i 4 IIMMII HMIMIIIMIIIIMHIItMl I ! I Society !i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1) i ii 1 1 1 it i Vt iiiumMniM i-iPIK.VDs in rimihi hue revived I'tlrr. i'vn Mr. Leonora D'i j M Nel.on, who it m tutor. ith the Ann V. K" rirty thit rrrr Mine. ie atn. wrU known in Onikj the aunt ( Mr. . J Sonnel! and a ulrnttd rmi.'e.n, wu hsUi at tea or Mr. Nelwm dunng her Uv m !'rn. ar.d Mm Irene.! -V 4t:d Mr SeUon Nve de aded to fy .?-! next wmier. Ih'y will he th Mw, d le in I'ursii much fcl the tur.e. . M.t Airnr, Wichham. anMhrr men.Ur of ihr fiy, tntcrunc.j in l ant by M l.aura Maiihrwi, an .riC4 8'rt ho remained abroad in irr.l iervn-r v-k after the r, and v!ed m Omaha lat sum. mer. Mj Matthew will return to Toulon "t Ul but tt summering " Another t'em of intire.t to Onuh. rradrr n that Mr. F. W, Clarke and her daughter Mr LI"vd .smith, who went abroad in Mv. have joined the Kdm i.ariv and will tnur ...iithrrn France and Italy ith them. Memberi 'i tr Hf party ti"'' K';,' VuwrW. Omaha bay wh- i in Europe .ih Mr Arthur Srr.nflkr.pr?'. r.rty. At that twe Mr. IWrll Mid he expected to sail for the !'m!d State on the Arjuitanu. July 22, and that he would he m Omaha ?.. ntarlv a mmith vt.itmg h parent. Mr. and Mn Ger,rce H Towe!! Later Mrs. Srhoelknpff plan t gr Honolulu and South America, and. aecord.n to Mr. Powell, he will accompany the party. inttead of returning to scr.ooi 1 CsMldy-Williami. Mis Teisie William became the' I ride of Raymond C. Caidy Tuej.- dav morning at St. Joseph church. ' while at the same time her parent. Mr. and Mm. A. A. William, re . newed the wedding vows thev too 40 years ago on the same day. The Pc. Simr.n Schwartz officiated at the o!emn high mas. Mis Mamie Naiherg and Joe H irons were tne f bridal couple's attendants. Mr. and . Mr Cassidy will live in Council Bluff. They are now on a wedding ' trip to Colorado. Woman'a Club Social Meeting. 5 Fifty reservation have been made i for the Omaha Woman" club mid- lummer luncheon, kensington and ; card partv to be given Thursday at 1 p. m. at the Prettiest Mile club. The following program will be given during the afternoon: Read ings. Mrs. George Shields. Mrs. : Xtarw Vanor: none croups, Mrs. James Hanley. accompanied by Mrs. , Raymond Young; Mrs. Gilbert " Brown, accompanied by Mrs. Gale I White McMoincs; story telling, Mrs. ' Joseph Lawrence. Alina Vocdisch, advance manager for the Ukrainian National chorus. - which Max Rabinoff is presenting m America next season, will give a talk on the chorus. It is probable that the Omaha Women's club will pre sent the chorus in Omaha. Reservations may be made with Mrs. John R. Golden, chairman of the house and home committee. For Miss Amelia Cranston. Wednesday Mrs. A. P. Durkee en tertained Miss Amelia Cranston of Iowa City as her guest at luncheon , at her home. Among the .guests s were Miss Cranston's hostess, Mrs. E. H. Howland. Mrs. R. N. Sage, who will entertain informally Thurs- dav evening for Miss Cranston and Miss Virginia Duffy of Central City, Xeb. . j Thursdav, Mrs. Howland will give a luncheon for her guest at in Brandeis tea room when covers will bt placed for 12. On Friday Mrs. Walter Nceby ! letic club, when MJss Cranston will ! : be honor guest, and that afternoon . Mr. K. Rc?-noIds ivill entertain in 1 formaHy for the visitor, lifts Cran f ston laves for Iowa City on Satur i ay- Miss Garlow Honored. Miss Virginia Br) son will give a party Thursday afternoon at her home complimentary to Miss Jane Garlow, her cousin, and granddaugh ter of the late Col. William Cody. Another house guest will be Miss Virginia Duffy of Central City, who is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. A. P. Durkee. Miss Garlow is makvig her home with the Brysons and a number of parties are beiag given for her. Saturday Miss Kathcrine Ballinger will give a swimming party at the Athletic club, followed by luncheon at her home, and Mrs. Boyd Smith and her daughter, Christie, will entertain at luncheon at the Lakoina club Monday. , In Estes Park. 