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——— S Paul Goddard Weds Louise Ankenmann Mr. and Mrs. Harry P. Goddard, 808 Mandan St., have received word of the marriage of their son Paul, of Scranton, Pa., and Miss Louise An- kenmann, New York City, daughter of Mrs. Sara West Ankenmann, Jack- son, Mich., formerly of Bismarck. The wedding took place at 2:30 o'clock Monday afternoon in The Little Church Around the Corner, ‘New York, in the presence of a few Telatives and intimate friends. Mr. Goddard and his bride are now on their way to Havana, Cuba, where they will spend their honeymoon. Both Mr, and Mrs. Goddard were reared in Bismarck and attended high school together. For the last year the bride has been employed in the offices of the Chase National bank, New York. Mr. Goddard, a graduate of the University of North Dakota, is an en- gineer with the firm of Carey, Baxter and Kennedy, Scranton, where he has been located for the last six months. Among the guests at the wedding was Miss Kathryn Goddard, New York, a sister of the bridegroom. * * * Goes to Bemidjifor | Sorority Convention Miss Catherine McKinnon, 312 Ave- nue B West, will leave Bismarck next Sunday for Bemidji, Minn., to attend the 37th biennial international con- vention.of Gamma Phi Beta sorority, to be held there June 28-July 3. Ses- sions will be et the Birchmont lodge. Approximately 15 members of the chapter at the University of North Dakota and 19 members from the chapter at the North Dakota Agricul- tural college will attend. Province four, including the two chapters in this state, and those at the Universities of Minnesota, Mani- toba, Wisconsin, Iowa and the Iowa state college chapter, will be conven- tion hostesses. Mrs. Arthur Sullivan, Madison, Wis. is province director and Mrs. Arthur Hoffman, Minneapo- lis, is convention chairman. The Fargo chapter will put on the Crescent Moon service. Other enter- tainment features will be a pageant, a memorial service, a visit to Itasca park, golf and tennis matches and a formal banquet. * * * Mrs. J. W. Cleveland, Washburn, will leave Wednesday for Minneapo- lis, where she will join a group of people from the northwest, headed by the Rev. James M. Reardon, pastor of the New Basilica, Minneapolis, for a tour of the five Catholic shrines in the vicinity of Quebec. This will in- clude visits to St. Anne de Beaupre, St. Joseph’s Oratory; Canada’s Mar- jal Shrine; Our Lady of Victory and the shrine cf the Jesuit martyrs. The party will travel by way of Niagara Falls, with the return trip down the Hudzon to New York. From there Mis. Cleveland will go to Old Point Comfort and to Washington, D. C., for short visits. x * For Miss Lois Pearce, who will be- come the bride of Chester Stanley ‘Novak, Tulsa, Okla., June 30, her sis- ters, Mrs. J. A. Graner, Mrs. H. A. Halverson and Miss Gladys Pearce entertained a company of friends ‘Monday evening at the Graner home, 320 Mandan St. Bridge was played at four tables during the evening and score honors went to Mrs. W. F. Mc- Graw and Mrs. Charles Martin, A gift was presented the guest of hon- or. Appointments for the tables were in pastel shades, with the tallies rep- resenting bouquets of sweet peas. Mrs. Warren Watson was a guest trom Mandan. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Malvin Olson, 412 Fifth St., accompanied by Mrs. Alvin Olson and small son, Peter, Rugby, returned Monday from Devils Lake where they visited with Mrs. Olson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Marshall. They also visited at Rugby at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Olson, brother and sister-in-law of Mr. Ol- 6on. ee * Mr. and Mrs. Willis J. Devlin, 422 Tenth 8t., returned Sunday evening from Drayton, N. D., where they vis- ited over the week-end with Mr. Dev- lin’s mother, Mrs. Nina Devlin. They stopped in Devils Lake, en route to Bismarck, to attend the