The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 22, 1933, Page 5

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SUA eean st yE Baca — Fy aed ] | trom Schenectad: ” | y, Mrs. Hop me ton and Mrs. Gray entertained eight Dots With Dash! | PENNEY ASKS E AST Resume Hearing on guests at bridge Friday evening at| 4, > Sugar Agreement the Lhe home. Score prizes were | {}awal to Mrs. Everett LaFrance | Washington, Aug. 26.—()—Hear- bees aie ar ie a RATES 10 NORTHWEST ings are to be resumed Monday by the ; rt aa ; Miss Evelyn Fryer, 420 Second St. Sugar marketing agreement. ‘ Bolivian Missionary |Haynes Postmistress _|ttt the tirst of the week tor » motor | The administration recently sus ape * trip through the Black Hills and oth- |Wants Interstate Commerce ded hearings in the face of ap- be { Speaks at Church Tea] Bride of H. Jacobson er roints in south Dakota. She plans ety. eREacHabl te n't a : pemtats ot return about Sept. 1 in time to be- | Commission to Equalize Per GaaOAs & Bou SAUnieg Bam Leo =A talk by Mrs. Ruth Lynn Smith,] Miss Hattie Dyson, postmistress at Hap toscrtrad Guiles in the shoo! | Rates For All Sections sugar interests, advanced & written #® missionary in Bolivia for the last | Haynes, N. D., for a number of years, ee compromise which opened the way for Lee years, who has just returned to sritaat EE aa pire Welt Mrs. J. M. Harty and two children, further negotiations. ff ie United States for a visit, was a mmon, S. D., is rest The ‘accom! H The beet sugar interests agreed to i surprise feature of an informal tea Nesday according to information re- ny Bind hey ‘Mow, 117 Fiuet t a NEES OL Bet bral een tL limit their commercial output for the yall given by the Standard Bearers of the| ceived by friends here. Rev. George are enjoying an outing at Spiritw ood Penney, Inc., New York City, Tuesday domestic market to 1,750,000 tons. McCabe Methodist church Monday|Hoover of the Lemmon Baptist lke, near Jamestown. filed a complaint with the Interstate Previously, they had taken the atti- ven Eiemoon is the parlors of the wars en or suas: Hit Ge witty i a % % Commerce commission that west- tude that there al be no limit oe urch. Guests 4 tput for tl nti . oman FENN WAMELTY ORES tidt and ‘accessories to Radthoniee was Captain Clarence Agre of the sal pound railroad rates on less than car- Gata 4 Betas: continental S: Mrs, Smith discussed conditions un-| Worn by the bride. Her attendant, |Toume srmva; "OAtre gig ‘Thayer nai eanibGund und GAEEd tba tates The proposed agreement would sl- ¥ der which missionary work is carried | Miss Florence Arnold, Hettinger, wore | | yeoue’ and Mrs. Charles Rowe, Man- bound rates be put into effect on locate to the various interests the fn in Bolivia, mentioning peculair|® frock of rose flat crepe. Ely 8.14.0" Monday for & week's motor westbound traffic. amount of sugar, up to 6,575,000 tons, customs and various incidents of her| Wright, Haynes, was best man. trip through the Black Hills, ‘They The complaint said cotton goods which they might market in the Unit- life there. Mrs, Smith is visiting in| Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson now are on |.) oi visit at Belle Fourche with from Ne ernie’ ed States for the year beginning next h : a wedding trip to Chicago where they |® ai le Fourche wi from New England to California cost 5 Ashley with her parents and came to Mrs. Herman Hayenga, a sister of Mrs. $3.40 a hundredweight while the east- duly 1. Hl “| Bismarck Monday to spend the day Seaton san Sule Bieneie ey Agre. i bound charge would be only $240, a | | Epes bis Noe ry calles oe eae also plan to motor to several points . ee * Sant of $1. The company claim- 1 RAIN DELAYS TENNIS a Asbury : '/in the east before returning to Hay- | _ Miss Elizabeth Roether, 622 Twelfth ed it had been injured to the amount Forest Hills, N. ¥., Aug. 22.