The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 23, 1937, Page 5

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, ©) SOCIETY and CL Showers Thursday Evening Honor 2 Prospective Brides 6th Band Concert Is Arranged for Tonight The high school band will present its sixth open-air concert of the sea- Progressive Dinner Given by 3 Hostesses The Misses Peggy. Jane Skeels, Vir- ginia Cayou and Marian Pederson entertained 30 of their friends Thurs- day evening at a progressive buffet r party. At 7 o'clock the guests gathered at the Skeels home, 521 Thayer ave- nue, west, for the cocktail course. A bowl of garden flowers banked by candles appointed the service ta- ble. At Miss Cayou’s home, 612 Man- dan 8t., the main. course was served from a table centered with a silver bowl filled with garden flowers and lighted with ivory tapers in silver holders, From there the group went to Miss Pederson’s home, 723 Fourth St., for dessert. Ice cream molded in the form of yellow lilies was a -fea- ture of this course. Garden flowers decorated the table. F Following dinner the guests re- mained Kl Miss Pederson’s home for ICO. were awarded to the for the benefit of the band fund.|Misses Jane Lawyer, Irma Fern Lo- Money raised in this way is used to|/gan, Donna Jean Davis, Grace Ro- send the band to the state music con-|herty, Madeline Angell and Ruth test in Grand Forks, which is held /Gallaghan. Miss Jennie Williams, Glendive, annually in May. Mont., was shore ct ann guest. ** & es * William Murphy to — Feted 2 Social Affairs Wed Dorothy Feeney Announcement has been made of Mrs. E. A. Sparks, 600 Sixth 8t., complimented her. sister-in-law, Mrs. the approaching marriage of Doro- thy Schnecker Feeney, 810 Thayer Lorn Christensen, Caldwell, Idaho, at an informal party Thursday after- avenue, to William J. Murphy. The wedding will be solemnized at St. Noon. Eight guests were it. An- other out-of-town guest Was Mes, zg Mary's pro-Cathedral Tuesday, Aug. nee 7a. m., by Rev. Robert A. Fee- O. Stoudt, Jr.,. Fargo, who is visit- ing her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dorothy Feeney is the daughter of Mrs. M. H. Schnecker, 418 Seventh 8t., one of the early pioneers of the city, and has been employed in the legal department of the Bank of North Dakota for the last five years. of McHenry county, lived in the Granville community for the last 20 years. He has been connected, since Jan. 4, with the office of Com- Eis cna na wy Se e ca Com- missioner. rs. Cooper Fetes. Miss Geier- mann; 3 Friends Compli- ment Miss Arnold po Se .o prospective brides, whose wed- Bae will be events of early August, sere nonored Thursday evening at whose ower's. suis Mary Gelermann, marriage to Earl W. Wilmot will take pace Aug. 7, was complimented shen Mrs. Thomas Cooper, 515 Broadway, west, entertained at) a titchen shower and bridge party in her honor. ‘A pink motif was carried out with wreet peas decorating the tables, A miniature bride marked Miss Geter- mann’s place when lunch was served and small pink bells marked those of the other 11 guests, The dessert, strawberry ice cream molded in the form of slippers, further carried out the pink color. $core honors for the evening were awarded to the Misses Elizabeth Cer- yinski and Ruth Olson, Miss Lucille Jsaminger received the traveling ee Misses Gertrude Ejichhorst, vivian Connole and Beth Murray en- tertained with a.shower Thursday evening at 207 Rosser Avenue, west, in honor of Miss Agnes Arnold, who will become the bride of Robert Birdzell August 2. The eight guests brought their fa- vorite recipes to present to the bride- eect, She received a service of franciscan pottery given by the group and by Miss Esther Noggle, Chicago, Ill, and Mrs.. John. Dillion, Park River, both of whom are former Bismarck residents and close friends of Miss Arnold. During the evening the honored guest received a tele- gram from Miss Noggle, expressing her good wishes, Favors, individual nosegays of garden flowers, marked the guests’ places when lunch was served. As place cards tiny baskets of artificial Included on the program are “Illu- on the Range,” = cowboy song; “Uni- pected of: ” Panella; ‘The band mothers will sell ice cream Down at Baton Rouge, La., th Staley, 701 Sixth 8t. a Mr. and Mrs. Christensen