Governor's day ceremonies at Camp Grafton. ** Miss Jane Byrne, who has been & student at St. Catherine's college, St. Paul, has returned to Bismarck to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. BE. Byrne, 120 Avenue A West. Miss Byrne has been visiting at the home of Miss Jane Connolly, St. Paul, since the close of school. * * * Dr. G. A. Rawlings returned Mor- Gay from Portland, Ore., where he attended the wedding of his daugh- ter, Miss Ruth, and Dr. Frank Ball. Mrs. Rawlings, who has been there for the last six weeks, is expected back early ae week. * * Mrs. I. F. Wright.and daughter Harriett, Drayton, N. D., have arrived for a visit at the home of Mrs. ‘Wright's brother and sister-in-law, Mf. ‘nd Mrs. Merle M. Gilroy, 204 Av- enue A. * * * Mrs. E. J. Gobel, and son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Gobel, 423 Fourth 8t., returned Mon- day from Minot, where they spent the week-end as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Gobel. Natter part of the week for a visit Miss Lee Is Bride of H. C. Reddington The wedding of Miss Ruby Lee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R. Lee, Moorhead, and Harold C. Red- dington, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Reddington, Wilton, took place June 19 at the home of the bridegroom's parents. The Rev. Swenson, pastor of the Washburn Methodist church, read the service. Attending the bride was Miss Sarah Benedict, a school friend. Victor Burkhart, Lonetree, N. D., was best man. Mr. Reddington and his bride have left on a motor trip which will take them to points on the west coast. They will return to Wilton Septem- ber 1, where Mr. Reddington will be an instructor in the public schools. “ee Miss Palmer Goes to Education Convention To attend the convention of the National Education association, in session at Los Angeles, Calif, June 27-July 4, Miss Bertha Palmer, state superintendent of public instruction, al leave Tuesday evening for the west. As a recently appointed member of the new committee on rural educa- tion, Miss Palmer will assist in pre: senting a report. She will also con- duct @ discussion of trends in‘rural education and will describe what is being done in North Dakota in the way of supervision for rural schools. C. C. Swain, Mayville, is also a mem- ber of this committee and will ap- Pear on the program. Before returning to Bismarck about July 15, Miss Palmer will spend a few days at Hollywood and San Diego end nearby points and wil] visit in San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. * * * For her son, Charles, who was cele+ brating his ninth birthday anniver- sary, Mrs. Charles P. Brady, 230 West Thayer avenue, entertained a group of children at a theatre party Mon- day afternoon. After the show, the guests returned to the Brady home where a dinner was served. Deco: tions for the table were in pink and green, with a birthday cake center- ing the table, and with favors at each Place. Mrs. Brady was assisted by Mrs. Kenneth King and Mrs. L. J. ‘Wehe. Guests were Robert Lipp, Bruce Plomassen, Bobbie and Kay King, Bill and Jack McDonald, Bert Mahiman, Ray Granan, Forest Hen- derson, Floyd Howell and John Gun- nes. ee ® Dr. Herbert H. Miller, Omaha, Neb., is expected to come to Bismarck the with his brother and _ sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Miller, 610 Fifth St. Dr. Miller who was graduated this month from the medical schoo! at the University of Nebraska, will return to Omaha to begin an interne- ship in the Nebraska Methodist hos- pital. With his wife, he is now visit- ing relatives in Minot. She will re- main there for the summer as the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Johnson. Dr. Miller will be ac- Miller, Minot, who will visit for a short time at aa L. V Miller home. ** Dr. Leonard Moyer has arrived from | Omaha, where he recently was grad- | uated from the medical