—()— Vocal and piano numbers and a| Nes next month to make their home, |St-. has Dna a 4 rhinece or hated by the rates. For the second successive day rain | reading comprised a program given| Mr. Jacabson is a rural mail carrier vacation spent at points in this a e asked that westbound charges Tuesday brought postponement of the ! Wiricee the atta pide at Haynes. and South Dakota. In Zell, 8. D., she not be in excess of the eastbound semi-final matches in singles and Lee} 75 a te Gad wedthieal tie n- RRR bind tad es of ie artes crt M. Bey! Cees cotton piece goods doubles of the women’s national ten- ‘Brown) and “I Passed by Your Win-| Miss Mary Arg oi Sixth ua is wae ry at Glen Ulin with two oth: a Toney Saar ee el aye GUNES oil be played tomor- ae ay Tone Noggle; piano, Sie ata for iis J ue olka To visiy (ef sisters, Mrs. Frank Wehri and Mrs. The petition said the complaint ap- row, weather permitting, and finals vA Dream” Gartiett and “Days of returning to Bismarck the latter part! Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Anderson, For- SeMintiOn teriiry, (wear temne| Only with the beginning of the * ’ - (0! 4 ; 4 : Marjorie Dean; and piano, “Morning” |, Richard Schmidt, Vernel Anderson, | Knudtson, 810 Fifth St, Mrs. An- Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New| Wouaire, will make his third trip to the altar in October with Mrs | Reed tor, 8 dictionary which should (Grieg) and “Goodnight” (Nevin),|£'win Barbie ‘and ‘Bernard Maddock | Gerson Gs 0 ‘slater of Men’ Knudtsgn. Mexico, North Daketa, Oregon,| Pauline van der Voort Dresser, 40-year-old divorcee, with whom he fe |help Englishmen to a better knowl- Beatrice Vater. ’| comprised a party of young men who The Andersons Will Go tron Hare to Washington, Utah and ‘Wyoming, ‘| shown here, soon after announcement of their engagement in New edge of their language. i Garden flowers were effectively ar-| oft Sunday for Chicage to spend) underwood and Minot to, visit. rela~ PE | tom ot seihlas” TEEN Gy ice hyo Progress exposition, teen the Deny OP SRE epee Industrial Group Rev. Logee Asks for | tenable mor hie: Waker E Yast |, Mt R:R, Tourlet and ema son|*®™ ggg Ce | wife of the pastor, and Miss Ruth|Mave returned to Fort Lincoln after! 5 4 ward of the Capitol Laundry Chica, yter- | i . O. go, Aug. 22.—()—The 'govern-| Rev. F. E. Logee of the Presbyter- | Goraner, sponsor of the Standard ere ie oer ne ane |returned Sunday from Grand Forks ment in effect, today sanctioned ad-|ian church’ addressed the Kiwanis ae! : anda Presided. Almost 35 women other points in the east. where on Saturday she attended a mittance into the NRA industrial|club Tuesday on the necessity of se- The affair was arranged by Miss Cordner, assisted by a group of young girls who are members of the junior missionary society, TITTLE BROS. PACKING CO., INC. 400 Main Phone 332 Wed. and Thurs. Specials BABY BEEF SIRLOIN STEAK 19¢ - Lb. - 19¢ YOUNG TENDER BOILING BEEF SUGAR CURED BACON SQUARES 10%%c - Lb. - 10% R. FRESH SLICED PORK LIVER Wy Lb. - - Te * * ® Mrs, C. N. 8. Ballou and children and Mrs. Ballou’s sister, Mrs. Wilhel- mina Collier, Minneapolis, plan to leave Wednesday for Devils Lake to spend about 10 days visiting with friends. * * *% Miss Nell Mickelson and Miss Helen Preston left Monday evening for their homes in St, Paul after spending the week-end here with Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Preston, 310 West Thayer avenue. Miss Mickelson is a niece and Miss Preston a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Preston. ee % Miss Alice Morrison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Morrison of St. Paul, has come to Bismarck to take a position with the local Buttrey store. Miss Morrison will make her home at 522 Avenue D. Mrs. Morri- son, who accompanied her here, re- * e % Miss