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4 tion at Devils Lake. Elect Delegates To Convention At the meeting of the Business and lara M. Spitzer i Takes Nuptial Vows In Mandan Home Professional Women’s club last even- | Under an improvised arch of|ing, Miss Mary Anderson was elected ridal wreath tied with orchid| delegate to the national convention : of the Business and Professional Wo- Mie and before a floral altar of} ras. clubs to be held. at Portland, | ‘chid colored blossoms Miss Clara! Oregon, July 9-14. Miss Hazel Pearce | \ay Spitzer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | was elected as alternate. As the close | ‘barles Spitzer of Deer Park, ) of the business session the club mem- ! Wash., formerly of Bismarck, be-|pbers thd the pleasure of being en- me the bride of Arthur Sakarias-| tertained by one of our local art if Suan of Mr. and Mrs. Chris} Ciel! G. Gannon, who talked on the | Akarjassen of Mandan yesterday|«appreciation of Art,” illustrating | vening at 6 o’clock at the hothe of} nj, topics by his own drawings and | 41. and Mrs. Sakariassen of Man- pictures. Mr. Gannon’s poem on : unede tela Mle neonittiwen eaeree North Dakota was received with grea ‘in the presence of a few ‘intimate Peete Geter 'riends and relatives. The bridal) )0"e 0Y NT. 4 ;ouple were attended by Mr. and| 'Ustrate his poem, yoivs. George Beaumont of James- Siown, \ ‘The bride appeared very charm- ine in a dotted/Swiss dress of or-| yrid with white organdy inla a corsage bouquet of sw The matron of honor wore a colored frock of Sw Sakariassen who h 4 ay Closing Exercises Well Attended: The closing night exercises of the | B smarck Indian school were present- | ed t evening before a large audi- | ence, including many visitors from le of friends here received her} ! Bis and vicinity. ! ucation in the Bismarck schools,; ‘The program was an unusually fine end for the past eight years has|one throughout and showed the heen a saleslady at Webb Bros.) .lendid training which the children Department store, being in the | Were receiving under the direction of Supt. C. B, Dickinson. | While all the numbers were de: lightful several deserve special men tion. Margaret White Eagle recited “The Way to' Speak a Piece” in such | an amusing manner as to arouse many laughs from her audience, anc n Little Soldier and Emma Zahn | “Go to Sleep My Honey” in a| pleasing manner. Returns With Indian Children Rev. Geo. B, Newcomb, Superin- tendent of the Humane and Society | for the Friendless returned 1 ty night from Minot bringing with him five quarter breed children. He left | Pierre, S. D., today where the | roudy-to-wear department for the past seven years. Mr. Sakariassen iy ua graduate of the Mandan high skool and is employed at ‘present on the Northern Pacific railway. During the war he Served with the} ola Engineers and was wounded While on the battlefield in France. |™ After the marriage ceremony aj Lillia charmingly appointed wedding din- | S8°g ner d at the Sakariassen ; Vers Lome at 7 o'clock, covets being laid | toy fourteen cards guests. ‘The - place were ornamented with the t bridal figure and table utions were carried out in les of orchid and white. Two large cakes, the white bride’s cake end the rk bridegroom’s cake which occupied a place of honor e ornitmented with orchid and! e flowers on the white frost- 1B. Webb Laan pales qotce: te: children will be placed in’ the «In- ceived plecey Of the Mark welding | tien school tor a periodof tive! coke wrapped in white napkins and |...) ‘ tied with orchid ribbons ag a token er oa case of an Indian of remembrance fromthe bride. | other all but blind and whose hue. | Ae ene es perdal | tand has deserted her, ‘There are ful wedding gifts of linen and sil-|t¥° smaller children to be cared fo yet and then some disposition willj ver and various pieces of furniture } th which they were presented by Med to beymade of the mother. friends and relatives, At the sta- open toi toaee nen rena on tel? Postpone Celebration Church Anniversary | | iioneymoon trip were a host of tends