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day me, pve- lant sllet lvin ling in- mry nes- wer ard far- tors r at fis: \op- few and — |. Additional Society | PB chet ‘ise aay Dean Walster Talks To City Garden Club Dr. H. L. Walster, dean of agricul- ture at Ne Dakota State college, was a guest speaker at the Bismarck Garden club meeting held Thursday evening in the association of com- merce rooms. During the business meeting, club members voted to issuc an invitation to the Mandan Civic league and Mandan members of the Missouri Slope Gladiolus society tq meet with them in Bismarck on Thursday, Nov. 9. Mrs, A. H. Irvine, 412 Eighth 8t., and Mrs. °E. F. Trepp, 231 Thayer avenue west, were appointed to make arrangements. Plant names difficult to pronoynce were given by members when re- sponding to roll call. Russell Reid, 811 Twelfth St, talked on “Fall Planting and Winter Care of Peren- nials.” Mrs. Trepp’s topic was “Orna- mental and Hardy Shrubs.” Dean Walster supplemented the re- marks made by Mr. Reid and Mrs. ‘Trepp and in addition gave a talk on “The Selection and Care of Irises.” Dean Walster was in the city to act as @ judge for the state corn show. * * * St. Mary’s Students Have Halloween Dance Halloween colors of black and orange decorated St. Mary’s school auditorium for the dancing party giv- en Friday evening from 8 to 11:30 o'clock. There were 130 students of the school present, Patrons and patronesses were Mr. and Mrs. George L. Hays, 515 Tenth! St.; Mr. and Mrs. W. F. McGraw, 322 Anderson St., and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Winter, 521 Tenth St. Warren Jenkins and his orchestra provided music for dancing. The stage on which the orchestra was seated presented the appearance of a field with its corn stalk and pumpkin decorations. : Several novelty dances were includ- ed in the program. Robert Murphy played a piano selection, Miss Lucille Christian and Arthur Hulbert gave readings and Miss Lois Werstlein gave a solo dance. Miss Werstlein’s ac- companist was Miss Marion Curran. Chairman of the committees ar- ranging the.party were Paul Whittey, advertising; Paul McDonald, decora- tions; Miss Irene Anderson, tickets, and Miss Phyllis Carroll, entertain- ment. * * * Miss, Roberta Burr left Thursday for Cambridge and Boston, Mass., af- ter passing the summer with her fath- er, Judge A, G. Burr, 702 Fourth St., and her aunt, Miss A. D. Burr. Miss Burr will wisit with her brother, Alex- ander Burt, at Cambridge before lo- ating in Boston where she expects to make her. home. & * * * Complimenting Mrs. H. A. McNutt, 719 Fifth St., who is leaving for Na- poleon, Mrs, F. F, Skinner, 209 Thay- er avenue, entertained @ company of|* wemen at luncheon at the Inn Fri- day. After luncheon, the guests passed the remainder of the after- noon at the home of Mrs. Skinner. * * * Miss Jean Renwick has {ssued in- vitations for a Halloween bridge par- ty which she will give this evening at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Renwick, 807 Sixth St. There will be 24 guests. z x oe * Mr. and Mrs. H. L, Harless, 308 Park St., have returned from a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Jacobson at Wadena, Minn. Last week-end Mr. and Mrs. Harless were Buests at a week-end party given by Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson at their cottage on Battle Lake. x * Oe Mrs. R. E. Wenzel, 317 Park St., is in Grand Forks spending the Univer- sity of North Dakota Homecoming week-end with her son and daughter, Ralph and Wilma Wenzel, both stu- dents at the University, and with her sister, Miss Harriet Coger. Mrs. Wen- zel left aaa é John Young, Jr., of Menominee, Wis., left Saturday after visiting for two weeks with his brother and sis- ter-in-law, Major and Mrs. A. C. Young, 600 Broadway Avenue West. Miss Dorothy Mathys, 512 Avenue E, left Friday for Grand Forks to at- tend Homecoming at the University of North Dakota. Miss Mathys, an alumna of the University, is a guest at the Delta ane govrily house. Mrs. E. R. Morris, a former resident ‘of Bismarck, recently was elected grand regent of the St. Elizabeth court, Catholic Daughters of America, of Minot. Mr. Morris was. named grand knight of the Minot council, Knights of Columbus, @ short time ago. Mr. and Mrs. Morris .are fre- quent visitors 19 a fe Mrs, G. M. Freitag, 1516 Avenue B was hostess to. 20 friends of her daughter, Rebecca, iday evening from 7:30 to 10 o'clock to honor Re- necca’s. 11th birthdey anniversary. Goblins and witches welcomed the guests, who came masked, and con- ducted them into the rooms decorated ‘n keeping with the Halloween season. Adella Jacobson received the prize for taving the best mask. Fortune tell- ing, games and contests provided en- lertainment. ‘The supper was served at five tables decorated in black and orange with the traditional black cat, goblin and pumpkin motif featured. There were caps and other favors for the guests. -/: ——_$__—_---_—-—-—-—- |.Meetings of Clubs. | | And Social Groups | . Dias 20 ims, J.C. O'Berg, 611 Avenue D, will entertain the Bismarck Study club at her home Monday afternoop at 2:30 ealock, ou