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IT | Community Council to Hold Business Session Many items of important business relative to activities which the Bis- marc Women’s Community council will undertake this year will be taken up at a meeting of the council at 3 o'clock Friday afternoon, in the Aux- iliary room at the World War Me- morial building, according to Mrs. Alfred Zuger, secretary. Every organization is requested to have a delegate in attendance in or- der that committees for the year may be completed. Reports of standing committees and of the school nurse, Miss Esther Teichmann, will be re- ceived, The meeting will adjourn at 4 o'clock in order to permit all dele- gates to attend the silver tea being given the same afternoon at the Me- morial building by the American Le- gion Auxiliary, *e Mrs. D. H. Houser, 418 West Rosser avenue, is spending the week at Cry- stal, N. D., with her son-in-law and daughter, Rev. and Mrs. L. E. Dickin- son, * * * Mrs. Edgar Scott, 802 Second St.. ‘Was hostess to members of St. Mary's mission group Wednesday evening. Bridge, played at three tables, was the pastime and high scores were held by Mrs. Harry Homan and Mrs. Joseph Clifford. A business mecting concluded the evening. * * * Mrs. Muriel Cauthers, R. N., has been engaged as Red Cross nurse for Bismarck, it was announced Thursday. She will take the place of Mrs. Roy Hanson, R.N., formerly Miss Marial Lehr, who has served as Red Cross nurse in the city during the last few months, and whose marriage took Place last week. | * * * i A banquet for delegates from chap- ters of the Order of the Eastern Star in district.14 here for the annual school of instruction Thursday, Oct. 27, is being planned by the Bismarck chapter, which will be hostess at. the meeting. The dinner will be served at 6:30 o'clock in the Masonic temple, and members planning to attend are requested to make reservations with Mrs. A. C. Brainerd at 998 or witl: Mrs. F. E. Diehl at 1186 before Mon- | day night. * * * Mrs. George Smith, 419 Griffin St., entertained 12 small girls at aj birthday party Wednesday afternoon | for her daughter, Alwyn, who was seven years old. Games and contests Were the pastime and prizes went to Nancy Tavis, June Hall and Gweneth ‘Tester. Witches, jack o'lanterns and other seasonal decorations were used for the table and Halloween favors marked the places. A large birthday cake indicated the place for the guest of honor, and there were individual pumpkin birthday cs%es for cach guest. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Zuger, 501 Weat} Thayer ayenue, will leave Thursday | aflerncon by automobile for Fargo, where they will spend the week-end with relatives and friends and attend) homecoming at the North Dakota Ag- ricultural eoliege. They will be joined at Fargo by their son Jack. a student at the University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, who will spend the week-end with them. £ ee Notices with return cards attached have been sent out to members of the Burleigh County Pioneers’ association for the annual banquet and business meeting to be held Nov. 3 in the World War Memorial building, ac- cording to J. B, Belk, secretary of the organization. The cards are to be re- turned promptly with notation as to the number of plates to be reserved. Pioneers who do not receive notices; are asked to phone Mrs. M. L. Shu-} man, as the committee wishes not to overlook any old-time residents of the city, Belk said. * Ok O* i Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Heathcote, Wa- tertown, 8. D., left Thursday morning ; for their home after spending a week here with Mrs. Heathcote's brother- | in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.| Couch, 700 Third St. They also vis- ited in Mandan with two other sis- ters of Mrs. Heathcote, Mrs. Daisy Clapp and Mrs. J. W. Stroup. Com- plimentary to Mr. and Mrs. Heathcote, Mr. and Mrs. Couch entertained 16 guests at a dinner party Wednesday evening. Orange tapers and bou- quets of autumn flowers decorated the table. During the week several din- ners and other informal social affairs were given for the visitors. They were accompanied to Watertown by Mrs. Stroup and her daughter, Miss Nilah Stroup of Mandan, who will be their | guests for a time. American Legion Auxiliary Radio Program for Oct. 22nd Mrs. S. A. Blackburn of Kentucky, National President of the American Legion Auxil- iary, will broadcast over the Na- tional Broadcasting Chain at 11:45 A. M. Saturday, October 22nd. merely to believe one 6 tes, ‘When you are tem; to self medication, ‘Neunter that you'do not know. Your phy- sician is a trained scientist— he