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vw THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1930 | Additional Society | peter hn tc he A DISTRICT CLUBWOMEN CONVENE AT WILTON Bismarck's 14 Federated Clubs Are Represented by Large Delegation Bismarck’s 11 federated clubs, and three junior clubs affiliated with the state federation, are well represented at the sixteenth annual meeting of the Eighth district, North Dakota Federation of Women’s clubs, which opened in Wilton this afternoon for a three-day session. Sixty delegates and visitors were registered when the convention opened. Mrs. Steffen announced this after- noon that 50 per cent of the money taken in at the entertainment Wed- nesday night will be used to pay the| cost of sending the Bismarck Indian girls’ glee club to the convention of the national federation of wemen's clubs at Denver. The entertainment, “The Feast of the Little Lantern” will be presented by the girls, The convention was called to order by Mrs. James H. Cooper, Courtenay, district president. Following this was assembly singing, led by Mrs. A. M. Dahl, Wilton. Rev. F. W. Christ, gave the invocation. Greetings from the hostess club were extended by Mrs. L. E. Nugent, head of the Wilton Women's club, with Mrs. Cleve Acton Cross, Dawson, State auditor, giving the response. Reports were presented by Mrs, R. C. Hansen, Streeter, secretary-treas- urer; by Mrs. T. H. Steffen, Wilton, chairman of the student loan gind, and by the district presidents. Musi- i | | Above are pictured the members of ; at the commencement exercises last Eltha Graf, Margaret represented the Bismarck Thursday Musical club on the North Dakota Music Federation Festival at Fargo. They will return to Bismarck this | evening. * ok * Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Dorrance and Everett Pearcy, Minneapolis, are, the guests of Mr. Dorrance's sister, Mrs. Della Fox, 423 Fifth strect. They are en route to Portland, Ore., where Mr. and Mrs. Dorrance will make their future home, * ok * panied by Mrs. Elmer Boepple and Mrs. J. Morton, Miles City, Mont., are visiting friends in the city this week, Armour Creameries conference. Mr. and Mrs. Boepple are former Bis- marck residents. se Miss Audrey Rohrer. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Rohrer, 411 Ave- nue E, has returned from Minot cal numbers were also given by Mrs. | Teachers’ college, to accept a position Steffen. Following the presentation of a/ @miner. playlet by the primary grades of the Wilton schools, the afternoon was de- voted to club problems. Mrs. Nellie Gilmore will be toast- mistress for the annual banquet this evening, to be served in the dining room of the First Presbyterian church, Addresses by Miss Bessie Baldwin, Bismarck; Mrs. James T. McCulloch, Washburn; Mrs. Albert E. Jones, Lis- bon, state president. and Mrs. Cooper, are scheduled for tomorrow evening. STATE B. P. W. CLUBS MEET IN DEVILS LAKE Local Women Will Attend Two-| Day Session; Martha Con- nole Is Speaker Bismarck women will leave this; end for Devils Lake to be pres- cnt for the annual convention of the North Dakota Federation of Business id Professional Women’s clubs, hich will be in session Saturday. In the party w: Ray V. Stair, retiring president of the local club; Miss Lillian Cook, Miss Henricka Beach, Miss Mary Hubei Mrs. L. B. Sowles, and Miss Juditl Rue. Delezates will be welcomed to Devils Lake by A. V. Haig, president of the city commission, following the formal opening of the mecting Friday morning, with Miss Eleanor Bryson, State president, presiding. Other welcoming addresses will be given by Mrs. A. M. Powell, represent- ing the women's clubs, Mack V. Tray- nor, for the service clubs, and Miss Margaret Babcock, president of the Devils Lake P. B. W. club. Madora Knox, Grand Forks, will re- spond. i Appointment of the nominating} committee and other routine business will take up the morning session, to be followed by a luncheon at which Miss Marie Steining, Fargo, will speak on “What B. P. Means.” Talks by Olivia Johnson and Nellie } Severance of St. Paul will feature the | early part of the afternoon gathering. | At this time also, reports of the club presidents and the heads of the standing committees will be giv- en. Miss Martha Connole, East St. Louis, Ill., speaker sent by the na- tional federation, is scheduled for an address. A sight-seeing drive to nearby points will conclude the | afternoon, and the guests will be