The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 26, 1930, Page 3

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} ‘*) y f PRESBY TERIANS PLAN ~ RELIGIOUS TRAINING PROGRAN NEXT WEEK Pageant Staged by Sunday School Students Will Close Program October 5 \ Religious Education Week will be ol in. the First. Presbyterian chi Sept. 28 to Oct. 5, it has been announced by Rev. Floyd Logee, pas- tor, The will include four spe- cial days and teachers of the Sunday | school will visit every family repre- sented in the Sunday school ‘during the’ week. Next’ Sunday will be Promotion Day, all students in the inday school being advanced to the next class on this day. The Sunday school has 70 students. School workers will hold their monthly conference at a supper meeting Wednesday evening. Mrs. L. C. Sterrett is chairman of arrange- ments. Miss Bertha R. Palmer, state superintendent of public instruction, will give a 15 minute lecture on “The Value and Place of Goals and Stand- ards of our Church School Program.” Friday evening has been set aside for the parents and teachers, who will hold a meeting in the church parlors at 8 o'clock. All parents are invited to attend. Mrs. John Page, superintendent of the junior depart- ment, and Mrs. L. P. Warren, super- intendent of the senior department, re co-chairmen of the program com- ittee. Serving also are Miss Madge Runey and Mrs. L. W. Larson. Music on Program Rev. Floyd Logee will open the pro- gram Friday evening with a word of welcome. Miss Ruth Johnson will give a vocal solo, being accompanied by Mrs. Norman 8. Johnson, pianist. Miss Helen E. Vaile, director of re- ligious education, then will describe the church school program. Miss Vaile will be followed by Mrs. Obert Olson, who will give a reading. C. L. Young, superintendent of the Sunday sehool and chairman of the board of education, will follow with a talk en- titled “Why ‘Religious Education?” The program will be closed with a ,.Violin solo by Adolph Englehardt, ac- | companied by Mrs. Anne Peterson, pianist. Sunday, Oct. 5, is set aside as Rally Day. -The Sunday school will have its usual . Religious education will be stressed in the morning worship and installa- tion and consecration of all church school teachers and officers is on the| Will Give Pageant In the evening, the Sunday school students will have charge of the eve- ning worship and as @ part of the service a pageant, “The Pentecost of {fouth,” will be presented. The cast for the pageant: Episode One: The Twelve Discip- les: James, Chester Perry; Philip, Melvin Munger; Matthew, Merrill Kitchen; Thomas, Ben Cave; Na- thaniel, Carroll Blunt; Peter, Myron Benser; Andrew, C. D. Todd; John, Fritz Schrimpf. Other disciples: Joyce Moule, Donald Keniston, Wade Green and Jack. Humphreys. Episode Two—The Meeting of the Centuries: ' First Century, Mary Cram; Twentieth Century, Emma Trygg; The Star, Edith Callender; The Voice, John Page. Episode Three'-— Mr. Jonathan, Fritz Schrimpf; Charles, Joyce ‘Wade Green; Effie, Elizabeth Davy, Allen Bowerman; Ruth, Ernes- étine Dobler; Dick, Jack Humphreys; Angela, Margaret Bates; Tad, Don Keniston. Mrs. James Gentry and Mrs. Eu- gene Tuskind are coaching the cast. Grace Duryee Morris at the organ will furnish the accompaniment for back stage music and singing. +1 Freise of Redwood Falls, Minn., may $ OSCAR H. : Flower ‘Phone 184 | Hold-Up Jail Term | To Wean Infant | Gary, Ind., Sept. 26.—(P)—The 30- day jail sentence imposed upon, ‘Ethel Hall has been held up by order temporarily to give the 24-year. ban mother a ‘chance to wean hei |_ Mrs. Hall was convicted under the Indiana nuisance law because there had been drinking at her home. When she was sentenced to jail her attor- ney appealed to the couft on the ground that eight-monthis-old Bev- erly Hall was still a nursing infant and could,not leave her mother. | Judge Martin J. Smith agreed to) postpone the sentence until the baby | could be weaned. i Soo Box of Freight Smashes Handler’s Toe} Peter Ryan, bri an on the Sd | Line, is in a local hospital with @/ crushed big toe on his right foot. Ryan was unloading a box of mer- chandise at aWhsburn, from a north- bound way frieght, Thursday after-. noon, when the box slipped, landing on Ryan's right foot. Mrs. Mary Hoerauf, 38, Laid Away at Hebron! Funeral services were held at 2:30 this afternoon for Mrs. Mary Hoerauf, 38, Hebron, who died in this cit; Monday. The rites were conducted ; by Rev. Mr. Muntz, pastor, at the German Evangelical church, Hebron, ; and interment was in the Hebron; cemetery. | Mrs. Hoerauf was the wife of Louis Hoerauf and was a native of Ohio. She was born March 22, 1892. Her parents were from Germany and Her maiden family name was Ruppert. Hold Russie Leroy On Bootleg Charge Fargo, N. D., Sept. 26.