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ociety Five From Here Going | To Methodist Conclave Five delegates from the McCabe | Methodist Episecopal unit leave Fri- day morning for Valley City to attend the annual conference of the Mirine- apolis branch of the Methodist Wo- men’s Foreign Missionary society, which will close Sunday. They are Mmes, Emil Benesh, William Noggle and Marion Gossman and the Misses Mildred Benesh and Ida Springer. Convention delegates will come from Minnesota and the two Dakotas. Prin- cipal speakers will be Bishop J. Ralph Magee of St. Paul, Bishop Eben S. Johnson, missionary in Africa for 20 years, Dr. George Mecklenburg, pas- tor of Wesley Methodist church of Minneapolis, and Mrs. Magee, presi- dent of the Minneapolis branch. ee Arrange Program for Townsend Gathering Neil Cameron and James Austin ill be speakers and there will be dance numbers by Hazel Waite, little Hol- lywood actress, and music by t he Potter family when the Capital City ‘Townsend club meets at 8 p. m., Fri- day in the Burleih country court room. Everybody who is interested is invited to attend. *% *% ‘The wives of all of the army officers residing at Fort Lintoln were guests at a 7 o'clock supper and bridge party which Mrs. Wesley C. Wilson gave in her quarters Wednesday evening as a ‘surprise for Mrs. Joseph S. Leonard, wife of the commandant, on her birthday anniversary. Guests read original greetings which they had composed for Mrs, Leonard and the remainder of the time was passed with contract, Mmes. Raymond C. Lane, Gaylord L. Phipps and John C. L. Adams receiving te score favors. Flow- ers decorating the rooms and tables were a gift to the hostess from Mrs. Phipps. ee % Mrs, E. A. Willson, 831 Sixth St., and her sister, Mrs. Bernard S. Nick- erson of Mandan, gave a 1:30 o'clock bridge luncheon for 24 gueSts from Bismarck and Mandan Wednesday in the Lewis and Clark hotel. Several shades of pink were used in the flow- ers and other details of the decorative theme. Mrs, E, G. Patterson of Bis- marck received first and Mrs. R. A. Countryman of Mandan received the second high score award at contract. ** *% Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Funden of Mandan departed on Thursday, the 17th an- niversary of their marriage, for Cleve- land, Ohio, to attend the 18th annual convention of the American Legion and Auxiliary. After the assembly closes Sept. 24, they will visit friends at Greenville, Miss., for the balance of a three-week vacation. Mrs, Fun- den is seventh district committee- woman of the Auxiliary and was a page at the national meeting held oy St. Louis, Mo., in 1935. ee Miss Irene Swain, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Swain of Glen Ullin, Jeft this week for Cleveland, Ohio, to enter the Francis Payne Bolton School ef Nursing for College Women at Western Reserve university. Miss &wain, who was graduated from Carleton college, Northfield, Minn., in dune, will take @ course in adminis- trative nursing. * * * Miss Mary Timmerman of Fargo, member of the state board of cosme- tologist examiners, spent Tuesday in ismarck and Mandan attending to dusiness” matters. Miss Timmerman zecently returned from Dallas, Texas, where she attended the Texas Cen- tennial exposition. * * * Mmes. L. A. White and Ira D. Rush ‘were named delegates to the state —_———— nr Ladies’ Wool Knit Dresses * Sizes 14 to 20, $6.95 Miss America Foundation Garments and Girdles $1.00 to $5.00 TOTS AND TEENS SHOP 318 Main The “Penci H gest style show. Left to right: conference of the Daughters of the American Revolutig: at Mandan Sept. 21-23, when Pierre Verendrye chapter | members of Minot held their first ‘luncheon meeting of the season. Mmes. | B. A. Dickinson, L. H. Winje and George H. Smith were named alter- nates. * * OK Mrs, J. Henry Kling, 622 Hannafin St., has accompanied her son, Robert, | to Madison, Wis., where he is to enroll | as a freshman at the University of | Wisconsin. Mrs. Kling will return: home in about a week. + % % { Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cashman have| grade rooms in three of the city schools have necessitated hiring an additional teacher to take care of the jreturned from a trip to Yellowstone ; National park made in company of | Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Hall of James- | town. i