The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 16, 1933, Page 7

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Harry Lobach Weds Miss Corinne Sayler Huge baskets of peonies, bowls of spirea and other early summer flow- Conservatory Pupils To Appear in Recital A group of pre-school and primary jPupils of the Mehus Conservatory of ers decorated the living room of thejMusic will be presented in recital at home of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Craig, |3:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon, June 306% West Thayer avenue, Thursday|17, in the Terrace Gardens of the evening for the wedding of Mrs. Patterson hotel. Featured in the first Craig’s sister, Miss Corinne Agnes E.|part.of the program will be a demon- Sayler, and Harry 8. Lobach, son of!stration of pre-school class work in Mr, and Mrs. H. 8. Bt The wedding vows were exchanged at 6 o'clock in the presence of im- mediate family members, with Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor of McCabe Methodist Episcopal church, officiat- ing. A dress of white satin, fashioned along princess lines, was worn by the bride. The bodice was finished with @ tiny collar of. pleated organdy and the short puffed sleeves were edged with a ruching of organdy, while the skirt fell in soft folds to the ankles. Lilies-of-the-valley formed the bridal bouquet. Mrs. Craig, as matron of honor, ‘wore a gown of lace in a coral shade, with white accessories. Her flowers were peonies. Wyman Glitschka at- tended the bridegroom. A wedding dinner for eight guests was served at the bridegroom's home immediately following the ceremony. | Garden flowers were effectively ar- ranged about the rooms, while the wedding cake formed the table cen- terpiece. The bride is a graduate of Under-| wood high school and has attended! schools at Yankton, S. D., Fargo, ani Fremont, Nebr. She is employed in/ the offices of the Great American! Life Insurance company. She is the | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John G. Sayler, Yankton. Mr. Lobach, a graduate of Bis-/ marck high school, has attended the| University of North Dakota, and is employed at a local Phillips Oil Service station. Mr. Lobach and his bride are to| make their home at Person Court. Later in the summer they plan a/ trip to Yankton and other South! Dakota points. PARAMOONT| ENDS TONIGHT oS ANY DAVENPORT IN A STORM And this sailor ran into |! more storms ashore than he ever hit at sea. \ eM Lrg wih sams DUNN say EILERS SAMMY COHEN Just an Ocean of Laughter Free to Ladies TONIGHT Radio Girl Face Powder and Perfume, Compliments of Miss Diana Wynyard, Star of Lobach, 519 Ninth, piano, rhythm, technic and ear-train- ing conducted by Miss Belle Mehus and Mrs. Harris Robinson. Those tak- ing part will be Sally Ann Fleck, Mar- jorie Barth, Delores Bavendick, Vir- ginia Sorenson, Mathilda Towne, Jimmie Pierce, Mary Putnam, Vir- ginia Cox, Betty Lou Fleck and Grace Barbie. Piano and violin solos, piano trio and violin ensemble numbers will comprise the second half of the re- cital. Numbers to be given include “Lucky Lambs,” Grace Barbie; “The Cuckoo,” Betty Lou Fleck; “Dance of the Wooden Shoes,” Virginia Cox; Piano trio, “Dainty Butterflies” and “London Bridge is Falling Down,” Virginia Cox, Betty Lou Fleck and Grace Barbie; “The Cello,” Beverly Cummings; “The Busy Bugle,” Mar- ian Gray; “Gavotte,” Dorothy Carl- son. “The Daisy” (violin), Pearl Porter; “Musette,” and “By the Waterfall” Beverly Jane Hall; “Sonato Mig- nonne” (Seuel-Holst), Phyllis Wahl; “Little March” (violin), Dorothy Nel- ison; “The Marionette,” Marjorie Lou |Robinson; “Sweet Violet” (violin), John Belk; “The First Butterfly,” Bev- erly Gunness; Piano trio, “ ‘Neath | Sunny Skies,” Beverly Gunness, Phyl- lis Wahl and Marjorie Lou Robinson; and violin ensemble, “Valse Mig- nonne” Lorraine Hauch, Marilyn Mad- sen, Mary Jane Nelson and Ferris {Cordner. * ee Roosevelt Cabin Is Opened for Season With 145 visitors registered Thurs- day, when Roosevelt Cabin on the State capitol grounds was opened to the public for the first time this sea- ‘Son, a new record of attendance is ex- pected to be set up this summer. Ap- ‘proximately one-half as many persons visited the cabin on the opening day last year. The cabin, which is maintained by /Minishoshe chapter, Daughters of the Revolution, will be open from 10 to 5 o'clock each week day and from 2 to 6 p. m., Sundays. 