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About The Omaha morning bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 1922-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1925)
Social Slump While Omaha Convalesces "Such dull times. All my friends fie either in the hospital, on their ivav Utere or convalescing at home,” said one young matron tills morning to the social scribe. In almost every set someone Is 111. Mrs. Foye Porter lias just returned to her home following an operation for appendicitis, Mrs. Charles Mc Laughlin and Mrs. Russell Best are also on the “getting better, but not able to be out" list. Mrs. Charles Morton and Mrs. tv. D. McHugh are just recovering from the . grippe, and are curtailing their social activities. Mrs. C. A, Goss is convalescent at the Methodist hospital following an operation performed on Tuesday. Mrs. Floyd Smith, jr., who is visit ing her father, E. Norman Bayne, in N'ew York City, underwent an opera tion for appendicitis last week in the Lexington hospital. Phi Dolts ami Wives lio to Linonln Today. Omaha ns motored Friday to Lin coln to attend Phi Delta Theta's 50th anniversary. At the formal dance Friday at tlie Lincoln hotel were: Messrs, and Mp^dnines— Frank Meade. M. Buchanan. Robert I ndlk**. Alvin F. Johnson. T. S. McCaffrey. Arnos Thomas. *’rank Builla. Robert Trover. {.yje. Harold C. Payne. Itay Stryker. Ppbo McCullough. At the banquet tonight will be: Messrs.— Messrs.— S. H. Ayer. H. C. Be Laniatre. L. Putt. Baybas Spain. John Townsend. H. A. Tukey. Virgil Northwall. M. K. Northwall. R. 1) Coad. I,. H. Blanchard. Merrill Northwall. B 1). Tunnldiff. II. Owen. Willard Alleman. Saturday Dinner Parties. Mr. and Mrs. Miller Prentice will entertain Messrs, and Mesdames E. H. Jeffers, A. W. Devereaux, J. J. Higgins at the Fontenelle. They will play bridge afterwards at the Prentice hofne. The I.inn T. Campbells will give a dinner for 26 guests with bridge at their home afterwards. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Wilson will en tertain IS guests and the W. E. Davises will have 33 guests, the It. .1. Calinas eight. The l.loyd Smiths Hosts. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Smith will en lertaln 14 guests st iheir home Sat urday evening at dinner. t liapter II. V Officer*. Chapter B. N., P. E. O., elected the following officers at a meeting Tues day at the home of -Mis. Charles A/ea.l: M*adamc«-: Rudolph lll.v. president; V. . »\ IlnioMlI. vice president; l\ Stroud, re < ording secretary, S. S. .Montgomery. '• or i**apon-iing aeuretary: Rftbert Wilson, treasurer; C. C. Bahl**n,, chaplain. Mrs. Iliiiilingrr Entertains. Mrs. John Dindinger will entertain the following guests at luncheon at her home Thursday: V. ..Jane*— Mesdames— Clare NirKlnnd Eugene Weiner Bon.i t‘.h pAcrd M.*>u'<— M'syfa— )’• T.:y I n^ghan Nine Uarr.*tt Flora .'•’hulicit Mar*ha Shouscon /--N I Personals 3_j Mrs. Chauneey Abbott, jr., is In Lin coln for a week. Col. Louis Nuttrnun will be home .Monday from -New York. Mrs. K. I.. Bridges returned this week-end from Oklahoma Clyde Drew. jr.. will arrive from Shut tuck .Military academy -March 23 to visit his parents. • Miss Eleanor Renfro of Kansas City will arrive the end of the month to visit Mr. and Mrs. Harold Payne. .Mrs. Frank Johnson and Mrs. Ad don Rich left this week Tor California, where they .will spend several weeks. Mis* Jane Bliss will spend the week at the University of Nebraska with .Miss Edith Sadie-, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Mr. and Alts. S. G. Briggs returned Tuesday from Florida, where they spent six weeks motoring. At Lake f land, Fla., they met the Warren Kvvitzlers of this city. ADVERTISEMENT. HELPEDTHROUGH CHANGE OF LIFE Took Lydia E. Pinkh&m’s Vegetable Compound dur ing this Critical Time Baltimore. Md. — "I took Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound to help me through theChangeof Life and for a broken down system. 