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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1930 Bismarck Musicians to Attend State Festival Mrs. J. P. French, Mrs. F. M. Davis, and Miss Belle Mehus, members of | the Thursday Musical club, will leave tomorrow for Fargo, where theyewill attend the convention of the North , Dakota, Federation of Music, clubs, +‘which opens in Fargo Monday. Mrs. French will serve on the credentials committee, and Miss Mehus and Miss Marie Lemohn of this city, who will also attend, will play Grieg’s “Concert in A Minor,” arranged for two pianos, at one of the programs. Other Bismarck people who will at- tend are Miss Helen House and Miss Grace Hand. Miss Hand is director of the Roosevelt School Harmonica band, which will appear on the con- vention .ogram Monday. It is ex- ‘ppected that a number of the parents of children in the Harmonica band will also make the trip to Fargo. * ek OR “State C. D. A. Officers Gather at Jamestown Officers of the Catholic Daughters of America in Bismarck and Mandan left last night for Jamestown, where they will attend the state assembly meeting of the Catholic Daughters, which opened in Jamestown today, and will continue through Sunday. In the group are Mrs. J. P. Hess, Mandan, state regent; Mrs. B. E. Ward, state treasurer, and Mrs. Max Kupitz, regent of the Bismarck chap- ter, and Mrs. L. H. ested regent of the Mandan chapter. The meeting will be attended by regents from all state chapters, and state officers, who will consider var- ious projects of the organization. ** * Miss Runey Attends & Sorority Installation | Miss Madge Runey is in Fargo this week to attend the installation of Beta Beta chapter, of Phi Kappa Lambda, national social sorority at the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege. At the formal installation ban- quet last night at the Gardner hotel, Miss Runey was one of the speakers. Guests at the installation besides alumni members, were Miss Julia Ris- “er, New York, national extension chairman, and representatives from chapters in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Towa. Many social affairs held during the | ceremonies include a dinner given by Mrs. W. W. Puller, a tea at the home of Mrs. Kent Darrow, and a luncheon today at the Lincoln Log Cabin. The formal reception and dance given by the college will be this evening. Visiting alumni are invited to be the guests of Mrs. F. Paul Smith, Amenia, at a luncheon at her home| Sunday. From Fargo Miss Runey will go to Winnipeg. where she will assist with Xthe installation of the Gamma Beta chapter at the University of Manitoba. se * Meetings of Clubs And Social Groups : SEES Mrs. Charles Rohrer, street, will be hostess to the members of the Rebekah Busy Bee club Tues- day afternoon. * Oe OK ‘The final meeting of Chapter N of the P. E. O. Sisterhood will be held Monday evening at the home of Mrs. S. H. Merritt, 221 Third street. The program will be presented by all of ~*the members, who will discuss musical preferences, victrola records. x * * Give P. E. O. Luncheon Chapter F of the P. E. O. Sister- hood will conclude its meetings for this season with a 1 o'clock lunch- eon Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Geo. Shafer, 617 Fourth street. Hostesses will be Mesdames William Nuessle, Frank Cave, George F. Shafer, George Bird, H. F. O'Hare, + | | places were set for 14. 801 Eighth illustrating them with | {Reception Welbores New Church Members Brief welcoming addresses, musical numbers and readings made up the \ delightful program given at the re- | ception for new members of the Mc- Cabe Methodist Episcopal church last evening, which was attended by a ‘large number of the congregation. Rev. Walter £. Vater, pastor, pre- sided during the evening, and Mrs. John Larson was in charge of the music. Miss Hardy Jackson spoke, reviewing the activities of the church, and welcoming the more recent mem- bers. Other addresses were givn by Rev. J. S. Wilds, district superintend- ent, and by Rev. Vater. A piano trio composed of Mrs. F. M. Davis, Miss Ruth Rowley and Miss 1 i numbers, and Adolph Englehardt gave violin selections, accompanied by Miss Kennedy. Vocal numbers included a solo by Mrs. John Graham, accompanied by Miss Rowley, and a duet by Mrs. John Larson and A, J. Arnot, with Mrs. Arnot at the piano, A musical read- ing was presented by Miss Mary