The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1923, Page 8

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eee a ee oe ae ere DAQT mura PAGE EIGHT VANITY ISNOT REASON WOMEN’ TINT FACES Its Their Response to Color Impulse, Declares Harriet Forbes, Jewel Expert FOSTER IT MEN BY MARIAN HALE, NEA Service Writer. York, Dee. 5.—The soup their faces in vchres tnd mohogany tones and s imitate the pink nd cream és of the peach is not, prinerily. | y it's their way ol responding | color impulse. is the theory of Harriet Fobes, jeyel expert, whe ha: us for putting every gem in t urlistic mount.ng, and who us delved into the h , chen istry und mineralogy -f every known stone. “This color in se tself in milliner cessories and in yewe “Women want more them, more on tueir their lives, They a for a renaissance of by xeosness such ne experienced before. “Women are learning to wear color more effectively, and are de- veloping much more taste abo} their fucial makeup. The time wi come when every woman will work out her color harmonies and her own personality colors, and then the problem of dressing will practi cally be solved.” No Puritan Heritage. The color feeling and the present interest in it is not # heritage from | pla our Mayflower ancestors or Puritan | .nto first families. It has been kept alive |an a und aroused-in us by the peasants of | oth Checoslovakia, Russian, Armenia and | Tex... Italy who have come to our shores | — reason 3 manifesting | , yowns, shoes, ac. | she color around uces, and ting ready ty und gor has been says as own © curtain of Life ter las prrowing tri has rang And che p For y dropped a membe: ro cast were d cos. h ( wnoon Ma audits ¢ Marva is dead. THE BISMARCK TRIB MARTYR OF MOVIES ‘the effeet sons FARMERS WHO DIVERSIFY GET ~ PREFERENCE Board of University and School Lands Not to Fore- close in Such Cases by the ity and School Preference will he given State Board of Unive Lands in making f: farm contracts to farmers who diver- cided by the hoard i a lengthy meeting here today. The bourg adopted a resolution to that after Janu making applicati ns who are diy xiven preference. loans and on sify, it wag d was de- | cided that there will he no foreclos- ‘an effort to diversify. Mansfie'd. Stie-hits mirers have turned | Burns received when! Qin her lap, while she and San Arftonio, ha her a mi sing “ocation” near and revealed to us its possibilities, Gexinait Kiddies i é Miss Fobes thinks, “The love of jewels and the jew- elry craft has been fostered by men, | not women,” she “Most | men are innately fond of juwels and | Berlin, Dee German parents naturaliy want to bestow them upon | complain bitterly that their chiidren | the women they love. And they have | flock evenings to the movie houses! taught women to care for gems. | atch blood: “But though men care most for !curdling dramas. The laws against | jewels, they lack the taste that wo- | young children being abroad at night | men have. That is why for so long | alone apparently are not enforced. — | so much value has been attached to, Crowded housing conditions and | diamonds—the most impersonal of lack of heat and light in the homes | all jewels. Men have valued them given as r ons for the disposi- | because they represent so many dol- | tion of the youngsters to take to the | tar bil cinemas. nircase went on Twas Money Counted. are no longer lighted inj “Formerly men gave women jewels many apartment houses in Berlin, the and these were prized for their actuals janajoras saying the expense is. too value. Precious stones were sup-!yreat, Signs reading as follows are posed to be becoming to everyone. | not infrequent: ia hana a Gl lay women are more diseriminat- 1 qj at dusk; persons entering later They want color and form. 14, cu at their own. rink.” | ade really was- what opened the | i Ze eyes of most women to the beauty of semi-precious stones. Today they , POWER FROM MERCURY are becoming sensitive to the decora | : an vane tive value of erystals, lapis, coral, VAPOR MAKES PLANTS | opals per ful stones by e EFFICIENT which a woman may bring out her sua AN ! own coloring, und iave her jewelry a $ distinetly of her style us her fash- | gens y Des. §, — Power ion of wearing her hait iry vapor, making “The museums are being searched a double vapor power plant for oriental designs and antique sub- jn which curpines tor 4 ‘imal tleties. Women are getting down to | ¢jectricity are driven bute art in fundamentals. We never can) mercury vepor anil water. vo por xo back to an era of Quaker plain- | from the same fuel source, result- ness again, Instead we will go fur-|ing in a gain of about 50 per cent ther in gorgeous costumes and in| ; ue’, is the facial makeup thun ever before, But ilevement of anew we will do so with much greater in- | oiler perfected by the. Generadl telligence, and with much more tell- | Rlecirie Comp. ing effec! The last. g in improving anufeetur ns men, of the AGED SUFFRAG WORKER - Yr cae ‘ steam of ESCAPED INJURY IN | reeiproc: _ JAPANESE EARTHQUAKE, turbine. inv Tokio, Dee, 5.