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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1924)
- - L -- The Seas No More Divide, But Bring Us Guests From Far Lands The seas, far from dividing, -unite us to other lands in these days of .usurious and numerous ocean going liners. Many of our fall visitors have crossed to us front one or another side, and to the army nre we most Indebted for the cosmopolitanism In our social life. From Scotland comes Airs. AT. I.. Alacfie, mother of Mrs. Pigott, wife of Maj. William Pigott, commanding officer at Fort Omaha. Mrs. Pigott went to New York recently to meet her mother. Brigadier General and Airs. Halstead Dorey have Issued cards for a re ceptlon'and dance to be given Saturday evening at the fort, honoring Mrs. Maefie. Airs. H. I.. I.aubaeh, wife of Colonel Daubach, will arrive next week from Honolulu to visit her daughter. Mrs. Farragut Hall, and Captain Hall until after the holidays. Her visit here will renew a friendship she had In Georgetown university with Mrs. George Duncan, wife of General Duncan. Mrs. Daubach Is also a lifelong friend of Airs. H. A. Eaton, wife of Colonel Eaton. Mrs. Daubach is an accomplished singer and linguist. Her home In El Paso, Tex., before her marriage, gave her the opportunity to spend a great deal of time In Mexico before her army travels. Colonel and Mrs. Trent arrived last week from a short slay In Washing ton D. C., following 17 yenrs in Manila, where Colonel Trent was Judge In the’supreme court. Colonel Trent Is taking the place of Col, Kyle Rucker, who Is now In Washington. English visitors In the civilian set this year will be Dr. and Mrs. J. Me Gibbon, who will arrive from their home In Liverpool to visit their daughter, Mrs. Lee Ross Newkirk. Miss Jean McGlbbon, who spent six months here last year, may return "UhMhr:r jfrank Hamilton of Paris will arrive during the holidays to visit the ^ C. W. Hamlltons. ___ St. Joseph Guests of Walter W. Head. Walter W. Head has as his guests Mr. and Mrs. William Thompson of St. Joseph, Mo. Among the hostesses this week in their honor are Mes dames Louis S. Clarke, L. C. Nash and W. A. Fraser. Fort Omaha Tea-Dance Not to Be Given This Week. Owing to the Halloween dance at Fort Crook Friday night, the officers and ladies of Fort Omaha will not give their weekly tea (lance on that date. For Dr. Meek. Dr. Lois Hayden Meek, educational secretary of the American Association of University Women, is to be the guest of honor at a luncheon the Omaha College club is giving at the First Presbyterian church on Wed nesday, October 29, at 1 p. m. Dr. Meek's talk at this luncheon will be of special interest to the mothers ns she will give some valuable helps for the training of the child at the pre school age. At 4 P- rn. on Wednesday Dr. Meek will be the guest at a tea at the home of Mrs. Thomas Casady. Mrs. Casady will he assisted in receiving by Mrs. James Dendar, president of the Omaha Coliege club, and Mrjs. Dwight Porter. Mrs. Harvey Newbranch and Mrs. Daniel Jenkins will preside at the tea table. Dr. Meek's talk at the i tea will be for the teachers, principal ly. as she will emphasise the inter relation of the home education and the school training. Past Gaieties. Mrs. Arthur Smith gave a four some at luncheon and mah Jong Mon day. Chapter B. S. of P. E. O. enter tained at tea on Monday for 80 guests, at the home of Airs. Roy Ralph. Rev. Frank Smith of the First Central Congregational church spoke on the "Trend of Afodern Thought.” For the Kremor Bains. Air. and Mrs. Adolph Storz enter talned a picnic party Sunday evening in honor of Air. and Airs. Kremer Bain of Bonne Terre, AIo., who are spending a few weeks with Airs. Bain’s mother, Airs. James X. Wood erd._ To Fremont Party. Mesdames Walter Dawson, Harry Byrne, Benjamin Harrison and John K. Morrison will go to Fremont Thursday for a luncheon to be given by Mrs. Lovane Fitzsimmons. Airs. Augusta Stewart and Mrs. Harold Byorth. For Mrs. Cullingham. Airs. R. Beecher Howell will give a luncheon Thursday at the Omaha club for her daughter-in-law, Airs. Sidney Cullingham. Chapter Hadassah Meets. w Chapter Hadassah will meet Wed nesday at the synagogue, Nineteenth and Burt streets. Hallowe’en Parties v_----—' Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. T'ndeland will give & Halloween party on Fri day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Rushton will en tertain their bridge club at a Hallow een party Friday evening. Airs. Harry Nicholson will give a Halloween dinner Friday evening from 6 until 9 for her little daughter, Mary Elizabeth, and 35 of her friends. /- -- —' | The Housewife's Idea Box rJ ipf» in The best way to chop suet or meat Is to put It through a mincing mu chine. If you do not possess one k try this way: Roll the meat or fnt In flour. Roll firmly with a rolling pin then chop. Roll and then chop again, Tou will find this very successful. THE HOTTSEWinS. . iCopyrlsbt. 