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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1925 i Social and Personal if W. C. T. U. Meet Here September 24 Plans for the state convention of thp Woman’s Christian Temperance Union to he held in Bismarck Sep tember 24 to 27 were made Tuesday evening at the meeting of the Bis marck Union in the parlors of the .McCabe Methodist Episcopal church. Committee conferences and gen eral discussion of the convention fea tured the business session. Delegates were chosen as follows: Mrs. William Suckow, Mrs. W. F. Reynolds, Mrs. R. C. Goddard. Mrs. F. L. Watkins led in the dis cussion of the lesson topic, “Building the Futura for Home and State." The hostesses, Misses Viola Builey, Gladys Moffit and Bertha Morgan, served a refreshment course at the conclusion of the evening. Mrs. Calvin Is Hostess at Bridge Six tables of bridge were entertain ed Tuesday evening in the home of Mrs. Thomas Galvin, 315 Washing ton. Guests were members of the St. Rose division, Cutholic Women’s Mis sionary Society. Honors in the games were won by Mrs. L. Simons and Mrs. J. I*. Wag ner. The abundance of garden flowers used throughout the house formed a pretty setting for the evening’s play. A refreshment course was served aft er the games. VISITING FRIENDS HERE Mr .and Mrs. William A. Edwards of Tacoma, Washington, returning from a motor trip to the Atlantic coast, stopped in Bismarck today to visit friends. They will go on to Washburn to visit Mrs. I. V. Mann, a sister of Mrs. Edwards. Mr 3. Ed wards will be remembered in Bis marck as Miss Ethel liene Merry. She attended the grammar and high school in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Edwards will leave the latter part of the week for their ’home, stopping at Yellowstone National park. ENTERTAINED AT BIRTHDAY PARTY Mrs. W. J. Noggle entertained ten little girls at a party Tuesday after noon celebrating the tenth birthday of her daughter, lone Noggle. Games and contests were the amusements for the afternoon after which a lunch was served. Decorations of yellow were carried out in the lunch. A birthday cake lighted with candles was the centerpiece. Mrs. Noggle was nssisted by her oldest daughter and Miss Gene* Roh erty. MOTOR TO DETROIT, MICH Mrs. Stanley Albertson, who has been visiting with friends and rel atives in the city for the past month, accompanied by Miss Adele Kauff man, left this morning by car for her home in Detroit, Mich. Miss Kauffmun will the winter as Mrs. Albertson’s guest. Miss Kauffman has been bookkeep er at the A. W. Lucas store for some time. METHODIST LADIES TO MEET The meetings of the Methodist La dies Aid Society will be held as fol lows tomorrow afternoon: first divi sion, Mrs. Fred Romanowsky, 519 Fourth Street; second division, Mrs. C. A. Allen, <524 Tenth Street; third division, Mrs. R. W. Folsom, 412 Eighth Street; fourth division, Mrs. A. S. Dale, 215 Washington Avenue. LUTHERAN LADIES AID MEETS The Zion Lutheran Ladies Aid will meet at the home of Mrs. H. C. Muhl man, 320 Griffin Street, tomorrow afternoon. Important business is to he transacted and all are urged to at tend. D. A. R. LUNCHEON The Daughters of the American Revolution will have a luncheon Fri day noon at the Country club. The first regular meeting of the year will be held during the afternoon. ENTERTAINED AT SLUMBER PARTY Miss Vivian Martineson entertain ed the Salvation Army girl guards at a slumber party Monday night. VISITING HERE Mrs. Coe H. V. Kiebert and baby of Center are in the city, guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kiebert. RETURN HOME Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Hendershott have returned to their home in Ster ling after a business visit in the city. HAS RETURNED FROM VACATION Miss Alva Lahr Whitson has re turned from her vacation spent in lowa and Minnesota. VISITING HERE TODAY Miss Marjorie Fitzloff of Dickin son is in the city today, the guest of Miss Madge Runey. FROM BALDWIN C B. Anderson of Baldwin was in Bismarck on business yesterday. Use Gas. It’s the Scientific FueL The Weather Generally fair