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SATURDAY, JULY 28, Bridge Tournament to Open Tuesday at Country Club The women’s bridge tournament of the Bismarck Country club will! even Tuesday afternoon at the club nouse, play, beginning promptly at 3 o'clock. The tournament is case to all members of the country club, and is an annual event. ‘Xba tournament is under the di- rection of Mrs. J. K. Blunt, who will announce further arrangements Monday, Doris Lundquist Is Hostess Yesterday Miss Doris Lundquist was hostess last evening to twelve gyests in honor of her house guest, Miss Helen Davis of Hoffman, Minn., and of Miss Marian Lack of Norfolk, Neb., who is visiting her cousin, Miss Audrey Rohrer of this city. Three tables of bridge were in play during the evening, honors go- ing to Miss Marian Jensen and Miss Lack. two-course supper was served at the close of the games by Mrs. O, Lundquist, mother of the hostess. Mrs. Lundquist was as- sisted by Mrs. A s. N ielson. Bunco Party Given at Miller Home The Misses Luby and Mary Miller were hostesses at a bunco party Monday i Twelve guests were present and three tables of cards were in play during the evening. Honors went to Miss Alma Hecken- Jaible, and a guest prize was pre- sented Miss Lena Polonsky of Wil- ton, who was a visitor in Bismarck. Mr. and Mrs. Niles Stowe have as their guests this week Mrs. Stowe’s parents, brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J.'O. Kongelf, Grand Forks; Mrs. Fred McGilvray and son, Donald, Fargo; and_ Elmer Kongelf of Grand Forks. The vis- itors will be in Bismarck about a week, oe see after spending a few da guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Vey and Mr. and Mrs. W. H. McVey. En route home they planned to visit Mrs, W. A. McVey at the Boy Scout camp at Wildwood Lake where she | E is camp cook. se @ Miss Betty Lofthouse returned last evening from Fargo where she has been spending two weeks vaca- tion with friends and relatives. She was accompanied home by her | Social and Personal | 1928 Bartley - Sletten Nuptials to Take Place Next Week The wedding of Miss Elsie Sletten of Bismarck to Patrick Bartley of |Brainerd, Minn., will take place Sat- jurday, At ug. 4, in. Brainerd. Miss Sletten, who has been employed at the A. W. Lucas store for the past year, will leave tomorrow for her former home in Fargo, where she will spend several days before going jto Brainerd. The wedding will be followed by a short honeymoon trip, after which the couple will be at home in Brainerd. i Double Wedding Interests Bismarck “Word has been received here of the wedding of Miss Carol McClure of Dickinson to John Magner of Minneapolis, and of Miss Grace Mc- Clure, Dickinson, to Allen E. Olson, Milwaukee, at a pretty double cere- mony in Dickinson Tuesday. Rev. M. Schmitt of St. Patrick’s church read the service. Mrs. Magner is well known in Bis- marck, having been a teacher of mathematics in the local high school for several years prior to 1925. She is a graduate of the Dickinson high school and the University of Minne- sota. P Following the wedding, Mr. and Mrs. Magner left by train for Min- neapolis where they will start on a motor trip to Port Arthur and Isle Royal, Canada. ® ry Bridge Dinner at Chris Boepple Home Mrs. Chris Boepple entertained last evening at dinner in honor of the eighteenth birthday anniversary of her daughter, Miss Ramona Boepple. Members of the O. E. C. club comprised the guests. Garden flowers were used effectively on the dinner table. se Mrs. Blanche C. Hutchinson and cep Peet Mildred, of Morgantown, W. Va., are the guests of Mrs. A. W. Cook of this city, sister-in-law of Mrs. Hutchinson. The visitors are en route east by motor from Glas- gow, Mont., where they have been visiting Mrs. Hutchinson’s brother, Cook. They toured Yellow- stone National park en route here from Montana. e Mrs. R. W. Oakman of Washing- ton, D. C., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Jones of this city, is the guest of her parents, having been called cousin, Miss Florence Flemming of Fargo, who will remain here for a short visit, ee Miss Eleanor Cooper of Chicago arrived in Bismarck this afternoon to be the guest of Miss Gwendolyn Jones for a few days. Miss Cooper is