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FRIDAY; JULY 15, 1921 Socialand | ___ Personal WACHAL-WEBB NUPTIALS TODAY, Miss Edna Wachal, daughte: vt | Mr. and Mrs. C. IM, Wachal, of Menoken, and Philip R. Webb, aon of | Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Webb, of Fourth | street were murried at St. Mary's: School Chapel at 6:30 this morning. | { | | | | \ ‘ne ring ceremony was used, Father | Slag officiating. ‘Miss [Margaret Wynknop was the | bridesmaid and Oliver Webb, brother | af the bridegroom, was the best man. | The bride was prettily attired in a dress of peach colored georgette | and wore a hat to match, She car- | ried a bouquet of pink carnations. Miss Margaret. Wynkoop, the brides- maid wore yellow organdy and car- ried a bouquet of white carnations. *|Mrs. Webb is one of Bismarck’s popular young ladies. ‘She attended | school in Florida but returned here | to graduate with the Bismarck High | Sehool class of 1918. Since her; graduation sne has made her fome | here, being employed at the Pro-,| vident Life Insurance Co. ‘Mr. Webb | is a graduate of St. Thomas College, | St. Paul and is now employed at the City National Bank. | Only the immediate families were | present at the wedding ceremony. | After the ceremony a wedding break- | fast was served at the P. B. Webb | home: 'They left this morning on a| trip. by car'to Yellowstone ‘National \ Park.» Mr, and Mrs. Webb_ will be | gone about three weeks after which | they will be at home to their: friends , at their upartment at Person Court. | SHOWER FOR MiSS MILDE. | Mrs. H. A, Herman of-522 Avenue F entertained. thirty young ladies at aj misceHaneous shower last night in} honor of Miss Bertha Milde, a bride of ; the last of this month. ‘fhe rooms {| were decorated in pink and whité and; in hearts and cupids, Gladiolas were! the floral decorations. The gifts were broyght in a clothes basket covered s ane ‘ with white and decorated with large Lake Vermillion, Minn., July 15— ‘pink bows. Lucile and Thelma Kaline|!magine yourself—in these hot days and Helen Herbert were the little|—clad in khaki trousers, woolen shirt, HER JOB IS TO GUARD THE GREAT OUTDOORS MRS. WILMA GILMAN, IN RANGER OUTFIT AND IN HER CANOE. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE salt and water alternately. Then | stir in the cherries. Turn into a) well buttered dish and steam 45 min- | | utes. Serve with sugar and cream. | | (Copyright 1921 by Newspaper Enter: | prise) * SLEEVES TO | BE LONGER | , i ' By Newspaper Enterprise, } New York, July 15.—-Redingote coats | | many of these ornamental garments in) | the places frequented by smart women | ; They are most often of dark silk, pref-| | erably taffeta and are lined with some. | ‘thing strikingly colorful. H | “Sometimes the lining and the gown! i worn under are of matching or har-! | monizing color. ' ! In the general trend of things, being| ' brought out for fall there is a decided} hint of the mode of 1914, when skirts! were quite wide, quite long and orna-! mented with ,many ruffles, Bodies; were tight then and the waistline was! slightly accented. | As for sleeves—the majority of arms ; which one sees this fall wilk be quite: ‘covered, Some importations are car-/ | rying sleeves which reach almost to} { i} i the kmees and make a dark secret of: |the fact that the wearer ha’ hands. ‘| This is'a noté borrowed trom the*ori- | ental, i pasese I. EGG LEMONADE, : i Beat two eggs with two tablespoons! of powdered sugar, add 1-4 cup of cold | water, 2 tablespoons of lemon juice. | | Add water and ice. i | REMOVING FAT. | If you would rem°ve fat from the! |soup which is intended for a delicate | j stomach place a wire sieve on ice to} chill it, then remove and pour the soup! | through it into a container, ' TO REMOVE GUM | | If you happen to get chewing gumi on material, freeze the gum with ice,| {then work the material under it and! , the gum will chip off. It may be pos-; ‘sible that the services of a brush will! 