The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 8, 1929, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SATURDAY, JUNE8, 1929 Social and Personal | Wedding of Miss Marian Ackerman Everett LaFrance Takes Place Today| Marriage Vows Spoken at 8:30 This Morning at St. Mary’s Procathedral The wedding of Miss Marian Louice Ackerman, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Ackerman, 418 Sev- enth street, to Edward Everett La- France, son of Mr. and Mrs, Paul La- France, 1016 Avenue C, was solem- nized this morning at 8:30 at 7‘. Mary’s procathedral, Rev. Father ae Slag reading the inpressive ser Only the immediate families of the bride and groom were present for the ceremony. The bride Mod baer in a gcwn of suntan chiffon over apricot flat crepe, with full skirt, made longer in the back, and a cape of shaded tan lace. She carried an arm bouquet of Ophe- la roses and masses of lilies of the valley. Miss Helen Thomas, who attended the bride, wore a frock of pale yellow georgette with matching accessories. Vincent LaFrance, brother of the gloom, was best man. Following the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served to the wedding party and immediate relatives at the Hotel Prince. Ophelia roses and bridal wreath with ivory tapers and pink tul': bows were used in the table decorations, and a three-tiered wedding cake in \ elected, with the exception of histori. Local D. A. R. Officers Reelected at Final Meeting for Season Officers of Minlshoshe chapter, Daughters of the American Revolu- ion, for the coming year were re- an, at the final meeting for the se son, a 1 o'clock luncheon at the Bi |marck country club yesterday. | | Mrs. B. K. Skeels was reelected re- gent; Mrs, A. M. Christianson, first | vice-regent; Mrs. 8. D. Cook, second | vice-president; Mrs. P. H. Meyer, re- | cording secretary; Mrs. E. T. Beatt,| corresponding secretary; Mary E. | Owens, historian; Mrs. L. B. Warren, | registrar; and Mrs, J.,B. French, ! treasurer. Local winners in the national flag | contest, sponsored locally by the D. A. R. chapter, were announced. Miss | Esther Wilson and Richard Schmidt ; wrote the prize-winning essays, but | honorable mention was given to those | submitted »y Nina Melville, Mary Cave, Edmund Schreiner and Leo; Boespflug. Awards have not been | made as yet. It_was also announced that Mary Bankston would receive the history medal for 1929, awarded annually to that eighth grade student in any of the city schools who has the highest marks in history for the year. A highly interesting account of the national congress of the Daughters of pink and yellow formed a ccnterpiece. Covers were placed for 12. Later an informal reception was held at the home of the bride’s pa: ents. A profusion of bridal wreath, Ophelia roses and spring flowers were in the decorations of the rooms. Mrs. LaFrance is a graduate of the Bismarck high school, and has a tended Jamestown college. For the past two years she has beea employed in the office of the state hail insur- ance department. ‘The groom is also a graduate of the local high school and has attended the University of Pennsylvania and also the University of North Dakota. He has been an accountant for the state hail insurance department dur- ing the past few years. Mr. and Mrs. LaFrance left this noon by motor for a two weeks’ honey- moon to points in the east. They plan to visit at the bride's former home Tlinois during the trip. For traveling Mrs. LaFrance is wearing a blue silk ensemble, with small hat of the same color and hai monizing accessories. Frank J. Ackerman, who arrived this morning from Grand Forks for his sister's wedding, was a guest from out of town. ** * Mrs. Anne Peterson to Give Piano Recital Mrs. Anne L. Peterson will present & group of her piano pupils in recital Monday evening at 8 o'clock in the meeting room at the Hotel Prince. This will be the last recital for th spring season, and a cordial invita- tion is extended the public. ‘The program follows: La Fontaine (Bohm), Gladys Han- Smith), Marie Nixon. La Zingara (Bohm), Ruth Rand. Con Amore (Beaumont), Ruth Riggs. Waltz in B flat (Beethoven), Irene Hedstrom. Marche Militaire (Schubert), 8 hands, by Ruth Riggs, Lonny Kunkel, Ruth Rand and Jane Smith. La Grace (Bohm), Vernon Vrazel. A La Bien Aimee (Schutt), Jane Smith. . To Spring (Grieg), Ruth