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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1937 SOCIETY and CLUBS Jolly-8 Entertained By Mrs. R. Anderson Mrs, Rachel Anderson was hostess to the Jolly-8 bridge club Wednesday evening at her home in the Dun- raven apartments. Decorative ap- pointments carried out the Halloween theme, as did the score pads and tallies. Honors in the bridge games were awarded to Mmes. Selma Jacobson and Jospehine Hugelman. The trav- eling prize went to Mrs. Carl Sund- land. Following the card games Mrs. Anderson entertained the guests at a waffle supper at Kelly's lunch room, The next meeting will be held Nov. 10, at the home of Mrs. Ruth Engen, 927 Seventh St * * * Mrs. Minnie Howell Leaves for Germany ; Mrs, Minnie Howell, 227 Thayer avenue, west, left Thursday noon for xt th trip to Germany, during will visit her birthplace, v in Germany she of a number of rela- 5 11 will sail Nov, 3 from New York City on the Europa, land- ing in Bremen, Germany, Nov. 9. En * route to New York she plans to stop for three days in Washington, D. C. Imelda Maddox Feted At Farewell Party Imelda Maddox was feted at a fare- well luncheon Thursday at 12:30 o'clock in the Capitol lunchroom as the staff of the secretary of state's office entertained in her honor. Halloween appointments decorated the luncheon table. The honored guest was presented with a gift from the group. She will leave Bismarck this week- end to accept a position in Fort Yates Noy. 1, She has been employed in the secretary of state's office for a number of years, xk * Daughters of Legion Announce Chaperons Chaperons have been announced for the Daughters of the American Le- gion dance, which will be held Fri- Gay, Oct. 29, from 8:30 to 11:30 p. m., at the Country club. They are Mrs. F. D. Register, chair- man of Daughters of the American Legion activities; Mmes. James Mor- ris, M. P. Wynkoop and Clarence Gunness; Mrs. Spencer Boise, chair- man of all junior work, and Mrs. J. C. Spare, president of the local auxiliary unit. * ee Cathedral Players First Play Nov. 12 Friday, Nov. 12, has been announced oy the Cathedral Players as the date for their'opening production of the fall season, “One Mad Night,” a mystery farce in three acts by James Reach, The play will be presented in the city auditorium, Rehearsals have been underway during the last two weeks under the direction of Mrs; F. J. Hublou, who Successfully handled the organiza- tuon’s traditional Lenten drama, “Bar- ter,” last spring. Heading a large cast is Jack Mc- Donald, Playing the feminine lead Opposite him is Miss Marian Cur- Tan. Supporting roles are being played by Bernard Majors, Bernard Thiegs, Rosaleen Fortune, Mrs, Jack McDon- ald, Emmet McCusker, Delain Ward, Joseph Cotter, Eleanor Thompson, Helen Mildenberger, Delia Beylund, Diamonds Engagement and Wedding Rings. F, A. Knowles Jeweler Bismarck's Dia Store for 31 |Antoinette Lux and George Fergu- son. Committees arranging production jdetails ,appointed at a meeting of \the Players Tuesday evening, include Albert V. Hartl, Edward Hennessy and ;Dr. Hublou, stage; Arlene Wagner, {Elaine Wentland, Jake Stocker and |Ralph Glaser, properties; Genevieve Parsons, Mary Lee Devereaux and \Mary Litt, tickets; Helen Baker, Elizabeth Stannard, Leo Boespflug, Conrad Ulmen, Margaret Fox, Loretta Sheeran and George Ulmen, house Marcelle LaRose McRae and Arthur jCayou, Mandan, makeup; Jean Roh- erty, Mrs. Arthur Hough and Geuej McDonald, publicity. * * * Mrs. Durey Honored by Wilton Nonpartisans/ Mrs. Marie Durey, Patterson hotel, was an honor guest Wednesday eve- ning of the Wilton Women’s Non- {partisan club as they entertained at la card party. The occasion was the second an- niversary of the organization of the club, Mrs. Durey organized it. Ac- {companying her to Wilton was Miss |Pearl Olson. Halloween decorations | Were used and the menu further car- \ried out the Halloween idea. * * * i Mrs, Charles Verret, 810 Rosser av-! enue, entertained member of St. Rita's) Missionary group Wednesday after- noon at her home. Honors went to Mmes. Harry Clark and Charles Sny- The next meeting of the grour be Nov. 10, at the home of Mrs. * * The Bank of North Dakota whist club met Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Elva Puckett, 711 Av- enue A, with Miss Ruby Kitt as as- sistant hostess. Honors went to the Misses Pearl Ebbeson and Maletta Lowry. * ok * Miss Loretta Wilke has returned to her home after visiting relatives in Wimbledon. Marlen Loehrke Given Promotion A. A. Loehrke, 407 Third St. has received word that his son, Marlen, has received an outstanding promo- tion as an employe of the Hardware Mutual Casualty company of Stevens Point, Wis. After three months special train- |ing in the