'be needed to remove the particles. If; | any of them remain dissolve it by: us-! ing chloroform. ROSE SHOP Attend the Suit and Hat Sale cided.to join him. She applied for a like position and landed it. | Her duties? i | meal are taken. girls who guided the presents to Miss Milde and they also were dressed m white and wore pink pows. After the! presents were all opened by the bride-| to-be a delicious lunch was serve: by | Mrs. Herman. and woodsman’s high boots—and tot- ing a pack loaded. with woolen blank- ets, food, a hand axe, a 45-caliber re- volver, and a high-powered rifle. That’s the life Mrs. Wilma Ander- son Gilman leads year in and year out All she has to do ‘is’ ccver, twice daily, a stretch of wooded country, 20 miles square. Her siation is on the forest reserve near here. | Observations are ‘made from the top of towers, 70 feet nich. She must climb thege by ladder, taking with her or by Rose Shop, Saturday, July ith. s Suits formerly priced at $65.00, will be sold for $25.00. Any trimmed summer hat at $5.00, former values to $27.50. “the preacher ‘both morning and everi- DEEP FRYING LESSON TODAY. |—during the coldest days of the win- ‘An interesting lesson was taught at/ter and the hottest days of the sum- the Domestic School this afternoon|™er. | ‘ when the subject of deep frying was|.5he is a ranger in the Minnesota taken up. Fish was fried in the/State Proves Se on mazola first, then doughnuts were| pedal et er eh deel z | It was a long jump Mrs. Gilman ae eee eet ctogaln rit ay, Zecently took—from her home life and if ‘ |writings, in Minneapolis, to the far This lesson demonstrates the saving | north woods of the Badger state. She qualities of mazola in being able to/naq graduated from conservatories in use it over and over again. Mazola|France and Belgium and is, an accom- heats to a very high temperature and! plished pianist. She has also written for that reason does mot carry the | many school text-books. taste of one food to another. In to But reason enough prompted the morrow’s lesson the same mazola’ will |change. 5 be used to make mayonnaise. | She says that the outdoors had a fe DESDE ENSLIOM strong appeal to her: “Women do not {get enough exercise anyway. The open air gives you that ruddy com- @d un their vacauon trip by auto this|plexion and builds up your ‘system. morning. They will go to Big Turtle)That’s what I wanted—and I’ve got Lake, Mekenock Island, Minnesota, |it.” ¥ and will be gone until about the first! Her husband, Captain Charles A. of: August. The pulpit of McCabe |Gilman, .a. former. army officer, suf- church will be supplied each Sunday |fered a nervous breakdown and joined during the absence of the pastor. Rev, 'the Forest: Service. Mrs. Gilman de- Leslie Bergum of Washburn will be ON VACATION. Rev. G. H. Quigley and family start- | , | left yesterday for Minneapolis and ing. next Sunday. | Chicago by car. RETURN TO MINNEAPOLIS. TO DETROIT LAKES Mrs. William Suckow accompanied) yirg w: H, Web é Avy ‘Mrs, W. H. Webb and son, Philip paca ee ee See aatine at ‘Webb left for Detroit Lakes where % {ll a t the Suckow home, left today for Fargo.! They prepd : shone vacation Mrs. Suckow wi! spend six weeks vis-| VISITING AT WING iting friencs in “argo, Grand Forks,; Mrs. A. W. Cook and Holmes and‘i-..:s..J.0, «i. D. She wili) Mary left for Wing, N.D. where they then spend the remainder of her vaca-) wil) visit relatives and friends. tion’ in Minneapolis. i Tae eae AT HOSPITAL HERE ON MOTOR TRIP. |. IMrs. Roy Stevens of Stanton is con- Qbert Olson, Lou's Carufel and H. L- fined to the Bismarck Hospital and Stegner left today on a motor trip to|is here for medical treatment. thé Western part of the state. They): will Visit several counties. Mr. Olson, | D on hig return, will stop in Dickinson| A marriage license was issued to for the meetng Monday and Tuesday! Miss Mary Keller of ‘Bismarck and of the Farmers’ Insurance Company | William T. ‘Larsyn of Grand Forks. directors, Mr. Olson being president of | tbe company. i MARRIAGE LI RETURNS FROM SCHOOL daughter, ; observatjon glasses and other appara- tus. + Cooks Meals on Camp Fire The end of a day may find her in the middle of a densé forest, where | bears still. run ‘wild, or out in the| open. So at ‘all times’ she carries food, blankets and firearms. Meals are all home cooked, over | trail campfires, and in all sorts of weather. Often there are lakes to! cross. Then Mrs. Gilman paddles her own birch canoe. At.times she car- ries it on her back across the port- ages. 4 The Gilmans took their infant; th daughter into the backwoods with} 4 them. The youngster ‘is carried, now|* and: then, from: one’ place to another, on an Indian dickanoggin. It’s made out of a board, padded with feathers and lined with buckskin. Indians showed Mrs. Gilman how. to’ make it. Mr. Giman’s station’ is close to that of his wife’s. Usually they wind up the day’s inspection tours together at the Lake Vermillion camp. |WAYS WITH | CHERRIES { | By Sister Mary ' “Cherry pudding. has more food value than cherry pie. In planning jfor the dessert this fact should be kept in mind, If the pudding is rich in: butter and egg, the first part of the | luncheon or. dinner should be very | light. A clear soup, ‘combination | ;vegetable’or fish salad and the pudd- | ing would make a desirable meal. Cherry Pudding 4. One quart cherries, 1 cup sugar, 