en- tertained at dinner at he Town and Country club. A “Virginia” breakfast, with Miss Eabcock, vice president, presiding, will precede the opening session Saturday morning, which will pe mostly taken up with committee reports. Talks will be given by Miss Lillian Gubel- man, Valley City, and by’B. W. Briggs, superintendent of the school for deaf, Devils Lake. Miss Denice Kilshaw, Ray, will preside at the noon voca- tional luncheon. Mrs. Agnes Rex, Grand Forks, will conduct a school of instruction dur- ing the afternoon meeting which will be devoted to election of officers and other business. Judge C. W. Buttz, Devils Lake, will speak on “Saka- kawea.” jing business in the city today. i back on duty at Klein's. jin the offices of the state bank ex- * * * Mrs. Thomas C. Lauder, James- town, is spending the week here as the guest of Miss Leila Diesem, at the Patterson hotel. * * % Mrs. Mary Potter left Monday for Portland, Ore., where she will make her home with a brother. ee @ Mr, and Mrs. F. E. Ackerman ar- j rived yesterday from Wishek for a | visit with friends. | * ok x Mr. and Mrs, A. J. Piers are here from Braddock for a few days visit. SS | City-County Briefs H, A. Fischer, Washburn banker, is a business visitor here today. William Lembke, Fargo, is ‘eansact- Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Sanger are v' itors in Bismarck today from Sang Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Stroup were business visitors here | Hazen. Dick Grosvenor has returned from Seattie, where he visited friends and relatives for two weeks and is now Mr. and Mrs. Tony Steingruber, ac- companied by Mr. and Mrs. dl Steingruber, Hebron, visited friends here Saturday. c with Mrs. Albin Hedstrom and her son Ted Hedstrom will leave tomorrow for Valley City, where they will attend in-law of Ted Hedstrom. June 5. Regina, The road is a route from Canada, to Mexico City. The asked to send a representative. Friends here have been notified of the death of Mrs. George Weather- head, Portland, Ore., wife of a former editor of The Tribune. which occurred at their home, 1301 ple: Malusky, Given Four Fargo, N. D., May 20.—()—With a recommendation from District Judge A. T. Cole that he be pardoned im- mediately, Joe Malusky, Fargo, re- sentenced Monday to four years in the state penitentiary, left today for Bismarck in the custody of Sheriff Mark Andrews. ‘The state pardon board proba: will take up Malusky’s case as an emergency matter when it meets June 2. according to John C. Pollock, state's attorney. Malusky drew a four year term un- Ger the habitual criminal act, after being convicted of a liquor law viola- tion. He was sentenced May 28, 1928. but with good behavior would be eli- gible for release in about nine months. Miss Cook, Bismarck, will preside at the annual banquet Saturday night | in Guild hall, with Miss Connolé as) the principal speaker. She will have | for her topic “Where Do We Go From Here?” | Indian School Girls | Back from Operetta ° Tour of State Points The Indian school glee and dra- matic girls are back from a state tour which embraced Lisbon and Fort Totten. They gave the operetta, “Mon-Dah-Min,” Friday afternoon, at Lisbon’and “The Feast of the Lit- tle Lantern” in the evening. Satur- day evening they produced Feast of the Little Lantern” at Fort Totten Indian school. ! The party was made up of 18 of the| singers and dramatic students of the| school, under the chaperonage of Su- perintendent and Mss. C, B. Dickin- son, Madame Scheffer and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Doyle. Sunday evening the girls gave a Program at the Checko-Slovakian hall several miles south of Mandan, putting on the operetta “Mon-Dah- Min.” Miss Maric Lemohn, playing Grieg’s *Concerto’ in A Minor,” with Miss Belle Mehus at the cecond piano, Lolding the constitutionality of the habitual criminal act, it was held that in Malusky’s case it was not manda- tory but discretionary on tho Part of the court to double the sentence as provided by the act. The case was remanded back to Judge Cole, who ve-sentenced Malusky but recom- mended a pardon. COUNTY HAS INDEPENDENCE DAY Charlotte, N. C., May 20.—?)—This is independence day in Mecklenburg county, schools and businoss houses being closed. On Mzy 20, 1775, citi- zens of the county signed a declari | tion of independence from British rule, New Orleans, year’s greatest piece of American fic- tion; the story of bootleggers running in booze from Europe when as a matter fact they get $10 from the country club crowd for 15 cents’ worth of sucker whiskey. FORMER CRACKSMAN HELD Chicago, May 20.