The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 15, 1935, Page 7

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Baton Wielder Says Typical Ameritan Five-Feet-Five ‘Dark Blonde’ NEW OFFICERS ARE INSTALLED MONDAY AT LEGION MEETING Rue Becomes Commander of Veterans Group; Names 81 on Committees Appointment of 81 members of Lloyd ~{Bipetz Post No. 1, American Legion. to Beauty Is jRay. Noble, British Orchestra Leader, Studies Charmers From All U. S. — New York, Oct. 15.—The composite American beauty is a dark blonde, five feet, five inches tall and a per- ethos standing committees was an-| fect 16. She uses.a lot of lipstick but ‘mounced Monday evening by Milton jRue following his installation as new ‘commander of the local veterans ‘group. \_ Taking office with Rue were L. i } Miller, vice commander; Charles F. Martin, adjutant; Henry Hanson, fi- imance officer; Melvin Steen, histor- Han; Rev. E. L. Jackson, chaplain and ;George Haugen, sergeant at arms. Kenneth W. Simons and Walter J, Brophy, respectively retiring com- mander and adjutant, became mem- bers of the post executive commit- tee. Past Commander A. D. McKin- jmon was the installing officer. Chief among Rue’s appointments ‘was that of Robert J. Dohn, a past \commander of the post, as service of- ‘fieer, a position which he held for ;Many years beore becoming com- “mander. Hektner Leads Membership Other appointments were: Member- \ship committee—George Hektner, jehairman; L. F. Bechtold, Harry Ros- tenthal, Jack MacLachlan, A. C. Brainerd, William Franklin, Ryder Hamro, R. A. Nelson, Ray Robinson, E. M. Davis, Henry Handtmann, L. V. , Miller, Carl Knudtson, Theodore Mar- tell, Ira Kelly and John Degg. Junior baseballi—Kenneth W. Si- mons, chairman; Myron Anderson, Harold Hopton, G. A. Dahlen, Clar- ence Gunness and Louis Lenaburg. Publicity—Curtis Dirlam, chairman; John Musol and Carl Knudtson. House and Entertainment—William ‘Yegen, chairman; George Dolph, F. G. Bernard, A. D. McKinnon, L.. B. Brauer and Dallas Kast. ‘Ways and Means—Harry Rosenthal, chairman; C. F. Martin, L. V. Miller, ‘W. Brewster and M. W. Erwin. Boy Scouts—Dr. G. J. Worner, chair- man; Sam Merritt and Dr. J. O. Arn- eon. Foreign Relations—Iver Acker, chairman; Frayne Baker and Harlan Poindexter. Spare Heads Conservation Conservation—John C. Spare, chair- man; George Hektner, Robert J. Dohn, ‘Melvin Steen and A. D. McKinnon, Child Welfare—Dr. A. M. Fisher, chairman; Walter G. Renden and A. A. Jones. Americanismi—James Morris, chair- man; P, G, Harrington and Claire Aeronautics—Myron H. Atkinson, chairman; Harry Potter and Vincent Cavasino. Legislative—William M. Schantz, chairman; Thomas J. Burke, Theo- dore Martell, Harold Hopton and J. L, Barth. National Defense—L. P. Warren, chairman; Walter Sather and Ed. ‘Trepp. Graves Registration—Rev. Floyd Lo- gee, chairman; Herman Brocopp and Lester Diehl. Education—s. T. Lillehaugen, chair- man; Dr. W. E. Cole, C. W. Leifur and W. H. Payne. Day Observance—Ferris Cordner, chairman; Frayne Baker, Herman Brocopp, H. A. Jones, F. F. Skinner and Thomas 8. Smith. Boxing—Fred Thimmesch, chair- man; John Degg, John Bowers and Jack MacLachlan. almost no rouge, watches her diet carefully and gets her chief exercise by swimming which she does with fessional expertness. She would prot like to go on the stage or into motion | - , | pictures, :|take almost any job she can get, but failing that, she'll whether she needs it or not—for work she must. It’s the custom of her coun- toy, y ‘These are conclusions arrived at after considerable research, by Ray Noble, the British composer, lyricist and orchestra leader to whose music girls from all over the country dance in the Rainbow Rooms at Rockefeller Center. For evenings on end, Mr. Noble and @ group of beauty experts he had in- vited in, viewed the dancers and se- lected beauties, nearly half a hundred in all, Then when the ballots were all collected, Noble averaged them up and was surprised to find that the Amer- ican beauty was a blonde. Surprised and to tell the truth, a little disap- pointed. Likes Brunettes Best “I prefer brunettes, being a blonde myself,” the tall, amiable and intelli- gent conductor admits. “I had some sort of notion that brunettes predom- inated in America, blondes in England. Of course, though, the term has a fairly wide scope and the American blonde is darker than her English sister. Maybe there ought to be an in-between name for her, since her hair is usually quite dark and her eyes are frequently. dark blue or gray. Her skin, however, is fair, and