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PY SOCIETY and CLUBS Junior Auxiliary Activities For New Season Are Launched New Unit for High School Girls Exclusively Is Formed; Sen- ior Unit to Meet Activities for Junior American Le- gion Auxiliary groups were put under way this week with an organization mesting for high school girls Wed- nesday evening in the home of Mrs. RR. Nelson, 712 Ninth St., president of the Auxiliary to Lloyd Spetz Post No. 1. The two groups for younger girls, the Juniorettes and Junior Aides, will have a joint picnic in Pioneer park Friday with sponsors as hostesses. The children will be met at their school buildings and taken to the park. ‘The high school girls, organized in- to @ unit of their own for the first time, chose the name Daughters of the American Legion. Any girl whose father is a Legionnaire is eligible for membership and is invited to attend future meetings to be held on the second and fourth Monday of each month in the homes of the girls. Officers elected are Jean Baker, president; Marguerite Degg, vice; president; Ruth Register, secretary; Jeannette Fay Morris, treasurer; ‘Wanda Swenson, chaplain, and Pau- Pianist. the group for girls through the fifth grade, will meet af- ter school on the second and fourth Mondays. The Junior Aides for the sixth, seventh and eighth grades will assemble on the second and fourth Fridays. Beh of these units will use the American Legion Auxiliary room. SENIOR AUXILIARY MEETS FRIDAY NIGHT The music committee headed by Mrs, Iver A. Acker is arranging a mu- sical program and card party, which will be followed by refreshments, for Friday's meeting of the senior Auxil- jary unit at 8 p. m., in the Auxiliary room. Mrs. Nelson requests that all committee chairmen be present. ss % C.D.A. Court Plans Card Party Monday Immaculate Conception Court No. 322, Catholic Daughters of America, is holding its first social event of the new season, a public card party, at 8 p. m., Monday, in St. Mary's school auditorium. Mrs. L. H. Carufel is arrangements chairman. The party will follow a regular business meet- ing of the court, set for 7:30 p. m., in the same place. ee *% Welford to Speak at | Townsend Gathering! Governor Walter Welford will give the principal address at a special meet- dig of the Capital City Townsend club at 8 p. m., Friday, in the Burleigh county court room. Other talks and special music also are being arranged. The public is invited. x * * Miss Kathryn Johner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Johner, 1408 ‘Thayer avenue, arrived home Tuesday after a two-month vacation with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Stark of Portal. Some of the time was spent at Carlisle lake and Re-; ging in Saskatchewan. Mr. and Mrs. Johner motored to Portal Saturday and were week-end guests in the Stark home. Several New Families Establish Homes Here Mrs. D. E. Shipley, city hostess, who has just returned from a brief vacation in the west, is busy Lis week: calling on several new Sismarck families. Among these are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Rounds and their family, for- merly of Dickinson, established at 406 Fourth 8t., where Mr. Rounds conducts a radio repair service. Lionel Fuller, associated with the Sam Kontos orchestra, and his wife came here from Rapid City, 8. D., and are living at 607 Fifth St. Albert Schmidt, a carpenter, and his family moved here from Beulah and are residing at 406 Fifth St. Emil’ Kruse, a radio operator, and Mrs. Kruse are established at 322 Ninth 8t., south. Other new residents are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Martwick of 120 Main, west; Mr. and Mrs. C. M. O'Brien, 414 Second St.; Miss Louise Melvey, Rose apartments, and Mr. and Mrs. John A. Nordstrom, Park Hill addi tion. ~ ** *# Luncheon Opens Year Of Mothers’ Society Lewis and Clark chapter, Sponsor Mothers’ clubs, opened its new cal- endar with a luncheon Tuesday in the home of Mrs. C. W. Leifur, 719 Ninth 8t. Bridge had been planned byt was abandoned in favor of a program. Roy F. Williams, brother of Mrs. ; Clare L. Nelson, who was visiting here, showed sepia pictures portray- ing the life of the American Indian. Members contributed to the program by telling vacation stories and also discussed the proposed outline of study. Mrs. Nelson, who is leaving about Oct. 15 for Pine City, Minn., received @ gift from the club. Shasta daisies formed the table centerpiece and fall flowers were used in the rooms. Mmes. Forrest F. Skinner, A. C. Brainerd, Grover C. Riggs and G. A. Dahlen were the luneheon committee. « * Lefor Congregation Plans Annual Fete A chicken dinner, carnival fea- tures and special attractions for children are being planned for the annual bazaar and fair of St. Eliza- beth’s Catholic parish at Lefor Sun- day, Oct. 4, according to Rev. Gregory A. Borski, pastor. The day's events will start with high mass at 10 a, m., and will con- tinue into the