The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 30, 1923, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

“MONDAY, JULY 30, 1923 : egacrsiae Social and LURID FILMS _ |Bachelor foe Fight Fee ae Ousted | - _ Personal CVEBURGE | ee VISIT AT McHUGH HOME. — | : : WRONG IDE A Neil McHugh, who has been in the ‘ uf ‘ artillery department of the Unitea | “ States army at St. Louis, Wash.,/ since his discharge from the army | during the World War arrived in Bis- marck Saturday night for a visit at %the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick McHugh. Mr. MeHugn f served over seas during the war and | has just completed his term of scrv- | | in the regular army. eae | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~"——~— ' * SAGE FIVE “KEEPS THE FOOT WELL" WE WOULD LIKE TO EXPLAIN to you how the Arch Preserver Shoe. gives just the support to the foot that Nature requires; how it eliminates all strain on the arch. You can have foot comfort and smart styles as well. Aichmonds Bootery aaa ——S—— LAND WHALE IN THE WATER . Americans Are Not as Por-| trayed to Europeans in | Our Films | LONDON, July 30.—Europeans en- tertain curious notions about life in} the United States. Many of them get | their impressions from American} moving-pictures, which feature train robberies, bank hold-ups, social sean- dals, shooting affrays, exciting jau-| tomobile episodes, and other equhlly sensational things. “From personal obsérvation of American films in British cinemas,” says a writer in the London Evening News, “we reach the conclusion that America is a large country entirely surrounded by sin and sentiment. It | is inhabited in the east by unscrupu- lous, but enormously successful, bus- iness men, who devote their nights to squandering in cabarets their ill-got- ten gains of the day before. In th» west the bad men rob stage-coaches and banks, shoot sheriffs, and their partners in crime, and spend a good deal of time rollling on the ground in attempts to gouge each other's eyes JUSTICK GUSTAVE HARTMAN, WAGING FIGHT FOR ORPHANS out. AND MRS. ALMA B. FRORLICH, ONE OF GROUP WHO WON COURT “The north id peopled by bearded | ORDER AGAINST THEM, 1 JOIN IN MARRIAGE | Miss Edith M. Anderson of Regan | and Knute 0. Knutson of Menoken were united in marriage by Rev. C. F. Strutz Inte Saturday afternoon at; the Evangelical parsonage. The young couple were attended by Emma J. Knutson, sister of the bridegroom and Henry Anderson, brother of the bride. After the marriage service a wedding dinner was served at the \~ home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Knutson wil make their home on a farm near Menoken. JUNIOR RED CROSS HEAD HERS | A. L. Schafer, director of the Jun- ior Red Cross for the Central Divi- sion, spent Friday here in conference with Mrs. E. A. Thorberg, local chairman of the Junior Red Cross, / , Scoundrels, who go there to escape ; a c ar a as and mothers ailbcléted with the Red ‘ 5 from the law, to steal mining claims, By Josephine Van de Grift ing to setvup an institution in the 4 . A knitted costume this season looks | and having a krtitted bandanna y d me » lor ‘i id NEA Service Staff Writer. midst of a very much _ restricted « rk, During the summer Mr. : and to menace lonely girls gnowboun Service Sta: riter, re Om sescatht s, re ‘ smart whcther the background is the| atound the neck, That’s the newest jn log cabins. The south is notable e : property n. acacia: Semana eta treater s has presented the program onieaihhad eee forvenctiy aan andinnt.: The| New York, July 26—One hundred | Pg : of the Junior Red Cross to the ocean, the mountains, the links, the There's a slip-over sweater in din- Ioaterameqn, tnd half-breeds, The texchers attending the normal schools AEN tehitne eh ae trying to lodge 128 ors) fos Su ees last-named are no