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ti SsrePepeEveReccrsaennereaew = 'H. ———————— ey ing suitable for interpretation by the star. After due deliberation the choice was unanimous for “Du Barry,” as inter- preted on ghe New York stage by Da+ _ REE PES eee ean RR | Marjorie Bolton Will Be Bride of Harry Gunningham Announcement of the approaching marriage of Miss Marjorie Bolton, ‘Bismarck, and Harry D. Cunningham, Excelsior Springs, Mo., formerly of ‘Bismarck, was made at a bridge party and handkerchief shower given ‘Thursday evening by Mr. Cunning- “.ham’s sister, Mrs. Ray V. Stair, ‘Tribune apartments. The wedding ‘will take place at Excelsior Springs shortly after the middle of March. A part of the evening was spent at cards, with score honors.going to Miss Anita Cram and Mrs, Eugene Sowka Tiny hearts, carrying the announce- ment, were drawn by the guests and Miss Bolton received her gifts in a basket decortated to represent a large rosebud. The rose motif was repeated in the table appointments and cen- terpieces were in pink and white. Mrs. Elmer Johnson, Falkirk, a sis- ter of Mrs. Stair, was a Lf from otu-of-town. * * * Mrs. Harding Gives Party for Visitors Mrs. Fay Harding, 1008 Avenue C, was hostess at an informal party ‘Thursday afternoon, in honor of sev- eral women who are spending a few weeks in Bismarck with their hus- bands, members of the North Dakota legislative assembly. ‘The afternoon was spent socially. Ferns and spring flowers to form a green and gold color note were used in the rooms and for the refreshment table. Guests were Mrs. L. O. Frederick- son, Pekin; Mrs. A. Levin, Park Riv- er; Mrs. D. H. Hamilton, Eckman; Mrs, C. J. Hanson, Litchville; Mrs. J. ; H. McCay, Selfridge; Mrs. James McManus, St. John; Mrs. A. S. Mar- shall, Forbes; Mrs. William Kamrath, Leith;.Mrs. G. Patterson, Donny- brook; Mrs, Joseph Renault, Thorne; Mrs, Herman Thorson, Hettinger; and Mrs. T. H. Thorson and Mrs. S. 8. McDonaid, Bismarck. ze 8 Miss Gwendolyn Jensen and Miss Marlys Lahr entertained a company of 12 young women at a miscellaneous shower Thursday evening, compli- mentary to Mrs. F. Duane Diehl, Ab- erdeen, S. D., a recent bride. The af- fair, which was held at the Jenson) home, 709 Fifth St., took the form of a bridge party. Score prizes for the evening went to Mrs. Henry A. Jones and Miss Irene Brown. After the games the guests gathered around @ pink and white wedding bell, which was suspended above the dining room table. From the bell hung small hearts carrying messages in rhyme for finding the gifts, which had been; hidden about the rooms. Decorations in pink and white were used. ** * Mrs. W. J. Targart and Mrs. Caia Lee were joint hostesses at a bridge supper Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Targart, 705 Sixth St. Yel- low jonquils centered the tables and appointments in harmonizing shades | Bridge was played at} were used. three tables during the evening and ; high scores were held by Miss Hildor | Simonson end Mrs. Harry Stasek. A guest faver also was presented Mrs. Stasck, Oakes, who formerly made her home here. Mrs. W. F. Reko was a guest from Mandan. xe OR Members of the Gaie Oiseaux bridge club were entertained Thurs- day evening with a pot luck dinner a’. the’ home of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Hendricks, 921 Fifth St. Yellow eandles and appointments in keeping ; with the spring season were used for | the tables. Score honors in the bridge games after dinner were held | by Mrs, Jack Fleck and J. C. Peltier. Guests of the club for the evening were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Peltier, Bis- marck, and Mrs. F. W. Renner, Min- neapolis. -* * In compliment to Mr. and Mrs. | Judd LaMoure, Pembina, who are spending a few days in Bismarck, Mr. | and Mrs. E. G. Patterson entertained ; | a. a 7 o'clock dinner Thursday eve- ning at their apartment in the Pat- terson hotel. A spring decorative theme was used for the table. Guests from out of the city besides Mr. and Mrs. LaMoure