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Bismarck Rainbow Delegation Goes to Dickinson Thursday Rev. N. E. Elsworth, Associate . Grand Patron, to Talk; Miss McGillic Presides i 7 Four official delegates will be in; the! party of Bismarck girls leaving! ‘Thursday afternoon for the sixth an-; nual grand assembly of the Order of . the Rainbow at Dickinson, which opens in the evening and continues; through Saturday. Presiding officer will be Miss Winnifred McGillic of Mandan, grand worthy adviser. i Local delegates are Miss Jeanne Paris, who is Grand Fidelity, and the | i Misses Beverly Barnes, Frances Frahm and Marion Pederson, Charity, worthy advisor and proxy delegate for ‘Miss Emma Langer, associate worthy advisor, respectively. In the visitor group will be the ‘Misses Peggy Jane Skeels, Harriet; Rosen, Lois Erdahl, Bernice Peterson, Phy! Mrs. Laura Erdahl, past mother adviser of the chapter, will accom- pany the group. Rev. N. E. Ellsworth, associate grand patron, is scheduled for a talk on the opening program which is to be followed by a recep- tion. ‘The Misses Barnes, Paris and Ped- erson all will receive the grand cross of color degree, which is in recogni- tion of outstanding service to the! order, Friday afternoon. Miss Mar- garet Buckley of the Mandan as: sembly will give a vocal solo on thi same program. The Badiands will serve as a back- ground for the degree work Friday when delegates will stage the grand cross of color ceremony during a tour of the scenic area. Also planned is a rodeo at the Walter Ray ranch near Medora. 400 Girls Expected Approximately 400 girls are ex- pected for the assembly, which opens at 1 p.m, Thursday with Togistration | in the Masonic temple. A banquet and the reception close the first day. Breakfasts for mother advisers, honor guests, Eastern Star guests and advisory boards open Friday’s sched- ule. Committee reports and election of Officers follow. In the evening there will be the assembly hall in Bagdad pavilion. Installation of officers will mark the closing session. Mrs. W. D, Robertson, Dickinson, is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Mrs. Philip Boise, mother adviser of the hostess chapter, and numerous other aides. e* % Mrs. John C. Anderson of Minot arrived Tuesday for a few days’ visit with Mrs. H. A. Disney, 618 Second 8&t., and Miss Josephine Hosch, Enge apartments, who both attended the University of North Dakota at the —_—_ [Defeats Thermometer| ¢ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1936 Baptist Aid to Hold Outing for Families The First Baptist Ladies’ Aid is combining a regular meeting and a picnic for members and their families |im plans for an outing Thursday at | Ploneer park. Each family is to pro- vide its own comp! » Trans- \ ete lunch ; portation for those not having cars will be available at the church at 4:30 p.m. The supper is set for 6:30 Pp. m, To Present Advanced Pupils in Musicale A musicale Thursday evening in the ‘Grand Pacific hotel private dining |room presenting a group of advanced : piano, violin and vocal pupils will con- (clude the late spring and early sum- mer series of recitals of the Mehus conservatory of music. The interested public is invited to the program, which will begin at 8 p.m. Miss Belle Mehus, piano instructor, is presenting Izobel Cochrane, Ar- leen Mann, Carcl Wilson, Phyllis Wahl, Alice Knowles and Robert Kling. Frances Frahm, Asle Lewis, Nick Barbie and Leo Halloran compose the violin group being presented by Ralph ; Truman. Ralph Warren Soule, voice teacher, is to present Charlotte Sa- thre, Harold Smith, Gregory Dahlen, Leonard mas and oad Ytreeide. * Mrs. Mary Grady, 417 Sixth 8t., had as her week-end guest her grand- daughter, Miss Mary White of Grand Forks, who was returning home after Spending part of her vacation in Minneapolis. Jack McDonald of Grafton also was a week-end guest of » |Mrs, Grady. a Margaret Lindsay wears the kind of suit that fashion authorities advocate for hot days in town. The plain skirt is of black twill. The Eton jacket, in matching fabric, is trimmed with black braid. A frilly blouse of white organdy and a gob’s hat go with it. Mrs. Al Rosen and daughter, Miss Evelyn, of 119 Avenue A, west, left Tuesday evening for Chicago where they will visit friends and relatives for about a week. En route they will stop in Minneapolis for a few days. ee * Mrs. Frederick C. Bertrand and son, Robert, left Monday for their oo | Meetings of Clubs | | And Social Groups | DUV. Tirzah Ann Barclay Tent No. 3, Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War, meets at 8 p. m., Thurs- day, with Mrs. R. E. Carlander, 928 Ninth 8t. es % Unity Study Club Material for discussion will be taken from Chapter XI of Charles Fillmore’s “Christian Healing,” which is entitled “Judgment and Justice,” Unity Study club meets Wednesday, in Legion Auxiliary room, World War Memorial SAKAKAWEA PLAYED SGNFIGANT ROLE IN NORTHWEST HISTORY same time she did. Mrs. Anderson is|/home in Minneapolis after a brief! Joined Lewis and Clark Near the former Miss Mavourneen Todd of ‘Williston. * * & Allen U. Hunt of Barrington, Il., his son, David, and his mother,, Mrs. U. F. Hunt of Fessenden, were Bis- visit with Mrs, Bertrand’s brother-in- law and sister, Lt. and Mrs. Richard R. Saul of Mandan. x * & Mrs. Gerald Craig and daughter, LaVerna Mae, of ‘719% Thayer ave- Here to Lead Explorers to Pacific Coast “Intelligent, cheerful, resourceful, + marck visitors Wednesday. Mr. Hunt/nue, have gone to Aberdeen, 8. D., for | tireless, faithful” Cap is treasurer and general auditor of/a two-week visit with her parents, Seeemaiiag abies tedilinnncn nt the Jewel Tea company. Mr, and Mrs. John G. Sayler. ‘N A Reps, Wwe' ve ‘ wilh our Wade 4he~ headline Chiftone ang | They're so Cool—Comfortable and easy to keep Conditioned—Made of a good quality printed Silk Chiffon with Slip all ready to go places— $5.00 of the Lewis and Clark expedition, used to describe Sakakawea, the Shoshone bird woman who played so significant a role in early ex- Ploration of the great northwest. Sakakawea was taken from her own people when she was 11, and brought to a Mandan vi Pedition of exploration which car- tied them, during the years 1804- 1806 through what is now North Dakota to the west coast. On this trip she rendered inval- uable service to the expedition, not only in guiding them through country that she alone was familiar with, but ae in ane them food, comforting m sickness, and saving oe valuable and papers wi their capsized. The only member of the expedi- tion who received no pecuniary re- ward for her services, Sakakawea lived many years after, finally dying April 9, 1884 at the Shoshone Mis- Washington State was called off Wed- nesday as the young legislator start- Because .. The food is so good, The service so capable, Toe rerenntinge nleanens, That’s why 20 many people balay allen ot | O’Brien’s Cafe 413 Bawy. pie And 8 yes lhe Bkanarck @) SOCIETY and CLUBS Father Did Not Regret Hanging of ‘Bad Son’ Brave Bear, Indian Desperado, Defied Federal Authorities for 10 Years Almost legendary isthe story of the Indian desperado, Wapaypay or Brave Bear, who killed a man near Pembina in 1873 and defied capture by federal suthorities for nearly 10 years. He was finally caught and hanged in Yankton, in 1883. Brave Bear was a member of the Cut Head band of the Yanktonal tribe of the North Dakota Sioux. As @ young buck, he was the boon com- panion, or “brother-friend,” as the Indians called it, of the famous war- tior, Rain-in-the-Face. Together with Hohay, an Assini- boine, Brave Bear and Rain-in-the- Face made a daring attack on Fort Totten, N. Dak. in the summer of 1866, Yelling and shooting, they rode on swift horses up to the very walls of the fort under a continuous barrage of rifle-fire from the soldiers, and es- ‘caped with only minor wounds. The deed had been prompted by a mutual dare. Slew Three Men The government's hunt for Brave Bear began on the day in 1873 when he entered the stable of a settler near Pembina to steal some horses. Two white men approached, and Brave Bear and his companion shot and killed them both. After mortally wounding a third man, and firing on two women occupants of the house, the two Indians escaped with several horses to the Missouri river