The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 7, 1929, Page 5

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ne > _ ee e qe CaN Mmes. McGillic and Murphy Entertain Guests for seven tables were enter- | tained by Mrs. J. A. Murphy and Mrs. James T. McGillic of Mandan, at a‘ bridge luncheon Saturday afternoon at the Murphy home. A mn effect was carried out in the rooms ind for the table ap- pointments with tall orange candles, | and miniature pumpkins and black cats. Fall flowers in tones of yellow | 20. and orange were also used in the decorations. Mrs. Harold T. Perry held high score in the afternoon's bridge games. Guests from Bismarck included Mrs. L. A. Tavis, Mrs. John Graham and Mrs. H. T. Perry, and Mrs. M. H. Connolly, Los Angeles, Calif., who {s the guest of Mrs. Tavis. Miss Anna Strom Is Bride of J. Everson The wedding of Miss Anna C. Strom, 411 Fifth street, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Manne Strom, Hoffman, Minn., and Jay G. Everson, 415 Fourth street, was solemnized at 8 o'clock Friday evening at the Trinity Luth- cran parsonage. Rev. Opie S. Rin- dahl, pastor of the church, read the service. The bride's gown was of white flat crepe, simply fashioned, and her flow- ers were an arm bouquet of Ophelia roses. Mrs. C. L. Phieeger, as bridesmaid, wore a frock of Queen blue georgette. Mr. Phleeger attended the groom. Mrs. Everson is a graduate of the Hoffman high school, and has been employed at the A. W. Lucas store for the past three years. Mr. Everson, the son of Mrs. Mary Everson, River Falls, Wis., has made his home in Bismarck for several years. He was with the Carpenter Lumber company for three years, and is now cmployed by ‘the Jones and Webb grocery. Mr. and Mrs. Everson are taking a short wedding trip to Fargo. and will make their home in the Hazelhurst apartments, * * * Miss Mary Berger Honored at Shower For Miss Mary Berger, whose mar- tiage to Albert Keller will take place 17, Mrs. Herman Hemmer. 609 Tenth street, entertained last week at a miscellaneous shower. Bridge, played at four tables, pro- vided entertainment, and honors went to Miss Elizabeth Cervinski and Mrs. Herman Pelker. Many useful gifts were brought for Miss Berger. ‘Asters and bittersweet were used to decorate the tables when a refresh-| ment course was served at the close of the games. . * Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Irick left Sat- urday afternoon by motor for Car- rington, where they will make their heme in the future. Mr. Irick, who was with the state hail department | for several years, is now connected with the Northwest Bancorporation, with headquarters at Carrington. A number of social affairs were given for Mr. and Mrs. Irick during the past few weeks. se * Mr, and Mrs, Roy Indseth, 513 Fourteenth street, have as their guest | Mrs. Leo Wilson of Washburn, sister of Mr. Indseth. Mr. Wilson, who has been with the North Dakots Ameri- can Legion band at Louisville, Ky., daring the recent convention, is ex- reeted to arrive in Bismarck this eve- ning, when Mr. and Mrs. Wilson will return to their home. ee * Members of the Business and Pro- fessional Women's club will hold their regular dinner meeting for the month Tuesday evening at 6:15 at the club rooms on Rosser avenue. The house committee, composed of Miss Cath- erine McDonald, chairman, Misses Henricka Beach, Belle Mehus, Ethel Flaten and Mrs. J. I. Arman will be hostesses. s * Papers relative to better English for schools and to school taxation will be given by Mrs. A. P. Lenhart and Mrs, William Kraft at the meet- ing of the Mothers’ club tomorrow; afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home of Mrs. William McGraw, 322 Anderson street. sek Mrs. M. E. Mossbrucker, accom- panied by her small granddaughter, Charlotte Kramer, left for Anaconda, Mont., Sunday for about a month's visit with Mrs, Mossbrucker's son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Havelock. es * * Mrs. Edith Reamann, daughter . M. Freitag, 203 Fourteenth entertain members of the ve Mother's club Tucsday it 8 o'clock. Central Amer- Miss Lorraine Mont., has arrived in Bismarck for k's visit with her aunt, Mrs. . | home, 815 'Mr.