The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 26, 1933, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

'SQCIETY NEVS| Miss Ruth Kershaw Is Bride of G. W. Melick A profusion of peonies, roses and ferns decorated the home of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Kershaw, Menoken, Baturday for the wedding of their daughter, Miss Ruth Esther Kershaw, and Gilbert W. Melick, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Melick, Washburn. The service was read at 4 p. m. by Rev. Floyd E. Logee, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, in the Presence of a large company of rela- and friends. As the bridal party took their places in the living room, Miss Lil- lian Watson at the piano played the “Bridal Chorus” from Wagner's “Lo- hengrin.” The bride wore a suit of white silk pebble crepe, white accessories, and a corsage of white carnations and Ophelia roses. Miss Adelaine Neil- son, as maid of honor, wore a frock of ceil blue crepe. The bridegroom was attended by his cousin, Clarence Kesselring of Washburn. Following the ceremony a dinner was served to about 50 guests. The wedding cake formed the centerpiece at the brides table and peonies com- pleted the decorations; Other tables were centered with bouquets of pink and white peony buds. The bride is a graduate of Bis- marck high school and the Capital Commercial college. She has been employed at the local S. and L. store. Mr. Melick is a graduate of Wash~ burn high school. After July 2 Mr. Melick and his bride are to make their home with the bride’s parents. : ee 8 Local Woman Named To O. E. S. Committee Mrs. A. A. Whittemore, Bismarck, has been named chairman of the com- mittee for the Order of the Rainbow for Girls, according to an announce- ment made by Mrs. Elmer May, Fargo, new worthy grand matron of the Order of the Eastern Star for North Dakota. Other members of the com- mittee are Mrs, Lillian Lillibridge, Dickinson, and Mrs. Jean Movius, ~Lidgerwood. Chairmen of the various standing committees of the order, as named by Mrs, May are: jurisprudence—Walter Murfin, Fargo; mileage—N. E. Ells- worth, Jamestown; credentials—Stan- ley F. Hatcher, Grand Forks; finance —Ruth Whipps, Wahpeton; appeals and grievances—Mrs, Isabel Flath, Stanley; and education—Mrs. Helen Stockwell, Fargo. Mrs. Louise Harding, Valley City, as- sociate grand matron, will serve as fraternal correspondent during the year. * % * Mr. and Mrs. 8. F. Hollingsworth, 523 First St., returned to their home Sunday following a three-week motor trip through the Black Hills. sn For her niece, Helen Breen, who was 16 years old, Mrs. Paul Halloran, 507 Fourth St., entertained a group of eight girls at a party Saturday after- noon. Cards were played, with Ber- nice Ulmer and Ardeth Breen re- ceiving prizes. A decorated birthday cake centered the table and peonies were used about the rooms. * * ® Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Morgan, Chicago, left Sunday by automobile for their home after a week-end visit here with Mr. Morgan’s brother-in- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Raaen, 718 Ninth St. The Morgans stopped here on their way home af- tera trip through Wyoming and Montana. They will be joined in Chi- cago by Mr. Morgan's mother, Mrs. Myrta Morgan of Washington, D. C., who will visit there while attending the World’s Fair. ese 8 Miss Mabel Lee, Minneapolis, @ missionary to Japan, who is on a fur- lough in the United States, will speak at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon in McCabe Methodist Episcopal church parlors, under the auspices of the ‘Women’s Foreign Missionary society of the church. Members and friends are cordially invited to attend. Miss Lee will come here Tuesday from Dickinson, where she filled 2. speaking date. * # * Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Cook and daughter, Mary, Berkeley, Calif., have arrived to spend a few days with Mr. Cook’s mother, Mrs. A. W. Cook, 204 Avenue A. Mr. Cook is meteorologist in the U. 8. weather bureau at San Francisco. Mrs. Cook will be remem- bered as Miss Marjorie Moore, daugh- ter of Rev. and Mrs. J. G. Moore, Grand Forks, former residents of Bis- marck. Other guests at the Cook home over the week-end were Mr. ‘and Mrs. Davis Cook, Fargo. * % % Rev. Floyd E. Logee, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, Mrs. Logee end their children will leave Wednes- day for Chicago and points in Ohio where