May- nard, accompanied by Miss Helen Crawford. A social hour followed, and refresh- ments were served by the Ladies Aid society. The church parlors were attrac- tively decorated with many baskets of flowers and fern4 oe 8 Mrs. Vater to Spend Summer in England Mrs. Walter E. Vater, wife of Rev. Vater, pastor of the McCabe Metho- dist church, and her daughter, Miss Beatrice Vater, will leave Bismarck Tuesday for New York, from where they will sail Friday on the S. S. Carmania to spend three months vis- iting relatives in England. Mrs. Vater and daughter will land at Plymouth, and will visit there tor a time with Rev. Vater’s mother, going from there to Truro, in Corn- wall, to be the guests of Mrs. Vater's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Trega- nowan. They will spend the remainder of their time in traveling in Devon, Exeter, Torquay, Sussex, and will go to London for a week. They will also tour the Shakespeare country. Returning, they will sail from Southampton on the S. S. Alaunia, for Montreal. and they may visit in the east on their way home. * * * Miss McLean Honored Members of the T. N. T. club, com- posed of teachers, were guests at a dinner given last evening by Miss Beatrice Register, 1011 Fifth street, in honor of Miss Helen McLean, a ; Member of the group. Miss McLean will become the bride of Richard Hall, Chicago, next month. Favors and ap- | pointments to form a yellow color {scheme were used, and a bowl of yellow roses centered the table where Later Miss | McLean was presented with gifts of linen. Assisting the hostess was her sister, Miss Lavina Register, and the Misses Elizabeth Best and Esther | Gerrard. Miss McLean was alsocom- plimented at a party given recently ; by the teachers of the William Moore school, in the new rest room at the school. The affair was arranged as a surprise, and Miss McLean received a gift from the group. * * * Mandan Women Are Guests Ten tables of bridge were in play at the card party given in honor of members of: the Mandan Degree of Honor Protective association last evening by the local Degree of Honor at the A. O. U. W. hall. Score prizes in the bridge games were awarded Mrs. Charles Kidd, Mandan. Miss Rose Huber, and Mrs. George Shafer. Tulips and other early spring flow- ers were effectively used in decorat- ing the hall, and the tables were or- namented with bouquets of lilacs and if Places for the Marguerite Kennedy played several | Mrs. George Galloway, Mott, presi- Cent of the Mott Woman's club, was named district committeewoman at the convention of the seventh dis- trict federated clubs in session at Mott today. She will be a member of the nominating committee for the state convention in Bismarck this fall. 5 Mrs. Harriet Smith Fuller, Dickin- son, chairman of music for the state federation of women’s clubs, gave an address on “Music,” at the meeting of the seventh district clubs yester- day at Mott. Mrs. Harve Robinson, Dickinson, President of the seventh district, | North Dakota Federation of Wom- | en's clubs was reelected at the annual business session held during the con- | vention at Mott, which will close this afternoon. search was concluded when the treas- ure was located at the Burke home. The Juvenile Degree of Honor members will present a playlet, “Rain, Rain, Go Away,” and a program Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in St.! Mary's school auditorium. A small j admission will be charged. Play prac- tice will be held Monday afternoon jat the home of Mrs. Paul Homan, 223 Tenth street, and the dress renearsal | will be at 4 o'clock Tuesday afternoon | at the hall, according to Mrs. Homan. * * Mrs. H. A. McNutt was compli- mented at a surprise party given last evening by teachers of the Sunday school of the First Baptist church. Mrs. McNutt is superintendent of the school. cially with games and music, and was concluded with a luncheon served by the teachers. Mrs. O. T. Raaen was chairman of the committee arranging for the affair. xe For Mrs. Solomon Nichola, St. Paul, a former Bismarck resident who is visiting in the city, Mrs. A. W. Snow and Mrs. C. E. Will entertained a group of old time friends last evening street. The time was passed infor- | mally with games and reminiscences. Mrs, Nichola was presented with a/ handsome corsage by the group. xe OK Mrs. Mary Putney, Detroit, Mich.. who has been visiting at the home of | her brother for the past