a graduate of the University ot Wisconsin and is a. Delta_ Delta Delta sorority sister a Miss Jones, Mrs, John Thomes of Riverside, Calif., who has been visiting at the home of her son-in-law and daugh- ter, Mr. and Mrs. Rov McLeod, will leave August 1 for her home. At present, Mrs. Thomas is the guest of relatives in Granville, ND. Mrs, Della Curl and daughter, Mrs. Charles Race of Ithaca, N. Y.,| few are the guests of Mrs. Mary Mathi- son here this week. Mrs. Curl will make her home in Bismarck tempvr- arily, while Mrs. Race plans to leave August 3 for her home, Mr. and Mrs. J, D. Haas, accom- panied by Mrs. P. Shuren and Ruth and Ed Shuren, motored to Harvey and Rugby this morning to spend the -end with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kuntz and Mrs. and Mi Chola, Mrs, Dan Kelso and children of Duluth, Minn., have returned to their home after a visit in Bismarck as the guests of here by the illness of her mother. Mrs. Thomas Griffiths of Ottawa, Minn., sister of Mrs. Jones, is also @ guest in the city. rt Mr. and Mrs. John Guber of St. Cloud, Minn. and Miss Ethel Tschumperlin of Minneapolis have returned to their homes after spend- ing a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tschumperlin in this city. The party also made a trip to the Bad Lands, pees Mrs. C. A. Lack and three daugh- ters, the Misses Marian, Donna, and Betty, of Norfolk, Neb. are the pee of Mrs. Lack’s sister, Mrs. . S. Rohrer, of this city. The vis- itors are en route to their home from the Twin Cities where they spent a aor ese @¢ Mrs. Alice York will leave tomor-| brid row for Detroit Lakes, Minn., where she will spend two weeks’ vacation at the lake resorts. Returning, Mrs. ‘York will step at Devils Lake where she will be the guest of her sister, Mrs. Ole Peterson, for a few days. Women of the B. I. C, are having @ social party Monday evening in the community rest rooms under Hoffman's conmentnnery, Mrs. John Delzer, said today. rs. Frank Matscheck i3 social chairman of the _—, eee Mrs. Emma Nichols has gone to Harvey where she will be the guest of her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. Mrs. George Martin, over the week-end. . se 8 Miss Catherine Werstlein leaves today for Fergus Falls, Minn., where she will spend two weeks’ David Sweet has returned from a to] two weeks’ vacation trip at lake he mike al nin 30 W. 5, Casselman. ” points in northern Minnesota, Miss Emma Bader left for Kulm today where she will be the of her mother, Pee Mrs. W. S. Brown of Beach, N. D., was a Bismarck shopper today, Mrs. M. G. Turney leaves this eve- ning for Chicago, Lost Special, “We Americans, guest | j, A New Picture of Curiless Mary i Here is the latest picture of Mary Pickford, showing the screen star with- out her famous curls. Note that the bob is an extremely conservative one. o ee | Atthe Movies | OO CAPITOL THEATRE Edward Sloman, actor, writer and director, is responsible for the splen did direction of the new Uni | ” which will | tre on Moa- | al | open at the Capitol Th day with an all-star cast. Sloman made a location trip to New York where he collected cor siderable data concerning the live and customs of America’s adopted sons and daughters, for use in this heart-stirring drama of a foreign family coming to this country to take out naturalization pape “All of the educators agree,’ Sloman, “that the solution o: e | problem of making good American | citizens out of immigrants lies with the children of these people who are being educated in the public schools.” Nevertheless, Sloman pointed out, there is often stark tragedy under- lying this Americanization process. The children so easily absorb the atmosphere and language of their adopted land, but the old folks live, think and act just as they did in the “old country.” The situation of misunderstanding which is created between the older and younger generation of our for- eign-born people forms the theme for “We Americans.” ELTINGE THEATRE The bride and groom join hands, Thirty have tion as first, consolidated, chools. the state standardization board. This Palmer, superintendent of public in- struction, W. Henry Hanson and Shirley G. Fox, .,|Tural insepetors, and J. A, Page, id} high school inspector. Schools which have applied are as dent, Schoo! 30 Schools Seek Standardization Burleigh applied for standardization, ice Runey, county superin- aid today, may 2 t second, or third class board is made up of Bertha Parsons, deputy, county schools | ply for classifica- | }, Creek, two; Sible two; Burnt Creek, . Lincoln, Fort Rice, White, n, Long Lake, Pleasant View, | i , Frances, Driscoll, Gibbs, | | Canfield, McKenzie, Telfer, Morton, | Boyd, and Regan. | YOUR CHILDREN | ee fy Olve Roberts Barton ©1928 by NEA Service,Inc. There has been a great movemeni in welfare societies to provide placcs where little girls can take their baby brothers or sisters on summer days. These places provide care for the babics in the form of day nurscries and recreation for the little mothers as well. It is one of the greatest humani- ties extant. There are many tami- lies where mothers must be away all day earning, in which the old- est little girl must take the place of the parent. Everywhere in cer- tain districts of large cities we see ittle mothers” caring for babies. They carry them around, often the babies almost as big as themselves, and never know a free moment away from their charges. In other homes where the moth- er is busy all day long, it is often the custom to call upon an older child to help in taking care of the baby. While mother washes or irons or sews or cleans, the little daughter of the house will be wheel- ing her baby brother out for his air- ing, watching him while he plays on the porch, directing his little journeys on his kiddy car, or even bathing him, feeding him, and dress- ing him. And that is all right if it does not go too far. I have known mothers who never thought fit to relieve their little girls from this responsibility from one summer's end to the other. They forget that the older children had as much right to their play and freedom as the younger ones, “Go look after the baby. “No, you can’t go to the pic- nic. Who'll look after baby?” Bla the baby while I finish this res These commands are all very well for a certain part of each day, but it isn't fair to saddle a child with if 4 Faskion Plaq ue <Liadleteateatetttttiti THIS NOVEL SCARF COLLAR is suitable for a short-haired fur coat such as ermine, Japanese mink or caracul. Braid is used in little decorative motifs. the sourest dispositions imaginable. It was no wonder. There is another thing about chil- dren taking care of babies. They may hurt their backs or bend their soft cartalaginous bones out of shape by carrying a heavy baby g: . Whenever I see a woman with mis- shapen shoulders, particularly with the right one lower than the left, I say to myself, “She has probably the constant care of a baby unless. it is absolutely unavoidable. She will learn to hate the baby and all abies, most probably, if she is turned into a drudge, I knew a mother once who em- broidered all summer long while her two litttle girls were veritable pris- oners, Once they left their little brother on a neighbor’s porch and ran after a hurdy-gurdy man with the other neighborhood _ children. The baby fell off the porch and the girls were punished. Those little girls grew up with The minister starts to speak, and then an angry mob breaks into the room and a policeman tears the bridegroom away from his weeping ride. That’s the experience Sally Blane has in “Fool for Luck,” W. C. Fields- Chester Conklin team comedy play- ing at the Eltinge for Monday and Tuesday. She had planned for years on this day. It was to be the big moment of her life. Everything seemed to be working out even finer than her dreams. Her sweetheart had a fine job with the millionaire oil magnate who had Te come to town and the world looked rosy with promise. Then her dream castle starts crumbling before her tearful eyes, Surprises come almost as fast as the laughs that ripple their way throughout this highly amusing and entertaining story. Fields plays the part of the smooth oil stock promoter who comes to the small town expecting to clean up a fortune by the sale of worthless oil stock. Chester Conklin is the big man in the little town and puts a spoke in the wheels of Fields’ The two comedy-men clash from the time Fields reaches the town un- til he is ready to leave. He doesn't leave, however, for everybody turns a profitably and everybody is PPY. ‘There is no better green food than » while a herring supplies as much body building food as the same it of salmon. ors —Black Angora cat fire HT. Deena ‘A violin that plays itself has been M. Gabriel Borcan Borie Antes, Frosch enginesre, bry, two FCAPPER FANNY SAYS: ‘ ies al NEW SALEM, N. D. To. the melodies of MACK’S BAND “Syd’s Aces of Rhythm” Post 91 «'e COLLEGEVILLE, MINN, ‘2 ‘A Boarding and Day School for Young Mey | Conducted by Benedicting Fatherg 3 HIGH SCHOOL, COLLEGE and SEMINARY, y. Wonderful location, on the banks rj A picturesque Lake Sagatagan” * Sports of Write H] Room 42 all kinds under the directlon of experienced coaches ‘Jor teautifut pictoriat eatetag OFFICE OF JHE DEAN jolegeville, Minn, | _Undisturbed sleep. ELS-Tox BESEARCH BY REX RESEARCH Is Your Home . Thief-Proof? your Is Your Window as Strong as a Steel Vault? rental, The First Guaranty Bank FLA, Lahr, Pros E. V. Labr, Vice President J. P, Wagner, Cashier H.E. Baker, Assistant Cashler Ox Fhe Second Story Man —Is at large, roaming the streets and robbing the homes. You read of his exploits in the papers. Even now his eye may be on fixed om your valuables. Why tempt Fate and the Burglar? At this Bank there is a safety deposit. vault available at a trifling ,* safe, sure, stainieas, fragrant. {And sure-death to mosyuttoce, Mca and other houschold insectsend. 3 Fly. home, covetously e || family when helped to bi ‘8 child.” And think of the baby! with his 10-year-old iter carrying him around? Isn't likely to let him fall? In a house with endless work to be done, I should: reverze the order of things. A little girl of ten can learn many househoud duties and relieve her mother that way. It seems a much safer plan for every- body, and is certainly kinder to her. Vacation should be as much of a tion as possible. All chidiren must play. ‘3 {_S. W. Burleigh } Mr. and Mrs. Claud Hauser visited relatives at Huff, N. D., Sunday. ‘orfine and Na mi Buckley are able to be around again after being sick from the effects of having their tonsils removed. Rudolph Rosenberger of Bismarck is helping A. J. Stewart cultivate corn. Frank Andrist of Bismarck trans- acted business in this vicinity the first of the week. Lou Mallard and Norman Stewart have purchased a tank for dipping sheep. They have been ws, iy for the past few days with this oc- cupation. being held at the The services Dr. Enge Chiropractor Drugless Physician Lucas Bik. Bismarek, H. BD. | TONIGHT FRED THOMSON IN ‘JESSE JAMES’ — Also— NEWS PICTURES and COMEDY COMING—STARTING MONDAY Y yf HAVE A BIG TIME A picture that you can take to your heart ning—That takes possession of your heart to the end. You may have seen more spectacular pictures— You may have seen more pretentious pictures— You may. have seen costlier productions — but— You have never seen a‘ picture that could hold you spell- bound from beginning to end as does “We ‘Arwericans.” | Last Time AT THE BIG SHOW @,> ng wD her, mother's | Gloncod chureh are belig well e was tended and much interest is shown. Rev. Sorenberger is himeelf to be a phe eee Fang pat Whee ae at a TONIGHT — Saturday also the Glencoe will not be held this week on count of the special services, A binder. Mr. Irvin of 8 Tact ih “be mma binder. Matinee Every Day at 2100; cceceieatinmebtedea ee LILLIAN GISH RALPH FORBES GEORGE FAWCETT KARL DANE ‘THE ENEMY’ A Vivid Romance of Wer-Tern : Austria } News Picturee—Comedy SUE UEEnnnnenemeenmeemaemmeee eel Coming—Mondey and Tuesday “Kings of Foolishness” at the begin- No corner for these fools for fun. They run away with all the comedy co keep your eyes on them in this hilarious piece of funning— spiced with pathos and sweetened with romance. ALL FOR FUN— FUN FOR ALL! TTT NY community. TMM tind that it will grow with s Take a firm grip on your expenditures. to save for your old age. He that saves is independent. He is a capi in his own right and can look the world in the face a free man, ‘A Savings Account in this bank The Pioneer Bank RT is » step in the right direction, You will step Fey sight x For nearly half a century, we have ministered to the banking needs of this NATIONAL BANK OF BISMARCK Total Resources, $4,500,000.00