—One of those who ity vapor boiler is escaped bodily harm in the Japanese |5 a greater step in the progre earthquake and fire was Madame | science. : Kajiko Yajima, the 90-year old suf- frage advocate and president of the , 800 COIN _ pounds Haunt Movies »: ; handed oy ce ! per a rding to third | Barnesville IN MAYOR Japanese Christian Women's Tem- | gham, Enz. iety. | next Mayore-s « After her home had been damaged have by the earthquake she was removed ;made from $00 by 10 girls to the residence of Mar- quis Kurods, when she was obliged,| to flee, because of fire, to the First Regiment barracks. Luter she was | sted to the Women's Refuge! Home. ' Mme. Yajima represented Japan at the international conference of Wo- men’s Temperance Societies in the United States in 1906. her revent FLU| andGRIP i GIRLS FLOCK TO MOVIELAND | BUT FEW CAN FIND PLACES Hollywood, Cal., Dec. 5—Scores of young girls, movie-struck, arrive here every week, most of them with no | recommendations beyond flattering | notices in home-town papers, accor ing to the Hollywood Chamber of | Commerc. which has started a cam- paign to warn young persons through- out the country of the futility of finding screen jobs, unless they are | qualified and have been encouraged to | apply at the studios, The Chamber of Commerce esti- | mates the population of Hollywood | | ee ee eee stem are, REFUSE SUBSTITUTE: ireepenny pieces,” | p paid as a fine of 10 3d on Councillor Ro- “| to zecep! the po- Councillor Roper 800 small coin aowill them made into a ain for f re! Mayoresses, ONE-THIRD AUSTRIA’S POPULATION LIVES IN CITY OF YIEN which we who reiu Mayo Thirty-eight population es in cities of 20,090 cr more, whe new census. of te kotal population of the resides in Vien. Vienna, cent of present republic INSTANTLY KILLED Dec. Anton Ande of the Trovaten garage was instantl: hen the car driven J Putnam, I slid off the road near Buker, turned and pinned him beneath it, His and neck were broken. : son employ urday ov hack BISMARCK STORAGE COMPANY Storage of all kinds. Rates on application. DEAD CAR STORAGE $2.50 PER MO. Office With Lucky Strike Coal Co. Phone 82 909 Main St. A Warning to Car Owners Don’t let your battery run down during the winter, even if you are not using your car. It will freeze if discharged. ‘Our winter storage service removes this danger and takes all responsibility off your shoulders at a very small cort. | : ut 85,000, of whom, it states, less | than 15,000 are engaged in the film | industry The girls who drop in. from the ends of the earth all are willing to become stars, but most of them are unable to find even minor parts. With their funds exhausted, many of them turn out to be a problem for socia) and civic workers ’ { FOR SALE Buick Model D 45, new paint job. New tires. Engine completely over- hauled and new battery this spring. A bargain if taken at once. COPELIN MOTOR COMPANY |. 201 Broadway E& Befcre School Fortify ‘scores SN TS Se, EMULSION ‘Something for. the CORWIN MOTOR | COMPANY. | Car for Christmas CORWIN MOTOR CO., Bismarck. ures made for delinquencies on farm loans or land bought on contract if the farmers are raising their own garden, keeping chickens and making It was the attitude of the board, according to joner Kositzky, that very encouragement should be given to farmers to keep their land and to make up their delinquencies. The board authorized appraisement r al pieces cf school land near jem, the appraisal to be made on request of H. Wolfe ‘of *Des Plaines, Minois, who has 4 number of Illinois farmers desiring to buy such land, ‘ The report of the land commission- er was accepted and 7,000 copies ord- ered. printed. ! VIENNA SOCIALISTS MAKE BIG GAINS Vienna, Dec. 5.