The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 17, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE TWO ‘BETTER HOMES’ BENEFITS FOR g LESSON VII 2 CITY ARE TOLD & By J. H. PUELICHER, Chairman, fa ig Committee on Public Education, American Bankers’ Association Week Given Over to Study of P Bank deposits are broadly divided into two kinds: Methcds of Improving 1. SAVINGS DEPOSITS Homes Comes to Close lk 2. COMMERCIAL DEPOSITS ft SAVINGS DEPOSITS=deposits more or less M'SS PALMER SPEAKS permanent, in a savings bank or savings @ | department of a bank, on which interest The Committee in charge of the is paid, and which are withdrawn against Better Homes in America Movene the depositor’s receipt; they in effect rep- “observed in Bismarck are tired t resent conservative investment of funds happy today. “We feel that the accumulated through personal thrift. Pee raul vAlcaie conic COMMERCIAL DEPOSITS=deposits in a members and business men are lo al business account at a bank from which ing forward to und making plans for) (J. H. Pueticher money is withdrawn by check; they rep- a better Better Homes ine America § resent an essential facility for the conduct Week next year. a of business, The people who visited the sever-) § aie nt ene aed a mecived |e) Many persons and al) business houses have checking ac- Most ha and the Committee g counts in which to deposit the cash and checks which they business men 1 that the we @ receive and against which to draw their own checks to pay Deen worth a great deal to them and! @ bills, wages and purchases. Thrifty people almost universally to the Bismarck public well 5 keep their savings in a savings account. This afternoon in ne Elltin ic] ae + Building Bertha KR. Palmer, Art CoP CVV RUUee AURA CAAT N RATATAT ORAM BAT Chairman for the State Fedetation|-—— aes of Women’s Clubs, gave two 1c rahe: senrfs, renee NAT, MINE demonstrations on “Principles to be picture and flowers, ebserved in Interior Decoration | The vertical line pngth, | Miss Palmer said in part, “There! and the horizontal lin is a general impression that beauty|are the foundation’ lines of eve OPERATES AT come nt, that Mrs. So-and There should be repetition of | So's house siwayg locks well becduse ‘these for harmony and ‘feeling’, but! she seems to have a knack of ding|witial such variation as will avoid| EXHIBITION ht. It is true that all bave! monotony | ial taste or knowledge, Skill Pictures Influence Hl ys a ques of study and] Pictures exert n strong un-| s experience. House furnishing is an) conscious influence and for this rea-' London, May 17--A. “life sized” art to which there is no royal rond.| son should be chosen carefully as! coal mine tually underground and Good taste develops through the! something to live with. A picture|demonstrating coal mining as con- making of choices with reference to| should be selected not to fill a given! ducted in Wale Scotland, is one some ideal pace on the wall, but like a book,| of the interesting educational exhi- Several Principles hecuuse of the message it contains,| bits at the British Empire Exhibition “There are s« principles! yr the appeal it has for the one liv-| ehich i n full swing, “around which choices should center.’ ing with it. Ruskin s: n| The “Palace of Neptune” is All rules are to guide, not to ham-| without pict is like a rod H | ethee of the amusement park attrac- pers out window’ Leigh Hunt s ‘A| tious which, under a Coney Isiand “I. William Morris tells us to! picture is a window, through it we title, affords 2 have nothing about us which we do not know to bé useful and believe to be beautiful. A chair that cannot be sut in, a clock that does not keep! time should never be given space no matter how ‘ornamental’ such picces| may seem, for usefulness in such objects is considered first. Neither hould an ugly thing be tolerated because it is useful. Slight remodel- ing and a coat of paint, or indeed the coat of paint alone often can make an old thing better than a new thing. A vase, a plant, a piece of pot- tery needs no other excuse for bi ing but its beauty. But we must r beauty of the decrease with the number dis- | Covering peries, of walls and floors, should be considered ting | the sub. look beyond it down long vistas of thought.’ In the introduction to his Art of Home Furnishing and Decor- ation, Frank Alva Parson, » Man ly what he lives in, for en- vironment is the strongest possible etor in One man’s development may live so long among loud noises, bad odors, inharmonious colors and wrong arrangements of things that one doesn’t mind them, because one ha let them become a part of one's If. They are there, and they are bad as they were at first, but one become immune to them. on accustoms himself to wrong he becomes like when he is like it, he will admire on- does ly its kind, and whatever he will be as nearly ment as he hims “This fact is Better Ho! in Ameri The demonstrations which acco panied the lecture were made pi ble by the various articles loaned by the Perry Furniture Co,, A. W. Lucas Co., Bismarck Paint and Glass C9., and the several members of the com- mittees. This evening at 7:90 tern SI dard Time % race Abbott wil! broadeast from New York City sta- tion WE. n official radio talk on of the Better Homes in America Movement. g the background which the personalities of th unfold. Neither in color nor pa tern should they advance, but by means “of both create the desired impression of space and atmosphere. Color is the most dominant clement is our environment, I color as such has a decided nervous effect. Too much blue is depressing d will bring on the blues. red is exciting and stimulating. Someone has estimated t reent age of divorces in red dining reo grays and light tans are best for large spaces, the color scheme being fur- Read Tribune Want Ads. “leiation of remarkable exhibif | of strange denizens of the seas. | ota a whole this feature of j the exhibition is on a larger seale | than London ever has seen. The park designed by experts and cov over 40 acres. The booths, exhibits and shows have been built in grcups ial design. One ind is on a House with — gigantic | and each has a sp | is called “Toyland | that-Jack-built | wooden soldiers as supporting col- Jumns. Then there is the “Alice in Wonderland” scetion, the “Garden of Flowers” and many others in addition jto the usual water and dry chutes, racers, Ferris wheels and dance alls without end. n, Denver, Colo., 17,—The Asso- Operative Millers will hold its twenty-ninth annual conven- jtion in Denver during the week of | June 2 to 7, according to a recen nouncement. Membership in the sociation includes representatives from all parts of the United States, Canada and England, and even China and Japan. Arrangements are being made for the entertainment of 1,000 millers and their families. Technical problems of milling cper- ation and allied subjects will make up the major part of the convention | Program, an- A Permanent Home—A Good Investment When you build a home you want -it to be beautiful, comfortable and permanent. Beauty and comfort can be ob- tained temporarily with many ma- ferials but permanence is not so ‘easily secured. This pleasing varia- tion cf the Dutch Colonial type of *home—the Hazlehurst—has been de- in concrete block and Port- land cemept stucco with fire-resist- . ing shingles in order to obtain the maximum permanence and mini- goum maintenance while not sac- rificing beauty and comfort that are 80 much desired. : « fo the family desiring a few large _ fooms rather than many small rooms this home ‘Will particularly "appeal. The lower floor has but three _ rooms and a hallway extending : front entrance to rear en- ‘The stairway to the upper © fioor is located in this hallway. “26° thé left from’ the front en- ince” is ‘the ‘extra large living : feet,” This toom ex- front of the home “to the rear poreh where a donble door is provided. There is one win- dow on the front and two on the pide. A fireplace addy muck to the wiTCHEN ergo LuING ROOM (200200 DINING Boom Wen 126 Tinst TLcor PLAN beauty of the interior and on cool evenings is just the thing to remove the chill from thy atmosphere, Logs may be burned or.a gas ar- rangement