from Bismarck and Mandan 19 wish them happiness and to} pced their departure to the west, The Fiftieth Anniversary of the roust with rice and confetti. Mr., founding of the First Pr byterian { TH# reguiar monthly meeting of tue Woman's Christian Temperance union which was held yesterday at the Indian school with Mrs, C. B. Dickinson as hostess was attended vy a i rge number of Bismarck women. in the absence of Mrs. F. L, Wat- Lins, president, MrswSara Ankenman, vice president, had charge of the bus- iness session. Mrs, L, E, Heaton led the devotionals. Mrs, C G Boise gave a report of ‘the Woman’s Community Council work The topic for discus- sign, “Flower Mission Day” was pre- Mted by Mrs. L. F, Crawford. The ond M Sakariassen will spend | Church, which was to be the svbiect two weeks in Spokane and Seattle, ' of a number of special programs dur of Mrs. ° Sakariassen'’s parents.|has been postponed until fall. At is Upon their return they will make) probable that dates in Octever wil! N. W., Mandan, tor, Rey. Dr. H. C. Postlethwaite, - anda few days’ delay in the com- Neo c Ww. C. 1. Holds i ed pipe organ, have necessitated Fine Meeting | th chanre | Go To Coast; Miss Minnie Nielson, _superin- many other North Dakota educators, inéluding M, E. McCurdy of Wash- i Education association, wil} attend the , National Education association con- land, California, in July. Miss Niel- son will speak on “The Place of thi Wash., and at Deer Park, the home | ing the week of June 10th to 17th, their home at 308 Second Avenue | be selected. The illness of the Vv plete installation of the newly pur-| ch: Educators Will tendent of public instruction, and iburn, secretary of the North Dakota vention in San Francisco ang Oak- State Educational Department in story of Jennie Cassedy was related | Arousing Public Sentiment for Good by Mrs, Liessman, Mrs, Crawford | Schools,” before the state superin- tive a reading of Kipling's “The | tendents’ section and also on the pro- Glory of the Garden.’ A special feature of the program | was the mock trial of King Alcohol, ! riven by members of the union, as- | sisted by the following young wo-| | Northwestern Bell men: Catherine Deemy, Frances’ Wanner, Genevieve Boise, Jean Mac- Mrs. Leod, Shirley Penner, Elizabeth But- tor ut Flasher, found herself mayor \ ler, and Velma Liessman. ‘of Flasher, when she returned home | J, A number of the girls from the late’ this ‘wipter from attending a Indian school assisted in the pro-. telephone meeting in Bismarck, ac- gram by giving readings and vocal ccrding to an article in the June! and instrumental selections. About issue of The Northwestern Bell. fifty ladies were present. At the; A number of other women in close of the program which was one | "earby towns who have accomplished of the most enjoyable of the season *mething special in their telephone the hostess, assisted by several of business include Anne Lintfield, | the teachers at the-school, served re- | °Perator at Wilton. freahmenta, The photographs of a number of nem ther women in nearby towns who re faithful telephone workers in- The GapERS' CLUB PICNIC ‘clude Anne Lillifield, operator at suht Club season for the Mothers’: wilton; Sophia Aanes, Bisbee; Marie Social club, was concluded yesterday | Schweigert, chief operator at Heb- nvening with a-pienie at Wildwood. ‘on; Mary Ann Fischer, chief oper- ‘The members of. the club had as!ator at Wilton; Bertha Fennel, as. their guests! their husbands and ‘ f nt {ant operator at Velva, Anastasia children, About thirty people enjoy-j Skelly, evening operator at Bis- #4 the social picnic supper and eve. Lillian Hatling, Bisbee; H. hing, Acting as hostesses were Mrs, manager, Elmer Wilson, D, T. Owens, Mrs. B, F. Tillotson, f,/ Agnes Mrs. Harry Woodmansee, and Mrs.!Saylers, chief operator, Marie Walsh, Gard’ Wallace, ‘ | Margaret Gellespie, Nan Walsh, and Fay Early, New Rockford; Edward Shere, lineman at Bismarck; Grace |Lippert, Amelia “Sandness, Bessie \Ellis, Mrs, W. R. Eves, Myrtle Bar- ton, Louise Ellis, La Moure. DINNER GUEST. Dr. F. Al Bricker of Rochester, Minn., was a dinner guest at the phome of Mr. and Mrs, E.