The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1920, Page 3

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BISMARCK NATL.Y TRIBUNE PAGE THREE © TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, +1920 . - Ray ube Paes > | ADDITIONAL SOCIETY | oa a ee DAUGHTERS HOME* 4 The Robert Orr’s have as_ their house guests through the Federation meetings, their daughters, Miss Agnes V. Orr of Minneapolis and Mrs. Mer- ton Orr of Jamestown The latter has come on to take part in the pro- gram gof the Federation .of Music raed Clubs today. Miss Agnes will re- . main for a short rest before taking up her work again in Minnesota. 7 ITT iM MMMM l LUUUnOCUNONUUoDanasndndundatuayaQADUvengdeQOQGQQ4QAQUGUUUUNRENUODEEOEGUAUDGNGH nao PiUUEGOEGDUANGDEMLODADUSEROGDDAADOGEQGUAUOUUSUEL SE USTUON AES LT iM H A MESSAGE— ar ae aae . Of Vital i aaportaies to Every Man and Young Man Who Contemplates ‘Buying Clothing and Furnishings This Fall. Clothing Prices Drop=Wait! Wait! Details On This Page Tomorrow Inbeleboleideletebebetetellelet URS Ea “bbb {TTT ary aromas MIKKLESON MARRIED. Bismarck friends wil] be intereste in the marriage of N. E.” Mikkleson cashier at the First-Guaranty Bank, and Miss Grace V. Shaw of Albany, la. The event took place tast S: urday in St. Paul, Rev. Chas. Howe. 7 pastor of the First Christian church of that )lace, officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Mikkleson returned yesterday to Bismarck, and will make their home in the city. FEDERATION. GUESTS Delegates to the State Federation of Women’s club which opens here tonight with a meeting of the board of directors in the community room Ly at the library, were all met at the depot today by memebrs of the trai portation and hospitality committe Automobiles, numbered and decor ed with bows of the club’s colors, green and white, have been placed at the service of the delegates While they are here. They may stop any of Bye teuee ea they wish to, and TTT UCT NNN TM: Local’ merchants have decorated —— = their, windows most attractively in| ner was served, Mr. apd Mrs. Arnoll BURIAL SERVICES’ honor of the visitors, and every ef-| will pe pt home ater Nor. 1 in Bis-, OF TE A PA iD fort being mee to extend them a; marc! r. Arno! olds a position | | cordial welcome. / here with the Standard Oil company,; PE R Cc S RY | a : and Mrs. Arnold was graduated last | ARNOLD-NEWKIRK WEDDING spring from the St. Alexius nurses’! + The home of Mr..and Mrs. J. New- | school. kirk, New England, ‘was, the scene of a pretty wedding at high noon Sun- Bebe bbb sebbbi Se a _ . §, E. BERGESON & SON | _ The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes | l UUTAMATAAGNUARCAATUOCOCNUEEASECACNNCA TUN CAUH LAN uunvevncuerenarnvacaang nee tues neunnec anette Sell your eream and poultry | i K. Ps LODGE: see to our agent, or ship direct to | Attention Knights Pythias. !There will be a stated conven- Northern. Produee’ Co., ~ Bis- ‘tion at the Castle Hall Wednes- i marck, Write us for prices on | day ovening, Oct. 6, at 8 o'clock. ‘| cream and poultry.—Northern ‘Important business. All Knights * Produce Co, . | requested. to be present. in MT Pall bearers were: S. E. ‘Bergeson, Munson. Mid beaiitifnl fioral tributes and in| 9: Seveytson, Theodore Kotfet, Gil- the presence of 2 large assembly of bert Haugen, S. A. Olsness: and An- I Is. IMPRESSIVE, grieving friends, the beautiful service | drew Reisen. “ i eereeclt : ; or the church was read. Mr. Henry |. A, brother of ithe deccas mpressive bur’ services for the!" "-acs-> and Mige. Sailae: rendered j late ‘respected citizen, Peter Caspary solos: that wére beautiful in thought 4 tine for, the Pyrial wale} wae; STYLE SHOW PLANNED were held this afternoon at Trinity, cay voSiwu i | Faizview Cemetery. | Lutheran church, ‘Reverend Andrew_| day, when their daughter, Myra, be- came the’ bride of Harold Clifton Arnold, son of Mrs.~Margaret- Arnold of this city. Rev. T. McCoy perform- ed the ceremony in:the presenée of relatives and a few-friends. The. bride wore a gown of whité crepe de chine made over’ dinsdiite: iG toute acess] and carried jf ae¥e boliqet oF OMNES) lia roses, while Miss Julia” Weber, her maid of honor, wore a frock’ of cream colored silk. Mr. Arnold was attended by George Lang of Bismarck. Large bunches of purple and -white asters, and white carnations with simlax formed attractive decorations. A feature of the meeting of the State Federation of Women’s ciubs to -be-field on Friday afternoon will be the educational fashion show conduct-| ed by Miss Myrtle Cole, state clothing specialist from the Fargo Agricultural college. She will be assisted by Miss sis Stark, home demonstration gent: The show will commence at ‘4 o'clock and every rural and city wo- man