—(?)—Russie Leroy, former Fargo lightweight box- er, is-at liberty under $1,000 cash bond on a charge of bootlegging. Le- Toy surrendered to authorities today when he was informed that the sher- |iff held a warrant for his arrest. | Fargo Minister to | Head Association 4 Fargo, N. D., Sept. 26.—(P)—Rev. C. A. Bremer, Fargo, superintendent of the Fargo district of the Evangeli- cal church, was elected president of the Fargo District Ministerial ation in Chaffee today. ; chairman of the convention, asserted NICHCAN G0. , ~ RAPS REPEAL AGT Opposes Plan of Wolverine Dem- ocrats for Nation-Wide Ref- erendum on Dry Law Grand Rapids, Mich., Sept. 26—() —The Michigan Democrats’ proposal for a nation-wide referendum on the prohibition question came in for Tough handling in Keynote speeches at the Republican post-primary state convention today. Gov. Fred W. Green, temporary that prohibition is not a political is- sue and should not be injected into Political campaigns. He denounced the Democratic platform declaration as an effort to “catch votes” and as- serted such a referendum would be ain ee? effect. ase S: Osborn, former governor, followed with a stronger denuncia- tion of the referendum and of state control proposals, saying the latter brought up an issue which was de- cided in the Civil war. While the Republicans met without an official leader, Governor Green called on them to accept Wilber M. Brucker, attorney general, who was nominated on the face of returns, as their candidate for governor. Certi- fication of a nominee was held up be- ‘ause of @ recount demand by Bruck- er’s nearest opponent, Alex J. Groes- beck, former governor, who ran 4,726 votes behind. nN who supported Governor Green, Brucker, deplored the “legal techni- calities” which he said prevented Brucker’s having the title of nominee today. He called upon the Republi- cans to accept his leadership never- theless, The business before the convention consisted of nomination of candidates for minor offices and writing a plat- form. The wishes of the nominee for governor usually are deferred to in these matters in state conventions in Michigai ‘Antiquated Law’ Is Attacked by Judge St. Louis, Sept. 26—()—The “anti- quated and fossilizied rule of the common law,” which prohibits a wife from testifying in favor of her hus- band or @ husband for his wife, was discussed by Judge William 8, Ken- yon of the United States circuit court of appeals in an opinion fileo here today. Judge Kenyon declared that “if there ever was reason for this rule, Rey. E. F. Schroeder, Great Bend, was named vice president; Rev. w.| W. White, Osnabrock, secretary, and) | Rev. A. W. Heidinger, Alice, treasurer. | Decline to Call \ New Arms Parley} Geneva, Sept. 26—(P)—The dis- | armament committee of the League| of Nations assembly today declined to direct that a general disarmament | * conference be called in 1931. While defeating the German pro-; posal to authorize the council to call @ general disarmament conference in the year 1931, the committee decided to say in its report that the assembly “expressed the desire” that the con- ference be held before the end of next year. a Minnesota Woman Ts Culinary Champ Chicago, Sept. 26—()—Mrs. M. L. now call herself the culinary cham-.| pion of American farm women cooks, without fear of contradiction. She earned the title by submitting the winning Thanksgiving dinner menu in an American farm bureau federation contest. Second prize went to Bernice Rink- er of Grand Ridge, Illinoi NOW FOR | MIDWINTER. | FLOWERS | a ¢ it has long since ceased to exist.” He Suggests that congress should pass an act making husband. and wife compe+ tent witnesses for each other in fed- eral court. A definite decision of the supreme court, he added, would have the same effect as an act of congress. & pio hes reset iat | Pilot of Antique i] \| | . Airplane in Texas | st El Paso, Tex., Sept. 26—Pilot A} Wilson, on a jaunt combining what he considers the finest features of reliability and good-will tours, not to THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 19380 ° proceed Probably due to the poor ship of the attackers. Proceeding down the river the U. §. Oahu ran into a battery of Red fleld guns a few miles above Kiuk- Hair that sparkles ! having the hair in style best suited to the individual type.