Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 04, 1921, WOMEN'S SECTION, Image 18

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4 B
Council Bluffs
Society
CooMCeUey.
On of Iht first of the September
brides was Mitt Florence Kelley.
whose marriage to Francis J. Cool
was tolemiied yesterday morning
In St.-Francii Xavier'i , Catholic
church, and followed by a nuptial
mass. , '.
Mri. Cool wore a becoming- uit
of dark blue with jade green hat
and a corsage of Ward rcaei to
complete her costume.
Mill Mary Kelley at bridesmaid
wai gowned in brown, with hat to
match, and her-tersage wai of Co
lumbia rose. .... ,
Joieph Flynn attended Mr. Cool
at belt man. '
Immediately ' following the cere
mony a wedding breakfast wai
served at the home of the bride'i
mother, on Sixth avenue.
To Attend Wedding.
In Deniton, la, next Tuesday
evening will occur the wedding of
a former Council Bluffs girl, Mm
Marianne Simmi, and George Stur
gesi. Among the gueiti will be Mr. and
Mri. L. C Squire and Mri. Howard
Tilton of thii city.
Lei Affairea d'Armour.
A Council Bluffi girl whose en
gagrment wai announced last week
in Washington, W. C, ii Mii Mar
garet Green, whose marriage to
Courtney Campbell of New York
will be solemnized early this winter.
Miss Green is the daughter of
Congressman and Mrs. W. K. Green.
She attended the- local High ichool
and later entered National Tark
seminary in Vashin$ton. The past
year she ipent in Madison, Wis., at
the. State university, where she be
came a member, of the Kappa Alpha
sorority.
Congressman Green will arrive in
Council Bluffs the first of the week.
In Riverside, Cal., last week an
nouncement was made of the ap
proaching marriage of Miss Mar
garet Wolfs and Harry'Mills, which
will take place in November.
Misi Wolf i is a sister of Mrs,
George Wickham, and recently spent
a winter in Council Bluffs.
Luncheon.
A luncheon of 20 covers was given
at the W. S. Stillman home last
Tuesday by Miss Nancy Stillman
; and Miss Esther Pusey in honor of
Miss Betty Bonson of Dubuque,. Is.,
who has been visiting her uncle,
George S. Wright.
Bridge.
Mri. John Mulquech entertained
six tables of guests at bridge last
Tuesday afternoon at her home on
' Blug" street.
Mrs. A. W. Tyler was awarded
the prize for high score and Mrs.
Henry Cox of Omaha received the
eut-for-all.
Fof.Miss Cooper.
s Complimentary ;" to Hist; Flora
Cooper, who leaves Monday to as-
mm. hrr neur rltitiet as assistant
iin thr Illinois State Normal !
. ; university, s mi&nvn
entertained at luncheon Friday. -
. i
The centerpiece was lormea 01
mignonette and covers were placed
" for Mesdames G. W, Kirn arid Tat
roe, Missel Edna Sprague, Edith
Flickenger, Margaret Flickenger,
Jennie Rice, Henrietta Spcrle, Leota
latswell, .the. guest of honor, and
' Miss Mavnard. '
Friday Bridge Club. . j
Mrs. Blaine Wilcox and Mrs.
George Wickham were hostesses Frl
- day, when the Bridge club of which
they were members met at the Coun
try club for luncheon and cards.
- Sioux City Girl Feted.
To honor1 Miss Mary Ellen Mc
Laughlin, who has been the house
guest of Miss Elizabeth Douglass, a
small Orpheum- party was . given
' Monday afternoon by Miss Jane
' Schoentgen. That evening Mr. and
Mrs. John P. Davis planned a dinner
at the Country club for this vis
itor, and on Tuesday Mrs. William
, Coppock entertained at a luncheon
in her honor at the Athletic club.
.Miss McLaughlin departed
Wednesday for her home in Sioux
City. : . A' .
Miss Empkie Entertains.