8S. K. Clark, Bis- marck, will be in charge. Mrs. P. J. ‘Meyer heads the D. A. R. committee which is supervising the cabin this season. Native plants, flowers and shrubs which form the garden about the cabin are at their best now, the com- mittee said. ee % Zerr-Feil Wedding Is Solemnized Here Miss Clara Zerr, daughter of Mrs. Andrew Schatler,.303 Seventh St., and Jacob Feil, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lud- wig Fiel, Bismarck, were married ‘Thursday by Rev. J. J. Lippert, pastor of the German Baptist church. The service was read at the Lippert home, 618 Eleventh St. The bride wore a frock of pale blue flat crepe, with white accessories, while her sister, Miss Ida Zerr,.who was the only attendant, wore a suit of beige crepe. home for the present with the bride's mother. eee Mr. and Mrs. George Lenhart and Mr. and Mrs. Connie Kalberer, Haz- elton, were visitors in Bismarck Thursday. eee Robert Stackhouse, student at Northwestern university, Evanton, Ill, has returned to Bismarck to spend the summer vacation with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Stackhouse, 814 Fifth St. * # * Miss Dorothy Petron, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Petron, 211 West “CAVALCADE” ‘Rosser, has returned to Bismarck to spend the summer vacation with her Suits wi If it's cool, shines. The nice enough and comfort. Good Food Boys’ and Girls’ Wool Sun and beret can be worn with other clothes. Lovely colors, sizes 3 to 6. THE CHILDREN’S SHOP 106 3rd St., South of Prince Hotel DINE IN COMFORT Why not dine where the air is always pure and clean. cooled, washed air system maintains that even cool temperature of 75 degrees. This system has been installed for your convenience THE SWEET SHOP — Comfortable — Always ith Jacket and Beret slip on the jacket until the sun three pieces make an ensemble to “go places” in and the jacket Our water Excellent Service Egyptians believed that the kindly Healing Herbs or plants came from the Blood and Tears of the gods. _ another superstition that has been effaced by our phy- sicians of this age. Where Science and Ethics Reign Fineye¢Deags Corner 4th @ Bi Blood and Tears Just G. P. Hotel Iperents after completing her first] jyear at the University of North Da- | pital July 1. Mr. and Mrs. Feil are to make their) ;tion for wheat. tern standard time. } summer. OS || City-County News ( THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1988 ‘kota. * * Miss Margaret Will, who has just | completed her junior year at Smith) college, Northampton, Mass., returned | to Bismarck Thursday to spend the! summer vacation with Mr. and Mrs. | George Will, 323 Second St. ! * e % Miss Linda Johnson, teacher at; Laurel, Mont., who has been spending | a short time with her sister, Mrs. Fred Anstrom, 206 Park St., has left for | Chicago where she will attend A Cen-; tury of Progress exposition. She will! return to Bismarck in about 10 days. ee % Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Solien, 600 Av- enue D, left by automobile Thursday | for Fort Collins, Colo. where Mr Solien will enroll for special work at Colorado state college. Mr. Solein has served as state rural school inspector ; for the state department of public in- struction for several years. Recently ®& number of farewell affairs have! ee % Members of the Bismarck Ameri- can Legion Auxiliary have been invit- ed to attend a meeting of the Mandan Auxiliary unit at 8 o'clock (M. S. T.) Monday evening at Riverside pavilion, according to Mrs. K. F. Trepp, retiring president of the Bismarck unit. All members are urged to attend and those who do not have a means of transportation are asked to call Mrs. Trepp at 1079. * * *% terested to learn that Sister Anastasia, formerly a music instructor in St. Mary's school, will celebrate her gold- en jubilee Sunday, June 18, at St. Benedict's academy, St. Joseph, Minn. Sister Anastasia directed the choir of St. Mary's pro-cathedral, while she was connected with the school here. * Among a group of University of North Dakota students returning this | week from Grand Forks for the summer vacation were Miss Mary Lou; Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Thompson, 612 Avenue D; Miss | Bernice Klein, daughter of E. B. Klein, 