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? Ars, Selke to Speak In Broadcast Friday | The second in the series of Pen, | encil and Brush programs, which | Jke the form of an animated news- pre of the air, will be presented . Yer KFYR at 3:15 p. m. Friday by |} 4 Bismarck branch, National League ) >: American Pen Women. + Featured speaker will be Esther bbetmayer Selke, Dickinson, state cture chairman, whose subject will {: “writing for a State Clientage.” _ Irs. Selke also is president of the qyenth district of the North Dakota ‘ederation of Women’s clubs. Edna LaMoure Waldo, national vice resident for North Dakota and re- jonal radio chairman, will speak on >. Books for Winter Reading.” Mrs. Valdo directs the programs, which te broadcast monthly. t eee Hairdressers Elect s Mrs. Bannon Leader J Bismarck hairdressers perfected a ftermanent organization with Mrs. ‘Gdward Bannon as president at a aeeting Friday evening in the Grand Wacific hotel. Fifteen of the eighteen ‘eauty shops in the city had repre- ‘Nentatives at the meeting. The group Will be known as the Bismarck Hair- > $ressers association. | 4 Other officers are Wallace Dem- aing, vice-president, Jack Gfretl, | ‘reasurer, and Jessie Carison, secre- ry. \ Regular meetings will be scheduled. ‘ims are uniformity of regulations ju member shops and study of the jairdressing profession. There will | ye some social gatherings, the first of qese to be given by the men mem- gers Jan. 18. —— a i * * Poetry, Society Will + Hear Meeting Report { Col. Paul 8. Bliss is expected to teport on the convention of the North Poetry society at Grand Forks in November when the Bismarck chapter meets at 8 p. m., Thursday in The Cairn, home of Mr. and Mrs. Clell G. Gannon. All per- sons interested in poetry, particular- ly those who write, are invited to at- tend the meeting and to affiliate with the organization. eee Tina Matthiesen’s Marriage Revealed Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Matthiesen of Judson made formal announcement ‘Wednesday of the marriage of their | daughter, Miss Tina Matthiesen, to | Lee Macklem, son of Mr. and Mrs. | August Macklem. The ceremony was | performed at Sisseton, 8. D., Satur- | day, Sept. 19. Mr. and Mrs. Macklem | are making their home with his par- | ents, who reside west of Mandan. Both are graduates of the Mandan high school. * * The Misses Harriet Whittey and Mildred Knutson gave a miscellaneous shower in the latter's home, 619 Ave. C, Tuesday evening complimenting Miss Alice Nelson, who will be married to Carl Anderson of Beach on New Year's day. Twelve intimate friends of the bride-elect were invited. Luncheon decorations were in keep- ing with the Christmas tradition. Miss Nelson leaves Saturday for Beach, where she remains until the ‘wedding. She is a motor vehicle reg- dstration department employe. «<k * Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Forsythe, 719 Fifth St., left Wednesday for Minne- epolis, where they will remain until | the first of next week, on a combined “business and pleasure trip. Mr. For- sythe will visit exhibits of new plumb- ing fixtures and also will view now air-conditioning equipment while he is away. * *e * | _ Mrs. George A. Welch, 415 Fourth St., is spending the holiday season at River Forest, Ill., with her daughter, Mrs. John Koucky. She also will visit Women Who Hold _ Their Men i Never Let Them Know NO matter how much your back aches and can ne’ so hard to live with one you Week in every month, ‘Too often the honeymoon ex- press is wrecked by the nagging tongue of a three-quarter wife. The wise woman never lets her husband know by outward sign that she 's a victim of periodic pain, * For three generations one wo- man has to! ther how to go “smiling through” with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, It helps Nature tone up the sys- tem, thus lessening the discom- forts from the functional disord- ers which women must endure in the three ordeals of life: 1, Turn- ing*from girlhood ‘to womanhood. 2. Preparing for motherhood. 