SOCIETY Rev. and Mr?. Casady to Receive on New Year's. liev. aYid Mrs. Thomas Casady will be at home on New Tears afternoon »nd evening ft'All Saints rectory. Re ceiving with them will be Judge and Mrs. William Redick, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Montgomery. Mr. and Mrs. John T. Yates, Mr. and Mrs. S.-M. Town send Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crittpnden Smith, Mr and Mrs. Robert Trimble. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Caldwell, Dr. and Mrs. Charles O. Rich, Dr. and Mrs. Henry I^mere, and Messrs John lirady and Farnam Smith. Mi4s Clara Thomas will preside In the dining room assisted by the young girls of the church. A. H. Richardson and ( Bride Return. Mr. and Mrs. A. II. Rirhardson. who ■'■■ere married early ui November in Washington, D. C.. will return to Omaha Sunday morning after a Euro pean honeymoon. Mr. Richardson's mother and sisters. Mrs. Charles Rich ardson and the Misses Nannie and Mary Richardson, who leave Friday evening to spend the winter in the south, will meet and spend the day with them on Saturday in Chicago. Madorian Club to Give Straw Ride. New Year’s day the Maderian club of the Central High school will give a bobsled party, followed by a dance at Harte hall. Sixty of them with their escorts will meet at 7 o’clock at the home of Miss Helen Pancoast, and they will ride until 8, when they will go to Harte hall, where 40 others have been invit'd for the dance. Mrs. Prinz Entertains. Mrs. George Prinz will have 10 guests to dine with her Friday eve ning at her home. The following Wednesday she will again bo hostess at dinner. Announce Engagement. Announcement is made of the en gagement of Miss Mary Margolin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Margolin, to Hux Mozer of Lincoln. The wedding will take place Decem ber 31 at the home of the bride's parents. Hostesses for Miss Margolin have been her sister, Mrs. Nathan S. Yaffo, who entertained six tables at bridge at the Urandeis last Thursday, and Mrs Gail Margolin, who gave a bridge party Friday, and Miss Dorothy Wengel. who was hostess at a handkerchief shower at her home last Tuesday. Georg* Custer Officers. Georgy A. Custer Woman's Relief corps lias elected tile following offi cer* for the ensuing year: Mrs. Z I'enton.’president: Mrs. Kathleen An derson. senior vice president; Mrs. Grace Croaen, junior vieo president; Mrs. Iiora Smith. chaplain; Mrs. Clara Wins hip, conductor; Mrs. Emma, titiypne, treasurer: -.Mrs, Alice Hum pftrey, guffyd. Officers will be In stalled January !>. ttcieaatds'to tha state convention to fie Meld ln>- tfnchln next spring are Mesdanjcs Kathleen Anderson, Mary Cormaejc aVtd M. Bowes. ('hrlstinns Party. The Foreign Missionary society of 3 Ian scorn Park church. Mrs. W. H. Wright son, president, will hold its annual X3fiins. party in the church par lors. Friday, pecember 15. Luncheon iit 12 .SQ o’clock. Program leader. Mrs. -Clyde B. Clssel. Vocal solos by Mrs. Mablo ,^llen Smalls. All interested are welcome. , _• College Club Meeting. The executive committees of the Omaha ‘College cluh will meet Friday, •1 p. m., at the Fonti nolle hotel when plans will be completed for the Settle ment Christmas party. Personals Mrs. H. S. Kamen is in Excelsior Springs. Jay D. Joster is confined to the •Methodist hospital. Miss Betty Colt and J. Clarke Colt are spending two weeks in New York City, William B. Clift has undergone an operation for appendicitis at the Nicholas Senn hospital. Mrs. Herbert Negole left Monday for Sioux City. la., to spend 10 days with her sister. Mrs. E. V. Menden liallo - :/ The Misses Irene Powell. Helen Con don and Mildred Turks, students at Ward Belmont in Nashville. Tenn., will arrive home on Saturday. Mrs. Sophie Shirley McDermott has ; returned from Detroit, where site spent the last two months and Is with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Shirley. Mrs. Philip Casady of Los Angeles, Cal.. Will be the week end guest of flev. and Mrs. Thomas Casady. Mrs. Casady is tn route home from an •astern' trip. Miss Elsie Waite math of North Plaifce, Neb., who hns been visiting Dr. and Mrs. D. T. Quigley for the (last two weeks, will return to her home Thursday. Among the Smith college girls who will spend the holidays