were Senator and Mrs. Frank Hyland, Devils Lake; and Representative and Mrs. Edwin Tray- nor, Starkweather. -_* * | Mrs. Alfred Zuger, 501 West Thayer | avenue, and her sister, Mrs. R. D. Flavin, Wilton, returned Thursday from Fargo and Enderlin, where they have been visiting for several days. While in Fargo Mrs. Zuger was a puest at the home of Judge and Mrs. Andrew Miller, former Bismarck resi- | dents. * *e O* Fdgar Hamlin has arrived from Boise. Idaho, called here by the ser- fous illness of his son, Lloyd Hamlin, ; who is at the Hamlin home, 100 Ave- | nue B. ke * | ene: i Miss Laura B, Sanderson, La Moute, | arrived Thursday evening to visit over | Sunday in Bismarck as the guest of | Mrs. F. R. aay, Par Third St. Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Henderson, 1030 | Fourth St., have returned to Bismarck | from ‘Minneapolis’ where they have | been visiting for several days. See Gussner’s Window tonight.! jit is expected activities of a civic na- Tout for inspection; a score of interest - characters were mentioned as vid Bels Producer-director Sani mucaeye aa te 1 “Du B ry but iy e an ideal “Du Barry” bu Afro-American Music |T™ms#e: | plot @ wealth of ineident “Featured in Program|and suspensive material to make a ei” tiret rate talking picture. Miss Elizabeth Jones traced the de- velopment of modern American mu- Keeps Wedding Ring sic in id bef bers *. of the ‘Thureday Musical club et the| Bought Here in 1872 William Brinkman, former Ft. home of Mrs. Arthur Bauer Thurs- day afternoon. Under the direction of Mrs. J. P, French, a program of! Abraham Lincoln soldier now living musical numbers and readings was|in Springfield, Ill., claims to have ob- given showing the influence which | tained the first marriage license ever Negro melodies has on our present day |fssued jn Bismarck. music, ‘ »|_.1n writing a letter of reminiscence. Mrs. John Graham sang “Jean”! Brinkman, a member of the party (Burleigh), and “If I Forget” (De-| which conveyed the body of General Koven Thompson); a quartet com-|George Custer to Bismarck after the Posed of Mrs. G. Wingreene, Mrs./tndian battle, characterizes Bismarck George Duemeland, Mrs. Opie Rind-jin 1872 as containing nothing but abl and Miss Bessie Baldwin, sang mosquitoes and Indians. tr brea by 'W. Marion en + Mr, Brinkman, who now is 80 years aed aie a ro of a be old, says that he came to old Ft. 2d apices Main od “oh Rese Abraham Lincoln as a sergeant in the two numbers, ng commissary department in 1872. At ‘Honey,” from Nathaniel Dett's sulte,} that time, according to his letter ae Ges ‘cae played by MYS.|there were only a few tents scattered uemeland. ‘Miss Baldwin sang “I ‘Told My Love Hee fie aoe. on the site where the to the Roses” (Johnson); and Miss|~;; Ruth Rowley played “Magnolia” and ‘I claim to have obtained the first “ ” ’s “Magnolia marriage license ever issued in Bis- vo estar Useashibel) marck,” says Mr. Brinkman, “and it ane was issued by & man named Adams, m : : whose first name I cannot recall. Our Dickinson Business wedding ring, which still is in my * Possession, was purchased from a Mr. Women Organize Clube sho’ vas’ Biomarck’s fies jeweler.” A Business and Professional Wom-|" Brinkman recalls the incident of an’s club was organized at Dickinson | custer's first arrival in Bismarck ir ‘Tuesday evening, with Harriet Smith | 1973. te was also a member of the Fuller as president. Other officers party which brought the general's are Eleanor Reichert, vice president; hogy back to Bismarck, landing here Pelagia Kosmoski, secretary; and) yyy 36, 1876. sf Regina Harrison, treasurer. He states that he is anxious to hear ‘The club has a charter membership | trom any old friends that might still of 24. Work on a program for the re- mainder of the year is under way and Seth eer BOHIPRTIOA ae cel BISMARCK TRIBUN. People’s F Forum Editor's Note.