Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
CERTIFICATES FROM BISMARCK HOSPITAL Commencement Speaker Gives Necessary Qualifications of Educated Mind Thirteen graduates of the Bismarck | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1935 {3 NURSES RECEIVE [Dionne Quintuplets’ Doctor Celebrates His Own Birthday hospital school of nursing received their diplomas at commencement ex- ercises Monday evening at the Bis- marck city auditorium. A large au- dience of friends and relatives of the nurses and friends of the hospital at- tended. The seniors, garbed in their uni- forms, were seated on the stage which had been transformed into a bower of bloom with apple blossoms on a trellis and baskets of roses, peonies, gladiolus and other spring flowers. Seated with them were Dr. Harold R. Heininger of Naperville, Ill, the commencement speaker; Rev. John Fischer of Tuttle, chairman of the hospital's board of trustees; Rev. H. ‘W. Graunke, the hospital superinten- dent; Rev. Ira E. Herzberg, who gave; the invocation; Rev. Walter E. Vater, who pronounced the benediction; Miss Susan V. Sheaffer, supervisor of nurs- ing service at the hospital, and Miss Pauline Buzgzell, the educational di- rector. Reception After Ceremony ‘The undergraduate nurses attended the exercises in a body and were seat- ed in a special section. Members of this group acted as ushers and also assisted with the reception given after the program at the World War Me- morial building in honor of the grad- ‘uates. Miss Sheaffer administered the Nightingale pledge, which was re- peated by the graduates, before Rev. Fischer conferred their diplomas, In this he was assisted by Miss Buzzell. Musical feature of the program , ‘ were “From the Land of the Sky Blue : Water,” Cadman, “Sweet. and Low,” Barnby, and “The Rosary,” Nevin, sung by the Nurses’ glee club, direct- ed by Mrs. Herzberg, and saxophone solos played by Miss Lois Gloege, ac- companied by Miss Esther Kremer. “There is no person here who can not have a well trained mind,” de- clared Dr. Heininger, who used as his opyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Dr. Dafoe (above) gives the bottle to Marie, a feeding-style which the quintuplets are fast eutgrowing. Dr. Dafoe Smothered Under Avalanche of Congratulations as He Observes 52nd Anniversary Day After His Famous Charge Mark Their First Callander, Ont., May 29%-()}—Dr.)the cabinet, Speaker Byrns of the Allan R. Dafoe was all but smothered |house of representatives, and scores under an avalanche of congratula-|more. tions from all over America today as| The telegraph messenger boys who he observed his 52nd birthday anni-|made almost a parade to the hotel subject, “The Marks of an Educated fe Education Has 4 Phases Defining the educated mind, Dr. Heininger stated that it must have four capacities, the ability to face facts, the ability to confront assem- bled data and to do straight, hard on the basis of that data, the ability to build some kind of a system of worths and the ability to find the real reason for living. Dr. Heininger described the faulti- ness of some modern educational sys- tems which yield the student a “kalei- discopic jungle of unrelated facts” and keeps him “spending his time in @ breathless dash from one area of hastily surveyed facts to another.” He said young people should be allowed to assemble facts into a unified whole. Continuing to a discussion of val- ues, Dr. Heininger said that what a person thinks is worth while largely is a matter of perspective and that one aim of education should be to TONY AND GUS! RADIO'S NEW “HIGH SPOT” KFYR 9:15 P.M. (CST) @ combination . . . the magnificent singing voice of Chamlee, fa- ped al star, as “Tony” —pilus the” human, homely comedy of Geor; Frame Brown’s laughable, lovable boxer, “Gus—the Swedish Tornado!” Tune in TONIGHT. Brought to you by POST TOASTIES ano POST'S 40% BRAN FLAKES on ENERAL FOOD: only in BUDWEISER delicious, age-old taste of BUDWEISER. ANHEUSER-BUS Order by the case for your home | Budweiser KING OF BOTTLED BEER BISMARCK GROCERY COMPANY, 521 Main, Distributors | . . Ah! Roast Beef Certainly not! tven with your eyes shut, your taste would never let you make such a mistake.... Similarly, versary the day after the Dionne|where Dr. Dafoe was a guest at a quintuplets passed their first. dinner given him by newspaper men, To Oliva Dionne and Elzire Dionne, jhad no chores calling them to the the quintuplets’ parents, the world)Dionne homestead. As one referred sent few greetings. to them, Oliva and Elzire Dionne Some congratulatory wires were ad-|were the “forgotten parents.” dressed