home office where he. has been employed since his graduation in 1935, he will be transferred to the Madison, Wis., branch as office man- ager on Feb. 1. Loehrke’s position will be in the; nature of an experiment, he explains la a letter to his father. Under the present system, sales managers have charge of the company’s branches. Under the new system, the sales manager's duties will be confined to sales while the newly-created post. of office manager will take care of management. ° Jobless Budget OK’d; | N.D. Men Are Honored | Approval of a $41,133 budget for the second fiscal quarter has been re- ceived from social security officials at Washington, Alvin Purcell, state di-/ rector of the unemployment compen- sation, said Wednesday. é Purcell, William Schantz, chief ac- countant, and J. K. Murray, chief counsel, are back at their desks after attending the eighth district national interstate conference of unemploy- ment compensation administraors in Washington, Purcell was named secretary of the eighth district and Schanzt was chosen to represent the district on the national committee on accounts and records, ONE DIES IN FLOOD Hoquiam, Wash., Oct. 28 —(P}— A 60-mile gale, torrential rains and flooded rivers cost one '\fe and left travel and communications on the jOlympic peninsula disrupted Thurs- fee ‘\) @ snooty square sist, Of BLA Fall styles! uMreys “A VERY UPPISH” YOUNG DEBUTANTE MODE Very low and square... an air of getting there that’s pretty hard to re- BROWN SUEDE. Swell in either way! Just one of many glorious new toe and CK or jin your shirt-sleeves when it’s zero SIX BIG ADVANCES CLAIMED BY NASH Conditioned Air for Winter Driv- ing Chief Innovation An- nounced by Firm Presenting three series of new Nash cars with 83 new value features, six of which advancements the company heralds as revolutionary, Nash Mo- tors Division of Nash-Kelvinator Cor- jporation has introduced its 1938 offer- ings, it is announced by F. A. Cope- lin, of Copelin Motor Company, Bis- ck. Foremost of the six leading. features is the system of conditioned air for winter driving, which makes Nash the first car to be equipped with this mod- ern development. The system, which is installed under the cowl and uses the cowl ventilator for an intake, is described as one which purifies and circulates the air, ends chilling drafts, eliminates windshield and window steaming and “enables you to drive outside.” Probably of equal importance, say engineers, is Nash’s new “Super- Thrift” engine. ‘Sea Legs’ Steady Car “Sea Legs,” skyliner-type shock- absorbers, which steady the cars on curves and smooth out “the pitch as well as the roll”—or bumps as well as side-sway—is another new Nash fea- ture. Another of the outstanding six de- velopments is a vacuum gear-shift, the operating lever of which extends from the instrument panel to within a few inches of the right hand position cn the steering wheel. A new sound-proofing method for motor cars, which is claimed to make these cars 25 per cent quieter, is the tifth of the six big developments. The sixth is the spacious interior, which the company claims “makes these cars the roomiest in their field.” The three series announced include the Ambassador eight-cylinder line, which consists of five models on a 125- inch wheelbase, with a new “Super- Thrift” valve-in-head, twin ignition, double. carburetion type of motor, rated at 115 horse-power. Next is the Ambassador six-cylinder line on a 12l-inch wheelbase, which also is available in five models and which has a “Super-Thrift” valve-in- head, twin ignition type of motor, of from the University of North Dakota {195 horse-power. LaFayette in Two Styles Third is the series of LaFayette models, which will be available in both DeLuxe and Master styles. They are both powered with a 95-horse-power L-head motor, which is also a “Super- Thrift” engine, the monitor-sealed design of which has been proven suc- cessful through use in the Nash low- priced line the last three years. Both styles are on a 117-inch wheelbase, The DeLuxe group has five models while the Master has four. 5 —+—— Scores Drown in Flood in Syria Damascus, Syria, Oct. 28 —(P)— A great flood rushed down from the hills northeast of here Thursday and swept. through the town of Dmeir where almost all the houses were washed away. Dozens of bodies were recovered. One hundred persons were missing. The flood followed a cloudburst. A sheet of water nine feet deep rolled onto the town so quickly that the in- habitants had little time to flee to high ground. a N. D. Woman Hurt as Bus Runs Into Truck Chicago, Oct. 28—(>)—Mrs, Frank Salber, 25, of Silva, N. D., was injured Wednesday night when a Greyhound bus en route from Chicago to Madi- son, Wis., struck the rear of a stalled truck on the West Side. George Ho- vend, the bus driver, and 17 other passengers, were not hurt. Dr. John M. Grinde of Madison, a fellow pas- senger, treated Mrs. Salber for cuts and bruises and she resumed the trip. Girl, 11, Slept in Auto Lots 3 Nights Minneapolis, Oct. 28.