knows. Pinoys $8 Dt Colonial Objects to Be Displayed at Tea The colonial spirit will prevail in. the appointments for the silver tea to be given from 3 until 6 o'clock Friday afternoon in the World War Memorial building under the auspices of the American Legion Auxiliary unit. Heirlooms dating back to colonia! Gays will be in evidence in the rooms. while those receiving the guests and those presiding at he tea table and assisting in serving will be gowned in costumes of colonial times. In the receiving line will be Mrs, James Morris, national poppy sale chairman for the Auxillary; Mrs. H. W. Rosenthal, state radio chairman; Mrs. E. F. Trepp, president of the Jocal unit; Miss Hazel Paris, secre- tary; and Mrs. George Constans, treasurer. Guests, who will include members of all women’s organizations of the city, will be introduced by Mrs, Frayne Baker, vice president of the unit and chairman of the committee in charge of the tea. Presiding at the tea table during the afternoon will be Dr. Fannie Quain, Mrs. W. H. Webb, Mrs. F. L. Shuman, and Mrs. John Larson. ee * Appointments suggestive of the ap- Proaching Halloween season were used when Miss Viola Toews, 615 Sixth St. entertained members of her bridge club Wednesday evening. Pumpkins and black cats decorated the tables, which were lighted with orange tapers in black holders. There were eight guests. Score prizes were awarded to Misses Flvina Nelson and Grace Livdahl. * * x For Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mason of Stanley, N. D.. who were guests at the home of Mr. Mason's brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Mason, Miss Esther Leer. entertained eight guests at a bridge party Wed- nesday evening at her home, 919 Fifth St. Halloween decorations were used for the rooms and tables. The bridge prizes went to Wayne Wilder, and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mason. Mr. and Mrs. Mason, who have been here for a week, left Thursday for their home. ‘ ! Meetings of Clubs, | | Fraternal Groups | iirc Mrs. Margaret Hall, Minneapolis, deputy field director for the Women’s Benefit. association, will be a guest speaker at a meeting of the local W. B. A. at 8 o'clock Friday evening in the Odd Fellows hall. Sinclair Warehouse _ Is Robbed by Pair Two robbers, evidently » man and a_ boy, entered the warehouse and | office of the Sinclair Refining com- pany at 100 S. Third St. Wednesday night and escaped with an undeter- mined amount of loot, according to Paul Shannon, manager. Footprints showed one person with Jarge feet and another with small ones. Entrance was gained through a window, to which access was gained by a ladder. A portable typewriter was stolen and an inventory was be- ing taken Thursday to determine any other articles which might be missing, Shannon said. Elks Circus Again Draws Large Crowd Despite the inclement weather, the Elks Charity circus, now showing at the World War Memorial building, drew a big crowd again Wednesday night. The circus will be staged again Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Mon- day evenings with a Saturday ma- tinee. Free dancing is a feature after j cach evening performance. TO PROSECUTE [PLOYERS Milwaukee, Wis., st. 20.) — Charles E. Broughton, Sheboygan editor and Democratic national com- mitteeman for Wisconsin, announced ‘Thursday he will seek prosecution of @ large utilities company which, he believes, is threatening employes with loss of their jobs if they do not vote for President Hoover. ie FOREIGN EXCHANGE New York, Oct. 20.—&—Foreign exchange firm, Great Britain de- mand in dollars, others in cents: Great Britain, 3.39 1-2; France, 3.93 3-16; Italy, 5.11; Germany, 23.78; Norway. 17.12; Sweden, 17.48; Mon- treal, 91.75. CHARITY PATIENT RICH Bremerton, Wash. Oct. 20.—(?)— Seymour Abrams, 80-year-old Indian fighter who died in the Naval hos- pital Monday night as a charity pa- tient, had $15,051.61 in cash sewed in his vest, authorities revealed. The aged man campaigned from 1872-77 in Wyoming and Montana against the Kiowas, Comanches and Chey- ennes. PLUNGES TO DEATH Chicago, Oct. 20.