The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1931, Page 5

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4a al. “ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, APRIL 11, 1981 SOCIETY NEVS Convention of Eighth District of Women’s Clubs Opens Two-Day Session Three Bismarck Women Are Scheduled to Speak; Will Stress Special Projects Mrs. James H. Cooper, president of the eighth district of the North Da- kota Federation of Women’s club, has announced the program for the 17th annual district convention, which will open in Jamestown Thursday after- noon for a two-day session, The Music club and the Wednesday club of Jamestown will be hostesses. Among those scheduled to give ad- dresses are Mrs. Cooper, Mrs. Albert E. Jones, Lisbon, president of the state federation; Mts, Paul T. Boleyn, Fargo, state chairman of press and publicity and editor of the North Da- kota Clubwoman; Mrs. George F. Shafer, Mrs. Florence H. Davis, lib- rarlan for the state historical society, and Miss Lillian Cook, secretary of the state library commission, all of Bismarck. At Presbyterian Church Registration for the convention will be at the Jamestown Presbyterian church, where the s¢ssions will be held, with the formal convention opening set for 1:30 p. m. Thursday. Following assembly singing led by Mrs. C. R. Travis, Jamestown, and invocation by the Rev. J. E. Webber, delegates and visitors as well as new clubs will be introduced to the con- vention. Mrs. Cooper will preside. Mrs. J. J. Nierling will give the ad- dress of welcome, with Mrs. F. O. Freeberg, Mercer, district vice presi- dent, responding. Mrs. Cooper will present the district report and give her annual message during the after- noon and reports of the secretary- treasurer, Mrs, R. C. Hanson, Streeter; the district historian, Mrs. John Bolinger, Jamestown; the student loan fund, Mrs. T. H. Steffen, Wilton, chairman, will be received. A period will be given over to sug- gestions for activities of the various departments, followed by a discus- sion led by Mrs. Cleve Acton Cross, Dawson, state auditor. Several mus- ical numbers have been arranged for the afternoon, among them a violin solo by Miss Shirley Smith, a piano number by Miss Josephine Spokes- field and piano class work will be). demonstrated by Mrs. B. H. Kroeze, Jamestown. Hold District Banquet The district banquet will be served at 6:15 o'clock Thursday evening in the church dining hall, with Mrs. C. E. Boyden 26 toastmistress and the; annual concert for the benefit of the student loan fund will conclude the| first day's entertainment. 3 Bismarck Women Speak Three Bismarck women are on the! program Friday morning. They are} Mrs. Florence Davis, district chair-| man for the Pioneer Mother project, who will speak on this work; Mrs. George F. Shafer, wife of Governor} Shafer, who will describe the Passion Play at Oberammergau as she wit- nessed it on a recent European trip; and Miss Lillian Cook, who will talk on “County Libraries.” Mrs. Jones, president of the state federation, will give her message during the morning. A reading by Mrs. P, G. Westby and a vocal solo by Mrs, Travis are also on the pro- gram. Will Name Officers Election of district officers will be ‘an important item of business at the closing session Friday afternoon, with reports of various committees also scheduled. Mrs. Paul Boleyn, Fargo, will be the Principal speaker Friday afternoon and preceding her addregs winners in the district scrapbook contest will be announced. Musical numbers will be given by Mrs. Lawton McDonald. As a clos- ing feature new officers will be in- troduced and an invitation for the next convention extended. * oe Oe Mrs, J. C. Peltier and small son, 831 Fourth St., have returned from a week's visit at Fargo and Arthur, N. D. At the latter place they were guests of Mrs. Peltier’s mother, Mrs. J. A. Burgum, and they visited friends in Fargo. ee * Miss Evelyn Jacobson, a student at Sioux Falls college, Sioux Falls, 8. D., recently was initiated into Delta Psi Omega, national dramatic fraternity. Miss Jacobson is a daughter of Rev. and Mrs. O. 8. Jacobson, 1212 Avenue D. ‘ek OK Mrs. P. D, Warren arrived Friday from Minneapolis to join Mr. Warren, @ representative for the Chevrolet Motor company, who is located in Bismarck. The Warrens formerly made their henge in Minot. * * Bill Brown hes returned to his home in Dickinson after a few days’! | visit here with his brother, George Brown, 218 Avenue C. * * * Miss Maxine Burnsides, teacher in Wildrose district, is