—The. KYA ad wel- comes letters on jeatea of ine terest. Letters di in ‘with gon- troversial religious mh jects, w] wd attack individuals | unfairly, which site good taste and ral play will be returned to writers: A All letters MUST ba you pi sign t joudonym first one. own ni beret h it, We will spect renerve ests. the right to ‘lero such parts of letters as may necessary. to conform to tte *polleys Editor, Bismarck Tribune: I wish to call to your attention the mistake so commonly made of blass- ing loss of life as a horror of war. Is there anything more honorable, more glorious, than giving one’s life for the cause for which our fore- fathers sacrificed so much? We who are left are the ones who must suf- fer the horrors and tragedies of war. ‘We didn’t feel the tragedy of war, ain We Goh acest een did, be- cause we were a part of! was dur destiny. Some of fulfill it. Those who dia were lucky ones, though we didn't re that at the time. Yes, they the lucky ones, those men who did not have to go back with a victory they did not know what to do with, to watch life ebb out, year after year. They, the ones who paid the su- preme price of war, had thréwn themselves away, definitely, generous- ly, but we, the living victors, pay in endless succession of barren days “ survival. Ours the horror, the tragedy at| war's aftermath, Again, I say, would it not have been better, much better, to have joined “the Legion of Herots” over thére, aati Gent BIR Seen death, unfit physically, mentally and ie af financially to compete with the young- er generation of today? “The Valiant Heroes Over There” are first on the tongue of the na- tion, while the living victors, forgot- ten, must suffer the loss of their FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1931 ter-effects of many diseases, they must lie in a hospital or struggle through life, f ten by those who were made millionaires overnight. I have here a copy, in part, of a ntws atticle, taken from the Minne- polis Journal, dated Feb. 14: “The passage of the compromise re- lief measure was a victory for Presi- dent Hoover and his policy of opposi- tion to a federal appropriation which could in any way be interpreted as a dole. He insisted on loans only, on the duty of the states and local com- munities to act first in caring for their people, on the principle that charity must come from private con- tribution, through charitable organi- zations like the Red Cross, and not from the federal treasury, through government agencies. President Hoover is against any legislation to pay part or all of the adjusted compensation certificates or to liberalize them, and will veto any bill that comes to him. He has made that clear several times since the matter first was broached.” Is it charity the veterans seek when they ask cash for their certificates? No, it is justice. They ask only a fair wage for the most noble service of all, a service for which there is no set or “going” wage. They ask for a debt the government admits, a debt that became a law in May, 1924, over the president's veto. The gov- ernment has accumulated hundreds of millions of dollars in a reserve or contingent fund for the payment of this debt. Can this debt, then, be termed an act of charity, a dole? ANOTHER MOORHEAD MAN REGENT St. Paul, Feb. 27.—(7)—Dr. O. J. Hagen, Moorhead, was elected regent of the University of Minneso!a from the ninth district. FLYER’S FATHER DIES Los Angeles, Feb. 27.—(#)—Arthur Goebel, 75, father of the widely known aviator, Art Goebel, died at his home late yesterday of a cerebral KEEP COOL PLEASEI IF YOU notice that your hands are not staying as smooth as they might, ask yourself the cause. The answer is that washing in bet water is the greatest single destroyer of skin beauty in existence. Of course, if you use ordinary soap, you won't get clothes and dishes clean withont hot water. But with White King Granulated Soap, made from pure vegetable and nut oils, you can get complete and thorough cleansing in luke- warm water. It will spare your hands, and, at the same time, save your colored ginghams and prints from an untimely end. White King is economical too; Because it’s condensed, 2 little goes a