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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, ©) SOCIETY and CLUBS Kooal Girl ‘Acts as Friend’s Bridesmaid! Miss Kathryn Schroeder, 205 Sec- ‘ond street, returned Monday morning from Wadena, Minn., where she was bridesmaid at the wedding of Miss ‘Mona Breaske, daughter of Mr. and} Mrs. C. R. Breaske, Wadena, to John H. Collins, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Collins, Minneapolis, Minn. The cere- mony was read at St. Mary's church, ‘Wadena, Saturday, June 27, with Father Langer officiating. The bride wore a white silk spider- ‘web net dress over satin, a silk chif- fon hat with a face veil reaching to her shoulders, white net mitts and a) corsage of orchids and lilies-of-the- valley. She carried a white prayer book with a shower of lilies-of-the- valley. The bridesmaid’s dress was_of light blue silk chiffon with a finger- tip organdy coat. She carried a blue rosary, gift of the bride, and wore La corsage of pink and yellow roses. Mr. and Mrs. Collins will go to Duluth, Minn., for their wedding trip and will be at home after July 11 at Lake Minnetonka. For her going- sway costume the bride wore a suit of British tan linen with brown and white accessories. \sist of a sight-seeing trip and recep- ‘tion at the Veteran’s hospital on Thursday, a council meeting at 10 o'clock Friday in the Memorial hall, and a business meeting in the after- noon, also in the Memorial hall. **% *% iMiss Wilmes Is Wed To Lester Schonert | During an 8 o'clock nuptial mass and ceremony read Tuesday morning in St. Mary's procathedral, Miss Pau- line T. Wilmes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wilmes of Glen Ullin, be- came the bride of Lester G. Schonert, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Schonert of this city. Rev. Robert A. Feehan, pastor, of- ciciated. Raymond Wilmes, the bride’s brother, attended Mr. Schonert and Miss Lois Schonert, sister of the ‘bridegroom, served as maid of honor. The bride was costumed in blue and carried a bouquet of roses. Mr. and Mrs. Schonert are to reside |in Bismarck, the bridegroom being connected with the Lomas Oil com- | pany. ———___ —_—_~ | Meetings of Clubs | And Social Groups | The bride attended the College of | St. Benedict, St. Joseph, Minn., and | the groom attended the College of | 8t. Thomas, St. Paul, Minn. He is now affiliated with the Street Depart- ment of Minneapolis as district man- | ager. I * * *% V.F.W. Auxiliaries To Meet in Fargo R.N. A. The Royal Neighbors of America ; will meet at 8 p. m. Thursday in the A.O.U.W. hall, * % Gamma Phi Beta Alumnae | There will be a meeting of the |Gamma Phi Beta Alumnae chapter in the home of Mrs. Lucille Anderson, 422 Seventh St., at 8 p. m. Thursday. |All Bismarck-Mandan members of Mrs. Winifred Touissant of Jersey |Gamma Phi Beta social sorority are City, N. J., national president of the | invited to attend. Veterans of Foreign Wars auxiliary, * * *% will pay her official visit to North | Unity Study Club Dakota chapters of the organization; When the Unity Study club meets July 2-3. Fargo will be the only point | at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the Amer- in the state to be visited and there-| ican Legion Auxiliary room, World fore representatives of the several chapters throughout the state will meet with her there. Mrs. Myrtle Burton of Jamestown, department president, will meet for a conference with Mrs. Touissant at Fargo. The Fargo chapter will be hostess to the entire group. Entertainment will con- | | War Memorial building, members wifl j continue study of Chapter XI on |“Judgment and Understanding” of Charles Fillmore’s “Christian Heal- ing.” Miss Bertha Schulz will con- duct, the meditation period and roll call will be answered with Biblical quotations. 