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ve ow FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 1926 Social and Personal * Wedding of Mrs. Cleo Hartman and ‘ Rudolph Hagen Solemnized Thursday New High Crown i at Hoime of Mr. and Mrs. Olgierson The home of Mr. and Mrs. G. Olgeirson, 621 Third street, was the seene of o pretty home ‘wedding Thursday at noon when Mrs. Cleo James Hartman of Turtle Lake end Rudolph EF. Hagen, brother of Mrs. Olgeirson, were married by Rev. W. tewart of Mandan, an old time doy the Hagen family. ” The ceremony was read front of the fireplace, which was banked with wild roses and peonies, Flowers and vines were used in attractive pro- fusion throughout the house. Imme- diately before the ceremony Miss Louise Huber sang { Covers were marked for 20 guests! at the three-course luncheon served after the ceremony. Mrs. Olgeirson was assisted by Mrs. W. L. Nuessle and the Misses Edith and Marion aera eee ests Ag __& clu Fr. @ ts. M. G. Hagen, Mr. and: Mrs. C. V. Danielson and son, Mi N : and Mrs. G. L. Hagen and ligt all A\ y of Wilton; Alfred Hart ‘urtle Lake; Miss Viola Hagen, ‘Wing; Miss Ruth Hagen, Minneapolis; and Mrs. W. Stews: jandan. Mrs. Hi the a iter of Mr. nd Mrs,.H. H. James of Turtle Lake, is a graduate of the Minot Normal, “I, Love You|has taught in Burleigh county schools The new closely draped turban fea- tures a higher crown than in the ary the length of a jacket and trim-j med with fur at the neck and the) hem. They are patterned to resem- ble the mottled skin of a rattlesnake, usually toned to light brown color. The snakeskin «)fect is produced by glazing the material. * | Constantinople, — (#) —- Smyrna! boasts the first-woman member of a stock exchange in Turkey. The gom- mission directing the Smyrna ex- {change has elected to membership Fatma zehra Hanoum, already well known as one of the few ‘urkish women engaged in commercial affairs and prominent in Smyrna us owner of several factories. Kansas City.—-(4)—The tenth bi- {ennial convention of the National Women’s Trade Union League, in} hich are federated many thousands ‘ef working women and friends of their moyement, will open here dune 28, Problems of women workers, the|” gathering of these workers into trade unions, and legislative programs will feature the meeting. Among the na- tional officers of the league are Mrs. Maud Swartz, New York, a printer, who is national president; Miss Rose past. It isjof black satin and comes low over the ears. | Truly.’ The bride was attended by Miss Ruth Hagen of Minneapolis and Miss} Mr. Hagen is the son of Mr. and Trene Hagen of Wilton, rs of the | Mi Hagen, pioneer farmers of groom. The groom's attendants were| the Painted ‘Woods district. He was William Bitner, Wilton, and Robert] one of the first volunteers from Bur- Olgeirson, Bismarck. leigh county at the beginning of the The bride’s gown was of bois du| World war and served on submarine rose georgette and she wore a corsage | chasers during the war. He is en- of roses and lilies of the valley. Miss f d in farming with his father. Ruth Hagen wi in poudre hblue| Following a wedding trip to points in feorgette Miss Irene Hagen wore| Minnesota the couple will make their & frock of rese taupe georgette. home on the farm near Wilton. for several years and in very popular in her wide circle of friends. MARRIAGE LICENSE A marriage license was issued yes- terday to Ralph R. Falkenstein “of Baldwin and Ethel Mabel Anderson of Regan. RETURNS FROM CHICAGO George Jundt has returned | from Chicago where he has been in at- tendance at the Eucharistic congress 1 Aiea VISITING IN JAMESTOWN ANNA MAE SCHIWAL MARRIED | Miss Ruth Cordner has gone to Announcements have been received | Joy 1 i rf i by trends in Biamarek of the mare| samestown for a visit with friends. for Seattle, Wash., after spend-| riage of Miss Anna Mae Schiwal, few days in Bismarck, the guest! daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anton Schi- Her sister, Mrs, Eva D. ‘Sheldon.; wal of Gladstone, N. D., to Ashley Lowden will visit a sister in| LeRoy McNeil on Monday, June 21, at vattle and later go to Berkley, Calif.,| 8 a, in St. Leo's church, Tacoma, where she taught for several years,| Washington. Mr. and Mrs. McNeil returning Grinnell over the Cai will be at home after July 5 in the dian Pacifi Miss Low who has! Newton Apartments, Tacoma. traveled extensively here and in Eur-| Mrs. McNeil was employed for two aid Bismarck was one of the at the Bank of North Dakota, t cities of its size she had ever ing Bismarck last sununer. Mr. Miss Lowden is a sister of| McNeil also lived in Bismarck sev- vernor Wrank O. Lowden| eral years ago. JUDGE JANSONIUS RETURNS Judge Fred 3 returned | yesterday from estown, whe had been to 4 MISS LOWDEN LEAVES Miss Eleanor Lowden, a teacher of Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa, has Fe et rere croecerrey News About Women | —_—_—_—— London.