The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 13, 1922, Page 5

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—-s=@ a a) - of the Rotary club, Ensign Homer of MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, ’22 Social and Personal Community Council Make Many Plans | at Special Meeting} A special meeting of the Women’s Community Council was held at the Rest Room of the Masonic Temple on! Saturday afternoon. The meeting! was called for the purpose of form-! ing some sort of association as a clearing house for charity so that there will be no duplication. About 20 members of the council were present and representatives of the Rotary club, Town Criers Club, Commercial Club and Salvation Army were there. Mrs. Bannon, president of the council, presided at the meet- ing. There was much enthusiasm in the} discussion, special stress being given} to the discussion of a central regis- tration bureau. The Council ask the cooperation of all Bismarck citizens and the cooperation of the social | for several days. worker, Miss Lawrence, who begins| her week in Bismarck and Burleigh county this week. A committee was chosen to draft a plan for taking care of the charity work in the city. This committee is asked to have this plan completed and ready to report at the next regu- lar council meeting. The commit- tee is composed of Dr. Towne of the Town Criers club, George N. Keniston of the Commercial club, Burt Finney the Salvation army and Mesdames Smyth, Postlethwaite, Weleh, Keller and Bannon of the:Community Coun- cil. Mrs. Robert Orr reported that a recreational room.for young ladies can be arranged in a room in the Will school building. The president of the school board, George Will, was heart- ily in favor-of the plan. The boys are provided for at the high school and if a room is given at the Will school the young ladies of the city will also have a recreational room. Superintendent of Schools J. M. Mar- tin also heartily approved of the plan. GIVE FAREWELL PARTY. A farewell party was tendered Sat- urday afternoon to Miss Hazel Fark- asch and Miss Ethel Fleming by em- ployes of the Workmen’s Compensa- tjon Bureau. Miss Fleming is leav- ing’ the Bureau to accept a position with the Fargo Forum, and Miss Farkasch is going to Madison, Wis- consin. ‘Members of the Compensa- tion, their wives and employes ar- ranged the farewell entertainment. Valentine favors announced the pur- pose of the gathering. Luncheon was served. GIVE BIRTHDAY PARTY. Evelyn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Freeburg, celebrated her twelfth birthday Saturday afternoon when she entertained twelve of her little girl friends at her home. A pleasant aft- enoon was spent: playing games after which lvely birthday refreshments were served at a table decorated in a color scheme of pink and white. A birthday cake formed the center Piece. GIVE BIRTHDAY PARTY. A pleasant surprise was given J. W. Sandy of 606 Eighth. by a number of his friends. on Saturday evening. The affair was in honor of his birth- day. Music and cards were the di- version of the evening followed by a bounteous supper. Mr. Sandy was wished many happy returns of the day. LEAVES CITY. Miss Ethel Fleming will leave to- night for Fargo, where she will take a position in the editorial rooms of the Fargo Forum as librarian. Miss Fleming, who has a host of friends in the city, has been honored at several affairs given prior to her departure. RETURNS FROM TRIP. Miss Mary Buchholz of the Buch- holz Millinery, has returned from an extended visit to LaCrossé, Wis., Chicago, IIl., and the Twin Cities. 1 Buchholz visited her mother in Wis- consin and did her spring buying while in Chicago. BRANCH. TRAINS ARE CLOSED. The McCluskey and Linton branch trains which have been closed for the past three days are still closed but crews are working on both lines and it is expected that trains will be able to resume schedules again soon. ENTERTAINS GIRLS OF DANCE. Miss Vivian Murphy entertained the members of the “Jackies” dance of “Katcha Koo” at her home Saturday night following the show. Dainty re- freshments were served. TO VISIT SISTER. ’ Mrs. A. W. Mellon, of the city, left | Saturday for Adams, Wisconsin, where she will be a guest at the home of her sister. CLUB TO MEET. The Mothers Social club will meet with Mrs. J. H. Kling at her home to- morrow afternoon instead of with Mrs, Raymond Bergeson as is given on the program. RETURN TO HOME. Mr. and Mrs. Guy McClain of Max, returned to their home yesterday. Mrs. McClain has heen confined to a local hospital for some time. HERE FROM JAMESTOWN. Gus Leiber of Jamestown was in the city to attend the banquet in honor of Judge Miller at the McKenzie hotel | on Saturday night. RETURNS TO HOME. Mrs. Chris Nelson returned to her home at Washburn this morning after | a weeks’ visit here, the guest of her | daughter, Miss Esther Nelson. | \ | BOWDON BUSINESS VISITOR. J. H. Seibel of Bowdon, N. D., is in the city attending to business matters. TO