The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 18, 1936, Page 5

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@)SOCIETY and CLUBS Homemakers Elect Staffs to Assume Charge for 1936-37 Mrs. J. W. Soctt Is President of Bismarck Unit; Other Clubs Elect and J. W. Scott as hostesses the former's home 827 Thirteenth Was among several Slope units of e Homemakers’ organization nam- ing officers for the ensuing year. Scott was chosen as president, membership in the Auxiliary to Lloyd Spets Post No.1, American Legion, mich she took an active part, and membership in the Washburn se & Scranton Instructors An improvised altar in « bower of a of the Order of the Eastern’ stay, white and green formed the setting for the marriage of Miss Sign Maria Chelstrom and James McFad- gen, both instructors at Scranton, Informal Functions Honor Two Visitors Miss Florence Larson of Washing- ton, D. ©., and Mrs. Huntsman Man- guests at two came Wi Saturday, were honored formal social functions during their inf Recite Marriage Vows foe chiffon, cape over @ rose pink chiffon eve- ning gown makesa charming ensemble for summer dancing. A cluster of multi-col- ored ribbons at the shoulder FOR STATE GOLFERS SEEKING N. D, HONOR Paul Cook of Bismarck Rated Favorite in Field of 62 tla: i i a i j : it People’s f Forum (Editor's Noté)—The Tribune wel comes letters on subjects of imter- eat. Letters dealing with contro- verstal roll; ubjects, which unfairly, oF good taste and fair play will be returned ers. All letters MU: If you wish to use a pt sign the pseudonym firs own name beneath it. We the right to delete such parts of letters as seary to He i a Ey | HF If lit : 4 eit tHE iste Fey ‘ il t Wednesday on the lawn at the home of the bride's father, Alfred Chel-| © strom, at Perley, Minn. 5 is a nice de» parture : Dobson, secretary; Mrs. C. W. Walk- F er, treasurer, and Mmes. Kirby and ‘William Gierke, project leades. Mrs. Gierke was returned to her office. Miscellaneous topics chosen for study next year nclude dessert and vegetable cookery, food and food habits for children from two to six years, making use of leftovers, salads for every occasion, folk music and “Calling All Drivers,” a minor project lesson devoted to safety on the high- ‘ways. e The major project is being selected by the North Dakota Agricultural “ college extension division and has not been announced as yet. Mrs. Lyman Morley was admitted into membership in the club. ‘The hostess gave a demonstration on making ice oream in the refrigera- tor. Election at Bowman At a meeting in the Irvin Herman home, the Stillwater Homemakers of Bowman named Mrs, Herman and Mrs. R. Pierce, project leaders; Mrs. L. Holzman, president; Mrs. O. W. Pierce, vice president; Mrs. Aus, sec- retary-treasurer, and Mrs. Ortwin Schade, reporter. After Mrs. Frank ‘Whittet gave a lesson, entitled “Clothes and Their Effect Upon Us,” the hostess served lunch. Badlands Club Elects The Badlands Homemakers’ club of Medora at a special meeting in Olive Kinmark’s home nam¢d the following: president, Alice Lebo; vice president; Zella Fong; secretary, Evelyn Thompson; project leaders, Genevieve Tennison and Olive Kin- mark. They will assume office in October. A lunch of ice cream and wafers was served. Entire Staff Returned All officers of the Get-together Homemakers’ club at Hettinger were returned at the annual meeting for which Mrs. L. R. Smith was hostess. The staff consists of Mrs. F. H. Due, president; Mrs. Smith, vice president; Mrs. J. C. Warbis treasurer, and Mrs. F. Brownenn, secretary. Miscellane- ous lessons sir behead next year. Robinsons Depart for Residence-in Nevada Mrs. Harris Robinson and her. daughter, Marjorie Lou, who have been visiting at several places since shortly after school closed, left here Friday evening for Butte, Mont., to join Mr. Robinson, who is there at- tending a mining conference. From Butte they will go to Fallon, Nev., where Mr. Robinson, formerly connected with the North Dakota highway department, is chief engi- neer and superintendent of a gold, mining syndicate. The family will spend the summer at Fallon and in, the fall Mrs. Robinson an@ Marjorie Lou.expect to go to Reno, Nev., where the latter will enter school. For the last 10 days Mrs. Robinson and her daughter divided their time between visits at Washburn and at Bismarck in the H. C. Hanson and R. 8. Indseth