The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 30, 1932, Page 5

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a AX ( ' Vocational Pageant | Given by Club for i Eighth Grade Girls j ‘A vocational pageant stressing 14 Mines of endeavor open to women fea. tured the program given Tuesday evening by the Business and Profes- sional Women’s club at its annual college work as can pe managed: Those taking part in the pageant jand the vocations they represented were Miss Bessie Baldwin, vocational |guide; Miss Lillian Cook, journalist; Miss Mary Huber, policewoman; Miss Gertrude Evarts, explorer; Mrs. Ray V. Stair, teacher; Miss Esther Max- \well, artist; Mrs. George McCay, phy- 'siclan; Miss Catherine McDonald, milliner; Mrs. Myrtle Hardt, nurse; Miss Ether Flaten, mother; Mrs. J. Scott, lawyer; Mrs. Evarts, scien- tist; Miss Judith Rue, photographer: nd Miss Henricka Beach, gardener. A stereopticon lecture featuring - Notth Dakota scenes and bird and animal life by Russell Reid, superin- tendent of the state historical society, completed the entertainment. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Evarts and her committee, Mrs. E. P. Quain and Mrs, Scott. About 70 eighth grade girls and a large group of club members attend- eH 4% Mr. and Mrs. Ernest O. Stoudt, Jr., left Tuesday by car for Fargo where they will spend several days while Mr. Stoudt is transacting business, **e# Miss Vivian Luther has returned to her studies at the North Dakota Agri- , cultural college, Fargo, after spend-; ing a short vacation with her mother, Mrs, John Racek, Bismarck. + # #* : Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Overbee and children, 614 Second street, have re- turned from Valley City where they Spent the week-end with Mrs. Over- bee's parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Moc. * * * A. V. Rulon left Wednesday for his home at Jamestown after a short visit here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Giles Personius, 610 Tenth St. Mr. Rulon is a brother-in-law of Mrs. Personius. ee % Mrs. Paul T. Boleyn, Fargo, arrived ‘Wednesday noon for a short visit with friends in Bismarck. Mrs. Boleyn is editor of the North Dakota Clubwoman, magazine published by the North Dakota Federation of ‘Women’s clubs. ee Miss Maxine Erstrom, 228 West Rosser avenue, was hostess to mem- bers of the Octagon bridge club ‘Tuesday evening at her home. Two tables were in play, with Mrs. Wal- lace Bjelland. Miss Erstrom and Miss Eileen Doerner receiving the prizes. eee Members of their bridge club were guests at a “personality” party given Tuesday evening by Miss Eunice Venn and Miss Evelyn Grace Her- mann, at the home of Miss Venn, 514 Fifth St. Score prizes were awarded to Miss Irene Brown and Miss Jane Christian, ee # J. N. Roherty, 615 Mandan street, accompanied by his daughter, Miss Jean Roherty and the Misses Ar- Jene Wagner and Josephine Wein- berger, motored to St. Joseph, Minn., Tuesday, where the young women will continue their studies at St. Bene- dict's college after spending the Eas- ter vacation at thelr, homes here, « 8 Practical gardening suggestions, such as planting and care of flow- ers and vegetables and elimination of insect pests, were given by H. O. Putnam, Burleigh county agricultural agent, in a talk before members of the Mothers’ club Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Harry Wood- mansee, 614 Fourth street. -* & ‘Miss Helen Benson and Miss Grace Livdahl were hostesses to the mem- bers of their bridge club Tuesday eve- ning at the home of Miss Benson, 115 Avenue B. There were guests for two tables. Misses Ruth Wetmore and Viola Toews received the bridge prizes. A spring theme was carried out in the decorations, with appoint- ments in yellow and white. * * # Mrs. E. P. Quain and son, Buell Quain, 518 Avenue A, accompanied by Mrs. Quain’s small granddaugh- ter, Patricia Sterrett, left Wednes- day morning for Madison, Wis., where Buell Quain will continue his time with her daughter,-Mrs, Marian Quain Sterrett. panied by his wife and their two small daughters motored here Sat- urday.and was taken to the hospital years were carried out by persons un- der 30. “ (ning, was improving Wednesday. St. George’s