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;, Graves, Jamestown, to his son, Dr. ’ ‘ Dr. Kroeze Officiates At His Son’s Wedding Dr. B. H. Kroeze, president of Jamestown -college, officiated at the wedding of Miss Cynthia Graves, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold T. Robert Gray Kroeze, Detroit, Mich. The service was read Thursday eve- ning in the First Presbyterian cliurch, Jamestown, in the presence of a group of relatives and friends. Attending the bride as maid of honor was Miss Marian Buck, James- town, wearing a Goupy model of opa- line pink chiffon. The bridesmaids, Miss Isabel Whitman and Miss Mabel Habberstad, were gowned alike in turquoise blue chiffon. Ann Mulroy and Ann DePuy were flower girls. The bridal gown was a Chanel lel of ivory satin and bridal Alenceon lace and she wore a veil caught into a cap of lace from her grandmother's wedding gown. Vernon Cain, Haiti, S. D., was best man and the ushers were Harold Graves, New York City, and William Graves, Jamestown, brothers of the bride, Dr. and Mrs. Kroeze have left for ‘Winnipeg and the Lake of the Woods for their honeymoon. They will re- side in Detroit, Mich. where Dr. Kroeze, who was graduated from Johns Hopkins university, Baltimore, will take his interne work. The bride Was graduated from Smith college, Northampton, Mass., this spring. Mr. and’ Mrs. C. L. Young, 220 Ave- nue B West, were among the guests at the wedding. ee # Mrs. R. August and children, Jackie and Donna, Grand Forks, are here for a visit with Mrs. August’s brother- in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Leonhard, 719 Mandan St. eee Mr. and Mrs, O. F. Bryant, 305 Ave- nue B, have left on a short vacation trip through a2 oom Hills. = Miss Doris Lundquist, daughter of Mrs. O. Lundquist, Mason apartments, plans to leave Sunday for Madison, Wis., where she will spend about a month with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. cont Olness. * * Members of a young matron’s club were entertained Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Patrick Gable, 313 South Thirteenth St. Whist was played at two tables, with Mrs. Frank Edere receiving the score prize. Mrs. Charles Van Dyke, Chicago, Ill., was @ guest, These Discontinued Models of Parker Pencils formerly $3 to $5 Pencils are brand new and mechanically per- fect, of non-breakable Permanite. One given with every latest style Parker Pen at $3.50 to $10, including Guaran- teed for Life Duofold Pens. This amazing offe for easton Beal ‘And his 11-piece eres 800 Special Attraction Popular song writer. (Author of “When It’s Springtime in the Rockies”) Orchestra. General Admission Dance tickets at the usual price Clifford Jansonius Weds Miss Fadness At @ service read at 8:30 o'clock Saturday morning at the hofne of Judge and Mrs. Fred Jansonius, 816 Fourth St. Miss Gladys Ramona Fadness, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Fadness, Mobridge, 8. D., became the bride of Clifford Jansonius, eldest son of Judge and Mrs.’ Jansonius. The Rev. Opie S. Rindahl, pastor of Trinity Lutheran church, officiated at the ceremony, which was witnessed only by a few relatives. A profusion of gladioli and other garden flowers were arranged in the living room. The bride wore a simple tailored suit of skipper blue wool with white accessories and carried a bouquet of Colombia roses and sweet peas. Her attendant, Miss Pauline Munsch, wore a dark printed flat crepe three- piece suit, William Smith, Bismarck, ‘was best man. A wedding breakfast was served at the G. P. Eat Shop following the ceremony. : The bride, a graduate of the Mo- bridge high school and the Capital commercial college here, has been employed in the offices of the Provi- dent Life Insurance company. Mr. Jansonius also attended the local commercial college following his graduation from the Bismarck high school. father, judge of the fourth judic! district. aren After a motor trip to Yellowstone and Mrs, Jansonius will- make pode ae Mr. and Mrs, O. E. Stadler, Joliet, TL, will leave this evening for their home after spending about 10 days in Bismarck as the guests of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Stadler, “eae beens Broadway. * * Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Keller, accom- panied by their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs, E..T. Put- nam, 102 Avenue A, left Saturday on @ motor trip to el Minnesota lakes. * * Gifts of linen were presented by Elizabeth Raaen, daughter of Mrs. Rasen: Baskets of gladioli were used to decorate the rooms.and the :- freshment table, *# e # Miss Bertha Varney, 408 Second St., and Miss Margaret Wynkoop, 723 Seventh 8St., will leave this evening for Minneapolis to spend a week as the guests