The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 8, 1918, Page 5

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1918 | BISMARCK ‘DAILY TRIBUNE |Johnson’s Popular Priced . Store BISMARCK’S FASTEST GROWING STORE The Store With Over One Thousacd Garments ‘COATS That is the Whole Story. (COATS We Are Long and . Strong on Coats. Of. Every Conceiva- ble Styles. COATS Invall the Popular Shades. _, COATS In all the Varieties of Materials. COATS Trimmed «in Every Known Fur, at © } JOHNSONS POPULAR BISMARCK A wedding of unusual interest to the Slope was celebrated at St. Mary’s | cathedral Monday, when ‘Miss Alice Jewison of the Bismarck hospital nurs- ing staff became the bride of Robert} Bruce Martin, youngest son of Sen- ator. William Martin of Huff. The nuptials were simple and were wit- nes8ed by only a few members of the family and intimate friends. Immedi- ately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Martin left, by automobile tor the groom’s big ranch at Huff, where they will make their home. i Robert Bruce Martin was born in Mandan and his entire life has been: spent on the Slope. He has proven; successful as a rancher and farmer, The young English violinist, Isolde, Menges, who is one of the greatest artists in the world, and who is to ap- pear here on Friday, October 11, has decided to do special work for the children of Canada during the war. 1.) pursuance of her aspirations, she has given this season in Canada over sev-| enty free concerts for children. One} critic, writing about her, says: | “Miss Menges could rightly be called | an educationalist of the highest type, for she wants to bring out in the chil- dren what is actually there, and not to force upon children things that they take no interest in. She has very de- cided views regarding the forcing of children to learn something they do| not want to. Miss Menges believes: firmly that all the practice and run-! ning up and down of the various chro- | matic scales on the piano will do noj child any good, but rather harm, if hot child hac on abhorrence of the! piano. But if the child prefers the violin, and the violin is taught, then, the talent will be developed naturally. and the spirit of art will rule that child's life. THREE NOTABLE EVENTS PLANNED FOR FEDERATION Three of the very important items to be included in the program for the meeting of the North Dakota Federa- tion of Women’s clubs at Grand Forks on Uctober 15, 16 and 17, are the en- dowment fund concert, on the opening night of the Federation, a lecture by Dudicy Crafts Watson, of Milwaukee, and a lecture by “Smiling”: Pat O" Brien. : The endowment fund concert is to ve given by Cornelius Van Vliet, well known ;’ce!list, and) Madame Elsa Flora, dramatic: soprano, of Florence. Italy. Van Vliet hails from Holland, and since his arrivel in this country, a few years ago, has steadily clim>ed the musical ladder, until he stands at the top rung, among the musicians of the country. He had been given dis- tinguished patronage in foreign musi- cal fields, and his successes were re- peated, when he came to America. He was associated for three. or four sea- sons With, the Minneapolis. Symphony orchestra, and as soloist with that or- ganization has’ bocome. known to North Dakota audiences. Madame Flora.is successfully known on the so- RRA. Dudley Crafts Watson, director of” the ‘Art Institute of Milwaukee, is known as an artist end lecturer of ability, and his appearance at the Fed- eration promises to be. one vf the real treats of the program. He studied u Spain, Paris and London, and served as an instructor at the Chicago Art Institute, from which he graduated, before going abroad. RNY W. 8.8 PAT O’BRIEN TO TELL FEDERATION OF HIS ESCAPES Lieut. Pat UBrien’s thrilling es- capades have become known through- out the country, and he ts probably one of the most picturesque figures before the American public today. He will tell the North Dakota Federation of Women’s Cluds at Grand Forks of his escape. from a German. prison camp, his story being the one he told to King George of England, in a 55 minute interview, that is said to have held his Majesty spellbound. O’Brien was granted the longest interview that the king has given during the war. Ticket sale for seats, through mail- orders, has alréady opened. Leut. O’Erien is to speak at the Auditorium, which seats several hundred people, and these is the greatest enthusiasm felt in Grand Forks, over the appear- ance of the distinguished warrior. Mrs. Fred Conklin’ of Bismarck, chairman of the woman's committee, council of national defense, North Da- kota division. will tell of the work of that committee; Miss Minnie Jean Nielson will be present to speak on the Liberty Loan work among women in North Dakota; Miss ‘Newton of Far- go is td talk on food conservation: Judge N. C. Young, director of the Red Cross work in North Dakota and num-, erous others are to appear on the: three days’ program. UY Ww. 8.8 siting Sister. 