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ra) 4 eo i ft Oe THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, ‘WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1930 nal Handkerchief Shower |Dinner Compliments Honors Young Women | Fashion Plaque | $e soi ecard ‘. Miss Mary Maynard and Miss Ioan Snellenberger were complimensed at a handkerchief shower given last eve- ning by Miss Jessie Ramp st her home, 515 Sixth street. Guests were members of the staff of the primary department of the McCabe Methodist wp Sunday school, where the Misses ‘Maynard and Snellenberger teach. Miss Ramp is superintendent of the department. The evening was spent informally with sewing. Miss Snellenberger, with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Snellenberger, 312 Park street, will leave in the near future to make their home in Flasher. Miss Maynard, whose marriage to George Kieffer, jr., Sioux City, Iowa, will take place early in September, Swill leave Bismarck the last of the month for her home at Sioux City. Miss Maynard has been assistant to the secretary of the state library commission during the last year. Miss Maynard was also honored Sunday when Mrs. Florence Davis en- tertained the young women of the state library and the Bismarck public library staffs at a breakfast at her home, 1029 Seventh street. * * * Catherine Longmuir Chooses Wedding Day Announcement of the approaching marriage of Miss Catherine Long- muir, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J, G. Longmuir, 523 Tenth street south, to Frank Watchal, Menoken, was made at a party given last evening by her sister, Miss Marian Longmuir. The wedding will take place September 4. Guests were 12 friends, and the evening was spent with various games and contests, zk * Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Church, 502 Eleventh street, have as their guests this week their son and daughter-in- Jaw, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson C. Church and son Bobby, Tenafly, N. J., who arrived Monday. Another son, W. O. Church, came Sunday from Salem, Ore., to spend a week or more. Mr. « ‘and Mrs. Emerson Church came here from Detroit Lakes where Mrs. Church and son have been enjoying an outing at the summer liome of her parents, Senator and Mrs. Lynn J. Frazier. * * * After a several weeks’ motor trip to Marshalltown, Iowa, Parkston, 5. D., and.points in Minnesota, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Schlenker have returned to their home, 722 First street. They were accompanied to Bismarck by their son Alvin, who has been visiting in Iowa, and who will remain here until September, when he will leave for Washington, D. C., to continue his studies at George Washington university. ee ® , Baskets of gladioli and sweet peas {n lavender and rose shades were used in the decorations when Mrs. Willis J. Devlin, 422 Tenth street, yntertained at bridge last evening in honor of Mrs. Jack Moe, Oak Park, M1, Guests were intimate friends of Mrs. Moe, formerly Beryl Packard, who lived here several years ago. Cards were played at two tables, with score honors going to Miss Marian Staley, and there was a guest favor for Mrs. Moe. * * * Miss Anne Edinger, Chicago, who has been visiting at the home of her sister, Mrs, M. J. Ratzlaff, 511 Fifth street, and with Mrs. Merton J. Orr \ during the last two weeks, left today for Woodworth, N. D., to spend sev- el days with her father, J. Edinger. 5 Miss Edinger will return to Bismarck Saturday, and will remain here until ‘Thursday, when she plans to leave for Chicago. * ek Ok Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Shearn and son, 213 Second street, left this morning by car for Grand Forks, where they will visit another son. They will go from there to Winniueg to be the guests of Mr. Shearn’s mother and sisters. two weeks. * * * Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Thielman, 500 Main avenue, left Sunday for St. Cloud and Avon, Minn., where they » will visit relatives for about a week. They wil! also enjoy a brief outing at the Minnesota lakes before returning to Bismarck. ** * Mr. and Mrs. Hector Barnes, who spent the last two weeks at Sun Prairie, Wis. with Mrs. Barnes’ mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Marr, and at Milwaukee and the lake resorts near Madison, have returned to Bismarck. * * * Mr, and Mrs. J. H. Tauer and daughters Frances and Helen, 1004 Avenue C, will leave Thursday on a 10-day motcr trip to the Black Hills » and the Yellowstone park. x * * Miss Emily Olson, who has spent her vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A: G. Olson, 511 Righth street, left Monday evening for St. Joseph, Mo., where she is employed by the ¥. W.C. A. hat all- Phone9 Guest from Chicago Mrs, Merton J. Orr and Mrs. M. J. Ratzlaff were hostesses at a seven o'clock bridge dinner last evening at the Orr home, :021 Fifth street, com- plimenting Mrs. Ratzlaff's sister, Miss Anne Edinger, Chicago, Ill, who is their guest. Pink and white cosmos and sweet peas in crystal bowls, and yellow tapers adorned the tables, were covers were laid for 16, while the rooms where covers were laid for 16, while the rooms were decorated with bouquets of zinnias, gladiol and other garden flowers. cA Score prizes in the bridge games after dinner were held by Mr. and ‘They expect to be away about Mrs. Arthur Tavis, and a guest favor was presented Miss Edinger. Mrs. Elsie Parker, Dickinson, and Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Scothorn, Mandan, were guests from out of the city. * * * Mrs. Caspara Sarheim and daugh- ter Alice, Chicago, arrived Monday for a visit with Bismarck friends, be- fore going to their former home at Minot for a few days. They will also visit with Mrs. Sarheim’s brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Ander- son at Wildrose, and later will ac- company them on a trip to Winnipeg. Mrs. Sarheim and daughter, who for- merly lived here, plan to return to Chicago the latter part of next month. zee Miss Susan B. Sheaffer, superin- tendent of the Bismarck hospital, re- turned Monday from a week's vaca- tion trip. She spent a part of the time at the Quain cottage on a lake near Wilton, and later, in company with Miss Esther Maxwell, Bismarck teacher, motored to Lake Metigoshe in the Turtle mountains, for a brief outing. * * * Mrs. Mell Pollard, Rose apartments, has left for Oshkosh, Wis., where she will spend the last two weeks of August visiting relatives. Her daugh- ter, Miss Ruth Pollard, who is now at Lake Mellissa, Shoreham, Minn., will join her in Oshkosh for a short stay. * * * Mrs. Archie McPhee, 500 Avenue A, and her mother, Mrs. H. F. Sloan, Mandan, will leave tomorrow for Se- attle and Bremerton, Wash./ where they will visit friends. They plan to spend a few days at Longview and other points in Washington before re- turning in about three weeks. * * * Miss Elizabet Jones, 707 Avenue A, j|is enjoying a visit with her sister, Miss Sarah ©. Jones, who arrived Monday from Sparta, Wis. Miss Jones, who formerly lived in Bis- marck, will remain here for a month or more. x oe O* Kenneth Cooley, McLaughlin, 8. D., who has been visiting for a week or more at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Bertsch, left today fcr his home. ee Miss Marie Matt, St. Paul, Minn., left last evening for her home. aiver spending the last few weeks in Bis- marck as the guest of Miss Peggy Bertsch, 602 Sixth street. * ee Mr. and Mrs. Chester Solberg, Bis- marck, have returned from a two- weeks’ vacation trip to Halfway, Ore., and Spokane, Wash., where they vis- ited with relatives. “ee The fegular meeting of the General Aid society of the McCabe Methodist church will be held Thursday after- noon in the church parlors with mem- bers of the third division as hostesses. * * * Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Hughes, 519 Elev- enth street, have as their guest for a few days, Mrs. W. H. Edson, Moffit. Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Edson are sis- ters. xe OK Mrs. W. M. Corcoran, Brookings, 8. D., has come to Bismarck for a visit with her niece, Mrs. Joseph Dickman, 215 Third street. The steam turbine has been applied | to the railway locomotive in Germany. Lovely hair! Modern hair dresers add beauty to your hair by graceful lines and con- tours. It is just as important to keep your hair soft, lustrous, abundant, rich in color. Millions of girls and women are doing this at home with the easy help of Danderine. It is so simple to use. All you do is put a little on your brush each time you arrange your hair. Instantly Danderine brings out the natural color of dingy lifeless hair; makes it more sparkling and lustrous manage; holds it in place. The consistent use of Danderine dissolves the crust of dandruff; stops falling hair; tends to make the hair grow long, silky and abundant. Five million bottles used a year! Danderine The One Minute Heir Beautifier At All Drug Stores - Thirty Five Conte than brilliantine; makes it easy to|” SHEER SILK gunmetal hose with @ black foot are a new fall importa- tion from Paris. i City-County Briefs | —— e Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith, Linton, are parents of a son born Tuesday at the St. Alexius hospital. Mrs. F. J. Liebole, proprietor of the Sarah Gold Shop, returned Monday from @ ten-days’ buying trip to Chi- cago, New York and other eastern markets. C. L. Elkins of the Elkins Tractor company, Minot, is transacting busi- ness in Bismarck today. Dr. A. P. Nachtwey, Dickinson, is a visitor in Bismarck today. Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Culbertson, who have been making their home at 404 Tenth street, are mgving to the J. H. Tucker residence in Mandan where they will make their future home, Mr. Culbertson is connected with a grain commission. Governor Is Hearing Divide County Case Governor George F. Shafer will hear arguments this afternoon in the removal proceedings brought against the three Divide county commis- sioners. The arguments will be based on the record of testimony taken at hearings conducted at Crosby last month. Several electors of the county charged the commissioners with mal- feasance, incompetency, and im- | proper conduct. L. O. Bloom, Carl Schultz, and ©. T. Bissonnette are the commissioners complexions must complete the fashion— “symphonie” Have you studied this im- portant new harmony be- | tween clothes and complex- ; ions? The new ekin tone, like the new styles, must be natural, luscious, feminine! Armand has created a subtle new powder-blend called “Symphonie.” It is keyed to the underlying flesh-tones which are essentially the eame for both blondes and brunettes. You, too, possess this soft, translucent skin- tint and only need this pow- der to discover and enrich the tone. Just try one appli- | cation’. . . see the flattering | effect. Ask for ARmManD i “SYMPHONIE” POWDER | Ita fineness of texture will truly entrance you! $1 box. GENTLE BUT FIRM TO FILL every household need, @ soap must be safe for the filmiest fabrics and yet be stero with the grease on dishes, the hidden dust in beavy blankets. It’s a combins- tion you don't oftea find, White King Granulated Soap plays both parts. Made from fine vegetable and out‘oils good enough to eat, its purity keeps it from injuring anything that can be safely dipped in water. Use it in washing your most delicate ging- bi and prints—note the fresh- and renewed brightness of the colors. White King is prompt, thorough and effective. ‘White King solves every wash- ing problem—dishes, fabrics, sil- ver, glass, foors and woodwork. And it’s kind to the skin of tender hands because it works so well in lukewarm water. It’s economi- cal too, Try it today. Sold by your grocer. | whose removel' is sought. | dazzling thing of light beauty if you | Paint the walls a gloss apricot and They have Ges cae ee Romance Wrecked The arguments will bring the pro- ceedings to an end, and will leave the case in the hands of Governor Shafer. In the event the commissioners are dissatisfied with the decision of the governor, they can resort to the courts. — | Household Helps i o— NOON RECREATION A successful business woman pre- serves her calm and conserves her energy by never lunching with friends in summer. She goes to a swimming Pool in a nearby hotel, takes a fifteen minutes’ plunge, rests another fifteen minutes and uses the rest of an hour for @ quiet lunch alone. | DARK KITCHEN | Your dark kitchen will emerge a | | { use light greens for furniture and | Pots and pans. | COOLING BEVERAGES | If you keep ice tea in the refrigerd- | tor as a base for cooling drinks in summer time, you will find it easy to be hospitable at a moment's notice. | Mixed with any fruit juices or just a | dash of mint, and served with boxed | wafers, it makes a chance guest feel | Sand pile, an artistic woman brought welcome. ; Stones from a nearby hill and made peneeer, ‘a very attractive wall of them around OUTDOOR MANIA! the sand which fitted perfectly with Get the outdoor habit this summer, | the landscape design of her country It improves both the health and the | home. oe Agel can be mended on le porch, peas can be shelled and | Potatoes peeled out in the open air | CHEESE-EGGS quite as efficiently as inside. You | =ess. scrambled with cream cheese, can even take your lunch tray outside Made a delicious dish. Melt a cake with a few extra steps and eat de | 0f cream cheese in butter, and when luxe in the great outdoors. |the mixture gets hot, pour in six | eggs, beaten with a little milk. Stir SPICED RHUBARB thoroughly all the time it is cooking To make a de luxe dish of the / 9Nd serve very hot. lowly rhubarb, when cooking it add a | dash of cinnamon, a clove or two and | EASY CUTTING the grated peel of one orange. Red; A new kitchen convenience is a cinnamon drops, used instead of cin- little combination sharpener for both namon, give it a beautiful hue. | knives and scissors, made of two discs | and stone with a guide set in a strong LANDSCAPE SAND-PILE jhandle. Tools with sharp edges make Instead of having a disfiguring | a tremendous difference in one's en- wooden fence around the children’s | joyment of work. tic City, N. J..whom er a four-day court. of bigamy. Mat. Daily 2:30 10c and 35¢ Evenings 7 - 9 15e and 50c The big new motion pictures of the com- ing season are ready. The Morie New Year of 1930-31 starte now’ in Paras mount Publix Theatres. “ ¥ Se NOW SHOWING Everyone has been waiting to hear Lillian Gish in her first talking picture. The star of “Broken Blossoms” and “Way Down East” LILLIAN GISH Speaks for the first time from the screen i] “ONE ROMANTIC NIGHT” Starring with her are CONRAD NAGEL : Rod La Rocque O. P. Heggie Marie Dressler A Royal roisterer is yanked from his pleas- ures and made to dance for the hand of a beauty he does not love. Enter an admiring commoner. Rivalry! Rebellion! And the war of Sexes {a on! “One Romantic Night” explodes a bombshell of surprises! Novelty — Drollery and piquancy, Big Little Features— Paramount Sound News . A Mack Sennett Comedy *VACATION LOVISS” At Allensworth Farm DANCE &Srnn Every Saturday Night. GOOD MUSIC GOOD TIMES The critical choice of America’s millions . is responsible for Blue Ribbon Malt being America’s Biggest Seller. Uniform quality (always the same) is the pi its sweeping, ever-increasing popularity. " DISTRIBUTED BY GRIGGS, COOPER & CO. FARGO MERC. CO. Dance ;*, Dome Tonight "5 One Hundred Forest Fires in Minnesota St. Paul, Aug. 20.—(?)—Fire condi- tions in northern Minnesota were re- Ported “unchanged” today by A. F. Oppel, deputy state forester, as more than 1,200 rangers, patrolmen and emergency men continued in their at- consideration to the widespread shortage of forage reported over large sections of the nation before touch- ing a match to their straw stacks this fall, Dr. P. F. Trowbridge, director of the North Dakota Agricultural college experiment station, said today. “With the abundance of straw in the valley, there will be a temptation to fire the stacks while they are dry,” Dr. Trowbridge said. “I have discussed the situation with Dr. J. H. Shepperd, president of the college, and we believe that it should tempt to keep the present blazes under control. There are about 100 fires scattered | throughout nearly every district of the northern woods territory, most of them covering small areas. Most of the fires now burning are on secondary growth or peat land. | Duluth city firemen and a crew | under supervision of the state fores- | try department this morning con- | tinued fighting brush fires in the vicinity of Duluth, with neither of the blazes reported dangerous. The! firemen are checking a brush fire | near Lester Park in the city limits, | while the state forestry crew con-/| tinues to halt brush fires near the municipal airport, seven miles from the city. Yes, Rain Breaks Up This Rummy Game Fairmont, Minn., Aug. 20.) —| Rain did things to Fairmont today. It broke a seven-weeks drought and broke up a rummy game started Mon- day by members of the Fairmont recreation club. Club members vowed to play rummy night and day, in relays, until rain fell to break the drought. Early today nearly half an inch of rain fell and the players, farmers and business- men, went home to breakfast. Leave Strawstacks Advises Trowbridge Just a tasteless dose of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia in water. That is an alkali, effective, yet harmless. It has been the standard antiacid for 50 years among physicians everywhere. One spoonful will neutralize at once many times its volume in acid. It is the right way, the quick, pleasant and efficient way to kill the excess acid. The stomach becomes sweet, the pain minutes. Don’t depend on crude methods. Employ the best way yet evolved in all the years of searching. That is Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. Fargo, N. D., Aug. 20.—(7)—North Be sure to get the genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi- Dakota farmers Should give some | cians for 50 years in correcting excess departs. You are happy again in five | | be wise to preserve the stacks for a time at least.” ‘TWEED-CHIFFON Arresting is the new use of tweed and chiffon. Chanel makes a fitted coat of hydrangea-blue tweed, with softly pleated flounce, cuff and lapel trim, lines it with a rich chiffon print in the same blue, with beige, lavender and violet flowers and makes a very feminine little frock to go under it of the print. acids. Twenty-five cents and 50c a bottle—any drugstore. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles H. Phillips Chemical company and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875, eae | THE BEST WAY 1 TO WHITEN TEETH | o- e A single application of Phillips’ Dental Magnesia ‘Toothpaste will bring glistening, white teeth and a sweet breath. Prove it at our expense. Write The Phillips Co., 170 Varick St., New York, N. Y., for free 10-day tube.—Adv. TH and His FAST SUC Believe it or s Fi 3 Cy eo stner ROBERT L. “NOT A COUGH Oriental Ball Room EY GAVE A new Thrill THAT’S WHY THEY GOT THERE--: SO QUICKLY UNKNOWN THREE "YEARS AGO— “TODAY, RIP GETS THE BIGGEST FAN-MAIL OF ANYONE WHO HAS EVER_UVED. 1,000,000 LETTERS CESS STORY NO.10 RIPLEY Believe it or not .. . Rip’s own success story is even more amazing than the astonishing facts heputs in his cartoons. Three years ago... unknown. Today... 20,000,000 readers look for his drawings. Ripley clipped all time records in his quick rise to overwhelming popularity . .» because he gave a new thrill. And that’s OLD GOLD'S story too. When 0.G. first said ‘‘Not a cough in a carload,’’ the skeptics scoffed. But cough- ers and scoffers alike were converted. Like Ripley, OLD GOLD proved its facts. Better tobaccos gave better taste. Mel- lower tobaccos gave throat-ease. not... OLD GOLD will win you... just as Ripley did. - BETTER TOBACCOS IN A CARLOAD*® Orchestra From St. Cloud, Minn.