homes. Before that they had visited relatives in Minne- apolisSand accompanied them on a trip to Chicago. In the departure of Mrs. Robinson, Bismarck lost one of its outstanding music and club leaders. During the nine years that she lived here she ‘was an advanced piano pupil con- tinuously of Miss Bell Mehus, on whose music conservatory) faculty she has served for the last years. She was councilor of the Mehus Junior’ Music club for three years and was affiliated with the Thursdey Musical . Mrs. Robinson consistent The single ring ceremony was read at 4:30 o'clock by Rev. Thomas Ander- son. Mrs. Rudolph Olson of Perley played the wedding marches. A gown of salmon Alencon lace with accessories in aquamarine cos- ftumed the bride, who had as attend- ants the Missés Goldie Johnson of Willmar, Minn., and Leila Jean Mc- Fadgen, wearing gowns of yellow and aquamarine silk crepe, respectively. All wore corsages of Talisman roses, delphinium and baby’s breath. Ernest Chelstrom was best man for Mr. McFadgen. The bride's table was centered with ®& modernistic wedding cake with tall tapers at the corners and other tables ‘were marked with larkspur and baby’s breath for the wedding supper. served to 66 guests on the lawn. Those from out-of-town included relatives and friends of the couple from Boise, Idaho; Osakis and Moorhead, Minn., and Fargo and Valley City. Mr. and Mrs. Mt are vaca- toning at Duluth and other north- ern Minnesota points and will be at home Sept. 1 at Scranton, where he is superintendent of schools. The ‘bridegroom and bride have degrees from Concordia college at Moorhead, Minn., and Valley City Teachers col- lege, siencgaiah * \Mae Anstrom Engaged, ee & Lieutenant and Bride Arrive Here Saturday Lt. Emerson O. Liessman and his bride, who was Miss Martha M. Smith of Hempstead, Long Island, N. fore their marriage last 8 are arriving in Bismarck Saturday for a few days’ visit with Lieutenant Liess- Due to the fact that Lieutenant Liessman’s leave from Fort Francis E. Warren, Cheyenne, Wyo., has been shortened, it will be necessary for them to continue their trip on Mon- day. They had hoped to spend four or five days in Bismarck. Mrs. Liessman, the bridegroom’s mother, and his sister, Miss Thelma ‘Liessman, who was one of the brides- maids at the wedding, cnd the and Arlene To Be Wed in August ; Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Anstrom, Park Hill addition, have formally an- nounced the engagement arid forth- coming marriage of ‘their daughter, Miss Mae Anstrom, to George Root, son of Mr. and-Mrs. John Root, 210 Second St. The marriage will be an event of ‘Monday, August 3, and will take place in Bismarck. Miss Prina Root, sister of the prospective bridegroom, and Miss Grace Abbott will be brides- maids and Miss Anstrom’s brother, ‘Townley Anstrom, and Donovan Lewis will be Mr. Root’s attendants. Both Miss Anstrom and Mr. Root are graduates of the Bismarck high school. Miss Anstrom has taken & beautician’s training course in the Demming shop and has been em- ployed there since completing her studies. Mr. Root is connected with the Master crue : Dyers. Mrs. Leonard E. Nelson (Clarice Belk) will arrive on Saturday eve- ning’s train for a visit with her par-| ents, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Belk, 710 Fourth 8t., according to a mes- sage received Friday. This is her first visit to her home since her mar- riage in June, 1935, for Mrs. Nelson) who has been abroad with her hus- band, Rev. Nelson, since that time. Among social events to be given in her honor will be a 7 o'clock dinner party at the municipal golf course clubhouse next Wednesday evening for which the Misses Beatrice Regis- ter and Josephine Hosch have issued invitations. xe e Mr. and Mrs, A. L. Arnegard of Mandan expect to move to Bi to make their home August Mr. Arnegard having been transferred here by the Red Owl stores. Mrs. Arnegard was Miss Lois Ripley of Mandan before her marriage which was an event of last year. * Se 4% Miss Pauline Buzzell of the Bis- marck hospital left Saturday for Cleveland for a brief vacation and is expected to return next Tuesday. She’ will visit with her mother, Mrs. C. P. tly | Bussell. belonged | Meetings of Clubs | And Social Groups | to ; ES AMATEUR WINHERS In pei Be ALL NEW! 10 SENSATION- AL ALL STAR ACTS! | U.S.W.V. Auxiliary The United Spanish we For Your Greater