1134.) r^our Problems | y___/ A Kude _ Admirer. Dear Miss Allen;’ I am a girl of 18. About two months ago I met a man of 20 who is a member of onr Hub. For a while we went about together quite steadily. I thought a lot of him and Anally grew to love him. And everyone knew that he eared a lot for me. I saw him every Saturday, Sunday and sometimes during the week. He had a date with me one Friday night and didn't keep it. That was the first time he disappointed me. A few evenings later I met him at our club. He hardly spoke to me. And ever since he has barely said "Hello and "Goodby" when we happened to meet. I would like to ask him what the trouble is, but don't quite dare. Should [ put my pride in my pocket and walk over and speak to him? Or should I write? What if he shouldn't answer? I am very much In love with him. though I appear as Indifferent as he. What do you advise? LOVESICK. Certainly, ask your friend quite frankly why he failed to keep his ap pointment with you. Do this in a friendly way. If his reply is cour teous ask him to call oh you—just as though nothing had happened. He may have listened to silly gos sip or may have taken offense at something you said or did that has quite escaped your memory. You tan afford to overlook a Arst offense. Don't allow yourself to think of him as more than a friend, for you have no reason to believe tbat his feeling for you is other than simply friendly. Of course if he fails to accept your Invitation to call or shows rudeness to you again- for he really has been rude—don’t extend further Invitations to him and regard him henceforth merely ns a passing acquaintance. Wants to Grow. Dear Martha Allen: i am asking for advice to grow. I am 18; I am five feet high. BLUE EYES. Either wait and give time a chance or see a physician to be sure the glands which control growth are working full time. Dundee Bridge Club Meets. Mrs. J. B, Hays will entertain the Dundee Bridge club Wednesday. Three tables will be placed for the game. ^ | Happy Is The Mot 1 I when the hah) is Well | ■ Constipation is the bane of babies. Prevent it jl with half a tcaspoonful of Dr. Caldwell's jl • Syrup Pepsin j IjT requires no long experience in jl • the bringing up of children to under- jl : stand that food waste must pass out of the :l • system promptly, and so the intelligent mother jl : will watch the baby’s stools. :l : In infancy the child should have two T : or three passages in 24 hours, and in childhood •! j one or two. Less than that will soon tell in canker II ; sores, coated tongue, foul breath and restlessness. " i ; As these signs deveiop.-promptly give half a tea- I - spoonful of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup l’epsin, and in 1 'Si ; a few hours the symptoms will vanish. Si : Thousands of mothers have reared ■ I I proud familieswith no othermedicine than Syrup SI S Pepsin, for it has relieved their families of con- SI I stipation for thirty years. Rev. Mary F. Malcolm, S| j j Belle River, 111., and Mrs. James Richmire, Ster I ; lingville, N. Y., have had great success with it *1 ; and constantly urge others to use it. S| I Here you have a laxative ideally suited to and to ward off fevers and colds. You will be grate- :| • family purposes, as it acts gently and without grip- ful to see your child have natural sleep without ;| j ing, is exceptionally pleasant to take, and contains the use of opiates. ;l ; no opiates or narcotics. .. . II : , , - , , . ^ , Use it yourself and give it to the adults :| . J he formula IS clearly stated on every in the family. There will he less sickness, less ab- :| . package and is a vegetable compound of Egyptian sence from work and school. When you see what :l . senna with pepsin and agree- , . , Dr.Caldwell’sSyrupPepsindocs ;l : able aromatics. A bottle, which Free Sample Bottle Coupon foryouyou will discard pills and *1 : can be had at any drug store, —----1- powders and salts and coal tar ll ; lasts a family months and costs rherspeople who wy ri«btly prefer to iry • drugs disguised in candy A ll ; an average of less than a cent remedy like this, that sells over J : tGlVC °He hal/ 10 * T' « •h. r.p.ln Syrup Co.. 5.B W..h!niton '"'»>«'> bottle, annually, the J • spoonful, according to age, for Monrtctllo, Illinoi., and • free •ample bottle of largeit sale In the world, must .1 j constipation, biliousness, loss Dr. caidwell'a 8vn*p Pep«in will be aant them have su|>erior merit. We guar* ZI l of appetite, flatulence, belching, poarpeidby mail. Do not indoae pottage, it u free, antee it or refund your money, si DR.CALDW LVS j I SYRUP PEPSIN j The Family Laxative jl liii*i.11.