THE BEE; OMAHA. THURSDAY. MAY II. 1922. Society Elsie Storz Bride Ogunquit a Popular Sum morlng riace. Ogunqmt. out of Maine's nioit ai tractive coast rrsorti. fa 10 b ih fathering tiUet (fr nmbf of Omaha Umihrt ihn summer. Mr. Frank Johnson leaves fht first of The Johnsons are planning to builJ a coins t'trre neat km, ir. mm Air i, tiiiur fcon ami ineir cnuaren art alto Ogunquit devotees, and arc punning to t mere again wis year The fceott family i at nre.ent inak- Inv thiir hnme in Washincton. Mr, and Mra. C. M. Wilhrlm plan to l . i . i in f 10 ugunquil aim irs. wsrrrn crs antl lirr daughter. Mix Mildred Kogers, will lcae about June IS (or their vacation there. Mr. C. C, George it also nuking tentative plana 10 iprnd part ot me summer mere. For Mr. and Mra. Cooper. A number of affair have been planned for next week for Mr. and t. - . . tea Mra. Samuel cooper 01 aevvicKiey, who will arrive Thurlay to be the guests of Mra. F. P. Kirkendall. Monday evening Mr. Kirkendall and Mr. and Mra. C. M. Williclm will give a dinner and bridge party at the Country club. Tuesday evening Mr. and Mra. A. L. Keed will en tertain Mr. and Mra. Cooper at din ner at their home, and Wednesday they will be the guests of Mr. and Mr. John L. Kennedy at a dinner at their Fairarrea home. For Future Bride. Alpha Fhi Sorority i swing- a party Saturday for three of their member, who are to be bride of this summer and one recently mar ried. The honor guest are to be Mis Helen Giltner, whose wedding to Jack Landale of Omaha will take place in California thi month; Mis Rita Sullivan, whose engagement to Larry Heim wa announced last Sunday, and Mis Margart McCoy, who will be married later in the sum mer to James Strang, and Mr. Earl Hope, formerly Mis Mary Haller. Next Monday Mis Giltner wyll be complimented by a bridge party giv en by Mis Lydia Burnett. Miss Dow to Return This Month. Mis Eva Dow, who has been visit ing her brother, Edward A. Dow, at die American consulate in Algiers, Africa, i expected home the latter part of this month. Miss Dow plan to sail from Liverpool May 13 on the Adriatic. While in Rome Miss Dow had an audience with the pope and also had the unusual privilege of attending mass in hi private chapel and re ceiving communion from his hands. ' At the Sacred Heart convent in Rome Mist Dow met a charming French girl, a student at the school, and was greatly surprised to learn that she waa a niece of Dr. Felix Despecher of this city. Miss Dow also visited with Mrs. Miriam Pat- terson Fairbanks, who, with her hus band and little daughter, is spending several months in Rome. She has . spent some time in Rome and Paris with Mrs. John Iten, Miss Helen Iten and Miss Irene Barmettler, To Be at Rosemere. 'Mr. and Mrs. .Albert Sibbernsen and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Allison are both planning to move June 1 to the Allison's country home, Rose mere, north of Florence, for the sum mer. Mrs. C. C Allison has been there for two weeks already. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. T. Belt, who have been at the Blackstone, will occupy the Sibbernsen house for four months, and Miss Josephine Cong don' and Carl Paulson, whose wed ding will take place next month, will occupy the Allison's apartment on their return from their edding trip. New Century Club Dance. The New Century club of the South Side will give a dance on next Friday evening at St. Bridget's hall, Twenty-sixth and F streets. This i affair can be enjoyed by everyone, " as every other number will be 'one of the old-fashioned dances a quad rille, rye waltz or polka. The com mittee in charge is. Mfsdamfs J. P. Murphr, James Burke. H. T. Moorohaafl. J. T. Murray. William McGulgan. M. J. Heatey. D. J. Farrell, Oeorg W. Smith. James Shaahan. WIU 1 llam Shawa-o, P. J. MoMahon. P. J. Nea ter, F. J. LlchnovBhy and J. R. Brady. For Mra. Clarke. Mrs. J. J. Sullivan will be hostess Saturday at a luncheon and bridge at her home, complimentary to Mrs. Frederick W. Clarke, who leaves Omaha May 19 with her daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Smith, for New York. They sail May 25 on the Scythia for three months in Europe. A number of inforal parties are being given for Mrs. Smith. ; ... v . Luncheon. Mrs. E. A. Wickham Of Council Bluffs gave a beautifully appointed luncheon at her home Tuesday. Cov ers were placed for Mrs. H. H. '.. Baldrige, and Mrs. Baldrige's sister, Mrs. Garland; Mrs. E. S. West brook, Mrs. A. V. Kinsler, Mrs. Clara Swobe, Mrs. John L. Kennedy Mrs. George Brandeis and Mrs. Sam . Caldwell. . For Mrs. Baldrige. Mrs Alvin Johnson will entertain oht ffiiesta at luncheon and hrtrltra Friday at her home complimentary to Mrs. Howard Baldrige, who is leaving June 1 for Europe. Mrs. Baldrige will spend a few days at Excelsior Springs next week. Mrs. Herman Kountze, who will occupy the Baldrige home thi summer, ar rive June 1. ,' : New Board Members for V. N. A. At the meeting Tuesday afternoon three new members were elected to the board of the Visiting Nurse as- sociation: Mrs. N. G File, Mrs. W. - S. Wiley and Miss Gertrude' Stout. During the month of April the Visit ing Nurses paid 4,000 visits. - ' Mrs. Weed a Visitor. Mrs. Hugh Weed of St, Louis, formerly Miss Faith Potter of Oma ha, is here on a visit to her mother. Mrs. Philip Potter. Mrs. Potter wilt entertain at a tea for Mrs. Weed on Friday afternoon. St. Joseph Open House. St, Josephs hospital will hold Open house Friday when visitors will be ." shown throughout 'the rooms. A . food display will be given. Woman's Auxiliary. The Woman's auxiliary of Trinity cathedral will meet for a social gath ering Fridav at 1 :30 at the home cl Mrs. D, E. 'Digg in Drake Court, The wedding of Mi.ss Elsie Storz and Temple McFaydcn took place yesterday afternoon at the home ot the bride's sister, Mrs. Earl Buck. The Rev. Thomas Casady of All Saints Episcopal church read the wed ding service before the immediate families of the young couple. Miss Storz wore a dark blue traveling suit and blue taffeta hat and carried V A ' . - J "'V .. ' Z'. 'r orchids and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. McFayden have gone to Kansas City and Excelsior Springs on their wedding trip and will be at home in two weeks in the home built by Mr. McFayden at 342 South Fifty-second street. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert McFayden of Norfolk, par ents of the groom, were the only out-of-town guests. Personals Mrs. Florence Steunenberg is ill 'at Clarkson hospital. Mrs. Moshier Colpctzcr left for Chicago Sunday night to spend a few days. Mrs. H. W. Lightfoot is in Aber deen, S. D., for a two Weeks' visit with relatives. Mrs. Walter Page is visiting in the south at present. Mr. Page is on a trip to New York. Mr. anrl Mrs Thomas -Dnu-rl an nounce the birth of a son Mav 7 at St. Catherine hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Charle9 Burcess will leave Thursday for a motor trip to txcelsior springs, Mo. Xfra r V. Fnllor Wt lact Satur day for a short trip to Los Angeles. 5ne is expected nome next weeK. Miss Elizabeth Davis, who has been visiting in New York and To ledo, is expected home Friday or Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shirley will come in from Denison, la., to spend the week-end and attend the Junior league show. Mrs. William Garland, who is the guest of her sister. Mrs. Howard Baldrige, has decided to make Omaha her permanent home. Byron Clifford of Los Angeles i3 spending the week in Omaha as the guest of John Cavers and his daugh ter, Miss Marjorie Cavers. , Mr. and Mrs. Alec Porter, who were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. An derson Long for a short visit, have returned to their home in Chicago. Mrs. Andrew Dow of Elwood. Neb., is a guest of her brother, Thomas W. Blackburn, and family while' she is attending the Eastern Star meeting. Kenneth Norton, who recently left Omaha with Mrs. Norton for Grand Island, will spend the week-end in Omaha, and will attend the Junior league review. ' Miss Maxime Harbach, who has just finished her junior year at Co lumbia