The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1929, Page 5

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pe \ “ y ‘ § » c » 4 f ‘ @ Social and Personal | Miss Ethel Miller, Richard Penwarden To Be Wed. August 18} Appleton, Mrs. Rugg Mrs. A. N, Miller, Moorhead, Minn., Announced the approaching marriage of her daughter, Miss Ethel Milles, to Richard Penwarden, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Penwarden Sr., Bismarck, at & bridge party given at her home last Friday. The marriage will take place Aug. 18. Four tables of bridge were in play at the affair, and a patriotic color scheme was carried out in the ap- itments. The announcement of Miller’s engagement was found in numerous gay colored balloons. Miss Miller is a graduate of the Moorhead high school and was em- ployed in the Webb Bros. store in this city for some time. She is now employed at Black's department store in Fargo. Mr. Penwarden is a gradu- ate of the Bismarck high school and has been employed at the First Na- tional bank here for the past several years, 22 & Surprise Dinner Honors Mr. Junkert Mrs. C. H. Junkert entertained cight guests at dinner last evening in honor of the birthday anniversary of Mr. Junkert. The affair was a surprise to the honor gucst who reccived a number of gifts. The dinner table was pleasingly decorated in red, white, and blue, and @ birthday cake carrying out that color scheme formed the centerpiece. Red roses were also used on the table. * Oe OR Mrs. Dawson Honors Out-of-Town Guest Mrs. J. E. Dawson, 406 Sixth strect, was hostess last evening to nine friends of Mrs. Frank Ryan, Tacoma, Wash., who has been a guest at the John Maassen, Sr., home for the past two days. Guests were old residents of Bismarck. Two tables of bridge were in play during the evening, honors going to Mrs. J. D, Wakeman. Mrs. Ryan re- ceived a guest prize. Roses formed the decorations for the course supper served. * * * Honor Nurse Leaves For Montreal Meeting Miss Elsie Gebert, student nurse at the Bismarck hospital, will leave Bis- marck tomorrow for Fargo where she will join Miss Esther Teichman in & trip to the meeting of the Interna- tional Council of Nurses to be held in Montreal, Que. Miss Gebert receives the trip in recognition of her rank as nurse in the senior class. She will represent Bismarck at the meet- ing, as Miss Teichman will represent the state of North Dakota. ~ From Fargo, Miss Teichman and Miss Gebert will go first to Chicago where they will spend a day before leaving for Montreal. Following the convention, they will go to Quebec, and-thence to Niagara Falls, N. Y;to join Miss Susan B. Schaeffer, who is at present visiting in the east. They will return with Miss Schaeffer by car about July 21. x oe OK Mrs. Carl Brandt, Noonah, N. D., who has been a guest at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Musgjerd, in Bismarck for the past two weeks, left for Fer- 6us Falls, Minn., this morning to spend some time with her daughter, Mrs. Charles Zimmerman. see Mr. and Mrs. 8. V. Russell and fam- ily, and Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Thorpe of Mott are guests of Mr. Russell's brother, C. M. Russell, manager of the Prince hotel. The party will remain in Bismarck over the Fourth. ze Delain and John Ralph Ward, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Birlea O. Ward, left Bismarck this morning for Dorset, Minn., where they will spend two weeks at the S. W. Corwin cottage. se 8 H. H. Steele and daughter, Miss Helen Steele, Minneapolis, formerly of this city, spent Tuesday here vis- iting friends. Miss Steele was the guest of Miss Mary Caron. * Mr. and Mrs. Ray Olson and party of Marshfield, Ore., were guests in Bismarck Tuesday en route to Still- water, Minn. “ ** * Mrs. Frank Ryan, Tacoma, left yer- terday for her home after spending & few days at the John Maassen home ere, **e Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Boucher, New England, arrived Tuesday to spend a few days in this city. Fashion Plaque : Oe oe ee. Parties at Beatt Home Honor Mrs. Mrs. Lulu Clark Appleton, Long Beach, Calif, mother of Mrs. E. T.j Beatt, 422 First street, was honor guest at a bridge breakfast given by the latter yesterday morning. Covers were laid for eight at a breakfast table decorated in rose and white. in Following the breakfast duplicate bridge was played, honors going to Mrs, Obert Olson and Mrs. Appleton. Mrs. Appleton received a guest favor. A NOVEL-CUFF, edged with kid, forming @ laced applique’on the Minneay is the guest of her sister, Mrs. J. L. Mul- ae lin. r tables were in a the evening, with honors. going. te ae Mrs. L. H. Belk. A guest prize was | else kid. presented Mrs. Rugg. 