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} sina Party for 300 Guests Is Giv- iss Hazel Nassif Is Bride In Church Ceremony Sunday Wedding Dinner and Dancing |9>d George Nassif, son of Mr. and g _ u S| sera, Carl G. Nasaif’of Sioux City, Ia ‘The ceremony was read at 3 p. in St. George's Episcopal church, eltar of which was decorated with a profusion of flowers and tapers, by A wedding dinner for 300 guests Rey Nae, Eiswortny rector. served in the World War Memorial * building dining room and a dancing en During Evening Will Soon be Here Take advantage of the special low prices the State Fur Co. is offering this week and se- “lect your Fur Coat from our complete line of the most beautiful styles ever offered. State Fur Coats are made of the choicest pelts and linings, and are fully re-inforced to sive many years of satisfac- tory wear. Special this week Guaranteed Northern Seal Coats as low as $69 Mave your fur coats repaired, relined, or restyled now, and have them ready when needed, STATE FUR CO. Manufacturing Furriers Next to Heskins-Meyer Grand Prize will bea : Beautiful Magic Chef Gas Range DAILY PRIZES Food and Merchandise Prizes Given Each Day NOTE: You must register each day to be eligible for the grand prize. Y SOCIETY and CLUBS , jcouple For the wedding, the bride was jowned in white satin and she carried an arm bouquet of white roses. Her bridesmaids, Miss Josephine Nassif, her sister, and Miss Angeline Azar, School coniieted both were gowned th velvet in an or- ange shade and had bouquets to harmonise with their frocks. , Edward Azar of this city and Or- lando Nassif of Sioux City, Ia., were the bridegroom's attendants. Attending the ceremony and the events afterward were relatives of the from Dickinson, Williston, Rugby, McClusky, Cedar Rapids and jioux City, Ia., and St. Paul. Following the service, there was a wedding procession with a police es- cort. During the dinner there were a number of talks with Floyd Nassif ot Cedar Rapids acting as toastmaster. The White Jackets orchestra of this city played for dancing. - The bride was born and reared in Bismarck. Mr. Nassif has been & resi- dent here for the last two years. eee To Attend Episcopal Meeting at Dickinson Rev. N. E. Elsworth, pastor of St. George's Episcopal church, and Mrs. Elsworth expect to go to Dickinson late in the week to attend the annual convocation of North Dakota Episco- pal churches, to be held there Sept. 20-21. Lay delegates from the local congregation will be named at a meeting Tuesday evening. Meetings of Clubs | And Social Groups Girls’ Nonpartisan Club 505 Girls’ Nonpartisan Club No. 505 will meet at 8 p. m., Tuesday, in the American Legion Auxiliary room, ‘World War Memorial building. ee * Chapter N, P.E.O. The postponed meeting of Chapter N, P.EO. Sisterhood, will be held at 8 p. m., Monday, with the Misses Laura B. and Mae Sanderson of 828 Seventh St., as hostesses. x * V.F.W. Auxiliary There will be a regular meeting of the Auxiliary to Gilbert N. Nelson Post 1326, Veterans of Foreign Wars, at 8 p. m., Wednesday, in the Grand Pacific hotel parlor. Church Societies McCabe M. E., W.H.M.S. Mrs. Ray Robinson will be hostess for a meeting of the McCabe Meth- odist Episcopal church Women’s Home Missionary society at 2:30 p. m., Tuesday, in her home, 1010 Avenue E. | fj Mrs. Ray Smith will be program | jij leader. ese % Trinity Lutheran Girls’ Club Teachers and other young women who recently have arrived in the city are invited to attend a regular meet- ing of the Trinity Lutheran Girls’ club at 8 p. m., Tuesday, in the Trin- ity Luthearn church parlors. Mrs. O. | f A. Convert and Miss Elvina Nelsor are to be hostesses. O.E.S. Members From Steele to Be Guests About 16 members of the newly in- stituted Chapter 118 of Steele are ex- ected to attend as guests when Bis- marck Chapter No. 11, Order of the Eastern Star, meets at 8 p. m. Tues- day in the Masonic temple. There will be balloting and also initiatory exercises. ** * Norwegian Lodge to Hold Dancing Party Younger members of the Sons and Daughters of Norway lodge are mak- ing preparations for the first social affair of the fall and winter schedule, which is planned for Wednesday eve- ning in the A.O.U.W. hall. The Cap- ital Five will provide music for danc- ing, beginning at 9 o'clock. Lodge members and their friends are in- vited. x“ * * Fortnightly Club to Open Its 39th Season The Fortnightly club has chosen the subject, “America, Yesterday and Today,” for its 39th season which will be opened Wednesday with a meeting at 3 p. m., in the home of Mrs. C. W. Moses, 216 Park St. { The club, organized in 1897 ahd af- fillated with the North Dakota Fed- eration of Women’s clubs in 1901, is headed this season by Mrs. J. E. Davis, Guest day is set for Feb. 17, and another variation in the program will be the luncheon, May 12, mark- ing the end of the year. Among topics assigned to members for the various meetings are: Age of Exploration, Mrs, R. W. Lumry; Per- fod of Colonization, Mrs. Charles R. Robertson; The Struggle for a Con- tinent, Mrs. Clell G. Gannon; John Marshall, Mrs, W. L. Nuessle; The Constitution of the United States, Miss Anna D, Burr; The Dawn of National Consciousness, Mrs. C. L. Young; Jefferson and Democracy, Mrs. John Burke; The Jacksonian