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! | THE BISMARCK TRIBUN. 7 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1934 Betrothal of Local Girl Announced Tuesday Evening Miss Audrey Rohrer and War- ren L. Kiesel to Be Married September 1 At a 7 o'clock dinner given at the Bismarck Country club Tuesday even- ing, Mrs, Wilbur 8. Rohrer announced the engagement and approaching marriage of her daughter, Audrey Cathleen Rohrer to Warren Louis Kiesel of Forman, N. D., and formerly of Bismarck. A color scheme of yellow and pale green was effectively carried out in the table appointments for the dinner party. News of the engagement and ‘wedding was discovered in tiny heart- shaped scrolls sealed with yellow daisies and attached to the yellow daisy nut cups which marked the Places for the 12 guests. The “daisies My Dad! My-Son! Magic Words in Any Tongue! SEE! THE ALL NEW TALKING VERSION OF THIS MIGHTY STORY! SHE GAINED b eg Faithless to # mother's duty... wife's devotion! She found herself a stranger to her only son...the woman who let his father downl WARWICK DEEPING'S = | Mr. Kiesel will take place will tell” theme was carried out fur- ther in the black-eyed susan daisies which were scattered over the green tarlatan table cover. The centerpiece was a large bouquet of goldenglow, marigolds and yellow daisies in an amber colored crystal vase and on either side triads of yellow tapers jburned in amber colored crystal hold- jers. Baskets of garden flowers were arranged in the rooms of the Rohrer home where bridge was played follow- ing the dinner. At the Rohrer home the guests were {Presented with favors of lily of the valley wrist corsages with . yellow shields and attached to these, with yellow ribbons were the. score tallies. Three tables of bridge were in play and honors were won by Mrs. Everett O'Neil and Miss Aldeen Paris. An out-of-town guest at the affair was Mrs. John O'Neil of Fort Peck. oe & sorority sister of the bride- The wedding of Miss Rohrer and here Sept. 1, The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur 8. Rohrer, 411 Avenue E. She is a graduate of the Bismarck high school with the class of 1929 and has attended the Univer- sity of North Dakota, where she affil- jated with the Delta Gamma social sorority. Miss Rohrer has been em- Ployed by the state highway commis- sion for a year. Mr. Kiesel is the son of J. E. Kiesel, 408 Second St. and the late Mrs. Kiesel. He is a graduate of the Bis- marck high school and of the school of commerce of the University of North Dakota in 1933. His fraternity is Beta Theta Pi. He is employed as county worker in Sargent county by the Federal Relief Administration of North Dakota and is located at For- man. ek * Public Invited to Social Thursday Circle No. 4 of the Ladies’ Aid of, the Trinity Lutheran church will sponsor an ice cream social on the’ lawn of the church grounds at Ave- nue A and Fourth 8t., Thursday ev- ening, August 23, beginning at 6:30 o'clock, to which the public are in- vited. In case of inclement weather the social will be held in the church dining room, the committee has an- nounced. * * * A. 0. U. W. Lodge to Give Show Boat Party Members of the A. O. U. W. lodge will entertain members and invited guests at a party which will be given aboard the Show Boat, starting at 9:30 o'clock Thursday evening. Dancing, eghel se other entertainment will provi according t6 Joseph Pa- tera, who is making arrangements for the affair. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Mergens, 226 West Rosser avenue. have left for a trip to Chicago, where they will spend some time attending the exposition. * * Miss Louise Westie, Portland, N. D., has arrived in Bismarck to spend two o- three weeks visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Slattery, 508 West with 4.B.IWUARNER NOW SHOWING Today and Thurs. PARAMOUNT, IT’S COOL 25¢ Until 7:30 Comedy - News - Novelty Broadway Avenue. **e* * Miss Mary Louise McLaughlin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Mc- Laughlin, Fargo, is a guest at the home of her aunt, Miss Alma Sund- quist, 205 Second St. * kk Second St., have as their guests for several days their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Mark P. Wynkoop and daugh- ters, Barbara and Mary, of James- town. *x* * * Miss Mary Cashel, 