The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1928, Page 5

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J y y WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1928 Miss Palmer . Will Talk at South Bend Teachers Meeting Miss Bertha Palmer, state super- intendent of public instruction, left today for South Bend, Ind. She will apeak Saturday at an institute of teacners of the city of South Bend on “If I Were a Poet.” Miss Palmer will go to Washing- ton, D. C., from South Bend, to at- tend the national convention of state superintendents and commissioners of education, which meets there Dec. 10-12, ‘W. E. Parsons, deputy state super- intendent, and Mrs. Parsons will also attend this convention. Miss Palmer will spend several days at Cleveland, Chicago and Min- neapolis: on business before return- ing, and will be away about three weeks, Club Are Guests at Waffle Supper Mrs. John R. Fleck entertained the members of her bridge club last evening at a 7 o'clock waffle supper. Three tables of bridge ‘were in play during the evening, with high score going to Mrs. E. M. Hendricks and Mrs, Bernard Andrus. Roosevelt Pupils to Give Program Teachers and pupils of the Roose- velt school, assisted by Miss Ruby Wilmot, music supervisor, will pre- sent their arnual program in the school gymnasium in two perform- ances this week. A special matinee will be given on Thursday afternoon at 4 o’clock, and on Friday evening at 8 the second program will be given. The matinee has been arranged to take care of the crowded conditions of previous years. Proceeds from the two entertain- ments will be used to help pay for the new piano recently purchased by the school. A cordial invitation to attend is extended te the public. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Belanger left this morning for Montreal, where they will attend the golden wedding anniversary of Mrs. Belanger’s par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. LaFlamme on Dec. 12, They will also spend some time with Mr. Belanger’s relatives at L’Orignal, Ont. En route to Montreal they will stop at Chicago and New York, and will be away a month or more. eoee Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Tice, of Sioux City, Iowa, who have spent several days in Bismarck visiting friends, left this morning for their home. Mr. and Mrs. Tice are former Bismarck residents, having lived here at the time Mr. Tice was connected with the Bismarck branch of the Interna- tional Harvester company. . . The regular monthly business meeting and social of the Presbyter- ian Ladies Aid society, will be held in the church parlors Thursday aft- ernoon. Circie No, 2 will be hos- tesses. The annual bazaar and din- ner will be given Tuesday, Dec. 11, the sale coramencing, at 11 o'clock. car) St. Mary’s Circle will meet Thurs- day afternoon at 2:30 in St. Mary’s school auditorium. Honored guest and cozy corner prizes will be pre- sented. Hostesses for the afternoon are Mrs, R. H. Crane, Mrs. C. E. McKee, and Mrs. E. R. Baldin, * Miss Bessie Baldwin was hostess last evening to a group of friends at a party for Mrs. R. N. Van Petten, at the home of “Ars, H. A. McNutt. Bridge was played at two tables. oes The ladies of the First Lutheran church will hold a food sale at the A Lucas’ store, Saturday, Dec. ’ 8, beginning at 11 o’clock. see Clarence Peterson, Hoffman, Minn,, has arrived in Bismarck for a visit with his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. O. Lundquist. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Dodds have returned from Minneapolis where they have been visiting friends since Thanksgiving. ‘ Mrs. J. E. Blegeberg of Sharon, N. D., is visiting in Bismarck as the guest of her daughter, Mrs. M. H. Sidener, CARD OF THANKS ° We take this means of extending thanks to the many neighbors and friends for the kindly Seat BAEnY. and help given us during the illness and death of our beloved wife and moth- er, We also wish to extend our thanks for the many beautiful floral offerings and to the choir members who sang at the services. Philip Axt. Charles Axt. John C, Axt. David Axt. Jacob P. Axt. Christ_ Lehmann, Mrs. William Wahl. Mrs, Paul Wahl. Mrs. John A. Schmidt. Mrs. Arthur Magnuson. Get a Radiantfire for these cool mornings, Montana-Da- kota Power Co. —_—_— EEE eee Amusement Forecast MOVIES ELTINGE THEATER “The Masks of the Devil” CAPITOL THEATER + “Freedom of the Press” DOME DANCE PAVILION WEDNESDAY NIGHT Art Bronson’s Bostonians ‘THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE =— ) Bridge Is Played at Costura Club Costura club members were enter- tained last evening by Mrs. John Karasiewicz. During the evening bridge was layed at two tables, with Mrs. rank Andrist and Mrs. Matt Nie- bauer having high score. A course luncheon was served after the games. Bridge Party at Thos. Luyben Home Mrs. Thos. Luyben entertained, guests for three tables of bridge last evening at her home, 712 Main Ave. Honors for the evening went to W. B. Schriener and Ryth Wyncoop. After the games a course luncheon was served by fhe hostess. Seasonal Program Given at Meeting Mrs. Roy Riggs was hostess to the members of the Progressive Mothers club last evening at her home, 425 Sixteenth street. An interesting dis- cussion of the origin of Christmas customs was conducted by Mrs. 0. W. Kolberg, and Mrs. Earl Speaks ase a paper on “Christmas in Other nds.” Plans were made er a_special meeting to be held Dee. 14. This will be the annual Christmas party of the club and gifts will be exchanged. * Progressive Mothers’ Club Holds Meeting A discussion of “Parents as Com- rades” by Mrs. William Harris, and @ paper on “The Important Business of Being Parents,” by Mrs. E. Cave, were on the program yester- day afternoon when the Mother’s club met with Mrs. R. H. Wald- schmidt. Home games were named in re- sponse to roll call. This is the last meeting of the ina until after the Christmas holi- lays. I The Woman’s Day j ink Siler descr tes La By ALLENE SUMNER One of the most interesting and thought-provoking pictures printed in a long time, so far as I am con- cerned, is the picture of the frame house at 21 Massasoit street, North- ampton, Mass., which has rented by President and Mrs. Cool- idge, occupancy to take effect after March 4, 1929. Already boxes and bales packed in excelsior and paper have been sent to the big frame house—the Possessions which the Coolidges took with them to Washington, and the momentoes which they have collected of the time when they were First Man and First Lady of a great land. The house is big, but most un- Pretentious. It looks rather old and sprawly and _ inconvenient, and though its many shuttered windows, porches and vines that clambor up its side spell sunlight and air and homeiness, one knows that the man and woman who would choose such a home put little premium upon the “modern conveniences” which lure those of us who can, into apartments where somebody else tends to such prosaic matters as stoking furnaces and hauling forth ashes and light- ing the hot water tank and rating up dead leaves and shoveling snow from the walks. Somehow the picture of the sprawling frame house doesnot speak of many servants. It distinctly an- nounces that Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, now the president and the wife of the president of these United States of America, will return to pretty much that scale of living which they accepted before they be- came tenants of the nation’s most famous hous>. | es Like Old Home True, this new. home probably rents for a little more than $30 a month as did the one from which they came. But they return to small town, middle-class, without frills, living: When the Coolidges went to the White House there were many stories about Mrs. Coolidge’s thrift and housewifely abilities. We were told how she made her own shirt- waists and, so a neighbor confided, cut down her husband’s shirts for the two boys. We were told of her cooking and preserving skill, her cookie recipes, her complete adher- ence to all the traditions of the anly woman, hen she went to Washington, first as Second Lady, then, as First. While it is almost axiomatic that the reigning First Lady is always the most gracious and charming and tactful of any who has ever graced the house on Pennsylvania avenue, the fact remains that Mrs. Coolidge is admitted by even political oppo- sites to be just that very thing. Their plans for their lives as private citizens are not at all un- expected for them. But stop and consider how many of those in the jom- high places are willing to return to the old and humbler standard of liv’-- after. graduation from their Pinnacle. We have a tradition which says that the cares of public life are sc onerous that the man and his family who have known the limeli are only too glad to sink into oblivion. But turn the pages of history and ‘ee how many of the great and near- great you can find who, after tast- ing, ae ore of Eaeer iat fee, and living aN. acco iy reall to the ever ly returned sphere of living and thinking from which they started. kes pice of wonder, too, if makes many of us er, the substitutes which we have been able to find for the old-fashioned, prosaic. house-living which makes us all rush to modern apartments, {s ;2 test sbstitute at all as far as personal happiness goes. Ore The Coolidges seem to think that a bie inconvenient to tend is worth their while even if they must have many rore inner capacities for ake piversitieg interests than most of us: The 10th is the tast day oj discount on Gas bills. Massasoit street | Paris.—(AP)—Coat dresses for mofning wear are not all of the tal- lored type. Nicole Groult designs one in black crepe de chine. It opens down the front over a foun- dation of gray-blue with the same color forming a tie collar. The sleeves are embroidered well above the elbow with a heavy chain stitch in red, gold and blue. The same {” Fasiion Plaque oii -———_———-—9 | MANDAN NEWS | Jacob Schaff Chosen | President of Mandan Verein Organization Jacob Schaff was reelected presi- dent of the Mandan chapter of Joseph’s Verein at the annual elec- tion of officers held at tha St.! Joseph’s auditorium. | Other officers elected for the year| follow: Chris Baron, vice president; C. P. Fleck, secretary; Stanley Hoff- man, finance secretary; Anton} Gruenfelder, treasurer; Rev. Fr. Paul, spiritual director. Trustees named are John Baron, M. Hoerner, and Frank Knoll. An- drew Kuntz and John F. Heinz were | named outside and inside zuards re- spectively, The organization appropriated $50 for St. Joseph’s parochial school | to be used for the purchase of a Christmas tree for the holiday pro- gram. Speakers at the meeting were: R. A. Countryman, who spoke on the aid of the Mandan Deaconness ho: EXQUISITE EVENING slippers \of dark blue satin are patterned in |little silver stars. The strap and trimmings are of strips of gold and silver kid and the heel of silver. ieal building program; Rev, Fr... f ‘aul, Rev. Fr. Urban and C. P. fined to his home for some time as Fleck, jthe result of an auto accident, and Fleck said that the chapter now| has not yet fully recovered. has a membership of 401, with 35/ more to be initiated in the near fu- ture. ‘Personal and ~ i Social News of | Mandan Vicinity | oO Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Wickham have colors simulate tiers on the skirt. [vom Bis] The regular meeting of the Knights of Pythias will be held at 8 o’clock this evening at the A. O. U. W. hall. All members are urged to attend, as important business is to be transacted. Chris Thronson, Minneapolis, vice president of the Benson Optical company, was a business visitor in the city yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Faunce Luyben and daughter Bernice of Driscoll were in Bismarck yesterday. A daughter was born yesterday at the home of Mrs. John Dixon, 504 Ninth street, to Mr. and Mrs. Ted Amundson, E. M. Rindy, of the Cooper Under- wear company, has returned from a six weeks business trip to points in Montana. J. B. Smith, purchasing agent for the Board of Administration, returned to his office after a three weeks absence on account of illness. ‘Henry Broste of Wilton left last|} Las for New York City. He will sail from there the first of the week for Denmark, to spend the winter § with relatives, George Hecker and. George Hugel- man left this morning for Sioux City, Iowa, for a visit with relatives. Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Larson of Underwood were Bismarck visitors yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. DeWitt of Sweet Briar are the parents of a daughter born Tuesday at the home of Mrs. John Dixon, 504 Ninth street. The 10th is the last day o1 discount on Gas Be Sure Beforehand And NOT SORRY AFTER- WARDS. Buying a diamond is pretty much like choosing a wife and the chances of making a mistake in the store or the girl are about even. The sales argu- ments we use are simple prom- ises of satisfaction covering |) quality and value. We keep them. The story of our big diarron? businegs is a story of price sav- ing to you. F. A. KNOWLES JEWELER “Bismarck’s Diamond Store Since 1907” Guaranteed Pure Use KC for fine texture end large volume. in your bekings | Millions of pounds use? our has} = as their guest Mrs, J. J. Sweeney of | Forsyth, Mont. I * o & i Mr. and Mrs. John Maher of Cen- ter have gone to Los Angeles to} spend the winter. * * Mr. and Mrs, T, J. Spires have re- turned to their home at Atwater, Ohio, after spending the past month | at the home of Mrs. Lucy Barkin. | * Mrs. L. L. Dahl, who had several bones broken in her shoulder in an auto accident a week ago, is recover- ing rapidly. | x Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Curtis have as their guests this week E. D. McBride | of Sheboygan, Wis., brother of Mrs. | Curtis, and Mrs. W. B. Dickson of | Dickinson, ea + oe oe _ Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Hamil vis ited with friends in Mandan yester- | day en route to their home in Kill- | deer. They were returning from a | trip to points in Minnesota. * * with Theodore Roberts, Alma Rubens, Ralph Forbes Comedy: “Hold Col. I. N. Steen of Carson, a pio- | neer lawyer of the Missouri Slope } country, is spending a few days in Mandan. Col. Steen has been con- Is the Gift Ideal With sc much prominence given the ensembl in clot? it is ditfieult to imagine a smarte than one of the new FE oP EOLELLOIOVG ES DISSS SS FSSS IS SSS SIS SSS SOS SOISIO: ARE NOW O two days and which plunge: tana into arctic weather, with the | ff temperature in one section of the state j¥ero, apparently was broken toda: Miss Spokane Frocks just received. We were able to buy them so that on THURSDAY of this week we will have another sale of Regular $1.95 Values 2 tor $2.95 These are all folded as they come from the manufacturers and make ideal gifts. MONTANA COLD WAVE LETS UP Fair and Warmer Weather Fol- lows Unofficial 56 Below Mark at Chinook er, Dec. 5.—(AP)—The o hich has centered o Mountain region tox reaching 46 degrees below Chinook, Montana, which had r ported an unofficial temperature of 56 below yesterday and Havre, with an official recording of 32 derrees under the zero mark, today wel- comed relatively mild temperatures around zero, ané the mereury rose generally over the state. Temperatures had moderated in Denver which shivered last night at 9 degrees above zero, diction was for fair and weather. Toda: pre- armer Montana, New Mexico, Nebraska, Kansas, Idaho and Utah were prom- ised warmer weather, and the TONIGHT Tuesday and Wednesday Matinee Every Day 2:30 3 Evening Shows Saturday — 6 - 7:30 - 9 —aatenernipaaieaieineniaee A man without a con: What a role for das! Gilbert! Setting the pace in a life of magnificent aban- don, he is confronted at last with a true love. me DEVEL That Monkey” e idea r gift Organdie Trimmed, Colored Piping, Coin Dots, Small Dots, Figured Cretonnes, Fast Colors Christmas Numbers in Nellie Don Aprons, Smocks and Frocks Christmas Numbers in Sunbonnet Sue Frocks and Smocks Christmas Numbers in Chic-on Aprons IN DISPLAY A.W. LUCAS CO. Bismarck’s Busy Style and Shopping Center PAGE FIVE {weather bureau here foresaw no im- ;mediate prospect for a return to the |excessive cold farther north. \ | TROUBLESOME HACKING | COUGHS STOPPED Coughing is often due to an irri-| tation of the throat that persistent hacking only makes worse. To stop | , it at once, hold for a time a dose of | Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound | low in the throat, as for a gargle, before swallowing. This puts the healing, soothing qualities of Foley’: | opiates. Honey and Tar Compound in direct contact with the irritated surfaces and relief is immediate. Every in- gredient of Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound is active and potent. Ne Sold everywhere.—Adv, Get some fresh new packs today BICYCLE and CONGRESS PLAYING CARDS _— Dr. Enge Chiropractor Drugiess Physician Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D First Class Shoe Diamonds of Permanent Increasing Value! Many people are buying the amonds at Bon- ham’s. There must be a reason. Maybe it is because Bonham's policy is to give the finest Diamond for whatever price is paid. We take personal pride in helping everyone select a Diamond of the finest col- or and quality. The amount of the purchase is secondary compared with the importance of our gaining a friendship and meriting confidence. Solitaires at All Prices ¥ K YY \\ NAN SSS Es 4, L33509SSS9703S SS TOES OOES APAA~. 3$S9SSSSSEES555SS555 5499S SOSSEOES OST OOS WS: Repairing Bismarck Shoe Hospital Henry Burman, Prop. Bismarck, N. D. WILL PUT AN Orthophonic ‘VICTROLA IN YOUR HOME CHRISTMAS MODEL NO. 4-3 JOIN THE VICTROLA € CHRISTMAS {CLUB $00 Makes You A a We'll Tel: ou ss About t. HOSKINS MEYER Home of KFYR

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