The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 6, 1931, Page 5

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she a i) © of the Mayville Normal school; Addresaes by C. ©. Swain, resident Hugo Remmington, Lisbon, conserva- tion director for the state Isaak Wal- nm » ate ‘acheduled Bees ‘meeting of the fourth district clul of the’ North Dakota Federation at Lidgerwood, April 14 and 15. Hostess clubs will be the Dexter Homemak- ers, the Lidgerwood Civic and Study, Community, the Lid- the Lidgerwood ‘te gerwood Wornan’s and the Wyndmere Civic. re Mrs. Daniel Riley, Lidgerwood, will give the address of welcome and Mrs. C. V. Wheeler, Hope, will respond at, the opening session, when reports of officers will be received and Mrs. J. ae ie ir gttees it her piety 3 it, will . on Swain will speak on “Bducation for Parenthood,” and Mrs. Albert £. Jones, Lisbon, president of the state federation, will read, her annual message. ‘The formal ballot will be taken and sak Cae eo e first dey’s session. bans oN C. Swain will preside as toastmistress at the Care brett td ich lowec Oe as got he loan entertain- ment. ‘ the Wednesday meeting wi be. the presidents’ breakfast, served by the hostess clubs. “Mr. Remmington will deliver an address ing the morning and win, Mri ert will conduct a . Miss Hatch, Fatgo, ‘will be the principal speaker at the afternoon meeting, speaking 6n Art, the Essen- tial of Every he ‘The ea ther project wil presez Mr H.W. Farge, state rman. onmne fourth district is composed of 30 clubs, with a total membership of 950. ‘2 2 ® Complimentary to her daughter, Miss Elsie, Mrs, Carl Nelson, 922 Eighth St., entertained a group of school friends and young women who were home from college for Easter at a tea Sunday afternoon. Miss Nel- son arrived in Bismarck Sunday from Hollywood, Calif, where she spent the winter months. Tulips in pastel shades and Easter lilies decorated the tea table, where Mrs. George Janda presided. Baskets of spring flowers were used throughout the rooms. Mrs. Nelson was assisted in dining room by Mrs. C. W. Peterson and ‘Miss Lucile Coghlan. About 60 young women called during the receiving hours, which were from 3 until 5 o'clock. * * * Elizabeth Ann LaRose, pianist, and David Davis, baritone, pupils of the Belle Mehus Music studio, will pre- sent one of the series of miniature recitals Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock ever KFYR. Numbers to be given are Gavotte, Handel-deSivrai; To a ‘Wild Rose, From an Indian Lodge, McDowall; From an Old Album, Mokrejs; March of the Little Lead Soldiers, Pierne; Elizabeth Ann La- Rose and Tally Ho, Leoni; The Build- ‘ers, Cadman; A Ranjo Song, Homer, David Davis. ee A company of friends gathered at ‘the home of Carl Tolliver, 1922 Ave- nue D, Saturday evening, to help him celebrate his birthday anniversary. | ‘The evening was spent in playing | Bismarck Monday en route to Grand whist and prizes were awarded Mrs. | Forks, where he is a student in the University of North Dakota. He was accompanied by Ted Sailer, Hazen, and Lester Rasmussen, Beulah, who also are students at the University of Carl Scott, W. R. Johnson, Mrs. Ned Koelb and George Mindt. Ab mid- night refreshments were served by Mrs. Tolliver, assisted by Mrs. Mindt. ‘There were 24 guests. zee Nelson Sauvain, chairman board of ‘ation, Sauvain have returned f1 Forks, where they atte nual session of the North high school conference, at which Dr. ‘William John Cooper, of education, ms a sparen * Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Zuger and son Jack, 501 West Thayer avenue, and George Moses, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Moses, 216 Park 8t., are back from Minneapolis, where they spent a week as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Fitzsimmons and other friends. * * * Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor of the McCabe Methodist church, officiated at the wedding of Miss Hélen Merkel, Robinson, and Paul Wise, Tuttle, which took place Sunday evening at