522 Second St., executive secretary of the Burleigh county Red Cross, left Sunday for her Y OVS in these HATS e Velvet Berets e Felt Brims FOR AUTUMN 1.88 e Fabric Turbans Chic heads have been thoroughly turned by these new fall hats. Yours will be no exception. They’re easy to wear, and that’s always good news about hats! Head sizes 21 to 24, | DoTTY DUN a former home at Winona. Minn., where 407 BROADWAY Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Wynkoop, 608) ee es New Democratic if Women’s Head Dr. Fannie Dunn Quain Tuesday was appointed director of the women’s di- vision of the Democratic state com- mittee. She succeeds Mrs. Mary Ness, whose term had expired. she will spend a weex visiting rela- tives, * *k * The Misses Colleen and Shirley O’Brien, Minneapolis, arrived in Bis- marck Tuesday to spend a week vis- iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Helgeson, 710 Washington St. The Misses O'Brien are cousins of Mrs. Helgeson. * * * Herbert Asselstine, Jr., son of Mrs. A. H. Asselstine, 222 Third St., has returned from Minneapolis, where he spent three weeks visiting with a former schoolmate, Clifton White, .| son of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. White, who formerly lived here. * * Miss Doris Tait and sister, Mrs. O. B. Benson of Bottineau have arrived in Bismarck to visit at the home of their mother, Mrs, William Barneck, 612 Ninth St. Mrs. Benson will leave will remain in Bismarck for about three weeks. ee R. E. Wenzel, secretary of the state bar association, left Wednesday for Milwaukee, where he will attend ses- sions of the Bar Journal Editors’ con- ference and a meeting of state secre- taries to be held in conjunction with the American Bar association meet- ing this week in Milwaukee. ek * Mrs. Nellie Evarts and daughter, Miss Gertrude Evarts, 217 First St., have returned from Grand Forks, where Miss Evarts has been attend- ing a summer session at the Uni- versity of North Dakota. Mrs. Evarts joined her daughter there about a week ago. * * x Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Dehne, 423 Sec- ond St., have as their guests, who arrived Tuesday, their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Jones of Portland, Ore. Mr. and Mrs. Jones formerly lived in Bismarck, when Mr. Jones was an announcer at | the local radio station. * * * Miss Thelma Amundson, 518 Fifth St., has returned from a week's va- cation spent at Detroit Lakes, Minn. She was accompanied by Mrs. Rose McCarthy and Miss Anne Mushik of Mandan. The first week of Miss Yellowstone National park. i * * * | Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Cordner and i children, 718 First St., have returned from a week's vacation spent at De- troit Lakes, Minn. Guests at the Cordner cottage during the week were Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Harty of Bismarck and Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Overbee of St. Paul, former residents of Bismarck. * * Ok Miss Helen Anderson, daughter of Mrs. Rachel Anderson, 222 Third 8t., Sunday for her home but Miss Tait; Amundson’s vacation was spent at! SOCIETY and CLUBS returned Tuesday from Milwaukee, ‘Wis., where she has been visiting for six weeks with her sisters, Mrs. How- ard Grimmer and Mrs. A. G. Gud- mundson. She was accompanied to Bismarck by Mrs. Grimmer, who will visit for several weeks with her On their way home to Glendive, Mont., after spending a week at A Century of Progress in Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. I. T. Dean visited friends in Bismarck Wednesday. A partner in the Larson and Dean garage and bus business, Dean was driving home a new combination 15-passenger and mail bus, which will be placed in ser- vice soon between Glendive and Wil- liston, N. D. ee ® Honoring Mrs. Donald B. Carman, 819 Fifth St., who will leave Friday for Havre, Mont., to make her home, Mrs. Clifford Palmer entertained at her home, 201% First St..at a sewing party Tuesday evening. Garden flowers decorated the table where lunch was served at the close of the evening. Mrs. Carman will join her husband at Havre, where he was transfered & month ago to work in the Gamble store. ee * Lieut. and Mrs. David Hollings- | Worth, who have been visiting for a month at the home of Lieut. Hol- lingsworth’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Hollingsworth, 