—()—George M. Willets, 62, former vice president of Armour and Company, was killed Thursday when he plunged from a window of his 11th-floor apartment. The body was found in the street below, fully clothed. is ignorance,” said “father of medicine.” Where Science and Ethics Reign ‘NatAll--Phone 9 G. P. Heéte! I. Corner 4th @ Broadway THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1932 | Issues Appeal for | Red Cross Sewing An appeal for women who will vol- unteer tnetr services for Red Cross sewing was made Thursday by Mrs. E. F. Trepp, chairman of the cloth- ing project which has been under- taken by the American Legion Auxi- Mary unit. There is a great need, Mrs. Trepp said, for women who will take cut out garments home and sew them and also need for workers dally at the sewing room, which has been opened in the new Wachter warehouse. The cold weather has brought about an unprecedented demand for warm clothing. Garments have been cut out by a Professional seamstress and designs are simple enough for any woman with a little experience to complete. Those wishing to help are requested to call at the Red Cross office or the sewing room. Cut out garments for sewing also have been supplied to needy persons who are able to do their own sewing, Mrs. Trepp said. Livestock Husbandry Tacded by Agronomist Valley City, N. D., Oct. 20—(7)— Livestock husbandry has more ele- ments of permanency in it than any other system of agriculture yet devis- ed, H. L. Walster, dean of the school of agriculture at the North Dakota Agricultural college, told members of the state dairymen's association at their annual convention here today. A creamery operators butter judg- ing contest opened the dairymens meeting Thursday morning. Fred J. Fredrickson, mayor of Valley City, welcomed the dairymen. Following a report of 1932 officers, Dr. I. H. Wells of Harvey delivered the president's agent, discussed county testing asso- ciations. Dairy farming, Dean Walster said, is an intensive system of livestock husbandry wherein the dairy cow be- comes a factory converting both roughage and concentrates and pas- turage into milk and its products, while at the same time producing large quantities of a valuable by-pro- duct, manure. “Soils of low or declining fertility,” Walster asserted, “return higher yields under a system of livestock farming than under a system of grain farming.” SAYS PRISON RIOT OVER Toronto, Ont., Oct. 20.—(#)—Re- ° ports that rioting had been renewed in the Portsmouth penitentiary at Kingston, Ont., where the 900 pris- oners participated in an outbreak Monday, were denied by. implication early Thursday by Brig. Gen. D. M. Ormond, superintendent of peniten- tiaries. PREDICTS RECONSIDERATION St. Paul, Oct. 20.—(#)—Senator Lynn J. Frazier of North Dakota, in an address here Wednesday night, said the Frazier bill to refinance the $9.- this country will be taken up by con- gress again at the beginning of the short session, and a determined fight made for its passage. PRIEST LAW PASSED Guadalajara, Mexico, Oct. 20.—()— A law limiting the number of priests | in the state of Jalisco to one for each 50,000 population—a total of 56—was passed by-the state legislaure Wed- nesday night and sent to the gover- nor today for promulgation. UNCOVER MORPHINE CARGO New York, Oct. 20.—(?)—Customs inspectors, in a second search of the liner Stuttgart during the night, found 10 small boxes of morphine under some loose planking in the steering gear engine room of the ship. The contraband was valued by officials at $50,000. No arrests were made. MANIU PREMIER AGAIN Bucharest, Rumania, Oct. 20.—(P) —Dr. Juliu Mantu, veteran leader of the Rumanian peasant party—who once went into a frowning retirement. of silence, some of his friends said, because of the presence in Rumania of the red-haired Mme. Magda Lu-! pescu, friend of King Carol—was | 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 pores. New French process makes it spread more smoothly and stay on longer. No more shiny noses. Purest face powder known. Prevents large Pores. Ask today for new. wonder- ful face powder, MELLO-GLO, that aus every complexion.—Advertise- ment. The Annual Chicken Dinner Continues the plan of Our analysis and systematizing address. T. X. Calnan, Barnes county | } 000,000,000 of farm indebtedness in} in the Memorial Building. Tickets sold for 8th will he honored tonight. Piano Lessons 33 Cents (and up) The Mehus Conservatory of Music Special Group Work for Piano Pupils Beginners or Advanced able us to give superior musical training’ at exceedingly low prices, under thoroughly capable and experienced teachers. Mehus Conservatory of Music mente Voice, Violin, Organ, Dramatic Art, Theory sworn in Thursday to head the gov- ernment. The veteran former pre- ment when Carol suddenly returned from his Paris exile more than two years ago, succeeded in forming a cabinet Wednesday night, after a po-| litical squabble which lasted all week. ! CERMAK AT GOTHAM | New York, Oct. 20.—()}—Mayor An-/ ton Cermak of Chicago arrived Thurs- | day with the announced intention of | trying to persuade former Gov. Alfred | E. Smith to make a Democratic cam- Paign speech in Illinois. FORKS MERCHANT DIES | Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 20.