WOMJMMS -MEWS • FEJnETOSB f i Adele Garrison | **My Husband’s Love” (low Katherine and Dr. Braithwalte Men * At his wife’s words, Dr. Edwin Braithwalte swung around abruptly, %nd with a long stride reached Kath erine's side. Evidently my ruse to Beep his attention until the two women had exchanged greetings had been successful, for I am sure he Rad not seen his former associate un til Harriet spoke her name. , All unconscious of our scrutiny— for I fear T watched him as narrow ly as did his wife—he put out both hands impetuously to Katherine. For Just the almost imperceptible fraction of an instant she hesitated, and I knew what fear of possible misinterpretation on Harriet's part was in her heart, then she did the Only possible thing, and laid both Her slender hands in the physician’s big ones. In a greeting that appeared as warm as his own. He shook them heartily, beaming at her with such evident delight that I remem ber' d Harriet's comparison of "a child on Christmas morning.” , "Well! well” He boomed the banality os though it never had been Uttered before, "it is certainly good to seo you onco more. Let’s have a gfood look at you." He swung her -4-around, facing the light, and scru tinized her sharply before dropping $er hands. I suspected that Kath erine had made the first movement tp break that hearty handclasp. . "You haven’t changed a bit," he proclaimed. "I don’t believe you’ve Shined or lost a pound since We saw you. Has she, Harriet? And doesn't she look bully?” ■ I found my lower lip between my tieth in my tense conjecture as to Harriet’s answer. Surely a woman of her acumen could not fail to read the utter absence of anything which could possibly threaten her own happiness in the greeting, extrava gant though It undoubtedly was. There was also the fact that he had greeted Katherine so openly and heartily before his wife. It took either a man absolutely free from gplle or one full of it for that action, and no one who hafl ever enjoyed tbe privilege of Edwan Braithwaite's friendship could doubt his frank sin cerity. Judged only by surface IndicatlonsC her answer to her husband’s appeal ■wfes most gratifying. “Indeed she does,” she said heart ily, then -turning to Katherine, she put her hand upon the younger woman’s shoulder In an affectionate gesture rare with her. \ t Mrs. Braithwaite’s Query. i"I did not know how much I had missed you, until now,” she said, and there was every evidence of sin cerity and affectionate liking in her voice and smile. “Your letters hgve ■ been most unsatisfactory in their brevity. When you get time, I wftnt to hear all about yourself—and yfiur husband. I understand he Is away.” There was distinct inquiry in her voice, and Katherine promptly an swered it. "Yes. poor Jack, he is down in the South American wilderness a#ain. It is a wonderful assignment, and I suppose I shouldn’t call him ‘poor’ for it is the thing he loves to dd, but I never can help worrying about him.” "Naturally. But isn’t it fortunate that you can be with Margaret?” "It is more than that," Katherine Father, Teach Your Son The Habit of Thrift ' Habits formed early continue to influence him throughout life. They form either good for ba-' habits in the thoughts of you son. Teach your son so that h may learn the good habit of sav lng his money. Have • him open an accoun ?iat will pay 0% quarterly each him the value of a sav iligs fund and its power of doing good. Is there a better way to teach your son the beginning of life’s responsibilities? The Occidental Building & Loan Association. £8th and Harney, is a mutual institution and has been one of Omaha’s renl assets for 35 years. It has resources amounting to $12,475,000 and a reserve fund now amounting to $439,000. The Association had the magnificent increase of $2,000,000 the first ttine months in 1923. ■ ——————— ■ -- - ... Al>VKKTlSr.'IKNT. THOUGHT BACK WOULD BREAK Nothing Helped until She Began Taking Lydia E. 4 Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound "When my baby was bom,” says lira. Poslaszny, KDHigh Street, Bay Uty, Michigan, "I fot up tco soon, t matfe me so sick that I was tired of living and the weakness run me down something awful. I could not get up out of bed mornings on ac count of my back: 1 thought it would break in two, and if 1 started to do any work I would have to lie down. I do not believe that any woman ever Buffered worse than I did. I spent lota of money, but nothing helped me un til I began to take Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. 1 felt a whole lot netter after the first bottle, and I am still taking it for I am sure it is what has put me on my feet.” If you are suffering from adisplace ment, irregularities, backache, ner vousness, sideache or any other form of female weakness you should write to the Lydia E. Pirikham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass, for Lydia E. Pink ham’s Private Text-Book upon ‘‘Ail ments Peculiar to Women/’ It will lie sent you free upon request. This book contuina valuablojn formation. , returned, with an affectionate smile at me. The Strained Voters. To all outward appearances this was a most natural and spontaneous conversation, but X fancied I detected a strain In both voices and turned the conversational switch down the track, which I guessed would be most welcome , "I must remind you that dinner is almost ready,” I said. "Alfred If you will take charge of Dr. Braith walte I will take care of his wife. Don't let anything burn, Katherine.