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1 @) SOCIETY and CLUBS * ‘Wynkoop, Jean Visitors’ Day at Girl Scout Day Camp to Be Held Friday Two More Overnights Plan- ned; Gypsy Trip to Be Tak- en July 27-28 Visitors’ day, Friday, July 9, is being planned by the Girl Scout day camp- ers at the Girl Scout cabin for scouts who have not been attending day | Furness, camp. All scouts who have attended the camp this summer may for Friday by calling the Girl Scout of- fice by noon Thursday, July 8. Each girl who attends visitors’ day must bring a guest with her. In charge of arrangements are the following com- mittee: Marian Lorraine Engel, Mar- garet Pfleeger, Frances Boutrous and Virginia Wheeler. The activities of the day will begin at 7 a. m. at the cabin in Kiwanis park and will close at the swimming pool at 1 p. m. Breakfast will be served at the camp. The morning’s program will include an archery tour- nament, campcraft, a kittenball game and novelty races. An en camp council will be held at 11:30 must have attended three previous day camps. To Begin Wood A new activity will be begun by the camperaft group Wednesday, July 7, when they begin wood carving. So far their activities have included clay modeling, spatter printing, smoke printing, tin craft, soap and paraffin carving, raffia and leather weaving and the making of shepherd's pipes. The second Brownie camp was held Friday, June 25, for packs 1 and 2. Leaders assisting were Mmes. FP. F. Griebenow, H. W. England, C. W. Lei- fur and O. W. Lovin. The nature prize of the day was won by Shirley Knecht, &@ member of pack 2. Leaders who have assisted at day camp during the last two weeks have been Mary Louise Nuessle, Mrs. M./P. Paris; Mrs. H.’A. Brandes and Marion Little. In the contest between the three units at day camp the Similians, win- ners of the first two-week period, are still in first place with 24:points. The Shady Nook group is second with 19 points and the Rangers, third, with 15 points. ‘ * Mrs. Sinkle, Lewine Bismarck, Is Feted Mmes, H, E, Schultz and Paul An- strom entertained Friday evening at the Schultz home, 513 Rosser ave- nue, west, in honor of Mrs. C. E. Sinkle. The evening was spent in- formally by the 12 guests. -_ The Sinkles are leaving Bismarck Mrs. Faubel Honored ~ At Affair in Mandan eke ‘Avdie Burroughs Is Entertained Friday ‘ to Compliment her sister-in-law, eth a » who is her ** 2 Farewell Party for Mrs. Cowan Friday Honoring Mrs, John Cowan, the Capital Homemakers club entertained with a bunko party Friday evening of Mrs, Frank Nichols, 400 Thirteenth St. . Two tables were in play during the evening with prizes going. to Mmes. R. J. Fox and L. T. Wedge. Places were laid for 15 guests when luncheon was served. Garden flowers decorated the rooms. ‘ Mrs, Cowan left Saturday morning for the northern part of the state where she will make her home near Minot. She has been a member of the Homemakers club for the last four years, . ee * Mr. and Mrs. U. J. Downey and daughter and son, Josephine and Donald, 417 Tenth St. returned Thursday evening from @ month’s tour of the west. They visited their son, Jack Downey, in Oakland, Calif. and spent five days with Mrs. Downey's brother, John B, McManus, warden‘of the New Mexico penitentiary, Santa Fe, N. W. They spent some time in Yellowstone National park, Salt Lake City, Utah; San Francisco, Carmel-by-the-Sea and Los Angeles, Calif and the Grand Canyon. En route home they stopped at Denver and the Black Hills. *** *& Miss Jean Roherty, 615 Mandan 8t., Edward , 814 Mandan 8 Hennessy, and his sister, Miss Mary Hennessy, who will come from Williston Sat- urday, will spend the holidays at Lake Melissa, Shoreham, Minn, at tho summer cottage of Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Hennessy, the parents of Edward Sunday for Aberdeen, 8. D. Mr. Sinkle | and ‘is employed by the International Harvester company and has been transferred to the Aberdeen office. They have been residents of Bismarck for the past 11 years. Sunday x4 Monday Try Our Satisfying Holiday Dinner Features CHICKEN... 50c TURKEY... 