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_ the guests. MONDAY, JUNE 3, 1929 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE Miss Thelma Kaline Honored at Shower Given by Mrs. Herman For Miss Thelma Kaline, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gust Kaline, whose marriage to Lyndal Shipley, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Shipley, will take place sometime this month, Mrs. ‘H.W. Herman held open house Sat- urday afternoon from 3 to 5 and that evening from 7 to 9. The afternoon affair took the form of a tea and shower, with an informal reception in the evening. During both the afternoon and evening Mrs. Her- man, Mrs. Kaline, Mrs. C. W. Mc- Donnell and Miss Thelma received Bleeding hearts, honeysuckle, tulips and other spring flowers were used in the floral decorations which were at- tractively arranged throughout the rooms. At intervals during the afternoon ‘Miss Lucile Coghlan sang, with her sister, Miss Vivian playing the ac- companiments. In the group of songs were “I Love You Truly” (Bond) and “The Silver Ring” (Wood). Miss Viv- ian Coghlan alternated with piano numbers. At the tea tables were Miss Floy Kitchen and Helen Herman, and as- sisting in the dining room were the Misses ‘Eileen Doerner, Mary Cram and:Alice Strong. . - ‘The bride-to-be received many gifts of linen and other articles for her home. Miss Kaline, who is a graduate of the Bismarck high school, class of 1926, is employed in the offices of the Lahr Motor Sales company. Mr. Shipley, a graduate of the Dickinson high school, is a salesman for the M. B. Gilman company. s* * Capt. and Mrs. Noyes ’ Entertain at Bridge Captain and Mrs. H. H. Noyes en- tertained yesterday afternoon at their quarters at Fort Lincoln, with a buf- fet bridge supper, honoring Mrs. Eva c. Hunt, Boston, Mass., who is leav- Ing for her ‘ome this week. Bridge was played at two tables. with honors going to Captain A. K. Kupfer and Mrs. John R. Oswalt. Lilacs and tall tapers in pastel shades were used in the decorations. * Officers of Rainbow Girls Are Reelected All officers of the Rainbow Girls ‘were reelected at the annual election held Saturday evening at the Ma- sonic temple. worthy Officers are Aldeen Paris, adviser; Muriel Van Hagen, associate adviser; Vera Heaton, charity; Vata Heaton, faith; and Julia Wetmore, hope. Mrs. Minnie Shuman is mother ad- viser for the group. ' * * * Mrs. C. A. Fisher was a guest over Sunday at the home of her son, Sam A. Fisher, Minot. She is conducting a series of organization meetings for the Nonpartisan league women’s clubs, and spoke at a meeting in Mi- not Saturda. evening. She speaks today at the county convention in Berthold. xe * Miss Genevieve Crose, a member of the graduating class of the Bismarck high school, left this morning for Minneapolis to be the guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Simpson, former Bismarck residents, for a week. Miss Crose will later go to her home at Spokane. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lynch and daughter Catherine and son Earl, who have been guests at the James Cur- ran home for several days past, left yesterday for their home at Grand Forks. Mr. Lynch is an uncle of Mr. Curran. =z * & Mrs. H. W. Rosenthal and children left. this morning for Oklahoma City, Okla., to spend three months with her mother, Mrs. W. A. Johnson. They plan to stop at Sioux Falls, 8. D., and at Dallas, Texas, to ris with relatives. * * Miss Tia Moffit left this morning for Barney, N. D., summoned there the serious illness of her mother, who suffered a stroke of Miss Moffit was accompanied by ay “i vel aa * * Mrs. C. J. Zintheo, Seattle, Wash., who has been the guest of her niece, Mrs. Spencer Boise, during the few days, left this morning for neapolis where she plans to summer. Rev. W. M. Smith, who has been visiting at the C. J. Trygg home north of the city, left fre eaeagi is Jamestown, an ‘ wi weel return to his home at Plentywood, Mont. Ef Dolores and Jimmy to Grand Forks yesterday where they will spend the summer visiting rela- tives. * * * Chayanga Campfire girls will hold meeting st the bome of thelr guard: Social and Personal home after dinner, won by Mrs. Spencer Boise and Dr. L. W. Larson. Dr. and Mrs. Constans Give Bridge Dinner A color note of pink and green was used in the decorations when Dr. and Mrs.