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OR = 2 e-em Net in Bismarck for the past month, left |% spend Louise Dutt Wed at Presbyterian Manse Miss Louise Dutt, Bismarck became the bride of David E. Blankenship, Ft. Lincoln, yesterday at a quiet wed- ding in the Presbyterian manse. Rev. Paul 8. Wright read the service. The couple was attended by Miss Betty “ Comant and Emil Ditz, both of Bis- 1 marck. Mrs. Blankenship has resided in this city for a number of years. Mr. Blankenship's home is ih Dayton, Ohio. se & Miss Roan Entertains For Bismarck Girls Miss Abigail Roan was hostess last evening to a group of friends of the Misses Eleanor Mann and Rosella Rausch who have recently returned to Bismarck. The evening was spent in dancing, and Miss Mann favored with several piano and vocal numbers. Miss Rausch entertained with a solo dance. At the close of the evening, a course luncheon was served by the hostess, assisted by Miss Phyllis Thompson. Peonies were used about the rooms as decorations. ** * Hyland Home Scene Of Pretty Wedding Under an improvised arch of pink roses in the J. A. Hyland home, 810 Sixth street Saturday, the wedding %. ceremony was read which united Miss Judith Rognlie, Portland, Ore., and Henry Hugelen, Twin Valley, Minn. Rev. Opie 8S. Rindahl of the Trinity Lutheran church officiated. Roses and peontes in shades of pink formed the setting for the simple wedding ceremony which was pre- seded by two solos, “O Promise Me” and “I Love You Truly,” sung by Mrs. Hyland. Mrs. Rindahl accom- panied on -he piano and played the soft strains of familiar wedding music during the exchange of vows. Miss Rognlie was unattended. She \ Wore a gown of rose beige georgette ‘and lace with a picture at of match- ing lace. Only relatives and intimate friends were present at the service. An informal supper was scrved fol- xowing the ceremony, and Mr. and Mrs. Hugelen left immediately for a trip through Yellowstone park and sther western points. Mrs. Hugelen is a cousin of Mrs. Hyland and has been employed as an instructor in the Riverdale school, Portland, for the past three years. She is a graduate of the Valley City State Teachers’ college and has been a student of dramatic art at Mac- Phail school in Minneapolis. The groom is a graduate of Concordia college, Moorhead, Minn., and is en- gaged as superintendent of the Twin ~a_ Valley, Minn., city schools.” Mr. and Mrs. Hugelen will be at home in Twin Valley after Sept. 1. * ke Mrs. T. M. Stebbins Icft last eve- ning for Dickinson where she was called by the death of her brother-in- law, Gilbert Lunde of that city. Mrs. Stebbins’ mother and sister, Mrs. B. Larson and Miss Frances Larson, will leave for Dickinson this evening. xe e Miss Alice Hersey, Los Angeles, daughter of Mrs. Lillian Hersey, form- erly of Bismarck, arrived here this morning to spend the summer as the guest of her aunt and uncle, Mrs. Jennie Smith and William Foger- ov) strom, . xk & Joseph Kitchen, W. J. Church, and J. E. Davis, members of the state Aboard of administration. left today for Dickinson where they will install the recently appointed head of the Dick- inson State normal. x * * Miss Helen King of Steele is the guest of Miss Mary Cayou in Bis- marek today. Miss King formerly lived in Bismarck and drove here Monday from Detroit Lakes, Minn., xk * Miss Stella House, Ellendale, and Ernest House, Great Falls, Mont., are | @ expected in Bismarck tomorrow to|% spend the Fourth with their sister, Miss Helen House of this city. * % * Miss Helen McLean, Grafton, who as been conducting a kindergarten for her home this morning to the summer wih her mother, x * Frank Clausen has returned to : Bismarck from the Minnesota lakes where he has been the ten days fishing ee ee 4 »-—Camp Grafton at Devils Lake, % = * 8 Mrs. C. F. Strutz left for Wis., this called to ‘the bedside of her sister, Mrs, Fred Page. Mrs. Strutz will be «, 8way two weeks or a month. Md * ek * J, P. Jackson and sisters, Miss |% «Hardy Jackson and Mrs, ing where she has been | % Miss Huber Honored At Kitchen Shower Miss Florence Huber, who is to be |\ @ bride of next month, was honor se & Miss Runey to Attend Sorority Convention Miss Gretchen Thelen, Wilton, will leave this evening for Syracuse, N. Y., where she will attend the national convention of the Alpha Gamma Del- ta sorority which begins there Satur- day. She