--)—To prevent the ap- pearance of the V-shaped red patch on neck and chest, the bane of the woman tennis player, an accessory to this season’s tennis outfit is the “sunburn scarf.” Made of double crepe de chine, the scarfs afte just long enough to twist around neck and throat except for the embroider- ed ends, one of which falls over the chest as a sun shiéld wi the oth- er does the same service for the back of the neck. of Mlinois, who spoke here in support | of the Coolidge administration just! before the last general, election. MISS NIELSON TO PHILADELPHIA e conduct court while Miss Hagel Nielson, state superin- | Judge J. A. Coffey of that city was s Bais 3 tendent of public instruction, will) here, Judge Jansonius will open a| ..ANkorn- P).-Mustapha, | Kemal's leave tonight for Philadelphia, Va. to attend the convention of the tional Educators Association. Miss Nielson North Dakota deputy for il the association and is national presi-| has been finished. In the meantime dent of the Council of Administra-| the judge will endeavor to complete tive Women in Education, one of the} decisions on a large number of cases departments of the ussociation, She| previously heard. will be gone about 10 day pena scd | ENTERTAINED AT DINNER FORMER BISMARCK MAN | The John Fletcher College quarte HONORED | of University Park, Iowa, arrived i | Bismarck Tuesday, en route for many years a resident of Bis-| Jamestown where the members marck, was elected senior vice com-j give a concert. They stopped over mander for the state of Montana at| for a day, the guests of Miss Ruth the recent convention of the Veter-| Cordner, who entertained yesterday ans of Foreign Wars held at Missoula.| noon at a dinner in their honor. Miss Mr. Rufener wus also elected state} Cordner was formerly a student at historian for Montana at the Ame.-| the John Fletcher college. ican Legion convention held in Butte ND SHRINERS REUNION two weeks ago. | FB. McAneney, Mr. and Mrs. J. LEAVES FOR HOME B. Williams, R. E. McIntyre, G. L. Miss Mary Ellison, who has been Spear and A. S. Erickson were among employed in the county treasurer's; the Shriners from Bismarck left office in Bismarck, has returned to; today for the Killdeer Mountains to her home in Sterling. Miss Ellison,| attend ‘the annual reunion of Fl accompanied by Miss Violet Sapp of| Zagal temple in session there today Sterling, will leave tomorrow for|and tomorrow. Jamestown for a visit with friends. jects barns AT HOSPITAL FOR TREATMENT BREAKS LEG Clifford Jansonius, son of Judge John Olgierson, son of Mr. and] and Mrs. Fred Jansonius, underwent Mrs. G. Olgierson, had the misfor-| surgical treatment for sinus trouble (ope to bisa ole a valle visiting | at the Bismarck hospital this San is grandparents on their farm neat He is getting slong nicely fol- Witton, te war brought to the Bis- Weise the oper: pa aad ay be able marck hospital and is getting along] to leave the tal tonight ort nicely. morrow. | REBEKAH MEETING TONIGHT VISITORS RETURNED The reguler rece of the Re-| Mr, and Mrs..C, M. bekah lodge will be held this evening} bab; at the Odd Fellows hall, A short! Mr,” an business session will be followed by| returned to their home in Jamestown, a social hour. Mrs, Cordner and Mrs. Stevens were alae classmates at the Bismarck. hospital RETURNS FROM MOTOR TRIP | training sehool. - Dr. and Mrs. G. Lipp returhed| - ee . last night from & e weeks’ motor GUEST OF SISTER ° trip in the east. \Dr. Lipp attended! Miss Margaret McAllister, who has a number of medical clinics while! been attending the Jemestown Col- away. lege, is in Bismarck for a visit with her sister,Miss Caroline McAllister, before returning’ to her home in Braddock. ACCEPTS POSITION Miss Marion Ackerman has accept- ed @ position for immer months with the hail it ce department. HERE FROM LIVONA’ Miss Clara Suverely of Livona is spending a few days. in‘ Bismarck, visiting friends and shoppin; RETURN HOME Mr, and Mrs. Fred Gans turned to their home in a short visit in the city. LEAVES FOR IOWA Miss Frances Melick of Underwood left yesterday for Waterloo, lowa, for a visit with relatives. HERE FROM MOFFIT \ Mrs. E. A. Jensen of Moffit is spending several days in Bismarck, visiting and shopping. FROM WILTON Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Harnish of Wilton were business visitors in Bis- marck* yesterday. i; —" regular jury term of court for Me- Lean county at Washburn July. 6,| is little more tha and’ consequently there will be few cases tried here until after that term a myth, On a was found that, except in large cities, ninety per cent of the Turkisl women still wear the 1 and lead the same miserable ex- istence their sisters did for 400 years before them, It is true polygamy has been sup- pressed and that the Moslem woman s now permitted to appear in pub- . but her social and political posi- still very obscure, There is t universal suffi Ralph A. Rufener of Helena, Mon’ Paris.