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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1922)
THE OMAHA BEE: WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 2. 1922. Former Omaha Girl Makes Her Debut in Tacoma. mmm Word hat come from Tacoma. Wash., of the debut party of a lor mer Omaha girl. Miti Dorothy Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mr. Llewellyn Jones, who are ell known here. Mrs. Jones was for merly Miit Louise Uoherty, titter of Robert Doherty of Omaha. The debut took place at "Cartres," the beautiful tununer home of the family at Interlaaken, jut ouukie of Tacoma. The groundi were hung with gay lantern and the court and wide verandas were arranged with fir bought, hangings and easy chair. Mitt Jones, who received with her mother, wore white tatin and car ried pink and lavender tweet peat, while Mrt. Jonet was gowned in Alice blue. Mrt. Robert Dohertv of Omaha attisted, at did Mrt. Set wyn Doherty, formerly Mitt Helen Rahm of Omaha, and Mrt. Gladyt Kiplinger of Omaha. About 250 guest! were pretent, and dancing followed the reception. Miti Jonet graduated a year ago ft-Am m inni Wrier lit CMminarv ' and during the past winter the at . tended. Mount Vernon teminary. Many Omahant will remember her. Announce Enticement. Mr. and Mrt. A. Winer will enter tain at a reception Sunday evening, August 6, to announce the engage ment of their daughter, Anne, to Mr. Michael Cohen, ton r-I Mr. ana Mrt. M. G. Cohen. J , Here for Wedding. . ' Judge and Mrt. E. A. Rice of Washington, who came to Omaha ol&st week to attend the wedding of Mist Verna Jones and Roscoe Rice, have cone to visit in Iowa betore , their return to the east. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Rice are now on their honeymoon, a motor trip through the ' Minnesota lake region. They will later be in the Canadian Kockiet for a tew weeks. . They will make their home in Creighton, Neb. Mr, Rice it ths ton of W. 0. Rice of Creisrhton. and the family is vell known in the state. The bride, th daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lance Jones of Omaha, is a Delta Delta Delta. ' ' v ' Leaving for California.' Mrs. Jolin W. Rabbins, accom panied by her daughters. Mist Polly and Miss Jean, will leave next Tues day for Los Angeles. They go from , there to Carmel, where they will share a cottage with Mrs. Robbins' mother. Mrs. VV. H. Wyman. Mrs. Wyman spent last year in China and expects to return to Che Foo next September. . Miss Polly Robbins will enter Pomona college at Claremont, Cal., next fall. Mrs. Robbins and ,Mist Dean will also spend the win ter in touthern California. ". .' . At Glennwood. . Quite an . Omaha colony is sum mering at Glennwood, Minn., this susnit. Mr and Mrs. John VV.' Towle and Miss Marion Towle left Tuesday for Glenwood, where they .will snehd the month of Aueust. i W, Lambert, A. V. Shotwell ind TJana'A'an Deusen left a week ago for a -week's stay there, and Mr. and Mr. Dan Johnson and the Mitset Beatrice " and Margaret Johnson are there for a few days. ' " " : For Mrs. Patterson. Mrs. William Shoup entertained at a beautifully appointed bridge lunch eon Monday at her home in honor of Mrs. Maude-Patterson, who is visit ing Mrs. A. , V. Shotwell. Covers were placed for eight. ' . E. M. Jones underwent an opera tion Monday at Emanuel hospital. He is doing oicelyv- I Retreat at Duchesne. 