will be joined in Minneapo- lis by Miss Madge Runey, county su- perintendent of schools, on July 4, and they will go on together. Both are members of the University of Minnesota chapter of Alpha Gamma Delta, Miss Runey being a charter member, Miss Runey and Miss Thelen plan to spend a day in Chicago where they will be the guests of the chapter of the sorority. They will take the Alpha Gamma Delta special from there to Syracuse. Following the convention, Miss Thelen expects to meet her parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Thelan, in Montreal and join them in a Canadian trip before returning to North Dakota. + 2 @ Donald Ellickson, Charlson, N. D., arrived in Bismarck yesterday to spend the week with his brother, Waldo Ellickson. Mr. Ellickson is a former Bismarck resident, having been graduated from Bismarck high school in 1926. Since that time he has attended school in South Dakota, Towa, and Minnesota, and has been teaching school near Charlson for the past year. see Mrs. Catherine Hendershot will leave today for Braddock, where she will spend several weeks visiting rel- atives before going to Flint, Mich., wi she wil make her home with her daughters, Mrs. C. J. Lynch, for- merly of Bismarck, and Mrs. Phillip Elliot. Mrs. Elliot plans to meet Mrs. Hendershot in Wisconsin and the two will motor to Flint. ss Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Fournier spent several days in Bismarck this week as the guests of Mrs. Fournier's sister, Mrs. M. J. Bartley. Mr. and Mrs. Fournier are on their way to their home in Minneapolis from a wedding trip to Vancouver, Lake Louise, Banff, and other western points, se * Fred_Peterson has returned from Sauk Center, Minn., where he has been on a fishing trip for the past two weeks. see Ivan,Bigler, son of Mrs. Mattie Bigler, left today for Fessenden for a two weeks’ vacation with friends, f City-County Briefs j Dr. S. A. Zimmerman of Valley i a business caller in Bismarck lay. City to- Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Wedell of Fargo are in the city this week. Mr. Wedell, The <A. W. Lucas Co.; Picnic Shop % Will Supply the Eats for $ Your Outing : & Delicious Sandwiches Made to $ Order While You Wait. ‘ Your choice of Bread— : % White, Whole Wheat or Home } Made Rye. ; % (Our Special Picnic Sandwich— Ham, Swiss Cheese, Dill Pickle, % RULE ‘In What Month Is Your Birthday? es send our Hoskins-Meyer Rome of EYER Op your ‘HE BISMAKUK 1LRIBUN ‘fulton Pane "| YOUR ; ‘| CHILDREN (Steke difficult to keep step been drilled glanced sideways to see how the audi. ence was taking it. THE VOGUE for triple tiered skirts has its counterpart in a little chapeau with three scalloped iace straw brims. more, it was a lovely soft June eve have been very happy. Sensitive Thoughts formerly state tax commissioner, is in attendance at a meeting of tax com- missioners. a the T. C. Anderson, Fargo, is a business visitor in Bismarck. Everybody was at me. John Shatt of Linton was transact- ing business in Bismarck today. pie Me Nea car splashed it. I just spoiled every. thing and I wish I hadn't come.” W. H. Harris, Turtle Lake, arrived in Bismarck yesterday on a busincss trip. Miss Lillian Sherman of Dickinson arrived in Bismarck Monday for a short visit. them? Well—not this! Rev. Helen 8. Morrow, Hamilton, Ohio, has returned to her home after @ ehort stay in this city. L. 8. French of the French and Welch Hardware company is confined to the Bismarck hospital because of @ severe case of blood-poisoning. at all. we're wise. time we touch the sore 5] aching all over again. Let it alon and it will heal. Fo the Fourth of July its flavor adds a merrier, happier note "CANADA DRY’ The Champagne of Ginger Ales Fresh tea! No other is like it e+. for it’s a Schilling secret. Money back Try a tin of any size. If you don’t declare it thé most freshly fragrant iced tea you ever served ... your grecer returns your ' monéy. Your statement is enough. We pay him. You keep the tes. s _The other evening I watched a column of little girls marching to slow | will increase her self-respect. music at a certain exercise. It was| And keep her time filled, absolutely in the big church to the rolling notes of the] Busy Tate cay’ Dut real interests, How sorry I felt for those especially sensitive little girls. For all of them | tor jellied = inexpensive fish mold looked lovely; no one expected them | flower mold to keep that difficult step perfectly | worth their (it was even worse than the wedding march and we know how hard that is, even for grown-ups) and, what was ning and everybody there should But I knew what was going on in half dozen sensitive minds.