trans- lucent, after the way of blondes in any climate.” Noble has under his eyes every eve- ning a sample of the composite Amer- ican beauty in Doris Wester of Ohio, who came to the big city a young un- known hunting fame and fortune, and had in the Rainbow Room a sensa- tional success that set the whole town talking. Rumor has it that she is| bound for Hollywood and further laurels. Energetic and Determined “That is the amazing characteristic or the American beauty,” Noble muses, “her energy, determination or maybe it is character. There was a time when beauty was enough, but no girl relies on it now.” There are girls from at least a dozen states any evening in the Rain- bow Room. And by the end of a week, the entire roster from Maine to Cali- fornia has been represented. Ray Noble is learning to tell the section of the country from which they come by the way they dance. It’s one of those intangible things he can’t explain, but in nine cases out of ten, he can pick them, ~ He insists that American women are beautiful (and by that he means something more than merely the freshness and charm of youth) young- er than any other women in the world. One Type Girl Is British “I think it’s a sample of the way you are in this. country,” Noble ex- plains. “You feel that you have to do everything faster than it is done any- where else. All that speed mania THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1985, 1 | | ¢ eae, . hasn’t been exaggerated. It is really a habit of the American mind and perhaps it always will be. Or maybe it will fade out as you get older.” Among the young women who un- consciously helped Mr. Noble to draw his conclusions about the composite American beauty were Tallulah Bank- head, the screen and stage star, who represents the South on the list, hav- ing from from Alabama; Jerry Bergh, young pre-debutante of New Haynes, an executive secretary from Seattle, Wash.;.June Brehm, society |girl from Massachusetts; and Pat | Martin, who is American only by adop- tion, being British by birth, and proves Conductor Noble’s contention that English beauties are blonder than American ones. SLOPE NEWS U. S. Cruiser Is Sent To Strife-Torn Port Hongkong, Oct, 15—(#)—The United States cruiser Nashville was dispatched ‘Tuesday to Swatow, China, where a Sino-Japanese controversy arose over customs duties, Chinese at Swatow said the Japan- ese had built a wharf and refused to pay duties, but the Japanese insisted they only refused to pay a special, illegal rice tax. ‘The Japanese were reported to have threatened to land marines there to force settlement of the dispute. A new gliding instruction program inaugurated by the Soviet govern- ment is expected to train 1,000,000 in this branch of flying. MODERN WOMEN similar Big bargains right at the best time to gol New. York .... 2 Ae m ... 24.85 Lira nda 20.35 | Ene Cleveland ..... 18.55 Detroit saceees 15,40 ‘argo-$8.75 Seattle 24.00 nn 32.70 —_L’Ang. 27.50 NORTHLAND sREYHOUND Strasburg—Falling over a chicken roost, Mrs. Tom Wagner fractured a thigh bone. Steele—The annual fall festival and 4-H Achievement day will be held here Oct. 19. Anamoose—Forty men are busy put- ting in Anamoose’s first pavement, two ‘blocks on Main street, Hull—Mrs, J. J. Haveman suffered & fractured collarbone when the car in which she was riding tipped over. Beulah—Mercer county teachers meet here Oct. 18 to hear C. E. Scott of Minot, Supt. J. O. Reidel announces. Braddock—Ray Dietlein, 21, sus- tained several broken ribs, cuts and bruises when his car cases over sev- eral times. Washburn — Albert Kuk has re- turned from Scotland, 8. D., where he attended funerel services for his father. Bowman—Minor injuries were suf- fered by Bertha Bertschy and Herbert Avery, when their cars collided at a rural ‘intersection. Dickinson — Funeral services were held here for the infant son of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Matecjek who died @ few hours after birth. Medora—Falling in an attempt to catch a@ freight train here, Emmett Murphy, clerk at the CCC camp, suf- fered a fractured right arm. * Lehigh—The briquetting plant here will. produce 2,000 tons of fuel this} Hettinger — Funeral services were winter, The plant has reopened after being shut down three months, Williston—Frank Locke, 21, Buford. Leng haareey allegedly shot ‘by J. Van Bus- Round Prairie farmer, in an ar- pans over wages, has recovered. Bentley—Resident here since 1906, Mrs, oe. Kleinjan, 70, passed away. left eight children, 17 grandchil- bl and three sreat-grandchiléren. Garrison — Ray