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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1924)
i • fit - k Miss Davidson Honors John De Puy. Miss Dorothy Davidson will enter tain 14 guests at the Country club on Friday for her guest. John De Puy of Columbus, O., who arrives Thurs • day. Saturday evening Miss Betty Pax ton will entertain for Mr. De Puy. Miss Barker's Fiance to Arrive Thursday. Irvin J. Bussing of New York City .will arrive Thursday to visit his fiancee. Miss Elizabeth Barker, and her parents, the Joseph Barkers. The betrothal of Mr. Bussing and Miss .Barker was announced in the spring, and this is his first visit in Omaha. For Columbus Guests. Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Offerman have as their guests Mrs. Offerman's sis ter, Miss Dorothea Abts, and J. Hale McKillip of Columbus. Neb. At the dinner dance at Dakoma club last evening Dr. and Mrs. Offerman en tertained In their honor and their guests were Misses Madeline Diesing, ■Elizabeth Ortman, Katherine Porter and Messrs. J. llale McKillip, Thomas ’Coleman, Eugene Holmes and Edward Kennedy. For Miss Harvey. Misses Helen and lluth Nolan gave u tea Wednesday at their home in Fuiracres in honor of Miss June Harvey of Memphis, Tenn., the guest ,bf Mr. nnd Mrs. O. H. Barmettler. Mrs. Howard Douglas poured and those assisting were, Misses Ruth .Wallace, Grace O'Brien, Helen Moore, Madeline Diesing and Catherine Porter. ■ Mr. and Mrs. Barmettler will give a picnic Friday In honor of Miss Harvey and Miss Helen Condon will entertain 14 guests at the dinner dance on Saturday evening at the -Field club. McCarthy-Picard. Announcement is made of the mar riage of Miss Naomi Picard, daughter -of Mr. and Mrs. Fred P. Picard of Ge neva, to J. J. McCarthy, son of ex ffongressman J. J. McCarthy of Pon ca, Neb. The wedding took place Saturday. June 7, at Marysville, Kan. Both Mr. and Mrs. McCarthy are sen iors in the University of Nebraska and will finish with the class of 1U25. Mrs. McCarthy Is a member of Alpha Ni Delta sorority. Mr. McCarthy is a student of the law college and be longs to Delta Epsilon fraternity. For Mrs. Magner. Mrs. William I.ncko and Mrs. Har old Berquist will entertain at a bridge luncheon for 1G guests on Thursday at the home of Mrs. Berguist in honor of Mrs. Robert G. Magner, Mr. and Mrs. Magner leave next week for Des Moines where they will reside per manently. Mrs. Magner was former ly leader of the music department of the Omaha College Club. Gallagher-O’Hara. Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Mary O'Hara of Columbus, O., and Dudley K Gallagher of Columbus, former resi dent of Omaha, which took place .June 20 in Columbus. [, Miss Daisy Rich, daughter of Dr. , and Mrs. Charles O'Neill Rich, left Sunday for Camp Holliday, * Lake j Okcboji, la. | Your Problems |j | Seeks Popularity. ‘ Clear Martha AlLn: I seem to lie • a social failure and 1 wish you could help me. I am of medium height, weight 1 JO pounds, have thick curly blonde hair, violet eyes and clear white skin. Maybe you gather that 1 am not ugly. But I appear dull and more, than stupid and seem to have no magnetism or personality. No one ever sends me candy, drops in to see me, or takes me to movies or In his automobile. I have a nice home, earn good money and dress well, I think. I hate to rum after the men when they show so plainly that they are not Interested in me. How can I please them? CELIA. You'll not advance one step unless >ou forget entirely about your faults ■and keep In mind your attractions. Most of us have some little trait of ..character or some feature of our gen eral makeup that pleases. Think ■hard and you'll surely find something ■ in yourself to magnify so as to make a few men think more than once about you. If you can't find a mar ket for your attractions where you happen to be, then try another place just as any good salesman would do. But, be yourself, be natural, for there is nothing that will drive away ad mirers more than insincerity. Arti ficial ways that some girls acquire in order to attrart the opposite sex are •sometimes deplorable. Play up your Best traits and you'll surely find hap piness In lime. Puzzle of the Ages, • Dear Martha Allen: I often won .dor how one person happened to fall in love with another. Can you give any explanation for such strange at tractions ns we see about us? A beau tiful girl will often marry the home best fellow In town and the most handsome man the plainest gill to be found. INQUISITIVE SUE. You have fallen upon the puzzle of the ages. Sue. Heal love isn't a thing to be defined. It is a thing gifted with deep vision that most of us are unable to grasp. Tenderness, devo tion and lasting happiness are only a few of the things Included In love. Ileal love Isn't a matter of broad shoulders, beautiful features or rougtsh eyes. It is a deep, basic at traction founded upon character and spiritual union. No use lo try to find out what two persons find In each other to love. It Is beyond power to discover these attributes that attract one another. (inldenrod: If you must have a bat rack In the home, the portable ones are more suitable, I believe, than the ones fastened to the wall. But if your home Is Just being planned, by nil means have a small coat closet In the ball, where umbrellas and ieonts may be hung out of sight. Horry that I am unable to give you the age of Mis* Marguerite Clarke, the movie actress who 1* now mar ried '-- ■ Visiting the Whitcombs j 'Mrs J/aj-jvJ (jeorfi? 