The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 20, 1932, Page 5

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q|> one re ‘SOCETY NEVS| Richard Gerlach Weds Miss Binder Miss Anne G. Binder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Binder, Beulah, and Richard Gerlach, Bismarck, were 'Two Clubs Will Begin Activities Wednesday Two Bismarck clubs, the Fortnight- ly and the Wednesday Study, will {Open the 1932 fall season with meet- married at 7 o'clock Saturday evening | 19s Wednesday afternoon. at the home of Rev. J. J. Lippert, pas-|_ The Fortnightly club will meet at tor of the German Baptist church, 3 o'clock at the home of Mrs. 8. D. who read the service, Cook, 703 Second St. Reports of the The bride wore a frock of biege annual convention of the North Da- flat crepe and lace with hat and ac-| kota Federation of Women’s clubs cessories in a matching shade. Her) Will be presented by the delegates, flowers were a corsage of Ophelia Mrs. William Langer and Miss Anna roses and sweet peas. | Burr. Mr. and Mrs, Anton Kutchera, Bis-| The club has chosen for its general marek, brother-in-law and sister of topic for study this season, “Travel— ‘the bridegroom, were the attendants. | United States and Canada” and a se- After the ceremony a wedding din- | ‘les of papers and talks are planned. ner was served to eight guests at the| The Wednesday Study club has ar- home of Mr. and Mrs. H. F, O'Hare, Tanged a luncheon at 1 o'clock Wed- | 802 Fifth St. |nesday afternoon in the Cavern roorn Mr. and Mrs. Gerlach will make &t the Hotel Prince as a preliminary their home in Bismarck, where the | ‘0 its year's activities. Bridge will be} bridegroom is employed by the! Played following the luncheon which | French and Welch hardware com-| iS in charge of a committee compose? pany. \of Mesdames N. O. Churchill, W. B. * Oe OK Miss Julia Keeley, who has been Visiting with friends at Frederic, Wis.,! has returned to Bismarck, * * | Mrs. George Robidou, 323 Seventh St, left Tuesday morning for Minne- apolis where she will spend several days transacting business and visit- ing with relatives and friends. | eR R Hugh Jackson and his daughter,! Miss Helen Jackson, Fremont, Ohio, Jeft Tuesday for their home after | spending several weeks in Bismarck as the guests of Mr. Jackson's broth- er, J. P. Jackson, and his sisters, Miss Hardy Jackson, 601 Sixth St. and Pierce, H. T. Perry, and W. G. Ren-} den. Russia is the subject to be studied; this year and the group is to begin an extensive stufy at the next meeting, | Cet. 5. * * * P. E. O. Convention Report Is Given Miss Helen Katen presented a de- tailed report of the state P. E. O. convention at a meeting of Chapter N, P. E. O., Monday evening at the home of Mrs, L. P. Warren. An in-/ | formal social hour followed the pro- Mrs. Harvey Harris, 609 Seventh St. * OK Mr. and Mrs. Dave Baskfield, 801 Fifth St., returned to Bismarck Mon- day from St. Paul where Mrs. Bask- brother-in-law and sister, Mr. Mrs. N. M. Nelson. She also visited with friends in Minneapolis and was joined there last week-end by Mr. Baskfield. and tield has spent the last month with her | | * * * Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Higgins, Centralia, Wash., arrived Sunday for a visit with Mrs. Higgins’ brother and | gram. This was the second meeting of the chapter since the summer recess, the first being held two weeks ago at the home of the chapter president, Mrs, Juanita Edick. Study this year will center about world affairs, according to a schedule arranged by the program committee, composed of Miss Bertha Palmer, Miss Laura B. Sanderson and Miss Helen Bascom. One program will deal with India, another with Africa, with talks or papers on Australia, Canada, Europe, China, Japan, Mex- ico and Russia planned for later in sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Eric A.