422 Broadway; Miss Auverne Ol- son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Obert Olson, 514 West Thayer avenue; Miss Virginia Rohrer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Rohrer, 205 Second St., and Miss Iris Meinhover and Ted Mein- hover, daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Meinhover, 523 Seventh St. * * Mrs. A. H. Irvine, 412 Eighth St., left Friday for Ann Arbor, Mich. where she will be present for the graduation of her son, Earle Irvine, from the School of Medicine at the University of Michigan. Em route to Ann Arbor Mrs. Irvine will stop at Battle Creek, Mich., for a brief visit swith her daugh- ter, Miss Ernestine Irvine, who will accompany her to the com- mencement ceremonies. From Ann Arbor Mrs. Irvine and her son and daughter will go to Chicago to spend a week attending A Century of Pro- gress exposition. From there Earle Irvine will go to Flint, Mich., to be- gin his interne work at Hurley hos- Summer Bible School At M. E. Church Ends Classes in the daily vacation Bible school which have been conducted at McCabe Methodist Episcopal church here for the last two weeks came to an_end at noon Friday. Enrollment this year. about 120 students, was the largest in the his- tory of the institution, according to Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor. Aver- |age attendance each morning was 99 children. The school has had an all-trained; faculty and courses presented cover- ed the work of missions, memory work, hand work, dramatization and interpretation of Bible stories. Children from pre-school age up to and including first-year high school Students took the work. Departments of the school will pre- sent their annual demonstration pro- gram at the church at 7:30 o'clock Sunday evening. The program will be in the form of a pageant, showing the relationship between the work of the home, school and church. The faculty of the school, under the direction of Miss Ruth Rowley, superintendent, also will present a full exhibition of handiwork completed in the various grades. This exhibit will be in the church parlors. Parents and friends of the children are urged to attend the program. Drum, Bugle Corps Visits Eight Towns Bismarck’s American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps Thursday made a tour of eight towns northeast of here, putting on a drill of about 45 min-| utes’ duration at each place visited. Included in the Drum Corps’ itiner- ary were Tuttle, Hurdsfield, Good- rich, McClusky, Mercer, Turtle Lake, Coleharbor and Garrison. A good turnout was had all along the line,: especially at Turtle Lake, where the local merchants’ Bargain Day insured a good crowd, and at Garrison, where a Legion-sponsored Community Day was in progress, Thirty members of the Bismarck Drum and Bugle Corps, accompanied | by six Bismarck business men, made |the trip, which was started from Bis- |marck at 8:30 a. m. Thursday and was not completed until late in the evening. The corps is scheduled to put on a demonstration at 10 p. m. Friday in the World War Memorial building for the Rainbow Girls, whose state con- vention now is in session here. Wallace to Announce | Wheat Taxing Scheme Washington, June 16.—(#)—Secre- tary Wallace intends to announce late Friday his program for levying Processing taxes and acreage reduc- He will do so at a press conference starting at 4:45 east- | Saturday he will make announce-| ment of his cotton program. 4 It was said authoritatively he has: made no change in the program de- cided upon recently for putting maxi- | mum processing taxes into effect this! This program has been ap- proved by President Roosevelt. | i | John Bauer, Christ Bauer and Au- | gust Bader, all of Wishek, were in Bis- marck Thursday visiting with friends | and conducting business. Many Bismarck persons will be in-; the treasury has been calling for bids for projects under the first $25,000,- | all has asked for bids on 22 projects. GOVERNMENT WIL CALL FOR BIDS ON PUBLIC BUILDINGS Administration Approves Plans For Bids on $25,000,000 in Construction Washington, June 16.—(?)—The| administration approved plans Friday! to call for bids on $25,000,000 of pub- | lic building 45 days from now, in ad- Gition to a like amount on wale bids now are sought. Postmaster General Farley and W. Robert, assistant secretary of ne treasury, sanctioned the arrange- | ments, but detailed lists of the spe- been given for Mr. and Mrs. Solien. | cific projects for which bids are to| be asked had yet to be formulated. { Robert told reporters that in addi-/| tion to the $50,000,000 already cer-| tain to be spent on postoffices, fed- | eral buildings, court houses, immi- | gration stations, etc., another $50,-' M. 000,000 would be thrown on the mar: ket in 90 days, assuring that the gov-: ernment would seek to have $100,- 000,000 of new buildings under way before October. Anticipating enactment of the president's public building program, 000 for the last several days and in| ca These will be opened during July and the work started as soon there- applications for automobile licenses has taxed the motor vehicle regis- tration department to capacity and | Rainbow Award Is Given Miss Noggle Miss Ione Noggle, daughter of Mr. Re Mrs. W. J. Noggle, 718 Fourth t., was one of 27 Rainbow Girls to receive the Grand Cross of Color Degree at cere- monies conducted at the World War Memorial _build- ing during the Fannual guest night program. Awards are made for distinguished service to the or- der and were pre- sented by Miss Miss Yone Noggle Nadine Nimmo, toe Lake, past grand worthy ad- ‘AUTO APPLICATIONS SWAMP REGISTRAR jore Than 90,000 Received in May, Passing Last Year's Total Mark An unprecedented deluge of late used delay in distribution of plates, Registrar L. H. McCoy said Friday. More. than 90,000 applications were sent to the department in May, the after as the contractors can get to} rcgistrar said, and at the end of the work. The projects are being chosen from the. list of public buildings or congress and it is expected that as} 19: many as 10 a day will be announced; shortly. las month more applications had been received than for the entire year) improvements already allocated by | 1932. Registration totaled 154,000 in 32. The department has had as many 11 mail bags of applications in The projects for which bids have! the vault at one time, unable to get already been called to be opened} at next month include the Rapid City,| Coy said. S. D., postoffice (extension and re- modeling), $67,560. mailed on or about May 15, when The treasury did not announce the! penalties began, list of projects included in the plans for asking bids in 45 days, but said it numbered 62. them because of the deluge, Mc- Thousands of applications were making receipts of applications in the office for that week the greatest on record. nomic conditions, Eco- with the result Among the larger projects included,!that many motorists held off secur- it became known, are the federal of-| in iz licenses as long as possible, ac- fice building at New York costing| counted for the rush, McCoy said. $5,715,000 and the postoffice at St.) Louis costing $4,275,000. in, Six District Meetings Announc- ed By Farmers Group For Near Future | Jamestown, N. D., June 16.—(P)— The North Dakota Farmers Union! will hold six district picnic-conven- tions this month. ' The schedule: Lisbon, Ransom and 22. Spiritwood Lake, Stutsman county, June 22 and 23, sti county, June 21 Mandan, Morton county, June 23) and 24. | Gladstone, Stark county, June 24 G and 25, Mouse River Park, Renville county, June 25 and 26. Lake Wood Park, Ramsey June 27 and 28. Speakers on the programs include Congressman William Lemke, C. C. Talbott, president of the North Dako- ta Farmers Union; D. L. O'Connor, president of the Farmers Union Ter- minal association; C. D. Egley, man- ager of the Farmers Union Livestock commission company, South St. Paul; and Ralph Ingerson, manager of the | Farmers Union Central Exchange of | St. Paul. John A. Simpson, National Farmers Union president, is to speak at the | last two picnics. Mrs. Gladys Talbott Edwards, state | junior leader, will conduct the junior programs and speak on junior work ! in the union county, i | | WILL GIVE PRINCE DEGREE Grand Forks, N. D., June 20.