6DC Served from 11:30 a. m. till 8:30 p.m. Grand Pacific Restaurant eke * Mrs. Marié Cordner Riche, small daughter, Peggy Lou, 930 St. is leaving Saturday evening for a 10-day trip to Montana. She will visit in Billings at the home of her broth- er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. James Childs, and will stop at other and ‘The Misses Flora Deane McKee and Shirley McKee, Nashua, Mont., and sister, Mrs, William Smith, rural Bis- marck, will leave Saturday for Pierre, 8 D., where they will visit another sister, Mrs. Ross Steiner. Mrs. Smith will return to Bismarck the first of the week. ** * Mr. and Mrs. Fay Brown and two children, 423 Fifth St., left Thursday morning for Wellsboro, Pa. where they will visit Mrs. Brown's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Basche. They Plan to be gone for about two weeks. ——_—_______ Meetings of Clubs | And Social Groups | Royal Neighbors The Royal Neighbors of America will meet Wednesday at 8 p. m., at the home of Mrs. E. F. Trepp, 231 Thayer avenue, west. Jayson Shirts wear lon Bergeson’s. has Two Free Enlargements 8x10 Enlargement “Special 5 Star” Grade Overnight Service Drop Films in out box when store is cl . rk orders “Standard” or “Special.” Campbells F i . Agnes | Ps. formerly of Washburn, who has HE BISMA Mmes. F. M. and J. E. Davis Give 2 Parties , Forrest M, Davis, 930 Sixth 8t., . J. E. Davis, 100 Avenue a 5 i i FA 0 28 ay FE zee Ety & i E F i il i ; F E E I i E j i s fl , ™. Ee F i BE i 4 i i E Z F : 2 F og i i i z i E Pp i H used » 8. # "| Mrs. Longworth Goes HETTINGER vivacity that won f “Princess Alice,” . | Washington. -_* * Bible Conference Be Held at’Braddock|“%, A Bible conference will Johns, : i j : z gts i i rt Fut Ison, on the trip. They for about 10 days, * * ty tet this ety re z m attend the funeral of B. M. Schwars, of wi was informed Friday Schwarz's death was & 2 = z i gz i Hie it BE Eee OB Ue é ere pepabysiciltgradteparaag guest o! grandmother, Mrs. ‘Theodore Meldahl. ; ** * Miss Alice Knowles, 316 Avenue A, west, entertained Friday with a bridge luncheon. Places were laid for 10 guests at a table appointed with gar- den flowers. High honors went to Miss Jane Wilson. Miss Sarah Crewe was among ie suet * guests of Mrs. Shledorn’s two Mmes, A. G. Olson and Ethel Sork- ness. oe Vernon Enge, who has ing & two-week vacation at of his parents, Dr. and R. 8. Enge, 518 Fifth St., left Friday for Chicago, Ill., to resume his studies at the National segee a? * Chiropractic. * Miss Ruth Cordner, 111 Avenue A, Monday for American exposition. She plans to visit other points in Texas and will be gone for about # month. * * * Mrs. Wallin, Philadelphia, been the guest of Mrs. W. L, Nuessle, 710 Second 8t., for the last two weeks, left Friday for Rapid City, where she wt vee oe by ‘Miss Sara Crewe will leave Satur- day night for Minneapolis, Minn. after which she plans to visit for & in Rochester, go to Washington, D. C., to home Aug. 1. s make her ses 8 Mrs. A. G. Olson, 511 Eighth 8t., arrived home Friday evening Scouts from the Bismack region at- D. C., is Dr. M. F. Williams (above) North Dakota boys years district judge. Minn. She will| turns TF Scouts’ Doctor | RCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 3, 1937 Contributors’ WORKERS ASK Column | TE! BE AonED TO GO BACK 10 JOB A rubber check is like a race poe Tt 1s hard to catch up With! «Protection of Our Right to A race horse but a rubber y ace icks fast aes pictogosd Work from City and County’ come souvenirs and the artists even- Asked by 23 Persons Se pean ree e What we need is a better check 2 checks, and fewer: jall birds. cs ee eee on an Body of Plane Victim Found at Wreck Scene Salt Lake City, July 3—(#%—One of the bodies of seven persons killed in an airplane crash last December was found at the mountainside wreck scene Saturday, Frank Eastman, field manager for Western Air Express, announced. “The body has tenta- tively been identified as that of Mrs. John Wolfe of Chicago, a passenger Eastman on the plane,” said. Duluth, July 3—(?)—County At- FORD CHALLENGES BOARD'S AUTHORITY | erst wed charged with first degree murder in tial oe n cut al wi Motor Company Denies Charges said was an attempt to fake It Vi . jolated National Labor Bhidler’s % Relations Act. aoe : a Lz ATTEMPT T0 HIDE KILLING BY RAKING AUTO CRASH FAILS Blood-Covered Pocket Knife and Wrench Found in Duluth Man's Car luth boulevard after the restaurant DR. M. F. WILLIAMS * * * * * * z CARES FOR SOOUTS JUS AT JAMBOREE Dr. M. F. Willlams, Native of North Dakota, in Washing- ton With Boys of Region Caring for the allm-nts of Boy tending the jamboree at Washington, the the nation’s capi- Mo mranece (eo Mussa Desiee 208 scoompanied the Bismarck region to He is one of them. lodge. elected it of the Lions elas acceso Erland V. Bergland, Hettinger publisher. To Get Harvest Jobs . For Drouth Victims tants of those regions of the state where there will be no harvest are being made by Western North