The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 22, 1936, Page 4

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~ @) SOC ETY and CLU Miss Carufel Bride In Church Ceremony St. Leo's Catholic church of Minot was the scene of the 8:30 o'clock nup- | f tial service Saturday in which Miss! Ernestine Marie Carufel, daughter of Louis H. Carufel, 202 Eighth St., be-/ came the bride of John Florian Meck- | ler, also of Bismarck, son of Mrs. | Kathryn Meckler of Dickinson. Rev. J. J. Raith officiated at the/ ‘ceremony at which the couple was at-| tended by Mr. and Mrs. Philip E.| Carufel, of Bismarck, brother and | sister-in-law of the bride. i A floor-length gown of pink linen; Jace and a leghorn hat were worn by | the bride. Her bridal bouquet was’ of Ophelia roses and lilies-of-the-val- | ley. The matron of honor was attired | in a floor-length taffeta print model! and carried Columbia roses. ! Mr. Carufel, the bride’s father, and { Mrs. Carufel of Bismarck and the | bridegroom’s mother and Miss Marie ; Croteau of Dickinson were the out- | of-town guests. | Mr. and Mrs. Meckler are residing | @t 609 Fourth St. On July 6, they/ ‘will leave for a wedding trip to Den-' ver, Colo., and Salt Lake City, Utah. | The bridegroom has lived in Bis- | marck for four years and is working | in the North Dakota Power and Light | company credit department. Mrs. | ‘Meckler has been employed by the F. | ‘W. Woolworth company. She attend- | ed St. Mary’s high school. | * % % | Miss Eleanor Kjelstrup, daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. Krist Kjelstrup, 417) Broadway, west, who has completed} hher freshman year at Stephens col-/ Jege, Columbia, Mo, arrived home} Saturday noon. After the close of the} term, Miss Kjelstrup was the guest ot | 2 classmate, Miss Wilma Hallock of | Elgin, Ill, at her home. She also visited in Minneapolis with her aunt, ‘Miss Thora Iverson, and spent a short ime with the 8. D. Dietz family of| | go before coming on to Bismarck. a cE a = | For Hot Days } i ae The outfit of lightweight, non- crushable pale rose woolen, mod- eled by Margaret Lindsay, con- sists of intricately cut skirt, hip- length jacket which buttons down the front and a full-length coat, double-breasted with notched re= vers. Accessories are brown. PEGGY SAGE SALON MANICURE PREPARATIONS if Is now our privilege to offer you the same exclusive Mani- emart world to Peggy Sage’s New York Salon. Come in and choose from dozens of Peggy Sage Pol- ish colors . . . all famous for their incredible loveliness . . « Hand Creams and Lotions that leave you fascinated with the silky smooth- nees of your hands, HALL’S Drug Store 122 3rd St. Bismarck Phone 284 | Tuesday. | ton, D. C., and |returned over Picnic Is Scheduled For L.A.P.M. Society The Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Pa- triarchs Militant, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will hold a picnic % e | Wednesday evening in Riverside park. cure Preparations that bring the |The outing originally was set for Cars will leave from the jhome of Mrs. J. W. Scott, 311 Sev- enth St., at 6 p.m. Mrs. J. A. Flow |and Miss Catherine McDonald are heading arrangements. * * * Miss Marjorie Staak, daughter of from Peggy Sage | Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Staak, 225 Avenue | A, west, came home Saturday after a month’s motor trip through the east jas the guest of Miss Jeannette and | Frederick Rothausen of St. Paul. The | party passed some time in Washing- New York City and a Canadian route. | Highlights of the tour included a visit to the Queen Mary as the boat docked |in New York after its maiden trip; \and: attending the graduation review |at the United States Military aca- | demy, West Point, N. Y. Before re- | turning to Bismarck, Miss Staak visit- ed with relatives at Cochrane, Wis., for two days. re REA S a No THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1936 BS Virginia Patzman Is i ' procathedral when Miss Virginia Em- ‘maline Patzman, daughter of Mr. and i Mrs. R. W. Patzman, 