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MONDAY, APRIL 4,1927 Social and Personal Mr. and Mrs. Myers Sunday Night at Bridge Dinner Mr. nnd Mrs. C. J. Myers entertain ed Sunday evening at their home at 8 Rosser with the first of a series of bridge dinners. An attractively ap pointed course dinner was served, the tables being prettily decorated in pink and white. After the games three tables of bridge were in play, honors going to Mrs. J. E. Kiley and James Riley. Out-of-town School Girls Entertained * v Sunday Afternoon Twenty-eight out-of-town school girls were entertained at an Informal afternoon Sunday at the Business and Professional Women’s club rooms. Mrs. Florence .Davis was in charge of an interesting story hour and musical numbers were furnished by the guests. Tandy making was an enjoyable feature of the afternoon. Members of the committee in charge Included Mrs. Sara West Anlcenmann, Mrs. W. G. Worner. Miss I. M. llickox. Miss Rruns, Miss Helen Katen and Mrs. C. F. Struts. TO PLAN STATE MEETING Tlans for the annual convention of the State Federation of Business and Professional Women’s clubs, to be held in Fargo, June 6, 7 and 8, will he completed the coming week-end when Mrs. Bess Beatty Sherman of Grand Forks, state president, will meet with Miss Marie Stiening, presi dent, and ether members of the Fargo club, in Fargo. Mrs. Minnie M. Mur phy of Jamestown, chairman of the convention program committee, wifi also be present. MISSES DAKOTA FRIENDS David G. Sullivan of this city, whe is visiting at the home of his brother in North Andover, Mass., writes thut he misses his Dakota friends and reads with Interest concerning their doings in the Tribune each day. Mr Sullivan came to Bismarck in 1879 nnd is one of the city’s genuine old settlers. In his letter he expressed deep regret at the sudden passing of “Rob” Walton. “A noble character — it seems hard to lose him,” Mr. Sul livan said. EASTERN STAR MEETING The regular meeting of Bismarck Chapter, Eastern Star, will be held Tuesday evening, at 8 o’clock at the Masonic temple. All members ore urged to attend and visiting mem bers ere invited. CALLED TO ST. CLOUD Mrs. Fred Peterson, accompanied by her parents, left this morning for St. Cloud, Minn., where she was cull by the death of a four-year-old nephew who was run down by a truck. VISITOR LEAVES Mrs. Rose Sbctten has gone to her home at Hannaford after a several days’ visit in the city with her fath er, E. C. Evenson of Medicine Lake, Mont., a patient at a local hospital. TO JAMESTOWN O. W. Roberts went to Jamestown today on business connected with the National Parks Highway association, of which he was recently elected president. RETURNS HOME Mrs. Lena Henry left this morning for her home at Lark, Wyo., after an extended visit in Bismarck with her sister, Mrs. John Stirling, 623 Ninth st reet. RETURN TO NEW SALEM Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Ringeon have returned to their home at Now Salem after a short business visit in the city. • PARENTS OF SON Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Heaton, Jr., of McKenzie, annouce the birth of a son, Sunday at the St. Alexius hospital. MOTHERS’ CLUB TO MEET The Mothers* club will meet at the home of Mrs. W. F. McCray at 3 o’clock Tuesday afternoon. CLUB TO MEET The Mothers' Service club will meet tomorrow afternoon at 3 o’clock at the home of Mrs. F. J. Bavendick. VISIT HERE Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Andrus of Wer ner are visiting friends in the city for a few days. WEEK-END VISIT Miss Irene Samuelson spent the week-end with relative* at Under wood. PATIENT AT HOSPITAL Mrs. Lyman Sunter of Werner Is a patient at the Bismarck hospital. TO STEELE W. H. Patrick Is spending the day in Steele, transacting business. BUSINESS VISIT State Attorney F. E. McCurdy has gone to Backoo on business. HERE FROM HAZELTON Mrs. E. P. Kurts of Haseiton spent the week-end in the city. The Weather Generally fair tonight, and Tuesday. Cold, er