Guild to Hold Benefit Party Mrs. Thomas Hetherington, 309 Seventh street, will entertain mem- bers of St. George's Episcopal Guild and their friends at a benefit bridge party Thursday afternoon in the Auxiliary room at the World War Memorial building... Play will start about 2:30 o'clock. A charge of 25 cents per person will be made, the proceeds to be used for charities maintained by. the Guild. ‘Those interested in aiding the Guild ae asked to phone 1287 for reserva- jons. Ry enna eee Meetings of Clubs, ‘ Fraternal Groups | cae etd A dinner meeting of the Liberal Arts club will be held at 6 o'clock Thursday evening in the Cavern room at the Hotel Prince Cafe. * & # A special meeting of the Bismarck court, Catholic Daughters of Amer- ica, will be held Friday evening in St. Mary's auditorium, following the meeting of vege Convert’s League. * # The Mission Circle of the First Baptist church will meet at 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon the home of Mrs. Clarence Gunness, 318 Hannafin St. x * | The Ladies Aid society of the Zion Lutheran church will meet at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening at the home Ms Mrs. Fred Greenberg, 305 Avenue a L City-County News 4 eg Mr. and Mrs, R. C. Gunderson, Bis- marck, are parents of a daughter born Ce siaad evening at St. Alexius hos- Pi Mrs. G. L. Reid, Bismarck woman who suffered a broken leg and a slight concussion of the brain when struck by an automobile last Saturday eve- A hospital attendant said she was “get- ting along fairly well.” A son was born Tuesday at the Bis- marck hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Trueblood, Ryder. , Judge Fred Jansonius left Tuesday for Jamestown where he will preside at district court proceedings. Sentenced to Jail For Petit Larceny Fred Richter, Bismarck, was fined $100 and sentenced to 30 days in jail after pleading guilty to petit larceny before Judge E. S. Allen in police ‘court Wednesday morning. charged with the theft of six chick- ens. Arrested by Fred Anstrom, deputy sheriff, the defendant admitted hav- ing taken the chickens to exchange for.liquor. He had been a@ county charge. Swett Indorsed by Kidder Nonpartisans (Tribune Snecial Service) Steele, N. D., March 30.—Herbert Swett was indorsed unanimously for reelection to the house of representa- tives from the 35th legislative district, comprising Kidder and Sheridan counties, by Kidder county Nonparti- sans at a meeting here. There had been considerable spe- culation as to whether Swett would receive the indorsement due to his stand opposing the naturopathic bill at the last session of the legislature. The naturopaths had opposed his re- indorsement. ©. E. Erickson was indorsed for re- election to the senate from this dis- trict. ‘The state ticket adopted by the state Nonpartisan convention was in- dorsed in a resolution. Railroads Bid for Motorcar Business Fargo, March 30.—(?)—In a further effort to meet truck competition and also to halt the growing practice of automobile dealers of sending crews of men to the head of the lakes to drive cars to this territory, railroads serving North Dakota and northern Minnesota announce they will great- ly reduce carload freight rates on au- from the Twin Cities, Du- luth and Superior. The proposed rates will be estab- ning at 30 cents per hundred weight NO, B ‘True To Good,” which has just Thi hows Ernest Cossart, who is playing her first dramatic role: He was! Ushed on a mileage scale basis begin- | appl; nard Shaw goes almost burlesque tn his newest play, about an intensive police investigati A threat of suffering for Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth, widow of the late speaker of the house, unless she turned over $1,500 brought shown with her daughter, Paulina, 7. No direct threat was made against the daughter In the communication. Associated Press Photo jon in Washington. Mrs. Longworth and advancing to a rate of $1.20 a era for distances: 501 to 550 les. South Dakota to Try North Dakota Banker Omaha, Neb. March 30.