The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 30, 1934, Page 5

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Junior Singers’ Guild to Give Graduation Musicale Bismarck High School Seniors Will Be Presented at City Auditorium Friday The musicale to be given by junior members of the Singers’ Guild at Bis- marck city auditorium at 8:15 o’clock Friday evening under direction of Miss Maude A. Tollefsen, teacher- founder, will include several selec- tions sung by members of this yea: graduating class at Bismarck high school. ‘The public is cordially invited to attend the program, for which there will be no admission charge. Grace Olmanson, who is 12 years old, will be the youngest singer, her number being “The Cares of Yester- day” by Metcalf. Miss Maxine Pick- Jes, a last year’s high school grad- the series of weekly programs spon- sored by the eighth district, North Federation of Women’s clubs, under direction of Miss Maude A. Tol- Affiliated with the Washburn Study club since the second year of its or- Ganization in 1925, Mrs, Williams has welfare division leader for two years. Mrs. Williams also has won distinc- lon for her club series of life sketches of 50 pioneer mothers of McLean county, which ap- Peared weekly in the Washburn news- Paper and now is published in book form and available in many public and private libraries throughout the uate, is making her first appearance | count with the Singers’ Guild with Masse- net’s “Elegie.” Miss Tollefsen will Play the violin obligato. Miss Mary Louise Nuessle will nd Miss Ruth Christianson and Bernard Flaherty each will sing an aria from @ well-known opera. Shafer’s selec- tion is “It Was Not So to Be” from “The Trumpeter of Sakigen,” Miss Christianson’s is “Ah, It Was He” from “La Traviata” and Flaherty will sing “The Flower Song” from “Faust.” Emerson Logee will be heard in the Coleridge-Taylor setting of the Whit- man poem, “Beat, Beat Drums,” which was inspired by Whitman's service in @ military hospital at Washington, D. C., during the Civil War. Coleridge- Taylor was an American negro, who made his home in London. Miss Emily Belk is to sing two East Indian love lyrics, “Less Than the Dust” and “Till I Wake,” Woodford- Finden arrangements of poems by Lawrence Hope, an English woman. Miss Jane Smith is to be heard first in a 10th century English ballad, “The Three Rave: ind then in the famous, “Songs My Mother Taught Me,” the best known of a set of gypsy songs by Dvorak. Several quartets, trios and chorus numbers are interspersed throughout the program, which will last about an hour. ek * Girls’ Athletic Club Will Banquet Fathers Members of the Bismarck high school Girls’ Athletic association will have their fathers as guests at the annual Dads’ and Daughters’ banquet, to be given at 6:30 o'clock Thursday evening at the World War Memorial building. The event was ‘postponed from Thursday of last week. Committees for the function are: Entertainment—the Misses _Priscill Hosie, Doreen Church, Dorothy Man: ney and Sarah Anna Messenger; dec- orations—the Misses Jeanne Paris, Marjorie Bergland, Peggy Purdy, Au- drey Warrior, Doris Lampman, Gayle Kelly and Mary Louise Finney; food —the Misses Beverly Barnes, Frances Bergland, Jean Renwick and Marcia 3. Yeservations—Miss Gladys Miss Messenger, who is -benketiell manager, has presented chevrons the members of the senior basketball team, who were victorious in the re- cent tournament. Girls receiving the chevrons were Miss Hosie, who is cap- tain, and the Misses Emily Belk, Car- lander, Grace Hugelman, Catherine Mason, Kathleen Pherrill, Winona Haggerty, Lucille Monroe, Gladys Risem, Ruth Saxvik, Frieda Tolchin- sky and Abbie Welliver. Mrs. W. K. ‘Williams To Be Radio Speaker In observance of Memorial Day, Mrs. W. K. Williams, ashen, ob speak on “Remeinbering Our ” over KFYR at 3 o'clock Friday after- noon. This broadcast will continue try. Through her writing, Mrs. Williams ‘was selected for the “Who's Who” sec- tion of the, “Register of Women's Clubs, 1933.” * x * Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Plomasen and their children, Bruce and Jean, have returned to Bismarck after a year Spent in the West and now are at home at their former residence, 506 Rosser Avenue