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s LE Invitations Issued For Masonic Dinner Planned for Feb. 19 Invitgtions have been issued by the! local Masonic lodge and the Order of the Eastern Star for a dinner dance ‘to be given Friday, Feb. 19, in the Masonic temple. Members of the two orders visiting in the city or those who have not as yet affiliated with the local chapters ere urged to attend even though they do not receive a formal invitation, Decorgtions for the affair will be in keeping with the observance of the ‘Washington bicentennial. There will ‘be daricing until midnight and cards ‘will be provided for those not caring ‘to dance. A number of novelty num- ibers will be introduced during the evening. Reservations for the dinner are to > made with Mrs. John whose telephone number is 1738, not Jater than next Wednesday. This scason's Social committee is in charge ©. arrangements, one @ Rainbow Girls Plan ‘Dad’s Night’ Party Plans have been completed by the Bismarck Order of Rainbow for Girls for a “Dad's Night” program and party Thursday evening at the Ma- Sonic temple. Musical numbers, talks and other Special entertainment will feature the first part of the evening’s program, scheduled to start at 8:30 p.m. This ‘will be followed by dancing and cards and a supper will be served. General arrangements for the event fare being directed by a committee composed of Marion Worner, Marian Isaminger and Nina Melville. Serv- fing on the decorations committee are Eleanor Kjelstrup, Louise Dietz, and Donna Jean Davis. In charge of the dining room will be a committee made ‘up of Neva Vettel, Beth Wheeler, Eve Urwine and DOREY seme * Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Rue, 619 Mandan street, are back after a \0- day business and pleasure trip to Minneapolis and St. ~~ e 8 Miss Belle Mehus returned Tuesday gvening from Devils Lake where she spent the week-end as the guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Studness. ee 8 Mr. and Mrs. E. BE. Kastner, who came here for the funeral of Mrs. Kastner's brother, J. T. Rice, left Tuesday eyening for their home in Chicago. se ® Mrs. H. T. Perry, 116 Avenue B, entertained members of the Tuesday bridge club at a 1 o'clock luncheon ‘Tuesday afternoon. Places were marked for 12 guests. Mrs. W. L. Diven and Mrs. E. G. Patterson held high scores in the Seiden games, . 7 * Mrs. F. J. Leibole, 111 Avenue ©, and her sister, Mrs. N. F. Julius, 206 Seventh 8t., have returned from New York, where they spent the last three ‘weeks visiting with Mrs. Leibole’s daughter, Miss Annette Leibole, who ds a student at the Institute of Mus- ical Art, affiliated with the Julliard foundation. -e* & Members of the Thursday Musical club will hold their annual hanquet at 6:45 o'clock Thi evening in the main dining room at the Patter- Son hotel. Husbands and friends of members will be guests and will be entertained at a musical program following the dinner. Mrs. L. R. Priske will be toastmaster. eee Barbara Henry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Henry, 600 Avenue D, entertained 12 small girls at a thea- tre party Tuesday evening. After the show the guests went to the Henry thome where a supper was served at @ table decorated with Valentine f9- vors, Streamers led from the heart- shaped centerpiece to each of the places. oe & Valentine decorations were used for the tables when Mrs. J. 8. Kelly, 421 West Thayer avenue, entertained the members of her bridge club. Tues- day evening. There were eight guests. Score prizes were awarded to ‘Mrs. W. H. Van Orsdel and Mrs. Clarion Larson. Cut-out cupids and red tapers decorated the refreshment table. * * * Mrs. Dan Hall, 404 West Rosser avenue, entertained 12 children at a birthday party for her daughter, Beverly Jane, who was observing her fifth anniversary. The time was spent in playing games and favors were awarded Margaret Forister other valentine appointments de- the refreshment table which was centered with a birthday cake. * * * For her son, Meyer, Jr., who was four years old, Mrs. Meyer