1 inch stick cinnamon, 1-2 cup flour, 4 | eggs, 1-2 cup cream, 2 tablespoons milk, 1-2 lemon (grated) rind, 3-4 tea- | spoon salt. Stone cherries and put in top of | Couble boiler with cinnamon, 1-2 cup sugar and 2 tablespoons of water. ; | i i SATURDAY How you can save on butter, improve on lard and have more delicious food. The secret of modern cooking | IVY BERRIES | by scrubbing well with plegty.of soap, | hot water and a nail brush. A CURE FORIVY |. POISONING and jyou'll tind it very much like the fresh ‘article. yy Woods Hutchinson, M. D. Thousands of city dwellers who are eager to get out into ine woods and brushwcod hills, are held back by | the dread of ivy poisoning and its tov- | turing eruption. i ‘Now relief is held out for all its the leaves and gradually the dose until they become immune, of one of the crushed berries every day and. slowly increasing, within ten. days two or three berries can be tak- en without discomfort. Skin specialists are now using a one per cent solution of the tincture of rhus toxicodendrom, which is the dress-parade name for poison ivy. One drop after the first méal, two after the second and so on, drop by drop, until twenty drops after each, After which a mod- erate dose once a day or even nce a week, will maintain the immunity. | Modern science cannot claim the | credit of inventing this method of | protection, for it has been one of the | fables” of rustic medicine, that ivy | raison. could be cured in this way. But very few ever had the courage to try it. | ‘The other method of protection for | the lighter attacks is by washing | thoroughly in alcohol or in gasoline, the hands and all exposed surfaces | after coming back from the woods, oF FRECKLES — Now Js the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots, There’s no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as Othine—double strength—is guar- anteed to remove these home'y spots. ! Simply get an ounce of Othine—| double strength—from an druggist and | apply a little of it night and morn- jj: ing and you should soon see that even G the worst freckles have begun to dis- Hy appear, while the lighter ones have) It is seldom that! vanished entirely. more than an ounce is needed to com- pletely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength *Othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. Put the dry cocoanut in a colander $250,000. FIRE H (Madison, Wis. Jul |are having their session. One finds| victims, by simply eating very small! ed by defective elec quantities of the berries or even of! troyed the Sauk City Canning com- increasing | pany’ factory and two nearby fidences at Sauk City ‘Beginning with a very tiny portjon | Loss estimated at $250,000. Big Clearance Sale PAGE FIVE GIRLS! BLEACH UGLY FRECKLES Squeeze the juice of two lemons inté a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complexion whitener. Massage this sweetly fragrant lem- on lotion into the face, neck, armé and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes bleach out and how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin becomes. STEAM IT steam it for half an hour and IN WISCONSIN 15.—(Fire caus- ric wiring des- res- early. | today. a natu ‘uuu Millinery and Waists Every Summer Hat in the Shop must be sold in the next two weeks. Why wear your old hat when you can get a $20.00 Hat for $5.00, and $7.00 to $15.00 Hats for— $1.00 ” ° $5.00 Georgette and Crepe de Chine Waists worth from $9.00 to $13.50. $5 98 Clearance | é : 4 H | JUST RECEIVED New Feather Hats and Hats for Early Wear. You will always find season’s Hats at the right time, from leading Chicago and New York Houses, At Nielsen's. Nielsen’s Millinery and Waist Shop 420 Broadway Penne rt ‘tnunntnagoa MARRIED AT MINNE. Announcements have been received ! Ralph Hilmer has returned from: Cook over boiling water till cherries | Duluth where he went to attend a!are tender. Cool. Heat cream, ad@ naval training school. | flour mixed to a smwoth paste with | the milk. Let boil. Add sugar and; Spice Cake — Frosting, Spice will be given at the American Legion Hall over the,Rex Theatre—- E VERY day this week from 2 fo 4 p. m., lectures and-demonstrations —no charge—everything free. in. the city of the marriage of Charles | Niles, son of George H. Niles former- | ly of Bismarck to Miss Esther Wes- | i : ¢ ner of Minneapolis. The wedding : son of Moffit were visiting in tink place at the home of the bride on |. city yesterday. ‘July 6. ———_—_—. — TO VISIT DAUGHTER. AID) MET YESTERDAY :| Mrs. W. S. Rohrer left today for The fourth division of the Method-| Dickinson, where she will visit her ist Ladies Aid met at the home .of.