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~ Officiating was Rev. H. G. Bens, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1936 6s ) SOCIETY and CLUBS CLUBS Bertsch-Roberts Vows Taken At Matin Service Thursday! Couple Will Reside at Hibbing, ‘attendants, including three sisters, | . " Migs B. Margaret Bertsch of Minnea- | Minn., After Trip to Yel- polis as maid of honor and the! Misses Lydia and Matilda Bertsch as lowstone Park bridesmaids. Miss Neva Vettel was | |the third bridesmaid. Their gowns of White peonies and pastel flowers ' mousseline de soie were made in floor in baskets placed throughout thejlength with wide girdles of velvet j rooms and forming an improvised |and they wore matching shoes. Their altar before the fireplace created the |flowers were colonial wrist bouquets | setting in the home-of Mr. and Mrs. |tied with pastel tulle to match their Chris Bertsch, 602 Sixth St., for the | frocks, marriage at 9 a. m., Thursday, of] For her wedding, the bride chose a their daughter, Miss V. LaVerne|Louise Mulligan model of Chantilly Bertsch, to Glenn Maxwell Roberts, |lace made over an angel skin satin Hibbing, Minn., son, of Mr. and Mrs, 'slip, fashioned in princess style with E. C. Roberts of Mott. White tapers |short train, high neck and long tight atranged in candelabra burned on/|sleeves. Her finger-tip-length veil the fireplace. of tulle net was bordered with val lace. White gladiolus and lilies-of- minister of the German Baptist church, who long has been a friend of the Bertsch family. His daughter, Miss Clara Bens, played the tradi- tional wedding music and also played softly during the exchange of vows. Attendants in Pastel Orgayly A symphony of pastel shades in nile green, pale yellow, sky blue and pale peach were worn by the bride's quet were carried by the bride. Brother Attends Bridegroom Bernard Roberts of Bismarck was! his brother's attendant. Mrs. Bertsch, the bride's mother, wore a beige and blue handblocked silk crepe dress and a corsage of Talisman roses, while the bride- groom’s mother was costumed in printed chiffon and had a corsage of | Columbia roses. | For the wedding breakfast immedi- ; ately after the ceremony, table deco- | rations were white peonies and tapers ‘jand the bride’s cake. Mr. and Mrs. Roberts will be at home after July 4 at 5013 Portage St., Hibbing, Minn., after trip to Yellowstone National park and lakes in northern Minnesota. The bride was graduated from the Bismarck high school and has been working for the WPA. After his Mr. Roberts attended the McPhail Minneapolis and the North Dakota | Agricultural college. He is a pharm- | acist and is employed by the Burke | drug company at Hibbing. The wedding guests from out-of- town were Mr. Roberts’ parents and the maid of honor. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kenyon and returned from Louisville, Ky., where they visited relatives for two weeks. Miss Margaret Reynolds, sister of Mrs. Kenyon, returned with them for a 10-day vacation. OO | Meetings of Clubs | | And Social Groups Women’s Nonpartisan Club No. 1 There will be a program of talks and refreshments will when Women’s Nonpartisan Club No. 1 meets at 8 p. m., Thursday in the World War Memorial building din- ing room. * OK Rebekah Lodge Mrs. Anna Roberts, who is to move to New Salem, will be honored at the the-valley arranged in a shower bou-| : graduation from Mott high school.! § school of music and dramatic art én! ; son, Paul, of 415 Mandan St., have; be served | ee | Pleating Highlight pies hektrrs / | ° An unusual arrangement of ac- cordion pleating distinguishes the charming jacket outfit in which Miss Mary Taylor attended the races at New York. The dress bodice is plain. The skirt is pleat- ed, as is the jacket, except for shoulder yoke, cuffs and front panels, Rebekah lodge meeting at 8 p. m., Friday in the World War Memorial building dining room. As this will be the last meeting until September, all members are requested to attend. ese 8 Bismarck Homemakers’ Club In connection with a lesson on “Fruits and Shrubs of North Dakota,” the Bismarck Homemakers’ club will | make a tour of the Oscar H. Will and company nursery and the United States Great Plains experiment sta- tion Friday, starting at 2 p.m. Mem- bers not having transportation are to meet at that hour at the Northern Pacific depot. TOSHARE IN THESE XTRAORDINARY SAVINGS