—(P)—| The University of North Dakota will confer the honorary degree of Doctor of Law upon Crown Prince Olav of | Norway when he visits the United States next fall, it was announced Friday by J. C. West, who becomes; president of the institution July 1, ‘MOTHERS of Bismarck and Vicinity This i Children’s Picture! As Human As Your Beating Heart! Attend the “Mother Matinees” Daily oe change the penalties, because the deadline for making ap- | plication is set up in a legislative Your Picture and Your At present the department is send- ig out from 1,500 to 1,750 licenses j daily, which is the best the depart- [ox can do with equipment and UNION iN PLANNING | personnel available, More than 30 {are working regularly in the depart- ment and the staff has included as PICNIC CONVENTIONS =: any as 40 persons, the registrar McCoy said that, contrary to a prevailing rumor, Governor William Langer has issued no proclamation delaying the deadline date, on which penalties begin, to June 15, Penalties began May 15, he said, | 10 cents a day for the first 15 days j and $2 for every 30 days or fraction thereof after the deadline. The department is powerless to McCoy said, atute. Applications for licenses are being jTeceived at the rate of about 300 per day now. GRAND FORKS CHOSEN Devils Lake, N. D., June 16.—(P)— rand Forks was chosen as the 1935 meeting place of the North Dakota district of the Norwegian Lutheran Church of America at the organiza- tion’s convention here Saturday. | light and power to the entire state. DEMOCRATS GATHER AT JAMESTOWN 70 AID DEVELOPMENT Aim Is to Push Missouri River, Diversion Plan; See Tri- | State Help | Jamestown, N. D., June 16.—(?)—A meeting of the Democratic state cen-/| tral committee was convened here Friday at the call of Fred W. McLean, | Grand Forks, state chairman, for the} purpose of securing concerted action | toward the Missouri river diversion | project. Completion of this project, McLean | said, “would not only furnish water supply to cities on Devils Lake and! - ‘Declare Serum Treatment Is Big Milwaukee, Possibility of cutting in half the death rate from at least one of the four major types of pneumonia by injection of serum into the veins of patients was announced Fri- day before the American Medical association. Results of two years of experi- ments to learn the practical value of the serum treatment for pneu- monia, which ranks second as the cause of death among people in early adult life, were reported by Drs. Gaylord Anderson and Rod- erick Heffron of Boston, “Mass. The tests were made to determine advisability of continuing produc- tion of the serum, usually made from the blood of horses by an expensive process. Aid in Halting Pneumonia Deaths June 16—(P)—The | ‘The study showed there were | less than half as many deaths a- mong patients treated with the | serum for type one pneumonis as ; among patients not given the serum. It also was fairly succeste ful in treatment of type two, but did not produce so great a reduc- tion in deaths. The serum is usually considered chiefly valu- able in treating these two types. The great problem the doctors said is to develop a method for wider distribution of the serum, while conserving the supply as much as possible because of its high cost. Serum offers the only practical method of controlling pneumonia, which outranks all other infect- ious diseases except tuberculosis as @ cause of death. the Sheyenne and James rivers in North Dakota, but would benefit Minnesota cities on the Red River and South Dakota cities on the James riv- | i er. “In addition to the water supply a would create 480,000 horse power of electrical energy, sufficient to furnish McLean told the committee that President Roosevelt has taken the gineers and placed it with the de- partments of agriculture and interior, where it will receive sympathetic con- sideration. The Democratic committee also ex- pressed itself as solidly behind restor- ation of the Mouse river marsh to restore humidity in that section of the state and recreate the state's greatest Propagation grounds for waterfowl. “There was no such thing as crop failure in that section of the state until after this marsh was drained,” the committee was informed by E. H. Mattingly, Jamestown. “I understand that this has been made project No. 1 by the agricultural department.” The young Democratic clubs state executive committee will meet with the Democratic central committee and other leading Democrats Friday af- ternoon. It is expected that the perfection of county and state organizations will be discussed as well as preliminary work in connection with the placing of a complete legislative ticket in each county at the next state election. Fleck Presents Novel