The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 21, 1932, Page 5

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oe aw 9 #'|9 - | Be A | j | | | | e v e a G ) ’ Lb 4. ¢ < ths ra) New BandGroupto | Give Free Concert A new band composed of Bismarck musicians under the direction of Clarion E. Larson, will present a concert at 7:45 o'clock Friday eve- ning in front of the postoffice, it was announced Thursday by Larson. This will be the first public appearance of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1932 Grand Forks Girl Is Awarded Scholarship Miss Romona Murray, Grand Forks, one of North Dakota’s 32 war orphans, who this year completed her high school course, has been awarded @ four-year scholarship at James- town college, according to Mrs. R. M. DePuy, Jamestown, department secretary for the American Legion the organization, which has not, as Auxiliary. yet, selected a name. There are 28 members, all trained musicians, and numbers to be given will be of a high order. Concerts will be given at regular intervals ee the remainder of sum- er. Members of the band are: cornets, Archie Olson, Tom Boutrous, Orrin Jenkins, Harold Yeasley and Edwin Mueller; clarinets, Sam Kontos, Don Herman, George Munger, Russell Saxvik, George Boutrous and Jack Humphreys; trombones, Arthur Erickson, Neil York, and Robert Mueller; baritone, Henry Breninger; horns, George Moses, Ralph Rand, and George Schmidt; basses, Marian. Folsom and William Mueller; flutes Joe Sullivan and James Hyland; saxophones, Harry Rubin and Elmer Wlipstein; and drums, I. C. Davies, Curtis Dirlam and Vivian Coghlan. * x * Mrs. B. M. Hendircks, 921 Fifth St., underwent a tonsilectomy Thursday morning at the Bismarck hospital. x * Miss Amanda Carlson, R. N., 500 Avenue A, left Wednesday for Lake Independence, near Minneapolis, to spend about two weeks with friends. She also will visit at Detroit Lakes before returning to Bismarck. * * * The Misses Margaret, Hildred, Flor- ence and Laura Fairbanks, 707 Av- Presentation of the scholarship will be made at the state Auxiliary con- vention in Devils Lake next week. Miss Murray has received her edu- | cation with the assistance of the Auxiliary which supervises the edu- cation of war orphans in the state as one of its projects. Miss Julia Brek- ke, Devils Lake, has been in charge of the work for the last two years. * eK Playground Group Holds Indian Hike Dusty and hot, but still upholding the tradition of the Indian tribes they had chosen to represent, 32 Bismarck youngsters returned to their homes Thursday afternoon after their first “Indian” hike under the supervision of Miss Mildred Fried, city playground director. The group met at 10 o'clock at the swimming pool and divided into four tribes, composed of 14 “braves” and 17 “squaws,” choosing as their names Shoshones, Sioux, Chippewa and Al- gonquins. Hiking in typical Indian style, the youngsters scorned highways, making their way in single file through corn- fields and open prairie and reaching the Indian lodge on the state capitol grounds about noon. After inspecting Indian relics stored in the lodge and enue A, have returned from a two- weeks’ vacation spent in the Black Ras and at their home at Lisbon, Y. D. Hurry—Last Times Today! “Reserved for Ladies” A Hilarious Paramount Hit with LESLIE HOWARD BENITA HUME You'll Laugh Plenty at... ANDY CLYDE in “Heavens, My Husband” EXTRA This is “REVIVAL NIGHT” in addition to our regular program. See “Paramount on Parade” with the screen's gi est collection of stars Starts at 11 p.m. No Extra Charge a visit to the Roosevelt cabin, lunch was eaten. pleted the contests. Thursday. ee OR iMrs. A. Strand Named Mrs. Arthur Strand was elected president of the Regan unit of the American Legion Auxiliary at a meet- ing held last week in the Regan Aux- iliary room. Other officers named were Mrs. A F. Ghylin, vice president; and Mrs. John Carlson, secretary-treasurer. A large group of members attended the meeting. * * * Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Corwin and son Bert, 616 Bell St., have returned frona @ short visit at Camp Grassick, near Dawson, where their son is spending the summer. * % & Miss Evelyn Gallagher, Taylor, N. |D., left Wednesday for her home after spending 10 days here with her broth- er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Knief, 314 Third St. * * * Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Wedge and two sons, 922 Seventh street South, re- turned to Bismarck Wednesday after a two-weeks’ vacation trip to Albert Lea, Minn., and points in Iowa, where they visited relatives. ee # Mrs. Clara Fortune and daughter Later each tribe competed in stunts and races and the