1 | : ° | Buckinghams Arrive | To Live in Bismarck | Dr. and Mrs. T. W. Buckingham | (Lorraine Bohlig), who were married |April 9 in Philadelphia, Pa., where | Dr. Buckingham has been taking post graduate work for several months, {have arrived in Bismarck to make {their home. They are residing at 105 Sixth St. |: The couple drove from Philadelphia {and before coming here spent some {time with Mrs. Buckingham’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Bohlig of Fargo. Both Dr. and Mrs. Buckingham are | former residents of the city, the form- er having maintained his office in | the Cowan building during his absence. Mrs. Buckingham was employed by the |state board of administration until | shortly before her marriage. * % Miss Myrtle Swenson Is Bride in Montana ; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Swenson, 416 Thayer avenue, Wednesday announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Myrtle Jennie Swenson, to Peter Baumgartner, which occurred Satur- day at Billings, Mont. For the ceremony, which was per- jformed in the presence of a few |friendg of the couple, the bride wore a white crepe ensemble and a cor- sage bouquet. Mr. Baumgartner is playing with the orchestra which was known as the Four Aces during an engagement at Mandan and which is now at Glas- gow, where he and his bride will be at home temporarily. During the winter months he played in one of the Bismarck night clubs. eR Coming from Reedsville, W. Va., to ‘care for business matters in Bismarck, | which they have maintained as their legal residence, and to attend the Pioneer Days celebration were Mr. and Mrs. Alfred 8. Dale. They ar- jrived Tuesday and will be house |guests of Mrs. G. A. Hample, 234 | Thayer avenue, west, until after the Independence Day week-end. Mr. Dale is working as an auditor with i resettlement administration and now is at Reedsville where the firat of the homestead projects fostered by Mrs. Franklin D, Roosevelt is being carried on. * * * Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Osmundson, Mason apartments, are home from a two-month vacation in Oregon, most jof which was spent at a cottage on |the Willamette river close to Port- jland. The Osmundsons formerly {lived in Oregon and they visited friends at many points along the jeoast. En route home they were at Spokane, Wash., for a few days and were at Billings Mont., for about a week. Mr. and Mrs. Osmundson and Mr. and Mrs, W. 8. Ayers, 220 Avenue A, west, were together for part of the time while the Ayers, who returned a few weeks ago, were in the west. * % Guests arriving Tuesday at the home of Judge Alexander G. Burr and his sister, Miss Anna D. Burr, 702 Fourth 8t., for the Pioneer Days cel- ebration were their sisters, Miss Elsi2 Burr of Devils Lake and Miss Cath- erine Burr of Bottineau, and Judge Burr’s son and daughter-in-law, Mr and Mrs. A. C. Burr, and their sons, |Alexander IV and John Robert, of |New Wilmington, Pa. The Misses |Burr expect to remain for a few \weeks and the A. C. Burr family will [leave in about 10 days for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Puller of Cavalier. Mr. Burr is having @ vacation from his duties as dean of Westminster college of New Wilming- ton, * ek Mr. and Mrs. John A. Graham, 905 Tenth St., leave Thursday morning by motor for Los Angeles, Calif., where they will attend the national Elks convention opening June 12. Mr. Graham is exalted ruler of the local lodge and is serving as its official delegate to the conclave. En route they will tour Yellowstone National and jother parks and will make # stop at Salt Lake City, Utah, where Mrs. Graham formerly lived, to visit friends. In Los Angeles, they will be guests of |Mr. Graham’s brother and sister-in- |law,-Mr. and Mrs. Walter Graham, | who formerly lived at Wilton. On the |way home, they will drive along the coast. They expect to be away for a month. * ke * Mrs. Oliver Lundquist, 404 Mandan, will have as house guests over the | week-end of the Fourth, Mr. and Mrs. | Elmer Floback, Minneapolis, and Mr. |and Mrs: James Hasight, also of Min- |neapolis. Mrs. Floback and Mrs. 5 = SILK DRESSES SILK HOSE . “Regular,” full fashioned, 44c WASH FROCKS silk chiffon or service; all new shades = -& LS yaiues THURSDAY-FRIDAY CULOTTES Me. Regular values to $5.00, NOW..... ANKLETS Ladies and Misses, assurted color] OS aad patterns..... e Ladies’ White Sports Voiles, Dot- a vanbaae Goodyear welt construction. lawns, crash Lace style; all white with x! and = wash- leather trim; leather sole. able crepes " GO SWIM SUITS Ladies’ and Misses’ 98c $3.00| MESH GIRDLE ) Beauty and the Beach. & Swing ” Pure wool worsted, For that aS hi i knitted in flocks of Particular 2 Skirts color combinations and flattering styles. Field, Stream, At the Country Club, Gees $139 Bridge or Afternoon Tea. Picturesque Court, prints and creamy pas- you'll find tels with a new inter- them tops for Girls’ pretation of flattery. F WOOL Lots of whites for the any