-Mrs. Charles Rue | Give Bridge Dinner A Halloween motif was used for the bridge dinner given Saturday eve- ning by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rue, | 619 Mandan street. | Arranged throughout the rooms were black cats, witches and owls, ; Suggestive of the season, and bowls of fall flowers. Orange tapers lighted | the tables where places were laid for High scores in the card games aft- er dinner went to Mrs. George Hell- jing, J. E, O'Neil, and Mrs. Rolf Nor- mann. Mrs. A. N. Moe, Omak, Wash., was @ guest from out of the city. n ® x Bridge Dinner Given At Val Yeager Home Mrs. Val Yeager and Mrs. D. A. Baertsch were joint hostesses at a bridge dinner last evening at the Yea- ger home. 931 Eighth street, complt- mentary to their brother-in-law, R. A. Kramer, whose birthday anni- versary it was. yellow chrysanthemums, and the ap- pointments were also in yellow. There were 12 guests. Bridge was played after dinner with honors going to Mrs. E. T. Myhre and Walter Steadman. x ek OR Turtle Lake Couple Married in Bismarck The marriage of Miss Cora Ims- dahl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theo- jdore Imsdahl, Turtle Lake, and Wil- liam Orman, Jr., took place at seven o'clock Saturday evening at the home jof Rev. Opie S. Rindahi, 114 West Rosser. Rev. Rindahl, pastor of the Trinity Lutheran church, read the service. They were attended by Miss Pearl 'Bergo, Turtle Lake, and James Fogar- jty, Bismarek. |. Mr. Orman, the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Orman, Turtle Lake, is en- {gaged in farming, and the young {couple will make their home on the groom's farm. |Fifty Pupils Show Dance Methods Used Fifty children appeared in demonstration of various types of dances and methods at the open house held Saturday afternoon at the MacIntyre dance studio on Fifth st. Other features of the afternoon {were talks given by Miss Donna Lor- {raine Leidahl, Glendive Mont., and | Ronald MacIntyre. Mis; Leidahl, who conducts a studjo of interpretative ‘dancing at Glendive, has been a vis- jitor at the classes in the local studio and stressed the benefits of the course for children. Mr. MacIntyre spoke ‘briefly regarding methods of eastern schools, Tea was served from four to six, | with Mrs. C. D. Dursema and Mrs. M. , ©. McIntyre at the tea table which ‘had a basket of bronze chrysan- \themuns for a Pade -ua * Miss Ila Bigler, daughter of Mrs. Mattie Bigler, 305 Third street, who has been a student in the school of nursing at Northwestern hospital, Minneapolis, has returned to her home for an indefinite stay. Miss Bigler is recovering from a serious ill- ness, see Mrs. H. W. Lanterman, Mandan, entertained the members of her sew- ing club at an informal luncheon Sat- urday afternoon at the Hotel Prince. Later the guests went to the Lanter- {man home where the time was spent | Socially with sewing. ss & Mrs. L. H. Carufel will be hos- tess to the members of the Mothers’ Service club Tuesday evening at 8 ‘o'clock at her home, 227 Thayer av- enue West. Mrs. F. J. Bavendick will jPresent a paper on “Fit Your Child for Living.” xe & | Mrs. James Whitlock, who has been | spending several months at Wash- | burn, left today for Superior, Wis., to | visit for a moyth or more. She will be joined 1 Mr. Whitlock, and they will make their home in Minne- apolis, ek * Mr. and Mrs. M4. J. Bartley had as their guests over the week-end Mr. and Mrs, R. B. Lorenz and children, Golva, N. D., who returned