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Jan ; Beromes Bride’ of Ramus R. Robinson The wedding , of Miss Jane G. Woodworth and’ Ramus R, Robinson took place this morning at 11 o'clock at the parsonage of the Presbyterian church. Rev. Paul S. o Wright read the service in, the nae of a grovp of relatives and iends, Miss Grace Woodworth attended {her sister while J. H. Osborn was best man. Following the ceremony wedding dinner was served by the Abride's sisters, Mrs. Sam Robinson, Jr., and Mrs, Oscar Swanson at the Robinson home, Mr. and Mrs, W. C, Robinson of Braddock were out- of-town guests, The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Woodworth . of south of Bismarck, For several ears she has been employed in ‘ebb Brothers store. The groom is the son of ‘Mrs, Sam Robinson of Bismarck, Mr. and Mrs. Robinson will make their home on a farm south of this city. . eee Bridge Luncheon at Schultz Home Mrs. E. J. Schultz and Mrs, Roy » Bakken were hostesses at a 1:3 Ivncheon Tuesday at the Schultz home. The tables were attractivel in spring colors wit! ieces of jonquils. The afternoon was spent at three tables of bridge. High honors in the games were won by Mrs. J. W. Mc- Guiness and Mrs, W, S. Rohrer. . Col. and Mrs. C. B. Little, who are spending the winter in Galifor- nia, are spending some time at the El Encanto hotel, Santa Barbara, in company with their friends, Mrs. H, Tate of New York city and Miss Dietric of Los Angeles. x ° The ladieg of the Episcopal church have arranged for good values at the rummage and white elephant sale which they will give Saturday at the parish house. on \ Third street, t: . ° All parents desirous of present: ing their children for Christian bi tism in the Methodist church are « requested to do so Sunday morning at the 10:30 services, : St. Mary’s Circle will hold a food and fancy work sale Saturday at Jones & Webb’s grocery. The sale vill begin at 10:30 Saturday morn- is eee The ladies aid of the Zion Luth- eran church wilh mect Thursday evening at 7:30 at the home of Mrs. J. M. Harrison, 518 West Thayer. * Ross Cullen has returned tq Hens- ler after spending the week-end in Bismarck at the home of his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Cullen, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Draper and children will leave Thursday for Brainerd, Minn., where they will , ymake their home. * The ladies aid of the Methbdist church will hold its annual spring rummage sale in the church base- ment Saturday, A son was born this morning at St. Alexius hospital to Mr. and Mrs. William N, Miller of Bismarck, Mr. and Mrs. Jutius S, Zeller- of Leith were the guests of friends in Bismarck this week-end. St. George’s Guild will meet Thursday afterngon at 2 o'clock at the parish house} eee? Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hertz have wk returned to Carson after a week-end visit in this city. A C. A. Bertel of Windsor has re- turned home after transacting busi- ness in this city. STOPS COUGHS QUICKLY —HEALING, DEMULCENT “I was bothered with a hard persistent cough, but found no oth- er remedy so good and so ~ quickly relieving as Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound,” says E. Boggess, Po-: mona, . Coughs and throat irritations, hard bronchial coughs, ‘ing “flu” coughs, almost in- ly. It combines the curative luence of pure pine tar and the mollifying demulcent action of fresh clear honey with other healing ipgredients. A boon to those who"suffer from troublesome night coughs. Ask for Fole: Honey and Tar Compound.—Adv, and White Ele- phant sale by ladies of Episco- pal church Sat: at the Parish House on Third street. Good values. Try the meals at The Pat- terson Hotel, formerly The Mc- Kenzie. i: For est Results in Your BAKING POWDER 10] tion should be sure that it is repre- Out-of-Town Guests Are Entertained at Reception Saturday Mrs. E. H. Morris was hestess Saturday to 25 ladies of the Pres- 1 byte church at a reception for ; Mre. J. H. Mackley of Minot and the Rev. A. C. Hill of Bottineau, | guest preacher here last week. Fooms were’ decorated with garden flowers, During the after- noon a musical program was given by Mrs. Mackley and Mrs. Paul 8. right. The hostess served a buf- fet luncheon. . sf Girls’ Welfare Meeting Thursday at High School Due to a conflict of meetings, it will be necessary for the Girls’ Welfare meeting held at the high school building on Thursday aight rather than at tlte Association of Commerce rooms, as previously | 3 announced. This meeting is a very important one since it has the welfare of Bis- marek girls as its ek The only way in which volunteer work of this kind can be successful is to have the backing and support of the entire community. Every organiza- sented at this meeting. Every rep- resentative is urged to take an ac- tive part in making this project a success, ———__ | Menus For the j | Family | CHICKEN A LA KING 1 1-2 tablespoons chicken fat .or butter; 1 3-4 tablespoons flou: cup hot chicken stock; 1-2 cup scald- ed milk; 1-4 cup cream; 1-2 teaspoon salt; 2 tablespoons butter; 1 cup cold boiled fowl cut in strips; 1-2 cup sauted sliced mushrooth caps; 1 cup canned pimentos cut in yolk of one egg. Melt fat, flour and stir until well blended; then