they will spend about a month. They will attend the Century of Pro- gress exposition in Chicago and spend the balance of the time visiting with relatives at Cleveland and Ashland, ‘Ohio. Accompanying them to Ohio wil be John Workman, a nephew of Mrs. Logee, who has been visiting here for several weeks. ———____________» "| Meetings of Clubs, | 4 | Fraternal Groups | The Business and Professional ‘Women’s club will hold a business and social meeting Tuesday evening at Pioneer park. Members are asked to meet at the World War Memorial building at 6:15 o'clock. The picnic will take the place of the zegular bus- {ness session of the club. ANNUAL MEETING Farmers Mutual Fire & Lightning Ins. Co. of Burleigh, Kidder and Emmons counties will be held at Driscoll, N. Dak. Friday, June 30, 1933, 2 p. m. Election of 3 directors and usual business. K. A. ERSLAND, Sec’y.-Treas. Attend Convention | Of Degree of Honor Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Zuger and son, Jack, 501 West Thayer avenue, and Mrs, A. M. Brazerol, 217 Avenue A West, have returned after a week's trip to Detroit Lakes and to St. Paul, where Mrs. Zuger and Mrs. Brazerol attended the grand lodge sessions of the Minnesota Degree of Honor Pro- | tective association. | The party were guests of Judge and! Mrs. Andrew Miller, Fargo, at their cottage at Detroit Lakes, Mr. Zuger and Jack remaining there for the week, while Mrs. Zuger, who is presi- dent of the local Degree of Honor lodge and a former state president, and Mrs. Brazerol, vice president of the local lodge, attended the conven- tion sessions in St. Paul. During the convention Mrs. Zuger and Mrs. Brazerol were introduced to the grand lodge assembly by the national president, Mrs. Frances Buell Olson. She gave a luncheon in their honor at the Lowry hotel. The Bismarck women also were guests of honor at a dinner given at the Com- modore hotel by Mrs. Kate Holmes, national secretary of the associa- tion; and their hostess, Mrs. W. E. Fitzsimmons, St. Paul, gave a lunch- eon for them. e+e % Miss Alice Bremer Will Become Bride Announcement is made by Rev. arid Mrs. C. A. Bremer, Fargo, former Bis- marck residents, of the engagement of their daughter, Miss Alice Bremer, to Paul E. Stockebrand, son of Mr. and me E. P. Stockbrand, Kansas City, lo. Rev. and Mrs. Bremer made the an- nouncement at a dinner Saturday evening. A pink poke bonnet with ribbons and ruffles, filled with in- dividual corsages formed the center- piece. At each place were tiny bon- nets attached by pink ribbons to the corsages which held cards telling of the approaching wedding. Miss Bremer is a graduate of North Central college, Naperville, Ill, and has been clothing instructor at Ben- ton high school, St. Joseph, Mo. Mr. Stockebrand, also a graduate of North Central college, is with the U. S. Ep- oe Underwriting company, Kansas y.* * % # A. A. Mayer, assistant cashier of the Dakota National Bank and Trust company, has returned from a two- week vacation trip to Chicago and to Bridgewater, S. D. * eX Lyle Youngstrom, assistant Associat- ed Press correspondent, returned Sun- day by plane from St. Paul, where he spent two weeks’ vacation with his Parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Young- strom. * % % In compliment to Mrs. John Caplice, who is leaving soon to make her home in Spokane, Wash., the Misses Irma and Charlotte Logan entertained a group of intimate friends at an infor- mal tea Sunday afternoon from 4 un- til 6 o'clock. Bouquets of peonies and other summer flowers were used in decorating the zooms and tea table. * Mrs. Anne Hurlbut Petersen, 220 Fourth St., returned to Bismarck Saturday evening after a motor trip to Ponca City, Okla., where she was the guest of her sister, Mrs. W. H. Lamm for about three weeks. Mrs. Peterson left Monday for Braddock, where she will spend several days vis- iting with friends. Former N. D. Woman Leaps to Her Death Minneapolis, June 26.