particular’ viee,| 204 twenty-eight small orphans. are tennis court or just all outdoors. today sadly contemplating the tail. | Phans and 25 attendants in a house mond design with a V-neck that car- They are just bad, * ; ‘ “ >| originally meant for 10 persons and in the west contral states. Hnltted things usually have had! rics out the fashionable long line. ! “The rich women of the ecatace BLsGLsLHEUUESEIRAG ee oer cee | Roba on /abIBE atOnsipeator teat f [Say | their own style, hardly ever showing! ‘There's the sweater in Tuxedo notable for the seantiness of their | P*#k into socie we There would be scarcely any place B Wish) DROWHUDTEMORE | ti¢ in fuunee ol éthel taahtana: Now| style with a checker board pattern costume, their uncharitable attitude| Led by Justice Gustave Hartman, for the i Miss Minnie Ahrens, nursing rep- they are showing the influence of| in front and plain hildren to play and almost tive of the Central Division of | the latest styles, le. And right in front of the Tpaai jtowards other women, and for their| New York’s bachelor judge, the or. resen For all those sweaters—and sweat. Temarkable bediooms. These are af| phans, whose winter home ta at. tie house is the bay, six feet deep or- the Ked Cross, and Tsubell Car-| Take, for instance, the bandanna’ er blouses—a Pleated skirt is the enormous size, elaborately decorated, | !srael Orphan Asylum down on New dinarily and nine feet deep at high “iuthers of Fargo, director of the| blouse sweater made of Ieeland wool most appropriate have at least one telephone, and an| York's lower East Side, had looked tide, How does the Judge expect to ed Cress nursing in North Dakota, Tg eck: le y of caress for heroines and| forward to spending the summer! )'¢ the children from falling in? . pide) sie yf ——--—-— i foniherbas, amidst the fashionable colony which| keep the children from falling in? were in conference with Dr. A. A. on 7 ! DE eet reaely Ki a Long Island| He says he will build a fence but Wh.ttemore, state health officer Sat.| the week end visiting with Mare hey, have been the guests of | “Sometimes the villain uses one of | Yearly Sra aRTAGGIE TIPE TIE Gaeta lidhatsie: ridiguldusvense street of re- orday, making? plans ‘tor the com.| #4 relatives, Mrs. Copelin’s sister, Mrs. A. J.) these entrances, and then the heroine and, more particularly, Long Bench, sikibted uronert 5 iiig (yeaelin Meine fe — Danstrom for the past week. throws a lamp at him and rings up| The judge had leased a large and in o F a a Fi lieecd s einen ge Auge LEAVE FOR CANADA | oe jthe hero, who was lying awake wait- SON Be SRR UIGREUEE Coe cone uncon plnce) for] be (oi raante eaniene deep washed ashore, as it might appear at first ‘i 5 RETURN TO HOME, jing for the call. tn it en nurke the actress, had lived ai 5 ‘ lance, but a whale of an elephant having a whale of a frolic on the sO tug RESIDENTS) RETURN, aaehess Bein Marqvana\ Cane. Walter Daugherty, formerly a mem-| “He dashes round in pajamas and| in it once—and already the orphans| But the bachelor judge feels ait-| # rs . ws Mr. and Mrs, Frank Harris ana Jie : ss idworehes an automobile to her rescue just in| Were collecting their sand pails and| ferently about it. For one. thing Mrs. i = | bell MacLeod of Winnepeg, cousin of| ber of the McKenzie orchestra, has |an au daughter, Miss Zella, of Minneapolis; i. beach at Atlantic City, N. J. : 3 ene to his home in Livingstone, time to wake up the household and| Wondering what they should. take| he was an orphan himself ant ne Minn., formerly of Bismarck, arrived | the Misses MacLeod, left Saturday | &' Mont. |be covered with suspicion, along in their small suit cases, used to sell papers down on the ae Saturday afternoon for an extended | f0F Toronto, Ont. While east Mr. Mac-| Mo pati || “tnvthe wontiand tnaleouthiverslik} But