The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 12, 1934, Page 5

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Cole! arbor Couple Wed, | Will Make Home in City Miss Olivian Amundson Be- ‘pomes Bride of Harold C. Nel- son Sunday Afternoon ate [se ; peerarytnae fe i befallen 21g nag othe ele gi8 * & 60 Attend Meeting of Tiny. Tots Music Club Mathilda Seventh 8t., at 3:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon with 60 members and par- ents it. Betty” Lee Orr, president of the group, the program of vio- lin and piano solos and ensembles which was presented by Jean Leon- Anderson, Beverly Jean Methodist Society to Observe Anniversary To celebrate Founders’ day, the will give a potluck supper for mem- bers and their families at the church parlors at 6:30 o'clock Tuesday ever ning. i : Special guests at the dinner and the program which is to follow will be ex- tension and honorary members of the group and members of the Standard Bearers organization. = Mrs. Alfred Roe, 826 Sixth 8t., is tee in charge of the supper includes Mrs. J. J. Rue, 711 Avenue A; Mrs. W. J. Church, 502 Eleventh 8t., and Mrs. H. F. Tramp, 414 Seventh 8t. Miss Florence Fritch Entertains Students Do you know there is a lot of difference in Hairdress- ing and dressing hair? We Dress Your Hair at the Elite. hey ww Inquire About Our Plastic ~ Mask for a and Steam Treatments for ‘Dandruff, Oily and Dry Hair for Men and Women. St. Patrick Special mage ven $1.00 Ryerew Arch 9 £00 Blite Beauty and . Barber Shop - 916 ath Bt K., of C. Fourth Degree Members Hear Kelsch Hi HERE af Mrs. E, Ulmer Named Counselor for U. C. Fle Thy lie sin il if. ff a Eugene Permanent. Waves, $6.25 Special for 2 weeks Other Waves $2.50 and up Bannon’s Beauty Shoppe v Patterson Hotel Phone 146 ONDAY, MARCH 12, 1934 Rigler, Harold Shafer and Charles Goodwin. xk & The Wachter school Parents and ribbon streamers. Green tapers were| Teachers association will have a wed to complete the decorative/“penny social,” with guests paying acheme. @ cent for each article of food served, a8 a feature of the social meeting to ee th : In celebration of the thirteenth |be held Tuesday evening, starting a birthday anniversary of her daughter, |7:45 o'clock. Games will provide di- ne ths kk q eis Irving Jeliee, Olympic Speed Bhating (Champion, says: “Ie takes healthy nerves aad pleaty of wind to be an Olympic skating I fied thet Camels, because of their costlier tobaccos, are mildand likable in taste. And, what is even more important to a champion athlete, they never up- oot the meves."” Sandin, | version during the evening. of the lunch will go towards the or- ganization’s ' Mr. and Mrs, Frank Jewett, of Isabel, 8. D., are parents of a daugh- ter, born at the Bismarck hospital Sunday at 12:45 p.m. Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Eagle, of the Mason apartments, Bismarck, are Parents of a daughter, born at 5:30 _|P. m., Sunday, ing Police Magistrate Edward 8. Allen was at his office Monday morning for the first time in nearly a week. He wae suffering from an attack of gout $< i] Today’s Recipe || ———_______—________@ Eggs on Brown Rice From a leading New York hotel ‘comes the recipe for curried eggs on brown rice which is a timely sugges- tion when Lenten dishes are in order. Put four tablespoons of butter and four tablespoons of flour in a hot pan and blend them thoroughly. Add two cups of rich milk, salt, pepper and Curry powder to taste. Boil one and one-half cups of brown tice in four cups of water until tender. ‘Wash the cooked rice in cold water to remove excess starch and put in a Pan, covered with wax paper. Set the Pan in the oven until the rice is very hot. This makes the grains fluffy. ‘When ready to serve, place rice on & hot serving dish, cover with whole boiled eggs (two to a person) and pour the curry sauce over them. Ployhar Is Urged to Run for U. S. Senate Valley City, N. D., March 12.—()}— Former State Senator Frank E. Ploy- har of Valley City is being urged by friends to become a candidate for the United States senate in opposition to Sen. Lynn J. Frasier, endorsed for re- election by the two recent Nonparti- san League conventions. Ployhar’s friends point to his record during the 2¢ years he was a member of the state legislature. Businessman, farmer and former newspaper " |Msher, Ployhar has been a life-long Republican affiliated with the I. V. A. faction. ~ He was state senator from Barnes county from 1909 to 1933 and was chairman of the state affairs commit- tee most of that time. Editor Refuses to Violate Confidence Frankfort, Ky., March 12.—(?)