The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927, November 21, 1924, Page 6, Image 6

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    Former Omahans Return
For Xmas Holidays
younger set aren’t to have things all their own way this holiday
gfagbrf. The young married folk are seeing to that, for they «re to have
^j-roer Omahans as their guests, and affairs for them will pre empt the social
calendar.
Mr. and Mfs. Douglas Peters will return from Cairo, 111., and Lewis
Burgess will come to join Mrs. Burgess from Wilkesbarre, Pa.
;T• CJeorge Radcliffe wilt come front. Dayton to join Mrs. Radcliffe who has
. J>een here for the past month with the R. L, Carters and Dr. and Mrs. Sanford
, Gifford.
* Also from Dayton will come the Norman Curtices who moved there a year
i fgo to make their home. They will visit Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey-Ahbott, Jr.
Ji Mr. and Mrs. Warren Noble will arrive from Birmingham, Ala., to visit
} bie Fred Metz during the holidays, and Burke Adams will come from
j Rew York.
! • The Clifford Smiths (formerly Clifford Wolfe) will come from their Rock
J Jnnd. Me., home to visit the Donald Macraes of Council Bluffs, and the Hoxle
’ ("larkes of New York. They will stop at the Blackstone during the holidays.
Dr. and Mrs. Pulver
\ Announce Niece’s
\ - Engagement
t ; __
! Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Pulver announce
"(he engagement of their cousin Ruth
Kedmen Peterson of Salt Lake City,
jtjtali, remembered as a very popular
I Visitor here last spring and summer
| fend at present their guest, to James
jNoNp De Fiance of this city. The
• (nJrrtage will take place early in De
! c#n)her.
!'fjjWny affairs are planned' In their
bW
G. A. R. Reception.
»' G. A. R. will hold a meeting on
dPhWay, November 21, 8 p. m. In Me
morial hall, courthouse, honoring Mrs.
Alta Slonecker of Lincoln, state in
spector. Refreshments will be Berved.
Civil war veterans are Invited to at
tend.
Scholarship Fund Benefit.
Oil Saturday, November 22, the
home section of the Omaha College
club will hold two food sales, one at
Buffet's grocery. 5015 Underwood and
the other at Thompson-Belden’s, as
benefit for the scholarship fund.
^ The Housewife's Idea Box j
To Prevent the 1'nihrella Jar From
Breaking.
Very often an umbrella par is
broken when the umbrella Is dropped
into it. You can prevent this if you
cut a piece of rubber to fit the bot
tom of the jar and keep It In the jar.
Use a piece of an old /rubber or a
stair tread. THE HOUSEWIFE.
(Copyright, m4.)
Mrs. Seeman Home From
Sioux City Visit.
Mrs. George Seeman returned this
week from Sioux City, where she
made a fortnight’s stay. During her
visit she was honor guest at a
luncheon given by Mrs. Arthur Han
ford, formerly Muriel Window, of the
Harry Lauder company.
The nffair was given at the Han
ford’s country lodge, where Mrs. Han
ford Is Interested In the breeding of
pedigreed English sheep dogs.
Ethel Barrymore and Mrs. Lewis
Burgess have also been guesls of
Mrs. Hanford.
Messrs, and Mesdames Elliott Cobb
and Arthur EUard of Sioux City will
be November guests of Mr and Mrs.
Seeman.
Harvest Home Tea as
Hospital Benefit.
Cathedral branch of Trinity ca
thedral will have a harvest home ten
as a benefit for Clarkson hospital,
Friday, November 28, 3 P- m., at the
cathedral parish house. Table sup
plies will be received by the commit
tee.
Mrs. E. V. Shayler, Mrs. Dean Me
Olnley, Mrs. F. H. Davis, Mrs. W. C.
Shannon will pour.
St. Patrick Annual Poultry
Party.
On Monday evening. November 24.
at 8 30. St. Patrick parish will give
the annual poultry card party. Prizes
of turkeys, ducks, geese and chlokens
w ill be awarded for each game.
For Guest of Mrs. Gray.
Dr. and Mrs. E. I.. Bridges enter
tained Miss Corinth Tracy at a din
ner party at the Brandels Wednes
day night. Last night Mias Tracy
wrs In a group of young people who
attended the symphony concert.
She Is the guest of Mrs. Carl Gray.
Mr. and Mrs. Gray and son will
leave next week for Kansas CJty,
where they will spend Thanksgiving
with Carl Gray, Jr. Miss Tracy may
accompany them that faf on her way
to Jefferson City, Mo., where she will
visit. Her home Is at Willlamstov*n,
Mass.
Friday Luncheon.
Mrs. Samuel Rees will entertain 12
guests dt luncheon Friday at her
home.
At Jubilee Meet |
--—*
_ ,_
| Mrs Jana Witney
Mrs. Anna Whitney of Elk City,
represented the 800 members of
•Douglas county W. C. T. U. at the
Jubilee convention in Chicago earlier
this week. She is county treasurer.
Upon her return, Mrs. Whitney will
report to her organization on this
inspirational meeting
For Miss Rogers.
Mrs. Eugenie Whitmore Dinkins
will entertain at a bridge party Sat
urday afternoon at her home in honor
of Miss Mildred Rogers of New York
City, who Is visiting at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rogers.
For Affianced Couple.
I.udovic Crofoot will be host at din
ner Friday evening to honor Miss
Maud Borup and her fiance, Charlee
T. Kountze.
Miss Information
L_-—-/
I HEAR THE WELL DRESStol
WOMEN IN PAREE ARE WEAR-)
ING SKIRTS SHORTER THAN
EVER. WONDER WHAT THE j SM0K*O\
WELL DRESSED MEN ARE/^^SSM)
Judge for yourself
the sparkling whiteness
of this sugar
A woman says: “I can tell the
-difference in sugar by the
color."
That is true; but what difference?
Color it one sure test. It indicates
the degree of purity of the sugar—
not whether it is beet or cane sugar.
In the process of refining, the sugar
crystals are separated from the juices
and thoroughly washed. If sugar is
"off-color”, it is evidence of impuri
ties still in the sugar—a lack of proper
refining-sugar below standard!
• • •
Color is important. Sparkling
white sugar is pure. Superior sugars
have three qualities visible to the
eye: sparkling whiteness, luster and
evenness of grain. Sugar meeting these
standards is chemically pure and de
pendable for every cooking purpose.
• • •
Sparkling white! ... that is an
outstanding qualification of Great
Western Sugar. It is properly refined.
It is thoroughlycleansed of impurities.
It is accepted. In millions of house
holds ... by experts in the sugar
industry . . . among industrial users
of iugar . Great Western Sugar is
regarded as a standard in purity. To
day, a production of 8H million
pounds of sugar daily is being sold
to satisfied users.
Every community accepts GreaC
Western Sugar in supplying its needs;
every grocer knows its universal sat
isfaction ... there is the most signify
cant evidence of its dependability.
• • •
The sugar grain is a crystal. This
crystal is a chemical of unvarying
content, no matter whether it comes
from the sugar beet or sugar cane.
With n the crystal is pure sugar; any
impurities cling to the outside.
There can be no vital difference in
granulated sugar except a differenca
in purity, due to the imperfect wash
ing of the crystal. That is entirely
under the control of the refiner.
It is our exacting control of produc
tion . .. our thoroughness in refining
.. . that is making Great Western the
standard among sugars in the West.
* * *
Your grocer hasGreat Western Sugar.
Ask for it by name. See its spark
ling whiteness for yourself.
New Home-Made
Candies
The recipes for many delicious
home-made candies are avail
able in a booklet in the Sugar
Bowl Series, "Candy Making
the Easy Way." It is by Mrs.
Ida B nicy Allen, noted cookery
•Xpert. A copy will be mailed
you without charge. Send for j
fc today.
* *. *
; . . rV -
I
The Greet Western Sugar Company
Sugar Building Denver, Colorado
' ,
f Your Problems
V_--/
Foolish Woman.
Dear Miss Allen: I am 21 and have
been married three years. But this is
my trouble: Before I met my hus
band I went with a boy two years
older than myself. I grew up to love
him and he did me. but we quit one
day and I went away from where he
lived and I met a boy and went wdth
him three months and we got mar
ried. We have a tine home and a
sweet baby, who looks like his daddy.
I went back to my home town a
few weeks ago and, of course, saw
the first fellow.
Now, Miss Allen, he says he still
thinks of me as he always did and
would have come baede, but was afraid
I would snub him. I still care for
him really more than my husband
and, since I came home, I can hardly
stand it. What ts a person going to
do? I have tried to do everything, but
I can't be satisfied at nothing.
I would love for you to give me
some advice. As you always give oth
ers good advice and I have read your
writing so much. Hoping you answer
soon as you can in The Omaha Eve
ning Bee.
What am I to do to be consoled
without the other fellow?
He also says he will never be sat
isfied without me and that he will
never marry unless it is me.
HEARTBROKEN TOPSY.
"Bunk!"
Not a nice word, but plenty good
enough for your nonsensical conduct.
We can all control our feelings if we
try. Suppose you make the effort
and seek happiness in the only place
where it can truly be found—your
home.
Miss Kjeldgaard Hostes.
Miss Katherine Kjeldgaard, who,
with her mother, Mrs. C. Kjeldgaard,
spent the summer abroad, entertained
on Monday evening at her home. Her
guests were:
Mr*. J. H. Parratt. Mra. George Dennla.
Mlaa Mamie Anderaon of Council Bluffa
and the Mlaaes Bertha Scott, Rosalie
Clark, Gather Nelaon, Mario Dugan and
Martha Shafer.
Isaac Sadler Bridge.
Major Isaac Sadler chapter P. A.
R. will be entertained at cards on Fri
day, November 21, at 2 p. m. by Mrs.
E. C. Gibson, 1306 South Thirty-fifth
street, assisted by Mrs. F. G. Kellogg.
Reservations may be mads with Mrs.
O. F. Dotson, AT. 8780,
A Wife's Confessional
Adele Garrison's New Phase ol
REVELATIONS OF A WIFE
(Copyright, 1924.)
V.__
The Calm Way In Which Lee Cliow
Departed.
Katherine made a note or two on
a Httle pad of paper then crossed to
the door. ,
"I shall have to get some things
from the drug room,” she said "but
I won't be gone long. Do you wish
me to give any message to Katie and
Marion, or do you want them up
here?’’
"Won't they bother you?” I asked.
"Not a bit,” she answered cheerily.
"This Isn't .a major operation you
know,”
Her smile and manner took away
th% last remnant of fear for my lit
tle lad, though of course I had known
from Dr. Pettit's verdict that there
were no serious consequences to be
feared from the mysterious poison
that had so swollen and discolored
Junior's face and eyes.
"Then let them come up,” I decid
ed, "but—will Marlon have time to
run out to the car while you are In
the drug room?”
"At Marion’s usual gait—yes,” she
answered, smiling.
"Then please ask her to tell Lee
Chow that we shall be here about—”
I looked at her Inquiringly.
“An hour,” she responded.
“And to say that there is nothing
serious the matter with Junior and
that—” I hesitated a second, then
added, “It was not the clams.”
Katherine elevated her eyebrows
whimsically as she turned the door
knob.”
“I'll deliver your message," she
sold, "and I won’t stop now to find
out who Lee Chow Is. But when I
come back I'm going to ascertain
whether I’d better order a strait
jacket for you or whether a sedative
will do.”
Sho went swiftly down the corri
dor, to return shortly with Marlon
and Katie in her wake—Marion, si
lent and self-effacing, Katie voluVde
in her belief that Junior was not seri
ously ill.
"Eet mighty goot ting dot old Chink
didn’t get' enough poison in dose
clams to hurt dot ba-bee mooch,” she
began as soon as she came In, hut I
cut her short .sharply.
"Don't let me hear you say that
cruel and untrue thing again, Katie-”
•
This Exquisite Baby Grand
Only Costs $635
i y a T*rr -
PERHAPS you have always wanted the
beautiful home that a Baby Grand
assures, but have hesitated on account of the
cost. You will be delighted to learn that so fine
an instrument as the Brambach can be had at so
moderate a price. It is easily worth >150.00
more than we ask for it.
The Brambach Baby Grand is an instrument
of rich, vibrant, sonorous tones—glorious in
resonant timbre. The result of more than a
century of working to an ideal.
You will be astonished, as thousands of others
have been, to know that this exquisite little grand
requires no more space than an upright piano. It
will fit charmingly into your home.
As little as >50 will place a Brambach in your
home now! You may pay the balance on easy
monthly payments you will find very convenient.
Call, or mail the coupon for a beautiful free book
let and paper pattern, which shows the exact floor
apace required. •
BRAMBACH
BABY GRAND $/ OC
‘Brambach is the world's largest ■' ^ ^ W
exclusive manufacturer of Baby J
Grands- which accounts for Bram
back quality at such a low price F.O.B.-H.T.
A. HOSPE CO.
1513 Douglas Street
Mail this coufum for Beautiful Free Booklet
mjgB*. mmasm -4—1—mam—l.4
A. I.jap. Co., Ora , No
Plmr send me paper pattern showing sua of the Braia
bach Baby Grand.
Name—-— ■ - - —
Address-—-- j
L 1
I said sternly. "Ur. Pettit says it
was not the clams at all, that the
poison is from something Junior
handled. Lee Chow had nothing to
do with it."
She stared at me, cowed but un
convinced, and as she turi%d away I
heard her mutter something dispar
aging Dr. Pettit, but I knew that
she would say nothing more before
Lee Chow which was all I wanted.
I cared no whit what her private opin
ion of the Chinese might be, and
would make no elTort to change her
distorted idea of him. But 1 was re
solved that she should bait the Orien
tal no more.
