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‘Assistance of Local Women Is Important i Factor in Relief Work Here, Speaker Says|_ Members of the Monday éiub wil | Activities of Welfare Agencies Are Listed by Red Cross Executive Relief work, as it is being carried on through the various agencies in Bismarck at present, was described for members of the Bismarck Com- munity Council Friday afternoon by Mary Cashel, executive secretary the Burleigh county Red Cross. Every phase of relief, work for the coming months is being considered and prepared for Miss Cashel said. is includes the collection, mending id distribution of clothing; conser- vation of surplus vegetables and fruits; the preparation of food bud- gets and menus of well-balanced in- expensive foods, and finding work for us manr persons as possidle, as well @s assiting in cheching up on cases here and in rural districts, the Speaker pointed out. Bismarck people have been most generous and sympathetic in ‘heir -e- sponso to the call for additional workers, Mics Cashel stated. She snentioned the fine work by the wom- en in preparing and remodeling clothing under the direction of Mrs. >. A. Lahr and Mra. J. C. Oberg; of the canning activ‘ties supervised by Mrs. II, W. Herman; and of the col- Jection of shoes obtained oy Mrs. C. E. Stackhouse and school chilldren. Burleigh county is the only county in North Dakota with a full-time Program, the speaker declared in ex- plaining the county basis on which Red Cross work is organized. She drew attention to the program of activities outlined for the Red Cross throughout the state this year and mentioned the four meetings of the organization scheduled for October. ‘These gatherings will be attended by be held in Bismarck, Devils Lake, estown and Fargo to consider ___Jogal and state relief problems. ‘A teport of the rest room commit- tee of the Community Council, presented by Mrs. C. G. Boise, show- that during the months of June, ly and August, 378 women and 428 children were cared for in the rest room and nursery. Thirty members of the organiza- tion were present for the meeting. which was the first for the fall sea- son. + #* ‘Mr. and rst Forrest Harding and son will leave for their home in Rapid’ City, 8. D., Saturday, after spending a few days visiting in Bis- marck with Mr. and Mrs. Fay Hard- ing, parents of Mr. Harding. Mr. and Mrs. Harding arrived here early this week after spending a week at Bem- idji, Minn. Mr. Harding is division superintendent of the Montana-Da- kota Power company at Rapid City. He was associated with French and Welch Hardware company here from 1919 to 1928. ee * lonel and Mrs. C. F. Mudgett, 515 Mandan street, were hosts at a dinner party Friday evening at the Bismarck Country club. Covers were marked for 16 guests. An. autumn note was emphasized in the appoint- ments, with bright-hued leaves, orange candies arid fruit: arranged in pum] baskets adorning the table. Bridge was played at the Mudgett home after dinner, with score hon- ors going to Mrs. F..E. Shepard and C. L. Young. ee * Mrs. Mary Jane Whitney and her daughters, the Misses Edmeresa and Afton Whitney, Beverly Hills. Calif., left Bismarck Saturday for Dickinson fox,@ brief visit before returning. to home. They have been guests for the last three weeks at the home; of Mrs. Whitney's son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. B. O. Refvem, ‘71@Sixth St. They will be accompa- nied from Dickinson by’ Mrs. Whit- ney’s son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Frank Whitney, who will motor to Denver with them. During their stay in Bismarck Mrs. Whitney and her daughters have been guests ‘at numerous social affairs. Friday Mrs. Harvey Niles, 609 Avenue D, en- tertained a company of 10 women at ‘an informal afternoon party in their honor. Autumn flowers decortated the rooms. How Would You Answer A voice on the phone that—revealed ‘your past, threatened to wreck your home, then demanded a fort- une for silence? “HUSH MONEY” with Last CLIVE BROOK Times i Sat. “Silence” with Pegsy Shannon Welfare Workers to ( ‘Address Ministers Relief work necessary in Bismarck during the winter months will be out- lined by welfare workers at a meeting of the Bismarck Ministerial associa- tion at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon in the nurses’ home at the Bismarck | hospital. . Mrs. F. L. Conklin and Miss Mary Cashel, chairman and executive sec- retary, respectively, of the Burleigh county Red Cross, will be the speak- ers. * # & Simon Miller, son of Mr. ana