to the quintuplets, but most} The Dionnes had no part in Tues- of the hundreds that continued to/day’s celebration for the quintuplets. Pour in were directed to Dr. Dafoe,| “We don’t consider it an honor to who delivered the quintuplets before 'be invited by pure strangers to visit the sunrise of May 28 a year ago. our own children,” said Oliva Dionne Broadway stars, members of the/|in one of his few formal statements. Roosevelt cabinet, governors and{ The government has expressed it- leaders of industry sent congratula- |self as anxious to mollify the Dionnes, tions. The names included Former |who want their babies for themselves, Governor Alfred E. Smith of New|but the parents grow steadily more ork, Secretaries Ickes and Perkins of |resentful. give the young person an opportunity sdabsage. tapered Improvements Made At Wildwood Resort In considering the reason for liv- aa ing, the speaker related the views of| Extensive improvements have been those “who live as if the world was|Made at Wildwood Lake, popular one huge Coney Island” or with fun|summer resort for Bismarck people as their goal, those who think the |Jocated south of Wilton, according to world is s battle ground where Mrs. Hugh McCulloch, manager of supermen and women can survive the those who consider it basically a tory for the exploitation of its nati resources. The truly educated he pointed out, has none of views but considérs the world scene of the home, the family children of the living God country one where people have and happiness. He said that glad that the nurses had chosen. profession in which they could out that end and that he wished join with their parents and friends and all who made it possible for them to graduate, to congratulate them. The roll of graduates includes Helen Anderson, Douglas; Clara Beck, Het- tinger; Wilma Birkmater, Hebron; LaVina Brosz, Ashley; Edna Carlson, Ambrose; Ruth Hemmann, Reeder; Alice Erickson, Charbonneau; Lena Neidhardt, Hebron; Lydia Lidtke, El- gin; Minnie Schramm, Hazen; Ruth Schroeder, McGregor; Vera St{llman, Washburn, and Hertha Zeissler, Ha- zen, ree E i : & : i i ‘was completed recently and werything made in readiness for the summer season. The dance floor is 65 feet long by 55 feet wide. itinuing the dance season, which in last week at the pavi- » Don Lincoln and his orchestra Winona, Minn., will play for a jursday ctetell Fifi [ i j i | g i 3 fi ADMIRAL COLE DIES Vallejo, Calif. May 20.—()—The ashes of Rear Admiral William Carey Cole will be scattered on the sea where he spent 46 years. Admiral Cole died Tuesday at the Mare Island Navy Yard hospital. He was 67. Hebron Woman to Be Buried on Thursday Hebron, N. D., May 29.—(?)—Fun- eral services for Mrs. G. H. Funk, ‘pioneer settler who died Monday from complications that followed a frac- of her hip last February, will be at 10 a. m., Thursday at the home and later at the St. John’s Rev. J. M. Munz urial will be made ga | z ! : i i ig rH E E ! Eee f Ascension Day Masses will you find the CH ¢ ST. LOUIS Have your lawn mower reground for only $1.50. Call the Bismarck Spring Service for expert service. We call for and 714 Thayer or deliver. RVANGELICAL CHURCH CHANGES EFFECTIVE Heidinger and Herzberg Leave for New Fields; Successors En Route Here Changes in the personnel and ad- ministration of the Evangelical church in Bismarck became effective Wednesday. Rev. A. W. Heidinger, district su- Perintendent here for the last four years, left Tuesday afternoon for Fargo, where he will become district head of the church organization. He was accompanied by his wife and two daughters, Margery, » 8, Replacing him here is Rev..C. A. Bremer, former superintendent of the Fargo district and superintendent here until eight years ago. The church Tules prohibit a superintendent in the same district for a longer period. Rev. Bremer, with his wife and family, were due to arrive in Bismarck Wed- 95 Per Cent of Farmers in State Favor AAA Extension Total Tabulations for 49 Out of 53 Counties Show Yes Vote of 54,783 Against 2,117 No, N. D. A. C. Extension Division Reports Fargo, N. D., May 29.—(7)—Of the wheat producers in North Dakota who Saturday voted on extension of the AAA wheat adjustment contract past the 1935 crop season, 95 per cent favored the proposal as shown by re- turns from 49 of the state’s 53 counties. The producers under contract voted 49,629 yes and 1,745 no, while non- contractors voted 5,163 yes and 372 no, according to the unofficial tabulation of returns by the extension division of the North Dakota Agricultural college. 