Katherine worked swiftly, bathing
Junior with lotions, and carrying out
tho other directions of Dr. Pettit.
When she had finished It was a tired
but much more comfortable little lad
whom she gathered up in her arms.
"Auntie Katherine's to carry you
downstairs," she announced, and
Junior so docile under her dictum as
he had been obstinate against Katie’s
similar offer, laid his head confiding
ly against her shoulder and was
asleep by the time we reached the
car.
"Get In, Madge,” Katherine whls
pered, "and I'll hand him to you."
I obeyed hef. Katie took the seat
beside me, and Marion clambored
again to her post beside Lee Chow.
I saw Katherine look sharply at Lee
Chow as I gave him the directions
for driving to the farmhouse, and
knew that the explanation of the
man’s presence which I had given
Katie, would never satisfy the keen
brain of either Katherine or Lillian,
although I also knew that neither
woman would ever seek to gratify her
curiosity unbidden.
We reached the farmhouse In good
time, nnd when Lee Chow had
brought the car to a stop, he stepped
out of it and helped me to alight.
Then with a low bow he asked re
spectfully:
“Boss lady need me any more to
night?”
“No, thank you, Lee Chow.”
‘‘Then I go,” he announced calm
ly. “If boss lady want Lee Chow
In big hurry, can tell cousin In laun
dry. But Lee Chow will know when
boss lady need him.”
He turned away, and the next sec
ond was padding swiftly away down
the drive.
Former Prominent Busines*
Woman a Visitor.
Miss 8- lidith Baker of Miami. Fla.,
formerly h resident and prominent
business woman of Omaha, arrived
in the city Monday evening. Miss
Baker is cn route to her former home
at Alma. Neb., but plans to return
to Omaha later to visit Miss Clara
Brewster and other friends here.
Sartorial Decoration.
Crepe bark satin is often used with
a self trim. If the dress is made of
the shiny surface, then the “crepe
side is used for folds or merely bands
seamed In to contrast.
Tucks were never better for trim
ming the frock. They are «sed wide
and as narrow as pin tucks. 1 hey
may be used perpendicularly or hori
zontally and sometimes the whole
skirt or blouse is thus trimmed.
For a handsome moderate price
living room rug, 9x12, Saxony yarns
In Chinese or Persian colorings and
patterns are good. __
Mrs. Engler Hostess.*
Mrs. George Engler will entertain at
dinner at her homo Saturday evening
for Mrs. Thomas Heyward of Pitts
burgh. guest of Mrs. R B. Busch.
Mrs. Heyward will remain until after
Thanksgiving.
Candle sconces backed with mir
rors that double their heauty be
witehlngly are for Spanish or Italian
effect interiors. They are frequently
polychromed, wrought Iron or
"verde." an antique finish.
__ -
Velvet Ensemble
C-O-S-T-U-M-E-S
F. W. Thome Co.
1812 Farnam
|V £
I «
<
Whether you “Stop—Look and Listen” or
take a chance, you’ll see that circle. If you
can’t think which to do, put on your brakes
and remember—"Everybody likes Candy.” >
JOHN O. WOODWARD 4 CO.
"Tha Candy Mjb'*
*
Inner-Circle
Candies
_ n
• . __1 ■
MILLINERY
*
The Semi-Annual Clearing Sale Occurs Friday
Always awaited with keen
interest. This year the re
ward is far beyond the wild
est expectation.
The Price $
as usual,
each . . . :
For your choice of every
Velvet and Silk Hatters
Plush Hat in our entire
stock.
j J
Gage Hats, Rubin Hats, Sameyer Hats
Many of them priced from $10.75 to $20.00
Amsden is constantly building values C* A AA
into these “HATS "OF QUALITY” <P /■ W
until their cost makes minous this a©- aaaBVH
customcd closing price of each.. I
Friday at 9 A. M.—Second Floor
Art Section
To Better Meet the Demand
for Instruction, Please Note
Instruction in
Dennison Crepe
Paper & Roll Work
Tuesdays and Fridays
Instruction in
Gesso Work
Monday, Wednesday,
T h u r s day, Saturday
May we ask our welcome friends to
conform and not request us to vary
the above.
---—___
Apron Frocks
Of cleco cloth, linene, Japanese crepe .
and black sateen jphemstitched models
and attractive hand embroidered. Col
ors. peach, lavender, flame, tan, rose
and blue,
$1.98. $2.39, $2.95
Third Floor.
Albatross Robes i
Beauty combined with comfort; hand
embroidered Colors, rose, copen. wis
teria and orchid— 4
$10.95
Third Floor. * j