The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 22, 1932, Page 5

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-_~-. ae SOCETY NEWS Miss Mary Register Is Bride of L.. Humphreys Cards have been received in Bis- marck announcing the marriage of Miss Mary Lorraine Register, Minne- apolis, daughter of Mrs. Mary Reg- ister, 508 Second St., and Professor Liewelleyn W. Humphreys, Ames, Iowa. The wedding took place Feb. 12 in the Little Chapel of the college. Attendants were Mrs. H. Kelley and Dr. and Mrs, C. Lindstrom, all of Ames, The bride wore a gown of biege chiffon with accessories in the same shade. Her flowers were an arm bou- quet and talisman roses and her wind ornament a diamond pendant, the gift of the bridegroom. Mrs. Humphreys, who has grown to young womanhood in Bismarck, was graduated from the high school here and later attended the University of North Dakota. Recently she has been employed in Minneapolis. The bridegroom is professor of biology at Iowa State college, Ames, where he and his bride will make their home. * oe OK Miss Eve Irvine entertained 12 high school classmates at a bridge dinner Saturday evening at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Irvine, 412 Eighth St. The Washington bi- centennial was featured in the table decorations. Betty Barnes and Clata Fox received prizes in the bridge games, * oe Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Bavendick, 709 Third St. entertained the members of their bridge club Saturday evening at a 7 o'clock dinner. Covers were. marked for 12 guests, Score prizes in the bridge games after dinner were awarded to R. E, Thompson and Mrs. Henry Hanson. * * * Mrs. Hermann Scheffer, voice teacher here for many years, return- ed to Bismarck Sunday from Mil- waukee, Wis. where she has spent the last year. Mrs. Scheffer, who is widely known for her concerts and other musical entertainments, again will direct the music department at the U. S. Indian school, where she is making her home for the present, se ® The public is invited to attend @ benefit card party Wednesday eve- ning at the Masonic temple, sponsor- ed by the Order of Rainbow for Girls. Play will begin about 8 o'clock and a short program is. being planned. ac- cording to the Misses Ruby Guthrie and Marjorie Ackerman, who are in charge, Those reserving tables or others planning to attend are asked ta notify Miss Ackerman at 1126-R. * # % Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bakken, 511 Sec- ond St., entertained the members of their dinner dance club at their home Saturday evening. Appointments in the patriotic colors were used for the tables and places were marked for 12 guests. Bridge was played after din- ner with Mrs. Milton Rue and R. E. Middaugh holding high scores. Mr. and Mrs. John Fleck received the guest prizes. Later the group danced at the Dome. *e 2 ‘The flag colors, red, white and blue, were used to carry out a Washing- ton’s birthday theme in the table dec- orations for a bridge party given Sunday evening by Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Deragisch, 225 West Rosser avenue. ‘Two tables were in play, with Mrs. J. 8. ly and H. A. Streeter receiving ; pie nels Mr. Kelly was awarded a prize in a colonial game during the evening. Mr. and Mrs, Streeter were guests from Mandan. _* # * : E. V. Lahr, 231 Avénue ‘West, left ‘Sunday for St. Paul, wuere he) will continue his work with the Fed- eral Land Bank, with which institu- tion he has been connected for the last year. Mr. Lahr also has been associated with his brother, F. A. Lahr, in the Investors’ Mortgage Se- curity company here. The move was necessitated by additional duties with the bank. Mrs. Lahr and their son and daughter, Edward and Marlys, will leave to make their home in St. Paul at the close of ihe School year, * * 4 Complimentary to Mrs, George Krost, Mankato, Minn., who is visit- ing in Bismarck, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Schlechter, 722 Third St., entertained a company of 12 guests at a bridge dinner Saturday evening, Favors in keeping with the Washington bicen- tennial observance and appointments in the patriotic colors were used for the tables. Prizes in the bridge games went to Mrs. J. M. Shirek, W. E. Stitzel, Mrs. Stitzel and Malvin Ol- son. A favor was presented to Mrs. Krost, who is @ guest at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Holm, 616 Raymond St. * * OK Miniature’ portraits of George ‘Washington marked the places for 12! guests when Mr. and Mrs, Forrest M. Davis, 930 &t., entertained the members of their bridge club at a dinner party in the Cavern room at the Hotel Prince Saturday evening. A larger portrait of Washington cen- Opera Star Retires Associated Press Photo Geraldine Farrar, former opera star, has