with their parents, is Miss Onnolee Mann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Mann, who will arrive in Omaha De cember 21. Mr. and Mrs. John Patrick of Chey enne, Wyo.. who have been spending a few weeks here, leave shortly for their home. Mrs. Patrick has been with Mrs. E. L. Lauer, while Mr. Patrick has been at the Clarkson hospital, where he underwent an op eration. from which he is rapidly recovering. KODAKS And nwiy other useful articles in our I stock will solvo the gift problem. Christmas Greeting Cards and Seals. The Robert Dempster Co. Eastman Kodak- Co. ' --I8I3 Karnem Street. Preach 308 South 15th Street. j CatholicDaughters to Initiate Class of 50 Catholic Daughters of America. ^ Omaha court, will meet in the assem hly room of the Knights of Columbus club Saturday afternoon, 1 o'clock, when plans will be made for the or ganization of a state court for Ne braska. Miss Anna Reilly, state regent of Iowa; Miss Clara Gagnon, Falls Cify, stale deputy for Nebraska; Mrs. P. J. i Flynn. Plattsmouth; Mrs. William Fenton and Miss Celia Foster, Lin coln, will attend the meeting. At 2 p. m. a class of 50 will be in itiated. Miss Gagnon will have charge of the ceremony. A banquet will be served in the Brandeis tea room at 7 p. m., Mrs. '■ Arthur F. Mullen, grand regent, pre- I siding. Jlrs Leo Hoffman will be | toastmistress, Mrs. Thomas Golden in charge of program, and Miss Helen Gerin, musical program. Rev. W. J. Grace, S. J., Creighton university, will be the speaker of the evening. Covers will be placed for 150. Bishop and Mrs. Johnson to Be in Omaha Next Week. Bishop and Mra. Irving R.'Johnson of Denver. Colo., will be In Omaha on tlie afternoon of December 22. They will be at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Canady front 3 until 7 o'clock and will receive visitors there. For Miss itoscnstock. Among the affairs that have been planned for Miss Jessie Rosenstock. who is to marry Dave Rosenstock Monday 'evening at tho Fontenelle hotel, is a tea to be given on Saturday at the Blaekstone, when Mrs. Nathan Foil and Mrs. Herbert Sloman will be hostesses. That evening Mrs. Herbert Arnstein and Mrs. Edward Kirschhraun will entertain 40 at bridge at the home of Mrs. Arnstein, and Mr. Rosenstock will entertain at dinner. Mrs. Flora B Rosenstock, mother of the bride-to-be, will entertain at a buffet supper Sunday evening. Among the guests at the festivities are Mr. and Mrs. D. T. Becker of Mitchell, S. D , and Mr. and Mrs. Emil Rosenstock of Sioux City. Methodist Missionary Meet. The Woman's Home Missionary §o riety of the First Methodist Episcopal church will meet for 1 o'clock lunch eon Friday at the home of Mrs. George Carty, 5022 California street. Mrs. J. JI. Fit ton will review the third chapter of "Trend of Negro World;" Mrs. J. C. Hammond will tell the les son stfjry and devotionals will lie led by Mrs. A. D. Davis. A reading is to Ik- given by Mrs. Charles Cornick and violin solo. Mrs. Warren Carey. For Two Brides. Mrs. James T. English entertained at bridge on Tuesday in honor of her sister* Mrs. John Gamer!, who was re cently wed, and on Wednesday she complimented at luncheon Mrs. Earl A. Connolly, who has just come to Omaha to make her home as the bride of Dr. Connolly. College Women to Sell Cook Books Saturday. Mrs. Herbert Woodland and Miss Joselyn Stone will sell the Omaha Col lege club cook books in the rest room of Thompson Belden's store Saturday from 11 a. m. until 4 p. m. All club members are requested to report on sales by Wednesday of next week to Miss Mae Sommers, chairman of the cook book committee. Proceeds from the sales will be add ed to the cllub scholarship fund. Past year four scholarships were given to Omaha high school girls. It is the aim of the club to increase the num ber of scholarships this year. Lafayette* Club. The Lafayette Dancing club will give a dance Friday evening. Decem ber 15, at the Hyland dancing acad emy, Twenty-fifth and Farnam. The Jazz Classtque dance band will furnish the music. Organists of City to Meet Dupre Invitations iffvve been issued to city organists by the Y. W. C. A. for a luncheon to moot Marcel Dupre, Notre Dame organist, who will appear here Tuesday, December 19, in con cert at the First Central Congrega tional church