Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
1 } "ey —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_——— THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1980 [| ond street, where bridge was played. ||| Honors were held by Miss Ida Ellef- jj] 808 and Mrs. Roy Nelson. Mrs. Gag- j]] Bon was presented with a gift. 1 xk ® ———S ee =a | home of Mrs. E, ©. Wachter, 717 Secs Family Gatherings Will Have Important Part in Festivities of Holiday Season 3 Mrs. I. Rafteseth, mother of Mrs. Many Bismarck People Leav-| Hulett and Mrs. Nagel. Mr. and Mrs. | where he is c: -ployed, Hulett will also visit Mr. Hulett’s par- shat Sse, n,n |AWANIANS HEAR | Avenue, will go to Mott this after- SSEASES—= — HOUDAy SERWN ing to Spend Christmas at Homes Throughout State The holiday season, traditional time for family gatherings and re- many Bismarck! Ses ea tant | Mr. and Mrs, Roscoe Fenstermach- jer, Mason apartments, will motor to | Lj {and his assailants bolted when a | Minot Christmas day to he the guest | Li@ht, Peace, Happiness, Song People to home firesides in distant parts of this state and elsewhere. Ideal Christmas weather and good roads have made it possible for a larger number than usual to motor to their homes either for Christmas day or the entire week-end. While many families leave today others go- ing but a short distance will not ge away until Christmas eve. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Cox, 602 Wes! ‘Thayer avenue, will motor to Minot tomorrow to spend Christmas with relatives. They will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Fisher, broth- er-in-law and sister of Mrs. Cox. Mr. and Mrs. 8. W. Preser and small daughter, 408 Raymond street, left this morning for Fargo to spend the holiday season with Mr. Fraser's ents, Mr. and Mrs. K. Hulett, Elgin. - } Mr. and Mrs. John 5 of Mrs. Fenstermacher’s mother, Mrs. John Sullivan. i Center, N. D. t holiday season. {me Dic! tives during the holidays. parents, Adjutant General and Mrs.| Miss Beatrice Thoreson will leave G. A. They will also visit Mrs. Fraser's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert McGrath. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Oberg, 609 Ave- nue D, are spending the holiday sea- son with relatives and friends in Minneapolis. They plan to be away about two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. George D. Mann, 232 | Avenue A West, left today for Grand Forks, where they will be the guests Mrs. A. G.! liam Snyder. Sorlie, and her mother, Mrs. O. S. of Mrs. Mann's sister, Hilleboe. — Miss Dorothy and Mrs. Ralph Mayer, Mason apart- ments. Miss Georgini the Christmas holidays at Bowman as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Wil- Mr. and Mrs. William Fulton and | spend the holiday with Mr. Brant and sinall daughter, 801 Fifth street, will; other members of their family. motor to Jamestown tomorrow to be present for a holiday reunion at the Miss Ellen Holtan will ‘visit her home of Mr. Fulton’s parents, Mr. and/ Parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ole Holtan, Mrs. C. F. Fulton. Present at the gathering will be a sister who has; been stationed in India and a brother Falkirk, over Christmas day. Miss Helen Geise, 106 Rosser ave. who will come from New York. It; nue, will visit her mother, Mrs. M. will be the first time the entire fam-| Lemke, New Leipzig, during the ily has been together in many years. | Christmas holiday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Houser, Bis- marck, will leave tomorrow to spend the holiday season with Mr. Houser’s Miss Avis Cartyle will leave tomor. day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. mother and other relatives at James- | H. A. Carlisle. town. Mr. and Mrs, L. '‘K. Thompson and i pores | Miss Mildred Quam will spend Christmas day at Steele with her daughter Mary Lou will leave Friday ; mother, Mrs. Thomas Ritchie. for Minneapolis to spend about a week visiting relatives. They will be; Robert Ward, son of Mr. and Mrs. the guests of Mrs. Thompson's moth- } er, Mrs. William Weimer. Miss Helen House, Rose apart- ments, will leave Wednesday evening | for Grand Forks to visit hcr parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. House, during the | ton university, Omaha, Nebr., holiday season. A. L. Bavoné of the state health department has left for Indiana, Pa., to spend the holidays with his par- He plans to be away for about ents. two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Osakis, Minn., former Bismarck resi- | dents, are spending the Christmas , Chester Wilcox. holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Dan/| Prentice, Wilton, parents of Mr./ Prentice. Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Demming. 