VISIT PARENTS. jthe banquet in honor of Judge Mil-| s| citing, was the election of new offi- | played under the direction of Lewis this morning for her home at Wash- burn, where she will visit at the home| of her parents. HERE TO ATTEND BANQUET. Attorney H. A. Mackoff of Dickin- son was in the city, Saturday to attend! ler, DIVISION TO MEET. The first division of St. Mary’s sew-| ing circle will meet Thursday, the 16th at’ the school auditorium. LEAVES FOR JAMESTOWN. Stanley Vervinski, of the city, left yesterday for Jamestown, N. D., on a several weeks’ business trip. VISITING FRIENDS HERE. | Mrs. F. C. Casey of Watagua, S. D.,) was visiting friends and shopping in Bismarck on Saturday, VISITING BROTHER HERE. Roy Mock of Jamestown N. D., is visiting his broher in the city for severaé days. VISITING IN CITY. Mrs. William Alverson of Werner, N. D., is visiting friends in the city \ SHOPPING IN CITY. Miss F. Howard of Beach, N. D., was shopping and visiting in the city Saturday. oe! LEAVES FOR MINNESOTA. C. E! Love, of the city, left yester- | day for Rochester, Minn., on a visit. GUESTS FROM MINNEAPOLIS. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Harris of Min- neapolis, visited in the city over Sun- day. LEAVES FOR MINNEAPOLIS. Mrs. F. E. Shepard left yesterday for Minneapolis, Minn., where she will visit. TUTTLE VISITOR HERE. Mrs. John J. Peterson of Tuttle, N. D., is visiting in the city for several days. LEAVES ON BUSINESS. C. B. Little has left for the Twin Cities on a several days business visit. : 1s ILL AT HOME. Mrs. 0. W. Roberts is ill and is confined to her home for several days. HERE ON BUSINESS. George M. Slomey of Beulah, N. D.. is in the city on a business visit. IS CONFINED TO HOME. Mrs. Alta Keller is ill and is <on- fined to her home for several days. Attend the Big Valentine Party in St. Mary’s Auditorium and Gymnasium on Feb. 14. Given by the Foresters. 5 piece orchestra. : Cae Ac i | Bismarck Boys o— z The games for Tuesday night at the Richholt school gymnasium in the F. A. Knowles Shield competition will be: Richholt vs. St. Mary’s. “wm. Moore vs. Indian 3rd. The Indian School girls will play the Richholt girls The first same will commence promptly at eight o'clock. Knights of Pythias regular meeting in K. P. hall Wednesday, Feb. ‘15, 8 o’clock. = ~ Scout Notes i + ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL TROOP NO. 3. Scoutmasters—Rev. T. Dewhurst and Mr. Gordon V. Cox. Assistani—Rex Berndt. This troop hal its annual meeting lest Monday evening in the Parish House. The special feature of the meeting, which proved healthily ex- cers, which resulted as follows: Hon. Scribe—Lewis Grambs. Hon, Treasurer—Dick Dewhurst. Patrol Leaders—Jessie Scroggins, ; for Beaver patrol; Lee Hughes, for; the Wild Cats patrol; Dick Dewhurst, | (ee i) | CITY NEWS | Show Nets $215, The production, “Katcha-Koo,” net- ted $215 to the Business and Profes- sional Women’s club, it was an- nounced today. The show, deing an elaborated production, was expensive to produce. and the club feels that it made an exce!l2nt showing in having this amount. as its half of the pro- ceeds after all expenses were paid. Edna Jane Gail, who directed the show, left today for Grand Forks, where she will produce “Katcha-Koo.” K. of P. Memorial Service St..Elmo logge, Knights of Pythias, at its regular meeting Wednesday night, -will hold a memorial for the late Fred Wheaton, of Minneapolis, who was supreme keeper of records and seals of the order. Mr. Wheaton was a prominent figure among fra- ternal men of the country. Father Passes Away Word has been received by Bis- marck friends of Lewis P. Warren that his father had passed away of heart trouble at Westbrook, Maine. Mr, Warren had been in the east for several weeks and was with his father at the end. Install Fixtures Fixtures for the Harris-Robertson Ladie’s-Ready-to-Wear store are being installed, and the opening date will be announced in a few days. The storee will be located in the building formerly occupied by Johnson Bnos. OLD FAVORITE IS RETURNING TO AUDITORIUM Based on. the idealistic principle that human’ hearts are alike, whether they beat under skins of brown or white, Richard Walton Tully’s famous Hawaiian romance, “The Bird of Par- adise” is due back at the auditorium Feb. 24, Although the production has been here before, interest in its return is Keen, according to the management of the auditorium. For this tour of the piece Mr. Tul- ly has assembled an entire cast which is said to be the strongest yet pro- vided for “The Bird of Paradise.” Ann Reader is the Luana, Herbert Charles is the Wilson, Frederick For- rester enacts the role of the beach- comber and Ellen Mahar is the new Diana. Rex Ingram has actually sur- passed “The Four Horsemen” in producing “The Conquering Power.”