under Y. W. C. A. aus pices. Invitations are complimentary and are going to the organists of tho city. The Organists' Guild will be In cluded and Dr. It. Mills Kilby has beep consulted for furthet names. Any or ganist omitted is ashed to telephone the Y. W. C. A. Girdles with long fringes hanging at the sides are good. So are those that consist of a wide band about the hips, laced together loosely at the front in a decorative manner. ■ My Marriage Problems Adele Carlson's New Phase ol "Revelations ot a Wife." The Way Madge "Opened Fire” on Mrs. Barker. I looked curiously at the lighted house before which we had drawn up. the house which held Claire Fos ter, and in which I instinctively felt I would be compelled to act warily if I were to avoid a scene. It was evidently a summer hotel of the remodelled up-state farmhouse type, and upon its broad front ver anda were several women swathed in heavy wraps, ostensibly enjoying the moonlight upon the distant moun tains. That some of them were genuinely indifferent to my arrival, I knew, for the guests at a mountain resort in the late fall are generally autumn lovers, and pay no attention to anything else save the delights of the Indian sum mer. Hut I was sure from the furtive glances of two of the women nearest the door that they had been watching for my arrival, and anticipating the pleasurable prospect of a possible ox citing row. Dicky stalked up the steps, looking neither to the right nor the left. He had assisted me from the taxi, and kept his hand beneath my elbow as I mounted the steps. Just before we reached them he made some perfunctory remark about the beauty of the moonlight upon the mountains, palpably an attempt to play the game as I had requested. I answered him with equal casualness, but gave a whimsical twist to my answer, and accompanied it with a light little laugh for the benefit of the sleek tahbies on the veranda. Dicky's answering laugli was a hit hollow, but plausible enough, and I had my reward for our effort in sec Ing, from benpath my lowered eyelids, a turning of heads on the veranda and hearing a crescendo in the crack ing of the veranda rocking chairs. ‘‘How Is Miss Foster?” Dicky souitded an imperative tat loo upon the door. Almost immediate ly it was opened by a tall, spare woman, whose abundant hair, with streaks of Its original red showing through the gray of advanced middle age, was wound tightly around her head. Her eyes were blue, cold, keen And there was a suppressed hostility In her manner which did not es cape me. Problems That Perplex Answered by BEATRICE FAIRFAX, ■ Kiluctnnt to Marry. Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 have been going about with a girl of 22 for eight months. I gave iter an engagement ring. She set the (late for the wed ding. but now she tells me she does not want to get married yet. All my asking and pleadings for a reason for this.suddtn change have been in vain. My (ianeee assures me there is nothing Wrong. Hundreds of times my fiancee assured me in letters dur ing the summer that she loves me dearly and wishes to marry me, yet when the time draws near she seems to have a certain fear she does not know herself. You have probably put your finger on the crux of the matter when you say that " she seems to have a certain fear she docs not know herself." Some girls do feel a terror of marriage even though they love the man to whom they are pMsed. A terror of the unknown, a minder where thelr great adventure will lead. Try to be gentle and patient and to set her fears at rest. Teach her that your love will protect her. Perhaps your mother could do a great deal to smooth the way for both of you. Misplaced Admiration. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 19 and considered attractive. There is only one man I care for, and I love him desperately. Hut, he is married. -He has promised to get a divorce and marry me. hut he has never done so. 1 "know that it is Impossible for me to give him up, as he has a large place in my heart. Please advise me what to do. HOPEFUL. If this man did get a divorce to marry you, how could you ever have any faith or confidence in him? Your Vanity has led you into a position where you are destroying the honor of a man. breaking' up another wo man's home and making yourself mis erable over "the moon" which you cannot have and probably would not want if it were attainable. Meeting His Friends. Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been going about with a young man a year and have consented to become en gaged to him Christmas. I have never been introduced to any of his people. My parents say I shouldn't become engaged to him until I meet them, as it is odd that he doesn't ask me to. T don't know what to do, as I don't know if it would he proper for me to ask, as I'd much rather the Invitation came directly from him. MAY. If you feel closely enough in accord with a man to marry him, you cer tainly should not hesitate to he frank with him. Don’t let pride or nn ex aggerated sense of delicacy prevent you from telling him just how you feel in this situation. He may he thoughtless or feel that he wants to wait until your betrothal is announced before having you meet his family. But whntever is the trouble, it can be adjusted by honesty on your part. They Hate Rubbers! ! The youngsters DON'T like to wear rubbers. Mothers talk and plead, and heed* less children forget. There is a way to forestall any danger and protect the chil dren from their own thoughtlessness. The Elite Shoe Renewal is a first class safeguard against catching cold. Bring the children's shoes to us and leave them with instructions to remake them. We'll sew up the ripped seams, put on new* soles (half or full) and heels, mend torn linings and generally ^store the shape and style of the shoe. A moment's attention now may save sickness and doctor bills later. The winter has made a hard beginning. Don't let it overtake your little ones. Our prices on children's shoes— Shoe Renewal. $1.50 Half Soles. 65c and $1.00 Standard Shoe Repair 1619 Fariiam St. Downstairs I That she relished neither the pub lioity Dicky’s escapade had brought upon her house, nor his reappeartince was plainly to be seen, and 1 could not blame her. Justice made me ad mit that in her place I should, no doubt, have felt as she did. But, curi ously enough, in the face of her cold j disapproval, I began to feel n real championship of my husband and Claire Foster. The hurried introduction which i Dicky mumbled (&ve me only her name, "Mrs. Barker,” ind I repeated it with a forced smile. The first thing on the program I saw, was the pla cating «t Mrs. Barker, and though I distinctly did not relish the task, there was nothing else for me but to undertake it. "I am so sorry to bother you ut this hour of the night, Mrs. Barker," I said apologetically, "but the after noon train was the only one X could get, and I did not want to wait longer before coming to my friend, Miss Fos ter. IIow is she?” Mrs. Barker stared frankly at me before answering. That my attitude astonished her, upset some of her pre conceived Ideas of the situation, I was sure. "I guess she’s all right,” she said at last grudgingly. "I haven’t seen her since she came back here yester day morn ng. But the girl who took up her meals asked her if she needed a doctor or anything, and Miss Foster told her all she needed was rest, so— we let her have It." A Breathless Moment. There was a grimness about the thin lips of Mrs. Barker which be trayed how thorough was her disap proval of Claire Foster, and how glad she would be when ttw girl should leave her house. Indeed, I strongly suspected that while the woman had | too much principle to send a guest I away while suffering from a shock such as Claire Foster had received, still she was only waiting for the girl’s recovery to ask for her room. "I am so glad,” I said with an air of extreme relief. "When Mr. Graham wired me of the accident to his air plane I was so worried for fear Claire might have been hurt or shocked ner vously. She is so venturesome, and so delights In flying! She never misses a chance to go up. I wish I were as brave. My husband has tried Kif often to have me jjo up, hut I am too much of a coward, lie tells me I am missing the greatest sport In In world, and I suppose I am, but I cannot help it. “Do you think Miss Foster will he able to travel tomorrow?” I said with deep solicitude. "I do want to take her home with me, and I ought not to stay over the day." I had to let her have it all at once, a hit hurriedly as I