Maé Lidstrom, Detroit Lakes, left Saturday for her home following @ three-weeks visit heré with her sis- ters, Mrs. Harold Hopton, 615 Sec- ond St. and Mrs. Lyle Gray. She ‘was accompanied to Detroit Lakes by Mrs. Gray, who remained there for the week-end. Oc#nplimentary to Miss Lidstrom and to Mrs. Theodore Sherarts, who recently came here meeting of the North Dakota Laun- drymen’s association in regard to adoption of the NRA code for laun- dries. Mrs. Ward, who has passed the summer at the Ward cottage at Lake Isabel, returned to Bismarck with him, ee Little change was noted Monday in the condition of Mrs. Carl Myhre, Bismarck woman who is critically ill at the Mayo hospital in Rochester, according to information received by friends here. Mrs. Myhre, who was injured in an automobile accident about three weeks ago, recently un- {derwent two operations at the Ro- chester hospital. * 8% Captain and Mrs. George Connor, Fort Lincoln, entertained eight guests at a dinner Monday evening at their quarters in compliment to Major and Mrs. John R. Oswalt, who leave Mrs. A. G. Olson, 511 Eighth 8t., left Monday for St. Joseph where she is employed as Girl Reserve secretary. She accompanied Mrs. L. Stone and her daughter, Miss Alice Stone of St. Joseph, who motored here and spent the week-end at the Olson home. Miss Stone is general Y. W. C. A. secretary at St. Joseph. * * * Miss Eleanor McCormick, Mandan, Cost of fur FRANKLY — t! has been reach Increased fur prices are already a fact! Prices on raw furs are climbing stead- y! labor has increased! he Rock Bottom on ed and passed. Frederick-James anticipated a rising market and prepared months ago for the greatest value giving August sale in years. A small deposit will reserve your selection. Convenient credit terms may be arranged. Two days only, Com- mencing Noon Wed. All Day Thursday August 23-24 FUR COAT STYLES WERE NEVER MORE BEAUTIFUL Mrs. George V. Harris, on a stroll at Saratoga Springs, wore a simple white sports dress topped by a polka dotted silk coat, as shown above. 20 young women at a buffet supper and bridge party at her home. A profusion of garden flowers as used in profusion of garden flowers was used in decorating the rooms. High scores in the card games went to Misses Kathleen Warren and Josephine Mc- Cormick. Guests from Bismarck in- cluded Misses Catherine McKinnon, Helen Taylor, and Peggy and Lydia Bertsch. f City and. County E. L. Schlechter of the A. W. Lucas store left Sunday on a buying trip to Minneapolis and Chicago for the store. A baby boy was born Tuesday morn- ernment will be either “politely ig- nored or driven from the field by a Pop-bottle barrage of conflict of in- terest,” Senator L. J. Dickinson of Iowa predicted Tuesday. Senator Dickinson, keynote speaker of the last Republican national con- vention, addressed a luncheon group at the Midland Club, commenting up- on the government's economic pro- gram. “The present administration in Washington is definitely committed to @ policy of centralized government control,” Senator Dickinson said. Open criticism would soon appear against the general program of gov- ernment direction of private enter- prises, he declared. “Soon it will be claimed that re- covery in industry will be more cer- tain and business more stable if per- mitted to return to its old channels The ultimate cost of the economic program, he prophesied. would be borne by the public, in the form of the North Park hotel vault, took $1,000 from the safe and looted the safety boxes of 24 guests of an undetermin- ed amount of money and valuables. They held employes prisoners more than an hour. Sept. 13, 1922, the thermometer reg- istered 136.4 degrees in the shade at Azizia, in the northern African des- ert. Hopes for Film Career Blasted Bright hopes of Vivian Tracey, above, 19-year-old, red-haired Topeka