sport. s = holiday ahead. Cool crash Sui ts A ROCKET VALUE cottons in we at many new Fancy color combi- Aes nations... all sizes. color BLOUSES In white and pastels... permanent finish corgandy. Ladies’ Sport Shoes Fashionable square toe ..» Soft white Elk up- ... Leather sole. $498 rocket value. Simply Devastating K body ventilat- S ea nok tikes tine too... 98c Children'sW biteShoes Valuesformerlyto 1.98. Straps, Oxfords, Ties, io all sizes ... ~ WEDNESDAY, JULY Haaight are nieces of Mrs. Lundquist. They expect to return Tuesday, July 7, to Minneapolis, and will be accom- Panied by Miss Doris Lundquist, who will spend two weeks visiting with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. H. O! » Minneapolis. Dur- ing that time Lundquist and Mr, and Mrs. Olness will go to Green Lake and Willmar, Minn., to visit with friends. ee 4% Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hopton, 807 Fourth St., have as guests several relatives who chose the time of the Pioneer Days celebration to come to Bismarck. They are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Hopton, and his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Hopton, and their daugh- ter, Letitia, all of Marseille, Ill. On July 5, the Hoptons and their visitors will go to Detroit Lakes for a week’s outing. Before coming here, the guests visited at Regan, which for- merly was their home, and at Hurds- field. es ee Guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Sleight, 212 Second street, for the past week were Mr. Sleight’s sis- ter, Mrs. P, B. Harding, and daughter, Harriet, Ann Arbor, Mich. and Mrs. George Wismer and three grand- children, Bernice, Carrie and Fred- eri¢k, Detroit, Mich. The party left Tuesday to spend a week at the home of Mrs. Harding's brother and sister- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sleight of New England. After leaving New England they expect to motor through Yellowstone National park. ** % Mr. and Mrs. Helge A. Zethren, 406 Mandan 8t., leave Thursday for a two or three week motor trip in the east. From Bismarck they drive to Chicago and then to South Bend, Ind., where they will be guests of Mrs. Zethren’s sister, Mrs. E. O. Nelson. Then they go to West Point, N. Y., for a few days with his brother Geroge Zethren, @ cadet at ‘the United States Military academy. Returning home, they wil! take a route through northern Wis- consin and Michigan. eee Mrs. J. L. Scharff and sons, James and John, Jr., of 812 Main avenue, left Tuesday by motor for a several months’ visit with relatives and friends at Yakima and Spokane, Wash. En route they will visit sis- ters of Mrs. Scharff at Beach and Golva. Miss Mabel Smith, 711 Ave- nue A, will take over Mrs. Scharff's duties as financial secretary of John T. Yates Grove No. 19, Woodmen Circle, during her absence. eR Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dohn, 832 Mandan 8t., and Mr. and Mrs. William Oelke, New Leipzig, left Tuesday for a three weeks motor trip to the west coast. They intend to make stops at various cities en route, including Sid- ney and Billings, Mont., and Spokane and Seattle, Wash. George Dohn, Jr., accompanied them to Laurtl, Mont., where he will visit with his aunt and uncle, Mr. _ Mrs. James Grady. * *% Mrs, B. E. Hersey of Los Angeles, Calif., who is making her first visit to Bismarck in 17-years at the’ time of the Pioneer Days festival, arrived Tuesday and is the guest of her sis- ter, Mrs. J, K. Smith, and her brother, William Fogerstrom, both of 319 Sev- enth St. Mrs. Hersey is the former Miss Lillian and was born and reared in Bismarck. She expects to er a . month or two. Rev. Thomas J. Tracy came Tues- day evening to assume his duties as one of the three assistant pastors of St. Mary's procathedral. Since his or- dination to the priesthood which was solemnized in the procathedral here June 2, Rev. Tracy has been with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Tracy of St. Paul. * * % Mrs. Mabel C. Lindgren of Minot, state manager of the Woodmen Circle, left for home Tuesday after visiting her daughter, Miss Elma Lindgren, 711 Avenue A, since Sunday. Mrs. Lindgren was, returning from the regional convention of the Woodmen organization held recently at Hollis- ter, Mo. * 8 * Mrs. L. C. Jones, 807 Fourth street, arrived home Tuesday from Chicago, where she visited with her son, Don- ald, and her brother, P. J. Coolidge, and