The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 28, 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)

Pe FORM ope mccee oe mip pene: om Sewell Mason Weds Margaret J. Lovell A late summer wedding of interest to friends here took place Aug. 21 at Beach, when Miss Margaret Jean Lovell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark L. Lovell of Beach, became the bride of Sewell Luverne Mason, son of Mr. and Mrs, E. H. Mason of Sentinel Butte, N. D. Rev. Ralph McNeil, pastor of the Beach Methodist church, read the ceremony before an improvised altar of gladioli and Badlands cedar in the bride's home. Only family members attended. Before the ceremony a pro- gram of nuptial music was presented by Mark L. Lovell, Jr., and the Misses Ruth, Dorothy and Janet Lovell, brother and sisters of the bride, and Miss Merle Lovell, her cousin. The bride wore her mother’s wed- ding gown of ivory satin and Irish lace and a veil of heirloom lace. Her bouquet was @ nosegay of Ophelia roses. She was attended by her sister, Miss Elinor Lovell, wearing a frock of pale blue net over peach satin and carrying a sheaf of Talisman roses. M. A. Tovey, Beach, was best man. A wedding breakfast was served to 22 guests following the ceremony. Mr. Mason and his bridge now are on ® motor trip to Yellowstone park and are to make their home in Grand Forks on their return. The bride was graduated from the University of North Dakota. She is &@ member of Kappa Alpha Theta sor- ority. She has been Girl Reserve sec- retary at the Grand Forks Y. W. C. A. for several years, Mr. Mason is an instructor in mathematics at the University of North Dakota, of which he is a grad- uate. He is a member of Phi Alpha Epsilon fraternity. x * ok Mrs. Theodore Quanrud and chil- fren, 601 Seventh &t., have gone to Leith to spend about a week at the T. W. Asbridge ranch near there. ee * Mrs. Sofie Enge and daughters, Dr. M. S. Enge and Miss Hilda Enge, left Monday for their home at Albuquer- que, N. Mex., after spending about 10 days in Bismarck with their son and brother, Dr. R. 8. Enge and Mrs. Enge, 518 Fifth st. *e * Mr. and Mrs. Ben Moser and their daughters, Mrs. Nick Buri and Mrs. Lydia Smith, and two small daugh- ters, left Sunday for their homes in Milbank, 8. D., after a few days’ vis- it at the home of Dr. and Mrs. R. 8. Enge, 518 Fifth St. Mrs. Enge is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Moser. x ek * Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Selbman, Miles City, Mont., are in Bismarck for a brief visit with Mr. Selbman’s broth- er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. George Munger, 408 Avenue F. They are returning to their home after a visit at the Century of Progress expo- sition in Chicago, * * % Miss Peggy Jane Skeels, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, B. K. Skeels, 521 West Thayer avenue, has returned from. Bordulac, N. D., where she was a guest at the home of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Murphy. She was accompanied to Bismarck by a niece of Mr. Murphy, Miss Jean Deverall, Grand Forks, who will spend about @ week here with Miss Skeels. ee * ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Halpern and sons, George and Richard, Los An- geles, Calif, spent the week-end in Bismarck with Mr. Halpern’s brother- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Rosen, 205 Avenue A West. They left Monday for Minneapolis, where they will visit, and were accompanied there by Mr. Halpern’s mother, Mrs. Jacob Halpern, Minneapolis, who has been & guest at the Rosen home. xe * Mrs. Agnes Robinson and sons, Courtland and Jack, Seattle, Wash., former Bismarck residents, arrived in Bismarck Monday for a visit with friends and plan to remain until Saturday when they will continue their trip to Minneapolis, ‘They are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Spencer Boise, 618 West Thayer ave- nue. Mrs. Robinson is the widow of | the late Dr. C. O. Robinson, for sev- eral years nose and throat specialist with the Quain and Ramasted clinic. * * * Ellen and Benny Tillotson, daugh- ter and son of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Tillotson, 