The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1937, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1987 | EDWARD AND WALLY ) TELL CAMERA MEN Announcement of Marriage Date Is Expected Prob- ably Next Friday Monts, France, May 7—(P)—Edward of Windsor and Wallis Warfield Simpson, hand-in-hand and beaming, posed for photographers Friday be- neath a chestnut tree on the lawn of the Chateau de Cande. Inside, invitations were being pre- pared for the select circle that will witness the former British monarch’s marriage to Mrs. Simpson on a still secret wedding day. “We are very happy. We always are very happy,” the duke said, smiling. ‘The woman for whose love he re- nounced a throne nodded her em- tic approval. Pimne Ais tree, in full bloom on the lush, spacious grounds of the chateau, provided an almost thea- trical background. Trousseau Complete ‘The bride-to-be’s trousseau, includ- ing a wedding gown in “Wallis blue,” is virtually complete. On the day she becomes her royal highness, the Duchess of Windsor, Mrs. Simpson will wear a long aft- ernoon dress, part of an ensemble with @ jacket to match in soft silk. ‘The date will be announced after the coronation of the duke’s brother- successor in London next Wednesday. ‘Herman L. Rogers, spokesman for the betrothed pair, said the announce- ment may be made next Friday, add- ing that it certainly would not be on ‘Thursday, May 13, for that is an un- ‘They say clothes make the man, but add grease paint, footlights and dier becomes a minstrel, your stenographer a prima donna just that formation is strikingly shown in this group of pictures snapped as employes of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company deserted roaring furnaces, ledgers and typewriters to stage their annual minstrel show. C. T. (Rip) Kyle, shipping clerk at left, and the 330-pound song and dance man in striped cos- tume just below him are one and the same. In the center pretty Glenore Qrris leaves her typewriter and steps into silk and lace to be the show’s charming herald. George F. Arm, Jr., right, can stoke his furnace or serve as interlocutor with equal ease. fine feathers and your steel pud- quick! The magic of the trans- PAINTED CHEEKS OF | Masks tdenicy TODAY'S GIRLS WIN | pr INDIANS APPROVAL Widow of Missionary Thinks Daubers do a Neater Job in This Age Jusky date. Makes Wedding Guess A friend of Mrs. Simpson—one of the wedding guests-to-be—intimated that the marriage would take place at the Chateau de Cande, near here, some time between May 23 and June 3. Edward’s jeweler was expected to arrive at their Touraine retreat Sat- urday to fit the wedding ring to the finger of the American-born com- moner. Edward talked for 10 minutes ‘Thursday evening with the mayor of Monts, Dr. Charles Mercier, who had requested an audience. The mayor said his vistt—which villagers had awaited as a sign of the approaching ‘wedding—was not concerned with the ceremony. se ic St. Paul, May 6.—(?)}—Go ahead, girls, and paint your cheeks. The In- dians did it, too. Frilly femininity got this advice ‘Thursday from 82-year-old Wi zica- Ahe-Win, last survivor of the old Shakopee Indian village, who came to, St, Paul hana! axe on her head and shawl over her bs Ser i ate tas ora, len o! ie] Old in years but with young ideas, state child’ welfare bureau sald Fri-|sne stepped from a train for a month’s visit with her niece, Mrs, Susan Bahr. P-| “The girls look nice,” she said in who will attend include|sioux, which her niece in ted. “They wear pretty clothes and paint ‘Willson, state executive |their faces nice.” The Indians of her LL visor | girlhood daubed their cheeks, she re- 3; Mrs. jcalled, but the modern miss puts on ‘Weneel, executive secretary |a neater paint job.” county welfare board, She also gave approval to bobbed hair and high heels, although for her- Social Workers Will ~ Attend Conferences A group of North Dakote social and welfare executives will His features concealed by a silk- en mask, the leader of the under- und German seamen’s union is reporters in New York that he heads a group of anti-Nazi elements who work to discredit the present regime. Despite the ap of the mask, Behmide” as he is called, pla inned? address a rally of Nazi foes. self she would have nothing but moc- casins. ‘Wi zica-Ahe-Win, or Stepping-Over- the-Smoke, is known as Mrs. Jane Gilbert to her neighbors in Eden Prai- rie, where she now lives. Her chief reason for brewing met- Topolitan excitement at this time was to file suit in Hennepin county dis- trict court to recover eight acres of Eden Prairie land from her nephew, Charles Jackson of Granite Falls, STUDIO CRAFTSMEN GAIN SUPPORT FOR THEATERS BOYCOTT CIO Offers Help to Picket Cin- ema Houses Throughout Whole Nation Hollywood, May 7.