long, long way. It’s the safest and yet the most effective soap you can buy. And. jt’s ideal for hard water. Try it today. At your grocer's. jirg Tuesday evening at the home of | ;mances is the basis for the action in sidered. Stories of the jazz-age, the ture will oe undertaken, according to Mrs. Fuller. Meetings will be held on the last Tuesday of each month. Dickinson had an active Business and Professional Women’s club until a few years ago, when it. was dis- banded. Recently, Miss Bessie Bald- win, president of the Bismarck club, and Miss Catherine McDonald at- tended a pre-organization meeting in Dickinson and assisted in interesting @ group of women in the new club. The new club is the 17th to be formed in the state, others being lo- cated at Bowbells, Crosby, Devils Lake, Fargo, Grand Forks, Langdon, Minot, Powers Lake, Ray, Stanley, Valley City, Williston, Lakota, Cando, Rugby, and Bismarck. *** * Members of the Bismarck branch, American Association of University Women, will hold their March meet- Mrs. Clyde Welsh at the A. P. Len- hart home, 106 Avenue B West. A bridge. party will follow the regular business meeting and program. All —— PY Glenview | °° “BY MBS. LARS JACOBSON Lawrence Ousley was a Wilton caller Saturday. Mrs. C. M. Jacobson called at the Lawrence Johnson home Friday afternoon, Roy Simons took in the dance at Price Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Anderson transacted business in Wilton Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Oshanyk, Mr. end Mrs. Lars Jacobson and Howard Scott motored to Bismarck Sunday, where they were dinner guests at the Theo. Quanrud home. Con Johnsons were Wilton shop- Pers Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Al Holden transacted business in Wilton Saturday. PASS S. D. MEASURE Washington, Feb. 27—(#)—The sen- members planning to attend are re-|ate passed and sent to the house a quested to call Mrs. Welsh at 361. > ° At the Movies Pe PARAMOUNT THEATRE George O'Brien, who portrays the character of “Buck Duane,” the only surviving member of the fighting Duanes in “Last of the Duanes,” Fox Movietone all talking romance of the Southwest, is one of the best known amateurs in the world of sport. He is expert at boxing, having won the light heavyweight championship of tne Navy when he was serving during the World war; he has been a mem- ber of championship basketball, foot- ball, baseball and volleyball teams, besides being, perhaps the best ama- teur swimmer on the Pacific Coast. Besides all these accomplishments, le is a crack shot and few can ride a horse with more dexterity, an asser- \ tion that is proved by his perform- ance in “Last of the Duanes,” which comes to the Paramount Theatre to- morrow. The picture was made directed by Alfred L. Werker, and for the most Part was made in the picturesque wide open spaces of Arizona. Ernest Pascal wrote the adaptation and dia- log. CAPITOL THEATRE ' One of the vorld’s greatcst ro- Norma Talmadge’s newest picture, “Du Barry, Woman of Passion,” which comes to the Capitol Theatre on Monday, The plot concerns the heart adventures of the siren who risked power and a king's patronage for the love of a common soldier. Much time in research was spent by Miss Talmadge and Gam Taylor. director of the picture, to gei a ve- hicle which would do full justice to the star's talents and tell a story that the lovers of good drama and ro- imante would find provocative. Thou- sands of books and plays were con- underworld, the future, were ferreted This Week-end’s Special Blooming Cinerarias in red, pink and blue 50c and 75¢ each Oscar H. Will & Co. Flowerphone 784 319 Third St. Bismarck. N. D. bill to authorize $14,000 for tne pur- chase of camp sites or rifle ranges in “| South Dakota, for the use of the Na- tional Guard in that state. Clearance sale. Prices great- ly reduced on stamped goods Pea-| cock Art Shop, 508 Broadway.