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| milk e, will juice ¢ neces- e eats latin. order dition > milk lated, > mille restive ily. ods Please kaline mg to I will rticles Syndi- isit to y, ace | fam- visited ned to ling if ee 4 Grocery we Mandan Couples Wed - At Double Ceremony At an impressive double wedding; ceremony at 6 o'clock this morning in St. Joseph’s Catholic church, the mar- tiage vows of Miss Mary Lapp, Vames- town, and John K. Kennelly, Mandan, and Miss Delilah Hagerman and Frank Wetzstein of Mandan -were spoken. Each couple served as the other's attendants, and the service, which was read by Father Urban, was witnessed by only the immediate fam- ies. Mrs. Kennelly wore a gown of rose beige crepe Elizabeth, with long sleeves, and fashioned along princess lines. Her hat and accessories were also of rose beige. Mrs. Wetzstein was attired in a dress of royal blue Spanish lace, with tiered skirt falling to the ankles in the back, with long sleeves and snug fitting bodice. The same shade was used for her hat and accessories. Each carried a rosary of black onyx and gold, the gifts of the grooms. Mrs. Kennelly, the daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Christ Lapp, Jamestown, received her education in the Jamcs- town schools. Mr. Kennelly, former commander of the North Dakota department American Legion, is one of the pro- prietors of the Kennelly Furniture company. Mrs. Wetzstein has been employed ; in department stores in Bismarck for | several years. She is the daughter of Mrs. Hilda Hagerman of Mandan. Mr. Wetzstein, son of Adam Wetz- stein, has extensive business and farming interests, and is manager of the Palace theatre, .in which he is also interested. Immediately after the ceremony the two couples left by motor for James- town, where a wedding breakfast was served at the Lapp hoine. From there Mr. and Mrs. Kennelly and Mr. and Mrs. Wetzstein will go to Duluth and take the boat trip to Buf- falo. They plan to spend about a month motoring to various places along the Atlantic coast. * * * B. P. W. Club Gives Farewell Picnic For Miss Granner For Miss Justine Granner, who is leaving Saturday for her home at Hubbard, Iowa, members of the Bus- iness and Professional Women's club held a picnic last evening at the | Mandan Chautauqua park. Sixteen members were present, and the time was spent informally. Miss Granner, who has been an in- structor in the Nurse's Training School at the Bismarck hospital for the past two years, plans to spend a month or more at her home, and will then take special training at one of the large eastern universities for a year. Miss Granncr has spent a num- ber of years in hospital work in China, and expects to return to the Orient. During her stay here she has taken an active part in the work of the B. P. W. club. xk * Mrs. Anne Zetersen and Miss Lila McDowall aygived here Sunday after an extensiv@ motor trip through the west. About a week was spent in the Black Hills, and from there they went to the Big Horn mountains and the Yellowstone park, stopping at points of interest en route. At Portland, Ore., they visited relatives and friends and made trips to nearby beach resorts. Returning they made stops in Wash- ington, Idaho and Montana. * * * Miss Charlotte Logan and her & Guest, Miss Myrtle Haugen, McVille, | will motor to Carson this evening to/ be guests at the home of Miss Phyilis Evens. morrow morning to Lee Osterhus, Minneapolis, and Miss Haugen will play a program of nuptial music dur- ing the ceremony. ** * Miss Ella M. Ross, sister of George M. and F. H. Register, and her daughter Isabelle C. Ross, of i Del., who have been guests George Register home for the month, left yesterday evening for Stillwater, Minn., to visit a cou- 4 sin of Mrs Ross, Mrs. Mary Regis- ter, before returning to their cast- crn home. * * Ok Miss Hazel Pierce, who has been spending several weeks vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E H. Pierce of the Hazelhurst, return- ed to Minneapolis Sunday. Miss Pierce is advertising artist for the Dayton company, and a part of her work is