The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 14, 1931, Page 5

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1931 [SOCIETY NEWS Miss Mildred Wenaas |*97.55,>> 7-3 Wa A | Meetings of Clubs j And W. F. Gillen Wed | And Social Groups | The. marriage of Miss Mildred |@—H——_+—___—__-6 ‘Wenaas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.| The General Aid society of the church 8,0. Wenaas, 323 First St., and Wil- | McCabe Methodist meet will Thursday afternoon in the church liam F, Gillen, Jr. took place at ®! nariors with members of the third pide ars ve Te Mera hs ee as nies ‘The ladies are ay evening al ie home of je ; Serving a ic sul beginning at bride’s parents. Rev. Opie 8. Rindahl, | 5°50 Ollock that afternoon pastor of the ‘Trinity Lutheran Petry church performed the ceremony. The four circles of the Ladies’ Aid The bride wore a simple frock of |S0clety of the First Ivesbyterian dark blue flat crepe, trimmed with| church will meet at 2:30 o'clock lace and slippers of the same color, | Thursday afternoon, Circle No. 1 Miss Marie Jones, ‘as bridesmaid, | Will meet with Mrs. John Sterling, was dressed in brown flat crepe. P. aig Br a oad Ried Jacobson attended the bridegroom. Charles Letenen, B15 PS A dinner was served to the wedding |with Mrs. O. F. ‘Bryant and. Miss party following the service ;Anna Burr assisting; Circle No. 3 with On ‘Sunday relatives and a few|Mrs. F. Minsef, 108 Avenue C West, friends were guests at a dinner party Sens oie folie Maiating: and oe os ‘Wenaas home in honor of the a au Avenue E MS. Anna i john i ston ive a on her as Heltah 2 ‘ann Bf the A. Visit in Ireland for members of Girele a son of Mr. and Mrs. ieee oe Nb ee * i Burt, N. D., is employed by the stat The local Yeoman lodge will spon- highway department. ‘sor @ tard party for members and 5A their friends Thursday evening at the Clara Mack was elected president! Oqgq Fellows hall. Play will begin of the Christian Endeavor League of| § o'clock. a bei the First Evangelical church at their kk OK annual business meeting Tuesday eve-) The Mission Circle of the first Bap- ning in the church parlors. She also] tist church will meet Thursday after- will serve as president of the young] noon at 2:30 o'clock with Mrs. O. T. People’s department of the church.| Ragen, 718 Ninth St. Other officers who were named to serve with her are Iris Schwartz, vice oe president; Clara Bredy, secretary; and Kenneth Tavis, treasurer. t Welch 8 Spur | * * * ° Mr. and Mrs, W. R. Ton left Sat- urday for St. Paul where she and her husband expect ‘o spend the next three weeks. Mr. Ton is postoffice inspector with offices in the federal building here, but has been assigned to special duty in St. Paul. After a yisit in St. Paul, Mrs. Ton will go to the home of her parents in Chicago for a visit. By MRS. R. M. WELCH Otto Ayers, rural mail carrier out of Menoken, has resumed his summer schedule of Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, making the north and south runs both in,one day. He will continue as at present as long as the weather permits. Arthur Bates moved his cattle from his east farm to his other place in Applecreek township last Saturday. Chester Boyd assisted him. The Rittel children called at the Robert Welch home Saturdey. Mr. and Mrs. John Welch and lit- tle nephew, Claud Hauser, Oliver Welch, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Mallard were Bismarck visitors last Satur- day. Chester Boyd called at the Robert Welch home Saturday. Mr$ Mrs. Boyd's smallest child, a baby girl of about four months, had a light case of pneumonia this week. Ed Doppler and son Leo, Ralph Mrs. Clarence Peterson arrived! Snyder and O. P. Welch visited at Monday from Glendive, Mont., to| the Robert Welch home Sunday. spend @ week as the guest of Mrs.| Eleanor Snyder, Laura Welch and Howard Hendrickson, 511 Thirteenth! Louise Boyd were all out of school st this week on account of sickness. \ Robert Welch visited at the home * Oe * A biographical sketch of James W.| Foley, North Dakota poet, was read by Marie Jager at a mecting of the Four Leaf Clover Study club Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Jager, 515 Fifth St. Several of his poems were read during the evening. * * * Miss Ethel Evingson, Fargo, deputy county superintendent of schools, for Cass county, is a guest this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Heis- ing, 122 Avenue C West. Miss Eving-| son is attending the mid-winter meet- ing of county superintendents. * * * | 0: his sister Mrs. Ruth McMurrich of jes" Glencoe Sunday. ! At the Movies | Ed Doppler and son Leo were in Bismarck Monday. PARAMOUNT THEATRE Little Donald Welch, son of Mrs. “I expect to live a hundred years,” | Robert Welch, has been very ill this recently declared Will Rogers, inter- | week. nationally known wit, humorist and philosopher. “The secret of longevity is happiness and I’m the happiest}! man in the world, at least the hap- piest in the Democratic party. “I have my health, a family of the right sizé, a good home and enough ; money to keep the much publicized wolf from the door. Besides this, I don't worry. Worry kills more peo- ple than bootleggers. Reminds me of a story I heard recently. “A motion picture employee, who was much given to fretting over tri- vial matters as well as bigger ones, Welch home Tuesday evening. Robert Welch, Horace Dirlam and Ed Doppler were in Bismarck on bus- iness Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Welch were in Bismarck also. Mrs. Earl Snyder's father, Mr. Ccons, of Bismarck, died the middle cf the week. Most of the near neigh- bors of Mr. and Mrs. Snyder attend- ed the funeral in Bismarck and the military service at the grave in Mc- Kenzie. Mr. Coons was a Civil war veteran. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Doppler called at meeting a friend, announced that he! the home of their daughter, Mrs. | Robert Welch, Wednesday. Oliver Welch has been on the sick list this week. was through worrying. Nothing could make him stew, no matter what it was. “‘How come?’ asked the friend; ‘you used to worry continuously.’ ‘Well, I've hired a professional worrier; he does all my worrying’ | Troute to town. , “‘Something new, isn’t it? How! Fred Rittel, Ed Doppler and son much do you have to pay him?’ | Leo, and Robert Welch each hauled a “‘Well, that’s the first thing he’s | load of wood from the river bottom got to worry about.’” Thursday. Rogers portrays the role of “Light- Mrs. R. M. Welch called at the nin’ Bill Jones” in “Lightnin’,” Fox | Chester Boyd home Friday. Mrs. Movietone comedy drama, adapted | Welch's brother, Leo Doppler, accom- from John Golden's tremendously suc- | Panied her. cessful stage play, which comes to| Mr. and Mrs. John Welch and Mr. the.Paramount Theatre tomorrow | and Mrs. Ed Doppler called at the for a run of two days. Bill is lazy, | Robert Welch home Friday. friendly, genial and loquacious, espe- | _ Alice Carlson called for Mrs. John cially when he has been indulging in | Nieland after school Friday evening. drink. He is whimsical and tells | Both teachers spent the week-end at some of the biggest lies ever heard, me. his imagination running riot when he | _ Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Reed, Mr. and is properly “fueled.” Mrs. Earl Snyder, Mrs. Ed Doppler But Bill is “nobody's fool” and | 82d two sons, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dor- turns out to be the hero before the | Man eee soba get and hes its x. were SIPhITE -FEBOREE sy ay Bismarck Saturday. CAPITOL THEATRE i 0 Doppler called at the home of Marooned in a wash in Dinosaur | Bis, sister, Mrs. Robert Welch Sun- Canyon, Arizona, twenty-seven miles a from the nearest habitation as the| Mr. Steen and a couple of friends result of a cloudburst, a company of | Called et the Ed Doppler home Sun- Pathe technicians.on location for | day morning. ‘ “The Painted Desert,” starring Bill Boyd, were rescued when an Indian guide ran twenty-seven miles for aid. Sam Running Deer, one of the fin- est athletes of the Hopi tribe, per- formed this feat in_an almost con- tinuous rain, from Dinosaur Canyon —an almost inaccessible spot—to ‘Tuba City in a little more than two hours and a half. A rescue crew was dispatched’ and the stranded technicians, were brought back to camp tired, water soaked and hungry at three o'clock in the morning. “The Painted Desert,” which comes to the Capitol Theater tomorrow, was made on the exact location of the story on the Navajo Indian reserva- tion in Arizona. | turkeys in Bismarck Thursday. They called at the Robert Welch home en R= Musterole well into your chest and throat—almost instantly you feel easier. Repeat the Must: once an hour for five hours... what a glorious relief! ‘Those good old-fashioned cold reme- dies—oil of mustard, menthol, camphor —are mixed with other valuable ingredi- ents in Mus to make it what doc- tors calla‘‘counte ” because - is gets action and is not just a salve. i" penetrates and stimulates bl circulation and tion and pain. Used years. Recommended by many doctors and nurses. Keep Musterole handy—- im tubes. All Mc John Nicland called at the Robert | Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Welch sold their | John Lewis Prefers Garden as Unit Rather Than One to Produce Bouquets By JOHN H. LEWIS, MINOT, N. D. (Reprinted from Gladiolus Review) There are many answers {o this question; in other words, many kinds of gardens. In the deserts of Asia, water is the principal feature; the garden consists of pools, fountains jand a little greenery. In Italy also, some attention is usually paid to |water, but the garden is primarily architectural, and its outstanding fea- tures are columnar evergteers and statuary or pottery. The famous park at Versailles in France is an example of the some feeling; so are parts of Hampton Court in England, in a more modified form. The formal garden generally makes much of trées. The smaller English garden, the “cottage garden,” and most of our American gardens, are more informal in spirit. Trees or high shrubs are absolutely needed as a background, unless we iresort to the less satisfactory walls, which do not have the greenery of trees; shrubs may be greatly in evi- dence; but flowers have come to take ® much more prominent place. There are, frankly, two kinds of American gardens, one a garden for Picking, or for the individual speci- men in flowers; the other for the pic- ture, a kind of outdoor living room. One need not condemn either, but, as .