14, and Vir- | A‘ nesday and will occupy the home at 1002 Avenue C which was vacated by the Heidingers. It is owned by the church organization, Rev. Bremer formerly was manager of the Bismarck hospital here before becoming district superintendent, having lived here for 10 years prior to 1927. His return is something in the nature of a home-coming. The same thing was true of Rev Heidinger, who was pastor of the Evangelical church at Fargo before coming here as district superinten- dent. Rev. Heidinger asked that pastors in the district be informed that the telephone number listed in his name will be unchanged, this arrangement having been made to facilitate Rev. Bremer’s work. Another change in the church or- ganization sees the removal of Rev. Ira E. Herzberg, pastor of the First Evangelical church, to a Grand Forks pastorate. The Herzberg family was to leave Wednesday. Rev. Herzberg will be succeeded in the local pastorate by Rev. W. A. Lemke of Hazen, expected to arrive here Thursday. Medical Men Return From Minot Meeting Bismarck doctors, who returned Tuesday night from the annual con- vention of their state organization at Minot, played a prominent part in the deliberations of the state society. Dr. C. E. Stackhouse, president last. year, presided at the sessions and delivered one of the main addresges, attacking various proposals to set up @ compulsory medical insurance sys- tem. Dr. N. O, Ramstad, Bismarck, was re-elected counsellor for this district, &@ position he has held for many years, and Dr. H. 8. Brandes was rec- ommended for appointment on the state board of medical examiners. Brandes also reported for the state committee on medical economics. A report by Dr. L. W. Larson, chair- man of the legislative committee, was read at the annual banquet. Dr. Lar- son was unable to attend. At a meeting of the state health council, Dr. Maysil Williams, state health director, was a leading factor and discussed achievements and goals in the public health field. Dr. A. M. | Brandt read a paper on the etiology and treatment of scarlet fever at the health officers meeting. Bismarck physicians in attendance, in addition to those listed as taking Part in the program, were W. B. Bo- denstab, G. M. Constans, J. O. Arn- son, A. M. Fisher, city health officer, and C. A. Arneson, Forgotten Woman’ ‘ Parades in Barrel ° Portland, Ore. May 29.—(?)— Miss Grace Wick, who was nomin- ated for at a beer gar- den convention here last fall, now believes she is “one of the forgot- ten women of the new deal.” Wearing only a barrel, inscrib- ed with caustic slogans, she stag- ed a “one-woman” protest par- ade through the downtown streets Tuesday. Blasting Repub- Ucans and Democrats alike, she declared those in power had pre- vented her from obtaining any remunerative public office. Guilty of Slaying | 17-Year-Old Bride oe . JOSEPH L. STEINMETZ New York, May 29.—(7)—Joseph L. Steinmetz, 22-year-old divinity student, was convicted of man- slaying of his 17-year-old bride, former Hollywood, high school girl. He faces a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison, al- though the jury “strongly” rec- ommended mercy. Steinmetz was accused of shoot- ing his bride, the former Ruth Armstrong, and a priest, the Rev. joseph J. Leonard. Judge Charles C. Nott, Jr., set June 14 as the date for sentence, The total is 54,783 yes votes against 2,117 no votes. The vote by counties includes: Contract Non-Contract County Yes No Yes No dams 584 38 38 10 Billings .. 311 12 32 3 Bowman 408 24 38 5 Burleigh . 1010 23 142 8 Dunn .. 1287 28 223 1 Golden Valley .. 354 14 25 1 Hettinger 1063 38 45 3 Logan 7149 43 65 6 McHenry 1325 51 91 4 McIntosh 915 21 24 0 McKenzie 1058 17 177 lu McLean 1896 4 188 6 Mercer 897 55. 64 3 Morton ... 1386 22 110 1 Mountrail 1575 56 102 11 Oliver 479 21 52 8 Sioux .. 265 8 46 4 Slope .. 385 14 57. 1 Stark .. 984 19 43 0 Steele 659 68 37 10 Ward .. 1743 40 207 ll Williams . sees 1646 45 120 6 ‘First Lady’ Studies ‘Model’ Mill Homes Goshen, Va., May 29.—(#)— After spending the night as a guest in the home of a railway agent here, Mrs. Franklin D, Roosevelt took back to Washington Wednesday another of the first hand impressions of work- ers’ living conditions for which she is noted. Unheralded, she arrived Tuesday with a party to inspect “model” mills and employes’ homes here and at Augusta Springs and Craigsville. The president’s wife and her party stayed at the home of J. B. Wood, Chesapeake & Ohio railway agent. Ask Venue Change in Gibson Murder Case Dickinson, N. D., May 29.—(?)