Hanson. Sonata, Quasi Una Fantasia (Beeth- ovén), Ralph Goddard. Hunter's Horn Kornatski), Phyllis Thompson. ze Water Sprite (Lange), Harris Owens. Students of Sorrento Aileen Cameron. Moonlight on the Hudson (Wilson), eight hands, Thompson, Aileen Cameron, Betty Foster, Mrs. Peterson. Song of the Katydid (Kern), and! Rrening Song (Grogman), Pearl wartz. Pixies Goodnight (Brown), Ellis; McCay. | At the Circus March (Streabog), Milton Rosen. In a Mountain Lot (Kern), Arlene Ruder. Dance of the Thora Beattie. Le Secret (Gautier), Lillian Hed- strom. Danse Petite (Thompson), Leonard Laskem. Farewell to the Alps (Bohm), Vir- ginia ou. On the Meadow ‘Lichner), Mary Cowan. Slumber Sweetly Svaren. Ariel (Kern), Justine Bahner. ~ A number of the pupils of Mrs. Pe- | terson have received high school | credits for their music work “with her during the past year, among » Genevieve Crose, Aileen Cameron, Phyllis Thompson, Irene Hedstrom, Ruth Hanson, Ralph Goddard, Ver- non Vrazel ang. Harris Owens." (Celega), | Flowers (Johnson), (Beaumont), Lu son. Lily of the Valley Mazurka (8, | ing | Lakes, and from there to Montreal, FOR RENT—Two room the American Revolution, held in | Washington, D. C., in April, was given by Miss Runey, national dele- gate. Miss Runey told of the excur- ieee to historic spots, gave resumes of addresses by national speakers, and [described the various entertainments planned for the delegates, as well as many of the more intimate details of the convention. Places were marked for 30 at the Izncheon table, which was adorned with seasonable flowers. 4 | Among the guests from out of the/ city were Mrs. Paul Register, Newport, | R. L.; Mrs. Robert Gregory. Dearborn, Mich.; Mrs. 8. H. Clark, Waubay, S. D.; and Mrs. Fannie N. Heath, Grand Forks sk * Luncheon Is Given — | At Plomasen Home! Spirea, columbine and lilacs dec- orated the tables and rooms yester- | day afternoon when Mrs. T. G. Plom- asen entertained at a bridge lunch- con, the second of a series she is giv- ing. Covers were placed for 12 guests at the tables, which had appointments in lavender and yellow. Bridge was played during the after- noon, with honors going to Mrs. H. K. | Pederson and Mrs. John A. Larson. x * * | Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Mott and daugh- ter Marjorie, former Bismarck resi- dents, are spending several days in the city, while they are to! ship their furniture to their new | home at Rolla, N. D. Mr. Mott, who | |several months ago purchased the | Turtle Mountain Star, Rolla new paper, and Mrs. Mott have been mal their home at Rolla since the/ first of the year. ee * | Miss Alice Brown and Miss Mabel Stars and Stripes | Forever! Paris gives American women & novel patriotic touch in a new frock of ‘white marocain, with incrustations of self-banding posed in geometric lines. The collar, which is a double little square in the back and slender bands knotting in the front, has a star of blue in the middie of the back with red, white and blue border. The cut of the collar is as fascinatingly new | as its decoration. Persian Missionary Will Speak Sunday In Native Costume To be taken for a native Persian jis mo new experience for Rev. Edwin | M. Wright, who was born in Persia of missionary parents. Because Mr. Wright speaks Arabian, Persian, Tur- kish and Armenian with native flu- ency, and because he often wears the native costume of Persians he {re- quently has passed as a Kurd. Mr. Wright spent his early life in| ind received his college edu- Persii cation at Wooster, Ohio. Later he | attended the Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Chicago, and upon gradua- tion returned to Mesopotamia, where for a year he was alone on the Kurdi- stan border doing refugee work | among the Assyrians. In company with a college friend, | the two, wearing the Kurdish cos- tume, tramped for 400 miles into the | Kuristan country, first Americans or non-Moslems for five years previous- ly, or since, to penetrate Central Kur- distan as far. Mr. Wright has just completed a ar’s work at Colombia University, and will spend the summer teaching at summer conferences for Presby- terian young people. Rev. Wright will deliver the sermon | at the morning service tomorrow, and will speak in the evening on “Life in Persia,” wearing native Kurdish cos tume. It is also planned to have him speak