—(7)—An 11- year-old girl runaway from a St. Paul boarding home was found by police- women Thursday wandering in\down- town Minneapolis. The child, dirty and unkempt, said she had slept in Loop parking lots the last three nights. She has been missing since Monday. Lieut. Blanche 8. Jones of the police department said the child would be returned to St. Paul. PRIVATE JOBS INCREASING St. Paul, Oct. 28—()—Private em- ployment throughout Minnesota is in- creasing, while public employment is cn the wane, according to figures made public Thursday by Dreng Bjornaraa, employment service. SEEK HIGHER RATES Chicago, Oct. 28 —()— President end executives of the nation’s rail- roads assembled here Thursday to draft new applications for freight and passenger rate increases. - Home-made Alarm | | Works; Man Shot Somers, Wis., Oct. 28—(P)—An unidentified man, trapped by & home-made burglar alarm, was shot to death Thursday when he failed to heed a command to halt after looting the general store operated by James and Albert Bullamore, aged brothers. The brothers were aroused when their locally famous device functioned successfully for the fifth time in the last six years. The alarm, when tripped, rings a bell in the Bullamore home, feet from the store, and turns on’ the store lights. James Bullamore shot the burg- lar with a double barrelled shot- gun. He was the first to have been killed in the series of store burg- | laries. The brothers wounded an- other burglar several years ago | and last year captured one with- | out firing a shot. : = state director for the National Re- LOW FARM FAMILY | INCOME REFLECTS YEARS OF DROUTH Average Yearly Income of Red River Valley Families in 1935-36 $763 Washington, Oct. 28—(#)—The aft- ermath of the drouth, the agricul- ture department reported Thursday, was reflected in the unusually low income for families in four ‘North Da- kota counties for 1935-36, An income of $763 in cash and “in kind” was estimated as the average for a family of 4.7 persons living in Barnes, Cass, Griggs and Steele counties during that period. The de- partment surveyed 1,106 families. “This income is not typical,” said the department. “It, represents e results of the drouth in an area where bumper wheat crops have pro- duced good returns in more favor- able years. “If the North Dakota counties chosen @re representative for the wheat farmers of that region, family life during that year was character- ized by great frugality and thrift.” The survey was made by Dr. Louise Stanley, chief of the Bureau of Home Economics, and included a part of the study of 66 farm counties, 140 vil- lages, and 19 small cities. The object of the survey was to obtain a sta- tistical picture of the income of the American family and how it is spent. Family incomes ranged from $1,103 to $1,417 for families whose aver- age size was never ‘arger than 3.9 persons in four other farm regions studied. The survey also showed 123 of the 934 self-sustaining North Dakota farm families studied had incomes ex- Is Acquitted Baltimore, Md., Oct. 28.—(?)}— A Negro woman came before Judge FRowland K. Adams in & larceny charge, pleaded “guilty,” and then insisted she had stolen nothing. “Do you know what ‘guilty’ means?” the judge asked. “It means I didn’t do it,” the defendant replied. The jury acquitted her. R’S ‘QUARANTINE PLAN HIT BY NYE North Dakota Senator Speaks to Nebraska State Teach- ers Association | ‘Guilty’ Negro Scottsbluff, Neb., Oct. 28. — (#) — Senator Gerald P. Nye, militant North Dakota advocate of neutrality, criti- cized Thursday what he said was President Roosevelt’s plan to “quar- antine” belligerent nations and de- manded the United States be steered away from the road to war by invok- ing the neutrality act. He charged the fear of losing for- eign trade in Japan and China is “once again at work pulling America into a position where the profit from other people's wars will outweigh our determination to stay out of those wars.” In an address prepared for deliv- ery before the district convention of the Nebraska State Teachers’ associa- tion convention here, Nye struck sharply at a recent statement as “clearly voicing fear that to bring our neutrality law into play would cost us the loss of some foreign trade.” The senate munitions committee investigator said Roosevelt's sug- a ideal TEL LE A te ceeding $1,500 annually. Of those families with an average income of $763, the survey showed $702 came from their farms, the remaining $61 from non-farm sources. Of