university, Missouri, has ar rived to spend the summer witfTher parents at the Colonial, i Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Trestcr of Lincoln motored to Omaha Sunday for a short visit with their son, Leo nard Trester, and Mrs. Trester. They returned to Lincoln yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Clarke of Los Angeles, Cal., are visiting here with Mrs. Clarke's father, Rome Miller, and a sister, Mrs. H. A. Waggener. Laverty. Mrs. John McClintock, who has been in Omaha this winter with her daughter, Mrs. Milton T. Barlow, plans to leave about May 20 for Portland, where she will spend the summer with her daughter, Mrs. Hunt Lewis. Mrs. Augustus K. Detweiler has taken an apartment at the Colonial, which was formerly occupied by Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Love, who have moved to their Dodge street country place to reside permanently. Mr. and Mrs. ' Charles Levings left Tuesday for their summer home in Estes Park. They spent thi win ter in Florida and have been in Omaha the past week with their son, Mark Levings and Mrs. Lev mgs. , ... Mrs. Don Forbes of Dakota City, Neb., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. W. S. Weston, and Mr. Weston. Mrs. Forbes, who is worthy matron of the Dakota City Eastern Star, came especially to attend the East ern Star convention. Mrs. E. T. . Farmer, who spent some months here early in the win ter with her daughter, Mrs. Frank G. . Norton, and who left for San Francisco some months ago, has been ill and was unable to make the return trip to Honolulu, as she ex pected. She is now planning to sail May 15 on the Matsonia and will join her daughter, Mrs. Samuel De Freest, in Honolulu. Problems That Perplex Answered bf BEATRICE FAIRFAX. A Mother's Love. Dear Miss Fairfax: Please stive me some advice in the columns of The Omaha Bee. which we eet. and read your articles with interest every day. i am a miaaie-agea woman ana had an only son, whom I was very devoted to. He fell in love at an early age and married against my wish, and the girl, knowing I had opposed the union so much, has tried to turn my boy away from me. I have invited them to my home and given big dinners for them on nu merous occasions. These are the only times she will come to my home, and she refuses to let him speak to me or come to our home unless she is present to hear every word. 1 have never said anything against her to him since their marriage only spoke good of her. They live In the house With her mother, and she is an only child, Her . mother does not like me and feels herself better than I, although she goes out of her home and works by day's work and allows this daughter to attend roller skating rinks, etc., unchaperoned, which I would not think of letting my daugh ter do. My heart yearns for my boy. t do not wish him to neglect his wife, but, oh, it hurts so to think he has forsaken all the mother he will ever have in this life. He never comes, nor does he write to me, as they live in a nearby town, and my life is greatly saddened by the attitude" he has taken. I know she has poisoned his mind against me. I have gone to their home and they never invited me in, after I en tertained them so many times to dinner. Do you think if he really loved and was true to me as a boy should be he would allow his wife and her mother to treat me that way? Please tell me what you think of it, and is it best to just give him up and try to forget the chubby baby boy I held on my lap and looked forward to when he would be grown and a. comfort to mother, a I have had such a sorrowful, eventful life? "A HEARTBROKEN MOTHER." . four case is really a heart-breaking one. Your boy certainly ought not to neglect or forget riis mother'. There are mothers and daughters-in-law who do not get along, but if the girl has any human sympathy at all he will urge the son to see some thing of his mother, even thoui she does not herself. Your story brings me to the state ment of a universal truth. We look forward in life, not backward. The generation coming on never fully