West. Although they spent most of the time at Long Beach, Calif., extended visits also were made at points in Washington and Oregon, where they visited friends. They also pent some time in Mexico. xk ke Miss Gertrude Almos, who is to teach in Bismarck during the com- ing term, is among a group of six women graduates of the North Da- kota Agricultural college, Fargo, who are to continue their studies toward master’s degrees at universities this summer. Miss Almos, who has been teaching at Mohall, will go to the University of Minnesota. Miss Lois Minard, who has been teaching at Mandan, will attend the University of Chicago. eke Miss Bessie R. Baldwin, 414 Avenue B, has as her guests her sister, Mrs. Fred Gross, and her niece, Miss Isabel Baldwin, both of Sparta, Wis. who will be here the remainder of this week. Miss Baldwin will accompany them on a week's trip to the Bad- lands and to the Black Hills of South Dakota, after which they will return to Wisconsin. ee Miss Helen Burton and her adupted daughter, Chang Tzu Ju, of Peking, China, left Bismarck late Tuesday afternoon after spending over a week with Miss Burton’s mother, Mrs. ‘Mary F..Burton, 219 Third 8t., and her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs, Samuel. H. Merritt, 221 Third St. Miss Burton and Tzu Ju were to spend week in Minneapolis and then will visit eastern summer resorts during the remainder of the scacon, ee k Mr. and Mrs. 8. PF. Hi , 523 First St., left Wednesday morn- ing for West Point Military Academy at West Point, N. ¥., to attend the graduation exercises of the 1934 class. of which their son, David Hollings- worth, is a member. Commencement at West Point will be on Tuesday, June 12. Mr. and Mrs. Hollingsworth will visit in Minneapolis and Chicago, expecting to be ed for a month. * * Miss Magdalene Troutman of Bis- marck, who is to become the bride of Nicholas Herner in a ceremony to be Performed at St. Joseph's Catholic chureh of Mandan on June 7, was complimented at a shower and bridge Party given Monday evening by Mrs. Oliver Valder, Mandan. Cards were Played at two tables, with high score awards going to Miss Troutman, Mrs. Edward Zander and Miss Cecelia eee The approaching marriage of Miss Anna Scholl and Lawrence Schmidt, both of Mandan, was announced Monday evening at a miscellaneous shower given for Miss Scholl by her BISMARCK TRIBUNE. PATTERNS| Make This Model at Home THIS WOULD BE LOVELY IN A SHEER FABRIC PATTERN 1815 SOCIETY and CLUBS Brides Are Picking Cotton—For Their Wedding Gowns Nothing is more youthful than cotton. Realizing this, many smart June brides will choose it for their wedding gowns. And they'll dress their at- tendants in it, too. The bridal gown (above), an Elizabeth Hawes model, is fashioned from crisp organdy. It has ah extremely high neckline, long sleeves and is worn with short organdy veil. The bridesmaid also is wearing organdy in red, white and green candy stripes with a small hat of matching material. sister, Mrs. Philip Senn, Mandan. The marriage will be an event of early June. Miss Scholl is the daugh- ter of Mrs. Anna Scholl, Killdeer. Mr. Schmidt's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Math Schmidt. xk ok Mrs. R. E. Wenzel and Miss Nora Fluevog gave a picnic for Cosmos club members Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Wenzel, 317 Park St., where Miss Fluevog also resides. Dinner was served on the lawn at 7 o'clock. Guests of the club for the occasion included Mrs. Grace Clendening, 500 Avenue A, and Mrs. Fred Gross and Miss Isabel Baldwin, both of Sparta, Wis., who are guests of Miss Bessie How Are YOU have ¢ biten essociated Jangled know the ingand inclined toward jumpy nerves check, your ponitsofwork and play. cigarette. They ue Ca BACCOS then eny EXPENSIVE TOBACCO! more nerve telephone slamming, hot words R. Baldwin, 414 Avenue B. The Cos- mos club will conclude its year with the annual picnic during the early summer. xk ke Robert Larson, son of Mr. and Mrs. |J. A, Larson, 210 Avenue A, west, has returned from Chicago, where he was |a junior student at Chicago Technical \college during the term just closed. | Larson will spend the summer here jand will return to finish his course in the fall. He has been elected captain of the basketball team for next year, is president of the Lettermen’s club CP | Meetings of Clubs | And Social Groups | The &t. 