100 Avenue A West, have teturned to Bismarck from Fargo, where they spent a few days with their grandmother, Mrs. W. F. Low- man. Ellen also visited with friends ‘n Grand Forks, and while there was complimented with a bridge Party given by Shirley Pitzer. Miss Emilee Carr Is Bride of Texas Man —— i Friends here have received informa- tion of the marriage of Miss Emilee Bates Carr, daughter of Mrs. John W. Carr, Jamestown, and the late Lieu- tenant Governor Carr, to Daniel Rus- sell, Georgetown, Tex, The wedding took place Aug. 12 at Houston, Tex, With Rev. Mr. Windham, rector of the Episcopal church, reading the service. The bride, who has visited in Bis- Marck many times, was graduated from Jamestown college with the class of 1931. Recently she has been em- Ployed as a technician at St. John’s hospital, Houston, Mr. Russell and his bride are to make their home in Houston, where the bridegroom has oil interests, outing at the Howe cottage on Wildwood lake, as guests of Miss Esther Howe of Wilton. Miss Beatrice Bowan, 800 Fifth St. was hostess to the same group of girls at ‘& bridge party Friday night and Mrs. Stewart Hanks, Mandan, entertained them at a one o'clock luncheon the same day. Miss Madge Runey, Mc- Kensie, entertained the group inform- ally Thursday afternoon. sek Miss Frances Peterson, 208 Avenue | B, has returned to Bismarck after Spending a week in Chicago attend- is the Century of Progress exposi- tion. | City-County News | — SO Fred F. Fleck of Pierce county, & legislative employe at the last ses- sion of the general assembly, was a business visitor in Bismarck Saturday. He flew here from Aberdeen with Pilot R. H. Bertch and Curtis Davis of Aberdeen. Fleck now is a sales- man for the state mill and elevator, working the South Dakota territory. x * * Mrs, Laura C. Sterrett, 508 Avenue A, has returned from a week-end out- ing at Spiritwood lake, near James- town. ek kK E. G. Patterson, proprietor of the Patterson hotel, returned to Bismarck Saturday from Chicago, where he has spent several months. * * James Andrus, Bismarck, has re- turned from an outing at Christmas lake, near Minneapolis, where he also attended an agency meeting of an insurance company. * * % Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Morton and daughters, Harriet and Joan, 1011 Eighth St., left Sunday by automo- bile for Duluth, where they will spend a few days, x ke * Mrs, E. E. Enright, Riverside, Ml, left Sunday for her home following a six-week visit in Bismarck with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Enright, 515 Third 8t. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Cordner and children, 718 First St., have returned from Linton, where they spent the week-end as guests of Mrs, Cordner’s brother and sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Wolverton. ee # Miss Catherine Andrist, 508 Avenue E, returned to Bismarck Saturday fol- lowing a two-week visit in Chicago and Milwaukee and a Great Lakes boat trip. In Milwaukee she visited with Miss Edna Dean Best, former Bismarck resident. ee & August Rabischung, who makes his home here with his daughter, Mrs, R. G. Morton, 1011 Eighth 8t., returned to Bismarck Saturday from Minneap- olis, where he spent the last six weeks with his cones Mrs. Alma Mills, * * Mrs. E. B. Gorman, 702 Avenue F, will leave Tuesday for Chicago, where she will visit her daughter, Miss Dol- ores Gorman, and her son, James Gorman. She also plans to spend a short time at the Century of Progress exposition before returning in about 10 days, * oe * Justice and Mrs. A. M. Christian- son and their daughter, Ruth, and son, Marc, 1005 Fifth St., left Bis- marck Saturday for Chicago to spend about a week attending the Century of Progress exposition. They expect- ed to attend the ceremonies Wednes- day, which has been designated North Dakota day at the fair. xe # ‘Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Herbert, Hunt- ington Park, Calif, who arrived Te- cently to spend about two weeks with Mr. Herbert's parents, Mr. and Mrs, E. W. Herbert, 813 Avenue C, were complimented at a dinner given Sun- day evening by the elder Mr. and Mrs. Hrebert. Nine