The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 27, 1936, Page 4

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pagina —— oclety ‘Swish’ Is Keynote O. B. Olsons Announce Daughter’s Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Olson, 221 Fifth Bt, announce the engagement of their daughter, Viola Helen, to Claud E. ‘Cummins, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Cummins of Seattle, Wash. The marriage will take place sometime in the early fall. Miss Olson was formerly employed in the Northwestern Bell Telephone Company in Bismarck, but at present she is employed with the same com- pany in ere * Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Myers and son, Dick, 709 First St., and Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Myers, have been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Myers, Fargo, They returned to Bismarck ‘Wednesday. They were in Fargo for the wedding of their brother, James. * % % Mr. and. Mrs. D. D. Prust, 311 Boulevard Ave., have as guests, Mr. and Mrs. Joe E. Green and children, |evening clothes, she runs—not sweeps - Joan and Bobby, ofEscanaba, Mich.,|—along. Worse she grasps both sides who are on their way to Yeliowstone |cf her long gown when she starts up park. They arrived Tuesday and will |2 flight of stairs. leave Friday of this week. * % % Miss Mary Kellogg of Ellendale is Pert who was born in India (her spending Thursday and Friday of this week at the home of her sister, Mrs. Mark Wyncoop, 920 Eighth St. Rain does not clear the air of im- purities, according to tests made in 14 American industrial cities by the U. 8. Public Health Service. = help you GET THEM READY |} FOR SCHOOL ii] The new things for tots and sub- debs are arriving daily, and such |} lovely ones. You can dress them neatly and economically at Tots & Teens | 318 Main J | whenever possible. A quarter of an ‘ To Correct Style Famous Clothes Designer As- | serts True Chic Is Impos- sible Without It | By MARIAN YOUNG (NEA Service Staff Correspondent) New York.—“Women should learn to swish!” From Nina Price, who has swished herself right into the profession of jfashion consultant and turns ugly | |Gucklings into birds of paradise, | comes this counsel. Swishing, says Mrs. Price, is rule No. 1 for Chic. “If she doesn't swish, she doesn’t | \curry her clothes well,” Mrs. Price in- ists. “The best way to go about mas- tering the art is to cast off all the so- | ,called comfortable, mannish lounging | | pajamas, unfitted, knee-length bath- |robes (left-overs from college days) |and, in their place, substitute house | coats and hostess gowns. | “The non-swisher slumps in the |saddle, making her tailored suit look | like a sack of potatoes with a string {around the middle of it. Or, when in | Evolves Rules for Chic The sleek, dark-haired fashion ex- Nina Price educated in Europe (she remembers | inch in width of brim or height of |father was a British army officer), history by recalling clothes worn dur-|crown can make or ruin you. See ling the various periods), and who that your colffure has some relation |Married and has lived in this coun-'to the shape of your head and face. jtty twenty years, believes there are! «Remember that chic is more to |Gefinitely followable rules to guide in-| pe desired than mere prettiness. The vee dressing. Among them are! peautiful but dumb have no place in ects the sophisticated whirl of today. inet Your wardrobe at the begin-| «5. sure you are right, then swish!” ning of each season. Get at it early, N P; bout fift |Sc as to have the full season's joy out} Nina Price greets about fifty per lof it. If you can't purchase every- {cet of her clicnts with a brief lec- thing at once, get what you can, but | ‘te on the importance of good pos- |stick to your plan. Don't be tempted | ‘Ure and proper corseting. Ke men (Ehe \by bargains unless they fit into the | !@¥S down a few don’t for all. jplan. Bargains to some women are, “Don't economize on classics. To jlike strong drink to some men. In| buy the wrong suit or coat is an ex- |both cases, the results generally are bensive mistake. Get the right coat, jtegrets and headaches. and there's no reason why you can’t j Against False Economy Wear it year after year. “Have as few clothes as are com-| “Don't try to look like someone else. | patible with your mode of life. Have | Gct a vision of what you could be at | Decide on a color | Your best, then work toward that.” |scheme and stick to it. This makes| Right here is where Mrs. Price |your accessories interchangeable. =| Comes in. She maintains that it is | “Have your hats made to order |4ifficult for anyone to be objective about herself and that many a girl has possibilities she never dreamed |these the tops. You'll like these smart Fall Oxfords in a gala array of swanky styles, and at just the right price! Come in and choose yours today! KILTIES ... SQUARE TOE ... MONK STYLE . +» Ruffie and Smooth Le Ui as {ef. To any client, Nina Price is as \levish with praise as with criticism. “Don't be sloppy and save your eccasions,” the fashion consultant continued. “You never know who you will meet the very day you look your worst. “Don’t economize on cleaning bills. Proper and frequent cleanings pro- long the life of your clothes and give you that fresh look so essential to good grooming.” | Three Types Seek Advice The women who come to the Price studio can be divided, as far as mo- tive is concerned, into about three |categorics. There is the woman who is just plain tired of looking dowdy. The girl who hasn't time to shop, {and hates to do it, anyway. The {woman who wants to win or win back ® man’s attentions. smart looking hess of collecting fine feathers to make a bird isn’t really as simple as it sounds. She has to deal not oniy with - figure eccentricities and the like, but, very often, with prides and prejudices the client has built up over a period of years. “Becoming smart doesn’t just hap- pen. If a woman has been dowdy for j20 years, it takes more than one Season, or even three, to get her edu- cated to the idea of choosing the right clothes and, what's more, know- ing how to wear them. However, once the change takes place, you can’t even get her to admit that she ever owned such a thing as a wrap-around |house dress or a ‘hat that went with | everything’.” Tavis Music Co. ANNOUNCES New and improved ra- dio service department. D. L. Anderson in charge. Guaranteed Service All Radios Phone 762 * ot STUDENTS Here’sa Buy | need New Revised Edition Webster’s Practical DICTIONARY Self-pronouncing Based upon the facts and infor- mation, rules for punctuation, eign phrases, latest U. Perfect | You the protection | “2 a original founda- tien lala by NOAH =—A._ Reg, $1.00 WEBSTER, Ilus- ° ole trated profusely _ Value iabilit: with fall color | and halt-tone While they last Y plates, Contains cals Insurarice Policy. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” ‘ Bismarck 218 Broadway for- words, census, desens other features. ate- Phone 577 good clothes for so-called important | Mrs. Price admits that the busi- | 5 Men From Slope Enlisted in Navy | Five Missouri Slope men, one of them: from Bismarck, have been ac- | cepted for enlistment in the U. 8. imavy as the Bismarck recruiting | office’s quota for September. | The men chosen are Frederick |Yochim, Bismarck; Frederick Swan- 'son, Dickinson; Robert » |Harmon; Robert Nehl, Watauga, |S. D., and George Kelsch, Bentley. They will leave for Minneapolis | Sept.) 8, where they will be given a ; final) examination and, if successful, j fent |to the U. S, naval trait sta- jtion at Great Lakes, Ill. There they will undergo @ three-month training | period. They will then be assigned either to a trade school or to one of | the ships of the U. 8. navy. ‘Five Are Killed When | Truck Hits Guard Rail Darlington, Md., Aug. 27.—()}—Five jpersons were killed and 16 injured jearly today as a truck loaded with jiaborers crashed through a guard rail jand over a 50-foot embankment at the Conowingo dam bridge near here. | The injured were taken to a hos- pital. Miss Elizabeth Stewart, super- lintendent of the hospital, said the \injured were in serious condition. One hile said to be dying. Two New Classes Are Now Open to Adults Taxidermy and wood turning are two new classes being offered by the edult education program in this dis- HAPPY RELIEF FROM PAINFUL BACKACHE Caused by Tired Kidneys Many of those gnawing, nagging, Painful backaches people blame on colds or strains are often caused by | tired) kidneys—and may be relieved | when treated in the right way. The kidneys are one of Nature's chief ways of taking acids and wastes out of the blood. A healthy person should pass about 3 pints a day and so get rid of more than 3 pounds of waste matter. If the 15 miles of kidney tubes and filters don’t work well, waste stays in the body and may become poisonous It may start nagging backaches, leg pains, loss of tad and energy, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. Don't let it lay you up. Ask your druggist for Doan’s Pills | —used successfully by millions for over zs years. They give happy reliet and will help to flush out the 15 miles of kidney tube: Doan's Pills. | | THE CAPITAL Commercial College (Incorporated) 314!3 Main Avenue Phone 121 Bismarck, North Dakota The fall term of the Capital Commercial College will be- | gin Tuesday, September 1. if Enroll early as we expect a \f full attendance. We have modern and up-to-date equipment .and furniture for two hundred students. Why attend a commercial school in other places when you have a better one at home? We have finer equipment, more instruc- tors, more individual instruction, ‘# and more positions to fill than any similar school we know of. A commercial