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'H. BISMARCK 'TRIBUN UESDAY, JUNE 16, 19386 Society Delegation Leaves for Fargo O.E.S. Meeting! ; A delegation from Bismarck Chap- No. 11 and from the Mott and Qinton chapters left here Tuesday moon for the 42nd annual session of the Grand chapter, Order of the Eastern Star for North Dakota, to be held at Fargo. There also is a large group attending from Queen Esther Chapter No. 9 of Mandan. Among the grand officers assisting will be Rev. N. E. Elsworth of Bis- marck, associate patron, and Mrs. Isa- bel Flath of Stanicy, chaplain. Mrs. F. G. Orr of this city is a grand rep- g resentative. i" Local chapter officers going are Mrs. Laura Erdahl, worthy matron; Mrs. F. E. McCurdy, associate worthy matron; Mrs. F. E. Diehl, junior; worthy matron; Mrs. H. L. Wheeler, | secretary and F. G. Orr, associate pa- | tron. Mrs. F. A. Lahr, Bismarck, and Mrs. Edna Galloway of Mott are among the past grand matrons to be there. Mrs. Galloway is making the | trip with Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Orr. | Mrs. F. J. Pietz came from Linton and accompanied the party composed | of Mmes. Erdahl, McCurdy, Wheeler ; and Diehl. | Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Thompson and daughter, Miss Mary Lou, and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Graham have been at! Fargo since the first of the week a tending Masonic grand lodge sessior and will remain f he O.E.S. meet- ing. Mr. Graham is worthy patron of | the local chapter. Those who expect to go from Man- | dan are Mmes. F. C. R. Schulize, A. C. Sakariassen, J. L. Brenden, J. M. Mc- Leod, Theodore Serr, R. Langdon Dalla Crosthwaite, B. D. Rowley and F. W. Mason and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. ‘Thyscll. With Mrs. Lillian M. Kalbfleisch of | (Minot, worthy grand matron, presid- ing, the meeting will open Wednesday and continue through Friday. About 600 representatives are expected The secretaries’ association luncheon and meeting in the Methodist church and a banquet for officers, committees @nd distinguished guests in the Pi byterian church will precede the form- fl opening Wednesday evening. Sessions Thurs will be devoted ‘to routine business, talks by visiting: delegates and musical selections by the choir. The annual banquet for past worihy grand matrons and pa- ‘trons will be held Thursday in the} Gardner hotel. horses. Her white hat is a varia- Election and installation of officers. tion of the popular Homburg. Schilling Bu pepper inthe larger sizes. A printed silk dress with softly shirred neckline and daisy belt buckle, and a three-quarters swagger coat of sheer woolen are worn by Mrs. Dodge Sloan, owner of a stable of famous racing reports of committees and appoint- jment of committees will conclude the |imeetings Friday. * eH Miss Mabel Culver, 320 Eleventh St., has resumed her work in the secree tary of state's office after a trip to Oakland, Berkeley and San Francisco, ; Calif. which she made in company i i with her brother, Donald Culver of Look what ahaa Dickinson, who went on to his home oz pepper lo; Sunday. They took their sister, Mrs. Vivian Culver Ungano, to San Fran- 40: pepper 15¢ cisco, where she is at home at 2073 Boz pepper 25¢ Van Ness avenue. En route home they visited Miss Evelyn Wall, a form- er Bismarck resident, and other friends, at Salt Lake City, Utah. ings opportu brings all of the # to wee these! see balireys First BIGMARCK'S STYLE LEADERS * Costume for Races | Nib Mrs. Eva Vetter of Hebron Is Wed Here Mrs. Eva Vetter of Hebron and G. D. Bertsch of Ashley were married in Bismarck Monday. The ceremony was _——» | Performed at 3 p. m, by Rev. H. G. | Bens, German Baptist minister, in his home, ae Avenue C. * % The silver vedic anniversary of Mr, and Mrs. W. B. Hartley, who live on the River road, and the third wed- ding anniversary of their son and | daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hartley, 401 Fourth St., were observed Sunday evening when a dozen couples {gathered in the W. B. Hartley home. The occasion