6' If'sh’ll ‘iKicicjtf ~ Mrs. Harry George and daughter, Helen Frances of Franklin, Ind., are guests of Mrs. Elmer Whitcomb and Rev. Mr. Whitcomb. Mrs. George ind Mrs. Whitcomb-are sisters. Mrs. Whitcomb will leave Friday with her sister for her old home to spend sev eral weeks. Mrs. George is president of the Delta Delta Delta sorority alumnae In Franklin. f Personals l__— -—* Mr. and Mrs. Arthur It. Klopp will go to Lake Okoboji in August. ' Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Grace enter tained at a bridge party at their home Thursday. Mrs. W. E. Rhoades is visiting her sister, Mrs. F. TV. Metzger, and Mr. Metzger, in St. Louis, Mo. Miss Nell Stoneman of Malvern, la., will arrive Thursday to be the guest of Miss Clara Lindley. Miss May me Hutchinson has re turned from St. Joseph where she has been spending a week with friends. Mrs. TVilliam Sears Poppleton will entertain members of the ©riginal Cooking < lul» at Aq.uila Court tearoom on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. John TV. Towle will leave July 4 for Glenn wood, Minn., where they will spend a few weeks. They go by motor. Mr. and Mrs. TVilliam Grainger of Lincoln (Mildred Taylor) will arrive Thursday to spend the Fourth with Mr. and Mrs. E. TV. Taylor. J. G. Lutler and daughter, Helen, leave this week for Detroit and Can ada and Lake Saranac, New York. They will return September 1. Mrs. TVilliam Hill Clarke left SureReSief FOR INDIGESTION I INDIGESTION// 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief PEIL-ANS 2S<t and 75{ Packages Everywhere ECZEMA Alter Other: Fail FE’i ERSON’S OINTMEKr Big Box 35 Cents The mighty healing power of Peter son’s Ointment when eczema or ter rible Itching of akin and scalp tor tures you Is known to tens of thou sands of people the country over. Fur pimples, acne, rough and red skin, ulcers, old sores, piles and all blemishes and eruptions It Is su premely efficient, ns any broad-mind ed druggist will tell you.—Advertise ment. EKTISEMKNT. i To Whiten Skin | with Lemon Thy only harmless way to bleach the skin white Is to mix the Juice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which any druggist will supply for a few cents. .Shako well In a bot tle, and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin whltener, softener hjhI heautlller. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon bleach into the face, neck, arms and hands It can not Irritate. Famous stage beauties use It to tiring that dear, youthful skin and rosy white complexion: also us a freckle, sunburn and tan bleach. You must mix this remarkable lotion yourself. It ran not he bought ready to use because If. acts best Immediately after It Is prepared. Tuesday for Walloon Lake, Mich., whfcre she will be joined August 1 by Mr. Clarke. They return Sep tember 1. Herbert Woodland la spending the summer at Oto ranch in Montana. Ho leaves July 15 for a 16-day horse back trip through Yellowstone park. John H. Killian and daughters. Mary anjl Margaret left last night for the Elks convention in Boston. They will tour the east and south before returning to Omaha via Canada Aug ust 1. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Noble and children of Kansas City who have been the guests of Mrs. Noble's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. George T. Lindley of carter Lake club, left Saturday for their home. Dr. and Mrs, Joseph C. Lawrence have as their guests, Mrs. George Hadley and son, Joseph Hadley, and Messengers of the Night Night flying, cross country non-stop flights, new air mail records are familiar words to us now. Air mail, like all other innovations, is having a humble beginning. However its development is rapidly being carried on and soon it will hold its place high with the other great improve ments of the age. Electricity, too, had a hum ble beginning. Its pioneers risked their lives’ savings developing a “dream” into a reality. Like air mail, also, electricity has had a rapid development. Both electricity and the mails serve all alike. They recognize no race, creeds or classes. They are servants of all the people. ;| “Omaha Is a Great Place in Which to Live " j Nebrdskd ® Power <2. Adele Garrison “My Husband’s Love” v_-—__y The Way Lillian Lived Fp to Madge’s