boys’ tribes staged a wrestling match. A tug-of-war com- Miss Fried annnounces that plans are under way for another hike next )Tegular meeting oe society. The Young People’s group of the First Presbyterian church will meet at 8 o'clock this evening at the church ii for a tour of the Liberty Memorial By Regan Auxiliary finding on the state capital grounds. Russell Reid, superintendent of the state historical soicety, will talk on Dorothy, St. Paul, arrived Wednesday for a few days’ visit with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Fortune, 1212 Broadway. Mrs, Fortune, who formerly lived in Bismarck, is a sister-in-law of Mr. mo A New Kind of Man With a New Kind of Love! Let the one and only boy show you how to 1 2 woman's home companion three easy lessons. all the tricks and has takes. “Winner Take All” with MARIAN NIXON VIRGINIA BRUCE GUY KIBBEE Keep Laughing with Harry Gribbon in “HATA MARI” It’s a Panic “Let Me Call You Sweetheart” Screen Song “A Seat on the Curb” Novelty Paramount News Here’s the Greatest Show In Town FRI. and SAT. Fortune. ee * Miss Wilma Olson, 511 Eighth Bt. jand Miss Margaret Bates, 224 Avenue D West, left Thursday for Minneap- olis where they will spend a short vacation with friends. They were ac- ‘companied by Miss Lila Olson, a stu- dent nurse at the Bismarck hospital, who will spend her vacation in St. Paul and at River Falls, Wis. * * * Miss Eunice Venne, 514 Fifth 8t., returned to Bismarck Wednesday eve- ning after a four-weeks European tour. She attended the Eucharistic Congress in Dublin and later toured England and France, arriving in New York the first of the week on the “Baltic.” ee * Mrs. Adele Zimmerman and son ‘Walter Zimmerman, 518 West Thayer avenue, returned to Bismarck Wed- nesday after spending two weeks at ‘Alexandria, Parkers Prairie and points in the Minnesota lake region, where they were guests of relatives and friends. * KOR Mr. and Mrs. O. I. Devold, 711 Sixth St., have returned from a month’s vacation spent in Grand Forks, Win- nipeg and points in Minnesota. At Grand Forks they were guests of Mrs. Devold’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Sauer, and later they visited Mr. Devold’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Devold, at Belgrade, Minn., and spent @ few days with friends at Hutchin- son and Minncepole. 7. Miss Doris Abeler, Berlin, Ger- many, and Miss Constance Sylvester, Minneapolis, who have been guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Leach, Bismarck, for about 10 days, left Sunday for Brockett to spend several days. They will return to Minneapolis from there. Miss Dor- othy Abeler, Berlin, twin sister of Miss Doris, who came here with them, will remain at the Leach home for the rest of Rs week. * * Mr. and Mrs. John Benson, 115 Ave- nue B, have as their guests Captain Ellsworth Young, U. S. army, Mrs. Young and their two daughters, Eli- Stay Cool by Sele Voiles at $1.00, $1.95 and $2.95 Sizes 14 to 52 “heers, chiffons—in one and two piece styles drastically reduced i] Engagement Denied SOCIETY NEWS| Associated Press Phote There were Hollywood reports of an engagement between Nanci Lyon (abow 18-year-old Los An- geles girl, and Harry Bannister, former husband of Ann Harding, but Bannister denied th nor and Carolyn of Manhattan, Kan. They arrived in Bismarck Tuesday en route to their home after a visit in Seattle, Wash., and other points on the Pacific coast. Mrs. Young is a sister of Mrs. Benson. Captain Young is stationed with the military unit at Kansas State college. 1 Fraternal Groups | Indian exhibits housed in the build- BELIEVE MINNESOTA GIRLS WERE SLAN Bodies of Two Who Drove Off ith Strange Men Are Found in River Lake City, Minn., July 21.—(P)— Finding of a second body Thursday convinced county officers that two girls, last seen alive Tuesday night when they left a farm home with two men, were slain, The scantily clad body of Louise Prigge, 22, farm girl living near Ro- chester, Minn., was found Wednesday night in the Zumbro river, 22 miles west of here, by campers. Thursday searchers found the body of Frances Polikowski, 22, her chum. It was not far from where Miss Prigge was found. They had left the Prigge home with two men who called for them. Offi- cers said they had not been able to learn who the men were, or to estab- lish a possible motive for the slaying. W. H. Prigge, father of Louise, said he did not know who the men were and did not see them when they called at his home after making an engage- ment to meet the girls Tuesday eve- ning. He presumed they were friends planning to take them out for the evening. Miss Polikowski’s body was found on the river bank, also partially clad. The coroner said he had been unable to determine how the bodies were taken there but expressed the opinion the killings took place elsewhere. No water was found in Miss Prigge’s lungs and there were no outward signs of violence, the coroner asserted. He planned an examination for poi- son. An autopsy was planned to de- termine the cause of death of both. START DRIVE ON ALIENS Detroit, July 21.