7 A similar color scheme was used by | ¢f, Jesse Gordon. Judge Gordon was Mrs, Beatt in the evennig int- | Ch route to Des Moines, Ia., where he will visit his son, Sidney Gordon. * ae is oer Ua uian was served rary at the close of the bridge gam <9 Mr. and Mrs, Louis Wipper_and Birthday Surpri Mont, drove to Bumarck Sunday %6 y font. ve jul irthday Surprise at | Seha'the day with Bios Masel Wip- P. D. Kebsgard Home| rer ot this city. They made up a ~~ See Twenty friends of Mrs. P. D. Kebs- 4 i. Owen iS gard, 1011 Fourth street, surprised her |*24 MES. D. T, Owens, last evening on the occasion of her! yrs Otto Bowman ‘and children, Robert and Donald, and the Misses Elaine, Marcia, and Beatrice, left yes- terday for Detroit Lakes, Minn., where birthday anniversary. Four tables of bridge were in play throughout the evening, Mrs, Anton Nelson winning high honors. A course luncheon at the close of Miss Milda Brelje of the Workmen's Compensation bureau left today on an extended vacation trip which will include visits to the Walther League summer conference camp at Arcadia, Mich., and the 37th annual Walther League convention at Fort Wayne, ah it tobe) shod tir tet Miss relje will spend a month with rela- tives and Pang in Chicago. pensation bureau met yesterday. In Miss Brelje, with two other Bis- | the absence of the chairman, Richard marck delegates who will leave about | Wentel was elected chairman pro uly 14, “Will represent the Bismarck | tempore for ee ‘ese uutheran churches. The conventt is to be held on the grounds of on: Langer sbi gman Sorat pineal cordia college, Fort Wayne, and about | Ross and Lambert, of Parshall re- 2000 delegates are expected to attend, |turned to their home yesterday after The Walther league ts an internation. | Spending a day in Bismarck with Mrs. al organization of Lutheran young ppieen Oe le whi Pooat szqoo,, hes ® membership Of) s4iss Josephine Charlebois left Bis- marck last evening for her home in Miles City, Mont., after spending two weeks in Bismarck with Mrs. Annie Preigang. they will bois Ar Nan bevihare the games employed a pink and white | 'erorte. | They will be Joined there eotor scheme, Garden flowers, were after July 4 bg — ut on e tables. irs. Kel was presented with a number of gifts. Wat \veue Tee Pegi Benn bile spending several days in Bismarck as Leaves for Walther | the guest of her daughter, Mrs, Henry : _ in be League Convention |Ricnnott nave recently returned from an extended eet . Miss Helen Dolwig, Dickinson, left for her home yesterday after spend- ing a day at the home of Warden George Brown. Miss Dolwig drove the guest of res oe Miller, Members of the Workmen's Com- * ke Word has been received in Bis- marck that the Misses Victoria Dunn. and Barbara Register have arrived in Yellowstone park. The two girls left Bismarck a week ago intending to hike to the park where they are to be employed the rest of the summer. They visited Miss Ramona Boepple in Miles City and Miss Florence Smith in Billings, both of whom are former Bismarck residents. see At an assembly heid at Dickinson Normal yesterday, Dr. C. L. Kjerstad, newly appointed president of that school, was installed by three mem- bers of the state board of administra- tion. The three Bismarck men were Joseph A. Kitchen, J. E. Davis, and W. J. Church. They were also guests at a reception given for Dr. Kjerstal by the faculty last evening. e* * Miss Marian Staley left today for Fairmont, W. Va., where she will visit her sister, Miss Ruth Staley, who is an instructor in a normal school there. En route, Miss Staley plans to visit in Fargo, Minneapolis, Decorah, Ta., and Chicago. She will return to Bismarck with her sister about Au- gust 1. eke Edward Simmons, New England, arrived in Bismarck yesterday cn route from his home to Camp Gras- sick at Lake Isabel. ee & The D. D. D. club entertained at a girls made up the part; \W sss Colonel Joseph K. Partello, George Wright, Wash., commander dseys. During his absence, Lieut. Col. W. A. Alfonte, post commander at Ft. Lincoln, will assume command. aes Dan Slattery has returned to Min- versity of Minnesota where h> is a student. ene with food Ft. Lincoln gymnasium was aid a0 + ie crowded last evening for the regular to digestion. Tuesday dance for enlisted men. A (aes) dance is given there each Tuesday and Saturday evening. Blamarehs 4. Ua. Judge @. A. Gordon spent ‘Tuesday Nash-Finch Happy. ‘ CFree SHOW for (2hildren Little Miss ACIROBAT performs At our store, Friday - Saturday. - Monday July 5 - 6-8 at 3:00 and 5:00 p. m. iig the children to ose the talented Litele Mise ies te chee to ms te shane Lae Die Aoi Shoe—recommended by i by 184 GOOD SHOW. ‘The chin wil ove fo Kcrebae