‘iiiiiiiiSmSmUmAiAiis ‘ T * VirTi W VW ViV tifT.r."m ill ltd Drama League Friday v_■* L w Miss Laura Sherry will open the season for the Omaha Drama league oil Friday, 4 p. m., Brandeis theater. Miss Sherry's program is divided into three parts each given In a change of costume. Lyrics, French dialect sketches and old French folk songs make up the program. Miss Sherry was reared In Prairie du Chien and learned her French dialect while she was learning her native tongue. She began her career as an actress playing leading Ingenue roles with Richard Mansfield In repertory, being later associated with Sir Henry Beerbohm Tree, Henry Miller and George Broadhurst. Her work is considered more than entertaining, it Is said to have dis tinct historical value to the Amer ican people, portraying ss ft doee, the beauty and charm In the lives of the French voyageurs and inhabi tants of the Mississippi valley around Prairie du Chien. St. Catherine Dance Patrons Announced. St. Catherine hospital alumnae benefit dance will be Riven at the Fontenelle hotel, October 3ft, 1924. Miss Helen Murphy Is chairman of the committee. The patrons and patronesses will be Doctor* and ftfeadame* T. J. Dwyer. J. K. Dwyer, LeRoy Crummer, F. it. ' 'onlin, R. Rlx. \\\ P. Wherry. W. P. Haney, J. A. Sander*. J. S. Honey, .1. F. Kelly, K. S. Furay. N. J. Everett, Louis Dermody, L. A. Dermody, H. T. Alllncr ham, F. W. Nlehaue, A. Harhs. K. tf Shlmel, \V. H. Taylor. Doctor* A. H. Koenig. J. W, Duncan. JI. T. Sullivan, J. Severin. B. M. Riley. Messra. and Mesdamea L. C. Nash. V. Keogh. O. V. Furay. O. H. Bannettler. J. It. Hanley. John Hopkins. J A. tlentle m&n. L. A. Hoffman, B. J. .Larkin. Leo A. Daly, J. F. t'oad. Roy Byrne. T. J Donahue. T. P. Redmond, Torn O'Connor, A. B. McConnell. A. F. Mullen, T. F. Murphy, S. C. I.eary. B. J Dugun. Mm • lame Catherine Allison, Mias Margaret -Wary and Dan Butler. >■ — --1 ■ ■ " * V Miss Information | __/ | j /---■ > A Wife's Confessional Ailrle Garrison's New Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE (Copyright, 1»24.) How Mother Graham Rushed to Madge's Reseuc. There was but one thought In my mind as Leila littered the significant words, "after File comes back to Marvin so soon and alone,” I must not permit niv secret dismay to be tray Itself to either of them. There fore I constrained my voice to casual ness. ‘■Oh, you Hie not going to stay down there, Edith?" I asked. "Where did I pick up the notion that you were not coming back until spring? "It was lying around loose almost anywhere until a few days -ago," Edith Fairfax laughed, and I wonder ed if it was my Imagination that read a'strained note in the laughter. “Tbit I've changed my mind only within the last few days. I'm going down with Leila, of course, but I'm only going to slay until the party 1« safely over"—this with a tender, merry glance at her sister, flushing and paling under the loving raillery. Edith's Explanation. "I know I’m selfish," Leila said, and in her voice was all the wistful ness of the Indulged child who sud denly sees a. separation from the per son upon whom she most depends, "hut T Just couldn’t live If Ede wasn't with me until—” “Well, you may go on living." Edith Fairfax laughed, and in her fare was mirrored the tender beautiful protec tion which has enfolded her delicate younger sister during her entire life. "You know very well I won't leave you a minule until you're perfectly safe. Then Aunt Dora and Mother Graham can boss and pet you to their hearts' content, and you won't need me. You'll be too busy." Leila's beautiful eyps were sudden ly misty. “I'll need you all my life, Ede!” she cried, and I saw Mother Graham's eyes meet Mrs. Durkee'g with the conviction which I shared that Alfred Durkee's young wife, so near the sc colade of motherhood, had spoken only the truth. She had always leaned upon her elder sister's superior strength and more disciplined nature, and as long as Edith was near her she would con tinue to do so. For Leila's own de velopment under her coming new re sponsibllitlea, It was far better for Edith to he so far axvay that her younger sister could not appeal to her guidance. But It. was not for that reason that Edith was coming north as soon as Leila’s ordeal was safely over. T sensed this psychically even as Edith answered tenderly: "And you'll have me all your life. Kitten. But,” turning to Mother Graham and me, with an explanatory little smile, "I have the chance for some work which I really mustn't turn down. It means more of a fu ture than I have dared to hope, and It wouldn’t be fair to the—the people who have given me the opportunity for me to stay sway from It any longer than Is absolutely necessary.” "You Ought to Be Starting.” Was It my Imagination, or did she hesitate perceptibly before the word "people?’ Had she, perhaps, meant In say "person" and changed to the plural form because she had been seized With a sudden impulse to con cealment? My pulse* throbbed with a Jealous suspicion that long had been absent from them. None knew better than I—for I had heard the fact often enough from Dicky—that Edith Fair fix's artistic attainments were not very high. But I also knew that her determination never faltered, her energy never flagged and because ot the respect for her grit and the gen nine liking for her personality, pre ..:.vifw vailing among a coteri* of artiste kindred spirits lo whom Dicky and Billion I’ndcrwood both belonged, there had come to her. through their unobtrusive aid a modest measure of success which she never could have attained unaided. Della's artistic ambitions had been early overshadowed by her love for Alfred Durkee, ami I knew that the best friends of the two sisters had for a long time hoped that Kdith would give up the struggle and ac cept the home and devotion which Dr. Jim Paige had kept inviolate for her. Hut this revelation of her plans emphatically negatived all such hopes, and the jealous convection that some how, somewhere, Dicky was Involved in her sudden change of schedule, suddenly loomed terrifyingly before me. I was able,'however, to muster will-power enough to register con ventional Interest, hut I was grateful indeed to my mother-in-law for her emphatic—and I guessed—Intentional sidetracking of the subject. "Margaret.” she said didactically. "I don’t want to hurry you, but if you're going to have a beach picnic with those children, you ought to be starting. You don't want to risk driving home after dark, you know. Vesper Musleale Postponed. The Musleale Vespers on Sunday, October 19, at the home of Mrs. K. D. • Hurke, and Sunday, October 26, at the home of Mrs. Charles Offutt, were sponsored by the Young Women s Christian association, and were de lightful affairs In everyway. Nurses were special guests at Mrs. Burke s, and employes of the telephone com pany at Mrs. Offutt's. The third and last of the series was to have been held at the hbme of Mrs. C. M. Wilhelm on Sunday No vember 2, but will be postponed to a later dat* because of Mrs. Wil helm's absence from the city. \ isits Mrs Koltorman. Mrs. Frank Clifford of l,os Angeles arrives Wednesday to visit her sister. Mrs. R. W. Kolterman. Mrs. Koiter man will give n three-table luncheon bridge on Thursday. __ 4 Mrs. kiddoo Hosles?. Mrs. Guy Kiddoo will entertain s' luncheon Thursday for the truest* of Mrs r. Louis Moyers. Mrs. Pavld Keith and Miss Florence llnllornn of .Suit Lake City. ———SM Ahamo Auxiliary Dance. Ahnmn auxiliary. Typographical union, prill give a dance tonight et Hanscom park pavilion. n> e Want Ada produce results. For School Lunches and when the kiddies come home from school “hungry as baby bears” —just give them all they want to eat of ITEN 5 Graham Crackers, spread with butter, jam, jelly or anything else they like. Good for the-n! You and all your folks will like Iten's Graham Crackers, because of their pleasing taste and fine flavor of good wheat. The longer you chew, the better you like them, though they are so ,tender that they literally “melt in your mouth.” These fine crackers are easily digested and highly nourishing because made of the best grade ingredients, carefully selected and thor oughly tested before using. When packed in the re turnable can (either half or full size) all dust, moisture and odors are kept out—and all delicious goodness kept in, so these crackers reach your table fresh, fine and perfectly palatable. JUSl Try a reiurnmir (half or full size, as you pre fer) of 1 t e n's Graham Crackers and make your kid dies happy with this fine and healthful food. F rce Weight and Height ; | Tablet A postal card request to Iten Biscuit Go., Omaha, Neb., will bring you a free copy of “Building Up Healthy Bodies for School Children.” This contains the weight and height tables for both boys and girls, as ap proved by the Bureau of Ed ucation of the federal gov ernment. You want your children to enjoy childhood while they may. But before they can be ' TRULY HAPPY, they must be HEALTHY. Why not check up now and make sure of it? Ask your grocer for Iten’s Graham Crackers by NAME t I always. Get the GENUINE and be SATISFIED all ways. j N-99 I cMy husband insists on Buller-Nul Coffee/' >,:<■< ft Hi, %u w’ould be surprised bow often grocers 1 I tell us, “My customers insist on Butter-Nut I Coffee. Nothing else ill do. They say there I is none to compare with it. I That is the tnbute women always pay to de ll pendable quality. Butter-Nut is always coffee I at its best; rich, mellow and delicious. Wherever I it goes it wins a host of friends. I If y>ou have never tried Butter-Nut, order a I can toda>\ Let your family be the judge of its II exquisite flavor. I Coffee Delicious" I 3 Lb.Cans ( 1 Lb.Cans i 1111 imlWnow- • - A--—