The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 23, 1935, Page 7

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COMMUNITY CHEST _ POND DRIVE WILL START OCTOBER 8} U. C. Taylor Is Chosen General Chairman; Goal to Be Set by Budget Group Bismarck’s annual Cqmmunity ©hest Fund drive will be launched|* Oct. 8 under the direction of J. C. ‘Taylor, who has been named chair- man of the general campaign com- mittee. The goal of the 1935 campaign will be determined at a meeting to be held woon by the budget committee of the Chest fund. The amount is expected ‘to be approximately the same as last Veer when 1,843 subscribers contribut- ed_$12,173 to, the welfare fund. - Election of the board of directors ¥rom among the 16 persons nominat- ed at a recent meeting of a commit- tee, appointed for this purpose will pe the first day of the campaign ve. Institutions which derive their ex- Sstence from the Chest funds include, the Bismarck Boy and Girl Scout organizations, the Bismarck Juvenile band, the local chapter of the Ameri- can Red Cross, the Salvation Army. ‘and the Bismarck community Christ- mas. Aid is also given to the Florence (Crittenton home, North Dakota Chil- dren’s home, the St. John’s Orphan- age, and the N. D. House of Mercy, all at Fargo. + Committees Chosen : Committees appointed at a recent meeting of the board of directors to handle various phases of the cam- paign include: General Campaign—Taylor, chair- man; H. J. Duemeland, R. C. Kirk- ‘wood, J. N. Roherty, Frank Milhollan, HH. A. Brandes, Kelly Simonson. Publicity — Milhollan, chairman; Charles C. Goodwin, Gordon Mac- Gregor. ‘Advance Gifts—Brandes, chairman; R. B. Webb, F. M. Davis. Chain Stores—Kirkwood, chairman, B. O. Refvem, D. D. Prust. To-Secure-Solicitors — Simonson, chairman, E. B. Klein, Opie S. Rin- dahl. State and Federal Officers and Em- (ployees—Roherty, chairman. Additional ociety Miss Grace Jeweski, -» Charles Miller Wed During a quiet nuptial service read at St. Mary’s procathedral parish house at 6:30 o'clock Saturday eve- ning by Rev. Henry Holleman in the presence of a few relatives and friends, Miss Grace Jeweski and Charles Miller, both of this city, ex- changed their nuptial vows. Miss Blanche Jeweski, Drake, sis- ter of the bride, and Dr. Milo 8. Priske attended the couple. The bride wore a wine colored chif- fon velvet dress fashioned in floor length with a turban and shoes to match and had a corsage of white gardenias. The bridesmaid wore a seal brown crepe ensemble with har- monizing accessories and a corsage of yellow roses. ‘The bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jeweski of Drake, were among the wedding guests, Mrs. Jeweski wearing a black crepe gown and a corsage of pink roses, Mr, and Mrs. Jeweski gave a wed- ding dinner for 18 guests at ihe Ren- desvous following the ceremony. An amber color scheme denoting the fall Season was used, the bride’s cake be- ing the main feature of the table de- corations. , Mr. and Mrs. Miller now are at home in this city. The bride was graduated from the St. Alexius hospital school of nurs- and took post graduate work at Pig rks hospital, Chicago. Since been engaged in nurs- here. . Miller is the son of Mr, and Mrs, . Miller, Chip Lake, Sask., Can., is employed as a 6 a draftaman by the state Planning board i; Cina Council Resumes Activities AUTO COMPASS Tt ae HOLLYWOOD | san pictures, he was greeted most enthu: foubt, would appreciate a chance te play opposite him, ind opera singer, arrived in Los (Associated Press Angeles for his debut In Ameri- istically by a bevy of young film actresses. Most of them, no Photo) make the reservation that funds could be asked if an occasion requiring ad- ditional money should arise. Mrs. E. F. Trepp introduced a reso- lution in behalf of KFYR, carrying an endorsement of the station and a Pledge that whole-hearted support will be given if necessary in the ef- fort to, retain its license, which was adopted. Meetings will continue in the Ameri- can Legion Auxiliary room for the current