A unchcon of eight covers was
given at the Country club on Tues
day of last week, by. Miss Gretchen
Empkie. ' ' '
For Miss Matthews. ,
Miss Laura'Matthews left Thurs
day foe. Des ..Moines, la., and after
a brief visit here departed for New
York, front which point ihe sails
Wednesday on J the "Empress of
1 China," a boat which is to replace
the Mauretania, ' which recently
burned in the Liverpool docks. '
Among the hostesses who honored
Misi Matthews during her stay in
' Council Bluffs were Mesdames Rob
ert Wallace, Glenn Reed, Jack Day,
T. C Aid, A. Rissc, Fred
Rinmnitar mil fi Ci. Saunders:
Misses Flbra Cooper, Nan Murphy,
r . 1 M T , f T
Margaret ieetine ana nuci Luug,
In Des Moines.
Mrs. ' Henry Jennings js in DesJ
Moines, la., where she went to at
' tend the wedding of Miss" Virginia
Stubbs and James Wilson Wallace
, which was solemnized yesterday
afternoon.,:. .
The only other Council Bluffs
people who went over for the nup
tials were Mr." and Mrs.' Garland
Rounds and daughter Peggy Mrs.
Rounds is a sister of the bride and
both she and her daughter were
, members of the wedding party.
Dinner-Dances.
Owing to the fact that after Mon
day night the dinner-dances at the
Country : club will be - discontinued
for the season; reservations for the
me w!r wen nuite heaw. Amonsr
those who! entertained were Harry
. Van. Brunt, ueorge Mayne, jonn
Schoentgen, Donald Macrae, M. F.
Rohrer, Mr. Wise, Frank Riker,
i Oscar Baumeister, Mr. Hazelton,
Mrs. Woodbury, A. L. English, J. J.
Keliher, George Kaiser and Mrs.
Boyer.
A special dinner-dance has bee
arranged for Monday evening and
mntiar thna -tin . have made reser
rations are George Van Brunt, J. R.
Williams, Mr. McMillan ar.a Air.
Crsiton of Omaha. v .
Colt
A number of the golf enthusiasts
were on the course last Wednesday,
-"" when 18 holes were played for qual
ifications for next week, when a
special . prize will be -awarded. At
that time Mrs. . U. iswmgion ana
XUtf Join Davis, will play together;
' Assistant Dean
w
rf J
Miss Flora Cooper leavei Monday
for Normal, 111., a luburb of Bloom
ington, where she is to be assistant
dean of the Illinois State Normal
university.
Miss Cooper was one of the most
popular teachers in the Council Bluffs
High school, where for the past few
vean she' has taucht 'English and
journalism! '
In her honor several dciigntiui ai
fairs have been given during the past
two weeks. '
Mrs. Crawford and Mrs. Frank
Garrett, Mrs. E. E. Evans and Miss
L. Comstock and Miss Marian Tur
ner with Mrs. R. H. Bloomer.
Last week's prize for putting was
won by Mrs. Davis.
Personals.
Mr: and Mrs. Chester Dudley left
Thursday for a fishing, trip in Colorado.-
-
Miss ' Elizabeth Quinn has re
turned from a short stay at Lake
Okoboji, . Ia.
. C. G. Saunders will arrive home
today from Cincinnati, 'where he
went last week on Dusiness. ,
Mrs. Toe : Cheyne and daughter,
Jean, arrived Thursday from Win
nebago, la., where they have been
visiting.
Mrs. Thomas Christian is expected
todav from San Antonio, Tex., to
visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F.
Hughes. . , . t
Miss Henrietta Specie, who for
merly taught in the Council Bluffs
High school, leaves Friday to enter
the University of Vermont. -
.Mrs. E. H. Howbart and son,
Steven, arrived Saturday from their
home in Denver, Colo., for a visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sheehan.
Vfrc TT 'Cfninrtlffr a n A A a 1, rh tr
Helen and Josephine, are expected
home, today -"from Grand Lake,
Cola, where ' they spent the. .sum
mer. . t. . . .
Dr.' and Mrs. Donald Macrae and
Dr. M.- A. Tinley motored to Spirit
Lake. Ia.. last week to attend the
state meeting of the American Le
gion.' ; ' . . "rv. . ". '..'.
Mrs. Sarah Flickenger with her
daughters, Edith and Margaret, ar
rived home 1 hursday Jrom Montana,
where they have beensummering on
a ranch. V;
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. McConnell
had as their guest' last week Miss
May Randall,, a niece of Mrs. Mc
Connell, who was en route "-to
Lead, S. D. '
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Clark of -New
York Citv "will arrive today iot a
visit with; Mr, Clark's brother and
wife, Mr an -Mrs. J. A. CJark of
Blutt street. -v ' - ' ' '
Mrs.'Angeline Brindsmaid, Mrs.