3. Approaching “middle age.” Don't be & three-quarter wite, take LYDIA E, PINKHAM'S VEG- ETABLE COMPOUND “and Go amon Through.” —Advertise- ment. A coat of dappled silver horse caused a sensation in Heim's Paris salon. For sports or in- formal country wear, it is new both in pelt and coloring. The amusing little cap is also in silver horse and a gay neckerchief pro- vides the touch of color. another daughter, Mrs. James Gil- christ of Detroit, Mich., before going west for the balance of the winter. -* * High School Pupils To Give Choral Play A Christmas choral play will be given at 8 p. m., Thursday in the Bismarck high school gymnasium by four groups, the Junior Playmakers, girls’ glee club, mixed cliorus and or- chestra. The presentation is being given as 8 holiday gift to parents of the high school pupils and other interested friends of the school. There will be no admission charge. Louise Johnson, assisted by Leal Edmunds, is directing the Playmak- ers, Miss Mildred I. Hoff, the glee club, and Clarion E. Larson, the chorus and orchestra. The complete cast for the produc- tion will be announced Thursday. x * * Progressive Mothers’ Club Has Social Time Christmas carols, piano solos by Mmes. Clark Gordanier and W. J. Wilcox and contests entertained members of the Progressive Mothers’ club as they held their Christmas party Tuesday evening with Mrs. H. E. Paul, 301 Eighth St., as hostess. Prizes in the contests went to Mmes. Gladys Nelson, Vera’ Stewart and Wilcox, Gifts were exchanged. * * Bismarck Garden Club Sets Annual Meeting Mrs. Florence H. Davis, president of the Bismarck Garden club, an- nounces that the organization will hold its annual dinner and business meeting at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday, Dec. 22, in the Grand Pacific hotel private dining room. *** * Miss Bertha Schulz, who will be- cofhe the bride of Sverre Scheldrup of Huron, 8. D., on New Year's day, was honored at a miscellaneous shower Saturday by her sister, Mrs. John L. Peterson, and Miss Beata Jasman in the former's home, 515 Fifth St. The 22 guests passed the time with sewing. Miss Schulz leaves Dec. 23 for New Leipzig to visit with her parents until her marriage. * Members of a bridge ciub which meets fortnightly sewed and gave each other gifts at their Christmas party held Tuesday evening in the home of Mrs. L. P. Mahoney, 808 Tenth 8t. Refreshments appoint- ments were in the holiday colors. The next meeting Jan. 5 will be held with Mrs. Paul C. Bennett, 550 Ninth St. eo Rev. Marcellus Leisen, who has served as assistant priest at St. Jo- seph’s Catholic church of Mandan for the last year, left Tuesday for St. John’s abbey, Collegeville, Minn., to temain until he is assigned to a new field. His quccessor at Mandan has not been named. * * & {/WILLISTON'S LIQUOR Miss Vivian Luther, employed at the North Dakota Agricultural col- Jege, is visiting friends in Mandan for Sa A ARTS A sewing club which holds meetings weekly planned its annual Christmas SITUATION SNARLED Only Voters Apparently Can Cut Knot at Special ‘Election Williston, N. D., Dec. 16.—()—The liquor situation in Williston was tied in a knot Wednesday which it seemed would be cut only by voters in a special jelection. A final twist was given the tangle Tuesday night when city commission- ers received a referendum petition on {ts package sale ordinance adopted the week before. The petition auto- matically suspends the ordinance which would have become effective Saturday. The petition was the second pre- sented at two consecutive commission meetings. The first, offered last week, presented an initiated ordinance for bar sale in opposition to Williston’s package Sale measure. Commissioners, apparently disposed te stand by their guns and support their own package sale ordinance by refusing to adopt the initiated bar sale measure, expressed confidence of sup- port of voters when their proposal is up for election, Mandan Battery Now Has Heavy Field Guns Arrival of heavy field guns will give Battery E of the 185th field ar- tillery a war-like appearanee when the newly-organized national guard unit swings through maneuvers in Mandan in the future. Two 155 millimeter howitzers, two 37 millimeter field pieces and two machine guns, complete with sight- ing equipment, have been received in Mandan for the battery. The howitzers are valued at ap- proximately $40,000 and shoot shells costing $65 each. Total weight of one gun and carriage is about 12,400 pounds, while the shells, more than six inches in diameter, weigh 96 pounds, The battery has also received seven trucks. Interstate Truckers Warned by Hendricks A warning that compliance with the federal motor carrier act by North Dakota interstate operators will be strictly enforced by the in- terstate commerce mwas of the bureau of motor carriers. Interstate