tonight and Thursday somewhat cooler tonight. BERGESON’S TAILORING MUST SATISFY YOU. * « • Bergeson's Quality-Style-Economy F. H. Peters Moves to Minot Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Peters will leave tomorrow for Minot to make their home. Mr. Peters, who for the past six years has been connected with the State Highway Commission in the capacity of chief Draftsman, has resigned his position to engage in business in Minot. He has leas ed one of the finest business loca tions in that city and expects to op en a stationery store in the near future. Mr. Peters has beep active in var ious organizations in Bismarck. He was prominently identified with the Masonic lodges, having been an of ficer in both the Blue Lodge and Chapter. Mrs. Peters, who was formerly Miss Harriet Foss of Minot, came to Bis marck five years ago. She has been active in musical circles, is an ac tive member of the Thursday music club and an qflficer of the Eastern Star. Children Guests of Mothers Club Mrs. Wijliar.i F. Harris, assisted by Mrs. R. M. Bergeson and Mrs. H. D. Shaft, entertained the members of the Mothers club and their chil drei) Tuesday afternoon in her home, 824 Fifth street. The afternoon was spent informal ly. Games were provided for the en tertainment of the children. A luncheon was served at the close of the afternoon. The first -regular meeting of the club for the year will be held Tues day, September 15, at the home of Mrs. Fryne Baker. ENTERTAIN FOR MISS KAUFFMAN Mi ss Addle Kauffman was guest of honor gt an informal picnic Mon day evening on the river hank south of town given by the members of her bridge club. There were eight guests in addition to the club mem bers. Mrs. Stanley Albertson of Detroit; Mich., was the only out of town guest. HOME FROM VACATION Miss Caroline McAllister of the Bank of North Dakota returned this week from Aberdeen and Brookings, S. D., where she has been spending her vacation. She also visited rela tives at Braddock. PRESBYTERIAN LADIES TO MEET The Presbyteriun Ladies Aid will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the church. The ladies are asked to bring needles and thimbles. A pot luck supper will be served at 0:30 o'clock. LEAVE FOR CALIFORNIA Mrs. Halloran and son, Terrence, left this morning for Watsonville, Calif., to spend the winter with Mrs. Ilallorun’s son, Father Leo, Halloran. Terrence will attend school in Cali fornia this winter. TO MOVE TO POLLOCK Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bayer left this morning for Pollock, S. D., to make their home. Mr. Bayer, who is em ployed by the Soo Railway Company, has hpen transferred. , VISITS DAUGHTER G. W. Howe of Long Beach, Calif., has gone to Jamestown to visit after being in the city for several days, the guest of his daughter. Mrs. Har old Wahl. MOTOR TO MINOT Misses Esther Burch, Olga Stein, Katherine Hawk, Muriel Hart and Mrs. Harold Wahl motored to Minot Saturday and remained over the week-end. ENTER HIGH SCHOOL William and Flora McAllister of Braddock will attend the Bismarck high school this winter. They are in the Freshmen class. TO ATTEND SCHOOL HERE 9 Miss Felucia Van Eeckhout and her brother, George, of Wabek, N. D., will attend the High school in Bis marck this winter. RETURNS FROM VACATION Miss Mary Schlenker of the Bank of North Dakotd has returr.Vd from a two weeks' vacation with relatives and friends at Minot and Fargo. DAUGHTER BORN Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Engelhart of Grassy Butte are the parents of a daughter, born Tuesday, September 1, at the Bismarck hospital. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. M. Eckrofh of Man dan, announce the birth of a son, Tuesday, September 1, at the St. Alexius hospital. SON BORN Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Overbee, Bis marck, announce the birth of a son, Tuesday, September 1, at the Bis marck hospital. HERE FROM TUTTLE Mr. and Mrs. Earl B. Sorenson of Tuttle, N. D., were in the city Tues day visiting friends. VISITING HERE Miss Luella Sandquist of Fargo is visiting in the city, the guest of Mrs. H. A. Gran. RETURNS FROM VISIT Miss Anita Cram has returned from a visit with relatives at Wi baux, Mont. HERE TUESDAY Mr. . (and Mrs. Ernest Lange of Wilton were in the city yesterday on business. RETURNS FROM VACATION Miss Milda Brelje has returned from a two weeks' vacation in Min neapolis. RETURNS HOME Mrs. J. E. MehlhofT of Linton has returned home after a short visit in the city. ON BUSINESS Louie Peterson of Painted Woods was in the city yesterday on busi ness. HERE YESTERDAY Miss Helen Thomas of Driscoll vis ited friends in Bismarck yesterday. HERE YESTERDAY Miss Anna Bosch of Linton was in the city yesterday on business. ON BUSINESS H. W. Price of Timmer was in the city Tuesday on business. SHOPPED HERE Miss Sena C. Nelson, Killdeer/was shopping here yesterday. FOR A CHIU) This frock for a child has an in teresting arrangement of fullness that is of Parisian inspiration. It is cut with a deep U and with cordings outlining the cut. It would be ap propriatevon a grown-up gown as well as a child’s. I Cynthia Grey | I Says: I MODERN GIRL SPLENDIDLY EQUIPPED TO TACKLE LIFE’S PROBLEMS Bv Oothia Grey All in all, this season has been litv*e uetu-r or worse than Hie average. It hus had its bright side and its dark side, and the two just about even up. But there is one thing for which we may truly give hearfelt thanks. We are hearing fewer and fewer attacks on “the modern girl." Ever since the war the modern gill has been a fair target (no pun is in tended) for any preacher, editorial writer, politician or uplifter who i:'*t a yen to attack something and could not at the moment think of anything else to excoriate. To be sure, graybeards from time immemorial have always spent a good percentage of their time in bgwailing the passing of the “good old times’’ and in pointing out to all and sundry that the girls of their days were fur and away above the newer generations. But during the last few years this complaint has been especially loud and insistent, and has been joined in by more bo wailers than ever before. • What sort of mothers will these flip young flappers make? This has been the closing selection on the pro gram since the war. And our reply, made after con siderable acquaintance with mothers past, present and future, is: Mighty good ones. Because the modern girl, more than any girl that ever lived, is equipped to cope with life, to see it as it really is, to tackle its problems boldly in stead of shutting her eyes to them, and to give to her children knowl edge that will help them to avoid heartaches and wasted opportunities when the grow up. There my be less modesty about her, but there Is less hypocrisy. It there is less reverence there is also less fear. If there is less regard t % the old established standards of con duct there is also more bravery anil sense in finding »ievv and better standards. ihe flapper wears too few clothes, erv the greybeards. To which it might, he replied, Who says so? She wears fewer than her mother did, to he sure —but she wears enough to keep her warm, certainly; and it is a fact well known to students of the subject that clothing and morals have no connection whatever. But she smokes cigarets, they com plain. And ou<- reply here is, Whiit of it? Why is it proper for her brother to smoke them and not for her? What is sauce for the gander is sauce for the goose. Loudest of all, however, her critics Beyond Doubt the NOW —perfect washing is done without rubbing or churning/ In this wonderful One Minute only the foaming water comes in contact with your clothes while they are being washed. Surprizingly different, yes—so , much so that women who see this washer in action are V°P D A™™ l amazed at the ease with which the heaviest clothing og &tub. Nothing to lift the finest fabrics are thoroly cleansed. The One Minute out or clean. Noth' man is here now—he is daily showing housewives a cheaper, mg m tub to come in , quicker and better way to work. Drop in and meet him. ctotlrs* 'wasties** Over a Million Satisfied One Minute Usera usual time. Sorenson Hardware Co. Sold on t■ —■ T ■ Easy ■ 1 k I dljLlJnTs| • Paymenta THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE complain that the modern girl allows men to take loom any liberties with he r. First of all, you might try to find out whether the girl of today, on he everage really does induge in much more freedom along this line than the girl of, say, twenty-five years ago. There have been a lot of loose assertions to that effect; but has anyone, ever checked up on it? It’s our opinion that things are much the same now as they always Were. Only—you lieay more about ii nowadays. If self-reliance, frankness, courage, contempt for shame anil a growing willingness to discard rose-colored glasses and look at lift* as it realh is are faults, then the modern girl sins grievously. But an*'they? Aren’t they rather the traits that will help her in the great tnsk that »*s youth even where —tile re pairing and general mending of a world ihai we of the older generation have more or less allowed to go to smash ? * MENUS FOR THE 1 FAMILY BY SISTER MARY Breakfast—Blueberries with cream, cereal, thin cream, soft cooked eggs, toast, milk, coffee. I, u n c h e o n—Creamed kohl-rabi, brown bread and cheese sandwiches, baked apple pudding, milk, tea. Dinner—Baked bluefish, baked po tatoes, buttered beets, cucumber sal ad, steamed blueberry pudding, rye bread, milk, coffee. Kohl-rabi is an out-of-the-ordinarv vegetable that is really most deli cious. It belongs to the cabbage fam ily. If used when the bulb-like roots are one or two inches in diameter the vegetable is tender and of deli cate flavor. Steamed Blueberry I’lidding Two cups flour, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 1-2 teuapoon salt, 2 table spoons sugar, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 egg, 3-4 cup milk, 1 cup blueberries, 2 more tablespoons flour. Mix and sift flour, salt, baking powder and sugar. Rub in butter with tips of fingers. Beat egg ami cut into flour. Cut in milk. Sift extra flour over berries and add to dough. Turn into a buttered mold, cover and steam 1 1-2 hours. Servo with molasses sauce. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, lno.i I FASHIONS CRAZE FOR NAVY BLUE Navy blue is the most popular color in Baris at the present time. It is taking the place of black that has been so generally used. MANNISH TOP COATS Top coats are very popular in Paris, and they are developed in mannish materials and cuts. FLOWERED CHIFFON Flowered chiffons are being used for long tunics and the blouses of ensemble costumes. HEAVY WHITE SILK' A stunning sport dress is of heavy white silk crepe bound with black ami embroidered with black on the two front pockets. FLOWERED COLLARS Flowers of velvet or georgette crepe finish the collars of the new chiffon coats and capes. GRAY PEARLS SMART Gray pearls have suddenly become extremely popular and are very much liked with the all-white outfit. SO USEFUL, TOO Soft fleecy wools in gray, tan and white are very much liked for sport coats. NOTICE Knights of Pvthias meeting tonight at 8 sharp. New Silk and Wool Dresses in all the leading shades and styles. Bismarck Cloak Shop. Household Suggestions COLOR VALUE ('olorful vegetables Midi as green peas, beets, carrots ami pimentos molded in dear gelatine ami s»*rved with mayonnaise make a delicious salad. < hi ltd; in i.i ki: n An ice cream cone filled with strawberries anil whipped cream is a dessert that children ln\e. CLOUR AND OR CASK The pail in which you hake a Mtollge cake should lie creased and then dustvd generoii sly with flour. IMPROVES THE FLAVOR To make tasteless meal savory let ii lie over night. in a dressing <>i oil, vinegar and paprika with a little onion juice. ADD CRATKO (TIFESE If you want to increase the caloric, value of soup serve it with crated cheese as the French and Italians do. MACHINE STITCHING Let your Hewing machine help with the mending. Don’t waste time sewing hy hand when it can he done just as well on the machine. TWO PURPOSES Slip covers not only look cool and attractive during the summer months, hut they save the wear and tear on your upholstered furniture. “LOST WORLD” IS SUPER-THRILLER Amazement, surprise, disbelief in one’s own eyes—these