1 ‘Mrs. Clyde Landis of Minneapolis! arrived. today for a visit with her sis-; ter, Mrs. E. H. Light, of the LaRue| apartments. Home Oer Sunday. Miss ‘Florence Keniston, teaching; in the public schools at Center, spent} Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George N. Keniston. on Avenue A. L Called to Detroit. ‘Karle A. Heywood of The Tribune! force has been called to Detroit, Mich., by the serious illness of his mother. He probably will return to the Capital) City when his mother’s condition has} | ' improved. Tis Grandfather Hibbs. |. Announcements have reached Bis- marck of the birth of a fine son Octo- ber 1 to Mr. and Mrs. Fred. Peterson of Milwaukee. Mrs. Peterson, nee Viola Hibbs, is a daughter of Dr. C. C. Hibbs of Bismarck. now in the national army. Joins Field Artillery. ke Bruce Covault, well known in Bis-i merck, associated with the general |’ offices of @¢he Underwood Typewriter Co. in Milwaukee, exnects an early assignment to. the field artillery, ofti-| cers’ training school at Camp Zach-i —————— Mr. Peterson is| : NURSE BECOMES BRIDE OF WELL-KNOWN HUFF RANCHER and is now the master of the Martin homestead ranch of 1,00 acres between Huff and Smith. He has ergaged ex- tensively in cattle-raising as well as general farming, and he has prosvered. Mrs. Martin has been one of the most'popular and efficient of the spe- cial nurses on the Bismarck hospital staff. She is a graduate of Mayo Bros.’ hospital training schoo] for nurses at Rochester, Minn., and of the City hospital of St. Paul. She has spent several years following her pro- fession in Minnesota, iowa and North Dakota. During her residence in Bis- marck she has made a large number of warm friends who extend congratu- lations to the lucky goom. ‘VIOLINIST WHO COMES TO BISMARCK FRIDAY TO DO WORK FOR CHILDREN A Hobby of Children. “Miss Menges has vrought pleasure to many hearts and many audiences, but ‘her’ children ‘are perhaps uncon- sciously her most appreciative audi- ences. Hundreds of wounded soldiers as well, Canadian boys suffering from the effects of their trench life and their battles against the Huns, Biglish lads who have borne that brunt of some tight corner in the great war, these also can testify to Miss Menges humaneness, for she played for them at the camps and hospitals in England. And Miss Menges is one of the world’s preatest artists. Is and always will be. The children simply adcre her—chil- dren evervwhere. The wounded boys worshipped her, and her memory still lives with some of the boys who are now recovered and in the thick of the fight again. ‘True, Miss Menges, the famous violinist, is an artist, but she is a woman. Optimistic. frank and natural. No sunerficial shell. no fads, no fancies. Merely a good-hearted, unselfish girl who has not let fame spail her. And then some people say that great artists are not human.” DARA RAR eee ary Taylor, writes Mrs. Covault, nee: Pauline Hibbs. Mrs. Covault may re-, turn to Bismarck for the winter. | Harry Lohman Here, Harry Lohman, popular Tribune typo expert, who was inducted for training in the vocational army class-| es at the university and lager dis- rged because of a slight physical} disability, was in the y over Satur-| day calling on his many friends. He} left yesterday for a visit in Dickinson. Since being discharged from the army | Mr. Lohman has done his bit by run-| ning a threshing machine engine and he looks mighty fit. - | From Washburn. | ¢, Johnson, the Washburn | in the city on a business | , August banker, mission. From Wishek. Rey. Joseph Gaston of Wishek, form- | erly stationed at Glen Ullin, is a Bis-| marck visitor. Current Events Club. The Current Events club. will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. W. C. Cashman, 412 Ninth street. Home From Hunt. .oepel,-proprietor of ic billiard rooms, is home H. &. Grand P: praho and concert stage. ,from a hunting trip to Napoleon. Finishes Threshing. 0. R.. Martin of Braddock was in the city last night en route home, report- ing that he has completed threshing | for the season. Returned From Wedding. "Miss Ethel Fleming of the public li- | brary commission staff has returned from Bowman, where she attended the | wedding of her brother. Trinity Ladies’ Aid. The Trinity Ladies’ Aid society will meet in the church parlors at 2 o'clock Wednesdlay afternoon. Mrs. A. P. Anderson will be hostess. Mrs. Wood: Is: Ill. Mrs. Millie Johnson Wood, stenog- rapher in the offices of Governor Frazier, is confined to her apart- ment by an attack of la grippe. Baptist Ladies to Meet. The ladies of the First Baptist church will hold their first aid society meeting at the home of Mrs. Morgan on Second street Thursday evening. Miss Anderson Here. Miss Hilma_ Anderson, formerly chief clerk in the offices of the state board of control, who resigned about a month ago and had been visiting her parents at Washburn, called on state house friends yesterday while en route to Washington to take up war work. McKenzie Folk Wed.. Mr. Anthony Doucet and Miss Pearl} Cotrin, well known young people of; McKenzie, were united in marriage at| St. George's parish house Monday} evening by Rev. George Buzzelle, the/ tector. Mr. and Mrs. Doucet will/ make their home at McKenzie, where they have a wide circle of friends. Ladies’ Aid Meeting. The Ladies’ Aid society of the Swed- ish Lutheran church will hold its regu- lar meeting in the church parlors Thursday afternoon, October 10, with Mrs. Hanson and Mrs. Eliason as host- esses. society are