Fondest Hope. Would Lillian show any perturba tion at the unexpected sight of the man who had been her husband—in fact still was, legally? This was the question that heat insistently against my brain as I saw her at the vestibule letter box of the apartment, and realized that when she turned around she would see the ridiculous procession headed by my self, with Harry Underwood holding tightly to the girl, Mamie, just be hind me, and his chauffeur, Pete, bringing up the rear with the suit cases I had risked so much to get into Lillian's hands. I opened my lips with the absurd idea of calling out. "Lillian, here’s Harry’’ or some equally banal warn ing, but closed them again as I saw Mr. Underwood's eyes flash toward me quizzically and knew that ho would Interpret my words—Justly enough—as an acknowledgement that I did fear Lillian's reaction to his unexpected apearance. I wished—fervently—that I had not permitted myself to boast to Harry Underwood that his unexpected ap pearance would have no effect upon Lillian. In all probability, I told my self scathingly, he meant nothing but friendly solicitude by the question at which I had taken umbrage. If I had only kept silence, or an swered non-committally, a little nerv ousness on Lillian's part would have passed unnoticed. But with his mock ing answer to my boaBt still ringing In my ears, with his amused eyes upon my face, I felt that I should be utterly abashed were Lillian to lese daughter, Miss Mary Hadley, of Pon tiac, Mich. They are on their way to Denver. Miss Ethel Bass of Broken Bow, Neb., who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Klopp, will spend a month with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Bass. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Weller and their daughters, Mrs. Francis Mur phy and Miss Dorothy Weller, have returned from a month's motor trip in the east. Margaret Mary Toher of Davenport Is visiting her grandfather, F. B. Toher and her aunt Mrs. J. F. Hurley. Mrs. Hurley also has as her guest A. H. Toher of Baltimore, Md. Mrs. John Gamble will drive to Chi cago July 4. with her son, Joseph Eaton, to visit another son. A daugh ter, Mrs. H. L. Thomas, will Join them in two .weeks from New hawk* for the trip back. Miss Florence Hturdevant of Osce ala, Nebr., who has been traveling in the east, was the week-end guest of Miss Marguerite Shrum. Both are members of the Phi Omega I’l sorority it the University of Nebraska. one jot of her usual perfect com posure. It seemed an eternity before Lillian turned from the letter-box. Hhe had taken three or four envelopes from it, and she hastily ran them over, pausing at one, and looking at it intently. It was obvious that she was so impatient to read it that for a sec ond she considered opening it at once. But her long and rigid rlining In repression conquered, and hIic put the envelope back with the others, turn ing toward us ns she did so. That she saw the man who had been her husband at the same time she saw me, I was sure, for he was standing just behind me, but she gave no slightest start of surprise at his presence or mine, or our bizarre companions. "No mail for you, Madge.” Her greeting was as casual as though I had left the apartment but an hour before. “Hello, Harry! You're looking very fit.” She held out her hand to him with an absolutely' impersonal air, and as he bowed over it, I felt a little thrill of triumph, even while I registered a mental apology to Lillian for having doubted her ability to carry off any situation no matter how difficult. "If I told you how well you are looking, old Roget would have to climb out of his grave and add a few more words to his little book," Air. Underwood told her Impressively, and Lillian laughed In an apparently care free fashion as though memories both sweet and bitter could not help but press insistently upon each of them. "May I invite you up to your own apartment?" She turned to me smil ingly, and then gestured hospitably to Afr. Underwood: "And, of course, your—friends.” I wondered if Air. Underwood caught the delicately amused malice which tinged her voice and sntlle at the ludicrous figure he presented, as he stood gripping Mamie's arm as If he were a policeman, and she trying to escape from his custody. Outwardly Imperturbable, however, he only drawled an exaggerated "Chawmed, I'm sure," and Lillian led the way to our apartment. No sooner were we inside the door, | however, than his manner changed. "Get back to the cars, quickly, Pete," he commanded, "and wait un til I come.” The man set the suitcases down and obeyed, and Air. Underwood turned to Lillian. "If you'll take Madge somewhere out of hearing," he subtly indicated PRINTED CREPES ^ Lovely new Printed Crepes, alto plain color Crepe Dresses Thursday— Printed 1A QO Plain Crepes 1 v*i/0 Colors F. W. Thorne Co. 1812 Farnam St. ' | the girl whose arm he was grasping, “and let her tell you about this little third reel we’re staging, I'll take care of the gyuri—and—the papers— un til you get back. But please make It snappy. Sit down.” He spoke curtly to Mamie, releasing her arm. "And don't try any funny business, or it will be the worse for you." Without a word, I,tlllan led the way Into the bedroom, closing the doors and^letting fall the heavy drap eries over them. “I think this is the safest place," she said, and then she permitted her self a relaxation of her usual iron composure. * “For the love of Mike!" she ex claimed softly, "whatever In the world have you got out there with you?" In the Flower Shops. Spring millinery styles for flower shops are an Important feature this year. The finest of hats, as well as the cheaper and coarser, are used as flower holders. Some of these hats are attached to baskets with handles and .are tied with dainty ribbons; others are dented in and hold a metal vase In which the flowers are placed. / After the Fourth The Kodak films you’ il expose over the holiday — our finishing service. The connection is ob- ’ vious. After the Fourth, bring us your films for developing and printing of the superior kind. Prints on Velox, exclu sively. Kodak, Gradix and Brownie cameras of titty style and equipment always in stock. Eastman Kodak Co. ■ - rrl— Robert Dempster Co.) n/.\ 1813 Fenuun St. lUDAd Branch Siora 308 South 15th St. Miss Britt Wed. Saturday, June 21, Miss Anna Britt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Britt of Mineapolis, be came the bride of Arthur Joseph Kgan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kgan of that city. The ceremony was performed by Rev. John M. Cleary, pastor of St. Thomas church. Mrs. AVlliiam J. Brazill of Omaha. Meter of the bride .attended an matron of honor. She was gowned in sea green chiffon and cream lace over satin, finished wtth sashes of violet ribbon. She wore a small leg horn hat and carried arm bouquet of pink roses and baby breath. The bride has been a frequent and popular guest here. Announce (engagement. At the wedding of Miss Charlotte BrookBteln and Phillip Gendankin, (' 1 —— which was solemnized Tuesday, Mrs. Anna Harris announced the l>e trothal of her daughter, Lillian, to the bride's brother. Jacob Brookstein, son of Meyer Brookstein. No date has been set for the wedding. Theater audiences demonstrate that uncurled ostrich feathers are well liked for collaring evening wraps. Boiled Corn Beef OCa and Cabbage, (Our own cured beef) Rome Hotel Cafeteria Open 24 Hours Every Day ■ ■ ■ i Julius Orkin 1512 Douglas Street Thursday Offering For 4th July Sport Hats $2.45 to $4.95 Ribbon Hals Felt Hats Leghorn Hats Crepe Hats In white, green, rose, sand, gray and black; Leghorns combined with the popular shades of the season. Millinery—Third Floor rnpr Cnorlrlorc Bring the kiddie* in and get a box con MBI5 taining 10 harmless sparklers FREE. I SAVINGS I 130% to 60% I fj in Our Great S I JULY SALE I JB Everything in our entire fg big store is included. & I SAVE When You Buy—SAVE Cash Script I FURNITURE AT LOWEST PRICES I Our low rent location allows us to offer high grade furniture at correspondingly if low prices. Everything in the store is included—and you obtain cash saving script m on furniture purchases exclusively at the State. And remember—we charge no p interest on Time Accounts. |S I BEDROOM SUITE Five-piece bedroom suite in period de sign—priced for July . $79.50 Special Simmons bed spring C91 *7C and mattress outfit.«p£ltlO One bedroom outfit . $43.50 LIVING ROOM SUITE Two-piece overstuffed living room suite —fine spring construction and your choice of velour or C1A7CA tapestry. <plUl«DU Extra chair or rocker .... $28.00 I DINING ROOM SUITE Special five-piece dining room suite in American walnut, as ©9Q 50 long as they last.▼Ww* 4 Chairs and Oblong Table I 00 EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT D r . 7" f:! y I Down We maintain a separate department that |(G I FI F3 10 FS X1 . makes it possible for you to turn in the ® | ^ ‘ *! furniture you no longer want, and ap- & i/•* Knd I anles, ply on purchase price of new fur $4.95 I niture. Highest allowance for old pieces. I l|Fi j f _ , . Lowest prices on new furniture. ^ 1 l amps complete —, ---- - -- /*W t with silk shade, ^ $13.75 rnrr g*t* of di;h'* o pIIpp FREE with the purchase IfiMP Kitchen t hairs, | IlLL of a 100-piece Dinner Set. v*. * | $1.95 $1.00 Down—$1.00 a Week Refrigerator,, 75-pound ca- j UbJSj'Kbi., -,-- >”'“»• "4' -*11 I $19.50 Kiddie Guaranteed A H i Kitchen Table, Cars Electric Iron* | j nu» 69c 1 2.98 *23= i Cotton Mattress, ■ »-»• ^ .. __ p 50-pound, rn I rly owatters Tree FREE—>500 Pounds Ice pi $7.75 ■ II » for the a • k i n g. ---J ■ i THE HOME OF LOWER PRICES—ALWAYS” g | QTATP FURNITURE CO. 11 W I I El 14th and Dodge I j Ice Cream Served Free Every Day—Come and Visit U* gS