Elsie Bowles of New Yfk, and Miss
Mary Key.who were guests at the
W. A. Maurer cottage at Lake Oko
boji, returned "home during the past
week.
Mr. and .Mrs. Robert Organ and
daughter, Katrina, motored to Stew
art, Ia., Saturday, where they arc
spending the week-end with Dr. and
Mrs. Arthur- Brown, tormer coun
cil Bluffs people.
En route from a visit with rela
tives in La Porte, Ind., to' Pasadena,
Cal., Mrs. Helen Taylor Uuayle ana
her daughter, Helen, l arrived in
Council Bluffs' Thursday to visit at
the ; W. A. . Cutler .home on; Clark
avenue! Mrs. Quayle is a sister of
MrsJ Cutler. "t . ."
Miss Elizabeth Bruingtbn is' ill'at
her home on South Seventh street
Miss BruinKton, with her mother and
fbrother, Walter, "spent the summer
with relatives in Portland, Ore., anti
en' route home - contracted . pneu
monia. Her condition is now great
ly improved, but she will probably
not be able: to enter De Panw uni
versity in -Greencas.tle, Ind., this fall
as she had planned. . , ' ,
Bread for fancily shaped sand
wiches . should be sliced across the
long way. This gives more sur
face to work upon.
Things You'll Love
. To Make. , : V-
A stunning new fall hat is shown
today with a petaled crown.- Cover
the upper brim with any light-colored
duvetyn; the under side with
a darker, shade. Cut leaf-shaped
forms of both - colors of the duve
tyn. Have them hemstitched around
the edges. Start at the center of the
crown and stitch on a row of the
darker colored leaves. - Under these
stitch another row using both colors.
Continne in this way until . the
whole crown b covered. 'A hat with
a petaled crown will look very
smart with a new fall suit "
(CoprrttU, lH. St rui Mtw O.)
How Do You Wear
Your Veil?
How do you wear your veilf
Do yon pull Urge meshed veil
over your face so that the tip of
your round-ended noie pushes
through or the end ol your pointed
nose nicks out?
Do you pull the veil tightly acron
your forehead so that your eyelashes
catch in ttr
Do yon always have an irritating
little exceis of veil under the chin
that you repeatedly roll and twist
into a tittle bunch to get out of the
wav?
Do you get the veil on so that It
draws in tome placet and lags in
others?
Do you have trouble because the
veil slips from around your hat
down over your eyes, while it re
mains secure around your neck or
chin?
Do you lose the endi at the back
Irom their fastening and find them
Hating out in the winds of heaven be
hind youf '
Of course, if you follow the mede
In veils, you need do none of these
things, for the really smart veil now
adays floats loosely at the back and
is not held in at all, unless around
the throat. Some of the new veils
are made with little ruffs of feather
or tulle or ribbon that fasten about
the throat. Above this band the veil
puffs and balloons and little effort is
made to keep it taut and smooth.
Some of the new veils are ex
ceedingly attractive. They are made
so that they flare in almost circular
shape from the small hats with which
they are worn. They float out and
hang to the shoulders and add muih
gracefulness to their wearer.
.Now-the tight snug, veil is often
considered in Europe a typically
American trick. ' That is 0 say,
Europeans consider the American
woman a past mistress at arranging
the neat face veil.
Pcrhaos that is the reason why so
many women, even, when, floating
veils are the fashion, wear a face veil
neatly arranged.
These women make none of the
frievous errors enumerated above,
heir little veils are always crisp and
untorn; they are stretched over the
face so that they just touch the nose
and chin and lie smoothly on the
cheek. There is not a bit ol extra
fulness.
These women, too, do not keen
pulling their veils with their fingers
and poking them with their tongues
and winking their eyelids out of the
meshes that touch them. There is as
much a passive art of wearing the
veil, perhaps as an active art of put
ting it on.
Caught Napping.
Mr. De Seines (on beinjr introduced
to adored one's mother) Pardon me,
madam, but have we not met before?
