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1 Wictions »without the: slightest hesita- THURSDAY, OCT. -28, 1920. - “~ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE CIVIC SUBJECTS ON PROGRAM FOR OPEN LUNCHEON) “Bismarck—My City” General Topic for Commercial Club Luncheon “Bismarck—my city,” will be the subject of discussion at an open for- um luncheon of the Bismarck Com- mercial club which is to be held Fri- day noon at the McKenzie, at which the Bismarck Rotary club will be in- troduced. | Subjects pertaining to community | interest will be discussed informally | at the meeting. A large number of members of the Commercial club are expected to be present to hear the discussions. ! rresideut Young, of the Commercial ; club, anticipates the attendance of «| large number of members of the Com- mercial club at the luncheon. The open forum monthly luncheon plan, |‘ started in the summer, has proved | very successful. VOTING SCHOOL | ATTRACTS MEN LEARNING BALLOT The Voting, School, which offers Bismarck men and women an oppor- tunity of gaining full information re- garding election laws and the ballots to be used November 2, is attracting a great number of Bismarck people. One of the advantages of the school is that the men and women who attend the talks will be able to walk into a voting iplace ahd vote his or her con- $03 ees MARRIED HERE. Andrew Irvine, of Telfer township, this county, and Miss‘Emma McDon- ald, daughter of William McDonald, of Missouri township, were united in matrimony Wednesday noon at the Presbyterian manse by the Rev. H. C. Postlethwaite. The groom is a suc- cessful farmer and has prepared @ home for his bride on one of his farme in:Telfer township. After the wed- dinig ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Irvine, with the accompanying witnesses, Mr. Sylvanus Irvine' and Miss Hilda Mc- Donald, brother and sister respective- ly. of the newlyweds, drove to the home of the bride’s father where wedding dinner was in waiting. tign or loss of time. The school is being conducted in the K. of C. hall on Fourth street. 4-YEAR-OLD GIRL DIES AT HOME Leola Gertrude, the four-year-old daughter of Mr. and'Mrs. L. P. Stiver, died at the home of her parents on Eighth street at 4:45 o’clock this morning after an illness of two weeks. Funeral services will be held on Sat- urday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Stiver have one other child, a girl a few years older than Leola. The death of the little girl brought a wave of sad- ness over the neighborhood, as she wi fl a * PARTY MONDAY EVENING. asia lend 'o all te Relehbore. The Daughters of Isabella have Did you ever'eat Jack O’ Lan- {Postponed the Hallowe'en _ party which was. to have been given Satur- day evening to the children of the south side at the Wachter school, be- cause of the Town Criers Frolic at the Auditorium. The party will be given Monday evening at the school terns and Candles? They will be served by Spirits at the Pres- bvterian Harvest Festival and Hallowe’en party, Friday even- ing, October 29. i tu MI II MMMM Special Sale of FINE GLOVES Friday and Saturday ~ POPULAR LONG WRIST GLOVES Made of Chamois Skin in the natural color. Very good looking, warm and serviceable. Fastening at the wrists with straps. Our regular price is $5.75 a pair. Two days special price, 2 - WINTER CAPE WRIST GLOVES Made of heavy, soft cape skin, very serviceable. The soft gauntlet comes well above the wrist and draws up around the wrist with straps and fasteners. They come in the pretty combinations of brown and_ beaver, also black and white. Regular prices are $7.50 and $8.50 a pair. Special for two days, | $5.00 ELBOW LENGTH KID GLOVES Imported French Kid Gloves in the popular lengths, reaching the elbows and just below the elbow. Known as 12 and 16 button lengths. Browns, tans, black and grey. Regular price $7.50 a pair. Special price, Friday and Saturday, . $5.00 COMBINATION CAPE GLOVES Heavy, soft and serviceable cape skin in the new and popular color combinations for Fall. Browns, beavers! and Mastic. Regular price $5.50 a pair. Friday and Saturday, only, $3.95 A. W. LUCAS CO. “The Store of Quality and Service” - FAMOUS CHOIR IS COMING :UUUAUUEGSEUOUAEARGAUUOAGAOURGAOUOGAOUANOOUOEOEUGOLUUH AA LE The famous Mountain Ash Maie chorus is co ming to Bismarck Saturday night, to sing at the Presbyterian church. Music lovers of the city,-w ho know of the reputation of the choir declare the concert’ will be one of