was a surprise for the honored couples. The guests brought an elaborate luncheon, including a wedding cake, and a clock which was | presented to Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Hartley. Mandan guests were Mr. and Mrs. L. F, Smith, Mr. and Mrs.! J. R. Header and Warren Haines. | * e # | | Arriving Wednesday night for a visit with Mr, and Mrs. O. E. Ander- son, 723 Second St., will be Mrs. An-| derson’s brother-in-law and_ sister, | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hoppensdedt of Gaylord, Minn. On Saturday the An- dersons and Hoppendedts expect to; leave for a three-week motor vaca- tion trip to Lake Louise and Banff in| Canada and along the western coast. | On Thursday evening Mrs. A. M. Brazerol, 217 Avenue A, west, will give a garden dinner for Mr. and Mrs. | Boppensdedt, who are her uncle and} jaunt. H * e ® Peonies decorated the home and formed the centerpiece when Mrs. Fay Brown, Woodmansee apartments, gave a bridge party Monday evening to| jcompliment her mother, Mrs. ‘William | |Bashe of Wellsboro, Pa. Prizes at contract went to Mmes. Frank E. Fitz- | simonds and Elmer Brown and there | kl Ast GARB Here is what feminine golfers will wear soon, according to styles from Paris. The trousers and sweaters made their sp- pearance during the British women’s championship at jwas a guest favor for Mrs. Bashe. | Mrs. Fred Burroughs of Streetshoro. \ |Ohio, who is visiting Mr. and Mrs. | Daniel F. Burroughs, was another out- | jof-town guest. | ee % | || Mr, and Mrs. Emil Benesh, 810 First /St., had as week-end guests Mr. and | Mrs. Herbert Engelbrecht (Florence | Benesh), who were married at the} bride’s home at Two Creeks, Wis., June 10 and who are on their wedding tri. | Leaving here Tuesday morning they | went to the Badlands and expected to} go from there to the South Dakota | |Black Hills and the Wisconsin Dells. (Mrs. Engelbrecht is a niece of Mr. | Benesh. * * * Co-hostesses for a miscellaneous shower given in the Henry Schwart- ing home at New Salem for Miss Nora Schwarting, who is to be a bride, were Mmes. Paul and Harold Gaebe. The afternoon was passed with progressive whist games, the score prizes going to! Miss Hilda Gaebe and Miss Holle. Little Ruth Jane Gaebe, dressed as @ bride, presented the gifts to the bride-elect. ee * Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Sawle and their | daughter, Joan Louise, of Carlin, Nev., arrived in Bismarck during the week- end. Mr. Sawle left Monday for Minneapolis to attend the University of Minnesota summer session and Mrs. Sawle and Joan Louise will pass the summer with her sisters, the Misses Rose, Marie, Christine and Dorothy Huber of 300 Second St., south. * % % | For Miss Dagmar Pederson of Man- dan, whose marriage will occur June | 28, Mrs. LaRue Shaw and Miss Ruth} Shaw entertained 15 guests at a mis- cellaneous shower Saturday in the} Shaw home at Mandan. Out-of-town guests were the bride-elect’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Pederson, and her sisters, the Misses Ruth, Lillian and June Pederson, all of Almont. * * * Mr, and Mrs. J. P. Hess of Kansas City, Mo., and their daughter, Mrs. |James Bernard Tonskemper of Du- luth, Minn., were at Mandan, their former home, for the week-end. They visited relatives and attended to business matters. ee * Miss Henrietta J. Bens of Herreid, S. D., is spending a three-week vaca- tion with her grandfather, Rev. H. G. Bens, and her aunts, the Misses Clara and Irene Bens, of 1102 Avenue C. Women Get Chance to | Learn Beauty Secrets; opportunity of learning just as the screen stars do how to apply make- up so perfectly as to give the illusion of perfect features, Max Factor has sent his personal representative, Miss Eve Marie Gilson, to Bismarck for a limited engagement. Miss Gilson began Monday a series of daily lectures at the A. W. Lucas Company store. She also is conduct- ing a Max Factor art school of make- up While making arrangements for this service to its patrons, the Lucas company received this message from Mr. Factor: “The exciting glamour