appreciates what the older genera tion has done for it. But it, in turn, does for the upapringing generation. That doesn't mean a child should not be sensible of what he owes his parents, but it sometimes softens our sorrows over the ingratitude of young people if we realise that we are in a cycle, and that the sacrifices are passed forward, not backward. An other truth which appears on. your case is that husband and wife cling together if they love each other, even discriminating against the parents who brought them into the world. The Bible says "Thou shalt leave father and mother and cleave unto him," simply meaning that the mar riage bond is stronger than the bond of child to parent. It seems cruel, doesn't it? But it is the normal thing. A mother's love for her child probably surpasses all other loves, but the child pours his greatest af fection more largely into his chil dren than backward to his parent. The love of children for their par ents has been so cultivated in many instances that my statements may be doubted, but I am speaking of in stinctive regard. TO go back to your case, there isnt much you can do except exhibit patience, forbearance and sympathy for both your son and his wife. If you ever have an opportunity, talk to your son.. He and his wife are both doing wrong and only the greatest of love on your part can span the breach. A child in their home would do much toward reconciliation. My Marriage Problems Adl Garrison! N TbsM of "REVELATIONS OF A WIFE" . How Mother Graham Took It Out" on Madgt.' The Kene which confronted me in my mother 'in-taw's room at one which tugged with equal trength at my sense of the ludicrous and of the pathetic. Mother Graham'i ton and manner were as haughty and majestic at if she were clad in a silken gon and surveying the universe through her lorgnette. But it is hard to he con vincingly dignified in a flannel night gown and red yarn slippers, with t0 wisps of gray hair braided down one's back, and I would have found it hard to control my ritihlrs had it not been for the contrasting picture at Junior's crib. Marion, slender, exquUite, in her dainty pinlc pajamas, with her golden-glinted hair rutl led in her sleep, but with wide, terrified eyes staring from her white face, was holding Junior tightly in her arms, and had effectually quieted his veil, which had been half-angry, haff-frightened. But the little girl was shivering with fright at well at cold, and I crossed quickly to her, ignoring for the moment my mother-in-law's tirade, which I knew from experience had but just begun, and would gain in volume and strength as it continued. Mother?" The child's white lips framed the question tensely. "Mother is all right. She will be here in a minute, dear," I said soft ly. Then, in a louder tone, I re peated the explanation Lillian had instructed me to give concerning our supposed alarms at chicken thieves. Lillian Intervenes. "Chicken thieves! Fiddlesticks!" my mother-in-law ejaculated scorn fully. "Margaret,' you never have fooled me for an instant since you married Richard" her tone spoke of years of attempted deceit upon mv part "and you needn't think you are going to begin now. You haven't any. pistol" I guiltily visioned my little revolver locked in my trunk "and you needn't tell me that a sane wo- man like Mrs. Underwood is shoot ing but of the window at chicken thieves. That's like the performances of those animals across the rond. When they don't know anything else to do, they shoot off a gun. You'll have to think up a better story than that. But that isn't what I want to know from you. How dare you turn the key on me, locking me in my room as though I were some spoiled child? How dare you?" She almost choked upon the words, so angry was she, and I dallied men tally with the retort that she was but a spoiled child, and that if I could only add a spanking to the key-turning it mieht have a salutary effect. Needless to say, however. I did not utter my thoughts aloud. In deed, to my great relief I did not need to make her. any answer, for