truckers or passenger haulers must file with the I, C. C. a tariff of their rates or fares and strictly adhere to them under a pen- alty of heavy fines, he said. A number of complaints in North Dakota are now being Investigated, he stated. Gennerich’s Funerai Held in White House Washington, Dec, 16—()+-A simple, impressive White House * funeral service was held Wednesday for August “Gus” Gennerich, personal bodyguard and close friend of Pres- ident Roosevelt who died suddenly in Buenos Aires, De..2. The presi- dent and Mrs. Roosevelt, Vice Pres- ident and Mrs. Garner, and all mem- bers of the cabinet in Washington attended. Burial will take piace Fri- day morning in the Lutheran ceme- tery at Middle | Village, Long Island. Suspended Cleveland Policeman Convicted Cleveland, Dec. 16.—(7)—A crim- inal courts jury Wednesday convict- ed Michael J. Harwod, suspended police captain ,of accepting bribes from bootleggers during the prohibi- tion era. The suspended officer faces possible sentence of from one to ten years on each count. Black Legion Founder Sick With Pneumonia Cumberland, Md. Dec. 16.—(P)— Isac “Pegleg” White, reputed founder of the Black Legion terrorist gang, was seriously ill with uumonia Wednesday in a hospital here. White was arrested near here Monday. FIRE DESTROYS PLANT Evansville, Ind., Dec. 16.—(#)—Offi- cers of the Klamer Goebel Furniture company said Wednesday they were unable to determine immediately the loss caused by a fire which destroyed the company’s plant Tuesday night. It was expected to exceed $100,000, however. SSR J rnitQes A. H. PARROTT Word has come from the North Dakota Agricultural college that the registrar, Alfred H. Parrott, will attend the Bismarck-Man- dan Bison Booster chapter ban- quet at 6:30 p. m., Thursday in the Grand Pacific hotel. Mr. Par- rott and J. C. Thysell of Mandan will give talks and Arleen San- born will sing at the gathering, which is open to all present and former students of the Fargo col- lege. Reservations may be tele- phoned to Aldyth Ward {1295-J). Photos of Simpson Affair Are Banned Berlin, Dec. 16.—(#)—Pictures of neither the Duke of Windsor nor Mrs. Wallis Simpson may appear in Ger- man newspapers, an official regula tion instructed editors Tuesday. The ban on publication of the American woman's photograph, in effect since before King Edward's abdication, was ordered extended to include the prince. Editors were told also not to print stories concerning the duke’s stay in Austria. Meat Packers Having Best Year Since 1930 Chicago, Dec. 16.—(#)—The meat packing industry, the nation’s biggest business based on value of products, had the best dollar sales volume this year since 1930, reliable unofficial estimates disclosed Wednesday. Posted authorities agreed that packers’ sales topped the 1935 turnover, estimated ‘at $2,750,000,000, which was the best since 1931, Sales in 1931 totaled $2,- 710,048,000 and in 1930 reached $3,- 627,783,000. Former Dakota Woman Suffers Light Stroke Jamestown, N. D., Dec. 15.—Mrs. A. F. Mallick, long-time resident here and now of Los Angeles, Calif., suf- fered a stroke of apoplexy Friday morning. F. E. Mallick of Jamestown is a son. Mrs, Mallick’s husband is a retired Northern Pacific engineer. FIND EMPTY LIFEBOAT Algiers, Algeria, Dec. 16.—(#)—Radio messages picked up Wednesday said two empty lifeboats from a Russian freighter afire 45 miles off Oran, seaport in northwestern Algeria, were found floating in the Mediterranean. ST. CLOUD BREWER DIES St. Cloud, Minn., Dec. 16.—(7)— John P. Nicolin, 74, manager of the 8t. Cloud Brewing company, died ‘Wednesday at his home. ¢ MOTHER'S / MACARON/ ff) COOKS UP BETTER wo \ Mever Sticky . “Never Sogey FROZEN FISH Direct from Canadian Lakes Wholesale Lefer on not less than x lots, Pike, Pickerel, Herring, Salmon ad Halibi Northern Hide & Fur Co. Corner Ninth and Front St. Bismarck, N. D. HOLEPROOF HOSIERY Quality Checked and Guaranteed by Good Housekeeping She'll not only exclaim over the beauty of this hosiery and this ‘stunning gilt box on Christmas. . . she'll enjoy using both long after. one of the loveliest boxes we've ever shown. or light service weights... THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1936 COMMISSION OKAYS $301,239 PAYMENT Part of Processing Tax Refund Is Transferred to State Treasurer Grand Forks, N. D., Dec. 16—(7)— The state industrial commission Wed- nesday had authorized payment of $301,329.78 to the