school of the University of Nebraska, and will take his interne work at the Bismarck hos- pital. He will be asscciated with the hospital after July 1. Dr. Moyer, the son of Len Moyer, pioneer resident of Kidder county, is a graduate of the University of North Dakota. He was accompanied here by his wife and two children. They will make their home at 212 Rosser avenue. * * * Colonel Wallace McNamara, com- mandant at Fort Lincoln, and Mrs. McNamara, were hosts at a tea Mone day afternoon in their quarters at the post in honor of reserve officers here for the C. M. T. camp. Other guests were officers at the post Eisg their wives, and a small group of Bis- marck friends. The affair was entire- | BULLETINS ° ee companied by his mother, Mrs. Agnes! @ ri Wednesday Coffee Specials (FRESHNESS. HAMBURGER THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1981 Adopt Resolutions Pocono Pines, Pa., June 33.—(#)—- Resolutions on various subjects were before the sessions of the 39th Inter- national Walther League convention Tuesday. Monday delegates heard Harry Rberline, Detroit, Mich., chairman of the board of Valparaiso university, Valparaiso, Ind., picture the world Tushing toward another catastrophe if it did not shake off the enslaving bands of machines. He said social control had not kept pace with ma- terial achievements and that unless machines were controlled they would master “humanity's soul.” TRADERS TAKE PROFITS New York, June 23—(#)—Prices closed §1 to $3 lower on the New York stock exchange today, re- flecting extensive profit taking from the sweeping rise of Mon- day and last Saturday. SHIELDS IS VICTOR Wimbledon Stadium, England, June 23.—(7)—Frank X. Shields, America’s leading player in the ‘Wimbledon tennis championships, won his way through to the third round today by defeating H. F. Davis, . Great Britain, 2-6, 6-0, 6-3, 6. Lenhart Says State - A shies SON ie een Hike ae: Is Making Progress cepting -with reservations Presi- Fargo, June _23—(?)—Approxi- dent Hoover's war debts and re- parations suspension plan will be sent to Ambassador De Martini late tomorrow possibly in time for Presentation the same day. mately 175 North Dakota and west- ern Minnesota druggists and their wives gathered here today for the annual convention of the North Da- kota Pharmaceutical association, which ends Thursday. North Dakota is making more progress than any other state in the union in working its way through un- favorable business conditions, said A. P, Lenhart of Bismarck, state presi- dent, in his annual address. 600 in Attendance At Firemen’s Meet Fargo, June 23.—(7)—With niore than 600 members in attendance from all parts of the state and many visiting guests from Minnesota, the, 47th annual convention of the North Dakota Firemen’s association got under way here today. Most of the morning session was devoted to a memorial service at which Dr. W. CO. Sainsbury was the principal speaker. The annual business session, at which officers will be elected and the 1832 convention city chosen, will be held Wednesday. TO BE TRIED IN CASS Lakota, N. D. June 23—@)— James Gronna of Lakota, Carl W. Lewis of Fargo and Ralph Chisholm of Willmar, Minn., will be tried in Cass county district court on charges of irregularities in handling the affairs of the Farmers and Merchants bank here, Judge Grimson of Rugby decided here Tuesday. CALLS ‘WAGON’ FOR SELF Fargo, June 23.—(7)—If BE. L. Brudevold of Fargo is drunk, he's not going to wait for the law to find him. That is'what he told Judge F. A. Leonard in police court Tues- day morning, explaining the fact that he had awakened in the “pull pen.’ Ejected from a dance last night, he called the officers to come and ty him with “Black Maria.” They wi econ cradiumn, 3 23. jum, June 23.