——Joe (Big Charley) Burgess, once known from! coast to coast as a cracksman, later ! the temporary Officers were: in trouble over begging for dimes, was! Robinson, J. A. O'Brien, held today on a charge of counter- feiting. He is to be taken to St. Paul, Minn., for trial, Frances Beer, Genevieve Forster, Genevieve Auth, Perpetua Thomas, artists’ program this morning at the | Mr. and Mrs. Chris Boepple, accom- | while Mr. Boepple is attending the | where she has been attending the State | terday from | the funeral of Mrs. A. Sunde, mother- | The sixth annual meeting of the j Miss | Great Plains Highway association wiil be held at’ Liberzl, Kansas, opening * Association of Commerce has been | !: Her death, % Fremont street, was caused by apo- Year Term, on Way to | ,,x Bismarck from Fargo if Under a supreme court ruling, up-| These Nurses Were Graduated from St. Alexius Hospital the 1930 gradyating class of the St. Alexius hospital school of nursing. taken week. From left to right they are Schwartzbauer, Helen Boucher, { i —— | Additional Sports || ‘Pitchers in Hot spending a few days in Bismarck, a | Water as D-Ball | Six Teams Get 95 Safe Hits in | Three Games; Program to | | Be Resumed Thursday Winning their games on the first | Program of the season last evening, | | the Capital Laundry, North Dakota! | Power and Light, and Grand Pacific | Eat Shop entrants jumped into the! lead of the Bismarck Diamondball | league. The laundrymen walloped Mont- gomery-Ward 27 to 21 in the wildest | game of the evening while the elec- tricians trimmed the Gamble Auto Supply company 15 to 3 and the res- | taurateurs defeated Northwestern Bell Telephone 17 to 8. , The battle will be continued Thurs- day night at the kittenball diamonds | at Thayer avenue on .Twenty-first street. | | It was a bad evening for pitchers in | | the first program of the year. The | six teams secured 95 safe bingles be- Itween them. This is accounted for largely by league officials because in- | | clement weather has prevented the | ordinary amount of spring practice. Box scores of the games last nigh follow: i Capital Laundry— ABI Brown | . 1 1 ! 4 ‘ i 0 N. DP. Power and Light - ABR OH Mol Satine’ at 0 N. Neibaucr 1M. Coetz eibaucr un iEmecic Totals ' v4 ' 0 | | | nLa- , mented by Nebraskan, ! | Lincoln, Neb., menting suspension of Primo Car- | | Hera, Italian behemoth, at the hands | ;of the National Box association, | Ira Vorhies, Nebraska commissioner, | today directed a letter to Stanley Isaacs, president of that organization, | | demanding that Carnera be given | hearing. i Should Isaacs frown at his attitude | in the Carnera case, Vorhies will re- | sign his office as treasurer of the N. B. A. and will withdraw his member- ship, he said. | “All I ask is justico—I have never | yet suspended a fighter without a | hearing and that’s what Carnera is, entitled to,” Vorhies wrote after im- | pressions of Carnera gained in his| | Omaha workouts Saturday and Sun- | day. | | i | Washburn Sportsmen | Form League Chapter (Special to The Tribune) | Washburn, N. D., May 20.—Unified | action in support of the intererts of | \ ‘ica, organized here. | John Tucker, Bismarck, state league secretary, explained the work of the! jorganization and assisted at the/| ‘initial meeting, | Temporary officers elected were: | President, W. J. Bickert; vice presi- ident, J. G. Odegard; secretary-treas- | | urer, E. J. Shulz. Charter members, in addition to BE. Walter K.| Williams, A. Archie Nelson, George | Cramer, E. 7. Klein, D. FE. Shuiz, Jr.. Pred J. Jefferis, H. E, Wahl, J. T Mc- 1 i | no longer nervous and irritable. | tacks the causes. Carrie Burkhardt, Marian Helenskec, Sister Mary Mark, Margaret Barrcit, Ethel Sandberg and Vera Dieruf. Cullough, P. E. Ekstrom, Albert Neu- mann, M. B. Thorstenson, and Albert Peterson, 1. A.A. F. Honors Tolan 9.5 Mark Schedule Starts Michigan Negro Now Holds Rec- | ognized World Record; Set It Last Spring Berlin, May 20.