The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 20, 1936, Page 4

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; ation leaders originally was scheduled PSESER SAH ry « m Bo" SE5* ieee eters f) ceiving the prize. Green was the pre- i4 seph B. Sabraw and L. R. Shipley. Dates of 39th Convention Midwinter Executive Session | °7, First Set for Bismarck Is Held in Fargo , On Winter Vacatic Vacation | The board and council of the North Dakota Federation of Womens clubs. in session at Fargo, announced Thurs- day that the 39th annual convention will be held at Ellendale June 2-5, The mid-yea~ meeting of-the feder- for Tuesday and Wednesday in Bis- marck. Tuesday afternoon Mrs. W. C. Taylor, LaMoure, president, tele- phoned Miss Marian Burke, art divi- sion chairman who was to make ar- rangements for the banquet Tuesday evening, saying that the session had been postponed and that she should make arrangements for a meeting hhere March 5 and 6. Press dispatches from Fargo late Wednesday afternoon were the first indication received here that Mrs. Taylor had changed her plans. Mrs. Taylor is presiding officer and others in attendance include Mrs. Minnie Keup and Mrs. H. L. Walster both of Fatgo, state treasurer anc gecretary, respectively. Convention plans are the principal business. Directors include Mrs. O. A. Stev- ens of Fargo, Mrs. W. M. Stenshoel of Williston, Mrs. C. 8. Buck of James- town and Mrs. , Chapple of Bath- gate. District presidents are Mrs. George Berg of Courtenay. eighth, which embraces Bismarck; Mrs. T. L. Brouillard of Ellendale, sixth; Mrs. 8. ‘M. Hydle of Williston, third; Mrs. A. ©. Arnescn of McVille, first; Mrs. Paul Smith of Amenia, fourth; Mrs. George Davidso of Rugby, second, ‘and Mrs. George Galloway of Minot seventh. x For Miss Thalia Jacobson, whose marriage to J. E. Harding of Medora will be a Feb. 29 event, 15 of her in- timate friends who are affiliated with the Trinity Lutheran Girls’ club en- tertained Wednesday evening in the eburch parlors. Miss Jacobson, who has been an active worker in the group, was presented with a gift of silver. The time was passed with anagrams, Miss Jeanette Myhre re- With a perfectly straight white skirt and a quaint blouse, Mrs. P. A. B. Widener wears black pumps, rather long white gloves and a medium-brimmed hat with black grosgrain band. “Mrs. Nick Zappas has go gone to Jamestown for a few days visit with Telatives and friends. FUR SALE CONTINUED end during our three-day sale we have decided to' continu tis great value sale through this coming week-end, Reductions From 20% TO 40% AND MORE Krimmers, Seals, Beaverettes, Broadtails, Musk- rats and Caraculs included. Come early. State Fur Company MANUFACTURING FURRIERS 204 Fourth St. dominating color note in luncheon @ecorations. The committee arrang- ing the party was composed of Miss Margaret Davidson and Mmes. Jo- Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 496 Thank You Sub-zero temperatures and snow storms during the past few weeks oe caused a great increase in the number of telephone calls in Bis- marck. Instead of the usual 22,000 calls a day, there have been 26,000 or more. Monday, February 17, brought an all-time record of nearly 45,000 calls. People have relied on telephone service more than ever before and used it more, We realize that many telephone users have been unable to get all their calls through promptly because of the great increase in the number of calls being handled. However, our customers have been patient when calls have been delayed and for this cooperation we are most grateful. _~ Also, we greatly appreciate the many statements we have received from telephone users about the in- creased value of telephone service to them during this emergency. NORTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY Community Council Is Meeting Friday Officers of the Women’s Commun- ity council urge all delegates to at- tend the February meeting scheduled for 3 o'clock Friday afternoon in the American Legion Auxiliary room, World War Memorial building. * ek * Alvin C. Schlenker Wins Oratory Award Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Schlenker, 122 First St., have received word thac their son, Alvin C. Schlenker, won a silver cup as first prize in an oratori- cal contest staged Feb. 13 at South- eastern university, Washington, D. C., where he is a studeht. His oration was entitled “ palin heared ” Expect 7 at Uz N.D. Dinner and Reunion Some 70 University of North Dakota alumni and former students will gather in the Patterson hotel Terrace Gardens at 6:30 o'clock Thursday eve- ning for the 1936 reunion of the Bis- marck-Mandan N. D. U. alumni chapter. Honor guests will be Prof. John E. Howard of the university faculty, the main speaker; John Burke, chief jus- tice of the supreme court who