The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 27, 1937, Page 5

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n- 10 ol, o- ot, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1937 [Pie Winner] ©) SOCIETY and CLUBS 3 Local Maccabees Return From Supreme Tent Review 3500 Delegates Present From 44 States and All Cana- dian Provinces Catherine McDonald, commander, Mrs. J. H. Newton, alternate dele- | liam gate, and Mrs, Alfred Zuger re- turned Monday evening from Detroit, Mich, where they attended the drennial Supreme Tent Review of More than 3500 delegates were in attendance, representing 44 states and every province in Canada, and including 100 elected delegates and 37 drill teams, some of which com- prised 100 members, Opening on July 19, the Review continued through July 23, The first two days were devoted to competi- tive drills by both the juniors and adults of the various tents and hives. Tuesday evening @ grand t and parade of the states was held at Arcadia hall, The business sessions opened July 21, continuing to July 23. Wednesday afternoon, July 21, an impressive memorial service was conducted by the supreme officers of the organiz- ation. F. F. Schwarz, trustee, Toledo, Women’s Wear Shoppe Again to the Front With 50 New 16 Gore Waltz Dream and Gone with the Wind DRESSES in Swiss and Voile. Priced 1.98, 2.50, 2.98 Same styles Navy, Taffeta 8.75 ‘We are unable to secure any more of the above styles. This will be our last shipment. Special for 10 Days Vacation time dresses and our entire stock of up-to-the-minute Wash Dresses as well as Silk Chiffons, Wash Silks and Silk and Linen Dresses. $2.00 Off any purchase of $10.00 and ar Chif- $1.00 Off on any purchase of $5.00 and one pair of our 49¢ hose FREE. This sale ts effective from now through Bismarck’s Barbecue Bargain Day on Wednesday, August 4th. Also for that day, FREE TICKETS for the Barbe- cue Luncheon and Dance. Ask for them. New Henderson Wash Dresses of any store in N. D. Now 2,000 in stock, Priced 1.00, 1.49, 1.69, 1.95 2.98 up to 3.75 Over 1,000 Silk Dresses Sizes 12 to 52. Priced 6.75, 8.75, 10.75 up to 22.75 We buy from coast to coast, gar- ments that are different. Women’s W Shoppe | oni, delivered the memorial ad- Commander Returned to Office Supreme Commander E. W. Thompson. and Supreme Record Keeper C. L. Biggs were returned to their respective offices without op- position. Frank M. Hodge and Wil- M. Pem, New York, and Reu- ben Young, Texas, were elected to laces on the Board of Trustees. As part of the social activities of the convention the lady delegates and Maccabee workers held a dinner Wednesday evening at the Prince Edward hotel, Windsor, Ont. Thurs- day evening a large banquet, at- tended by 800 or more delegates, vis- itors and members, was held. The banquet, held in the grand ballroom of the Book-Cadillac hotel, was fol- lowed by dancing. Charles E. Gauss, insurance commissioner of Michian, was the principal speaker at the banquet. A healthy growth of the Macca- was reported by Supreme Com- mander Thompson over the period of the last four years. He announced the absorption by the Maccabees of the Brotherhood of America, the Slavic Progressive Union and the Fraternal Home Insurance Society, Philadelphia. He predicted an even Greater growth for the Maccabees and other leading fraternal societies in the future than in the past. The convention was closed Friday at 8 p. m., with the installation of supreme officers in the auditorium of the Maccabee building. Daniel J. Coakley, junior past supreme com- panier, served as installation of- er. ** « Deryl Ehrmantraut Notes 7th Birthday In honor of the seventh birthday of her son, Deryl Ehrmentraut, Mrs. John Ehrmantraut, 301 Hannafin 8t., entertained with a birthday party Sunday afternoon. Fourteen little boys were present ini and the afternoon was spent in play- ing games. Each of them received a prize as a favor from the games. Pink and white appointments decor- ated the table with a favor in those colors at each place. Centering the table was a pink and white birthday cake, es * * Harry Johnson Home From 3-Week Holiday Harry Johnson, Burleigh county courthouse janitor, returned Friday from his first vaaction in six years. His three-week holiday was spent in visiting friends and relatives in Ore- gon and California and in Mexico. “kk & Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Houser and daughter, Jean, Banning, Calif., who have been spending a week here with Mr. Houser’s parents and sister, Mr. and Mrs. D, Houser and Miss Mary | Houser, 418 Rosser Avenue, west, left