The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 17, 1930, Page 5

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i Conclude Series of . Bridge Luncheons Mrs. H. E. Spohn and Mrs. Roy Logan were hostesses at a one-thirty o'clock bridge luncheon yesterday at the home of Mrs, Spohn, 406 Griffin street. This was the last of a series of three which they have given dur- ing the week. Yellow chrysanthemums centered the tables, and appointments carried out the autumn color note. Similar decorations were used for a luncheon given on Tuesday, and for the bridge dinner which they gave Monday eve- ning. Sixteen guests were bidden to each of the parties. Score honors in the bridge games yesterday afternoon were awarded to Mrs. Roy Indseth and Mrs. A. W. Gussner. The hostesses were assisted by Mrs. Price Owens. Mrs. F. M. Davis and Mrs, L. M. Parsons held high scores in the card games following the Tuesday lunch- eon, at which Mrs. Harry Woodman- see assisted. ~On Monday evening honors went to Mrs. R. J. Kamplin and Miss Beu- Jah Schurr. At this party Mrs. Spohn and Mrs. Logan were assisted by Mrs. John Hoffman. xe % Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fleck enter- tained the members of the Gate Oiseaux bridge club at a potluck din- ner last evening at their home, 514 West Rosser avenue. Covers were placed for 12 tables decorated in the Halloween colors. Bowls of late gar- den flowers were used in the rooms. Mrs. Roy Indseth and Mrs. A. R. Miesen held honors in the card games during the evening. Dr. and Mrs. R. 8. Enge, 518 Fifth street, and Mr. and Mrs. Obert Olson, 514 West Thayer avenue, left today for Grand Forks, ioe) Rend seta see tend homecoming fe: les University of North Dakota. Mr. and Mrs. Enge will visit their son Russell, and Mr. and Mrs. Olson their daugh- ter Auverne, who are students at the university. They were accompanied by Mrs. T. Meinhover, 523 Seventh street, who will be the guest of her son, Ted Meinhover. * * * Mr, and Mrs. O. E. Anderson, 723 Second street, entertained a company of 25 friends at @ Halloween party last evening at their home. Fortune- telling, Halloween games and stunts occupied the guests during the early part of the evening, with ghost stories concluding the entertainment. Prizes during the evening were awarded Mrs, Alfred Dale, Mrs. C. W. Moses, Rev. Walter E. Vater and W. J. Nog- gle. Mrs. Anderson was assisted by her daughters, Mrs. A. M. Brazerol and Miss Arllys Anderson in serving a buffet supper. Pom-poms were used on the refreshment table, with bowls of yellow Heer sey teeta) oe Pom-poms placed ‘oug! rooms. Other decorations carried out the Halloween idea. * * & Study of North Dakota birds was continued at the meeting of the Junior Study club yesterday after- Langer and Alice Knowles were made members of the club. The group will hold its next meeting November with May Keuhn. x * * Mrs. H. A. BrarNes and Mrs. R. ‘Waldschmidt were hostesses to girl employes of the stad clinic at a bridge Huber, Miss Virginia and Amanda, Carlson Sekt peer * Mrs. John Harty was hostess at a bridge dinner Wednesday evening at the Harty pee ie tale avenue, the occasion birthday an- niversary of her husband. Decora- tions suggestive of the approaching Halloween season were used, and covers were marked for 12. Mrs. A. L. Overbee and Joe M. Harty held hon- ors in the bridge one Members of Eta Rho ha evening at the home of the director, Miss Madge Runey, 511 Fifth street. The inolyded discussion program the writings of Count Leo Tolstoy; the prose works of John Milton, and writers of the colonial period. MAKE-UP FOR BLONDES ue pe f Make- Creator o: ee Color isthe wecret a deny in etare Factors Society Make-Up, because of the greater beauty commetic colorings, Parizts Haver Ifyou'reabloodetype, Pathe Star Bie le ae Haver, ‘with blue eyes and fair skin, you'll find new beauty in this Max Factor color harmony make-up. Bliss Burtch, color harmony makeup artist, will be at this store one week starting Monday, + Oct. 20. Come in and have your complexion analyzed FRI Max Factor’s Society Make-Up Homemakers Club Has Party for Husbands Members of the Hay Creek Home- maker's club entertained their_hus- bands at a chicken supper last eve- ning at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bridgedale, north of the city. Appointments in keeping with the fall season were used and places were set for 35. . A program followed the supper. An sents peyet “The Economical ris and Mrs. Charles McGarvey gave ® Dutch skit, and Mrs. Irish a hu- morous reading. The remainder of the evening was spent informally. Albert Kupkuske, Oconomowoc, Wis, who is visiting at the William Morris home, was a guest. sss ‘Miss Bertha Palmer, superintendent of public instruction, returned today from Devils Lake, where she spoke yesterday at a sectional meeting of the state education association. Miss Palmer attended the American Coun- try Life conference, held at the farm school of the University of Wisconsin, October 7-11, stopping at Devils