—(7)—A girl who for an unexplained reason leaped to her death on Superior Boulevard from the automobile of F. A. Ulberth, of Minneapolis, was identified today as Mollie Hagland, 30, a maid in the home of John 8. Pillsbury at Orono, Lake Minnetonka. The girl hailed Ulberth near Lake Minnetonka Sunday afternoon as he was driving to Minneapolis. During the ride, Ulberth said she appeared agitated and complained of the heat. Near the Superior golf course, he said, she suddenly screamed, flung the door open and jumped. The car was traveling between 30 and 35 miles an hour. He picked her up and brought her to General hospital where she died a short time later. Questioned by Miss Elizabeth Owens, assistant county attorney, Ul- berth could give no reason for her actions. They spoke but little and he knew nothing of her, he said. Not until Mr. Pillsbury appeared was she identified. A_ motorist who was behind Ul- berth’s car, Frank Gralla of Delano, told Miss Owens he was too far be- hind to observe the girl's actions: Miss Hagland has a sister, Ingrid, of Minneapolis. Her home formerly was at Buxton, N. D. Plaintiff Awarded $50 in Court Case A jury verdict of $50 damages was returned Saturday in favor of Mrs, H. H. Seibel in a civil action brought by her against John Batley and James Tees before District Judge Fred Jan- sonius. In a similar action brought by Mr. Seibel against Bailey and Tees, the verdict was awarded the defepd- ant with a recommendation for dis- missal of the case. Mrs. Seibel had sued for $2,500 damages and costs, while her husband had asked $150 damages. The charge brought by Mrs. Seibel against Bailey and Tees is that the pair had caused her bodily injuy during the course of an argument over the own- ership of some farm property. Seibel claimed the defendants had damaged his hay rake and harness and fright- ened his team. Use the Want Ads \ DINE IN COMFORT Why not dine where the air is always pure and clean. Our water cooled, washed air system maintains that even cool temperature of 75 degrees. This system has been installed for your convenience and comfort, Good Food THE SWEET SHOP Cool — Comfortable — Always Excellent Service ‘__-THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1938 She Will Grace | Berlin Embassy | | Miss Martha Dodd, above, will go to Berlin with her father, Prof William E. Dodd of the Univ sity of Chicago, when he takes up bis duties as ambassador ta Germany. Eastern Section of State Gets Rainfall With light to moderate thunder showers reported in northern and eastern North Dakota, a generous fall of moisture was received in those sec- tions over the week-end along with high temperatures. The recording of .38 of an inch rain- fall at Crosby, in the northwestern part of the state, marked the greatest rainfall during the 48-hour period ended at 7 a. m. Monday. Lisbon’s .80-inch was next. Among other communities getting considerable rain were Minot .48, Bot- tineau .41, Sanish .40, Williston .34, Grand Forks .28. Parshall received -22, Devils Lake .16, Max .05, Lari- more .04, Hankinson and Fargo .02. Thundred storms were in prospect in southern North Dakota Monday afternoon or night, according to weather bureau predictions, which al- so call for generally fair weather Monday night and Tuesday, cooler Monday night and east and south por- tions Tuesday. Temperatures Monday morning were far in excess of the seasonal normals from the Dakotas southeast- ward, federal weather officials report- Over the week-end the mercury ranged from 88 to 99 degrees in the maximum bracket while minimum re- cordings generaly were in the 50. The high-mark for the state, 99 de- grees was reported at Napoleon. Max was close behind with 98 while Bis- marck reported 97. To Get Bonus Despite Rising Grain Prices] Kansas City, June 26.—(#)—Prof. M. L. Wilson, wheat administrator under the new agricultural adjustment act, said here Monday the administration intends to pay farmers a bonus for reducing their acreage the approach- ing season, regardless of skyrocketing prices for wheat. Wilson was here for the regional extension conference on wheat pro- duction control at which government, officials discussed the domestic allot- ment plan in the first adjustment, meeting. Agricultural experts have comput- ed this policy nationally means a gross bonus of $150,000,000. The administrator's announcement to southwestern wheat growers came at a time when the department of ag- riculture has predicted a badly dam- aged crop through the agencies of drought and heat. Under the present plan discussed at the conference Monday the bonus will be derived from a processing tax on wheat to go into effect July 8 which will amount to 30 cents a bush- el. Expense of administering the col- lection and payment of the tax will come from the gross return to the farmer but is not expected by the ad- ministration to exceed two cents a bushel. Goodyear Tire Firm Boosts Employment Tire sales throughout the country