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\ BE, A a which will arrange the two ° {ances. It is planend to tickets through the aa ik Last year the chapter sponsored Sarg marion- ettes in “Faust, the Wicked Magician,” which proved to be a popular enter- tainment. Mandan Group to Give St. Patrick’s Dance Among the first social functions to be scheduled for the St. Patrick’s day season 1s the 7 o'clock dinner dance Monday evening, March 9, in the Midway club, for which the Mandan Dinner club has issued invitations. In charge of arrangements for the event are Messrs. and Mmes. C. E. Arnold and Maurice Diehl. He % a a ee Moving Picture Music Is Club Paper Topic Mrs. M. E. Tindall’s paper on “Operatic Music in the Movies” was a highlight of the evening meeting of Sarg Marionettes to the Wednesday Mothers’ club in the home of Mrs. Harry Turner, 614 First Appear Here April 3)? *e & Aa do or Unieeety “wanes | Willing Workers Will completed negotiations Thursday for Plan Sleighing Party an appearance of the Tony Sarg at ionettes in “The Connecticut Yankee” The First Lutheran Willing Work- in the city auditorium Friday, Apr. 3. ers will . ide which will be given for members and their Mrs. W. B. Pierce, president, has been in contact with the Sarg agents and Pee Mat é a watts soon will announce the committees FIRST ANNUAL BURLEIGH COUNTY ONE-ACT PLAY TOURNAMENT ; Sponsored by : The Bismarck Community Players SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1936 AFTERNOON GROUP 2:30; EVENING GROUP 7:30 Bismarck City Auditorium SIX SPLENDID ONE-ACT PLAYS THAT DESERVE YOUR SUPPORT €) SOCIETY and CLUBS THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1936 permits at the regular meeting set for 8 p. m., Friday, in the home of Mrs, J. A. Erickson, 918 Sixth St. More arrangement details for Saturday's party will be worked out and will be announced following the meeting. se Norwegian Society Is Planning for May 17 Drawing of plans for the 1936 Syt- itertainment and lunch was served by Mmes. Ber- tha Elness and H. H. Engen and Olaf Lein. Score awards went to Mrs. J. 8. Hanson and Adolph Hagen. es *# 2 Score awards were won by Miss Evalyn Grace Hermann and Mmes, William Smith and H, 8. Lobach, holding first, second and low, re- spectively, when Mrs. Robert Paris, 211 Rosser avenue, west, entertained her Wednesday evening contract club. The luncheon tables were set with crystal and lighted with white tapers. ‘Mrs. Smith will be hostess to the club in two weeks. ff MENTHOLATUM Gives COMFORT Daily D. A. R. to Have 1936 Guest Day Function The. 1936 guest day meeting of Minishoshe chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will be in the ; form of a 7 o'clock dinner Friday eve- ning in the Rendezvous. Hostesses are Mmes. John P. French, P. J. Schmitz, Samuel H. Merritt and Les- ter 8. Diehl and the Misses Mary Houser and Ruth Wynkoop. * 8 % | Queen Liliuokalani Reign Is Described The Fortnightly club’s study of fa- mous queens in the order in which they walked across the pages of his- tory was continued by Mrs. George F. .| Bird, who gave an appreciation of Queen Liliuokalani, of Hawaiia, Wed- nesday afternoon’s meeting for which Mrs. R. W. Lumry, 311 Third St., was hostess. After Mrs. Bird presented # com- prehensive history of the ruler, her people and country and their cus- tomes, Mrs. John Burke, who had vis- material. | Mrs. Bird dwelt particul- arly on Liliuokalani’s visits to the United States and Great Britain. Miss Laura B. Sanderson and Mmes. A. M. Christianson and Lumry were appointed to outline the 1936-37 pro- gram of study. * # * Seven tables of coritract were in Play at the monthly card:party of the United Commercial Travelers Auxil- jary held Wednesday evening in the home of Mrs. L. D. Hulett, 1005 Eight St. . Honors went to Mmes. William H, Schermer and Harold Smith, turn- ing in high and low scores, respec- tively. Refreshments were served by @ committee composed of Mrs, Van R. Middlemas as chairman and Mmes W. E. Jensen, Leo DeRochford and, Hulett. * *,* Charles R. Robertson, Mason apart- ments, proprietor of Robertson's store Monday left Rochester, Minn., where he went for consultation with Mayo Clinic specialists, and is going to Cal- ifornia to spend some time recuper- ating from his recent illness, Mr. Robertson spent a few days with Mrs. Robertson's parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Armstrong of Kansas City, Mo., before beginning the westward trip. In California he expects to visit with ited the Hawaiian Islands during the| Jr,,|time of her reign added descriptive Try to visualize how Easy on the Eyes you could be in a lovely sheer SILK JACKET DRESS Dots and. dashes with lots of flashes of turquoise blue, coral rust and Mist Rose .... Perhaps you choose to “follow the fleet” in the leader of them all—Battalion Blue (Navy to you) “Gobs” of them, in adorable one and two piece styles, and no two alike. Crisp Organ- dies, Imported Laces, Piques, HATS We could write sonnets about the lovely bonnets that everyone will wear in the “Easter Parade” .. But you can bet your old Winter hat that most of them will have a hint of the “Homburg” version. Ohs of admiration will greet this new group of one of a kind at $785 Surely a new HAND BAG! : Since they can be had in smart patents and grained leathers for only The swing is.to SUITS Shade-Piaids or over Plaids of three- the most gorgeous new fabrics, too div- érsified to mention. Featured price, ‘14° Others at more or as low as §7.85 98c To complete smartness of ensemble. Full ioned silk chiffon. New spring shades. SKIRTS Gay the your fash- square toes. Sensational new “Flats.” Mother Of Wee Baby : Mrs. Lester Benson of Chicago (above) is mother ef the tiny girl born January 14 who the attending physician estimated hed only 12 ounces. Forty-five days after. wards, the infant weighed two pounds and two ounces and was re. ported doing well in an incubator. (Associated Press Photo) @ cousin, Earl Mair, whose address is 1287 South Ridgeley Drive, Los An- geles, and at other points. * 4% # Mrs. Milton Rue, 309 Avenue B, was hostess at a 6 o'clock bridge dinner Tuesday evening for instructors of her children, Beverly and Milton, Jr., ani @ few other guests. Covers were laid for 16 at tables lighted with ivory tap- ers trimmed with green tulle bows. In the contract games score favors went to Mrs. Charles Rue and Miss Marie Lemohn, holding first and second high, respectively. | City and County | Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ingstad, 417 Fifth 8t., are the parents of a girl born at 7:22 p. m., Wednesday at the Bismarck hospital. Mrs. F. J. Leibole, 111-Avenue C, proprietor of the Sarah Gold shop, arrived home Wednesday night after spending two weeks in New York City selecting her late spring and early summer merchandise. On the return trip she was’met at Chicago by Mr. Leibole. . U. 8. WILL ABSORB ALL CANADA SILVER Treasury to Fix Purchase Price Rather Than Be Govern- ed by New York Washington, March 5.—(#)—Secre- tary Morgenthau said Thursday his agreement to buy newly mined Can- adian silver through the Bank of Canada was expected to absorb the Dominion’s entire output. The pro- duction was estimated by treasury of- ficials at about 16,000,000 ounces per year. Morgenthau said the treasury would fix the price to be paid for the metal rather than to be governed by the pre- vailing New York price. The treasury figure is about one-fourth cent an ounce higher than that quoted in New York. The buying is done in pursuance of the silver purchase act requirement that treasury stocks of the metal be built up to one-third those of gold or until the price reaches $1.29 an ounce—the coinage value. FARGO MAN DEAD Fargo, N. D., March 5.—(?)—Charles Phelps, 66, died Wednesday in a Fargo hospital from heart disease. “Schilling le eae! Cinnamon “Has more flavor! Lote of it! Makes 'a lot of difference in ules sprle pie gr anton toms Also in modified rounded toe. patent leather— Widths AA toB...... SILK BLOUSES or pastel colors. Taffetas, silk EINSTEIN ASSAULTS ATOMISTIC IDEA OF MATTER MYSTERY Thinks Science Must Take New Tack in Order to Solve Riddle of Composition Philadelphia, March 5.—(?)—Prof. Albert Einstein challenged the physi- cal scientists Thursday to follow him in getting away from the purely ato- mistic idea of the construction of mat- rr. His ideas that the as (rare in the physical world can be understood and measured as well as the material par- ticles was set forth in.an 11,000 word article in the proceedings of the Franklin Institute. “Physics,” he said, “constitutes a logical system of thought, which is in a state of evolution, and whose basis cannot be obtained through distilla- tion by any inductive method from the experiences lived through, but which can only be attained by free inven- tion.” This free invention, he held, now must be applied to the tangle of the ‘atomic world, where scientists are daily in apparent touch with the orig- gravitation, yet are unable to solve the riddles of any of these mysteries. theory of the origin of material par- ticles, or solid matter, as a “bridge” between two shells of space. This theory he first announced about a year SELASSIE ACGEPTS IPPEAL FOR PEACE Italy, Sowever, Is Believed to Be Holding Out for Certain Concessions (By the Associated Press) The League of Nations’ appeal for peace was accepted without qualifi- cation by Emperor Haile Selassie of Bthiepia, but an Italian source said Italy would accept it only under cer- tain conditions. | Just what those conditions were not stated, but it was assumed that | Italy would demand the right to keep | the portions of Ethiopia she has con- quered. On the battlefronts, the Italians reported they were continuing their mopping up operations along the Takkaze river. Another Italian condition to final acceptance of the peace appeal was understood to be with reference to jthe league suggestion for an im- {Miediate cessation of hostilities. King. Edward Cheered As ‘Good Old Teddy’ Glasgow, Scotiand, March 5.—(?)}— King Edward was cheered as “Good Old Teddy” by 2,000 workmen on the new liner, Queen Mary, Thursday. The Scottish nickname for Edward was shouted as he completed a two- and - three - quarter hours inspection tour of the partially completed ship. The British Postoffice Department carried more than 150,000,000 parcels during 1934; of these, 67 tons were aent by air. at the Hotel Patterson French Doughnuts and Coffee in the Main Dining Room, Silver Grill and Coffee Shop. Coffee—Piping Hot and al- ways the same at any hour of the day or night. TO COMPLETE. THE PICTURE Low square heels and Black ins of matter, light, electricity and! As an example he offered his own! Puerto Rican Is Held On Conspiracy Charge San Juan, P. R., March 5.—(P)— United States Marshal Draughon Thursday arrested Pedro Albizu Cam- pos, Nationalist leader, on a charge of recruiting soldiers in a conspiracy to overthrow the government of the United States by force. Six other Na- tlonalists also were arrested. The warrant for arrest also charged Cam- pos, a lawyer and Harvard graduate, with inciting to insurrection, TWO CONVENTIONS BOTHER REPORTERS) Keeping Nonpartisans’ News Straight Is Problem for Newsmen, Editors Keeping straight the news from Nonpartisan conventions never was an easy matter but this year it is harder than ever, as witness two er- rors in the Tribune’s account of po- litical proceedings in Wednesday's edition, At one point the story said that F. J. Graham, would-be peacemaker, was jdenied the opportunity to speak at |the Welford convention. That was an error. It was the Langer conven- ition which refused to hear him, al- though it later changed its mind and let him speak. More serious was @ “ball-up” where- by @ part of the Langer platform, jealling for a.state-owned printing Plant, was erroneously attributed to the Welford group. The latter organiaztion favored fed- eral arrangements to supply text books to schools, whereas the Langer- ites would print them and do all other State printing in a state-owned plant. PATTY BERG WINS St. Augustine, Fla., March 5—(@)— Still going strong, 18-year old Patty Berg, of Minneapolis Thursday de- feated Jean Bauer of Providence, R. |1,, 5 and 3, in the second round of the annual Florida East Coast Women’s golf tournament. 1 HOFFMAN INSISTS | BRUNO. IS DOOMED Attitude Unchanged, He Says, Unless Something New Develops Soon New York, March 5.—()—Gov. ~ Harold Hoffman of New Jersey Thurs- day denied that there would be an- other reprieve for Bruno Richard Hauptmann, convicted slayer of the Lindbergh baby. “My attitude of Jan. 17 is un- changed. Unless something arises that will bring Mr. Wilentz (attorney general) and myself into. agreement to go before Justice Trenchard based on new evidence, there will not be a reprieve,” the governor said. Hauptmann is scheduled to be exe- cuted during the week of March 30. At Trenton, N. J., a railroad cross- ing watchman’s story of seeing the mysterious Isador Fisch, now dead, near Col. Charles A. Lindbergh’s home several times before the famous flier’s first son was fatally kidnapped, was labeled worthless by Prosecurtor An- thony M. Hauck, Jr., who helped con- vict Hauptmann of the crime. Alfred Hammond, the watchman, said he not only recognized photo- graphs of Fisch after Hauptmann’s arrest, but also told the state police. Hauck said every phase of the watchman’s story had been checked four years ago, and that when Haupt- mann was arrested, Hammond was unable to identify either him or Fisch. KINGSRUD QUITS MEET Hollywood, Fla, March 5.—(/}— Paul Runyan, the White Plains, N. ¥., pro, took an early lead in the $2,500 Hollywood open golf tournament at the’ end of 54 holes Thursday, adding @ 69 to his previous 142 for a total oF 211. Ralph Kingsrud, Fargo, N. D., withdrew after scoring 147 for the first 36 holes. BUXTON NATIVE DIES Fargo, N. D., March 5.—(7)—Mrs. Isabelle Berge, 58, died in a Fargo hospital Wednesday night from a pro- longed illness from heart disease. She bite born at Buxton, N. D., Jan. 27, 1878. Helping Mothers to Cut Down on Family’s Colds Colds, and to Throw Off Mothers are so of- ten worried about their families’ colds that they find special que aid for prevent- ing colds—Vicks Va- tro-nol. Especially designed for nose and up- throat, where most colds start, ‘a-tro-nol stimulates the functions provided by Nature—in the nose—to prevent colds, and to throw off head colds in the early stages. Used in time—at the first sniffle, sneeze or nasal irritation—just a few drops up each nostril—Va-tro-nol helps to avoid many colds. Over ion Vick U | nasal |through the nasal passages—reduces comfort in this uni- | swollen membranes—clears Unique Formula for Nose and Throat Helps to Prevent Many Head Colds at the Start —It Quickly Clears “Stuffy Head.” Where irritation has led to a clogged-up nose (a stuffy head cold or catarrh) Va-tro-nol spreads clogging | mucus—brings comforting relief | _A Practical Guide for Mothers Each year, more and more families are being helped to fewer colds, short- er colds and milder colds by follow- ing Vicks Plan for Better Control of Colds. Vicks Plan has been clinically tested by practicing ph; further proved in every: throughout the country. details of the Plan come in each package of Vicks Va-tro-nol. Better Control of Colds Final Clearance.... | Frederick - James RS * Just 94 Not One Coat Will Be Carried Over to Next Fall A Frederick- James Tradition “Give Just One Frederick- James Quality COATS at for Now © or for Next Fall A Small. Deposit Will Reserve Your Away Selection Prices” NOT EVERY FUR LEFT—NOR EVERY, SIZE—BUT IF YOU FIND YOUR COAT IT WILL BE A MIRACLE VALUE More Day. ‘Tweeds, flannels, wool crepes, silks, checks, plaids, plain colors of every hue—wrap-arounds with , oodles of buttons. Fan Pleats, side or front slits, gores galore. That in » mouth- ful is the-skirt story, and to accent the importance of this ‘showing, here's the price, believe it or not. $1.98 fine t2 to 91.98 Take your tip from the stars—Refresh- ° ingly New Spring ties, straps and pumps. Again a struggle between the Blue and the Grey—you be the judge. Airflow con- tinental. or spike heels. Widths from AAA to B— $2.98 Friday - - March 6 -at- For’ Women's" Wear BISMARCK é z