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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1924)
^ Thanksgiving Dinners v— -) Mrs. F. P. Klrkendall will dine with her daughter, Mrs. Glenn Wharton. MV. and Mrs. It. I). Neely and family anil Mrs. Henry D. Neeley will be the guests of Miss George Dennis. Mrs. George Taylor and sons will be guents for Thanksgiving dinner at the home, of Mr. and Mrs. 'Henry Wyman. Mrs. Mary Van Giesen will be a Thanksgiving dinner hostess. Dr. and Mrs. C. O. Rich will be included among her guests. Mrs. Henry W. Yates will have the Ralph Peters, and their small daughters, Jane and Rebekah, Mrs. George Voss and Hal Yates. Mr. and Mrs. David Fenton Davis, their daughter, Nancy Patricia, and 1 Miss Margaret Shnkleford, will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Kirk patrick. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. C. Kennedy will have Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Kennedy, Mrs. D. C. Bradford, Miss Marie Ken nedy, Edward Kennedy and Dr. H. B. Fitzglbbons. One of the largest family dinner parties on Thanksgiving day will be given by Dr. and Mrs. Adolph Sachs, who will entertain 30 relatives at a 5 o'clock dinner at their home. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cowan of Den —0 ver, with their daughters. Misses Mary and Anpabelle, will arrive Thursday morning for Thanksgiving dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Long. The visitors will spend the week-end here. Mr, and Mrs. John T. Yates will en tertain Dr. and Mrs. J. J. McMullen and James, and a party from Odibolt, la., which includes Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mattis, their daughter, Bar bara, and Dr. and Mrs. James Mc Allister. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Shirley will en tertain at Thanksgiving dinner for Mr. and Mrs. M. Shirley and Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Shirley and family, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shirley and family, Mrs. Sophie McDermott and family. Saturday Card Party Promises Success. The annual card party to be given 2 by the Catholic Instruction league ^ Saturday afternoon In the club rooms of the Catholic Daughters of Amer ica, promises to be a very successful affair, according to those In charge. Many handsome gifts have been donated, accordjng to Mrs J. J. Ross bach, general chairman. Among those making reservations are: lUclnmen: FMivnrd Daugherty. Arthur Mullen. Paul Ileed. Will Hamilton. .John Kornmayer. .1 P. Collins t’harle* Asaman. . <\ K. Caughiin. K. K. Van do Ven. John K^rns. M- J. Donahuo. I. . (*. Nash. Mi.'oea: Uov Byrne. .Mario Proulx. McMilBn Hard- Margaret Swift *-00 Inir. Etta Wallace. II. ii. Bn ford. l.aura Power. JatiH O'Brien. Margaret McHugh. J M. Crnney. May Beary. John Gillen. May me Riley. Miles E. Welsh. Reservations for bridge may be made to Miss Margaret McHugh, 2512 South Tenth street, and for high five to Mrs. Rossbach, 602 South Thirty fifth avenue. Mr. Bowie in Scene of Rialto Play This Week. •Tames G. Bowie has returned from sn extended visit to New York, Wash ington and Atlantic City. While in New York he was the guest of Mrs. Wallace Eddinger at her country home on Long Island, and of Dr. I and Mrs. Frank Crane, and of his aunt, Mrs. Bart Bretherton. He attended the opening night of "What Price Glory." after which his aunt entertained for Brian Don Lavy, one of the leading members of the cast, Including Mr. Bowie smong the guests. Mr. Bowie takes part In the West Point carnival scene In "Classmates," starring Richard Barthlemess, which is now playing at the Rialto theater. The McMullens Hosts. Dr. and Mrs. J. J. McMullen will give their first party in their new home on Monday evening. They will have 16 guests to dine with them and will play bridge and mah Jongg. Entertains at the Braudels. Mrs. Sam Outtentlan will entertain -luturday at the Braudels restaurants for Mrs. M. Snloman of Chicago, guest of her daughter, Mrs. Edward Salo man. ADVERTISEMENT. Tronic roughs and persistent colds 1? d to serious lung trouble. You can stuo them now with CreomulsioD, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to till t*. Creomulsion Js a new medical di overy with twofold action; it soothes am heals the inflamed membranes and kill i the germ. Of all known drugs, creosote is rec ognized by the medical fraternity as the gre atest healing agency for the treat iner t of chronic coughs and colds and other forms of throat and lung troubles. Cre mulsion contains, in addition to creoiote, other healing elements which soot e and heal the inflamed mem branes and stop the irritation and in flammation, while the creoiote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, attacks the seat of the trouble and destroys the germs that lead to consumption. -U