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oocnneY nnevan terNAaead err THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1931 ANNUAL MOTHERS AFFAIR GIVEN BY AUXILIARY WOMEN ‘Mrs. A. A. Whittemore and Mrs. | Alice Bailey Are Speakers Tuesday Night Tributes to motherhood, especially to War Mothers, were paid by Mrs. A. A. Whittemore and Mrs. Alice Bailey | in addresses Tuesday evening at the annual mothers’ party of the Amer- iean Legion Auxiliary. The affair was held in the Auxiliary room aot the World War Memorial building, with members of Fort Lincoln chapter, American War mothers, mothers as guests. In referring to the mother’s influ- ence, Mrs. Whittemore said that hers is the full measure of devotion and that mother love embodies the quali- | ties of encouragement, inspiration | and forgivenness. She paid a tribute | to fathers as well and to the examples set by both, which she said have made the home a sacred institution. In closing Mrs. Whittemore read 1 poem by Robert Teichmann, LaMoure, a brother, of Miss Esther Teichmann, to his mother. | Pointing out that Mother's day was given a deeper significance this year, Mrs. Bailey recalled the appeal made | recently that all women’s organiza- tions join in a movement to obtain; adequate maternity care for mothers | in the United States. There is no community in this county at present | where competent maternity care is available to every mother at a price she can afford, Mrs. Bailey said, in recalling attenion to the educational campaign recently launched by the| Maternity Center association of New York. It is planned to direct public attention to the deplorable maternal death rate in this county and to in- form the general public as to what constitutes adequate maternal care and why it is necessary. Mrs. Bailey gave figures to show how in the last two decades the death rate from various contagious and communicable diseases has been cut in half, yet in this same period very} little has been done to bring down the appalling maternity death rate. That prenatal and post-natal care will re- duce this one-third is indicated by a report of eight years’ work in a ma- ternity center, where thorough care was given to mothers, Mrs. Bailey said. Two numbers by the popular rhythm band of the Roosevelt school opened the program. They played “La Paloma” (Yraider) and “Spanish Serenade” (Bizet), with Miss Helen House at the piano. As president of the Auxiliary, Miss Mary Houser welcomed the War Mothers, and Mrs. W. A. Falconer, president of the local chapter, re- sponded. A group of delightful dance num- bers were given by students of Miss Margaret Ramsel. Betty Lee Orr gave a novelty toe dance entitled “My Lady Goes A-Shopping”: Peggy Ber- geson gave “Hi-Kix and Twist Kix’ and Vivian Coghlan gave a specialty called “At the Races.” Sammy Kontos, clarinetist, played an arrangement of “Long, Long Ago” | with variations, accompanied by Miss | ‘House. Myron Anderson, Latin in- structor at the high school sang “Mother of Mine,” accompanied by Miss Miriam Knauf. Miss Knauf Sang two numbers, “That Wonder- ful Mother of Mine” and “Loves Old Sweet Song,” accompanied by Miss | Belle Mehus. Completing the program was a col- | lection of colored slides of North Da- kota birds, animals and scenery. ‘These were displayed by Clell Gan- non, who explained where the var- fous pictures were taken and other Interesting details. Refreshments were served in the dining hall following the program at tables decorated with snapdragons and other spring flowers and green ‘and yellow tapers. The publicity committee was in charge of the entertainment. Serving ! on the committee were Mesdames Jack McLaughlin, F. C. Stucke, J. M. Harty, R. J. Kamplin, John R. Fleck, | ‘Herbert C. Hanson, William Yegen, Roy Mills, Frank Hedden, Arthur V. Sorenson, B. J. Kuntz, and Misses | Nora McGettigan, Dorothy Blunt, ‘Margaret Wynkoop and Amy Fahl- gren. Man Held for Arizona Released in Minot Minot, N. D., May 13.—(?)—Fred Stone, 41, Minot, Wednesday was free of a charge of obtaining labor under false pretenses, filed against him at ‘Yuma, Ariz. Sheriff R. W. Kennard, Minot, who, at the request of Arizona authorities, took Stone into custody, was advised | by Sheriff J. C. Hunter of Yuma to liberate the defendant because the county supervisors had refused to/ authorize funds for attempted extra- dition of Stone. Stone, who furnished bonds immed- jately after his arrest in Minot, an- nounced he would make a finish fight in the courts against being returned to Arizona. Hold Third Annual Dunn Music Contest Halliday, N. D., May 13.