| daughter. Mrs. George M. Register at 47 Thayer | street yesterday afternoon. A good | ; crowd -attended the meeting and! W. P. Lomas motored to New Sal- everyone had a god time. em today where he will transact — | business. ENTERTAINS' WEDNESDAY CLUB. | Mrs. W. F. Crewe entertained the) @——— members of thepWednesday. club at the| |, CITY NEWS | Country club on Wednesday afternoon ; g————____-__ lg Bridge was played and Mrs. P. C.| & Remington won the high honors. Aj} Baby Girl, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Broch of dainty lunch was served. 112 First street are the parents of 2 VISITING HERE Mr. and Mrs. L. 'L. Rockwood and the ON BUSINESS TRIP ON VACATION TRIP. | baby girl. Mrs. George Anderson of 700 Tenth/ ee street left today for Minot, Devils! Baby. Boy, Lake and Towner, where she will) Mr. and Mrs. John A. Scallon of spend her two weeks’ vacation. i Wing, are the parents of a baby boy, | born at the St. Alexius hospital. IN HOSPITAL HERE. Mrs. T. J. Atwood of Jamestown, | ig recovering from an operation she ROSE SHOP underwent at the Bismarck hospital.) Attend the Suit and Hat Sale Mrs, Atwood Is the mother of Mrs./at the Rose Shop, Saturday, July D. 8, Scothorn of this city. | 16th. | Suits formerly priced at ALS. Schwarz of Snohomish, Wash.,| pete x ill He sold for agony ‘i left’ this evening for Fargo. Mr. ny trimmed summer hat ai Schwarz has been visiting at the Wil-; $5.00, former values to $27.50. liam ‘Suckow home. | LEAVES FOR HOME. i ax ea LEMON BUTTER TO YELLOWSTONE PARK. Cream 1-4 cup of butter with 1-4 Mr. and Mrs. P. B, Webb, Mr. anditeaspoon of paprika, add 1 table- Mrs. P. R. Webb, and Oliver Webb leti spoon of lemon juice, drop by drop, this morning on a motor trip to Yel- | stirring constantly until all is blended. Jowstone National Park. SEEK Sak SR BRAIDED ON AUTO TRIP. { Burnt orange velvet baby ribbon zo Ete salt. Let cool while, beating the: yolks and whites of eggs. Add yolks of eggs beaten till thick and lemon j colored and the grated lemon rind. ! ‘Wold in whites of eggs beaten till stiff | and dry. Put a layer of cherries ‘in the bottom of a well buttered | | baking dish. Add a layer of the mix- ‘ture. Continue with: alternating lay- ;ers until all is used. ; Cover with aj ! buttered paper and bake in a mod- erate oven for about 40 minutes, ‘Serve warm with whipped cream or | cherry sauce. { Cherry: Sauce One cup stoned cherries, 1-2 cup | | butter, 1 cup powdered sugar, 1 egg | white. | Cream butter and slowly add sugar. / | Add white of egg beaten till stiff and dry and cherries. | Steamed Cherry Pudding | One egg, 1-2 cup sugar, 1-2 cup wa- | ter, 1-2 cup flour, 2° teaspoons bak- ing powder, 1-4 teaspoon salt, 1 1-2 cups stoned cherries. Beat egg well and add sugar. Add flour mixed with baking powder. and : Crust Chiffonade Salad Dressing, Vegetable Salad. ASK Your Grocer For kt & S ced BARKER BAKERY KODAK FINISHING Quality Work for the Amateur SLORBY STUDIO Successors to HOLMEOE STUDIO Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Murphy'and Mr. | woven or . braided _ is forming the and Mrs, F. J. Matscheck and children crowns of a number of velvet hais, Date Pie—Mazola Pie ican Cooking and Salad Oil. Mazola is much more economical than butter. calls for a: cup of butter you only use 2-3 to 3-4 of a cup of Mazola; so you save in this way, too. There is no more delicious salad oil anywhere than Mazola. It blends perfectly with all the other ingredients, and makes a smooth rich dressing, that wilt keep for weeks without separating. These experts are here for the purpose of demonstrating the best and most modern ways of cooking, baking and salad making. They will be glad to prove, right before your eyes, all that we have | been saying about Mazola. Any questions you may have to ask concerning your own cooking or salad problems, they will be only too glad to answer. Run in tomorrow and see these clever young women. You could not spend a half hour to better advantage. Women’s Clubs, Teachers’ Organizations and high school domestic science classes especially invited. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING COMPANY, ' 17 Battery Place, New York . : Mazola is 100‘ pure vegetable fat. Best for frying, shortening and Salad during the lecture. Dressing. Buy a can from not satisfactory. More than seven million women in America have solved the problem of economy in their cooking and salads. They have found that for frying and sauteing; for shortening bread, cakes or pie crust; for a sweet, whole- some salad oil, there is nothing so acceptable as Mazola—the Great Amer- Where the recipe Bring pad and pencil and take notes your Grocer. He refiinds cost if results are