Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
AN | | Many Social Affairs During O, E. S. Meeting Numerous social affairs are being held this week in Grand Forks in connection with the annual meeting of the Grand Chapter of the North Dakota Eastern Star, which opened there today. A bahquet for past grand matrons and past grand patrons will be held this evening at the Hotel Ryan, aft- er which the of the grand family will form. A number of musi- cal selections and feature numbers have also been arranged. Acacia chapter of Grand Forks will have charge of the grand officers’ luncheon Friday noon at the Masonic temple, with Mrs. James Mt ie as general chairman. Mrs. Kate Guy, Oakes, grand worthy matron, will be ,® guest of honor. Last evening a banquet was held at the Hotel Decotah for all delegates, and it was followed by a reception. Later the delegation of Rainbow Girls, under the supervision of Mrs. Lillian Lillibridge, Dickinson, su- preme deputy of the Rainbow order, | o¢ nie exemplified their work. Among the preliminary affairs was the secretaries luncheon held yester- day following the morning session of the secretaries association. xk * Miss Gayle Hawk Is Hostess at Bridge Miss Gayle Hawk entertained guests for four tables of bridge last evening at the home of Mrs. L. V. Miller. High scores in the evening’s games were awarded Mrs. L. A. ue and Mrs. E. M. Hendricks. Garden flowers were prettily ar- fanged throughout the rooms with small bouquets on the tables when a two course luncheon ‘was served at the close of the evening. Miss Hawk was assisted by Miss Catherine Bleth. se 8 Mrs. Henry Snure, Los Angeles, who has been visiting for the past three weeks at the home of her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mer- ton J. Orr, left this morning for Far- 0, where she will be the guest of Mrs. ‘Wattam for a few days. From there Mrs. Snure goes to Minneapolis and Chicago to visit friends and relatives. She will return to her home by way of the Grand Canyon where she plans to spend a week or more, * ek * Mrs. Lewis Krug and children Severa and Frederick, Janesville, Wis., who have been guests at the home of Mrs, Krug’s brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bernstein, for a week or more, expect to leave next Monday for a visit with relatives in South Dakota. They will also make a trip through the Black Hills before returning to their home. * * x .»TO HOLD MID SUMMER PICNIC The annual midsummér picnic of the Lutheran church cast of Wilton, sponsored by the Ladies Aid society, will be given Monday, June 24, at the Herman Falkenstein home. A picnic lunch will be served at noon, and lat- er there will be a and sale. The public is cordially invited. se Miss Phyllis Jean Rosen has re- turned from the University of Minne- sota, where she is a junior, to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Rosen. She was accom- panied home by her sister. Miss Effie Rosen, who went to Minneapolis last week for a short visit. * sa 8 Honoring Mrs. C. J. is leaving soon for Flint, Mich., to Join Mr. Lynch, Mrs. B. F. Tillotson and Mrs. Alfred r entertained @ company of her friends at an in- formal tea yesterday afternoon at the Tillotson home. ** * Lynch, who Miss Agnes Crothy is returning to her home at Tappen today after a 3 weeks’ stay in the city as the guest of her cousin, Mrs. R. E. Carlander. She will be accompanied to he: home by Mrs. Carlander, who will visit in Tappen for several weeks. xe * Mrs. O. L. Quanrud, mother .of Theodore Quanrud, left this morning for Grand Forks and Buxton, where she will visit friends for several weeks. ‘Later she will go to Inkster to spend the remainder of the summer with a daughter. *-* * Miss Mattie Hoppin left last night for a four weeks vacation with rela- tives in Grand Meadow and Austin, Minn. Miss Hoppin plans to take a trip east before returning to Bis- marck. . ** * Rev. A. J. Malmquist, pastor of the First. Lutheran church, officiated at the wedding of Miss Kat Hellwig and Christian O. Lillefjeld, Bismarck, which took place Saturday at the “Qutheran Parsonage. Frame, and other relatives. -* 8 Earl J. Templeman and Miss Emma both THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1929 Social and Personal | Booth-Ruoff Wedding Takes Place in East party ¥ House, Saratoga, followed the saxe mony, a Mr. Booth is a |. Graduate of the Unt. Bismarck Resident in Seventies Visits Here After her visit here, Mrs. Ehman Plans to go to Buffalo, Minn., for a stay lta algeert and from there to Kansas City, home by Pueblo, Colo. fap A number of informal social affairs have been held honoring Mrs. Ehman, etek rd bho dinner last eve- ning given by Fanny Slattery. oe se & Mrs. M. Lenhart, 414 First street, will be-hostess to the members of the Women's Relief Corps, tomorrow afternoon at 2:30, skh - ‘Miss Marian Wof left this morning for fargo, where she expects to spend several weeks. For hot weather suggestions, try the Grand Pacific Cafe, coolest place,in town to eat. ‘Wonder Powder, . Say Beauties MELLO-GLO Face Powder is pre- ferred by beautiful women because it leaves no trace of flakiness, pastiness Made by a new French process—prevents large pores. Spreads more smoothly—gives a youthful bloom. Very pure. Use MELLO-GLO Face Powder. It’s wonderful. Finney’s Drug Store.