guests were seated at the table which had a centerpiece of late summer flowers, e * * Thelma Liessman, 615 Sev- and Isabelle Humphreys, 930 Eighth St., students at the North Dakota Agricultural college, are mem- bers of a group designated as Campus Sisters who are working out a sched- ule of activities for the benefit of new women students at the school. Miss Jeanette McComb, Fargo, is chairman of the group. Among the duties of the Campus Sisters will be meeting trains, showing new girls about the campus, and arranging so- cial affairs to acquaint new students with the older girls, * * # Miss Margaret Dadey, Fargo, who has spent the last 10 days with friends in Bismarck, left Sunday for her home. She was a guest of Miss Thelma Liessman, 615 Seventh St., while here and was complimented at a number of social affairs given by local mem- bers of Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, of which she is a member. On Sat- urday afternoon a group of sorority Misses enth 8t., WE CUT Grain Fed Meats EXCLUSIVELY LARD So peek ec cccsssconsscs THO PORK Fancy Roast.” Chopped Beef, Pork Sausage "=, POT ROAST, Grain Fed, Ib.......... SLICED BACON CONCORDS TOMATOES CANTALOUPE TOMATO JUICE, Libby's, No. 1 can .. MAYONNAISE, Minneopa % Fancy, ve SDC : 5c Mustard, tree. ...... 15 4 for OVALTINE 50c Size, Special .. 14¢ | rece, Sugar Cured, 210c 124c .12c 10c BACON, Ends, BBL ono. asnnessvesseders Fancy, Red Ripe, 4 pounds . GUSSNER’S PHONE 1060 A marriage license was issued Sat- urday to Miss Allene Mae Sawyer and Hans Pederson, both of Driscoll. Army Officers Are Assigned to Fort Orders transferring three junior of- ficers to duty at Fort Lincoln have been received recently by Colonel George W. Harris, post commandant. New officers, who are expected to report for duty some time within the next month are First Lieutenant Gerald St. C. Mickle, who has been on duty in the Panama Canal zone; Second Lieutenant Tito G. Moscatelli, who is being transferred from Hawaii; and Second Lieutenant Adrian L. Hoebeke, a member of the 1933 class at West Point. Information that Colonel Wallace ‘McNamara, who has been in com- mand of the Fourth Infantry regi- ment, Fort George Wright, Wash., has been relieved from the command and ordered to duty with the R. O. T. C. battalion at Dallas high school, Dal- Jas, Texas, has been received at the post. Colonel McNamara formerly was commanding officer at Fort Lin- coln. Troops stationed there are a part of the Fourth Infantry regiment. Legion Redistricts N. D. Into Nine Areas Fargo, N. D., Aug. 28—()—North Dakota was redistricted into nine areas Sunday when the American Le- elon executive committee met here to complete plans for the state Legion- naires’ part in the national conven- tion at Chicago. Formerly there were six districts but the new arrangement is expecied to facilitate Legion work and make for Greater efficiency, according to W. H. Johnson of Minot, state commander here for the meeting. The delegates for 1933 will represent six districts, Johnson explained, but next year the newly-created nine dis- tricts will elect representatives. Frank Webb of Grand Forks was named department athletic officer. North Dakota Legion men and women, it was decided, will travel to Chicago for the national convention and the Century of Progress exposi- tion over three railways. Loan Group Formed Steeel, N. D., Aug 28.—Organiza- tion of a giant farm loan association to aid every Kidder county farmer in obtaining @ federal farm loan at the lowest possible interest rate, has been perfected here. At a recent meeting here it was decided to form the Kidder County National Farm Loan association and a board of directors was elected from approximately 80 persons in attend- ance. Ross Haibeck was named president and Fred Shipley vice president. Other directors are Ed. Taasevigen, Dan Lieno and F. 8. Mahin with Linn Sherman, Steele attorney, as secre- tary-treasurer. Alternate directors were elected as follows: John T. Burk, W. B. Mor- Toy, Tom Jaynes, George Murphy and George Altes, Dies at Devils Lake In Mysterious Episode Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 28.