| ‘Thorberg, 712 Fourth St., and with} her mother, Mrs. Ida Thorberg, Ma dan. They came here from Salt La! where they have spent the sum- | eRe | Mr. and Mrs. R. E, Middaugh and | small son, 307 Fourth St., left Tu day morning by automobile for Par- sons, Kan., to attend funeral services for Mrs. Middaugh’s father, George Lampson, 52, wh death occurred | the year. One meeting has been set aside for a program celebrating the 64th! anniversary of the sorority and the} final meeting next spring will take the form of a guest day tea. Miss Helen Bascom will be hostess at the next meeting, Oct. 13, when -| Miss Laura Sanderson, Mrs. R. E. | Thompson Sorenson | program. Chapter officers are .Mrs. Juanita and Mrs. Arthur V. will have charge of the j ‘GIRL SCOUT MASS Monday afternoon. He had been suf- | Edick, president; Miss Bascom, vice fering with ‘heart trouble for some | president; Miss Esther Maxwell, re- time but had been seriously ill only 2 | cording secretary; Mrs. Mell Pollard. few hours preceding his death. | corresponding secretary; Mrs. Soren- Besides his widow he leaves Mrs. | Sen, treasurer; Miss Mae Sanderson, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1982 St. Paul where he will begin his sec- ond year at Luther Theological Sem- inary. For the last three months he jhas been in charge of Lutheran con- |gregations at Taylor, N. D., and pre- viously was assistant to the pastor of | the Trinity Lutheran church here.| Mr. Ellickson was accompanied to St. | Paul by Orlean Rue, another student at Luther Theological Seminary, who has been serving as student pastor of a church at New England. s ee OK Mr. and Mrs. Frayne Baker, 508 | ‘West Thayer avenue, have returned | from Portland, Ore., where they at- tended the annual convention of the | American Legion and Auxiliary. Mr. Baker was a North Dakota delegate to the Legion meeting and Mrs. Baker served as alternate for one of the state Auxiliary delegates. They traveled on the Legion special train which made stops at Butte, Spokane, Vancouver and Seattle en route to Portland. * * * Mrs. V. J. LaRose, 522 Sixth St., re- turned to Bismarck Tuesday noon| from St. Paul, where she went about | 10 days ago accompanied by her daughters, the Misses Marcelle and Elizabeth Ann LaRose, who will re- main at Visitation Convent, St. Paul, for the school year. Miss Marcelle is teaching expression at the convent, and Miss Elizabeth Ann will be a student. En route to Bismarck Mrs. LaRose visited at St. Benedict’s col- lege, St. Joseph, Minn., and was in- terested to note that Deborah Kilmer, New York, daughter of the noted poet, | Joyce Kilmer, was enrolled as a stud- ice | Meetings of Clubs, | | Fraternal Groups | © srembers of the Progressive Moth- ers club will meet at 8 o'clock this evening at the home of Mrs. Albin Hedstrom, 319 Thirteenth St. * * OK A public card party will follow the regular meeting of the Rebekah lodge, which is scheduled to start promptly at 8 o'clock Friday evening in the Odd Fellows hail. Bridge, whist and bun- co will be played. The committee in charge is composed of Mrs. Nellie Evarts, Mrs. Thomas Sanders, Mrs. Minnie Howell and Mrs. J. A. Flow. —_—-————~@ [Women’s Club News | — Members of the Pan-Attic club held @ program and social hour at the home of Mrs. Alfred Zuger, 501 West | Thayer avenue, following the regular luncheon meeting of the group at the Patterson hotel Monday evening. A report of the biennial convention of the General Federation of Women’s clubs at Seattle was given by Mrs. Fannie Oeltjen, delegate. Later Mrs. wW. E. Fitzsimmons, St. Paul contralto, sang several numbers, accompanied by Mrs. Henry Jones. | MBETING PLANNED BISMARCK STUDENTS. $$ _—_________-+4 i City-County News Uti Mr. and Mrs. John Coombs, Pick ardsville, are parents of a daughter Leta Monday at the St. Alexius hos- pital. GET HIGH AVERAGES Local Students in Last Year's | Freshman Class at U. N. D. Earn Distinction Twin sons were born to Mr. and Mrs. Emil Zueger, Mandan, at the Bismarck hospital. One of the in- fants was born late Monday, the oth- er early Tuesday. C. B. Little and Alfred Zuger left ported at Fort Lincoln Monday for {| two weeks’ active duty with the regu- lar army. Father of Bismarck Woman Dies at Carpio Nels A. Lunde, 67, Carpio, father of Mrs. Nicholas B. Werstlein, 711 First St. died at his home near Carpio Tuesday morning from pneumonia, Lunde was taken ill a week ago. Mrs. Werstlein left for Carpio Tuesday morning. Graduates of the Bismarck high school in last year’s freshman class at the University of North Dakota at- tained an average scholastic standing that was approximately 25 per cent higher than that of the average of their fellow classmen, according to statistics compiled by R. O. Wilson, registrar. The group average of the 15 students in the class from Bismarck high school was 1.7921, as