-P)—Snakeskin spats pocketbooks. and now snakeskin jac- kets have made their, appearance on ysees and at the Long- startling reptilian coats which are weird enoagh to make any serious drinker believe his’dreams of pink and blue snakes have come true, The easy-disposal feature of this new hygienic help N a new way, women now are freed. of the disadvantages of old-time “sanitary pads.” Protec- tion is greater. The old embatrass- ment of disposal and laundry is avoided.; Get Kotex—8 in 10 better-class women have adopted it. Diseards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. Noembar- rassment. It’s five times as absorbent as ordinary cotton pads! You dine, dance, motor for hours ig sheerest frocks without a second’s doubt or fear. It deodorizes, too. And thus ends ALL danger of offending. You ask for it at any drug or department store, without hesitancy, simply by saying “KOTEX.” Do as millions are doing. End old, insecure ways. Enjoy life every Package. of twelve costs only MOTOR TRIP Mr. and Mrs. EB, W. Anderson of McKenzie ‘weré in Bismarck yester- day en route to the Black Hills of South Dakota. They are meking the trip by car, WALTHER LEAGUE MEETING. The regular business meeting of the Walther League will be held to- night at 8 o’clock.in the chapel. All members are asked to be present. he VISITOR RETURNS Mrs, O, J. Torbenson of Plaza, N. » who hi en the guest of Mrs. |. F, Demming, 40 Thayer, for two weeks, has returned to her home. LEAVES ON VACATION Miss Cecelia Bares, graduate nurse of the St Alexius hospital, left this morning for her home in Madison, Wis., for a two weeks’ vacation. Come and buy your baked goods at the Quality Meat Market tomorrow, inning at 11 o'clock. Given by Mis- sionary Society of Methodist have re- ten after Church. : | GUEST HERE oS Jack Cannon of Billings, Mont., is pe at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Matscheck. * ‘VISITING IN MINOT The Weather ; ison of the Bismarck Cloak Vee hop ij nding the week in Minot! 66! ” she’ te apameee oe seer Peas that Please Mostly fair tonight, be- coming Unsetttled Sat- SHOPPING BERE jinger’ and children i Mrs, W. E, Ki urday; © warmer. of Judson were shopping in Bismarck / 2. : OPE EBL yesterday... 7 : There's a Natural rich « - ‘el | Se ne areis. Robins "hopping in the city yesterday. ‘Ming Oo. peas. A nities iB 'FOR FEW PAYS Howard Holten of Washburn is in Bismarck fora few days’ visit. : TO MINNEAPOLIS C.J, Harvest Ses) ht for a business visit in Minneupolis, — ¢ -. HERE PROM GARRISON: Bigelow Neal of Garrison is spend- ing a few days in the city. Li w. Weber Wat 'today’ for | Paul on a b 8 visit. ik ; found only im Peas Grown in the famous pea growing GALLATIN VALLEY . .|cap maker, national Schneiderman, also of New York, 9 vice-president; Miss Elizabeth Cristman, Chicago, & glove maker, national secretary und treasurer, Mrs. Raymond Robins, for many years president of the or- ganization, now is honorary — presi- dent. Paris—-)-—A ministry or at least An under-secretaryship of state for women is one of the measures sug- gested by a newly for ‘associa- tion, “the French Feminist Club.” Josepr Pithon, barrister at the Paris Court of Appeals, who has devoted years to questions of women’s rights and the pr Yection of infants, is urg- ing the new club to secure this addi- tion to the Cabinet. London. -(#)- When wil- kinson,.LuBor member of the House of Commons, indulges in a new style of hair trimming she has in mind not the f,vhion of the day as some- Helen ian ends to be achieved. A year ago she had her hair shingled with the principal object, she said, of saving time over her toilet. Now she has gone a step further and submitted to an Eton crop, still remaining con- sistent to her purpose. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . “Tennis” Belts | Vw |Lucas Company Has ‘0,207 thet, sien" eve wor tec ty nia Four Full Pages of Advertising Today ;“"" ; The attention of Tribune readers | rushing, j is called to the appearance in tod issue of four full pages of advertis- at anywhere from two hundred to a| fir: ing for the A, W. Lucas Hl ich no doubt estab vfor the use of adver ~ PAGEHIRTEEN One associates it wth honeygickle and pinks. ee Even period furniture in its varying designs and divergent character must depend upon the size of your reomé, the height of your ceilings, the type of your house. Study your house then plan. Buy a furwitute book or two! Impossible to get the real stuff? Almost. But there are authentfe: ré- The queer part of it is that it costs the price of crown jewels to furnish the most modest house ngw; wood is wood, and it doesn’t have to be mahogany at that! Yet we go headlong and buy whole sets—they must be sets, you know-- company, thousand dollars # room es a record giving the ‘matter any intebligent ng space in| thought until we walk inside of a without thing to be followed, but the utititar-] re ta single issue of any {by once, # company k of special bare rt tomorrow \ until Satu ‘A perusal of the nis belts” in gre suede pockets also in suede, ing of | con| or we rebuild, that makes it ne min tu 0 often, we take an nen are buying them for their beau- " Sar, realized the BR monds, pearls and emerald: pride of place for even Owen Flanagan Funeral Tomorrow | Funeral services for Owen Flana- . who died yesterday at a local spital following a s iMness, will be held at § Cathedral tomorrow morning at 9 jock with Father John Slag offici- ating, Interment will be in the fam- ily lotvat St. Mary's cemetery, Mr. Flanagan has been a prominent ident of Burleigh county since | when he came th his parents from New York state, his birthplace. He has been engaged in farming for ma his farm be- ing located in’ Hayereek ‘ownship near here. He was « devote Catholic hly respected thoughout Matinee Every. Day, 2 TONIGHT FRIDAY & SATURDAY Hilarious Fun Putting “reverse English” on the real estate boom—selling New York lots in Florida— “the old army game” wit! A new type of screen comedy with W. C. Fields of “Follies” fame as chief laughmaker, modern touches. HODGE PODGE NOVELTY * NEWS PICTURES $10 : yor ate newspaper s, the adverti: aie | g and con- morni which will ap peal to both men and women, ‘New Furniture— | Why Not Like It! IVE ROBERTS BARTON something happens to turn our | sto mew furniture or more furni-! As a usi where from two days ts two weeks to attend to the ia-! take anywhere from a day to forever The florshemm Show | a lot to you. “BISMARCK furniture ‘store. Rut wh can bet productions. And y furniture buying 1 not going to say arly nd Tum not going to say How do T_ know jwhat kind of a house you have? 1} Karly Auerican furniture may not ave} suit. your any more than it 1 the White House, eve, has been given cheme of refurnishing. ones. who invented “se but anyway he is di and buffet do bed does not * (Copyright, 19; which p: up in the new wininti| ~=BEAUTY Permanent Waves $15.00 They are a benefit to the hair, a weather, Miss Maher arrived today her or Mr, Harrington give the wave. da joy in warm nd you may have 1 thin, matter Soft Water Shampoos HARRINGTON’S BARBER-BEAUTY SHOP Phone 130 Bismarck, N. D. HNN] -§ SG HO PPE FANNIE Special for Saturday Ladies’ Silk Hose—“Dixie Maid”—all the late col- ors, ravel stop, guaranteed first quality. Regular 69¢ pair. Saturday, while they last, only ic each stocking tC ve f| MAKE your feet . en last year than went in. 1924. Lasty marck, “He also leaves to mourn his comfortable. Wear Only : i Se meen toe eraplieeprd ine ary and five ais ait jac ere " Each under the Society's auspices. . : ’ wilbliaveehy cies London.) The opal is no long-| W.” Wase' Moynier, 8. from rn = See what le will do at the “Arcade” Saturday CS night. That’s worth Pay lic for a San-O-Mat—get two for 16c¢ Our window tells the sory—come, look, and be here early in the morning VARIETY STORE y enly 15e a th.—other Ise Bargains!!! : vecerereeee ee Me DOK, $1.15 DOZ Mason Jars Quart Full line of Canning Goods remember this— one fine piece is worth twenty shoddy And speaking of sets—I don't know of furnitarg, and you need have no fear of hurting his feelin if your dining-room chairs and table 50th Anniversary of the Battle of the Little Big Hom of June 27, 1876, recalls the early establishment of ° ia0l er WEBB BROTHERS in October, 1884 We take pride in the fact that we established this insti- tution only eight years after the gallant Custer and his men went forth on their fatal mission, being the oldest Department Store in western North Dakota. Our length of service to the public — 42 years —.,is ample proof of the wisdom in our policy of handling “Merchandise of Merit Only,” a policy adopted and strictly adhered to since our opening day, long before. North Dakota became a state. We join in a hearty welcome to all old settlers and ~".- ' . Visitors during the Custer Anniversary Celebration. bial’ - WEBB BROTHERS. Established 1884— ae 1: +. NORTH DAKOTA