the farm income, only $146 was in cash, the balance being “in kind”—estimated value of houses and farm-furnished food, fuel, ice. “In contrast with three counties in Ohio where farm ownership pre- dominated by a three to one ratio,” said the report, “almost as many of the North Dakota farmers rented as jowned their land, 487 reporting as owning all or part, and 447 as ren:- ing all. gested “quarantine” policy against belligerents “might lead to war, in- deed it will put us definitely on the road to war. “In any event,” he added, “this does not explain why our neutrality law has not been used, a law that would very positively be a quarantine against our being drawn into foreign wars.” Windmueller Funeral Is Held at Dickinson | Dickinson, N. D., Oct, 28.—Funeral “Computed from the estimates made by the farmers themselves, the value of the land, dwelling, and buildings of averaged $12,771, and rms $11,013, Owners rage of 439 acres. Renters operated an average of 431 acres.” - Girl Held in Death Of Aberdeen Woman Aberdeen, 8. D., Oct. 28.—(?)—Miss Viola Smith, 23-year-old domestic, was held in jail Thursday after a coroner’s jury returned a verdict that drove “in a careless and way” in an unlighted car that and killed a woman and seriously in- jured the latter's husband Tuesday night. County officers said Miss Smith would be charged with manslaughter in the death of Mrs. Irene Fulton, 31. ‘The latter's husband, Robert, 47, suf- fered two broken legs. Maurice Jensen, companion of the Birl,’ testified she had “two or three bottles of spiked malt” before she ctatied to drive the borrowed car ome. Man, 59, Reported Lost in Yawl at Sea New York, Of. 28.—(7)—Disap- pearance of Victor, Brevoort of Miami, Fla., 59-year-old scion of a famous Dutch family, was reported Thursday by his sister, Mrs. Rudolf Eickemeyer of Yonkers, N. Y. : Mrs. Eickemeyer said her brother had not been reported since he started out alone in his 36-foot motor yawl Cygnet Aug. 7 from Boston on & projected trip to the Azores. He carried provisions for 60 days. | CALLS JURY Devils Lake, N. D., Oct, 283—(7)— District Judge C. W. Butz announced Thursday he had called a jury for duty Nov. 12 at a special fall term of court in Minniwaukan, Phone us your party orders. Home-made rolls, pastry, cakes and pies. Phone 581, Dahlen. your furnace, heater or range. Keeps your home comfortable with less firing. Occident Elevator Bismarck, N. Dak. 112 Frent Ave. Phone 11 services for Frank M. Windmueller, 25, who died in Bismarck Monday, were held from the Price Funeral home here Wednesday. Burial was in a local cemetery. Besides his father, mother and bride of less than two weeks, he leaves three brothers, Clyde of Dickinson, Edward of Kenmare, Woodrow of Itasca Park, Minn., and a sister, Blanche of Hettinger. The white corpuscles of are outnumbered by the red the bi 5,000 to 1. Sees Sharp Rise in N. D. Pig Population North Dakota’s pig population soon will be back to normal, according to B. E. Groom, agricultural expert for the Greater North Dakota association, who visited at the State Corn Show here Wednesday. The association now is assisting farmers in the purchase of gilts and the demand has been heavy, he said. Most of these will be bred during the winter and thus play an importaat| Mal part in next year’s spring pig crop. ‘Heavy supplies of corn and other feed in many parts of the state make this a logical agricultural develop- ment, he said. The work of re-stock- WAR OFFICER DIES Newcastle, Eng., jor General F. W. chief inspector of qi “LIFE BEGINS IN COLLEGE” c— livered 0! difference to talk about! See yourself, “why of ‘arth be content with a small cantodsy? NEW FATIGUE- PROOF RIDE—WITH “SEA LEGS”! A masterpiece of en- balanced car weight nized like clockwork «8kylinertypeshock- absorbers mounted sailor's “sea is far above the js Nash LaFayecte 15% ates) oa Three” Class io pineeen Leche ve there's 20% enough is car 333 drive 1 : WASH UPSETS OLD IDEAS | 2-5 DRESSES Just When You Need Them .. « 75 tures thatare Oct. 28.—P)— B. Landon, 77, juartermaster gen: eral’s services in the World war, died Wednesday. ‘re here now... the three great for 1938! And, Mister, they sporta ioecewaright | LONDON SEES DUKE ON SCREEN, London, Oct. 28.—()—For the first time since the abdication, three newsreel organizations are showing average length features on the Duke and Duchess of Windsor — the cur- rent and first one dealing with the former king’s visit to Germany. ~ Cops’ CZ PROVED 2 GENERA BOTH ONE AND FOOTBALL COLORS Also Black, Brown, Green and Wine new Nash | listoffea-: down the line! seabout eNaiess tetera new acceleration, and 12% better gas mileage! %* about GEAR-SHIFTING! New sound- 1g! 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