gold piece awarded to those districts hav- ing the largest number of units ever the top by the close ot the year. For her daughter. Louise Elizabeth, who was 9 year old Saturday, Mrs. John Elich, 510 Eighth street, enter- tained 12 children at a birthday party. Games were arranged for the after- noon, and later a luncheon was served at a table decorated in pink and white and centered with a birthday cake. Mrs. Elich was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Fred Gruenberg. eee Leon Jacobson, Sims, a student at the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege, Fargo, was the guest of his brother and sister, Roy and Thalia Jacobson over Sunday. He was en route to Fargo after spending the Christmas vacation at his home. “ek * Miss Mabel Aaberg, daughter of Mrs, Stella Aaberg, left yesterday for Minneapolis, where she will take ad- vanced piano work under the Coun- _ tess Morsizyn at the McPhail School of Music. Miss Aaberg has taught piano here during — Past year. s s Misses Mary Weinberger and Helen Jasckowiak left today for St. Joseph, Minn., to resume their studies at St. Benedict's college after spending the Christmas vacation here with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Wein- berger and Mr. and Mrs. Francis Jaszkowiak. se * ‘ Several students at the North Da- keta Agricultural college, Fargo, who have been spending the holidays at their homes here, left this mornihg and Robert Ward. continue her studies at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. -_* * Miss Marjorie the parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Stask, left this morning for St. Benedict’s Mrs, E. C. Frits. The. 10th is the discount on Gas last Legion Auxiliary, were! Staak, who Christmas: holidays here wih her | Students Return to University of N. D. Many Rismarc': young people who are students at the University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, left this morning to resume their studies at |i university after a holiday visit at their homes here, while others left on Saturday for Grand Forks. Those returning were Louise Keller,-Cather- ine McKinnon, Grace Tait, Thelma ,| Pangburn, Catherine Alfonte, Spencer Robert Ben Jacobson, Lobach, Elmer Donald Jones, Neil York, John Bird- ;zell, Duane Davis, Sidney Hoffman, ‘Warren Keisel'and Paul Hedstrom. ** * State Club President Attends Board Meeting Mrs. A. E. Jones, Lisbon, president of the North Da::ota Federation of ‘Women's clubs, left Lisbon yesterday, for Washington, D. C., to be present for the annual meeting of the board of directors of the General Federation of Women's clubs held there Jan. 8 to 11. Speakers of -prominence at the meeting will include Ruth Bryan Owen, representative in congress from Florida, and Dr, L. 8. Rowe. di- rector general of the Pan-American Union. A reception Tuesday evening at the Federation’s national headquarters, will be the outstanding social event of the week. At this affair senators and congressmen and their wives, as well as others prominent in Wash- ington’s official life will be guests. The sessions of the board will be devoted to a discussion of plans, problems and programs of the feder- ation with special relation to its La- tin-American and the furth- ering of the community program, and to the reports of the president, other officers and department, division and committee chairmen. The board of directors consists of the officers, state directors, depart- ment chairmen and members of the board of trustees. State presidents and division chairmen are cqnference members of the board directors and are urged to attend all meetings. ee 8 Party At Ebeling Home in Menoken Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ebeling enter- tained 16 guests at a bridge party Saturday evening at their home in Menoken. Table appointments were in the holiday colors, and honors in the games went to Miss Edna Dralle, 'L. 8. Blensly, and Lawrence Bair. The guests included the following Bis- ;marck people: Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Blensly, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bair, Edna Dralle and Katherine Kositzky. was hostess to the members of her bridge club Saturday evening. Three tables were in play, with score prizes going to Mrs. J. L. Enright, T. E. pointments