istaile. To the right from the front en- trance is the dininz room which has two largé Windows, one en the front and one on the side. A door leads to the kitehen which also has two willdows. A closet located in the halJway’ completes the first floor arrangement. The second floor has two large bedrooms, bathroom, and three clos- bts, all of extra size. One bedroom has two windows and the other has BED ROOM Moxie ~ SECOND TLOOR PLAN four, all of which ‘Insure proper ventilation while in use. The trellised front porch giveg smiling weleome and the concrete steps and floor will never cause a departing guest to stumble. The maximum of convenience has been |. aimed at. The well-planned cellar contains ‘a ‘well equipped laundry with modern electrit appliances for washing and drying clothes. The | | First Church Of Christ, Scientist 4th St. & Ave. C. ervice ut 11:00 A. M. “MORTALS AND IMMOR. | Sunday S Subject: Sunday School at 9:45 A. M. Wednesday evening testimonial mee | ing at 8 o'clock. | A reading room is open in the church building every Tuesday, Thursday and Satur except legal holi- days, from 2 to 4 P. M. | All are welcome to attend these ser- | reading a vices and to visit the room. Trinity English Lutheran Church 1. G. Monson, Pastor | Morning Service, Sunday at 11 A. M. | Tepic: Christ's desei'ption of a | Christian. Evening service, 7:30 p.m, June Ist 8 o'clock). | The Lord's Prayer. i hool and Bible Class at Topic: Sunday 12M “Blessed is he whose transgression | is forgiven, whose sin is covered.” Psalm 2:1. Salvation Army’ Special Adjutant Chesham {yam Minyea- polis, Minn., the Divisional Seeretary of the Salvation Army will visit the | city of Bismarck tomorrow (Sunday) | und will be in charge of the meet-/ ngs throughout the day. The mectings will be as follows: Open Air Meeting in front of the G. P. Hotel at 10:30 A. M. and | Holiness meeting tn the Citadel at } 114. M. i Sunday School at 2 P M and Y. P.-L. | Meeting at 6:30. Oyen Air Meeting in front af the Soo Hotel at 7:30 sharp and g spe- cial Salvation service in the Cit+ adel at 8 P. M. Every Salvationist should be wut for all of those services and to give the Adjutant all possible assistance. It is also of importance for all the Sunday School children to turn out for Sunday School at 2 P, M. as it is to be the first Sunday of the con- test. First Presbyterian Church Rev. Harry C. Postlethwaite, D.D. Morning service at 10:30, Theme “Ile Shall Be Called Jesus.” The quartette, composed of Mesdames Burnes and Scothorn, and Messrs Halverson and Humphreys; will fur- nish two numbers. Our new mem- ber of the Session, Dr. H. A, Bran- des, will be ordained at this service. All members of the Session, if pos- sible, are requested to take the front pew at the close of the offering. Junior Department of the Sabbath School will meet at 9:30. All the other Departments will meet at 12 M. Join the Men’s Class, The. Senior Christian Endeavor will meet at 6:30 instead of 7:00 o'clock, Subject “God's Holy Day: What It Is For, And Why.”—Leader,, Mrs. Postlethwaite. There will be no service in, the church in the evening because of the Bi laureate in the Auditorium. The Giris’ Reserve will meet Mon- day at 7:30 p. m. The Juniors will meet Tuesday at 4:30 p. m. The sub- ject “Work and Play.”—DLeader, Au- verne Olson. Prayer meeting on Wednesday’ at 8:00 p. m. All are invited to the services of the church. St. Georges Episcopal Church Dr. Ryerson, Rector Holy Communion at 7:30 A. M, Sunday School at 10 A. M. Morning service and sermon ,at 1 ALM. The subject of the morning ser- mon will be “BREAD ALONE.” This is. the time of the year, when the beautiful “Outdoors” is apt to make one forget that there is such a thing as church service on Sun- day morning. Don't forget. ——_—__- Evangelicay Church Church, corner Seventh and Rosser Sts, C. F. Strutz, pastor, - Tomorrow is the last Sunday be- fore the annual conference session. Jt should be a great day in the church. Rev. C. A. Bremer, Presid- ing Elder -will be with us at the morning and evening services. German preaching, followed by communion in charge of