Monday morning for Hettinger where they will be the guests of Rev. L. E. Dickinson and family. From there they will go to Billings, Mont., where they will visit Mrs. Houser’s brother. They will then return to their home in Banning where Mr. Houser has a large auto court that he has been operating for the last three years. * * * Mr. and Mrs, L. E. Zimmer and young daughter, 1010 Front Avenue, have left by motor for a two weeks’ vacation. They will visit friends and relatives in Minnesota and Indiana. En route home the will drive through the Black Hills and Yellowstone Na- tional park where the will spend the remainder of their vacation. * oe * George W. Newton, Williston, and his daughter, Mrs. E. H. Berggren, {Los Angeles, Calif., returned Tuesday {to Williston where Mrs. Berggren is the guest of Mr. Newton. They spent the last 10 days at the home of Mr. Newton’s son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Newton, during their absence in Detroit, Mich. * * * Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Oberg, 611 Ave- nue D, have’as their guest their niece, Miss Audrey Ann Edberg, Minne- apolis, Minn. Miss Edberg was their guest at Detroit Lakes for a few days and returned to Bismarck with them Sunday. 3 x * * Mrs, Roy E. Harris, 112 West Thayer, returned Sunday from @ 2-weeks vacation spent in Minneapo- lis, Willmar, Minn., and Taylor, N. D. At Taylor Mrs. Harris visited her parents. x * * George Anderson and family of Wing, accompanied by their son Dr. Wallace Anderson, Minneapolis, re- turned last week from a trip to the west coast. They were gone four weeks. *** * Miss Gladys Risem, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Risem, 507 Eighth St. returned Monday from Minneap- olis where she has been attending the first summer session of the Uni- versity of Mines: Miss Eleanor Arntz, who is em- ployed in the Re-employment office at Dickinson, was a week-end guest 8t., and at the Matt Steil home, 419 Ninth St. pe The Misses Margaret Will and Al- deen Paris and George Francis and Sue Will left Tuesday noon for De- troit Lakes. They expect to return to Bismarck Sunday. 3 Mmes. Fred Brodl, 201 Avenue A, west, and Alice Finnegan, 210 Thayer avenue, west, spent the I2:t week-end in Fargo. * * * Fred L. Conklin, 307 Avenue A, or 10-day business trip to the west Net Seffer monthly pain and aeiay a serosal ner all at the M. C. Bau home, 413 Ninth, west, left Friday evening for a week | Final CMTC Dance Is Wednesday Evening The final C M. T. C. dance at Fort Lincoln will be held Wednesday eve- ning, it has been announced by the Past Presidents’ Parley of the Amer- ican Legion Auxiliary, whose members are sponsoring the affairs. Young women of Bismarck whe have been invited to attend the pre- vious dances at the post are invited to attend the Wednesday dance. They will meet the members of the parley who will accompany them at 7:45 p. m., instead of 7:30 p. m., at the Me- morial building. At the Saturday night dance there were between 60 and 70 girls from Mandan and Bismarck present, with 40 from Bismarck. Five women of Bismfarck and three from served as chaperons, see Mrs. Narum to Go to Grand Forks Tuesday Mrs. C. A. Narum, 218% Thayer avenue, west, plans to leave Tuesday for Grand Forks, where Mr, Narum hhas been located since November. Mr. Narum will arrive in Bismarck Saturday evening and will stay here until Tuesday, when they both will leave for Grand Forks. They had been residents of Bismarck for the last four years, when Mr. Narum was transfer- red to the welfare office in Grand Forks. He now holds the position of executive secretary there. Mrs, Narum has been prominent in musical activities during her resi- dence here. * ee Mrs. Rosenthal to Open A. L. A. Meeting The annual membership meeting of the American Legion auxiliary, which will meet here Wednesday, will he called to order at 10:30 a. m., in the Auxiliary room of the World War ‘Memorial building by Mrs. H. W. Rosenthal, department president. At the dose of the day’s meeting Mrs. Spencer 8. Boise, 618 Thayer avenue, west, will be hostess at a tea for all members attending the meet- g. Luncheon will be served at noon at the Country club. * * * Male Chorus Picnic | Wednesday Evening The Bismarck Male chorus will hold @ picnic Wednesday evening. Mem- bers are asked to meet at the Mem- orial building promptly at 6 p. m. Those having cars are requested to bring them in order that transporta- tion may be afforded for those hav- ing none. ee * Miss Luella Steil, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Matt Steil, 