—(#)—The Interna- tional Amateur Athletic Federation today recognized as a world’s record the mark of 9 5-10 seconds for the 100 yard dash made by Eddie Tolan of the University of Michigan last year. Recognition also jas given to the records made by Eric Krenz of Stan. ford university in the discuss throw Lee Barnes, formerly of the Univ sity of Southern California, pole vault; Emerson Spencer, former Stan- ford Captain, 400 meter run, and the United States national team of Baird, Barbuti, Spencer and Taylor for the one-mile relay. Marks made with starting blocks, namely George Simpson's 9 2-5 hundred yard dash and Dick Rockaway’s low hurdles rec- ord, were turned down. Mandan to Bismarck Relay Set for May 27 Decision to hold the annual Man- lan to Bismarck relay race on Tues- day, May °7, was announced today by E. B. Kicin, who sponsors the con- tests. Five teams. representing the four 4 Classes at the Bismarck high school and St. Mary's High school, will par- ticipate. The race will start at Man- dan 3 p. m. and is expected to end —— ee Konjola’s Merit Beyond Words,’ Says This Lady New Medicine Strikes at Root Of Nervousness and Offers Speeds Relief h I hed heard of Konjola go.” Time after time has this expression of regret been voiced by men and women of all ages and from sil walks of life who have found in this new and different medicine the finel end lasting answer to their health prodlems. Ae RE S$ LUCILE ELMEZGREEN Compounded of 32 ingredients, 22 of which are the juices of roots and herbs of known medicinal value, Konjola is designed to attack the very source of ills of the stomach, kidneys, liver. and bowels, and rheumatism neuritis and nervousness, How well | this great medicine succeeds is evi dexced by the records, full to over- flowing, which record the happy exe pressions of thousands who learned, to their everlasting joy, that Konjola made good. Miss Lucile Elmergreen, 936 Wisconsin avenue, Racine, is but one of many hundreds, many of them your friends or neighbors, of whom the Konjola Man, now at the Hall Drug Store, Third and Broadway, Bismarck, cen tell you. Sez him May 20.—(?)—La- |, there today and learn more of what ‘this master-medicine has done. This is what Miss Eimergreen sa ing her ‘experience “I suffered for ye ous condition that was growing regard- idly worse. The least bit of noise or | excitement weuld cat and shake and I becoming crocs and irritable. Frightful headaches attacked me frequently and lasted for hours at a time. Constipation both- ered me for years end I was forced to use cathartics almost daily. My General health was badly impaired end I was growing weaker each da! I tried many medicines and treat ments but enly secured occasional temporary relief while the treatment was going on. “I finally tried Konjola although at the time I had little or no faith in any medicine. I took five bottles of me to tremble | Konjola and the results were abso- lutely startling. My constipation was relieved within a week and I could feel the tonic effect of Konjola. Iam y nerves are in better condition than they have been in years. The fright- “The | BOOTL 4 » the North Dakota sportsmen is the| ful headaches and backaches are now raeIne a merioy Object of the McLean county chapter! happily ® thing of the past. I can ran has an idea for.a prize for the Of the Izaak Walton League of Amer-| 2Cv#r find words to express my ap- preciation of Konjola and I shall never be without a bottle in the house although my system no longer re- quires for it hes been years since I | have enjoyed the excellent health I enjoy today. Konjola was not designed to afford mere temporary relief, it strikes the very source of the ailment and at- The Konjola Man is at the Hall Drug Store, Third and Broadway. Bismarck, where he is daily meeting the public introducinz and explein- ing this new and different medicine. Ady. | Free here about 3:30 o'clock. The destina- tion of the runners will be Klein's Toggery at Fifth strect and Broadway j avenue, Members of the high school class teams met yesterday and clected cap- tains as follows: Freshman, Wade {Green; sophomore, Lester Dohn; jjunior, Gilbert Benzon; senior, Wal- lace Green. The St. Ma team has {not yet selected a captain. ‘The teams, composed of 12 runners jeach, will carry a message from the ;mayor of Mandan to the mayor of} (Bismarck. The winning team will re. |celve a trophy, now on display in the | window of Klein's Togge: 4 Considered for American Skipper Nichols, Lawrence, Vanderbilt, and Either Hammond or | Thorne, Probables | New York, May 20.