x Ok Ok | Eugene Fevold, son of Mr. and Mrs.! \J. 8. Fevold, 707 Eighth St., has gone) to Northfield, Minn., to attend St. Olaf} college. —— | Meetings of Clubs | | And Social Groups | a aaa | Women’s Community Council Delegates are asked to make & special effort to attend the Women’s Community Council first meeting of the year at 3 p.m., Friday in the American Legion Auxiliary room. World War Memorial building. ees | Church Societies He First Lutheran Brotherhood | The Brotherhood of the First Lutheran church will meet at 8 p. m., | Friday in the home of LeRoy Tollund, 711% Avenue A. An informal social | and devotional program will be given. Men who are members of the con- gtegation and their friends are in- vited to be present. Rev. George Kobitch cathedral since July 1, has been named parish priest of the Sacred Heart church of Wilton and has entered up- {on his new duties, it was announced Thursday. He succeeds Rev. John C. | Wingering, who has been serving the | Catholic congregation at Noonan since ‘early summer. Rev. Kobitch will con- | t:nue as assistant here but will spend Saturdays and Sundays at Wilton. He {will continue the same schedule of | masses. j ———— | Two portable bars on trucks were |sent from Madrid to Loyalist troops jin the Guadarrama mountains during | fighting there in the Spanish revolu- | tion. Silhouette’ of Transparent Chiffon Velvet ‘8 The scoop of the Age! Velvet tunic frocks, the Fashion of the Hour, styled with all the verve and dash of the season! White pencil || | To Serve at Wilton! Rey. George Kobitch, who has been | an assistant pastor at St. Mary's pro- ; sweater and skirt; white satin evening gown designe pleted with capelet sleeves and long white gloves; sports suit of brown beige checked wool ner suit by Mainbocker with a long skirt and a ripple tailed jacket bordered in black caracul. NEW FOURTH GRADE Beatrice Miracle, Gackle, to In- | est increase has been in the Richholt i il 1 t 1 | | piping accents this silhouette and interest- ing buttons trim the neckline. —-Bollreys Giemareh, N. D. Supt. H. O. Saxvik. has been secured to teach the extra) fourth grade which will be located pils will be transferred from the Rich- holt and Will schools. school Miss Prudence Houske has 56 enrolled in her fourth grade in addi- tion to being principal of the build- pupils. educational authorities the maximum one teacher. { These costumes were among the hundreds displayed at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel! in A new version of the sweater and skirt costume, ciated Press Photes) TEACHER IS ADDED struct Unit in William . Moore Building | Scnool. | Crowded conditions in the fourth increased enrollment, according to cleaning Miss Beatrice Miracle of Gackle in the William Moore building. Pu- At the Will ing. Miss Ruth Rowley has 42 at he Richholt, and Miss Frances Col- ison at the William Moore has 42) Thirty-five is considered by number for efficient instruction by| | this state, She will | duties Monday. Latest enrollment figures compiled | in the office of the superintendent | show 1,295 children attending the R. E. Hagen. Bismarck, Mrs. Wm. Gierke and Mrs. Training meetings on New York In the Fashion Futures exhibit, America’s bis with a bell silhouette and an original Austrian ‘and knit d with the glamorous coronation fashion in view with low decolette and full skirt, com. designed with the culotte skirt; broadcloth din- Note the backward sweep of the silhouette. (Asso- Washington any of the Bi eral offices closed. Governor Welford in a proclama: tion asked citizens to join with the rest of the nation in observing the boliday, In Washington, the bronse-and- marble shrine which encases the na- tion’s fundamental law was polish jal library attend- ants for the benefit of a large crowd Of Constitution Day visitors. Although no special ceremony was scheduled, lbrarians figured that by up by OBSERVED QUIETLY Original Document on Exhibi-| the . tion in Bronze Shrine at Bismarck and North Dakota were observing Constitutton Day quietly Thureday. No special exercises were held in ismarck schools or churches nor were any state or fed- ed nightfall more than 5,000 people would have paid their respects to the time-stained document signed 149 years ago Thursday. If their eyes are keen, visitors can still trace nearly every letter on