tonight . HAVE BERGESON’S MAKE YOUR CLOTHES Bergeson’s QaaMijr-Stgli hßmmmj Mrs. John Stirling Hostess Saturday at Dinner For Guest Mrs. John Stirling entertained Sat urday evening at her home on Sixth street with a dinner for her sister, Mrs. Henry, of Lark, Wyo. Mrs. Henry left this morning for her home after spending the winter in Bis marck. Covers were marked for ten guests at the attractively appointed tables. Luncheon Saturday Is Complimentary to Mrs. E. H. Pierce Mrs. E. H. Pierce was honor guest at a luncheon given by friends Sat urday at the Prince hotel prior to her departure to Minneapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Pierce will leave Wednesday morning for Minneapolis to spend the summer with their daughter, Miss Hatel Pierce. Mrs. Richard-Kirk has arrived from Minneapolis to take charge of the Hazelhurst apartments during the absence of Mr. and Mrs. Pierce. Methodist Ladies to Present Comedy Tuesday Evening The “Spinsters Convention,’’ one act comedy given recently by the teachers and officers of the McCabe Methodist Episcopal Sunday school primary department, will be repeated Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock at the Rex theatre. The play was given before a full house a few weeks ago and repeated requests persuaded those in charge to give it again. Tickets arc being sold by the mem bers and may he purchased at the door. In addition to the comedy furnish ed by the proceedings of the “Old Maids Sinirie Blessedness Society,” an excellent program given by the it-muueiea oiu maids is included in the entertainment. At the perform ance tomorrow evening the program will be entirely different from that given before. W. C. T. U. TO MEET The W. C. T. U. will hold a regular meeting tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Dan Mc- Gettigan, 827 Sixth street. Rev. C. A. Stephens will be the principal sneaker and Mrs. William Childs will sing. * JOINS JOURNALISTIC FRATERN ITY Charles Andrus of Hazelton has been elected to membership in Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalistic fraternity at the Univer sity of North Dakota. HOSPITAL ALUMNI MEETING The Bismarck Hospitul Alumni As sociation will meet tomorrow evening at the home of Mrs. C. E. Knudtson, 812 Fifth street. A social hour will follow the meeting. EMPLOYED HERE H. C. Beall hits arrived in Bismarck to accept a position- with the federal bureau of public roads. He was sent here by the department at Washing ton, D. C. AT PRACTICE HOUSE Miss Marian Staley, Bismarck, is one of a group of students in charge of the practice house of the home economics department at the state university. RETURN TO MINOT Mrs. William J. Booth and baby have returned to Minot after a two weeks’ visit in the city with Mrs. Booth’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McVey. PLEDGED TO FRATERNITY Theodore Kellogg of Schafer has been pledged, to Alpha Psi Delta, academic fraternity at the University of North Dakota. CARD PARTY Members of the Sons and Daugh ters of Norway were entertained Fri day evening at a card party at the A. 0. U. W. hall. WEEK-END VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. Lewis J. Mann of Van Hook were week-end guests of Mrs. Mann’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Best. TEACHERS HERE Miss Lily Christianson and Miss Ruby Halvorson, Gibbs district teach ers, were week-end visitors in Bis marck. The secret of the well-dressed foot is per -1 fect-fitting footwear. J& K Fine Shoes are 1 ■ famous for their matchless fitting. They || I hug the arch so snugly and beautifully the 1 : H foot seems moulded into form. Come in and 1 IS let us fit you in one of the smart new mod- 1 IB * els. Welcome any time. B m m | A. W. Lucas Co. I H Right Footwear at the Right Price I Pearls to Match Ilf The newest pearls are beige, gray or pink, sponsored by Molyneux for pleasing emphasis of the color of the gown. BIRTHDAY PARTY Mrs. R. LI Mathewson, 420 Four teenth street, entertained last evening