announced her retirement from the concert stage. She will be 50 years old hi xt birthday. | tered the tables.and red tapers com: pleted the decorations. The occasion E. V. Lahr, who received a gift from the club, Bridge was played at the Davis home after dinner, with score prizes going to Mrs. A. J. Arnot and J. A. Johnson. Miss Marlys Lahr was & guest. + # # Mrs, L. K. Thompson, 612 Avenue D, is spending about two weeks in St. Paul and Minneapolis, visiting with her daughter, Mary Lou, a freshman at St. Catherine's college, St. Paul, and with relatives in Minneapolis, (oS ee eee || Meetings of Clubs | | And Social Groups | ee — *s. George’s Evening Guild will meet at 8 o'clock Monday evening at the home of Mrs, Frank Orchard, 211 Second St. Mrs. J. L. Vrzal will be The Willing Workers group of the First Lutheran church will hold a so- cial in the church parlors Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. All members of the church and friends are invited. xe * Members of the Progressive Moth- ex's club will meet at 8 o'clock Tues- day evening at the home of Mrs. Verne Haines, 1310 Avenue B. * * * Mrs. John R. Fleck, 712 Mandan &t., will be hostess at a meeting of the Mothers’ Service club Tuesday evening at 8 orolook. * * Members of the Trinity Study Circle will meet at 7:30 o'clock Tues- day evening at the home of Miss Mathilda Welo, 408 Second St. ipa cat ° Women’s Club News | ce Impersonations of stage characters featured a program given by mem- bers of the Braddock Study and Civic club Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs, Long in Braddock. Vocal and piano solos and community singing was @ part of the entertainment, ar- ranged by Mrs. Long and Mrs. Bow- er. Taking part were Mesdames Bar- ton, Dexter, Aarvig, Button, Piers, and Koenig and Miss Grace Martini. Plans were made for a community festival, to be held sometime in April under the auspices of the club. * * * The Washburn Study and Civic club will sponsor an essay contest on “Law Observance,” for high school students, as a feature of the club’s participation in the Washington bi- centennial celebration, it was an- nounced at a meeting of the group at the home of Mrs. J, R. Long at Wash- burn, Mrs. E. I. Schultz and Miss Margaret Englund were appointed to arrange a scrap book cover contest for pupils in the junior high grades. Mrs. Schultz'read @ paper on Russian Music and piano illustrations were given by Mrs. L. J. Mann, NEW CHRYSLERS ARE ‘PLACED ON DISPLAY Many Advantages Are Contain- ed in Latest Models Says Local Dealer Two new lines of Chrysler cars were displayed in Bismarck for the first time Monday by Corwin- Churchill Motors, Inc. Local motorists who have been awaiting the appearance of the new cars will find more innovations, both mechanical and visual, than in, any other motor car introduced this year, according to S. W. Corwin. Seven of the engineering features that are making their appearance on the new Chryslers are revolutionary enough to be reckoned among the highest honors awarded for the out- standing engineering developments of 1932, Corwin asserted. Foremost, of course, among the many new features is the new principle of vibrationless engine mounting—Floating Power—a Chrys- ler discovery and development which is patented and fully protected. Other important first-time mechanical im- provements are the automatic clutch, free wheeling, silent gear selector, centrifuse brake drums, doublé-drop girder-truss frame and the Chrysler patented Oilite squeak-proof spring. By the use of Floating Power in the new Chrysler cars, the last vestige of vibration or power shock has been removed from the motor car, Corwin said. Motorists are cordially invited to attend the showing of these new cars, to see them and ride in them. BIG SUIT DISMISSED Pierre, 8. D., Feb. 22,—(#)—The million dollar suits started by former Senator James A. Reed and Charles W. German of Missouri, against the Universal Oil Products company were ordered dismissed by Judge A. L. Wy- man in a federal district court deci- sion received here Monday. HOSPITAL IS OPENED Brownton, Minn. Feb, 22.—(P)— After several years of agitation, Brownton has a hospital. The hos- jsician here the last four years. “Open house” was held Saturday. MARRIED IN FRANCE —P— Mrs. Ogden Armour and formerly Comtesse “Frederick de nl married at the town hall if HANT Fargo, N. D., Feb, 23. 