Ticland hes pur: chased the Rupp Coal company. Ri is moving to Haynes whee he continue in the mining business. Ochsenfeld, 69, Slope pioneer. He leaves his widow and two children, |John of Glendive and Mrs. Lena Kath- Irein of New England. Hazelton—George Bird of Bismarck will judge exhibits at the Corn show | here Oct. 19. Center—Falling against the concrete base of playground apparatus, Duane, json. of County Supt. and Mrs. R. C. Stubbs, suffered a gash over the eye that required four stitches to close. Garrison—Six grandsons, Lloyd, Reginald, Jack, Paul, Raymond and Frank Heinzen, bore John Peter Heinzen, 69, to his grave in the 1902. Taylor—S. T. Baer, 77, pioneer here, was buried at Halliday. He left six jchildren, all Taylors residents, Mmes. Joe Forster, Henry Schmidt and John Heinert, and Frank, Peter and Jacob Baer. Hebron—For the first time, Amer- ican Legionnaires of the seventh dis- trict will meet here Oct. 17 to hear Department Commander S. 8. Boise, Adjutant Jack Williams and other leaders. Mott — Funeral services were held | here for Jacquelyn, 3-year-old daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Mehrer. Pallbearers were Gertrude Sauer, Es- ther Huisman, E Edinger and Hil- degard Schroed Hettinger—Funeral services were held here for Mrs. J. J. Solem, 37, Adams county resident since 1906. Pall bearers were L. N. Tommerson, R. P. Carney, Leon Clement, Lawrence | Swanson, L. O. Ramstead and Don| DeLa. held here for Albert Sangsland, 34,/ ural mail carrier here. He leaves his widow, his mother anda son. Pall- bearers were Ira T. Hall, Ira V. Mar- tin, Louis ‘Wright. Hettinge Funeral services were here for . W. A. Beadle, 70, known as “Aunt Nan” because of her long nursing service to. the community. Pallbearers were Oscar Berg, M. L. ‘Swanson, Hans Jensen, Andrew An- derson, E, C. Arnold, Henry. Fossen. Tuttle—Funeral services were held . |here for Joseph Robert Davis, 67. He leaves iis widow, two sons, Lloyd of Belmont, Iowa, and James of Tuttle; four daughters, Mrs. John Becker, Sykeston; Mrs. Isabel Colby, McKen- aie; Mrs. G. Docketer, casas Bernice of St. Paul: New Lalpeig—Juntor Class officers in the high sehool are Selma Giese, 3 Dan Schramm, verby, Don DeLa and Ely York with stage ambitions; Virginia | cemetery here, homesteader here in} MELLON ART DREAN NEARS REALIZATION tablishment of Unrivalled Art Gallery Pittsburgh, Oct. 15.—(#)—Andrew W. Mellon’s often expressed dream of an American art gallery to rival the best of the Old World moved nearer its goal Tuesday with disclosure of a $10,000,000 gift. That sum is in addition to the col- lection of masters which cost the for- mer secretary of the treasury $25,- 000,000 and which is held by the Mellon Public Educational and Char- itable Trust, The trust was organized in 1930 to handle plans for the institution) pects to found in Washington as a! gift to the nation. The deed conveying $10,000,000 in| Gives $10,000,000 More for Es-/ which the Pittsburgh millionaire ex-| New Hail Insurance North Dakota’s new hail insurance rate may be set this week, officials of the hail insurance department ex- pected Tuesday. Employes of the department have been working long hours during the past week, moving hail loss checks from the office. More than 10,000 checks have gone \ out to the various farmers whose crops suffered hail damage in storms this past season, officials of the depart- ment said. 100,000 TRIBESMEN Rate to Be Set Soon|' FACE WINTER DEATH Indians Can ‘Get by’ If WPA Approves Projects, Bu- reau Chief Asserts Guess But Know Whether the “Pain” Remedy You Use: is SAFE? Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family’s Well - Being to Unknown Preparations THE person to ask whether the preparation you or your f: family are taking for the relief of Headaches is SAFE to use regularly is family doctor. Ask him partic ty about Genuine BAYER ASPIRE securities to the trust was formally | filed Monday and in it Mellon in-{ Washington, Oct. 15—(#)—The In-| structed that “necessary action” be) dian bureau Tuesday said 100,000 | Ray Noble interviewed and photographed these typical beau- ties on the dance floor. Virginia Haynes (upper left) is from Se- attle; Doris Wester (lower left) is an Ohioan; June Brehm (upper center) is a Massahusetts society girl; Jerry Bergh (lower center) is a New Yorker; and Pat Martin (right) is a British-born Ameri- can, 7 KILLED IN CRASH linto an omnibus carrying 16 passen- gers Tuesday. Buenos Aires, Oct. 15.