413 Third St., {exchanged marriage vows with John ; William Armes, son of Mrs. Keith W. | Mickelson, 410 First St. | Rev. Joseph Schmidt read the nup- | tial mass and ceremony at 7 o'clock. | The bride, wearing @ pink silk dress with white accessories and a shoulder orsage of red roses and snapdragons, |was attended by her sister, {Dolores Patzman, who wore a silk | print dress and also had white acces- tsories. A brother of the bride, Rob- ert Patzman, served as Mr. Armes’ | best man. ‘There is to be a wedding supper given Monday evening by Mr. and Mrs. Patzman. Mr. and Mrs, Armes are to be at nue, The bridegroom, who is em- uated from the DuPont manual train- ‘ing high school at Louisville, Mrs. Armes has a diploma from | Mary’s high school. | Sunday evening the Misses Dorothy ‘and Barbara Russell were hostesses at a surprise shower honoring the | couple. ee > guests. Former Instructor at Sterling Recites Vows Miss Mathilda Wall, former instruc- tor at Sterling, daughter of Mr. and | Mrs, Carl Wall of Bottineau, and Roy | Knudtson of Aneta spoke their nup- tial vows at high noon Tuesday, f | June 16, before a candle-lit altar in the Turtle Mountain Lutheran church of Carbury. Baskets of peonies de- jcorated the altar. The bride, escorted by her father, jher sister, Mrs. Clara Paulsen, as matron of honor, and Miss Lucille Knudtson, brother of the bridegroom, roses. Attendants for the bridegroom were and Alfred Wall as ushers. The Miss- es Stella and Velma Dyrstad, of Ster- ling, nieces of the bride, provided the musical setting for the ceremony, which was read by Rev. P. N. Oklevik in the presence of only immediate relatives and a few intimate friends. A reception at the bride's family home near the church followed the ceremony. The out-of-town guests included the bridegroom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Knudtson of Aneta, Miss Tina Lee of Devils Lake, Mr. and Mrs. 8. B, Dyrstad of Sterling and Robert Wall of Nash. Mr. and Mrs, Knudtson left late in the afternoon by motor for Montana Points and Yellowstone National park and will be at home after July 15 at Aneta, where the bridegroom is asso- ciated with his father in the mer- cantile business. Mrs. Knudtson taught in the public school at Aneta for the last five years, prior to which she taught at Sterling. ee A. Neil York, transferred to Minot a week ago by Buttreys, Inc., came here to spend the week-end visiting his mother, Mrs. Alice W. York, 309% Main Ave., and to get his wife, who was the guest of her mother-in-law and of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Steinbruck of Mandan, since he left. John W. Armes’ Bride | the bride's’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. | Engebretson. The bridegroom is the Another June nuptial event took/ place Monday morning in St. Mary’s'S0n of Mr. and Mrs. Gust Bunas of home immediately at 200% Main ave- | Clifford Wall as best man and John| To Reside in Capital To establish their home in Bis- marck after July 4 are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Bunas (Helen E. Leigh) who |were married in a candlelight service jat 3 p. m., Sunday in the home of <i Miss Theresia Essert, Couple Wedded Sunday aren honor, Wore » white silk aut Fourth 8t. with a blue blouse and white hat and she had @ shoulder corsage. Russell Turner, was Mr. Essert’s attendant. After Joly 1 Mr. Essert, who is a salesman for a local fruit house, and his bride will be at home at No. 5, Rue apartments, 711 Avenue A. Mr. and Mrs. Eckert received their educations For the,ceremony, Lakes, bride wore a turquoise blue chiffon jover the managership gown and white accessories and Mrs. | Store No. 2, succeeding Hansen was in pale pink dotted or-| who has held the position for gandy and also had white acessor-|two years. . jes, Both carried bouquets of mixed | their son, flowers, G. Leigh of Bottineau, by Rev. O. E. Max and is a civil engineer employed in the drafting division of the state highway department. | Nuptial selections were sung by Miss |Claire