'i Mrs. G. W. Noble, her daughter, !. Genene, and son, David, are in Estcs Park. Mrs. Arthur Griffith, formerly i Miss Martha Noble, came on from I Pittsburgh the end of June and mo s tored out, to the park with her family, j They expect to return August 5 and r Mrs. Griffith will spend August in i Omaha. Mr. Noble will go to Bos- ton, Mass., on a vacation trip the I middle of next month. Mrs. London Honored. Mrs. R. L. Harris entertained at ; luncheon Tuesday at the Athletic s club in honor of Mrs. W. L. London I of Chicago, who is visiting her sis ; ter-. Mrs. C. D. Glover. Mrs. Chester Xieman will om- I - 1 , T J . . .1 I I I t club dinner dance Saturday cvr.ning. ADVERTISEMENT. SURE HELP TO SIGjLWOMEN Mrs. Baker.so much Benefited by Anxious to Help Others Lebanon, Indiana. "I " . .is com nletelv run down from women a trou- iDies uiv ewmacu LI J l U trouble and for a long time was hardly able to do my work. I had some friends who had taken Lydia E. rmicnam s Vegetable Com pound, and they told me about it I know what it has done for me and 1 recommend it to others, as I am sure it will be a great help to all sick women. It is a . wonderful medicine, and 1 give you ' permission to use my testimonial and 1 my photograph." Mrs. Emma Baker, 310 S East St, Lebanon, Indiana These letters recommending Lydia ' . 1L Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ' ought to convince women of the great worth of this medicine in the treat ment of ailments to which they are often subject. Mrs. Baker calls it "a wonderful ' inedicine." If you are suffering f from troubles women often have, or feel all run down, without any ambi : t tion or energy for your regular work, ! s take Lydia E. Pinkham's V eg table Compound. It Is a natural restorative S.tmi sbotid help you, : . ........................ k I I"! ini iu. Personals MUt Nell Doyle of Rockford, III., it veiling Mrs. j. D. Weir. Mrs. E. S. Westhrook leaves Au gust IS for Prior Lake. Minn. Mr. and Mrs. Randall Pollock will return Monday from Isle Koyal. Mich. William Denny will arrive home Sunday from a motor trip to Min neapolis. Malcolm Baldrige returned the first of this week from a short stay in Atlantic City. Mr. Mary Mora leave Monday wiih Gilbert and Peggy Doorly for Prior Lake, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Adams left Wednesday for 4 or S days at the Cheyenne round-up. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Morton, jr., and small daughter, Patricia, leave in August for Belle Isle, Mich. Mrs. William J. Hynes and son, William, jr., leave the first of August for baton s ranch, yoming. The Misses Carrie and Mildred Wood of Holland, Manitoba, are vis iting their aunt, Mrs; Harry Mor rell. Mrs. Eugene Adams is visitmg her mother in Los Angeles. She left Omaha this week and will not return until September 1. Mrs. Mary Adele Abbott, who un derwent a serious operation at Lord Lister hospital three weeks ago, is convalescing at her home. Alina Voedisch, advance manager for the Ukrainian National chorus which Max Kanmoir is presenting to .Mnerjca nexi season, 15 ai mc 1 uu- tenellc hotel for a few days. 1 Miss Lois Holt of Chicago arrived j Wednesday for a visit with Miss Marguerite Walker. Miss Holt and Mies Wa ker were c assmates at the National Kindergarten school. Mr. ar,d Mrs. Robert L. Gilmore leave on Friday for Minneapolis, where ihey will be for three weeks. They will motor to Duluth from Minneapolis, and then take the boat trip for Buffalo. J. P. O'Keefe and daughter':, Elizabeth and Margaret left Wed nesday with W. J. Haynes and son, Billy, for Cheyenne to see the Fron tier day celebration. They will go in Mr. Hynes' private car. Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Mills have just returned from a two week's mo tor trip to Minneapolis and Duluth. They are building a new home on North Thirty-eighth avenue and ex pect to move in next month. Mr. and Mrs, E. P. Boyer ac companied by Mrs. William R. Wood, leave the end of this week for Albert Lee, Minn., where they Problems That Perplex Answered by BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Father Is Mistaken. Bear Miss Fairfax: I have written to you before and I have found you give splendid advice. My father objects to my going with boys. A certain young man seems to care a great deal for me and has asked me several times for dates, but I have always had to refuse. One day he asked me if my father had ever changed his mind. He writes me letters, but goes with another girl. She is very nice and I like her very much, and I don't blame him for taking her since I can't go. If I were Jealous, would I hate this girl? I see them together quite often and it hurts me to think I can't go with a bov when I think so much of him as I do. Am I jealous, or what? I hope I am not, for I do hate people I who get jealous and I may have to i hate myself, but I sure hope not. 1 Miss Fairfax, 1 have liked a boy and I then I would see another and like 1 him, and I would not know which I liked best, but since I met the young man I have been speaking of I do not think of any other. Do you I think this is love? I feel so different I from what I used to; it seems I I would do anything in the world for ' him, and I feel I could be eo happy. ! My thoughts have always been of him since I met him. I am almost '13 years of age young, and yet I ; f.;J so old. I hope you will kindly answer my questions; I am anxiously ;ai;ing for your advice. I thank you ' for your splendid advice, j BETTT. ; I don't believe you are !n love with j ;he boy you speak of. Be. honest ! isn't half of it because your father won't let you see him, and so you J Vitalize him and imagine he is every thing you would like a lover to be? I That is just the danger when parents I refuse to let their daughters see j young men. and I would like to tell j your father so. Romance thrives J more on prison bars and sighs and I imaginations than it does on every day contact with the adored one. Sae TflU&i V - n Crlctoa! Food-Driak For A3 Afl I 7 ir tv T''s-"N,ir I BRINGING UP ' I erf COLLY' Msf IIH""li It 1 1 ft VC LOOKED Q 1 1 j t CUt Tt wt0ls CI (' jj I r 1 1 7 will visit Mr. and Mrt. Richard R. Payne. They will make the trip by motor and will do some motoring in Minnesota before their return. Mrs. J. M. Souby returned Mon day from Chicago. She and her two children, Margeryt and James, jr, will leave Saturday for Banff in the Cana dian Rockies. Mr. and Mrs. George G. Summer and family will leave the first week in August for a motor trip through the east. They will stop in Chicago on their way home to visit their daughter. Mrs. Bryant Williams and Mr. Williams. Mr. and Mr. Charles Harding and their nieces, the Misses Dorothy and Antoinette Adams of Middletown. N. Y., leave Thursday for Clear Lake, la., where they will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. Max Millan Harding for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Constantine J. Smythe of Washington. D. C, for merly of Omaha, spent last week in the city at the Blackstone. They left Monday for Yellowstone Park, but will return to Omaha in about two weeks for a visit with their daugh ters. Mrs. Charles Burgess and Mrs. Clarence Sibbernscn. Birth Announcements. A son was born July 25 to Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Harper at Nicholas Scnn hospital. A son was born July 26 at St. Jo seph hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Matt Hovza of Wahoo, Xeb. Mr. and Mrs. Max Lichter an nounce the birth of a daughter July 24 at St. Joseph hospital. A daughter, Mary Alice, was horn Sunday to Dr. and Mrs. Frank Mur- phy at gt. Joseph hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Max Blasser an- nounce the birth of a son Tuesday at the Swedish Mission hospital . Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Kube an- """'"- " U"L" vl '''. J' at St. Joseph hospital Julv 21. Mrs. i Kube was formerly Miss Ellen ! Kemmy. Announcement is made of the birth of a son, Robert, to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A. Halpenny July 23. Mrs. Halpenny was formerly Miss Helen Gentleman. Mr. and Mrs. George B. Donnelly announce the birth of a son, Richard John, July 23 at St. Joseph hospital. Mrs. Donnelly was formerly Miss Mayme Donahue. Afternoon Bridge. Mrs. Robert Hughes entertained at bridge Wednesday afternoon in honor of her guest. Miss Rosina Kissner, of Indianapolis, and for Miss Helen Peycke, a former Omahan, who is visiting her sister, Mrs. John Howard Payne. The guests were the Misses Myrne Gilchrist, De Weenta Conrad, Minna Stedinger and the Mesdames Payne, Stanley Jack and Dan Gruenig. Juliet would probably have discov ered plenty of faults in her Romeo if father had allowed her to go on picnics with him or to an occasional movie or dance. I don't think your jealousy goes very deep, so you won't have to hate yourself yet. My ad vice would be to your father rather than you. There is no reason why an American girl of 18 should be kept in a cloister. Hurrah for the Inhuman Boy! Dear Miss Fairfax: Do'you think a girl of 16 can know her own mind in love affairs? I am quite popular and have several boy friends whom I once thought I loved, but I seem to hate them now, and all other boys, too. They to -me seem so Inhuman; they don't seem to realize the value of love as did the "old-fashioned boy." I have wondered if the "Old Fashioned Boy" whose letters were published in The Omaha Bee several weeks ago is as perfect as his letters seem to indicate. Is the demand for stenographers increasing or decreasing How is my penmanship? HALF WAY BETWEEN. I have no hesitation in saying, my dear, that you don't know your own mind. Few girls of 16 do. In human is a pretty strong word, but it does somehow describe boys at a certain age, if you mean by it that they are lacking in all evidences of the finer sensibilities. But, thank goodness, they are inhuman! It is so refreshing. Think how horrible it would be tf healthy, active boys of 16 and 17 went around mooning about the value of love. Read "Seventeen," by Booth Tarkington. I don't remember the "Old-Fashioned Boy" you refer to; but nobody is perfect, and from what you say he must have been highly sentimental, I would recommend you to get silly ideas of love out of your head, par ticularly if you aspire to be a good' stenographer. The demand for a good stenographers la always steady, and your penmanship is creditable. INFANTS m INVALIDS ASK FOR toe urgiaai .Avoid Imitations uASubttitute No Cookta - NourUWm Diftibl THE OMAHA BEE: THURSDAY. JULY 27. 1022. FATHER a. My Marriage Problems Adele Garrison'! New Phase of "REVELATIONS OF A WIFE" (Copyright lltt) What Harry Underwood Asked Madge to Do to Aid Him, The idea of Harry Underwood act ing like a father to any girl was so ludicrous that I nearly choked in the effort to suppress a laugh, and stole a look at him to see if by any possibility he expected me to take seriously the balderdash he had been uttering. But as I caught his eyes he exploded into a loud laugh which sent the resentful blush to my cheeks. "Very nearly put one over on you that time, Lady Fair!" he chuckled. "For a second or two I had you groggv. However" his voice lost its mirth 'don't get me wrong on this. I'm using that family, I'll ad mit it. Yes, 1 expect to use them some more. But the old popgun father deserves anything that can be done to him, inclcuding a nice boiling oil bath. Every dollar he has made cheating the government in the war. But 1 haven t been tri fling with the gyr-r-l's affections. Remember that, with these" he touched the snowy-white mustachios and Van Dyke beard, "I'm a grand