|' and rayon underwear. adds the right tang of flavor. EMPRESS COFFEE helps you keep’ that reputation of a "Good Cook” Always serve this RELIABLE Coff birthright, deprived of their ability to produce their kind, deprived of the loving help of children. Maimed and afflicted with the af- hemorrhage. Celery Sale at Gussner’s. 3 things to stop a cold “Pape's” does them all! Now, just a pleasant tablet and relief that achey, feverish, weak feeling for your cold begins, instantly. And|Which is due to inactivity of the Pores. “Pape's” kills cold germs; opens Pape’s Cold Compound relieves 811 \the bowels; takes germs and the acid- symptoms of colds. It does the | wastes of colds right out of your three things any doctor will tell you | system. are necessary to check a cold. Next time a cold starts, try Pape’s “Pape’s reduces irritation and|Cold Compound and learn the reason swelling of the nasal. lining. So/|for its tremendous salés and popu- BAKING POWDER It’s double acting Use KC for fine texture and large volume in your bakings. breathing becomes easy; discharge |larity. Just remember the name MILLIONS OF P stops; the head clears. “Pape’ s” |“Pape' 's.” All drug stores—35c.—Ad- BY OUR C encourages perspiration; banishes | vertisement. aa Going Out of Business Last Day Tomorrow In which to get your bargains of Furniture and Household Goods Our store will be open both evenings—tonight and tomorrow. Ruder's Furniture Exchange 206 MAIN AVENUE BISMARCK THEATR LAST TIMES TODAY! Live in the intimacy of a celebrated theatrical family’s life! You'll recognize them—you li know their scandals, secrets, loves, hates— “THE ROYAL FAMILY OF BROADWAY” A PARAMOUNT HIT with ' FREDRIC MARCH INA CLAIRE MARY BRIAN COMING SATURDAY ZANE GREY’S ... Greatest Romance of the Old Southwest! Pale ines _ “THE LAST oF GINGER ALE = Biogen ‘Gees O’Brien Order a few bottles for the Lucile Brown home. It’s good. Myrna Loy ‘You've read the story If your dealer can’t supply seo tha oe ‘and bring along the youngsters — they'll . “MANDAN BEVERAGE COMPANY Tove it. Sizes 4, to9 A. W. LUCAS CO. Bismarck’s Busy Style and Shopping Center An Outstanding Spring Foot Saver From the slender flowing lines of this smart new Foot Saver there radiates an enchanting charm. From the patented in-built construction of the arch arises Foot Saver luxurious ease, smoothing away foot fatigue, warding off all danger of pressure and strain, bestowing a romantic slimness on the ankles. The studied style of Foot Saver Shoes makes them a matah for the most fashionable frock you have. The Emily Beautiful Two-Tone Pump $11.85 Other Styles AAAA to B, 4 to 10 $9.85 $10.85 $11°85 Month End Sale Toiletries Every One a Present Need. Why not buy now and save? Mello-Glo Face Powder, $1.00 value ............$-.79 Face Powders, assorted odors, all regular dollar values, each .........eee0ee Johnson’s Baby Talcum, 25c value . Cashmere Boquet Talcum, 25c value Almond Lotion, dollar value . Madam Dulcey’s Cleansing Cream, dollar sre os Pond’s Cold and Vanishing Cream, 65c value .... Daggett & Ramsdell Perfect Cold Cream, 35c value Kleenex, assorted colors, 25c value ......... Listerine, 14-ounce bottle, dollar value .. Pepsodent Antiseptic, 16-ounce, dollar value ; Nujol, 16-ounce bottle, dollar value ,. Bathasweet, dollar value .. Palmolive Shampoo, 50c value ..... ° Packers’ Olive Oil or Pine Tar Shampoo, 65c val. De Miracle Depilatory, 60c value ........e20++ Burma Shave Shaving Cream, 35c value .... Odorono, 60c value ............008 Tooth Pastes: Pepsodent, Ipana, Pebeco, “Squibbs, each 50c valttes ....00.scessececccnscnses Dr. West’s and Prophylactic Tooth Brushes, 50c values, each ...... Toilet Soaps: Colgate’s Big Bath and Palmolive, 16 bars for ........ssseeseeeeseceneneces 1.00 How to Make Hair Beautiful Let us give you a Genuine Nestle Circuline or Modernistic Permanent Wave and you will see how attractive your hair can be. It will take on new lustre and always look its best. Next Week $ 00 Arrange for Appointment Every department filled with new spring merchandise, and on sale at the New Lower Prices. A. W. LUCAS Where You Expect More for Your. NO ENE Widths AAAA to B