with a party for her daughter, Beu lah, celebrating her tenth birthday. There were 14 guests. TJie table was prettily decorated with candles and Easter favors. LEAVES FOB HOME Mrs. W. C. Cavanaugh, who was called to Bismarck by the death of her uncle, Robert L. Walton, left this morning for her hojjfa at Casper, Wyo. Mrs. Cavanaugh received word of the_serlous illness gf her husband. LEAVES FOR MINNEAPOLIS Miss Lucile Lahr left this morn ing for Minneapolis where she will visit friends until Friday, when her marriage to Willis D. Wynrd of this city will take place. En route Miss Lahr will visit in Fargo. A. 0. U. W. MEETING The regular meeting of the A. O. U. W. lodge will be held Tuesday evening at the hull. After the meet ing there will be an old time dance for members and their friends. Lunch will be served. ALUMNI TO MEET "The St. Alexius hospitul Alumni Association will meet at 8 o’clock Tuesday evening at the hospitul. A large attendance of members is de sired. BASKET SOCIAL The Salvation Army will have a basket social Wednesday evening ut 8 o’clock at the Salvation Army hall. VISITS BROTHER G. L. Fort of Minneapolis is visit ing in the city with his brother, Judge John F. Fort. WEEK-END GUEST Miss D. Samuelson of Hazel was the week-end guest of Mrs. E. Ulmer in Bismarck. VISITS HERE Miss Odessa Nelson of Washburn is visiting friends in the city for « few days. HERE FROM LINTON Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Baumann of Linton were week-end visitors in the city. HERE ON BUSINESS Morris C. Anderson of Wilton transacted business in the city today. BEGINS SCHOOL TERM Miss Harriet Shipp has begun a term of school in Morton district. ENTERS HOSPITAL A. W. Gussner has entered the Bismarck hospital for treatment. VISITS IN UNDERWOOD Robert Demming spent the week end with friends in Underwood. VISITS FRIENDS Lee Sparks of Braddock spent Sun day in the city with friends. HERE FROM BALDWIN Ed Lewis and son, Roy, of Baldwin, spent Saturday in Bismarck. HERE FROM MENOKEN Mrs. Ralph Ishmael of Menoken spent Saturday in Bismarck. VISITS AT STEELE A. C. Taylor spent the week-end with relatives at Steele. ’ BUSINESS TRIP J. W. Maddox went to Beulah today on a business trip. The 10th is the last day of discount on Gas bills. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MUSICAL REVUE HERE APRIL 13 Earl Carroll ‘Vanities’ Will Be Feature Attraction at City Auditorium; Preceded by glamorous tales of beautiful girls, bewitching music, ex travagant scenes and a hundred of America’s most celebrated and tal ented entertainers, the famous revue “Earl Carroll Vanities," which has been one of the very marked suc cesses of the present theatrical sea son, will come to the city auditorium in Bismarck Wednesday evening, April 13. i The “Var.2lies" is described as a new musical revue, and is one of those kaleidoscopic presentments de void of plot and with u constant chnnge of scene, moving so rapidly from one t7* another that there is never a chance for a dull moment. In constructing the entertainment, or having it constructed, Mr. Carroll has deviated from the usual course in collecting material, and, instead of giving travesties of current the atrical successes, he has chosen to have his revue deal almost entirely with happenings of real life that took place during the year 1926, as chron icled in the columns of the daily press, and he has succeeded in ex tracting enough fun from this source make his audience forget that there ever was a care in the world. Naturally, in an entertninment like the “Vanities,” the Sahara-like dry ness of the country comes in for an episode that stands out brilliantly for the wit and humor pervading it. This is taken care of in a scene call ed "The Speak Easy,” “Wrestling Bouts,” “The Country Hotel,” “Life’s Mysteries,” “Big Shoes,” and the “Tank Mystery” are also parodied, and there are numerous other epi sodes that are treated in a manner to extract whatever comedy may be available. Some of the Big