|[@ Much of the effect is lost, a show you how marvelously it removes excess Oil from the hair; cleanses it; Try Gland Treatment with As Cure for Bad Boy ne WILL & CO. | mention endurance flights, is in El Paso after twelve days of travel from) Paso after two days of travel from Pas derine. All you do is put a ttle on His craft is a 1910 Curtiss pusher | your hair! Tne poe by use of type plane. Some part of the 12 days Was spent sitting on the Texas des-|crust of dandruff; soothe, heal the ert among the mesquite after a forced | scalp; stimulate the growth of long, |~ landing. ! undant hair. “It’s the a igre pull who gets tr Aer ‘ ¥ ° Places, nowadays,” flier said as he| doesn’t show. makes landed his ancient pusher box-kite,| (est show. Tt make ncuee oe - The antique’s struts-are somewhat! “Set” your waves with it | hours. marae, Picked up by the filer see how much longer they stay in— GALE ENDS FLIGHT { Oklahoma City, Sept. 26.—(P—A heavy gale ended the endurance! flight of Bennett Griffin and Roy | Hunt, after they had been eloft 293) The Owe Minute Hair Beautifier * (At All Drug Stores - Thirty Five Cente Tulip and Narcissus Bulbs for in- door blooming. There is ‘nothing cheerier. Tulips may. still be plant- "ed outside until the ground freezes. ' Call us for prices on jumbo size bulbs. cad \ Special prices on ferns and vines for your fern= ery. This is the time to get it started. 3 inch Ferns - 25c each Some lovely bittersweet just received. 25c and 75c per bunch " Straw Flowers, Statice, Cat-tails, Babies-breath, and prepared ferns for your autumn basket or bouquet at very reasonable prices, 315 Third Street Danderine | Ped br capa raked the nee wy fire. Speeding up engines and bringing her machine Guns into action, the Oahu raced to safety. She the shore line with bullets, silencing the battery. Another Barrymore Makes Stage Debut Columbus. O., Sept. 26.—()—Ethel | Barrymore Colt has come into her in- heritance of eight generations of tra- ditions of the speaking stage handed down through the Lanes, the Drews and the Barrymores, The 19-year-old daughter of the famous Ethel Barrymore was invested with her birthright in the Hartman theatre here last night during the first dramatization of the Pulitzer Prize novel, “Scarlet Sister Mary.” The Presence of her mother in the title role served as a royal accolade, and | the black grease paint behind which she spoke her lines helped to lessen the nervousness of her first stage ap- pearance. Despite the leadership of Miss Bar- rymore, interest in the debut of her daughter, and a capacity audience, the presentation was not artistically to many of its judges. Crit- ics in the fifth row said they heard little of the play, while the black faces of the actors and the Gullah dialect; of the South Carolina negroes used thoroughly baffled the rear half of the audience almost completely. with : i Slaps Singer’s Face, | | Is Slapped in Return ; voi seth lea Vienna, Sept. 26—(7)—A transat- ‘tantic Radio company report | Western Girl’s Lucky Day 5 bees candles! And each one repre~ sents a year of joyous living. Little Jacqueline Wilson, of 2528 So. Grand Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., is a typical Fig Syrup baby. Here is what her mother says: “My mother used California Fig Syrup with me, and when Jacqueline was a baby we decided to get some for her. It relieved her constipation immediately, sweetened her breath, made her bright and happy again. “I have also used Fig Syrup for her colds and upsets. it has kept her strong and vigorous.” For fifty years, wise mothers have been secure in the knowledge that a child’s headachy, bilious, feverish or fretful spells can be ret a safe- ly overcome by California Fig Syrup. Physicians recommend its soothing aid to keep the bowels clear in colds, or children’s ailments; or whenever bad breath, coated tongue, or list- lessness warn of constipation. California Fig Syrup helps tone and strengthen weak bowels—assists in building-up and cremang weak children. The genuine always bears the name California. All drugstores. | Rats and Mice the World’s Most Costly Animal Pests Protect your property and health by using Maro to get rid of your enemy— the rat. Maro will not harm your domestic ani- mals but is a positive guar- antee to kill rats and mice if used according to instruc- tions, Rats distribute the virus of plague so why have them about when a 50c box of Maro will do the work. Not a Poison Sold by COWAN’S DRUG STORE Bismarck, N. Dak. Katherine De Laney and Dressmaker “For Those Who Discriminate” Suits - Dresses “Cc and D” Blouses - Lingerie Ensembles Phone 1538 11914 Fourth Street Budapest says Franz Molnar, dramatist, created a sensation at the | Franziska Gal returned the slap! comedy theater by slapping the face} whereupon Molnar cancelled the of the Prima Dorina Franziska Gal,| prima donna’s engagément, because she came late to rehearsal. the TO-NIGHT and SATURDAY CAPITOL THEATRE Daily 2:30 Adults 35¢ until 7:30 Action Every Minute! —and WHAT action! See hurricane Hoot in a thriller that fairly burns the screen! See him perform almost superman feats of horsemanship. See him and THE GIRL outwit the blackest bunch of outlaws on the border. Get the laugh of your life at Hoot’s inimitable comedy. See. the Ace of Action’s greatest picture to date. IT’S A PEACH! 