designing covers for the Daytonian, sales magazine sent out several times a year. a * ® Miss Bessie Baldwin returned yes- terday from Sparta, Wis., where she has been visiting at the home of her mother, Mrs. R. 8. Baldwin, and with “ other relatives. Miss Baldwin spent two weeks at Madison, Wis., during = which time she took dn intensive | course in library work for experienced librarians at the University of Wis- consin. She has been away about a isl see Mr. and Mrs. John Dolwig, Glad- stone, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Helen, to Ralph W. Ferguson, Minneapolis. Both young people have many friends in| jismarck. Miss Dolwig was recently Fracuated from the Dickinson high school, and Mr. Ferguson was for some time employed by the Dickinson * * 5 Mrs. Scott W. Derrick, who we visiting friends in the city for about ten days, ne now al in cottage at Lake Sarah, near fi ry wil remain there and will then go lor several weeks their home at Se Social and Personal | Miss Logan will be Miss | di Evens’ attendant at her wedding to- | jaat i, |Dorothy Schnecker | And Frank Feeney Are Married Here Miss Dorothy M. Schnecker, Car- son, became the bride of Frank Feeney, also of Carson, at five o'clock last evening at St. Mary's parish house, Rev. Father John A. Slag read- ing the service. The bride's dress was of suntan georgette, and with it she wore a small hat and accessories of the same shade. Her bridesmaid, Miss Margarct Wynkoop, also wore a frock of sun- tan georgette with hat and slippers of the same shade. P. H. Butler at- tended the groom. The bride is a daughter of Mrs. M. HH. Schnecker of this city, now in St. Paul, and has been deputy register of deeds of Grant county for the past four years. Mr. Feeney is secretary of the Grant {County Abstract company and was formerly connected with the Bank of North Dakota here. | A wedding dinner was served at the Patterson hotel after the cere- mony. Guests were the wedding Party, and the bride's sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John N. Forister, her nephew, Carl Martin, of this city, and Mr. and Mrs. A. D. LaDue and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hart of Carson. Mr. and Mrs. Feeney left last eve- jning for a wedding trip to the Black i Hills, and possibly Yellowstone park, and will make their home in Carson | Upon their return. H ee * i Party Compliments Out-of-Town Guest | Honoring her guest; Miss Myrtle | Haugen, McVille, Miss Charlotte Lo- ; an entertained at bridge last evening {at the Logan home. | Guests were invited for four tables, | and high scores at the close of the games were held by Miss Marian Burke and Mrs. Kelley Simonson. Miss Haugen received a guest prize. Garden flowers were attractively | atranged in the rooms, and formed centerpieces for the tables when a two course luncheon was served after the games, Miss Zella Harris, Minneapolis, was @ guest from out of the city. ** * ‘Mrs. O’Hara Honored By Junior Daughters Mrs. T. G. O'Hara. councilor of j Troop No. 3 of the Junior Catholic Dausiiers, was a guest of honor yes- ;terday noon when members of the | Troop entertained at a luncheon at | the Grand Pacific hotel. Covers were placed for ten, and | Sweet peas, four o’clocks, snapdragons ‘and zinnias formed effective decora- | tion for the table. Mrs. O'Hara, who has served as councilor for about two years, was ; Presented with a gift from the group. Guests in addition to the members ! were Mrs. Harvey Niles, head coun- | cilor of the Junior Catholic Daugh- | ters, here. and Miss Christine Wag- { ner, Red Wing, Minn., who is visiting | Miss Arlene Wagner. * * * 1_ Mrs. R. B. Campion and daughter Marion, St. Paul, have come to Bis- marck for several weeks’ visit with Mrs. Campion's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Ban- non. se ® Mrs. S. S Johnson and son Her- bert, Chicago, who have been visit- ing at the home of Mrs. Johnson’s brother, A. C.. Booth, 321 Griffin | street, returned to their home to- lay. ** * |, Mrs. J. B. Seylor and daughter Helen returned last evening from a | two-months motor trip through Ohio, j