imagined an un suspecting rnoitse. of a wife would talk, and T thing 1 waited breathlessly for her answer. SM E p V - T . ME. _T A L E? TOMMY FOX. ADVENTURER ^ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY CHAPTER XVIII. \ Trick Worth Knowing. It was almost milking time. John nio Green and old dog Spot had gone to the pasture to drive the cows home, and the Muley Cow was missing. ‘‘She's jumped the fence again, in to the hack pasture," Johnnie told old dog Spot. So with Spot running on ahead, Johnnie Green started up the hill. And that was the reason why old Spot happened to visit the little used hack pasture that afternoon. Young trees—birches and spruce— dotted the hack pasture, as well as clumps of ferns and berry bushes. It was not easy to find a cow that stray ed there. Though Johnnie and Spot looked everywhere, they couldn't see the Muley Cow. At last Spot harked. Johnnie Green, a little way from him, heard his barks and exclaimed, "He's found her!" But Spot hadn’t found the Muley Cow. He had stumbled upon some thing far more interesting than that staid creature. He hid found two foxes—an old one and a young one. It was Mrs.T'ox and her son. Tom my, that Spot had surprised. “Come this wayi'' cried Mrs. Fox to Tommy when old Spot saw them and barked. "Follow me'." To Tommy's amazement, his mother didn't dash Into the woods. Instead. iS t Tommy had followed hc» every mova rhe headed downhill, straight for tho pasture where the herd of cows was moving slowly towards the bars, "Footer, Jimmy, fattest Yom know mother said there won’t be any breakfast till we bring the Kellogg's Certt Flakes I” - »V" Compare flavor and crispness! KELLOGGS against any Com flakes you ever ate! Takes the rough edges off hopping out of the covers these snappy mornings just thinking about that lusty bowl of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes waiting down-stairs! Big and brown and crispy-crunchy flakes—a revelation In appetizing flavor, wonderful in wholesome goodness— the most delicious cereal you ever tasted! Instantly you like Kellogg’s, not only because of ap pealing flavor, but because Kellogg’s are not “leathery”! Kellogg’s are a delight to eat, as the little folks as well as the big ones will tell you! And Kellogg’s ought to be best—they’re the original Corn Flakes! You have only to make comparison to realize that quickly! KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes for - ■ tomorrow morning’s spread! They fTOASllw get the day started right! Insist * upon KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes in COKIN the RED and GREEN package— & FLAKES the kind that are not leathery I 81 iSSSs.1 CORN FLAKES 41*0 o' KELLOGG 5 KKOMELjlS and KLLLOGG’3 BRAN, cooked aid kmUid We Quit Business January 1st Our Entire Stock Must Be Sold READ! READ! READ! Our Entire Stock of Ladies’ and Misses’ Coats, Suits and Dresses to tie Closed Out at 25c to 50c on the Dollar Closing Out Sale This, without a doubt, will be the greatest value-giving event ever offered the buying public. Our lease is sold and we have to get out by January 1. Therefore we have shut our eyes to cost to close out this stock within a few days_and if value giving will do it., this stock won’t last long. Every coat, every suit and every dress must go. Every garment is of the latest, as we just opened this department last August. WINTER COAT BARGAINS COATS Worth Up to $29.50 Coats of ve lour. cut Boli via and plush. Plain and fur trim. COATS Worth Up to $39.50 Coats with fine large fur collars of the finest Bolivias and velours. COATS Worth Up to $59.50 Coats nf fine Bolivia*, large wolf collars — fur cuffs in Black*. Browns and Navys. COATS Worth Up to $79.50 Coats of the better kind of the finest ma terials with fur trimmings -*-a 1 1 colors and sizes. All Other High Grade Coats—Exclusive Models at V2 Price and Less Get Your Share of These High Grade Dresses Wool and Silk DRESSES 9 Ileautiful mod el* and wonder ful materials. DRESSES of the finest Canton and Poiret Twills— all P o n « e e lined. Perfectly made in every way. DRESSES . of the tnore excluiiv ► model*, the wea pon’s finest materials and trimmings. One of n kind styles. This it our lost, your gain. The entire stock must be told in a short time. Come early, at our gar ments are all exclusive one-of-a-kind models. Don’t Forget the Date and the Place 1613 Farnam Street rs ! musing to snatch tempting grass tufts now and then or clover tops. "Aren't you making a mistake, mother?" Tommy asked as he bounded along by his mother's side. Mrs. Fox actually smiled. And that was something she seldom did when a dog was following her. "Watch sharp," she said, "and you'll learn a trick that may be of use to you some day." When Sirs. Fox smiled Tommy knew that she was not frightened. When she spoke about a trick, he knew that sho could be making no mistake. So he ran gayly beside her. They leaped the fence out of the back pasture. Below them the fields dropped down into the river bottom. Off to their right stood the farm buildings. Ahead of them the cows dawdled along near the bars that opened into the lane. Mrs. Fox swerved sharply and headed for the herd of cows. Behind her and her son, old Spot was yelping. Behind him, Johnnie Green was shonting. "Sho must be making a mistake, after all," Tommy Fox thought. And he said, "Hadn’t we better turn back toward tbs woods?" "Follow mo,” Mrs. Fox snapped sternly. It was certainly no time to disobey one’s mother. Mrs. Fox and her puzzled fin drew nearer and nearer to the cattle. Then they dashed into the herd and ran in and out among the wondering cows. ^ At last Mrs. Fox dived right under a cow that stood on the edge of the herd beside the brook. She leaped down Into tho hrook, followed It up stream a little way, then turned and doubled back toward the woods. Tommy followed her every move. As they reached the upper end of the pas ture they could hear old Spot still barking. lie was down below, scurry ing nbout in frantic haste among the cows. Mrs. Fox smiled grimly as she looked at her son and spoke. "That's the trick," she said. "There’s no better way to hide your scent from a dog. old Spot, will never find ours among those cows.” And then she led Jemmy Into tho woods. (Copyright, 1»22.) Sidney Powell Married. Friends of Sidney Powell, former' Omahan, the son of Mrs. A. C. Pow ell of this city and a brother of Clarki and Doane Powell, who has made lili home In New York for the past few years, received announcements of hit marriage to Mrs. Julia D. N. Clem ents, which took place on Thursday December 7, at New Rochelle, N. Y ELD RID G E ijrj-15 Farnam St. W. O. W. Annex Suppose This Casserole Graced Your Table fetched from stock offered Wednesday Sketched from stock offer*! Wednesday /CERTAINLY an acceptable gift—Of plate O silver, chased in Dutch design, the liner is pyrex glass; special, at. Sketched from stock offered Wednesday Sketched from etock offered Wednesday Present Fashion Dictates a Bowl of Fruit for Table or Buffet BOWLS of colored crystal in a variety of shapes filled with luscious looking fruit; specially priced, at. A Hint of Springtime May be bad with the purchase of Narcissus Bulbs, in any one of a number of beau tiful bowls in glass or pottery; boxed for— They Are New— Six small crystal ash trays with cigaret snuffers and numbered for the bridge table; set (PO of six; special for. They Are Charming These low colored crystal candh holders of blue, decorated in enamels with candles to match her dressing table; JO? A specially priced, pair.. * Ivory Pendants— for her gift, are beautifully carved from real Ivory— $2.50 to $10 Small Lamps Are always useful. Here is one com plete with silk shade, base is of stippled gold; 17 inches high— *5 . Decorated Candle* make an excellent small gift Wa have them In endless vari ety at per pair— 50*. 75*. $1 to *3.50 Sketched from stork offered Wednesday Sketched from stock offered Wednesday Desk Set— Unusual Value—$7.50 Moire silk, mica covered in rose, blue, yellow, gold. This is a practical set as ink stains can be removed immediately with damp cloth. W. H. Eldridge Importing Co. 1313-15 Farnam Street. W. 0. W. Annex Christmas Furs... 1 FOR HER Chokers in Mink, Sable, Fox, etc. FOR HIM Gloves and Mittens for work, play or dress, $1.00, $1.25, $2.50 up to $6.00. Caps and Fur Collars, Special Sale of Fur Capes HUDSON SEAL—MUSKRAT A Selection of Styles at Closing Out Prices National Factory and Salesroom 1921-29 South 13th Street A number of molt tcrvicoable fur auto robes to be told at $7.50 to $15.00