Mrs. R. Miller, 213 West Rosser avenue, left Saturday for Minneapolis, where he is a student at the University of i ta, ee Mr. and Mrs. William Noggle, 718 Fourth street, left Saturday morning by car for Warsaw, Ind., where they were summoned by the death of Mr. Noggle’s brother, L. J. Noggle, which joccurred at Warsaw Friday. se Mrs, Mary Purvis, Minneapolis, who has spent the last three months at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Mc- Kinnon, 312 Avenue B West, left Sat- Minn., where ives for a week before returning to her home. Mrs. el ae eee ee ae ee Mr. and Mrs, P. J. Meyer atvi daughter Marietta, 912 Fourth street, and Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Thorberg, 712 Fourth street, left Friday for Shore- ham, Minn., where they will spend the ‘week. cottage on Lake Melissa, * % % Mrs. Robert Nippert and small mpanied by Mr. Nippert’s mother, Mrs. E. F. Nippert, Hollywood, Calif., left Friday for Minneapolis where they will spend two weeks with rela- tives. Mrs. E. F. Nippert has been visiting in Bismarck for two weeks and will leave from Minneapolis for her home. ee % Miss Alice Angus, secretary of the minimum wage commission, is spend- ing the week-end at her home in Hannaford. ee * Mrs. F. A. Maser and Mrs. Peter V. Hermes, Glen Ullin, spent Friday in Bismarck with friends. zs * * Jack Cowan, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Cowan, 306 Avenue B, will leave Sunday for Minneapolis, to enter the University of Minnesota, * * & Miss Genevieve Rue, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Rue, 711 Avenue A, will leave Monday for Minneapolis to continue her studies at the University }of Minnesota. Miss Rue is taking the nurse's training course at the uni- versity. ee Mrs.. A’ G. Olson, 511 Eighth 8&t., left Ariday for Edmore, N. D., where he will be the guest of her mothe~ ‘Mrs. Eracan Johnson for about a ee % Mr. and Mrs. K. Kjelstrup, 1022 Fifth street, will leave Sunday morn- ing on a motor trip to Fargo, Grand Forks, and Minneapolis. At Grand Forks they will visit their son, Mar- vel, a student at the University of North Dakota. They will visit Mrs. Plan to be away about 10 days. . ee * Ms. C. C.. Ballou, Spokane, Wash., arrived Friday {1 the east to spend several weeks visiting her son, Lieut- enant C. N. 8. Ballou, who recently was assigned to duty at Fort Lincoln. Mrs. Ballou is en route to her home after an extended visit with relatives in New York ae the ii England |states. On tl ip east -acpom+ of her husband, the late Major General Ballou, who was buried at West Point recently. ee % Meetings of Clubs i | And Social Groups: | er ees eee eee anes JOAN BENNETT HARDIE ALBRIGHT OWEN MOORE Mack* Sennett Comedy / | “POKER WIDOWS” NOVELTY ACT BOBBY JONES &' Paramount News 5 BIG ACTS of , AMATEUR VODVIL Every Monday Nite MON. - TUES., - - SEPT. 21-22 " Midpight w Sunday at 12:15 GParamountg, “Where You Get The Most And The Best For Your Money” *@ Weather permitting, members of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19; 1931 \ * hold @ meeting at 3 o’clok Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. B. E. Jones, 519 First St. A review of Alice Foote McDougall’s “The Autobiogra- phy of a Business Woman,” prepared by Mrs. P. C. oe be read. Members of Chapter N of the P. E. O. Sisterhood will meet at 7:30 0’ Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Samuel H. Meer 221 Third St. * Members of Fort Lincoln chapter, American War Mothers, will hold their first ‘meeting for the fall season ‘at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the War Mothers’ room in the World War building. Members of the Attic club will hold a luncheon meeting at 1 o'clock Monday afternoon at the Patterson hotel. “Our Garden” will be the pro- gram topic. George Will is scheduled to give a talk on how to beautify a city yard with the least expenditure of time and money. British Sailors to Submit Grievances London, Sept. 19.—()}—Discon- tented sailors of Great Britain's At- lantic fleet were privileged Saturday at the Meyer summer/|to submit their grievances over wage, reductions to the various base com- manders who will meet Monday to. . , Rose apartments, ac- recommend adjustments to the ad- national Red Cross executives and fected ys miralty. The commander of the Endeavor at Sheerness lined his crew up on deck and told them if they had any complaints to put them in writing and submit them to the master-at- arms for transfer to higher author- ities. The men were in a jovial mood over the success of their passive mu- tiny and apparently were-willing to wait for the decision of the admir- alty on their protests.. They were given week-end shore leave as usual ‘and no incidents of a disorderly na- ture were reported. olen {This Course Would | Be Liked Anywhere Be Liked Anywhere | ° Valley Stream, N. Y., Sept. 19. —#)—Students school are scrambling to sign up for a new elective course. Thus far 40 boys and as many: girls have reported for training in how to hit a golf ball. HEADS GOPHER CLUBWOMEN St. Paul, Sept. 19—()—Mrs. John J. Louis, Minneapolis, will head the 50,000 club women in the state as a result of elections held at the closing ‘session of the annual Minnesota Fed- eration of Women’s clubs convention here. WHY NOT USE IT? Man has from 10 to 100 times more brain capacity than he uses, Dr. Hrdlika, famous Smithsonian scien- Kjelstrup’s sisters in Minneapolis and| ‘st, tells us. The brain capacity is there, but it must be developed by study. before it can be used. Farm demonstrations work is con- ducted in 1,287 Alabama communities. NOTICE Ice wagons will deliver on Fri- Mondays, Wednesdays, days and Saturdays only be. ing Monday, Sept. 2st. fachter Transfer Corporation. AUDITORIUM MONTANA SENATORS SEEK DROUGHT AID Walsh Says Two Successive Crop Failures Put Thou- sands in Distress Washington, Sept. 19.—(#)—Condi- tions in eastern Montana as a result of the drought have brought the State’s two senators to Washington seeking means to alleviate the situ- ation. Senator Walsh said two total crop falures in succession had caused thousands of families to be in dis- tress and he had been informed by the Red Cross many would. suffer keenly before asking charity. The Montana senator said he had been informed by the Red Cross at least 10,000 families would need help from now until the harvest’ next year. He said he hoped for some aid from federal road funds. Some time ago, Senator Walsh said, the president suggested that it might be wise to build storage res- ervoirs on the headwaters of the Missouri. Army engineers who have been studying prospective sites and the feasibility of the work, he said, are now prepared to report. If the recommendations were favorable, he said, construction might ve Segun ‘soon. Senator Walsh said he thought seed loan legislation for eastern Montana would be necessary and| that farmers were demanding addi- tional time in which to pay farm mortgage loans. One thing most needed, Senator Walsh said, was clothing. He said many of the rural schools would be limited to three months this year because there were no funds to pay teachers. James Bannon Will Ask for New Trial Watford City, N. D., Sept. 19—James F. Bannan, convicted of a charge of complicity in the murder of the A. E. Haven family of six near Watford City a Pihsaiate 1930, will seek a new A notice that Bannon will ask the supreme court to grant a new trial has been served on J. 8 Taylor, McKenzie county states attorney E. J. Mclllraith, Crosby attorney, will make the appeal! In the library of Gottingen is a Bible written on palm leaves. There re 5,373 pages, each made of a single ingly. ONE NIGHT j the Bismarck hospital. ! City-County Briefs i Mr. and Mrs, August M. Brusch- wein, Driscoll, are parents of a daughter born Saturday morning in | in een Friday to Mr. andj . W. Wanttaja,. Wing, in St. Alexius hospital i te Hampton By ELIZABETH KOPPY Mr. and Mrs, Ed Kiemele were shopping in Linton’ Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mauseheund and children, Hazel, Verl and Lester, were Linton callers Sunday, Miss Hazel and Lester remained in Linton, pia they will again attend high in Linton from ednesday were Steve Koppy, Gus Joeb, John Ohlhauser, Sr., Her- man Backhaus, D. 8. Joeb and Ed- ward Kiemele. Business callers we Mr. and Mrs. Steve Koppy and daughter, Frances, visited at the Ed Surber home in Linona Thursday. John Schiermeister of Linton and M. J. Baumgartner of Strausburg were business callers in this vicinity Thursday. Henry Knittel made a trip to Lin- ton Thursday. Shoppers in Linton from here Sat- urday were Math and Steve Koppy, Mr and Mrs. Herman Backhaus, Mr. and Mrs. Rhinhold Burkhardt, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Albreeht, Ted Lawler, Dewey Lawler and son, Russell, Frank Lawler and boys, Gus Joeb and Dave Joeb and sons, Bill and Ernest. Jim Postle took in the fair at ‘Wishek recently. Mr, and Mrs. John Ohlhauser, Sr., were callers at the Steve Koppy home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sathern of Linton were business callers in this vicinity