— wathe United States’ young Davis Cup: team continued its brilliant pley in the Wimbledon tennis championships today, all four members advancing to the third round. Sidney B. Wood, Jr., George Lott, Jr. and John Van Ryn won their second rcund matches in straight sets while Frank X. Shields, the star of the team, was forced to go four sets to down H. F. Davis, former Ox- Bismarck Boys Are Entered for Bouts Devils Lake, N. D., June 23.—()— The most pretentious boxing card ever staged in this section of the state is planned for Friday night’ by the 164th North Dakota Infantry, now encamped at Camp Grafton. A six round battle between Judy Ruddy, Grand Forks lightweight champion of North Dakota and How- ford player. ard Sheik, Fargo welterweight, will s feature the program. Sheik hails Burke and Cox Are _| "om Bend. ore. in Sargeant Dvorak, Fargo. George Horwitz, Fargo welter-| weight, will tangle with Joe Milton- berger, Company M. Corporal Blanchett, Grand Forks, | and Bat Brunagle, Bismarck, will! tangle. They are heavyweights. Bud Welling, Moorhead. will take | on Johnny Baker, Grand Forks, both are featherweights. Tony Beer, Bismarck, meets Tony Maxson of the Devils Lake Howitzer company. Jimmy Todd, also of Com- pany A, Bismarck, and Jim Vandee of Company D, both lightweights, will stage the curtain raiser. Canadian Harbor Is Damaged by Flames St. John, N. B., June 23.—(#)—With the western half of St. John harbor in ruin as the result of yesterday's $5,000,000 fire, plans for at least par- tial replacement were being consid- ered today. Government property, sheds, houses, elevators, schooners and dories were destroyed, Seven families were made homeless. About 250 men were thrown out of work and many fishermen lost their means of livelihood. Earthquake Is Felt by Tokyo Residents Tokyo, June 23.—()—An earth- quake perceptible to human beings: for more than one minute, shook! Tokyo at 3:15 p. m. Tuesday (1:15 a.! m., eastern standard time). As far as could be determined, there was no’ damage. | Mt. Yakegatake in Nagano prefec-/ ture erupted at 2:20 a. m., today and again at 11:20 a.m. Mt. Asama, near Karuizawa, also in Nagano prefec- ture, began erupting yesterday. Improve Your Driving at HILL-SIDE _ PRACTICE GOLF COURSE East End of Ave. E. Back Richholt School Open from 7 a. m. to 9 p.m. f BULLETINS ~¢ Walther League to weight, will take on a tough customer made through finger prints of feuth peed A. ©. Greene of Crawford CIETY NEWS MAN FOUND BOUND AND GAGGED ALONG ROAD IS IDENTIFIED Victim Is Held to Be Jehn Smith, lowa Politiclan Miss- ing Since February in Garner, Iowa, June 23.—(#)—Sher- iff E. P. Hanson of Hancock county announced today a man found bound and gagged along the roadside near Garner has been positively identified as John Smith missing Presi- Perry dent. He said the identification had been made through finger prints of Smith checked by Harold Gessell, ex- pert from the state bureau of identi- ication. Tdentification, Hanson said, was Radic Remodeling, Cleaning at low summer rates Phone 496 STATE FUR CO. 202 Fourth Street Bismarck, N. Dak. “Bat” Cheski, welterweight of Com- pany M, will meet Heinan Summer- ville, Wahpeton, in the semi-windup. Mutt Smith, Grand Forks middle- TITTLE BROS. PACKING CO., Inc. 400 MAIN Leading at Scioto Ecioto Country Club, Columbus, Ohio, June 23—(#)—Billy Burke of New York, and Wiffy Cox of Brook- lyn, led the field in the race for posi- tion on the American Ryder cup team today. with totals of 181 for the first 45 holes of the 72 hole skirmish. Burke, who finished one shot be- hind Cox at the end of yesterday's 36 | hole test, jumped. into a tie with the Brooklyn professional on the first nine holes today, scoring a par break- ing 35 to Cox's perfect 36. | PHONE 332 12'%c - Lh. - 12%4c is protected BABY BEEF SIRLOIN SREAK 22¢ - Lb. - 22¢ FRESH MADE FRANKFURTERS 16c - Lb. - 16¢ ly informal. Mrs. C. A. Hoss and ae O. A. Tanson presided at the tea table. ——<—_—__—_—___ ( Meetings of Clubs | | And Sosial Groups ! pare Reena eae Members of