the four leaves of wrinkled parchment, ed shielded from sunlight by a double sheet of glass and a film of yellow gelatine. the constitution. grade schools, 361 in the junior high; school and 652 in high school, This|Joseph R. Kirby; Driscoll, Mrs. Roy total of 2,308 pupils represents an in- {Colton and Mrs. John Mount; crease of 128 over the enrollment at ken, Pearl L. the same time last year. The great-|new; Baldwin, Mrs. Burel Monroe ‘and Mrs. Enock Anderson; Boyd Cross Country, Mrs. Glenn Oder and Mrs. Albert Anderson; Rainbow, Mrs. B. Bailey and Mrs. Charles Thompson. ‘Homemakers’ Leaders Attend Meetings Here household for the project leaders of all homemakers’ clubs in Burleigh coun- | ty were held in the Memorial building Vednesday and Thursday. Miss Mil- ‘ed Boxwell, extension specialist in home management from the state col- lege at Fargo, was in charge. The meetings were the first of a series of four lessons in household economics which will be presented to Burleigh county homemakers this year under the direction of the county agent's office. Leaders from the various clubs in attendance were: Capitol, Mrs. Chas. Toliver and Mrs. John Quinn; Lake- iville, Annetta Erickson and Signe Miss Miracle holds a bachelor of | Johnson; McKenzie, Mrs. Vada Scott \sclence degree from the Valley City, and Mrs. H. C. Folkins; Trygg Cedar State Teachers college and has had! Hill, Mrs. Bert Hendershott and Mrs. several years of successful teaching} Oscar Coleman; Still, Mrs. A. B. experience in intermediate grades Liane and Mrs. Elmer Kling; Ster- A gorgeous variety at.. High ~- riding Pumps, straps, stepins, ox- fords. Like the “Higher” movement in Foet- 4° wear Fashion, Debu- tante Modes ride the crest of style su- premacy.. See this completely “differ- |, ent” array! You'll be thrilled be yond words! America’s Smartest Styles! l€ Bismarck, N. begin: her mer ne, Mrs, H. E, Wildfang and Mrs. M. M. Wing, Mrs. 8. L. Lein and Mrs. ‘Clyde Harvey; Painted Woods, Mrs. Man Given 30 Days Effective Sunday, Sep- For Petty Larceny} tember 20, the eastbound Lillian Haggerty of Milwaukee as it hung on the edge of a 100-foot cliff where it had skidded. William Ried, 39, a transient, plead- ed guilty to a charge of petty lar before ‘City Magistrate E. 8. Thursday, and was sentenced to 30 days in the county jail and fined $100 and costs. He was apprehended tak- ing merchandise from the Woolworth store, present road netword costs around $400,000,000 a year. are all plainly visible. Parke. Mrs. Lars Jacobson Salter and Norms Gethsemane” and +| The famous phrases were set down in the round, clear hand of Gouver- neur Morris, Pennsylvania delegate entrusted with the final drafting. of Signatures of the 30 colonial statesmen who signed the document Church Windows Are IHuminated Nightly A light burning from within and illuminating the beautiful stained- .|@lass windows depicting “Jesus in “The Good Sa- maritan,” greets persons who pass the ceny Allen fore. Firemen recovered the auto of Mrs. main the same. pe SE your Maintaining the United States’ marck, N. D.—Adv. N. P. TRAIN NO. 2 TO LEAVE EARLIER North Coast Limited of the Northern Pacific Rail- way will leave Bismarck at 11:32 a, m., twenty-five minutes earlier than be- Arrival time in Minne- apolis and St. Paul will re- For information on low- cost travel, anywhere—see Northern Pacific Agent, Ober A. Kobs, Bis- dawn, { Wallace Harmon, 4, farmer near for before Justice Brummond at Wash- . | burn Wednesday and was fined $50.60 | and $4.40 costs, E. M. Lee, chief state game warden, reported Thursday. Lee Harmon said pelts to eastern furriers, Wardens found no pelts at Harmon's farm at the time of his arrest, Lee said. Psychologists say that parents’ acts and gestures are a much mote effec- tive education for children than Do FALSE TEETH FASTEETH, a new, greatly improv- firm and comfortable, slip, rock or pop-ou' ooey, paaty taste or reath sweet-and pleasant. TEETH today at any good drug store. —Advertisement, Ask about our convenient Budget Payment Plan on orders of 15.00 it ig responsible for turning light and must turn it off at For Illegal Trapping guilty admitted he sold 53 Rock, Slide or Slip? owder to be sprinkled on upper No gummy, ing. Makes’ Get FAS- Campbell's to be seen in Beautiful . 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