father." I smothered the retort on my lips to the effect that he had carefully explained to the romantic Miss Helen an appealing reason for his white whiskers. It was apparent that he honestly acquitted himself of phi landering with the young daughter of his host. But I remembered a re mark of Dicky's to the effect that "old Harry would do the impressive to a department store lay-figure if there were no other feminine person on his horizon," and realized the fu tility of making him see any other viewpoint but his own distorted and fantastic one. Besides, I told myself crossly, it was none of my business anyway. And I appeased my conscience with the thought that the romantic Miss Helen would have the opportunity to get over her infatuation if its object were really going away. A Roundabout Route. "Where do vou wish me to take never was TOASTS comi w . Alto makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLE3 and KELLOGG'S BRAN, cookod aad krambled ii i riM ofttr. you?" I asked, glad of a chance to switch the subject. "To the railroad station?" "Not the first thing," he returned, dropping at once into the matter-of-fact tone I had adopted. I guessed that he was glad to avoid any fur ther discussion of Miss Helen. "I want to go to the Smythe-Hopkins' house first and throw a few things together. Would you mind waiting for me there? I won't be gone more than a few minutes, and I can put a steamer trunk in the tonneau, can't I?" "Of course," I said quietly, al though I did not exactly relish the prospect of driving through the streets of Southampton with a trunk in the tonneau, and so striking and bizarre a figure as the pscudo Don Ramon Almirez sitting beside me. "I know it's a miserable thing to ask you to do," he said contritely, "but I can't afford to let any of those dubs get a line on where I'm going. I'm afraid I'll have to trouble you an awful lot, but your father seems to think it necessary. I don't want to take the train from this sta tion. Could you get me to the Shelter Island ferry to Greenpoint 1 without attracting too much atten tion?" I considered his question a min ute. Then I answered slowly; "Yes, there is a wood road from Southampton to Sag Harbor, and I can drive you around the back streets there to North Haven, and from there to Shelter Island. Many of the summer people have gone any way." Dr. Pet tit Passes By. "Yes, I know," he returned with a sardonic grin. "My hosts would have been gone long ago only I persuaded them that the real aristocracy lingered late in the autumn. Well, that's settled then! But what about this sawbones you are supposed to send back to the palpitating Mr.-Smythe-Hopkins? I suppose it's dear old Herbie Pcttit. It so, you don't catch this child near the tele phone. It's my private belief that m irm 'Wfit i.ijtii i iu n i Vk ja jm "ifi iiiiv ys - sm sa m r , CORN FLAKES with fresh fruit f such a hot Everywhere you go you'll find Kellogg's Corn Flakes await ing your call! Restaurants and dining cars provide this crisp, delicious, ideal warm weather repast And, how good these wholesome, nourishing, appetizing flakes taste served with a generous pitcher of cold milk and the luscious fruits now in' season! ' Eat Kellogg's Corn Flakes for health! They're wonderful all the year 'round but as warm weather food they are supreme easy to digest and cooling! Let the children eat all they want ! See that Kellogg's are served at least once or twice a day instead of the heavy foods that overtax big and little stomachs ! And, see the results in health ! As an extra-treat for dessert some evening right soon, serve Kellogg's Corn Flakes and fresh fruit with a generous helping of cream. You can't realize the treat that's in store! Be certain you buy KELLOGG'S Corn Flakes the kind in the RED and GREEN package that bears the signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Corn Flakes. None are genuine without it! see ;cci and maccik in rCC OP COLOM IN THK SUNDAY bird could spot me over it without 1 my uttering a word." ! 1 iitNoluntarily broke my rule of j keeping my eyes on the road ahead and gave him a quick, astonished glance. j "There's nothing clairvoyant about ; it," he said. "Herbie, dear, is your family physician, and I know he's down here. Ergo I saw him the other day in his car, and shivered behind my glasses, but he was look ing the other way. By the wav. thtre comes a car away down the 1 road. I'll just put the things 0.1 again. Never can tell who might be traveling this way. Police! How 1 hate these things I I haven't had 'cm off so long before in weeks." I N ill you tell me," 1 said, voicing a question which had been in my mind since the accident, "how the glasses escaped breaking in that col lision?" "They didn't," he answered. "The glass is strewn over the floor of the car. But I always carry an emergency pair with me. I say, Lady Fair, talk of the devil. If that wasn t Herbie who went past us then I'm a rng-noser oriole. I had swerved my car to avoid the car w hich had flashed past us at a terrific speed. But it is very sel dom that I am able to see the driver of an approaching car, to say nothing of recognizing him. The next instant we heard an auto horn signalling iuriously behind us. The way to rind happiness is to look with happy eyes. EMPRESS Always Coal and R frwkinf THREE DAYS STARTING TODAY MARIE PREVOST "HER NIGHT OF NIGHTS'' From A ustk tkmrm f fsm (boys t th siatpic kmstr mi m auknv haa ctta tw fimnfm bmiuH of -Mr .Ntr! ( "istfcfV ar Hwk for kpann. and Paris tor tar stas ar aam ia a style ditalajp ia tais BMtwra. CHILDREN 1 DIME ANYTIME. "Mothv.Ut'i go in that ftaurant and gt tome Ktllogg't Corn Flak an' milk an' fruit. Oh I I'm $o hot! An', Mother, I can oat a big bowlful if you'll go in thtro and get torn Ktllogg't liko we have hornet Oh, come on" day feast! rvu. SEE thekc'j my watch::: that dftOTnct or 1 J'lll " l2 FT"" Sin.ice IXC Speeding King on Visit Here Recalls 1897 Experience Experiences on his first visit to Omaha, in 1897, when he contested in a hicyclc race between tins city and Blair, were recounted by Barney Oldfield, speedway hero, who ar- rived here from Denver yesterday, Because Barney, who was scratch rider and won time prize and iourlh place, told reporters he had tied a SCiriners' Special for Friday OnSy Dedication and Ceremonies, Abdallah Shrine Leavenworth, Kansas Courtesy Noble McClurg of Leavenworth FRIDAY ONLY At 11-1-3-5 Now Playing BOOTH TARKINGTON'S An e?.:ena:Eing story of an American heiress in Italy ' sri? fell in !cve with a prince. Then her sweetheart firs Kckc-T.a heard of it and took the first steamer. Y-wstS erjfv lie contest. Photographed in America. JAMES K1RKWOOD STARTS TODAY HOOT GIBSON in the story of the west, ii Trimmed COMING RODOLPH VALENTINO "Tha Lilll NOW SHOWING! A great story d r a matic thrill, and tha thrill of a nightr i d e r s ' raid. Ask the thousands who'va stca It. Alsa A Furnace of Fun! BUSTER KEATON In "The Blacksmith" Spectacular Scenic Novelty CAPT. LAURENCE & CO. Bee Vant Ads Produce Results. LA Drawn for The Bee by McMrm TZ s-y bottle of vinegar around his neck, several local riders "followed suit" in subsequent race, he said. An increase of .'"7 per vt nt in sale over the same month a yesr ago makes Julv bv far the best in the j history of the Oldheld l ire com. j pany, according to Mr. Oldneld. who is visiting; J. L. Bain, new manager of the" Virertonc Rubber & Tire company, and F. C. Rusidell of the Rusidell Rubber company. 7-9 Now Playing ANNA Q. NILSSON MILE-A-MINUTE-MARY A Ciavcr Christie Comedy Silverman's Orchestra ENDS SATURDAY SUNDAY Deliciou, De.il" MAE MURRAY Today Tomorrow Last Times "COSMOPOLITAN DANCERS" and other sterling features WATCH THIS PAPER TOMORROW for details of SUMMER'S BIGGEST BILL Starting SATURDAY Lakeview Park TONIGHT Annual Midsummer Dancing Contest CASH PRIZES :i