of Miss Varney's sister, Miss Bessie Varney. eR Virgina Mae, Chicago, Ill, hav2 ar- rived to spend two weeks with Mrs. W. E. Jenstn, 709 Fifth St., and Mrs. Henry. Groves, 822 Avenue. C. Mrs. de Grasse is a sister of the Bismarck women, * He R. C. Morton, 1011 Eighth 8t., left Friday for Vergas, Min: here will join Mrs. Morton and their fam- ily, who are vacationing at Loon lake, where they have taken a cottage. They will return to Bismarck in about two weeks, a a xe Mrs, Charles Nagel was named t : : ig He ts court reporter for mi Care ident of the Mystic Circle, an or. ganization composed of women resid- ing north of Bismarck, at a meeting held at the home of Mrs. John Luth- ander. Mrs. Henry Nagel is vice presi- Park and the Black Hills and a visit with the bride’s parents in Mobridge, Pictured above is a horseless car- viage built by Henry Ford almost 40 years ago and its twenty-millionth descendant which will arrive in Bis- marck next Wednesday noon en route from Detroit on a transcontinental tour. It will be met on Main avenue at the city limits and escorted to the state capitol grounds, where officials will sign the log book and Governor George F. Shafer will present Col. H. Hilton, driver of the car, with a North Dakota license tag bearing the number 20,000,000. Following the ceremonies at the capitol the car will be taken on a tour of the city and then to the |Copelin Motor company where it will {be placed on exhibition. When its tour of the country is completed, the twenty-millionth Ford will be retirned to Greenfield Vil- lage for preservation near the first Ford, the “gasoline buggy” in which Henry Ford astounded his neighbors Victor Recording Ladies Plymouth Leads in Sales HENRY AND EDSEL FORD WITH 1893 AND 19 dent and Miss Marie Mihm secretary id treasurer. The affair took the PR ea SR rte dere ented beled aioe hat hate cee are The Twenty-Millionth Ford SS es = and demoralized horse traffic as he chugged noisily through Detroit's cobbled streets at the dizzy speed of nearly 20 miles an hour. In December, 1915, more than one million Fords had been produced. The production reached two million in June, 1917; five million in May, 1921; ten million in June, 1924, and twenty million in April, 1931. Mrs. Anne de Grasse and daughter | form ofa costume most novel outfit. Refreshments were Henry Nagel and Miss Mihm. % % & Mrs. John Larson, 210: Avenue A West, Mrs. T. E. Flaherty, 607 Sixth’ St., Miss Florence Satterlund and Mrs, Minnie Shuman, 414 Third 8t., composed a party of Bismarck wom: en who left Friday afternoon for De- troit Lakes, Minn., and nearby resorts where they will spend a week. The trip is being made by car. sn and Canada. at the home of Judge and Mrs, M. J. Englert. They will go to Duluth from there and then north along the lake eral resorts en route. | * * * Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moule, 1029)] Fifth St. have left by car for Pine Bluff, Okla., where they will belfj guests of Mr. and ,Mrs. C. Cahoon, brother-in-law and sister of Mrs. Moule during a camping trip in the Ozark mountains. Mr. and Mrs. Moule are traveling west through’ Denver and Fort Worth, Texas, and will return by an eastern route. eee Mrs. H. M. Leonhard, 719 Mandan St., entertained 14 children at a party Friday afternoon in honor of the third birthday anniversary of her daugh- ter, Jean. Games were played until 5 o'clock, when refreshments were served at a table decorated in pink and green. The centerpiece was a large cake bearing three candles and decorated with animal cookies. Fa- vors marked the places. jincluded Jackie and Donna August, 31 MODELS —___ i ~ ! | LADIES AND GENTLEMEN j For better service for your | tonsorial-work visit the CLASSIC BARBER SHOP Good work costs no more z Pete—Mannie—Herh | 502 Main Ave. Phone 473-W HURRY | LAST DAY SAT. || om A JOAN Midnight Show Sun. at THEATRE “MURDER BY THE CLOCK” | ‘The Spine-Tingling Mystery Thriller Secrets of the private rooms! Mysteries that hap- pen in the dead of night! Scand: Barbara STANWYCK In the Thrilling New Sensation “NIGHT NURSE” CLARK GABLE BEN LYON —EXTRA— BOBBY JONES Demonstrates the Proper Use of “THE MEDIUM IRONS” MONDAY AND TUESDAY . In Wayne county, Michigan, follows: outh, phone 700 and we will be ‘car that drives like an 8. * —with— i—Regis Toomey ‘Tashman Thrills! Intimate Secrets! of neglected Nothing omitted! one’ night nurse ho has courage to TELL —-with— BLONDELL 1315 makes of automobiles together sold for the entire month of July. where Detroit is located, sales were as party, with Elea-/Grand Forks, smal! cousins of the nore Green receiving the prize for the | guest of ho! served by the hostess, assited-by Mrs.