Creomulsion Is guaranteed satisfac tory in the treatment of chronic coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, catarrhal bronchitis and other forms of throat snd lung diseases, and Is excellent for building up the system after colds or the flu. Money refunded If any rough **’ cold, no matter of how long stand A Ing, is not relieved after taking accord 1 ing (1 directions. Ask your druggist, Creomulsion Co, Atlanta, Ga. A If ->! Sponsors Exhibit From Vienna _____ Miss Dorothy, North of Chicago is here with the Clzek exhibit from Vienna, now showing at the Fine Arts galleries in the public library build ing. It will close November 30. Miss North is seen seated at the desk with pictures from the exhibit on the wall behind her. The exhibit is of work done by Viennese children of school age and includes wood cuts, lithographs, pottery, embroidery, carv ing, toys and postcards. The idea back of Clzek's school is that of freedom for the child s de velopment. "Cizek Is one of the pathfinders In education,” said Miss North. "He be lieves in the greatest possible develop ment for the child itself rather than in an imposed education. The child is full of talent and beauty of spirit which should not be professionalized. A happy, wholesome, creative youth will carry through life with him." Miss North became interested in the school when she was doing war relief f-- ' Personals V___* Mrs. E. O. Ames is recovering from tonsllectomy. C. F. McQaw is spending Thanks giving at Topeka, Kan. Miss Helen Nolan has gone to Kan sas City to spend Thanksgiving day. Mrs. F. A. Brogan has been called to Emporia, Kan., by the illness of her brother-in-law. —— 'i Walter Preston, Jr., student at Yale, will spend Thanksgiving day In New York with a classmate. Miss Irene McKnight will spend Thursday In Lincoln. She will go witfy the Carl Pauls of Thurman, la. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Wilkins will spend Thanksgiving with their son, Frank Wilkins, In Sioux Falls, S. D. Miss Gladys Goodman, who has been in Englewood, N. J., for the past six weeks, will spend Thurs day In Brodklyn. Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. Page leave Sunday for New York, from where they will sail December ♦ for a five month trip around the world. Mrs. John C. Goodwin and two chll dren, from Newcastle, Ind., arrived Sunday to spend the week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Kennard. Misses Mae Reynolds and Hazel Lake and Messrs. Cortes Kelley add James Parmalee will motor to Lin coln Thanksgiving day to attend the Nebraska-Oregon game. Mrs. Margaret Shotwell will arrive Thursday morning with her daugh ter, Margaret, who has- been abroad. Mrs. Shotwell waited 12 hours at the pier for her daughter, who was on the liner Berengarla w-hen It was delayed. Miss Dorothy Davidson and her brothers, John and James, who are in school in the east, will Join their parents, the J. E. Davidsons in Port Huron, Mich., for Christmas. They will return to Omaha December 26 for the remainder of their holidays. Nut erarkers for table use with squirrel heads, bear heads or feroci ous looking wolves and other wild animals come in brass. They do much to set off the nut howl and add their bit to the table Betting. f The Housewife's Idea Box ^ pv , /»• zk To Malta Maaltad I’otatnn* Taafy. If you want a vary taaty potato dl*h, try thla. Add a taHapoon of onion julr* to aarh potato. Than aanaon with pappar and aalt. Till* will Hlva a llttla varlaty to your potato courae, (Copyright, Hit ) ■Hill I WIIISI ... —J work with the Quakers. She Is not a Quaker herself, but became attached to one of their war units through as sociations made at Bryn Mawr, from where she was graduated in 1909, Miss North's work for the Cizek exhibition is voluntary. She Is accompanying it on a tour of this country. Parts of It have already been shown in England. Scotland, Ireland and Wales. More than 6,000 school children have attended the exhibit In Omaha. Some of them have sent back charming greetings to the children of Vienna. "They feel the children behind the pictures,” said Miss North. Sale of cards and prints helps to support the exhibit and the Cizek school. Dr. Kollar of Vienna is also here with the exhibit. He is a critic, writer and archaeologist with whdm the Cizek school Is a hobby. His serv ice, too, is voluntary. The showings are Tree and open to the public. Congregational Bazar and Turkey Dinner Next Week. First Central Congregational church women will hold their annual bazar Thursday and Friday, December 4 and 5, In the church parlors. Luncheon will he served at the church both days and the annual turkey dinner, an anticipated event, will he given Thursday night. Mrs. W. II. Taylor and Mrs. O. T. East man will be In charge of the tea room. Mr?. Heywood Leave?. Mrs. Thomas Heywood