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MONDAY, JUNE 10, 1929 Inez Greenwood Is Bride of R. A. Joos At a quiet ceremony at St. Mary’s parish house thig morning at 8 Miss Inez Greenwood became the bride of Raymond A. Joos, Father John A. Slag reading the wedding service. Attending the bride was Mrs. L. E. Running, who wore an ensemble of blue georgette with hat of the same color, Raymand Greenwood, brother of cag bride, was the groom's attend- ant. The bride was attired in a white flat crepe ensemble, with hat and ac- cessories to match. Mrs. Joos, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Greenwood, is a graduate of St. John’s academy, Jamestown, and came to Bismarck when Mr. Greenwood took office as State Dairy Commissioner last January. Since moving here she has been employed by the Woolworth company. ‘Mr. Joos, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Joos, Jamestown, is employed by the a Brothers méat market of this city. A wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride's parents im- ‘mediately after the ceremony, after which Mr. and Mrs. Joos left for an futomobile trip to Jamestown and points in the eastern part of the state. Upon their return they will be at home at 513 Rosser avenue West. see ' Reception Tendered Visiting Officers General Joseph Castner and Major Hester, Fort Lewis, and Colonel Rus- sell. and Captain Ewart, Omaha, were guests of honor yesterday when a re- ception was held at the quarters of Captain and Mrs. G. A. M. Anderson, Fort Lincoln. ~ Pink peonies and white candles were used for the tea table, and gar- den flowers throughout the rooms. Officers of the post and their ladies called during the afternoon. General Castner, Third Division Commander, and Major Hester, ar- rived yesterday from Tacoma as did Colonel Russell and Captain Ewart of the Seventh Corps Area, who con- ducted an inspection at the post this morning. s* # Complimentary to Mrs. Henry Snure, Los Angeles, who is a guest at the Merton J. Orr home, Mrs. G. A. Rawlings entertained a company of eight friends at a breakfast Saturday morning at the Country club. Later bridge was played at the Rawlings home. zk & The Women's Foreign Missionary society of the McCabe Methodist church will meet Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. D. H. Houser, 418 Rosser avenue West. The topic for the meeting, which will be conducted by Miss Jennie Gilliland, will be “Three Ways to Happiness.” * s* Miss Chrissie Budge left for Fargo and Wahpeto1 will engage in social welfare work in the Third Judicial district. Miss Budge was a guest of honor at a Mrs. Neil Churchill and small son, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. H. Center, and her sister, Miss Harriet Center, will leave Tuesday for Los Angeles and Redondo Beach, Calif., where they plan to spend the sum- mer. s* & Arthur and Marian Whittemore re- turned Friday from Jamestown col- lege, Jamestown, where they have been students during the past year, to spend the summer vacation with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Whittemore. es According to word received here to- day Miss Eva Loughfon, formerly of this city, and Charles Rohiei, of this city, were married at Beach this morning. They are taking a 10 days’ wedding trip “a er — Hills. Mrs, J. P. Arason of Mountain, Pembina county, has come to Bis- marck for an extended visit at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Halldorson. Social and Personal Bridge Luncheon Is Given for Mrs. Barry Complimentary to Mrs. G. R. Barry, Aberdeen, Mrs. William Muraane en- tertained Saturday at a bridge lunch- eon at her home in Mandan. Guests included a number of Bismarck ladies. Lavender tulips, Iilacs and tapers were used in thé decorations for the tables and rooms. Covers were placed for 12 guests. Honors in the bridge games went to Miss Anna Marie Manning and Mrs. Hays Stevens, of Bismarck. Mrs. Barry was presented with a guest favor. ee * Legion and Auxiliary To Hold Joint Picnic Members of the American Legion and the Auxiliary will hold their an- nual joint picnic Wednesday evening at the Davis farm, formerly the Wild- wood dance pavilion, east of Bis- marck. All members are requested to bring their own lunch, and buns, coffee and ice cream will be furnished. Supper will be provided for single Legion members. Those planning to attend will as- hat at the Bank of North Dakota at 5:30. Mrs. E. P. Walker is chairman of the Auxiliar committee in charge of arrangements. Edna Patzman and D. M. Holeomb Wed Miss Edna Loretta Patsman, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Patzman, Bismarck, and Derby M. Holcomb, Fort Lincoln, took place last evening at St. Mary's parish house, Father Walker reading the ceremony. The attendants were Miss Marian Patsman and R. W. Pateman. The bride wore a blue flat crepe ensemble with white hat and acces- sories, and a corsage of roses. Her sister wore a flowered chiffon dress