have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sparks for the last two weeks, Mrs. Chris- tensen is a sister of Mr. Sparks. They were honored Monday evening at a buffet supper given by Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Scott, 320 Avenue C. Places were laid for eight guests at a table garden pepper AGH) and Scott. centered: with flowers ar- ranged on a mirror reflector. evening was pant sntcemally. Beta Sigma Phi Plans Fashion Show and Tea Hardinsburg, Ky., duly 23 —)— ‘This county seat town of 800. people flowers, bearing the pictires of the : ** cence a Lape! a o th groom, eae lust which caters royalty, Te Gad Were! 4 combined fall fashion show and| Mrs. R. Reff Honors | /RSusty whey cir, Te wes ued. Garden flowers decorated the Tooms. ** ‘= : German Radio Service Sunday From Mandan Rev. H. V. Sorensen, pastor of the Church of the Nazarene, is sponsor- ing a German service over KGCU, teas were planned for September: 19, at the meeting of the Beta Sigma Phi eorority Wednesday evening. A com- mittee of two, including the Misses Auvurne Olson and Evalyn Grace Hermann, was appointed to have charge of arrangements for the affair. The next business meeting will be held at the same time as the birthday Mrs. Francis Stanton Complimenting Mrs. Francis Stan- ton, who before her recent marriage was Miss Katherine McLean, Mrs. Roy Reff, 931 Ninth 8t., entertained fednesday afternoon at an informal founded 16 years ago by @ woman who can’t sew @ stitch to this day. Twelve guests were present and anniversary celebration Aug. 8. Mandan Sunday at 11:40 a, m. (MST), ste spent the afternoon embroidering | wade into some forters,” she said. a 12:40 p. m. (CST). Mrs. C. H.| Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Raaen, 718 Ninth | dish towels for the shonord guest.|uwe need some.” : Gibbons, Fargo, evangelist to shut-|St., have had as their guests for the | Garden flowers appoined h abl whne| “«Gooq.” said Beard ins, will be the speaker, last few days Mrs. Raaen’s brother | Garden flowers appointed the table) she gid when lunch was served by the host- ess. zee Dorothy Haas, Frazee, Minn., returned to her home Thursday after * * * Miss Irene Anderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, EB. G. Anderson, 617 Eighth St., left Friday morning for a two-week vacation at Lidgerwood, where she will visit her mother’s peo- i ple. Miss Anderson is employed by) spent several days the Northwestern Bell Telephone British Columbia. They left Bis- company. marck Friday morning and were ac- by Mrs. Rasen’s and Mr. lorgan’s mother, Mrs. Myrta Morgan, ho make “Maybe I could sell some of them at a profit,” said Mrs, Beard. “Go ahead and try,” nodded Beard. She went to New. York.. Business Mushrooms “Can't you get them handstitched by some women down there?” sug- gested a department store buyer. “We can get machine-made ones at ® hundred factories. Make something and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, H. 8. z* * Robert Larson, Grand Forks, ar- rived Wednesday evening to visit his sister, Miss Hagel Larson, 514 Sixth cn extended walt at pe and his uncle, James P. Curran, will the Morgan home. She has been a ied a ag of the Rasens for several) ar and Mrs, Edward B. Cox, Bis- months. 4 e+ marck, are guests this. week at Breezy ee * Mrs, Walter H. Willson pea aa Senna DIE POEL Bernanke simende TSE: Miss Ione Noggle, Bismarck, will be : among the girls attending the Phi| phoenix, . Today’s Recipe Omega Pi sorority house party this | for their home after being the guests week-end at Spiritwood Lake. of Mr. Willson’s brother and sister- Arizona Corn -law, Mr. and Mrs, E. A. Willson, (4 to 6 servings) WHAT IS U1 * *k * Mr. and Mrs. Myron 8B. Skeels, Chicago, Ill, left Friday morning for Yellowstone National park after be- ing the guests for a few days of Mr. ses parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. K. eels, comforters. Each week-end house- wives, who did the work delivered the finished product to the Beard home, and the Beards packed and shipped Suddenly, the mushrooming busi- ness was crowding the Beards out of their home. They built a studio in the back yard. 4 PICCARD DESCRIBES HOW FIRE STARTED Says Ignition of Excelsior Wrapped Around TNT Charges Caused Blaze F ' Three ‘cups: young uncooked corn are