secrets that the screen stars of Hollywood use to gain a fascinating, individualized type of beauty will be revealed to women of your city when my personal repre- sentative arrives. “I am often asked what screen star or what woman in private life has the | most perfect features. The answer is! —it doesn’t matter—every single girl} and woman can apply her make-up so expertly that, gazing at her, one gains the ilusion that her every fea- ture is perfect. There are tricks of applying powder, rouge, lipstick and | the other essentials of make-up so as to make each shape of face seem per- fez.” Thompson Presiding At Masonic Meeting Fargo, N. D., June 16.—(#)—With approximately 400 officers, delegates and representatives from other states in attendance, the 47th annual com- munication of the Grand Lodge, A. F. & A. M,, North Dakota, opened Tues- day in the Masonic temple here. Lewis K. Thompson of Bismarck is grand master. Distinguished guests include John R. Lioyd of Butte, grand master of Montana, and Frank W. Matson of St. Paul, acting grand master of Min- nesota. Following business sessions Tues- day, featuring the grand master’s ad- dress, six regional finalists in the Masonic oratorical contest will com- To give women of Bismarck the| — Southport, adorning the trim form of Gloria D. Minoprio. The fair French entrant drew a large gallery, not only because of her unusual garb, but due to her scoring a 90 while play- ing a No. 2 iron throughout 18 holes. ND. ELKS STUDYING Seek Government Help in Effort to Assist Crippled, Hand- icapped Child Minot, N. D. June 16.—(?)—Pre- pared to study means by which it would be possible for the federal gov- ernment to contribute funds to a pro- gram for physical rehabilitation of |crippled children in North Dakota, the state Elks association opened its annual convention at the Elks home in Minot Tuesday. An out-of-state speaker will be Miss Jean Pierce, Minneapolis executive secretary of the Minnesota Association for Crippled Children and Disabled Adults, and also a vice president of the International Crippled Children’s society. Miss Pierce will tell of voca- tional endeavors which have been out- lined for cripples in Minnesota and will exhibit some of their work. With Former Gov. L. B. Hanna, president of the state association, pre-} siding, the first business of the con- vention when it opened shortly be- fore noon was the appointment of committees and the transaction of routine business. Major Noel Tharalson, Devils Lake, district deputy grand exalted ruler, announced that the Minot lodge for @ second consecutive year won the Hanna flag for the best exemplifica- | tion by lodge officers of the ritual at’ the time the district deputy made his! Official visit. the state association, announced that the attendance at the Minot meeting, totaling close to 100, is the largest in many years. lodges in the state, outside of Minot, was asked to send a delegation of at} | least 10. Lodges represented at the meet- | ing are those at Dickinson, Mandan, Bismarck, Jamestown, Valley City, Fargo, Grand Forks, Devils Lake, | Williston and Minot. CHILD AID PROGRAM; Sam Stern, Fargo, vice president of | Each of the nine/ U. §. LABOR BOARD CHARTS PLANS FOR ACTION IN FUTURE Will Continue Administering Act Despite Adverse Decision by Court Washington, June 16.—(#)—Acting swiftly in the face of an adverse cir- cuit court decision, the national rela- tions labor board gathered Tuesday to study the ruling and chart a fu- ture course for administration of the ‘Wagner act. The fifth circuit court of appeals at New Orleans in a unanimous decision Monday ruled the constitution “does not vest in the federal government the power to regulate the relation as such of employer and employe in production and manufacture.” The ruling applied only to the case of the board against the Jones and Laughlin steel corporation, the senior }judge saying it was not a blanket nullification of the labor relations act. The court denied the board’s peti- tion for enforcement of an order re- quiring the steel company to reinstate