—(/P\—specula- ; tion as to who will be at the helm of {the defender of the America's cup against Sir Thomas Lipton'’s Sham- | rock Fifth in September has brought the names of four skippers to the fore- front. Final choice of a skipper is in the hands of the American selection com- mittee but indications are he will be chosen from among former Com- modore George Nichols, son-in-law of J. P. Morgan; John S. Lawren¢e, Bos- ton; Harold S. Vanderbilt, and cither Paul Hammond or Langdon K. | Thorne. COLLEGE BASEBALL Gustavus Adolphus 8; St. Johns 1. Augsburg 16; St. Thomas 1. * CENSUS RETURNS ° 4 = Butte, Mont., 39,540, decrease 2.971 or 5.23 per cent. Far Less than the normal wear of this improved motor oil ducke STANDA found in the parts of this engiac after 29,000 mile test run on New Iso- That shows the all-around efficiency will not thin out in your crankcase. esses—giving it a degree of cating efficiency which we believe is exceeded only by the New Iso- Vis. The price is 25¢ a quart. '38 TOBE GRADUATED. _ FROM MOBRIDGE HIGH | | jJames Parkinson and Hildred! Miller Are Valedictorian | and Salutatorian | | Mobridge, S. D., May 20.—The si: teenth annual commencement of the | ¢o, | Mobridge senior high school which | | Opened with the class play, April 24, | will close with graduation’ exercises, May 29. The class has 36 members. The junior-senior prom will be Sat- urday, May 17. Baccalaureate serv- ices will be in the high school audi- torium, Sunday, May 25. Rev. J. O. Parrott will give the baccalaureate sermon. Rev. T. E, Hall will give the invocation. Class officers are president, Charles Tucker; vice president. Hildred Mil er; secretary, Catherine Hawkins; | treasurer, James Parkinson. James Parkinson is valedictorian and Hil- dred Miller, salutatorian. Graduates are Dorothy Byrne, Max- ine Fuller, Gladys Gustafson, May Hardcastle, Clare Haakenson, Cath- crine Hawkins. Beatrice Hawley, Ruthanne Hoenisch, Dorothy Klein, ——_—_—_——_— Well Pressed Is Well Dressed pressed Ladies’ Coats, pressed .. Men's Tepcoats, pressed .... Klein’s Toggery Phone 770 We Call for and Deliver was Vis. that Same conditions with of lubricating oil, including New Iso- Vis. Each oil was given a 50-hour test. At the end of each 50-hour run, every bit of carbon was removed from Lhe New Polarine also is prow ir new refining pee: lubri- RD OIL “Use the Air Mail” i 1 | Rhodes, ‘MOTORED PARACHUTE PLANNED | after leaping from a plane UstT how much does the amount of carbon in your engine depend upon the kind of oil you use? Here is a test that has Surprised even experienced mechanics. To make this test we tookanengine out of a car, placed it on blocks in the laboratory, and ran itunder exactly the Hildred Miller, Bertha Larson, Mer- | cedes Milligan, Ramona Monthye, | Ruth Mosher, Eleanor Schneider, Alyce Slensby, Thelma Stienecker, | Cora Vanderlaan, Grace Wahl, Clar- ence Bell, Lloyd Bodin, Charles Boldt, | Arthur Brown, Charles Burton, Edwin | Kosel. Rolland Lease, Raymond Mill- er, Ellis Lewis, Herbert Morris, James Parkinson, William O'Neill, Glen | Chauncey Schwartz, Tor. rence Slaughter, Charles Tucker, Cor nelius Vanderlaan, Soft Lustrous Wavei by expert operators Ohm Dress Shop 204 Fourth Stre Dresses at $9.98, $14.98 and $17.98. Hate Our New York, May 20.—(?)—Now mes the motored parachute. Henry Bushmeyer, professional jumper, is working on a device that he hopes will enable him to fly 20 miles or so Beautiful Tumbler FREE With each pound purchase of Princess Patt Coffee even fo hard- boiled, mechanis Men who know motors appreciate the low carbon Sorming feature of New Iso-Vis Motor Oil, Herve is the carbon formed by various oils under the same conditions —New Iso-Vis at the left. It is only about Vp of the average carbon deposit from various premium-priced olla pistons and cylinders and accurately measured, New Iso-Vis not only deposited a minimum of carbon but this carbon was actually 50% less than the average car- bon deposit of the better grade oils tested, But this is only one of the results of the special refining process by which this new type oil is made. It has a wider temperature range. It lubri- Cates effectively at low temperatures and all the way up to temperatures far beyond the highest on your gauge. Moreover, New Iso-Vis is the only motor oil that will not thin out in your crankcase. Every motorist fa- miliar with the diluted condition of motor oil after a few hundred miles in the crankcase will appreciate what this means. New Iso-Vis is actually as heayy and oily when you drain it off as when you first put it in. Any Standard Oil dealer or service station attendant will be glad to drain your crankcase, flush and refill with New Iso-Vis Motor Oil. various brands COMPANY (Indsana)