—(#)—An- drew W. Robertson, former First Na- tional bank president at Walhalla, N. D., was taken from the county jail Tuesday and started on his way to Vermilion, S. D., where he is charged | with embezzling $7,000 while acting 88 legal guardian to a nephew. He je faces a federal charge of misap- | propriating bank funds. He fled from. Walhalla the day the bank closed. | Robertson's wife, charged with ob- taining property by false pretense at here awaiting extradition. Handcuffed, Robertson was taken in an automobile for the trip to Ver- milion by Sheriff Howard Curtis of _|the I, 0. 0, F. Stoux City, still is in the county jail) make this one of the largest gather- National I. 0. 0. F. Officer to Speak W. F. Jackson, Fort Scott, Kan., deputy grand sire of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will be the fea- tured speaker at a public program for members of the order and friends, next Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in Members of the local Rebekah lodge are arranging a Washington bi- centennial program for the first part of the evening and this will be follow- ed by Mr. Jackson's address. A re- ception will be held after the pro- gram. Jackson's visit to Bismarck marks the first time in the history of the order here that a ranking national of- ficer has visited the lodge. Plans to ings of Odd Fellows and Rebekahs held here in some time are under way, according to Hogan P. Erickson, noble Clay county, 8. D., who obtained ex- tradition papers from Governor Charles W. Bryan at Lincoln, Coast Guardsmen to Resume Ice Patrol Washington, March 30.—(?)—The Arctic which last year failed to send icebergs south into the international steamer lanes for the first time in memory this year is pushing the | menacing ice south earlier than usual. The coastguard Wednesday ordered resumption of the international ice patrol. The patrol was established after sinking of the Titanic in 1912 after its collision with an iceberg. Last year it was abandoned when no bergs came into the steamer lanes. Good Showing Made By Aviation Firms ‘Washington, March 30.—(?)—Amer- iean civil aircraft carried 2,389,862 passengers 141,729,107 miles during 1931. Clarence M. Young, assistant. sec- retary of commerce, said Wednesday that scheduled air lines, including domestic routes and American oper-|—(#—The International Sugar coun- } ated lines into Canada, Mexico, Cen- tral and South America carried 522,- 345 passengers 47,385,987 miles. Express carried in domestic serv- ice totaled 1,320,215 pounds compared with 2,760,207 pounds in 1930. Mail carried totaled 9,097,411 pounds aaginst 7,985,010 and payments for carrying mail were $19,900,251 com- pared with $14,702,656. Germany and Poland In New Customs Pact Washington, March 30—{#)—Ger- many and Poland were reported ‘Wednesday by the commerce depart- ment to have signed a customs agree- ment which confirms the custome Status of 1931 preventing either from lying maximum duties on impor- tant German-Polish trade items. NEW SHAW PLAY oto “Too had-ite world premiere In America. Beatrice Lillie, musical comedy star Hope Williams, social register "dasociate [the fact that one cf Ohicago’s orig- grand. Public Enemy, Long Thought Dead, Lives Chicago, March 30.—()—A police- man’s death has brought to light inal “public enemies,” long believed dead, is alive and well, prosecutors of the state's attorney's office sald Wed- nesday. The “public enemy” is Leo Mongo- yen, midget gunman, who for more than @ year has been listed by the Chicago crime commission as dead. That Mongoven is alive was learned when his attorney notified police he desired to surrender on a charge of carrying concealed weapons for which he was indicted largely on the testi- | mony of Police Sergeant Frank Burke, who made the arrest. But Burke died two weeks ago, and the prosecutors said the conviction of Mongoven on the pistol charge would be difficult now. And that’s why, they intimated, Mongoven is willing to sur- render. Sugar Agreement Is i Reached at Meeting ‘The Hague, Netherlands, March 30. cil Wednesday issued a statement of- ficially disclosing the terms of the agreement reached at Paris on March 26 by the principal sugar-producing nations. That arrangement, the statement said, gave Cuba a 1932 crop of 2,700,- 000 long tons. European and Peru- vian producers agreed to reduction of the export quotas provided in the Chadbourne plan, The European producers also agree to corresponding reductions in this year's sowings. Norse Youth Murders His Family With Axe Oslo, Norway, March 30.