5 Duchesne college is preparing to hold its annual summer retreat, which will be conducted "this year by the Rev. Father William T. Do Tan, S. J., of Marquette university, Milwaukee, Wis. Father Doran is the son of the late Mrs. PrH. Carey, and a graduate ..of. Creighton univer sity. The retreat will begin August 6 and will last for three days. For mer students at Duchesne or the Convent of- the Sacred Heart will attend. Many of those who usual ly go, are out of town this month, but a number of Omaha maids and matrons who have attended the re treat in former years are Mrs. R. VV. Connell. Mrs. "Lawrence Brinker. Mrs. Charles Burgess, Mrs,. Albert Sibbernsen. Mrs. goy Byrne. Mrs. - Clarence Sibbernsen, Mrs. George Brandeis, the Misses Ellen Creigh ton, Margaret McShane, Claire Helene Woodard, Minnette and Mar garet Rousseau. Sorority Girl a Visitor ! f A V-i -l'y ( usT- It, - - Szi y r. : rjj My Marriage Problems Adtle Carriton'i New Phait e( "REVELATIONS OF A WIFE" (Oprrittt i:t) Problems That Perplex BEAltICK FAIRFAX. Hoi Gently Miss Mary Brundage, Miti Gertrude Harte. Miss Mary Brundage of Tecumseh, Neb., who has been the guest of Miss Gertrude Harte, left Tuesday for her home after a gay visit with her Oma ha friends. Hostess and guest are sisters in Delta Gamma at the Uni versity of Nebraska and have been the recipients of much attention from other members of the sorority. Personals Mrs. Frank Wirthsafter and daugh ter, Ida,; left last Thursday for two months in California. Mrs. William Hill Clarke is at Moon Lake, Wis., and will be there Until September 15. Mrs. C. VV. Morton and Miss Dorothy are guests at the Hotel Windemere, Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Smailshave taken the Howard Dunham home in Dundee for the mouth. Miss Eva ' Mahonev and her sis ter, Miss May Mahoney, are in Estes park on a vacation trip. , Mrs. F. VV. Clarke and Mrs. Lloyd Smith are sailing from Cherbourg to New York on August 12. Mr. and Mrs. William McHugh, jr., left Tuesday for Estes Park. They are making the trip by motor. Mr. and. Mrs. Herbert Rogers and daughter, Miss Helen, returned Tuesday from .Waquetonsing, Mich. Sigsby Sears left last week for San Francisco and for Portland, Ore. He was accompanied by Clay Beisel. Mrs. VV. C. Crosby is leaving the first of this month for a visit with her aunt, Mrs. W. C. Hayes of Min neapolis. Mr. and Mrs. William Diesing and family left Monday for a motor, trip to Lake Okoboji, where they have taken a cottage, E. G. McGilton has returned from a trip to Estes, followed by a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Williams at Hugo, Colorado. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Goodell of St. Louis,; formerly of Omaha, spent Saturday in the city with Mr. and Mrs. Simeon Jones, enroute to Estes park. - John Kvenild, son of Mr. and Mrs. Birger Kvenild, fractured both arms in a fall last week. John is at Ever green, Colo., with his mother and brother. Robert. -Mr. and Mrs. Allan Tukey left Monday for Lake Okoboji for a week, their small daughter, Cather ine Anne, is staying with her grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Din- "ing- Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Sturtevant, who recently sold their home at 103 North Fifty-fourth street, have moved into the E: O. Hamilton home at Forty-first avenue and Davenport street. Mrs. Joe Merritt and baby, Carolyn Rose, returned Saturday from . a three-weeks' trip to Minneapolis and Lake Minnetonka. They will leave again in August for a two-weeks' Mrs. Carrie Marks of Sioux Ctty. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gentleman returned last week from a three weeks' trip which included among ether places , Detroit, Atlantic City, a tour down the St.' Lawrence river, Canada and a visit to the Shrine of St. Anne. Harry Underwood Aided Madge. "Are you lure ou feci able to drive?" In Harry Under wood's voice, ten der and tolicitout, there wat no be trayal of any chagrin ai the rebuff I had just liven him. Evidently he meant to accept roy tilent dictum, and drop the sentimental poie he had adopted, when, at hit request that I tell him of Grace Drapcr't connec tion with Junior't kidnapping 1 had succumbed to the nervous, blind dizzinett which comet over