's Episcopal After- noon Guild will meet at 2 o'clock aaa afternoon at the parish louse. ee k The modern novel study group of the Bismarck chapter, American As- sociation of University Women, will have the closing meeting of the year at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening with the chairman, Mrs. A. J. Lunde, 303 Broadway avenue, west. ——__—_—_—* Today’s Recipe | Walnut Brittle Ioe Cream One pound walnut brittle, 4 eggs, 1 cup whipping cream, 4 cups milk. Black walnut brittle is especially good to use for this recipe. Beat egg yolks slightly. Scald milk and beat into egg yolks. Cook in double boller, stirring constantly un- til mixture coats spoon. Remove from heat and add crushed brittle. Fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff. Cool and pour into freezer mold. Pack in eight parts of ice to one part ice cream salt. When be- ginning to freeze around the edges, stir in cream whipped until firm. Let stand several hours before serving. ‘This recipe is excellent to use in a mechanical refrigerator, too. Litvinoff Address Stirs Geneva Body Geneva, May 30.—()}—It was Euro- pe’'s move on the cluttered checker- board of disarmament Wednesday, following positive declarations by the United States and Russia. Views of two powerful nations to- ward the problem were to be express- ed by Louis Barthou, French foreign minister, and Sir John Simon, for- eign secretary of Great Britain. An exchange of views between the Little Entente (Czechoslovakia, Yugo- slavia and Rumania) and Russia fol- lowing the speech of Maxim Litvin- off, Soviet commissar of foreign fairs, led to a belief that there would be a favorable development of rela- tions between them. The Balkan countries were pleased by Litvinoff’s address because they interpreted it as taking a firm stand against any revision of post-war trea- ties. A permanent council of the Entente met Tuesday night to examine the new situation created in the disarma- ment conference by Litvinoff’s pi Posal for complete abolition of arma- ments and that the conference be made a permanent body to safeguard peace. Iowa to Fight Back In N. D. Truck War Des Moines, May 30.—(P}—A ban against North Dakota trucks traveling in Iowa without an Iowa license was involved Tuesday by Lew Wallace, state motor vehicle commissioner. He said the action was taken after an Iowa truck had been detained in North Dakota and officials at Bis- marck had declined to negotiate an entry for the truck. Iowa department inspectors have been notified to pick up North Da- kota trucks and hold them and their drivers until an Iowa license has been obtained for the vehicle. A thermometer, with the degrees and is vice president of his class. Only female mosquitoes bite. ! marked with raised figures and in- scriptions in Braille characters, has been invented for use of blind per- ns. ‘ —_——____—__e | Graduate from A. C. | —________—__ WENDELL SANDERS Robert Paris and Wendell Sanders, above, both will receive bachelor of science degrees from the North Da- kota Agricultural college at the grad- uation exercises June 4, Paris, the son of Mrs. Frank Paris, 404 Fifth St., receives his degree from the school of education. His course has been in commerce and education. He has been prominent in football while attending the Fargo school and in 1932 was all-conference center. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega, national society fraternity. Sanders, son of Rex H. Sanders, is completing the course in the school of mechanical engineering. He is a member of the college Gold Star band and has earned most of his college expenses as a musician in a dance or- chestra. Pioneer of Emmons | | Bismarck Visitor William 1. “Uncle Bill” Yeater, pioneer of Emmons county, vis- ited in Bismarck Wednesday while California, where he spent the winter, Yeater has lived in North Da- kota for more than half a cen- tury. He witnessed the corner- stone ceremonies of both the old Dakota Territorial capitol and the new North Dakota state capitol here. “Conditions in California are improved,” the veteran said, “The ‘West Coast has had plenty of rain and restoration of employment has been satisfactory. Recently, however, a shipyards strike has held up shipments and caused the temporary closing of saw ‘mills and other industries.” Yeater has spent winters in California for the last decade. Claim Society Girl Took Her Own Life Sacramento, Cal. May 30.