evening. At a special booth oriental tapestries and em- broideries will be exhibited and given away. The parish invites everyone to attend and is making more extensive | preparations than ever before for this annual event. * se *% Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Shipley, 406 Rosser, west, and their daughters, Miss Loris Shipley and Mrs, H. R. ‘Winter, are home from a western trip during which they took Dayton Ship- ley, who had passed the summer at Powell, Wyo., with his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, R. D. Shipley, to Moscow, Idaho. There he entered the University of Idaho school of forestry. Mr. and Mrs. Shipley, their -in-law and daughter from Powell and their daughters toured Yellowstone National park after leav- ing Dayton at Moscow. By Appointment To Her Majesty Collingwood FROCKS We present the season’s outstanding .. colors and dress fabrics. sty! Individual chic with loads of person- ality. Fine dressmaker details, gor- us new fall shades in our own Inimitable COLLING- New Fall Dresses. Money Specially priced at © © - Group. Values indeed, up to $7.95 New arrivals daily in this $3.33 |Fall Rushing Plans Are Made by Sorority Fall rushing activities were dis- cussed and a program covering types cf introductions was given when Beta Sigma Phi sorority met Wednesday evening with Miss Vera Person, 506 Avenue A. Miss Betty Hall directed the pro- gram in which the Misses Mary Litt, Beth Wheeler and Dorothy Tiedman treated general introductions, intro- ducing speakers and letters of intro- duction, respectively. A thodel meeting to which guests will be invited is planned for Oct. 7, next regular meeting date. Formal installation of a chapter of the sorority at Minot with a large membership and Miss Harriet Nelson as president has been completed by Miss Eunice F. Harlan, national field secretary, who is placing a chapter this week at Devils Lake with Miss Maguerite Fischer assisting her. There now are eight chapter in North Dakota, including the one at Minot. Others are at Fargo, insti- tuted four years ago, Jamestown, Val- ley City, Bismarck, Mandan, Dickin- son and Williston, the last four named raving been organized within recent weeks by Miss Harlan. * * * 30 Women at First Assembly of Chorus A “splendid” turnout of 30 women interested in organizing a women’s community chorus assembled in the B, P. W. room of the Worid War Memorial building in response to ® call from Ralph Warren Soule, who will direct the new organization. Rehearsals will be held at 7:30 p. m.,, each Tuesday at a place to be announced later. Membership lists | will be kept open for two weeks and then will be closed until after the Christmas holidays. To join a ‘candi- date for membership must attend a regular meeting. In outlining the chorus plan, Mr. Soule stressed the fact that the de- sire to sing will be considered more important than a high degree of training. Programs will be composed of num- bers generally classified as popular through being familiar to the public, following the plan of the men’s chorus organized last year by Mr. Soule. Mr. Soule expects to present the women singers in their first concert within two months. Y * * % Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Irvine, 412 Eighth St., returned Wednesday from Denver, Colo., where they attended the national encampment of the Vet- erans of Foreign Wars and its auxil- lary. They were among those attend- ing the banquet and reunion of Mr. Irvine's regiment in the Spanish- American war, the Ist Colorado in- fantry, Also returning this week from the convention were Mr. and Mrs, P. G. Harrington, 511 Third 8t., Mr. Harrington having gone as im- mediate past commander of the North Dakota department, The Harringtons made a motor trip of some 7,000 miles prior to the meeting, touring and vis- iting along the west coast, going through a number of national parks, {including Yellowstone, and also trav- jeling extensively in New Mexico. ee | _ Mrs, L. A. Thompson of Seattle, Wash., arrived Tuesday for a week's visit with her mother, Mrs, Laura |Carey, and her aunt, Mrs. Sidney F. ,|Smith of 924 Fourth St., also her cousin, Mrs. H. B. Nelson. Mrs. Thompson is on her way to Kansas ;City, Kan., to visit with Mrs, H. John- son, who graduated with her from St. Alexius hospital school of nursing in 1922, She will make another stay in Bismarck when returning to her home. ee * Mrs. Nancy Scarff and daughter, Miss Maxine Scarff, of Devils Lake, are visiting at Mandan’in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Serr. Miss | Scarff has accepted a position with the Mehus conservatory of music of this city and she and her mother will arrive here to make their home about Oct. 1. * * x | | Miss Emma King, daughter of Mr. |and Mrs. C. D. King of Menoken, who received both @ bachelor’s degree and diploma in music from Jamestown col- lege last June, is attending a music iSchool in Chicago. Miss King has made a