of Pitts burgh, who has been the .guest of Mrs. R. B. Busch, leaves Friday for her home. Mrs. Busch is entertain ing at Thanksgiving dinner for her guest and members of the family. Mrs. Ceorge Engler will entertain Mrs. Heywood at dinner tonight. /-*-s Miss Information! V-/ - ii FOR g MOTHER % if A FINE NF.W jfjj W GAS RANGE \« 'or jZ 5 XMAS 1 Jf Gat Department k Ef METROPOLITAN UTILITIES P St district '"9 fcj? 1509 Howard SI. AT 5767 ADVERTISEMENT. HAVECOLORIN CHEEKS Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets. If your skin Is yellow—complexion pallid—tongue coated—appetite poor —you have n bad taste In your mouth —n laiy, no-good feeling—you should take olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—a sub ■dilute for cnloigEl—were prepared by Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study. t>r. Edwards' Olive Tablets nre a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. you will know them by their olive color. To have a clear, pink akin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of buoynn cv like childhood days, you must get at the cause. Dr Edwards’ Olive Tablets set on the liver snd bowels like calomel— yet have no dangerous after effect a. They slart the bile and overcome constipation. Take one or two night ly and note the pleasing results. MU lions of boxes ate sold annually at lbc and 30c. r > -n A W ife’s Confessional Adcle Garrison's New I’hiue of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE (Copyright, 1S24. > v _ The Surprising Request Mother Gra ham Made of Madge. Junior choked back his sobs with an effort which would have done credit to a much older person, and threw up his head with a character istic gesture. "I won't cry one bit more,” he af firmed stoutly, "but you tell my Granzie I'm down here, and she'll tell you to let me come upstairs quick, you bet your boots.” I was too proud of him, and too filled with sympathy for his sorrow ing little heart, to chide him for the slang, but I noticed Dicky's half in voluntary frown toward Katie, and knew that soorier or later I should listen to a diatribe concerning the influence of my little maid's speech upon our child's English. He made no verbal comment, how ever, and I kissed my small son's wet face. "You shall see Granzie just as soon ns the nurse says so," I promised, and then little Mrs. Durkco emotion al and excited, seized me by both shoulders and pulled my face down to hers for a welcoming kiss. "Oh, I'm so glad you've come,’" she cried. “And how perfectly won derful of you to bring Katie.” turn ing to the girl with a friendly smile. “Just go on into the kitchen, Katie and make yourself at home,” she went on with a lltttle laugh, and as Katie with an answering giggle dis appeared in the direction of the kit chen. Her Fluffiness slipped her hands caressingly down to my wrists and pulled me In the direction of the staircase. "I can't let you wait a minute, she said, “for poor Mother Graham has been calling for you ever since she came to .herself. Did Edith tell you how we found her?" "No." I contented myself with the monosyllable, for I knew that little Mrs. Durkee's voluble tongue needed no questions to set It In mo tion. “I Didn't Dare Scream.” "Well, I suppose she hadn't time," she commented condescendingly, "al though I do think she might have let you know something about It. I never was so flabbergasted In my life when I saw her lying there on her face, Just as if she were dead. I tell you, I was just turned plumb to stone for a second or two, I couldn't even scream for help, or stoop to her to see what really was the matter. But finally I did get my senses to-, gether and turned her over, I saw CHIME CLOCKSl I 15’-a DODGE ESTABLISHED 1890 Paul's METROPOLITAN | jc DINING R O O M | I KEEN HOTEL 1 » i •'« for your u 1 Thanksgiving }; | Dinner |_| | Call JA. 3808 !( For Reservations f A IlVC RTIS KM EN T. RHEUMATISM LEAVES YOU FOREVER So Says James H. Allen, Who Drove Out Rheumatic Poisons After Being Crip pled for Years. m 9 iws tm m —. Mr. James 11. Allen, of 26 Forbes Si., Rochester, N. Y., suffered for years with rheumatism. Many times this terrible disease left him helpless and unuble to work. He finally decided, after years of ceaseless study, that no one chii be free from rheumatism until the ac cumulated Impurities, commonly call cd uric acid deposit*, were dissolved lu the Joints and muscles and expelled from the body. With this Idea In mind he consult cd physicians, made experiments and finally compounded a prescription that quickly and completely banished every sign and symptom of rhenium ism from Ills system. lie freely gave Ills discovery, which he called Allenrhu, to others who took It, with what might ho celled marvelous success. After tears of urging he decided to let sufferers everywhere know about his discovery through the newspaper*. “The blessed tcllrf this marvelous prescription quickly giv> has made for It thousands of friends." «s\a Heaton Drug < 'o., who has been up pointed agent in your city. Jt Is Mr. Allen's own discovery, she wasn't dead, for she was breath ing, although she looked as If she'd pass out any second. But I slipped my sweater under her head, and rar hark to the house and told Edith and Leila—you see I didn't dare scream for fear of startling Leila, yoi know.’’ I nodded an assenting eomprehen slon of the necessity of guarding gentle Leila Burkee, so near hei first motherhood, from any shock and little Mrs, Burkss hurfied on lowering her voice to a whisper ai we reached the upper hall, but appar ently forgetting the haste with whirl: she had ushered mo upstairs to set my mother-in-law. "Send Everybody Out.” "Edith came back with me, am Leila telephoned to the neighbors t< help us carry Mother Graham Inti the hourse, and then started In ti get a doctor. But wo couldn't ralsi one for the longest time, as you know i Finally however, a doctor arrived whi brought her to. But that’s all tin good it did us,’’ Mrs. Burkee wounc t/p naively, as if the chief object ol bringing her old neighbor bad to consciousness had been to satlsfj her own curiosity as to the reasor for her seizure. "She wouldn’t tell us what hit hei or scared her, although I know some body must have, for the doctor salt so," Mrs, Burkee continued. "Am the neighbors next door said thei Finest and Fastest to Florida mm Starting December 1st The Floridan—the DeLuxe Train runs through to Miami daily. Time again shortened— SO minutes faster. , • me Lv. Chicago • • • • 1235 p. m. Lv. St Louis «... 3.50 p. tn. Ax. Birmingham • • • 5:40 a.m. Ar. Jacksonville ... 8,50 p> ^ Ar. West Palm Beach • • 7:40 a. m. Ar. Miami .... 10:15 a. m. « J tlC Ar. Tampa . . 5^0 a. m. Ar. St Petersburg ... 800 a. m. Q * f Ar. Smsou .... 8.00 a. m. CmillCllC All provisions for luxurious travel; observation, club , , , , „ / and dining cars; drawing room, compartment—single —dependable all-year tram to __ , . , . Florida with an enviable record OT •mte*”*nd °P«n «Ctl0n sleeping cars to Su of on-time arrivals—leaves Augustine, West Palm Beach, Miami, St. Petersburg, sih£S. «21V^*“y- L”'"’ Tampa “d S""501*- P^an passenger. only. Valet, Arrive. Jacksonville 7;t0 a. m. maid, manicure. second morning m ikingconnec- On-time arrivals assured by powerful mountain type turns tor all Florida resorts. a , . . „ . , , ... . . locomotives and well-maintained roadbed. 1 nrough sleeping cars with drawing rooms, compartments Ullnob Central Service All the Way and open sections to Jackson- * » villc.l arapa, Sarasota viaTampa Our beautiful booklet “Florida" contains many valuable point [eflective Dec. 1 ] Miami [eflec- Write for it. C^rgUPL'aJer^Mrio.fr«rndiJ- forr‘ deseripliva booklet, ask ins Car and COAChoK City Ticket Oftre. SU Soutk ICtk Street. Phone AtUntir SMS ft Hiyderk. Division Passenger Agrni. Illinois Central Ha.lr**4 IU City National Bank BI4g., !tth and Harney mi_ l*h#ne JArkson P2«a. Omaha, Nek. v • . had seen an ugly tramp around that I shrubbery back there across the brook, just now the Iceman told me a strangc-looking man hailed him this morning and asked him if Mrs. Graham lived anywhere around her?. The iceman is a new fellow, but be d heard the name, so he said he guess ed so. What do you think of it all. anyway?” 1 was prevented from applying by the sudden opening of the door just )>eside us. and the appearance of a thoroughly business-like white-uni formed nurse. "Has Mrs. Graham—” she began, then changed her sentence as her eyes fell upon me to: "Is this Mrs. Graham?” At my murmured assent she threw the door wide and gestured me past her, “Your mother-in-law insisted she heard you outside,” she said, and the next minute I had hurried across (he room to the bed wh^re my husband’s mother lay weak and white, with her eyes staring into mine with such burning intensity that I, startled wondered if her reason had been af fected by her fall. She gave me no word of greeting Coats!! Coats!! Coats!! Smart Fur Trimmed Stylet Values 0/^7^ Full to 49.50 X^'l**' Crepe Now— 4l v Lined F. W. Thorne Co. 1812 Farnam v_ ^ but her hand lifted as if with pain ful effort, and gripped mine. “Send everybody out of the room," she whispered. "I must talk to you all alone." ■ Cereal With Dates. One cup cereal, 4 cups boiling wat er, 1 teaspoon salt, dates. Bring the water to boiling point in a double boiler, add salt, then sprinkle in slowly 1 cupful cereal, such as farina, stirring all the while. Cook quockly for 10 minutes, then stand in a pan of boiling water for 20 minutes longer. Serve with stoned and heated dates on top. BALTIMORE SIX SOLID SILVER * Rote Pattern Tea Spoons $6.60 ALBERT EDHOLM Upstairs Jeweler 2nd Floor City Natl. Bid?.