—()—Agents of the department of labor Thursday began an extended drive on aliens and per- sons who are in this country illegally, arresting 105 men and women and preparing for the arrest of 425 more by Friday night. Explosions in body cells generate human energy, according to Dr. George W. Crile, famous Cleveland, Ohio, scientist. Scott's Grocery ‘The Red and White Store Where you save not Saturday but every week. Bulk Sweet Mixed Red & White Green Tea, 1-2 Ib, ...---.-+++ Red & White Black Tea, 1-2 Ib. . ... 40¢ Bread Spread, peach and apricot flavor, per jar .. 15c Free Delivery Service - Phone 816 | Meetings of Clubs, | |ar J ‘The Women's Home Missionary s0- ciety of the McCabe Methodist church will hold a picnic for members and their families at 6:30 o'clock Friday evening in the Mandan Chautauqua park. This will take the place of the PARTY HARMONY 1S SOUGHT BY FARLEY IN JERSEY SPEECH Democratic Chairman Says G. O. P. Disappointed by Soli- darity of Opponents Spring Lake, N. J., July 21.—(®)— James A. Farley, chairman of the Democratic national committee, in his first speech of the 1932 presidential campaign Thursday, asked for party harmony and attacked the Republican platform as an instrument of mean- ingless platitudes and jughandled paragraphs. Addressing the New Jersey Demo- cratic state committee, Farley men- tioned the fight of Alfred E. Smith against the candidacy of Franklin D. Roosevelt and added that the one hope of the opposition was that “our sturdy warriors * * * would nurse their disappointment and sulk in their tents during the campaign. “You know and I know,” he said, “the futility of any such expectation. One by one, without exception, the chiefs of the forces that fought klin D. Roosevelt's nomination have come forward and saluted the victor and pledged themselves to his support.” The chairman said the Roosevelt forces had been prepared to support the party nomination in the event they lost. He denied that any political trades were made at the convention, said places, ambassadorships or anything else. Other excerpts of Mr. Farley's ad- reSS: “No small part of the revulsion they have been tricked, bamboozle and led astray by declarations framed tion. prostrated under Democratic rule.” Steele, where Judge Jansonius pre- sided over a jury term of Kidder adjourned until after harvest at the request of farmers. * * * Bismarck Boy Scouts who desire to work toward their pioneering merit badge and all others interested arc 1 area executive, at scout headquarters in the city auditorium at 9 a. m. Fri- day. Scouts will bring their axes and luncheons. * Paul Cook Leads in Detroit Lakes Meet Detroit Lakes, Minn., July 21.—(?)— Paul Cook of Bismarck, champion of North Dakota golfdom, led the field Thursday. He had a score of 109. Cook tied with Ed Bolstad of St.) Paul at the end of 18 holes Wednes- | day, each with 73, and got a 37 for the outward nine Thursday. Bolstad was less fortunate, taking a 42 for a total of 114. Pat Sawyer, the defending cham~- pion and winner of the state amateur title last week, added a 42 to his 73 for 2 115, and his brother, Dick, a semi-finalist last week, was only two strokes over Cook, with 111. He also had a 73 Wednesday and shot 38 Thursday. Fritz Carman of Detroit Lakes anc Cy Anderson, Minneapolis, each had 119. Carman shot a 42 Thursday and Anderson a 39. Bob Clark, who elim- inated Lester Bolstad in the state amateur tournament, had 80-42—122. PATHETIC PICTURE Fort Worth—One of the most touching pictures ever seen in this city happened when a mother with a nine-month-old baby in her arms, and two small tots straggling behind her, were seen plodding through the streets on a hitch-hiking trip from Emergency Officers Carl Harmon and H. W. Carter gave the woman and her children a lift through the city. Repairing and Remodeling Cleaning and Relining At Our Low Summer Rates Free cleaning with every remodeling job. State Fur Co. Opposite Grand Pacific Hotel Bismarck, N. D. Phone 496 Clearance on Summer Hats Asst. colors, while they last .. 