—(7)—A family tragedy, in which’ a young man of 21 killed his father, mother and five brothers and sisters with an xe and then set fire to their home was discovered at Verdal, near Trond- heim, Wednesday when the sheriff answered a mysterious telephone call. A youthful voice had called the tel- ephone exchange, saying: “Hello, op- erator, get me the sheriff and the fire brigade.” The sheriff was noti- fied and rushed to the house imme- diately. Neighbors said the young man had shown signs of increasing nervous-. ness during the last two days. The nearest star known is Proxima, in the soluthern constellation Cen- tauri. It is a faint star in the 10th magnitude ard is 4.3 light years from the earth. Eat Eggs and Help the Farmer ROAD BOARD URGES COUNTIES 0 PARE REQUESTS FOR YEAR Defeat of Gasoline Tax Neces- sitates Economy, M’Kin- non Declares A resolution adopted by the state ways in North Dakota @ight-hour day far all gravel truck the action is in cordance with resolution adopted by the commission to provide work for unemployed. He said in the truck drivers have worked as much 16 hours « day. South Dakota Faces Deficit in Treasury adopt an highway commission urges county boards to reduce their requests for fu- ture construction to a minimum be- cause of the defeat of the four-cent gasoline tax law in the recent primary electon. i The resolution states that “a very Nght program of state and federal highway construction will be possible in 1933” because of the gas tax defeat. Attention is called that road and bridge levies on general propertty can be further reduced by the various county boards if not eliminated en- tirely. A. D. McKinnon, chief highway ‘commissioner, commenting on the resolution, said the proposed 1932 con- struction program calls for approxi- mately 518 miles of new grading, 460 miles gravel surfacing, and 190 miles of oil mix surfacing. This program, he added, is made possible because of the emergency federal aid appropria- tion, amounting to $1,200,000 granted by congress to the state in 1931. The money was used in lieu of state funds to match county and federal money and permitted the department to car- ry over in the 1932 construction fund ® substantial balance, McKinnon said. No Ald For 1938 “No federal aid emergency, how- ever, has been extended to the state for 1932 construction,” McKinnon continued. “Therefore, we cannot ex- pect to carry into 1933 any substantial ‘balance in the highway fund so the construction rT for next year ‘will be only half as extensive as that for 1932. ‘The resolution states that the high- way commission “will cooperate with ‘any county or counties in formulating the federal road construction program for 1933 on such a basis as will per- mit the substantial reduction or elim- ination of county road levies this year to finance such construction work in 1933, and this commission respectfully suggests to the county boards that the 1933 federal road construction work requested by them be so limited as to permit the counties to finance the lcounties’ share of the cost thereof from revenues derived largely or Wholly from license fees and gas tax collections. “This commission will, in order to effect the tax economies herein out- lined, join with the several boards of & statement urg- all state ‘ttments to “curtail expenditures to a minimum.” Dunn said his prediction was based on estimated receipts and dis- bursements and was “as conservative as possible.” Hope was expressed that tax collections will relleve the Predicted difficulties ne; the opinion was ex) Dakota's next legislature will face the most difficult financial problems since statehood. Prince Nicholas to Bucharest, Rumania, March 30.—(?) —Prihee Nicholas, who angered his brother, King Carol, by marrying a Return to Rumania |" ‘ACCUSES BANKERS | -OFPROPACANDZING AGANST MEASURE Glass Says Financiers Conspir- ing to Oppose His Ré- strictive Bill Washington, March 30.