The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 2, 1937, Page 3

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x EMERGENCY LOANS TOTALED $43,300 Extra Period Added by Gover- nor’s Proclamation Came to End July 1 Farmers in 16 distressed counties in ‘western North Dakota received $43,- 300 in grants under the emergency proclamation of Governor William Langer which extended the loaning period for livestock feed monies and allowed forage and seed grants, E. A. Willson, executive director of the! state public welfare board, an- nounced. The loaning period as provided by an act passed at the last legislative session expired June 1 and the gov- ernor’s tion extended the time until July 1. The original meas- ‘ure appropriated $224,000 for live- stock feed loans but the executive order also set up provisions for mak- ing forage seed loans. Willson said only three counties re- ceived emergency feed loans totaling $16,000. Williams county headed the list in this division with $8,000, Divide $6,000 and Burke $2,000. Fourteen counties were given emer- gency forage seed loan grants rang- ing in amounts from $400 to $2,000. Willson said these loans were made to counties where enough moisture fell in June to insure a feed crop. The director asserted he had talked with all county chairmen in 28 west- ern counties “considered distressed” but that commissioners of the re- maining 12 counties said they would take advantage of the loans. Counties which received forage seed grants included Billings $400, Bowman $400, Burke, Divide, Logan, McLean, Mercer, Slope, Williams and Sheridan, $1,000 each; Billings and Bowman $400 each; Grant, Morton, Mountrafl and Sioux $2,000 each, and Oliver $500. New Dome Pavilion To Reopen Saturday Grand re-opening of the New Dome pavilion, midway between Bismarck and Mandan, under new manage- ment has been arranged for Saturday evening, July 3, Frank Froelich, man- ager, said Friday. Associated with Froelich in opera- tion of the @musement institution will be Mike Guon, Joe Gould and Adam Miller, all of Mandan. ‘The New Dome has been renovated and redecorated by the new manage- ment and will cater to diners as well | you' as dancers, Featuring swing-time, old-time and modern dance melodies, Max Mastel and his six-piece band will be on hand for the opening occa- sion over the Fourth of July week- end, 2 The New Dome, according to Froe- lich, will feature chicken and steak dinners, and a Ia carte menu, beer, wines and liquors. Constructed in 1929, the Dome has been a popular dance pavilion since that time, particulatly during the summer seasons, but has not been operated as a dancing pavilion for the last year. , "Sterling | By SHIRLEY STEWART ‘The Bridge club members were en- tertained by Mrs. Pete Schlobaek at her home last Friday afternoon. Miss Luceifie Millman is visiting at the Christine Beyer home for a few days. Miss Vernon Jensen spent the ‘week-end at her home in Moffit. She is employed at the Charles Ryan home here. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hobbs, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lang, son Wayne, Mrs. Maud Langley, daughters Bessie, Frances, left for Rock Lake Satur- day morning to attend a family re- union. Fred Schaper’s house burned down Jast Saturday morning. The fire was started when kerosene was poured on live coals in the cookstove, causing an explosion. ve Mr. and Mrs. Edward Isenbeize spent the week-end at the Art Chenwell home, returning to Bis- marck Sunday evening. Mrs. Carey Johnson, Sr., returned to work at Bismarck Monday morn- Get Rid of Excess FAT with this SAFE DRUGLESS Treatment go 54th Street in Manhattan, you will find a supper club—the Wivel—where hill-billies sing, a ventriloquist talks, and a few girls dance. Thaw. says. have happened since, and we must be judged by what we are doing to- day. It’s my duty to entertain peo- ple, to sing my torch songs and swing lyrics and novelty ballads to make them happy when they come to the club. It's lovely to be able to do this. waistline has thickened. show the vein tracery of the years. Humming 15 minutes. Near 50, She Keeps Beauty That Inflamed Harry Thaw and Inspired Murder By HELEN WELSHIMER ~— New York, July 2—(NEA)—If you down a flight of steps on West You will also find Evelyn Nesbit In this gaily noisy setting, the most maligned and best known American woman of the early century is staging & comeback to wee once she was tragedy’s the Manhattan night “Why talk about yesterday?” she “That's over. Lots of things “There was a time, you see, when I couldn’t go out on the street with- out having women cut pieces of my hair and my clothes and try to get to me. I suffered so much then. But that was long ago.” Looks Young at 50 Yet to the public the name of Evelyn Nesbit conjures up the viva- cious, girl whom her young husband, Harry K. Thaw, shot and killed Stanford White, America’s most famous architect, one night in 1905, at the old Madison Square Garden, . sparkling 