|beauty inevitably includes suitability @|and compatibility, it is only the gar- Gen which is grown as a unil in itself, and not for its products, that makes & truly artistic and beautiful whole. It is such a garden that is more prop- erly @ garden, and that I for one like to make: and, more and more, lovers of the beautiful come to this type. The newly developing gardener prob- ably begins with flower beds cutting up the lawn—few of us have escaped that early stage—but he comes in time to the point where he would no more do that than He wouid exhibit his new automobile in the parlor. ‘Types Have Advantages The law of compensation is a law of life; and there are advantages and disadvantage of each type of gar- Gen, as of everything else. The pur- Pose of the two types is different, and the method is different. The com- mercial florist, seeking to raise the jlargest and most perfect ind:vidual blooms, plants them in rows where he can care for them easily and well; where each plant will have an abun- dance of soil for its development, free from the encrcachments of a rival plant. Some enthusiasts among flow- er growers have two gardens, one to live in and one to pick in; and un- questionably the best flowers are raised in the latter. But it is not difficult to secure a reasonable degree of both sorts of satisfaction in the one garden, provided it is made primarily & living garden. Such a garden demands a back- \ground—either trees, wall or shrubs. Walls may be very beautiful, and are more favored in England than here, yet to most of us the green of trees { Mat. | 2 = 3:45 10e - 35¢ CHAS. FARRELL HUMAN as the jovial smile sopher of wit. his salty quips. | Louise Dresser tion, Guaranteed to make MINOT MAN, FLOWER GARDEN EXPERT, OFFERS MANY HINTS “Lightnin’” Strikes Tomorrow NATURAL as the slow drawl that makes you grin at WILL “Lightnin” J. M. Kerrigan WILL ROGERS SAYS... . You'll agree with me that this is the most uproarious comedy about divorce since marriage became an institu- doesn't, don’t see a lawyer—see a doctor. and shrubs is more desirable, It is a question to be decided according to the circumstances of each particular case whether we want the background of trees alone, or of shurbs alone, or of the two together. There is more of @ contrast with trees; a more gradual transition, tying the garden to the landscape, with the two, the shurbs of course in front, or with shrubs alone. Again, it depends much on the nature of the particular land- scape. No Earth Should Show lines. The situation may demand straight edges for both the front and back of the border; but it is extreme- ly unlikely to demand anything like straight rows within. Usually a bor- der will be spoiled by such straight Tows. I have some friends who are hav- ing their gardens laid out by land- scape architects. I pity them. To me such a garden is like an adopted child. I had rather make all my own mistakes— and they have been legion —and finally see the child of my own brain blooming in the sun. It is dearer for the struggles it has caused much as our children are dearer be- cause of the diseases through which we have nursed them, the anxious hours we have spent throughout their childhood. In such a garden it is desirable that no earth should show, that the green grass and plants should cover the whole gfound. This means some sacrifice of the utmost development of the individual plant. Like human beings in civilization, it must yield some of its rights to the greater rights of the community. This is not all a disadvantage, even from the point of view of the individual plant, because the mass of surrounding plants will shade the ground and preserve mois- ture, and to that extent prevent bak- ing out and contribute to the develop- ment of all the growth. Paths subject to “heavy traffic” should be of gravel; but those which are not, and in a fairly large garden moe are not, are much lovelier made of grass. Not only must height, color, form and time of blooming be carefully considered, to determine whether various plants go well together; but the individual needs of the plants must be studied in order that the sit- uation assigned them, while not ideal from the point of view of individual development, may give them a fair chance in the world. Whatever the artistic result might be, heavy feeders like gladioli cannot be put near trees or shrubs, because in such a situation they sulk and refuse to do anything. Delphinium may be so placed, and does magnificently there; and its tall spikes make it an ideal architectural plant for such situations. Columbines and pansies may be planted in the shade, where many others could not