corliaddy invited to at- tend. , Returns to Bismarck. Dr. A. Schutt and family have re- turned to the city from Pasadena, Calif.. where they spent the past ten months enjoying the’ California cli- mate. Dr. Schutt has taken post grad- uate work during his absence from the city and he has decided to furnish a modern dental office in the Haggart § Ahoge sore—very deep—full of foal discharge. Agony all day; no rest at night. Then just a few drops of thegem- tle, cooling liquid, D. D.D. Irritation ‘and pain gone. Sweet, refreshing sleep at night. In due.time, complete hea ing. We guarantee 0..D. D. Sic, 6c and $1.00. . Ask for D. D. D. today. ‘Liquid Waeh 408, BRESLOW Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes | then just to keep in the pink of condition, the | Members and friends of the’ building at the corner of Third street and broadway. The family will occu- py their Rosser street .residence until spring, when’Dr. Schutt plans to build a new home. ” . 5 | Brother Is’ Wounded... | Mrs. George 'Little.of Fourth street today received.a message from the di- rector of records of the Canadian over- seas forces advising her that her brother, Emil Farby,-of a Canadian in- | fantry battalian, was admitted to the general hospital:at Dannes Camiers on September 29 suffering from a gunshot | wound in the gight thigh. “Emil Farby was born and reared in Minnesota and South Dakota, Though an American, he did not wait for America to get in- to the fight, but enlisted with a Can- adian contingent. at Vancouver, B. C., more than three years ago, ‘since which time he has seen a lot of severe fighting in which he went through without a scratch until his recent ,wound. A CLEAR COMPLEXION —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known, vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets.: You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poison- pus matter in one’s system. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull ayes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a Jistless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly for a time and noie the pleasing results. Thousands,of;women as well as men take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the suc- cessful substitute for calomel—now and RRAY FUNERAL HERE WEDNESDAY a ,The remains of Sergt. Joseph Mur- ray, Bismarck’s first Spanish flu vic- tim, who passed away at Camp Pike, Ark., will reach Bismarck at noon ECKMANS alcerb FOR COUGHS AND COLDS A handy Calclum .compound that mafe- guards against chronfe ‘lu id throat troubles." A__ tonic-restor: gwithout harmful or habit ‘ry them today. 50 cents a box, including war tax For sale by all Druvgiats Eckman Ludoratory, Philadelphia prepared ng drugs. Individuals and tumili cording it photographically. is done in this section of the cou are work dove now, want the pictures, 3: THE WAR DEPARTY BOYS PHO! cy 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. r/G It’ We want you to help us by coming and getting your Christmas Don't put it off TWILL ALLOW YOU TOS NE Wednesday and will be taken to the|by Rev. H. C, Postlethwaite. Inter- ebb undertaking rooms, where fun-| ment will be made in Fairview ceme- eral services will be conducted at 2:30] téry. AA a ES f Bismarck Auditorium, Friday, October 11 AT 8:15 P. M. d MATINEE SATURDAY AT 2:30 P. M, World. Renowned English Violinist ‘ ISOLDE MENGES ., ' Talented Australian Artist Eileen Beattie at the Piano Prices, $1.50, $1.00 and 50c. Seat sale now open | Children admitted for 25c to Matinee Saturday, October ' 12 at 2:30 P. M. | | i | THEY ARE MAKING HISTORY making history, but they are re- sup to us to see that the work untry, and we are doing our best. | until a week before the time you TOGRAPHS Holmboe Photograph Studio is Say AES, Cee oS Home Craft Week Why envy your neighbor’s home, when you can have one j ust as enviable? Home Is Dearer Than Ever Home grows closéi to the hearts of our people as the realization of those devastated homes over in Europe is being borne in upon us. We look with newly opened and grateful eyes on all that goes to make up that dear place called Home! And the thing that appeals most is the daintiness, The important step in cleanliness, freshness, that lulls the fancy to peaceful, happy wanderings and soothes the tired nerves and ach- ‘ing heads by their mere suggestion of quiet and beauty and comfort. attaining this charm of the Home is in the choice of the window curtains. There lies the misty, dainty, joyous charm—the white, filmy, graceful essence of Home! During Home Craft Week call at our drapery depart- ment and see our remarkable display of curtains and other window lace. Here are just a few items: Filet Richelieu- a Quaker Fil-e-Net with the characteristci duotone effect of handmade lace. The effect is gained by stressing the stems or scrolls or outlining the figures with heavier weaving than the rest of the design. Made in Sectional Craft Lace at 39¢ to $2.25. Amerex, a new Quaker Craft curtain fabric with a ground of ex- ceptional transparency and softness yet of excellent wearing qualities, in splendid Oriental‘or nature-note designs from $1.00 to $3.00. Lucas Company

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