week, left | Thursday for her home. En route she will stop in Jamestown and Min- neapolis for a visit with relatives. * * * Members of St. Anthony's Mission- ary group were entertained last eve- where clues had been concealed. The| ‘The evening was spent so- | at the home of Mrs. Snow, 911 Eighth | ning at the home of Mrs. Louis Garske, east of the city. The evening was spent at bridge. Three tables were in play. Honors in the games j went to Mrs. T. J. McLaughlin, Mrs. | Fred Wilhelm and Mrs. E. G. Lacey. | Dainty refreshments were served at) the close of play. 2 Kenneth Preston, son of Mr. and | Mrs. A. E. Preston, 311 Park street, arrived this week from Kansas City, |Mo., where he is employed in the offices of the government engineer. Mr. Preston will conduct an inspec- tion tour of work on the Missouri river in this vicinity, and expects to ; be here about two months. * * * Guests for two tables of bridge were invited when Mrs. R. J. Kamplin entertained the members of her | bridge club last evening at her home, |927 Ninth street. Honors at cards| ‘were held by Miss Esther Burch and Mrs, Harry Rosenthal. A pink and) green motif was carried out in the table appointments. x Oe OR Mrs. C. A. Hoss, Fort Lincoln, was hostess to the members of the Ladies bridge club ata bridge tea held Thursday afternoon at her home. | Cards were played at two tables, and | honors were awarded Mrs. Eva Hunt. Mr. and Mrs. George Crosby and |Miss Margaret Crosby, Duluth, Minn., stopped in the city today en route to their home after spending the winter | months in California, xk O® Hear Rev. Walter E. Vater Sunday evening, 8 P. M. Metho- dist Episcopal Church, Subject, “Caught Napping.” More \ Than From Bernard K. Dorothy i | Bismarck’s Oldest _| ; Woman ‘Air Minded’ | fp See eg Age is no handicap to Bismarck’s oldest woman, Mrs. Julia Johnson, who is now in her ninety-fifth year. Confessing that she would as soon travel by airplane as by car, she ad- mitted that she had ‘been planning | to take a trip to the northern part of the state by plane, until she found it cost too much. Mrs. Johnson's en- thusiasm for present day conveniences | is as great as any girl's. Coming to America from Norway when a young woman, she was on a sailing vessel which was becalmed in | mid-Atlantic, so that the trip, which | would ordinarily have taken a month, This expcrience, with many others she enjoyed as a resident of Minne- sota and North Dakota in the pioneer days, Mrs. Johnson loves to relate. Flowers are Mrs. Johnson's hobby, and there is almost no kind she can- not name and describe. And grow too, for that matter! At least all that sons, are to be found in her garden each year. It is her flower garden | that is calling her back to her home in Landsford, she admits. In spite of her years she is extremely active, and | does most of the work among her | flowers herself. Mrs. Johnson left this morning by bus in company with her daughter, Mrs. Mary Ryan, 230 West Main ave- nue, who will remain in Landsford for a week or more, until her mother is settled. Mrs. Johnson has made was stretched over twice that coal are adapted to the North Dakota sea- | | her home here with Mrs. Ryan for the greater part of the last 11 years. | Mrs. Johnson has only two children ; living, Mrs. Ryan of this city, with whom she has made her home for the greater part of the past 11 years, and a son residing in Spokane. She has | three grandchildren. With continued good health, Mrs. Johnson is planning to live to be 100, for she says she feels as well as she , did at 60, and believes she is growing younger every day. A number of Mrs. Johnson's friends gathered at her home yesterday aft- ernoon for a farewell surprise party. MRS, HARVE ROBINSON. REELECTED AT MOTT Is Again Named Head of Sev-| enth District Clubs at An- nual Convention | | The invitation of Bowman to be | hostess to the seventh district, North Dakota Federation of Women’s clubs, for 1931, was accepted at the session of the annual convention being held | in Mott. It was decided to plant a memorial | tree for Carl Ben Eielson, Hatton avia- | tor, who died in Siberia, at the mect- | ing yesterday. The district also vot- ed to contribute $10 to the fund to finance the trip of girls from the In- dian school at Bismarck, to the gen- eral federation convention at Denver. Proceeds of a benefit concert last night were $85. Mrs. Harve