Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1916)
V THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. JULY 5, 1918. ociety N otes : Woman's Work Personal Gossip CHILDREN TO LEARN If ABOUT THE FOURTH 4 t t f Tots of West Harney to Move I Their, Parade to Seymour Lake This Year, f AT FOUR .THIRTY TODAY t in By MELLIFICIA-July 4. A wee .kindergartner .told me the father day, "I made a picture of peorge Washington at school," But When I asked her who was George Washington. ahe said, "Why, George VVashington," and, .no. further inquiry ly could elicit, any information. There t lis a group .of children in town, how ever, wiiu. unijr Know. aDOUl Trie father of their country,, but are doing ?fhat they can to preserve his pa triotic spirit. ihe children of the West Harney street region have for the last five of Mrs. Georee Mickel and others. they have staged the cleverest parades and patriotic celebrations without a suggestion of broken arms and burn fcd fingers and blinded eyes. This year, as before, a grand pa geant with floats, colors, tableaux, flags and singing has been prepared under the direction of Mrs. Mickel and Mrs. T. L. Combs. It is to be a .bigger and better affair than ever be fore, it is said, because fifty children from Seymour Lake have collabor ated to make the event a huge, suc cess. The parade will take place at Seymour Lke club grounds, start ing at the playgrounds and moving to the club house. The hour set for'1 the pageant, ts 4:30 ' this after-' noon. Jrtatinee Dance for Visitors.. ' ' Miss Ruth, Nolan will entertain at the matinee dance at Happy Hollow club today, complimentary 'to Miss Elizabeth Becksted of White 'Bear lake, guest of Mrs. W. 'F. Wappich, and for Miss Clyde Hoerr of Man- lratn. truest of Mrs. K. R. AlHnna. Mr. Aldous will chaperon the party, which will include, aside f.om the visitors: Misses Misses Geraldlne Johnson, EstheB MoVann, Beatrice Johnson, . Willow O'Brien. rcaretha Qrlmm.1, Katharine Newbranoh. Social Gossip. Madame Richards of Denver, who has been the guest for the last month of her son, J. DeForest Richards and Mrs. Richards, leaves Wednesday for the east to spend the summer. Personal Mention.' Mrs. Mollie Singleton from Buhl, Idaho, is visiting her cousin, Mrs. A. B. Prior, for a few days before going to her former home at Zanesville, O. Timely Fashion Hint ; bt la BaooimnnM. ' t p, $8 I.' . 1 yT ?V Clever collar and cuff sets are made of white organdy and net and trimmed with dainty pearl buttons, lace and tucks. In this instance the tucked collar and cuffs are, edged with a jeep net footing which is 'finely 'pleat ed. Tinv organdy buttons afford suit able trimming. The velvet turban with ribbon covered crown is unusual and smart. - . ' : ' " 1 i Buffet Supper for Guest Miss Naomi Towle will be hostess at a buffet supper today, honoring Miss Sarah Perkins of MeniDhis. Tenn., the guest of Miss Mary Me- geath. U be party will include: . , BUSBes- mimtvr Sarah PerktM. 3raldlne Ren Gertrude Stout. of Council Bluffs, Alary Megeatb, Naomi Towle. Messrs. - Messrs. Robert Whittlesey Robert Edward, of New Haven.' Herbert Davis. . Albert SlbbernseB. On the Calendar. Miss Florence Neville will enter tain at luncheon Friday in honor of Miss Sarah Perkins of Memphis, Miss Mary Megeath's guest At Happy Hollow Club. Tudee and Mrs. Irving F. Baxter will entertain one of. the larger din er parties of the Fourth of July at ppy noiiow ciud. i neir guesu win be: .. . , . ," Messrs. and Hasdamat Norrls Brown, A. M. Oow.ll, t Hisses Misses Dorothy Cow.ll. Anna Howland. Meadames . Meedamesj W. R. Burbank. P.' R. Uausman. Mr. and Mrs. Qyde J. Baker and Mrs. I. J. Munn of Red Oak, la., will, be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don T. Lee at Happy' Hollow today, At the Country Club. ' ' ,' The largest Fourth of July dinner at the Country club, a dinner of twenty-six covers; will be given this evening by Mr.' and; Mrs. John W. Towle. ' Mrs. Ben Gallagher will be hostess at another dinner party, her- guests including: ' s ' - -' Judge and Mrs. D. M.'Vln8onhaI.r. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Oallashsr. v Mesdames , Mesdames , I. R. Hill of 'Herman Konntac Kansas City, 1 ' ' Messrs. Messrs. Rnn nAlla.fl'her. Baslnffer. Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Hochstetler will entertain at dinner at the Coun try club today, their guests being: Mesdames M. 1. Barber. P. P. Xlrkondal), Messrs. ' Messrs. Charles Hochstetler, Burdette Klrkendall, V Myron Hochstetler. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Walters will give a dinner for the family and for Jheir daughter, Miss Harriett's, guest, Miss Edith Hightield, superior, wis. Covers will be placed for six. Mr. and Mrs. C T.' Kountze have reservations at the Country club this evening for' ten guests. The same party will ahve been entertained in the afternoon by Mr. and Mrs. Ward M. Burgess. Mr. Louis Burgess has a reservation at the club for six guests at supper, At the Field Club. The Field club will be- the popular Fourth of July resort. A special program and dinner, dance has been arranged and "Dutch treat"' parties are quite in order. One of the larger parties will include: Messrs. and Mesdames A. V. Shotwell. C. D. Sturtevant, VV. C. Lambert,' B. Kvenhlld. . Miss Mary Hall. ' 1 Mrs. Oladden James of Brooklyn. - Mr. Don Ryan. ' -" ' Another party will include: . Messrs: and Mesdames . P. B. Burlelch. W. Rlrhtor Wood, ' H. E. Mllllken, Jack Sharps. Still another "Dutch treat" party will be made up' of: ;. Doctors and Mesdames- ' H. A. Wahl, . W. K. Foots. . Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Fradsnburf. . Mrs. Vlnlnla DybaU. Mr. John Kuhn.' Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Goulding will entertain at dinner for Mr. and Ls. L. M. Peeau. Miss Ruth Bar- ascn ana Ur. William Anderson, Picnic for Visitors. Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Weller are giv-! nig a, little family picnic today for the three young women who are the guests of their daughters! the Misses Marion and Dorothy Weller Miss Harriet Waters of Binghamton, N. Y.; Miss Bess Ritchie of Idaho Falls, Idaho, and Miss Ellen Weart of Cherokee, la. Two motor loads of people will be included in the party and the destination will probably" be Lake Manawa. Faidy-Borglum Wedding. News has been received in Omaha of the marriage of Miss Harriet M. Borglum to Mr. Abel Faidy, in San Francisco, on Wednesday, June 28. Since leaving Omaha Miss Bor glum has been engaged in Associated r !.. ;. L.' i- l- lnarny organizations, in .wnicn-, snc has been very successful. -She is a sister of August, Arnold, Solon and Gutzon Borglum and Mrs. Alfred Darlow. Mr. Faidy is a Frenchman and is a prominent architect in San Francisco, where they will reside Mrs. Faidy has been on the coast for the last two year with her sis ter, Miss Theodora, whose marriage is scheduled for the near future. A niece of the bride. Miss Ida Dar low, was married last Tuesday to Mr. l.loyd mirdic ot Herman; Iveb. Says Anglo-Japanese Alliance as Firm as Rock (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) . Tokio;' June 26. Dr.. Thomas' Baty, an English authority on international law, who has' arrived in Japan to take up the ' position of" legal adviser to the foreign office,-a cost which was held for many years by H. W. Deni- son, an American, is quoted as say ing that the future of the Anglo-Jap anese alliance will be more produc tive, of good than to 'the past "The alliance is as firm as Gibraltar," he said. "The progress of civilization in the next century- will hinge largely on the synthesis of the east and the west and in promoting this synthe sis, the Anglo-Japanese alliance -will be one of the chief factors:"" Billy Byrne Plays With The Baby to Keen Cool "Would you keep cool? It's easy," avers Billy Byrne' of Orpheum fame.' "Naw, I don't go fishing, swimming or resort to a thirst parlor," says Billy. "I've got the finest scheme of all. When I get pretty warm I chase out to my son-in-law's and play with the baby. It's the greatest cooler in the' world." ' But, as Billy neglected to mention, it isn't everybody that is a grandfather,- or who can find a trusting mother who will consent to the use of her child as. a hot weather temperer. Costs Million and Half to Haul One State Guard to Line New York, July 3. It will cost the United States about $1,500,000 to transport the New York National Guard to the border, it was estimated