be. Avoid Choppy Effect A choppy effect is not beautiful; |beauty demands long and graceful lines. So, make your borders as long as your situation will allow: and plant your flowers in masses, rather than in single specimens of cne of @ kind. ‘ Borders, not beds, should be almost jthe invariable rule. Whether these borders should have straight or irreg- lular curving edges will depend on va- rious things. In the more formal garden, straight lines are apt to be preferable, and certainly are with hollyhocks, plants whose feeling is on straight lines. Straight tines are apt to be more suitable in a small garden, where there is not enough room for curves without producing the choppy effect condemned above. With long- er borders, on the contrary, curves, be more beautiful. Unless the garden be very formal indeed, the mixture of plants within the borders had best be somewhat irregular, and somewhat along curved THEATR NOW SHOWING “The Princess a nd the Plumber” A Gay Comedy of Romantic Errors With * MAUREEN O'SULLIVAN of America’s beloved philo- SS With Helen Cohan you laugh out loud. If it Timely Hockey Caps Girls and Boys Double Knit, Fancy ‘Choice at ...... 38e AT THE S&LCo. . THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, ONLY Savings Ladies’ Zip O’St..es Firestone All-Rub- ber, Fleece Lined Per Pair ..... and rather irregular curves, may well} | MANDAN NEWS | SELFRIDGE FARMER DECREED WIFELESS Divorce Papers Improperly Served on First.Wife Nulli- fies Second Marriage who asked the courts to determine whether he had one wife, two wives, as a result of a decree of the Morton county district court, Judge H. L. Berry, Mandan, gave his decision after testimony was in- troduced showing that Arndt mar- ried for the second time when he be- Arnold Arndt, Selfridge farmer, or no wife, Wednesday was wifeless | lteved he had obtained a divorce from his first wife. Arndt and wife No. 1 quarrelled a few years ago, and Mrs. Arndt left the home and went to Seattle. Arndt began divorce proceedings and gained @ decree by default. The day after his divorce last June, Arndt married again. Then Mrs. Arndt Nou. 1 returned home, said she knew nothing of the divorce, and claimed that che was still the farmer's legal wife. Testimony brought out before Judge Berry Tuesday showed that divorce Papers were not properly served on Mrs. Arndt in Seattle and that the divorce was not legal. Judge Berry, however, granted the divorce, and the marriage of Arndt to his second wife was nullified, Mrs. Arndt No. 1 was granted a division of her hus- band’s property. Arndt, who was advised to separ- ate from his second wife following the return of Mrs. Arndt No. 1, is now free to re-marry. Mandan Commission To Meet Wednesday Mandan’s city commission will meet Wednesday evening in the city audi- tor’s office, according to W. H. Seitz, Mandan city auditor. | Probable business will deal with routine matters and the allowance of & few bills, Mr. Seitz said. 120 Ask to Take Civil Twenty applications have been | made for permission to take the civil service examination for rural mail carrier traveling out of Mandan, ac- to Col. A. B. Welch, Mandan postmaster. territory of Mandan, and will be Coal, per For cash in load lots. This T. M. Help those that bring the prices down. PHONE 1132-W ton - $3.00 is good dry coal from Wilton. BURCH Service Examination The examination is open only to persons actually living within the ——————) conducted the early part of Feb- ruary, Col. Welch said. . All applications for the examina- tion are Tequired tc be in the hands of Mandan postal authorities by Jan, 30. . Information concerning the duties and salary can be obtained from the Mandan postoffice window. Shrine Ticket Sales Mandan’s Indian Shriners will be- gin their ticket campaign Thursday for their first annual dance June 26 at or near Mandan, it was announced ‘Wednesday morning by Col. A. B. ‘Welch, first chief of the organization. At the dance the Shriners will give @ new 1931 Chevrolet special sedan to one of their guests. The Shrine will use the money to Will Start Thursday) machine has been finance the trip the group is making. to the national convention at Cleve- p {Blt a t Your Building May Be "Fireproof*—But Your Records Are NOT! NLY about half your)business{is insurable. You’ cannot} insure your‘records. If,valuablejpapersiare’ destroyed you lose the basis{of:many of.your, business activities. Your; policy;reads that‘intcasejof fire - you ‘shall’ produce! for,examination all booksYof account}, bills,invoices and'otherjyouchers ‘necessary to a clear;proof_of;loss. Art:Metal’STEEL ;Safesyareyprotect: ing’ business{records‘in'thousandsyof Officeszagainst loss‘or damage\byjfire ‘They, are tested’and 'approved|byjthe’ ene ‘Underwriters’ Laboratories. You never know.when‘ fire;will sttike. Let us give iyouran‘estimateltodayion fire’ protection for'yourirecords! , _ The Bismarck Tribune BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA EXCLUSIVE AGENTS Ba|siaia olo 8 ‘| = 8 3

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