liaive 80 increased within the last few months that manufacturing plants of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber com- pany are now operating to 75 per cent of capacity, according to 8. W. Corwin, local Goodyear dealer. Running four shifts of six hours each, the Goodyear company has re- employed a large percentage of its laid-off workers, and claims to be the first major organization in the rub- ber industry to respond to President Roosevelt's plea for an upward revi- sion of wages. Goodyear company officials are confident, Corwin says, that this pro- gressive step which they have taken will be only the first of many on their upward trek to normalcy. ——— | City-County News | A boy was born at 1:05 a. m. Mon- day to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Newhardt a ‘Washburn at the Bismarck hospi- Girls Diamondball on Program for Tuesday High school girls who will play Giamondball this season will assemble at North Field at 9 o'clock Tuesday morning, it is announced by super- visors. ; Teams will be organized for play and @ general program drawn, it is announced, It is expected the girls will play Tuesday morning, also. LAKE FAIR TO OPEN Devils Lake, N. D., June 26.—(7)— The Lake Region fair will open a five-day exposition here Monday night with a grandstand show. Entries in the livestock, 4-H club and women’s exhibits exceeded expectations. Judg- ing will begin Tuesday which has been designated Rotary-Kiwanis day. A pioneer program has been arrang- ed for Wednesday to be known as Devils Lake day. Horse races and other attractions will be held each afternoon, = 6 29 PERSONS PERISH OF VIOLENT CAUSES ——— Nine Drown, Five in Traffic Crashes, At Least Five Killed By Heat St. Paul, June 26—(4)—Twenty-nine persons perished in the northwest over the week-end from a variety of violent | causes, i Nine drowned, five died in traffic crashes, and at least five deaths were attributed to the heat. Those drowned were: John P. Hors, 20, ranch hand, in reservoir at Roy, Mont. Albert Tower, 13, St. Paul, McCar- ron Lake. Fred Nelson, 69, Dassel, Big Swim Lake. Kenneth Christie, 26, Minneapolis, Bass Lake. Merle Johnson, 15, Carrington, N. D., Arrowhead Lake. Joseph Oldham, 14, Pine Valley, Wis., drowned golf course swimming ‘Pool. Fred Petereit, 70, Minneapolis, Cry- stal Lake. Sylvester Kuhn, 21, near Minneap- olis, Chowen Lake. Edwin Westerman, 35, drowned in Big Elbow Lake when boat capsized. Many Traffic Fatalities ‘The traffic fatalities included: Andrew Peterson, St. Paul, fatally hurt when struck by a car. James Claire, 5, St. James, crushed by beer truck. Jerome Kieselbach, 26, Barnesville, killed when car overturned near Pelican Rapids. Gerald Brennan, 20, Pennsylvania, killed when car overturned near St. James, An unidentified man was killed by a train at Thief River Falls. Tom Blossom, 55, was killed at Gettysburg, 8. D., while digging well when bucket fell. splitting his skull. Mrs. Mary Bogart, Duluth, was fatally injured in fall from window. Mollie Hagland, 19, killed in leap from automobile near Minneapolis. Vernon B. Kolshorn, 27, St. Paul, accidentally shot with own pistol at his parents’ home near Red Wing. Wife of George Brendel, farmer liv- ing west of Henning, Minn., killed herself and five weeks old child. Five Die from Heat The heat deaths included: C. O. Bysven, 70, Pelican Rapids vil- lage assessor, prostrated Sunday. George Chrysler, 64, Belfield, N. D., stricken while watching air races in Minneapolis. Bert Desmond, 51, collapsed in Min- neapolis restaurant. Mauritz Thunnell, 44, died in Min- neapolis of a heart attack superin- duced by the heat. ‘William Steinmeyer, 76, stricken in Minneapolis. Mrs. Bernice Kriesel, 34, Minneapo- lis, fatally hurt in car crash near Hudson, Wis. Laverne Denison, 17, killed while sleeping on railroad tracks near Alma, Allen Edberg, 25, Virginia, Minn., fatally hurt when he fell from a gird- er at a lumber mill. ‘ Ralph Fylken, 16, Minot, mutilated by hog. Sunday School Group Elects Helen Iorns (Tribune Special Service) Shields, N. D., June 26—Miss E. Helen Jorns, Fort Yates, was elected president of the Grant-Sioux County Sunday School association at its an- nual convention held at the Congre- gational church at Shields Sunday. She succeeds Frank Wagner of Lark. Other officers chosen were Mrs. J. H, DeLange, Carson, first vice presi- dent; Mrs. Horace Storm, New Leip- zig, second vice president; Mrs. Clara