DURING THIS JUBILEE Sé«LCO. A. W. LUCAS CO. Nationally Advertised Merchandise Goifed M.W LOCKE SHOE FITTING? Let's begin with Dr. Locke himeelf. Dr. Locke is internationally famous for his treatments of foot ailments | A representative of the factory will be in our Main - Floor Shoe: Department Friday and Saturday to assist in your fittings. : | Mrs. Levard Quarve and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kerns, all of Fessenden; Mr. and Miss Jane E. Fritch: Recites Nuptial Vows Mrs, Clair Codding and family, Wa- | ertown, Minn.; Miss Edith Quarve, Chicago; Dr. Pearl Matthaei, James- town; Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Fritch, In @ ceremony read Wednesday in the Methodist Episcopal church of! Valley City by Rev. George Parish,! Miss ete E. Fritch, daughter of ea | Mrs. W. W. Frit ni st grade ee last hata ie: Cen | Teachers college, taught at Fessenden school, became the bride of T. Kermit |Pefore coming to Bismarck in Sep- tember, 1935. Mr. Quarve, who is a | quarve: gon of Mr. and Mrs. C. A.|ressenden merchant, attended St. ‘A double archway of greenery and Ol@f college at Northfield, Minn., and | white flowers, flanked at either side | by baskets of peonies and witha tapers arranged in candelabra, was) ' erected before the altar to form the| t Yellowstone National park and the ‘setting for the service. | | The bride and her attendants, Miss | Rebecca Karshner of Valley City and/| Mrs. Earl Kerns of Fessenden, sister | of the bridegroom, all wore boucle; The birthday anniversary of Mrs. ‘knit suits in shades of white, rose and| Walter F. Meili, 1313 Rosser avenue, | turquoise blue, respectively. All had|which occurred Wednesday, was ob- shoulder corsages, the bride’s being of | served with an evening party for 15 Toses, sweet peas and gypsophila and | guests which Mrs. L. P. Mahoney of {the attendants’ of gypsophila and 413 Griffin St. gave in the Meili Sweet peas. |home. Mmes. Wesley Ackerman ‘and Elton Fritch, the bride's brother,/Minnie Evans turned in first and attended Mr. Quarve as best man. second high scores, respectively, in The bride's parents gave a recep-|the bridge games. Mmes. Oscar tion and buffet supper for about 60! Boutrous and John Wilson assisted relatives and family friends in the jn serving the lunch of which the church parlors. Decorations were | pink and green birthday cake was an baskets of peonies and the table WaS important feature. |marked with roses, pink candles and ee OR the wedding cake. | Miss Ruth Wetmore, daughter of} Gerald Munro, who has just com- |Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Wetmore, 813)pleted the term at Pullman, Wash., | Rosser avenue, with whom the bride |college, arrived here Wednesday for |made her home in Bismarck, was/a visit with his uncle and aunt, Mr. among the guests. Others from a dis-|and Mrs. P. G. Harrington, 511 Third tance were the bridegroom’s father, |St. In about two weeks he and his his sister, Miss Sigrid Quarve; his|mother, Mrs. G. E. Munro, who bas grandmother, Mrs. Sigrid Quarve; Dr.|spent the last eight months in the and Mrs. D. W. Matthael and family, |Harrington home, will go to their ee and Mrs. W. K. Taylor, Mr. and/own home at Seattle, Wash. Fritch, Moorhead, Minn. peton. wedding trip. They will be at home at Fessenden, July 1. * ee Indianapolis, Ind., and Miss Beulah fall by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Jung | The bride, a graduate of Valley City | changed their nuptial vows during the State School of Science at Wah-|TOSe organdy were worn by the bride Mr. and Mrs. Quarve are traveling| Keefe, who was her only attendant. South Dakota Black Hills for their | flared skirts over slips of satin with | | | Bismarck Bride Will {and Christine of Los Angeles, and | have been visiting with them and | tending the California Pacific Inter: national exposition at San Diego. (Margaret Lucille Keefe) who ex-/ The fair, they write, is set in a 1,400 acre park planted like a tropical for- est and with the most gorgeous flower beds they have ever seen. In the ma- jor buildings, they have viewed ex- hibits on transportation, water, elec- tricity, fine arts, natural science, | medical science and other subjects. One of the fair curiosities which has impressed them is the world’s largest pipe organ which is heard several times a day. A wedding trip will be taken in the the 9 o'clock mass