the finest ever given in the city. instead and all South Side children are /invited. MRS. W. E. BROWN ENTERTAINED Mrs. W. E. Brown was hostess on Tuesday afternoon toa small party of friends at her home on Fifth street: Three tables of cards were in play. and the favor went to Mrs. C, B. Nu- pen for the highest score in bridge. Mrs. Brown us¢d_ chrysanthemums and roses in the decoration of her home with the Hallowe'en plan of dec- oration for the tables. HALLOWE'EN PARTY, The Epworth League ofthe’ Method- ist Episcopal-¢hurch will hold a Hal- lowe’en party at the church on Fri- day evening. All who attend are re- quested to aprons or overalls. No, adiiigsion; will be charged and all friends of the Epworth league are invited to attend. G. C. CLU The G. C. L. club met with Miss Edna Wachal, Person Court, last night. Members of the club spent the evening at sewing, and a musical program was rendered and refresh- ments were served. Nature Club Dinner The Friends of our Native wild life are arranging for a dinner to the members On election night, the menu of which will be entirely native prod- ucts. Mrs. Peter Ried is chairman of committee on arrangements. SMALL GIRL'’S PARTY Little Mary Hasse] will be hostess: tomorrow afternoon to 12 little girls for a hallowe’en frolic. The hpme wiJl be elaborately decorated, there will be games ant ‘favors and every thing nice. , LEGION AUXILIARY The first fall meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary of the American Legion will be held at 8 o’clock tonight in Elks hall. MINOT GUEST Mrs. G. A .Hassel has as a guest Mrs. Minnie Slocum of Minot, who motored over for the week end. CHURCH DINNER ,¥ Chicken dinner in basement of Stewartsdale church from 6 to 10 np, m,, Friday evening, Oct. 29. Ladies of the community will serve one of their famous chicken dinners. Come early and help swell the funds to repair the church. From 6 to 10 p. m. CITY NEWS. WM in Town Attorney J. H. Wishek, of Wishek, is a patient at St. Alexius Mrs. Van Allen IIL. Mrs. A. Van Allen of 411 Fifth street is ill at Bismarck hospital. © savas Sterling Baby. A baby boygarrived at Bismarck hos- pitalon Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. An- thony Gustafson of Sterling. 7 Le . Gone to Convention . G. L. Peterson of Person Court left last night on No. 4 for Minneapolis ing. The work, which began at 5 p.! m., was suspended during the serving of a supper for lodge members. Mrs. Doyle Here, Mrs. J. J: Doyle of Wishek, wife of former Representative Doyle of McIn- tosh county, is at a local hospital witi: | her small son Walter, who is recoy- ering from an attack of pneumonia. | Charles Scha of Golden Valley, and J. M. Meier, of Menoken, were visitors in the city today, trangact- ing business with Barton and Beck, general agents for the Provident In- surance company. There will be a special meeting of the Lady Macabees at K. P. Hall on Friday evening, October 29, at eight | o'clock sharp. Mrs. Anna Demars, state deputy from Fargo, and Mrs. Dow, district deputy from Mandan, will be here. All members and visit- ing members are requested to be pres- ent. CHICAGO CHIEF BEFORE JURY Chicago, Oct. 28—John J. Garrity, chief, of police, was called before the federal grand jury investigating the liquor ‘ring today to tell what he knows about alleged corruption of the police department. Garrity was sum- mgned yesterday following his refusal to surrender affidavits gathered in his ‘investigation of the charges. K. P.° Hall, Saturday night, Oct. 30. O’Con- nor’s Orchestra. VOTING SCHOOL The Anti-Townley Voting School for Men and Women is open every day this week in the K. of C. Hall over Rex Theatre. All people are requested to visit this school and inform them- selves the correct way to mark their ballot on election day. In- struction hours at 10:30 A. M., 12:30 P. M., 3:00 P. M., 7:30 P. M. and 9:00 P. M. “The Terror is Coming” — ee “DANDERINE” : Girls!’ Save Your Hair, Make It Abundant! ’ to attend a convention of paint and glass dealers. Duck Hunting. E. J. Schultz of 511 Second street, fnd Mrs. Schultz, have returned from & successful three-day hunting jaunt. A successful trip is reported. St. Alexius Historian. \ Miss Vera Were, a graduate nurse of St. Alexius, has recently been in- stalled in the office of the hospital ‘as histonian of all cases recorded in St. Alexius. Enter St. Alexius Patients entering St. Alexius on Wednesday were: Violet Welch, Ral- eigh; James Markham, 311 S. 13th St. Bismarck; Anna and Rose Koch, Gol- den Valley; Lenor Hilde, 411 Fifth street, Bismarck. Hallowe’en Party , The young people of McCabe Metho- dist church will hold their Hallowe’en festival in the basement room of the church Friday evening. A delightful time is anticipated. Food Sal The Ladies’ Aid society of the Swed- ish Luthern church will hold a food sale at the gas company office, Sat- urday, Oct. 30, at 2 o'clock p. m. Home baked bread, biscuits, cakes etc. will be offered for sale. Receive Lodge Degrees Mr. M.W. Roan and Henry Esmark received the Grand Cross and Knight Templar degrees at the meeting of | Tancred Commandery No. 1 last even- sino Sy \ Immediately ‘after a “Danderine” massage, your hair takes on new life, lustre and wondrous beauty, appear- ing twice as heavy and plentiful, be- ing twice as’ heavy and plentiful, be- cause each hair seems to fluff and thicken. Don’t let your hair stay lifeless, colorless, plain or scraggly. You, too, want! lots of long, strong, beautiful hair. A 35-cent bottle of delightful “Danderine” freshens your scalp, checks dandruff-and falling hair. This stimulating “beauty-tonic” gives: to thin, dull fading hair that youthful brightness and abundant thickness— All druggists! ANNOUNCEMENT Western Maid Beauty Parlor ALL NEWLY EQUIPPED and up-to-date, will be lo- cated upstairs in the Little building, corner Third and Broadway, as soon as build- CO oS clothes. The greatest pos: and overcoats. Copyright 1920 Hart Schafiner & Marx Values. Values Values $21.00 ~The Home of Hart Schaffner Will sell on easy terms at a bar- gain, if taken soon. If interested, | { TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY iF |e ——_——_———— | call at place or phone 616X. FOR RENT—Five room house. Party 10-28-1wk FOR SALE—Ford touring car. For particulars, phone 59 or call 216 4th Street. 10-28-1wk WANTED—Living apartment with that rents house must buy furniture. Reliable party must apply. House is at 508 2nd stfeet. Phone 722 or 165L. Mrs. J. B. Galvin. 3 fi sel 40:28 3t heat in private house, close to 5th FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod-| Street and Broadway. Tribune 150. ern house 921 5th St. 10-28-3t 10-28 It LOST — Small saddle blanket. Re- ward to Ckocolate Shop. 10-28-2t FOR SALE— By owner, one 8-room house, full basement, 3 clothes closets, east front, porch screened in. Barn, garage, hen house. This property ‘is located at 1014 11th St. Rummage Sale in Church par- lors, Presbyteria,n Church Thursday and Friday. Bargains in new goods as well as old. SALE “The Terror is Coming” The Presbyterian Aid will hold a sale of baked beans and home made white, brown and nut breads on Saturday} afternoon at Hoskins Store, Fourth Street. at the K. Splendid Music Lower-Priced ' Not CHEAPER fe yeerecey wants lower _pricéd clothes; but nobody wants cheaper We're giving the public what it wants; fine clothes, lower priced. Satisfaction or Your Money Back $40.00 | $50.00 | $60.00 $31.00 | $41.00 S. E. BERGESON & SON HVIINUUNUNURUNNAAAUAUCLUNRLA AULA TAR { HALLOWE'EN TICKETS, 75c . PAGE FIVE UT T= TTT # sible values in suits $70.00 i» Values 02 $51.00 & Marx = = = = = — = = = ws “The Terror is Coming” Nonpartisan Night at the , Bismargk Theatre Friday; Oct. 29 Between first and second shows ' Woman Speaker (Political Adv.) DANCE P. HALL MONDAY EVENING, NOV. Ist, 1920 é Given by B. A.:Y. No. 503 Good Time Assured Those important soft little wooléns— they need the most delicate laundering there is H? wool things, so silly small they look like make- believe, are very real to Mm—there must not be a single scratchy shirt,. nor one shrunken band in his whole wardrobe! 5 Every night they're gathered up and tossed into a big bowlful of the gentle Lux suds. Then just sousing,, and pressing of the rich suds through the very soiled spots. There's no matting and no shrinking because there's not a bit ‘of rubbing to hurt the fine wool fibres. Let Lux keep all his tiny wool things soft and swect. Your grocer, druggist or department store has Lux.— Lever Bros, Co., Cambridge, Mass. To keep his woolens soft No suds so wonderful for dainty baby things” and unshrunken Whisk two tablespoonfuls of Lux into thick lather in bow!- ful of hot water. Add cold water untillukewarm. Squeeze suds through. Do not rub or twist. Rinse in three lukewarm waters. Squeeze water out. Dry in moderate temperature; _ press with warm iron. Copyrighted 1920, by Lever Brov. Co. I ing is completed. i