Your face seems strangely familiar. ;
Adored .Gile s Mother Yes, I am
the woman who stood uo before you
"for two whole miles, in a street car
the other day -while you sat reading
a paper. -London Opinion.
When peach puddings are mads
with canned peaches serve the peach
syrup as sauce. -
, Bureau of The' Bee,
Washington, Sept 3.
Already Washington sees unmis
takable signs of the early gaieties
approaching. Unprecedented 'prepa
rations are noticed-' on every hand
for the autumn, festivities, as well
as serious business, when, early in
November, the delegates and vis
itors to the disarmament conference
will be arriving. Even the month
of September will have, its, unusual
social festivity, tor on the evening
of the 15th' the Pan-American Union
building willlbe the scene of a re
ception and " ball, with at least a
thousand guests, in celebration of
the centennial of the five -Central
American republics Salvador, Gua
temala, Honduras, Nicaragua and
Costa-Rica-, i -. .
The intention is , to make this
quite the most beautiful and elab
orate function which has been
staged -in this unique building, arid
there have been some very beautiful
affairs given there, particularly at
times when a part of the festivities
could be in the Aztec garden, the
center of which is- the romantic
sunken, garden, with the lake ui the
center."".. The" president -. and' Mrs.
Harding, the cabinet,, supreme court,
diplomatic corps and resident smart
society, with many . guests from
other parts of the country, are ex
pected. ... The, ministers of the five
countries celebrating will, receive
the guests, and the members Of their
families will assist. -
In the midst . of the preparations
for autumn festivities' society,1 or
what was left of it, in Washington
this' week, paused long enough to
pay proper respect to the dead as
well as to a friendly foreign - country
at the memorial service yesterday
for the, late .King Peter of Serbia.
It was an "impressive ceremony and
an intensely interesting one, con
ducted by a priest of the orthodox
Greek church in the presence of the
president, and cabinet, all the mem
bers of the diplomatic corps who
could be in town; all other officials
and many of the leading resident so
ciety people. The quaint and beau
tiful' little Bethlehem chapel of the
cathedral of St. Peter and St John
was filled to overflowing-and scores
of the invited guests paid their re
spects from the outside.
' Swimming Popular.
Swimming grows more" and. more
the absorbing sport as the summer
wanes. Country places are not now
complete without a good pool with
running water. Even city homes are
beginning to have them and it has
just been discovered by society in
general tfiat little groups of the
chosen few have been enjoying a
new swimming pool in- the lovely
grounds of Boundary Castle, the hill
top mansion . of Mrs. John B.
Henderson which looks as though it
might be a small edition of Windsor
Castle. Mrs. Henderson had the pool
built this summer not only for the
amusement and use of her grand
daughter Beatrice, Henderson, a
debutante of a few seasons hence,
but for the entertainment of the
friends of her son, John B. jr., and
herself. And indeed ail these different
sets have made good use of it the
past few weeks when the congres
sional circle was much in evidence in
town, from necessity. It was here
Was Society
THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 4. 1921.
By Antoinette Donnelly.
YOU probably don tl No matter
how skinny, you think your lot
1c liard than that nf vnur
ter with the opposite style of archi
tecture. You do on shopping days
but on rainy days when you stay
home and carry on a conference on
ways and means with your mirror
and decide the angles would be better
tor a few pounds of healthy adipose
tissue, you must realize that you have
a harder job on your hands arriving
at perfect symmetry than your lister
with her mind set on a perfect meas
urement. : ?!
It is harder to put weight on than
to take it off. That has been, proven
time and time again. Funny, isn't it.
when in both cases it is almost whol
ly a matter of food consumption.
runnier to a fat woman, though,
that any one who is skinny would
ever want to be fat I But they do.
When I ask the ultra-thins if they i
want to get fat, it is not an invita
tion with a guarantee to return you
unrecognized and unclaimed by ycur
immediate family. There's no particu
lar danger othat. Unless you give
that the ultra-fashionables exercised
their aquatic skill, and indeed are
keeping it up during the autumn
season. This exclusive "swimmin
hole" is a part of the lovely land
scape garden of Boundary Castle. -f.