G. Steele, Raleigh, secretary-treasur- er; Geneva Bahr, Flasher, elementary superintendent; Mrs. Luella Wood- hall, Solen, secondary superintendent; and Mrs. C. D, Belden, Shields, edu- cational superintendent. Approximately 150 delegates and visitors attended the convention, at which Rev. C. A. Armstrong, state superintendent of the North Dakota Council of Religious Education, was the main speaker. Others appearing on the program were Miss Iorns who spoke on “What Makes a Successful Sunday School” and Miss Wilda Sebastian, Carson, whose topic was “The New Program of Temperance Teaching in the Sun- day School.” Choirs from the churches at Flash- er and Shields furnished special musi- cal numbers. fatally Minnesota Receives Scattered Showers St. Paul, June 26.—(#)—Scattered showers in Minnesota Sunday night brought down temperatures which in some cases went into the upper 90s. New Ulm, which reported 98, was the hottest point. Detroit Lakes reported .81 inch precipitation, the heaviest in the state, and Crookston .63 inch. Huron, S, D., reported the high for that state, 98 degrees, and received .01 inch of rain. Otter Tail county had heavy rain which amounted to a half inch in Fergus Falls and considerably more elsewhere. Boy Scout Swimmers Will Compete Tonight Bismarck Boy Scouts will partici- pate in a swimming meet at the city swimming pool Monday evening, be- ginning at 8:30 o'clock. In charge of the meet will be A. C. Van Wyk, pool manager, and Charles Goodwin. The public is invited to witness the events in the three classes. Contest- ants will be divided into three divi- sions for competition. DEVILS LAKE WINS Devils Lake, N. D., June 26.—(7)— Devils Lake batsmen connected for 16 hits to defeat Minot 7 to 6 in an 11- inning baseball game here Sunday. Ninth inning homeruns by Gene Ku- lawik, Bernard Busse, and Coley Mad- den featured the tilt. INJURED NEAR HEBRON Dr. Walter Ebbeling, Philadelphia, his wife and two children suffered minor injuries when their car turned i Long and Short of | | Summer Coiffures | OO New coiffures take the waves gent- ly and far from the brow and pay much attention to the way the ends of the hair are fixed. Two new Fer- dinand coiffures answer the bobbed head's problem and the girl with long hair. The short bob is brushed straight back off the forehead, has some softening little ringlets on the tem- ple and ear and begins its wave slantwise from ear to ear back of the crown of the head. There are only two deep waves and then all the ends are curled up the back of the head, a magnificent coiffure for the new picture hats and the sailors. For the girl who wears her hair long, the hair is brushed back from the forehead, with center front part or no part at all, waved across the top and back of the head and the end rolled softly and wound up around the back wave and tucked in underneath as it circles back down. This insures keeping the shapely headline that women demand today. Four-Year-Old Son Of W. L. Roberts Dies Willard Lewis Roberts, Jr., four- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Roberts, 216 Thayer avenue west, died at 10:30 p. m. Sunday in a Bismarck hospital. His death, which was caused by spinal meningitis, culminated an illness of three weeks’ duration. Besides his father and mother, the boy leaves his sister. Jeanne, aged three. His grandparents, Mr. and |Mrs, F. M. Roberts, Sr., and his uncle, '. M. Roberts, Jr., are residents of Bismarck. His grandmother, Mrs Charles Marquette, of Kendalls, Wis., also has been in Bismarck since the beginning of the child's illness. A short funeral service will be con- ducted by Rev. Walter E. Vater of Mc- Cabe Methodist Episcgpal church at Webb's funeral parlors at 4:30 p. m. Monday, after which the child’s par- ents, accompanied by Mrs. Marquette, will leave for Kendalls, Wis. where the body will be taken for burial. W. L. Roberts, father of the de- ceased, is assistant chemist at tho state regulatory department here. To the World’s Fair. Your through Air Service af- fords a most convenient mode of transportation to the greatest Fair of all times. “Short-cut” your travel time and add a day or two more in which to enjoy the many wonderful attractions. 