500 Avenue A, and Mrs. Demming’s broth- | er, Elmer Samueison, will motor to Underwood Wednesday evening, to and) Arthur J. Faust Wed be guests of her parents, Mr. Mrs. J. M. Samuelson, over Christ- | mas. Miss Marie Lemohn, Rose apart- ments, left today by car for Minne- apolis for a holiday visit with her mother, Mrs. Julia Lemohn. Dr. and M:s. J. O. Thoreson, 114% Fourth street, will motor to Fargo of Dr. Thoreson’s mother, Mrs. Julia Thoreson, over the Christmas holi- day. Misses Ruth and Thelma Duncan where he is a student at the North | Dakota Agricultural college. He will spend the holidays at his home here. Paul Parsons, student at Creigh- has jcome to Bismarck to visit his par- 514 Sixth street, during the holiday vacation. i Miss Katherine Kuntz, who has 'F. Thistlethwaite for several yecss, Robert Prentice, | has left for Fargo to make an | i tended visit with her sister, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Byrne, 500 Avenue A, will go to Jamestown iday with Mr. Byrne's parents. ' Lillian M. Soule and | The marriage of Miss Lillian M. Soule, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | Charles Soule, Moffit, and Arthur J | Faust, Verdon, Neb., was solemnized last evening at the Methodist par- Sonage, the Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor of the McCabe Methodist { church officiating. | Miss Alice Klipstein, Menoken, | school friend of the bride, was brides. {maid and Anton Knoll, Mandan, at: ; tended the bridegroom. crepe ornamented with wool lace and | she wore slippers and other acces- will leave tomorrow for their home! at Almont, to be the guests of their | SOfles to harmonize, Miss Klipstein parents, Mr. and Mrs. for the holiday. T. J. Duncan Miss Esther Mary Brannen ts ex- pected this evening from Des Moines, Towa, to spend the holiday season with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver C. Brannen, Mason apartments. Miss Brannen is head of the journalism department at the Abraham Lincoln high school, Des Moines. Mr. and Mrs. Jamese Wiley, 115 Avenue B, will spend Christmas at Steele, N. D., with Mr. Wiley’s broth- er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. William Henry. Hugh Morrison, Minneapolis, has come to Bismarck to be a guest at the home of Mr. . Bowman, 609 Fifth street, during the Christmas holidays. Miss Spara Christianson will leave tomorrow for Harmon. N. D., to spend Christmas day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Christianson. Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Hulett, 623 Sixth street, and Mr. and Mrs. A. 3. Nagel, 808 Seventh street, will motor to Elgin to spend Christmas with hats all- wore @ dress of dark green flat crepe. Mrs. Faust is a graduate of the , Hazelton high school and has at- tended the Valley City Teachers col- |tege. Recently she has been teach- | ing in the Dana school near Moffit. jhome at Verdon, where the bride- | groom is engaged in farming. * * day afternoon at the home of Mrs. | ; Jack Fleck, 514 West Rosser avenue, | members of the Bismarck Study club 'made plans to pack baskets of food j for Christmas dinners for two needy | families in the city. A Christmas { ;,;John R. Fleck read don’s “The First Sign.” Later gifts |brought by the members were dis- ‘tributed from a Christmas tree. | * * ® Mandan street, entertained the mem- bers of the Two-B bridge club at a dinner and Christmas party at their | ; home Saturday evening. A green ; and white motif was used for the tables, which were centered with bowls of freesias. Tiny candlesticks , holding green candles marked the | places for the 12 guests. After the out of the city. ** * Each member of the Cosmos club brought a Christmas gift to their George the study chapter on “Modern Indus- | try and Management,” by Dexter; + Kimball, i * * * Complimentary to Mrs. J. A. Gag- | | non, 718 Mandan street, whowith Mr. Gagnon will leave after Christmas to: make their home in Minot, a number | of friends entertained at a dinner Party last evening at the A, W. Lucas lunch room. Covers were placed for eight. Later the group went to botal| Mrs. Ina Stark of the Robertson store will leave tomorrow for Gettys- burg, 8. D., where she will visit a sister, Mrs. F. P. Wall, during the | Mrs. Elsie Park of the state depart- ent of public instruction will go to kinson Wednesday to visit rela- Christmas Kat kt botge N. D., for a ef ith her parents, Mr. and !not for the influence exercised by er, Minneapolis, | |has come to Bismarck to spend the holiday season with her parents, Mr. | stands Him, Rev. Stewart said. ‘Their a Brones will spend Mrs. E. H. Brant and daughter | : a | Loma will go to Linton Wednesday to | in bondage. There was no sympathy row for Braddock to spend the holi- | M. G. Ward, is back from Fargo,! ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. M, Parsons, | been making her home with Mrs. R. | | Christmas morning, to spend the hol- i The bride's gown was of orchid woo! | | Mr, and Mrs. Faust will make their| } {, At @ business meeting preceding | their annual Christmas party yester- | Dr. and Mrs. F. C. Stucke, 722 | bridge games the guests gathered | about the Christmas tree and gifts! were distributed. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. | Miesen, St. Paul, were guests from; Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Goddard, 808 Mandan street, will have as their ; Suests during the Christmas holidays dard, who arrived this morning from ‘New York, and their son Fenton, who came yesterday from Lincoln, Neb., .| Brought to World by Christ- mas, Says Speaker Light, peace, happiness, song and! the world as the result of Christmas, Rev. G. W. Stewart of the Mandan Presbyterian church, told membe! luncheon meeting Tuesday. Time and a new conception of life dates from the birth of the Christ | sata, and reviewed how that event has changed the course of history j and influenced the development of the world. | The great music of the world, the great art creations, the great litera- j ture would be impoverished were it {that momentous event 1930 years {ago, the speaker asserted. The Pagan world had no idea of God as the Christian world under- mode of life was based on the philo- sophy expressed in the phrase “Eat, drink and be merry,” and lust, im- mortality and licentiousness ruled. In Athens, Greece, at the time Christ was born, three out of every | five men were slaves while 900,000 of | Rome's population of 1,600,000 were toward suffering humanity, no desire to help the poor and unfortunate, only greed and cruelty, Rev. Stewart said. Congrasting this condition with the present, the speaker said the Christ- ian influence is emphasized in the | spirit of brotherly love which affects nearly everyone. Superstition and ignorance have been vanquished and every Christian realizes that he is, in a measure, his brother's ; | The Christian idea and influence | are best illustrated, the speaker said, by the activities of the season when few think of what they will receive | and nearly everyone thinks of how jhe can bring happiness to others.) | This proves, he asserted, that the Christ child in the manger is still | the “light of the world.” ; Gifts of toys were exchanged by ; the club members to add to the festivities of the luncheon. These | later were collected, on motion of At- torney General James Morris, and turned over to the “Open Your Heart” committee of the American Legion | for distribution to the needy chil- dren of the Bismarck area. Three Christmas songs were sung by the Shrine quartet, composed of ; Henry Halverson, A. J, Arnot, George |,Humphreys and Rev. Stewart. Mem- bers of the club also joined in sing- j ing Christmas songs. Philip Bangs, Grand Forks, was a | Suest at the meeting. Liquor Sales Decrease In Canadian Province! Victoria, B. C., Dec. 23.—(4)—Be- ‘cause liquor sales under government control are falling off, the liquor board of British Columbia is consid- jering closing some of its small stores lin outlying districts. ! {Officials of the board said liquor |22 per cent in November and indica- tions were that the decrease this (month will be 30 per cent. general contraction of the business.” ; {a memortndum from the liquor board said. “The question of closing out some of the smaller outlying centers 4s under consideration.” CARD OF THANKS | I wish to express my appreciation |and gratitude for the kindness ex- {tended in the recent death of my husband. I also wish to thank my | Many friends for the beautiful floral offerings. Mrs. Thos. Harrington. | See Gussner’s Adv. on page 3. WATKINS PRODUCTS bottle of Liniment— OTTO Cc. Sid Tenth Street Bixmarck, N. D. Your Watkins Dealer The Sweetest Gift of All | CANDY Good old St. Nicholas knows what sweéthearts like best, and he’s suggesting that it’s a wis? fellow who gives her our delicious If chocolates on Christmas day. A luscious assortment of sweets, gaily wrapped. Christmas Treat Fancy Gift Boxes $1 to $3 Novelty Chocolate Santas and Cones for the Kiddies Xmas Mixed Gift Cigars, etc. Special Xmas Dinner The Sweet Shop Phone 27 RUSSIAN NOVELIST | their daughter Miss Katherine God-!Konrad Bercovici Believes He ri ithe victim of Rumanian monarchists | who resented his political views 4 |Bercovici said, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kiebert, 411 jh Avenue A, will spend Christmas day | with ‘their son William Kiebert at} new order of living have come to patroit In the afternoon, the novelist had | rg}8POKen before the American Jewish | congress, repeating his opposition to, of the Bismarck Kiwanis club at their King Carol and the present form of | Rumenian government. He has tak- en the stand in recent magazine ar-| child in the manger at Bethlehem, he|ticles that Rumania never would Small Prepared Spruce Christmas | Trees, for window, floor or table use. 20 to 20 inches high, .. with stand each ........... 50c {sales declined 15 per cent in October, | 2 “These facts are indicative of the} B Was Victim of ‘Monarch- ist’ Group New York, Dec. 23.—()—Attacked | in {as he walked through Central Park , wrote jlast night, Konrad Bercovici, novelist. | voices thundered at the inaugural of expressed the opinion today he was | | prosper as @ monarchy and must be- come a republic, Chicago, Dec. 23.