—()— | Carl C. Gowran, 70, president of the | C. C. Gowran company, and for the | last 50 years a prominent figure in Grand Forks business and fraternal circles, died Thursday morning. MINNESOTA GETS LOAN | Washington, Oct. 20.-- (4) —The| Reconstruction corporation Thursday loand $655,376 to the governor of Minnesota for relief needs in 20 counties and one city from Oct. 16 to Dec. 31. The names of the coun- | ties and the city were not made pub- | lie. | FARMERS’ UNION MEETS Devils Lake, N. D., Oct. 20—4)— Members of the North Dakota Farm- ers’ Union opened their annual three-day session here Thursday with C. C. Talbott of Jamestown, state president, presiding. | Dust falling in Great. Britain has | been traced to the Sahara Desert, a/ distance of 2000 miles. Exotic Women! Cruel Men of the World’s Last Terror-Shadow Frontier Firet it wags “Trader Horn” Leave it to Me- tro- Goldwyn Mayer to thrill the world! Hero's another one! Leave it to Metro -Gold- wyn-Mayer to I the world Hold tight ur seats: as you watch this spine- chilling romanco of the Kongo” unfold before you! Things never be- fore pictured! Starring This Great Cast Walter HUSTON LUPE VELEZ CONRAD NAGEL VIRGINIA BRUCE —Bie Little Features— “Romantic Melodies” Novelty “Always Kicking” Comedy: Paramount News Today and Friday UNT; With He'll Rock the Town Laughter HAROLD LLOYD in “Movie Crazy” of the Salvation Army, post- poned on October 8th, will be served tonight at 5:80 p. m. Plates 50c. former years, offering of piano teaching methods en- (Signed) BELLE MEHUS. Eltinge Bldg. mier, who was head of the govern-| stompro, 19, Columbus, _T00 LATE TO CLASSIFY HARRINGTON’S SUPERCULINE THE CALIFORNIA WAVE NOOK A. C. COED IS INJURED Fargo, N. D., Oct. 20.—(#)—Eva| North Dakota Agricultural college, is student in home cconomics at the | broken leg and other injuries receiy- | Stompro was ed when struck by a car driven by » sophomore | in St. Luke's hospital here with a! Marcus Lee, Fargo, Tuesday. Miss nesday, hospital Our standard of quality is strongly upheld at any price! Bismarck, N. Dak. | Whata style feast! What gala days for values that | out-value all. Actually these dresses will stun you | ...for style... for rich fabrics and colors. Frocks | that were created with an eye to individuality and developed in the proper materials and color. Types for practically any occasion. Select a frock ‘that expresses your own personality at a price in keep- ing with your budget. New high shades... Autumn golds and rusts . . . dashing greens and blues ...Capuine...and mellow browns and black, Brand new Felt Hats! Youthful flatter- ing types you'd never expect to find at this price . ; . yes, plenty of dashing bows . . « shallow crowns or the deeper crowns many women NEW BAGS—new features. Swagger bags in real leather, including a vast assortment of zipper 98° and pouch bags UMITeL{S CELEBRATING 30 YEARS OF UNINTERRUTPED SUCCESS with Values That Out-Value All! New fashions whi they ave Fash io News!’ — Big Values in Little Things to Complete the Ensemble A Two-Way Stretch Step-In Girdle: It’s fashioned of a remarkable new webbing that gives back and forth and up and down. And it’s so comfy you'll forget ‘ 41. 9 8 you're wearing iteeoed Raw silk prices are climbing! Despite that fact at Buttreys during the 30th Jaoiice pure silk French Crepe Dancettes may be had at... Buy or Sell Through Thru The Tribune Want Ads live steam permanent, no electricity, natural waves, real comfort, done in two hours, $5.00. Electric meth- ods in combination, croquignole wringlet ends, $3.50 to $6.50. Steam Superculine exclusively at Harring- ton’s, Phone 130. Specializes in Combination waves. Spiral tops and ringlet ends. Com- Plete $3.50 and $5.00. 102 3rd St glazed and relined with good grade silk crepe material. For a short time only, $6.00. Capital Laundry. Phone 684. Buy Your Fur Coat at Home for my money? ALSO OREEN JAPAN © 8FOCEr today. AND MIXED Your Home Furrier Because—You can depend on the quality—be assured of the cor- rect style—and always at @ fair price. And remember, our coats are guaranteed. A ‘We are hereto give you the best, service always. STATE FUR CO. On 4th St, Opp. G. P. Hotel o LIPTON’S ORANGE PEKOE & PEKQE moneys 5 worth \ v questions. Am I getting the most tea flavor for my money? Am I getting the best tea flavor Lipton’s is the answer! Lipton’s Yellow Label Tea is economical because it goes farther. Lipton’s is uniformly delicious—care in growing and blend- ing by Lipton’s own experts assures this. For true tea economy, for the best flavor at any price—Lipton’s Yellow Label Tea. Ask your ere 98° | el H { SPR =