Shoemaker, Langford, accome jpanied by Miss Irene Fortune, Mo-| hall, who also played the wedding marches. | Sister Is Attendant in the Dickinson and Bismarck pub- lic schools, respectively. e* *% * Magdalen Patzner Is Wed in Matin Service During a 7 o’clok nuptial mass and ceremony read in St. Mary’s parochial school chapel Monday morning by Rev. Robert A. Feehan, Miss Magda- len Frances Patgner of Bismarck, The bride was gowned in white {starched lace model designed on sim- ple lines with a Queen Anne collar, She wore a finger-tip length veil and her flowers were an arm bouquet of Talisman roses and _lilies-of-the-val- ley. Her sister, Miss Emily Jane Leigh, her maid of honor and only attend: ant, wore powder blue flowered or- |gandy and a shoulder corsage of roses jand sweet peas, Bennie I. Bunas was ‘his brother's best man, |; Pink and white decorations were used for the buffet supper following ployed by Logan’s grocery, was grad-¥ the service. Out-of-town wedding guests in- cluded Allen Anderson, Bismarck; Mr. and Mrs, Bunas, the bridegroom's parents, and his brothers and sisters, |Miss Lucille, Gordon and Alton of Max and the Misses Irene and Mar- garete of Fargo; Misses Henrietta and Doris Lemke and Jean Disher, Devils Lake; Miss Edna Peterson, St. Thomas; John Winsness, Melvin Pre- sthus, Mr. and Mrs, Edward Hoff and |Miss Margaret Hoff, Rugby; Miss Nora Solenberger and Harland Jos- ephson, Washburn; Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Barnes and Mr. and Mrs. David Reimer, Fargo, and Mr. and Mrs. Chester Yoder, Wolford. Going to Boulder City For their wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Bunas are going to Boulder City, Nev., via Denver, Colo., and Salt Lake iCity, Utah. At Boulder City, they will be guests of the bride’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Thaxton. wore a white tailored sult with white|Mr. Thaxton is the chief field engt- accessories and a corsage of lilies-of-|neer on the Boulder dam project. In | the-valley and had as her attendants | Denver they will be guests of another aunt of the bride, Mrs. Eleanor Cong- don, and family. Both the bridegroom and bride are and Miss Gudrun Kornkven, as brides- | graduates of the University of North maids. They wore dresses of pastel | Dakota, the bride being a member of silk crepe and corsages of Talisman |the 1936 class. They have taken an apartment at 816 Avenue D. * % % Harriet Walborg Malm Is Wed at Dickinson A wedding dinner and a tour of the Badlands concluded with a picnic supper were enjoyed by the 40 guests attending the wedding ceremony at 1 p. m., Sunday in St. John's Lutheran ichurch of Dickinson, which united Miss Harriet Walborg Malm, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Malm, 510 Second St., to John Frank Es- sert, Bismarck. The wedding dinner was served in the home of Mr. Essert’s stepfather, Sebastian Deffert of Dickinson, whose first wife was the bridegroom’s mother. Out-of-town guests were the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Malm, and daughters, Viola, Virginia and Ra- mona Malm, Miss Kathryn Biglow, Jack Morgenthaler and Mrs. Celia Schloemer and daughter, Miss Mar- garet Schloemer, all of Bismarck: William Marvin, Mandan, and Mr. and Mrs, Alex Malm and sons, Ar- nold and Archie, Flasher. Rev. G. H. Plamann officiated at the service for which the bride wore a floor-length model of turquoise blue chiffon organdy with the waistilne marked with a pink sash. Her pic- ture hat was pink trimmed with |white daisies ana she held an arm fi E. SA IN ANY LANGUAGE whats more IN AMY CLIMATE! —_and PAINTED POST ARIZONA opened. other foe of cigarette goodness. Look at the package of Dou- jt by FACTORY-FRESH ble-Mellow Old Golds and cigarettes; as freah a0 they roll you'll SEE why! off the cigarette machines, Two jackets of Cellophane, (rinettana Lompoc not one but TWO, stand guard - . over the freshness of Old Gold’s Galea 1 PrizeCropTobaccos.Eachjacket £8; Yer indeed! Double-Your Money open, for 30 days from today. N EVERY language spoken