the Vater home. Attendants were Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Brown, Tuttle. : * * * ; ‘Mrs. R, A. Kramer, 814 Mandan St., has as her guest this week her moth- er, Mrs, Elizabeth Bleth, Glen Ullin. Her sister, Mrs. Nick Schneider, Glen ‘Ullin, has returned to her home aft- er spending Easter at the Kramer home. es * * E. L. Simmons, New England, a member of the board of directors of the North Dakota Federation of ‘Womens clubs, visited with friends in the city eedey ail. MRR of the Mrs. Grand ‘the an- Dakota, ©. W. Lelifur, principal of the Will school, Mrs. Leifur and their smalt daughter returned to Bismarck Syn- day evening after spending a few days with pees ee gue Raymond Sundquist, Miss Alma Sundquist, Mason apart- ments, left. Saturday for his home in St. Paul after spending several dayg ie Bismareg. nephew of Public Library Book reviews appearing below were ____ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDA [Newest Books at | ° nationally famous light optra mats- tro, exceeds the poetic touch which he gave ‘o such familiar stage ve: hicles as “Rose Marie,” “! “Katinka,” and “High Jinks.” It is the climax thus far to Friml’s genius. EASTER BGG ROLL DRAWS HUNDREDS Y; APRIL 6, 1931 half for, hospital, fiedical and other services. Fourth District Clubs {Legion Auxiliary Head To Meet in Lidgerwood| To Visit North Dakota Mrs. Wilma Hoyal, ‘meeting, according Mrs. seigen Hatton, G t, Forks conferring there. ing sent ‘tivitations to the meeting. der of the Eastern Star, initiation services at sonic temple. ek * will hold a meeting ‘Tuesday e' Esther Wilson, 208 Rosser avenue. * ok OR me The Progressive Mother's club will a meet at 8 o'clock the home Fifteen of Mrs. H. J. Nelson, ith St. national, president i the sei wou ee by Sir Philip . Legion Auxiliary, -& i North Dakota May 2, wnén she wil are be a guest of the Grand Forks unit. tative plans for entertainment of Mrs. Hoyal will include a luncheon . and AOA. preal- who spent Saturday in Grand with Pierce, district committeewoman, arid Mrs. 8. D. Coll, president of the unit Department officers and members of units throughout the state are be- Meetings of Clubs ‘ t And Social Groups Members of the local chapter, Or- will-conduet their meeting at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening in the Ma- The Four Leaf Clover Study club at 8 o'clock at the, home of Miss * * A meeting of the board of directors on “North Dakota Waterways” dur-|of the Business and Professional Mrs. M. A. Bald-} Women’s club will be held’ at 7:80 parliamentarian, ‘cue Tuesday evening in the club ‘Tuesday evening af i City-County News : preg, Mr, bid Mrs. Gustay Becker, Bis- Prepared under the direction of Miss Harriet Rust, a member of the staff at the Bismarck Public library, where the books may be obtained. All are titles recently placed on the library shelves, H Beginning with Armistice , Sir Philip Gibbs deals wtih the jrotiens| which have confronted the world in the 12 years since then. Of most of the events in Germany, Russia, Hun- gary, Poland, Austria, Italy and Amer- ica he has been an eye-witness. Great Journalist, reporter of history in the ‘making, liberal and peace-loving cos- mopolitan, he has written a brilliant and exciting story of nations. From the standpoint of political and his- torical selence, the book may seem meager and casual in spots, but the boint of view results in a simple and Gbeorbing narrative intelligible to the layman. His chapters on Wilson's part in the peace conference and the! United States during the ensuing 12) years are of particular interest to us, hi must be admitted as shrewd and ‘Took’ the Scot, by Alice Grant Rosman Jock, a very dark little Scot terrier, who gave up town life to run a coun- try estate, four other dogs, Gillian, his mistress, Roger Perch, a newcomer to the village and young, and a gos- siping woman tumble along through Mrs. Rosman’s newest story. The plot! is light, gay, almost improbable and ot quite impossible. The dialogue is! amusing, intimate, and the whole is spiced with the author, a special bratid of harmless intrigue. Not quite ® dog story, not quite all romance, it @ nice combination for an eve- ning’s entertainment. Lauterbach of the China Sea By Lowell Thomas Count von Luckner suggested to Lowell Thomas that if he ‘wanted to! hear a real story, he should hear Cap- tain Lauterbach’s. So Thomas heard {t and wrote it down. Captain Julius = Lauterbach is fat, jolly, Gerinan seajtreme south edge, with Boy Seduts of/Program Planned by Mrs./ TO WHITE HOUSE Hoover; President's Grand- children to Be Present Washington, April 6.