her sister, Mrs. H. N. Barrell. ee % Miss Margaret Mundy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Mundy, 232 Ave- nue B west, left Friday for a two weeks’ stay at Shoreham, Minn. She and pastel in many 49: «79° $463 vered Wagon your favorite brand of BEER perfectly chilled i in connection with O’BRIEN’S CAFE Air-conditioned 412 Broadway An Appreciation I wish, to take this means of thanking the voters for the generous support given to my can- didacy for re-election as County Superintendent of Schools of Burleigh County. Your continued support will be appreci. ated. s Marie Huber. ~ (Pol. Adv.) 1, 1950 will be the’ guest of Mr, and Mrs. John Sullivan, Mandan, at their sum- mer cottage be ca mae Miss Aldyth Ward, rural Bismarck, will have as her guests this week-end Mrs. George ‘Robinson and daughter, Blizabeth, and Mrs. Annie Clark all of Coleharbor. — —_-—* | Church Societies | P imei hcaritcarcbarc 4 corte Salvation Army Home League ‘There will be a meeting of the Sal- vation Army Home League at 2:30 Pp. a etched in the Salvation Army citadel. RECRUITING CONTINUES Hong Kong, July 1.—(®)—Military recruiting continued in southwest China Wednesday as commanders of the anti-Japanese “salvation” army took over their posts, reports from Canton said. ADD PLANE TO LINE St. Paul, July 1.—()—Northwest Airlines Wednesday added a fifth daily trip between the Twin Cities and Chicago to take care of increased traffic. The non-stop ‘flight was christened “The Commuter.” | More than 255,000,000 tons of eggs, dried_and frozen, were imported by the United States from China in 1935, late H. W. Steagall. | GROUP 1 75 PAIRS of all white and a few colored patents. For- merly $2.95, at | ALL SIZES GROUP 2 100 PAIRS of all white, black and blue. For- merly at $2.95 to $4.95, at .. SEE ne You will want two or three pairs of these shoes —— = ‘eral commission conferred wtih A. F. Miklethun Offered | Boneer, Jr, manager of iat sae ee State Job by Hopton 'concersine semis facture. Rips Senator John Miklethun of shee BOY DROWNS a cueET. City has been offered the post 0! Watford City, N. D. July 1 By a ee ee tie of tne hae in| FONRTEL MEH, TS ee agturcay surance department, Commissioner ig chee st at he ss att Harold Hopton announced Wednes-| oor pore, Sut'viving are the P pel day. Commissioner Hopton said that! ir ang wis, ©. P. Hegland, @ @/in the event Senator Miklethun does pn. sisters. not accept, he will take over the du-/ ties of the division head himself until’ completion of his term in January. | MANCHESTER LEAVES FARGO | Fargo, N.“D., July 1—(®)—T. M.| Manchester, president of the Man-; chester Biscuit company of Fargo, has) been elected president of the Union) Biscuit company, St. Louis, and will) leave soon for that city to take charge, of the organization, succeeding the, I MARRIED A FRAUD! See “FORGOTTEN FACES” Paramount Today ANARCHIST IS SUICIDE Nice, France, July 1—(#)—Alexan- dee Berkman, the internationally- known anarchist, died June 28 in 8 hospital here of a self-inflicted aa wound, it was disclosed Wednesday. | ALLL ELT EE BUDWEISER Now lic No Charge for the Bottle MEETING AT FORKS Grand Forks, N. D., July 1—(@)—| Meeting here to discuss grain storage on farms and to consider state mill affairs, members of the state indus: SENSATIONAL SHOE Sate! JUST IN TIME FOR THAT SECOND PAIR We have grouped these in 4 prices. All shoes have sold from $2.95 to $4.95 formerly. " 100 PAIRS of black patents, blue kid, brown and grey. For- merly $2.95 to $4.95 ......-- Low-Hi-Medium Heels! Straps - Ties - Sportox - Sandals GROUP 4 50 PAIRS of $ 95 whites, hile patents, blac kid. Formerly $3.95 to $4.95. at these remarkably low prices. So hurry. « “mires BISMARCK The following stores HOUSEWIVES! Buy Your GROCERIES Thursday & Friday THIS WEEK | BECAUSE MOST BISMARCK GROCERY STORES WILL BE Closed All Day Saturday order that their employes may participate in Fourth of July activities as well as the Pioneer Days Festival: ‘ E, A. BROWN GROCERY LOGAN’S CARL’S GROCERY =~ MARCOVITZ GROCERY DICK’S GROCERY NATIONAL. TEA CO. GUSSNER’S RED OWL FOOD STORES (We also have been informed that at least five other Bismarck grocery stores will be closed all day Saturday, July 4.) WATCH THURSDAY'S TRIBUNE FOR GROCERY ADVERTISEMENTS FRUITS VEGETABLES JULY 4 definitely have decided to close for Independence Day, in ZERR’S GROCERY ~- in, 1 . i f N c es tiene cl won