at headquarters tonight Read Bee.Want Ads for profit. Use them for results. LANGUAGE CHEST SPEAKS Cnrioaa and Informing onnds Car ried to the Doctor Thronsh the Stethoveope. Queen-Mother Was Keen Friend of the Late Kitchener (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) ' London, June 26. Perhaps none outside his immediate family was more grief-stricken at the news of Lord Kitchener's tragic death than Queen Alexandra. The attentiveness of the .soldier 'to the queen-mother had long been notable, and there was a very strong bond of sympathy between these two, undoubtedly two of the loneliest figures prominent in contemporary London. . . Indeed there was something pa thetic in the lonely bachelorhood of the war secretary, who occasionally to his intimates, dropped remarks bearing on his lack of home, and near relations. - Not a week passed during the war in which he has not paid a visit to Marlborough house, where he would remain for long visits with Queen Alexandra, and come away with a long list of those combatants of whom her friends had made spe cial inquiries. However, pressing the demands of the campaigns on the va rious fronts, he would always re turn within a few days with the de sired information. , Lord Kitchener had promised to be the queen-mother's guest during the coming summer at Sandringham. He constantly had ladies to lunch at his seat in Kent, Broome Hall, near Can terbury, on Sundays, and wquld show them how he war developing nil gar dens and dilate to them on the beau ties of his china. Younger women were conspicuous by their sbsence at these times, the guests being chiefly peeresses and experts on gardening, as well as the wives of men who had served under him in various cam paigns. At York house, ' St. James' palace, he gave a number of dinner parties to men only, the military element be ing not always conspicuous at these. He liked doctors, though caring noth ing for actors or musicians. Several of the higher clergy, in London en joyed his friendship and hospitality. 1 Lord Kitchener Was personally well known to the owners of many of the more expensive curiosity shops in London. He would bargain over pur- HOTFXS AfTD BE80BTS. chases, but did not possess the com mercial sense, and in the end would always pay a good price, usually on his own initiative. The dealer gen erally received a check the day after delivery, the check being quite often post-dated a month or two. Common Experience Now to Fly Across English Channel (CorrespeHdeD.ee of The Associated Frees.) . London, June 26. Flying from the trenches in France to London and back again in the same day is becom ing not uncommon experience for of ficers of the British army. Recent ly an officer left the trenches early one morning, crossed the . English channel in an aeroplane and was in a London Turkish bath in a few min. utes under four hours from the time he left the battlefield. Later another soldier did the trip in even shorter time, leaving the trenches in the early morning, Turkish bathing three and a half hours later in London, lunching at one of the leading hotels and ar riving back "somewhere in France" the same evening. . Bibles for Soldiers. El Paso. Tel., Jalr . No soldier alont the border Is to be without a Bible If efforts now brine made to provide each flfhtlns man with a Docket else khaki bound vol ume at a cost of I cents are eueeeasfuj. The army chaplains wno nave eeen inieresieo in tbs movsmsnt ars isnainff insir assistance 10 It The Bibles art provided at cost. A doctor hears some curious noises when he places the stethoscope against your chest to test whether you are fit for the army or not When the lungs are healthy, a pleasant breezy sound, soft in tone, is heard as the breath is drawn in and ex pelled. If the stethoscope conveys to his ear a gurgling or bubbling sound, the doctor knows that you are in what is known as the moist stage of bronchitis. In the dry stage of the same complaint the sound is a whist ling, wheery tone. One of the signs of pneumonia is the soft crackling note that comes through the stethoscope. It is not un like the sound that can be heard when your finger and thumb have touched a sticky substance, and you first place them together and then part