COMFORT ; Town Tak O’Brien’s CAFE are completely AR CONDITIONED Tomorrow have Sunday Dinner in Comfort after being away for about three weeks. This party toured in the east and south and also had a boat trip on Lake Michigan while on the jour- ney, which ny made by motor. ** Couple Wed in City To Live at Goodrich The marriage of Miss Edna Wutzke, Goodrich, and Rheinhart Christ Brose, Arena, was solemnised at 3:30 theran church, in his residence, 1020 Avenue ©, Albert Wutgke, brother of the bride, was best man. Mrs. Wutzke was matron of honor for the bride, who chose for the ceremony a gown of canary yellow organdy with hat and other costume details in white. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Brose, Arena, and farms near Goodrich, where hée and Mrs. Brose are to be at home imme- diately. *e * Townsend Convention News Is Telegraphed A telegram received Saturday morn- ing from Mrs. J. H. Sleight, wio is at- tending the national Townsend con- vention at Cleveland, Ohio, as a dele- gate at large from Bismarck, carries her observation that “this conven- tion is running smoothly regardless of report to the contrary.” North Da- kota has approximately 100 delegates, rok [According to Mrs. Sleight. Dr. F. E. Townsend's speech to the convention at 1:30 (C8T) Sunday will be broad- cast according to the local delegate, who urged that all of the local club's members en ic Miss Louise Boehm Is Wed in Wisconsin Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Reis of Man- dan have received word of the mar- riage of their niece, Miss Louise Boehm, a former Mandan resident, to James Purnell of Janesville, Wis., which occurred July 3. After @ trip’ Miss Betty Flink of Mandan Will Be Bride Nuptial vows will be exchanged 7 a. m. Monday in St. Joseph's Cath- olie church of Mandan by Miss Betty Fliink and Joseph Schmitt, both of Maifian. The bride-elect was hon- ored Thursday at a miscellaneous shower and bridge party given by the Misses Catherine Kraft, Frances Senn and Margaret Kupper in the Nick Kupper heme, Mandan. Score awards in the games at four tables were re- ceived by Miss Flink and Miss Edith Schlosser. New Pastor Chosen at Hettinger and Reeder Hettinger, N. D., July 18.—Rev. H. J. ‘Wackerfuss, pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran church of Bison, 8. D., has accepted a call to serve St. John’s Lu- theran church of this city and the Zion Lutheran church of Reeder. He succeeds Rev. W. R. Krueger, who has resigned after serving the two churches for seven years, to accept a pastorate at Ixonia, Wis. Purses were presented to the Krueger family by both of the congregations and the Reeder church members also gave & dinner in their honor. Mandan Prairie Fire Halted by Veterans Sixty veterans from the Mandan COC camp succeeded in halting a, $1,500 damage to the farm of James Melarvie. ‘The fire swept over a quarter of mile from the Northern Pacific ri road tracks and destroyed barns, ma- chihery and feed supplies on the Mel- arvie farm. Friday's fire completed the destruc- tion, Melarvie’s farm home having been destroyed last winter as a result of an overheated stove. A spark from a railroad engine was believed to have started the prairie fire, Mandan offi- clals said. Petersburg Banker’s Wife Victim of Heat Bemidji, Minn., July 18—(?)—Mrs. J. O. Engesather, 63, wife of a Peters- burg, N. D., banker, died Friday in @ Bemidji hospital of heat exhaustion suffered on a trip from Minneapolis. 'The body will be taken to Petersburg i ASO born in Nor- was born 9 the United States A rs in Norway. Today's Recipe Leaf Cake and Ice Cream TE 3% miles south of ball park Saat Silt Bas : Is Invites from the ubiquitous floral cor- sage'and is colorfully in keeping with the summer tradition. (From Stein and Blaine, New York) Mothproofing Liquid Can Be Made at Home . Moths fluttering from a closet where wollens are kept are a warn- ing that action is needed, but are no cause for panic. J. A. Munro, NDAC entomologist, recommends a moth- proofing solution made of 1 ounce sodium fluosilicate dissolved in 1 gal- lon warm water. Material to be mothproofed should be soaked thoroughly with the solu- tion so that when the liquid evapor- ates a deposit of sodium fluosilicate will remain. The solution may be applied by spraying or the fabric may be dipped into the solution. If the treatment is done carefully the ma- terial