—()—Miss Har- let Monroe, “patron saint” of Amer- | ican poetry, came to her seventicth | birthday anniversary today and spoke | her faith in the future of her art and | America’s appreciation of it. | For herself, “one success is enough “Columbian Ode” that 5,000 | | gress exposition in 1933, Christmas street, Bismarck. Phone 782. life.” Although she! rooms, good beds, capitol, 300-W. hot water always. GIVE HER a Permtanent Wave tor | Natural, lasting, guar- | anteed waves $5.00 and $6.50 at the i California Wave Nook, 102 Third : FOR RENT—Two warm sleeping | convenient to; the world’s fair in 1893, Miss Monroe | will leave to another the writing of |past summer alone with my thoughts. | an Ode for Chicago's century of pro- | Dumnutt—I was on the beach this| IN THE CLUTCHES : Rebutt— What perfect solitudel—! ‘The Girl: When she married him \The Pathfjnder. {he was a struggling author. i The Cynic: He can’t | have strug- See Gussner’s Adv. on page 3.'gled hard enough—The Humorist. * Bercovici was set upon by two men | ‘and severely beateh. He foughi back | {crowd began to collect. His injuries consisted chiefly of bruises. The men first asked’him his name, then pummeled { im. KATHERINE DELANEY DESIGNER and DRESSMAKER “For those who discriminate’—Expert remodeling and altering Phone 1538 on Ladies’ wearing apparel. Over Richmond's Bootery 15! ‘and I knew at once they were com: ts.” . Your loved ones Far away will not be disappointed at Christmas if you let us TELEGRAPH CHRISTMAS FLOWERS Our service is guaranteed swift, safe and reliable. No ged-tape or, | delay. You pay oaly for the | Last Times Today LEWIS AYRES “The Doorway or To Hell” ie of the Talkies lc - 35 0c - 500 LORETTA YOUN —in— “The Truth ‘* About Youth” — with — DAVID MANNERS MYRA LOY CONWAY TEARLE — Also — Grantland Rice Sportlite GRAHAM MacNAMEE NEWSCASTING” — “MYSTERIOUS MOSE” A PARAMOUNT TALKARTOON flowers plus cost of wire. Place your order today. Oscar H. Will & Co. Flo 1% Greenhouses and Salesroom, 315 Third Street BISMARCK, N. DAK. Open Evenings and until Noon on Christmas Day ROSES PLANTS CORSAGES “ $2 and up \t $3.00 doz., up $1.00 and up Permanent Waving And all branches of BEAUTY CUL- TURE, as taught by us, will assure you of success in this well paid, fast- growing and fascinating profession. Lowest Tuition Rates—Highost. Instructing Efficiency Chicago Hairdressing Academy “Earn While You Learn” Fargo, N. D. A Nationally Accredited Academy Sacred as your sentiment may be, it will find appropriate ex- pression in the gift of flowers. Pure... exquisite... graceful... natural... flowers alone can bear the sublime message of love. To your sweetheart ... your wife... your mother ... send fresh, fra- grant blooms from Hoskins- Meyer. We wire flowers to any part of the world. HOSKINS-MEYER The Home of KFYR Fourth Street ama Rumanian myself,” he said, | - mm AR PATE rE Capitol Theatre . Last Times Tonight “A Lady Surrénders” A sophisticated seven star drama of our time based on the startling novel, “Sincerity,” by John Erskine. Wednesday - Thursday - Friday Here’s one of the most entertaining novels ever written, made in a motion pic- ture many times more thrilling. AMAZING! COLORFUL A Henry King Production — with — UNA MERKEL JOHN HOLLAND and NANCE O’NEIL A Stirring tale of heart throbs and humor, of love and hate, joy and despair, enacted under the awesome canopy of the western stars. A mighty drama of the great out- doors today. Performances Daily at 2:30 - 7-9 Adults 35c until 7:30 A GRAND OPERA RADIO | AT A MOVIE SHOW PRICE! We are selling the marvelous new BABY GRAND Now right off our sales floor at the unbeliev- able price of $ 49” Less Tubes This is the most amazing radio value offered since man learned how to take voices and music out of the air. It’s not a toy nor a midget radio set, but a full- toned, distance-getting, 7-tube screen grid receiver, with electro-dynamic speaker enclosed in a fine walnut cab- inet—the little wonder of the radio world. We want you to see and hear for yourself. You'll H be delighted at the demonstration of the PHILCO Baby é Grand—its beauty, its selectivity, its full rich tone, its reception, its accurate station control. It has all the features of the big sets in a compact radio only 16 inches wide by 17 1-2 inches high. There’s no reason to say, “I’ll wait ’til I can afford a big one.” Remember Napoleon, Grant and David of Bible times were little fellows who did big things. You can’t judge by size. The PHILCO Baby Grand will fill any radio demand you may make. Besides, it fits any- j where, just as its price fits any pocketbook. Don’t deprive your family of this rare treat a day longer. Come in today while we still have them. Phileo | is the fastest selling radio in the world. That’s why we ; urge you to buy at once. Tomorrow you may have to | wait for another shipment. : Dahners-Tavis Music Corp. Bismarck - Mandan