certain employes who said they were dismissed because of labor activities at the Alquippa, Pa., plant. John M. Carmody, a member of the jboard, said he believed the decision was effective only in the jurisdiction | of the fifth circuit court of appeals. | He expressed the opinion that until | the United States supreme court act- ed, lower court rulings would not af- fect administration of the Wagner act on a national scale. Referring to the supreme court’s decision against the Guffey coal act, the circuit court held that manufac- ture and production constitute one thing and actual interstate commerce, which it described as the transporta- tion of products through negotiations and agreements,‘quite another. Famous Naturalist To Speak in State | North Dakota sportsmen may have an opportunity this summer to meet Jack Miner, prominent 11-year-old Kingsville, Ontario, naturalist, who put up his gun many years ago to make a study of his game bird friends. The naturalist, who maintains one of the best known bird sanctuaries in Canada, was forced to decline an in- vitation to speak at the junior game warden convention here July 18, but he is planning. a trip west later in the summer, E. M. Lee, chief game warden, said Tuesday. The naturalist, author of several books on wild bird life, will arrange a series of meetings with sportsmen of western states, the warden an- nounced. A state-wide sportsmen’s meeting will be called here by the game and fish department when Miner's visit is assured. | “The Canadian naturalist is one man who has succeeded in convincing migratory waterfowl he is one of | them,” Warden Lee said. “He has de- voted many years of his life to a careful study of their habits.” i {| It requires more than a century for ja cedar tree to grow large enough to id a 30-foot telephone pole. GARLIC and PARSLEY for * High BLOOD PRESSURE Allimin Essence of Gat Mer ig valuable for reducing high blood re. Tablets specially coated. Ry axe, fuse No drugs. Guaranteed safe heal had eaa or money back, Ask for these tablets by name —ALLIMIN ESSENCE OF GARLIC Parsley Tablets. Two sizes, 50c and $1.00 for sale by Capitol Cut Rate Drug, Inc. | FOR SALE BY OWNER: 5 iff xh Bungalow Di (ff pleted. nection age, close in. good investmen annual ensh, bi 6%. FI YOU CAN HAVE THIS BEAUTIFUL, MODERN RANGE IN YOUR HOME for 1 0% DOWN—BALANCE only MONTHLY The Bs any ways you can save money ith this modern new Hotpoint range would tickle the thriftiest Scotsman. For example: Low electric rates as- sure low cooking costs; cheaper cuts of meats cook tender and flavory in controlled, applied electric heat; the Thrift Cooker (nicknamed the "Scotch Kettle”) turns out an entire delicious meal with about the same amount of electric current as an electric lamp! ELECTRIC pete. The topic is “World Peace. How Obtained.” North Dakota Power and Light Co. can cook an entire meal (even to ber ye in the wonderful electric oven without one bit of attention from you. And, we haven't mentioned the orem yon es eniay oF on begaipe bed and lecoratin; 4 cml ia Pa ptety get all the ess coda FEATURES © Calred, hi-speed, aoe . renee Grain” (automatic timer clock) . . Thrift mow type oven temperature com trol. fully Insulated oven motel. aH porcelain enamel..trimmed with chromiam, e * Bice RANGES ‘ Depot Building Order The state supreme court held Tues- board of rallroad commissioners re- to build a standard station at Nash in Walsh county in place of a port- able station house was “arbitrary and unreasonable.” Order of the com- missioners requiring the building of @ new standard depot at Nash was reversed but the order requiring the maintenance of a station agent there for 12 months in the year was af- firmed. MICHIGAN SENATORS FAVOR LEGION PROBE Would Have Government Aid in Investigation of Hooded Terrorist Order Detroit, June 16—(/)—Support for @ government investigation of Black Legion terrorism came Tuesday from Michigan’s two United States sen- ators. The conference for the protection of civil rights announced the receipt of word from Senator Arthur H. Van- denberg that he had asked the de- partment of justice for a report on the sufficiency of various state in- vestigations already under way. Senator James Couzens, the confer- ence reported, expressed favor for the resolution of Senator Elmer A. Ben- son, (F.