yesterday by motor. ** ke Miss Bertha Boehrnsen, R. N., left this morning for Steele where she will spend about two weeks with her sister, Mrs. H. . Wisenbeitter. * * Mrs. John Ecklund and daughter Edna left today for Pasadena, Calif., where they plan to spend the win- ter, 1" City-County Briefs” 1 Leo Madden, Vail, Iowa, is spending several days in the city on business. A daughter was born Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Welch, at their Twelfth street. Thomas Burke, assistant attorney general of North Dakota, left this morning on a business trip to Fargo. J. B. Smith, purchasing agent for the state Doane Of Aametamra em, Nett junday for Minneapolis where he will spend several days attending to mat- ters of business. mone: a Te- turn invested in Gamble Stores 7‘; preferred stock, A safe in- vestment—active market maintained. 434 Stinson Blvd., Minneapolis. meeting of Bismarck Octobe: Regular meeting of — peda Pshialeg hg even! ‘7 r at Masonic business. Band or orchestra instruction. Blart yous CMRre nem Clar- fon E. Larson, high school music director, Phone 1261. The 10th is the.tast day of on Ges i Centerpieces for the table were P} z MARY L. JOBE AKELEY Brussels, Belgium, Oct. 7.—()— Mary L. Jobe Akeley, second wife and | widow of Carl Akeley, will hear the | tributes paid her explorer husband here October 14, The inaugural ceremonies of the Parc National Al- bert, Belgian Congo, will be held at {that time. PUBLIC LIBRARY HAS MANY NEW VOLUMES New Titles Include Outstanding | Books of Recent Fiction and Nonfiction Many new titles, including much of the best of recent fiction and non- fiction, are being placed on the shelves | of the Bismarck public library this week, according to Miss Ruth King. librarian. Among the books is Don Byrne's last novel, “Field of Honor,” an epic of the Napoleonic .wars, in which the great general is a chivalrous and heroic figure. Another of an emperor | of @ different sort is found in Fannie Hurst's “Five and Ten,” the life story of a man who finds that his newly acquired wealth has crushed every- thing he loves. Penrod Schofield, made famous by Booth Tarkington, emerges again after a 13-years absence in “Penrod Jashber,” and we hear more about the Whiteoaks family in De La | Roche's latest, “Whiteoaks of Jalna,” more dramatic and interesting than its predecessor. Those who have read Joan Craw- ford’s “Cradle of the Deep” will want to read Corey Ford's “Salt Water Taffy,” a rollicking and_ hilarious Parody. Some others of particular in- terest are Erich Remarque's “All Quiet on the Western Front,” Hugh Walpole's “Hans Frost,” and Martha Ostenso’s latest, “The Young May Moon.” For those who prefer nonfiction are such new volumes as Bower's “Tragic Era,” Siegfried's “America Comes of | Age,” Foerster's “American Ideals,” }Life and Fantasy; | Fear; jand Durant's “Mansions of Phijos- ophy.” The list, which includes about 140 }, follows: Aldrich, Peter Good For Nothing; Anderson, Tar; Andrews, Lost Com: mander; Bailey, Burning Beauty; Barric, Margaret Ogilviy; Barrington, Laughing Queen; Barry, Holiday; Bartlett, Familiar Quotations; Beals, nd Machines; Cheney, N: ment in the Theatre; Christi ners in Crime; Deeping, Roper’s Row; De Schweinitz. Growing Up; De La Roche, Low Life; De La Roche, Whiteoaks of Jalna. ‘ Mohammed; Dinnet, Art of Drinkwater, Bird in Hana; Dunbar, Complete Poems; Durant, ‘Mansions of Philosophy; Eastman, Modern Religious Drama; Ellis, Life of an Ordinary Woman; Ellsworth, Creative Writing; Flexner, Food for Children; Foerster, American Ideals; Fogg, One Thousand Sayings of His- tory; Follett, House Without Win- dows; Ford, Sult Water Taffy; Fox, Parliamentary Usage “or Women’ Clubs; Fraser, Story of Engineering in America; Frost, West-running Brook; Fuller, Her Son; Gale, Borgia: Gallichan, Youthful Old Age; Good- man, Creating the Short Story; Gor- don, Dark Journey; Greenlaw & Han- ford, Great Tradition; Gregory, Mys- tery at Spanish Hacienda; Grey, Fighting Caravans; Glasgow, They Stoop to Folly; Griswold, Home Life of Great Authors; Griswold, Personal Sketches of Great Authors; Hale. Dramatics of Today; Hackett, Henry the Eighth; Henderson, European Dramatists; Hendrix, Man of the North; Heyward, Angel. Heyward, Mamba's Daughters Hill, Prodigal Girl; Hurst, F and Ten; Hutchinson, Uncertain Trumpet; Isaacs, Plays of American James, Sand; Johnson, Sacrifice; Junger, Storm of Steel; Kaye-Smith, Village Doctor; Kelland, Dynasty; King, Conquest of Knowiton, Outline of World Literature; Kyne, Jim the Conqueror; Lemmon, Atout Your Dog; Lardner, Short Stories (New): Long, American Patriotic Prose; McBain, Prohibition MacKaye, Little Theatre in U. 8. Macy, Spirit of American Literature Mahoney, Realms of Gold in Chil- dren's Books; Mantle, American Play- wrights of Today; Mantle, Best Plays | of 1928-29; Marble, Study of Modern | Novel; Mathews, Jesus on Social In- | stitutions; Maurois, Aspects of Biog- ‘aphy; Maurois, Atmospherc of Love; | illay, King's Henchman; Moderweil. Theatre of Today; Morand, Black | Magic; Norris, Red Silence. Osgood, So This Is Jazz; Ostenso. Young May Moon; Overton, Mirrors of the Year; Page, A B C of Aviation; Parrish, Methodist Faun; Palmer. Your House; Pattee, History of Amer- ican Literature Since 1870; Pitkin, Psychology of Happiness; Political Handbook of the World; Raine. Fighting Tenderfeet; Rea, Six Mr: |Jumper and cardigan top a yellow Richmond, Listening Post; Rinehart, Romantics; Rice, Street Scene; Rich- ardson, Ultima Thu! Home; Remarque. All Quiet on the Western Front; Ripley, Believe It or Not; Roberts, Time of Man. Rogers, Ether and Me; Rogers, Po- Utical Follies; Roosevelt, All in the Family; Ruck, Unkissed Bride; Rob: inson, Cavandar's House; Robinson Harvard Dramatic Club of Miracle Schauffler, Plays for Our American Holidays; Seitz, Uncommon Amer- icans; Seligman, of Farm Relief; Sayre, Omnibus of Crime; Shurter, Practical Speech Making; O. Henry Memorial Award, Prize Stories of 1928; Stewart, Father William; Suckow, Cora; Turner, Great Names; Tarkington, Penrod Jashber; Undset, In the Wilderness; Universal De- bater’s Annual; Mannington, West Indies; Van Devanter, Poster Making for Amateurs; Vandercook, Black Majesty; Wade, Duke of York's Steps; Walpole, Hans Frost; Williams, Short Stories; Wisehart, Marvels of Science; Wood, Poets of America; Work, Con- tract Bridge for All. {Fashion Hints ‘ > MOIRE SUIT Black moire fashions a cute suit with fitted hip yoke buttoned up the front with white pearl buttons and big box pleats below the yoke. jacket is a plain cardigan, buttoned with white buttons. AFTERNOON NET Aluminum grey net, made double nd tailored admirably, fashions a ‘eet afternoon frock with full, long sleeves and an uneven full skirt. A matching horsehair hat tops the cos- tume, with a single big lavender flower under one side. CREAM AND BLACK Cream and black taffeta combine in a lovely evening gown for a young woman, The bodice is cream, with little revers at the deep V neck of black. The full, circular skirt is of black with its scalloped, dipping hem- line lined with cream. Black and cream flowers adorn the shoulder. STRIPES MOVE The smart new sports outfits move their decorative stripes from the weater to the skirt. A plain yellow Today and Tuesday When they kiss... you kiss your own love! Tall Buddy What a thrill lovers: Mexico; Biatz, Parents of the Pre- School Child; Blue Book of Favorite Songs; Boynton, Some Contemporary Americans; Bowen, Growing up With the City; Bowers, Tragic Era; Burns, Short History of the World; Baldwin, The Incredible Year; Benefield, Bugles in the Night; Burchenal, Folk Dances and Games; Byrne, Field of Greater Beauty For Lovely Women Beauty's first requisite—skin per- fection. Thus, the fairest and wisest use MELLO-GLO Face Powder that spreads more smoothly and prcduces @ youthful bloom. Its new French process makes MELLO-GLO stay on longer and bans the shiny nose. Pure! Prevents pastiness, flakiness, irrita- tion and large pores. Use MELLO- GLO. Finney’s Drug Store.—Adv. ROLLER SKATE “For Health’s Sake” THE DOME , Tuesday, Thurs- day evenings and every afternoon. Tonight Moonlight Skating Bag Tag Tuesday Night Third pecliminary in our graceful skating contest for couples. Two silver loving cups each Tuesday night. Me day * Friday Night Tug of War - Grand March “Join the Crowd” Admission 10c - Skates 25¢ You'll hear “Mlusion.” You'll hear this song too! You'll sce step the new From Arthur selling novel. estates. EARLY OHIOS luring Nancy Carroll! What a couple they make! In a story of young ro- mance. When gayety, | dancing chorus of thirty girls hot- tionary Rhythm”! A dramatic and luxurious Produced lavishness! ) “BUDDY” ROGERS and NANCY CARROLL in “Illusion” COMING WEDNESDAY - - RICHARD DIX All Talking in “The Love Doctor.” POTATOES That will keep _ Put in your winter supply On track east of Armour Creameries. Rogers! Al- they give as Nancy sing Buddy creon a beauty hit, “Revolu- story, too. ‘Train's best- Fifth Avenuc country with IRISH COBBLERS Rideout, Goin’ | The | skirt with deep border of yellow, jorange and dark brown stripes. | CORAL ENSEMBLE ‘ "| Fe Wynd Owner Leaving City Offers Home waa Six room modern, two story house, A-No. 1 location, east front, outside double garage, many attractive built- in features. Cost to owner over $7,500, offered for quick sale at $6,300. Ap- pointments at your convenience. HEDDEN REAL ESTATE AGENCY, Webb Block Phone 0 PEPLUM JACKET The frock’s preferenc> for peplums has extended to coats. A dusky rose ree suit has its dressmaker jacket made with a circular pepium below |the waistline. | saa RED TOUCH | ‘Tis smarter now to have a bit of; red in one’s outfit than a whole red ensemble. Red and black bouton- nieres are the latest accessory for the black jacket suit. 121 Fourth St. Bismarck, No. Dak. Phone 185 Your Dollar Gets the Fullest Measure of Value Here EVERY DAY See Them Here! New Coats And they’re smart-looking, too! See them on these ‘mart patent-Jeather one- so effectively trimmed @ fancy grain underlay, Suede is always « Fall fav orite, and this model will b¢ wa liked for ite omart style and clever trimm: wap and its low Prat Do come in to see the clever new coats assembled here for your fall and winter needs . . . straight line coats, flared and tunic models + +o all generously trimmed with fur. Sizes for women, mises and juniors, Two style features of this patent leather one-strap. The cubist heel, too, adds a clever touch. And the low price is sure to interest you! Pure silk is plaited over all wool to make this fine stock. ing . . . the silk helps te prevent shrinking. Sheeplined Moleskin Coats Are Gracefully Soft and Flattering ‘This is = season of ripples and flares . . . of feminine lines and soft trimmings . . . al- ways smartly used. Many, many styles are waiting for your selec- tion in this especially interesting group at Women . . . Misses It, linings, Full belted sire ea four s. Beaverized cole lar. 4 to 10, $3.98 *5.90 Colorful Bed Spreads Add Charm to Your Bedroom—and at Such Small Cost! Blue, Pink, Gold . . . which of these is the color scheme in your bedroom? Think how much charm would be added to it by a seamless cream-color spread with wide and narrow crinkled stripes in a matching shade! These, so low in price, are scalloped all around, and are size 80x105 inches . . . long enough to cover the bolster, And they are so inexpensive! . Ba BF! s mn

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