0. Mott Dietz, manager of the De Camp Mercantile company, died at his home here Sunday from a heart ail- ment. - Washington Patriotic dance, Odd Fellows hall tonight. Quilt given away free, also was the birthday anniversary of | Femininities - - AGE-OLD LEAP YE! CUFFS AN NEW WITH A BROWN CREPE BLOUSE. THE JACKET | SHORTAND TRIG AP YEAR TENDENCY’ M% PERT COSTUMES BELOW SEM TO CARRY OUT THE SPIRIT OF A BRIGHT NEW YEAR. THEIR MANNISH DETAILSARE IN KEEPING WITH AY me 1ee7, GREEN ROUGH CREPE ‘HAS ONE HUGE LAPEL WHICH MAY BE BUTTONED “HIGH AT THE NECK Qy THE CENTER, MILITARY BLUE LIGHT- WEIGHT WOOLEN IS USED FOR A ONE-PIECE FROCK WITH WHITE LINEN COLLAR AND RIBBON BOW ise Suir at THE RIGHT 1S OF THE By Gladys | AMERICANS PROPOSE PLAN TO DETERMINE POLICE FORCE NEEDS | Point to St. German Treaty as ‘Yardstick’; British Pro- posals Heard AR TRADITIONS SATIN MAKE A TAILORED Geneva, Feb. 22.—(#)—The treaty of St. Germain, which disarmed Austria after the World war, was suggested to the world disarmament conference Monday by the American delegation as a yardstick to measure armies necessary as national police forces. The American delegation presented its formal proposals for disarmament as requested by President Arthur Henderson. The St. Germain treaty was ad- vanced by the Americans as point No. 7 of nine propositions, and was the only suggestion among the nine no: covered in Ambassador Hugh Gibson’s speech before the conference recently. Point No, 7 asked for computation of the numbers of armed forces on a basis of effectives necessary for the maintenance of internal order, plus some suitable contingent for defense. Forces necessary for maintenance of internal order, said the Americana, are incapable of reduction. Reduc- tion in the defense force is a matter of relativity. ‘ The St, Germain treaty gave Aus- tria an army of 30,000 and was more liberal in proportion to Austria's 6,000,000 population than was the IDA HUGE BLACK CIRE STRING-COLORED WOOLEN WITH WIDE LAPELS AND SADDLE SHOULOERS many an army of 100,000 in a country of 60,000,000. The St. Germain treaty provided that the army should be composed through long-term volun- tary enlistment. Among the other suggestions of the American delegates were: Use of the conference's draft con- vention as a basis of discussion; pro- longation of the Washington and London arms agreements; abolition of submarines; lethal gases and bac- teriological warfare; protection of civilian populations against aerial bombing; restrictions against tanks and heavy guns; and limitation of ex- penditures complementary to direct limitation of armaments. The British formal proposals for disarmament also were presented Monday. They suggested limitation of effectives, abolition of big guns above a certain caliber, abolition of submarines; and limitation of battle- ships. CIVIL WAR VET DIES FORMER N. D. MAN DIES Devils Lake, N. D., Feb. 22.—()— Frank Snell, a former resident of North Dakota, died at Alhambra, Calif, according to word received here Monday by a brother. Snell at- tended the Grand Forks public schools and graduated from the school of engineering at the Univer- sity of North Dakota in 1910. Be- sides his brother, L. D. Snell, he leaves his mother and a sister, all of Devils Lake. i CHARGED WITH MANSLAUGHTER Olivia, Minn., Feb. 22.—(P)—Ar- raigned on a charge of first-degree manslaughter in connection with the fatal shooting of his brother, Paul Schoepke, farmer three miles south- east of Granite Falls, Monday was held in jail pending action of a grand jury. Schoepke is accused of shoot- ing his brother, George, during a quarrel at the farm home last Wed- nesday. Schoepke, according to offi- cers, claims he shot in self-defense. BLOOD POISONING FATAL Miller, 8. D., Feb. 22.—(P)—Blood poisoning which developed from a boil on his arm resulted in the death of Roy O'Neil, St. Lawrence, son of Rev. and Mrs. R. O'Neil. O'Neil, 17 years old, played basketball Wednes- day, was brought to a hospital here two days later when the infection spread and died Saturday. LEG IS AMPUTATED Sioux City, Iowa, Feb. 22.—(?)—In- juries that necessitated amputation of his left leg below the knee were suf- fered Sunday by Earl Huntley, 30, of Sioux Falls, 8. D. He fell beneath @ freight train. HURT FATALLY IN CRASH Glenwood, Minn., Feb. 22.—(#)—In- jured fatally when a west-bound ‘Minneapolis-Wahpeton bus struck his car Sunday evening six miles from here, George Koberly, 48, of Villard, Hoover’s Choice j AB assciad lak Sa a a o at the Credits Chicago Hairdressing Academy “Earn While You Learn” Fargo, . North Dakota Valley City, N. D., Feb. 22—(P)— died en route to the Glenwood hos-j John Hedgman Wynes 90, Civil war pital. With him in the car were his| veteran, died here Sunday. Wynes three daughters. They were injured | lived at Wimbledon for 18 years be- less seriously, Alice, 16, being able toj fore moving to Valley City two years {leave the hospital after first ald treat-|ago. At Wimbledon he was a mem- ment. Hazel, seven years old, has @|ber of the Odd Fellows lodge. He fractured pelvis, and Georgia, 14, is|retired from the shoe business in suffering from cuts and bruises. Towa 20 years ago. OLD MINNESOTAN DIES Breckenridge, Minn., Feb. 22.