en route home from 2 trip in the] cut. from cob, 1%. cups thick tomato @ . juree, 1 large onion, 1 tablespoon lard, chili powder, 2 tablespoons finely sung celery, 1-3 cup grated hard el » . ignition of excelsior wrapped TNT charges used to cut loose the upper cluster of balloons after he landed in a tree near Lansing, lows. Piccard revealed the details of the fire for the first time at a testi- micnlal dinner given by the Kiwanis jul More than half the lower cluster F FREDEEER FLUTE CONFIDENTIALLY : t's the Westinghouse Spleed Sweet Potato Slices Roaster with attech- cooked potatoes, % cup eble Breller-Grid. dinitrophe- 2 tablespoons butter, 1-3. ee AeHe Guild Will Consider ‘The Th cooking expense Orr “Too for thay cet 20 Tilo | gc RAC let tates 4 tines «day Referendum on CIO to te. will cause pounds to —— opera' ‘away lke —leaving 10 sassy, New York, July 23—()—The Amer- 1» Oval and Rectangular Models Sorte sors WATE-OFe, atveried sa Pictorial Review, car t $5 or $50 in 5 Minutes A new plan for Salaried Persons LET US HELP YOU People’s Finance Co. (Over Dah! Clothing Stere) 410% Main Avenue Phone 1506 North Dakota Power & Light Co. FRIDAY, JULY 23, sugar that conceals Sugar mi Ler corentar, ex doed sneseweeten Carruth which sugar was granulated in Woman Who’s Dub At It Gets Rich Sewing :| Labor Under Cover of Darkness er “Petty” Quarrels May Be Serious of the supreme court bill, the presi- Minor ‘Family’ Revolts May De-|dent skipped the formalities. velop Into Wide-Open, bien eneg ern Disagreements The public did not unanimously back the pesivent, The issue be- Tare oar came murky enough, in fact, to By MORGAN M, BEATTY tempt some Democratic senators who Washington, July 23—(#)—Head-! privately disagreed with part of the lines tell a confusing story of|New Deal program. Here was & chance to kick one of the president's troubles between the president and pet idess in the pants. And kick it seedbol the Democratic majority in| they ae ommittee report denouncing the idea as un-American. Some of them hint pretty strongly| The president did not carry his oe congressional revolt ageinst/ strong tactics quite so far into the 5 House rule, The rrevolt” msy|rest of his legislative program, but urn oul be just a family halr-| he has gone far enough to set cloak- pulling contest—but there is one) room tongues wagging, and finally, serious aspect to family spats: they/to start some representatives and sometimes lead to a wide open split. | senators to thinking out loud. The situation is confusing because} por instance: each time a rift appears, the issue 8t! wr, Roosevelt asked as usual for clay Sitterent: a blank check to spend $1,500,000,000 Gay it’s the supreme court] on relief for the unemployed in 1938. issue, the next it’s relief; again it's] ‘The house balked. A huge “economy ae control, or bes codeing cn {bloc” insisted a sizable slice of this ine congressmen who disagree wil 4 spending money be ear-marked for e president explain their stand | roads, flood control, ete. In the midst carefully enough, but the explana-| of the struggle, Representative Joe tion is all clogged up with the de-|starnes of Alabama put the issue tails of the question of the moment.| rather frankly, Said he: “We are Strip each issue down to funds-|tignting for congressional control mentals, and you'll find the rebels | over federal funds.” And fight they suspect the executive of trying t0/qiq until they won a compromise invade legislative territory, or vic®| from the White House that saved versa, And every time one branch |tneir faces, if nothing else. of our government suspects another ‘Love-Feast of reune te domain, political fire- Baid the ever independent Senator works a | Wi . Borah of Idaho, one day: Sometimes the president wins;! «The resolution (inspired by the aeatagaed ag the supreme! white House) for an inquiry into tax court; more often the differences are| dodging gives treasury employes too much power... . oon satisfaction to save its public ‘Treasury employes being under the No Coat Tail Threat which Mr Roosevelt. very” definitely wi . Roosevelt very definite! piace aries’ ietrieven tis pear the | runs, congress took heed to what Mr. Igncek downs aray out ts split | Borah said, and the resolution was - ther the eb party modified so that congress conducted President or congress! and controlled the investigation. ‘The 3 president had wanted the treasury to do the job. And so on down the line, until some of the stalwarts decided to hold a love-feast on secluded Jefferson Is- land off the Maryland shore, far from the roar of the congressional debate with the president there to talk, and listen, Can the Democratic family get together and finish out the current term of congress without the kind of fight that clips political careers and eaves a scar that will always show? ‘The odds are about even. Ozarks Slayer Waits Sentence for Murder Alton, Mo., July 23.