the: teahioenels and exclusive| very spot where the Israel Orphan a ore ee sles DR. BERGER visit at the home of Mrs. A. Harris. ea il Wee in ee mi LEAVES ON AUTO TRIP |tle work is donc. The men of the alia a Long Beach ist want Asylum now stands. é aay aeuiene ag awannenedeen A nas : They made the trip by’ automobile ae ee pearance! ord a Mrs. Paul Wachter left yes- town hang around the ‘store’ all ‘day | them. Not, you understand, that the Tt isn’t laws they're upholding, y stopping at severa} places, including | the Y. M. C. A. § T school, . ral i se ; colony isn't as fond of an orphan as| h 3, “they're fighting i | cellars which reach the waistline terday for an automobile trip long in ease they they are wanted for| colony isn je says, y're fighting innocen ‘ Duluth, Detroit, and Fargo. In Far- = i AKEGUP Te aMIAREEA ote and, a fight, and the,women gossip over| anybody in the world, Indeed, last] babies. Long Beach has room for its|#"@ are lined with gay colors, go Miss Harris visited several | ENJOYING VISIT IN CANADA. | 40" Ghe Twin Cities. She accom-'&ates so as to be ready to run into the] Year when the orphans’ summer sporting places and its dance halls}, girl friends. For the past year Miss | Mrs, Mary L. McLean has been vis panied Attorney W. J. Sullivan of Toad and weleome home the blogd-| home at Arverne burned down, Long r and its movie palaces but it hasn't been attending the Uni- | iting with her son, W. J. McLean at| the ‘Sullivan Goal company, Mrs, {Stained hero, Beach got together and raised some-| any room for Nittle children crav-| A very unusual diner frock versity of Minneapoli | Chawsnigan Falls, during her trip in AW. Farr and Miss Mildred Farr| ‘America must be an awfully in-| thing like $20,000 te wer tagurt ne: ing relief from the hot city. fombines | a rose-colored satin ! —- Canada. She said in a letter tel c# Mandan on the two-week trip.| teresting place to live in; only few] building the place. “Because these cnildren are or-|biowse with a black satin skirt, BACK FROM VACATION friends that she was enjoying a de. Dore of us invertebrate Britons could stand| But to have the orphans elect to phans Long Beach doesn't want|Y°TY much draped and very long. 1ali lightful visit and that her son wisheq SUNDAY VISITORS the strain of such an exciting life. It} come into their very midst! Long them. But they have just as much nase ; Miss Rosalie Pabst, nurse at the to. be remembered to his Bismarck| Mr. and Mrs, G. E Dorclson of ; isn’t so much the amount of work] Beach just couldn’t sec it. So they! eight tothe fresh alr 5 d fish TIERED SKIRT Quain and Ramstad clinic, and her| ‘®- } [ \ of | ria : puldn it: ; ig e ir and sunshine ; ; i in| friends, Minot * und the city,| the Americans do as the suddenness| secured an injunction against the : 4 i The tiered skirt is featured on sister, Miss Mattie Pabst, teacher in a Inot spen' sunday in the city.) ee * - © rs ri _| of Long Beach ns the children of : Mr. Danielson is the proprietor of | With’ which they do things, that must | bachelor judge and his migrating oy Gieseh wealthcnueccats oi t{82me of the smartest street cos- \ the Aberdeen, 8. D., schools, return-| , MISS HOMAN RETURNS, the Grand, Pacitie Hetel in that) tl! on them in time. Fortunes are/ phans. The injunction has just been inet thei 2 ae S who protest | tumes and is usually shown in com- ed. Saturday from Mondovi and Eau Miss Florence Homan returned | (hi t made and homes ruined in America| sustained, Aesine’ thelr coming, Pany with a side closing. Clair, Wis, ‘where they have been} a titan poreneey Olivrandigamees| feo BS on the screen in less time than the! “Long Beach isn't the place for| “If Long Beach would once ad-|" | Pt ipa antore ea Visiting with: relatives tor the past| ton, wele ahetas tar, visiting Yor MRS. COOLEY