year, it was decided. Mrs. Albin Hedstrom, the council's representative on the city health ad- visory board, reported on its final meeting, corrective work done in the city by the FERA and items donated to the loan closet for use of city nurses by Bismarck clubs. Interested in Park Mrs. Charles Liessman, represent- ing a committee headed by Mrs. W. E. Perry, spoke on the park project suggested for the vicinity of the coulee north of the city and asked that council members look over the proposed park site. Mrs. C. B. Whittey brought to the attention of the council the danger- ous traffic condition existing on the Avenue B, C and D intersections with Sixth street which carries the bulk of traffic from the Capitol, particularly during school hours. Mrs. Baker ap- pointed Mmes. Whittey, Mrs. H. L. Wheeler and Trepp to confer with the city commission and police force, presenting the gravity of the problem and requesting that the dangerous corners be policed when school is be: ing c&lled or let out or have the mat- ter otherwise taken care of. All women’s groups in the city are invited to send delegates to the next meeting Oct..17, Annual dues will be payable at that time. ee * Nelsen-Schafer Vows Are Exchanged Sunday A large group of relatives and friends were guests at the wedding of Miss Marian Margaret Nelsen, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Nelsen, Aberdeen, 8S. D., and Harold Schafer, son of Mrs, Bertha Schafer, Oxnard, Calif, formerly of Bismarck, which was solemnized at 9 o'clock Sunday morning at the First Presbyterian church. A profusion of garden flow- ers decorated the church for the oc- casion, Rey. F. E. Logee, pastor, officiated. Miss Florence’ Fritch, the church or- ganist, played the wedding marches. Preceding the service Howard Freitag, tenor, sang “I Love You Truly,” his ent being provided by Miss Janice Brodell. Bride Attired in Tile For the ceremony the bride was gowned in a tile dress and brown ac- cessories and had a bouquet of tea roses and baby’s breath. Her at- tendants, Mrs. Harold Pfaff of Na- poleon and Miss, Margaret Nelsen of Aberdeen, 8. D., sister of the bride, also were costumed in the fall col- ors, the former wearing plum and the latter brown, Both carried bou- quets of garden flowers. Mr, Schafer was attended by Mr. Pfaff and his brother, Gordon Beha- fer, Beulah, A wedding breakfast for 40 guests was served at the home of Mr. and jning by Miss Janice Brodell and Mrs. \deen, 8. D., and also will tour the | Black Hills. Hills and Aberdeen and will~be at home Sept. 29 at 302 Rosser Avenue, the family home of the bridegroom. Mr. Schafer was graduated from the Bismarck high school and then at- tended the North Dakota Agricultural college, Fargo. He is a clerk at the Dahil clothing store. The bride at- tended the Mellette high school and @ business college at Aberdeen and came here 18 months ago to take charge of the North Dakota Power and Light company home service department. xk kK Miss Marian Margaret Nelsen, who Sunday became the bride of Harold Schafer, was guest of honor at a mis- cellaneous shower given Friday eve- H. A. Pfaff at the bride-elect’s home, 302 Rosser avenue. The 10 guests passed the time with hemming tea towels for Miss Nelsen, who found her | & gifts during a treasure hunt. * & & Announcements have been received of the birth of a daughter, Mary Katherine, to Mr. end Mrs. William McCormick, Jr., of Washington, D. C., at the home of Mrs. McCormick's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Phillips of Valley City on Wednesday, Sept. 18. Mrs. McCormick will be remembered as Miss Jessie Phillips who was em- ployed at the Capitol for some time. She has passed the summer in Man- dan with her husband's parents, Mr. and Mrs. “William McCormick, Sr., and at the home of her parents. se 8 8 In honor of her son, Ernest, who celebrated his 10th birthday anniver- sary Sunday, Mrs. Jake Gartner, 607 Front avenue, entertained a number of friends at an afternoon party. Games which provided diversion were fcilowed by a two-course luncheon. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. Marcus Sattler and daughters, Caroline and Lucille, of Shields, x kk Jack Zuger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Zuger, 501 Thayer avenue, west, left Saturday for the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, where he will continue his law studies. Join- ing him at Minneapolis Tuesday will be George Moses, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Moses, 216 Park St., who is en- rolled in the school of journalism. They will have an apartment together again this term. # # # Miss Katherine Kraft, 402 First 8t., | employed bythe Grand DeLuxe beau- ty shop, left Sunday morning for Repid City, 8. D., to attend the South Dakota Hairdressers’ association | meeting. Before returning in about 10 days she will visit friends at Aber- ee oe Miss Elizabeth Schafer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Christ Schafer, Man- dan, plans to leave Oct. 1 for St. Paul where she has accepted a secre- tarial position in the Federal Reserve Land bank. @he has been employed by @ Mandan dairy company for sev- eral years. * # % Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Sleight, Walker, 8. D., spent the week-end here visit- ing his, father, Fred Sleight of New '49 Witnesses Await accepted a position in the office of the Hardware Mutual Casualty com- pany. He received his degree from the University of North Dakota last June. * * # Mr. and Mrs. Wade D. Gehringer, Mobridge, 8S. D., former Bismarck residents, visited with friends in the city this week-end. They were house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dick- man, 615 Washington St. * % * Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Dodds, 808 Ave- nue D, left Saturday night for a va- cation during which they will visit all the principal cities on the west coast and the San Diego exposition. * & & Dr. T. W. Buckingham, Enge apart- ments, visited with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Buckingham of Min- neapolis, during the week-end, | City and County | County Judge I. C. Davies issued @ marriage license Saturday to Arnold Sanford Anfinson and Agnes Constance Stenseth, both of Bis- marck, City Magistrate E. 8. Allen arrived | home Sunday from Lake Lida, near Pelican Rapids, Minn., where he had spent several days closing up his cot- tage for the summer. Applications by two companies to establish bus passenger service be- tween Grand Forks and Minot, scheduled to have been heard by the state railroad board Fritay, were in- definitely postponed Monday. They were the Checker Transportation company of Fargo and the Lieder- bach Bus company of Minneapolis, E. H. Bakken, deputy regional Boy | Scout Executive from St. Paul, came| to Bismarck Sunday from Minot and will spend three days with Paul O. Netland, Missouri Valley Area council executive, reviewing the area program. and visiting several of the district headquarters. A district meeting will be held at Mandan tonight and a sec- ond one at Lemmon, 8. D., Tuesday. Bakken plans to leave Wednesday for Fargo. Call of Grand Jury Fargo, Sept. 23.—(7)—With some 49 or more witnesses lined up in the hall on the third floor of the federal building awaiting their turn to tes- tify, a federal grand jury resumed its deliberations in Fargo Monday after two-day recess. While no official announcement has |many years ago. jand William ‘of Butte, Mont., Tony LONG AFTER DEATH j lie Way to Study ©: to Study Causes of, Children's Diseases Open- | ed by Experiment i Van gale Moscow, "Sept. 23.—(4)—Prof. N. Ossinoffsky of the government insti tute for the protection of children's health announced Monday that the} hearts had been removed from the bodies of 35 children and made to function again in a. solution contain- ing adrenaline. He said in experiments conducted in his laboratory the hearts had func- | tioned for as long as four hours in some cases and that they had been removed from the bodies at periods varying up to 25 hours after death. The number of hearts revived, he ; sald, constituted 65 per cent of all! the hearts with which the experiments | |Were conducted. The children | died of various diseases. The professor said he believed the | experiments would open a new way! to the study of the causes of chil- dren’s diseases. London-to-Capetown | Fliers Cheat Death; Khartoum, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, | Sept. 23.