—(?)— Mathias Kotachevar, 98, believed Wilkin county's oldest citizen, was buried Monday. He died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Leo Miksche. His widow, a son, a daughter, 16 grandchildren and 22 great-grand- children are left. FARMER DIES IN CAVE-IN Carrington, N. D., Feb. 22.—(P}— P. J. Brown, about 55, farmer north- east of Glenfield, was found dead Saturday morning in the family well. Brown had gone to the pump Fri- day morning to make repairs and the well is located behind the barn, out of sight of the house, no search was made for him until the next morning. His family believed he had gone to Glenfield. Thru The Tribune Want Ads Female Help Wanied Prize Coiffure Versailles treaty. which gave Ger-|, ‘the well had caved in on him. As/ donna. pisanine can tanaanoer Associated Piess Photo i simple white band set off this black straw hat, one of the early spring styles worn by Bettina Hall, operetta prima Fargo Boy Shot in Neck Accidentally Fargo, N. D., Feb. 22.—(?)—Russell Elvium, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Elvium, is in a critical condition with a bullet hole through his neck re- ceived Sunday night when a .45 cali- ber automatic pistol in the hands of a boy companion accidentally dis- charged, The boy's esophagus was drilled by be bullet, and the wind pipe was in- red. George C. Jackson, 13, son of Capt. and Mrs. George O. Ji ) is the youth who held the gun. DOG DERBY IS STARTED Quebec, Feb. 22.- rty Rus- sick of Flin Flon, Manitoba, Monday won the first 40-mile lap of the east- ern international dog derby, putting his huskies over the distance in three hours, 29 minutes, 15 seconds. Emil St. Godard of Le Pas, Manitoba, was second in 3:29.45, and Leonhard Sep- pala third in 3:33.39. The second lap will be run Tuesday, the third and last lap on Wednesday, with total time of the full 120 miles to deter- mine the winner. ne let ae get a ae hold. it germs quickly. jon com bines the 7 Best hel s known to mod- em science, Pt ful but harmless. eee Se At the Movies {| CAPITOL THEATRE After dn absence of two years ow- ing to illness, Dolores Del Rio re-| turns triumphantly to the screen in a glamorous role. The star makes | her belated celluloid appearance at| the Capitol theatre today in RKO- | Featured with her is Leo Carrillo, rapidly becoming an outstanding | screen star. Miss Del Rio's reappearance is a! fortuitous one in that she selected a story which affords in plot struc- ture, atmosphere and treatment a fit Setting for her rare talents as an actress, She plays the role of “The Dove,” | who is foreed by circumstances to dance and sing in a riotous cafe just across the border from the United | States. As in real cafes of this type—!| notably in Tia Juana, Juarez and Mexicali—there are scores of inter- | esting types, Mexicans, Chinese, men ofr @ spree, commission girls, and the | ever-present, soft-spoken gamblers. Dramatically Miss Del, Rio por-' trays what critics have declared to be the best starring role of her career. Supporting the star are Leo Car- rillo, who plays the vain-glorious Don | Jose Tostado, the self-proclaimed “Bes’ caballero in all Mexico”; Nor- | man Foster, who wins the fair! Dolores’ heart; Stanley Fields and! Ralph Ince, arch villains; Edna Mur- phy and Frank Campeai Use the Want Ads _T00 LATE TO CLASSIFY EUGENIE COMBINATION Wave! $3.15, Fredericks Combination, | $6.50, Oil tonic combination, $5.00, | complete. We specialize in perma- nent waving. California Wave plow 102 8rd St., Bismarck. Phone \ ' | Associated Press Photo | Robertson won first prize est colffure exhibited at a rs’ convention in Detroit. THEATRE - MANDAN TONIGHT - TUESDAY 7:18 - 9:15 — 15c - 400 Prepare yourself for the richest experience in your lifetime of picture going! « ALSO COMEDY and NEWS ples ee uae. Learn Beauty Culture oni Northwest's Finest Beauty School. Paramount News YOU GIRLS.-what would you do it your Leap Year lover said light @ Mured? YOU MEN--when o beautiful girl proposes, should she be able to support you in the style to EVERYBODY--do you want to see as sweet a love story as «ever came to the screen? -« OF COURSE YOU DO! I's “wilh Madge Evans- Continuous Performance Today, 2:00 to 11:00 p LAST TIMES TUESDAY ‘THEATRE “The House of Hits” aake, no’ when you proposed - - you are accustomed? ind Young GO SEE IT NOW! HE. . the bes’ caballero in all Mexico FLOUTED.. .. SCORNED es DOLORES DEL RIO LEO CARRILLO NORMAN FOSTER HJEJR'B E'R|T ON’S SUBDUED.. BY A GIRL! Smash Drama You don’t want to miss! Today and : Tuesday Wh show windo windows reflect? le can see their reflections in your ws, they don’t look past the glass,: no matter how good your displays may be, il

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