Scenes There's the "Rotisscrie," in which comely lassies are “dressed" ns chickens minus some of the feathers, and “roasted” on the spit hy attrac tive “cooks," in a setting of feminine coffeee pots; the “Fan, Pearl and Shawl," with a lilting song; “The Gate of Roses," a pretty stage pic ture with the "Kiss in the Moonlight” song; the “Ponies on Parade," nnd the grand finale, “Black Bottom Blues" The “Vanities” is called the most modern of revues, a potpourri of fun, song, talent and beauty. It is hailed as the high-water mark of gorgeously staged extravaganzas. The engagement will bring to this city in one big company, many of its most popular stage favorites. Bert Swor, formerly with the Field's Min strels, appears both in blackface am! without the cork. Lou Powers, well remembered for the splendid work he did in “Sally" and the “Green wich Village Follies," and Dave Chusen, are featured comedians in the cast. Others in the company are Mary Dowling, Lew Miller, John Coyle, Kenneth Lackey, Alice Brad ford, Johnny Dove, Aimcc Archer Swor, Emma Dean, Ricco, Maria Vesta, Harry Sharpe, Phillis Cam eron, Ray Cavanaugh, and the Earl Carroll Theatre orchestra, and Louise Brooks, the perfect Venus. The hook was written by William A. Grew, nnd the music hy Clarence Guskill. David Bennett arranged the dances and ensembles, while the en tire production was staged under the personal direction of Earl Carroll. T Hints on Etiquet I. Dors 1 lie waiter or the escort draw nut a woman’s chair in a restaurant ? 2. Should the napkin be unfolded above the table or in the lap? ■‘l. Should the napkin be unfolded completely or only part way? The Answers 1. The waiter. 2. In the lap. 3. Only part way. j At The Movies CAPITOL THEATRE One hour in which to save the family fortune by marrying aboard an old schooner. . . and he had no idea where he was going to get the girl! This la only one of the many wild situations in Rod La Rocquc’s ned De Mille starring vehicle “The Cruise of the Jasper B,” which James Horne directed from Zelda Sears and Tay Garnett’s adaptation of the famous Don Marquis novel. Mr. La Rooque has the role of a young descendant of a pirate of the DR. T. G. O’HARA DENTIST Room 10 Over Hall's Drug Store Bismarck. N. Dak. Office Phone 263 Res. 766 R Special attention given to ctall • dren’s teeth. ANNOUNCEMENT I am a candidate for reelectlon to the office of Police Magis trate. W. S. CASSELMAN. (Pol. Adv.) KC & Baking Powder Guaranteed Pure Use KC for finer texture and larger volume | ur your baking* f M Millions of pound* tued “ by our Government ft Spanish Main who cannot inherit the family fortune unless he marries on the day he becomes of age. He has lived u rapid life, but until the day he attains his majority, he has not fallen in love. Then things begin to happen and the action is rapid nnd highly di verting. One of the opening scenes shows the piratical ancestor of the young man battling with another pirate for the love of a fair captive maiden. Of course, La Rncque is the battler and he puts up one of the finest contents ever witnessed on the screen. Mildred Harris supports La Rocquq in the romantic comedy, which comes to the Capitol theatre tonight. ELJINGE THEATRE I Tense dramatic incidents, an incom parable love story, unusual scenic, effects, together with an underlying! strain of comedy and the graphic pot trayal of desert development join to make Harold Bell Wright’s “The Winning of Barbara Worth,” at the Eilinge tonight, tomorrow and Wed nesday, one of the outstanding photo plays of the year. Filmed on the great arid Black Rock Desert, the story unfolds n world of entertaining and education al features before Ronald Colman, as Willard Holmes, begins to feel sure that he has finally won the fair Barbara, played by Viimn Hanky. Ronald Column's ride with the pay roll to stop a threatened revolt of laborers in the town of Uurha, built by Jefferson Worth, Barbara’s fath er, to compete with Kingston, is one of the high spots of the