—A hearing was to be held here late Wed- nesday in district court on a motion asking for a change of venue of the trial of Mrs. Nathaniel Gibson of Dickinson on a charge of slaying her husband. son, has moved for a change of venue to another county. States Attorney Theodore Kellogg will resist the mo- tion, he said. Kellogg recently filed an affidavit of prejudice against Judge Harvey J. Miller of Dickinson, who was to have presided, and the supreme court se- lected Judge George M. McKenna of Napoleon, Mrs. Gibson is at liberty on $15,- 000 bond. Her husband, a mail car- rier, was found dead in bed from a gunshot wound in December, 1933. At first it was believed he had committed suicide. Later the charge was filed against the widow. EXPOSITION OPENS San Diego, Calif. May 29.—()— This little southwestern city which dared in the face of great odds to stage @ $15,000,000 world’s fair with half a year of preparation, Wednes- day opens its California Pacific Ex- Position. Fifty thousand persons were expected to participate in the opening ceremonies that move to a climax this evening when President Franklin D. Roosevelt, from his study in the White C. H, Starke, counsel for Mrs. Gib- House, will address the throng. Flier, Lost 8 Years, f , A | Is Found in Jungle Cnn RATIO eo CES ENT ONCE Colon, Panama, May 20.—(7)— An amazing account of finding Paul Redfern, American aviator who disappeared eight years ago, living as a “medicine man” in the jungle of Dutch Guiana, was re- lated Wednesday by Tom Roche. The informant, a German-born American citizen, said he lived for three months in 1933 with Red- fern, who vanished while on a flight from Brunswick, Ga. to Rio de Janeiro. Roche previously had told his story to James L. Park, U. 8, consul here and Park relayed to the state department at Washing- ton the narrator's offer to lead a Tescue expedition to Redfern’s rude hut in an Indian village far from civilization, Roche said Redfern was critic- ally injured when his plane crashed against a mountain. In- dians who found the aviator with both legs and his left arm broken nursed the flier back to health, he said. Roche said that when he left the native village, Redfern begged him to take a message to his father, Dr. Carl Redfern of Wash- ington, D. C., and his wife, Ger- trude, whose whereabouts he said he did not know. (Mrs, Paul Redfern, informed of Roche's narrative in Cleveland, Ohio, said she hoped it had “more truth in it than others we have received in the last few years.”) Pilot and Passenger Killed in Air Crash Carlinville, Il, May 29.—(P)—"“A peculiar noise” heard by a witness of- fered official investigatiors Wednes- day a clue to the cause of the crash of a Chicago and Southern Airlines plane, which varried its pilot and a passenger to their deaths Tuesday night. Bound from Chicago to St. Louis, the tri-motored plane, piloted by John B. (Red) Lynn and carrying as its only passenger his brother-in- law, Paul Gardner, crashed and burned on the farm of Charles R. Welton. Raymond Love, a farmer, told sheriff A. L. Henry he was attracted from his home by the noise, which he described as sounding “as if some- thing had broken.” KAY FRANCIS RECOVERING London, May 29.—()—Kay Francis, American motion picture actress, was recovering Wednesday from an oper- ation for the removal of the salivary gland made necessary by an infected wisdom tooth. 40 and 8 to Elect Meeting Delegates Members of the 40 and 8, fun and honor society of the American Legion, will hold their last meeting before the usual summer recess at 8 p. m., Friday in the World War Memorial building. Delegates to the state 40 and 8 convention, to be held at Grand Forks in connection with the Legion convention, will be elected at the meeting. A queen bee will lay an average of 1,500 eggs a day during the breeding TIRED ena IRRITABL Sidor of Chicago says: “I was very tired and irritable. I had pains and terrible peri- Sour Tabters ea ey helped me ur Tablets me Wonderfully.” MUSKET SHOOT —Memorial Day at 1 P. M— Range immediately west of Tav- ern on Memorial Highway—Fol- low signs. Prizes to winners—muskets and ammunition furnished to par- ticipants at small charge. EVERYONE INVITED Sponsored by | Bismarck Rifle Club Attention Veterans of Foreign Wars Gilbert M. Nelson Post, No. 1326 All members are requested to meet at World War Memorial Building at 9:45 a. m. for parade Memorial Day. And good cigarettes those Chesterfields. Made of mild ripe tobacco... aged 2 years or more. @ 1935, Leoasrr & Byzzs Tosacco Ca, ood ships those old windjammers .«. built from the heart of the oak comes — the cigarette Her masts and yards they shine like silver Oh a Yankee ship down the river that’s MILDER — the cigarette that TASTES BETTER t