Dakota offices of the national re-employment to C. Vernon Free- of the Bismarck of- i ip, manager ice. Its motto, “Bave North Dakota Jobs persons) available for harvest work to register at the Bismarck office in the World ‘Wat Memorial building at once. Winchester Memorial Prize Exam Scheduled Nine Burleigh county school chil- Gren will compete Friday, July 9, at the Will school in Bismarck for the Winchester memorial prize in arith- metic. The prize is $25 in cash. The examination, prepared by the state board of eraser wal be given at 2 p. m, Marie Huber, county superintendent of schools. The memorial was created by the family of Walter H. Winchester, for- fer county superintendent of schools for Burleigh county and for many Six th grade graduates from Burleigh county outside Bismarck and three from Bismarck will write the examination. International Group Denounces Arms Berlin, July 3—(7)—The Interna- tional Chamber of Commerce, under SHAVER INVENTOR DIES New York, July 3—()}—Col. Jacob Schick. 59, inventor of an electric Presbyterian Chicken Dinner Just Hike you used to get at home, Uncle Dave's Chicken Inn 212 Main SUNDAY, JUNE 20 scheduled at Roosevelt raceway here Saturday, was postponed because of rain. Officials a i a F ae E| 5 : z 5 s & | i following conditions warrant your full support, and do commend full public approval. “1, 1t is an established fact that we constitute 28 of the 33 persons employed by the Northern Hide and Fur company in Bismarck, four of whom could not be contacted. ti 8B i 8 pace bps eae : e> ry have endeavored to block the normal operation of the Northern Hide and Fur company by and with the sup- port of the Workers Alliance. “3. The affiliation of this small Group with the Workers Alliance local does not in any way constitute the desires of the entire group in respect to union affiliation og membership. “4. The action of the Workers Al- ance in calling a strike could in no way be termed a representative deci- sion of the employes of the Northern Hide and Fur company. “6. There has been no effort made to unionize the entire number of em- Ployes of this company in an orderly and legal manner, nor has there been ® vote at any time to determine the right and desire to strike. Endorse Management “6. We desire to express our sat- isfaction with the policy of the man- agement of the Northern Hide and Fur company; and as a majority group in this position demand the pro- tection of our right to work, from the city and county. Otherwise we ask relief. We must eat. “1, We feel that it is our duty to call the attention of all government officials, as well as the attention of the general public, to the facts of the present condition which is not the action of the employes of the North- ern Hide and Fur company, but the result of outside interests backing and influencing a small minority under the guise of union organization. Until such time as the interests of the ma- Jority of the employes of the North- 2 re j Piebre allie Bs. ePEEE Ege8 ih the freedom of returning to our re- ‘spective jobs unmolested we do not feel that justice will have been ac- |. The greater percentage of us want to work.” The statement was signed in ink That is just what has hap-| with the names of Bette Bick, A. D. ‘Wutske, Jesse J. Jones, H. O. Ims, adopted| George Rittel, Melvin Salhus, Willis Usten,”| Porsborg, Andrew Porsborg, Martin Albers, Mary Davis, Anne Oleksiw, Clarence Westbrook, Buel Henricks, Melvin Olson, Otto Smith, Clarence Hirsch, E. K. Remboldt, Edward Muel- ler, John Kuhn, I. J. Remboldt, Charles Stilwell, B. M. Benski and D. R, Benski. Police Seek Man as Suspect in Murder Los Angeles, July 3—(?)—Chief In- vestigator Eugene Williams of the istrict attorney's office issued an order Saturday for the arrest of Fred Godsey, an ex-convict, for question- 3 ae ae [ pad z HH § z : k 5 & - 8 ul e F se8e as the man known as “Eddie the Sailor,” who Williams said, is the prin- cipal suspect. 70 ‘SPIES’ EXECUTED Moscow, July 3.