—Dunn Center scored six first places and Halliday won three firsts and five seconds at the third annual Dunn county music festival staged here. More than 60 students competed in the contest at which members of the Dickinson State Teachers’ college faculty acted as judges. The festival, which was organized three years ago, is held for the pur- pose of fostering music in Dunn county. ‘Winners in the various events fol- low: Soprano solo, won by Stella and other i + | Harvey officiated. | MANDAN NEWS | Receive Report of i | Solen Woman’s Death: Information was received in Man-; dan Wednesday that Mrs. John Hein- ‘ert, Solen, died Tuesday afternoon, Funeral arrangements are set ten-| tatively for Thursday, according to the report. Details were unavailable. Expect to Complete |Gas Line This Summer! The pipeline carrying natural gas | from Baker, Mont., through Mandan to the U. S. Northern Great Plains Field station, will not be finished be- fore late this summer. A crew of 12 men is laying the line, which will be | about one mile long. James Trimble, Bismarck, is in charge. The line is | to be made of four-inch welded pipes. |Paint Parking Lines On Mandan Streets Mandan’s street crew of five men was busy Wednesday painting diago- nal parking lines on the Mandan main street and streets adjacent. Lines were painted orange with curb areas near water hydrants painted in red. The work is under charge of S. P. Ravnos, Mandan superintendent of waterworks who is in charge of Man- dan streets. The work is expected to be completed by Thursday. Honor Students at Final Convocation Public convocation was held in the; Mandan junior high school assembly | Wednesday afternoon honoring 50 |prominent Mandan high school stu- dents. | The program was the last general assembly period of the Mandan high school and was sponsored by the Student Council. Winners of the dis- trict music contest at Mandan two} weeks ago presented several musical/ selections. Donald Solum, newly] elected president of the Council, | presided. | iMandan Students to ! Register Thursday Registration of students in Mandan high school for next’ year will be made Thursday, it was announced by L. G. Thompson, principal of the Mandan! high school. Plans for registration were com- {pleted Tuesday night following a; meeting of Mandan high school! | faculty members. According to tentative p! more than 100 subjects will be included in five general courses of study next; ear, Thompson declared. Courses of | ‘study that will be taught in the Man- dan school are the vocational agri-| cultural, home economics, commercial, general, and the classical cr college ntrance courses. | | Mimeographed copies of the new, schedule of study courses in the Man-| |dan high schoo! also were made at the meeting of the faculty Tuesday; inight. They were to be distributed! Wednesday afternoon. NAMED ASSISTANT | Jeanne McGinnis, Mandan, will succeed Cecilia Swanson as assistant in the office of R. C. Newcomer, Mor- ton county agent. Miss McGinnis was graduated from the Mandan high school in 1930 and formerly was a student in the Capital Commercial college. Short Illness Is Fatal | To Kidder Co. Woman Mrs. B. G. McElroy, 52, Steele. who was taken suddenly ill Saturday. died here Wednesday at 3:15 a. m from the effects of a brain hemorrhage. Funeral services will be held at Steele Sunday, Rev. H. R. Shirley and Rev. Herbert Brown officiating Mrs, McElroy, wife of the pudlisher | of the Steele Ozone Press, was born in Montreal Feb. 14, 1879. “She was married in 1896 at Milwaukee and five years later came to North Dakota. She had been associated with her husband in the publishing business since 1915, Besides her husband she leaves @ son, two daughters and four grand- daughters. The son, Donald H., lives at International Falls, Minn. The daughters are Mrs. H. F. Crandall, Adrian, N. D., and Mrs. Luttie Ingle, Steele. Burial will be made at the Wood-! jlawn cemetery at Steele. | \Mother of 13 Laid | To Rest at McClusky; | McClusky, N. D., May 13.—Funera! | |Services were held in the Evangelical | church, McClusky, last Thursday for) ‘Mrs. Luisa Peterson, who died at her {home northwest of McClusky. Luisa Peterson, nee Sayler, was the mother of 13 children, three of whom! {preceded her in death. Besides her} living children she leaves her hus- band, Philip Peterson, one son-in-] one daughter-in-law, a brother, a sis- ter and one grandchild. Mrs. Peterson was born in Dinekel, North Russia, Dec. 19, 1887. She was married to Philip Peterson ir 1906. The family came to America in 1913, settling near McClusky. Mrs. Peter- son was 43 years old at the time of her death. McClusky Girl Weds i Hillsboro, Kan., Man McClusky, N. D., May 13.—In a wedding solemnized at the Mennon- ite church Sunday, Miss Esther Win- ter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gott- hilf Winter of McClusky, became the jbride of Harry D. Eltzen of Hills- boro, Kan. The Rev. Peter Wiens of Miss Emma Rosenea acted as bridesmaid and was dressed in pink. The bride wore a gown of white chif- jhospitals became state institutions, | Union army in the Civil war. SAME PRic, 18 STUDENTS AT ST. ALEXIUS GET DIPLOMA AWARDS! Chief Justice Christianson Lauds Sister Boniface in Address to Class Eighteen nurses were awarded di- Plomas from the St. Alexius Nurses’ Training school at a ceremony Tues-| day night in the city auditorium. | The presentation was made by Dr.! R. W. Henderson of the St. Alexius| staff and A. M. Christianson, chief | Justice of the supreme court, was the | Principal speaker. A reception for the | graduates and their friends and rela- tives was held at the nurses’ home} following the graduation exercises, Adolph Engelhardt played a violin solo and his string trio gave several! numbers. Songs were sung by Mrs. Frank Barnes, accompanied by Mrs. Grace Duryee Morris, and by Ernest Grewer, accompanied by Helen House. In his address, Justice Christianson. paid tribute not only to the nursing profession but to Sister M. Boniface, superintendent of St. Alexius hospital and a pioneer in Bismarck nursing and hospital circles. Largely because of the genius and untiring effort of Sister Boniface, he said, St. Alexius hospital ranks with the best institu- tions in the country and one which daily proves itself of benefit to North Dakota. He told the graduating class that when they come to sum up the in- spired men and women whom they have met in life, they will find no finer type of womanhood than Sister Boniface, and the fine body of women. who assisted in their training as nurses, Religion, war and science all have Played a part in translating the nat- ural human sympathy, which always found an outlet in caring for the sick and injured, into one of the leading modern professions, Judge Christian- son said. He asserted that religion first in-| spired women to care for the sick as a charitable duty and that the earli- est forerunner of the modern nurse was Fabiola, a Roman lady who founded a hospital in Rome in 380, devoting herself and her fortune to the care of the sick poor. At the beginning, he said, nursing services were unorganized, but in the reign of Honorius (395-423) 600 wom- en were employed in nursing in the hospitals of Alexandria. Throughout the dark and Middle Ages, he said, these institutions were managed by the clergy and were connected with religious bodies. Care for the ailing and comfort for the afflicted is one of the leading Christian principles, Judge Chris- tianson said, and finds its highest perfection in the modern hospital service. In the 16th century, Judge Chris- tianson said, the hospital movement received a severe setback when many managed by paid officials, and women were replaced by men in control of them. He asserted it to be a historic | fact that “whenever women are not at least coordinate in the care of the ailing, the old and the children, seri- ous abuse creeps in.” | The modern hospital revival and | development of the hospital nurse be- gan in the first half of the 19th cen- tury, the speaker asserted, and for the first time an attempt was made to give nurses systematic training. Until then, he said, such efforts were isolated and sporadic. The first training school for nurses was established in Germany in 1836, the speaker said, and the movement soon spread through the British Isles to America, the Quakers founding a nursing association in Philadelphia in 1838. Tremendous impetus was given to this movement by the Crimean war in Europe and the Civil war in the United States, which brought to fame Florence Nightingale, the “Angel of the Crimea,” and Clara Barton, who achieved fame as a nurse for the ‘These women laid down the princi- ples of nursing operation and nurses’ ‘urge the adoption of national poli- were taken to the_municipal morgue and will be buried secretly to prevent possible demonstrations. The streets were filled Wednesday with soldiers who paraded with fixed bayonets. Disorder was widespread over the country although Madrid, ruled by troops, was quiet. The Salesian con- vent at Canepello, near Alicante, was burned by a mob. Two convents and the offices of a Catholic newspaper ai Murcia were set afire. The Ca- Puchine convent at San Lucar Bar- Yameda was completely destroyed after a mob had fired it, the Friars escaping to the homes of friends, Three churches at Algerciras were attacked and images taken outside and burned in the streets. The mob attacked the asylum for the poor and some houses of priests at Algeciras but there was no bloodshed. Com- ‘BUS COMPANY PAYS BACK LICENSE FEES i 1 | Speakers for Garden Club Meeting Named Mrs. C. L. Young and Mrs, G. F. Dullam will be the speakers at a meeting of the Garden club