-H, L. Ves- j perman yesterday everiing. Dr. Brick- er and Mr. Vesperman were school mates, \ RETURNS T OSCHOOL ; gram on adult education. Photos Appear in Fannie Barrier, chief opera- 4 GUESTS OF MISS SCHULTZ. Misses Vivian Murphy ang Ade- laide Iverson, who were week-end guests of Miss Esther Schultz re- turned this morning to \their home in’ Mandan. While here they were entertained with a theater party and picnic. Miss Murphy expects to have in gbout a week for a tkip to “the west.” UNITED IN, MARRIAGE. Miss Alvina Didde of Baldwin and Jchn L. Johnson of Bismarck, were | Vered , CRRS, |nournishing liquid foods and w jai society of the MeCabe Method EDITOR'S NOTE—This is the second of a series of articles on the present time, un average mortalit b -fed babies during f of life. This rate among babies is much higher and iy es mated at from 20 to 25 percent bre of s the two, the breast-fed babies are four times less liable to di stch as summer complaint, convul- 1s and tuberculosis. a haby who is breast-fed for menths has a better chanes than baby who four months—provided the roperly. ndicate that there will abundance later. Nursing. the supply, and its p the breasts. ayed longer not omission Furthermore only so fed for three or breast k is sufficient to make him gain Little breast milk at first does not be increases! every day, preferab dries| second feeding. If the milk is de-)be gradually incr than the third day thej year he is getting one to two table- {store a customer finds himself in tu la be Or ma have howe beneficial effect on the summer care of babies, pre- A new-born baby is put to breast pared especially for The Bix. |fite or six hours after birth uni marck Tribune readers by the should nurse not more than four U. 8, Public Health Service, times during the first 24 hours, hut jit both breasts each time, We may BREAST FEEDING ave tt poon full of plain, cool Breast-Fed babies are much hard-, (not iced) boiled water at regular ier, much more resistant to dicepse,’ intervals between nursing, — but j than those that are hottle-fed. S nothing else. Repinning the second deaths per hundred or 60 per thou-|day he should nurse every two x nour’, or hepinning at or three hours, beginning six months, baby nurses every four hours, takin, both every time, Most infants are satis-| fied in 15 minutes or less; one who! is not may be allowed not more! than five minutes longer, “If he in-| sists on more, better consult the do ihe 10! tor, If he cries between feedings) ty aj when fed regularly™give him plain hoiled water; he is as likely | or from over as from under- feeding. me Adding to Diet pla At one month baby should have a one teaspoonful of orange juice| tu just before his amount should | (4 ed until at one The y should be fed from the bottle! spoonfuls. Strained tomato juice! '! every three hours, but should first may be substituted when oranges! he tried each time at the breast in]are not Weaning — too| order to stimulate the flow, Mothers. young is dangerous, it should never 1! who have too much milk can pre-!be done for the convenience of the |!!! serve the supply by emptying the mother nor without the advice of a ut breasts after e: y a me- physician, It may usually be begun |!” ‘thod of expre he easily ut the ninth month by substitut- | °! learned from the need of fresh air and some daily ¢ She cannot afford to h of nerves,” for this, or er < + hun plenty fer, worry or ‘tement, will atfect her general health and thus i the Supply and quality of che on which baby relies for his food. She may cit about what she likes, mutton broth if it agrees with her; if it does not, it will disagree with the baby, fresh vegetables, ripe fru will increase her milk. Constipation should against. Fresh finit, whole-wheat 1 water immed) sruard bise sass Postlethw » Who from Jamestown College y the ness of her father last Friday re 7 9 turned te Jamestown this tormias to[ Ine 7 at 3 p.m. ALL old and new resumes her wohk (ae cal Rev, | friends are invited to