in pink and green were used when a two course luncheon was served after the games. se 2 . Mr, and Mrs. C. A. Humble and daughter, Nancy Jane, who have been guests at the home of Mrs. Humbic’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Schultz, 511 Second street, during the Christ- {mas holidays, left this morning for (their home at rege Minn. -* George Jundt left yesterday for St. John’s university, Collegeviile, Minn., after spending the holidays here with his sister, Miss Christine Jundt, and at Taylor with his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. V. M. Zim- merman. +e * Mrs. Harold Shaft, 718 Avenue E, | reducing exercises by dancing. MacIntyre Studios offer this arrange- | . THE BISMARCK gins its local engagement tonight ‘at the Capitol theatre. ‘When Walsh’s dinner party was | cancelled, he decided to go to the | theatre to kill the evening, gid im well started. on production and for | weeks had been searching everywhere for a girl to portray the character of “Tonia Maria”—and he found her that nigth playing an ingenue part in “The Squall.” j That is how Norothy Burgess be- came a motion picture actress. Her portrayal af the half caste girl was ample justification of Walsh's un-! erring judgment. It was one of the outstanding screeh performances of all time; | In ‘A Song ¢i Kentucky,” Miss Burgess enacts the role of a scheming and Jealous girl who shatters the ro- mance of two lovers, but later con- fesses her perfidy and brings about a happy understanding. The lovers are portrayed by Joe Wagstaff, brilliant young actor from the New York stage, and Lois Moran, well known and populer screen actress. PARAMOUNT THEATRE ‘The first picture of New Show World Program outlines for this season will be inaugurated tonight at the Para- mount theatre -with the showing of “Golddiggers of Broadway”. This pic- ture—one of the outstanding hits since the advent of talking pictures— has been booked for a three day run, closing the engagement here on Wed- nesday. The 100 per cent all talking-singing- dancing production has been filmed in natural color and exposes all of the “inside stuff of the gimme girls”. The “Golddiggers of Broadway”, starring Winnie Lightner, former stage star, Ann Pennington, Conway Tearle, Nick Lucas, Nancy Welford, Lilyan Tashman and Gertrude Short, pre- sents one of the strongest casts ever assembled for a talking production. The story itself hearkens back to the much discussed advisability of a rich son marrying a chorus girl and the trouble the boy's uncle encoun- ters with the “gimme gang” in an at- tempt to thwart the marriage. Residents of Bistnarck are fortunate in being able—through local merch- ants—of effecting the same modes and styles displayed by the “Golddigger” cast. - Winnie Lightner—perhaps the outstanding star—has taken to reduc- ing and she uses and electrical reduc- t jin and about | Stopping place of Teddy eo ene Favorite Stopping Place of Teddy Roosevelt, In ’80’s, : Now Tailor Shop WAS CONSTRUCTED IN 1879 Roosevelt Signature In Register, Bar Mirror, Deer Head . Prized Fixtures Strange things must have happened Mandan’s first hotel, which in its heydey was a favorite Roosevelt. It’s. tailor shop now. ‘The Morton county city’s first hostelry, saloon, and dining room was built in 1879 and named the Mer- . Since 1920 Emil W. Block has threaded his needles and snipped with his shears on a table standing at the spot once covered by a drinking bar. Built by Henry Yunck ‘With the Northern Pacific building a bridge across the Missouri river and planning to extend its line westward, Henry Yunck built the Merchant's hotel, a long and narrow two-story structure of wood. In the front part was the saloon. Midway to the rear was the dining room. At the back was the kitchen. Upstairs were the guest rooms. Henry operated the hote¥ for a short time before he died. Then his brother, Herman, took over the hotel and married Henry's widow. Mrs, Block, a daughter of Herman, resides with her husband at the rear of the colorful it which was built by her uncle and latter operated by her father. Teddy Roosevelt, the rough rider who came to North Dakota to build his health and:later became president of the United States, was a familiar figure at the hotel in the early "80s— ing machine similar to the one dis- played at the B. K. Skeels. She also “golddigs” her sweetie for an auto- mobile, similar to the one displayed by the Copelin Motor company. Ann Pennington, enhances the beauty of her dancing legs with hosiery identical with those displayed by the Rose shop, while Nancy Welford secks to en- thrall one of her “subjects” by the use of perfume similar to that dis- played by the Finney Drug company. Lilyan Tashman—the “cultured” star of the picture—effects styles similar company. Nancy Welford effects a becoming marcelle similar to that given by the Bannon Beauty Shoppe while Winnie Lightner continues her The ment. Conway Tearle is always nat- tily. dressed in models available at Bergeson’s. The whole “gimme gang” lis strong for candy—the same as sold j by Sak’s. Nine distinct song hits are. introduced in the picture, copies of | Which are available at Dahners-Tavis ; Music company, and the advice.of the family lawyer is to bank the moncy— make it safe from “golddiggers”. The First National Bank offers this service. ture holds one of the most enviable positions in the new show world pro- gram today. This production has broken more box office records during its run in eastern cities than any other production yet filmed. In addition to the feature picture the Paramount theatre will offer “Noah's Lark” a talk cartoon and the Paramount Sound News. NOTICE Regular meeting of Bismarck will be hostess to the members of the Mother's club tomorrow afternoon. Current events will be given, and Mrs. T. Perry will review Rolvaag’s “Peder Victorius.” se * Miss Marlys Lahr left yesterday for Minneapolis to resume her work at the University of Minnesota, after spending the Christmas vacation at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, E. V. Lahr. s* * The ive Mother's club will meet at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening ,| and Mndan Lodge of Perfection and the Scottish Rite bodies, Jan. 8th; at 8 o’clock p. m. Glycerin Mix Removes Cause of Stomach Gas Simple glycerin, buckthorn bark, saline, etc., as mixed in Adlerika, acts on BOTH upper and lowe! bowel, removing poisons you never thought were there and which caused to those displayed by the A. W. Lucas | and right today the stuffed head of | a deer shot by Mr. Roosevelt rests on | \ the wall of the one-time dining room. | Denny Tobin, on of Mandan’s grizzled | veterans, will testify that Mr. Roose- | fixture in the building. That's why ‘Mr, and Mrs. Block wouldn’t think of i parting with it. . | Cooked for Marquis Why, my mother even cooked meals ‘for the Marquis De Mores,” Mrs. | Block said this quis at that time | trial for murder.” The | whose | packing plant at Medora, in the Bad- lands, were unavailing, later was.ac- of the cattle self defense. In the front room of the tailor shop is a large wall mirror, not moved when and bad men saw in it their reflections while they were tipping up a few drinks. ‘The Blocks quitted of the muri rustler, whom he shot or changed since the day ranchers, cowboys, | wouldn't part with that either. The ‘away ‘but Httle seen carry men who were important in their day. | Little does the casual passerby happened | know the signifier:nce of it. |Welch Is Transferred | Ninth, will be commanding officer tailor and his wife, packed | somewhere with their treasured | have the | “ re ”* pice | old hotel registers, many of which | The “Golddiggers of Broadway” pic: the.boll xignature of Roosevelt and many other western | of the old wooden building, which stands © | at 112 East Main street, know of what | in that structure, the one- | | time rendezvous of the best and worst of the pioneer western cattlemen. Few | To Another Regiment Major A. B. Welch, Mandan post- : aster, has been transferred from the | Ninth Field Artillery to the Twenty- josh Field Artillery, Ninth division, | he has been informed by the Seventh | Corps Area headquarters at Omaha, Neb. Forty-nine officers who served un- der him in the Ninth have been transferred with him. Major Welch, | Who was commanding officer of the TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 1930 MANDAN NEWS : Mandan’s First Hotel Tells Little of What it Has Seen| BELLS AND STORM | BEGKON STUDENTS Mandan Bundled Youngsters And High School