stenographer for becom- was hostess recently to a company of | ;, ing a movie star went glimmer- | group of 113 companies which have been unable to negotiate a trade code because of the existence of permanent consent decrees enjoining them from violation of the Sherman anti-trust aw. Counsel for the Tanner-Products company appeared before Federal Judge Walter C. Lindley and request- ed modification of the consent decree to allow it to draw up and subscribe ed in contempt of court. Authorities from Washington at- tended the hearing and consented to modification. The action was expect- ed to determine government policy re- garding the various industries which submitted to the Sherman anti-trust law injunction, enabling them to en- roll under the blue eagle. The court agreed that if the trade code is accepted by the administra- tion and if some of its provisions are New York, Aug. 22.—(#)—The psy- chological reason why great men and others like detective stories is out— the tales are soothing. They cut the puse rate, lower blood pressure and steady motor nerves. Furthermore, women react to them like the men. ‘These experiments are published by Ray Mars Simpson, psychologist at the Institute for Juvenile Research, Chicago. His test readers were 40 university students, 24 men and 16 women. Their ages were 18 to 41. While wearing attachments to re- cord their physical status, they read detective stories, history, psychology and geography, in 15-minute periods, for six successive days. The first, uhird and fifth days were devoted to detective stories. The instruments showed that the rate of breathing was consistently fas- breathing was on a declining rate, the longer they read the slower it be- came. several years. to an NRA code without being judg-; x judged in conflict with the injunction|the century of progress sufficientl; urn ie le 4 Fr 7c - Lb. - Tc prea seise eal ruse, Hee oe oe ee Nehanden| 08 to Mr. and Mrs, William Froelich |restrictions, Judge Lindley will again|to build a. firm foundation for thy| FRESH CUT Mrs. R. Van Neste, 610 Fifth St.,| flowers were used in decorating the of de Eighth street, at St. Alexius|be asked to modify the decree so as to! cooperative Program which we are PORK STE. ‘AK has returned to Bismarck following a| tables and rooms. Contract was play- eae eal Geeta ee a Cee ai 10-days’ visit in Jamestown and Wil-|ed with Major J, F. Duckworth and reste Ph leery tocereareear alas ie 10c - Lb. - 10 Uston. In Jamestown she was the|Mrs. Oswalt holding high scores. A/Government Is Poor — {1 viclstion of the injunction. | Minicinal League to guest of her brother, Rev. George|favor was presented to Mrs. Oswalt. U * Di ki A . * HOME MADE Monroe Thomas, who accompanied *% % mpire, Dickinson Detective Stories Meet in Jamestown LINK SAUSAGE her to Williston to spend several days} Miss Emily Olson, St. Joseph, Mo., lared Soothi with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. M.| who has spent the last three months| Chicago, Aug. 22—(P)—As an um- Declare: OOTNIN| The annual meeting of the North 12c - Lb. - 12¢ Thomas. in Bismarck with her parents, Mr, and| pire in economic disputes, the gov- Dakota League of Municipalities will Porting and patronizing employers and | curing cooperation of all consumers to insure the ultimage success of the NRA program, “The government is asking all consumers to sign the fol- lowing solemn pledge, he said: ‘I will cooperate in reemployment by sup- workers who are members of the | NRA’ | “As a matter of fair play it is the | responsibility of employers to secure the pledge from customers and it is equally the responsibility. of custom- ers to sign the pledge,” said Rev. Logee, “because it is only by the full- est cooperation between manufactur- er, retailer and consumer that we can pull ourselves out of the depression as we are