attend. My Postlethwaite is reported ot. he! Dunn’ and Mr iza Suttle will be steadily improving. METHODIST LADIES AID The fourth division of the Lad! ’s along trail From the North Pole to the South Pole, but Royal Bak- ing Powder went with Ad- miral Peary—Amundeen has it with him now. It went with Scott to the South Pole. Stanley had it in darkest Africa. Royal is the only baking powder you can buy , anywhere under the sun. Made from Cream of Tartar derived from grapes Your spring plants and the best we have catalog. ‘se In vegetable plants (Wwe grow. only the best varieties which Milk its, of hot + will as called home It Is Now Time for Planting ting out of vegetable plants. Our stock of Geraniums, Heliotropes, Petunias, Marguerites, Pans‘ ever had and at*prices that are right. Send for 1, are adapted: to. garden use in | this Northern climate’ and have been grown with the idea of having well rooted and thrifty | Plants when ri ed bel ‘eady to set out, | We wish to call attention to the pot grown vegetable plants Iat- low. While they cost more ' than the transplanted, they will bear two or three weekg sooner | than thi - united ‘in marriage at the First Lu- theran parsonage, Tuesday, June 5, Rev. E. F, Alfson officiated, Miss' Anna Litt and Jacob Shaw were the attendants. ‘The young cou- ple will make their home in Bis- marck, Miss Margaret _ Postlethwaite daughter of ‘Rev. and. Mrs. H..C. Wier CONVENTION Firemarshal H, 1, Rei ing the firemarshals’ stéte conven- others, and will make | @ full crop in seasons of early | frost. The pot-grown kind cheap inaurance on your crop. By Express Doz. 100 “transplanted ..... 80 1.60 Celery, self blanching 85 2.25 | Celery, seedlings 20 Egg Plant, potted Egg Plant, trans- planted ........... 6.95 vie cow's fart milk and two month or two he is taking whole cow's Snilk, At eight months he may take cercal gruel; at the nint. month, heeft juice or beef tea and’a piece of dry bread or zweiback atter nursing; at the tenth Inonth, , toust, ard chicken, beef ov may be added to his tn each till the end of hot weather. church will meet with Mrs. J. 1 Dunn at 208 Thad Street Thursday hostesses. GUEST OF MRS, COOK Mrs, D. C, Bailey of Brule, Wi-.. j} who has been visiting her daugh ete, 18 ,Cauliflower, early Sweet Peppers, pot grown Sweet Peppers, trans- Tomato, go! ‘00 ‘omat pot-grown.. Tomato, transplanted ‘85 ‘Tomato, yellow plum, transplanted ..... Pot-grown tomatoes in follow: ing to Bailey will visit at Wing before re- iM. | Minot the wuphtes. WEBB’S CARE FOR SHOPPERS’ Remodeling of Store Displays All the comforts of the shopper hve les found in a well supplied furni- perhinee It babe dinecta thie ace {teed furniture which occupies the Hee wi, digests thie Nell other side. The manager's office ; the Mater may be reduced till in #) i. located on the balcony at the . sift shop. For the woman in|} priate background for the polishe: room sets, bed room suites, and | mann cheffer’s class will ap- menu; and a month later, strained | < of some novelty, candle furniture, kitchen cabinets which the shopper near ii ital at the Rialto soup from fresh vegetables, fancy dish, new China ov, For the women in search of rugs,!imay wish to inspect. In the base-|Pear in recital a e During weaning, the namber of ware for which there is a: linoleum, kitchen furnjture, and|ment are stored the stocks and| Friday evening, June 8th, at breast feedings may be reduced andi fad, the gift shop with its rows of|Vrious special kinds of furniture] supplies. $:30 o’clock, the public is cor- at one year should be discontinued | itistic pieces standing on the con-| the short flight of stairs at the) Webb Bros. have made an im-!@ially invited. baby’s birthday falls at the | veniently anged shelves offers a! Mi of the store one on inviting Hvemeue in ues ae otyaien . Ns arma beginning of the summer. In that) picasing and convenient line from “nd easy ascent to the balcony or}ihe towm can be proud. It, has * Rie TEMeay agen a uievaeeeat is nt Tine from Second Hoot. "the broad windows| given Bismarck something in-add-| ‘The last cigar in every box > | IfYouBought Only One: Victor Record A Week You would soon have a treasury | |composers and artists of the! entire musical world are; Hoskins-Meyer A. W. Cook for the past eft for Regan this morn- it with. relatives. Mrs.