Guoe-the abot that—"Koape Your OM AN Free to All - - Bring the Kiddies t te oD ‘| have an oreneraeley Se seaming The here from Minot where she has been | 1) Picnic supper at Sunny, south of Mandan Monday evening. Twelve THE BISMARCK TRIRUNE. WE | McClusky Girl Wed - At Rolla Ceremony | (Tribune Special Service) McClusky, “N. D., Charlotte Lasher, Carrington, and | Raymond Meline, Minneapolis, were married Sunday afternoon at the + Methodist parsonage in Rolla, N. D. {Rev. Martin R. Davis, former Meth- odist minister at McClusky, performed the ceremony. Mrs. Meline ig a former resident of ; McClusky and a graduate of the local high school. She is well known in Sheridan county. The couple will [make their home in Minneapolis, where Mr. Meline is employed. es 8 Miss Gladys Von Hagen, Mark terday for Carpio where they will spend the Fourth with the latter's Parents and friends. ee Miss Catherine Williams has re- turned to her home in Fargo after | spending three weeks in Bismarck as the guest of Mr. and Mrs, C. L. Foster, 1016 Fifth street. ae ek Miss Alta Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Jones, Bismarck, has returned from Minneapolis where she is an instructor at the University of Minnesota. eee Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Targart and family left Bismarck today for Detroit Lakes, Minn., where they plan to spend July 4 and the following weck- end. zee Theodore Quanrud will leave to- morrow evening for Los Angeles where he will represent Bismarck at the national convention of Elks. ee 8 Mrs. M. Sudby left this morning for Detroit Lakes, Minn., where she will spend two weeks with her daughter, eae Oscar Noss. Personal and Social News of Mandan Vicinity Mr. and Mrs. Emil Stoltz and sons left Monday for a month's visit with relatives and friends in Cleveland, Toledo, and Elyria, Ohio; Saginaw, ‘peal Milwaukee, Wis.; and Chicago, eee Mrs. F. H. Schroeder of Mandan has had as her guests for a week her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Jasperson, and her sister, Miss Ethel Jasperson, all of Taylor, N. D. The guests re- turned to sage niga Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Williams have as their guests Mrs. William's brother- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hopton, and family of Carbi, Sask. zee Miss Katherine Stephens, daughter of Supt. and Mrs. W. M. Stephens of the U. 8. Great Plains station, has re- July 3. Miss | Whiting and Pat Thompson, left yes- | ltwrned fsom the University of Min- |nesota where she has been a student the past year. aee Miss Miriam Keidel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keidel arrived last night to spend a month’s vaca- tion with her parents. Miss Keidel {is a nurse in an Evanston, Ill, hos- pital. ee R Ernest J. George and John Emere son of the U. 8. Northern Great Plains station left yesterday on a trip through North and South Dakota, Montana, and Wyoming, during which they will inspect shelterbelt Projects. Mr. Emerson expects to be Away about two months while Mr. George will return in a few days. YOUR _ SDAY, JULY 3, 1929 CHILDREN et T've been asked about discipline. Don't I believe in punishment; what are we to do with unruly children who will not obey; how are we going about training them if we can’t make them behave? Yes, I do believe in discipline, and I believe in punishment. What I don’t believe is that child training consists altogether of discipline nor that punishment is the best means to an end. Moreover I do not believe that the chief aim of child-training is obed- fence. Obedience we must have, but that is not the end of everything. We must go further. The highest type of child training consists in developing the natural traits and planting other good qualities rather than constantly punishing a child for things that, in our estimation, are wrong. T say, “in our estimation,” for par- ents are not always right. Often cus- tom makes right. Things we may have punished John for five years ago, we may praise in him today. Our judgment is only too likely to be in- fluenced by custom. “Don'ts” Outnumber “Do's” But to go back, discipline carries with it too often the negative idea, and it is too frequently lacking in the Positive command. We deny a child the right to do things. The “don'ts” far outnumber the “do's”. That is Pretty much the conception of making @ good child. But we can't whip good things into children nor scold bad things out of them. If we're going to discipline them, it must be done in a wiser way, back at the beginning of things. ‘We don’t want to break their wills to ours too often. That isn’t going rr Dr. Geo. F. McEriain Osteopathic Physician Electrotherapy Sélar-Ray