with matching hat. After the ceremony, a wedding sup- per was served at the Patzman home on Third street to the bridal party and a few friends. Mr. and Mrs, Holcomb will make their home in Bismarck. * Ld Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Garske will leave tomorrow for a four months’’ visit with their children in California. They stop at Sacramento for a visit with their son Leo, and from there will go to Stockton to be the guests of their son William. Later they will go to San Francisco to visit two oth- er sons and a daughter, and will vis- it other places in the state before ré- turning about ae i, * * Mr. and Mrs. John Seitz, Menom- inie, Wis., are visiting at the home of Mrs. Seit brother-in-law and sis- ter, Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Agre. Mr. and Mrs. Seitz, who are returning to their home after a several months stay in California, we honored guests yesterday when Mr. and Mrs. Agre entertained ata dinner for eight. - t ** & Members of the Business and Pro- fessional Women’s club will hold a 6:15 picnic supper on the lawn at the home of Mrs. R. V. Stair, 515 First street, Tuesday evening. A business meeting and a report of the state con- vention at batie = a will follow. Rev. Paul 8. Wright returned yes- terday from Valley City where he de- |’ baccalt livered the the City State morning. | City-County Briefs ° _ F. W. Vreeland and Hazel Viola Vreeland, Hazen, were visitors here Saturday. John Herdebu, Baldwin, was in the city yesterday to visit his wife, who is @ patient in the Bismarck hospital. ‘Troops eases at Fort Lincoln ureate sermon to of the Valley college Sunday graduating Teacher's ° | ¢ North Dakota Hit by 2 Heavy Hailstorms 4 | State, will cause the in| ants, are city. This Dotted Chic ] Styles dot their way to chic this sea- son, in varied manner. A charming red mousséline party frock from Blanche Lebouvier has a novelty dot in the shape of a tiny white leaf. Red velvet pastilles are placed irregularly over it for richness. White mousse- line edges the full, irregular overskirt, outlines the rounding neckline and swings into a bow tie which hangs down the back. Cream and Produce Buyers Also Meeting Here as State Body Bismarck also will be host to the North Dakota Cream and Produce Buyers association Tuesday. This body will meet at the coyrt house. Edward Claremont, state president, of Walhalla, will preside. The chief speaker will be Roy Aney, of Minot, who will speak on “Dairyii in relation to succeasful farming. The meeting will open at 2:30 in the afternoon. It is intended to have an evening session also. Homemakers’ Picnic At Mandan Saturday Draws Two Counties ‘Ten Homemakers clubs and all the junior clubs of both Burleigh and Morton counties attended the picnic held in Mandan chautauqua park Sat- urday. The picnickeys numbered sev- eral hundred persons. At noon an al fresco luncheon was served, and during the afterroon the Program which had been planned was observed. The Homemaker club mem- bers put on a fashion show of the garments they made during the year. Girls from the Indian school sang se- lections. Miss Grace DeLong, head of the club work in the state extension service, made an address, Seven Are Graduated From Wesley College Grand Forks, N. June 10.) — Seven students were graduated from Wesley college here today. W. P. Da- vies, editor of the Grand Forks Her- ald, gave the commencement address. Baccalaureate services were held morning. Dr. E. P. 5 president of Wesley college, talked on “Unity of Life's Values.” the campus of the state institution today. Their annual spring banquet will be held tonight. Graduating exercises for 263 univer- sity students will be held tomorrow morning and will bring to a close the university's fortieth commencement season. fe ‘Thomas Campbell, famed wheat of Hardin, Mont., will be the In a baccalaureate address to the university men last night President Thomas F. Kane talked on “Rquip- ment Needed in Our Changing World.” TERMITES PROVE PERIL Jackson, Miss. — Termites, white proving troublesome in this insect, which bores through wood and eats it in its boring, is un- homes, ‘wooden structures to sag and, if left to mi- destruction of some homes eventually. O. M. Chance, state plant board inspector, has issued notice that advice will be given to anyone imperiled by this in- Huge presscs, used in the manufac- ture of explosives during the war, now squeeze out 100,000 miles of macareni weekly in Milwaukee, Newspaper advertising for churches is advised by the publicity committee of the Presbyterian general assembly. PAXO f £ 2 Ss i H FEee iii He af i if E 2 as A 2S 5 will relieve that pain THE BISMA YOUR CHILDREN Orns by Servoaina President Hoover asserted in his Memorial day speech that the “dead- liest human calamity is fear.” Dr. George A Dorsey, one of Amer- fea’s leading scientists and behav! iste, and author of “Why We Behave Like Human Beings,” declares in a re- | cent