against the gen- eral freshman average of 1.3560. Not only did the Bismarck students attain a higher mark than that of ) their class but their average was con- siderably higher than the average attained by the university as a whole. The general university average was 1.5510. Averages are basis on a maximum for Fargo Tuesday on a business trip. Two reserve officers, Lieut. Lewis and Erich Cowan, Grand Forks, Lieut. John E, Pariseau, Fargo, re- “I’m Going to Fight for You” Here is a picture taken from Life of the romance and drama that strange fate brings to adult lives! And what of the child of Members of the class from a Bis- divorce, who sees his marck high school were: John A, “s Zuger, Catherine B, Klein, Iris Mein- hod EAU ashi hover, Jean L. Mudgett, Berth Schulz, bi Cynthia Thoresen, George Allen, Thelma Anderson, John E, Davis, DIVOR E William C. Davis, Agnes Fleck, Earl F. Hoffman, Walfred Hultberg, Mar- len Loehrke, and Harold Tait. IN THE Wilham Rites Will FAMILY Be Conducted Here Acatetey tt vansktne -—— Than “The Champ” Funeral services for Arthur C. Wil- ham, pioneer Bismarck resident who died at Valley City Sunday from in- juries sustained in an automobile ac- cident, will be held here at the Cal- nan Funeral Parlors at 2 p. m. Wed- nesday. A half-brother of Mrs. Cora Strauss McLean, 212% Main avenue and Dr. F. B. Strauss, 223 First St., Wilham lived here for many years before mov- ing to Valley City about 15 years ago. He was injured in an accident in With Jackie Cooper Lewis Stone Conrad Nagel -Lois Wilson South Dakota and died a few hours Al St. John after being taken to Valley City. in Mrs. McLean, Howard Wilham, the Thats My Meat pioneer's son, and Mrs. Wilham, his A Panic widow, arrived here with the remains dered who could be stealing all the cantaloupes and watermelons from his farm. He enlisted all his family to stand night watch. In the morning they had rounded up 51 small turtles that had come from a nearby creek to feast on the melons. Tuesday. [[ Paramount Pictorial | Interment will be in St. Mary's beberle cemetery. f Latest News | PESKY TURTLES! ‘ Talhina, Okla—Cliff Austin won- Today and Wednesday The Biggest and Rest Show In Town Sell your live poultry and cream now to Armour Cream- -| eries, Bismarck. “Villain’s Curse’? Cartoon Riot Matinee 25c Absolutely WON’T ride up—hugs to the figure, and fits just like a “second skin’! Eliminates stocking runs—washes beautifully. The fine Lastex threads are woven in two directions, so that it stretches UP and DOWN as well as AROUND! “LE GANT” ~~ With firm sateen and youthlastic in the front panel, opened all the day down the left side, and boned at abdomen for special control to slightly heavier figures. The back panel is entirely of YOUTHLASTIC, where the two-way stretch is all-important. Weighs practically nothing—and is the most comfortable garment you ever had on your body! Such : Middaugh and two daughters residing at Parsons. No definite arrange- ments for the funeral had been com- pleted Tuesday morning. John B. Stetson Hats $5.00 and Up Alex Rosen & Bro. HEMPEL’S Broadway and Third QUALITY AT LESS \ chaplain; and Mrs. L. P. Warren, guard, x4 # | |returned to Bismarck after a short isit with friends at Jamestown. They Were accompanied here by Mrs. An- derson’s niece, Miss Catherine Har- ambasic of Sheldon, N. D. * * * Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Fossum and children Charles and Virginia, 503 Fourth St., are back from Dickinson where they spent the week-end as the guests of Mrs. Fossum’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George Nolan. They also attended the Dick- jinson golden jubilee. i * oR OK Mrs. George FE. McCay and four jchildren, 405 Fifth St. have left by automobile for California, where they will spénd the winter months. |The change to a warmer climate was jmecessitated by the illness of Mrs. |McCay’s small daughter Patricia. Mrs. | McCay plans to locate in one of the |Los Angeles suburbs, | ee | Captain and Mrs. Bird Little, Fort | Lincoln, entertained the Fort Lincoln | bridge club Monday evening at their {quarters at the post. There were guests for five tables. Auction was \Course For Leaders Will Start) Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Anderson have | | played with score prizes going to Mrs. ,John R. Oswalt, Major J. F. Duck- | worth, Mrs. C. N. S. Ballou