are some of the emotions aroused hy “The Lost World,” which opens at the Kltinge Theatre today for a four days show ing. The picture makers have long promised "something really new photoplay that will start a new chapter in film history." "The Lost World" comes nearest to living (ip to these promises* of any picture in a long time. School text books say that the last of the dinosaurs became extinct at least 10,000,000 years ago. Yet on the picture screen these fearsome creatures of the Reptilian Age act ually come to life with a reality that makes one tremble for the safe ly of Bessie Love, Lewis Stone, Wal lace Beery, Lloyd Hughes and the other film adventurers who find the huge creatures still alive in an unex plored area of South America. The amazement that these rep tiles instill is equaled only hy the curiosity as to how First National and Watterson R. Rothackor, the producers, were able to do it. This picture might he described as the one photoplay of universal appeal. Every class of movie patron will find a super-thrill in it. For those who like romance we have Lewis Stone and Lloyd Hughes struggling for the heart of Bessie Love, and at the same time trying to prevent her from being gobbled up by hungry, man-eating dinosaurs. For those who hanker for ad venture the picture offers the hunt- HHV(F #riLPli DEVELOPED W f BUTQNCE I IHNNEYS) % DAILY PHOTO SERVICE M BIJMdRCK J | ing episode where Stone, Beery and ■ Hughes attempt to hag a 1 .">0,00(1- ! pound monster that doesn’t .mind elphant guns any n.ore than bean shooters. The producers say it took over seven years to produce this motion picture. That is not surprising I At The Movies • - 4 AT THE 1 <MM 101 “Name the Man!’’, Sir Hall ('nine' latest drama to he 1 1 ansferrtd to i h screen, now koine prt-scnlcd at im Capitol t heat i•. Wodiio d.: \ an Thursday lakos rank with the 1.0 pictures of the yeai The story, adapted front "Tit.- Ala ter of Man ’’ i.. i ilute with drama tie action. It cariies one llimugh th hen its of it - people 11 ilea I . wit both the ll)v\l\ and the great aiu the intermingling oT the two. Am though the observer i-. totallv un conscious of the photography. it i Mirnassiugly boanl ifill. Mae Busch triumphs imaiii in this HJH Optometry | >; Assures Accuracy Molerit eqnipnient ur i with the exacting ear,* of the skilled i pt .metre • as surea light glasses In :v. The Sunshine Club Will hold an advertising sale, at Hialto Theatre, the 4th and sth. DOCTOR M.E. BOLTON Osteopath Specialist in Chronic Diseases Telephone 240 W lit; 4th St. Bismarck, N. D. Wednesday FRIDAY AND SATURDAY W : iomP' MVTIMi: I \ tl.'N \i\\ AT *_>::{!• The World’s Wonder Picture! An amazing experience- sleeping around our dying camp tiros, wo wero shot out of our slumbers •by tin* most frighful erica, as oar splitting as a gigantic whistle, but deeper and more vibrant. Then a deep oheated laugh, a growling, throaty gurgle a shriek -enough to bring the cold sweat and make the heart miss a beat —An I we knew that we were in the lost world, my sweet heart and 1, lacing a tight for life against these prehistoric monsters which we had just seen tearing each other. y Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s * with Kb Stupendous Story IN BESSIE love A 3irat national Pictu^^ •WrfQP Two Performances 0 MV ■ \ Each Evening ■ ■ ■ \ W 7:30 and 9 MATINEES 10 AND 25c ■TOr l EVENINGS 15 AND 35c her second Hall Caine story she having played Glory Quayle in “The Christian. ’’ Miss Busch's pet form once has the very desirable element of "abandon", and yet at no time docs she even hint at over-acting. Her pathos is superb especially her tears in the rain. Conrad Nagel, as the Deemsti-i T <.ll emerges with inauv lame) . al Smart Step-ins The smart simplicity of pumps that one simply has to step into makes them a favorite Fall fashion. All raet iv e buckles or bows hide clever gore adjustments. mi. Hl*; acti,oh is repressed, and yet st rong. Daisy Ruth Miller has a very sym pathetic role and handles it in a manner to add new praise to her name. Select y«ur Fur coat, now, at tho Hismarck Cloak Shop. » i ; PAGE'FIVE