Unusual Costume. '
Mrs. Peter Goelet Gerry, wife of
the senator from Rhode Island, for;
merly Miss Mathilde Townsend, who
has won honors on the turf and on
the ice, is equipped to win as many
in' her aquatic accomplishments. She
wears, by the way, for her swim
ming exercises, , an unusual bathing
suit of purple satin- with a round
neck, short sleeves, moderately short
skirt and "rolled stockings." A" cap
of ,:purple surmounts her ' lovely
blonde head, and she is none the less
beautiful and graceful in her appear
ance and her strokes in the swim
ming pool than she is on the ball
room floor, where few women have
ever, even nearly approached her su
premacy. - Representative and Mrs. C. Frank
Reavis returned to Washington on
Thursday after a delightful week's
outing on Delaware, bay. ' Their
-party included Representative and
Mrs.. Graham of Illinois and former
Representative and Mrs. .Humphrey
of Washington. . They spent their
time in' deep sea fishing and cruis
ing on a well-equipped yacht and
the fish were so numerous that they
almost took the pep out of the sport.
News of Former Omahan.
David W. Mulvane, republican na
tional committeeman of Kansas,
whose wife was an Omaha girl, Miss
Helen McKenna, is migrating be
tween Washington and Atlantic City
this summer and will continue to do
so until the middle of this" month
when they will come here for a short
stay before returning to their home
in Topeka. Mr.- Mulvane spent this
week in Washington and returned to
Atlantic Citv" to 'join Mrs. 'Mulvane
at the MarlbOrough-Blenheim,. where
she has been all summer. '
Gen. J. J.-"Pershing-; returned -to
Washington the middle., of the week
after a trip of inspection to Platts
burg, N, Y., and Camp Devan, Pa.,
and 'a visit to Detroit to take part
in the Red Arrow reunion. He re
turned by way of Camp Red Cloud
in the mountains of Pennsylvania,
where his son, Warren, spent the
summer. Warren returned here
with his father and is enjoying "a
visit with hint
Mrs. Harry A. Williams, jr., nee
Harrison' of Omaha, who is visiting
friends in Washington, spent a nart
of this week in Baltimore and Elli
cott City the guest of Mrs." Dean
Currier of . Chicago, formerly Miss
Anna Thomas, who is spending the
summer and autumn with her par
ents in their Ellicott City home. Mrs.
Williams- will be joined here on
Monday by Mr. ; Williams, who' is
still at the White Sulphur. He will
make the trip by motor and after a
few days here they will return to
their home in Norfolk by motor, tak
ing Miss Low with them. Mrs. Wil
liams was entertained at tea at the
Powhatan on Sunday afternoon by
Miss Katherine May Kearney, who
has frequently been her guest in
Norfolk. Miss Kearney entertained
at the hotel instead of at home, be
cause' of the serious illness of her
grandmother, and the company was
just, a few of the very ' intimate
friends of Mrs, Williams.
DouWisk
To Get Erf?
yourself over to a strict milk diet
under a doctor's direction and make a
straight business of putting weight
on within a given time, the process is
fairly slow at first. But once you get
the digestion trained to the things
that it balks at now and which in
turn are responsible for the prepond
erance of bones over flesh, the trick
is turned arid you can keep your
weight at a desirable mark.
Undernutrition is the most com
mon cause of thinness. Some thin
peple are just born thin and will
go to their graves thin, as some are
born with a heritage of dimpled
roundness.
The undernutrition is not always
eating too little food but not eating
the foods that build and fatten. Ail
ments to the digestive organs, defec
tive teeth, and an easier philosophy
of life are additional reasons for the
too thin person. . These may be
remedied by medical and dental at
tention and by learning to save on
one's enegry instead of wasting it in
an everlasting rushing hither and
yon,
Supplying Enegry Food.
If there is no such trouble, an im
proved diet and aihygienic mode of
life will-accomplish the desired result.
Thin people require an .abundant
supply of energy food, or fuel food,
fats, starch and. sugar. Butter and
oil are the best fats for them, as they
are less, likely to disturb the diges
tion., , . ' , . . .
The big problem with the girl who
wants to put on weight is to secure
the largest number of calories in the
most digestible form. The following
dietaries furnish so many calories
over the required amount of the aver
age . individual that improved weight
is almost certain to result. These are
simply sample meals, which you may
use as patterns, supplying substitute
meals from the list I will give you
later:
BREAKFAST.