—(?)—Striking film studio craftsmen gained support Friday in plans to put new pressure on major producers by a national boy- cott and widespread picketing of thea- ters. The Committee for Industrial,Or- ganization offered its help to the Fed- erated Motion Picture Crafts, Ameri- can Federation of Labor affiliate. L, P, Lindelof of LaFayette, Ind., president of the painters’ union, ;Jaligned with the AFL telegraphed Charles Lessing FMPC head, asking the names of the strike-affected stu- dios, He said when these were re- ceived he would ask all labor councils in which painters are members to boy- cott theaters showing their produc- tions. John L. Lewis, CIO chief, tele- graphed C. H. Jordan, local organizer, that union workers, no matter what their affiliations, should support the strikers, A “peace plan” submitted by the general labor council has been’ ac- cepted by the film producers but turned down by*the striking crafts because it did not grant closed-shop mghts to the FMPC. Film production continued while the big name actors, through the screen actors’ guild, pandered a de- cision to be made Sunday whether to support the strike. 5 which she said she deeded him on his promise to maintain her the rest of her life. She is the widow of Rev. Elias Gilbert, a Congregational In- dian missionary. Crippled Children’s Funds Are Approved Approval of the state crippled chil- PECAN Butter Scotch June 30 was received from the social security board Friday by the North Dakota public welfare board. E. A. Willson, executive secretary of the state board, said $9,785.82 federal funds were approved to match similar amount of state monies available, Christiania Ice Cream in Bricks “ands osen ‘other By MRS, ALFRED OLSON Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Hanson en- tertained Mr. and Mrs. Christ Schoon and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Barrow and the Misses Irene Koessell a Laura Meyers at dinner Sunday. delicious flavors Mr. and Mrs. Tilmer Lein were callers at the Alfred Olson home Monday; 2 y. The following were business callers in Bismarck the past week: Mr. and . Alex Seibel and daughter Tillie, Mrs. Christ Schoon and sons, id Gus, and Mr. and Mrs. Al- Olson, U. 8. Marine band furnishes jusic at White House receptions; as 1803, the Marine corps Gren’s budget for the quarter ending 1 — —(9O | McKenzie 1 > By MRS. T. T. HUGHES Mr. and Mrs. Philip Gable and family were Sunday visitors at the George Hughes home. The W. T. C. U. met Thursday at the T. Hughes home. Plans were made for the district convention whieh will be held in McKenzie May The Ladies’ Aid will meet May 12 with Mrs. H. Folkins. The birthday anniversaries*of Mrs. E. Fuehrer and Miss Elsie Heaton will be celebrated. Mrs, Irene Curtis and brother Bill Strong of Williston were Wednesday visitors at the B. F. Coons ‘home. David Torgerson succumbed to pneumonia in a Bismarck hospital early Tuesday morning. Mr. Torger- son leaves his wife and three sons, James, Richard and Johnnie. The P. T. A. held a meeting in the schoolhouse Tuesday evening. After the business session ajourned, a pro- gtam was enjoyed. Refreshments were served by Roy Wildfang, Mrs. Warren Clizbe and Mrs. P. P. Bliss. j Ghylin. | — By MRS. O. L. DAVIS Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Backman and daughters, Edith and Edna, were Bismarck shoppers Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Staton Davis and son Wallace were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Davis. Mrs. V.. Coleman and daughter Elsie and Helen Kroeger of Bismarck called at the Nick Holgierson and t presidential receptions. every other officer, to of law relati Give Mother a real treat on her day. She'll love the delicious flavor and it will save her work. Ask for Velvet Ice Cream at Your Dealers Bridgeman-Russell Co. Home of Pasteurized Purity Milk Phone 740 Bismarck, N. D. Therefore if you have not of May, 1937. ear naa EH NOTICE TO THE OWNERS OF AUTOMOBILES AND TRUCKS It is the duty of the Sheriff of this County, and to the procuring of a proper license for automobiles and trucks is secured. It is necessary that this law be strictly enforced. cure a proper license for 1937 at once to avoid penalty. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, this 7th day FRED E. ANSTROM, Sheriff of Burleigh County. Owen Davis one day last week. see to it that the provisions ly done so, please pro- 8 ~ ‘WERE VERY HAPPY?! When Workers Turn Out Parts After Quitting Time |(QRONATION WILL RECALL DAY WHEN MEN DRESSED UP Frills and Furbelows of Beaus of Yesteryear Are Now Well Nigh Forgotten London, May 7—(?)—Maybe the average man will have a new suit for Coronation day. He may. even stick a flower in’ his buttonhole. But he'll still be fairly inconspicuous, just an average man, and nothing at all like the men who really put it on in the way of clothes at coronations of the dressmakers are muttering in their sleep in their efforts to turn originality inside out, modern men’s tailors cant’ see any- thing to get excited about in a coron- ation. Saville Row is mildly suggesting a few changes. The correct lounge suit must have four buttons on the cuff, and that sort of thing. But the men who watch the coronation, who will see all the uniforms and frills and robes and fancy hats, will just be carpet slippers. At any rate there’s no more obvi- ous contrast, between this coronation "ped of splendor in his everyday at- tire. There was a time, old tailors recall with a touch of sadness when men were the peacocks in the way of dress; when the coronation of a was a signal for tailors from all the world to come to what the well dressed man ing; when men spent the money clothes and once in a while gracious enough to hand over a, bit of cloth to friend wife. The men who will take part in ti coronation procession and ceremony will bring back a touch of those days, with their flowing robes, ruffled col- lars, silk breeches, padded quilt jackets, brocaded cuffs, and so forth. Even the bobbing white plumes of the horse guards will be a throwback to the days when men really dressed up. a Livestock Are Freed By Street Collision — St. Paul, May .—(?)—Cows, calves and pigs populated the Como boule- vard district Thursday following a collision. in which two young women were injured. Leona Peterson, 29, driver of one car, and Lucille Knutson, 20, pas- senger, were treated for cuts and bruises. A trailer-truck loaded with live- stock bound for market, driven by Arthur Kohler of Audubon, collided with their automobile. ubhurt, but the trailer overturned, spilling its cargo‘ of -live beef, veal and pork. : Policemen rounded up the stray nimals, 5 al Carnations made by D.A.V. will be sold by War Mothers Saturday. Here are just a few of the amazing Two Men Designated To Represent State Gov. William Langer designated two North Dakotans Friday to repre- upon arrival wrote the first American volume jorwegain language, “Truth About America.” He the following year. Music Festival Will sent the state at unveiling ceremonies of the Ole Rynning memorial of Snaasa, province of Trondhjem, Nor- way, on July 4. The ceremony will be held in conjunction with the cen- tennial anniversary of emigration to The governor asked Peter Fugleso of Minot, and P. O. Bugge of Bisbee to officially represent North Dakota followers in 1837 and immediately “There’s a dividend of extra richness in every drop of QLD QUAKER. Why? Be- . cause we put a barrel of quality into every bottle, without asking you to put up a barrel of dough-re-mi to buy it. in Ne Honor Stark Mothers — Dickinson, N. D., May 7.—(#)—De- dicated to Stark county mothers, the sixth annual music festival for school children will be held Sunday at the ly 500 students, the Dickinson high school instrumental ensemble and the college band will participate. — The light sometimes appearing on Rynning | the masts and spars of ships is known as “Gt. Elmo's fire,” and is caused by & slow discharge of electricity. Be died Paris Capital, Labor “Call @Month Truce Paris, May 7.—(P)—A six-month truce abwpen capital and labor, to last for the duration of the Paris ex- position, was agreed upon Thursday at the insistence of Premier Leon Blum. Representatives of employers and employes acceded to the premier’s request for a truce, designed to fore- stall strikes, lockouts and wage putes until mid-November. ‘The agreement had two purposest to help make the exposition a suc: cess, and to permit industry and commerce to adjust Seetaee the 40- week and new s0c! WS. OP of the exposition, hindered by construction delays, has been set for May 24. CLD GUAKER STRAIGHT BOWRIBUM wriskey BRAND COPR. 1937, THE OLD QUAKER CO. LAWRENCEBURG, INDIANA ALSO AVAILA' values we are offering this week 19% CHEVROLET MASTER COACH—Motor overhauled in- cluding new pistons, pint o rings, valve ground, ings adjusted. Appearance perfect—tires good, 1984 PLYMOUTH COACH— This car has been driven only twenty-five thousand miles. One look a el iear and you will agree that it is an Exceptional buy for... 9O00 1934 FORD DE LUXE TUDOR —Original black finish with | cream wheels. This car is In pertect running condition; up- olstery cannot. be told from new. Special price in- cluding 1937 license... 