Epoch, Mrs. George F. Bird; Western Expansion, Mrs. M. E. Tindall; The History of Financial Legislation, Mrs. Thomas J. Haggerty; Our Wonder- Jand of Bureaucracy, Mre. Moses; Horace Mann and Institutions of Learning, Mrs. Joseph 8. Leonard; ‘The Old Man Eloquent, Miss Laura B. Sanderson; Races and Immigrants THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1936 Jor the United States, Mrs. William | Lai McKinley and Roosevelt, | Mrs, A. M. Christianson; Reeent De- | velopment in Music, Mrs. Davis, and j America as a World Power, Mrs. Philip J. Meyer. ze * Will Launch Baptist Young People’s Work | Rev. W. H. Bayles, Huron, 8. D., will jassist the First Baptist congregation in setting up the year’s young people's and Sunday school program at an open forum session called in the church at 7:30 p. m., Tuesday. All aicembers of the church are invited by Rev. Ellis L. Jackson, pastor. Rev. ‘Bayles is a youth worker for the Ba; ist denomination. ee *% Little Movie Actress Visiting in Bismarck Hazel Waite, one of the child act- resses and dancers of Hollywood, Calif., who has appeared in productions star- ring Shirley Temple during the last year, with her brother, Frank Arthur, and her mother, Mrs. Frank Waite, is visiting this week in the home of Mr. Hazel is 8 years old. Mines. Waite and Werre are cousins. The visitors also are being entertained in the home of Mr. and Mrs. George J. Schultz, 406 Seventeenth St., parents cf Mrs. Werre. The Waites have been in Chicago and now are returning to Hollywood. Guests in the Werre hime over the {week-end also included Mr. and Mrs. Jack Mathewson of Steele. * % % ‘The 82nd birthday anniversary of Mrs. Elizabeth Cunz, 508 Tenth St., south, occurring Sunday, was ob- served with a quiet family gathering. No more elaborate celebration was planned because of the blindness of Mrs. Cunz. With her were ner chil- dren, Mrs. Marion Lenihan and James G. Longmuir, eight grand- children and four great-grandchil- dren. Mrs. Cunz received several friends. ee % Mr. and Mrs. William R. Moses of| Springfield. Ohio, were week-end guests of their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Moses, 216 Park St. They were on their way to Pullman, Wash., where Mr. Moses is to be in- | structor in English at the University of Washington. FALL Teacher For appointment OPENS THIS WEEK Mrs. Arthur Bauer Home Studio—15 Sixth Street TERM of Piano its telephone 1425 and Mrs. Fred Werre, 216 Second St. 8 gifts, including a birthday cake, from Club Program Deals In Patriotic Topics Two discussions, the first on the American flag. taking in the origin of the emblem and the significance: of | the flag salute, and the second on fhe United States constitution, are! planned for the meéting of Town-| |send Club No. 1 at 8. p. m.,, Tues- {_ Dr. Fred E. Stockton of Fargo and iday, in the Burleigh county court room. There also will be vocal and instrumental numbers. The public is; invited. xe * Frank Paris, 404 Fifth 8t., has been, engaged to teach physical education and English in the Breckenridge, Minn,, high school and has entered; upon her new duties. Miss Paris is, @ graduate of the University of North Dakota. Paris, 1936 graduate of Bismarck hig] school, left Sunday for the North Da: kota Agricultural college to com: mence her freshman year. es % T. Trobaugh of Young, Ariz. a here for a brief visit with his mothe Mrs. Margaret Buckley, 400 Fourt! it. se & Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Mathewson and daughter, Miss Vera, arrived home Sunday evening from a week-end outing at Bemidji, Minn. (Additional Society on Page Three) Girls! Learn Beauty Culture As Taught by \ Minette rite for full parti- about our Startling Finance Plan, Attend School now—Pay later, Minette Beauty School Fargo, North Dakota NEW ¢ FASTER SCHEDULES Bismarck To Omaha 4% HI Ticket Office Prince Hotel Phone ‘300 ww HANFORD tn lines with Natural Mrs. Hollis will do her cooking City Auditorium Under Personal Direction of MRS. VIOLET M. HOLLIS Nationally famous Home Service authority GAS WED. - THURS. - FRI Every Woman In This Territory Is Cordially Invited. Absolutely No Charge. School Sponsored by and show its many advantages Miss Aldeen Paris, daughter of Mrs. | Her sister, Miss Jeanne; former employee of The Tribune, is) | | { { TOMORROW ONLY HES ERICK JA u RED The flattering beauty of Frederick-James Furs is an old story, but the chic, the subtle elegance of these excit- ing new 1936 modes is something to grow ecstatic about! They are all here for you at prices amazingly low, despite rapidly rising fur markets. We know these values cannot possibly be repeated next winter... they are possible only because of our raw fur purchases last Febru- ary and March. pensive. and up. your selection. ONE MORE DAY TUESDAY, SEPT. 15th Bismarck FREE COOKING SCHOOL 2 P. M. for 3 Day Session at News Frederick-James Furs are smart but not necessarily ex- Prices from $100.00 A small deposit will reserve 1 fo é Every woman attending the school will be well repaid with new and worthwhile cooking news. Mrs. Hollis will demon- strate new and better methods as well as . learn what’s new in the art of cookery. Montana-Dakota Utilities Compan giving recipes for new and tempting dishes. Plan to attend every session— September P.M. ® 16-17-18 Daily