Wednesday morn- ing in St. Mary's procathedral. Rev. Robert A. Feehan officiated. Identical frocks of Alice blue and and her sister, Miss Ruth Collette The frocks were fashioned with wide girdles of the satin. Both had white hats and slippers and carried bouquets of peonies. Masses of the same flowers were used to decorate the procathedral altar for the wed- xe * Mrs. E. A. Willson and children, Jane, Florence and Frank, of 831 Sixth St, are leaving Sunday for Glencoe, Minn., to .visit with Mrs. | ding. | Willson’s parents for a short time be- | proae, uns was best man for his/ fore going to Lake Sallie in Minne- rother. sota to spend the coming seven weeks. |The Willson home will be occupied while they are gone by Mr. and Mrs. | L. I. Nicholson and children, Robert | and Lois, who are moving here from | Devils Lake. Mr. Nicholson, who is | in the old age assistance department lof the welfare board, has been here )for some months and is leaving for | Devils Lake Friday evening to bring ‘other members of the family here. *** ® A wedding breakfast followed in the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Keefe, 422 Third St., and afterward the couple left for Cathay where they will be at home immediately. The bridegroom’s par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. William Jung, his brothers, Carl and Edmund, and his sisters, the Misses Sylvia and Irma, all of Cathay, were out-of-town guests. | | Mr. and Mrs. Dan Kuehn of Bis- marck have written The Tribune that | Make Home at Cathay | they are visiting their daughters, Ida Mrs. Jung attended the New Rock- ford schools and after graduating Jr. and baby daughter, Mary Joan, of | with honor from Valley City Teach- | Minneapolis, are spending the week ers college, taught at Cathay. She | with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. F. B. was a member of the Atheneum lit-| Strauss, 223 First St. Mrs. F. B.| jerary society and of Pi Omega Pi, |Strauss, Sr., who has been at their honorary commercial organization. | summer home at Green lake, Spicer,| The bridegroom was graduated from |Minn., has returned to remain until! the Cathay high school and is en- after the Fourth of July. Miss Cora/ Mr. and Mrs. Frederick B. Strauss, New Hollywood Creations in Washable Malibu Crepe The Ginger Rogers Dresses are the latest creation—full of life, full of song, full of irresistible Ginger—Just imagine—smart, sophisticated frocks at a price that every- one will want at least two. beautifully tailored Ginger Rogers dresses for street, sport, home or office— Mail orders filled while quantities last and sent postage prepaid in first and second gaged in farming. | Marie Strauss, who also left for Green | lake early in the season, is entertain- ing a company of friends at a house Party this week. ; ee *% Claudia Mae is the name which Mr. and Mrs. James J. Ehreth of 508 Sec- ond §t., have chosen for their daugh- ter born June 6 in 8t. Alexius hos- pital. Mrs. Ehreth and the baby re- turned to their home Thursday. > | Today’s Recipe | Schnecken The ingredients for the roll mixture are: 1 cake compressed yeast, 44 cup su- gar, 1-3 cup butter, 2 tablespoons lard, 1 cup milk, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 eggs, 4 cups flour. Crumble yeast and add one table- spoon sugar. Mix butter with lard and milk, Heat until fat has melted and cool to lukewarm. Add to yeast mixture. Add remaining sugar, salt, eggs and two cups flour. Beat two minutes. Add remaining flour, mix well, cover and let rise until dough has doubled in bulk. About four hours will be required. Divide dough into two parts and roll out each un- til % inch thick. Spread with filling, roll up into two inch rolls, Cut off % inch slices and place flat sides up and next each other in greased shallow pan or baking sheet. Cover with waxed paper and let rise until doubl- ed in size (about 31% hours). Bake 12 minutes in moderately slow oven. Serve warm with butter. To make filling use: 6 tablespoons soft butter, 2-3 cup brown sugar, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1-3 cup currant jelly. Mix ingredients and spread on soft dough. |A. W. LUCAS CO. Home of Nationally Advertised Merchandise Wear these SIZES 12 to 42 zones. Terry BEACH ROBES, Small, Medium, Large, White and pastel colors, plaids and checks - In full popularity now. . A. W. LUCAS Co. . , 0 EE ERE MIEN SS EE ERIE I,