Indiana, Illinois and Iowa, where they visited relatives. x * * Mrs. A. J. Herbert and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Cowen, Lieth, have re- turned to their home after spending the week-end with their son and daughter, Mr. gat he. Ira Herbert. * Miss Barbara Bliss, who has been visiting at the home of Dr. and Mrs. N. O. Ramstad during the past weck, left today for her home. nk * Edward Booth, Emil Sandrich and Vernon Saueressig, McClusky, visited over Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Booth. ee « Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Booth accom- panied by Mrs. S. S. Johnson and json Herbert, Chicago, spent the week-end in Medora. ** * Mrs. A. D. McKinnon left last eve- ning for Minneapolis, summoned there iby the serious illness of her brother, ‘William Mix, ek k Dorothy Loeffler, LaCrosse, Wis., jarrived Saturday evening for a vis- it with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. E. E, Gender, Miss Fay Ritchie and Miss Violet Zapp spent the week-end in Sterling with Miss Zapp’s peeate. * Mrs. O. F. Bryant has gone to Na- ;Poleon to spend the week with her sons, Jay, Otis and Clarence. Personal and Social News of Mandan Vicinity >| Waverly, Minn., and Winnipeg, Man., where they spent two weeks. ze % Mrs. A. J. Johnson and sons, Gay- lord, Jack and Arnold, have returned from a visit at Trenton, N. J., with another son, Eerl Johnson. ** * Mr. and Mrs. 8. A. Young had as guests over Sunday their son THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1929 ind daughter-in-law, Mi Fred Young and family of xk ind Mrs. Minot. Mr, and Mrs. James T. McGillic have returned to Mandan after a three weeks’ motor trip to California and other Pacific coast points. x eR Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Fredericks and daughters Erminia and Margucrite and Miss Elizabeth Schafer are at Round Lake, Minn., this week. They will visit in Minneapolis before re- turning. xk * For a two weeks’ trip through Yel- lowstone park, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Furness and daughter and Gladys Sundiland left Sunday by motor. x * * Miss Mirian Keidel, who has been visiting her parents here for the past month, has returned to Evanston, Ill. [ City-County Briefs | Dr. J. M. Nelson, Hebron, was a visitor here yesterday. T. A. Thompson, Wishek, spent yesterday in the city on business. Mrs. Carl Borge, Breien, spent yes- terday in the city with friends. . D, Thompson, manager of the Leland Parker hotel, Minot, Howard J. Hess, Minot architect, and Peter Zappas, proprietor of the new La Plaza cafe at Minot, were in the city yesterday on business. f Fashion Hints ° a NASTURTIUM SHADES Fall clothes reveal the style fact that nasturtium shades are excellent accessory colors for browns and tans. A beige tweed suit has a brown, white, beige. and bright orange plaided scarf and purse. ASCOT SCARF The new scarf shape is the Ascot tie. This elongated scarf may be tied in a bow under the chin, worn around the neck like a stock, or around the neck once with the ends looped in truc Ascot tie manner. KNITTED CAPS The fall beret-turban becomes al- most an old-fashioned hood with the front turned back to flare. Knitted wool ones have gaudy facings. COLORFUL BELTS The suede belt in high color finds a Popular place in summer modes. A white sleeveless crepe frock has a wide orange belt and a short orange Jacket topping it. LACE COAT For evening wear a charming egg- shell Alencon jacket is made over pink chiffon and has pink flowers outlined on its own lace pattern. The flaring | Sleeves and lower edge are scalloped. HAIR RIBBONS Little girls who have pretty curls are now getting the blue or other col- ored ribbons they deserve on them. Printed polka-dotted, striped and checkered ribbons are good now for hair ribbons. Roman stripes are nice for parties with white frocks. TWO-TONE SHOES Autumn shoes use either two colors or two kinds of leather, or both, in fashioning the most fashionable num- bers. Reds have a new vogue, both in wine shades and rust. DINNER TURBANS Milady just must have a