419 Ninth &t., returned Monday morning from & week’s motor trip to Humboldt and Regina, Saskatchewan. On the trip she was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Zimmer, Dyersville, Iowa. Otl members of the party included Mrs. Roy Donovan, Emmetsburg, Iowa, and Mrs. Clarence Zimmer, Cascade, lowa. In Humboldt the group visited the John and Anthony Steil families. The remainder of the party are now en route to their homes 4 Towa. * Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Phillips returned Monday from Ellendale where they spent the week-end with Mrs. Phillips’ sister, Mrs. Joseph Huber. They mo- tored to Ellendale Saturday, accom- panied by Mrs. Phillips’ niece, Lois Huber, who spent last week here at the Phillips home. * * Oe Rev. F. E. Logee, pastor of the Presbyterian church, left Sunday evening for Chicago to attend the Presbyterian ministers’ conference which is being held at the Chicago Theological seminary. He plans to be gone about 10 days. * * * Mrs. Nina Arntz, Miss Jennie Arntz and Kenneth and Vernon Arntz, Burn- stad, were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Matt Steil, 419 Ninth &t. Miss Arntz enrolled in @ local business school and expects to begin her course some time in the near future. * * * Miss Madeline Angell, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, B. O. Angell, Capital Court, left Tuesday for Lake Koronis, Minn,., to visit Frances Frahm at the Frahm summer cottage. She expects te be gone about 10 days. * * * Miss Roberta Burr arrived Monday from Boston, Mass., to spend her va- cation with her father, Judge A. G. Burr, and her aunt, Miss Annie Burr, 702 Fourth St. She expects to be here for three weeks. x * * Mr. and Mrs. R. Kenneth Van Der- hoef, 808 First St., have as their guest Mrs, Van Derhoef’s father, J. D. Stenson, Minot, who arrived in Bismarck Sunday. * * * Mrs. John Berg and son, John, Jr., 408 Second 8t., left Friday evening for Madison, Wis. where she will spend about six weeks. About Prescriptions By BURT FINNEY of Finney’s Drug Store The United States Pharmaco- ia contains many formulas— poe! medicinal Corspoande—ceater by sicians after making their Figgonsts of different diseases. Having been able to distinguish by its symptoms the disease, they then made use o! knowledge of drugs, and the amount 5 that were indicated as remedies for any curable disease. The treatment was then written in the form of a prescription sent to a drug store to be ded., This method of su Tag medicine to the sick of course, the logical one when one considers how completely a pre- scription Separsisien is equipped with even the rarest, and oft! seldom used drugs; also with the facilities for proper and accurate compounding. A store thus stocked and equip- ped has made.a substantial finan- cial investment that you, when ill, may receive, without delay, the exact medicine your physician pre- scribed. This is the 11th of a series of Edi- torial Advertisements appearing in this paper each Tuesday. Copyright Arzella Ode, rate daughter of tly chester memorial prise in arith- metic. She won the prize, $25 in cash, in competition with eight other eighth-grade graduates from Bismarck and Burleigh county. Mrs. S. H. Merritt Is Expected Home Aug. 6 . Mrs. 8. H. Merritt, 221 Third 8t., is expected to arrive in Bismrack about Aug. 6, according to word re- ceived here by Mr. Merritt. Mrs, Merritt has been on # six- month tour of Europe and several of the far eastern countries, She landed in Honolulu a few days ago and will sail from there to San Francisco, where she will spend a few days visit- ing friends and relatives before re- turning to ra Mrs. J. C. Winter and son, Jimmie, 812 Avenue D, left Tuesday for Fargo where they will join Mr. Winter for a vacation in Iowa and at the Minne- sota lakes. They expect to be gone for two via os Mrs. Mattie Carey and son, Thomas, Tucson, Ariz. are visit Mrs. Carey’s daughter, Mrs, Henry Weis- enburger, 519 Fifth St. eek * Judge and Mrs Fred Jansonius returned to Bismarck Sunday from a week's vacation trip to Yellowstone Park. 9 Senate Committee May Hold Hearing in N. D. Washington, July 27.—(#)—Sen. Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota, Republican member of a senate in- terim committee on farm legislation, solid Monday the group may hold hearings in North Dakota before the next congressional session. ‘The hearings, he said, would permit representatives of the spring wheat area to outline their views to the in- terim body, headed by Chairman Ellison D. Smith (Dem.