state treasurer, representing the amount of the pro- cessing tax refund to the state mill for which no liability is expected. The commission completed its ses- sions after the state board of auditors had accepted the audit of the mill and elevator to June 30, 1936, made by J. M. Shirek, auditor for the state. The report of the refund set the original amount at $675,040.82, Of this sum, $138,739.52 was deducted for tax expenses and $135,070.92 was re- served for future litigation. The check was made payable to the state treasurer. Buys Cream to Last Through Two Winters New York, Dec. 16—()—The Her- ald Tribune said Wednesday Mrs. Marjorie Post Hutton Davies, wife of Joseph E. Davies, new United States ambassador to Soviet Russia had pur- chased enough Grade he cream to last ® special 5 paper 4 will precede Mr. and Mrs. Davies to Moscow. Twenty-five electric refrig- erators are being installed in their Moscow residence. Davies, in Washington, was quoted by the paper as saying reports of the cream purchase were “somewhat ex- aggerated.” Former North Dakota Woman Dies Aged 103 Wolf Point, Mont., Dec. 16—(#)— Mrs, Eliza Fort, the oldest resident of Wolf Point, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs, Sarah Lefrinere, Dec. 10, at the age of 103, Mrs, Fort was born in St. Boniface, Man,, in 1883. There Francois LeFort, a Fre! at the age of 14, In li he moved to North Dakota, settling on unsurveyed land near the site of the town of Belcourt. The Fort family continued to re- side in North Dakota for 30 years. Motorman Is Cleared Of Liability in Crash Chicago, Dec. 16.—(#)—The verdict of a coroner's jury, holding that the deaths of 11 persons in an elevated railroad wreck resulted from “an ac- cident,” cleared Motorman Van R. Grooms of criminal lability and left him free from technical custody Wed- nesday for the first time since the col- lsion Nov. 24. TO GET THREE BILLS St. Paul, Dec. 16—(#)—Three un- employment insurance bills will be submitted to the legislature immedi- ately after the special session con: venes at noon Thursday, the legisla- tive interim social welfare committee announced Wednesday, meh carpenter, the family Discover OLD SMUGGLER and ¢ you’ discover @ finer Scotch. Try a bottle today. This whishy is 8 oan OLD SMUGGLER BRAND BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY i tesperted oad Cestribeted by | Cectortem 6 Worts, Lid., Betron, Michigan... Ext. 1632 G & W Whiskles and Gins Distributed by Northwest Beverages, Inc. 121 So, Fifth St. Phone 2966 Bismarck, N. Dak. Fargo, N. O. Lein, 41 Miners Accused of Bombing Coal Trains) Springfield, Ill, Dec. 16—()}—The federal government charged that members of the Pro- GEORGE 0. LEIN DIES D., Dec. 16.—(#)—George resident here since 1917, died Tuesday. Surviving besides the widow and six chilrden are two brothers, Henry of Ada, M! and SOMETHING ELECTRICAL! Gifts that are Appreciated and Remembered ELECTRIC ROAST- NORTH DAKOTA 4-H Wednesday Martin, Page, N. D., and four sisters, Emma Isaacson, Crookston, Mrs, Minn.; Mrs. Albért Kinney, Dickin: son; Mrs, ELECTRIC PERCOLATORS — fm four, six and cight-cup slee. Many beautiful patterns. AN HEE EE | try csetl rt iy What could be nicer? for a Christmas gift than an 1. E. S. ap- proved portable lamp, aes pew meee are beautiful in design and are eonstruct- ed in a way to give the most light, where most light is needed. All lamp dealers of- fer a very large selection. Meke sure that the I. E. 8, tag is on the lamp yeu buy. It will assure you of lighting perfection. Eyesight is priceless — lighting is.cheap. All I. E.-S. lamps are designed primarily for the protection of the only pair ef eyes you will ever have. They are scientifically constructed and are a timely aid in edm- pleting close tasks without eyestrain or fatigue. Xmas Plants Glorious full Christmas plants — gifts with true Christmas spirit. Cyclamen, Poinsettias and others in various sizes. Also lovely Christmas wreaths and plant baskets. Flowers sent anywhere in the U. S. or Canada by wire. Oscar H. Will & Co. 315-319 Third St., Bismarck, N. D. Flewerphene 784 blooming em iS . ) % he). or €: Table models are Fleer models are prited froe $2.96 priced frem $4.75 = - . . See these large For Holeproot Hotlery is now made both Sheerer and Stronger AT YOUR DEALERS , ++» with $250,000 of improvements. And packed for Christmas in ‘ ‘Shadowlesschiffons ond | Bois che % » North Dakota : a Power & Light Co.