—(P)—A statement that she heard “angel's wings flapping in her head,” was among the evidence on which author- ities based their belief Wednesday that Virginia Johnson, attractive 22- year-old society girl, had committed MEDICAL ADVICE Yyuwento w= « relieve constipation gently and safely « take the exact dose suited to your need + ¢ « avoid danger of bowel strain —use a liquid laxative Can constipation be safely re- lieved? “Yes!” say medical men. “Yes!” declare thousands who rial followed their advice and now. You are not apt to cure your constipation with salts, pills and tablets, or any habit-forming cathartic. But you can safely Telieve this condition just by ae regulation with a suitable iquid laxative, H "D Vaqutd innate” The dose of a ait laxative can be measured. The action can thus be regulated to suit your individual need. It forms no habit; you need not take a “double dose” a day or two later. Nor will it irritate the kidneys. The right liquid laxative will bring a perfect movement, with no discomfort at the time, or afterward. The unwise use of strong cathartics may often do more harm than good. In buying any laxative, read the label. If it contains a doubt- ful drug, don’t take it. If you don’t know what is in it, don’t chance it. The contents of Dr. Caldwell’s ae Pepsin is stated plainly on the label; fresh herbs, Pure pepsin, active senna. Its very taste tells you Syrup Pepsin is wholesome. A delight ful taste, and delightful action. Safe for expectant mothers, and children. Drug stores have it, ready for use, in big bottles. THE TEST: First: select a precered uid system. 3 ually reduce the Pips until bowels are moving of their own accord Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin has the highest standing among liquid laxatives, and is the one generally used. “ | 1S A REAL SHOPPING...THERE TEST OF NERVES, TOO, MR. BUCK!” t to visit usall. You “ that wound others, fumingover trifles. Ifyouare eating and sle never get on your nerves. ere made from finer, other populer CAMELS COSTLIER TOB rettes, or Camels. Listen to what Mrs. Abbot J. Copeland has on shopping—and nerves: “*There’s no doubt in the world that healthy Nerves are vital to a man who goes out and catches wild animals alive. But take it from a busy wife and mother who spends many hours each week searching through the stores anxious to make the family budget reach as far as possible—you need healthy Nerves to be a shopper, too! Tramping through miles and miles of aisles... pricing, compar- ing, judging quality and-values.. .well, that’s a test of anyone’s nerves. ‘Nerves’ don’t Frank Buck, who hes brought to say ever bother me, though. As for cigarettes, I smoke Camels. They don’t upset my nerves, And I have never tasted such flavor and » mildness, R Nerves? with flat-tasting the “sweet” type, you iate the mildness and rich And you can want. and Budd, the aftertaste ciga- ap- flavor of smoke them all ‘For Camel's costlier tobaccos never jangle your nerves. INI CAMEL CARA Fee astra, Bioopnagle E.S.T.—8P.M.,C.S.T.—7 P-M-y P.8.T., Over WABC-Columbia VAN with Casa Thureday at 9P.M.» re ML MS.7.—ePM., Network. ~~ cc 0 A beck many tons of wild cargo from the jungles of Asia, seys: “It takes healthy nerves to bring *em back alive. It’s a job packed with thrills, excitement, and real danger. I never would have been able to populate half the zoos in this country, cross the Pacific 20 times with tons of savage live cargo, and save my own life a half dozen times by quick action if I didn't have healthy nerves. I am a heavy smoker. I prefer Camels, knowing that I can safely smoke all I want without upsetting my nerves."* 7 / suicide by applying a match to het kerosene-soaked clothing. While her father, State Charles G, Johnson, and his brothers, Oscar and John, cide conclt Last Times Tonight His now Fest National hit with ALICE WHITE LATEST NEWS PEPPER POT BEN BLUE COMEDY CARTOON

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