523 First St., left Sunday for Chicago to spend several days and will then go to Summit, N. J., to visit her mother, Mrs. How- ard B. Buras. On Sept. 11 they will be at Fort Williams, Maine, where | Lieut. Hollingsworth reports for duty. « While here Lieut. and Mrs. Hollings- worth were entertained at a number of social affairs given in their honor. Ree el aa, t Meetings of Clubs | And Social Groups | Aedes onbshre mdi ed ° The second division of the Ladies’ Aid of the Methodist Episcopal ‘church will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Steve Ter Horst, {923 Eighth St., at 3 o'clock. Mrs. F. D. Register will be the assisting hos- tess, xk * Mrs. E. W. Herbert, 813 Avenue C. will entertain members of the Ladies Aid of the First Baptist church Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at their home. ** k The regular meeting of the Degree of Honor will be held Thursday eve- ning at 8 o'clock in the dining room of the World War Memorial building. All members are urged to be present. as a very important business matter is to be discussed at this meeting. Mrs. A. M. Brazerol, chairman of the ways and means committee, requests that all members bring their Degree bas- kets. Mrs. Harry Homan is chairman of a committee which will serve re- freshments at the close of the meet- ing. WALLIN ADVOCATES LARGER U, §, NAVY Details of Ship Construction Outlined for Rotary Club Members Wednesday “We are not anxious for war but {the United States navy should be kept up to @ strength commensurate to that of other nations,” Lieut. Com- mander Homer N. Wallin, a former North Dakotan and at present a fed- eral superintendent in the ship con- jstruction program, told members of ‘the Rotary club assembled at their regular luncheon meeting Wednes- day. Stationed until recently at Mare Island on the Pacific coast where the new navy cruiser, “San Francisco,” was launched not long ago, Lieutenant Wallin is on his way to Philadelphia where construction of ‘the cruiser “Philadelphia,” has just begun. Before taking ap the subject of ship building, Wallin touched briefly upon the strikes which paralyzed all ship- ping on the west coast in the last month, Blame for the strike was placed squarely on the shoulders of radical labor leaders and Commun- ists, Wallin said, and not on the la- bor operators or the public. Conserv- ative laborers took the initiative to stamp out the trouble, he continued. Eighty-five per cent of the cost of ship construction is in labor costs, Wallin stated in driving home his statement that the federal battleship construction program is primarily to relieve unemployment. U. S. Ranks Low Expressing a conviction that a lar- ger navy is advisable, Wallin said that since 1922, when the U. 8. gov- ernment took the lead in limiting construction, it has fallen to a third or fourth rate naval power. Details of ship construction which usually take three years, with one year devoted to severe tests, were out- lined. The San Francisco can aver. age about 32 to 33 knots and has a guaranteed 107,000 horsepower with which to drive its four propellers, he said, The 15-cruiser program inaugurated Dr. Wells Will Sell Registered Holsteins South St. Paul, Aug. 22, — (®) — A LESSENED DEMAND FOR HOME OWNERS? LOANS ENCOURAGING Federal Report Indicates That Peak of Necessity Has Been Passed . Reduced rate of new applications for governmental refinancing of ur- ban hemes in practically all states Points encouragingly to the passing of the peak of necessity for home loans, according to the weekly report of the operations of the Home Own- ers Loan corporation. 10,477,848 loans, totaling $1,246,382, 489, had been made to home owners. After the early rush. of distressed 0: the Home Owners’ Act on June 13, 1933, applications reached a high point of 146,989 during the four-week period from February 9 to March 9, 1934. Since then the rate has dropped to 60,477 applications filed during the |latest four-week period, with a week- ly rate of only 14,091 for the week end- ing August 10, the lowest since the corporation began operations. date, exclusive of those on which loans ubstantial number of which ha’ Hid been withdrawn or found inelig- le. Some confusion still exists as to the separate functions of the Home Own- ers’ Loan