—()—Seven | RSET persons were killed and nine injured,| At a recent benefit dance given for at least one seriously, when a heavy |a hospital in Los Angeles, free opera- truck loaded with iron bars crashed | tions were offered as prizes. A known fact --- SLOW-CLEANSING tooth pastes often to blame "ing soth pastes ares common cance of for dull-white teeth jull-white, unattractive teeth. Don't di waste time with them! The makers of Dr, West's famous Toothbrush have perfected a tooth paste that cleans double-quick—yet it cannot scratch enamel. For billiant - white, lovely teeth—try it today! BIG TUBE T. keep the family “team” happy and in close touch with each other .. . with some away at school and some at home or elsewhere . .. there's noth- ing else that covers the ground so easily or quickly as Talk with those away from home at leest once a week Syowest long distance rates begin at 7 P.M. and last until 4:30 A. M. for calls on which you ask bo talk with anyone available at the telephone called. You can talk 100 miles for 36 cents, 220"miles for 60 cents, 300 miles for 80 conte—fess per mile as the distance increases. , taken as soon as possible for creation of a “national public art gallery or museum, having as its object the ed- ucation of the people of the United States in the fine arts and cultural advancement of mankind.” Pardon Board Meets In Bismarck, Dec. 2 Members of ‘the state board of par- dons will meet Dec. 2, with a probable calendar of more than 100 applications for clemency before them, Miss Mar- janne Hanson, secretary of the board, said Tuesday. All applications for pardon, parole, commutation, or other clemecy must be filed with the board by Nov. 1, Miss Hanson said. The board is scheduled to hear once more, new developments in the par- don appeal of William Gummer, con- victed of the murder of Marie Wick in Fargo in 1921, Ravens and magpies can be taught to speak, tribesmen may starve or freeze to death this winter unless emergency | government aid comes quickly. Although cheered by a tentative | promise of at least $2,000,000 from the | works progress administration, Wil- | |liam Zimmertnan, assistant commis- | |sioner of the bureau, expressed con- | cern over lack of funds. The WPA has promised us orally. lie said, “that it will approve all of | our emergency projects, but we don’t have the signed contract yet Should these projects be approved, | Zimmerman said, the bureau could | “get by” this winter. There still would remain, however, | the problem of permanent rehabilita- tion of the 300,000 Indians in the country, according to John Collier, | |madian commissioner, and it will con- stitute most of the bureau's deficit. “I do not want to minimize our | difficulties,” Collier said in,an article | appearing in the bureau's publication, “Indians at Work.” “The Indian poverty is intense and all but universal.” He will tell you that before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin most ‘pain” remedies were advised against by physicians as bad for the stomach and, often, for the heart. Which is food for thought if you seek quick, safe relief. Scientists rate ee Aspirin among the fastest mcthods yet dis- covered for the relief of headaches and the pains of rheumatism, neu- ritis and neuralgia. And the experi- ence of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularly. In your own interest re- member this. You can get Genuine Bayer Aspirin at any drug store — simply by asking for it by its full name, BAYER ASPIRIN. Make it a point to do this — and see that you get what you want. Bayer Aspirin TWO NEW SIXES - A NEW EIGHT Mlore beaidlipul Uhan ever and BUILT TO LAST 100,000 MILES Dressed in beauty beyond anything known to motoring and backed by a pledge of quality entirely new to the low-price field, the Silver Streaks for ’36 go on display next Saturday. Plan now to see them, and set your hopes high. No matter what great things you expect, you will not be disappointed—the 1936 Pontiac Sixes and Eight present all that’s best of all that’s new, because that’s what it takes to build a car to last 100,000 miles! You'll see new body lines—even smarter and more modern—to keep you in style through all the years you drive.. You'll find great new safety, comfort and pem formance advancements to make each mile more pleasant than ever before. And, best of all, you’ll learn the astonishing story of Pontiac’s 100,000 mile dependability! So keep an open mind until you see the Silver Streaks for ’36—and remember, Saturday's the day! PONTIAC MOTOR COMPANY, PONTIAC, MICHIGAN ON DISPLAY NEXT SATU:

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