the Trinity Study Cir- cle will meet Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Opie 8. Rindahl, 704 Seventh St. eo 1 City-County News ‘ —— Freda Tolchinsky was named queen of the Bismarck B'nai B'rith lodge 4s the result of a popularity contest con- ducted at the annual picnjc of the order Sunday in the Mandan tourist park. Other candidates for this hon- or were Caroline Macovos, Mary Mill- er and Mirel Tilson. Cy races large number of Jewish people from this vicinity attended. Roy Lawrence, 314 Third St. was resting easily Tuesday, according to attendants, after undergoing an oper- ation for appendicitis Monday moyn- ing at the Bismarck hospital. Mr. and Mrs. W. M, Lane, Beulah, The finest quality coffee comes to you in the M:J‘B can. Note M:J:B’s patented Vacuum Seal that can’t close unless all air is out. M-J°B COFFEE "The Flavor-Protected Coffee” HEMPEL’S 197 Fisth st. Phone 1612 Scare Ar tess __ Wednesday and Thursday Specials Butter, No. l creamery * 2 Ib. roll 21 c per Ib. .....--- Bread, large loaves, white or atk 8 for .. c Milk, fresh per quart .. Flour “Climax” 10 Ib. sack .. Oranges, small juicy, 2 doz. .. Plums, “Red Beauty,” basket Figsepole, “Fresh ; uban,” each . e Juice j : le pt. bottle 2 1 Cc Beans “North- exn,” 8 Ibs. .... 20c Sweet Corn, “Crosby,” No. 9c 33 35c 58c 18c 2 tii A: ae Regular 2 for 25c value | "Yes, r 's“Double’ and say, “My, you look zymes) five times its other fc elements that strong’ mo genplearyal muscles. tremendous advent Now on Sale At *, Off. Hundreds of Styles to Choose from and No Two Alike. You can select an exclusive purse or necklace to complete your costume at a substantial saving. ; I’m Gaining —3 lbs. a Month” Lapenh leer apie ps pipist ea eal 4 al “ed Oo | 4 y ‘Malted,” they smile The perfect digestion. a children because they must eat and digestmore q Stier Sone bales es peeroecre Tl eeuernee Thorapson’s “Double Malted” (double en- Wate E This hel wing bodies fall benefit from the food they eat. Then eat more—| in t, weight boy or girl shall have the 3 neage in fe thac avigorous body gives. Order Thompson’s “Double Maleed” from your druggist or grocer now. Entire Sample Line of Well Known Manufacturers. High Quality PURSES and Novelty Jewelry Ineluding Necklaces, Brooches and Bracelets ‘own weight of height and weight. Keep chem abou average! Chart shows: youbowandbelpsyou. Just mall » postal now to Thompson's Maleed Mill Company, | ‘Wankesha, Wiseoosin. | obtained from his army and onestime gubernatoris! candi- date, was found bound snd gagged along a roadside near here lest night by Mrs. Charles Grau. as statements regarding his détention mentioned Cedar Rapids and Daven- port. to an automobile by three men where he was found. from Perry, and that his wife, Edith, who lived there, needed him. Smith's name is Edith. in Smith, an insecticide manufacturer His talk was rambling, containing a basement for several days. He He said he had been thrown from Today he told the sheriff he was Mrs. Tell the Girls! ere come the reatest Lovers in all languages ‘We have met the dames and they're . And bebee, are. Brag Quirt and Flagg, those » hardfisted, soft-hearted Vic MeLaglen Eddie Lowe El Brendel More Cockeyed Than in “The Cockeyed Worlé” “WOMEN OF ALL NATIONS” GRETA NISSEN FIFI DORSAY And 150 International Beauties It’s a Sensation COMEDY — CARTOON — NEWS LAST DAYE—TUES. & WED. pC) Come 3 Avoid the Cro “It's Refreshingly Cool Her J.C. PENNEY CO DEPARTMBEUNT s STORE We Lead — Others Fellow 113-115 Fourth Street Bismarck, N. Dak. Styles as smart as you could wish at sny price.<¥ sports dresses with vivid accents of color, prac: tical street dresses and suit types, engaging, feminine afternoon and evening dresses .., in all! the new colors and printed designs. At this price,’ you can buy a complete new wardrobe now, - Cool, Sheer Cotton Dresses that will help you reajly enjoy hot summer days!