| vi rhing, T VER | J. Fisk \and daughter, Valker and children of opped over in Bismarck for | hort visit enroute to their home Dickinson where they have visiting with Judge Fisk’s | eh Judge n New Arrivals --— of —~—- Imported and Domestic STRAW HATS NEW Shapes Self-Shaping — Comfortable : GUESTS OF FRIENDS. und Mrs. Walter Brown, of Idaho, former residents of were guests of Mrs. Robert rand Mrs, Nell Call while in Bis- ure, Monday, COMFORTS Weaves Colors Goods for Convenience of Customers ‘ Choicest selections Imported from Switzerland- heen considered by Webb os, in remodeling their furni- re store, England 3.50 to $6.00 and the very best of American make. Men’s Clothes Shop ALEX ROSEN and BROTHER. They have not only greatly in- eased their floor space but have the various depart- “nts into roomy and well lighted ices in which a customer finds it pleasure to examine furniture, gs, bric-a-brac, and other artic- re store. . Upon his entrance imto the © big display room which hag en effected by the removal of | alls, stairways, and a big vault. ie balgonies along the sides and © back of the big room give the ore something of the city atmos- ere in addition to increasing. the se with which a customer may ew thebabycarriagesof every de- ription along one side or the k where it gives him a view of e entire down stair store. On the main floor are found the; ticles of furniture which so|\hich to select. The ivory walls; iny shoppers wish to see, the) With the mahogany trimmings and lor furniture, porch swings, re-,the cluster and studded lighting erators, rockers, pictures, and|¢fects in the store form an appro- federal court room adjoining has Teen added to the main second floor turniture room to allow for a more convenient display of the dining history of step. the city jst another Voice Pupils from Mrs. Her- at the front of the s given plenty of Me ore up stairs goes free with the last cigar and the old bought. Hoskins-Meyer. FREE “’ At Stores Named This Week Present the Coupon ed convenience as well as beauty, and has advanced the furniture music wherein the greatest | Before You Sieep Go get this free tube and use it Then watch it combat the film on teeth This is to people who are missing benefits which ‘millions now enjoy. There is a new way of teeth cleaning. It is used by cartel People of some 50 nations, largely by dental advice. means whiter, prettier teeth, better tooth protec- Ve It means fighting the teeth’s enemies more effectively. |. Your dealer will & ten-dcy test. Go ask : | give you him for it. Test this new now. Look about you. Note how, teeth new gllsten — | a t leave that fil teeth which once were much those You can feel on your teeth a viscous film. It clings | to teeth, enters crevices and stays. The tooth brush, used in old ways, has left much of it imtact. That's why | so many had dingy teeth, decay and other troubles. Food stains, etc., discolor film. Then it forms cloudy ; coats. Tartar is based on film. That is why teeth lose Bismarck To millions of homes these new effects are ei ee benefits as yet, go now and find them out. To you and yours they mean far mose than you will care to miss. Happy-Go-Lucky Camp-fire Togs Thoughts of bacon siz- zling for breakfast, of ,8tories " the camp fire at night, of long hikes through the cool woods make you want to scurry after knickers, khaki suit, sport ‘shirt and other things. Well, they’re KHAKI KNICKERS $3.00 \ KHAKI JACKETS . $3.75. KHAKI SHIRTS $3.00 Harvis-Robertson For Women’s Wear. Biomarck,' N. D.. °,..,,.] |. Film was the tecth’s chief enemy. Very few escaped | its harm. So science long sought ways in Bremaiettwro ways were found. Sees film, one to remove it, and without any harm- Finney’s Drag. Store. é Lenhart Drug Co., : f ‘ 402 Main St. Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. D.