3 DAYS ---STARTING MONDAY “DIXIANA”’ BEBE DANIELS BERT WHEELER EVERET MARSHALL ROBERT WOOLSEY Piano Classes ‘ CHILDREN OF PRE-SCHOOL AGE Will Begin Monday, Sept. 29 Miss Mehus has specialized in children's piano work under Louise Robyn, at the American Conservatory, Chicago. Miss Mehus subsequently conducted Teachers’ Training classes and supervised. children’s work in colleges for five years. Mothers, who are interested, kindly phone 1571-W before Monday. BELLE MEHUS PIANO STUDIO 20 ELTINGE BUILDING Make Your Own Photos. We have, stored in our studio, negatives of prac- tically all sittings made here for the past 20 years or more. In order to release for other purposes the space taken up by these negatives, we find it necessary to dispose of all plates made before 1925. Before de- stroying the negatives, we offer you the opportunity to buy at the nominal price of $1.00 any 5x7 or smaller plate we may have of you, your near and dear relatives or friends. If you have the plates, you can have prints made from them at any time. You’may even make the prints yourself. If you wish, upon payment of $1.00, we will store any negative for another five years, and if you order any pictures from the plate during that time, we will credit the one dollar on the order. All arrangements must be made before Oct. 20th. If we do not hear from you we shall take it for granted that you do not want the plates saved. If you do want them saved, better act now before it slips your mind. The Butler Studio : Phone 249 Windustite “The American Metal Weather Strip Not Just a Weather Strip But the Best Weather Strip That’s what you get from W. K. LaPaugh Mandan Agent for the American Metal Weather Strip Company, makers of Windustite metal weather stripping. Telephone, Mandan, 128-M Dance Orchestras You simply cannot go wrong in any of the selections in this list, for jeg see every re- quisite fordancing. There’s a difference of style too,so that dancers who like a short, syncopated rhythm, as well as those who prefer smooth, even measures, will find their preference here. Ask to hear these popular tunes « + - we will be more than glad to play them ‘vr you! Little White Lies—Fox Trot Gee, But I’d Like to Make You Fox Trot No. 22492, 10-inch ARING'S PENNSYLVANIANS I'd Like to Find the Guy That Wrote the Stein Song—F. T. What’s the Use—Fox Trot Jonnny JonNson AND H:s ORCHESTRA No. 22493, 10-inch : When Love Comes in the Moonlight—Fox Trot We’re On the Highway to Heaven—Fox Trot JacKIE TAYLOR AND His OncaestrRa No, 22500, 10-inch Good Evenin’—Fox Trot Rupy VALLEE AND Just a Little Closer—Fox Trot His ConNecTICUT YANKEES No. 22489, 10-inch My Baby Just Cares for Me—Fox Trot A Girl Friend of a Boy Friend of Mine—Fox Trot No. 22499, 10-inch Tep WEEMS AND His OncaestRra Tomorrow Is Another Day—Fox Trot TED Fiorito aNpD His ORCHESTRA for the Lovelight in the Dark—Fox Trot No. 22501, 10-inch JACKIE TAYLOR AND His ORCHESTRA Go Home and Tell Your Mother—Fox Trot I'm Doin’ That Fox Trot ‘ Gus ARNHEIM AND His Cocoanut Grove ORCHESTRA No. 22505, 10-inch Lonely—Fox Trot BERNTE CUMMINS AND His F’r Instance—Fox Trot New YorgkER Hore. Oncwestrs No. 22494, 10-inch Confessin’ (That I Love: You)—Fox Trot My Bluebird Was it in the Rain—Fox Trot Rupy VaLL£e aND His ConNEcTICUT YANKEES No. 22506, 10-inch On a Little Street in Honolulu—Waltz All Through the Night—Waltz Ho Hawaman Oncnestra No. 22504, 10-inch Hullabaloo—Fox Trot Baby Won’t You Please Come No. 22511, 10-inch Okay, Baby—Fox Trot I Want a Little Girl—Fox Trot McKinners Corron PICKERS No. 23000, 10-inch Ida, Sweet as Apple Cider—Fox Trot Dinah—Fox Trot Home—Fox Trot MCKINNEY's CoTTON PICKER? Fess WriiaMs AND Hs Rovat FLus® ORCHESTRS _ No. 23005, 10-inch Just to Be ew ther ae Trot ‘very! . Ke rt x eine? Fess WiLLAMs 4ND is Horan Frouse ORcHESTBA No. 23008, 10-inch \ HOSKINS - MEYER The Home of KFYR ALL THE MUSIC YOU WANT WHEN vou want it ICIOR RECORDS

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