17-year-old chorus from Pittsburgh, for love of Miss Nesbit is around 50 now. Her Her hands But the gaiety and friendliness of manner that made her a favorite day before yesterday have not di- minished, She looks young. She acts young. Her finger-nails, toe-nails and lips are stained the same crimson. She ‘wears. open green sandals, green or- naments and a fiesh-colored lace frock, Her hair is shining chestnut, worn with curled bangs, and her eyes are brown. “I'm afraid of women,” she admits. “I feel safer with newspaper men. I never know what women will write about me. You'll be kind, won't 2” Miss Nesbit has ben absent from Broadway for five years. “I returned because I was lonely and wanted something to do,” she explains, “After all, just sitting around Grows tiresome and once you've been in show business, the call of it stays in your blood. I had a long illness, after which I went to work in small clubs around New York before I came back to Broadway.” Concerned About Religion Of Harry Thaw, the man who was her husband, she says little. Miss Nesbit prefers to talk about her esoteric philosophy rather than any of the tragedies of the past or her present comeback. It was 20 years ago, when the public still was scorn- ing her because of the murder her er Into Whether singing before the night club or re! the dressing room Evelffi Nesbit never lets memories of the Thaw tragedy cloud her vivacity, She retains so much of the beauty of her heydey that it is easy to understand why she was the toast of : Broadway at the turn of the century. husband committed, that she turned tees them to my dressing Don’t be discouraged if it is hard to discover the secret of the religion at first, for suddenly it will come.” Tragedy following the tragedy,” nisces. “I took English literature, an- atomy, biology, psychology — every- thing. I enjoyed studying and I had to have sometiing to do during the years when I was shut up in my hotel room, because the crowds gath- ered whenever I appeared.” Evelyn Nesbit Returns to Night Life That Whirled H Grim Tragedy Finds Comfort in Religion; Vi- vacity Makes Her Forget Sensational Past room any night. Routed by Vivacity The woman who escaped from the cruelties of the world that tried her, instead of her husband, for a crime he committed, admits that her pres- ent peace and natural gaiety are a result of this religion. Anyone ex- Pecting to see in Evelyn Nesbit a tragic, sallowfaced, despondent crea- ture will be astounded at the viva- cious woman who confronts her audi- ences, “I studied at Columbia university she remi- The crows, she remembers, were unsympathetic. “No one in the world had any way of knowing Harry Thaw ever intended to shoot Stanford White, who was a fine and kind man. We jaxing in the privacy of just had returned from our honey- moon. It was two years before, when I was 15, that I had known Mr. White. If Harry Thaw hadn't been’ crazed with insane jealousy he never would have taken a gun along that night. He knew of my former friend- ship with the architect before we were married. He wasn’t drunk the night of the murder. Ot, it took a lot more than the one brandy or liquor he had at dinner to get Harry Thaw drunk!” to three books for comfort. “They are ‘The Secret Doctrine’,”| she says. “H. P. Blavatsky brought the religion they describe to America from Tibet, where certain monaster- ies practice it, A reader must learn to unlock their doctrine to under- stand them. In the Book of Dzyan, which is 25,000 years okier than Gen- esis, you find this help. Of course, it all comes from India, “This religion gives one a mental poise and understanding of life. My father was a lawyer, who used to say that I had a hungry mind. Perhaps it led me to take up this philosophy. If you wish to see the books and says. and more understanding. They would not criticize a girl for a past deed and they would know that a man is accountable for his own actions.” Today Would Be Kinder Anyway, when the case opened, Miss Nesbit told of her friendship with the architect. At once the pub- lic censured her for the death. “It couldn't happen today,” she “People are so much kinder But she doesn’t talk often of the past. Rather, she likes to taste the restaurant's 60 varieties of smorgas- bord delicacies, sing, and chat with old friends who drop in. “Life is good,” she says. “It’s lovely study them, I'll be happy to bring; to be singing on Broadway again.” ing after spending a week at the Ernest and Raymond Mr. and Mrs. Harold Olson and/ son, Jimmy and Mrs. Oscar Anderson visited at the Raymond Johnson home Sunday evening. Johnson homes. Norman Hanson is visiting with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hall, tor a few days, land and Mr. and Mrs, Helmer family were dinner guests at the Earl Hall home Sunday. birds require food every S. W. Burleigh ‘By MRS. ALEX STEWART John Fields returned to the COC camp at Kenmare after a five-day visit at his home here. Bruce Fields “attended the young peoples’ meeting at Washburn last week. Neighbors and friends gathered at @ farewell party for Mrs. Knudson Thursday. She is leaving soon for Portland, Ore., accompanied by her sons, Kermit and Jewel, and Fred Dorman. Frank Johnson left Monday for Montana from where he plans to go to Oregon, Miss, Helen Schmidt of Redfield, 8. D., is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Otto Dorman. Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Buckley mo- tored to Bismarck Saturday where Mrs. Buckley attended the school meeting. Mrs. John Stewart, Arlene Ferris and Frank Glum were dinner guests at the A. J. Stewart home Sunday. HOUSE COLLAPSES, NINE DIE Havana, July 2.—()—Nine persons were killed early Friday when a ma- sonry tenement collapsed. Forty others were missing. Hernandez de Cordoba founded the early cities of Granada and Leon in Nicaragua, which country’s monetary unit is now known as the cordoba in his honor. Cool, comfortable wash slacks.—Bergeson’S. TEST FLIGHT OVER ATLANTIC PLANNED Forerunner of Regular Trans- ‘Sibley Butte _|| ocean Passenger Service to Be Saturday New York, July 2.—(?)—Climaxing four years’ study and surveys, Pan- American Airways prepared a flying “experimental” boat Friday for an schedule flight to London as the fore- runner to a regular passenger serv- ice across the Atlantic. When the service becomes a reality, American aviation’s commercial con- quest of the world will near com- pletion, with United States airlines in operation sround approximately | 16,000 miles of the globe's 25,000-mile girth. The flight will start Saturday morn- ing from Port Washington, Long Island, simultaneously with the be- ginning of a westward trip from Lon- don by a British flying. boat of Im- Perial Airways. Both companies are making the experimental flights un- der joint operation to obtain a maxi- mum of data on radio, weather and navigation conditions. By MRS. ELMER BLOOMQUIST Miss Alice Davidson left by train for Minneapolis, Saturday evening. School officers from here attended the school officers’ meeting in Bis- marck Saturday. Wayne Bloomquist visited several days with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed_Widger. Miss Esther Cederstrom and El- mond Pettis are visiting friends and {relatives in Minnesota. Mrs. P. E. Roth entertained the members of her Larkin club Tuesday. Bill Anderson attended a family reunion picnic at the Mandan park Economy Grocery Has Reopening This Week A number of special features have been arranged in connection with the grand opening of the Economy Groc- ery in its new home at 307 Third street this week-end, it was an- nounced Friday by Joseph A. Patera, Proprietor and manager. Though the work of moving stock and fixtures into the new building began several days ago, Patera has {not felt that he could do justice to his grand re-opening until this week- end. For seven years the Economy Groc- ery had been operated at 411 Broad- way in downtown Bismarck until its new home was constructed this sum- mer. Patera announced that the store will continue handling the same high quality merchandise with the same efficient service and delivery system. The telephone number re- mains unchanged. Mr. and Mrs, Patera and their children, long-time residents of Bis- marck, reside at 208 Rosser Avenue, Sunday. About 50 people were present. west, real beer drinkers are switching to Look at that tavern scene... typical of what's going on everywhere in northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, the Dakotas! More and more real beer-drinkers ‘are swinging over to Fitger’s. Why?...Fitger’s is he-man’s beer! He-men are asking for it. It's spar- kling... malty... refreshing, with a clean thirst-quenching after-taste that’s as satisfying as a full, deep breath of North Country air! Not “sweet"', like the home-brew beers Fi that so upset the modern taste for beer. Fitger’s is a real beer for real beer drinkers...for he-men. And for ladies who like things RIGHT, too. C COOL OFF with a ALVERT COLLINS! Some ice cubes clinking in a glass," Some Calvert smooth and rare, i Then, as the summer evenings pass; Who'd be a polar bear? everywhere in the North Country = tger’s he-man’s beer Abeer A scene typical of the cocktoll lounges of the Northlond ... with plenty of Fitger's beer on hond, Right: We call it he-man's beer! “That's okey,” says Sallie Marsh. “It’s one beer 1 con really go for myself.” Are you entered in Fitger's weekly radio contest? Nearly 200 Free Prizes throughout the summer for biggest fish caught every week! Listen to WCCO, WEBC, WMFG, WHLB at 9:30 every Friday night toa fishing review and variety show. Enter your biggest boss, pike, muskie or northern pike. ly s CALL FOR eri WHISKIES ., AND LOUISVILLE, KY., EX! “Reserve” Juice of | lemon or a 36 lemon anda 36!\mo 2 teaspoons suger Shake well—strain Into 12 ee. gloss edding Sa So0n 8 ten: Dacorenn woh an you with. mraent

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