Rev. Bre- mer, 9:30 to 10:45 A. M. All other services are conducted in English. Sunday School from 10:45 to 11: 45 A. M., followed by a brief Bible Talk. t The Evangelical League of C. E. will meet at 7:16 P, M. sharp, Mrs, Butler, for years President of the State | Christian Endeavor Society will give a talk on “stewardship,” Do uot miss it, The intermediate. League will meet at the same hour in the basement. - Evening sermon followed by com- munion at 8 P. M. A cordial welcome to all. Speciat music by the choir, South Side Mission Sunday School at 11:00 A. M. Afternoon Worship at 3 P. M. Evening Worship at 8 P. M. Rev. S. Dy Scott, pastor. Come and bring your friends. . pe ce tn a McCabe Methodist, Episcopal Church Dr. 8. F. Halfyard, Pastor. Prof. Harry L, Wagner, Organist. 10:30 a. m. public worship. Organ prelude Anthem. Deuan. offertory. jolo, VE Sermon, Rev. David §. McGuire. Organ postlude. 12m Sunday. school. « 7 p,m. Junior League. 7p, m. Epworth League. 8. p,.39, public worship. Organ prelude. Anthem. Organ .offertory, ., Solo. kitchen contains an electrically op; | erated gefrigeratot, so that daily, visits of the iceman with his muddy foot-marks are no longer needed and the electric dishwasher 'reduczs the | tor’ will kitchen work to a minimum, Sermon, Rev. David S. McGuire. Organ -postlude, a First Baptist Church | Ave. B and Fourth St. L.. B. Johnson, Pastor. 9:30, Sunday ool, Mr. John Thorpe, superintendent 7 10:80, morning worship. ‘The pas- speak on the subject, “Guarding the Source of Life and BISMARCK TRIBUNE Chewing Gum Aids Digestion known as the Achras Sapota. flavoring aad Sp the junior members of the congre-| except the Crusaders Sunday. ratio! ts aging the older children to remain | all the services. | leaders must be trained now, for I. By C. Houston Goudiss National Aathority on Natrition The Forecast—America’s Leading Food Megezine Everyone knows we are‘given to eating more than we actually need, but when the table is heaped with good food, “what's a feller to do?” He are so tempting, and so palatable! Why not enjoy them? But many a fea 3c during the process of eating is far from enjoyable dur- ing the process of digestion! Then it is that chewing gum comes to the rescue. Dr. W. A. Evans, former commissioner of health in Chicago, says in his book, “How to Keep Well”: “To chew gum after.a meal aids digestion. Most people do not chew their food long enough to mix saliva with it thoroughly. The chewing of gum adds some saliva to the stomach contents. It is of. more service in stimulatit cially serviceable in helping the stomach to empty its contents. If one -has' overeaten and the stomach is heavy something is gained by chewing gum for half an hour, beginning two hours after eating.” And it also helps to keep the teeth clean. m, Sark Chicle, the base of chewing which is secreted by the inner Only during the rainy season are the trees “bled.” | After being refined and sterilized, the chicle is mixed with sugar and | moulded into the familiar form which has become so of is the milky juice | of a tropical tree i popular, - ! Conduct.” Special musie by the | 8:00, Mid-week mecting for prayer, quartet. instruction and fellowship. ial attention willbe given to| There will be no evening services, n. We call attention to par- The Loyal Temperance Legion wil to the importance of encour- s. meet Thursday after school. Mrs. John L. Hughes, leader. The Ladies’ Aid will meet at the //home of Mrs. R. E. Wenzel, 814 4th Future church Per fidious Savages In the Torres Straits Islands in the East Indies, there are no.trees suitable for canoe building. So the natives, a cruel; treacherous race, import their’ canoes from the Fly River Delta in New Guinea — another place with an unenviable reputation. The dis- tance between these two places 'is over four hundred miles, and no native in that region travels even one-quarter of that distance. The word is simply passed on from tribe to tribe. On tire strength .of this vague order a canoe is built. Then it is relayed back. Each tribe of bloodthirsty cannibals tests and discusses it before passing it on. Finally the payment, shell necklaces, speay points, arm bands, makes its wav to'the canoe builders in the same leisurely fashion. There is reason for this honesty in savages to whom perfidy is nat- ural. If any of the parties in this ' eomplicated transaction were to risk being dishonest, their credit would be ruined. And though these natives may kill and eat each other, they hold barter in- violate. Even savages understand that in commerce it pays to be honest, and to Jet the world realize your honesty! So in modern business. , Advertising must be honest arid it is a proof of honesty. A prod- uet’s advertising is the best guar- antee of its quality, usefulness and value. The man who-advertises is in- viting your.inspection. He is let- ting his goods stand on their own merit. He can’t afford to deceive you.; You can depend on ‘him. That's why it pays to read adver- - tising and to buy’ advertised goods. f \ ANYONE CAN SPEND MONEY. ~~ THE, READER OF ADVER- TISEMENTS SPENDS Wey {in the history of the vacation school Wectieg nae ; movement in the city. meal which is hugely enjoyed |. . the stomach muscle. It is espe- | stumbled on the stairs, “is that, fof the different machines has you? |i selected and installed the | “No, dear,” came the reply. a'ffand most. scientific Electro trifle unsteadily, “ I’m a burglar. J Machine on the market. | Call the police."\—Tit-Bits. ' ae% al ah ERR, SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1924 Men doff their hats because the knight of old doffed his helmet | eeasanonanendsiemnannssonimmasnamemossme nama Bismarck Physico- ‘Electronic Laboratory Lucas Block, Bismarck, N. B-" The late Dr. Albert Abrams advanced the theory that every disease ‘has its particular vibra- tions, and, if counter vibrations of the same intensity are set in motion they would destroy the disease. Dr. Abrams machine was neév- er patented, and for this reason duplicates and improvements on his electronic,machine are on the market. \ Dr. Enge, after careful study Strect Thursday | afternoon. The business of: the society will fe trans- acted. Vacation Bible School The fourth session of the Bismarck Vacation™Bible School will be’ held beginning May 26-June 8 Parents and friends are asked to cooperate with the Council of Religious Edu- cation in securing the largest school First Lutheran Church Seventh Street and Avenue D. Morning service, 10:30, Sunday school 12 noon. ing service 8 o'clock. AR are cordially invited to attend these serv A “John,” stillness called the of the wife in the night as omeone | LARS 1 HIGH Many high collars are seen on the R. S. ENGE, Paris importations that fit smoothly D. C. Ph. C. and give the impression of having [| Lucas Block, Bismarck, N. D.’ been carefully built on, are very popular. Stocks, too, Phone «260 SAFETY WITH CONVENIEN Whenever 2 trip is taken an ‘important consideration is safe and method of carrying funds. a satisfactory A. B. A. Travelers’ Cheques eliminate the chances that one takes in carrying currency, with the ‘additional advantage of being read- ily convertible into. cash. The whole pro- cedure is as simple as cashing a check at your own bank. By means of Travellers’ Cheques your bank account travels with you to be called upon when needed. First National Bank THE PIONEER BANK ANY FISK Tire or Tube at 10% above wholesale dealer’s net price. CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY - People Like Six Cylinders Oldsmobile-Six offers you all the - desirable qualities of a good Six, and ata price that seems impossible until you are reminded that Oldsmobile enjoys a big advantage over theaverage manufacturer—an advantage that re- sults from the Breat purchasing power; Feared aoe nad manufactur- ing al vO! Ne otors working hand in hand si tg With the Oldsmobile: Six, you can enjoy §ix-¢ylinder superiorities and at a cost much less than that of the average good Four. The G.M. A, C. extended payment plan makes buying eaty. Prices f.o.b. Lansing. Tax and spare tireextra, AUTO SALES co, Sk A Dee DAKOTA 107-5th St, eS ae RE, ,

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