me tome timet at the remembrance of that awful time. An affirmative retponte was on my lipt, for I would rather drive a car than do almost anything else in the world, and nothing makes me quite to uncomfortable at to tit beside an other driver. But it occured to me that if Harry Underwood drove the car and listened at the tame time to the information of Grace Draper for which he had asked, he would have neither time nor opportunity for sen timenta ttate of affaire for which I earnestly withed. "I'm not quite myself," I said. "You drive, do you not?" and then, with a remembrance of hit ambulance tervice during the war, I flushed at my own stupidity. "If I don't get into any thick traf fic," he drawled, even as I stammered an embarratsed: "Pardon to ridiculous a question." "I'll pardon anything if you'll flush like that again," he returned' with a look which changed the flush to a flame for a second. But the chance remark affected me in a way that he could not guess. It pushed his rather hypnotic person ality a figurative thousand miles away and brought Dicky as forcibly be tore my mina t eye at it he had sud denly dropped from the air before me. For, without knowing it he had re peated words I often had heard from my husband's lipt before and after my- marriage, and the memories which the wordt brought me made me forget everything else for a poig nantly blissful second or two. "Are Yon All Right r ."Weill" Mr. Underwood's drawl ing voice broke the spell. "When your spirit or your astral body or whatever you call it has returned from the place it's winged itself, perhaps you'll inform me if I am to drive. I thought an invitation to tool this chariot trembled upon your dainty lips but a moment since. However, I ve learned m the course of a troubled life never to take any thing for granted " Of course I d like you to drrve, I returned a bit impatiently. And please pardon my absence of mind. I was thinking " ' Very dangerous thing to do, he interrupted with a preternaturilly grave face. "You never know what the consequences may be. Person ally. I never indulge myself in the habit. Now, if you'll jutt move over, Lady Fair, I'll try my luck with this gear thift. Let's tee, first, rear, left; tecond. forward, right; third, rear, right; reverse, forward, left It that it?" He had alighted from the car at he wa tpeakmg and walked around the front of it to the tide upon which I was tilting. And 1 guested that hit seemingly anxious query at to the gear shift was only a subterfuge to give me time to pull myself to gether. He wat too experienced a driver not to have noted the thing! for which he had asked. "You have them exactly," I taid sedately, moving over in the teat, and for the next five minutet Mr. Underwood gave hit exclusive atten tion to the car. "There, I've got her number now," he taid when he had shifted gears, reverted and experimented with the spark until he had tatitfied himself that no emergency would find him unfamiliar with the mechanism. "Now to resume our interropted journey. Are you sure you're all right r ' I read between the lines of the. query. For fear of the possible ef fect upon me, he would not ask me again to tell him the ttory of Grace Draper't crime. But I knew that my father had requested it, to with a mighty effort I braced myself for the telling. Common Sense Do You Know How to Rett? Do you know how to rest and re tax? Do vou know that the process of relaxation is necessary to resu Do vou know how to "go to sleep' in your muscles, and yet be awake to what goes on about you, enjoying it keenly? When you have leisure, what do you do with it? Do you sit awhile, then walk about, read a little, lie down 10 min utes. read some more, and then be. gin to long for something to do which will keep you moving? Or, to save thinking, do you just sleep the whole