; Orap juice, one cup. '
Cooked cereal with four dates (large
helping-), with cream and augar.
Scrambled eg-ga, one-halt cup.
Toast, one slice buttered thick.
Cream, thin, seven-eighths cup or cup of
halt cream and halt milk.
LUNCHEON. ,
Creamed chicken (one-half cup) on toast.
. Lettuce salad with oil dressing;
and crackers.
- Vanillia Ice cream.
Cup of chocolate.
, - DINNER.
' ' Cream of corn soup (one cup).
. Roast beef, two and -one-half slices,
1 - Baked- potato, one medium.
Buttered lima beans, three-eighths cup.
Two slices whole wheat bread.
Butter, two . tablespoons.
- Baked apple, one large.
' Cream, thin, one-half cup.
' . Sugar, one tablespoon .(scant). '
BREAKFAST.
Prunes, one dish.
Cereal with milk or cream and sugar.
One egg.
Two slices buttered toast.
One cup coffee with cream and augar or
one cup cocoa.
LUNCHEON.-
Cream soup, one cup.
Salad with mayonnaise dressing.
One buttered roll.
Pudding with cream.
DINNER. .'
Broiled steak.
Scalloped potatoes, one cup.
.Buttered beets, one-half cup.
Lettuce and tomato salad.
. Boiled custard, one cup. .
Cookies, two.
Butter and Milk Help.
A fattening mixture can be made
of one quart of milk to which are
i . . ' - - i
JdraordinQru ibh
DIAMOND RINGS
18 K. WHITE GOLD MOUNTINGS
C; B. BROWN GO.
Diamond Merchants
16th and Farnam Streets - - . . Omaha
The) Treason Chest ( Omaha
added fwl ounces of cream and
several ounces of milk tusar, to be
taken as a beverage at each meal
M ". and cream contain building tub.
stai.cei found in no other food, build,
ing not only fatty tissue but build
ing every nue in the body.
Take milk several times a day,
either plain, hot, cold, malted, or
with chocolate and cocoa. Drink be.
tween meali or with meals, or both.
You may have to train your appe
tite to these fattening foodstuffs by
sheer will, but it can be done. And
remember that an extra pat of butter,
an extra gtats of milk, extra amount
of cream and sugar on fruit and
desserts ill add a little to the burial
of bones and angles.
Diet It Generous,
Study this list of fattening foods
and incorporate them into your daily
menus:
Soups Bean, rice, barley, celery,
asparagus, mutton, clanyor chicken
broth, all cream soups. '
Meats Fat bacon, ham, ro: t beef
or mutton, lamb chops, sweetbreads,
lausage, squab and all gain.
Vegetables Potatoes, omatoei,
beans, spinach, onions, beets, aspara
gus, letuce, with oil dressing. Plenty
of iutter and oil should be incor
porated in preparing these.
F a r i n a c e o u s Oatmeal, mmh,
hominy, rice, whole wheat bread,
cornmeat, corn bread, milk toast,
biscuits and muffins, gems, graham,
and oatmeal crackers.
Desserts Sago and rice pudding;
tapioca, custards; all cooked fruits
with fresh cream and' ice crtam.
Drinks Milk, chocolate, cocoa;
and water. Olive oil after each meal.
Thin women don't need to go in
for the strict exercise regime their
fat sisters must. Swimming and
walking I recommend as the best
forms of exercise. They make the
appetite more keen, and swimming,
particularly, brings every mucle of
the body into play and is developing.
Of course, all outdoor games are ad
vised; in fact, all forms of exercise
that come easily within the reach
but in the beginning it is the food
that is the important thing.
And getting sufficient lest a
good round 10 hours every night.
Meats.
If vou would be sure of good, fresh,
sanitarily-killed meat look for the
government inspection stamp upon
every side of beef, pork or mutton
from which your order is cut. Every
packing plant doing an interstate
business must operate under inspec
tion. ' Inspectors are placed in it to
see that it is kept tn a san:tary Condi
tion. Every animal brought to it
for slaughter is inspected by an in
spector of the government, and if any
meat or product is found to be un
wholesome or. otherwise unht for
food it is condemned an.l cannot be
used for human food. ' All animals
ore killed under the eyed of the in
spectors and every carcass receives
. post-mortem examination to detect
any evidence of diescase that miht
. have escaped the ante-mortem in
spector. Therefore if you insist on : your
butcher showing you the .govern
ment stamp on your meat vou may
be satisfied you are getting pure,
clean meat from healthy animals.