| Mr. and Mrs. Robert Esgar and i bak daughter Maxine, Bozeman, Mont., and John H. Dawes, Los Angeles, Calif., have left for their homes after @ short visit here with Mr. and Mrs. John Cowan, 315 Twelfth St. Mr. Dawes is an uncle and Mr. and Mrs. Esgar cousins of Mrs. Cowan. They were reti tour of the eastern states, * In compliment to Miss Andrea Mc- Donald, an August bride, Mrs. W. G. Worner and Mrs. O. T. Raaen enter- ‘The Misses Gladys, Maude and Ella/tained Friday evening at a neighbor- Schroeder, 307 West Rosser avenue,/hood shower at the Worner home, left Saturday afternoon: by car for|709 Fifth St. There were 16 suests 4 10 days’ trip to points in Minnesota/ and the evening was spent in making will be joined by their mother, Mrs.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hall left Ida Schroeder, who has been visiting| Saturday for their home in Chicago 8PM ENR RUT MEE Sa EEE PTR NI OTD THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 8, 1931 after a week's visit here with Mr. Hall's parents, Congressman and Mrs. Thomas Hall, 512 Avenue B. ‘They + % # stopped here on their return from a| The regular meeting of the Catho- tour of Yellowstone park. jlic Daughters of America will be held ee % Jat 8 o'clock Monday evening at St.\at a price ranging Miss Ruth Staley will arrive Sun- | Mary's auditorium. cents. day from Fairmount, W. Va., where reaper rere eS ihe is an instructor in the Fairmount BOWMAN MARKETS WOOL Normal school, to be the guest of her; Bowman, N. D., Aug. 8—Wool; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Staley, | shipped from Bowman this year | 701 Sixth St. Miss Staley will be totaled 800,000 pounds, according to maid of honor at the wedding of her = sister, Miss Marian Staley, and:Ern-| a HOTEL RADISSON est Stoudt next Saturday. She will| Minneapolis nurses’ home. * # % from an extensive * + remain here until the opening of the fall term at the Fairmount school. | fal term at the Fairmount school | Meetings of Clubs {| a Rates from 2 | 35c until 8 o’clock At Valley City theylhot dish holders for the bride-to-be. |__And Social Groups | $2.00 a euler The Bismarck Hospital Alumni as- | 500 Rooms sociation will hold a meeting at 8) with Bath r shore to Winnipeg, stopping 2t sev-)}} Plymouth 1249, Ford 1063, Chevrolet 850. If-you have not yet experienced the thrill of driving the New Plym- h be glad to show you this eis eve cylinder Garage in Connection METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Corner of Fifth and Thayer Street WALTEE E. VATER, Pastor SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1931 Morning Worship, 10:30 a. m. Evening Worship, 8 p. m. Sermon Subject: Sermon Subject: “The Glory of Progress” “The Science of Slander” Special Music at Both Services A HEARTY. WELCOME AWAITS YOU Seventh Street Near Hennepin Located in the center of the dusit , Amusement and the Shopping districts. that givesa cuisine 4 Cafes teeitica: Prices ot any purse. Yast For a life of leisure. No coal to carry in. No ashes to carry out. No’kindling. No coaxing. No smelly grates or feeble room heaters to coax and humor. A clean house. A comfortable house. A house full of workless warmth. That's the life when an ESTATE GAS Piatti = HEATROLA takes over the heating job. hit novel LIGHT IT IN FALL. FORGET IT UNTIL SPRING. Go to the movies for the evening. Pack up and go away for a whole week. Come back. Open the door and walk into o ‘WARM house. No frozen pipes. No frosted plants. Every toom at June tempereture—without poking or stoking or Call at our office—or phone, and we'll gledly tell you more about the Heatrole. Montana-Dakota Power Company Duncan. There are many outside people who solicit collections in Bismarck, Mandan and surrounding territory from time to time but do not confuse any of these people with your local Credit Bureau as they have no connection with us in.any form whatever. Our records are available only to members, a list of whom may be seen at our office at any time. Accounts become delinquent after the 10th of each month Have you paid them? Bismarck -Mandan Credit Bureau, Inc. “Where Your Paying Habits Are Being Recorded” o'clock Saturday evening. in. the ‘figures compiled. at the local, freight, house. This was approximately 200,- }000 pounds more than was sold last year. Most of the wool was sold to cooperative marketing organizations CAPITOL THEATRE Today—Saturday JACK HOLT AILEEN PRINGLE Starting Monday shoveling fuel. The automatic heat control looks after every- by - thing—keeps the house toasty werm—constent, unverying, F ANNIE HURST all winter long. | with | LESLIE HOWARD | Richard Bennett, Irene Rich, Douglass, Mary |] A MARION DAVIES PRODUCTIO! vnacuneeteeeceuneueeeae eto eneetgeetp ran AAN from 12 to 16% SCREAMS! CHILLS! LAUGHS! THRILLS! aboard Kent