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Good Friday Services Planned by Churches Holy Week services, conducted in ii churches of the city, will cul- minate with special observances op Good Friday, according to announce- ments made by the various pastors. At the Trinity Lutheran church a service will be held from 12 noon until 1 p. m. Seven meditations on the last words of Christ on the cross Will be given by Rev. Opie S. Rindahl, pastor. Musical numbers will be ‘Flee as @ Bird,” Dana, Mrs. Clifford John- son; “It Was For Me,” Blount, Mrs. 'T. G. Plomasen; and “O, Divine Re- deemer,” Gounoud, Mrs. O. S. Rin- dahl and Mrs. W. J. Targart. | Maundy Thursday services will be; conducted at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening, with the concessional and Holy Communion, Rev. Rindahl an- nounces. The choir will sing, “Dark- ness and Sorrow.” ‘ Holy Communion services will be conducted at 7:30 o'clock Friday eve- ning at the First Presbyterian, the 1 . i McCabe Methodist After being converted he preached First Baptist, the Mct x beet ——— at Langdon, St. Thomas, Edinburg, range ae D., April ae many and Evangelical churches. sermon or meditation will be a part of each of the observances and spe- cial music is planned. The Rt. Rev 1. H. Seager, bishop of the central aera, will speak at the Evangelical service, and at the Baptist church a Paptismal service will be held. 4 ‘The service at the First Lutheran church is set for 7:45 p. m., according to Rev. Emil Benzon, pastor, and Holy Communion will be adminis- tered. : At St. Mary’s procathedral the ymass of the pre-sanctified wit be celebrated at 8 a. m., followed by the unveiling of the cross. At 7:30 p. m. the lamentation services will be con- ducted. Services at St. George's Episcopal chureh will commence with a litany and ante-communion service at 7:45 a.m. This will be followed by morn- ing prayer at 10 a. m. and threes hours’ devotion from 12 noon to 3 p m. At 8 p. m. devotions and a ser- mon by the Rev. Pierce-Jones, rector, SOCIETY NEVS aN { Meetings of Clubs j | And Social Groups | ¢ Officers will be elected at a meet- ing of Minishoshe chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Thomas Galvin, 623 First St. A luncheon at 12:30 o'clock, with Mrs. Galvin, Mrs. E. T. Beatt and Mrs. Mary Owens as hostesses, will precede the business meeting. *** * Modern German drama will be the topic for a meeting of the Delphian society Friday afternoon at 2:15 o'clock at the home of Mrs. F. C. Stucke, 722 Mandan St. Mrs. C. B. Rosen will read a paper on German drama and Mrs. George Register will review a Hauptmann play. * * * Instruction in Red Cross First Aid for Girl Scout leaders will be given by Dr. W. B. Pierce at 7:30 Friday evening at the Bismarck high school. | AT THE MOVIES ‘| ° PARAMOUNT THEATRE In “The Southerner,” now playing at the Paramount theatre, Lawrence Tibbett forsakes “period drama” to Play his first strictly modern role. It is in many ways the most interest- ing of his screen career. The singer appears as the prodigal son of an aristocratic Southern fam- ily who returns home to “make good” in an atmosphere of suspicion and hatred. When he attempts to prevent. his brother's wife from eloping with a former lover and falls in love with her himself, the dramatic action be- gins, and continues at a fast clip, working to a surprise climax. The songs as in the case of “The Rogue Song” and “New Moon” are woven into the narrative as a salient part of the plot. Tibbett sings one of his best known concert numbers, “De Glory Road,” as well as a num- ber of love songs and Southern MISSIONARY DIES Rev. C. J. Hill, 75, Stricken Tuesday at His Home in Fosston, Minn. Fosston, Minn., April 2.—(7)—One! of the most picturesque figures in North Dakota church circles, Rev. C. J. Hill, 75, veteran Baptist missionary in North Dakota, died Tuesday in his home here. Puneral services will be conductec Saturday in the Baptist church ai! Park River, N. D., with Dr. Olaf En- get, Powers Lake, N. D., formerly of Fargo, officiating. Burial will be in the Park River cemetery beside the body of Rev. Hill's first wife. Rev. Hill traveled for more than 30 years throughout North Dakota. He came here from Minnesota to Graf- ton, where he for a time engaged in the saloon business. He later moved to Park River where he maintained a hardware store and also l:andled farm machinery. Vang, and McIntosh, and then be- came Baptist missionary for North Dakota. During the Indian wars Mr. Hill crossed North Dakota with Gen. Al- fred H. Sully as a driver in the com- missary department. He helped to remove by ox team the government buildings from Fort Abercrombie north of Wahpeton, to Sisseton, 8. D. He retired from active church work in 1926 at the age of 70. Rose Croix Order to Hold Easter Services Commemorative services for Easter week will be held by the Bismarck- division of Scottish Rite masonry, ac- cording to G. F. Dullum, Master, who | is in charge of the program. To