The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 9, 1932, Page 3

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\ rr \" q wa > ge a ) \ * bush, A SRR EM THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1932 POEL 2 ine cma 0 EN Pioneer Burleigh County Women Are Guests SOCIETY NEWS) Of Honor at sg Given by Mrs. W. Luke Many Incidents of Early Days| Mrs. A. Jones Heads In Bismarck Recalled by First Women Residents Eleven pioneer women who have made their homes in Burleigh county for 30 years or longer were guests of honor at a luncheon given Thursday afternoon by Mrs. William Luke at her farm hame six miles east of Bis- marck, A special guest at the luncheon was Mrs. J. E. Brown, Steiackle, Nova Sco- tia, who is here for a visit with her danghter, Mrs. V. Spohn. The affair also was honored by the presence of two of the oldest women residents of Bismarck: Mrs. Jane Pol- Jock, who came to Bismarck in 1872; and Mrs. Charles Pearce, who arrived one year later. Mary Sebery Small, the third white child born in Bismarck and the only one of the three who still makes her home here, was preseint and as- sisted in recalling many historic in- cidents. A large part of the afternoon was spent in reminiscing over early days in Bismarck and in contrasting con- ditions then with those of today. A short program was given. Mrs. Arthur Knudtson, who is gain- ing fame as a writer of poetry, recited an original poem which she dedicated to grandmothers. Mrs, William Small gave an appropriate humorous read- ing and a group of vocal numbers ‘were presented by Edna Speaks Small. Baskets of early fall flowers de- corated the luncheon tables where covers were placed for 24 guests, in- cluding the following pioneer women: Mesdames Jane Pollock, Charles Pearce, Anna Roberts, Elizabeth Cam- pagna, Mary Kiley, Elizabeth Ritter- Christina Ramp, Josephine Hughes, C. M. Spohn, Rose Meisner and Lidora Ronemus. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. A. M, Abercrombie and Mrs. A. Streit. * ke * ‘A. O. U. W. Lodge Will Stage Picnic Sunday The A. O. U. W. lodge will stage its annual picnic Sunday afternoon at a picnic grounds three miles south and one mile east of the ball park, according to E. F. Trepp, chairman of the general committee in charge of the event. All members of the lodge and their families are urged to come and bring filled lunch baskets. Ice cream and coffee will be served. Among items of entertainment will be games and Taces and a diamondball contest. Mr. Trepp is being assisted with arrangements for the picnic by Mrs. D. B. Burton and Miron Rierson. * * Rainbow Girls Name Doris Tait Advisor|* Doris Tait was named worthy ad- visor of the Bismarck chapter of the Order of Rainbow for Girls at a meeting, held Thursday evening at the Masonic temple. Other officers named to serve with her during the next few months are ‘Wilma Wenzel, worthy associate ad- visor; Peggy Bergeson, charity; Fra ces Dunn, hope; Nina Melville, faith; and Ione Noggle, recorder. All will be installed at the next meeting. There was a social time following the business session. Refreshments were served by a commtitee composed of Marjorie Ackerman, chairman; Evelyn Omett, Virginia Rohrer, Helen Targart, Nina Melville, Ione Noggle and Ethel Sandin. * ok Ok Mr. and Mrs. John Hyland, Devils Lake, are in Bismarck for a short vis- it. * ek Robert Larson, son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Larson, 210 Avenue A. West, left Wednesday for Chicago, where he will enroll at a technical school. se 8 Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Converse, 609 Eleventh St., and Mrs. J. J. Rue, 711 Avenue A, left Friday morning for Fargo where they will attend a meet- ing of the Allied Forces for prohibi- tion. * * * Rev. G. Trauttner, Lemmon, 8. D., Albert Volzke, Herried, S. D., and Mr. and Mrs. Pietro Alberto, Pollock, 8. D., have left for their homes after a visit with Rey. H. G. Bens, 1102 Ave- nue C, “ee Mr. and Mrs. Arlan Stair and sons Roland and Gerald, Bottineau, N. D., arrived Thursday