production. Over miles of barren desert and through the beautiful canyons of the Harlequin Mountains, Willard Holmes nnd Abe Lee rode through the night. Bandits, hired by James Greenfield. Holmes’ foster-father, waylaid the pair in Devil’s Canyon. The battle, distinguished by its sincerity nnd the excellent acting of the characters in volved, resulted in the wounding of both men. This bit of action afforded Colman opportunity to perform one of the most spectacular screen feats he has undertaken in his successful career. PALACE-MANDAN Vaudeville at the Palace theatre in Mnndan on Tuesday this week brings the Melody Garden Revue, a com pany of four people who entertain with singing and dancing staged in a picturesque setting which repre sents an old southern mansion, lfulpin & Demure appear in “As You Like It,” a comedy, singing and danc ing sketch. Jack Cavanagh, “A Hollywood Cowboy,” stunt man for moving picture stars, offers a com bination of talking and mpe spin ning. l’hcsny & Powell form a com bination of clever man comedian and pleasing lady vocalist. Their “Vau deville Eccentricities” include eccen tric dancing, comedy, singing and guitar plnving. Real novelty is found in “Fun in a Hat Shop,”’ pre sented hy Bardell McNally, exnert comedy jugglers. “Bachelor Brides” will he shown on the screen. Rod La Rocque, Elinor Fair and Julia Faye are featured in this comedy-mystery Vatu re. DR. M. E. BOLTON Osteopathic Physician 116'/i Fourth St. Phone 240 W Bismarck, N. I). Women Thank Science for this new hy' gienic pad that discards easily as tissue no laundry By KI.I.KN J. BUOJCLAND H*rmlT*d Nun* THERE is now an exquisite suc cessor to the old-time “sanitary pad." A new way that offers far greater protection. A way that ends the old problem of disposal. Eight in 10 better-class women now use “KOTEX." Discards like tissue. No laundry. w No embarrassment. Five times as absorbent as ordi nary cotton pads. Deodorizes, thus ending all danger of offending. Obtainable at all drug and de partment stores simply by saying “KOTEX." Vou ask for it without hesitancy. Be sure to get the genuine. Only Kotex itself is ‘’like’’ Kotex. In fair ness to yourself, try it. KOT6X No laundry—discard like tissue VAUDEVILLE 'TUESDAY PALACE THEATRE - MANDAN JACK CAVANAUGH “A Hollywood Cowboy”' HALPIN & DEMURE In “As You Like It” MELODY GARDEN REVUE In “Romance” PHEBAY A POWELL In “Vaudeville Eccentricities’* BARDELL & McNALLY la “Pun in a Hat Shop” Matinee at S O’clock Evening 8:15 ft 10:15 Bismarck Time LONG LIVED The sermon went on. “How lons has he been preach ins?’’ whispered the late-romer, after, forty minutes. “Thirty or forty years,’’ murmur ed the white-headed man addressed. “I’ll stay, then," muttered the other. “He must he nearly finished.” Tit-Bits, London. - As the days gel warmer and spring 1 : apparel is in order how nice it will \ be to step forth in a pair of pastel t parchment slippers. T I Trimming of Spanish raisin, rose \ V blush and patent leather on the 1 1 newer pastel parchment shoes en- \ 1 able one to be individual as well l l as in the height of style. 1 1. Hosiery ] | In,,Spring Colors Some prefer to wear matching hosiery with pastel parchment slippers. Others, wanting contrast, choose hosiery in the same shade as the trimming. Either way is smart and easy to follow with hosiery in all the wrntcd shades avail* J able here. *j “First With the Newest” a * m ML t w f ,i n'niiniJJilJiWVHl (ffijk-= MATINEE FAERY DAY AT 2:30 THREE DAYS, COMMENCING One of any year’s greatest An Eye Feast of Beauty, Gigan dramatic pictures tic Thrills and Powerful Action! mßrnmzmzimß PROTECTED “But Bill, what do you want that stick for when you art* coins to the Unemployed Demonstration^” “So i can defend myself if any one offers me work.”—Faun, Vienna. The 10th is the last day of discount on Gas bills. PAGE FIVE Be sure and see the “Spin sters* Convention” at Rex Theatre Tuesday, April 5, 8 P. M.—so and 25 cents. 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