—Adv. 121 Fourth St. | mer need. Thrifty shoppers ving - | But that is exactly what I am going to do, starved for afi | on longer—no, YOUR CHILDREN et eS How many mothers are going to lift their eyebrows when I attack the emotion of love in little children? Not the little children who are or kindness or attention, but a certain type of child with @ clinging nature who fastens | his tiny being in the solicitous love of his mother and never frees himself ‘as long as he lives, just as the mistic- toe on the oak—a parasite. Yes—the murder is out. Mother fixation! The bugaboo we hear so much about. To save my scalp let me hurry to frock | say that here I do not mean to criti- cigze the natural, happy, dependable, normal . love that exists between mother and child. A little child is entitled to it and will thrive and grow and develop better in the at- mosphere of an intelligent mother- love than in any other on earth. Peril of Extreme Love But there is ari exception that even the most lukewarm behaviorist must 5 = : 2 3 H NOT SUN | Some of us aren’t, of course. 3 we all-love the new Sunburn shades shown in “Holeproof” silk hose. $1.50&$1.95 The new bare legged hose without seam “First with Richmond's Bogtery sancnvucnnvensousnnonascnsccasacascevsuevsucovsengcoangossgensavaceanonsooneocevnovansovgnueusonsaty ers and some children that will be hindrance rather than a help to the’ child through all the years to come. Love, like any other emotion, can be carried to an extreme. It can block mental progress and stultify the natural progress of character that should mark the adult. Some people never become adult. In character they stay dependable babes. If the mother dies they fasten to someone else for moral support. Half the grown-ups who get the credit for being “morons,” or people with incomplete brain de- velopment, aren't morons at all, but the victims of too much coddling, too much “babying” ‘and too much emo- tional intercourse, with mothers when they were little. Mother fixation! One Mother's Methods One very, very wise mother, real- izing the difference in her two chil- dren, one being the clinging, affec- tionate, warmly emotional type, the other suppressed and seemingly with- out much natural affection, told me that against her natural inclination she is reversing her treatment of them. She does not meet the too-depend- ent one quite half-way. At the ‘risk of making him a bit unhappy at times she is compelling him to rely more and more on himself. ‘The other child she is trying to free from a natural shyness by contriving BURNED? But $1.25 the Newest” J.C.PENNEY CO Bismarck, No. Dak. A Remarkably Low Priced Group of New Spring Styles and Patterns in Porch Frocks . Printed Cottons and’ All Silk P H make these house and Delightful new styles Smart cotton frocks an important \f f i = om ing prong wee into charming frocks for almost any spri will recognize them as superior val Phone 185 and sume typical of THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE recognize. That ts the smothering | to make him show some emotion, and love that exists between some moth- | overcome the barrier of his reserve. Bhe says she is succeeding, but it is slow business. It is in the distant future she will get her reward. Without doubt it will tell then. Dance at the Dome tonight, Music by Jack Mills and his recording orchestra from Sioux City, Ia. Friday and Saturday. See one extra Fer these extra : H. M. TAIT General Agent, Canadian Pacific G11 See. Ave. Se., Minneapolis Carry Canadian Pacific Buprese Travellers Cheques — Good the World Over * — Aye: ‘eat on that coveted trip abroad... without extra cost! enrowts 09 any your local agent or The St. Lawrence Frederick -James Two Days Only - Friday and Saturday, June 21-22 16-18 NORTH FOURTH STREET, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. | 1893—Thirty-six Years of Fur Service—1929 This fresh water is found at a dis- tance of more than 200 miles out from TOPSY-TURVY TOWN The outflow of fresh water from London.—Porlock is topsy-turvy |the Amazon river into the ocean is land no longer, for the ministry of jover a million cubic feet a second. | shore. health has made the two halves Of | eqns coe ntt eee Sener the city a whole. It used t» be, how- | ever, that: The water cart was al- lowed to water only one side of the- street; police needed a tape to meas- prisoner was in; taxes jared: and = rani E the other ary. we "MP wet and Matinee at 2:30 Reality dragged them through the Gutters of Life—but their heads were always in the clouds. | HELEN TWELVETREES _ FRANK ALBERTSON FOX NEWSREEL and COMEDY FURS Showing Advance Models for 1929 To induce early ordering and to avoid the annual fall rush Frederick - James FURS Offer Special Summer Discounts A Frederick-James fur coat may be purchased for as little as $75.00 and other garments of Beaver, Raccoon, Otter, Japanese Mink, Krim- mer, Persian Lamb, Pahmi Otter, Baby Seal, Rock Seal, $650 Caracul, Pony and other popular furs are up to ......... Muskrat Coats ........0.--»--$157.50 to $325 --$275 to 575 Hudson Seal Coats . Bonded Northern Seal Coats ........- $95 to $275 A Small Deposit Will Reserve Your Selection Until Fall, OUR SENSIBLE PAYMENT PLAN IS AT YOUR SERVICE Repairing - Cleaning Remodeling - Storage Whether you want your furs repaired by expert furriers who devote all their time to fur care ... Remodeled by fur craftsmen who are nationally known for their skill. , . . Cleaned by the new process by which fur and lining both are marvelously renewed . . . or merely stored in the finest storage vaults in the northwest, you may depend on a distinctly dif- ferent and exclusive service by Frederick-James. Reduced prices apply on all work placed now wtih the as-: surance that delivery will be made when desired. Free storage on all remodel orders. For Women's Wear