This, of course, does not apply to
those who prefer kosher killed meat
'
, Good Luck.
-Nowadays a woman's, idea .of :good
luck is to find a pair, of her socks'
that don't need darning. Wnnipeg
.telegram. ..
' ' THE
DR. BENJ. F BAILEY
SANATORIUM
Lincoln, Neb.
This institution is the only one
in the central west with separate
buildings situated in their own
grounds, yet 'entirely distinct, and
rendering it possible to classify
cases. The one building being fit
ted for and. devoted to the treat
ment of noncontagious and nonmen
tal diseases, no others being admit
ted; the other Rest Cottage being
designed for and devoted to the
exclusive treatment of select mental
cases requiring for s time watchful
care and special nursing.
tues in
ICHOCOLATESj
INKER-CIRCLE
x CANDIES'
Sandwiches. -
A delicious sandwich for afternoon
tea is toasted date, cheese and nut
sandwich.
Toat two slices of white bread on
one tide only; spread each with but
ter on the untoasted tide. Tben
spread one piece with cream cheese
-BOWENS
September Starts With
Remarkable Value-Giving
at BO WEN'S
' Never Before Have We Been Able,.
to Offer Such Amazing Values
Note These Price Reductions
...
Do Not Miss This Opportunity to Get Your
. Library Table
Reduced From S85.C0 to
124.50.
Genuine Mahogany. Your
choice of Queea Anne or Wil
liam and Mary designs.
Now $24.50
Reduced From $43.50 to
$23.50 .
Beautiful quartered White
Oak Mission Style Table.
Size of top 23x48. "
Now $23.50
Tr til
, Select Your Sun Parlor Furniture
;,;V"-- :;;;;;;,.;;::Now.. 'Sr
A Solid Car Just Received, in Ivory,
Frosted Brown and the new shade of Gray
NOTE THESE LOW PRICES
$120.00 Three-piece Ivory SuKe-v ' . if (grn aa
Lafge Davenport, Chair and Rocker...... vOJMU
(Without Cushions) . ' . '
1 37.50 Frosted Brown Rocker 9A RA '
Full spring seat, beautifully upholstered... .4U.OU
I 25.00 Frosted Brown Table . s . $12 50 '
I 40.00 Ivory Rocker Upholstered .In fine grade .'" ffOI AA'
Cretonne, full spring construction..."., Va4AUy
W 'VKWr2SSM30ri with shatte.
$85,00 Fr, Brown Chaise Lounge
Beautiful upholstering
$47.50 Fr. Brown Writing Desks
"; For .'.
$89.50 Fr. Brown Day Beds-
Latest designs, high grade
$47.50 Ivory Tea Wagon
Howard St., Bet:
l For'.....: -
I
" ; ..--
moistened with" a little mk" and
intoned with salt and pipnts to
ute. . Cover with three ' dates,
washed, stoned and cut in thin
slices crosswise. Sprinkle with finely
chopped nut meats Cover witlt
the other stice of bread, cut in two
diagonally and serve at onct oa t
lettuce leaves.
1
Reduced From $55.00 to
$29.00 .
Genuine quartered White Oak '
Colonial Table.. Slse ot top
27x43. :
Now $29.00
deduced From $57.50 to
$27.50 .. i :
Large quartered White Oak'
Table, heavy plank !top,
' size 28x48.. . '
-Now $27.50 5
Floor and Table
Lamps
148.50 Ivory Floor
'Lamp, (in nr
with shade. vXVO
$48.50 Fr. Brown Floor
Lamp,
with shade.
Lamp, . "tflOQC
J32.00 iTOry' T ab 1 e
Lamp,".. 1Qtn
$36.00 Fr. Brown-'Table
Lamp,- CIQCE:
with shade.'
$60.00 Ivory F 1 o. o r
Lamp, : . (
with shade.'
Lamp. .COT.fiC
$3&.0Q
$26.50
$54.00
upholstering
$18 tjft
15lh and 16th
f l