—The Socialists made 2 decided gain in the recent clection of members of the National Assembly. They lost but one seat, i while the Conservative parties lost seventeen,. This assembly has 18 fewer members than the lust one, It is held in some quarters that the ss was largely due to hey got out their vote, B. A. Dance Thursday evening, A. O. U. W. Hall. A, One-! CHEERY FACE OF CHRISTMAS SEALS ~ MAKES ITS FIRST i ing Milk For Needy cheery face of the Christm: seal which made its appearance Dre. 1 over the entire county will make its first appearance in Bismarck Sat . Dee. 8. y n the sale of these little far- | son | urda Hao Lingers of the happy holiday s the Anti-Tubercuiasis association hopes to be able to supply a lot of {kiddies in the city with milk in the schools as they did last year. School pildre i dential districts and -the Woman's Community Council have charge of the sales in the bus- iness district, under the direction of Mrs Frank Barnes. ‘The seals cost just a penny. Last " 800,000 people in the United APPEARANCE DEC. 8 Fifty Per Cent of Funds Obtained Will Be Used in Purchas- Children in Schools Der Cbeistitas States bought seals and tne people of Bismarck purchased so many that by using 560 per cent of the money ob- tained here 16,000 half pints of milk were purchased and many children cared for The children fed in this way have improved both in health and their school work shows an improvement, cording to the reports «of the teachers and school nurse. The un- dernourished and underweight child is not only an easy victim for tuber- culosis but for every disease Keep- ing the child up to normal is a part of the general public health program for prevention of disease and the spread of epidemics. The seals will be on sale from j Saturday, Dee. 8 until Christmas day, und those wishing extra seals may secure them either at the Tubercu- {losis office or by calling Mrs. Barnes. j | ' Mother! Fletcher's Castoria has been in use for aver 30 years as a pleasant, harmless substitute for \Castor “Oil, Paregoric, Teething} Drops and Soothing Syrups. Contains | no narcotics. Proven directions are! jon each package. Physicians every-| Scientists Find New Light Upon Biblical Stories Philadelphia, Dec. 5.—New light will be throwg: on old Biblical stor- jes n scientists complete de pheri the hieroglyphics on an- tique statues recently discovered in Palestine, according to Dr. George B. Gordon, director of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania Museum, who has returned from a tour ‘to the sites of expeditions operating in Mesopotamia, Egypt afd Pa‘estine. During his trip Dr, Gordon ar- ranged for the shipment of 100 tons of antique relics to Philadelphia. ‘CHILDREN CRY FOR “CASTORIA” | Especially Prepared for Infants and Children of All Ages where recommend it. The kind you e always bought hears signature of i WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1923 a [Pe ‘are expected’to arrive About| Belgrade Tribune of an article out- | University Musetm. | JUGOSLAVIA MAKES DEMANDS | January 1 and will be-set Up at the jining new territorial demands to, hv made on Roumania. | The Tribune, which is regarded a the personal organ of Premier Pas- ON ROUMANIA, IS REPORT| hitch, points out that the war efforts of JugosifWia have been inadequate- ly rewarded in the distribution of territory as between Jugoslavia and Roumania. Bucharest, Dec. 5.—A lively sensa- tion has been created in the Rou- manian eapital by the publication in| HURT 1 ‘A Christmas Gift of Jewelry BUYITNOW ‘>; AND BUY IT HERE We expect a visit from'you any day now, and we have devoted months to preparing a Christmas stock from which you,can select your gift. You will find here just the gift you want to buy at the price you want to pay. Exclusive dealers in Gruen and Bulova Watches. Bonham Brothers One Murphy Sed and Steel Kitchen in Every home. Saves two rooms. ¢ also saves $500.00 in cost: of home. Write A. J. OSTRANDER for information. Bismarck, N. D. metal New Low Prices on Closed Cars Light-Six two-passenger Coupe-Roadster $1195 Light-Six five-passenger Light-Six five-passenger Special-Six five-passenger Coupe . Special-Six five-passenger . Big-Six five-passenger Coupe . Big-Six seven-passenger Coupe All pricea f, 0. b. factory $1395 $1485 $1895 @ e Sedan. . . $1985 $2495 $2685 Studebaker’s increased production and reduced cost of Closed Care madein the new $8,000,000 Closed Car plants at South Bend make possible these new low prices. You cannot afford to buy any carwithout first seeing these sles did ; of one of America’s grentaet oaepeeaghirers. _— — _ Bismarck Motor Company (the finest in the industry) ‘ STUDEIBAKER

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