—(#)—Sullen- faced Robert Kenyon, youthful Ozarks mountain farmer, waited sentencing Friday, convicted of the kidnap- slaying of Dr. J. C. B. Davis, of Wil- low Springs, Mo. A possible attempt to escape from the Oregon county jail by means of a “soap pistol” ruse was frustrated Thursday night, officers said, when such a “weapon” was taken from him, State Highway Patrolman Ben As fast as Hollywood tries to forget its now-famous “hay- party, something else bobs up, and the latest incident was the filing of a $500,000 suit by Patricia Douglas, 20, above, film extra. A grand jury failed to indict on her charges, but her suit names the film salesman she accused of giving her liquor and then attacking her. It also names several film executives. Graham said the weapon was “a per- fect. model of the one with which Dr. Davis was killed.” Kenyon was assessed the death penalty by a jury of mountain men Thursday. i The first oil well in the United States was brought in at Titusville, Pa., on Aug. 22, 1859, producing about 400 gallons daily. r—does the Will e ? Virginia Cul- help to fill up ihe o al kettle Louisiana in fixed up a rei Cane mn Al sie re E Five years Merely heat a Wilson Secret Process Ham weak for 12 minutes to the pound and serve! It’s the world’s studio, organizing Eleanor Beard, Inc., and employing her own per- sonnel distinct from that of her hus- band. Her business is all retail; his is all wholesale, known as Kentucky Cottage Industries, Inc. Mrs. Beard now divides her time between Hardinsburg and her main/| take Office in Louisville. stores Beard “The ham you cut with a fork.” — “Mr. Beard sells to many that compete with me,” Mrs. laughingly explains, “so I guess that makes us competitors. But the friend- liest of competitors, mind you.” Old Italian Process counties work for either Mr. or Mrs. Beard. They take the material into their homes and work on it when they are not milking, or ironing. When it is ready they bring it back for the finishing touches, which are applied in the studio or the justries’ factory. ‘The friendly competitors pee Ge ploy @ process known as “trapunto” (between the stitches), originated in Italy in the 15th century and little used in America. ‘The design follows a double line. After it is stitched, it is “stuffed,” giving the exterior an embossed ap- pearance. “You know,” sighs Mrs. Beard, “I wish I could do that. Surprises some people, but I never have been able to & stitch.” . making. all legislation, at least. they want to look it over in advance and approve it. But in the highly important case guild convention’s endorsement of the Spanish Loyalists, independent po- litical action, large WPA appropria- tion and President Roosevelt’s su- to Cut Inlet to Now Dried- : Up Bay Hil} it IEREVER you are ... for cool- ing refreshment simply flip off the cap of a “Steinie” brown bottle (or can) of SCHLITZ. Brewed of the finest ingredients...under the femous SCHLITZ Precise Enzyme Control... every drop comes to you fully aged and full-flavored even during the peak demands of the hot summer months. Here’s a tip for summer comfort: keep your refrigerator well stocked with SCHLITZ. It’s the wholesome refresh- ing beverage for family and friends. Yeu dont have to euitivate @ taste fer Schiits. You like it on first ac- quaintance ... and ever after. JOS. SCHLITZ BREWING COMPANY Milweskeo, Wis. ape ; REE i F E i 2 ba i i g 3 § 82 g [ F Ee z ! i i i i | i de | Z E Z bE i : A Ee : if E 8 z E HL Ha gr a i i | 815 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. PHONE 128 QF MISSOURI SLOPE = DISTRIBUTING CO. BY KE at FRRBERSOR SS @ SBere aves maAKRsy ee tween

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