re- cently received an honorary degree from the school, and Mrs. Burke. Jus- tice Burke is to give a short address. There also will be musical numbers. Miss Genevieve Parsons, chapter president, wijl direct a brief business session during which a nominating committee headed by Gordon Mac- Gregor will submit the slate of new officers. * * * Miss Hilda Wendt’s _ Wedding Announced Christ Wendt, McClusky, announces the marriage of his daughter, Miss Hilda Wendt, to Jerome Massey, son of Mrs. Julia Massey of Mandan, which occurred Wednesday afternoon. The ceremony was performed at 2 o'clock in St. Joseph’s Catholic rec- tory at Mandan by Rev. Hildebrand Eickhoff, pastor. The bride wore a maroon colored ensemble with match- ing accessories. The couple was at- tended by the bridegroom’s brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Massey. Mrs. A. J. Hammerel, aunt of the bridegroom, gave the wedding” dinner with covers for 10 guests. The decor- ative motif was in pink and green with the wedding cake forming the centerpiece. Mr. and Mrs, Massey are to live at Mandan where he is employed by the government, * ek OK Bouquets of jonquils and cassia cen- tering the luncheon tables introduced a spring note in the appointments when Mrs. H. 8. Lobach, Jr., Person Court, entertained her contract clup Wednesday evening. Score honors went to Miss LaVerne Joersz, Mrs Lo- bach and Miss Josephine Hosch hold- ing first, second and low, respectively. Mrs. Robert Paris, 211 Thayer avenue, west, entertains the club March 4. * # # Miss Mary Louise Finney has been elected president of the Bon Ton club which will hold its third meeting of the year at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening with Miss Eleanor Lewis, 515 Mandan St. Other new leaders of the group, which will meet fortnightly and which has planned an active pro- gram, are Miss Marion Hyland, vice president; Miss Lewis, secretary; Miss Pearl Schwarts, treasurer, and Miss Gayle pe insane: ! Mrs, George 5. oe 218 Avenue C, west, was hostess to members of St. Anne’s missionary group at @ 7:15 o'clock chop suey supper followed by contract games at three tables Wed- nesday evening. Her daughter, Miss {Rosalind Brown, assisted in serving. {Score honors went to Mmes. F. H. Geiermann and M. P. Ryan who held first and second high, respectively. The Match 3 meeting will be in the home of Mrs, Emil Bobb, 307 Tenth C14 x % % About 35 members of Bismarck Chapter No. 11, Order of the Eastern Star, attended the regular meeting Tuesday evening in the Masonic temple. The session was followed by a card party with seven tables of contract in play and lunch with the red heart motif appropriate for Val- lentine's day noted in appointments. | Hostess committee members were |Mmes. C. F. and Otto Dirlam, Ferris | Cordner, C. L, Foster, C. W. Porter | {and D. H. Houser. | * ok Ox | Doris Lampman and Betty LeRoy were placed in charge of a candy sale which the Chi Chi Girls club of the Maccabees will hold next week at a combined business and social meeting Wednesday evening with Mrs. Doro- thy Homan, 201 First St., the director. Standing committee heads gave re- ports: Dorothy Elofson, Goldie Myers and Dorothea Arness contributed pro- gram numbers and Eleanor Wilson | and Miss Elofson won prizes for giv- jing the best stunts. Mrs. Homan served lunch. * * * Miss Elsie Stark of New York City, who has spent several weeks with her | mother, Mrs, Anna Stark of Mandan, expects to return to the east during the coming week. Her mother, who 1s one of the oldest and most prom- inent women of Mandan, has been in the hospital there for some time but now is being cared for in her own home. Miss Stark holds a position with a national home economics or- | ganization and will be remembered here as one of the organizers of the Business and Professional Women’s | jciub. She was one of the first women ever to hald the position of county agent. * * # Meetings of Clubs | | And Social Groups | — Drama Appreciation Group Several short plays by Christopher Morley will be read when the Bis- marck Community Players drama ap- W STERY FINANCIRR |/- DEMANDS GOLD THAT GOEVRNMENT SEIZED Secret Hoard, of 10,000 $20 Pieces Taken From Safety Deposit Box in N. Y. New York, Feb, 20.—(#)—A myster- ious European master of international finance, operating by transoceanic telephone, waged war Thursday on aad Roosevelt's gold seizure or- ler. Seeking to regain his secret hoard of 10,000 $20 gold pieces, Zelik Josef- owitz, variouly described as head of a family of wealthy Lithuanian, Ger- man or Russian financiers, Wednes- day was given an order requiring American officials to show cause why the gold, now worth $338,000, should not be returned to him. The cache was seized by secret serv- ice agents who swooped down on a bank deposit vault in a dramatic raid Tuesday. Attorneys for Josefowitz, after con- ferring with him throughout Wednes- day by telephone from St. Moritz, Switzerland, said that if the hearing on the show cause order, returnable Friday, went against him, the case would be carried to the supreme court, Josefowitz contends ‘that seizure of the gold and President Roosevelt's order of Aug. 28, 1933, calling in all gold, were illegal when applied to an alien, Sensational Divorce Case Figure Is Dead New York, Feb, 20.—(#)—Leonard Kip Rhinelander, 36, member ofa s0- cially prominent family involved in @ sensational di- vorce case in 1929, j died Thursday of pneumonia, In 1929 Rhine- lander was grant- ed a divorce de- cree in Las Vegas, Nev. from Alice* Jones when testi- . mony showed she = Rhinelander_ was the daughter of a Negro cab driv- er. Society was startled by their mar- riage on Oct. 14, 1924. Rhinelander, who had come into a fortune, then was 22 and his bride was 23. Relation of Roads to Taxation Is Pondered Relation of highways and taxation was being studied Thursday by the state interim tax commission in ses- sion at the capitol. The commission will hold a joint session Friday with representatives of the state welfare and planning boards, the league of municipalities and county commis- sioners association to discuss estab- lishment of a uniform system of ac-" counting throughout the state. Carl H, Chatters of Chicago, execu- tive director of the'national municipal finance officers ,assoctation, will ad- dress the meeting Friday. Senator John K. Brostuen of Alex- | ander is presiding at the tax commis- sion meeting as chairman. | Fewer Signatures on Finance Plan Petition Washington, Feb. 20—()—Signa- tures on a house petition designed to force a vote on the inflationary Frazier-Lemke farm mortgage refi- nancing plan had dropped Thusrday to 208. The number necessary to force the bill out of committee to the floor is 218, The bill, center of an angry contro- versy between Chairman O'Connor of the house rules committee and Father Charles E. Coughlin, Detroit tadio priest, would refinance farm mortgages on easy terms with new curseney: up to @ $3,000,000,000 maxi- um, JAPAN VOTING Tokyo, Feb, 20.—(4)—The Japanese electorate voted Thursday in Japan’s first national election in exactly four years, with the primary issue the sup- port or overthrow of the cabinet of Premier Admiral Keisuke Okada. 'M SO GLAD YOU HAVEN'T LET DISH- WASHING RUIN YOUR HANDS “THIS EASY WAY TO WASH DISHES IS | GREASELESS, TOO 'VERYONE knows how famous Rinso is for washing clothes whiter—with- out hard scrubbing or boiling. Its rich suds — thick and creamy, even ix hardest water— are marvelous for dishes, too ‘Wait until you see how grease soaks offt A hot tinse...and dishes come clean —no greasy film remains, And Rinso is so ise to your hands, Try it for pots and pans, for woodwork, tubs, basins. No grit. Makes all cleaning easier. MARIAN CURRAN Carrying the leading roles in “Broken Dishes,” comedy by Martin Flavin which is to be staged in the Bismarck city auditorium Sunday by EDWARD HENNESSEY the Cathedral Players, are Miss Cur- ran and Mr. Hennessy, who have been favorites in past performances given organization. The curtain will rise at 8:15 p. m. Welford Battled Blizzard To Attend Wheat Meeting Gov. Walter Welford has beaten North Dakota blizzards but he doesn’t recommend the feat as # general prac- tice. George Moris, head of the state regulatory department, Thursday re- called that two years ago the gover- nor walked six miles through a severe blizzard to attend a wheat allotment committee meeting at Cavalier. “I read recently of a six-mile hike through a 1936 blizzard,” Mr. Moris said Thursday. “Two years ago the road was blocked from the governor's farm to Pembina, but open from Pem- bina to Cavalier. “The day of the wheat allotment committee meeting was one of the worst of 1934. There was a typical northeastern North Dakota blizzard. The temperature was at least 20 be- low zero. “The governor walked six miles over the blocked highways through the blizzard to attend the meeting. That night, after the meeting, with a bob prairie in the direction of his home, through! the darkness and blinding snow. “I was worfied. Half an hour later I called his home by telephone. He had arrived safely. despite the darkness and the bliszard, he had come out on the highway be- side his home only a rod from the mail box.” 16,000 Ohio Workers Idle Due to Strikers Akron, O. Feb. 20.—()—Labor troubles beset several Ohio cities Thursday causing idleness to approx- imately 16,000 workers. A federal la- bor conciliator took over the task here of trying to settle a dispute between workers and the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., that has made 14,000 per- sons idle. In nearby Barberton, the Columbia Chemical Co., closed its plant because 250 of the 900 workers began a “sit down” protest in sympathy with 50 union pipe fitters who asked a 4-cent an hour wage boost, Twenty-four women employes of Libbey-Owens-Ford Co.’s laminated glass plant at Toledo started a walk- out that: attracted 200 employes. Hi Grant Commutations For Two Prisoners Two commutations of sentence were granted Thursday by the state par- don board which completed its ses- sions after passing on 78 cases. Gottlieb Dutt, serving a two to five year term for burglary, was ordered released from the state penitentiary. He was sentenced July 7, 1934, from McLean county. Albert Guimont, sentenced to 18 months in prison March 2, 1935, from Ward county on a grand larceny charge, was ordered released March 1. 62 Persons Arrested For Treason to Reich Berlin, Feb. 20—()—A Commun- ique, issued Thursday through the German news bureau, said 62 persons had been arrested for high treason during recent secret police raids in the Rhineland and Westphalia. Among those arrested, the Commun- ique declared, were 10 Catholic priests, seven Communist leaders, and 45 lay- aa of the Catholic youth organiza- lon, Former Paymaster in Navy Under Arrest Washington, Feb. 20.—(7)—The jus- tice department announced Thursday the arrest of a former navy* paymas- ter charged with embezzling approxi- mately $20,000 of government funds. John M. Cornell, hunted since 1916, surrendered at the New York office of the ‘bureau Feb. 18. Cornell has admitted his guilt, , March 7 Is Chosen Play Tourney Date March 7 has been chosen as the date of the first annual Burleigh county One-Act Play tournament, which will be héld in the city audi- torium here‘ under the sponsorship of the Bismarck Community Players. Ten county Homemaker and Par- ent-Teachers organizations have en- tered plays in the event. Three plays will be staged in the morning, four in the afternoon and three more in the evening. Letters, requesting the names of each member of the casts and in- structions as to when each play will appear, were mailed to all the com- peting groups this week. Theodore Campagna, county recreational direc- tor, is assisting the Community Play- ers in staging the event. South Dakota Woman Is 100 Years Old Today Madison, 8. D., Feb. 20.—(?)—Miss Mary Welling started the second cen- tury of her life Thursday—without offering her prescription for longevity. Miss Welling, born Feb. 20, 1836, at Medina, O., recalls vividly events of the Civil war. She came to South Dakota in 1883. Four Sailors Drown As Boat Capsizes Wilmington, N. C., Feb. 20.—(@)— Four of the ‘crew of the American freighter Chippewa were drowned Thursday when a small boat in which they were returning to their ship from shore leave at Southport capsized. _INSTANTLY YOU CATCH COLD ‘DO THESE 1, Rieger sere Instead of using fancy priced “cold remedies” try the new-day cold treatment pictured here. Your own doctor will approve it. It will start easing the average cold or sore throat almost asfast as youcaughtit. The Bayer Aspirin you take will start combating your cold internally 2 THINGS at once; if throat is sore, crush and stir 3 Bayer Aspirin Tablets in a third of a glass of water; gargle twice. Do not rinse mouth. ‘When you buy, though, be sure to get real Bayer Aspirin. ey GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN (co l iN i N il HN NEW PERFECTED HYDRAULIC BRAKES -- VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE «+ FULL-FLOATING REAR AXLE make Chevrolet the world’s greatest truck value age the new 1936 Chevrolet! These new pe ge oe ee it! itawiog features: wi rt 5 New track with the in the entire Een ag truck that money. the ee ne a for all-round duty—that’s trucks in their VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE with increased horsepower, increased torque, greater economy in gas and oi} power; New Hight empress Valve-in-Head pling spilt econom: mi See ET inte leon Bebl; Fa Fleming Ta rae eae teed sol dene GO en ‘Fi i ‘Luxe Cab for driver comfort, with clear-vision instrument panel for safe control. See these new 1936 Chevrolet trucks at your earliest Sei dete f toens a ae tive test tures sg epee your own load. To do this will be to convince ‘yourealf that they "re the world’s thriftiest hipipewered trucks and foie the world’s greatest values! CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICH. always equalized for quick, unswerving, “straight line” stope MEW MONEY-SAVING 6.m.A.C. Pay Compare Cherroats low deticred pricm and low monthly ERAL \MOTO NEW 1936 CHEVROLET TRUCKS Capital Chevrolet Co. 101 Rests Avenue Bismarck, N. D. Telephone 432 preciation group meets at 7:30o'clock Thursday evening in the city hall. Goodbye to this and that in- convenience. Eat at the Prince.

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