spending the week-end in Bismarck as the guest of Mr. and Mrs, Worth Lumry, 311 Third St. Thursday in Jamestown Dickinson’s Musical Organizations Will Give Concerts Here Dickinson's musical talent will be well represented in Bismarck Sunday when it sends two of its musical or- @anizations here for concerts. They are the concert orchestra of the Dickinson State Teachers’ college and the city band of 25 pieces. The concert orchestra will present a sacred concert at the McCabe Metho- dist church Sunday evening at 7:30 o'clock while the band, under the di- rection of Phil Patterson will broad- cast from the local radio station. Miss Catherine Burns, director of the orchestra, has arranged a pro+ of pleasing classical numbers for her players. Interspersed with the orchestra selections will be saxa- Phone, violin, piano and vocal solos, with Patricia Brennan, pianist, Clem- ent Rose, saxaphonist, Marjorie Fits- loff, soprano, and Dorothea Thorkel- Son, pianist, as the soloists. This is the second appearance of the orchestra in Bismarck and those who heard them last year will not wish to miss the program Sunday evening. xe 8 Members. of the Gaie Oiseaux bridge club were entertained at a 7 o'clock bridge dinner given Thursday br Mr, and Mrs. E. J. Heising at their home, 122 Avenue C West. Jonquils and lavender tapers were used to form a spring motif for the tables and places were marked for 12. Prizes in the bridge games after din- her were awarded Mrs. John Fleck and Earl Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Stucke were guests of the club. zee About 1,000 persons attended the benefit dance held under the auspices of the local Elks lodge Friday eve- ning at the Dome. A building fund for an Elks home in Bismark was started recently and proceeds will be added to this fund. During the dance the lodge presented 80 acres of land, located near Solen, to George Larson, Bismarck. Sam Kontos and his or- chestra played for the dancing. eee Mr. and Mrs. John A. Larson, 210 Avenue A West, entertained the mem- | bers of their bridge club at a 7 o'clock \ dinner Friday evening. Covers were | marked for 16 guests at tables cen- tered with pink and green tapers. Appointments in keeping with the spring themé were used. Bridge was | played after dinner, with honors going to A. J. Arnot and Mrs. H. F. O'Hare. ek * | Mr. and Mrs. Harold Thoreson, Hollywood, Calif., arrived Saturday for a visit with Mr. Thoreson’s brother and sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. J. O. Thoreson, They came here from Fargo, where they have been visiting Mr. Thoreson’s mother, Mrs. Julla ‘Thoreson. eee Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Hoskins, 904 Fourth 8t., left Saturday morning by motor for Detroit Lakes, Minn., where {they have a summer home. They will make arrangements for opening their cottage early next month and return the first of the week. * *” Mrs. George Brown, 218 Avenue C was hostess to members of St. Ce- celia’s Missionary group Thursday evening. Bridge was played at two tables during the evening, wit hon- ors going to Mrs. F. H. Geiermann and Mrs. Leo Derochford. * * % Rev. Emil Benzon, pastor of the First Lutheran church, will return Sunday noon from Minneapolis, where he has been attending the ses- sions of the Minnesota Lutheran con- ference since Monday. * ek OK Mrs, J. A. Melicher, Mason apart- ments, has returned from Minneap- olis where she has been visiting with friends for about ten days. | Bismarck’s Only | Woman Official we ° b MRS, C. L. YOUNG Mrs. C. L. Young, re-electes Tues- day as a member of the Bismarck park board, is the city's only woman Official. Beginning her second term on the park board, Mrs. Young stated that she favors a definite improve- ment program. Besides her ciwc du- ties Mrs. Young finds time for con- siderable church work and club ac- state president of the P. E. O. Sister- hood. Gardening is her hobby as the attractive flower gardens about Young home on Avenue B prove. ee | Meetings of Clubs i | And Social Groups | ° —— 2 Members of the local court, Cath- olic Daughters of America, will meet at 8 o'clock Monday evening at St. Mary's school auditorium. * * % The Cosmos club will meet Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Fred Jangonius, 816 Fourth St., with Miss Bessie Baldwin as hostess. Mrs. George McCay will presént the pro- gram. * eK Mrs. N. O. Churchill, 618 Mandan 8t., will be hostess to the members of the Monday club at the regular meet- ing Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock. “Interior