—()— Authorities were attempting to deter- mine whether the death of Adam Westbrook of Columbus, Neb., here early Monday was the result of an automobile accident or whether he was “taken for a ride.” ‘Westbrook, 60 years old, had been a farm laborer in this vicinity for ‘Several months. He was found in an elley Sunday night by Charles Scott, Negro, who said he had heard a car passing through the alley earlier, A woman screamed, he said, and then he heard someone moaning. Investigating, Scott found <West- brook fatally injured in the roadway and summoned a physician, Coroner A. E. Toomey and police. Without zegaining consciousness, Westbrook died in the hospital several hours iater. New Cabinet Crisis In Cuba Threatened |. Havana, Aug. 28—(P)—A cabinet crisis threatened the new government, Monday as the ae c pocal oe ganization prepared to withdraw two members of the ministry unless immediate constitutional reforms were effected. Provisional President Carlos Manuel De Cespedes had planned, it was un- derstood, to postpone changes in the constitution until after the general elections scheduled for Feb, 24, 1934. Negro Farmer’s Body Dragged About Yard Burgaw, N. C., Aug. 28—(?)—The body of Doc Johnson, 45-year-old negro farmer who shot a white woman and a deputy sheriff Monday and was slain after a three-hour gun battle with officers, was dragged about the Jawn of the Pender county courthouse here, Sunday night. ° Finally the bullet-riddled body was given over to an undertaking estab- lishment by a crowd of meit and boys who had taken it from officers as they were bringing the body here from a farm 10 miles distant. Johnson was killed. officers said, as @ result of his drunken insistence Kidder County Farm ALLEGED ‘SLICKER’ PAGES CHARGE OF DEFRAUDING WOMAN J. J. Keohen Is Accused of Tak- ing Money Under False Pretenses Here J. J. Keohen, also known as J. J. Kane, charged with obtaining money under false pretenses, was held to the Burleigh county district court when arraigned in police court Mon- day. Bond was fixed at $1,000. Keohen is accused of defrauding a local woman of $5 in what police de- scribed as a confidence game. Con- tact with the woman was made through insertion or an advertise- ment in local newspapers whereby employment was offered. Applicants were told, according to the story of the complaining witness to the police, that they were to be employed as collectors from persons who subscribed to a business course which Keohen said he was selling. Before they could be hired, so the story goes, they were required to put up @ bond that they would turn over the money collected and Keohen ob- tained from them $5 each to pay the premium on this bond. The complain- ing witness, a woman, told police she had had to borrow the $5. Keohen said he represented the Spokane Training Bureau with offices in the Rookery building there, but Police Chief C. J. Martineson said he was informed by the police chief at Spokane that the building was torn down some time ago and that there was no “Training Bureau” there. He | also said complaints had been filed against the man there. In police court Monday morning Keohen admitted to Martineson and Judge E. 8. Allen that he had no Pupils in Bismarck and had made no effort to obtain any, Judge Allen said. Martineson said he had an inquiry Saturday night from a postal inspec- tor at Fargo asking that Keohen be arrested because he wished to ques- tion him; also that he had received a telegram from O. Gunwaldsen, United States marshal, that he would arrive here Monday with a warrant for the man. a cr that he eat breakfast with a white family. Mrs. Tom Piner, 60, wife of a farm- er, and R. T. Murray, Jr., deputy sheriff of Pender county, were felled by the negro’s gun. Mrs. Piner was wounded seriously. Suspects Willing to Go to Oklahoma City St. Paul, Aug. 28.