pour on gradually, while stirring constantly stock, milk id cream. Bring to boiling point and add salt, butter, bit by bit, fowl, mushroom caps and pimentos. Again bring to boiling point and add e; yolk slightly beaten. Saute mush- room caps in butter five minutes. Serve on buttered toast. Slice bread 1-2 inch thick. Make trench at either end on opposite sides. But- fe hud both sides to trench and oast. CAKE ’EN SURPRISE Cut ‘several. day old cake in slices and toast a golden brown. Cream 4 tablespoons butter, add 6 table- spoons flour gradually, then add 3-4 cup brown sugar mi exes ce tel beaten, Heat 2 cups milk and add gradually to mixture. S&, add 2 or 3 bananas sliced. Line ‘ pie dish with toasted cake, fill with banana cream filling. Other fruits may be used in place of ban- anas, OYSTER BISQUE _ Make white sauce two cups. milk,. six tablespoons butter, six table- spoons flour, 1-2 teaspoon sdit. leat one pint oysters and add to white sauce. Season with parsicy and red pe} pper. Serve on toast for luncheon dish . ‘ SES PBS ASTD? ae [Hints on Etiquet ‘ strips; 1. If a woman leaves her purse | mak on a store counter and a clk re- turns it, what should she do? 2. If a stranger. returns some dropped article on the street, is it proper to tip him? 3. When should one be especial- ly careful to thank and tip for favors ot this sort? The Answers 1, Thank and trip the girl or write a note to the firm commend- ing her. Or both. , 2. His appearance should be the guide. If it is a valuable article and the man shabby, of course, you should tip him. 3, Children, _ Matinee Every Day at 2:30, ‘FONIGHT—Wed. @ Thane A atierinig spectacle of 1-2) Wylie they can be content to print -4|Family” (Liveright). ed with two| off to associate Mr. USEFUL as well as ornamental is the radiator cover when it serves book and flower shelf. Books and Authors Two Prime New | . Novels eee ; ‘They're From Pens of * Elinor Wylie and Sarah Millin SE BY THE NEA BOOK SURVEY With the arrival of on€ novel by Elinor Wylie and another by Sarah Millin, the publishers can call it a season, so far as we ate concerned. When a Millin and a Wylie arrive, we're always ready to forgive the printshops for the heaps of medioc- rity they produce. fir wonder is that, publishing a Millin and a anything else. Men. *Wylte’s ne® work is “Mr. Hodge and Mr. Hazard” (Knopf), llin’s “An Artist in the We always hesitate to discuss what a Wylie book or a Millin book “is about.” It never makes much difference. Whether Mrs. Millin, from the literary colony in South Africa, writes of the jungle influence upon a neurotic young missionary, as in “God’s Stepchildren,” or whether she builds a fine picture of what we are pleased to call “artistic temper- ament,” she writes with a style so terse and simple, so crisp and com- plete, so restrained and so free from the ‘superfluous, that this Survey asks no questions. 4 In “Artist in the Family,” she tells of a Seuth African ranch family that scrapes and saves to send a son to) an English University, only to find that he hasn’t been studying some practical profession, but has sneake:. to the‘Coast to paint. What’: worse, he has “upped and married,’ not because of love, but because o pity fos @ woman’s plight and a fantastic sense of the chiv-.lrous. He returns to be misunderstood and to Be a further burden. He paints and he exhibits, and he de- termines to give the countryside a masterpiece, Whereupon, having watched the struggles, of the black natives, he pictures negro pinioned to a cross. The missionaries look upon it and turn away their heads in horror. This is sacrilege, they say. There is no, place for anything but white pigment in their particular, idea of divine association. The story moves on to its ulti- mate futility when, having deter- mined to toil in the mines, the artist acrifice that robs him even | ility to paint. And he is his family’s hands again— all over. But how this is and Mrs, starting told! eee The Wylie book is further proof, that, in whatever medium Mrs. Dr. Enge ractor Drugless Physician Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D. Sed i Wylie chooses to write, she remains a poet. Call them novels though she will, her words sing with the rhythm of poctry. And her sub; matter has the whimsi- licate humor, and imagin- ic-minded. Thus it was in “The Orphan An- gel,” wherein she created an apoc- ryphal Shelley and brought him on an American venture; thus it was in the fragile ‘Venetian Glass Nephew,” and thus it is in “Mr. Hodge and Mr. Hazard.” She disarms the guessers in an introduction begging them not Hazard with any- one gwho has lived, since he is en- tirel} fictional. And so, those who mi try to see bits of Byron and more of Shelley have to at that and accept Hazard at his poetic self.. In a word it is an ew quisitely written fable which goes to show that Parnassus has no trails for commonplace hikers and that those who try to climb: it will ever be challenged age as the blunt and practical Mr. Hodge. As for the handling of this, or anything else she may write, there | eems to us but or: word in which to summarize Elinor Wylie—that is “elegant.” Local Rotarians Hosts to Farmers at Dinner Tuesday Eight$-five farmers of the Bis- marck vicinity were guests of the local