Chronic Diseases a Specialty Hoeskins-Meyer Bidg. Phone 240 Bismarck, N. to make them upstanding, fine, self- confident people when they grow up. The idea of shecr unquestioning obedience went out with the cat-o'- nine tails. Too often we let children drift along alone without real guidance and advice, then when they make mistakes, out comes the rod. It's like allowing a cut to fester before we take any measures to cure it. Threats, by the way, are not dis- cipline. “If you.don't do so and so, Til whip you,” isn't child training. It’s worse than nothing. IN THE WRONG PLACE The wife of a certain bishop, was very ill, and required a serious oper- ation. As she recovered from the anaesthetic she was heard to mur- ven? No, there's John."—Tit-Bits, NOTICE TO COUNTRY CLUB MEMBERS An eighteen-hole medal hand- icap tournament will be held July 4th from 8 to 12 a. m. Tournament Committee. Dance at the Dome tonight, Thursday, Friday and Satur- day to cher’s band. The 10th is the last day of discount on Gas bills. ON gm =_—_ we~ +f a SS wip wine bU0N wi waans vore waren Meg. Us B Pau U8. Ten-Year-Old Acrobatic Dancer to Appear Miss Acrobat, nationally famous 10- year-old acrobatic dancer. who, with her mother, is making/a tour of all of the principal cities of the United States under the auspices of the Shaft-Pierce Shoe Company, makers of “Acrobat” shoes, will be at Rich- mond’s Bootery on Friday, Saturday and Monday, July 5th, 6th and 8th. all cult demonstrations of acrobatic and tap dancing. In between acts Miss Acrobat’'s mother will give a short talk to parents on proper shoes for chil- dren. At Richmond’s Bootery in Demonstration The “Acrobat” shoe, for which Richmond's Bootery is the exclusive dealer, is made specially for children and youths, from infants to gradue ation ages. Officials of this store state that the “Acrobat” shoe is one of the best made children’s shoes on the market. Of especial interest is the fact that Miss Acrobat is a former North Dae kota girl and lived at Fargo until a little over a year ago. During the past year and a half she has gained an ene viable reputation for her excellent entertainments. ‘formances, which will be free to ho attend, consist of very diffi- Washes woolens and blankets! Wuen you wash with hard water there’s a dirty ring around the edge of the basin, but that’s not suds. It’s scum. The hard water is doing that. It's mixing with the soap to form a dirty curdle, Can't wash woolens and blankets in that water. Soften the water with Melo. Then add soap. The water is now a very fine cleansing agent and the soap is much more effective. Melo did that. Get a can today at your grocer’s. weEvO WATER SOFTENED WITH MELO IS A REMARKABLE CLEANER PRODUCTS CO. Canton, Ohio Manufacturers of Sani-Fluch h ’ Careful, Mother! When your baby’s fretful, feverish, don’t give him something intended for grown-ups! There’s no use when you can get Fletcher's Castoria—the pure vegetable, pleas- | ant tasting preparation doctors recommend for | babies—which millions of mothers know is safe. Give Fletcher’s Castoria at the first sign some- thing's wrong. See how quickly it will comfort | a restless, crying youngster. When Baby has caught cold, it keeps the little bowels from clog- ging. It quickly relieves colic, gas, diarrhea, con- stipation, etc., in babies—and older children, too. Keep on with it until your child is grown. Bigger appetite, better digestion, more tion will surely reward this sensible care. Be sure you get genuine Castoria. Look for the Fletcher _ . signature on the wrapper. Children Cry for ~——! |CASTO CE AT THE DOME rfect elimina- s “Tonight-Thur.-Fri. Music by Harry Fletcher's band—(The same band which fi a] SEARCH Pete’ LTT sal, NEW YORK CITY TALKS! The voice of the great city is heard thundering subways. . . roaring traffic... singing, laughing Broadway ... racing at Belmont Park . . . screaming fight fans at Madison Square Garden . . . thud of gloves on flesh ... glamorous ... thrilling ... real. Take a Sight-Sound Tour of New York. . . .See and Hear SPEAKEASY 100% Talking caer Tonight - Thursday THEATRE IO7= On July 4th, 1776 The Declaration of Independence was signed, mak- ing of Americans a free people forevermore. The anniversary of that great event has come 153 times since then, finding us sometimes happy and prosperous, sometimes shadowed by clouds of war or hard times, but always proud of our freedom and of the men who made it possible. First Guaranty Bank - “Strength and Ability Plus the Willingness to Serve” F. A. LAR, Pree. E. V. LABR, Vico Pres. J. P. WAGNBR, Cashier M. B. BAKER, Asst, Cashion music at the Dome opening a year age.)

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