and Major Wed. and. Thurs. Specials | Pl » Italians. | OAR rH inenne 69c Apples, Jonathans, high color, orchard run, very nice, per box .. $1 .68 Crabapples, yellow transcen- dents, special i $ 1 .29 Dies men kOe .14c 22c 35c Ihite Naphtha Laun- dry Soap, 10 bars . Eggs, strictly fresh, 2 dozen ..... Peanut Butter, Stone's Ronco, 2 Ib. jar ..... .25c eee ae a. .99C Seedless Raisins, Blue- bird, 4 Ib. pkg. .. .38C A. C. Young. * * * Waldo Ellickson left Bismarck for BARTON WASHER ly guaranteed in every respect. You must see this washer In. order ‘© appreciate the exceptional value, at $19.50. MELVILLE Electric Shop 4061 Bdwy. Phone 179 Radio Service F, J. Ackerman Phone 1802 We Don’t Sell Radios * We Fix Em. cream now at BETTER Let us know if you More Money!!! We operate the only up-to-date Poultry Dressing Plant in the western half of North Dakota. We now employ many more men and women. the unemployment by selling us your live poultry and We guarantee you will be satisfied always. Bismarck, North Dakota re PRICES need shipping tags. Armour Creameries Thursday Under Direction | of Camp Committee A mass meeting for all Bismarck Girl Scouts: at 7 o'clock Wednesday evening in the World War Memorial building, will mark the resumption of activities for the various local scout troops, according to Miss Harriet Rust, local Girl Scout executive. ‘The color guard ceremony will open the meeting after which 26 members of Troop No. 10 are to be formally installed as Scouts and will receive their tenderfoot badges. This troop has been meeting at the Wachter school during the summer with Frances Barrett as captain. Other officers are Mrs. W. B. Pierce and Miss Eileen Cameron, lieuten- ants. Following the installation cere- mony, the Scouts will divide up into troops for their regular weekly meet- ings. Announcement that the leaders training committee, composed of Miss Mary Cashel, Mrs. J. E. Davis, Mrs. John Reel, Mrs. W. E. Cole, and Mrs. W. G. Worner, have planned a train- ing course for the year which will be worked out through the assistance of the national organization. Miss Marie Aftreith, regional director, is expect- ed to come to Bismarck sometime in January to offer another training course for leaders. ‘The camp and camping committee, headed by Mrs. W. L. Nuessle, will offer the first leaders’ course for the year. This is to start Thursday, Sept. 22, and outdoors meetings are planned. Other members of the com- mittee are Mrs. W. B. Pierce, Mrs. C. 'W. Moses and Miss Marie Huber. a big package! Yes, you can’t help but notice the size of the big package when you buy Kellogg’s | Whole Wheat Flakes. It means real economy. And wait till you taste these delicious new flakes! All the nourishment of whole wheat. Ready to serve. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. NEW Easy-Open Home from the dance with ruinous Ioching KuwS If she’d only save the ELASTICITY that makes stockings WEAR! HE could easily cut down on those ‘ embarrassing runs. Other girls do. They make stockings last twice as long elastic—so the delicate back into shape without wo THAT WEAR chiffon hosiery wear. RSTEDS to make stockings Wash this 2-minute way: 1. One teaspoon of Lux for each pair of stockings. 2. Add lukewarm water, squeeze suds through stock- ings, rinse well. les color. With Lux you use lukewarm water. No hot water needed. Business men prefer them because of their serviceability and also because of the quiet re- finement and unobtru- siveness of their pat- ternings. Here are extra smart ones at $4 750 Alex Rosen Don’t _rub with cake soap. It ruins elasticity. With Lux there’s no rubbing! Even stub- born spots come out perfectly if you press a few dry Lux dia- monds into the dampened spot. Avoid ordinary sonpe— cakes, powders, chips. often, It’s onthe Way-- by Luxing them after every wearing. With Lux, you keep your stockings < under strain—stretch and then spring Try it yourself! It takes only 2 minutes to Lux a pair of stockings. You'll agree that the easy Lux way of washing saves stocking money—makes even delicate The LUX Way \ silk threads give breaking. last twice as long contain harmful alkali, which robs silk of its life, weakens threads, fades colors. Lux has no harmful alkali. Anything safein water aloneis safe in Lux. TRIBUNE WANT ADS BRINC

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