Children Resume School Work School belis rang in Mandan this morning for the first time in 17 days ‘and a cold wind from the northwest and stinging scales of snow helped bring children of the city to the rude awakening that Christmas and New Year's vacation had fleeted past. Tt was a@ bitter pill to swallow. A bad storm and school starting—both on the same day. High school students, who resumed classes at 8:40 o'clock, did not seem to mind the weather much but chil- @ren in Custer and Syndicate school grades were not so fortunate. Lest their children catch cold or suffer frost-bitten fingers and toes, Mandan mothers had bundled the smailer tots with extra pounds of wollens, mittens which are kept from being lost by a cord running through both éleeves, and overshoes. FIVE ELECTRICIANS WORK ON TURNTABLE Giant Northern Pacific Equip- ment Will Not Be Complet- ed Before 10 Days _ Five electricians and a crew of 40 men are working daily assembling the huge turntable which soon will be a part of the Northern Pacific round- house at Mandan, it was announced this morning by J. J. Kelly, round- house foreman. ‘ ‘The turntable, 110 feet long to ac- velt shot the deer whose head 18 8 | commodate the huge new locomotives on the run between Mandan placed \and Billings, Mont., is being assembled | outside of the roundhouse and wi | moved inside when it is put together, according to Mr. Kelly. ‘Work of reconstructing the huge morning. “The Mar- prick wall at the roundhouse, which was in jail right | collapsed last month and might have \back of the hotcl here awaiting om jkilled or injured a score of men; is Frenchman, | progressing slowly. Bricklayers have efforts to establish a huge| ‘4 | A core throat may be eased by garg- ing just once, with quarter of a glass of water in which you have dissolved two tablets of Bayer Aspirin. You | may have to repeat the treatment for | a deep-seated inflammation like ton- silitis, but Bayer Aspirin is the one Don’t forget this most sensible of all treatments: for sore throat. The iN, be rebuilt about four fect of the which will ‘be more than 20 feet The wall which collapsed was the last {scction of a new wall built around the roundhouse, the new wall being necessitated because of the installa- tion of the new turntable. Mr. Kelly does not believe the turn- table will be assembled and rei lor installation before another 10 days. Lion Speaker This Week Unannounced The speaker for tomorrow's regu- lar weekly luncheon meeting of the Mandan Lions club remained unan- nounced today, according to Dr. L. G. Smith, president of the organization. The speaker probably will not be announced until shortly before the meeting at the Lewis and Clark hotel, Dr. Smith said. * Personal and Social News of iN Mandan Vicinity New Degree of Honor Officers Installed Officers for the new year were in- stalled at the meeting of the Man- dan Degree of Honor Friday evening. Those taking office were Mrs. Charles Toman, Sr., president; Mrs. E. Mey- ers, vice president; Mrs. George Gooddale, secretary; Mrs. S. E. Arthur, financial secretary; Mrs. G. A. Richardson, treasurer; Mrs. P. Mathieson, usher; Miss Rose Bruc! er, assistant usher; Mrs. Henry Swan- son, outer watch; Mrs. Henry R. Handtman, captain of the drill team; Mrs. L. R. Skjod, pianist. A social hour followed the installa- tion. e | | * * Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hendrickson announce the birth of a son Friday at their home near Mandan. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Winbauer are parents of a son born Friday at the | Mandan Deaconess hospital. ese @ Ernest George of the U. 8. Great Washington, D. C., where he will The guaranteed specil pa- tent flours OCCIDENT. LYON’S BEST OR CLIMAX “Our Money Back” guaran- tee is an insurance policy with every sack. RUSSELL- MILLER MILLING CO. STON Plains Field station left Friday for \ i wall, high. | tal work. se comer Gustav Fristad left Saturday for| R. L. Fraser, Washburn, — Valley City, after spending the past county states. visiting relatives. week in Mandan se 8 Harold Porter has returned to Butte, Mont., after spending the hol- idays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Porter. s* * Mrs. M. C. Fransor and her grand- asughter, Miss Vava Byerly, left Sat- urday