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SOCIETY NEVS Junior Musie Club B. P. W. Club Closes Will Hold Program Members of the Bismarck Junior! The Bismarck Business and Pro- | fessional Women's club voted to re- LESSOR eg Program | Guco its dues from $10 to $5 per year and business meeting at 7 o'clock this | 9; the. final business session for the eening at the Dahners-Tavis Music | summer season, held Tuesday evening store at which all members are Soe a picnic supper in Pioneer park. Reuiea tose cent ' Mrs, Mary K. Davis, vice president, The program will include vocall| presided during the business meeting, solos by Edith Guthrie, who will sing when plans for curtailing the cost of “Pale Stars” (Jonciers) and “Garden maintaining the club room in the Thoughts” (Fanuels); a violin selec-| World War Memorial building were tion by Evan Kennedy, who will play | adopted. @ Negro spiritual; “Kerry Dancing”| Miss Catherine McDonald served as (Malloy), a vocal solo by Bernard|chairman of the picnic eommittee. Flehert and a piano solo, “Coast-| She was assisted by Mrs. Davis. ing” (Burleigh), by Donna Jean} * % Davis. | +e % | were in Bismarck Tuesday to visit Mrs. John Burke, 224 Avenue A| their daughter, Miss Mildred Mantz, West, is back from St. Paul where she | who underwent a tonsilectomy at the spent the last week with friends. | St. Alexius hospital. They motored * eR here with Christ Wolff and Otto Mr. and Mrs. Krist Kjelstrup and|Gackle, both of Fredonia, who spent their son Marvel, 1022 Fifth St. are| the day in the city. Mr. Wolff came on a motor trip to Minnesota lake|hefe to get his wife,.who has been resorts and to Minneapolis where they | receiving treatment at the St. Alex- will spend a short time with relatives. | ius hospital for some time. ee * % Mrs, J. J. Rue, 711 Avenue A, is ex-|_ Mr. and Mrs. Paul Halloran, 507 pected to return Wednesday afternoon | Fourth St., left Wednesday by auto- from Crosby, where she was summon- |mobile for Fort Collins, Colo., where ed more than a week ago by the ser- | they will spend about two weeks visit- ious illness of a brother. ing with relatives. At Fort Collins ee * they will be guests of Mr. Halloran’s Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Sanborn, daugh-| brother, James Halloran. They will ters Arleen and Grace and son Jack,|be accompanied to Bismarck by Mr. 706 Avenue E, are back from Minne-)Halloran’s mother, Mrs. Mary Hal- apolis where they spent about 10 days |loran, who has been making her home visiting with relatives. Miss Arleen| with hef son in Colorado. has been visiting relatives in Min- eee neapolis for about six weeks. |_ Honoring Mr. and Mrs. Edward ee 8 \Flanagan, whose marriage took place in Bismarck Tuesday, a dance was given Tuesday evening at the home of the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Flanagan, who reside north of the city. A company of about 200 relatives and friends assem- bled for the dancing, bringing with them gifts for Mr. and Mrs. Flana- gan’s new home. Gutenberg’s orches- tra played for the dancing in the hay- loft of the barn, which had been dec- orated with streamers and festoons of blue and white. A supper was served Hee midnight. Mr. and Mrs. David Mantz, Medina, Miss Elizabeth Fisher, East Orange, N. J., has arrived in Bismarck for a visit with Miss Margaret Will, 323 Park St. Miss Fisher, who will spend @ month or longer in Bismarck, is a classmate of Miss Will at Smith college, Northampton, Mass. | ee % | Mr. and Mrs. C. B, Whittey, daugh- | ters Frances and Peggy Lou and sons Charles and Paul, 722 Sixth St., have left on a motor trip to Chicago and points in Indiana. After a visit at the Century of Progress exposition the party will go to Plymouth, Ind., for @ visit with Mrs. Whittey’s parents.) Mrs. C. C. Turner, wife of Warden They will be away two weeks. Turner of the state penitentiary, left +e oF | Wednesday noon by automobile for Mrs. Douglas Lane will leave| Carrington where she will attend the Thursday morning for her home in| biennial session of the grand lodge of Minneapolis after spending the last} Pythian Sisters. Mrs. Turner is grand six weeks in Bismarck as the guest of| mistress of records for the state or- Mr. Lane’s mother, Mrs. Otto Holta! ganization. Sessions will open Thurs- and his sister, Miss Harriet Lane, 504| day morning, with a joint meeting of West Broadway. A number of social|the Knights of Pythias grand lodge affairs were given for Mrs. Lane dur-|and will continue through Friday. ing the last few weeks. Mrs. Esther Beymer, Doyon, N. D., * + * grand chief, will preside. Mrs. Mary Mrs. Alfred S. Dale, 