inaugurate: the services, Rev. Gilbert W. Stewart. Mandan, will THE BISMARCK ' sonic temple will be the mystic feast and the extinguishing of lights, Rev. D. Pierce-Jones, Bismarck, will give the Easter address. The services are obligatory for all members of the order, according to Mr. 5 Short services also will be held for members of the order who died dur- { 1930. Deceased members who will e honored are Odin S. Haugen, George Franklin Hunt, Joseph A. Reems and Stanley R. Sharts. Sandin-Wilde Named Willys Distributor Appointment of Sandin-Wilde Mo- tors, Inc., as distributors for Overland products in Burleigh and 19 adjoining counties was announced Thursday by the Willys-Overland company, Toledo, Ohio. The offices of the local firm will be the central one for the company in this area and complete sales. service and parts facilities will be maifttained here. The Willys line includes six and eight-cylindered cars, Knight motored cars and trucks. A. L. Sandin is president of the company and A. C. Wilde is vice president and treasurer. Each has been with the company from its in- ception and is actively concerned with its management, & PETITION POWER COMPANY Northern Power and Light company to extend their high-line from here to Fort Yates, according to J. Ber- nard Smith, editer of the Selfridge Journal. Woman Resident of Tappen | Succumbs Jamestown, N. D., April 2—()— Mrs, Orilla May Martin, 61, resident in the Northwest for a number of years, diéd at her home at Tappen ‘Wednesday night after a week's ill- ness. Funeral services will be held in Fargo Saturday afternoon and burial will be in Riverside cemetery there. She leaves a son, Ralph Martin, Rapid City, 8. two daughters, Mrs. Blanche Round, Staples, Minn., and Mrs. Flossie Campbell, Tappen, and a brother and a sister. North Dakotan Kills Self Taking Poison Sioux City, Towa, April 2—(7— After swallowing poison, Kenneth Lindersmat, 28 yéars old, Fullerton, N. D., died in a hospital Thursday. _—_———————ee Find Wonderful New Face Powder Poor complexions and old looking skins Jack protection. Preserve Last Times Tonight The Affairs of A Heart Hunter! ganized April 5, 1881. 1 SEE YOU ARE WASHING CLOTHES THE NEW way NOW YES. THIS WAY SAVES SCRUBBING AND GETS THEM WHITER | : With Betty Compson, Ian Keith, Mary Duncan, Jeanette Loff, Lionel Belmore Coming speak “On the MYaning of Maundy Friday and Saturday WITH RINSO, MOTHER! YES, THE HARD- WATER SOAP... RINSO. ITS RICH Thursday.” A feature of the Maundy | \ ‘Thursday program to be held Thurs- |} day at 8 p. m. in the Bismarck Ma- 1X are planned. melodies. * * * Mrs. F. C, Hauser, 71513 Thayer CAPITOL THEATER avenue, will leave Friday for Hills- boro, to spend about a week at the |drama, as suspenseful as it‘is laugh- | home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.|able and romantic, “Big Money,” r by M. EB. Morgan. Perhaps one of the most delightful x xe * productions ever made, will be on view iS Miss Lois Howard, physical educa- tion instructor at the Bismarck high school, left Wednesday for Wadena, Minn., where she will spend several days with a sister. ee * | Mrs. T. H. Tharalsen will arrive Saturday from San Haven, N. D., to spend Easter with Justice and Mrs. A. M. Christianson, 1005 Fifth St. See | City-County Briefs i | re A cca tbl Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Elkins, Minot, are transacting business here. T. J. Anders, Werner merchant, was ' in the city Thursday on a brief busi- | ness trip. = it Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Whitmer, Yuc- a, are parents of a son born Wed- nesday at the Bismarck hospital. Miss Queena Stewart, Buffalo Gap, . D., secretary-treasurer for the Western South Dakota Stock Grow- er’s association and her mother, Mrs. | HH. W. Stewart, are in Bismarck on a | business visit. H | standpoint “Big Money” is a gem and \in big stage productions and as lead-; Novel in construction, a comedy at the Capitol theater Friday and Sat- urday. It is a human story, peppy, tender, pathetic, but the tension is} relieved by exquisite comedy that pre- dominates in every scene. From every it sets @ standard for dialogue comedy | dramas of the finer grade that it will be difficult to surpass. 1 Eddie Quillan, as a dice-throwing | messenger boy, heads one of the best. casts ever assembled in any dialogue picture. The boy who won his spurs in “The Godless Girl” and “The Soph- | omore” will clinch his reputation by his work in “Big Money.” Robert Armstrong, who has been seen in nu- merous Pathe hits, is a bad man with a heart in this talker, and what a comedy team Quillan and he make! | James Gleason, who was featured; with Armstrong in “Oh Yeah,” his derby and hard boiled slanguage in| “Big Money,” will vastly increase his| popularity, Miriam Seegar, well known ing woman for Richard Dix, Adolph Menjou and Reginald Denny, sweet and charming, is at her best in “Big Money” as the girl Quillan loves. 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