Lillian came swiftly into the room. "Dear Mother Graham," she said CUNARD ANCHOR ANCHOR-DONALDSON N. T. to Cherbourg and Southampton MAVKETAMA ...May IS June 6 JuneZ7 AQlilTANIA May 23 June IS July 4 BEKENGAR1A . . .May SO June July 11 N. T. to Plymouth. Cherbourg A Hamburg CARON1A ........May IS June 17 July 29 SAXONIA May 5 July 1 Aug. Via Boston. N. V. to Cobn. fOucnstown & Liverpool. CABMANIA May 18 SCYTHIA (new).. .May 25 June 22 July 20 I.ACOMA (new).. .June 8 July S SAMARIA (new) . .Aug. 8 N. T. to Londonderry and Olairow. COLUMBIA May 27 June 24 July 22 CAMEROMA . . . ..June 8 Oct. 7 ALGERIA . June 14 July 15 Aug. 25 N. Y. to Vigo. Gibraltar, Napier, Fatraa. rjubrovnlk and Trieste. ITALIA June 10 Boston to Londonderry. Liverpool ana Olaeeow. ASSYRIA May 24 July 8 Sept. IS Boston to Queenstown and Liverpool. SAMARIA (new)... May 31 June 28 LACOMA (new) July 26 CANADIAN SERVICE via Picturesque St. Lawrence Route Montreal to Glasgow SATFRNIA . . . May IB June IS JuIy 14 KLYSIA May 28 June 28 CASSANDRA .. June t June 80 July 28 ATHEMA Aug. 18 Sept. 15 Alao call! at Movllle, Ireland. Montreal to Liverpool ALBANIA ....June 10 July 15 Aug. 10 TYRRHENIA . .'June 24 July 29 Sept. 2 AVSONIA July 8 Auk. 12 Sept. 18 Also calls at Olasgow. Montreal to Plymouth, Cherbourg and London. ANDANIA June 17 July 22 Aug. 28 AKTONIA July 1 Aug. 5 Sept. BEAUTIFUL Baby Grand and Upright Pianos for Rent Lowest rates. - Pianos tuned, -' moved, stored and refiniihed. Schnoller & Mueller 1514-18-18 p;9nA fin Phone Dodge St. riailO WU. Doug. 1623 . ADVERTISEMENT. , SAGE TEA DANDY TO DARKEN HAIR It's Grandmother's Recipe to Bring Back Color ' and Lustre to Hair. You can turn gray faded hair beautifully dark and lustrotr almost over night if you'll get a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound" at any drug store. Millions of bottles of this old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the addi tion of other ingredients, are sold annually, says a well-known drug gist here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it hr.s been applied. . Those w hose hair is turning gray or becoming faded have a surprise awaiting, them, because after one or two applications the gray hair van ishes and your locks become luxuri antly dark and beautiful. This is the age of youth. Gray haired, unattractive folks aren't wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound tonight and you'll be delight ed with your dark, handsome hair and your youthful appearance within a few days, pUcetingly il not Mrirt, it vvas I ha .xkH your door. An4 whm vie tit alone 1 tu explain why." Her pe r(l the rel of us, myself include), thouiih t were but psiMiii in game of which Moth. tr Graham W4 at the very Irsst bishop. And th almot impenrpt' iMe wink which she gave me in passing nearly completed the havoc in my laughter mtmle which my iiioihcr.iii-ljw'i appearance M ! gun. Marion's Request "Oh!" My mother-in-law smoothed her ruffled feathers down with Hart ling quickness. Then she turned on me. "Weill What are you waiting for she demanded. "Take that little girl away and get her calmed down." "Co with Auniie Madge, sweet heart," Lillian said softly to her small daughter, and with a parting hug to Junior, Marion docilely fol lowed me to her moiher'i room. "Katie." ! turned on my little maid with assumed severity, for I lose no opportunity to attempt the cure of her ridiculous hysteria, but her woe-begone face made it difficult for me to be item. "Oht I so shame myself! I so shame myielf!" she wailed. "I art so foolish, make all dot noise, get old vommans all crazy, so she talk so bad by you. Oh, I go shoomp in bay. I so shame myself." "It's all right this time. Katie," I said cheerfully, "if you'll only re member the next time. And all the trouble is over now, so I want you to be good girl, and lie down on your cot again. Marion will jump into her mother's bed, and I will He down with her until her mother calls me. We shall be busy for a while, no doubt, and you must not make any more disturbance, no matter what you hear. Stay right in the room here and go to sleep." "Alt right." Katie was as docile, as calm, as though she had not just shaken off the throes of hysteria, and she crawled into bed obediently. I stretched myself beside Marion, look the shivering girl into my arms, tucked the comforters about her and whispered softly to her. "You are the bravest little girl, I known, Marion. But you must get to s'cep now. That's the way you will help your mother best. Would you like me to sing you to sleep?" "Will you think me a big baby?" the little voice whispered, "if I ask you to say the 'House That Jack Built' to me, the way you do to Junioir Mother says it sometime whr hvt a headache." And so 1 bgaq th classic to hose bumming, Uiy monotone to many mothers ht wooed sleep to retilett, ailing (hildien. Aud I Vept it up until Marion's regular breath ing showed that she was asteep and her moiher bent over n, tender approval of my care struggling with the amusement which I knew her interview with my doughty mother-in-law bad le(t upon her (ace. Bee Want Ads Are ttett Business Roosters. Parents Problems What is the best way of leaching inodrtiy la ery Mile childrenr Very little children are almost always naturally modest, p not say much on the subject. It is bet ter merely to direct them, saying, "Do this rather than to talk much about why, A bandeau of narrow green eUel with two tjuitl, ef brilliants crone J at the sides is particularly good MEDITERRANEAN Cnisse Ltts. fiSnnry S Sty sillr CkerUre4 N Cunrd SS ''ScythU" Terkiae Oil-Berawr, fl.SSS IMS I asaalks. mc tm4 ssa, ssilniie sWt Mswstses aa ell eeesM tffPU Holy Land, Constant), nople, Greece, Italy, Sp'" Frank Tour Ut Co. KitebliskM l Tl 48 Firth Ave., New Yerk Or Oor LmsI Asa a I Everybody Enjoys HomeMade Bread Why Not Make Some This Week Here Is A Recipe Easy To Follow WHITE BREAD C eops Flour M cap Klnmrford's Corn Starch U cup lukewarm Water I H teaspoons Salt J, Yeast Cake I pint Milk, scalded 2 Ubleepoone Masols Scald the milk, coo! till lukewarm and add Mazola, Sift the flour, corn starch and salt together. Dissolve the yeast in the lukewarm water; add h to the milk and stir In the dry ingredients. Knead on a floured board for twenty-fire minutes. Place in an oiled bowl, rub the top very lightly with Masola, cover loosely with soft cloth, and rise over night. TT is not necessary to purchase both a bread and a pastry flour. By using cup of Kingsford's Corn Starch to ,i cup of any good flour the percentage of gluten is decreased and the starch content is increased so that home prepared flour will make a lighter and finer grained cake. FREEi Ask four trocar ar writ Corn Piwskcta Sale Co.. 8th and Jackton Sis- Omaha. Nab- far baau. tiful loloWr ef tbs aaw Kingslord Can Starch nclpaa. lt VVWV..ViV.sV.sW .' Buy your every gar ment need on our easy payment plan. MMSI We want to be of a real service to the man or woman who lacks ready cash. . 1417 DOUGLAS STREET QUALITY A CREDIT STORE FOR ALL THE PEOPLE STYLE Thursday0ur Greatest i ale of Dresses ! 5: And this is a strong asser tion when made by Bed deos, because Omaha wom en know the host of sensa tional value-giving dress sales that have been pro moted by this store. Choice of 200 $ lk s i E These presses Are Worth Double and Three Times This Extreme Low Sale Price Choose From Wool Crepes Canton Crepes Taffetas Crepe de Chine Foulards Our New York representatives secured 200 of these dresses in a manufacturer's close-out and we are enabled to offer them at this exceptionally low price. Styles of the minute, dresses which, you will recognize at first glance as being worth decidedly more money. Models for the flapper and the grandmother. Buy These Dresses Cash or Easy Payments Our extraordinary easy pay ment plan of selling these dresses leaves no excuse for you not to own one Thursday. Every color is here as well as all combinations of colors. We never have offered more attractive values than these. It will pay you to be here early Thursday, as many are one-of-a-kind styles, and at such a low price aW r