going to do.” Discussing incidents of his recent | vacation, part of which was spent viewing the Century of Progress ex- position at Chicago, Rev. Logee sug- gested that we should all celebrate | i be held at Jamestown Sept. 19, ac- cording to an announcement Tues- day by Myron Atkinson, secretary of the association. Otto Bauer, Man- dan, is president. The North Dakota Water and Sew- | age Works conference which will be | held in Jamestown on Sept. 20 will} participate in a joint dinner of the| two organizations on the evening of | Sept. 19, according to Atkinson. A. L.; Bavone, former state sanitary engi- neer, is secretary of the water and sewage works conference. | Billy Sunday Quits Prohibition Fight Omaha, Neb., Aug. 22.—()—Billy |Sunday, long a fiery dry” orator, is ‘going to give up the preaching of pro- hibition, he said today as he went an eight weeks evangelistic campaign. | “I can’t continue to preach prohi- | bition and preach the gospel,” Sunday | | the eighteenth amendment will soon! be repealed. “ fich green color. _ AGELESS BEAUTY Priceless is the glamour of a flaw- less skin. And Palmolive helps to bring out that skin-glamour. ated something breath-taking about a lovely skin. It makes a woman seem young, whatever her years may be. And if such a skin is your desire, let Palmolive — the soap of youth —do all it can to help you. Palmoliveisblendedof gentleoliveand palm oils. The secret of its beauty results lies not only in its beauty ingredients—but also in its exclu- sive blend—a blend which has made Palmolive the world’s biggest selling beauty soap. Olive oil—nothing else—gives it that soft, Olive oil, too, gives Palmolive a velvety lather which penetrates the tiny pores, freeing them of accumulations easily. . . leaving skin soft, smooth, gloriously clear and fresh. Buy three cakes today. Then stare this 2-minute treatment: every morning and evening, mas- sagea rich lather of Palmolive Soap gently into the skin; rinse it off with warm water, then with cold. Do that twice every day for a month. of activity,” the senator said. “It is|ter while reading detective stories, and |through Omaha bound for his ranch — with — ture of the Rachel Crothers’ stage my belief that the best business minds}deeper during exciting than less-|at Hood River, Ore. He was stricken! 2 lay that kept awa: are of that opinion now.” exciting tales. But this speeded up|with hay fever recently at the end of | Myrna Loy pay ept Broadway gossiping Alice Brady Frank Morgan new and increased taxes. rae Cee fee and asI used to i REFINER’S WIFE DIES e an e load is too heavy. So I'm — Also — 4 : CHICAGO HOTEL ROBBED Paris, Aug. 22—(P)—Mrs, Claus A.|returning to my first Jove—preaching W. C. Fields A daring, heart-gripping love- y chieaio, as Bes Five bandits) Spreckels, 69, wife of the American Ean aeauitincl | es int story! Plus Delightful je¥TO} iotel employes early Tues- finer, died at her residence ie irm pro- | o ” " dey as they hammered the lock off ee ‘Bhe had lived in France for|hibitionist, but he said he believes| “The Barber Shop’ Comedy! in her @ husband’s life! vp Husbands! Wives! Here's the pic- fer months, It's the frankest, most truthful drama of modern marriage yet to come to the screen. ing when her employer, Ronald | Thisvial shows the Soon you'll discover what Palmolive can do to | * Finney, broker, was charged 7 exact amount of Bismarck, ROBERT ON 9 S Bismarck, Sah oho dele oF teltetaoteitics bp yn cisae a cot glamourous skin and a aio ot per et In Kansas’ $800,000 forged jore enchanting 1. usedin i ¢ f N. D. ; N. D. bonds scandal. Vivian is ex- of Palmolive. pected to be an important wit- ness in Finney’s trial. It is claimed Finney promised her a movie career. 1893 — 40 Years of Fur Service — 1933 | PALMOLIVE...the soap of Youth

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