number of appearances here 8 vocal soloist with the Jamestown \college chorus, —— || Meetings of Clubs | | And Social Groups | Order of the Rainbow Officers Will be installed when the Order of the Rainbow meets at 7:30 De m., Thursday, in the Masonic tem: ple. * * ok OK Delphian Chapter Mrs. H. M. Leonhard, 719 Mandan &t., will be hostess for the Delphian chapter meeting at 3 p. m., Friday. * * * Woodmen Circle Mrs. Estella Cordner and Miss Mary Brien are the. social committee for the Woodmen Circle meeting at 8 p. m., Thursday, in the World War Me- morial building dining room: New Way to Hold Loose FALSE TEETH Firmly in Place Do false teeth annoy and bother by dropping and slipping when you eat, talk or laugh? -Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your new, tasteless powder firm and comfortable. gooey, pasty taste, Makes’ breath pleasant. Get FASTEETH today at any good drug store.—Advertisement, Now Is the Time have your broken glass re- placed with LIBBEY OWENS FORD GLASS. Do it now befere plat. This holds teeth No gummy, We call for and deliver VANTINE Paint & Glass Co. Pan-Attic Reviews Parliamentary Law A parliamentary law review was conducted by Mmes. C. E. Glass, Robert Byrne, B. F. Eppler, B. O. Refvem and Willis Brewster as the | Pan-Attic club held the inittal Junch- eon meeting of the year in the iid itol private dining room. Mmes. of i vem and O. T. Solberg made meet- ing arrangements. Guests were Mrs. W. H. Starry of Bellingham, Wash., sister of Mrs. Thomas Hall. and Mrs. L. R. Waldron of Fargo, sister of Mrs Glass. se & evening with Mrs. Randa Mills, 302 Eighth 8t., as hostess, opened activi- ties for the year for the Jolly Eight Bridge club, which has been organ- ‘ized for several seasons. Mmes Jose- phine Hugelman and Rachel Ander- son turned in first and second high scores, respectively. Mrs. Anderson will be hostess Oct. 14, 2 ** % The Misses Donna Jean Davis and Jane Willson of Bismarck he the assisting group Sreneny, a = ure hunt for rushees Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority at the North Dakota Agricultural college. Miss Eve- lyn Wattam, niece of Mrs. R. 8. Towne of this city,.was gerieral chair. man, * 8% Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Gwinn of Zumbrota,; Minn. And Mrs, Earl Whetstone of Winona, Minh., left for their homes Thursday morning after visiting with Mr. and Mrs, A, G. Bahmer, 926 Seventh St. Mmes. Gwinn and Whetstone are sisters of Mrs. Bahmer. i * % *% Mrs. L. K. Thonn held ae: nih score in the contract g at two tables when Mrs. H. Fr. Ofare en- tertained her Tuesday, bridge club at luncheon in the municipal golf course club house and at cards in her home, 802 Fifth St. Mrs, Thomipson will have the club’s next meeting Sept. 29. xe Oe Mrs. 8. M. Culberteon, who leaves this week for Minneapolis, was hon- ored at a farewell party given by the Government Study club of Man- dan Tuesday in the home of Mrs. Theodore Serr. After the luncheon, at which covers for 22 were laid, Mrs. Culbertson wae pommenyen with a gift. Mrs. H. H. Hanson of Grand Forks, & delegate to the state conference of the Daughters of the Amerftan Revo- lution at Mandan, was the house guest of Mrs. Forrest M. Davis, 930 Sixth 8t., from Monday to Thuraday. She is visiting friends at Valley City end Fargo while returning to her home. ee % Miss Gladys Ness of Bismarck and Mrs. O. Fallgren of Spokane, Wash., were among the guésts when Mrs. Fred Kist of Mandan gave an in- formal party Tuesday compliment- ing Mrs. Omer West, also of Man- dan. 2 eve Edmund O'Hare, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. O'Hare, 802 Fifth 8t., who graduated from Harvard university a few years-ago, left Thursday for Ann Arbor, Mich., to enter the University of Michigan school of law as a fresh- man, *x** * Leon Jacobson, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Jacobson of Sims, left Thursday for Chicago to enroll for his sopho- more year in medicine at the Uni- versity of Chicago. He spent the sum- mer in Bismarck working for the state bacteriology department. (Additional Society on Page Nine) Cards and luncheon Wednesday! WOMEN INVITED AID BUDGET DRIVE er Calls on Them to Put Good Housekeeping Prac- tice Into Government Women have the job of balancing milliohs of family budgets in the United States and should help the government balance its budget by voting for Alfred M. Landon, Mrs. Walter Scudder Hart, Chicago, told a group of women at a meeting Wed- nesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John O. Quinn, 610 Eighth St. Mrs. Hart is touring North Dakota in be- |haif of the Republican presidential | Nominee. If the American family and the American system of living are to sur= vive, Mrs. Hart told the group, it is imperative that taxes be reduced and that more of the average family’s in- come be left for its own uses than is the case now or than will be the case if “government waste and spend- ing” continue. In 