—Evening Mail. See it tonight at the Capitol Theatre. I” With the Movies {| & a he ETHEL CLAYTON AT THE ELTINGE Many patrons at the Elintge the past week have expressed pleasure at the coming of Ethel Clayton in “Wealth.” While she has never been hailed as a star supreme, Ethel Clay- ‘ton has made friends galore through “| @ personality which enables her to jconvey an appeal of great sincerity to her audience. “Wealth” is really a delightful picture dealing with the ‘trials of a young artist who marries a rich young man who has been rear- ed in the belief that money means everything, but who later learns that love and work, not money, is the key to happiness in this Ife. Herbert Rawlinson is seen as the wealthy young idler. Others in the cast are George Periolat, Claire Mac- Dowell and Jean Acker. The late Wm. D. Taylor, whose unfortunate death took from the picture world one of the really great directors directed this picture. Mr. Taylor wasa mining en- gineer, actor, a farmer in Kansas and a captain of English troops in the late war. His varied experience made him an ideal man for a picture director as his productions give evidence of his broad conception of human emo- SSS rs. C. EARL JO DELL Dancing Instructors at BAKER HALL Open 12 noon to 10 p. m. Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Open 12 noon to 8 p, m. Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. for the Owl patrol. | The annual social in commemora-j tion of the organization of the Episco- | pal Troop will be held tonight. It! will take the form of a box social open | to those who receive special invitation. | Each young lady is requested to bring | a box or basket of eatables, etc.! These will be auctioned to the boys! who will take both the box and its} fair owner. A farcial dramatic sketch will be; Grambs, who is the author of the score. This will be brim full of real fun. The proceeds will be given to! the Episcopal Scout’ funds. Rex Ingram has actually sur- passed “The Four Horsemen” in producing “The Conquering Power.”—Evening Mail. See it tonight at the Capitol Theatre. === . LEARN —the— BARBER TRADE To the untrained man and those disgusted with hard, | unsteady work, with anal bay, we invite correspondence relative e possibilities o the Barber Trade. Our en- larged location with complete, Up-to-date equipment, latest methods of instruction. tent instructors, S2N- NNN SSS staff of com; offers you tl to become NEN employment department. | Reneonable tuition. Write for | Free illustrated catalog today. | a lie Miss Mildred Herred of the city. left TELL HER.WITH FLOWERS ‘ , f St. Valentine’s Day is the one time of the year when flowers carry their most ex- pressive message. Make this year’s Valentine a Valentine of flowers. We have many special ideas in floral Valen- | tines that will please her im- mensely. If she is far away we can arrange to deliver the flowers to her by Wire. OSCAR H. WILL & CO. Greenhouse Phone 784W. 324 4th St. fentino, whose Latin temperament and THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE FIVE tions. “Wealth” shows at the EI-| tinge tonight and tomorrow. Funny; Lloyd Hamilton furnishes comedy in! a two-reel laugh producer, entitled | “The Advisor.” —— | NEW INGRAM PLAY i ON BALZAC THEME; Conquering Power” is an-' “The !nounced by the Capitol Theater for! two days, beginning tonight.’ It is a! Rex Ingram production for Metro and in it Mr. Ingram has had the assist-/ ance of all the principals who aided} him in making “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” the superb pro-| duction that it was. At its New York! premiere, “The Conquering Power”! was acelaimed with unstinted enthus- iasm; some reviewers asserting that it even surpassed “The Four Horse- men,” It is an adaptation by June Mathis of Balzac’s novel, “Eugenie Grandet.” The scene is laid in a provincial city of France, where the miserly old Grandet hoards his gold and lives in poverty with his daughter, Eugenie, A nephew, Charles, a young boulevard- ier from Paris, son of a bankrupt sui- cide, is thrown upon the miser’s charity—and is accordingly. thrown out, shipping to Martinique with little money, but with the treasured mem- ory of Eugenie’s love. This is, the beginning of Balzac’s tremendous story of love and greed. In the. screen version Alice Terry, the exquisitely beautiful Marguerite of “The Four Horsemen,” has scored a sensational triumph through her portrayal. of Eugenie. Rudolph Val- graceful fascination fitted him pre- eminently .for the role of Julio in “The Four Horsemen,” is cast as the Parisian dandy, Charles. Ralph Lew- is, one of the most effective of char- acter actors, plays old Grandet. Oth- ers in the cast are Edward Connelly, Edna Dumary, George Atkinson, Wil- lard Lee Hall, Mary Hearn, Bridgetta Clark, Mark Fenton, Eugene Pouyet and Ward Wing. The photography is by John F, Seitz and the technical directors are Ralph Barton and Amos Myers, AT AUDITORIUM. The Vancouver Daily World has this to.say of the famous mystifying act \at the PIMPLY? WELL, DON TB People Notice It. Drive Them Off with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the _ Successful substitute for calomel; there’s no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and just as effec- tively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. No one who takes Olive Tablets is ever cursed with a “dark brown taste,” a bad breath, a dull, listless, “‘no good’? feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or. pimply face. live: Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color: _ Dr. Edwards spent years among pa- tients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints and Olive Tablets are the immense effective result. Take one or two nightly fag a week.