-S. C.) of the, senate agricultural committee. He said the hearings are contingent on availability of funds and on the date of congressional adjournment. SCIENTIST 10 USE BALLOONS IN WORK 36 Unmanned ‘Spheroids’ Will Carry Instruments Up for Experiments Bt. Paul, July 27.—(P)—Bquipped with 40 rubber balloons, Dr. Thomas | ag H. Johnson of the Bartol research foundation, Franklin Institute, Swarthmore, Pa., arrived Monday to make preparations for a series of stratosphere explorations in North- ern Minnesota for the purpose of studying cosmic rays. Accompanying Dr. Johnson was John Marshall, senior physics student at Swarthmore college, who will as- sist Dr. Johnson. The party will make its base at the height of land tower in White Earth state forest near Park Rapids, Minn. Dr. Johnson said he planned to send up 36 unmanned balloons equip- ped with scientific instruments over @ period of three to four weeks. In- struments to be used weigh but eight pounds each and will be carried aloft by three balloons of uncured rub- ber and inflated with hydrogen gas. These balloons, he said, will be in- flated to about four feet in diameter and as they rise they will expand until they reach a diameter of 20 feet. Then one of the balloons will burst and the instrument will fall to earth supported by the other two balloons. According to Dr. Johnson, the bal- loons will ascend approximately 100,- 000 feet into the stratosphere before one of them bursts. COMMITTED TO HOSPITAL Atlantic City, N. J., July 27—()}— William H. West, a minister arrested on charges of sending extortion let- ters to President Roosevelt, was com- mitted to the Atlantic county hospital for the insane Monday. Crown—and was nice enough to say so! Gallic-Curci Returns | to U. S. Concert Stage Los Angeles, July 27.—(7)—Amelita Galli-Curci, the vital mite of Italian- Spanish femininity who has electrified audiences in both hemispheres with song, is coming again into her own. The diminutive coloratura soprano is booked for a heavy fall schedule after @ late spring tour in which she won flattering reviews. Now she looks forward to resuming a career inter- rupted by a goiter operation two years 0. The dauntless diva of world tri- umphs is vicacious again—dynamic— in sharp contrast to her demeanor of other years, After her operation, Mme. Galli- Curci went into retirement to rest and recuperate. In her first comeback attempt at Chicago last fall, concern over effects of the operation induced stage fright. She decided later to go into smaller cities to prove her old self. This Proved successful. RATION FOOD SUPPLIES Buffalo, N. Y., July 27.—(#)—Retail food merchants rationed their sup- Plies to harassed housewives Tuesday as striking truckers and meat pack- ers planned a finish fight for a closed shop. Pardon Board Grants Paroles to 6 Monday The North Dakota pardon board, by granting six paroles and rejecting or deferring action on about 40 petitions, cieared half its applications for clem- ency Monday night. The crocodile lives to be about 100 years old. of the kitchen THE SOFTER, SAFER SANITARY NAPKIN 90 PROOF R over 80 years, men in the tropics have known that the best ‘answer to a blazing sun is a long, cool, tinkling Gilbey’s drink. Try it yourself! Start all your sumnter drinks with Ask for Gilbey’s Gin by name at package stores or ae Savorite bar. Made from 100% grain neutral spirits, Fargo Warehouse 305 Front Street Phone 590 DISTRIBUTED BY Northwest Beverages, Inc. Gilbey’s Distilled London Dry Gin! YOUR GUIDETO &} GOOD LIQUORS National Distillers Products Corp., New York, N. Y. Bismarck Warehouse 121 So. Fifth St. Phone 2266 Miss Luella Kerr, pictured here, is one of those thousands. Like so many others in the World's Greatest Road Test last summer, she discovered extra mileage in Standard Red grade the same istently helPs LL Standard Red Crown give you more miles per gallon than any other gasoline? One gratifying fact that came out ofthe World's Greatest Road Test of Gasoline Mileage last summer was that Standard Red Crown in addi- tion to its long-popular “pep,” does give fully as long mileage as any other gasoline, in all makes of cars and under all driving conditions. But thousands said “longer!” Many drivers, in many types of cars, have found that Standard Red Crown definitely saves them mileage money. You might, too. —— Read what others say about Red Crown in the book to save all you can on the road, you'll want a copy “How to SAVE AS YOU DRIVE” (free, while they of this book, and you'll want to try Standard Red last, at all Standard Oil Dealers). 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