LEAVES fverage Englishman takes to eat his! orphans anyway,” says Mrs, Alma| Mit the orphans it would become as HIGH COLLARS three weeks. Miss Mattie Pabst will] the Vast tro meee Mrs. H. H. Cooley of St. Paul, | Pteakfast.” B. Froclich, wife of Jesse Froelich, | Proud of them as any inctitution in While it is not expected to be- spend the remainder of the summer pais Minn,, returned to her home ae | —_—— president of the school board, and, the city. se cj, /00me a popular style; the tigi cons with Rev. and Mrs. C. F. Strutz. GRANT KNOWLES LEAVES terday after spending several days WOULD PACK ‘ fH ake ineslnddne: aero apne rare Selah yor yr ger aeony aang oF Rep Tae Grant Knowles left this ing}here looking after business inter- e. -appeal fro § -Ichic costumes. Lingerie collars RETURN FROM VACATION TRIP] toy gr paul eG, MinResEeaUI Re here looking after business inter MASS MEETING | merely that he was teeing te pant prongs decision and carry, the,in-|are not so. tavored’ ae tice tone Robert Webb and Eugene Leonard| to visit with relatives for a’ couple vase 50 the laws of Long Beach by attempt-| junction’ into the Appellate Court, material of the frock. returned last night after an automo-| of weeks. RETURNS TO JAMESTOWN Fargo, July 30.—Callittg on the far— | cae = oe as bile trip through the Yellowstone Na-! W. Dunsmoor left this morning! mers and business men ef the entire # = © COTTON 1 RIE FUR BANDING tional Park and the Black Hills. They LEAVES FOR CITIES for his home in Jamestown after | state to drop all business for a day|! NEWS BRIEFS {| very dainty nightgowny cameniii ear bandl Drils used to elas spent two weeks on their vacation| Miss Elizabeth . Butler left .this| Spending a few days with his! and pack North Dakota’s farm’ mass | g, . | voile with printed figures of rose- | * earenenn eimewent velvet and trip, a ig in Wyoming during the] morning for Minneapolis, Minn, to|daughter, Mrs. W. P. Knott, meeting in Fargo Wednesday morn- buds, ‘dots’ or conventional designs, | 82tin frocks for fall. iP y 14 Pt , + 3 I ; — ~‘, ‘loud burst and encountering consid-| visit with friends and relatives ty 6 a ing to overflowing, Congressman siromoted qhey are hound .with ribbon the FANCY SCARFS «sable rain and muddy roads, week. WM. LANGER RETURNS. | George. M. Young of Valley City, Harry Neal, who: has been assist-|82Me shade of the design. A scart of figured silk 1s one of (ag eae Attorney William Langer sa | leader in a movement to revive the ant manager of the F, W. Woolworth TE . the most ap in oA 8 of livening 4 CORNISH FAMILY RETURN. MISS ROSEN RETURNS, turned yesterday from. erousiness United States Grain corporation, to store here, left’ today for Minnea- WHITE FOX , die tie eae ot denier oreo. Mire e ic poems ana| | Miss Cecilia Rosen ‘has returned | {TiP| to various points in Iowa and| aid in the movement bronghe sven. polis, having been promoted to the), A broad band of white fox tur| "Pt Satin costumes feature the ciildren returned ta Bismarck yes-| after spending a few days with her | S°uth Dakota. ‘jeral invitation to all citizens in| position of assistant manager of a Tne eee! atogke ol royal eluate of chiffon or brocaded| Dr. Elsa R. Berger, daughter of terday. Mrs. Cornish ang children | aunt, Mrg, F, R. Rosen of Steele, SPEND SUNDAY IN city _ | North Dakota to par(ctpate, large store in that city, Vincent Ka-| V¢lvet. georgette, * V‘ctor Berger, Wisconsin Socialist have been visiting in Minneapolis hrist. Fle ANGI The Fargo meeting is expected to] line of Bismarck will succeed Mr. SMBROIDERED « ase ‘rressman, hag been appointed and at Lake Minnetonka for the past |) VISITING MOTHER ae eee mel: Kala ond Es. take action in issuing a call for | Noal, } Tne R SHEN Ae SMOCKING wbvlance doctorat the Emer- three weeks. Mr. Cornish Went to| Miss Beatrice