1 had been com plaining a long timeand dragging , along had tried other medicinea which did not help me much. I read in the newspapers of the Vegetable Compoundand after taking a bottle I felt better. I did not stop with one bottle, but took it through the whole critical timeand am now practically a well woman. I have two daughters whose health was very bad before they married and I was worried about them. I got the Vegetable Compound for them and it helped them, and after they married it also helped them in bearing their babies. This is a great and good med It icine for all complaints of women, and I recommend ft to all.”—Mrs. L. GrNORicH, 1876 N. Gilmor St, Balti more, Maryland. The Vegetable Compound is a de pendable medicine for women of mid dle age. I,et it relieve you of nervous ness, that feeling of strain and those annoying hot flashes so common at this timo. f Past Events v-----> Mis. John A. McKenzie entertained at bridge luncheon at her home Thursday< Her guests were: Mesdani' * Meadaim ■ Gladstone Derby E. S. t'raver Maynard (’. Col** c. P. t’niver Augustus Dun bier »>. R. Gibb* Max Rapp Robert (loathe Frank Simpson A'. (J. Flebgute M. Soule, jr AN. C. Ross M. R. McWilliams Dinner-Danee for 12-Acar Ohls Tonight. Hetty Kelley, (laughter of Dr. end Mrs. J. Ernest Kelley, was host ess to her little friends, all seventh graders and 12-year-olds at Dundee school at a St. Patrick day dinner glance Friday. Her guests were: Phoebe McDonald Chauncey Abbott Alice Sac*Mb Stuart Kent Katherine Stone Billy Ramsey Elizabeth Johnston Thomas Patterson Madeline Johnson Jack Drew Betty Gardiner Routs Drew Catherine Marsh Charles Schwa eer Frances Beal Chaddourne Moor Eouiae Condon head I’aralvn Rees A it hue Worn berg Miriam Martin Jack Beaton Ella no Buel < harle> Hayward Mildred Sherman Bill} Kelley James Buffington Overton Guest Here. Mrs. C. H. Edwards of Overton, Neb., arrived Friday to spend a few days as the guest of Mrs. Arthur Kyle Rushton and Mrs. Rushton. Mrs. Ed wards and Mrs. Harold Claflin ol Newtonville. Mass., guest of her sis ter, Mrs. Donald Howe, share honors at the luncheon bridge today at the home of Mrs. Flortan Newbranch. Mrs. Rushton will entertain at lunch eon on Saturday at her home for Mrs. Edwards. Tea for the J. T. Smiths. Mr. and Mrs. Will Coad will en tertain Informally at tea at their home Sunday In honor of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Smith of New York, who will spend the day with the Coads on their way to California, where they will spend several weeks. Miss Marsh Honored. Miss Flora E. Marsh received a Wel lesley college honor scholarship, ac cording to an announcement Just made at the college of the scholarship awards for tills year. Birth Announcements. A daughter, Elizabeth Jane, zaa born to Mr. and Airs. Clyde Stuntz of Aladison, X. J.. on Atarrh 4. The baby is a granddaughter of the late Bishop Homer O. Stunts and Airs. Stunts of this city. I Parking With Peggy S]4 1 s "The avert!it* girl dogrii l need a course in auto mechanics to know that the best tiling to do Pith a flat tire is to give him the air." f—-> COLOR CUT-OUTS Little Snow-White THE HAPPY ENDING. This Is the Iasi pa’ uf i Ijp failiuuR «tory of' *:Snou Wliltr.'' Children hho have i tit out and saved the pape-t dnllR no” ia\R the whntf story <>r "SnoV White to art out. Next w.ek ih.r.'U tie anot.he” cut-out story. "The t^ueen of Hearts," .He sure to watch for it. When the prince's followers were carrying tlie glass case with tlie dead Snow-White in it, they stumbled over a rock and jarred tlie case. As they did so, the piece of poisoned apple, which had stuck In Snow-White's throat, fell out and she. came to life. Full of Joy, tlie prince asked her to be Ills wife, and the surprised Snow-White liked him so much that she agreed. So the prince took her home to the king, his father, and they had tl wonderful wedding. And the wicked, jealous queen? When tlie magic mirror told her that the'beautiful Snow-White was alive and had married a king’s son, she flew into a terrible rage, rushed out of her palace, and was never seen again. So Snow-White and her prince lived happily ever after. (Color the prince's suit red, with trimmings of gold.) Omaha’s Week of Wonderful Windows and Prices You’ll Like to Pay. F. W. Thorne Co. ’ 1812 Farnam Streat v w ADVERTISEMENT, A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks — Sparkling Eyes—Most Women Can Have. Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Known Ohio Physician. Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 yeare treated scorer of women for liver and bowel ail ment?. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. You will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers «n the liver and bowel*, which cause a nor ma! action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one’s system. IP you have a pale face, Fallow look, dull eyes, pimple*, coated tongue, head ache*. a listless no-good feeling, all out >f Hurt*. Inactive bow eh you take one >f Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets nightly tor ■x time and note the pleasing result*. Thousand-* of women and men take Dr. Edwards’ Oli\e* Tablet* the •uccessful cub*titute for calomel-—now and then Just, to keep them fit. 15c and HOc. wmm——mmwm* 1 A WtP?9/ Confessions^ by" . 1 Cfldele Qhrrisorg “Perhaps You Were Rivals t'en tiiiios Aco"—Lillian. Generally, I <lo not consider my self a coward, but I gave a distinct sigh of relief at Lillian's ultimatum lhat 1 was not to share the nursing of her protege unless someone else were in the room. Besides my fear uf the girl's maniacal strength, as I had experienced it during the ride home, Ihaij an uncanny little feeling that in some way unknown to me the life of fids mysterious waif and my own were linked unpleasantly. I felt a reluctance to j minister to her, which astonished uie. for my usual impulse ltt cases of illness is to aid in any way 1 can. Vet t was certain that never had I seen the girl before the minute when Lillian led her from the traits continental train. ... I looked up to find my friend's eyes fixed upon me quizzically. “Perhaps you were deadly rivals for a man’s love centuries ago," she said. "Malign in It's Influence." “What a bonfire you’d have made read my thoughts. I ought to be used to her psychic powers by this time, for 1 -surely have seen them exhibited frequently enough: but I hardly knew myself this morning, so captious was my mood. I felt as though from the temporarily twisted | mentality of the girl In the next room, there was emanating some thing malign In Its Influence upon my own soul. "You nce<l a square meal,1’ Lillian said, laughing and linking her arm in mine. "Let's stow this away/and prink up a hit, and then find out what progress Mrs. Ticer is making, t wonder where Marion and Junior are. I haven’t seen them since we came in. .Site had reached her own room and as site talked was stowing away in a closet the valise which had been chained to (lie mysterious waif's arm. She shut the closet door, and turning with some difficulty the key ill the lock, removed the key. She tucked It away in the little chamois liag in which she. carries anything small that is of too much importance to trust away from her person. "That’s the first time I've had to to turu the lock on that closet door,’’ she said, “but Sam Ticer In alto gether too Interested In this busi ness. Did you say you had seen the children, “No, but T know where they are, and so do you, if you stop to think.'’ "With Jerry Ticer and ’Lady' 1 suppose, you mean," she returned. "But. I think this time, you're mis taken. They, no doubt have had a ride or two on ‘Lady’ hut if I know Marlon, she's too anxious to report to me what she saw In that sedan which passed us on the road, to waste much time anywhere else. There's the ‘makins’ of a first rate sleuth In that child, if 1 do say It is shouldn't." There was distinct maternal pride behind the jesting words, and 1 knew that she was gratified to see the resourcefulness, the keew observation and the discretion which her young daughter had displayed. These are traits which Marion has Inherited from her mother, and which Lillian has fostered by every means in her power. "She saw the Sedan Again.'' "I think she saw the sedan again." I said quietly. l.llliati wheeled quickly. “Where?" she demanded "Just as we turned in the gate." I returned. "iSlie saw something, for she turned hei head