-” Dr. Bralthwalte looked startled and balky. "But—Mrs. Durkee—” he said, looking at Katherine. "Sound nste-n she answered, "and I think she will not Waken an hour at leas,.. 1 nope so, for she needs the rest after a wearing fit of nerves which attacked her a short time ago.” “Yes, Mr. Durkee told me,” the sur'geon replied. "Very well, then, I am at your service, only stipulat ing this: that if Mrs. Durkee wakens, no matter at what time, I wish to see her immediately before she has time to think about the Interview and get nervous over it.” "I shall summon you between two bites of pie,” I promised, and the fact that they were all intensely nervous was attested by the hearty laughter which greeted the inane Jest as the group broke up. Chautauqua Luncheon. One hundred reservations have been made for the luncheon to be given today, 1 o’clock, at the Y. W. C. A., under auspices of Omaha Chautauqua circles preceding the lec ture by Dr. Frank Smith on "Our Common Task In the New Day.’’ The talk 'will be given at 2 o'clock in the Auditorium. The public Is In vited. Dinner at Lincoln Club. Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Clarke will go to Lincoln today to be the guests of the Prank Quicks, who will entertain at dinner in their honor at rhe Lincoln Country club dinner : dance in the evening. Letter and Flower Shower. Mrs. Henry H. Bartltng, who is convalescing at Wise Memorial hos pital from an operation, was given a letter and flower shower by her friends on Wednesday in honor of her birthday. The McCagues Hosts. Mr. and Mrs. John McCague have Issued Invitations for a dinner to be given on Monday evening. Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablet* re lieve the headache by curing the cold A tonic laxative and germ destroyer. The box bears the signature* of E. W. Grove. . 30c. Advertisement. * j Coinings and Goings of _People You Know_ Mrs. C. L. West Is spending a Tew days at Russell, la. Dr. Charles Swal) left Wednesday for Womelsdorf, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. John Towle returned this morning from Chicago. Mrs. Robert Garrett is convalescing at Clarkson hospital following a slight operation. Mrs. Margaret Blair of Minne apolis Is the guest of her cousin, Mrs. Charles M. Edwards. Mrs. B. A. Waugh, wf thum' | nail or in *ert k n ! f « uid the cap can be easi 'y removed i n d r e placed. Sanitary | Splashless Replaceable Che New Alamito BairvCft The Gray Ghost The Gray Ghost is the most daring and accomplished big scale thief of the time. Every big crime is attributed auto matically by the public to him. Read his latest exploits chronicled by Arthur Somers Roche, famous author of de tective and mystery stories, in the magazine section of The Sunday Bee. / $ Girls Marry Too Young So declares Gertrude Atherton, famous novelist and author of “Black Oxen.’' Social laws should forbid girls to wed before 22, declares Miss Atherton in an interesting com ment on love and marriage in the magazine section of The Sunday Bee. Love Wreck No. 3 How Byron Chandler, the so-called “Millionaire Kid,” with his pockets bulging with money, seems never to obtain a permanent hold on the joy he started confidently in pur suit of so many years ago. An illustrated feature story of the actualities of a rich man’s life, in the magazine section of The Sunday Bee. I Free Trade No Panacea H. G. Wells, author of the “Outline of History,” in a spe cial cable dispatch calls the Asquith anti-tariff measure po litical hokum of the Victorian period and explains why free trade will be of no benefit to Europe’s ills. In The Sunday Bee. What Joy! What Grief! O. O. McIntyre packs his grip and goes traveling. Very nice. Not so good. It’s a lot of fun. It’s a lot of trouble. What h*appens when you go tripping? If you’ve ever done any traveling ycu can’t help but enjoy Mr. McIntyre’s quiz 1 zically humorous tale in The Sunday Bee. McAdoo in the Lead , “It’s the son-in-law of former President Wilson against the field,” observes Mark Sullivan, who outlines the situation within the democratic party as it stands today and how it will exist at convention time next summer. Talk of politics is in the air now and one of the best ways to keep yourself posted is to read Mark Sullivan’s weekly political reviews in The Sunday Bee. Behind the Footlights Everybody is interested in the theater. They must, be if Ziegfeld is able to charge $22 a seat for the opening per formance of his “Follies” and fill the house. Percy Ham mond’s weekly letter tells all the news of the theater in New York and in addition, Mr. Hammond’s fine style gives a liter ary flavor that makes his letter well worth while even for those not particularly concerned with theatrical events. Mr. Hammond’s letter is a regular feature of the amusement page of The Sunday Bee. Winners of the Jigga Get-Rich-Quick Contest Will Also Be