afternoon and get up as soggy and uniteresting as pos sible to vourselt and all with wnom you come in immediate contract? In other words, you eitner woric your tired system all the time, even when trying to rest, or you stagnate hibernate it cool enough. In either case, you are on the wrontr track. Do not go home in a hurry so that you can get started at something else in a hurry, to that you can rest or recreate yourself m a hurry. Energy must be balanced to be ef fective. The secret of long, happy life is to know how to rest, how to eat, how to sleep, and how to think to the best advantage. (copyncnt, iizi.i NewDiscoveiy for Stops tktir kwrting m im rnmite; starts luokmg at mux. Gtts at tk cause f fnu. 0b treatment of its kmd Be done with harsh and ttnaatisactorr ur. - .f.. : methods of treating orn& The safe, discsoerygnt immttm tcienrific way has at last been found. . rtStffrin p wMJi w o- Dr. Wm. M. Schofl, the eminent foot 'jirthi speoaust, acvciopea ic. iino-paas his new discovery not only stop pain the mioute applied but they protect against irritation and pressure, the real cause of corns. True healing begins immeeHately. Dr. Scholl's Zuto-pads are thin, anti septic, waterproof. Easy to apply; absohitery safe! Special sizes for cal louses and bunioos. Try them. At your druggiat'i or shoe dealer's. Dr Scholl's Spttieltiffeftrhm. tans. Esrily etfBtd. WU1 May in jiact Made ia tat The SchoD Mac Cou. of Dr. SeWTt Foot Camion InutitrtndftfP m nit Real Lemonade made of Real Lemon Juice and Not a Lemon to Squeeze FT ISN'T much fun to have to leave a merry party and go out in the kitchen and squeeze lemons to make lemonade. That's work. Or rather, it was work until we succeeded in making lemon juice in convenient form for you. Now you have only to keep Merrell-Soule Powdered Lemon Juice handy in your kitchen and you can make as much lemonade as you want in a jiffy without any trouble at alL And it's real lemonade for it's made of real lemon juice not a lemon extract or a chemical formula. We take the water out of die lemon juice and give you just the solids slightly sweetened. When you put the water bade you have a lemon juice that you can use just exactly as you do now. Merrell-Soule Powdered Lemon Jusce comes in 4-oz. and 10-oz, cans. The small package contains the solid parts of all the juice of a dozen lemons which are equal to 14 or more lemons as most folks use them. mm mm MERRELL-SOULE COMPANY SYRACUSE, N. Y. 111. lMERRELL-SClf fawDSRSO I He Xcmb to UH Out tf Hliwwir. My Dar Hum Fairfax: It U t. i'um l have faun tn you that I am 1 Hug 10 Mk you to holu 1 am ':a r old. Mentally 1 must t ! about 10. At :i I have a Urn gray r.nim: I dr wH: have a er completion, but have a trrloly , hnmvly mm; am not very talkative; 1 run t dance niui h save II up a bad Job; nvr had a rtvady girl, and very fw other: nvr popular or a fttvoril anions young popl: mvr had much mony to pnd; nlthr have I an education. Ob wrvation 1 my rhief pactim at place of imufRiinL 1 have frlnd. but m not Intimate with any of lhm. My reputation I good. I think 1 am mlMiug much of IK. At time 1 am very much dlu'our. acd and bitter, and hold everything In contempt. Then acaln I bUm mylf for everything and bevomo drepondvnt. My real trouble 1 that I am think. In of beromlnir a confirmed old bachelor who doe not care. Or. If I worry much more. I fear I shall turn our. 1 mu be In a data by myaelf. If I ahould find a nice sir). h eem to b above me. Flapper do not Interest me and seem to be below m. I w looking for an In telligent, kind, quiet ort of home girl. 1 have always dreamed of uch m girl. Is that expecting too much 7 It seem to me now that auch a girl 1 beyond me. I e that kind of girl at time, but I sue there are octal barrier between u. Much thought of all thl mke me, at time, discouraged, bitter, hard and dlaagreeable. What will It lead to? Ha not my llf been a failure so far? What is wrong with me? What do you think of matrimonial agenclea Are marriage contracted through agenclea a aucceful In love and happlnera a the usual kind? I hope thl letter doe not bore; It may eem odd, but thl ha trou bled me for a long time. Tour opinion or advice will be gratefully received. HOPELESS. I publish almost all of your letter, Hopele, because It struck me a an unusually Interesting- one. You say that mentally you must be SO. From your letter any one would think you were a discouraged old misanthrope of 70. First of all, I cannot ee in what way your life ha been a fail ure, 'except in o far as you have failed to get the joy out of it a you went along. And it ia an old truth that you never get out of life more than you put Into it. If you face the world with bitterness and con tempt you cannot expect that the world will be fond of you. You find what you are look 1 11? for, particu larly in people', and if you mistrust every one you meet and begin look ing for dark motives In all their action you are apt to find all their bad qualities and none of their good. And if the girls you meet do not like you, you can be sure it is this attitude of yours that repells them, and not lack of good looks. Home liness in a man make very little difference to most women. It is character they read in his face that attracts them, and if, by thinking hard, sour thoughts, you put dis agreeable line In our fae It will be no wonder If they are oot drewa tu you. Vou will think I am being pretty hard on you. o let me try to give you aom helpful uigeattwn. You are, after all. only 11, and you have your whole life Mill ahead t you to do with as you Ilk.' Kiht despondency and make a mental ef fort to look on the bright side of thing. On of th rule for rhrm whifh I often quoted to girl la to culti vate a modeat demeanor and an In terest In other people. The am rule applies equally to men. Don't worry about ourlf, and bring enough other lntreu Into your llf o that you wilt re to be entirely etf.centered. If you did mry a girl now. I should b rather mirry for her, for you would be thinking a good deal inor of your happlue than her, I am afraid. You auy you have no Intlmute friend. Friend are on of the chief compensation In life. He. member what Hhakpr ntd? "The friend thou hast, and their adoption tried, grapple them to thy oul with hook of ateel." He knew. And, to make firm friend, remember you have to give of yourself a well a tak from them. You are uperenltlv bout Mcln.M Prohably nln-tnth of th girl who you ituy eem to be above you never had auch an Idra, and would laugh at It. No on 1 In a clan by himself. We are all pretty much alike in our ambition, out weaknewe and our nobilities. There are plenty of girl who ar looking for what you have to offer, and to prove it I will confide In you that I published a letter almllar to your lnt month, and I had at least alx answer from grlla who wanted to meet the man. Unfortunately, I cannot run a matrimonial bureau, and you will have to find them your self. A to agencies, I know very little about them. I should think you would be more likely to find the right girl tf you aet about looking for her younelf. Mill Holt Honored. . Miss Louise Watson entertained two tables of bridge Tuesday after noon at her home complimentary to Miss Lois Holt of Chicago, who is visiting Miss Marguerite Walker. Garfield Circle. Garfield Circle, Ladies of the C. A. R., will meet Friday, 8 p. m in Memorial hall, court house. A full attendance is desired as this is the only meeting to be held during Au gust, Daughters of Veterans. Betsy Ross tent, Daughters of Veterans, will meet Thursday at 2 p. m. in Memorial hall, court house. Boys Are Getting Ay KcsJy for i:ik.' Supervisor of the puMu groundi h agreed t co-opel making a succrst 01 in i i panic for boy at Klmwood V. nrtt Saturday aftrrnoon, It it intended that ! h K not invited to picnics very otun shall be the preferred gueu 011 Om occasion. Soya who do not eujN'' many privilege will be specially wel come, though it will not be a "poor" bevt' picnic. The boyt are to aeml.lc at the Auditorium Saturday noon, when they will be taken 10 th ;k in chartered ttrret cart, There 1 a revival of pile ellow 11 the color of a canary's plunuge and ;t appear in town as often in the country. 