Guest day will be observed by the Monday club when they meet the afternoon of Oct. 30 with Mrs. F. A. Knowles, 316 Avenue A West. Each Thember will bring a visitor. | City-County News f J, F. McGuire, manager.of the Nor- “thern States Power com} branch at Fargo, left Saturday morning for home after spending several days in Bismarck on business. Waltgr Ray, state's attorney "of Bil- ling’s county and well known rancher "af Medora, was a visitor in Saturday. ° 030 Fourth St., Bismarck, are parents: | SIDE GLANCES - - - By George Clark |/PETER BAKER DIES (S THE ZEBRA A LIGHT COLORED ANIMAL WITH DARK STRIPES, OR A DARK ANIMAL With 2/GAH7 STRIPES ? BREEDING EXPERIMENTS PROVE THAT THE BASIC BODY COLOR IS MGHTL THERE ARE LARGE RANCHES WHERE THE LIVESTOCK NEVER. . HAS HAD A DRINK OF WATER. / THE ANIMALS LIVE ON CACRUS ANO BLUEGRASS PASTURES... THE CACTUS JUICE TAKES THE PLACE OF DRINKING WATER. HAS HONORED ONLY FOUR \WOMEN of a girl born at St. Alexius hospital Friday night from Carrington, where : he presided at a term of Foster coun- Saturday morning. ty district court. J. E. Melton, editor of the Mott Pioneer Press, visited with friends in; Harold Hopton was a business visi- Bismarck Saturday. | tor in Minot Saturday. Jae Fred Krause, well-known business | Kansas City—Bus Breeze, Man- man of Hazen visited in Bismarck; hattan, Kas. outpointed Floyd Saturday. | Morey, Omaha, (8); Jack Charvez, | 1%, Santa Fe; N. M., outpointed Judge Fred Jansoniug returned! “Tuffy Dial,” 175, Omaha. | We Tested Them All! |... Two months ago we tested almost every leading make of transmission and differential grease. The only one.that did not freeze was made up specially for this cold country by Mr. Chrysler’s engineering laboratory. It costs more (50c a pound including flushing the gear case with maohinery),; but it is ork it. Protect your car NOW against winter jamage. We Guarantee . our Zesto hot water heater for 2 years and install it in any car for $9.95 complete. This price will ad- vance in a short time. - re e _.. Windshield Frost is a great nuisance. A small electric fan is the most efficient remedy..: A fortunate factory connection . Row, ettables us to sell fans for $3.50, Last winter .. We Reduced Our Price on Eveready Prestone this winter from $4.50 to $2.95 a gallon installed. This solution will not evap- orate and lasts all winter.. Methanol is now 85c a gallon installed. It does not pay: to take chances with an ex- pensive piece of machinery in cold weather. Our service is ised by the highest paid mechanic in North Dakota. Let our 20 years’ experience be your guide. - Corwin-Churchill Motors, Ine. ‘Est, 1914 “Phone 700 CTOBER 28, 1933 j FOUR PAIRS OF HANDS TO HOLD FOUR SETS OF NRA REINS SATURDAY MORNING. Peter Baker, Sr., 63, for 12 years a resident of Burleigh county and for the last 10 years a resident of Bis- marck, died at a local hospital early Saturday morning Baker was born at Brundorf, Austria. After emigrating to Winnipeg, Can- ada, where he lived for two years, he came to the United States 24 years | ago. About 12 years ago he moved | to Arena, where he lived for two years | before coming to Bismarck. ie) He leaves his widow, six children and five grandchildren. The children are Peter, Jr., William, John, Agnes and Betty of Bismarck and Mrs. John ‘Weeks, Mandan. Puneral services will be held from the Capital Funeral parlors Monday or Tuesday, arrangements for the ser- vices not having been completed. Burial will be in St. Mary's cemetery. People’s Forum (Editor's Note)—The Tribune wel- comes letters on subjects of inter- est. setters dealing with contro- versial religious subject which attack individuals ui which offend good tai play will be returned ers. All letters MUST lt you wigh to use a sign the pseudonym fi: own name beneath it. V | spect such requests, We reserve ‘Too many fingers are not so good in one pie and too many hands can cause NRA mixups. So now four pairs of hands will hold the reins of direction in the recovery organization, guided, of course, by the master hands of tors will find their work merged in four divisions, headed by the men pictured above. Left to right, they are Kenneth M. Simpson, New York consulting engineer, who handled oil, steel and coal codes; Maj. Clarence C. Williams, former army ordnance chief, who handled shoe industry and other.codes; Malcolm Muir, president McGraw-Hill, publishers, who handled transit, bus and many manufacturing codes; and A, D. Whiteside, president of Dun & Bradstreet, who had charge of textile, n. Hugh S. Johnson. Thirty-odd deputy administra- tail, banking and other codes. the right to delete such parts of — conform to this policy. RELIEF ROADS gg a nied ‘although they may be in dire need/ letters as may be necessary to) /tamtiy have been compelled to sacri-| Yet, because these farmers are not | sam's children. fice everything that makes life worth on the needy list, they and their fam- | living, in order that they need not ask |ilies cannot share in any of the good | whatever. they are given, because we |charity, we demand justice. \for charity, and give to-those who,/things intended for other of