quickly and gazed down the road as the car turned. Hut when I asked her alxmt it, she said with very pretty embar rassment that she could tell nothing just then, for you had asked her to say nothing until you questioned her. Having heard that Injunction laid upon her by yoy when the sedan passed us, 1 put two and two to gether.." “And I hotte they make four," Lillian finished a bit Impatiently. "I'm sort of Interested In that .sedan. Its occupants were altogether too in terested In us.” We had reached the lower floor of the farmhouse as we finished, and front the veranda came the sound of running feet, the short pattering footsteps of Junior, and Marlon's longer stride. "They've seen us." Lillian said with a smile, and we stood together while the children fairly flur.g them selves upon us. “Oh, Mama!” Junior was «s ex cited that he was hardly intelligible "I tided on Lady, and I,adv galloped, and 1 stayed on a nawful long time, and Jerry says I ride like a ciTcus man n/.d oh! Ma ma we rode down near file hedge and we saw my nice Lee Chow!" 9 Dear Martha Allen: When crossed In the sllRhtest degree my husband has a most violent temper, almost reni'liTiiTT the point of Insanity, rip ping. tearing, smashing anything in sight. lie Is well educated and a member of an Influential family, and holds a fairly good position with pos slole advancement In the future. He has none of the faults which would ordinarily cause trouble in a home. This very violent temper has made me unhappy. How would you advise me to deal with this problem? We liave been married three years. 1 THANK YOU. Y'ou will have to handle your hus band as you would a spoiled child and do for him what his parents failed to do. Use ns much tact as possible to avoid "explosions,” but when he Is in the wrong in ills demands firmly hold your own. Harden yourself to his outbursts, knowing that a demon has control of your lovable husband and that you mustn’t blame him in the least. The less said about the matter after it is ovisr, Rite better. Mr*. 4. H.AY.: Service at the table is always given from the left of the person served. M. I,.: Send your address again land I will forward the information | you wish. 1 Dnrntli,v: I think it all right for I you to go to your school affairs. If yout’ iKtr^nt* object, thc> nuiPt havt some good reason. \N hat is it? ■ • Catherine: HU* patient. It he Jo\en you he will tell you »«». Republican Women Meet. Douglas County Republican Wo men's dub met Thursday at ihc Hotel Hamilton. Hereafter the club will hold regular monthly meetings to dis miss affairs at Lincoln and Wash ington. Mrs. X.. M. Lord is presi dent. "He Who Finds Himself” I Thi. Subject Will Be Discussed by Rev. Ralph E. Bailey at | The First Unitarian Church (The Church of Liberal Christianity) 3114 Harney Street SUNDAY AT 11:00. A. M. The sermon will he based upon a spiritual axiom which Matthew Ar» nold has famously expressed. j i aia i • i lira > ■ • a a a •imiiiiinaniiiiriiig TRINITY CATHEDRAL i 18th Street and Capitol Avenue " ORGAN RECITAL l Ily Ben Stanley " Assisted by • The West Sister* String Quartet ■ • SUNDAY I March 15th, at 4:30 P. M. • The public is cordially in\ itejj. j i » i » i » i i i i i i » i » i » » « « » r.ji ri3 ■ The Most Delightful New Spring Styles! Whether It Be for Sports, for Street, for Afternoon, or for Informal Evening Festivities »—. g You Will Find Here Charming Models—Fash ioned In the Most Ultra-Modes—Using Lovely New Silks of the Most Striking Colors r V7 / 50" Exceptional [Slew Values Spring p . t Th* Brand*i« Stor* at r a ones 4,e<w*Ji,oor THESE DRESSES ARK TO BE HAD IN A WIDE RANGE OF YOUTHFUL , STYLES. EVERY ONE NEW' AND DISTINCTIVE. THE QUALITY IS Mt>sT UNUSUAL AT TlUS ATTRACTIVE PRICE. 0 WITH Spring in view. Fashion has taken on the most exquisite coloring* in her newest models. Every frock is daintily and smartly designed and priced so low that one may have several to start o ff the new season happily. There are mod els lor every occasion—for immediate wear and the Easter season ahead. H»c Duntlft* l>m« %ilwi—91<ar PBHBP1 BPBB Pil BPBBBP^B PP^B PPOI BP^^B P^^BI BP^B i^P^BBBB^BB i f '