—(#)—Leonid Za- kovaky, chief of the Leningrad secret Police, announced Friday the arrest and “liquidation” of more than 70 persons who allegedly acted as toun- ter-revolutionary spies and ‘“diver- sen for the Estonian intelligence Rain Causes Delay of Vanderlip Auto Race Westbury, N. ¥., July 3—()}—The N. ¥, second annual Vanderlip cup race, 5 said it would be held at 11 a. m. (O8T), Monday. FDR WITHOUT CALLER Hyde Park, N. Y., July 3—(P)— President Roosevelt, who felicitated TWO DROWNED “2, The remaining stx employes oe operator early Saturday put in a call to police that his “wife had been hurt in an accident.” Naylor, after viewing such evidence ‘as a blood-covered pocket knife and monkey wrench covered with blood and glass, said he would issue a first degree murder warrant. Sgt, Ralph Fiskett of the West End station, after discovering the blood- covered wrench hidden beneath the front seat, called Chief Oscar G. Ol- son, and said he believed the woman had been slain. Shidler was held in jail awaiting questioning. Police were attempting to determine reasons for the slaying. Soil Conservation Work Is Explained County agents and soil conserva- tion committeemen from 10 central North Dakota counties met in Bis- marck Priday to get instructions on field measuring and compliance work in connection with the soil conser- vation program. Dr. John T. E. Dinwoodie, secre- tary of the state agricultural con- servation committee, was in charge. Also present were District Supervisors A. M. Challey and Harper Brush. Counties represented were McIn- tosh, Logan, Kidder, Burleigh, Em- mons, Sioux, Grant, Oliver, Morton, and Mercer. ‘The meeting was the last in a series held at key cities throughout North Dakota. july (®) — The Ford pany, formal answer to charges of the nationel labor relations board that it had violated the Wag- ner act, challenged the board’s au- thority Saturday. The complaint, the company said, should be dismissed “because the NLRB has no authority to regulate relations between employer and em- ployes engaged in local production.” The answer, signed by Harry Ben- net, personnel director of the Ford campay, denied all allegations con- tained in the complaint issued by the board last Saturday following charges by the United Automobile Workers Union. A hearing before a trial ex- aminer is scheduled for next Tues- y. In the answer Saturday the Ford company charged the U.A.W. “en- tered into a conspiracy ... to cause a riot,” on the property of the com- pany at River Rouge. It asserted that employes of the company who engaged in the fighting at the gates of the Rouge plant on May 26, “had at all times acted in self-defense and within their legal and constitutional right RAILROAD WORKERS CALL STRIKE VOTE Non-Operating Brotherhoods Join ‘Operating’ in Seeking Wage Lifts ASK RIGHTS FOR SIOUX Washington, July 3.—(?)—Senators Lynn J. Frazier of North Dakota and William J. Bulow of South Dakota have asked congress to allow the Sloux tribe of Indians to appeal to the supreme court from decisions of the court of claims. Chicago, July 3—(?)—The 14 “non- operating” railroad brotherhoods called upon their 800,000 members Saturday for a strike vote, the same action recently taken by the “big five” rail labor unions, Both groups sought wage increases, The “non-operating” brotherhoods demanded a 20 cents an hour pay hike, the “operating” untons—with a membership of 300,000—a flat 20 per OR A ent boost. + 8 CONSULT YOUR AGENT OR RROKER AS YOU WOULD YOUR DOCTOR OR LAWYER FA LAHR. INSURANCE “*0 BONDS BANK BLDG SMARCK Approximately 1500 representatives | fj of the “non-operating” organizations] #} authorized the strike ballot by un-| Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, pre- dicted a vote overwhelmingly in fa- Tike unless a satisfactory agreement was concluded before the paletine starts about three weeks ence. Under the provisions of the railway labor act none of the brotherhoods legally may strike until federal mediation machinery has run its course. Heads of the five “operating” unions sald the strike referendum au- thorized June 22 was designed pri- marily to speed negotiations with car- rlers and did not necessarily commit the workers to a walkout. NEW HOTPOINT SPEED-FREEZER Refrigerator List your properties for sale or rent with The Bismarck Agency 111 3rd Bt in a gentle blanket of frosty air... alr held constantly at proper temperatures by precisely bal- anced control. See it today at Service Electric Co. Phone 877 W. A. HART, MANAGER Park Rapids, Minn., July 3—(7)— ‘Two persons drowned in a lake near here Thursday when their fishing boat overturned. The victims were W. A. Atterbury, 33, of Coffeyville, Kas., and Helen Harris, 35, resident at a lake resort. ——_—K_—_____ Dine in the Patterson Din- ing Room or grill and enjoy food in air-conditioned cool dining rooms. life of a president—a day with not & single caller on his engagement, calendar. SAFE FOILS YEGGS W. E. PERRY 208 Fifth at. Phone 601 i New Sweet Shop AND RENDEZVOUS Nightly From 6 to 8 By € BILL BUNT AND HIS HI-HATTERS Bismarck 408 Main Phone 42