McQuillan of Wahne-| Len. Baker Sundae ari i ote: | national meeting of grain growers in eet GRE ae mean ave Smocking is associated with “‘1-| ¢y ‘Hospital in Washington, ip emotis last Friday returning | ton is visiting with her mother, Mra| the gly Pont Sunday visiting in/ the wheat wheat belt for the purro Injured In Field SoTL Sea eo eee eee Pl arantar eee URE REE ELMO ith his family yesteraay |. D. MeQuillan. ; the clty. of asking President Harding to con-| 7 George Ballenof Keer injan:| Nee Senet MOMIRtO ow te ween aera tte Sa ie i 5 vene a special session of Congress to 4 ~ NORTE ain most delicate satins and cre, for . 1 . ~,, GUEST OVER SUNDAY ‘stati itua- | der treatment at the St. Alexius hos- SHORTER SKIRTS et ae aatnn pee Leg pains, cramps and sore- ) ENTERTAINS AT DANCING PARTY BUSINESS VISITOR ‘Miss Thelma More of Minot was | P&8* legislation to relieve the situ | pital as a result of an accident while| Latest reports from Paris inform | evening wear. spains, be ; N tion in which it is declareq the far Rammell awis entertained at | B. F. Lane of Moffit was a busin) the guest or Maat mae Die dsl ean nant are assisting in the harvest field last |x that the long skirt cease ie en Paina thea back | 2¢8® disappear when you are dancing party at the Roof Garden of | ness visitor today. * |McGulis over Sunday. Z Friday. While driving a team Satur-| the wane and that models 12 Inches ‘ains in the legs and baci Properly, fitted with Ground the McKenzie hotel Saturday evening, —— a day the header box fell upon her,|from the ground are more, popular. | are often caused by ill fitting complimentary to a group of “boys RETURN FROM S‘OREHAM. Dr. H. A. Faber of Mott was a|_. Women clerks need Ground 2 who are leaving for Fort Snelling to a shoes. Scientifically built /GTiPper Shoes. Alex Rosen tent inj f 7 E GOW) : ‘0. eee injury had not yet been The popular bustle—that ig the Ground Gripper Shoes for soft puffy bustle bhow—is respon- men and women are sure to ——————SSS———— Bismarck Hospital sible for the revival of the old|relieve and make walking a e zs favorite in silk, moire. And the . i! Rose! Bro. John antes, oo ae a Eas meire frock {s included in every pleasure, | Al ex Macen ia vita, DR. M. E. BOLTON ley, Underwood; Harry Wasse-| *™4?t raparee. Don’t Forget Bismarck Osteopathic Physician nat Hensler; T. G. Plomasen, and LIZARD SKIN Juvenile Band Benefit. Audi- pee ieee Pratzice Ei efeeolls Fort te |, purser of lizard skin, on the|torium, Aug, 7. Tickets 73 al for Natnente Mrs 1 M Dek. pouch plan or made into large flat | cents, ! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Copelin retarn- business cailer in the city yester.| Gripper Shoes Droperly fitted. | Coysit® some injury to her spine. The serve jn the C. M. T. C. during Au- | eq Saturday from Shoreham, Minn.,| day, Alex n & ,. gust. Mrs, C, W. McGray chaperoned the party. sinpie ions. One Kind 'of Hat That Will Look Well Under Any Adverse Condition C. W, French and family of St. Paul, Minn., visited with Mr. French's ¢ prother, L. 8, French and family over Sunday. . W. French and family are enroute to California, where they i will make their future home. 119% 4th St Telephone 240 Bismarck, N. D. , inson, Dogden; Roving Roth, Na. envelopes mare very fashionable , leon; Jacob’ Deetor, Venturia;|"°™ { LEAVE FOR TRAINING CAMP : ; i y wa ie — - George Knowles, Harold Thomas. ; , ’ No 4 Anthony in eae Men and women with weak ict westerdny by automebile for fox | [iT ler, Beulah; “anes? Martha Wink- [fallen arches get promot. per-| tt THE WORLDS FINEST CRUISE Snelling, Minneapolis, Minn. to ‘at- ; e : r Meione manent relief wearing Ground tend the’ Citizens Military Training ' a . U the oy the Great Leics se Sapergtion Steel Ser, Duluth to Buffalo and Return UzuRIovs comfort, beautifulscenery and