—()—Five of sev- en Twin Cities men indicted for con- | in connection with the/ Charles F. Urschel kidnaping advised Federal Commissioner W. T. Goddard Monday they would waive removal hearings and go to Oklahoma City. L. L. Drill, federal district attorney, said he would recommend that the bail of each be reduced to $25,000 from the $50,000 set last week. | The five are Barney Berman, Pete | Hackett, Charles Wolk, Isadore Blum- enfeld and Cliff Skelly, all in jail here. The two others, Sam Kozberg and Sam Kronick, previously waived re- moval hearings. They were released | late Saturday, after furnishing $25,000 | bond each, to appear in Oklahoma} City Friday. | Arrest of the seven followed appear- ance of Urschel ransom money in the Twin Cities, rT ea ame | Louisiana Kingfish | Receives Punching ———$—_$_$____ 4 New York, Aug. 28—(#)—The New York Sun said Monday that U. S. Senator Huey Long, self- styled Louisiana Kingfish, was the object of a punching Satur- day night in a fashionable Long | Island spot near Port Washing- ton. The Sun did not name the pur- Ported assailant or give any de- tails, except to say that the man had been “gravely insulted” by Long. The senator, the paper said, made no effort to resist the Punching and attendants at the “fashionable spot” placed him in @ car and sent him away. A telephone call to Senator Long, who is in Milwaukee, the | Sun said, resulted in a conversa- tion “entirely unsatisfactory.” George Cohan Cast | In O’Neill Drama | New York, Aug. 28—(P)—Joy | and sorrow have struck a bar- gain on Broadway. George M. Cohan, song-and- dance man in whose hands even a melodrama turns into a guffaw, has said “you bet” to an offer to star in a new play by Eugene O'Neill, who concerns himself with the darker depths of the heart and mind. | “Magnificent,” said dancer-ac- tor-dramatist-producer-manager - composer-lyricist Cohan as he heard the script of “Ah, Wilder- ness,” the O'Neill opus of thus far unrevealed content which the Theatre Guild plans to put on in October. Then he signed | a contract and dashed off to the: ball game, giving no clearer ex- Planation of “this five-star event in the theatre than: “Well, I guess they just needed @ good song-and-dance man.” Cohan has been in the theatre some 40 years and this will be the first time, except for a war bene- fit, that he has appeared in a play in the writing of which he had no share. $e Four N. D. Indians | | Leave for Chicago | Fargo, N. D. Aug. 28—(P)— Mary Hairy Chin, Indian woman from the Standing Rock Reserva- tion in western North Dakota, her mate, Iron Roads, and two war- riors, Elks and Waga, left Man- dan Monday for Chicago, where they will participate in the North Dakota program on Wednesday. Mary Hairy Chin, 60, was chosen the prize beauty of all races at the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago and carries a gold medal, given her at the time, as a souvenir of that occasion. Waga, an elderly brave, also attended the 1893 ex- position. Heading the party is Col. A. B. Welch, Mandan, adopted white chief of the Sioux nation of 13 tribes. He is the adopted son of the late Chief John Grass and is recognized as the hereditary chief of the Sioux. His Indian name is Mato Watakpe, which > means Charging Bear. © 1933, Licesrt & Mytas Tonacco Co, the cigarette thats w Ward Farmers Union Wants State Embargo Minot, N. D., Aug. 28—(%)—The board of directors of the Ward County Farmers Union, meeting in Minot Sat- urday evening, adopted resoltitions fa voring increase of the wheat process- ing tax to 60 cents per bushel, op- Posing the pegging of the wheat pric “for the benefit of grain speculators” and “demanding” that Governor Wil- liam Langer declare an embargo on farm commodity shipments from North Dakota “without further delay.” Costa Rican Urges ‘Inter-Americanism’ Chicago, Aug. 28.—(?)—A true fra- ternity of American nations will be | achieved by “inter-Americanism,” not through the Monroe doctrine, the 2,000 attendants of the world fellowship of jfaiths were told Monday. The message came from Prof. Ro- berto Brenes-Mesen, once Costa Rican minister to the United States and now Professor of romance languages at Northwestern university. Unable to be present, his address was delivered by his son, Edin Brenes, of the Purdue university faculty. Guiseppe Castruccio, Italian consul of Chicago, termed religion the only reliable preventative of world strife. URGES TEACHER CUTS Minneapolis, Aug. 28.—(?)