for Huron, 8. D. after ing the Christmas holidays at the home of Miss Byerly’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Byerly. Miss Byerly attends Huron college, and makes her home with her grandmother. | City-County Briefs | Judge J. Lowe, Minot, is a business visitor from Minot. Mrs, J. G. DeFrance, Braddock, is a visitor in Bismarck today. Mrs. R. L. Davidson, Fredonia, is spending a few days in the city. Miss Hazel Grant, Wishek, who has x * * Misses Edith and Helen Saunders were hostesses at a bridge party Fri- day evening at their home. were guests for five tables, and hon- ors were held by Miss Vivian Luthex and O. K. Johnson. Appointments were appropriate to the holiday sea- son. .There attorney, and daughter Vis dan. gain. 314, MARSHAL INVESTIGATES FIRES Henry L. Reade, state fire marshall went to Anamoose, today, to investi- gate a fire there, Sunday in which a‘ dwelling house burned. Another fire which office is investigating is the burn of an automobile carrying double in: surance, at Mott. | | Dr. G. G. Wood, Minot, today wi been a patient at the St. Alexius, has |reappointed by Governor returned to her home. Miss Irene Ramsland, sixth grade | - teacher at the Roosevelt school, is ex- | pected to return this evening from Minneapolis where she has been re- ‘Rub oa throat; comeon | ‘tongue and jasitmelts. | ves Dr. Hibbs DENTIST REFUL GENTLE Price per Tes f G-inech 84.35 Lamp 6450 FILL YOUR BINS EARLY Phone We have the ex; jan Head Ligaite 718 Front 5¢. NOT ROUGH Bismarck DENTAL Cuinic Phone 281 Lucas Bldg. a urive sale e OCCIDEN TAF FUEVATOR jimmarcts, NED. George Shafer to be a member of the sta! board of chiropractic examiners. | | | | The following deal- ers in Bismarck handle Pancake Flour Brown & Tiedman R. & T. Grocery Broadway Food Market Logan’s Gussner’s M. Yegen \ South Side Grocery Bertsch Grocery Speak’s Grocery Golden Rule Store’ Marcovitz Grocery Dick’s Grocery Gabel’s Grocery Jones & Webb Corner Grocery Scott’s Grocery Bismarck Food Market Richholt Grocery Spohn’s Grocery Richard A. Kunz R. Penwarden Langmuir Grocery Senger’s Grocery Davis Grocery with Mrs. Fred Svaren, 600 Sixteenth street. “Chemists and Their Work,” will be the topic ior discussion. * * Miss Genevieve Forster of the St. gas and other stomach trouble. Just ONE spoonful relieves GAS, sour stomach, sick headache and constipa- tion. Don't take medicine which cleans only PART of bowels, but let the Twenty-fifth also. eral st } forces as ordered by quarters, ‘The transfers are in line with gen- of reserve army national head- Major Welch says. Details of the transfer have not yet been one the nurses all know; the one which all doctors concede to be effec- tive. And remember its quick relief of neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism, lumbago and the like. Use it to break-up any cold, or to dispel a head- BRIQUETS Alexius hospital staff, has returned from @ three weeks vacation spent in Des Moines, bey and Salem, S. D. ue 8 Members of the Busy Bee Sewing club of the Rebekah lodge will mect Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. J. A. Flow, 117 First street. ss 8 Miss Vera Person left yesterday to continue her studies at Macalester college, Paul, after spending the her home. see The regular meeting of the Bis- , Order of Eastern Star, evening at 7:30 st. at [Temenie comedy ares, Adlerika give you a REAL cleaning and see how good you feel! It will gas you. Lenhart Drug Store— lv. made known to the Hearts Hinge the stretch! Romance at the quarter, Thrills at the half Intrigue at the three-quarters, Success in LOVE WINS!!! on This Race! Adults 35c until 7:30 p.m. After 7:30, admission 50c. PLEASE COME EARLY! Mandan man. Last summer he attended camp at | thing ‘that reduces the infection. Fort Riley, Kansas, with his regiment. | Capitol Tonight, also Tues, - Wed. ache. It does not depress the heart. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer manufacture of moi i salicylicacid, icacidester of THEATRE 2:80 - 7:00 & 9 pom. Are easy on expenses. The advantages of hard coal at a saving of 20 per cent. Order Stott Briquets Let Milton C. Work Improve Your Game BRIDGE. by RADIO Auction and Contract Tuesday - KFYR - 4:30 p.m. C.S. T.

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