educa: Lake Hore bad seo Erie and numerous other bodies of water camp during the month of August. Gripper Shoes: properly fitted at Alex Rosen & Bro. GUEST OF MISS McKEEN Miss Luneta Wright of Jamestown left yesterday for her home after spending several days: with Miss Lila FIRST WOMAN. * St. Alexius ‘Hospital McKeen who is leaving in the near i ¢ 3 & p 2 Mrs. J.B. ' Kiley. city; E. 0. uture with her mother and. sister Vee é Lindstrom, Glen Ullin; Henry for Sacramento, Calif, Moortey, city; Miss Florence Jager, ] & Spe citys; “Anton Schlinger, * St. An- . SUPT. SAXVIK OUT‘OF TOWN . ik left today . dew and. Antena OP Supt. H. O. Saxvik left today for . ' 7 3 word, nton nel m- | Dickinson. On his way home he. will ' ace i pth, . Be nee hen discharged | ‘stop in Bowman where Mrs. Saxvik ; \d face, Others : ; ital. “Mast Ingram hes pout ising with relatives for show no favoritiam and’ mainain} Baawan, Glen Ulin; Rochas” Bete, | a mont si ‘el ~ fe . Richai ; Miss Priscilla thii, 1 width at all points, Mrs. Saxvik will return shortly. ace oe areigaed on some of the Bae gal A eae Eldridge, ET ie most severe model’ and they mow be | Tits MinAnue a ee : Al RETURNS FROM LAKES eeoe : : : draped to suit the features and soften | ture Tnomps ttle; Mrz, Fred Economic Essays— Henry Halverson who has been vis- .. NEA Serv Le : the general effect. Stiff little orna- Bolen Bertier and J, P. Stein LAW, HEALTH, PROSPERITY jing with -his relatives at Mondovi, New ‘York, July - é ments of, feathers, that closely re- Ri eo have been. dis 7 é ‘ The Book for all $3. ih and at the Virginia Lakes and Hreadgokt cope PS gaa rac fore ‘ide. mene father 4 shaving. nee, ar Nospital,”- lscharged ) WANTED CANV. "ASSERS| i is, Minn, two | omer. 4 : rite trimming. So are ribbon i ae ‘ bene en toe the past a lies Shea sal viata ea ietibta fcckuaes or the conventional flower, H ousekeepers can do their : : g : JUDGE ROBINSON MISS NEKOM resduied [about cluehg brim. Ie tity nat bee : pea ane er work: much easier and in per- a : : Bismarck Nels lealad tirely new or it may not look particu: On the all-white hat one frequently | fet, fort. if they weai : f = ins Esther Nelion, I feon ovat) lar exciting, but-it 18 amart, You can finds a band’of.clody white feathe Ground. G ~ ae their home in Washbugn, ) stance, and prow wast pe look, ene, four. AREAS OF MODERN {he ends" dangtng ‘lee the bvim, Bro, chy oi tal a : We have moved to 113—5th St. ‘ Comes 3 hear bei ie univ, . sometimes well: below ‘thé’ ‘shou! ¢ ‘ i . 2 b Ww . a VISITING FRIENDS. ‘becom! ‘ bess - : NS : . e are always ready to Miss Meta Kyueger of Dickinson, Putie the bei Tos'b fists dream, you will find a. slight however, oni oath eis ith th cs Rie : the market for all kinds‘of fi ; formerly of this city, i spending] it is scarccly visible. One ge the | brim more becoming and’ quite as awan-like nodes Ann E, Rae, Niagara Falls, is the office fixturés, etc. impression of a little black straw or |‘smart.. *- Base to Pecans E 7 oT new president of the U. 8. League of nk f F Zz. | felt dome having been efected over| : Some of the brims are cut to noth- ‘ ‘only i } y ae Lotal Building and Loan Associations. : ——COME AND SEE US—— Don’t* Forget _Bismarck|s pretty face, practically concealing | ing in. the back and allowed to ex- } : . pe CRS She was ghosen at the Bist annual if’ RUDER’S FURNITURE EXCRA’ Juvenile Band Benefit. Audi-| the hair, en tend out in front like’a visor. Others Hittle tel z convention at Tacoma, Wash. The cay: Phas n ye. Bia’ Bri ._ | @¥e,shaved quite as short‘in the i te fri : Sane . - are BY '~torium, Aug. 7. Tickets Slight Brims 5 ith th f horate first woman ever to hold the post, pear iapad ode ets 75! However, unless you Mave the wer pont. Bat a gcial ul Bi f r8. , been firat vice president for |]

Other pages from this issue: