Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1924)
1 wmO I Additional Affairs for Miss Lucile Lathrop. At a trousseau tea given Friday by Mrs. C. E. Lathrop for her daughter, Lucile, who Is to wed Glenn Hoff* himos of Chicago, October 14.. the guests, friends of Mrs. Lathrop s gave the bride to-be a shower of kitchen utensils. Saturday afternoon Miss Lathrop’s friends will be her guests at a tea. Those assisting will be Mrs. E. W. Bedford. Misses Helen Nolan, Ruth Miller, Donna McDonald and Wini fred Lathrop. Among those who will be hostesses in compliment to Miss Lathrop are Mesdames Joseph Lewis, Donald Pettis of Lincoln, Misses Josephine Platner, Marguerite Walker and Helen Nolan. Last week Miss Marguerite Fallon entertained for the bride-to-be and Thursday she shared honors with Miss Irene Simpson at a luncheon given by Mrs. Adolph Sachs. Minard-Anderson. Miss Myrtle Linae Anderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert An derson, became the bride of Clarence W. Minard at a home wedding Satur day evening, September 20. Rev. Oliver D. Baltzly conducted the serv ice. Attendants were Miss Bernice Anderson, sister of the bride, and Curl E. Weinhardt of Des Moines. George Jerpe played tho wedding march and Edwin ltedolfs sang. Assisting at the reception were the Misses Dorothy Hesbacher, Elva Engel, Mary Fischer, Margaret Fischer and Myrtle Anderson. Fol lowing a trip to New York and other eastern points the young couple will make their home in Omaha. Elect Golf Chairman. The women goiters at the Field club will hold their annunl meeting for the election of a new chairman on % Wednesday at 1 o'clock at the club. At Lakoma Club. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Cressey and Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Stryker enter tained 40 at dinner Wednesday eve ning. f Your Problems ) v / M I Not Popular at Home. Dear Martha Allen: I am coming to you with my troubles. I am 17, am considered good looking and have a good reputation. Now my trouble is this: Martha Allen, how can I be come popular among my boy and girl friends? I have tried, but In vain. When I go to partlee or dancea I am a wall flower and not even noticed there. I can go anywhere out of town and ha\e a w-onderful time be cause very few know me. Why Is It that I cannot make friends? Hoping to see my letter In print In The Oma ha Bee soon, I am, DISCOURAGED. I can't think the people In your town are really different from people elsewhere. The difference Is doubt less within yourself. Aren’t you more friendly, more receptive to attention, more sure of other’s kindness, when you are away? Too often we are at our best with strangers, but Inclined to take our best friends for granted. We are exacting of them and resent ful If they disappoint us. Forget about how other people act toward you in your own town, and make up your mind that you—will be thought ful toward them and Interested In what they say. I’m sure that will help. Slowly But Surely Jilted. Dear Miss Allen: We sre two girls of "0 and have been going about with a couple of boys of 21. "We are deep in love With them. We have read your advice In the paper whenever we haye the time, and at last have come to you ourselves for some of your advice. At first the hoys wanted us to mar ry them and they treated us with all kinds of respect. Then they com menced to jilt us. (Slowly hut sure ly). It Is breaking our hearts and we would like to know what we could do to win them hack. Please answer in The Omaha Morn ing Bee some day this week. Yours respectfully. D. AND D. Think less about these boys and more about your self-respect. If these hoys are ’’jilting” you, let them go. And even if you were trying to hold them, that would he the best course for you to pursue. People don’t plsee a high value on what comes cheaply. Flapper: The girl who refuses her kisses may, perhaps, lose a certain popularity, no matter how friendly and far from prudish her manner of refusing. But, on the other hand, there's an old saying—and they generally are true—that what Is hardest to attain is most desired, most precious. Maku your kisses precious and greatly to be desired. The flower that has been passed about from hand to hand loses a little of Its bloom. The peach la not so tempting when Its down Is rubbed away. It mav be hard to refitae k!ss«s to Toni, Dick and Harry. But you'll he safe in listening to that still, small, questioning Inner voice which asks whether it would not he better to re fuse. When John proves his love for you by asking you to he his wife, maker of his home and mother of his chil dren, you will know that It was worth your while to have kept your kisses very precious, very desirable. Then you'll have no regrets, for you can give your lips unsullied—all your kisses—to the one man In all this happy world. _ Thorne Store Hour* 8:30 Till 6 During Ak-Sar-Ben Alterations Will Be Free and Our Btisineia I* Good F. W. Thorne Co. 1812 Farnsm V—.-' RY F. COOPER SCHOOL OF DANCING Opens October 1st Blackstone Hotel Phans WA 8301 -j-' i 1 'Miss Information| Arrive for Wedding. Winslow Van Brunt, fiance of Miss Irene Simpson, whose marriage takes place October 1, arrives Saturday, as do also Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Peter son of Pocatello, Idaho, uncle and aunt of the bride. Mr. and Mrs. Ar thur A. Dodson and children. Miss Maren and Master Adna Dodson of Lincoln, arrive Sunday evening. Mrs. DodBon will be her niece's matron of honor and the children will also be members of the wedding party. Mr. Van Brunt’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Winslow Van Brunt, sr., of Beatrice; his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Van Brunt of Lin coln; his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Winslow of Chicago, and his brother and the lat ter's wife, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Van Brunt of St. Louis, arrive Tuesday. R. G. Van Brunt will be the best man. Berney-Smith. Columbus, Neb., Sept. 26.—The wed ding of Miss Georgia Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Smith, to Phil Berney of Omaha, former Columbus boy, was solemnized Tuesday at St. Bonaventure church, Rev. Father Charles conducting the ceremony. After a week's honeymoon in Chi cago they will return to Omaha. Mr. Berney will enter his senior year at Creighton college, where he is study ing medicine. At the Omaha Club. Harry Greenway entertained eight guests at dinner Wednesday evening at the Omaha club, when Mrs. Ralph Scagel Vlall of Chicago, guest of Miss Evelyn Ledwlch, was an out-of-town guest. At Saturday Races. Duchesses and princesses chosen to attend the new queen of Ak-Sar-Ben at the ball October 3 have been in vited by the board of governors of Ak-Sar-Ben to be their guests at the horse races Saturday afternoon. Phi Rlio Sigma Party. The freshman members of Phi Rho Sigma fraternity will entertain the older members at a house dance Sat urday evening. | -—---;-n | A Wife's Confession/il Adrla Garrison'* New Phase <>f REVELATIONS OF A WIFE (Copyright, 1924.) >■___' The Astounding Hatter Hugh Grant land Wrote' Madge. I never have experienced an earth quake, but I think I had all the sen sations described by those who have gone through one as the extravagant salutation in Hugh Grantland's hand writing struck my eyes. My world Indeed was. shaking, for until the re ceipt of the letter which I held in tny hand, unwilling to read further than Ihe wild terms of endearment with which it began, I had leaned upon the knowledge of Hugh Grantland’s friendship as one might rest against the shelter of a great rock. I had known, of course, that Major Grantland cared for me with a feeling far stronger than friend ship—it is a rare woman, found mostly in fiction, I suspect, who remains unconscious of a great, love offered at her shrine, even though the man who offers it conceals his feeling heroically. But I also had known, for Hugh Grantland had made it plain to me, that never by word, glance, or speech, would he trouble me with the betrayal of an emotion which any woman might he proud