@See how much better you fe@ta@md look, 15c and 30c. On account of having to devote all my time to the sign business, I a) compelled to announce that “The H leys” will be unable to accept any more dance engagements, beyond those already eontracted for. My complete outfit of drums and §} traps, Deagan xylophone, Deagan or- chestra “bells, elarinets, and about 500 dance and concert numbers for or- 9! ee will be for sale after February Sth During the past ten years we have derived much pleasure from our or- chestra work in Bismarck and the §) neighboring towns, and it is with con- fi siderable regret that we feel obliged to be shown at the auditorium with Loew's vaudeville Wednesday night. Vancouver people are with some reason, talking about what happens Pantages theater this week when a box containing a pretty young lady is sawn in half. The illusion or- iginated by P. T. Selbit and first pre- sented at the Maskeleyne theater in London, is probably the best and most thrilling ever brought to Vancouver. Although there is the traditional catch somewhere so openly is the thing done and so thoroughly that to the lay mind there is no explanation at all. Excited comment follows every exhi- bition. The girl is tied tightly and placed in the box which is small enough to prevent any but the small- est movement. Plates of glass and sheets of steel are pushed through and through the box and then the two henchmen of Mr. Sidney Hamilon, who brought the act from London, take a crosscut saw and saw through the box The two severed ends are pulled apart and the girl is found tied as before Dance at Baker’s Hall every Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- day nights. Best music and floor in state. 10c a dance. Rex Ingram has actually sur- passed “The Four Horsemen” iv producing “The Conquering Power.”—Evening Mail. See it tonight at the Capitol Theatre. Regular meeting Bismarck Chapter Royal Arch Masons to- morrow evening at 7:30 p. m. ‘Dance at Baker’s Hall every Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- day nights. Best music and floor in state. 10c a dance. 1922 SPRING. 1922 HART SCHAFFNER & MARK. Spring Suits are already here. Men’s styles have changed slightly; young men’s a great deal. New Sports Suits in Browns, Greys, Blues, Plaids. Newest ideas—rich soft worsteds, greatest values in years. $35 to $45 Others from $20 to 35 : Money cheerfully refunded. S. E. Bergeson & Son Tailoring. Dry Cleaning. Ty To Serve You In the everyday use of your telephone you per- haps give little thought to the number of people or the amount of machinery which is necessary to provide you with telephone service. : Engineers determine where the plant is to be built, how constructed and expanded. Other employees do the construction work and keep the property in repair. Operators handle the calls, and bookkeepers keep the accounts, And behind all, efficient management is necessary to finance the. business and see that every- thing runs smoothly. We wish you could meet each one of the thousands of intelligent, well trained and loyal men and women who make our system run so smoothly and effectively. North Dakoth Independent Telephone Company to terminate it. F. H. HURLEY. TT ’ LECCTOOTETELEOTEMTELETOELOTTUTN AT TTT TTT TTT ing, heat-making ready-to-serve. SI AA UCOLTTOTTCNONOMOT ATT OTLEY UT TH TTT food for youngsters and grown-ups. Heat the Biscuits in the oven to restore their crispness; pgur hot milk over them, adding a little cream and a little salt. Better for childfen than mushy porridges—ready-cooked and PECTOUODATOOOOATOTT AAA OOO TAT aT DENTTSUOOUNTOOPTOPTOOTTOTSOOTTOT ETON TOTOOONEO OOOO OCOD TREO ATAU ATT If Here’s a Real Health-Breakfast | The best laid plans for the day’s work end in failure if the breakfast is heavy and indigestible. The morning meal is the foundation for a day of joyous work or a day of fretful worry. Keep the:mind clear and buoyant and the body full of vim and pep by eating for breakfast _ - Shredded Wheat With HOT Milk It brings the ruddy glow of health in Winter and fortifies , . you against the cold-germs that always get busy in a‘poorly 3 nourished body. The man who “catches cold” is the man ¢ who doesn’t know how to eat. Shredded Wheat is rich in tissue-build- elements—the ideal COUR EUCETOTETVNC TELA ET ATTTEVTTT TOM TT fo : ANY, oy ee sg Er TTT POOUOOOODIYLADLLLL1)) 120000, 218i atte ake

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