—()—Deapite. @ thin cold drizzle, hundreds of chil- dren came to the white hotise Mon-|% day to frolic in the’ traditional, Eas-| | ter Monday egg roll. It began with normal attendance, the only result of the rain being to add vari-colored umbrellas to the scene. Several hundred children, from babies in go-carts to 10-year- olds, were waiting when the iron gates Swung open at 9 o'clock. Massed in the east room, about 200 children of government officials crowded to the windows overlooking’ the broad south grounds. They had been invited by Mrs. Hoover to join her three grandchildren, Peggy Ann, Herbert Hoover III, and Joan. At 10 o'clock the program which Mrs. Hoover planned began. The blue and red uniformed marine band swung into the south grounds, march- ed up to a raised platform in the cen- ter, removed rain protections from their instruments, and struck up a folk song. A group of about 30 girls moved into a roped off rectangle antl began a folk dance. Knolls along the edges tof the grounds were the most popular points, There scores tossed thelr eggs into mid-air, and rolled them down to shrieking playmates. Gaily colored baskets swung from the children’s arms. Grown-ups, ad- mitted only if accompanied by @ child spread blankets on the grass and as- sisted in games. ‘To meet any emergency, an am- bulance drew up within the grounds Mushik are with trientis ° | o neighbors for the kindness Vocally the entire production is superb and this is due in a measure to thi Macaulay and well known oh the light The comedy and characte: Joe E. Brown, Zasu Pitts, Max David- son and Harry Gribbon deserve praise, and a fine dramatic role is played by Carroll Nye as a brother, large singing of Joseph Chisholm, both ra stage. tions of weakling me This is Hammerstein's first of a series of musical plays for the screen after @ lifetime of success as a stage impresario, a Mandan Shorts | Mr. and Mrs. L, H. Connolly had as their guests on Easter Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. J. P.Oain, and brother-in-law af Mr. Connolly. , Dickinson, sister ee ® Miss Alvera Andérgon, student at the University of North Dakota, spent the week-end in Mandan with her Parents, Mr. and Mrs. 8. G. Anderson. * ek Alf Edwards, James Murphy and Eugene Dorflet, students at the North Dakota spending a few days at their homes in ‘Mandan, Agricultural college, aré x eK Mrs, Rose McCarthy and Miss Anne spending several days in Minneapolis. PEOPLE’S FORUM | IT’S A FAIR QUESTION Editor of the Tribune: And now we wonder what became of the other methbers that perished with Rockne. Yours truly, A. P. NYDEN, Hebron, N.:D. CARD OF THANKS We. wish to thank our friends and jown US Towne Reappointed Raymond and Iriest O'Briet) Mou ° dur- announced To Health Council Pig gg feign ght gamete tt Bg in the Mists Dr. R. 8. Towne, Bismarck dentist | 1981. vi Bens te ue due ne ea ig rll tse " jhas been reappointed as a msmber of Sandery disbursements for the seit |opened for busthess until Tuesday the state public health advisory | V2) ‘years totalled 718,38 and | morning, & reception for the public council, Governor George F. Shafer yme 807.49. will be held from 8 to 10 o’tlock Men- announced Monday. Dr. Towne’s new day night and refreshments will be term will expire March 27, 1937. RATES IN ISSUE served. : Other members of the public health Freight rates on stijcoo, plaster and — ‘adivsory council are Dr. Arne Ofte- plaster board from Towa points to| VOTE FOR 8. 