-G. M. Constans entertained a company of friends at dinner at the Bismarck Country club Saturday eve- ning. Places were marked for 24, and honeysuckle and candles were em- Ployed to carry out the cffective color scheme. Bridge was played at the Constans , high scores being Mrs. C. J. Zintheo, Seattle, Wash., was a guest from out of the city. * * * Leave for Minot P. E. O. Convention Mrs. J. P. French, president of Chapter F, P. E. O. Sisterhood, Mrs. P. H. Myers, Mrs. H. F. O'Hare, Mrs. C. L. Young and Mrs. Charles Staley, all members of the chapter, will leave tomorrow for the fifteenth annual convention of the North Dakota chapter of the Sisterhood which opens tomorrow in Minot, and con- tinues through Thursday. A delega- tion from Chapter N, the other Bis- marck P. E. O. Chapter, will be Mrs. John A. Page, president, and Miss Esther Maxwell. It is expected that. the Bismarck delegates will join a party of Beach; Dickinson and Mandan members who will attend the convention, among them Mrs. Charlotte Reed, Dickinson, state president of P. E. O., and will motor to Minot tomorrow morning. oe ile Lillian Hilken and Perry Nelson Wed Miss Lillian E. Hilken, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hilken, Wilton, and Perry A. Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nelson, 220 Sixth street south, were married Saturday morn- ing at the Zion Lutheran parsonage, Rev. J. V. Richert, performing the ceremony. Attending the couple were Miss Meta Hilken, sister of the bride, and Ralph Fricke, Baldwin. The bride wore a frock of beige georgette, with matching accessories, and her attendant wore pale green flat crepe. The groom is employed by the Wachter Transfer company here. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson will make their home in Bismarck, * ke * Graduation exercises for the 1929 class of the St. Alexius Hospital Training school, will be held at 8:30 ° this evening at the city auditorium. A class of 19 will receive their diplo- mas. * * Mrs. Henry Burman left this morn- for a month's visit with relatives at Osceola, and other points in Iowa. eke * E. B. Cox left this morning for Detroit Lakes to spend a few days. Personal and Social News of Mandan Vicinity Paul Shannon returned Saturday from a short business trip to Minne- apolis. xk * Mrs. John Timmerman and Waverly, Minn, se * Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Klesalek, daughter Mildred and son Louis left Saturday for Ord, Neb., to be. with Mrs. a eae mother, who is seri- eee A group of friends of Miss June vig het birthday anniversary. The time was ita Ya games. HEH Py mt Ci Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Copenha’ are the parents of a son born May 28 at the Bismarck hospital. A marriage license was issued to Norbert A. Grabinger and Inez 8. Cooper, both of Bismarck, Wednesday by the county judge's office. eo ¢ $ s 3 4 > oe Miss Madge Runey, county super- intendent of schools, and Miss Hazel a} ¢ i | e Legionnaire Queen 4 e Above is shown Miss ‘Harriet Phil- lips, Fargo, who is queen of North Dakota's famous American Legion band. Miss Phillips is the woman who made such a decided hit with this unique band on its tour of the south and middle west to and from the national convention of the Amer- ican Legion at San Antonio, Texas last fall. Miss Phillips and the band covered 11 states of the south and middle and son John David have returned from a visit with relatives in Minneapolis west as well as points in northern Mexico while on this tour and it was while she was in northern Mexico that she appeared with the- famous Mexico City Police band. While Laredo, Mexico, Miss Phillips met General Escobar, now famous for his part in the recent Mexican rebellion. Miss Phillips states that General Escobar was a genial host even though he was involved in the large uprising. While at San Antonio Miss Phil- lips was signally honored when she ‘was given the place of honor at the annual banquet of the 90th division. She was placed betwecn Gencral John J. Pershing and General Lord Allan- by, England. The North Dakota American Legion band made a hit with General Pershing and it was at this time that he dubbed it ihe “liv- est band in the world.” Miss Phillips is a charming dancer and has consented to appear at the Dome Tuesday evening, June 4, in connection with the dance sponsored by the American Legion for the ben- | © efit of North Dakota famous Ameri- can Legion band. | Music will be furnished by the Red Jackets, Fargo. - Fashion Hints ! GREEN CAPE A blue-green chiffon afternoon frock has a large circular cape cut like a bolero in front and fitting the shoulders like a raglan coat. LONG SLEEVES Sleeves grow more complicated and increase their number in the long- sleeved category. A few gathers ap- pear at the top of sleeves once in a while now. TAILORED CHIFFON A navy blue tailleur for afternoon uses double chiffon and tailors it like a single layer of goods. Its skirt is circular, the coat flaring. It has a richness to it that is charming. FLARE EMPHASIS ‘There's a flare to practically every skirt, frock and many coats: this spring. The new flare is apt to start between the hip and knee line and godets are one interesting treatment of this idea. LACE FROCKS The popular lace frock of winter promises to repeat its success this spring. The latest lace frock is the long-sleeved dinner gown. One in beige Alencon is princess, with tight, long sleeves and a scalloped decollet- age that is very low in the back. DRESSY SWEATERS New sweaters become dainty blouses, in the.new order of styles. Some of them have lingerie touches. A beige one with flecks of orange has a dickey .| and flaring collar of orange organdy. It is a tuck-in, like many of the newer blouses. PIQUE TRIM A wide-side poke cloche hat for Striped piaue in nary blue and white striy ue in navy blue wi ine A modernistic inset on the downward side. The scarf to com- plete the effect has a collar portion of the pique with jabot ends of blue crepe de chine, white lined. ceaoaine oot line changes one’s ne e ‘one’s appearance so very much that it is of real interest this spring for womien to note that a single type of frock can have as many as twelve er | different collars. Russian, Prince of ‘Wales, revised scarfs, sailor, bow-knot, kerchief, Peter Pan, sports shirt and batteau are some of the more popue lar collars, FLATTERY LINES Animated hem-lines are flattering to the legs and should be worn by every woman whose legs are not models of beauty. Even one wide pleat helps a little, a circular skirt is better, the pleated all-around skirt is a up a front, never gives in, never ar- those with legs too thin, too fat or too muscular, The straight definite hem- line of a coat emphasizes the defects in leg contours. An inch or two of soft lively skirt below the coat is better. ‘BE A SNOB, PLEADS | GRADUATION TALKER’ ‘Dress, Speak and Act Like a Gentleman and You Can Get Away With Murder’ Boston, June 3.— (4) — The neces- sity of snobbishness, a doctrine enun- ciated by Professor Robert Emmons Rogers of Massachusetts Institute of Technology in an address before the members of the graduating class, was under vigorous debate here today. “Be a snob,” Prof. Rogers told the seniors. “You will find it is just as easy to marry the boss's daughter as the stenographer. Dress, speak and act like a gentleman,and you will be surprised at the arfount of murder you can get away with. “Never buy a suit of clothes unless you get an extra pair of trousers. Keep one suit of clothes pressed every week. Never buy shoes unless you buy shoe trees for them. Keep them shined. Shave yourself, and never wear the same collar at night which you wear all day.” ‘Snobs Made’ Harvard Harvard, he declared, has received more publicity and money than any other American university because Harvard has never stopped “puttirig gues, blandly going on its way.” Among those who rallied to Prof. Rogers’ support was Miss Ada Louise Comstock, president of Radcliffe col- lege, formerly of Moorhead, Minn. “I believe Prof. Rogers was using the word ‘snob’ in the better sense, or at least in an unusual sense,” she said. “To me it appears that he wishes the | young men of technology to cultivate the virtue of snobbishness, and if it means self-respect, high standards, and dressing neatly, then I quite agree with him.” Called Strange Precept Former Mayor James M. Curley asserted Prof. Rogers had advocated “a strang precept, a doctrine against which the colonials fought in 1776— the divine right of certain individuals to constitute themselves a ruling Lieutenant Governor William 8. Youngman said: “Rogers is all wrong. I have seen lives shipwrecked by too much front. The most valuable thing to a young @| man is modesty, and people who hire and fire young men are keen to look for it.” Reparations Trouble Seems Near Solution Paris, June 3.—@)—With the im- ortant problem of German marks in Belgium shortly to reach the stage of active negotiations, the last ques- tion standing in the way of complete accord on reparations today seemed headed for solution. The experts were busy putting the finishing touches.on their report: be- fore complete agreement is reached. News from Berlin that Dr. Ritter, a ministerial director, was about to start for Paris to meet the Belgian plenipotentiary, M. Gutt, brought relief to the tense situation that ex- isted, since the experts came to an agreement on all other points. There were good prospects, in the Ht dbage of well informed circles, that the Germans and Belgians would reach an agreement and make pos- sible signing of the report before the-end of the week. Cigar-boxes are made of mahogany and not cedar, while “cedar” pencils are usually juniper. WARD WATER PLUS MELO MAKES SOFF WATER ee This is a hard-water country Soap and hard water make scum. The in the water combines with the soap. The scum collects dirt. There is a dirty Samaras the dishpan, the washtubs, bathtub. But soften water with Melo and no-scum Water softened with Melo is a won- cleaner, with or without soa It makes the soap much more effective, too, saving from % to 4 the amount ordinarily used. Melo only costs 10 You can afford to buy 3 ¢ p ohe in the kitchen, one in the laundry, and one in the bath- room. Get it at your grocer’s. weEvo | cents a can. ‘WATER SOFTENED WITH MELO IS A REMARKABLE CLEANER Be 10 cents FLO THE HYGIENIC =s=—"| PRODUCTS CO. emma Canton, Ohio tne} Manufacturers af ‘Sant-Flash , minutes with Paxo Balm. Muscular pains are the re- sult of congestion—lack of blood flow — and Paxo Baim brings a quick rush of blood to the painful area. Your druggist has this pene- trating and stimulating balm and will refund the purchase price of 50 cents if you are not relieved. ’ —S= Just a paltry $1,750,000—that's what Miss Gorges Lewys, left, is asking for the alleged plagiarism of her privately published novel. “The Temple of Pallas-Athenac.” She says the plot was used by Eugene O'Neill, in his “Strange Interlude,” Pulitzer prize-winning play of last year. By HORTENSE SAUNDERS | were privately published, one of which was sent that same year to the Thea- tre Guild for dramatization. The Guild produced the O'Neill play later. Trio of Defendants Another copy, she claims, was sub- mitted to Horace Liveright for pub- lication, which likewise he did refuse, but later published the O'Neill play. ‘Thus the million-dollar suit involves O'Neill, the Theatre Guild and Hor- ace Liveright. At one time, the “Temple of Pal- New York, June 3.—(NEA)— “Strange Interlude,” which holds the record run on Broadway, introduces a new act, “Strange Plagiarism.” Along comes Miss Gaorges Lewys, 8 California poetess, and claims that this Pulitzer prize-winning play of last season, and the artistic triumph of O'Neil areer, was stolen from ‘The Temple of Pallas- " She asks a paltry $1,750,- 000 for the purloined plot. Miss Lewys claims that she wrote her novel in 1924, and that 995 copies THAT famous red-and-green package! Look for it at your grocer’s. It brings you genuine Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. The flakes with the flavor that can’t be copied! The kind you'll surely prefer. Kelloggs CORN FLAKES * Extra delicious with fruite or honey added? Advertised in the she is going abroad shortly to be pre- unsubstantiated. Later it was seized in leas-Athenae” was cited by federal authorities in California on an ob- | seenity charge, but the charge was | | Poetess Sues Eugene O'Neill New York by John S. Sumner, famed reformer, but the case was not press- ed, Points of similarity in the two plots are these: Both have selective pa- ternity for the theme, and. both are built about heroines who tharry men descended from insane families in which the taint descends from gen- eration to generation, Another Parallel Both heroines find marriage a dif- ficult adjustment, and have their sons by men who are not their hus- bands. Both have weaklings for their legal mates. In cach story the scien- tific attitude of selecting a father is stressed and in both cases the ‘doctor becomes an important factor in the story. | Both stories cover the same time} span, 25 years, and in both stories the heroines learn of the insanity in their husband's family in the same | way, by visiting a relative where an} insane person is incarcerated upstairs. In both cases, the women marry with- out loving their husbands, both are | unfaithful, but both remain with them to the end. The points of sim- ilarity are in plot rather than in lan- guage. Not the most pleasant story in the world to quarrel about, in re- gard to authorship. But then, the story has proven itself to be worth a lot of money. Miss Lewys also is greatly concerned about the points of dissimilarity. “Strange Interlude,” she declared, is a travesty on her “Temple,” which Says she never was intended for the hoi-polloi, but for collectors and the intellegentsia. Her price of $20 a volume assured this exclusiveness. She claims that O'Neill lowered the tone, Played to the box office and intro- duced some questionable language. } Author of Several Books Miss Lewys is the author of several books, mostly in verse, and mostly privately printed. Her “Epic of Ver- dun” was presented to France by the late Ambassador Herrick. She says | sent when a copy of it will be placed in the Verdun ‘monument at its dedi- cation next month. is plagiarim site, Two with a su! years ago she sued Universal Pictures, charging that the film “Merry Go Round” was an infringement on her copyright. Slender, with a mass of curly, red- blonde hair. Miss Lewys admits to 31 years of age. She says she was brought up on the classics by her mother, who was 8 lecturer and scholar. Miss Lewys’ verses, however, are the result of “tuning in on the universe.” \ Same Pwice Jor over 38 Years KG BAKING POWDER Guaranteed Pure use less than of high priced brands MILLIONS of POUNDS USED BY THE GOVERNMENT VACUUM CLEANER SPECIAL In chis eters oreo Eureka, you will Geaige and color, high-grade iid ockmanahip—ra You'll be Saturday, June 29th, is the last day of this great oS Phone or mail coupon today. North Dakota Power Light Co. Bismarck, } Phone 222 ition of real beauty in material and Please send ereprecentstivet® and —_ssedaisrkeme Tiuplee Ne Dak. Address —______a Saturday Evening Post Electric GYRATOR Guaranteed for 10 Years: Mid-Summer Sale Price $7 g* Easy Payment Price, $87.95 $5 Down, $8 a Month an opportunity to make a considerable saving over Price of this washer. The Gyrator has improve- ments not found in even-the highest priced washers. All cop- washed tub 17 inches deep, with non-corrosive plat- inside. 8-position safety wringer. All enclosed working parts. 1-4 h. p. splash-proof motor. Easy rolling casters. MONTGOMERY WARD &.Co. a ; Store Hours: Four-Seven-Six BISMARCK, NO. DAK. “Nine tosis < RAQUEL TORRES 2 ERNEST TORRENCE With Sound and Musical Accompaniment. VITAPHONE VAUDEVILLE and “60 Minutes from Broadway” When Thornton Wilder wrote “The Bridge of San Luis Rey” the whole world hailed it as a masterpiece of romantic stery telling. LILY PAMITA DON ALVARDO ACTS. Continuous - 2 to 11 MONDAY and TUESDAY avery seasons of the year when an um ‘moal basden of coack is peta the