-L., Minn.), demanding a congressional inquiry. In Hamilton, Ont., police investi- gated the possibility that vandalism in @ Catholic church there marked an outbreak of Black Legion activity in Canada. Marauders attempting to enter the vault where the blesssed sacrament rested damaged the $25,000 altar. The Rev. Phillip Campbell ex- pressed belief that hooded night riders might be responsible, In Detroit, Dayton Dean, who ‘calmly related from the witness stand @ strange story of a blood pact and a Black Legion plot to kill a newspa- per publisher, faced cross-examina- tion by defense attorneys Tuesday. While that court hearing was in overnight recess, Councilman George Shanley, of suburban Lincoln Park declared in a council meeting that the Black Legion killed George Mar- chuk, treasurer of a Communist or- ganization, in 1933. in Lincoln Park. His death is one of a dozen in Michigan under scrutiny {for possible Black Legion connections. Ancient Antioch had a hippodrome big enough to rank with modern foot- Is Held Unreasonable day that an order of the North Dakota quiring the Great Northern railway Marchuk was shot to death in 1933 | UPHOLD CONVICTION ON LIQUOR CHARGE Supreme Court Refuses Court Refuses to Up- set Jury Verdict in Fargo ‘Woman's Case Netsey Nedtvedt, Fargo woman convicted of engaging in the liquor traffic as a second offense, Tuesday was denied a new trial by the state supreme court. The court affirmed the decision of District Judge P. G. Swenson of Cass county in denying the request for a new trial, sought on grounds there was “improper” cross-examination re- garding a prior conviction and that the state prejudiced the jury by re- ferring to her as a “bootlegger.” According to the record, sheriff's officers found two bottles in a man’s winter overcoat hanging on a hook on the wall in the Nedtvedt apart- ment Aug. 31, 1934. The defendant contended the coat in which the lquor was found was left hanging on the wall by her brother sometime dur- ing the preceding June and that she tees nothing of the presence of the iquor. ‘Inference of Knowledge’ In the high court’s decision, it was held “where unlawful intoxicating liquor is found in the possession of a person, the physical fact of possession raises an inference of knowledge of the presence.” “Where intoxicating liquor is found in the possession of a defendant who denies knowledge thereof and whose credibility is impeached,” the decision read, “the conflict between the infer- ence of knowledge rising from the prod Not Sefer monthly pain and delay dueto GuicinetmDurnoad rand Fle areetiectives reliable and; Railel. Bold by all druggists for over 45 years. Ask tor 45 we CHICHESTERS PILLS Jig "THE DIAMOND BRAND” possession and denial of knowledge by the defendant, raises a question of fact to be decided by the jury, and this court will not, upon appeal, hold the inference has been overcome as @ matter of law.” Reference to the defendant as a “pootlegger” by counsel for the state during argument to the jury, was held to be “improper” but not prejudicial in view of timely caution by the court. Judges A. G. Burr and A. M. Chris- |tianson dissented from the decision, written by Judge James Morris. The University of Javia, Italy, was founded by Lothaire, grandson of Charlemagne, in 825. GIRLS ! Avoid loneliness . . . Learn about men from “Big Brown Eyes” the manicure girl who knows Paramount Today Special! Special! Pioneer Days Photos 12 for $1 and up Get a picture of yourself in that big hat! 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Stocks at the very peak of the year . June 17th and 18th —at— insuring you wide and varied selection. REPAIRING REMODELING CLEANING STORAGE Two Days Only Commencing at Noon Wednesday, All Day Thursday, ‘ ‘ te, Fer Womens Wear Bismarck 43 YEARS OF FUR SERVICE —1936