course takes one to the largest cities, into the largest business, into the largest banks and business concerns, and it gives the best opportunities for advancement. Our students are employed everywhere. Permanent positions are one of the! many advantages of a Com- mercial College. A short time ago a former student told us that he had not missed a day's pay in fourteen years; a lady told us that she had not missed a pay- day in thirteen years; We know of several former students in this city who have not missed a pay- day in fifteen years. Secretaries and bookkeepers are more stead- ily employed than any other class of labor. i Commercial banking employs many of our students. We were checking up on our former stu- dents a short time ago, and found that one was in the largest bank in Chicago, one in the largest bank in New York city, one in the largest bank in Saint Paul. one in the largest bank in Los Angeles; besides, more than a i} dozen are employed in the Bank |f of North Dakota and other Bis- iff marck Banks. A Banking Course \f Pays. jf, We have many new business ma- chines: the Ediphone, the Comp- tometer, the Bank Posting Ma- || chine, the Monrose Calculator, the ‘| Mimeograph, and several adding and subtracting machines. Others are being constantly added. Take a Commercial Course before it is too late. If you look around you, you will notice that all suc- cessful business concerns are run by men who have started out in the right way; they took a Com- mercial Course to begin with. Our students are empleyed by the U. 8. Government in both the Departmental and Field Service and in all the local activities; in all departments of the State Gov- ernment; in County Court Houses, in Banking and large business month’s pay. are very low. Students may en- ter at any time. The Capital Commercial College if is heated with both steam and gas in the winter, and Is electric- ally, cooled and electrically venti- lated in the summer. poral we have one of sea finest. largest, and best equippe commercial schools in the North- weat. Call on us or write us for information. | |Robert E. Jack, President, | Wm. G. Ellis, Sec.-Treas, trict, according to H. N. Jenson, super- visor. A class in lip-reading will also be offered if there is sufficient inter- est. Those interested may call the district office in the Will school, phone 2019, for further information. a Walk oa | Today’s Recipe | o——_—__ Fresh Vegetables Salad for Three 2-3 cup cooked lima beans, % cup sliced cucumbers, 1 cup cooked as- Paragus, % cup cooked cauliflower, 1 tablespoon chopped onions, 2 table- spoons chopped green peppers, 3 tablespoons sliced radishes, 4 tea- spoon salt, % teaspoon celery salt, % With a dramatic Presentation of suedes and combina- tions. Round toes. Square toes, platoes and all the new heel heights in this group. tailored and fitted. eas FASHION | FLASHES LADIES’ FINE SILK CREPE SLIPS’. An assortment of charming $ | 49 styles from' which to make se- ® lections. ° V Pace neck or plain THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1936 7 teaspoon pepper, % cup French dress- ing. Rub the salad bowl with garlic. Add rest of ingredients, chill, Stir every 15. minutes to blend dressing thoroughly. Add bits of crisp lettuce and serve. Scrambled Eggs and Minced Ham Three) i 2’ tablespoons butter, % cup minced | paprika. ham, % teaspoon chopped parsley, 4% teaspoon salt, % teaspoon pepper, 3 eges ten, 2 tablespoons milk. Melt" butter in frying pan. Add rest of ingredients, combined. Cook slow- ly and stir constantly until mixture becomes creamy. Serve immediately on warm platter, surround with toast. (Canned minced ham can be used). * Salmon 2-3 cup milk, % cup soft bread, 2 eggs or 4 yolks, 2-3 cup salmon, 1 tea- pan of hot water and bake 25 minutes in moderate oven. Let stand 5 minutes, unmold carefully. Surround with egg sai Knock—Knock. ..Who's there? Elmbrook! Your FALL Elmbrook manner. trapped Raccoon. lines. * in common. - Price. Smarter by SILK BLOUSES For Fall § l 98 Co: The wanted sare included: to C. COAT Styled correctly, in the exclusive Replete with luxurious furs of Canadian Wolf, French Beaver,, Fox and November Spirited tight twisted tweeds and downy fleeces created with but a single purpose. The 1936 Silhouette. Some of them flare gracefully along the princess Others are swaggery and boxey. They have but one feature An exceptionally low QoY day ... Loviier ‘5° Collingwood understands the appeal of many types, they are individual and never monotonous. gorgeous new fabric is included in our fall showing. Lavishly done up with jeweled buttons, Cire’ and many other decorative motifs. cted of pliable Elk leather in a choice of several popular styles and colors. uare and round toe styles ther soles. Widths AA $7.85 Every. new head: line. Every new color and fabric ay

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