at 8 o'clock Thursday evening in the Asso- Registrar Received $475.5 5| ciation of Commerce rooms. Check From Interstate Mo- tor Transit Firm A check for $475.55 has been re- ceived by W. H. Graham, state motor vehicle registrar, from the Interstate Motor Transit company as three years’ back license fees for operation of the company’s buses in North Da- teunist bands patrolled the roads to Gibraltar and stopped cars, even those containing American tourists, Clerical refugees were beaten, de- rived of their belongings and their cars burned, but others were not harmed. The civil government at Valencia resigned early Wednesday, dispatches not making entirely clear the rea- son. All church institutions at Va- lencla were abandoned as a precau- tion, Intervention of government forces at Valencia, Bilbao, Cartagena, Arcos De La Frontera and Seville a attacks:‘on church property ere. Republicans Look With Interest to Middlewest Tour «Continued from page one) the three states the president will visit on three successive days. Considered Fertile Ground These states contributed the prin- cipal Democratic gains in congress last election and are now pointed to by tepublican Independents as fertile ground for a contest against renomi- nation of Mr. Hoover. Mr. Hoover has said nothing about his candidacy for renomination but has looked with apparent approval on movements in his behalf. He is ex- pected to give a full exposition of his views and policies in the June speeches. The president will go first to In-| dianapolis, on June 15, thence to Marion, Ohio, to dedicate the me- morial to Warren G. Harding, and then to Springfield, Ill, to the tomb of Abraham Lincoln. In all three states senatorial con- | kota. The company formerly operated a line from Glendive, Mont., to Willis- ton, N. D., but refused to pay the North Dakota license fee on the ground that the line operated only in Montana. An investigation dis- closed, Mr. Graham said, that the line was taking on passengers at Wil- liston and therefore was regarded as operating in this state. Arthur J. Gronna, Williams county state's attorney, threatened prosecu- tion if the fees were not paid and the company forwarded a check for its fees for 1927 to 1930. The line however, has been discontinued. Mr. Graham said that under the state law bus lines operating from other states into North Dakota and doing business in the state are re- quired to obtain licenses. “NOW LEAT WHAT I LIKE,” POPULAR WOMAN DECLARES tests will be waged in 1932 and in Indiana the Republican leader, James | E. Watson, is up for reelection. | Brookhart also is a candidate for re- | election next year. Quick Mobilization Of 4,000,000 MenIs_ Department’s Plan (Continued from page one) supported by public opinion and; would be so resented by workers they | would not lend their best efforts. ! He took issue with the views of the federal council of churches, contend- ing that adequate preparation and plans providing that no one could escape a share of war's economic loss, | would exert a sobering and restrain-' ling effect upon any group or class “that might be tempted otherwise to} cies likely to lead to international conflict.’ | Is Elected by Group Valley City, N. D.. May 13.—(4)— Twenty pastors in attendance at the East North Dakota conference of the Dakota District American Lutheran | church here Wednesday elected Rev. H. Elster, Enderlin, as chairman. | They opened a two-day conference | Tuesday. | Rev. G. W. Busse, Turtle Lake, was i named secretary, and Rev. C. Herbner, | Verona, treasurer. | | LEFT LARGE ESTATE | Duluth, Minn., May 13.—(4—Mar-! shal H. Alworth, Duluth ca;italist. who died in Florida May 31, icft an} estate valued at $6,363,153, a petition for administration shows. 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In many quarters Galarza’s an- nouncement was considered an at- tempt to appease some of the intense anti-Monarchial clamor which has marked the rioting of this week. The bodies of the dead at Cordova YOU SAVE IN BUYING BAKING POWDER You save in using KC. Use LESS than of H). high priced brands. FOR OVER f 40 YEAR® oouste Ac THE -3 LI SEE IT TIRE THAT BREATHES VES: AT THE SEIBERLING STORE TOMORROW A&M Tire Service OLIVER VOLD, Prop. | | 216 Main Ave, Phone 356 Mrs, Young will speak on “Window Boxes, Hanging Boxes and Garden Vases” and Mrs, Dullam will have for her topic, “Pergolas, Trellises and Garden Furniture.” Talks will be followed by a general discussion of practi¢al gardening problems. Pleads Guilty to | Burglary Charge Fargo, May 13.—()—George De- moray, 34, Fergus Falls, Minn.,+who ‘was arrested by Fargo police Tuesday, Pleaded guilty in district court Wed- nesday to a charge of third-degree burglary. 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