1932, she said, $1 of every $15 received by the people went for taxes. In 1032 the figure was $1 of every $5 and now it is $1 out of every $4 with the government running behind and more taxes looming ahead. Women contribute directly to the tax collector, she said, women hav- ing paid $80,000,000 in life insurance taxes, $83,000,000 in inheritance taxes nd $2,000,000,000 in real estate taxes last year, but the hardest blow is to those who have small incomes. If a man earns $20 a week, she said, $6.50 goes to the tax collector in direct and indirect levies. Emphasizing the need for women to interest themselves, Mrs, Hart said women own 80 per cent of the life in- surance poliices, 65 per cent of the savings deposits, 44 per cent of the public utility stock, 48 per cent of the railroad securities and 40 per cent of the real estate of the country. If they. want to protect these holdings, she said, they must vote to stop exces- sive government spending by sup- porting Landon. went to Hettinger to talk to women in the southwestern corner of the state. King Edward Roams Scottish Highlands “Aberdeen, Scotland, Sept. 24—(7)— Zestful King Edward VIII roamed the Scottish highlands Thursday like a feudal lord. He came and went when, where ‘and how he pleased, having cast off the fetters of royal pomp and tradition for his three-week holiday at Balmoral castle. ‘The guests included Mts. Ernest ‘Simpson and Mr. and Mrs. Herman L. Rogers , American friends of thé mon- aval ° Edward astonished station crowds yesterday when he greeted his guests es the over-night train from London EEE Rebuilt Watches For Sale, $5.00 up Also Clean Watches $1.25 to $1.50 See us for Better Work for Less Money 0. J. WEIST 417 Bréadway, Bismarck, N. D. THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE, ‘THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1986 arrived. , He came down out of the ful plaids of hills wearing the colorf the Scotch Tartan andthe gay Bal- moral, Temperatures Drop Sharply Over State er bureau here . Killing frost occurred at many North Dakota stations while gver the western section the mercury \slumped below the freezing point. Two stations, Devils Lake and Grand Forks, reported light precipitation. day; rising’ temperatures tonight and east and south portions Friday. Planting of 40 Million Shelter Trees Mapped Washington, Sept. 24.—(?)—Plans are being pushed by forest service officials for the planting of 40,000,000 trees for shelterbelt purposes in the Great Plains states. Ernest W. Tinker, assistant chief of the service, said the trees must be planted late this fall or early next 8) spring. “It probably will be done either by relief labor or by the farmers who want the protection,” said Tinker. He added that the large planting was a “liquidation” of the vast shelterbelt project announced two years ago by the administration. At that time there were plans for planting a belt 100 miles wide and from the:Canadian border to the Texas Panhandle. However, Tinker said congress had merely provided funds for distribu- tion of the trees now in nurseries to avoid destroying them. ‘The forest expert was enthusiastic about survival of trees planted during the past two years. He recently made @ trip into Nebraska and South Da- kota where, he said, “survival of the trees was remarkab! A snail can repair @ broken shell til it is as good as . Just Arrived Knitted wool @esses for the junior miss. Sizes 12 to 16, $3.50 and $5.95 Twin ‘Sweater Sets Children’s sizes 26 to 34. $1.98 and $3.25 Ladies’ Twin Sets $2.95 and $3.50 TOTS AND TEENS SHOP 318 Main Bism: TOWN CLAD Ss Town your UITS Q.75 Clad is on deck to solve suit problem! Here ore hand picked fabrics from America's finest mills..-. . styles from the country's leading fashion experts . . . tailoring from the industry's master craftsmen! Smartest patterns in the sea- son's most popular shades. In models to suit your preference! Devon, illustrated . . . the jevorite. Notched INSURANCE CONDUCT Asserts State Is Smarting Un- der Highest Rate in His- i 3 EE ae _paee attent ae of 2% million dollars had ‘been accumulated Campbell’s Beautiful Photographs years. Campbell’s beautiful photo- graphs are not expensive. $5.95, $8.95 and $12.95 per dozen Phone 1795 fer an appointment Today. Campbell’s Corner 3rd and Main ance funds should be taken away and turned over to the support of the schools. ‘ “The 1935 legislature ‘took 8 cool’ million of the farmers’ hail fund, crippling that department. Then fol- lowed (what was probably worse) the action of the insurance commission- er and the governor in setting aside CHERRY LANE FOR SPORTS! BURLING-LANE FOR DRESS! FUR TRIMME COATS 16-50 New swagger and fitted styles, featuring the smart fleece wool- ens! Styled like much higher. priced coats! Furs selected from inest pelts! See these to-day! Other New Fall Coats at $9.90 to $39.75 wry SOIL Cy Ls Superior Quality Fl! 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