dinner tur- ban this autumn. They are deftly draped, enchanting colors and ex- quisite fabrics, matching one's gown. CURRANT RED ‘The new red for autumn afternoons is currant red, deeper and ruddier than lipstick, lighter than crimson. A flat crepe frock in this tone has a detachable cape that buttons across both shoulders with buttons of the material. KITCHENETTE COAT A new garment is the little sleeve- less frock that is a coat dress and therefore easy as an old glove to slip into. Made of colored pique or linen it is charming. Doubie-breasted oncs are popular. FALL BAGS Purses for autumn are luxurious in their fabrics. Velvet, seed pearls, needlepoint, brocades, rich calf, and antelope, all are used. Frames are luxuriously dotted with marcasite and are unusual in detail. NAUTICAL INFLUENCE Sea-going togs had a tremendous influence on styles this summer. Some of the smartest lounging pa- jamas for fall have the wide sailor trousers, sailor collars and emblems of the sea for decorations. Household Hel MINUTE PIE An excellent dessert, called “minute pie,” is made by baking pie crust over the outside of a tin until crisp and —— ps 1a AAP ROOMs$ 50 DOLIMLE DOM: BATH 480 Pee Dor at 5 : i Helps Tourists _|| kg * ! ? | \ MARGARET wAprEen Lincoln, Mass. July 30.—()—An attractive American girl has becn designated a special representative of the United States government in Geneva, Switzerland, to look after the interests of American visitors. She is Miss Margaret Warncr,! whose home is in the old Bay State | town of Lincoln. She recently passed examinations for admission to the foreign service of the United States. | In her appointment, just announced, | she has been given the grade of vice- | consul of career. | filled when needed with fresh berries and whipped cream. If you bake the, crust in the morning, it really takes | only a minute to fill and serve. | KNEELING PAD | For pulling weeds, softening sold around plants and other gardening that requires stooping. a kneeling pad is indispensible. You can make a good one of black oil cloth, placed over a bag of sand. A gaudy bug in color, or a flower can be stitched onto the oil cloth for decoration. | THIN FABRICS | When cutting @ frock of very sheer | chiffon or other exquisite fabric that is apt to pull or cut irregularly, baste | it onto a sheet of thin tissue paper | and cut through the paper. You can even stitch through the paper and then remove it, to keep seams narrow | and straight. STEWED FRUITS When stewing fresh fruits, add the sugar just a minute or two before | removing from the stove. This pro- cess brings out the fresh fruity taste. | RAW VEGETABLES Raw carrots, beets, potatoes, cab- bage, peas and practically every oth- ONLY KELVINATOR Gives this Positive Silence pecans have always been quiet—as thousands of delighted owners will testify. But here in the New 1929 Kelvinator is entire absence of sound—as complete as modern design and super-precision methods can achieve. Simultaneously, Kelvinator is the first to offer, as standard equipment, the new rubber trays for ice cubes, that obsoletes the wasteful “‘water-faucet” method of removing cubes. Always reliable, the new Kelvinator is even more economical to operate. It maintains a constant reservoir of cold and its powerful motor starts only one-third as often as the average er fresh vegetable make fine benefi- cial salads when grated fine and marinated with French dressing and served on Icttuce or other salad green. DELICATE TINTS Never let a very delicate garment get badly soiled before washing. If you clean or launder it while it is still only slightly dirty, you will find the delicate tints are retained perfectly. SALT FILLER When filling salt and pepper shak- ¢rs, cut off the tip of one corner of | | 2n ordinary envelope and use the rest as a funnel, with that corner as the hole. RUG SAVINGS If you turn your rugs around once or twice a year so that all parts of it get even wear, you will find it lengthens the rugs’ life tremendously | and there are no worn spots. SHOESTRING TIPS. If Sonny keeps pulling the tips off his shoestrings, dip