Lake on her wey home. ‘ se * Miss E. Helen Iorns, superintend- ent of schools for Sioux county, pre- sided at a luncheon meeting today at the G. P. Eat shop for teachers of Sioux county. The affair was planned as a “get-together” meeting, and va- rious school problems were discussed. see Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Waldschmidt, 411 Avenue D, and Dr. L. H. Fred- to Minneapolis today = | tem, he added, is University of North Dakota. ——_——— | AT THE MOVIES ' |_AT THE MOVIES — THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1930 TEACHERS’ GROUPS ATTENDED BY 397; OFFICERS CONFER Deputy Supt. W. E. Parsons Ad- dresses Board Representa- tives on School Topics The southwestern division of the State Education association split into group meetings at the Will school building this morning and continued activities on that basis throughout the day. The forenoon attendance at these meetings was 397. In addition to the teachers meet- ing, the school officers of the Slope area also held sessions at which Problems pertaining to school board functions were considered. H. O. Pippin, superintendent of Stark coun- ty, presided at the officers’ meeting. W. E. Parsons, deputy state super- intendent of schools, addressed the officers’ session. Talks also were given by representatives from var- jous counties. Parsons called atten- tion to strides in the enrollment and attendance in the last 25 years, say- ing he believed that the gain was not entirely due to enactment of a com- pulsory attendance law. Rather, he was inclined to think, it was due to the increasing respect in which the People hold the matter of education. Deputy Parsons cited an enumera- tion of 140,000 in 1905, with a record. ed enrollment of approximately 95,- 000 and an approximate att of 58,000, the equivalent of 62 ‘per cent, while the latest figures for the State public schools are 220,000 enum- eration, 175,000 enrollment and 143,- 000 attendance, or 82 per cent. For high schools the attendance 25 years ago stood at 4,000, now it is seven times that, or , he said. The annual cost of the state school sys- $15,000,000. This was not what the state should spend, it was what it was possible for it to gather together for support of edu- cation. For high school support North Dakota is paying only about half of the limit set by law for stan- dardized schools. Would Raise Requirements ‘Mr. Parsops said requirements for teaching in this state are not strict enough. Teachers are coming in to teach in North Dakota because it re- quires only 12 weeks normal train- ing in addition to a high school edu- cation, while the adjoining states re- quire 36 months of normal ‘training. He also felt voters do not appre- clate the election of school board members as they should. In the last election in » he suggested as an example, only about 30 votes were cast out of the enrollment of several ,| thousand. F. W. Petchell, president of the Sioux county school officers organi- zation, spoke on his idea of a school officers convention. It was to not overdo the speakers list nor to skimp it. He also favored luncheons to- gether, to promote willingness to speak. This idea was indorsed by Deputy Parsons, who suggested that peel meetings should put on ban- quets. President Pippin added a number ¢f points, stressing the desirability of getting practical talks and results out ‘ly | Of the meetings. Mrs. L. R. Woolery, of Dunn county, was assigned the subject of state school officers organization. Hebron’s Methods Outlined The high school group met with Lloyd G. Thompson, principal of Mandan high school, as chairman. Miss Elizabeth Jones spoke of the increasing use of fiction for creating her | interest in history and fixing its facts and philospophy in the minds of the students by the added romanticism thus given to the subject. The matter of modification of the Dalton plan, as adopted in the Heb- ron schools, was discussed in @ paper by Superintendent Shrum of that city. This is one of the several ways resorted to by educators to get away from the Comenian idea that the mouth of the teacher is a spring, while the minds of the students are cisterns into which the spoutings of the school head must be allowed to a| flow, or that the minds of the stu- of ing Fires Spilled Paint Part of a can of spilled lacquer paint and the spark on the end of a discarded match which had tighted @ cigarette brought the firemen tc the Quanrud, Brink and Reibold store at 3:40 Thursday afternoon. The match was discarded during a delivery of goods to the basement. The paint, unnoticed on the concrete , promptly blazed up. But there wasn't much of it, and @ spray from) a fire extinguisher promptly squelch-_ ed the flame before the fire appara-/ tus could-arrive.-. Very light. damage. was done. dents are jugs which must be gauged from Lon to time ine how much of the flow of knowledge poured in has escaped. \ Hebron, he said, has adopted the unit idea of instruction from the the . It consists of four parts, su- Ppervised individual study, discussions, testing and retesting. The units of work consist of specific questions in detail, part of the objective type and part on the essay type. The work is so laid out that not all of the facts can be obtained from the basic tests but must be sought in supplementary sources and from encyclopedias. In the discussional phase, observations taken in field work are brought in. In the tests, true and false questions are used, to eliminate the factor of guessing. Harry Atwood spoke to the high YOU. CAN'T AFFORD IT NO MATTER how many fine silks and woolens you own, you can’t afford to wash in bot water. Because, even if you have the rice of new ones, you can’t re- oe the tender skin of bands that emerge red and swolleo from hot wash basins. Ifyou think that only hot water can get clothes clean, here’s news for you! White King Graaulated Soap, pure vegetable and nut oil soap, will yield quick, cleans- ing suds in cool or lukewarm water. Ginghams and prints will stay bright, white goods wash whiter, and your hands will re- main smooth and soft. White King Granulated Soap is com . You will be sur- prised ‘o find how little is ree quired. It’s the safest and yet the most economical sosp you can buy. Hard water does not hinder its effectiveness. Have you tried it? At your grocer’s. ———_—_$—$$—$————— er school group on “Training for Citi- zenship.” sided over the In this Berg, Linton; the wider emphasis, scope and application of geography by Miss Judith B. Rue; reading for grammar grades by Miss Erma Stel- ter, Beach; and practical experiences in teaching history by Miss Delia Ol- son, Mandan. Miss Madge Runey, Burleigh coun- rural section symposium, The pro- gram in this consisted of community singing; a talk on “Music as a gen- eral lesson,” by Mrs, Ruth K. Reitzel, Menoken; @ talk on devices for mak- ing school work more aa tell spok music and county choirs in place of Miss Elsie Belle Rogge, of Dickinson Normal. The primary department heard Miss Hand tell how to organize a harmonica band; saw a penmanship demonstration by Miss Bessie Wil- Son; @ reading demonstration by Miss Matilda Welo; and a talk on making of test sheets and seatwork. Cooking Teachers Lunch The home economics department. held a luncheon at the Patterson Ho- tel at 12 o'clock, nutrition in summer camps, by Miss Helen Katen, Bismarck; on family relationships, by Miss Myrtle Klov- stad, Linton; on home projects by oe one tates raat and on 5 ry Mallough, Dickinson. : Lutheran Conference Will Organize Soon Minneapolis, Oct. 17—(7)—An or- ganization meeting of the American Lutheran conference a national fed- eration of Lutheran synods, will take Lovely hair! Evenings 7 and 9 P. M. Presents To-night & Saturday BERT LYTELL PATSY RUTH MILLER Directed by RICHARD BOLESLAVSKY . also Fox News Krazy Kat Pathe Comedy “Two THEATRE Daily Matinee at 2:30 Plus 4 Place here October 29, 30 and 31, it ‘was announced today. Delegates from the following synods: American Lutheran church, the Augustana synod, the Lutheran Free church, the United Danish Lutheran church and the Norwegian Church of America, will represent . {more than 6,800 congregations in every part of the United States. When the organization of the Amer- ican Lutheran conference is complet- ed it will have a baptised member- ship of more than 1,328,700. The recently installed president of Luther Theological Seminary Dr. T. F. Gullixson, Minot, N. D., will be one of the principal speakers at the meet- ing. Rev. H. J. Urdahl, Fargo, N. D., and R. A. Nestos, Minot, N. D., also will speak. Famed Slayers Are Working Hard Now Joliet, Ill, Oct. 17—(?)—Hard | work—the first since their imprison- ment six years ago—was the order of the day for Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, slayers of Bobby Franks of Chicago. Both were directed to report for duty in the state prison shops. Here- tofore Loeb has been employed as a messenger. Leopold has been secre- tary to the prison chaplain. His failure to properly deliver a summons to a prisoner whom the chaplain Made Happy ‘ANY times a child has thing to make her happy and still is dissatisfied. This may not be wished to interview was assigned as the reason for Leopold’s transfer to the worksnop. Warden Henry C. Hill said Leopold had been transferred to the state’s old prison while Loeb had been sent by the new one at Stateville, near ere. “I do not believe they should be under the same roof,” he said. Extradite Alleged Gangster Slayers Springfield, Il, Oct. 17.—(?)