—(?)—Thomas Campbell-} Black and J. H. McCarter, British fliers attempting @ record round trip! from London to Capetown “bailed out” | from their airplane and landed with parachutes, unhurt, on the west bank of the Nile, said Reuters dispatches | Monday. It was reported that their airplane crashed west of the Kabushia rail-| way station, 130 miles north of Khar-| toum, Sunday morning. Balta, N. D., Farmer Is Claimed by Death Frank A. Gebhardt, 45, farmer and) rancher near Balta, N. D., died at; 4:45 p, m. Sunday at a local hospital from empyema, a lung ailment. He had been suffering from the ail- ment several years and was brought; to the hospital here May 27.° Funeral services will be held at 10 a. m. Wed- nesday at the St. Pius Catholic church at Balta with Rev. Father Stutz offi- ciating. Burial will be made at Balta | - Gebhardt came to North Dakota He was married to Carolina Zacher @ct. 27, 1919, atj Balta. He was a member of the, county. Iris; his father, William Gebhardt, |8r., of Balta; five brothers, Christ The Roger of ritain’s Fleet "IKGEP HEARTS GONG tien His Orders ish Home Fleet, which 1 held ready tor any emergency in | the Mediterranean area growing | out of the {talo-Ethiopian crit i is under command of Admiral Backhouse (above). would guide its maneuvers event military sanctions are in- voked against Italy by the League Nation: here the bod taken Monday. |v _pe_yq a “'Born Oct. 2, 1889, in Minnesota, Mr.| Garfield Hoglund, 48, Cass Officer, Is Dead Fargo, Sept. 23.—(#)—Cass county school and township boards in Pierce | commissioner for almost five years, Garfield Hoglund, 48, died in a Fargo He Naavés his wife, two sons, George | hospital Sunday from heart disease. and Allen; two daughters, Lillian and| American Legion funeral services will be held here Tuesday at 2 p. m. TVLLY'S SON GIVEN PRISON’ SENTENCE Pleads Guilty to Assault on Girl After Party; Gets One to 50 Years Susanville, Calif., Sept. 23—()— Thomas A. Tully, 24, son of the author, Jim Tully, pleaded guilty Monday to ‘a charge of assaulting a girl. Superior Judge H. D. Burroughs sentenced him to a term in San Quentin prison. The sentence carries a term of one to 50 years. Young Tully was arrested eight days ago, on complaint of Juanita Shep- |pard, 16-year-old Westwood, Calif., jeirl, who alleged he beat and attacked {her,after @ party. ; When a group of men milled out- jside the Westwood jail, reportedly bent on lynching, young Tully was re- |moved here for safekeeping. \Aloys Wartner Heads Municipality League Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 23.—Aloys ;P. Wartner of Harvey, vice president {of the North Dakota League of Muni- | chpalities was promoted to the presi- jdency at the closing session of the ;eighth annual convention here Sat- urday. ; F. O. Olsen of Fargo was named jVice president and O. M. Knudson of ‘Rugby was elected to a three year term as trustee. Myron H. Atkinson jof Bismarck was retained as executive | Secretary. | The convention decided to hold the (next meeting in Mandan and passed routine resolutions. Approximately 645,000,000 incan- descent lamps were purchased by | Americans last year. Iron Workers To Go Back to Y Cai the isst ey losing ue finally was Iron Workers union’s agen an agreement governing wages working hours which plant Datiagel had approved. The agreement bans areas 4 against any employes who joined strikers and provides for a 40-hour week of five eight-hour days on the wage scale proposed a month ago by employers. ELDRIDGE LAMB WINS Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 238.