Corporation and the Feder- al Housing Administration, as indicat- ed by the large number of inquiries and apvlications made at, the corpora- tion offices by home owners eager to borrow for modernizatin purposes, Differentiate Between Loans It has been emphasized that only such pronerty owners as are in actual financial distress are eligible for sistance from the Home Owners’ co: Poration, whereas, those of establish- ed earning capacity and credit stand- ing should apply to their own local banks or other private financing in- stitutions for modernization loans as Provided in the National Housing act. Decline of the weekly rate of closing the loans may be expected as a result of the improved position of many ap- Plicants, the increased ability of pri-| vate institutions to handle refinanc- Ing which otherwise would have been jundertaken by the corporation and the restriction of loans to cases of urgent distress, the report pointed out. During the week ending August 10, |loans to the number of 16,146 amount- ing to $46,936,940 were closed. Analysis of loans closed to date in- dicates that for each $100 loaned the corporation has taken mortgage se- curity of $149.70 of appraised property valuation, equivalent to an average loan of about 66 per cent of the value of the security. However, it is pointed out that on homes where the original encum- brance was high in proportion to val- uation, the corporation has loaned up te the full 80 per cent permitted by law, even though in many cases it was necessary for the mortgagee to con- Sent to a reduction from the amount due him in order to bring the loan within the legal limit. KIDNAPING WAS HOAX Goldsboro, N. C., Aug. 22.—(?)— The Rev. R. H. Askew, four-square| gospel Evangelist, confessed Wednes-! DRESSES With the Chie of Paris In Every Line! Up to August 10, the report showed | % home-owner mortgagors to the cor-|% poration offices following the passage The total of applications filed to|§ have been concluded, is 1,153,160, a/% Re EE eee eee eeeeeeeueceeceeteeeres day, Sheriff Paul Garrison said, that his story of being kidnaped was un- true and that he wrote the ransom messages received by his wife. Brittin Takes Post With Hannaford Line Minneapolis, Aug. 22.—(4)—Oolonel L. H. Brittin, former vice president and manager of Northwest Airways, who resigned from this post follow- ing his conviction of contempt by the United States senate, is back in the aviation industry, it was learned we ednesday. Colonel Brittin is working, without official title, with Hanford Air Lines. Colonel Brittin was found guilty of contempt and sentenced to serve 10 days in jail by the United States Introducing— oo DUO-HEEL New and Improved ALL-OVER TIPT-TOE senate in connection with the re- | moval of documents under subpoena by the senate air mail investigating committee in February. Regan, Moffit Will Have Ball Diamonds Two recreational projects in Bur- leigh county have been started dur- jing the last week at McKensie and Moffit, according to Ed Herr, county recreational director. A baseball diamond at each of the | two towns is being laid out under the federal plan for a permanent recreational program for rural com- munities. Other projects already approved will be started soon, the county lead- for the construction work are. swim- ming pools, tennis courts, volleyball courts and additional baseball dis- EXTORTIONIST NABBED Indianapolis, Aug. 22.—(#)—Edward B. Nicholson, confessed to having attempted to ex- tort $10,000 from directors of the Fletcher Trust company by threaten- ing to “blow them up one by one and then blew up the bank.” Wheat acreage in North Carolina was increased about 10 per cent this season but agricultural statisticians say the yield is below the 10-year-av- er said. Among the projects ready | A. W. LUCAS CO. 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If it hadnt been for the telephone, ! don't know what would have happened to Doris.” “It would be a hardship for me to be without a telephone. Each evening my son calls up to chat with me. That is the brightest spot in my day? Le that cost RN BELL little provide so much pleasure, convenience and protection as the telephone. TELEPHONE “Wouldnt it be terrible with- out @ telephone. My friends ere always telephoning me to plan things to do.” e COMPAN