8. Narn Gani, Fargo, president: Mrs Tll| North Dakota are in lasue in @ encc| FOR POLICE MAGISTRATE Clayton Smyth, Bismarck; Dr. Pan-| +o pe heard by the comi- (Pol. Adv.) ae ou aly, Butch, ol | am commun Bes Ded iia aa of the State anti-Tuberculosis associ. ‘April 8, apcording to the i. Regular ‘meééting of Bis- ation; Bertha R. Palmer, Bisttarck. | toua board. marck-Mandan Lodge of Per- superintendent of public instruction, | “"y p, hnay, it traffic ex- We and Dr. A. A. Whittemore, Bismarck | og; ay will represent | fection Wednesday, April 8, at state health officer and sectetary of P. the council. — Huge Business Done By Workthen’s Bureau| Premiums received by the state men's compensation bureau for the years 1927 to 1930, inclusive to- taled $2,444,056.18 and payments on awards during the. saitie period Ginounted to $1,933,940.06, according 8 brag etl by R. E. Wensel, one ureau commissioners. A balance between collections and disbursements in awards is struck by the allocation of 000 to admin- istrative expense during the four-year Perlod and of $286,116.12 to the re- serve fone of the bureau. ‘The cal Heaton Deak was réached in 1929 when $703,708.88 was réceived by the btiredu but the payment peak oc- curred in 1930 when $666,060.06 was turned over to persons injured in in- dusttial accidents or paid in their be- UPSTAIRS t Gentleman of the Paris boule- vei MONDAY - TUESDAY Estranged! fds, Thriving richly on tho polls of a sinistér profession. Now faces the conflict be- ‘ween love and conscience. all he disillusion the one in our recent bereavement, the ill- mess and death of our beloved wife and mother. and hovered nearby. A “lost and found” white tent stood at the ex- Sunday at the St. Alexius hdspital, Bismarck hospital ning on « business trip.to St. Paul: tending to business matters. on an extended Wednesday. hover, 523 Seventh St. ‘ North Dakota. instruction, spent Easter in Hamilt as the gyest of his parents, Mr. Mrs, George Page. marck, are parents of a son born A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Klick, Hebron; at the Saturday. George Duemeland) of the Patter- son Land company, left Saturday eve- W. E. Harke, New Leipzig mer- chant, spent Monday in Bismarck at- John Olson, 413. Avenue ‘B, left Bismarck Monday for Rugby, N, D,. business frip. Russell A. Young, Bismarck, teft Monday for Mott on-a business trip. He intends to return to Bismarck Clarence Burgess, Devils Lake, and Robert Larson, Bismarck, left Mon- day for Grand Forks where they at- tend the University of North Dakota. Theodore’ Meinhover, former Bis- marck high school athletic. star and at present a freshman in the Uni- versity of North Dakota, left Bis- marck Monday for Grand Forks after spending the Easter vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Mein- Elder Sailer, Stanton, arrived in John A. Page, director of high .| schools for the department of: public iton . He was at Grand Forks last weck for the annual mest- ing of the North Dakota high school | conference and spoke on the revision eaptath. During the war he was prize officer of the raider Emden, and Thomas describes, in Lauterbach’s own words, the adventures which be- fell this Falstaff of the sea aboard the Emden, his escape, his subsequent dis- Guises and escapes, and his life as commander of mystery boats in the Baltic sea and of the raider Moewe. It is a rare sea yarn, and it has two advantages: the first is that truth is stranger than fiction, and the second is Lauterbach himself. i Imperial Palace, by Arnold Bennett | The central figure of this 769 page| book is the super-luxury hotel, the Imperial Palace. This stupendous, palace, “whose directors are gods, whose managers are archangels, whose myriad head waiters and staff are the choir of cherubim and serap- him” is the creation of that artist among hotel-managers, Orcham. ‘There is not much of plot, and there are no particularly lovable characters. ‘The amazingly complicated structure of the hatel