1016 Eighth St., | Terwilliger, Livingston, Mont., su- Mrs. E. O. Bailey, 523 Avenue A West; | preme chief of the order, is expected Mrs. M. M. Ruder, 206% Main avenue; | to attend the convention. end Mrs. George Brittin, 418 Second St. comprised a party of Bismarck | “=~, women who left carly Wednesday for! Meetings of Clubs, | the annual board meeting and sum-| | Fraternal Groups | NE LEE SERRE SSS ee * mer conference of the North Dakota Federation of Nonpartisan clubs, which will be held at the W. W. Wixer | farm near Berthold June 28-30. Mrs. Dale is president of the state organ- ization. The Willing Workers of the First | Lutheran church will meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Engen, 811 Sixth St., Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. Hostesses will be Mrs. Engen and Mrs. Hjalmer Nelson. Last C. C. C. Company Leaves Ft. Lincoln A company of 220 citizen conserva- tion corps men left for Jamestown Wednesday to encamp there for re- forestation and conservation work Two officers are in charge of the |group. The company is the last to leave Fort Lincoln where they had been in training. * Be Mrs. John J. Caplice and infant son, John Michael, will leave Bis- marck Friday evening for Spokane, ‘Wash., where they will join Mr. Caplice who left several weeks ago! for Spokane. Mr. and Mrs. Caplice | will make their home in Spokane, where Mr. Caplice is assistant to the} president of the American Medical Life Insurance company. Mrs. Caplice | will be accompanied to Spokane by| her mother, Mrs. Mell Pollard, 923 Eighth St., who will spend the bal- ance of the summer there. Mrs. Caplice has been a guest of honor at several farewell parties recently. “What am I bid for : THE LAST MAN ON EARTH?" A modern Don Juan... . heart- whole... fancy free...sound of , wind and limb...put up at } auction to a host of gorgeous, FOX FILM presents Edna May OLIVER Gloria STUART Millions of women...with but a single thought! Thelast man on earth, and theyall wanted him! \T'S GREAT TO BE AL\Ve | It’s Spicy — Gay — Tuneful! Songs — Comedy — and ALWAYS COOL AND COMFORTABLE COMING The Giant Film Spectacle F Y \ oxy “BEN HUR” in Sound ONLY Season With Picnic JUDITH Hollywood.—Scotch plaids add mer look these days. For a travel outfit, Judith Allen very cute, long and tight, with little armholes, over the tight sleeves. gingham sailor cap. Roosevelt Hotel. suede belt and pumps. Elizabeth Young, newcomer in white quilted plaid gingham jacket dress. FEDERAL RELIEF {§ DESCRIBED 10 CLUB Judge A. M. Christianson of Su- preme Court Addresses Rotarians eee ses A resume of the federal govern- ment’s relief activities since passage of the R. F. C. act in 1932 was given in a talk before the Bismarck Rotary club at the organization’s luncheon program Wednesday noon by Su- Ppreme Court Justice“A’ M, Christian- son. The act provided two systems by which counties could borrow, Judge Christianson said. In one plan the county paid back the money and in the other plan a_ corresponding amount was deducted from the bor- rowing county's federal road building allotment. | Thirty-six counties in North Da- kota received relief, Judge Christian- son said. Many borrowed to the full extent permitted. 30 Per Cent Is Gift On May 12 the Roosevelt adminis- tration emergency relief and public works act was passed, appropriating $500,000,000, one-half of which will be available for use in states. Thirty per cent of the amounts received by sub- divisions, he said, will be regarded as gifts from the federal government but the remaining 70 per cent must be paid back by the sub-divisions. He told of attending the relief con- ference at the white house June 14; at the call of Harry L. Hopkins, relief administrator. Judge Christianson is @ member of the North Dakota state emergency relief committee. At this conference a great many governors were present and in their reports they presented a graphic pic- ture of conditions in this country, the justice said. Reports from one state indicated that 40 per cent of its en- tire population had been on the relief rolls. In connection with his talk, Judge Christianson passed about the club a Hollywood Sees Red | —_— MARIAN NIXON Hollywood. — Summer seems to make all the well-dressed ladies about here see red. If they don’t wear out- right red costumes, all of them have a dash of it somewhere in their get- , ups, Marian Nixon wears @ scalloped edged red belt and red straw hat with a navy blue crepe skirt and quilted blue and white taffeta jac- ket costume. Her blue kid pumps have red piping, too. Lunching at the Beverly-Wilshire with Winifred ehan, Janet