—The first prize lamb at the corn-lamb show Saturday, exhibit of August Wanzek of Eldridge, brought 18 cents @ pound in a post-judging sale, Tt has been estimated that there are between 70,000,000 and 75,000,000 eligible voters in this country. Of this number, 39,470,000 voted in 1932 and jonly 29,000,000 cast ballots in 1934. SCHOOL AND CO! WARRANTS accepted at P, VALUE in trade at A ROSEN & BRO. | Schilling Pure flied oN *\/anilla ¢ Lis delicate flavor never bakes out We feature the finest line of Men's and Ladies’ SPORT CLOTHES Ohippewa Boots (all models) and ‘Men’s and Ladies’ Riding Style Boots, all sizes. Capitol Army and Navy Store . D. ip 410 Broadway Bismarck, PIANO TUNING Charles L. Bryan 422 Fourth St. Phone 649 ‘ and John of Balta, and Lynn of Orrin, | N. D., and two sisters, Mrs. Gregorson, | Peerless, Mont., and Mrs. Delia Van- | Etta, Anamoose, N. D. \ Paul Sand, Pierce county represen- ; bedside when death came. mately 65,000 persons in this coun- try. ay Ear ee comfortable. Oysters provide work for approxi-| taste. Mak. F New Way to Hold Loose FALSE TEETH Firmly in Place Do false teeth annoy and bother: by tative in the state legislature, and/ jean ete a — yet, tuk or laug! ‘ust eprinkle a le members of the family were at the | {2 NTH on your plates; This new, powder holds teeth firm and No gummy, Booey, pasty breath been made as to what is being con- sidered by the jury, it is known nu- merous subpoenas have been served on county chairmen and others con- nected with the Langer defense fund, ordering them to appear and bring with them all records of collections made, Members of the marshal’s of- fice still were serving grand jury sub- poenas for persons in nearly every county in the state. England, who is a patient at St. Alexius hospital. They. were house }} ing sessions of the 5ist convocation | b of the Episcopal church. Hundreds of Items Priced to Save You Travdes Pad ‘ita a co and lela guest of Mrs. Sleight’s uncle and aunt, Mr, and Mrs. J. H. Sleight, 212 Sec- ond St. , +e % Rev. N. E. Elsworth, rector of St. | = 8 Episcopal chureh, and Mrs. day for Fargo, where they are guests of Mr. and Mrs. P.L. E. Godwin dur- George’ . Elsworth, 514 Mandan St., left sen | + #-% Dr. and Mrs, Leonard Stenseth of Jamestown were week-end gussts of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Thompson, Mason apartments. | *“ * # rt Setetl| VICKS for Stevens Point, Wis., where he has Money Hee a are E campend 58 3.98 General Custer, when a cadet at West Point, received 812 demerits, This was only 23 short of the num- ber which meant dismissal. He com- mitted 453 offenses, CATCHING COLD? At the first warn ing sneeze — quick —a few drops up each nostril. Its timely use helps RO:NOL mere elsewhere a) ie Ganetn Motor Company, Bismarck One of Buick’s veteran workmen, on the payroll since January, 1928 You canit fool us fellow who put em together, and I'm telling SATURDAY sert.28 Steel Tow Chain . Many Useful Household Articles tern Dept 243 West 17th Street, Announcing the Opening of FIRESTONE Accessory and Supply Store There Can Be No Substitute for Quality AUTO RADIO would cost $10.00 ++++++-..$48 BUMPER GUARDS vecevcee. 005 Protect your i ator and ¢ damege. A : .... 69 8 ssity for " erowded park- AND UP ine 2 Fires | almost unbelievably simple pattern! i ! i | ; skirt brings you one of the newest fashion features. The whole | has the easy grace that makes it a darling to wear! The fabric pic- } tured is a patterned silk crepe—the pattern standing out in | relief against its dull background. It would also be lovely ina new } corded or ribbed silk, or any novelty silk crepe with good body. Pat- tern X2483 comes in sizes 12 to 20 and 30 to 40, Send 15¢ today for pattern X2483 to The Bismarck Tribune, Pat- of the new novelty silks that has surface interest—and you'll be a magnet for compliments the season throt ittons make the only trim, notice. Sleeves and yoke are cut in one—both for style and easy making. The low-placed flare in the front of the i lustrous New York,

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