— newspapers to hold as confidential the names of writers of “letters to the editor” will be put to test by a special committee in the house of the Ken- tucky general assembly. —~ Armentrout is specifically charged with defiance to a house lobby in- vestigating committee in refusing to @ivulge to it the name of a member of the house who contributed a letter to the Courier-Journal’s “Point of View” column, criticizing the speaker and the rules committee. Accusing him of being in contempt, the committee last Wednesday order- ed him to jail, from which he was released a few minutes later on a habeas corpus writ, by a county judge who held the committee's action was illegal. Judges Divided on Clayton Act Issue Washington, March 12—(?)—The supreme court Monday upheld the right of two Connecticut companies to merge in a declared effort to give the public lower costs and to main- tain employment, but four of the nine Justices asserted this opened the way to consolidations in a manner not contemplated by law. Justice Roberts, speaking for the majority, said the Clayton anti-trust act did not “forbid the acquirement of property or the merger of corpora- tions pursuant to state laws.” ‘The dissenters replied, through Jus- tice Stone, that the merger was “an artifice and subterfuge designed in ‘an attempt to evade the Clayton act.” Increase in School Enrollment Shown ‘There were 1,977 pupils enrolled in Bismarck public schools during Feb- ruary, as compared with 1,920 for February a year ago, according to Su- Perintendent H. O. Saxvik. Of this number, 528 are in the high school, which number shows an increase of nine pupils over last year’s atten- dance. There have been no extra teachers hired to take care of the increase, the authorities said. The largest enroll- ment in any one room of the grade schools is the fifth grade at the Roo- sevelt school, which is taught by Miss Esther Gerard, with 52 pupils. Local Debate Team Meets Jamestown Bismarck high school upheld the affirmative side of the state high When will Gamble’s 2 for 1 Tire Sales end? Begin- ning Mar. 16th, you get two 6-ply Pharis First Line Tires for the Standard List Price of one—Buy 2 tires and get a set of 4. Inner Tubes, 49c and up. BREAD Patterson’s Mity-Nice or Oven Dandy White, rye or whole 7 wheat, 16-0z. ...... Cc 5 ° School debate league question non-decision contest with the representing Jamestown hig! Friday afternoon in the local ‘school auditorium. The question was “Resolved, the United States should essential features of the Brit tem of radio operation and Members of the Bismarck Bernadine Cervinski, Philip and Luther Birdgell, Jr., Del for Jamestown were Elwood Hanson, Arvid Johnson, and Robert Kneeland. H. W. Stone is their coach. The two teams and their coaches met informally after the debate to hear the suggestions of the critic Judges, ©. L. Young, John Lyngstad and Nelson Sauvain. Miss Pearl Bryant has charge of debate work in the local school, if] Tr gE igs Hl peychological Six Children From One Family in School Here The best represented family in grade schools of Bismarck is that of John Webster. Mr. and Mrs. Web- ster, 217 South Third St. have six children attending Wachter achool. They are Norma and Tesabell, fifth grade; Helen and Carl, fourth; Gor- don, third; and Leonard in the sec- ond. Three families in the city have five children in the grade schools. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Schultz, 706 Avenue A West, have Edgar and Harold in the sixth grade; Donald in the fifth; and Kenneth and Robert in the sec- Eee aff iba #3 MASONS, ATTENTION Meet at the Temple on Tues- day at 2 P. M, to attend the fu- d. *wattending the Richholt school are|neral of Brother Wm.F. Harris. Whatever praise we heap on “Gallant Lady” will be more than justly deserved — see the picture and you'll Today and ig Tuesday Daily 2:30-7-9 Matinees 25c Evenings 35c Vincent Lopez and his Band News — — Novelty DOESN’T TAKE HEALTHY NERVES, TOO, John W. Grout, Office Manager, who hails from Detroit, Mich., says: “An Olympic champion speed skater needs healthy nerves—but a man can’t han- dle a tough office job without healthy nerves, either. Many hours of nagging details and the pressure of work all tell onthe nerves. [smoke Camels all day long...and I never have to think of nerves. Camels have the finest flavor, too. Ms NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES...NEVER TIRE TUNE IN: “CAMEL CARAVAN featuring Glen Thureday at 10 P. M., E. S. T.—9 P. + “N 4 How Are YOUR Nerves? Seoner or later today face with jangied nerves, If peeves area i most of us come face to Sroblem with you, now is the Gray’s CASA LOMA Orchestra and other Headliners Every Taceday end Muy C. 8. Tom 8 P.M M.S. T=? P. May P. Se Tu. over WABC-Columbia Network

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