| A Something like this: “I spoiled it all. | printed in fine traceries of navy blue, look! 5 couldn't learn it. I’m too dumb. What will mother say? I wonder if my] fabric dress mashed. And I'm afraid that | back manner. where the Because, if we do, every spot, kindly, and gently, and healingly as it may be, we only open it up and start it to But the thing for us to do Is to set TUESUAY, JULY Z, 19Z it tou; that little thin skin. ee Let Self Be Forgotten The first thing to do is to get those pitiful self-analyzing young eyes turned out on the world and away from self. ‘Try, if possible, to find friends for ~— a child, of the same type as her- Have her play with children who filled, with pleasant activities; not That’s the salvation of the church organ, and although they had | sensitive child—sleep in plenty, milk, and drilled, as they | good marched down the aisle there was/ brain and nerve tissue, good friends, more or less shuffling and halting,’ ha: food, air, exercise, to build up ppiness—and teach her to think giggling, blushing and biting of lips.| about other things outside of her- Here and there a little white face looked positively agonized as it self. ih FISH MOLD Appearance in foods means much in summer. ‘ish salads and a pretty for desserts are well inexpensive price. LINEN LUGGAGE . |. For hot weather travel, new luggage ensembles come in very attractive glazed linen, in patterns of black, red od tan checks, stripes of diamond "DEEP YOKE _ White flat cfepe ensemble T/ has @ deep yoke of plain white, both front and back to which the printed is joined in modernistic set- ‘3 VOILE LINGERIE Hand-made lingerie in printed voile, Now if that isn't tragic, what is? | lace trimmed, is very summery look- Poor little pathetic, sensitive | ing. Worth uses a black and white 1 ‘What are we going to do with | voile for a stunning combination, with it. hi 1 caves ned not to to harp on their sensitiveness—t ‘The average depth of the n them. We're not going to mention it © ino. bees We are going to pretend not to notice things at all, we mothers, if wide ecru lace from 10,000 to 15,000 feet. HOMEMAKER CLUBS ADD SEVERAL MORE Miss Laurie Organizes Hay Creek, Canfield, and Meets Other Groups Today The Hay Creek Homemakers club has been organized by Adelaide Lau- rie, extension service worker from the college, with 13 members. The organ- ization meeting was held at Wilson schoolhouse. The club elected Mrs. Harold Breen, president; Mrs. Sam Turnbow, vice president; Mrs. Kasper Irish, secre- and Mrs. Carry’ Falck, leaders. Monday Miss Laurie organized an- ——_—————— Dr. R.S. Enge Chiropractor Drugiess Physician Lucas Bleck Bismarck, N. D. For the relief of Poison Ivy. If not satisfied, moncy refunded. Sold Exclusively by Cowan’s Drug Store ‘Taylor. Mrs. P. E. Patten was elected pres- ident; Mrs. H. D. Watkins, vice pres- ident; Mrs. J. F. Little, secretary treasurer; Mrs. A. F. Ghylin, chair- man of reports; Mrs. H. C. Taylor and Mra. C. W. Wilkinson, leaders. This ee a Miss ‘Laurie met a group in Boyd township to organize @ club south of Menoken. Tonight or Dance at Woodworth Barn 12 Miles southeast of Bismarck. Evening, July 4th Windstorm Insurance Costs Little But Pays Your Loss Let Le Barron Insure It Office 312 1-2 Broadway Phone 876-M Bismarck, N. D. * {at Sterling school and she is tomerrow she will meet another Af uled to organise a girls’ club at fit tonight. “Ua mau ke ea o ka aina { pono,” is the motto of the Territory of Hawaii. It means “The life of righteous- the land is preserved in ness.” PALACE MANDAN Wed. - Thurs. - Fri. 7:15 - 9:15 Matinee, July 4th, 3 p. m. 5 \/, COQUETTE 100 HED rips TALKIN A marvelous modern Mary Pickford with a charming bobbed head and a perfect screen voice brings to vivid life a glorious flirt who laughed with love till laughter turned to tears. 121 Fourth St. around In 36-inch width in unbleached. Our s T= sod Gages er 15¢ perm wide own trade-marked brand! 12s Yard | AN 7S, Gladio Percales J.C.PENNEY CO, BISMARCK, NO. DAK. 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