Sunday. Olaf Knudtson of Minnesota is vis- iting at the home of his brother-in- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Porter ‘Umber. Mr. and Mrs. Godfrey Grenz called on friends in Gayton Sunday. Math Koppy called on friends in ‘Winona Sunday. Miss Elizabeth Koppy is assisting with the housework at the Frank Lawler home, Frank Rotzein of Hazelton was a ‘business caller in this vicinity Mon- day. Corn fed to hogs by Robert Bar- wick of Craven county, N. C., paid a profit of 70 cents a bushel. NOTICE Legionnaires |. Attention Due to prior arrangements by local organizations to present on October | 4-5-6, the Allied Campaigners, an or- ganization of national speakers, the | dates of. the Legion minstrel show and carnival have been changed to October: 8-9-10. Each member will change dates on his tickets accord- Tce wagons will deliver on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fri- days and Saturdays only be- ginning Monday, Sept. 2i1st.| Wachter Transfer Corporation.| station. of Bardonecchia tor 20 hours. ry Bee asa an wi ‘York School e and Applied Design, said she finally obtairied her release after pried Italian police she was not been mistaken for an American wom- against the Italian. government. Of- fictals of the Paris branch of the ‘school have protested to the Italian | embassy. . IS DAUGHTER OF HOTEL OPERATOR Gertrude Pulsher, who was detained at the frontier station of Bardonec- chia on the France-Italy boundary for 20 hours when Italian police mis- took her for a person they were seek- ing, is the daughter of Henry Pul- sher, hotel operator he-e. Tom Creavy, Albany, N. ¥., won the American Professional Golf Associa- tion championship here Saturday, de- ae Denny Shute, Hudson, O., 2! an i. } > JAMESTOWN GIRL IS. DETAINED IN ITALY Mistaken Identity Results in CAPITOL Daily 2:30 - 7.9 35e until 8 & Wild Rose : By MRS. W. H. BROWNAWELL Her Being Shadowed oe | f The Wild Rose schools opened last! By Detectives jWeek. Miss Mabel Wilson of James-| | town is taking charge of schooi No./ Paris, Sept. 19.—(#)—Miss Gertrude|1 and Miss Esther Lang of Sterling: Pulscher, student of Jamestown, 2d average iti | irs. John erson and children| D, and New York, yesterday Teported visited at the home of her parents, | to authorities on her return’ from a |imr, and Mrs. Ole Feltheim of Brad. tour of Italy that:ahe was shadowed! dock Sunday. | by Italian detectives throughout the| The grain here is nearly all| trip and was detained at the frentier|threshed. Farmers, as usual, are hoping for better luck next year. | Mrs. H. A. Carlisle visited relatives) and friends over the week-end in Bismarck. Miss Esther Lang, teacher of sciiooi No. 2, visited her parents at Ster- ling Sunday, Homer Brownawell of Sterling and| Miss Louise Riedman of Moffit were callers here Saturday evening. Miss Mabel Wilson, teacher of school No. 1, visited friends in Bis- marck Sunday. J. 8. Swanson, who went to Color- ado several years ago for his health, |returned Sunday to his home here. Mrs. Swanson and their 11-year-old Son Amos accompanied him. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brownawel) and daughter Joyce made a business call here the first of the week. | Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Saville visited | friends in Selfridge Sunday. ‘ LAST TIME TONIGHT Eddie Quillan ‘Sweep Stakes’ The thunder of hoofs and frenzied crowds ch ing the greatest race ever caught by the camera! More excitement than you'd get at Belmont Park, Saratoga, Havana, New Orleans or Tia Juana! Miss Pulscher, a’member of a tour- Person they sought. | She said she understood she had an accused of subversive activities and Laurel - Hardy Comedy OF News - - Cartoon _—_—_— Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 19.—(P)— MON. - TUES. - WED. THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN THE WORLD— was the unhappiest ‘woman on earth! Twenty-one states, Canada and the Philippine islands were represented by CREAVY WINS TITLE the 1931 graduates of Marquette uni- Providence, R. I., Sept. 19.—(#)—| versity. HEAR and SEE The U.S. Army Band FOUNDED BY GEN. JOHN J. PERSHING The Outstanding Military Band of the World AT THE f World War Memorial Building Tuesday, Sept. 22nd Matinee at 4:15 . M. ices: hee Pupils ...... .35 at 8:15 p. m. poe [2351 ALL SEATS - - $1.00 Tickets Now on Sale at Harris & Woodmansee. 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Payment, balance on 18 easy monthly installments PHONE 222 North Dakota Power & Light Co. Bismarck Mandan Dickinson B