is urged to attend. The garments wore will present the lines of dress suitable for the differ- rent types of women wearing them. They will demonstrate harmony of color and design, and above all sim- The following | Following the service, the bridal din- | Plicity, yet cleverness. will appear in the show: Women’s | 1 - |garments, Mrs. Robert Orr, Mrs. Ed . MANY BANK JOBS {| NOT ENOUGH HELP Bannon, Miss Runey and Miss Carrie Haugen, business women, Mrs. Dill Register, Misses Eleanore Gustavison, Glen Bruce, Margaret Jones, Annic Atkinson, Eva LeDosqeut, Lora Lof- za | “‘Northern bankersarehiringour | tus, Irene Eastman, and Vivian Irish. students before the ink’s dry on their * | T' Be Meh shoal girls willbe Tepre- HI ” sented by: Mary nson, Alta Jones, | Eplomes, fa. Bas L. Watkins, Carol Hagen, and Rusella Harris: [oo Ss res., Dakota. Business College, | Children’s garments will be wore by: dL Fargo, N. D. “Recently the First -| Colin Anderson, Mary Nuessle, Mary Cowan, Dan Cook, Betty Halliday, Ho- bart Swan, Edith Ramstad, Etfie Ro- needed help urgently ‘We sent sen, James Anderson, and Abigail Miss M. Ufer before! her course | Roan, was quite complete. The First pavers National Bank of Wilton started our S TEN YEARS YOUNGER) Mr.’ L. E.-Massey with $110.’" aah nen mane pasted from ‘. lame back, headache, sti! joints, sore | pasta Bene cada states muscles, rheumatic pains or any other symptoms of kidney or bladder trouble { 1000 pupils needed to fill’ next National Bank, Tuttle, N. D., ‘The’ Gillette Safety Razor who were on the lookout Company—largest of its for better things—men will be interested in this letter from , 1 . H. Bryde, 925 Garden St., Hoboken, N. e . t i vai” Teeueiyis ptcwaees hget aos ta Oe a : kind in the world—was | who were not content with all the habits their Pres,, 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D, | many a time put on or off my shoes. 5 I obtained relief with Foley Kidney Pills. I feel now as if I were ten years | younger.” + (Advt.) founded upon an idea. An ota aoe. bw idea so fundamenta? that it |panseth Saniterium, ven by ‘has changed the persona! i ‘Lode ‘Ne, 300, at K.P. Hal, habits of a generation ot | These men tried out the Gil- [xi dee | ner: erica “Jette—found in it what Raa {t was the idea of a personal ee ibe t ead shaving service—of puttin ey 10 S 4 theservice they hadalways into a man’s own hands a | razor and had, razor that would shavehim | expected ofa a beret never received. "0" better and sek ee They talked about their discovery." more satisfactorily than They passed on the idea to their’ he had ever shaved before. neighbors. They gave it their outspoken approval. , s 6 6 Today, twenty million men of all classes, in every country on earth, are actively standing behind the Gillette —coming out publicty'‘in favor of it—making it an issue in their personal affairs. \ ‘ They are men of conviction, of ideas : . —who believe in the Gillette for way into the hands of rhen what it does'and what it has done : 2 for other men—and who refuse to No Stropping- No Honing / shave or be shaved with any other ' i kind of razor. $ $ 3 Outspoken approval on the part of users is the greatest power in business today. The téason, perhaps, why more than “a quarter of a million merchants. inthis country prefer to beknown fathers and grandfathers had passed down to them. WHEN YOU ASK FOR y s BUTTER om * NORTAERN ¢ és Out in the lumber camps of ‘Michigan, down in the cot- ton fields of the South, in the heart of the big city, | in the country village—the first Gillettes found their BILLY CHILLY, full of boasting, Went with Lackawanna Twins a-coasting; Were they worriedP—Did they care? Not with Lackawannauxar. CHILLS that chase each other up and down the spines of common-clad youngsters flit out: of the lives of Boys Girls and Infants who are wisely fitte out with Lackawanna Twins Underwear. The warmth of Lackawanna is born out of excellent yarns capably knitted intoa fab- ric of smooth and cosy comfort. It is a pre-shrunk fabric which launders per-} fectly; a sterilized fabric which is infi- nitely clean and sanitary. The exceptional fit and extreme endur- ance of Lackawanna Twins Underwear are traditional with the makers and taken for granted by innumerable women who ‘know. the-difference.”” Boston Underwear for Boys and Girks - femePER TH TO rere ' j vatfcidt as “Gillette Dealers” rather than Most shops carry Lackawanna Twins Underwear in, various styles brsegrvol Pastore iNew Yok Vanden Medrid becomes wide : Cutcwtte ; Me oy any Ps ther title, and i in qualities ie suit every requirement of service and price. Sea F pons Copenbagea Buenos Aires Siagepore Port Elizabeth 2 « \

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