7JC I EGGS HL Butter 4 Toast or. Bread, 5c Ex. ALL SIX RESTAURANTS J 10 to 60 Discounts Furniture, Rugs and Draperies Stovtt and Refrlgeraten Sale on All Cotton Felted Mattresses . $8.95 Regular $13.00, special '. Sale Sewing Machines Used Machinei $2.50 UP New Machines $29.50 Up Your Terms Are Our Terms. Howard St., Betwera ISth ad 16th. 5o gjjJgjgg Cj-g I 22c Trade Here You Will Find It Pays BTJY-RITE FRUIT DEPARTMENT One carload o fancy Idaho Apricots, In lugs or peach crates, lafit call for canning, while they last, per crate $1.49 500 bushela of extra fancy Elberta Freestone Peaches, per bushel basket .(2.75 500 bunches of golden yellow tlrm Bananas, per lb 8'M California Blue Tragedy Plums, large bask. 630 California Santa Rosa Plums, large square bas kets, per basket 636 Extra fa-ncy California Bartlett Pears, bask. 2St Per cr&te .. 5,000 small baskets of Tomatoes, 2 to 3 lb. baskets, per basket 10) One carload extra fancy large Ohio Potatoes, per peck 30) DAIRIMA1D BUTTER More populaT every day a real hit, per pound 37) SOAPS, POWDERS, CLEANSERS 1,000 cans Toilet Klean, works like Sani-Flush, 20c cans, 3 for 37 One carload of Crystal White Soap, 10 bars 475 Per box of 100 large bars $4.50 Bring in your Crystal White Coupons. 10 bars Lenox Soap. 250 Large package of Star Naptha Washing Powder per package 27) BUY-RiTE PILLARS Mammoth shipment of fresh Buy-Rite Coffee, per lb 35 " Splendid for Iced Coffee. N'ishna Valley Buy-Rite Creamery Butter, per lb 37f) 481b 500 bags of Old Wheat Tea Table Flour, 4811 sack $2.15 Campbell's Soups, all kinds, 3 cans for 33) MazolaOil, pints, 25c; qts., 49c; gal -lb. cake Walter Bakers Bitter Chocolate 21) 20c package Dromedary Cocoanut 5) STARCH I STARCH 1 STARCH! 5,000 5-lb. packages of Argo Gloss Starch, per package 39t 5,000 1-lb. packages of Argo Corn Starch, per p&ck&se 61? 5,000 Mb. packages of Kingsford Corn Starch, per package HVzt FAMOUS BUY-RITE SOFT DRINK DEPT. Fruitina, the splendid Summer beverage, all fla vors, 35c size, special Budweiser "Good Old Bud", per case bottles Fontenelle Glngerale, per case 24 bottles Fontenelle Rootbeer, per case 24 bottles Pop, all flavors, per case 24 bottles 98 Fruit Nectar, all flavors, 35c bottle 25) 29) of 24 $2.75 $2.15 $2.15 COOKIESI COOKIES! COOKIES! Fresh baked today Iten's. celebrated French Cakes, per lb 20) The more you eat, the more you want. Feed them to the kiddles! M. J. B. COFFEE WHYf Vacuum packed as fresh to you as the day roasted. Costs more, but goes farther. Per lb 47 3 lbs. for -$1.35 "Extra heavy Jar KUDbers, 14 grade, special per dozen jelly Glasses, tall or squat, per dozen. 5c Genuine Ball Mason Jars, pints, 850 1 Qts-. 95; 3,4 gals. Three Good Products We Recommend - Per ii. ... iPPf I Per BSSM45e Buy-Rite Price Are for Wednesday and Thursday Only J. D. CREW & SON, Tklrtr-tfeird sad Arte GILES BROTHERS, WILKC e MITCHELL. ItrtlHh aad ftraam SKUPA SWOBOOA tlrt an a 9tm, BMUi Me ERNEST BUFFETT, Th Oncer f Dude FRANK KUSKA, ISth mat OarfltM OSCAR E. NELSON, Mb ad t KU, aMtk Bid THORIN A SNY60 Fortieth Md Hamilton LYNAM A BRENNAN, Itth aa Dm E. KARSCH CO, TbrtM us Km Urn. ARMAND PETERSEN, ZiOS MienMLa Arc HANNEGAN A CO., Mh At. Md LTeirn JEP8EN BROS, nth and Coatlas GEO. I. ROSS, 1Mb inn Put one on the pain is gone!