them, holding them close to your ear. Doctors occasionally hear a drip ping sound, and that tells them that air and water have got into some part of the chest where they have no right. Pearson's. Pioneer Union Pacifio Engineer Hears Last Call Pat O'Donnell, 83 years old and a retired Union Pacific engineer, died last night at his home, 2521 Martha street. He was one of the first men to drive an engine over the Union Pacific rail road tracks.. Surviving are three sons and three daughters and one sister. They are: David O'Donnell of Mason City, John O'Donnell of Omaha, Stephen O'Don nell, 3210 North Fifty-eighth. Mrs. Carl Stawn, 1741 South Twenty-ninth, and the Misses Genevieve and Marian O'Donnell, who live at home. The sister is Mrs. Johanna Corrigan, of 2310 Seward. O'Donnell was born in Tipoerary county, Ireland, and came to Omaha in 1862. He was retired on a pension in 1904. The funeral will be held Thursday morning and burial will be in Holy Sepulchre cemetery. Wanted Some Want Ads in ex change for lots of answers. Phone The Bee. , ' Lnmbaa-o and Pains In the Back. At the first twins of pain In the hack apply Sloan's Liniment reUef comes at onoe: ' Only ISo. ' Alt dnifvlsta. Adv. Imperfect Notes Corrected, Seggfns Fleet Lifted, Wrinklet Removed The WejMlhurw TmUmmI 1 POSITIVELY NEVER USE PARAFFIN, ONE FREE TREATMENT TO DEMON STRATE MV TREATMENT IB PAINLESS. ' W. H. BAILEY. M. D. Plastic and Cosmetle Surgeon. 1426 Qlenara St., Denver. Oolo. Phone Champa 1821. Eighth Year In Denver Professional ami Bank References. pB!iiasiiiS;iii!Jffl!w:;;iiiBSiw me m THE PLAZA L NEW YORK World's Famous Hotel Opposite Central Park at 39th Street Cleat ts All Theatre! and Shops SUMMER GARDEN and Outdoor Tstrae Cool and Refreshing Place to Dine WrtU fit rWsfMMI iWaf FKED STEKJtT. Managua Director ROOMS WITH BATH $3.50 UP ZnZn ZvZa ZvZa ZuZtj ZuZu Oh, say! I say! You say ZuZu to your grocer man and you'll get snappy, spicy ginger snaps. M NATIONAL BISCUIT A! 7 S ofl y I r S COMPANY 4m 'GMJ IS fi ! v ZdZb ZuZii Zu Ztf ZnZu- Hotel- Marie Antoinette Broadway, 66th and 67th Sts. NEW YORK CITY. SITUATED In tht moit eon vantait location in town. Mod am In vtry detail, abiolutaljr flraproof. within tan minute, of th leading department atorta. ibopi and theater. ' Convenient to Pennarlvanla and Grand Central Depota. Rootris With Bath, . $2.50 Per Day Up. Suites, $4.00 Per Day Up. ROOMS 11.50 PER DAY UP. Restaurant al Unusual Excalleace. H. STANLEY GREEN Managing Director. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. St. Mary's School KNOXVILLE, ILLINOIS. For Glrla and Young Women. 49th year. Three rears beyond High School. Prac tical two yeara' court in Home Econom ies and Applied Housekeeping. Art echool. Exceptional advantage in all branches of MUSIC and in LANGUAGES. 40 acreB. Tennis, Basketball. Sargent method of Physical Culture. Gymnasium, Bowling. Swimming Pool, Dancing, Fencing, etc. Student from twenty states and countries. Mlaa EMMA PEASE HOWARD, Principal Ml STOP AT THE LLARD HOTEL WHILE IN OMAHA U Thoroughly Remodeled, Renovated and Under New Management - Centrally Located-Rates Reasonable lDst,.MiLLARD HOTEL l Rentf, Mgr. aaaaBaaBR I A Flag of 315,000,000 Square Feet If all the fabric used in one year's rubber products manufactured by the ' United States Rubber Company in the ! United , States alone, was made into a flag, that flag would be approximately 315,000,000 square feet. Or, it would make a foot-wide fabric ; band that would go three times around 'y; the world at the equator. , . , Another world's manufacturing -1 record established for the United States by the United States Rubber Company. J The United States Rubber Company output, the largest. of all the riibbcrj companies of the world, has Roachod Its Vast Proportions l 1 Because it effected great I economies through quantity, production. i 2 Became it turned these awj ings, resulting fnjkn manufacturing -economics, into still greater quality production. . , These indisputable facts explain inV part the steady and tremendous sales ' increases in 11 ..." v.x ' . Any reliable dealer can supply you with United States "Individualized" Tires. If he hat no stock on hand, insist that he get them at once or jo to another deader.