}—Cuts of 30 per cent in salaries of teachers and all other employes of the Min- neapolis public school system for the remainder of 1933 in addition to re- ductions and payless vacations al- ready ordered were recommended by Superintendent Carroll R. Reed at a meeting of the board of education. The new cuts are imperative if the school budget is to be balanced, he said. ATTACKS ADJUSTMENT ACT Washington, Aug. 28.—(®)—Attack- ing the constitutionality of the a jricultural adjustment act, an attor- ney for the Economy Dairy company of Norwood Park, Ill., Monday asked the District of Columbia supreme court to restrain Secretary Wallace from enforcing the Chicago milkshed agreement. SLAIN BURGLAR IDENTIFIED Rockford, Il., Aug. 28.—(P)—A burglar shot to death in a gun fight with police Sunday was identified as Edward Butler Monday by his father, W. H. Butler of Manitowoc, Wis. The youth formerly was a junior high school student here. DULUTH LABORER KILLED Duluth, Aug. 28—(#)—Emil Sny- dell, 31, Duluth, died Monday from injuries received when a barrel be- Meved to have contained alcohol ex- Ploded when ignited by an acetylene torch, He was working in a scrap fron yard. / AMERICANS RENEW APPEAL Palma, Mallorca, Aug. 28.—(P)— Five Americans accused of assaulting a civil guard, who were released in bail July 20, appealed Monday to the American consul-general at Barce- lona. They asked him to speed up their trial and to protest against the “strong charges” preferred against them by the military authorities. MINNESOTA FIRES WANE St. Paul, Aug. 28—(#)—A decrease in fires in northern Minnesota over the week-end was reported Monday to Grover M. Conzet, state forester, with better conditions prevailing. The area has had rain and cooler weather. ILDER Governor Floyd Olson Will Seek Reelection St. Paul, Aug. 28.—(#)—Definite de- cision by Governor Floyd B. Olson to tun for reelection for a third term as governor Monday cleared the political atmosphere at the capitol, where some state employes under the YFarmer- Labor patty believed he might resign for a federal post or oppose Senator Henrick Shipstead next year. Governor Olson said Monday he has definitely determined to run for re- election, although a number of his advisors have urged that he oppose his own party senator, Shipstead. The governor's present term expires at the end of 1934, Although the chief executive has made no definite statement as to hi: senatorial ambitions, it is believed he will enter the race in 1936 against the Republican incumbent, Senato: Thomas D. Schall. MISSPENDER SUCCUMBS Chicago, Aug. 28—(®)—Timothy 4 Crowe, 58, former president of the sanitary district of Chicago and con. victed of participating in its $5,000, 000 orgy of misspending, died Monday at his summer home in Williams Bay Wis. He had been suffering from diabetes for some time. A heart at- tack was the immediate cause ot death. With associates on the board he was convicted of conspiracy and sentenced to one to five years in pris- on, but an appeal still pending pre- vented his imprisonment. saan Rn RRRneemmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmm = one, The Story Every Woman Wants Every Man To Se: ...., Husbands and wives...lovers and sweethearts... will live more tichly, more emotionally, when they learn from this suo Preme woman what love can be! Up” Half of His Double Life! SYLVIA SIDNEY meets.the realities of love as HE GERHARD The celebrated record of a wo- man's life from the blazing pen of THEODORE DREISER PARAMOUNT Today and Tuesday —Plus— Comedy - News - Song Cartoon SHOW DAILY wi COMING WEDNESDAY they taste better. There isn’t any For we put into can buy to make Just try them! 2:30 - 7:15 - 9:15 Usual Prices ONLY—Request Return “TARZAN THE APE MAN” good cigarettes Lut they are not like = terfield - ++. and Chesterfields are not like any other cigarette. As soon as you light up a Chest- erfield, we believe you will notice that they are mild. And before very long, you will certainly notice that These things don’t just happen so. accident about it. CHESTERFIELDS all that Science knows and money them “‘satisfy.” estertield . the cigarelle thal vases BETTER 4

Other pages from this issue: