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o Hold Picnic Here July 26 Preparations Being Made to En- Nonpartian Club to tertain 1,500 Including Many Dignitaries Bismarck-Mandan Chapter No. 3, bled American Veterans, has com- pleted arrangements for its annual picnic Sunday, July 26, at 2 p. m,, in Pioneer park, according to announce- nent made boar by Walter J. & Invited to attend are all members the chapter, disabled veterans of ithe Slope area, officials of the various eterans’ organizations and their families, and also a number of honor Gov. Walter Welford will be among the speakers for a program commenc- ing at 2:30 p.m. The list also in- cluded Kenneth W. Simons, past com- mander of Lloyd Spetz Post No. 1, American Legion, and John Gray, state treasurer. Guests will include OC.’ ‘T. Hoverson, Veterans’ Bureau facility manager, of Fargo, and Floyd Castle, cei commander of the D. At 3:15 p. m., there will be a pro- gram of athletic contests for guests of all ages, which will include a blue- berry pie and ice cream eating con- test, and a baseball game. The evening meal will be eaten at | 7 o'clock and will be followed by an address by the unit commander. Bis- marck’s Little German band will play during the athletic contests and dur- ing the supper hour. This is the one big get-together which the disabled veterans of the Slope area hold each year and prep- arations are being made to entertain approximately 1,500 people. es * 4% Miss Lillian E. Cook, 610 Fifth 8t., Miss Susan V. Sheaffer of the Bis- marck hospital and Miss Mildred Por- ter, superintendent-- of the general hospital at Devils Lake, returned to the city this week-end after a motor trip of nearly four weeks to the west coast. At Los Angeles, Miss Sheaffer and Miss Porter attended the interna- tional meeting of the nurses’ associa- tion. The party also spent some time et Long Beach, Calif., visiting with Mrs. Lottie B. Sowles, who left Bis- marck during the last winter and now has established a business at Long Beach. ** & Miss Cynthia Cook and Miss Lillian E. Cook, 610 Fifth St., are entertain- ing informally in their home Monday evening for Mrs. Lou Esch of Sparta, ‘Wis., sister of Miss Bessie R. Bald- win, 1016 Seventh St., who has been visiting here for several days. Tues- day morning, Miss Baldwin and Mrs. Esch are leaving for a trip along the north shore of Lake Superior in Min- nesota, after which Miss Baldwin will spend the remainder of her two-week vacation from the state library com- mission office, at Sparta, which is hér home. * *8 % Mr. and Mrs. John Ehrmantraut and sons, Deryl and Jay Arlen, of 204 Thirteenth St., who left a week ago on their vacation, now are in the Dells of the Wisconsin after visiting at Waubay, 8. D., and at Minneapolis. age i Brand new shipment of cool summer cot- tons, including back- less and other cool a3 38 oe Hold Picnic Tuesday Girls’ Nonpartisan Club No. 506 will EF seER™ Z I se a i E g a F i 2 Ee i 2 EEF z # 5 gerbe tt aPrs to Valley City Monday morning. From. there Mrs. Gunness and the | Oakes, with heart!» Bassingwaite of Oakes, medalist, for in her won the championship of the womens ~| Mrs. Bassingwaite home, 708 Avenue F, was reported to slightly improved : Mr. Gunness will go to later for hig vacation. eee Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Fitssimonds, nied F of a including a drive along the Columbia highway. aw Miss Dora Hidde, 722 Sixth 8t., reference librarian for the state li- brary Fresen Fruit Saled To make this frozen fruit salad, which serves eight, use % pound 2 tablespoons fruit who leave Monday evening to tinue a trip to Yellowstone National park. The Patwns were here by Miss Hidde’s mother, Mrs. Hugo Hidde of Oshkosh, Wis., who them on their return trip at Aber- deen, 8. D. * 88 8 Mrs. C. M. Overgaard, 217 Avenue D, west, returned Saturday from & the Meth- it Mandan, tion in thi | Today’s Recipe | .| titement act which provided a tax to; | the treasury from the $46,685,000 ap- Ruth Bryan Owen and Her Husband TR A happily smiling pair were Mts. Ruth Bryan Owen and Capt. Boerge Rohde as they faced cameramen after they*had crossed the trom Copenhage! in to be married on the Long Island estate of Mrs. Owen's son-in-law. The U. 8. minister to Denmark greeted the Danish courtier with a kiss as his ship docked in New York and they fled to Sands Point, L. I., in a ‘futile attempt to evade news- former in the .|beat Mi _, champion 3 and 2. Papermen and photogti President and Wins Title at Oakes N. D., July 13.—()—Mrs. E. southeastern district golf tournament here S Mrs. Bassingwaite defeated Mrs. Roy Hall of the Fargo country club, state champion two and one finals. In the first round she irs. Grace Meredith, Valley City ‘Miss Jeanne McPhail of Fargo was runnerup for medalist honors with a@. : Minneapolis Quartet Sings Here Tonight The Luther Bible Institute quartet of Minneapolis will sing the first in @ series of concerts in Bismarck and vicinity at 8 p. m., Monday in the First Lutheran church, at which a jailver collection will be taken. Wed- nesday at 8 p. m., the group will sing in the itheran church of Brad- dock. The appearances are under the auspices of Rev. G. Adolph Johns, pastor of the two churches. Rail Pensions Will Be Paid Despite Rulings Washington, July 13—()—Railway pension disbursements soon will go out to retired workers despite a court rul- ing invalidating a section of the re- meet the payments. Payments certified by the railroad | retirement board will be sent out by/ Propriation made by congress to take | care of the pensions for a one-year period. The recent decision of the district court of the District of Columbia, taphers. They were married Saturday with Mrs. Roosevel it among the guests. which invalidated the tax section of the law, did not rule on the constitu- tionality of the pension payments themselves. Darrow Tactics Used To Save James’ Life Los Angeles, July 13—(?)—Defense attorneys for Robert 8. James pat- terned a final plea Monday on the “humanitarian” jury appeal used by Clarence Darrow in the Loeb-Leopold case at Chicago more than a decade ago. “We will try to show that no good would be served, society would not be elevated, by sending James up those 13 steps to the gallows at San Quen- tin prison,” said Defense Attorney Samuel Silverman. James is accused of drowning his seventh wife, Mary, for insurance money after subjecting her to a tlesnake’s bites. Montana Visitor Is Told to Leave Town Granville Barker, home on a Visit from Fort Peck, Mont., was arrested by Sheriff Fred Anstrom Sunday night following a complaint that he had threatened a man named Truesdale at the home of his mother, Mrs. Eva Barker. A family quarrel was said at the sheriff's office to have preceded the threat. Arraigned Monday before H. R. Bonny, justice of the peace, Barker | was sentenced to five days in jail but the sentence was suspended Provided | he leave town. The skin of the mountain devil liz- ard, @ native of western Australia, absorbs water like blotting paper. The heaviest wood known is iron- wood. It weighs 81 pounds a square foot and sinks in water. ‘The common household match is an English invention of 100 years ago. NEW V. F. W. POSTS FORMED AT MANDAN’ | | Local Men Assist in Ceremony) Held Sunday at Morton County City Organization of the new Veterans of Foreign Wars post at Mandan was effected at a meeting Sunday in the Mandan. Memorial building. The new veterans ‘organization will be known as Harry L. Kidd Post No. 707. Officers of the new post are 8. E. Arthur, commander; J. M. Hanley, senior vice commander; Adolph San- ders, junior vice commander; H. H. Warren quartermaster. Other officers will be elected or appointed at the next regular meeting of the post which has a membership of 25 men. Installing officer was Wesley L. Sherwin, commander of Gilbert N. Nelson Post No. 1,326, Bismarck. He was assisted by the degree team of the local V. F. W. post. In addition to commanding the local post Sherwin is commander of District No.1, which comprises the entire Missouri Slope area. Members of the degree team assist- ing Sherwin were Harry Bernstein, Adam Klein, Morris Satter, John Karasiewicz, Christ Free, Edward ‘Cornell and Dave Hamilton. As part of the ceremony P. G. Har- rington, Bismarck, past department commander of the V. F. W., spoke briefly, stressing the duties of war veterans to their disabled comrades and to widows and orphans of veter- ans, State officials, all of whom spoke briefly, were: F. D. DeWitt, depart- ment commander, and Leo Finnegan, department adjutant, both of Minot, and L. W. Bray, Fargo, department council member and temporary ser- vice officer. Herman Offner, Fargo, also was present. The Mandan post was the first V. F. W. post in North Dakota, having been organized in 1921. It became inactive in 1931. Reorganization was made possible by the transfer to Man- dan of the veterans CCC camp, thus increasing the number of eligibles in the area. Boy Saved From Pit Battling Pneumonia Oakes, N. D., July 13—(?)—Vernon Moore, 16, who escaped death Sat- urday when he was dragged from a water-filled gravel pit by two com- panions, is reported critically ill at a hospital here where he suffers inhala- tion pneumonia. Moore, in fever delirium, leaped from his hospital bed Sunday morning and dove through a screened window in the men’s ward, dropping six feet to the ground. A searching party found the youth an hour later hiding near the hospital. He was reported to be still delirious Monday. [Lemke Will Address Townsend Convention Cleveland, July 13.—(?)—Some two- score Townsend lieutenants arrived here Monday for the eT one movement's five-day cone) vention and received the formal as- William Lemke that he would address the final session Sunday. Lemke, who heads the Union party ticket, said in wiring his acceptance of an invitation: “I wish your con- vention every success and know it will make history and do much to end unemployment and abject poverty in) America.” Dr. Frances E. Townsend, founder of the movement bearing his name, mentioned a possible coalition with the Union party. Canvassing Board to Meet Here July 22 Members of the state canvassing board will meet July 32 to compile of- ficial returns from North Dakota’s 53 counties on the primary election vote, the office of Secretary of State James surances of Presidential Candidate the Fargo Juniors Barely Defeat Cooperstown rg argh N. D., July 13—)— The Junior American Legion baseball team qualified for defense of its state title at the tournament in Grand Forks late this month by scor- ing a 5-4 victory over Cooperstown in the final of the district tournament here Sunday. Fargo scored four runs in the open- half of the eighth to win. on a double play in the nint bases loaded and one out to esca D. Gronna announced Monday. Of- with victory. AIR-CONDITIONED The Coolest Spot in Bismarck Vacation Specials Enjoy the Coolness and Freshness of the Right Clothes on Your Vacation AND HAVE MONEY LEFT TO Go Places Mid-Summer Sale DRESSES Every One a New Summer Style to Wear Right Now. GROUP ONE—New, cool summer styles to wear right now.. Sheers, Pastels, Prints GROUP THREE—Includes dress. Beautiful sheers and GROUP TWO—Take one worth up to $12.00 . cold dishes — created by the chef of the famous Hotel Shoreham in Washington, D. C. ‘The appetizing array of cold cuts: shown below is a feature of the July menu in the fashionable Louis MOST VALUA- BLE PLAYER in the National Leaguelastseason —“Gabby” Hart- nett. “Ican smoke asmany Camelsas Tike,” he says.“A Camel with meals and after sets my digestion right!” GROUP TWO—Worth $8.00 and more. Cool, summery sheers for a smart vacation Stunning whites and pastels, $3.33 $5.33 $9.33 every summer pastel crepes COATS Smart Whites and Pastels GROUP ONE—Every one a new summer style. Whites and pastels. . $1.98 along on your vacation. us, $3.98 New White, Pastel Hats A hat for every dress at this low price. Whites, pastels, large dorms rely SHOP IN COMFORT ON THE GO. Bill Ferguson, star salesman (right), says: “Camels give me an extra sense of well-being.” UVA KIMMEY, daring girlparachute jumper. Miss Kimmey says: “I'm a Camel smoke smoker. I like to Camels ac mesitime. They make food taste bet- ter and encourage digestion in a pleasant way. Camels don’t jangle my nerves.” Camels add zest to eating - they set you right. No wonder smokers say: IME often finds us in Tl ness slow down the flow of digestive fluids. Remember, then, to pause for s Camel. When you smoke Camels at mealtimes, the flow of di- a state of rush gestive fuids is helped back to normal. is increased. You experience the follows a meal well Camels are gentle on gaver get on your o0foe digestion’s Alkalinity well-being that COSTLIER TOBACCOS MORE EXPER your throat and they herves. Enjoy them often for