Decorating” will be the pro- gram topic. * * * Menibers of the Bismarck Study club will meet at 2:30 o'clock Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. H. E. Ghearn, 213 Second St. Papérs will be given by Mrs. Jack Fleck and Mrs. H. H. Hanson. xk * The Yeoman Ladies’ club will meet Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. L. F. Bechtold, 828 Second St. f City-County News o—. L, A. Swanson and Edward Fields, Carrington, were business visitors in Bismarck Friday. J. O. Klapp, chief of the Soo line Cemutrage department, was in the city Friday transacting business. C. B, Little, president of the First National Bank, left here. Saturday morning for Boston and Hanover, N. H. where he will attend a meeting of the trustees of Dartmouth college. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Jorde, Mandan, are parents of a daughter born Saturday at the Bismar:k hos- pital. * Mrs. Hugo Solberg, of Naughton township, north of the city, and Miss Olive Wulfsbergh, teacher of the Naughton ‘school, were visitors in Bismarck Saturday. James Quigg, principal schoalg at Solen, week-end with friergis in Bismarck. Talks on vegetable dishes and food cookery were given by Mrs. K. Dor- man and Mrs. Falkenstein at a meet- ing of the Crofte-Star Homemakers club this week at the home of Mrs. H. T. Meyer, Methods of preparing various dishes were demonstrated. The group will hold its next meeting May 13 with Mrs. W. C. Gherke. of the Lincoln, Neb., April 11.—(7)—The secohd wife of Paul Wupper, former Beemer, Nebraska, bank president now serving a 110-year sentence in Per's arrest. e ried in Philadelphia. ‘Wupper has a wife at Fremont, but while going under the name of Frederick Brinkman he again mar- ed) is spending the | north of Bismarck. | ital and thtly land: ‘ks Wupper’s 2nd Wife being condemned. and remove. os = | Ineluc in the improvements ot Is Seeking Reward | Washington and now completed or the state penitentiary here for for- | gery, Saturday arrived in i un- | announced to collect the 10" | Now bulldogs, ene ellen: few anny ward offered by the state for Wup- | ti ald, one million: govei ent. print | i Speakers for Eighth District Convention | cages Scaana ern = = rs er — SPS OE MRS. ALBERT E. JONES Among the speakers at the convention of the eighth district of the North Dakota Federation of Women’s clubs at Jamestown April 16 and 17, will be Mrs. James H. Cooper, Courtenay, president of the district; Mrs. Albert | E. Jones, Lisbon, president of the state federation; and Mrs, Paul T. Boleyn, | Fargo, editor of The North Dakota Clubwoman and chairman of the de- | partment of press and publicity. Mrs. Cooper will preside and will give ‘her report Thursday; Mrs. Jones will deliver her message Friday morning | and Mrs. Boleyn will discuss pyblicity at the closing session. Mrs. Jones | will leave for Phoenix, Ariz., immediately after the convention to attend the biennial board and council meeting of the General Federation. She will also | pees at a meeting of the Presidents’ club, composed of the heads of state | federations, which will be held in connection with the council meeting. Mrs. Jones is president of the club. ‘BUILDING PROGRAM AT ‘WASHINGTON IS HUGE Beautification of Capitol City Will Involve Three Hun- morial highway, six millions; addi- tion house office building, ten mil- lions; enlargment capitol grour.ds, six millions; supreme court sife and building, twelve millions; purchase land and buildings slong .Pennsyl- vania avenue for site for new federal buildings, forty mililons; department of agriculture buildings, ten m:ilions; department of commerce building, eighteen millions; internal revenue | building, ten millions. | tor for North Dakota, dred Million Plans that have already been out- | lined and approved for the improve- ment and rebuilding of Washington will involve total expenditures by the federal government within the next six or eight years of three hundred million dollars, according to P. D. Norton, Minot attorney, and former member of congress who is visiting in Washington. Norton wrote that pl¢sical appear- | ance of the city has been greatly im- proved since the time when he was in congress in 1919 and that when} the building program is completed, | Washington will be the most beau- | | tiful capital city in the world. Buildings uniform in structure | and designed to fit in the general architectural scheme are being erect- ed along the streets leading to the | under way are the following, which {do