to have aroused, and for which, X knew, many women would have bartered much. It was this knowledge, coupled with the remembrance of the service he had rendered us in restoring Junior to our arms that had made me feel guiltless of any disloyalty to Dicky in keeping up the friend ship, which always had seemed such a refuge to me. "A parfait gentil knight.” The old quotation always has seemed to me to fit Hugh Grantland as if It had been written for him. Brave almost to foolhardiness, yet wise in strat egy, stern in the pursuit of his duty, yet tender as a gentle woman to any helpless creature, generous, chivalrous, honorable, brilliant, these qualities of mind and soul housed in a magnificent body—I did not wonder that men admired him and women were willing to give him something more than admiration: Dicky is my own man—never have my pulses throbbed for any other— and I know thlt the end of my life will still find me ‘‘cleaving only to him” but—— I cannot help thrilling at the thought that Hugh Grantland* heart ha* been In my keeping ever since we were thrown together in war work. What Ha* Happened? The letter In my hand, however, if it bore out the wildness of its beginning, would spoil everything, cheapen the beautiful friendship which had been so dear to me, and make it necessary for me to shut Hugh Grantland out of my life. What could have happened to make so sane a man break out in such rhottomontade a* that w hich was staring up at me from the paper I held in my hand? With a squaring of my aiioulders. and a realization that whatever the letter contained, I must read it, I lifted the single sheet and again read the salutation: ■‘.My own love forever lost to me.” I shivered a bit at the crudity of it. and hurried on feverishly. "Do not he angry at this letter. Be loved, nor call it impertinence”—the words leaped out at me like living things. "A man leaving the world, who never expects to taste life again, but who instead sees death facing him, may be pardoned for taking a final leave of the one dearest to him on earth. Your woman's intuition must have known you are that to me and have been ever since I first looked into your wonderful eyes and saw reveuled there your still more wonderful soul. "I would go to my death with these words unwritten, were It not for two things. One is my reluctance to have you think that I had failed you when the postcards no longer reach you. It is the bitterest thought I have— that I can no longer stand between you and any danger that may Qome to you. "Good-bye, Rose!’’ The other reason for my writing thus is one that may wound you when I write it, but it must be done. I know that you do not love me. that you are passionately in lovs with your husband, but I also know—I mean it has been borne in upon me— that sometime it may comfort you to know thnt one man carried your Image supreme in his heart as long as life remained to him, and that as he went to his death his last thought was a longing for you, his last prayer a petition that you might be saved from hardship and unhappiness. “You will never hear from me again, my darling—I may write this once, what I have so often called you In my heart—and such is the ironic fate confronting me, you will never know, nor can I tell you now, by what dread passageway I am to make the great transition. But that death is very near me, I am certain, elae I never would risk sending this. Dy ing I may write words freely to you, which if I were living and facing you. your loyal loving soul could not read. “What you have been to me, you never can know. I do not think a woman ever was so enshrined before in a man’s aching heart. But though the biles of your love has been denied me. the memories of your stanch friendship and of your iweetnesg are things w-hlch I shall take with me beyond the grave. "Goodbye, roee of the world. I am sending you the kiss I never hsve given you. ‘'HUGH.” I dropped the letter In my lap and stared wild-eyed into space. Surely there was but one explanation of this letter. Hugh Grantland must suddenly have gone mad! Miss Power Hostess. Miss Florence Power will give a [bridge on Saturday at her home. I.pimin Juice for Brown Shoes. Apply lemon juice to tan or brown shoes. It will remove the stains Rub it well into the leather. 'J hen polish in the usual manner. THE HOUSEWIFE. (Copyright, 1S2(.) Clubs Urge Women to Vote Nebraska Federation of Women s Clubs is co-operating in the effort to “get out the vote.” They have is suer! to each member in the state a card, reprinted from Collier s, which says: W« American* hcllev* in majority rule. W>’re nnt practicinr it. Our forefathers placed in our hand* * mirhty weapon to make majority rule effective. We're not uatn* it. That weapon is the ballot. What are we doin* with it** In etch national election ain^-e 1*96 the proportion of votera has dwindled. In 1896. 80 per rent of those qualified to vote did vote; in 1900. 73 p^r rent: in 1908. 66 per cent: in 1912. 62 Per ren* ! n 1920. less thsn 60 per cant. Four years a*o 64 421.832 American could have voted, but only 26.786.763 did so Such is the desrendin* f-urve of Amer ican democracy. Unscrupulous politician* *et what t hr v want by herdin* their masaes of unthinkl* voters to the polls. Isn’t it time more thinkinr voters were heard from? Rerlster! Vote! Instead of beln* a parlor patriot, a rockinr chair Paul Re v#re. let each American prova his rlrht to r!tJienahio. _ _ .. bets make 1924 ths year of tha blr vota._ Mils Swift Hostes*. Mias Frances Swift will be a bridge hostess Saturday afternoon. Anderson-Watson. Mrs Kathleen Anderson has re turned from New York and Boston En route home she visited her son. Dr. C. R. Anderson In Akron O., who accompanied her here and has gone to Berkeley. Cal., where he will wed Miss Cynthia Watson of that city. Dr. and Mrs. Anderson will reside In Akron after a honeymoon to Alaska. Dr. Anderson will be re membered as a University of Ne braska Medical College student. Birthday Celebrated. Fourteen friends of Mr. and Mrs J. E. Kent called on them Monday evening to celebrate Mr. Kent’a birth lay. Buffet aupper »«• aerved. Card! formed (he entertainment. mM 310-312,SOUTH 16" STR. Saturday— A Sale of New Arrival Silk, Wool and Flannel FROCKS •15 Just unpacked, fresh from their wrapping*, and Oh, *uch beau ties. Styles you sim ply can't resist. French flannels in smart plaids, as well as plain, straightline twills, and the jauntiest types of silk frocks. Every one is worth much more than $15, but, as a headliner, take your pick of the entire group at only $15. In a Feature Showing Saturday SEVERAL HUNDRED BEAUTIFUL DRESSES *195210 *3955 Mfr* word* cannot do justice to these clever dresses) they are exquisite in their daintiness, rich in fabric and color. The values are in stntly appealing yj tt, Saturday Rig Values in Winter COATS *15 *24 *39 Choose from sport coats, utility coats and the dressier types —coats with huge collars of luxurious furs, beautifully lined —high class coats, in every respect, and surely unusually low in price. i - lpii{iiwiimBiumiiiiiiBii)Hiimtfiniiiffrni6iHiitiiiiiiMiimmiiflni'iiMM'rtii,)tiMiiiiiiw'iwBiiiewniBi'iiwiiirgiiiinwngiiiiii!'iiiBiiiiiit»wui»!Miiiiuwiiii| unuHrnnBmrriTmiwnmiiiii Buy Christmas Gifts Now! | « ^ggpr j Everything Genuine—Even the Sale. Brisk, Eager Buyers Are Making the Most of 10% to 30% Discounts! A ‘'Sale" at the Brown Jewelry establishment is NEVER without a reason. P and the discerning public KNOWS it! Then, too, the built-up prestige of | YEARS cements an ASSURANCE to every piece of jewelry bought here— I whether in the regular way—or during one of these few and far between I Brown Special Sales evonts. Browns have one, simple, straightforward REA | SON for THIS selling; they must MOVE, so endeavor to CLEAR stocks I before they VACATE. Diamonds cut? Yes, ......Fancy Beads, Back Take 10%off. . Thnt <sVin\V i C o mb s. L e a t h e r , I 1 ndt ^nCm | Goods. 10% to 25% Gold Jewelry cut? | CciSe of CjOOCIs off. Yes, -10% to 20%. ^ at“HalfPrice” Sheffield Silverware It ■» * , 12% to 30% off. Watches cut? Yes, 1 IS a Magnet most of them 10% to I . mtl. Plated Knives, etc. | 25% off. White Go d : price" case, ia, that they've Cut li o tC oO o. Wrist watches low as for it contain* REALLY c;, ,,.77..,, *11 cn Dt <1. n.'o hiRli prade article*. Rea*on Solid Sliver llOllOW ; *t3 Si\v ' li/ D "’rh'""ware; new white cold mend Wrist Watches „,d d„.„ .. «.™>i ««■■«- mmntings. nw pht. : low as $ 5 . Gold Brooche*. Bar pin*, sti- inum mountings; all \er plated Flasks and Hollow . , . Mntttarr* PmrU mt "are n',rt counUn* other at big reductions. Navarre Pearls cut striking items in this ewe , , v , 10%; all others -«t half trice: Clocks. Yes $20 kinds arc cut 50% iimtiBiiHwiitMaiiminiiiniwwMiminiiiiiiiifiiwiiwi flr^ n0M $13. With the exception of a very few re stricted lines, you are free to take advantage of Heavy Discounts On Anything and Ev- || erything that goes to | make up a truly peer- | less Jewelry Stock. _ ! C. B. Brown Jewelry Co. 220 SOUTH 16TH ST. U S. NATIONAL BANK BLDG, T . With a small cash deposit any item may he laid away until later. Nan p [Sj otC • orders from out of town folk will he handled on the satistaction or your money hack" basis, \ «Er c&ucla#!t /—-—— --—8“ ' “ \ Free Tickets to Rialto Theater Given With Each Purchase Made in Our Store Saturday. Through arrangements with the Rialto Theatre we shall be pleased to give with each purchase made in our store Saturday a ticket en titling you to admission to Monday matinee. HERZBERG STYLE REVUE Rialto Theater. Week of Saturday, Sept. 27th , Ivan B. Martin’. Famou. Fifth Avenue Beautie. will model tho Mode, of tho hour in Apparel and accessorial for Milady. Saturday—We Offer 1 Another Lot of Those Famous Elsie Dinsmore Girls' Frocks Sizes 6 to 14 Years Another Purchase! Another Sale!! So successful was our last feature selling of these Dresses that we secured another lot for this Satur day's selling. Just 500, so they will go quickly. « Two Wonderful Lots—Dresses That Should Sell to $f.95 c " Fast Color Ginghams—Many Styles. Pretty plaids and solid colors. No mother can re sist the temptation of buying at least three or four, the sewing alone is worth much more than what we ask for the complete dress. Bring the girls with you Saturday. “Girlish Styles for Stylish Girls' pa eta Os.ua o «siQspt Qg p1Qj Oj.0 io iqigiosO.oJojTtOAoITr^rosg^^^^i'^ |^Ueve^olds saiely j |j I Iff A BOX AT DRUG STORES j Cuticura ToiletTrio Send for Samples Tn Pwtleara L<xb«r»*»rtat R. MaJgea. Iff j Perhaps the daily shave makes v ui sensitive skin bum and smart, or it trsav | cause a rash which is uncomfortab e and embarrassing. RksEXOL Gin: ment helps greatly to re.ieve and clear \ »V1» such ailments, but Rzsixot Shavtng Stick tends to prevent them entirely. Its rich, generous, non-drv l| mg lather makes shaving a pleasure because no after.shaving lotions are necessary, and the face is left smooth, j cooi and soft. J\f':nsl f>rodu£:s at p alt druggists. | b \nvr.Rn>K5TK,N" I BEFORE BABIES WERE BORN Mrs. Oswald Benefited by [Taking Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Gteardville, Pa.—‘‘I took Lydia FL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound be fore my last two babies came. It keeps mo in por fect health and I am on my feet getting meals and doing alt my housework until an hour before the baby is bom. A friend told me to take it and I have used ten bottles __since 1 heard about it 1 recommend the Vegetable Com pound w henever 1 can Just yesterday a friend was telling me how miser able she felt and 1 said. If you start taking Lydia K Pinkham's you will feel hue r Now she is taking it. Mrs. P J. Oswald, Jk . West Ogden St. Uirardville, Pa. Mrs. Nicola Paluzzi Says Mishawaka. Indiana. "I t.s4t Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound for weakne.-s before mv luibn s were born. 1 was weak and tired out all the time and it helped me. When 1 hao inward inflammation the docior treated! me. t'ut dm not nep me, so l tried Lydia F, Pinkham's I banative ilnh anu it helped me «t | once," - Mrs Moola Pauzsi. 415 I K. Dcoadway, Mishawaka, Indians