50c nobody had been promised cabinet} against the Hoover administration is| due to the feeling of the people aaa | s0 that every school of thought could) Chicago Pair Are Slain at Wis- interpret them according to their own desires. To this day the countyy does not know where President Hoover | stands on prohibition, on the tariff, or on any other controversial ques- | > 7 = | City-County News | ° ——_——-———¢@ | house near Shawano, Wis., about 1 District Judge Fred Jansonius and|a. m. They were Patrick (Paddy) Clifford Jansonius, court reporter,/Berrell, alias Pat McCann, vice pres- have returned to Bismarck from ident of the International Teamsters’ jrequested to meet with W. G. Fulton, | U. S. Beauty Envoy } assuenited bres Helen Park Cant of Douglaston, N. Y., represents the United States in the international beauty pageant at Brussels, Belgium. She was chosen by American residents of Paris. GANG GUNS FLARE ASNEW WAR OPENS consin Resort in Typical | Chicago Fashion Chicago, July 21.—(#)—A double “Perhaps it is unfair to say that the | xining in i angdo1 Hoover” adinitistration “eCdHOkd the [ee eee ee eee ene ane economic catastrophe, but it certainly |-Thursday brought statements from is no more unfair than was the Te-/nolice officials that the factions of iteration in every campaign up to the | George “Bugs” Moran and James present one that the nation pros-j«Pur’ Sammons are at war. pered under Republican rule and was} The men were killed by a firing squad armed with sawed-off shot- guns and a machine gun as they stepped out the back door of a road- junion, and Will Marx, his bodyguard. Chicago police knew them both, county district court. The term was|Berrell in pa::‘cular for his activity jin the affairs of the turbulent team- sters’ union. The killers apparently had waited long and patiently for their victims to leave the roadhouse. Investigators found where they had parked their car, about 30 feet from the inn. Tracks around the place indicated the slaying squad had been there jsome time. Nobody had been found {Thursday who saw them leave. Berrell had been a guest at the Shawano inn three weeks, the dis- trict attorney said. He was joined | Wednesday by Marx, who drove from Chicago with his brother-in-law, Clarence Gleason. Gleason is in jail, held as a material witness, along with a woman who was with him. LOOK - - 25c After 7:30, 35c -- Never Over 35c Never Any Tax to Pay OPENING TOMORROW “THE KICKOFF,” a 2-reel Metro Comedy and UNIVERSAL NEWS of 100 at the end of 27 hoies of the . Pine to Palm golf tournament here Frazier and Nye to Until 7:30 July 22nd A band of outlaws, a beautiful girl, and a “good bad man” who knew no fear!...Those are the main ingredients of this blaz- ing melodrama whose action will thrill you to the core as its drama hits your heart! With Lucille Powers, Fred Kohler, ‘Willard Robertson, Joseph Girard, Franklyn Farnum. Directed by Edward Leemmle. Story by Jack Cunningham. Produced by Cart Laemmle, Jr. Pre- sented by Carl Leemmle. A UNIVERSAL PICTURE MATINEE ONLY “BATTLING WITH BUFFALO BILL,” Serial Talk at Mandan Fair Senators Gerald P. Nye and Lynn Frazer will address the crowd at the | Missouri Slope sfate fair at Mandan July 27, the afternoon of the second day of the exposition, it was an- nounced Thursday. The fair opens Tuesday and contin- ues through Saturday. Thursday is governor's day and Governor George F. Shafer will address the audience. Arrangements have been completed to conduct automobile races on Satur- day, the closing day of the fair. John Osterhouse, Mandan aviator and rac- ing pilot, who won the auto races at Fargo, will be featured, fair officials sald. aie New Wonderful Face Powder Prevents Large Pores— Stays on Longer For a youthful complexion, use new wonderful MELLO-GLO Face Pow- der. Hides tiny lines, wrinkles and Kelso, Wash. to Houston, Tex. /pnores, New French process makes it spread more smoothly and stay on longer. No more shiny noses. Purest face powder known. Prevents large Ask today for new, wonderful powder, MELLO-GLO, that every complexion.—Advertise- F, A. KNOWLES Jeweler. “Bismarck’s Diamoné Store” Phone That Want-Ad NOW If you have an apartment or a room for rent, a used car to sell, or a radio to exchange, place a want ad in The Tribune. No matter what your want ad requirements may be—The Bis- marck Tribune want ad will deliver results, Our ad-taker will help you. Phone 32 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WANT-ADS cting One or Two of Our Summer Dresses at Our Special Dress Event for Friday and Saturday Cotton Meshes and Tub Silks, values to $15.00. Special while they last ..................-0 00s SARAH GOLD SHOP “Style Without Extravagance” Phone 566 $5.00 312 Main ... Nothing missing in this Sale! ... Every new authentic summer fashion at these sale prices. ... You'll want that extra dress BUY NOW! @ PRINTED SHEERS @ WASH CREPES @ ROSHANARAS @ CHIFFONS Ree os

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