Gay- nor wore a navy blue woolen swagger coat lined with red and white checked gingham—and no hat. Joan Bennett wore a candy-striped red and white sports dress to lunch- eon, simply made, topped by a red and white plaid blouse with a beige corduroy suit. ALLEN M zest to the Colony’s colorful sum- wears @ gay red, blue, black, beige The sleeves are flounces clear around them at the The neck is high, with an Ascot tie. Maureen O'Sullivan, having a short vacation at Catalina Island, wears a two-piece blue and white plaid gingham beach outfit with a The Yellow Kid had nothing on Sylvia Sidney, lunching at the Sylvia was all in yellow—yellow plaid dress, of woven material, yellow linen broad-brimmed hat, yellow tie, yellow Hollywood, wears a red, green and over a white tailored pique sports The jacket is a very short swagger one. the judicial council of this state from 1930 through Sept. 30, 1932, on laws pertaining to poor relief, poor farms and mothers’ pensions. In a letter from President Roose- velt to the conference of relief ad- ministrators, from which Judge Christianson quoted excerpts, the ex- local units of government do their fair share, Wants Competent Set-Up sponsibility as possible on the state means a competent set-up in each state, preferably a commission of five or six well-known citizens, who will not only administer the relief in a business-like way but entirely apart from partisan politics. The only way Telief officials can be assured that relief is to have competent adminis- tration.” D. E. Shipley, a guest, urged Ro- tarians to support the Bismarck base- ball team and invited members of the club to attend a game Wednesday evening against the Gray Ghosts of St. Louis and next Sunday against the Colored House of David. President George Duemeland an- nounced that Fred A. Copelin will be general program chairman for the next year. Those named to the pro- gram committee for July include M. H. Atkinson, Harvey Niles, Dr. Leon- ard W. Larson and L. K. Thompson. ert Nuessle of Bismarck, Dr. George a ae a | City-County News | Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mahoney, daughter, born Monday at their home. Mr. and Mrs. Krem are parents of a girl born at 7 marck hospital. Miss Ella M. Fode, Wing. Fargo on the Northwest Airways mail Plane Wednesday. Northern Pacific to A change in schedule of two North- ern Pacific trains, effective July 2, was announced Wednesday by T. P. Allen, local Northern Pacfic agent. According to the new schedule train of at 11:35 a. m., while No. 2 will ar- rive at 12:03 p. m., rather than at 12:11 p. m., Trains Nos. 1 and 4 wére not affected. The change will bring mail from the east to Bismarck more than one- half hour earlie AN INEXPENSIVE, SMART WARDROBE CAN BE PLANNED FROM THIS BOOK If you have not yet ordered this Anne Adams Pattern Book, tead for your copy todsy. Ie shows the kind of styles that well-dressed women and chil- dren will wear all through the Summer. Every model ‘can be made easily and quickly. See © the pattern feature of this newse and white checked fez and red and white checked sandals. paper for price and ordering ja structions. bound volume containing reports of ecutive said it is essential under the | % new relief scheme that the states and | ¢ “Obviously the federal relief ad-| ¥ ministrator should put as much re-|¢ administration,” the letter said. “This | % people are getting relief who need | ¥ B. K. Skeels was program chairman % Wednesday. Guests included Lewis} ¢ Champlan of Hartford, Conn., Rob- | ¢ C. Foster and W. F. Kurke of Fargo. | ¢ 413 Griffin St, are parents of a/ 9% Rudolph Miller of| ¥ o'clock Tuesday evening at the Bis+| A marriage license was issued Tues-|% day to Frank J. Walker, Regan, and |X M. B. Chapin was a passenger tol Change Train Time : No. 3 will arrive at 11:03 a. m,, instead] % f\ Thursday, June 29 Values That Are Unusual in Ladies’ Wear at the time when two months or more use can be had— : Cool Cotton Dresses s] How often have you wished for a cool little dress to slip into these warm days. Just drop in and see these. Cool as a breeze.... many sheer fabrics. . . . and such becoming styles .... Sleeveless, short sleeves and capelets .... crisp, fresh organdie trim- mings... . light and dark colors. Sizes tor Misses and Women, 14 to 50 ' Beautiful Patterns Eyelets Batistes Piques And Lovely Summer Prints Buy Summer. Hats Now Unrestricted Choice Values to $3.95, 2 for $1 Values to $5.95, Each $1 Choose any hat you like. We have cut the prices to these extremely low marks regard- less of what they are worth. 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