country. Dakota territory officials heard of the crime, and made several unsuc- cessful attempts to capture them. Five years later, still at large, Brave Bear returned to his people near Devils Lake to live. Major James Mc- Laughlin, then Indian agent on the Standing Rock reservation, called a council of the Cut Head band, feel- ing sure Brave Bear would attend. ‘Major McLaughlin arranged to have soldiers’ stationed nearby, and as Brave Bear entered the council lodge, they seized him. Escapes From Jail Taken to Pembina for trial, Brave Bear escaped from the jail there, stole @ horse on the Pine Ridge reservation, BRAVE BEAR and started north. Near Fort Sully | % he waylaid @ settler named Johnson, | % killed him and took his rifle. He then | ¥ fled to Canada where he joined Sit-|% ting Bull's fugitive band of exiles. grees Fahrenheit). Tt makes me tired to hear people ‘say good music is highbrow’. . . it ign’t the music that’s high-brow—it’s the people.—Jascha Heifets, violinist. ‘The most important thing in & child's education is to teach it not to take things which do not belong to it. —Mrs, Franklin D. Roosevelt. A. W. LUCAS CO. Home of Nationally Advertised Merchandise ; n Today’s Recipe ——— Dropped Fruit Cookies mix well. Add Three eggs, 1% cups light brown |sift flour, salt, sugar, 1 cup butter, 4 tablespoons | several times sour milk, % teaspoon soda, 2 tea- nuts. Mix well spoons baking powder, 3% cups flour, |ture. Mix thorot % cinnamon, 1 cup chopped |tip of teaspoon onto greased nut meats, % cup seeded and chopped | floured baking sheet. Bake 10 min: We Are Now Showing Two New Numbers In Nelly Dons Latest Creations by This Famous Maker. To See Them Is to Want One or More. In the summer of 1881 Sitting Bull|% decided to surrender to the govern-|¢ ment, and Brave Bear returned to) % North Dakota with him. He again} ¢ moved to the Standing Rock reserva- | % tion, and when Major McLaughlin | % returned there to be Indian agent, laid his plans to escape. He delayed too long however, and through the be- trayal of a white man who had agreed to help him escape, was captured for the last time. He was taken to Yankton, and hanged in the rear of the old court house, calm and fearless to the last. When Brave Bear's old Indian father heard of his son’s death, he said, “We are glad, his mother and myself, for he was a bad son.” Rain falling on overworked fields, washing through gullies, sweeping down streams and rivers, carrying rich soil out to sea, is no respecter of boundary lines or of economic classes. It is as much the concern of a con- sumer 1000 miles away as it is of the farmer on whose land it fell—H. R. Tolley, acting AAA administrator. Mid-Season White Shoe Clearance Starting Thurs., June 25 All White Style Shoes Go on Sale at from approximately 20 to 40% off Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Price Range Now $2.95 $ 2.95 $1.45 $6.95 $5. Children’s 95 $2.65 An opportune time—a long season ahead. All Phones 34 We Deliver oY @ ALL SEASONABLE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Grocery Specials June 24 to June 30, Inc. Crystal White Soap Ivory Soap, Wax or Green .Cut No. 2 tins 2 for 33c Superior in flavor, tenderness and appearance. R Baking or Sweet Certo, bottle 35c Tuna Fish, Ke, 2for....... Qe | me ae..21¢ C NELLY DON VOILE High note of summer— the swing, the grace, the beauty of this big blossom voile... tuned to a round of social en- gegements ... in per- fect harmony with soap- suds and water (senfor- ized and crease - resist- ing) . . . eccompanied The Grace and Beauty so desired by the Well-Dressed Woman. * NELLY DONS ALWAYS PLEASE THE PERFECT BEGINNING by LE GANT For the game of fashion—this girdle of “TwoWay-OneWay” elas- tic batiste back—a construction which permits up-and-down stretch and yet holds firm as cloth. Le Gant never rides up—it’s your tee off for a “par” game—it smoothes out the hazards of bulges and clears the fairway to a figure of © smartness and slimness. And with those handicaps eliminated—your game is won! $5.00 Top it with an A’lure bra—it will softly round yet firmly control the breasts into a youthful contour! -