Automobile Parade Bismarck residents Friday after- noon were treated to a novel parade of 1933 automobiles handled by Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. In the parade were six models of Buicks, two Oldsmobiles and two Pontiacs. With horns honking, the cars eirela the business section of the city. Fleck’s garage Friday afternoon opened to the public an exhibition of new automobiles which it handles. In the exhibition are Buicks, Pon- tiacs and Oldsmobiles. The exhibition, which will continue for several days, is being staged in Fleck’s show rooms at the corner of Broadway avenue and First St. | { RE-ELECT AUTO CHIEF | Washington, June 16.—(?)—Thomas P. Henry, of Detroit was re-elected president of the American Automobile association for his eleventh consecu-| tive term. Opposite Postoffice y Good Looking Tie Berg eson’S Bismarck, N. Dak. In a world heaven out To Courage, To Loyalty ...1T0 all Life’s Gallantry whirling chaos of three decades—this mother will make for you“a strange distressed — amid the of unbelievable h Cass County Asks Fargo, June 16. proposed dam on the Missouri river! miles of paving on U. S. Highway No. 10 from Fargo west were asked Thurs- day by the Cass county board of com- | missioners in a resolution r ‘equesting | Jr., son of the president, and Cornelius the state highy ceed with prepa project out of the hands of army en-| specifications for the wi Bie iid deal Project would be a} continuance of eight miles from the | west end of the present paving which |"° Philippine Islands. ends a mile south of Casselton. Minot, N. D., June 16.—(?)—Officers named by the Totenlag at the con-!acy to defraud the estate of the lat nis of its meeting here Thurs- | iia V. Van E. Wendel in his claim lay were: president; Einar Muss, Minot; P. J./the late John Gottlieb Wendel. Blien, Hanska, Minn.; Cashton, Wis.; O. A. Doseth, Decorah, Iowa; Even Dysthe, Forman, N. D.;! M. Hannestrand, Strom, Wis.; and | G. 0. P. HAS DEFICIT Jullus Fauchald, Minneapolis, vice) Washington, June 16—(4)}—The Re- presidents; Carl Nelson, Mahnomen, | publican national committee reported Minn, secretary; Minneapolis, member of the executive committee. Pensacola, Fla., June 16.—(?)—Pres- | cott H. Newman, navy res of Stillwater, Minn., killed here Friday on his last flight lin @ course of training at the naval jair station. Paving Extension) rwo roosevetts GRADUATE Groton, Mass., June 16.—)—Two Roosevelts were graduated from Gro- “|ton school Friday. They were Franklin D. Roosevelt, (®)—Eight more y department to pro- | jor of plans and | ¢ 'an F. Roosevelt, grandgen of form- r President Theodore Roosevelt. The latter is the son of Theodore Roose- |Velt, Jr., former governor general of CONVICTED OF FRAUD New York, June 16—(4)—Thomas Patrick Morris, 53-year-old Scots- man, Friday was convicted of conspir- TOTENLAG ELECTS M. Dysthe, Minneapolis, that he was the son of her brother, Peter Mitby,} The jury required 19 minutes to reach a decision. and A. M. Narum,|to congress Friday a deficif of $208,- 044 for the second quarter of this year. DUI IN CRASH TO BUILD WAR PLANES Washington, June 16.—()}—The @ officer|navy is recommending a $15,000,000 crashed and was | expenditure out of public works funds for new fighting planes. All the Excitement of the Circus “The Circus Queen Murder” Drama of the Big Top LAST TIMES TONITE Daring sii with giant octopus on the bottom of the sea... Thrilling encounter for the possession of a beautiful wo- man and a fortune in sunken gold! ‘With Undersea: Scenes in TECHNICOLOR RALPH BELLAMY FAY WRAY Matinee 25c—Evenings 35¢ | Saturday and Monday Bar wasted CAPITOL eve air THEATRE >= ; ‘oe MIDNIGHT SUNDAY A FOX Achievement ALWAYS COOL AND COMPORTABLE Produced at No Advance in Prices Fox Movietone City See! Hear! Noe! ‘cossd’s PICTURE of the GENERATION TOMORROW, MONDAY, TUESDAY, Matinees, 25¢ It Rings With Laughter, Song and Tremendous Thrills “The Sinking of the Titanic” “Marching Hordes of War” The Song Hits of Yesterday Masic to Stir Your Soul Evenings, 33¢ Is Assured With The Bismarck Tribune JOB PRINTING Our equipment, best mate- -rials, great care and atten- tion, and the rigid tests to which all work is subjected, makes every job we do satis- factory. It has to be. Call on Us for Estimates

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