not include all the improvements |to be made, with estimated cost in | millions: botanical gardens, one mil- | lion; national arboretum, half mil- lion; congressional library new site, one million; Walter Reed nospital ing office addition, one million; Ar-, ‘lington National cemetery, one mil-| lion; Arlington Memorial bridge, fit- teen millions; Mount Vernon Me- MRS. PAUL T. BOLEYN Will Increase N. D. \ Prohibition Staff; Fargo, April 11—(4)—Two new fed- eral prohibition agents will be added to the North Dakote staff next week, John N. Hagan, deputy administra- announced here Friday. About July 1 two more agents will be added to the North Dakota staff, which will bring the number of sleuths in North Dakota to 14, Mr. Hagan said. DeMolay Conclave Program Announced A banquet, a conclave ball, speeches by men prominent in the Masonic order, and various business meetings will feature the Tenth Annual De- Molay conclave to be held in Bis- marck and Mandan April 17 and 18. Tentative arrangements for the ball, to be given at Mandan April 17, and a banquet to be held at Bismarck the following evening, are being made. Speakers on the program will in- Se Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist clude Harold Tait, Jack Zuger, and A. C. Brainerd, Bismarck and C, G. Mathys, Mandan, as well as persons from several other North Dakota cities. DISAPPROVE NAME ‘LINDBERGH’ St. Louts, April 11.—(4)—Trustees of Huntleigh village have gone to law in’ an effort to change the namie of Lindbergh boulevard back to Denny Road. The board set forth that the name of aii ancient settler and prop- erty owner was abandoned last De- cemiber in fayor of one who with all due respect of his achievements owns no real estate in St. Louis county. Comedy Francis Williams “% in “Let's Stay Single” With a long lance And iron pants... . Yankee Doodle Rides to King Arthur’s Court Just imagine him as Sir Boss, head man of The Round Table. MAUREEN Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. NOW SHOWING SATURDAY She lures men to death with her lips— but for one man she is willing to die. MARLENE DIETRICH “DISHONORED” —with— VICTOR McLAGLEN TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY “A CONNECTICU' YANKEE” O'SULLIVAN WILLIAM FARNUM Home of Paramount Pictures Dangerous to Love —with— MYENA LOY Mrs. Frederick Brinkman Seusey, —_—_—_—_—_—_——- morning came to the office of Stal Sheriff Micheal Endres. She declined to talk to newspapermen and said she wished to talk with the sheriff about the reward. She declined to say whether she would visit Wupper at the penitentiary. He was a recently in Philadelphia and charged with bigamy. He admitted to au- thorities that he was wanted in Ne-" braska, The bigamy charge was not pressed at Philadelphia. BISMARCK’S DIAMOND STORE We specialize in Diamonds, Bul- ova Watches, Wedding Rings. Diamond mounting and Silverware. F. A. KNOWLES Jeweler METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Corer of Fifth and Thayer Street WALTER E. VATER, Pastor SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1931 Morning Worship, 10: ne Evening Worship, 7:30 Sermon Subject: Sacred Ci v y - “The Lessons of the Son Blate Teachers ‘College ‘Gee Rainbow” chestra—2& pfeces, under the di- rection of Miss Catherine Burns. At the morning service the,members of the Order of Rainbow for girls will be our guests. Special music by church choir and Rainbow choir. Mother’s Day _ MAY 10th Give her your photograph on her day. Make your appointments now. Virginia Butler Home Studio 100 THIRD STREET PHONE 898 "495 ~ BE THRIFTY—BUY QUALITY ABIG SIX, priced tke a fear A POWERFUL EIGHT .... A BRILLIANT ENIGHT ... 2 NEW WILLYS TRBUCES .. Willys Six. . 2 « $495 to $850 Willys Eight . . 2 . 995 to 1095 WillyeKnight . . . 1095 to 1195 Willys Yeten chassis... . 395 Willys 1¥+tom chassis 596 AU prices f.0. b. Teléde, O. brilliance to the reputation of the Willys Six as the fastest, most powerful of all low-priced cars... And the Roadster is as outstanding in appearance as it is in performance . . . Low, racy lines—the gleam of chro- minum plate—an impressive number of new, especial features-vall combine in a emart, stylish ensemble... There is a roomy rumble seat for two extra passengers, WILLYS Sandin Wilde Motors, Inc. 304 Fourth Lahr Building Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 1500 SAFETY CLASS IF ALL MODELS IN EVERY WINPOW AT SLICRE sreBa Cott Eat Your Sunday Dinner at the G. P. Eat Shop =

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