dominates the book to the extent that the book is the hotel and the hotel is the book. But like! the hotel, the book gleams and glows, moves swiftly with a hundted. things happening. The staff becomes as: fgmillar as the rooms and corridors. Orcham is for a moment deflected from his enslavement to the hotel by] the vampish Gracie Sayott, but he returns to the sober and loyal head housekeeper, Violet Powler, whose Portrait is Mr. Bennett's outstanding; piece of character work. If you like super-de-luxe hotels, you will get that Sathe grand thrill of awful, yet rest- ful importance very much more in- expensively from Mr. Bennett. It is his last novel. during the meeting. VOTE FOR S. S. McDONALD FOR POLICE MAGISTRATE (Pol. Adv.) e- O'BRIEN of the state high school manual and curriculum | Town Talk ; kas in the Nicola Building, 413 Broadway Tuesday, April 7 Will be open to the public tonight tram § to 10 ole. | For those people who en- joy a fine, full wheaten flavor in baked foods use OCCIDENT, LYON’S BEST, OR CLIMAX Try a sack— You are the judge— Satisfaction Guaranteed. Cost More - Worth It! RUSSELL-MILLER _, MILLING CO. Lunch | BROTHERS ready to return lost articles ot, if necessary, lost children. It was expected the president's grandchildren and their guests would Join the frolic later. Repeatedly, when a igure appeared on the porticg overlooking the scene, crowds surged forward, only to disperse when thé spectator proved another visitor. The first casualty was Sam Jack- son, 10, Muskegon, Mich. He broke his arm when he fell from the portico overlooking the grounds. He was car- ried to the waiting ambulance, and sent to the emergency hospital. i At the Movies i rH CAPITOL THEATRE A great love story set to music is the simplest possible description of Arthur Hammerstein's screen tri- umph, “Lottery Bride,” produced for United Artists at the Capitol theatre. With magnificent settings and backgrounds by William Cameron Menzies, the dramatic operetta runs its course of song and emotion through a highly modern plot that includes even the adventure of an Arctic flight and the crash of a giant dirigible. The music composed especially for the picture by Rudolf Friml, inter- John Gylden and Family, YOUR sintnpay senn MOTHER We Telegraph Flowers Oscar H. Will & Co. Phone 784 319 Third St. _ Blamarvk, N. D. Virginia Butler 100 THIRD STREET Mother’s Day Give her your photograph on her day. Make your appointments now, MAY 10th Home Studio PHONE 896 Grand Charles Aftern Admission 10¢ TONIGHT 8 P. M. Opening ‘Skating Rink Strictly High Class “ey SKATING 8:00 to 10:30 P.M. and Friday, Saturday and Sunday “Follow the Crowd” Shellie Charles, Mgr. Glorious Roller DAILY oons 3 Skates 25¢ soap must be safe for the filmiest newed brightness of the colors. Yet, on the heavy jobs, Whive King is prompt, thorough and ive. White King solves oT, wash- ing problem—dishes, ics, sil- ver, glass, floors and woodwork. It’s kind to tender hands hecause it works so well in lukewarm water, instead of the bot water ordinary soaps require. It’s eco- somical too. Try it today. Sold by + your grocer. Ww clean and new forever! | your werk in half. & AN D rags ir other? WILLIAM ie veeens | | rOwaE.. dashing melodrama— fabrics and yet be stern with the “ grease on dishes, the hidden dust ‘MAN in heavy blanketé. It’s a combina OF THE ADDED FEATURES tion you don’t often find. ‘ ss White King Graoultted Soap WORL “THE plays all parts. Made from fine ‘ee STOLEN vegetable and nut oils, its purity JOOLS” makes it safe for enything that caa Cerele be safely di in ied Useit : LOMBARD with washing licate ginghams aa 3 a stale prints—note the freshness and re- GIsSON git te hie By Blackmail he 1 By Blackmail he wins and loses Players’ Week” Special ives... love... Home of Paramount Pictures hich way... would you rather cook? HAT joy to a woman's heart is a set of cooking utensils that keep gleamingly You can cook this medern way fér léss than one cent a meal a person. 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