article. “You can't do, act, or look | your best if you don't feel right in- | side; and you can’t feel right if you're / scared.” These two statements are the sum and substance of the new principle in child training. And yet I receive many protests from mothers who cannot re- Inquish the old idea of “sparing the tod and spoiling the child” although the rod, of course, may take many other varieties of form than the RCK TRIBUNE switch off the birch tree. Punish- ment, scolding, if-you-do-this-you'll- gét-that sort of discipline are all rods oft old tree. The Penalty of Fear And as long as they compose about cent of child training as in the past, we'll continue to be a race which succumbs early to nervous dis- orders, “dyspepsia,” heart trouble, and other vital physical ailments, due to emetional unhappiness in childhood, chiefly fear, that becomes a habit and continues to ride us like an Old Man of the Sea through adolescence and maturity. This is only a part of it at that. No man or woman who hasn't been freed from the soul-de- stroying element of fear in youth ever can be wholly efficient in his work afterward. He loses not only the foundation of health, which means &@ good nervous system, but also con- fidence, and if he has not confidence in himself in his early years he cer- tainly can never develop 100 per cent later on. Of course, children should be con- trolled! It would be silly to make the slightest declaration contrary to that. And punished too when necessary. But discipline and punishment necd not comprise 90 per cent of training as the old method demanded. That's about all that parents used to think of. They broke their children’s wills to theirs and their duty was done! Scared-to-death, afraid-to-move chil- dren! That's what half of them were, and they were called good. Our fin- est parents are the ones who can control their children without arous- ing fear; almost without exception, these never punish at all. They make friends and confidants of their sons and daughters, and a le of honor takes the place of the “fear” subsidy that used to exist. Why Children Are Bad When you see a “bad” child of six or over, who will not obey, who knows no law, no control, and wilfully, even criminally, does as he pleases, that is because nearly everything in his home life and training has been wrong. Not always, but usually. children transplanted into homes of love and trust—who right-about-faced for the better, almost instantly. Of course, parents must be a child’s government. They represent city, state, and country to him, and he should obey the laws they make. But if he is started right, and early enough, he will naturally fall into a reasonable and ready obedience with- out @ constant wrangle and warfare. Laws should be reasonable and en- forcement governed by circumstances. Just as a country expects and must have the cooperation of its citizens, just so parents should have coopcra- tion of children. They won't get hon- est cooperation by fear. HIGHEST CHIMNEY Glasgow.—Smoke has a tough time getting out of the new chimney re- cently erected at the works of the Clyde Paper company near here. It is said to be the highest chimney in the world. It is 256 feet high and ad- joins another stack but a few inches =a ———~ —= =a ~_— HARD WATER PLUS MELO MAKES SOFT WATER, Reg. U. 8. Pat. Of, Bathing and Melo just go together ‘Tue man, woman or child who bathes and doesn’t use Melo to soften the water doesn’t know what they are missing. Melo softens hard water. It makes a Salightiully sudsy bath. It doesn’t let the water form a dirty ring around the tub. That's to women who scrub off the Water softened with Melo is a won- derful cleaner, with or without soap. saves soap, too, from % to 4 « the amount ordinarily used. It makes soap much more effective. Use it er you need soft water. Get it at your grocer’s. WEVvO| ‘WATER SOFTENED WITH MELO 3S A REMARKABLE CLEANER 10 cents THE HYGIENIC PRODUCTS CO, Canton, Ohio caro ad OO AL A CLUSTER of red, yellow and blue flowers on the brim of this chartreuse green baku makes a charming combination of colors. The | brim, long at the back and turned back on itself in front, has an invert- éd pleat under the flowers. i Man Earns Place in j | Beach Hall of Fame By Feats at Wibaux — Beach, N. D., June 10.—(7)—E. M. Golden is a full-fledged hero in Beach today. Golden, who works here, won his spurs in the flood at Wibaux, Mont., last Friday. Hearing of the flood he walked to Wibaux over the railroad right of way. When he arrived there towns- folk were trying to find a means of rescuing Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Loch- ery from a tree in which they had taken refuge the night before. It was Golden who built a rude flatboat or raft. It was he who de- vised a means of letting it down from the railroad bridge, controlled by ropes in the hands of men on the bridge. It was Go.den who made the peril- ous journey on the raft, taking the aged couple from their precarious perch and returning them to shore. Residents of Beach, today, made up @ purse for Golden in recognition of his heroism. | ? An English magistrate has devised & new sobriety test. He requires sus- pected drunks to pick up two pins from the floor of a badly illuminated Police station. Makes Skin Look Velvety Tve seen such | The skin of youth lies in every box of | new wonderful MELLO-GLO Face Powder. The purest powder made— its color is passed by the U. 8S. Gov- ernment. No pastiness, flakiness, or irritation. A new French process makes it spread more smoothly and No more shiny Use MEL- LO-GLO. Finney’s Drug Store.— prevents large pores. noses—it stays on longer. Adv, ‘White Em Ipresses tothe Orient... H. M. TAIT General Agen‘, Canadian Pacific, 611 Sec. Ave. So., Minneapolis, Minn. Canadian = Pacific ow Seca Ged tated Oo” gag ee f Fashion Plaque 500 VENEZUELAN Wilemstad, Curacao, Barracks Looted of Arms and Ammunition The Hague, Netherlands, June 10.— |(@%=—-The Dutch authorities moved | promptly today to deal with the situ- ation created at Willemstad, Curacao, Saturday night when a force of 500 'men described as Venezuelans over- {came the military police and seized the store of arms in the police bar- tacks. | The Dutch destroyer Kortenacr was | ordered to leave for Curacao, which |is off the coast of Venezuela, while | the battleship Hergo Hendrik also was ,ordered to prepare for her prompt | departure to West Indian waters. |. During the attack at Willemstad three members of the military police | were killed and several wounded. The governor of the island and the com- mander of the police were kidnaped and carried off in a seized vessel, but subsequently were permitted to return to Curacao. While the reasons for the attack were somewhat obscure, the Dutch colonial office was of the opinion that the raid and the seizure of the police arms were part of a movement by the attackers to be launched against OVERCOME DUTCH | Ties the Score Because her husband insisted on her being a “homebody,” even to the ex- tent of locking all the doors and try- ing to tie her in bed when she want- ed to attend her sister's birthday party, Mrs. Eva L. Gwin, Ellsworth Fun Will Be Held Tuesdi At 3:30 at Baltim Hail North of City Did Big Farm Dam San Francisco, was granted Score: One tie, one victory. the government of Venezuela. ‘The 500 “bandits,” as the govern- ment report described them, sailed for Venezuela and have since dropped from sight. Forks Police Trial Postponed by Judge Grand Forks, N. D., June 10.—(?)— | Trial of Larry O'Connor, charged with Permitting a prisoner to escape from custody, will be held at the next term mer, probably will be brought to trial Tuesday, CREDIT STATUE WITH MIRACLE Naples, Italy, June 10.— (%) — A statue of St. Anthony is believed by peasants of the village of Terzigno to have stopped the flow of lava a few yards from their homes during the recent eruption cf Mount Vesuvius. Residents of the district are flocking to the village to see what appears to of district court. It had been sched- | he a ri 4 ough reproduction of the statue for over 38 years 2 Le open today. in the hardened lava. Air. Glue becalie cf ihe: boner 25 eunces tor 25¢ from the city of Miss Katherine Flesch, a witness for the state, and ee sarsenieiit of attorneys for the Dr. R. S. Enge Use less than of sl ane lefense. rf State's Attorney Philip R. Bangs Chiropractor high priced brands said the case of Ed Benson, Lakota, Drugless Physician charged with manslaughter in con- Lucas Block Bismarck, N. D. MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED BY OUR GOVERNMENT nection with the death of a Grand Forks girl in an accident last sum- **cRUusHuY** We know our Oranges That’s why Orange-Crush is such a refreshing drink. We make it only from sun-rich tree-ripened oranges, picked _in the wintertime at their juiciest best. We take all their golden juice . . all the zestful flavor of their peel . . all the healthful goodness of the pulp . . and recombine them with a dash of sugar, pure food color, citrus fruit acid for tang and sparkling water to make this fruity drink as delicious as nature made the orange. Refuse “pop” and imitation drinks. For cool lingering refreshment ask for stores in the“Krinkly” betslo Orange-Crush | Mandan Beverage Company Phone 337 Mandan, North Dakota “Don'tDo dgelt,” Said TheodoreVail Theodore Vail, president of the Bell Telephone company and one the most conspicuous successes of our time, said: “The way to meet difficulty is to face it. If you owe a bill, don’t dodge it. Pay it today if it is humanly possible. Retain your self-respect—make good your credit standing. If you can’t pay today, tell your creditor when you can pay, and keep your promise. You will win his good-will and save yourself em- Pay Those Bills Today!! — KEEP YOUR CREDIT GOOD!! . Bismarck-Mandan Credit Bureau, Inc. (Where Your Paying Habits Are Being Recorded) X