at the assembly periods of the Junior and Primary departments of | the church school at noon. Olson will leave today for a month’s vacation trip in the east. They will) visit in Minneapolis, and will go to Niagara Falls by way of the Great returning by way of Boston, New York city and Washington, D. C..! where they will be the guests of | friends for a time. x * * Mr. and Mrs. A. H, Irvin and daughter Eva left yesterday for Grand Forks. They will be guests at the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity house for the fathers’ and mothers’ day. On their return they will be ac- companied by their son Earl, who is @ student at the University of North Dakota. * * * | Mrs. W. B. Styles, St. Paul, has! arrived in the city for an extended visit with her cousin, Mrs. A. Y. Hag- lund. From here Mrs. Styles expects | to go to the Pacific coast to visit relatives. ae | Stables of Solomon Chicago — (>) stables, where in Biblical days he kept the fine Egypt steeds he obtained when he married a ph raoh’s daughter, soon are to be de- stroyed in the search for further evidence of lost civilizations. Discovered last summer a thi wgiddo expedition of the Unive ity of Chicago, vestiges of a sti! earlier kingdom, a city of wealthy Canaanite kings, have been found below their level, Everything of scientific value found in the stables has been cai |fully surveyed and all possible data | tained, the expedition have been obt leaders assert. Shirt Specials, Several dozen $3 to $5 high grade shirts. $1.95 or 3 for $5.00. A good buy. Bergeson’s. Members of the congregation of the | which will be held immed- jately after the morning worship service. * * * . and Mrs. H. L. Wheeler and | L. V. Miller are expected to return | tomorrow from Minneapolis where | they have been since Wednesday on business. ** * Mr. and Mrs. 8. K.'Clark arrived this week for a several weeks’ visit at the home of their son-in-law and eae Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Thor- ‘ee . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bryan have northern part of the state, Stewart, # non-commissioned officer at Fort Riley, Kansas, ar- Chautauqua at Baldwin, N. Sunday, June 9,10-11-12. Afternoon and evening programs. 8 Don't fe Moran’s t. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY dance at Nealiy decorated. Private entrance, Suitable for two ladies or‘man and wife. Call at 307 Fourth street. ‘The 10th is the last day of | discoun i it on Gas bills. SE ___ UNITED PUBLIC UTILITIES CO. PAYS YOU OVER 6% ON YOUR MONEY For Information Write United Securities Company i: A00 W.Monroe St, Chicago Or ask sny employee of NORTH DAKOTA ‘ POWER & LIGHT CO. -; Due for Destruction ing Solomon's | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE YOUR | | CHILDREN (Sse “If I thought my child would do a | thing like that it would kill me,” a | certain mother is fond of saying to ‘her friends. And her friends regard her soberly | without reply, wondering what will | happen if the day comes when she | will discover that her child is doing enough things right now under her very eyes to cause this hypothetical leath” several times over. | Her son is akout the worst 17-year- ‘old in a certain town. But he has | become clever in the years he has | spent trying to keep her in the dark about his doings. And to her he is still the soul of honor and devotion. I think I can imagine how it sti | ed in the first place for I know a other mother who has a method all | her own of exacting obedience and of | expressing disapproval. Already her | young son is as clever a young de- | ceiver as you could find anywhere. | To begin with, when he was born; she said, “This is going to be my boy. Iam going to teach him that I must come before everything else in the The Plan She Adopted When he was a tiny tot, if he wouldn't drink his milk she would cover her face with her hands and pretend to cry. He'd pull her hands away, say, “Don’t cy, Muvy,.” and hastily gulp down his milk with two serious distressed eyes gazing at her over the edge of his mug. When he was naughty, or wouldn't stamped his foot and 'No,” when she wanted to take him to the barbers, she would say in an agonized voice, arling, you're hurting Mother dreadfully. Don’t you want Mother to be happy?” He got into the habit then, little as he was, of giving in to her about things that didn’t matter too much to him. But in things that did matter he went ahead and did as he pleased, it was an easy code he had—the im- portant thing was not to let her know | hot to hurt her. That was all that was necessary. You sec that’s the {way goodness had been presented to |} him. as something that “didn't hurt | mother”! The Logic of It | ‘Well—if that was all that really) counted, then the big thing was to keep her from knowing. You just went ahead and did things but you | had to be smart about her not find- ing out. e He now can slip a dime out of the store change, or smoke a cigaret out of his father’s pack, or do anything jhe chooses, and enjoy life in general. It’s all right as long as he can keep his mother from discovering anything. LAST SHOW! Closes Tonight Saturday Come Early!!! Willard Mack’s Talking Detective Mystery Melodrama “The Voice of the City” with Willard Mack Sylvia Field - Robert Ames Billy Dooley Comedy “Rough Dried” Offices —Bismarck, Mandan, Dickinson FOR SALE New English type stucco bungalow to be completed July 1st. Southeast corner of block, close in, five rooms, fireplace and breakfast nook. quire of L. P. Warren, phone 460-M, or call at 622 Fifth street. PICNIC AT Roder Picnic ' Grounds Menoken, Sunday, June 9th She no longer talks about things “hurting” her. Her boy is perfect and she is happy! He is about eleven now and going strong. I wonder if the older boy's mother didn’t adopt the same method when he was little. If so, what was left him but deceit? Perhaps not—deceit can of course be caused by other things, but this pained attitude of |Ore. parents toward children is not apt to encourage confidence, that’s sure. Personal and ‘Social News of Mandan Vicinity Mrs. F. P. Homan has returned from a short visit with her sister at Bird Island,, Minn. sx * Mrs. F. E. Koetke and children, who have been visiting relatives in Okla homa for the past two months, have | returned to Mandan. se & Mr. and Mrs. Leonard McMahon and small son left yesterday for Fair. mont, Minn., where they will be guests of Mrs. McMahon's parents. *** ® Mr. and Mrs, Warren J. Watson left today on a motor trip to State Center, Ia., where they will be guests | at the home of Mr. Watson's parents. * * * Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Sarvis have gone ts Brookings, S. D., where they will attend the commencement exercises at the South Dakota State college. They will also visit at Highmore, 8. D. zee Bathilda and Josephine Hess have returned from St. Paul where they have been attending St. Catherine's college, to spend the summer vaca- tion with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Hess, eek Miss Marian Weich was summoned to her home at Red Wing, Minn., yesterday by the death of her father, who has been ill for several months. Miss Weich is Latin teacher at the Mandan high school. x * * Mrs. J. P. Fleck was hostess at a luncheon Wednesday honoring Mrs. A. F. Kossick, Springfield, Mass., who is the guest of her mother, Mrs. E. M. Vetter. Bridge was in play at four tables after the luncheon, with honors going to Mrs. Harry McKee and Mrs. F. G. Tharp. a * * Mrs, Anna Stark has returned from @ several weeks trip to New York city for a visit with her daughter, Miss Elsie Stark. Miss Stark is superin- tendent of the home economics de- partment of the R. A. Davis company. manufacturers of children’s food and THEATRE Tonight and Saturday WILLIAM GIR GONE ILD The Dizzy, Whizzy Whirl of Medern Youth Gone Mad News Pictures and Comedy Coming Monday Matinee Daily at 2:30 Saturdays 2:30 to 11 p. m. (continuous) In- apparel. Mrs. Stark, her son George Stark her daughter took a two weeks motor trip along the New Jere sey coast. Mrs. Stark also visited an- other son, Dawson Stark, a student at the Illinois Medical college, Chicago, on the return trip. ¥ se Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Welch, Portland, 0 guests of Mr. Welch's brother and sister-in-law, Major and Mrs. A. B. Welch. Mr. and Mrs. Welch are returning to their home in the west after attending the funeral of an- |other brother at Wingate, Ind. ek ® A family picnic and _ reunion, | which 25 members of the W. Nichols family of Estherville, Io | Were present, was held in the Mandan ; Park Wednesday. Included in the | party are Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Nichols, | parents of Mr. LaRue Shaw, Mrs. Louise Wright and Mrs. L. F. Lyman | of Mandan, and Mrs. Edgar Newgard of Tacoma, Wash. "Household Helps || o| FILLED DOORWAY | | In rebuilding an old house, a charming bookcase was made right in the doorway in the living room by | | boarding it up on the back and put- | | ting the shelves across. In the next | room the boarded door was papered , like the room and unnoticeable. | at G. GUSSET APRON The apron follows where the frock leads, so far as style goes. Spring | kitchen aprons can be made very swanky by introducing little gussets | of color in the sides. | SUNDAY SUPPERS | If there are many young folks in| the house and Sunday night suppers usually serve more than can be ac- commodated, get cheap tin trays, paint gaudy colors and serve cafeteria suppers. It is an easy and altogether | delightfully informal way to do it. SOFTENING PAD | It is an excellent idea to cut blot- ting paper to fit pantry shelves where dishes and glass are kept to slip under the fancy shelf paper one uses. It acts as a silencer. SLUMBER PILLOWS Many people who do not like to | | sleep on pillows get cold in the neck | jat night. A very good way to keep the wind from going down the neck is to use a tiny slumber pillow SS: Universal Irons Special Offer $1. for Your Old Iron From now on until July Ist you will have an unusual op- portunity to purchase the high grade $5. ue Universal Iron for only Or if you wish to own the peer of all irons, the Universal Super- Automatic ($7.75 regular price), $1.00 allowance will be made on any iron, electric or non-electric, trade in. Get your new one now. Melville Electric Shop (Bob Melville) Phone 179 612 Broadway The Stamp of Success Make Use of Our is marked with the stamp of success. It is the BUSINESS certain barometer that gages unerringly his abil- COUNSEL ity to succeed. It is a point which should receive SERVICE your careful consideration—and attention. Let 0006000000600006 Uus tell you more about it. The First National Bank : Bismarck, North Dakota Ae The Pioneer Bank of down and very sparse; Sa it will be flat. i 4 " RUSTY KNIVES Rub rusty knives with an onion and they will clean easily. imes merely dipping in hot water, after- wards will shine them. ‘ LEMON-RAISINS Raisins, soake1 overnight in lemon juice, make a novel addition to break- fast food. Serve the foad thin and do not use milk over it. LIVE NOTE A pretty little clock sometimes can contribute a friendly live note that makes a living thing of a room that was entirely inanimate before. BATH ENSEMBLE It is now possible to get the same color and pattern in washrags, towels. bath mats and seat covers. Sponges. salts, soap and toothbrushes can all be had to match in tone, too. Race Drivers Ordered To Wear Trick Helmet Altoona, Pa.—(AP)—Race driver? at the speedway here are cultivating a cer amount of pride in appear. ance these day: Authorities have made the wear. ing of 3 1 helmets compulsory at all races here this season, the ‘ype selected beit imilar to that insti- tuted by Major H. O. D. Seagrave. The helmets are le of airplane cloth, cemented under heavy pres- sure, The old guard lament the i of their old headgear, but admit that one new style is vastly more decor- ative. Shirt Specials, Several dozen FRESHEN VEGETABLES $3 to $5 high grade shirts. To freshen egetables, soak them |$1.95 or 3 for $5.00. A good an hour in very cold water to which! buy. Bergeson’s. S GREATEST HOME ONVENIENCE Steaming Hot Water Always Ready for Any Purpose Flot water in abundance at the mere turn of the faucet! Hot water without waiting—because this service is en- tirely automatic. And it’s the most economical service. No other hot water storage system shows such remarkable records of heat efficiency and fuel economy. Gallon for gallon it costs no more than out-of- date, inconvenient service. Installed and Ready for Use Now Only $77.50 15 Months to. tay This special low cost, easy terms offer gives a the immediate oppor- tunity to ce your present water heating method with the most modern, convenient and economical system. Call or ‘phone for complete information. Don't delay another day. Montana-Dakota Power Co. 510 Bdwy. Bismarck, N. D. OFFMA ASTER. Automatic Storage Systems £ The man with the bank account is the man who Fifty Years in Bismarck

Other pages from this issue: