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= o>»: | Visitors Tendered Bridge Luncheons Complimentary to Mrs. Gordon Winkler and Mrs, Anthony LaBrier, Edmogton, Alberta, who are here/ for a vist with relatives, Mrs. A. R. Miesen entertained eight guests at a bridge luncheon yesterday afternoon at her home, 414 Avenue D. ‘\ Salmon-colored prims in bud vases centered the luncheon tables, and ap- pointments to harmonize were used. B'skets of the prims and gladioli in shades of pink were used in the rooms. Honors in the bridge games were «held by Mrs. John Fleck, and favors were presented the two guests of honor. Mrs. LaBrier and Mrs, Winkler were also complimented at @ luncheon given recently by Mrs. E. M. Hen- dricks, 921 Fifth street, at which Miss Caroline Lakin, Colorado Springs, was Saiso a guest of honor. Guests for three tables of bridge were inited, and honors were awartied « Mrs. Bernard Andrus. ee Oe Miss Madge Runey, county super- tntendent of schools, accompanied by Miss Maurene McCurdy, Fargo, will motor to Valley City this afternoon. Miss McCurdy, who has been visiting with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. James T. McCulloch, at Washburn, ‘will return to her home. At Valley City Miss Runey will be joined by Miss Nell Cooper, superintendent of the Barnes county schools, and they will motor to Devils Lake for the an- nual county superintendents’ conven- tion. 14 North Dakotans to Attend Iowa Meeting Fabs Four Bigmarcie- residents will at- tend the annual convention of the Des Moines Life and Annuity com- pany at Lake Okoboji, Ia., Aug. 26 ta 29. They are Mr. and Mra. ©. E. Pickles and Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Ruder. cs Other North Dakotans who will at- tend the same convention are Mr. and Mrs, L. B, Cox, Sanger; Dr. and Mrs. Trent, New England; Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Jonas, Fredonia; Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Parker, Price; and Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Tryhus, Russell. The party will leave for Iowa by autemobile Sunday. a3 8 Mr. and Mrs. Culver Ladd, 831 Tenth street, have returned from a vacation spent at Shoreham, Minn. Qn their return trip they stopped in Fargo, where Mrs. Ladd attended in- itiation services of Kappa Kappa Gamma, national social sorority at the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege, of which she is a member. In Fargo they were the guests of Mrs. O. Pearson, Mrs. Ladd’s mother. Mr. and Mrs. Ladd ad gone two weeks. s = Mrs. J. L. Barth and children, Mar- jory and Glenn, 827 Sixth street, leit Wednesday for Superior, Wis., where they will visit at the home of Mrs. Barth’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. J. McGettigan. Mrs. Barth and’ chil- dren will return about Sept. 1, and will be accompanied home by her sister, Miss Nora McGettigan and brother, Ray. s2 8 Joseph A. Kitchen, state cominis-j sioner of agriculture and labor, will attend the golden wedding celebra- tion of Mr. and Mrs. W. Prench at their farm hame near Nortonville. N. D., Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. French have been La Moure county residents since 1885. se Miss Loraine Carder, who has spent the summer months in Bismarck as the guest of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Madden, 1030 Fifth street, will leave Tuesday for her home in Burlington, Ia. * * * Miss Ada Gessner, Milwaukee, Wis., who has been visiting her brother, | Melvin Gessner, here for several days, | yesterday left for her home. While here Miss Gessner was the guest of Miss Marian Ryan, 605 Avenue B. ** * Archie McPhee and C. Eldridge Iverson will leave Bismarck Monday (Fashion Plaque | Py —e THIS SMART ensemble consists of a beige lapin three-quarter coat and beige and brown printed silk dress. The scarf, dvawn through slits in the coat and accented by dark brown squares, is interesting. morning for an automobile trip to the Twin Cities, Duluth and Winni- . They expect to be gone about wo weeks. ee * Miss Mary White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. White, 417 Sixth street, has gone to Minneapolis where she will visit relatives before returning to Jamestown where she will resume ner studies at St. John’s academy. * * * Mrs. Grace Duryee Morris, 408 Second street, has as her guest her mother and father, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Duryee qnd sister and brother-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Underwood, Watertown, S. D. s* % Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Hoskins, 714 Avenue E, had as their guests this week, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Mott and daughter, Marjory, Rolla. The Motts were formerly residents of Bismarck. *** Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Scharegge and children have returned from a two weeks’ vacation spent in Port Arthur, Ontario. En route, the Schoregges visited relatives in Crosby, Minn. * * * | Mrs. James Malloy, Garrison, ar- rived yesterday to visit aver Sunday at the home of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Simons, 311 Mandan street. *. Mr. and Mrs. 5. J. Heising and two children, 122 Avenue C West, returned last evening from Westby, Mont., ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUN «| where they spent about ten days with \ ae her sister. i * * * Mr. ahd Mrs. R. B. Webb, Patter- son hotel, and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Roop, Mason apartments, left Friday for a week's trip to Winni.eg and other Canadian points. —_____________-» | AT THE MOVIES | CAPITOL THEATRE To @ public satiated by war screen drama that veritably thunders a barrage of noise, the new film at the Capitol theatre, starting Monday, comes as a genuine pleasure. “Inside the Lines,” dealing av it does with those hidden byways of war show- manship, the espionage avenues along which men and women have risked their necks in spying out enemy secrets, reveals as much drama, and as compelling, as the most sanguine display of carnage and noise in the trench-and-bullet pictures. 2 “Inside the Lines” is the story of the intrigues about Gibraltar that almost spelled the doom of ‘the fort- ress during the bloody days of the great conflict. Betty Compson, never more moving and convincing, is an admirable star for this film, playing her loveliness against the ch-llenges of keen-witted men intent on her destruction as a spy. She is spendidly supported by Ralph Forbes, a good-looking and smooth-playing performer, and a sup- porting cast of genuine excellence. PARAMOUNT THEATRE “Remarque wrote that the finest thing coming out of the war was the comradeship born in battle. I won- der what he would have said had he seen the @trange comradeships made while his book ‘All Quiet on the West- ern Front’ was being made into a picture.” * So muses William Bakewell, who at 22 is one of Hollywood's most popular and most promising players and who has the role of* “Albert,” the little comrade, in Universal's picturization of Erich Maria Remarque’s sensation- al book of the war which is coming to the Paramount theatre on Monday, for a four day run. “The comradeship that Remarque wrote of was that of German for German, Frenchman for Frenchman, Britisher for Britisher. In the making of ‘All Quiet’ aga picture all bounds of nationalism were swept away. In the ranks of the soldiers used in the picture were German, French, British, Russian, Canadian, American and Italian. “I have seen a Frenchman, wound- ed in action over there, agreeing with a German veteran to share a room to- gether after the picture was com- pleted. There was no segregation. A German drilled Americans and an American handled a squad of Ger- mans. Home of Paramount LAST TIMES TODAY— WILLIAM HAINES fi “Way Out West” With LEILA HYAMS POLLY MORAN a ae COMING MONDAY FOR 4 DAYS you.. shocked’ body carry on.. brutai story . . qlust choke you... decency jeer you? Now «my screaming terror... . those moments of fine vulgarity... that was mine... flame with life. Out of the Pages March the Immortal Heroes! . did you hunger... and freeze. . wild enthusiasm... HE VOICE of the Unknown @&idier ie calling to . down through the emptiness of the years «++ he whisperg... ERE YOU with me in the blood-soaked mud of France... did you suffer in the filth of the trenches... did your nerve dia + my deepest despai: my beautifully all the heli ¥ COMRADES came crashing ... singing ... crying hysterically . . . madi ... kindly ... from the pages. /. ory. My story transcends all nationality... youth... forget mie . \ Me ++ you'll never want to! LEWIS AYRES LOUIS WOLHEIM My soul lives on! My stery will never die... all that I stand for .: . the misery... the laughter was mine ... was pressed the great book. “BARNACLE NOTE: daily—2:00, 4:13, 6:53, 9:26. ERICH MARIA REMARQUE —— Featuring —— lory . Bet een the covers of ADDED ATTRACTION PARAMOUNT SOUND NEWS TALRABTOON During the showing of “All Quiet on the Western Front,” four read show performances NO ADVANCE IN PRICES and into your heart... onto your men my experience is the stors of & JOHN WRAY, . . what little BILL” all lowly soldiers in those yeara between 1914 gnd 1918. You'll neve E, SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1980 | To Preach Sunday fo tree REV. HERBERT HENWOOD Rev. Herbert Henwood, general mis- sionary for the American Sunday School union with headquarters at Fargo, will give two talks on the work of his organization, at local churches Sunday. He will spegk at the local Baptist church Sunday morning and at the Evangelical church Sunday evening. There will be no Bublie dance at Glen-Echo tonight. REPORT MADE BY ries, 2,930 Bibles and by the missi Testaments were distributed and in order te bring the message to the older people in the communities where the Bible schools were held, Bismarck Baptist church the evening in the chureh. RELIGIOUS WORKER Rev. Herbert Henwoed Tells of Werk Dene by American Sunday School Union 250 adult Bible classes were organized with 4,494 members enrolled. Group gatherings of Sunday schools held during the year totaled 412. were attended by 68,301 persons. Op- portunity has come to the mission- aries to distribute a total of 4,304 Bibles, 4,728 copies of the New Testa- ment and 5,725 Gogpels. Seventeen churches of various de- nominations have developed from the Union Sunday Schools during the year, six ef which have erected houses of worship. Two hundred and two Young People’s societies have been organized and 291 prayer meet- ings have been established while 120 regular preaching stations have been opened for pastors of denominational churches. As @ crowning glory to the work 5,450 conversions have been reported. This society was organized in the year 1894 with the motto, “A Bible in every home. Every child in a Sun- day School and a Sunday Schoo} in every district where there is no Rev. Herbert Henwood, ral mis- sionary of the American Sunday School Unien with headquarters at Pargo, gives the following report of the work of this seciety. r the year ending Peb. 28th the American Sunday Scheol Unien has commis- sioned 199 missionaries. Twenty-one of these however have served only part of the year. As a result of the efforts of these missionaries 766 new Sunday Schools have heen organized gnd 554 reor- nized. Inte these schools have en gathered ¢€104 teachers and 38,676 scholars. In addition to this pioneer work these missionaries have visited 12,656 schools in which 51,- 723 teachers and 614,811 scholars were enrolled. Sermons and addresses numbering 20,271 were delivered by the mission- aries and, while exploring new terri- church.” Five missionaries of this society are at work in North Dakota. Rev. Henwood is the general mis- sionary for North Dakota and will speak on Sunday morning in the They r City-County Briefs ! Mr. gnd Mrs, Prank Russ, Bismarek, are the parents of @ baby bey, born Lei afternoon at St, Alexius hes- Pi . Justice and Mrs. L. E. Birdzell, 400 Pifth street, announce the birth of 8 =: Taureday at the Bismarck hos- Pital. Mr. and Mrs. R, A. Williams, 824 Fourth street, are parents of a dgugh- ter horn August 21 at the Bismarck hospital. A daughter was born Thursday at the Bismarck hospital te Mr. and Mrs, John Wolf, ‘edonia. If rcads were built today ty tne methods used by the Romans taey would cost $300,000 per mile ix: of $30,000. Klein’s Toggery bargain 1 ea end Saturday, Aug. th. tory or worl in the districts cov- ered before, 195,776 families were visited in their homes. The American Sunday School Union has continued to emphasize daily vacation Bible schoal work also the group gatherings of Sunday schools. Of the former, 614 vacation Bible schools have been conducted with an enrolment of 17,- 284 scholars. In organizing this part | of the work 9,708 homes were visited | DANC "GOOD MUSIC At Allensworth Farm Southeast of Bismarck Every Saturday Night. GOOD TIMES FREDERICK - JAMES FURS --- Since 1893 Dome Tonite 37th Annual August Sale rederick-James Furs VALUES BEYOND COMPARISON!! A Partial Muskrat Coats i Japanese Mink Logwood Brown Alaskan Hudson Seal Coats, as low as ......------++-++- Northern Seal Coats, as low as ........---- the year. jon wanted in the fall of Au Coats ..... Music by Hap Kastner and His Oriental Orchestra, St. Cloud, Minn. Sale Price List Seal Coats ........... 390,00 TWO DAYS ONLY August 25 and 26 When we announced this sale we claimed for it “our great- est of all sales.” The early selling and popular demand for a return sale has justified our claim. For with the dras- tic reductions in fur prices— the fine, lasting qualities of Frederick-James Furs are - available at prices that will astonish you—prices even lower than usually asked for ordinary furs. ‘ Repairing and Remodeling will be accepted at special August sale prices. sg :..§ 90.00 ... 465.00 265.00 85.00 Our liberal plan of de- ferred monthly payments is at your serviee. 7 Next Wednesday night the Virginia Ravens, colored or- chestra, will entertain you! t every dance there will be free ad- # cd a until 9:80 o'clock. Ball Room