Uncle know they are in dire want. But,| on the other hand, farmers are needy No, we do not begrudge the needy ;too. Even though we do not ask for A Farmer. The decision to employ only those already on the counties needy list on _|the relief roads will work an injustice on those farmers who have, through ‘self sacrifice and economy, been able to retain their self respect and keep off these same lists, for nothing is so demeaning to a person’s character |than to be compelled to ask for char- ity, and the farmer, as a rule, has been slow to ask for the help others appear to take as a matter of course. The truth is that many are on the needy lists today who, had they emu- lated the ant instead of the . grass- hopper, need not have asked for pub; lic charity, and the farmer, knowing these things only too Well, as well as his own circumstances, feels that if there are any relief roads to be built with government money, and the amount set aside for this work is staggering sum, he, too shoujd bene fit through it. The decis! to em: ploy those farmers who owe the gov- ernment for feed or who will owe it, is good, but they should go much furth- er than this and permit the farmer mow, were not nearly so self-sacrific- | jing? j | Isn't it the truth that many are be- :ginning to believe that the old adage about the world owing every man aj living is true-although they, in many | ‘instances are too lazy to collect it. | | Many communities can ‘boast’ of idle young fellows who are on the re- | ‘Hef list, too lazy to do an honest days | |work for a neighbor, content to live | jat the taxpayer's expense, without ef- | fort and without thanks. What sort | jof future citizens are we raising up? | Are they always to be a liability to! \those communities they ‘grace’ with | their presence? Perhaps no man can be blamed for \ {hard luck but we have the right to; |censure those who are willing to lie; down at the first blow of ob plaid id make no effort to get up again. Tt was with considerable interest we | listened to a recent radio address giv- | en by Harry Hopkins, relief adminis- | jtrator. Mr. Hopkins declared that| he was going to see those on the needy ; Automobile Heaters Ride in Comfort During Cold Weather Firestone Hot Water Heater 2-Speed Motor — Illuminated Switch Special Installed Price $9.95 who still owes on his seed loan to lists fared much better this year than | work or partly work it out, as well as they have previously. He spoke of the farmer who has a mortgage on/the apples he was arranging to buy, | his home and goods and chattels, with | along with other foods. I wonder the creditors clamoring for money|how many of our poverty-stricken | which the farmer is unable to pay. _farmer’s children will enjoy apples | Relief, in the broadest sense, means |this winter? Will they even have relief, and this not to a certain class enough clothing to keep them warm | but to all who need help. while they trudge the long distance | ‘Why should we refuse work to the from their homes to the little red! man who has sacrificed and whose school houses? . COPELIN MOTOR CO. Phone 318 Bismarck got tired of wearing GREEN! ¥ ‘ THE First Lady of the Garden, of course, had a wide choice of fernery to convert into finery. But all of it was green... and that grew monotonous. So next we hear of her wearing furs! For women, it seems, just must have change. Every- body knows that a red hat will cure the blues! . : Most important of all, new clothes for Mother seem to have a cheering effect on the ‘entire family. A successful little dress is worth a song before breakfast or a Grand Surprise Dessert at dinnertime. So Wise Men (otherwise referred to as good providers and model husbands) are falling in with feminine plans to buy some “mew clothes this winter’... and here's why we say to act now, and save! The sweatshop; and the cheap flashy silk dress, have pasued out of the picture together. There was no standard of value for the sweatshop worker. She toiled like a coolie for any wage she could get... sometimes was tricked into working with- out pay! Now, the NRA codes in the dress in- dustry, as you know, have raised wages, shortened hours, eliminated child labor, and improved working conditions all around. This is a good thing for everyone con- cerned. For the truth is that the price of women’s clothing had fallen so low that no one could make a decent living out of it. Wages went down and down... workmen were laid off ... human hands and heads, and their products, too, seemed to have lost almost all their real value. That is what the NRA codes are for ... to restore value to the common things of life... to make everyone and everything worth something again. And it’s working! Wages are up. Wool- ens have advanced 49%. Silk and rayon dress goods 35%. The price of women’s garments is bound to go up. So good buys, right now, are ripe for picking, and prices won't even be lower, they say, at January sales, In fact, they will probably never again be so low as ‘ they are today! Now is the time to buy! UPTURN ITEM NO. 3 Wool consumption, between June, - 1982 and June, 1933, showed a gain of 210% é