evening to spend several days as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray V. Stair, 220 Fourth St. Ar- Jan Stair is a nephew of Ray Stair. ee & Rey. and Mrs. H. G. Bens, 1102 Ave- nue C, have as their guest Arthur Fischer, theological student at the Colgate-Rochester Divinity school at Rochester, N. Y., who is on his way to Rochester to continue his studies. * * * Mrs. E. J. Schultz, 511 Second 8t., and Mrs. J. A. Melicher, Mason apart- ments returned Thursday evening from Napoleon where they went Tues- day to attend a meeting of the Royal Neighbor's lodge. Mrs. Schultz ts dis- trict deputy. =o. Mr, and Mrs. Wilmer Dins, Browns- ville, Wis., left Friday morning for Fargo where they will visit relatives after spending & few days in Bismarck with Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Schlechter, Sunday Picnic Dinner at Herman’s Cottage, 3 1-2 miles south of the Baseball Park. Spring Chicken, Salad, Variety of Vegetables, Lemon and Pineapple Cake, Native Currant Jelly Ex-Officers Club Devils Lake, N. D., Sept. 9.—Mrs. Albert E. Jones, Lisbon, retiring presi- Ident of the North Dakota Federation of Women’s clubs was elected presi- dent of the ex-officers club, organiza- tion for past officers of the federation, at the annual ex-officers banquet at the Devils Lake Country club Thurs- day night. Mrs. O. A. Stevens, Fargo; Mrs. H. W. McArdle, Fargo; Mrs. W. C. Tay- lor, La Moure and Mrs. D. W. Crab- tree, Ellendale were named vice pres- idents. Mrs. J. H. Movius, Lidger- wood, was elected secretary-treasurer, * * * The story hour for children, held at the Bismarck public library weekly, has been changed from Wednesday afternoon to Saturday, it has been an- nounced by Miss Ruth King, city li- brarian. Story telling will begin at 2:30 o'clock, with Miss Katherine Brown in charge. ** * Dr. Fred E. Stockton, Fargo, gen- eral secretary of the North Dakota Baptist State convention, spent Fri- day in Bismarck as the guest of Rev. Ellis Jackson, pastor of the First Baptist church and Mrs. Jac!§-on, 519 Fourth St.- While here Rev. Stockton completed arrangements for the coming state convention, to be held in Bismarck Sept. 27-30. a 2 8 Mr. and Mrs. Frayne Baker, 508 West Thayer avenue, left Bismarck Thursday evening for Portland, Ore., where they will attend the national conventions of the American Legion and Auxiliary, They are traveling on the convention special train which is carrying other Bismarck delegates and members of the North Dakota Le- gion band. xk x A profusion of garden flowers made an effective setting for a bridge din- ner given Thursday evening by Mrs. F. J. Bavendick and Mrs. J. L. Barth at the Bavendick home, 709 Third St. Places were set for 16 guests at small tables centered with flowers, with ap- pointments to blend with the bou- quets. The score prizes were awarded to Mrs. George Smith and Mrs. R. E. Thompson. a % # Mrs. A. P. Lenhari, 106 Avenue B West, accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. Clyde Welsh, San _ Francisco, Calif., and by Mrs. P. M. Ferguson, Washburn and Mrs. Alice Maitland, St. Paul, left Bismarck Friday morn- ing by automobile for points in Min- nesota. They will visit relatives at Elbow Lake, Lowry and Glenwood |and will be away about a week. Mrs. Ferguson and Mrs. Maitland are sis- ters of Mrs. Lenhart. ‘lack { Meetings of Clubs, | Fraterna! Groups Members of the U. C. T. Auxiliary will hold a meeting at 8 o’clock Sat- urday evening in the Elks hall, All members are ree > attend. — The American Legion Auxiliary will hold its first meeting for the new season at 8 o’clock this evening in the Auxiliary room in the World War Memorial building. : % e * Next Wednesday evening the La- dies Aid society of the Trinity Lu- theran church will sponsor a social hour for friends and members of the congregation. Members of the com- mittee in charge are Mesdames Theodore Quanrud, H. 0. Saxvik and O. S. Rindahl. oe x ok OK The Home Guards of the McCabe Methodist church will meet at 9:30 o'clock Saturday morning at the In- dian lodge on the state capitol grounds. The visit will be made as a feature of the Indian study which the group has undertaken this year. Landing ‘Field’ in Mid-Ocean Planned Berlin, Sept. 9.—(?)—Plans for the first floating airplane landing “field” in the Atlantic were announced Friday by the North German Lloyd Line, which designated the liner Westfalen to be anchored in mid-ocean to serve as a mother ship for trans-Atlantic mail planes flying between South America and Europe. German Air Star alr races at Cleveland. (Associated Press Photo) *) undertaking included the distribution 3 wide range of subjects, Mrs. Reed said. Chief among them were the study of problems of homemaking and mothercraft. The convention closed with a bicen- tennial program during which Mrs. Mary Sabin, LaMoure, was presented as North Dakota's oldest mother. She received a certificate from the Gen- eral Federation and a bronze tabtet from the state organization. Mrs. Sabin, who is 93 and as sprightly as a woman of half her years, addressed the convention, [speaking for about seven minutes in @ voice which could be heard in all parts of the auditorium. She was escorted to the platform by two young girls dressed in Colonial cos- tumes. Later she met and greeted all of the delegates. '“Gudeus News” agriculture at 2,854,307,000 bushels, as 1 ity-Co compared with 2,819,794,000 bushels e City unty sid | foercast a month ago and 2,563,271,000 bushels produced last year. Two Bismarck men will leave by Wheat production was forecast at automobile Saturday on a three-week | 714,538,000 bushels, as compared with trip, during which they will visit at @ forecast of 122,687,000 bushels | Washington, D. C., and New York i month ago and 894,204,000 buehels City before attending an educational) produced last year. | conference at Toronto, Canada, ar-| Winter wheat production is 441,- ranged by the Equitable Life Insur-| 788,000 bushels, as compared with ance company. They are James W. 789,462,000 bushles last year. Andrus, 512 Rosser avenue, and Henry} Production of all spring wheat was E. Buttweiler, 322 Hannafin St. forecast at 272,750,000 bushels, as see compared with 280,899,000 forecast a month ago and 104,742,00 busheds pro- Cuced last year. Durum wheat production was fore- cast at 44,779,000 bushels, compared with 51,095,000 bushels forecast a PRIZES PRESENTE At FINAL SESSION | OF N. D. CLUBWOMEN |Reports of Work Done By Vari- ous Departments During Year Also Are Feature FEDERAL ESTIMATE OF WHEAT CROP IS SHARPLY REDUCED Drop of Nearly 8,000,000 Bush- els Is Recorded Compared With Month Ago (Tribune Special Service) Devils Lake, N. D., Sept. 9.—Pre- sentation of prizes for 1932 federation projects and department reports fea- tured the final program of the North Dakota Federation of Women’s clubs here Thursday evening. Mrs. E. Murdock of the Lidgerwood Woman's club received the Corrine Lindon Smith prize for the best essay on outstanding Indians. Mrs. J. A. Rees of the Cando Woman's club was awarded the Blanche Jones essay prize. The Henry award for the best essay by an Indian boy or girl went to Fred Turcotte, Rolla. Mrs. George Keup, Columbus, was Presented the General Federation pin for the most 100 per cent clubs on the honor roll. Mrs. H. W. McArdle, Fargo, chair- man of the pioneer mothers project, announced the completion of the un- dertaking and reported activities of her committee during the three years it has functioned. Characterizing the project as the most outstanding ever undertaken by the state federation, Mrs. McArdle showed that North Dakota is the only state in the union to have an authen- tic record of its pioneer mothers, a record which will be increasingly val- uable in the years to come. List 4,000 Histories She recalled how data for the his- tories of approximately 4,000 pioneer women of the state had been gleaned from many sources through the un- tiring efforts of her committee. In addition some 2,000 others are listed in the card index maintained by the organization. “We have gathered a little here and a little there for our records un- til we feel that we have brought into port a very precious cargo, each part of which is a story of patience, love and endurance,” she told the conven- tion. “We know there are many stories of outstanding women still to be se- cured, and it is the hope of the com- mittee that the information will be compiled and sent to Mrs. Florence Davis of the state historical society library,” Mrs. McArdle said. Forty-six leather-bound volumes in which the pioneer mother stories have been placed, were displayed by Mrs. McArdle, who explained that they were loaned through the cour- tesy of the state historical society. Relief Work Noted More than 82 per cent of the clubs lof the state participated in relief work jlast year, according to Mrs. Harlan W. Reed, Dickinson, chairman of the department of American home, re- porting at the afternoon session. This Washington, Sept. 9. — (®) — The country’s corn crop this year was forecast Friday by the department of Marriage licenses were issued this week to Rochus Steiner, Bismarck, and Mrs. Agatha Amann, Richardton; and to James Sorenson and Katherine Fallin, Bismarck. American College Girl Reported Slain in Alps of 347 quilts and 107 baskets as well as an undetermined amount of cloth- ing and food. Other activities of a civic nature included such items as furnishing milk to undernourished children: ‘ ' providing sun suits for children at Camp Grassick; sending 1000 glasses of jelly to the U. S, Veterans hospital at Fargo; and pre-school and im- munization clinics. Study of clubs in the state covered The body of Jerane Iberschoff, above, 21-year-old Smith College stu- dent of Cleveland, O., is reported to have been found near a road in the Swiss Alps. Police said she had been attacked and murdered. Miss Iberschoff was on.a student tour of Europe, and was making a bicycle trip through the mountains. REDE GCATES Reminiscing-- On 39 Years With Fine Furs Remember When . . . Really fine Northern Seal Coats cost $200? . .. Hudson Seal Coats cost $5007 . . . Dependable Muskrat Coats cost $200? —Then think what it means when, here now—during our August revelation of fur values —you can buy these very furs, of equal quality, at prices of — Less Than One - Half Budget payment plan available Repairing and restyling at special rates. One More Day \ Saturday, September 10th MU ae [month ago, and 18,395,000 bushels Produced last year. Other spring wheat production was forecast at 227,971,000 bushels, com- pared wth 229,804,00 bushels forecast & month ago and 86,347,000 bushels Produced last year. Oats production was forecast at 1.- 244,781,000 bushels, compared with 1,- 214,733,000 busheds a month ago, and 1,112,037,000 bushels produced last year. Comparative Figures Indicated production of other crops follow with comparative figures for the forecast a month ago and statis- tics of production last year. Barley 303,000,000 bushels, compared with 303,000,000 last month and 198,- 000,000 last year. Rye 42,500,000 bushels, compared with 42,500,000 and 32,500,000. Buckwheat 7,200,000 bushels, com- pared with 7,200,000 and 8,900,000. Flaxseed 13,300,000 bushels, com- pared with 15,800,000 and 11,100,000. Hay (tame) 68,600,000 tons, com- pared with 67,400,000 and 64,200,000. Apples. 138,000,000 bushels, com- pared with 136,000,000 and 202,000,000. ,000 bushels, com- Condition of crops on Sept. 1 was: Corn 74.4 per cent of a normal; durum wheat 64.3; other spring wheat 67.5; oats 75.4; barley 70.9; buckwheat flaxseed 47.7; grain sorghums pasture 67.6; beans 71.7; apples 50.6; potatoes 70.7; sweet potatoes 71.3; tobacco 61.8. Third-Degree Case Ends in Acquittal Mineola, N. Y., Sept. 9.—(AP)— The prosecution’s second attempt to pin the “third degree” killing of Hy- man Stark, young robbery suspect, on a deputy police chief and two de- tectives ended in defeat Friday. A jury acquitted the three men of manslaughter after deliberating nearly 10 hours. Their first trial ended in a jury disagreement on Aug. 28. HELD FOR FRAUD Los Angeles, Sept. 9.—(AP)—AI- leged to have defrauded approxi- mately 1,500 persons of more than $750,000, four men were under fed- eral indictment Friday on 24 counts of using the mails to defraud in con- nection with filing of applications for homesteads on old Spanish land ant! me ——,-> CAprro! —zs= THEATRE ==— | Daily 2:30 - 7-9 | Today and Saturday ||25 Something to Cheer! \ Until 7:30 oH AC OU go 0° ant 6 Sine gy & 8 soe with Madge Evans, Una Merkel Ralph Graves A Sam Wood Production Ramon Novarro ill sweep you off your feet = his ate romantic role! It’s not “just another col- lege picture”—it’s great! EXTRA The Eclipse ‘A closeup of the Sun's Corona during the total eclipse. L TIME TO ENTER THIS BIG CONTEST! RADIO PICTURES BROADCAST SPECIAL 132 Are Prosecuted in Two Years Liquor Cases Are Most Numerous One hundred thirty-two criminal ——-: ti filed in Burleigh county —_—___—"* piney | Say Chorus Girls | district court by State’s Attorney Prevented Panie | — eee George 8. Register during the two- year period from July 1, 1930, to June 30, 1932, according to a report he has prepared. Thirty-four of the cases still are pending. Eighty-nine defendants pleaded guilty and seven others were convicted by trial. and smoke poured upward, Only one defendant brought be-| credited Friday with having avert- fore the court was released through} eq a panic when fire broke out dismissal of the charge. None was! in the Garrick theater. acquitted. The patrons, warned by the One murder defendant committed] manager that a serious fire had suicide while in jail. broken out in the basement, Forty-two of the defendants were charged with engaging in the liquor traffic, Register reported. Other charges included: adultery, arson, carrying concealed weapons, prosti- tution and immorality, selling, dispos- ing of or concealing mortgaged prop- erty, threat with intent to do bodily harm, unlawful cohabitation, operat- ing a motor vehicle without license, unlawfully selling cigarettes, aiding a prisoner to escape, possession of stolen property, trespassing on state land, indecent exposure, permitting running of place for dance on Sunday, unlaw- fully discharging a firearm and bigamy, one each; escaping from penitentiary; jumping board bill, murder, rape and receiving stolen property, two each; assault with dan- gerous weapon, 5; bastardy, 8; bur- glary, 9; desertion and non-support, 1; forgery, 8; grand larceny, 11; ob- taining money under false pretenses, and operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated. Register made the report at the re- quest of Attorney General James Morris, who sent a similar request to all state’s attorneys in North Dakota. eB Adams, Fairmont, university faculty member, died Fri- day of injuries suffered Thursday night when his automobile struck & truck and was hurled into a ditch near here. He leaves his widow and two children. =———— ss TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED AT ONCE—A 3 room un- furnished apartment with bath. Reasonable rent. Write Ad. No. 2429 in care ef the Tribune. FOLLOW THESE FOOTPRINTS FOR THE ANSWER The Best TO THE MOST Seller that BAFFLING MYS TERY IN YEARS! Made America Sit Up All Night! —Now For A Laff— “In the Family” Comedy Panic Howling Cartoon “sport Slants” Paramount News Today and Sat. “Always the Biggest and Best Show In Town” MAURICE CHEVALIER “Love Me Tonight” He'll Soon Be Here At the Patterson SATURDAY . See our display of Bakery Specials. Everything fer your Sunday needs fresh from the oven. In our Restaurant and Coffee Shop you will find the very choicest of home made pastry and home made foods at the lowest prices in Bismarck. Dine with us Sunday in the Patterson Dining Room where it is quiet, refined, exclusive. We feature an eight-course Sunday dinner at 75c. You will be pleas- antly surprised. Announcement RURAL CREDIT COMPANY 119% Fourth Street Bismarek, N. Dak. Livestock lane, low rate of interest, operating, with rex discount vileges through the Intermediate — eet a ech Bett teak PHONE 271

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