Rotary club at dinner Tuesda: evening at the Grand Pacific hotel. Captain George Bloomquist o: Fort Lincoln gave a splendid ad- dress on China and Japan. He told of the Honkong harbor, life in China; of Shanghai and the con- trasts of her English, French and Chinese sections. Captsin Bloom- quist said that there were 25,000 Russians in Shanghai, more than half of whom are unemployed. There is a decided lack of com- munity and national pride in China in contrast to the strong nationr slistic spirit in Japan, Captain Bloomquist pointed out. He men- tioned the improvements and mod- ern works in Japan and the Jap- anese faculty of adapting the good things of the west to their own needs, Captain Bloomquist told of the American traveler and his too common practice of attempting to make other countries change to his modes, County Agent A. R. Miesen spoke briefly of the farm organiza- tion committee report of the econ- omic conference held here recently. W. B. Falconer, in a short talk, urged cooperation and unity in the community. J. P. French was called upon for a report of his recent trip to Cal- ifornia, while George Duemeland told of a visit to the St. Paul Ro- tary club, i¢ splendid musical program was THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE move | ¢ SES — A_ spring bouton- niere composed of yellow-centered primroses edged with brilliants is very new, furnished by Rev, Paul S. Wright and George Humphreys, and by the Bismarck high school orchestra. ‘DICK GRACE TO ‘| WED MOVIE STAR e Engagement of Former Bis- marck Man, Movie Stunt Flyer, Announced The engagement of Richard “Dick” Grace, movie stunt aviatoy, son of Judge and Mrs, R, H. Grace of Minot and formerly of Bismarck to Alice White, also of the films was revealed today in Associated Press dispatches from Hollywood. Grace, who is known as a daring aviator, started flying in 1917 whei. he joined a naval corps. During thc war he piloted a bombing plane ir. northern France. Since the war hc has been an exhibition and stunt flyer, having doubled for well known actors in the movies. As the result of suffering a brok- en.neck in a stunt of “cracking up” @ plane before the camera, Grace wears a steel neck brace. Las summer he made two unsucoessfu. attempts to cross the Pacific from the Hawaiian Islands. Although Miss White discussed freely her elaborate plans for a big church wedding, she declined tc name the date, The tin is different. The tea is different. Bringing tea to you packed in vacuum just like your coffee-is only half the story. Schilling. Tea is more freshly fragrant than begin with. any other, to It’s a secret Schilling process. POD ! GET YOUR SEATS , FOR THE SEATS ON SALE Advance Orders. and Early Sales Indicate Packed Houses Both Nights Sale of reserved seats for the Elks morning and from the demand for places it is evident this ponular or- ganization is going to play to packed houses on Friday and Saturday nights, \ There is certainly going to be a lot of “pep” in this show judging by the way the mem! of the cast are jumping into rehearsals, accord- ing to Clint Draper, director, a about all that remains is the work out with the orchestra and the final polishing up. Dr. Struass, as the master of ceremonies in the big min- srel ensemble, is speeding the end- men up a little faster at each re-. hearsal and they are putting their jokes over like old time profes- sionals. The d rs, too, are showing up in great e especially in the “Slow Riv number which prom- ses to be a big hit, In this scene Jack O'Neil will present a hard shoe solo dance as one of the special fea- tures, and Geo. Klingensmith and Clint Draper have a double eccen- tric dance. If you haven't secured your seats, do so at once while there are some good ones left. They may be ob- tained at Harris and Woodmansee’s, The proceeds of the entertainment will go into the local lodge’s fund y and welfare work, as well ist in financing the Elks the cause is a worthy one. Senart new suitings ia our Ploce Goods Department. Modish styles for making the spring suit Departanent. in our PRINTED Minstrel Frolic opened this} A : ee collector BY W. W. WENTWORTR (Abbreviations a ates 1—When should t of j suit be bid initially?” hears 2—V "et is the quick trick value OS ie aay Gube tik ow many quick tric! qf dicated by. a defensive bid? ee ils 1—Wh Teen Qxxx — when holding a . 2—One and one-guarter quick tricks. S—At least one and one-half. The St. Mary’s Cirele will hold a food and fancy work sale, beginning at 10:30 Satur- day, at Jones & Webb’s gro- cery. Any watch, rei condition, rej Que the ‘cos Guaranteca Mail Orders Given Prompt : Attention ROYAL JEWELRY CO. PHOENIX HOSIER The PROFILE—the very latest in hosiery design— gracefully slenderizing the ankle. A delicate fillet of tone in pointed effect, a shadowy form that blends heel and ankle in a subtle, charming way. To be had only in this fine full-fashioned all silk hosiery, and at the new low price, $1.75 a pair. In Best Spring Shades at Webb Brothers “Merchandise of Merit Only” ac UR SCARF Fox Fisher Stone Announcing a four-day sale of Chokers in the season’s most popular Furs. ‘ Wolf - Squirrel Baum Marten Marten $750 . $ 125 Thursday, Friday and Saturday ~ Mareh 29, 30, 81 408 Main Ave, — Bismarck, N, D.