the ends of the laces in glue and let them dry pointed | and you will have new tips. | PEOPLE'S FORUM | Oppores Tariff Editor Tribune: I, Donald Ellickson, a humble citi- | Zen of the United States, do hereby | Submit a statement which I shall up- hold and defend publicly at any time with anybody who wishes to oppose my belief. Tariff is unconstitutional. has been justified by the Supreme Court through the clause “necessary and proper.” I believe tariff should DEVELOPEO AT MELLON INSTITUTE OF IND RESEARCH OY REX RESEARCH meowente A vast { aye ‘li insects Is bred tele testandec Copyright 1929 by The Rez Co, Minneapolis. Tariff | inFLY. Nope | to be released in the Lek iboats heme “ | ein Meret TORboher nee morning, 8:30. Program comes to you over the lumbia Broadcasting Chain through station WCCO, | be interpreted under the principle found in the sentence, not clause, if you please, “that no laws shall be ; Passed in restraint of trade.” | The Supreme Court maintained by are local, not universal in scope, but the Constitution says these rights are inalienable and self evident. ‘“T Believe the rights of man are uni- versal in scope, that these rights be- gin before birth, that he is entitled to Barents who are capable of assuming | the responsibility of being of value to the world, not a parasite. | We Mave parasites that interfere ; with the rights of man, among which are disease, vermin, filth, ignorance, war, crime, and other non-producing things such as advertising, competi- | tion in production “not among the workers.” I would recommend that our senate and house resolve itself | into a group of scientists to find those laws which will make life sweeter, easier, and happier and not to shock the world by the important question of who should sit by the vice presi- | dent. You cannot legislate natural laws but you can find them. Our gov- ernment is undoing the work of our | universities by justifying its existence illusion that tariff brings prosperity. Science faces facts—crime is increas- ©) ing, taxes are becoming higher, war {s to be seen about us, but our gov- | ernment places an army about itself, | not of construction, but of destruc- | tion, and happily in accord with the | old saying, “Ignorance is bliss.” Read- er, you may have your tariff but as for me give me free trade, an honest | government, or give me back my whiskey and opium with a shot of lysol as a chaser. Donald Ellickson, Yegen's Farm, Bismarc Death to insects, but abso- lutely harmless to people. 0 Do not miss it—it's different. electric refrigerator. The New Silent Kelvinators are beautiful, with unusually large « shelf area. Cabinets are designed inside and out with utmost artistry — ultra-modern and cleanly staunch. Come in today and view the complete new line, in sizes suitable for every home. Kelvinator prices are remarkably reasonable. There is no need to wait a day longer. Buy your Kelvinator now on Kelvinator’s attractive ReDisCo monthly budget plan. salegsing the ice cubes in 0 fgsh—one, or'all of them. No holding of met! ereys under water, Bo wasted ice, preciov THERE ulnutes caved daily, THE KELVINATOR North Dakota Power & Light Co. Bismarck, North Dakota _ARE KBLVINATOR BLECTRIC INSTALLATIONS FOR EVERY COMMERCIAL & A | its interpretation that man's rights | |not by work but by playing with the | | | Mounts Baker and St. Helena, in|eruption in the middle of the nine- the state of Washington, were in| teenth century. appealing beauty a exquisite skin,” voicing the experience f 1st movie directors. “I find Lux Toilet Soap wonderful for the bal smoothness my skin must have,” says Alice Day, popular blonde star. Nine out of ten sceen stars are devoted to oficial soap for dresing rooms fn jor Ss : ri lressing Tooms An Announcement For the convenience of our Bismarck patrons, we have installed a private telephone line which will help to give more efficient service. Just Phone 1596 which connects you with our Mandan office direct without cost to you, We call for and deliver your laundry and dry cleaning. Just call us by phone. Golden West Laundry and Dry Cleaners LE