in the U.S. A.,, they’re saying “FRESH!” whenever a pack of Double-Mellow Old Golds is is moisture - proof Cellophane; the highest quality obtainable. This double Cellophane wrap- ping keeps out dampness, dry- ness, dust, impurities and every eee daughter of Mr, and Mrs_ Robert Pataner, Regan, became the bride of Wilbert Edward Schneider, also of Bismarck, son of Henry Schneider of ton. Attending the bridal couple were centered with a wedding cake with bouquets of red and white peonies at either end. After a visit in Fargo with Mr. and Mrs, Charles Halliday, Mr. and Mrs. Schneider will be at home Saturday at 120 Avenue B. The bridegroom, who is proprietor, of Pal’s grocery, was graduated from the Williston high school. Mrs. Schneider is a graduate of St. Mary’s high school. ee 8 Among new residents of the Capital City are Mr. and Mrs. Alan Arnegard, formerly of Mandan, who arrived here never been busted. HANS NOTICE It has come to our attention that certain rumors of a political nature or otherwise have been circulated throughout the state to the effect that the Mill Work- ers Union at the State Mill in Grand Forks has been busted. We wish to say that these rumors are false and untrue in every sense of the word. The Mill Workers Union, Federal Labor Union No. 19177, is still in an active state of organization and has Signed ANTON E. DAHL, Chairman, wage and working ARTHUR J. ILAND, EDGAR S. WILSON, CHARLES YOUNGBERG, Members of committee. LAWRENCE Secretary-treasurer, N. D. Si Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hansen, welts ie morning és Guests at the wedding and a break- | he is to have @ similar position. fast for 12 persons served in the Ren-; Arnegard dezvous included the bride’s parents |dan Red Owl store and her brother and sister, Robert and | of Mott. Miss Bernice Patsner. The table was|to Mandan several Minn, Mr. oF fe Eng succeedet iu For Carefree Days... It’s Overalls of Cool Shantung agreement committec. JORGENSON J. MERO, tate Federation of FINESSE is the keynote of Brodl’s superi- ority. A deftness that comes with years of experience. An intuition concerning the rela- tionship between coiffure and personality. A smooth profes- sional type of workmanship which embodies both skillgand careful attention to every detail. Such finesse has made us the inevitable choice of Bismarck’s smartest men and women. BRODL’S Barber and Beauty Shop Third and Broadway Phone 15 Vote for Yourself Keep the taxing power at home with our own people needs and conditions. f The Constitutional Amendment WOULD © Permit the Centralization of the Taxing Power un- der a Board or Commission at Bismarck, thus taking away Home Rule in Taxation and giving you prac- tically no chance to protect your own interests. © Provide for taxation in any manner in which each successive legislature may fancy or the Exemption of any kind of Property From Taxation according to whim or politics of its members. . ©@ Permit taxation of property used exclusively for sehools, religious, charitable, hospital, or other pate Ake purposes which is now specifically exempted ion. Here’s One Chance to . VOTE On these two measures “Assessment of Property--Where and How Made” ? Shall Said Constitutional Amendment Be Approved? who know local Vote “Income Tax” shail said Referred Measure Be Approved? £ are con: ; e fal exemp- - tions available under the old law. ij Vote N Oo e BURLEIGH COUNTY TAXPAYERS’ ASSOCIATION Graham Supercharger costs less to eperste, See and drive today the win- mer of the Gilmore-Yosemite contest. Gl 622 Main Phone 217 ov pactont NO! NO! 2. The Income Tax Amendment E OF 1935 Works a hardship on people of small means by plac- ing more of the Burden on the small taxpayer. It repeals the family exemptions, Discriminates against the farmers, because It Pro- hibits them from Deducting Losses Suffered Dur- ing Past Years. Should be defeated, thus permitting the return of the Old Income Tax Law which provided sufficient revenue. (Pol. Adv.)

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