—(#) — A charge that opposition to the Glaas' banking revision bil! had been in- spired by “stimulated propaganda’ Was made in a senate hearing Burke, general counsel of the Pitts- burgh clearing house, the Dill which is intended to curb stock’ cut in Glass sharply, “and they were brought here and organized to protest and I think you were too. “Didn't we have the same kind of protests before the federal reserve law JAP AVIATOR KILLED New York, March 30.—()—The APITO THEATRE C L Mat. 25; Evenings 35c Daily at 2:30 - 7-9 Last Times Tonight MEN _DARED_ DEATH TO,SCREEN commoner, Madame Jana Deletj, is expected back here at the end of this week from his brief “exile” in France. The king sent General Condescu after him earlier this month and ap- parently the general persuaded him to come along. Was enacted? “That shows exactly how much im- ince should be attached to stimu- lated propaganda.” Burke replied that the bankers: “have a right to come here” and have done so voluntarily. It Brings You a New Kind of Love! A love that makes you gulp one mo- ment and guffaw the next... . . The greatest gal: of grins and pathos that’s eve; and warmed your ! from the author of “Cimarron” and the stars of “The Star Witness”! Edna Ferber’s “THE EXPERT” With Chas. “Chic” Sale And Adorable DICKIE MOORE riple treat Five Thousand county commissioners in a recommen- dation to the 1933 legislative session that it adopt an emergency measure authorizing the county boards, in their discretion, to use county rev- enues derived from motor vehicle li- cense fees and the gas tax, now used exclusively on county roads or any part thereof, to match state and fed- eral funds in the building or surfac- ‘ing of federal roads within such coun- ties.” Refers to License Law McKinnon pointed out that under the present state law counties are not permitted to use their share of auto- mobile license fees and gas tax for constructing or reconstructing state and federal highways. If the counties are to use their gas tax and motor ve- hicle registration money to match State and federal money in 1933, he said, it will be necessary for the next legislature to amend the present law. ‘The commission also has asked con- tractors holding contracts for gravel surfacing of state and federal high- Im proud of my Age!” says Nazimova | “ — “A woman's age is not the measure of her charm,” this famous ster says. “Tt is easy to be lovely at sixteen, but | to be still lovelier at forty... well, that is easy, too, if « woman is wise. I take care of my complexion with Lux Toilet Soap!” Negamart is caly ove constion, Perpeti oul pcreen stars wl se learned Eis sleet of epee tee of All the eggs you can eat at one setting for 25 cents at the Pat- terson Restaurant on Main St. or the Patterson Coffee Shop on Fifth Street. _KNIGHTS Soper at 6 welcome. NOTICE All Knights Templar are requested to be present at the Masonic Temple on Thursday evening March 81st. :30. Inspection at 8:00. Visiting Knights LEONARD H. MILLER, Commander 694 important screen actresses, including all the stars, actually 686 use this fragrant TEMPLAR Dollar "Prize Mystery, * ‘At 11 o'clock Central Stan- dard Time Tomorrow Morning / * On Your Radio NBC Hookup Paramount Pictorial - Comedy News Today and Thursday THEATRE “The House of Hits” NOTICE To the Traveling Public of North Dakota For Your Convenience The Bismarck Tribune Is Sold by News Agents and Dealers in the following North Dakota towns Mandan N. P. Lunch Room Mandan Drug Store Messmer’s Confectionery Homan’s Drug Store Lewis & Clark Hotel Palace of Sweets Flasher Flasher Drug Store Valley City Hotel Rudolf Carson Grand Forks Happy Cigar Store, Hotel Dacotah Carson Confectionery Mott Clifford Kingsley Mott Drug Store New Salem Gaebe Drug Store Wilton Glen Ullin Glen Ullin Pharmacy Gray’s Pharmacy Washburn Esther Meyer W. K. Williams Drug Underwood Evanders Pharmacy Coleharbor Webber Hotel New England New England Drug Store -Linton Bennie Meir Harold Burkhart Stone Drug Store- Hebron Columbia Hotel Richardton F. E. Maelrich Klein Drug Store Dickinson Midget Cigar Store illard Hotel Hettinger Lewellyn Fossen Steele Belfield Louis Wigton rg easy tore Dawson Minot La Plaza Cafe, Leland Parker Hotel J. B. Hatfield Jamestown Gladstone Hotel White Drug Store Killdeer Jimmy’s Sweet Shop

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