will be permanently mothproof. Mothproofing by this method is es- pecially good for rugs, carpets and up- holstered furniture. Rugs or other fabrics which have been sent to com- mercial cleaners may. have to be re- treated with the mothproofing solu- tion. 9,000 Drouth Victims Are Enrolled by WPA Approximately 9,000 drouth victims have been enrolled under the emer- gency program, it was announced Thomas H. Moodie, state WPA direc- tor Saturday, and about 1,000 persons are being added daily. Iver Acker, in charge of the state resettlement administration in the absence of Howard Wood who accom: panied Rexford Tugwell, national ministrator into South Dakota, 1,000 daily.’ ‘The resettlement bureau also was ready to act on livestock needs as tions come in. WPA Teacher Group In Convention Here About 50 teachers engaged in adult education work under the WPA in the Bismarck district were holding their monthly institute and confer- ence here Saturday at the Will school building with sessions beginning at; 10 a. m. and 3:30 p. m. Harvey N. Jenson, district super- viser, is in charge. Earl E. Clarke, state director of emergency educa- tion under WPA, was scheduled to ad- dress the group. Belpre, Ohio, July 18. — (®) freight train crashed into a motorized work car killing four Bautimore é& Ohio railroad section hands Saturday on a bridge spanning Little Hocking river, west of here. é RE ne a field of 75 at least. and Devils Lake have yet. The same is true Country club, which Has a ni layers ae 55 cplzty ze E Sundahl of Jamestown, the de! state champion. Paul Cook of Bismarck, five ‘state champion and, rated the favorite despite the star-studded field, is ex- pec! to arrive Saturday in time to get in a pratice round. i ing and 18 in the afternoon. The first round of match play is scheduled Monday, with a pro-amateur match scheduled for Monday afternoon. Two 18-hole rounds will be played Tues- day. The 36-hole semi-finals are scheduled Wednesday and the 36-hole final Thursday. The annual meeting is scheduled for Monday night. Charles M. Pollock of Fargo, presi- dent of the state association, is gen- eral manager of the tournament and a start all matches and qualifying Play. Roosevelt Is Fishing Off Nova Scotia’s Tip Aboard Schooner Liberty off Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, July 18.—(%)— After a bit of fishing off the southern tip of Nova Scotia, President Roose- velt set out Saturday in the schooner Sewanna, for Shelburne, about 35 miles up the east coast of the Can- adian peninsula. The sailing Roosevelts, in jolly mood after a spectacular 30-hour run from Seal Harbor, Me., to Cape Sable, Nova Scotia, are expected to lay over at Shelbourne for the week-end and then beat back up the coast toward Campobello Isle, New Brunswick. ‘There the cruise will end July 28. ty/Glass Scores FDR in Patrick Henry Speech Ashland, Va., July 18—(?)—Carter Glass, Virginia's 78-year-old Demo- cratic senator, brought the Patrick Henry bicentennial celebration to a climax with a declaration that the present administration is a “govern- ment of privilege and discrimination.” Speaking Friday night at a gather- ing on the campus of historic Ran- dolph Macon college, Senator Glass said the present government is such @ government as Henry denounced-in Virginia’s House of Burgesses. The president, he said, “made the mistake of taking all the power that congress was willing to give him.” MEXICO STRIKE FEARED Mexico City, July 18—(®)—A triple fear of disease, flood, and food short- age hung over the capital today af- ter the federal conciliation board Yes, Sir! The Best SUNDAY DINNER I ever ate was at the Grand Pacific ver. CHICKEN INNER 50c STEAKS, Gerved from 11:30 0. m. tal 0m i 88 § He se gf : & g 2 eee Ati eet KEEP COOL With Delicious ICE CREAM American Billiard Paciers 118 Fitth Street Blackstone Club Pariers 116 Fitth Street Broadway Drug Store 424 Broadway Avenue Broadway Food Market 128 Sixth Street City Cafe 308% Matm Avenue Miéway Cook's Grocery 613 Avenese D Corner 500 Third Street Dee Son oe Finkle’s Grocery Oppentte Kiwanis Part Ferris Grocery 680 Breadway Avenue Select From These Delightful Flavors Maple Nut - Chocolate Strawberry Banana - Vanilla Root Beer Ice Cream > N : Ask Any of These VELVET” Dealers There’s One Near You Bridgeman * Russell Co. PHONE 740

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