Cohen, : rid 5, eS FA : Z ail st 83 SOCIETY NEWS Mrs. Hulett Named to Head Chalice Guild Mrs. L, V. Hulett was elected pres- ident of the Chalice Guild of the First lan church at the an- nual meeting held Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Anna Burr, 702 Fourth street. She succeeds Miss Leone Hiland. bd Other officers named were Miss Lavina Peterson, vice president; Miss Florence secretary; and Miss The 5 yee tin sewi e was it in sewing for hospitals in foreign mission sta- * *e * Mrs. L. B. Sowles of the Helling Agency left Tuesday for Fargo, sum- moned there by the sudden death of her sister, Mrs. George Kinney. A son_of Mrs. Kinney, Albert Kinney of Dickinson, accompanied Mrs. Sow- les to Fargo. ‘ * * Mrs. Minnie Harrison, 518 West Thayer, entertained a company of friends at a Valentine party at her home Saturday evening. Games in keeping with the Valentine idea were played. se ® Lt. Col. Wallace McNamara, who| has been in command at Fort Lincoin for more than a year, and Mrs. Mc- bu sce left Bismarck Tuesday eve- n lor Fort George Wright, at Spo- kane, Wash. headquarters of the Fourth Infantry regiment which he commands. * oe * ‘Miss Abbie Lewis, 910 Avenue B, en- | tertained the members of her bridge club Tuesday evening. Valentine col- | ors, red and white, were featured in the appointments. Two tables were in play and score prizes went to Miss Alvina Nelson and Helen Benson, +e & | Appointments in pastel shades to} carry out an early spring motif were used by Mrs, M. B. Gilman, 707 Ave- nue A, when she entertained mem- bers of her bridge club at a 1:30 o'clock luncheon Tuesday afternoon. Twelve guests were seated at small tables. Score prizes for the after- noon went to Mrs. F. J. Bassett and! Mrs. Frank Hedden. Mrs. Dill Regis- ter, Oincinnat!, Ohio, was an out-of. town guest. * # % Members of the Washburn stuay | club will present the program during the weekly radio hour sponsored by the North Dakota Federation of| Women’s clubs, which will be broad- | cast at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon from the local station. Mrs. W. K. Williams, president of the club, will speak on Abraham Lincoln ‘and Mrs. | L. J. Mann, who is district music chairman, will sing a group of songs, aceompanied A Aerie E. I, Schultz. | ee Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Unruh, Alex- andria, Minn., arrived in Bismarck Monday to be the guests of Mrs. Un- ruh’s aunts, Mrs. Adelle Zimmerman and Mrs. Minnie Harrison, 518 West Thayer avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Unruh are on their wedding trip, having been | married Feb. 7. Mrs. Unruh, former- ly Miss Lila Raap, is a graduate of! the Alexandria high school. The bridegroom, a graduate of the Elec- trical School of Aviation at Fargo, is employed by the Ford Motor compa- ny. They are en route to the Pacific coast on a several weeks trip. + brag bee MD tins ial zal et { Meetings of Clubs | { And Social Groups | nn The Trinity Lutheran Ladies Aid society will meet at 3 o'clock Thurs- day afternoon in the church parlors. ‘Hostesses will be Mrs. O, O. Lee, Mrs. P. D. Kebsgard and Mrs. C. E. Finkle. * * * The Women's Missionary society of the First Presbyterian church will meet at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday after- noon at the home of Mrs. George Humphreys, 930 Eighth St., for the annual business meeting. ee K The Bismarck Homemaker'’s club will hold a meeting at 2:30 o'clock Friday afternoon in the demonstra- tion room of the North Dakota Pow- er and Light company. ee 8 Members of the Order of the Rain- bow for Girls will meet at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening for their regular business session, preceding the ‘Dad's Night’ program. There will be bal- loting. * * # The Ladies Aid society of the First Lutheran church will hold its regular business meeting at 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon in the church parlors, with Mrs. O. N. Nordlund and Mrs, ee Melville as hostesses. * * A public card party will be given Friday evening in the I. O. O. F. hall under the auspices of the Rebekah lodge, it was announced Wedsesday by Mrs. J. H. Oison, chairman of the committee on arrangements. Play will begin about 9 o'clock and there will be tables both for bridge and | whist. She’s a Colonel ‘Associated Presse Photo. | Margaret Cosgrove of Omaha is , the new honoraty colonel of the R. 0. T. C. at Creighton university. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1932 RUTARANS HEAR ~DAURYOPLE TALK Northwestern Airways Official Says Central Mail Route Merits Consideration A transcontinental airmail route through Bismarck is being given fav- orable consideration by government officials, C. R. Dalrymple, of the Northwest Airways, stationed at Far- , Said in an address before mem- fe! of the Rotary club Wednesday noon. Two other possible routes, are un- der consideration, he said. One is to the south through Aberdeen and the other through '. While the route through Aberdeen is slightly shorter than the one through Fargo and Bismarck, Dal- rymple said, certain advantages in physical equipment give the central route a strong claim as the most log- ical airway. The speaker outlined the history of commercial aviation in his address and sketched the possibilities of de- velopment in the future. He said that any nation was dependent on its transportation facilities for de- velopment and that mail was trans- ported across the United States in 24 hours in 1932 as compared to ap- proximately 24 days in 1850. Airmail ice was started in 1918 between and New York, the speaker said, and until 1925 the government operated the service. Private concerns now operate mail Planes under leasing agreements. Pilots are among the most capable in the country and must have 1,000 hours experience in the air. The Rotary quartet furnished the musical feature of the program, sing- ing “Paved Highways,” official song of the local club. The words were YOU SAVE IN BUYING KCroworr You save in using KC. Use LESS than of high priced brands. FOR OVER | IT'S DOUBLE ACTING SOF POUN USED VERNMENT SAME PRICe | | 40 YEAR? |the music by Mrs. H. J. Duemeland. | Members of the quartet were George Humphreys, George Duemeland, A. J. Arnot, and A. R. Tavis. Mrs. Dueme- land was accompanist. Visitors at the meeting were R. A. Countryman and E. R. Griffin, Man- dan; Dr. Oscar Smith, Killdeer; Dr. L. G. Eastman, Hazen; and R. W. Lumry and Mrs. Duemeland, Bis- marck, Judge W. L. Nuessle was program chairman. First Day of Lenten Ash Wednesday, the first day of the Lenten fast, was observed with Special services at St, Mary’s pro- cathedral. All liturgical churches of the city will mark the Lenten period with one or more services, although their discipline does sot require prac- tices of self-denial. In both the Trinity and First Lutheran churches members will be urged to eliminate as many worldly affairs as possible and to meditate on the suffering and death of Christ. The name Ash Wednesday is found in the earliest existing Gregorian Sacramentary and dates about from the eighth century. The service of blessing with ashes as practiced by the Catholic church requires the faithful to approach the altar before the beginning of the mass when the Priest marks them with burnt ashes the cross, saying the words, “Remem- ber man that thou art dust, and to dust thou shalt return.” The ashes used in this ceremony are made by burning the remaining palms left from the previous Palm Sunday. St. Mary’s pro-cathedral ashes were blessed Wednesday before the masses at 7 and 8 o'clock. composed by Dr. E. P, Quain and} upon the forehead with the sign of | Her Ship Comes In Associated Press Phete. Good fortune came in fairy-story fashion to Mrs. Frances Taucher, who came to Chicago from Aus- tria 14 years ago. While working in a hat shop she learned she had inherited $1,000,000 from the es- tate of her great-uncle in Italy. Cabaret Friday night at Terrace Gardens. La Porte Entertainers. Screen Souvineers Comedy TODAY and THURSDAY ONLY This RUPERT HUGHES heroine craves love! 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