Announced in The Sunday Bee is attending the Hill school at Potts-1 town, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Wesson Jeffery of Denver, have moved to Omaha to make their permanent home. Mrs. Jeffery was formerly Miss Pauline Coad of this city. _ i I.ouis Nash, jr., is home with his parents until after Thanksgiving to recuperate from an injury suffered In football at Georgetown Preparatory school at Georgetown, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Shirley and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shirley will be four of the guests whom Dave Cald well Is taking to the Ames Nebraska game at Ames, la., on Saturday. Mrs. W. R. Howard, who was call el to Denver recently by the Illness of her daughter, Mrs. Ruth Giffcn, has been called to Portland. Ora., by the serious Illness of her mother. When in Omaha Stop at Hotel Rome BEE WANT ADS BEING RESULTS Could Anyone Write A Poem About Your Beauty? / Vull cDown the blinds and Look Yourself in the Face — oAre You SMaking the SMost of the Best You Hare? Every woman has a right to be beautiful— and any woman can be, if she is willing to take the trouble. Celia Caroline Cole says so —and she knows. In “Types and Illusions” she has written a wonderful message to women who think they can never be more than “just a neat ‘n’ clean, good, dependable human woman that nobody could ever write poetry about.” Get the Decem ber Delineator and let Miss Cole show you how to make the very most of the good looks you have. A New Serial By Kathleen Norris If anyone knows how td write a love-story it is Kathleen Norris —and she says this new serial, “Rose of the World, ” is the best she ever wrote. It will hold you breathless through every page—and you will learn how a girl can love a man enough to say “I despise you!” Say it and mean it—with her heart breaking for love of him all the time. Don’t miss the beginning of this wonderful story in the December Delineator. . A Christmas Story By Zona Gale Zona Gale has written a Christmas story that you will not soon forget. It is a story of Christmas giving that taught grown-up chil dren something new and beautiful about their old mother. Something about a spirit of giving that was written in the Bible long ago: “Gold and silver have I none, but what I have I give to you.” Edith Wharton—Joseph Conrad Ida Tarbell — Booth Tarkington Each of these great writers has written a personal Christmas Carol to tell Delineator readers “The Best Christmas I Remember.” Joseph Conrad’s Christmas was on the high seas; Edith Wharton’s among the war refugees in Paris; Bpoth Tarkington—but you’ll want to read them hll yourself in the December Delineator. Do You Know Why Hats Are So Small? And why they are growing smaller all the time? Fourteen illus trated pages of fashions in the December Delineator start with a gossipy page telling what is newest in styles in Paris and New York. Tiny hats and two-headed hatpins. Quaint gloves with scalloped edges. Handkerchiefs of crepe de chine in batik designs. Strap slippers and sandals. New envelope bags. Holiday dresses and winter sports suits for the children. Lingerie suggestions for Christmas gifts.* The latest news of blouse effects. The outdoor clothes they are wear ing in Paris. Take our word for it that Butterick winter styles and patterns were never so interesting as this year. Twelve Times This for £2 All this and much more in its rich and varied partes, coming twelve months throughout the year. The Delineator will bring you fer $2. A million American women find The Delineator the biggest magazine value they can buy*. What there is in it for them there must be in it for you. ^ A Planned Magazine of Service The Delineator ia essentially a planned magazine of service to American women. It gives you a window that opens on the wide, busy world, and shows you what successful wide-awake wives and mothers are doing and saying and reading. It brings you the latest fic tion that everyone is talking about. Its Service Departments will help you lead a happier life in a better home by giving you month after month the advice and counsel of such eminent authorities as these: BETTER HOMES IN AMERICA Bureau of Information, Secretary, Mrs. William Brown Meloney, Edi tor of The Delineator. CHILD WELFARE Dr. L. Emmett Holt—Adviser in The Delineator Child Health Cam paign, assisted by Dr. Henry L. K. Shaw, Dr. Thomas W. Salmon, Dr. Ralph Lobenstine, Dr. William Pal mer Lucas, Dr. Owen Lovejoy. HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS Martha Van Rensselaer. Head of School of Home Economics at Cor nell University. FASHIONS By Butterick, style authority of the world. HOME BUILDING Donn Barber—Ecole dcs Beau* Art* Architects (Pari*); Architect Designer Hall of Justice. Washing ton, D. C. INTERIOR DECORATING Mr*. Charles Bradley Sanders — Interior Decorating Editor. BEAUTY Celia Caroline Cole — Famous Beauty Specialist, writing exclu sively for The Delineator. KEEPING FIT Fielding H. Yost, Director of Inter collegiate Athletics at theUnivertity of Michigan. Jill in the T$ig Christmas J^umher of^ie DELINEATOR xjlt YourP>utteric\ "Pattern Counter NOW ON SALE On the 0\(ews-sta7ids