—Ex- tradition of Danny Stanton and Edgar Smith to Wisconsim for trial for the murder of baron, was approved today by Gov- ernor Louis L. Emmerson, Zuta was killed at Delafield, Wis. Zuta was killed by a gang of Chi- cago gunmen August 1 in a Waukesha to have been the leader of the slayers A few days after the killing, Stan- ton and Smith were arrested in Chi- cago. In their car was found a gun from which one of the bullets that {killed Zuta was fired, police said. “JUDGE LIKES D.B.C. EMPLOYEES Thirty-eight years ago Judge B. F. Spalding began employing grad- uates of Dakota Business College, Fargo. Several became court ree porters; one isnow U. S. Attorney. The Judge still calls on D B.C., his latest employee being Irene Lee. Judge schools by the types of men and firms who employ their gradu- ates. Standard OilCo recently en- gaged their 208th Dakotan, O. E. Rogelstad. ‘‘Follow the SucceS$- BUSINESS tantog (copyrighted training (copyri —at D B.C. only). Winter te: Nov. 1-8, Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo. the youngster’s fault. Often it is due i to a condition easily corrected. Take the ex] Beesley, 1321 West 1st Street, Okla- homa City, Okla., whosays: “Nothing seemed to please Christine. She was fretful, feverish, suffered a lot from colds. She was constipated. “Mother used_ California Fig Syrup so I got Christine some. It relieved her trouble promptly; made her bright and happy again, e have used it for three years.” ience of Mrs. Ada ' Mothers by thousands praise this ‘ ure Vv le product. Children love it. Doctors Tecommend it to relieve constipation, feverishness, fretfulness, headaches; to open the bowels in colds or children’s ailments. Appetite is mcreased by the use of California Fig Syrup»breath is sweet- ened; coated tongue is cleared; diges- tion and assimilation are aided; weak bowels and stomach are strengthened. For your protection, the genuine always the name California. In addition, Chevrolet " - \aaaets | Station KF | at 8:00 p. m. PIANO INSTRUCTION No Modern Individual’s education is complete without some musical training. Give your children a chance to take their place with the best people on the same plane. The study of music is necessary for its appreciation; its appreciation has a most refining influence on character. Music is hard only when taught by untrained, inex; rienced teachers. In selecting your teacher be sure she has experience, the ability to teach and that infinite of children. patience which comes from a I will be glad to discuss all these matters with you at any time. JEANNETTE FRENDBORG 418 Fifth St., Bismarck, N. D. Telephone 678-R Home of Paramount Pictures NOW PLAYING Golf is His Game! Fore! The Musical Comedy Hit of the Season! Nancy and ing that golf is the world’s most romantic game! In Buddy prov- Home of Paramount the musical Pictures comedy hit that played 54 weeks on Broadway! Zelma O'Neal, the “Button Up Your Over- coat” girl, is also hilari- ously cast in the role she made famous on the New York stage! CHARLES ROGERS NANCY . CARROLL A Schwab and Mandel Production “FOLLOW THRU” with with 5 Great Song. Hits Including “A Peach of a Pair” “It Must Be You” “Button Up Your Overcoat” Zelma “ Jack Eugene —Added GRAHAM O'Neal Haley Pallette A Paramount Musical Comedy In Technicolor Subjects— MacNAMEE “Newscasting” Mickey Mouse Cartoon “The Cactus Kid” Wisconsin authorities based thei plea for extradition entirely upon the tind- ing of the gun in the car. Telegrapher’s Father Is Dead in St. Louis Fargo, N. D., Oct. 1.—-(7}—C. C. Cronin, 60, father of F. P. Cronin, chief operator of the Western Union Telegraph company in Fargo, died in St. Louis. Rochester. Minn., and had been a resident of Crookston, Minn. 12 years, until 8: years ago. Funeral service and burial will be conducted End Federal Court Term at Jamestown Mr. Cronin was born in |to 60 in Greensiel, Minn., Saturday morn- Zuta, Chicago crime | ing. county roadhouse. Stanton was said || Tomorrow Last Day Frederic k-James Furs Prices are lower on furs than any time in the past ten years. If you would see, at their best, what dis- tinctively beautiful Fur Coats the new style features have created, you have only to inspect our great exhibit, We emphasize both Low Price and Fur De- pendability! Convenient monthly payments may be arranged. square feet of shelf area cubic feet interior capacity ice cubes per freezing Tite wee Yokon Model! Kelvinator is a BIG electric refrigerator, with more than ample food storage capa- city for the average family. Its beautiful Jain-lined interi has storage space for four bushels of food. But size is only one of the many features of this remarkable new Kelvinator. The all-stee! cabinet will last a lifetime. The new Yukon has inside rounded corners for easy cleaning; a massive table top; a ‘Temperature Selector and Defrosting Switch; and five different freez- ing speeds, with extra fast freezing for ice cubes and desserts. It is remarkably quiet, and economical to operate. It can be connected to any light socket and can easily be moved from place to place. The new Yukon is the greatest value in electric refrigeration today. Come in and let us show you its many features and explain how easy and economical it is to give your family the many health advantages of Your Yukon can be purchased on easy terms through Kelvinator’s liberal ReDisCo Monthly Budget Plan. $159” f£O.B FACTORY NORTH DAKOTA POWER & LIGHT CO. BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA KELVINATOR

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