1931 CHEVROLET DE LUXE COACH—This car has been re- finished with new duco. Its motor, transmission, and axle have been carefully checked for dependability and durabili- ty. Two spares and 1937_lice: 1929 FORD TUDOR—A good economical 4-cylinder car equipped with trunk and 1937 license, A real buy in low cost transportation for 1938 PLYMOUTH DE LUXE COACH—Original tan duco fin- Its motor, transmission, axle have been carefully checked for dependability and aprarty Sold with “an that counts.” =. $325 it pear- * 1985 CHEVROLET MASTER SPORT SEDAN—Black origin- al duco finish. Equipped with knee-actio! in cal condition. The motor in this new car appearance 937 Me cense included for..... {036 PLYMOUTH COUPE—Act today if you want to buy @ slightly used last year's coupe. car re-conditioned. New tires, aI turret top, Fisher $525 s been $495 1929 GRAHAM SEDAN—The original dark green duco finish looks like new. The mechanic- al parts on this car hav. found to be in checked and od runnin; ig car comfort for only . condition, been injoy 1935 PLYMOUTH DE LUXE COUPE—The motor on this car s been’ including bearin round, Ori, , Orig! tallic finish, New tl: ntirely overhauled w pistons, rings, valves have new clutch in- LUXE ‘CHEVROLET COACH —DeLuxt wheels. tires with spare tire in a fender Includ- well, Motor ov. ing new pistons, and ni been installed. ‘test ri all bearings adju a valves revmronad: A new clutch rake di -» re-conditioned car " with 1937 license for . inings ALL i ULAR MAKES VALUES usa DEPENDABLE Pp nice you 1983 CHEVROLET MASTER SEDAN — A ropmy four door sedan. Its famous six-cylinder motor has been tuned to de- liver new car performa: Original biack duco fii Bee it and you'll buy it 1983 PLYMOUTH SEDAN—Ai economical four-cylinder car. The motor has been carefully tuned and checked. new clutch has been installed. New tan duco finish. Equipped with good tires and draulic brakes BORD TUDOR—This car hy- on @ new CI metallic finish, good tires and new license. ........ * ‘olet. . Equipped with tires, and upholstery show 8 10" tires wear; Sn Equipped with radio and heater. .......... 1933 FORD TUDOR—The mo- tor on this car has been ove: ing rods, rings, pins, all bi ings adjusted’ and’ valves ground. Finished in . new brown duco for... USED CARS AND TRUCKS ALL MAKES, c ALL MODELS IN RYE Attention Grocers Bakers : Dairies Special PANEL Sale ———————— 1934 CHEVROLET % TON PANEL—The motor on this light delivery unit has been carefully tuned and checked to deliver new car performance and economy. Very good tires, new appearance. Equipped with 1937 license for . $825 1935 FORD % TON PANEL— This unit is in perfect me- chanical condition and backed by “an OK that counts.” Tires are good and looks like a new aay pavloped vith two ucket seats an Hiainaa Giese $395 1985 CHEVROLET % TON PANEL—Very low mileage. Original dark blue dulux fin- ish. Tires look like © 395 new. 1937 license...... $. ———$<—$$ $< — 1935 CHEVROLET 1% TON PANEL—A heavy duty panel equipped to carry a large load, 32x6-10 ply tires in rear. Its motor and running condition have been checked to give new truck performance and economy sess... GOOD ee ene eee 1934 CHEVROLET PICKUP— The motor on this light pickup has been overhauled including new pistons, pins and rings. Valves re-ground, all bearings adjusted. Brakes’ re-lined and new green dull fintsh for’. $315 1929 CHEVROLET 1% TON TRUCK—This truck is equip- Ped with 32x6-10 ply single tires in rear. Good mechanical condition. Equipped with for ssesstesssseeeseee S165 for A dale 1983 CHEVROLET 1% TON TRUCK —Long wheel-base. Equipped with dual tires in Fear and overload springs. A good heavy duty truck E's low prices.” $380 1934 CHEVROLET 1% TON TRUCK—Long wheel-base, ly dual tires and over- load springs. Tires in very good condition. Mechanical condition perfect. Equipped with platform for. Capital Chevrolet Co. 101 Broadway Avenue Bismarck, N. D. Telephone 432

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