Robinson, Dickinson, was reclected president of the seventh district, at the annual election held yesterday. Mrs. George Galloway, president of the Mott Woman's club, was named district committee wom- | an, and will be a member of the nom- | inating committee at the state con- vention in Bismarck this fall. Mrs. |J. G. Johns, Hettinger, was elected historian. Miss Bertha Palmer, state superin- | tendent of public instruction, spoke | on “The Value of Art in Everyday | Life,” at the session yesterday. Miss Palmer made the trip to Mott by] partment, North Dakota Agricultura Piane, returning last night. College, are scheduled for today. The secretary's report, the reports of the essay contest, and addresses] The new German anesthetic, aver. by Mrs. Paul T. Boleyn, Fargo, chair-| tin, administered by injection, is sai¢ man of press and publicity, and Miss| to obviate all danger of the usua neausea following ether. Grace DeLong, of the extension de- ft For sheer beauty... choose a diamond! 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More Thrilling Any Play— Love Racket” Burn's Stage Play “The Woman on the Jury” Starring MacKaill A NEW | Maytag Gentus Presents for Farm Homes with or without Electricity! 1 = HUUUNGAUGUGANNDONNANCUNODONEONaUGNONECUOUOON Washer things that should have been done and weren't, -—that’s another story! If you're going to travel this summer, either this side of the water or the other, we can do a lot toward taking the trouble out of travel for you. Direct or through the Travel Department of the First National Bank of Saint Paul which, like this Bank, is affiliated with the First Bank Stock Corporation, we can assemble all the informa- tion you need about any trip you want to take and make all the necessary arrangements for transportation and accommodations. Letting ex- perts make your arrangements costs no more, saves you endless worry and assures your having things the way you want them. And before you go, be sure to get from us a supply of Travelers Checks,—the safest, simplest and most convenient form of carrying money on 2 trip. _ First National Bank Bismarck, North Dakota flowering almond. S. W. Corwin, William Harris, and S| wandan guests were marked with F. Hollingsworth. The program will; —with— center around the topic, “The Negro) in Drama,” and papers will be read by Mrs. Gordon Cox and Mrs. G. H. Doilar. a : 3 7 ry ‘ | City-County Briefs | Le aay EE Sn SNE San RA Tom Poole is going to Minneapolis and St. Paul for several days, to hold some conferences with clients of his accounting office. Frank L. Tischler, of Flasher, in the city on a business trip, announced to friends his opening of a hardware store and undertaking business in his home town. Joseph A. Reems, a Killdeer pion- eer, is in the city visiting Mr. and / . Mrs. M. M. Ruder. He is on his way to Minnesota, where he owns a farm in the family since 1854, when his . father homesteaded it. te Reems is @ native of Lebanon, Pa., where he was born in 1849. His dandfather was a soldier under George Wash- ington. Ash hauling, black dirt and fertilizer. M. Burch. Phone 1132-W. T. tulips. s* & Party For Miss Pollard Miss Ethel Pollard, who will be a bride of next month, was compli- mented at a supper party given Thursday evening by Miss Marian Burke and Miss Florence Homan at the Burke home, 224 Avenue A West Tulips, daisies and other spring flow- ers were used for the tables, and cov- ers were laid for 12. 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If it doesn’t sell itself, don’t keep it. Divid- ed payments you'll never miss. For homes with electricity, the Maytag is available with electric motor. French & Welch Hardware Co, North Dakota’s Oldest Maytag Dealers = Dance at the Dome Tonite Jack Mills and his Orchestra Send for this MANITOBA WACATION BOOK - This free Booklet pic+ tures and describes Cen- tral Canada’s Great No Passport Summer Playground— Needed— a lovely lake and forest- No Delay land threaded by 2,800 miles of at the all-weather highways. Boundary It tells about Manitoba cities and towns, hotels and tourist camps, resorts and beaches— where to motor, where to fish, where to hunt. ‘The Teares pnd Cas [Sy vporred Sunes Parlinment Bar utiee ‘Winnipes. Maaitobs, Canada. Gentlemen: Tiasss peed son vous emo Manioobe Deahiee and Road Mi Coming Attractions: Phil Sheridan and his Mon- tanans. A 10-piece musical cor- poration of America band.