2:10pm lv Bismarck ar 12:50 pm 6:35pmar Mpls. lv 8:10am 7:25 pmivy Mpls. ar 6:05am 11:15pm ar Chicago Iv 2:00am Restaurant and hotel ac- commodations available at the Minneapolis Airport. You will enjoy this modern mode of travel, especially delightful during the sum- mer season—cool, comfort- able, clean. Plan to make your trip to the World’s Fair—BY AIR —the All-Pleasure Route. NORTHWEST AIRWAYS, INC. over on its side near Herbon Sunday. The family was en route from Phil-| adelphia to Seattle. Telephone 800 or 826 : 1 i , !The family was en route from Phila- New Rockford’s Band ‘THATCHER Ng EAKER ee Winner in Tournament |parts of eastern North Dakota were F , Joe McCluskey, Bismarck, suffered | present here Sunday afternoon to heat Washington Representative of ‘hest injuries and lacerations when|a concert by a massed band of 506 ‘ : ‘ |his automobile went into the ditch on| musicians, the climaxing event of the Grain Bodies Gives Re- = |the Memorial highway ae about 10 annual band tournament. . : ‘o'clock Saturday night, his physician} Harold Bachman of Chicago, noted sume of Legislation said Monday. |band conductor, directed the concert, cecernininnecniomin He was not critically injured and| which was preceded by a parade of M. W. Thatcher, Washington rep- his recovery is assured, the doctor/ the visiting bands, resentative for grain cooperative as- ‘aid. It had been rumored Sunday| The New Rockford governor's band sociations, was the speaker at a meet- that the man had been fatally in-/ took first in the marching contest and ing of the Bismarck Lions club Mon-| jured. jalso in the Class A community band day. The cause of the accident was not) division. Reynolds was first among Thatcher, who has been in close! !carned. Two other men were said ta) Class B community bands. touch with all legislation affecting the have been riding with McCluskey but} In school band divisions, Valley interest of the grain farmer up for re not injured. The automobile was| City was first in class B and Hills- consideration at the recently conclud- | badly damaged. | boro in Class A. ed special session of congress, gave a L vesume of farm aid measures offered, with particular attention to the im- portant features of those measures Gigantic MIRTH and MELODY Show It’s Riotous Fun! which survived the grinding of the congressional mill to become laws. Brief explanations of the working features of the wheat benefit and pro- | cessor’s taxes also were given by Thatcher. Thatcher was introduced by Former Governor Walter J. Mad- Gock, who also was a guest of the club. | W. S. Ayers gave a financial report | on the recent Lions convention held here, | Guests of the club, in addition to Thatcher and Maddock, included E. A. Hatch and Charles C. Goodwin of Bismarck, W. E. Parsons, a former) president of the club, who now resides at Mayville, and E. A. Syftestad, gen-/ eral manager of the Farmers Union Terminal association of St. Paul. | E. B. Klein was program committee chairman. | Two Are Held for Montana Robbery, Minot, N. D., June 26—.?}—Petro| Soulas and Thomas Bastas, in jail at) Minneapolis, were apprehended there } after Alfred Ventureno, 29, had con-| fessed in Minot Saturday that he had} a part in the $1,000 holdup of James Frank at Snowden, Mont., and named | Soulas and Bastas as his companions} in the crime. Soulas and Ventureno until recently | had lived at Great Falls, Mont., and} Bastas is a former resident of thej Snowden vicinity. | Ventureno was taken to Wolf Point, i Mont., Sunday to face a robbery} charge, and Sheriff H. P. Lowe of) Wolf Point said he would go to Min- neapolis to get Soulas and Bastas, to, place robbery charges against them. | Frank, a railroad section laborer, was carrying money on his person, | and intended to return to Greece to visit his former home. | Smart, Fast Musical Comedy! * RUDY VALLEE) * STUART ERWIN * GEORGE BURNS & GRACIE ALLEN * COL.STOOPNAGLE & BUDD * SARI MARITZA * CAB CALLOWAY and His Orchestra * BELA LUGOS!I * BABY ROSE MARIE * Girlsin Cellophane INJURED NEAR HEBRON Dr. Walter Ebbeling, Philadelphia, his wife and two children suffered | minor injuries when their car turned i over on its side near Hebron Sunday. ; Concessions At Fairgrounds Those interested call at i Room 25, City Nat’l. | Bank Bldg., 9 a. m. to i 10 a. m. | | ALWAYS COOL AND COMFORTABLE TODAY AND TUESDAY—USUAL PRICES! Never before such low prices! Maybe never again! Buy now and be sure of owning the world’s finest washer at the lowest price ever known! Comein today! THE MAYTAG COMPANY FOUNDED 18¢2 . NEWTON, IOWA French & Welch Hardware Co. Bismarck, North Dakota ey LOW ES ON MAYTAGS EQUIPPED WITH GASOLINE MULTI-MOTOR

Other pages from this issue: