TTE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MAY 20. 191T S B Council Bluffs Social Activities Miss Irene Lungard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Lungard of this city, and Morris B. Wilder of Sioux City were quietly married at the First Presbyterian church of Omaha Satur day, May 12. The ceremony was per formed by Rev. E. H. Jenks. They were accompanied by Miss Gladys Chandler and Dr. anil Mrs W H Saunders of Omaha. After a short trip Mr. and Mrs. Wilder will make tneir nome in hioux City. airs. John T. Stewart and Mrs. otewart Wildman returned last Sun oay evening from San Antonio, Tex. where they spent the winter. .Miss Katherine Holland, daughter of James E. Holland of Omaha, and Mr. Michael F. Guilfoyle of this city were married Monday morning at 7:30 u liock at t. jonn's Collegiate church m Omaha by Rev. Simon Ryan. The was cnarmingiy gowned in blue with a black picture hat. Miss Marie Holland, a sister of the bride, and Mr. uilliam Guilfoyle accompanied the bride and groom. After a short trip ;u v-nuago tney win make their Home in umana. Mrs. Ernest Eldred Hart is plan ning to attend the commencement rx erases of her daughter, Miss Clara, at Dana Hall, Welleslcy, Mass;, June 19. Mrs. Hart and her daughter will then iu v-nrisimas .Lane, Minn., tor an indefinite stay. Mrs. J. K. Cooper entertained the Tuesday History club at luncheon Tuesday afternoon. She was assisted ny Mrs. Uiarles Purdum, Mrs. W. R. (ireen, Mrs. W. H. Killpack and Mrs. Harry Goodrich. A miscellaneous program followed the luncheon and a short business session was held for tne purperte of holding the annual nection, witu the tallowing result rresiaent, Mrs. A. VV. Tyler; vice president. Mrs. W- C. Joseph; secre tary, Mrs. A. B. Sipherd; treasurer, Mrs. Painter Knox. The club also de cided to hold fortnightly meetings during the summer and instead of continuing a course of study will de vote their time to Red Cross work. Tuesday evening Miss Maude War- tiocic, daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. A. King, and Mr. Henry Carmichael were married at the home of the bride s parents. The ceremony, which was witnessed by only the immediate relatives, was performed by Rev. H. T. Davis of the Epworth church. The Mendelssohn wedding march was played by Miss Opal King, sister of the bride. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wil liams accompanied the bridal party. The bride wore a beautiful white voile, trimmed with lace, and a bridal 'veil caught up with pink and white sweet peas. Both she and the matron of honor carried lovely bouquets. A two-course luncheon was served after the ceremony and the young people left the same evening for their new home on .tenth avenue. 1U.J : l,'.. T9.- tveuuesuay evening miss rrances uwen entertained at a 6 o clock din ner to celebrate her nineteenth birth day. .The evening was spent in dancing. Mr. and Mrs. William Marquardt entertained the East End Card club Wednesday evening. Mrs. Martin Follett and Mr. Ross Trotter won the prizes for high score at card and Mr. ' Trotter also won the "cut-for-all." Mrs. Grover De Bar and Mr. J. G. iv imams wonz-tne consolation prizes. Supper was served after the game. Mr, and Mrs. Arlington Wright will enter tain the club, May 29, since next Wednesday is Memorial day. Mrs. D. W. Otis entertained the Book Lovers at luncheon on Wednes- , day afternoon at her home on Wood bury avenue. About twenty members enjoyed a very delightful afternoon before breaking up for the summer. . The hostess was assisted in entertain ing by Mrs. L. D. Montgomery, Mrs. A. M. Jackson and Mrs. L. F. White head Mrs. J. B. Meyers entertained the Midweek Card club Wednesday after noon. Mrs. Fred Graham, Mrs. T. I. Fitzgerald and Mrs. J. P. Christen sen won prizes for high scorefi at '500" and Mrs. Frank Gathers won the "cut-for-all." The next meeting of the club will be held at home of Mrs. Gathers. The Mothers' and Teachers' club of Bloomer school held their annual election Wednesday afternoon, with the following result: President, Mrs. T. J. Boland; vice president, Mrs. Charles J-ellingham; secretary, Mrs. May Scott; treasurer, Mrs. Harry oriititii; executive committee, Mrs. A. McMillcn, Miss Davenport and Mrs. K J. McCaw. The club has arranged for the installation of the domestic science equipment, which will be turned over to the board for the sum mer school. Refreshments were served at the end of the meeting by Mrs. Edson Damon, Mrs. Glen Rieder and Mrs. Zinipleman. j Wednesday afternoon tjie Wo man's Golf club held the first meeting ot the season at the coat club, and played a nine-hole match. The club already has about forty members and a large number of beginners are ex pected. Iwo nine-hole matches will be played next -Wednesday, one in the morning at 10 o'clock and one in the afternoon. A picnic lunch will be served at noon. Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Conner of Los Angeles are visiting Mr. Con ner's mother, Mrs. Nannie R. Conner, at the Grand hotel. Mrs. R. J. Wood is the guest of her sister, Mrs. W. B. Mayne. Mrs. Wood is enroute to Canada to spend the summer, after spending the winter with her daughter in Florida. Bride Eight Months Ago, Secret is Just Out , ' 1 Ultra, m yfhinMwm - WILL MANAGE CRECHE BENEFIT BRIDGE. JTSS- C.W.rffANCIS SORORITY GIRL BRIDE TUESDAY. OF ) ' v. -k 5 1 r , . . - , TALENTED MUSICIAN IS WAR TME BRIDE. svxvcy jvazs Herat FOT West Ambler Social Activities Mrs. Jack Bostvvick and daughter, Miss Vera, spent the week end with friends at Glenwood, la. Mrs. O. W. Pickard left Wednes day on an auto trip to Villisca, la. J. Taylor of West Side spent the week end with his aunt, Mrs. J. Long, prior to leaving for Portland, Ind., and then to New York City to reside. Mrs. Jack Graham entertained Tuesday for Mrs. John Blankenship and Mrs. John Horan. Mrs. George Syas has returned from a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Guv Matson, at Columbus, Neb. . Mrs. Louis Jensen gave a party on Tuesday evening in honor of Mr. Jen sen's sixty-sixth birthday. Rev. Theodore Stenberg, pastor of the Swedish Lutheran church, was married Monday to Miss Hilma An derson of West Side. Miss Ruth Baker, daughter of Mrs. Emma Baker, was married Monday to William Gunther of Lincoln by Rev. J. Kerr of Denison, la. FIFTY-CENT LOAN SOURS FRIENDSHIP Hazel Dodd and Henrietta Hase Haled Into Police Court After Hair-Pulling Match. - Fifty cents worth of friendshin that soured brought two women into po lice court Saturday. Mrs. Hazel Dodd was dnrA .tin and costs for assault and battery upon miss nenrietta Hase. Bom women live at 2203 Douglas street. . Mrs. Dodd, a pretty woman of the brunette type, unbuttoned her shirt waist in court to show to the judge two scratches on her back, which, she said, were due to Miss Hase's finger nails. ' Miss Hase brushed back the hair which drooped over her forehead and exposed to the court a bruise which, she testified, was caused bv an elec tric flatiron which Mrs. Dodd wielded with hostile intent. She Saw It, Too. I saw Mrs. Dodd snit on Miss Hase," said Esther Balles. 2204 uougias street. Mrs. Dodd was standing at the top of a flight of stairs and Miss Hase was at the bottom." Miss Mildred Lang of 2202 Douglas 'vvi, iLuftu i uiai mine me expec toration marksmanship of Mrs. Dodd was unerring in so tar as most of it landed on Miss Hase. neverthe ess some of it spraved upon Miss Latin'. Mrs. Lanna Cook, landlady at 2202 Douglas street, said that she loaned a flatiron to Mrs. Dodd a faw minutes before the assaultupon Miss Hase occurred. "I was eoine alonir the corridor." said Mrs. Dodd, "and I saw Miss Hase sitting in a room with a young man. She made a face at me and that started things." Hated Her Long Time. "She might have killed me with that flatiron," said Miss Hase. "That wo man has hated me ever since last winter. I noticed her hatred for me. I asked Mrs. Cook why Mrs. Dodd was unfriendly to me an- she said, 'Well, you borrowed 50 cents from her last winter when you were sick and you never paid it back to her.'" Mrs. Cook agreed with Miss Hase's version of the iffair and added that it was she who separated the two fighting women. Mrs. Dodd, who formerly worked at the Burgess-Nash store, and Miss Hase, who worked in the Brandeis store, were bosom friends until the 50-cent loan was negotiated. .JTJPS. "fJVAMgr3HAM PRIDE IN LITTLE THINGS DONE WELL Contentment Maketb a Man Happy Whether He Hath Much or Little. Sutino Fined, Although Girl Does Not Appear Sam Sutino, who assaulted Anna Nelson in an alley near Eighth and Pacific streets Thursday night, was fined $20 and costs. All attempts to find the girl whom he assaulted were futile. Judge Mad den ordered police to bring her into court to testify against Sutino. She had aiven 5508 Center street as her address but does not live there. Wonderful Skin and Wrinkle Removers The method. of removing- bad complexions by absorption seems to have come into gen eral use ip this country. Ordinary mereolized wax, applied nightly like cold cream and erased mornings with warm water, gradual ly absorbs the coarse, faded or discolored outer film skin in almost invisible particles. Soon there's a brand new complexion, form ed by the younger, healthier under-skin. No cosmetic or artificial treatment can possibly produce a complexion of such radiant youth ful loveliness. Druggists all have mercolix ed wax: it is seldom that more than one ounce is necessary. l nousands have also reported great suc cess with the famous saxolite wrinkle-removing formula. One ounce of pure powder ed saxolite is dissolved in a half pint of witch hazel and the solution used as a face wash. The effect is almost magical. The deepest wrinkles and crow's feet, as well as the finest lines whether due to age, ill ness, weather or worrv are lmmot4iat.lv affet-tcil. No one need hesitate to try this simple lotion, as it won't harm any skin. Advertiseme" By A. R. GROH. Isn't it a fine thing to be proud of little accomplishments? The world keeps moving because of the millions of tasks done Maily by millions of obscure workers, who take pride in doing their tasks well. A working man stopped and talked to me at Fifteenth and Douglas streets the other day. "I was working for Old Man Kelly once, moving houses," he said. "I'd go ahead and do things without being told, unce we was moving a house up north and the woman next door wouldn't let us move her fence to get tne House out. The old man didn't know what to do about it, but I went to him and says, 'You just leave it to me and I'll get it out.' I told lerrv. one of the other men, to come down at 12 o'clock that night. When he come we took off three panels of fence and dug up two fence posts. Then we hitched on the gear that I had arranged before hand, and pulled the house out into the street. We put the fence back and there it was all done. Pleases the Boss. "When the old man come down in the morning he couldn t hardly be lieve his eyes. Was he pleased? 1 should say he was. He told me to go home ana sleep; said I d done a day s work. That man found more pleasure and took more pride in getting that house moved for his boss than many a "big" man could find in making a million dollars. A colored man approached me on the Sixteenth street viaduct. With an apologetic grin he said: acuse me, doss, nut will you We Have to Move ' THEREFORE We Discount All goods on hand 10 to 3313 A GREAT SAVING ON 5 EVERYTHING J fARE Jpl J&Sorail I h Qnd) JM I In the fullest sense of the H word. We cover the coun H try thoroughly. Flowers B sent anywhere. Our Ser I vice and our Flowers are I the best money can buy. gJohnH. Bath uThs Careful Florist" S 1604 Farnam St., Omaha. Neb. Rj Phont Douglas 3000 E ?'''?! if" j 1 1 iLjmiHi ii wiij j .if j jOk,- .,-,1 ZEPPELIN IS SHOT DOWN OFFDENMARK L-22 is Destroyed by Third Volley from British War ships; Lightning Hits Second Airship. MRS. HARRY JORDAN. please tell me how much thirty tons o' coal would make at 8 cents a ton." "That would be $.'.40." 1 said. The colored man laughed. Shovels Thirty Tons. "Dat's jus' what Ah made it when Ah figgered up." he Staid. "Ah gets 8 cents a ton an' Ah unloaded thirty tons today. Much liligen, boss. I met another man pushing a lawn mower in front of him along the side walk. He carried a big basket and a sickle in the other hand. "It's a fine day for making hay," he said, cheerily. "Yes, it is. Pretty hot, though," I replied. "Well, I don't mind the heat." he said. "It's good for a fellow to sweat. It keeps me busy cutting lawns for my customers. I have quite a list. Its an independent occupation. I'm my own boss and I come and go just as I please." Another man, "not overly bright," is a sort of delivery boy for a cer tain concern. He pushes a two wheeled cart. "I've been with them now two years the i9th of May, he told me one day, as he mopped his brow. "When a firm gets a good man they try to keep him," I said. Which pleased hjm very much. "Contentment maketh a man happy whether he hath little or much," as Aesop would say. Honstoa Get! Away. By winning- seventeen of the first twenty three same of the season the Houston team got away to a flylnr atart In the race for the Teiaa league pennant. i Copenhagen, May 19. (Via Lon don.) Destruction of the Zeppelin 1-22, reported in a British announce ment Monday, May 12 occurred off Esbjerg, within sight of the Danish coast, according to eye witnesses. These accounts indicate that not one, but two, Zeppelins wore de stroyed on that day, inasmuch as the t explosion of an airship orf Tcrschell , mg was reported from Holland at a , point too distant to cover the 'same j case. The loss of the second air ship is attributed to lightning, i The L-2J was seen off lislijerg on ' one of its daily observation tourj up and down the coast of Jutland. It i was engaged by a Uritish force which j presumably was looking for German aesiroyers tnat ot late have been fish ing up British mine fields in this region. The Zeppelin was not far from shore and was plainly visible. Its opponents could not he seen, but their presence was made known by the sound of guns. Eye witnesses saw the airship dart upward after the first round of shots. Then they heard a second salvo. The Zeppeliii endeavored to maneuver itself out of range, but with the third broadside it went down, mortally hit. At first it sank slowly and then plunged down at great speed into the sea below the horizon. I3eeJiVant Ads Produce Results, jiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiijiiititiiiiiiiny . SIVA W 1 Junior i Cameras I $7.00 i to i $13.00 t "Everf Click a Picture" Rohlff Theater Soon to Be Reopened With Good Features The beautiful Rohlff theater will open its doors again to the public in the very near future, the tentative date being set for Decoration day, May 30. It will be under the personal management of Oscar Rohlff, who is now contracting for the best and big gest features the market affords, and quite a number of superfcatures will be shown. "I am taking this theater over un der my personal management," says Mr. Rohlff, "and all 1 care to say at this time is that nothing will he too good for patrons of this theater and they can expert the best and not be disappointed. I believe that the open- iiik i'Jtiurc win e Aornia laimage in 'Panthea,' which is a stinei feature, and the Clara Kimball Young superfca tures will also be shown." BROWN PARK Mineral Baths Promote health and efficiency ha cairn they ravlve dull circulation open all porei and channel., for the expulsion of poUonouf arldi and matters injurious to health; arouse bIuiktIhIi and torpid secre tiona nnd help build up and r atore the entire ayslem. Brown Park Mineral Springs 25 th and O Sti- South Si da Phone South 879 DR. JOHN A. NIEMANN Osteopathic Physician In Charts IJ!M;MH4fJ - 1 6th and Howard. Douglas B44. llllinllllllTtl!llll1)llfMllllti;flllllllllllllMlfii Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Kelly Announce a SPECIAL SUMMER COURSE FOR SINGERS FROM MAY 21ST TO JUNE 28TH IN OMAHA Private and class lessona by Mr. and Mrs. Kelly and competent assistants Special work for teachers, choirmasters and church aoloists. For Special Terms Apply to THOMAS J. KELLY "Tha Bl.ckston.," Omaha. GRADUATION GIFTS SPECIAL OFFERINGS AT SPECIAL PRICES THIS FOR THE SWEET GIRL , GRADUATE No. 115-100 Blue White Dia mond, set in 14-karat solid ring, best value we have ever offered. Price $21.75 No. 2 Diamond Ear Screws 14-karat solid gold mounting, weight guaranteed, beautiful graduation present. Price 811.75 No. 3 Ladies' Wrist Watch Gold filled case,, neat size guaranteed time piece. Price 89.75 No. 4 Small size Skylight Wrist Watch, 20-year gold filled case, 15 jewel move ment. Price 812.75 No. 5 Elgin Wrist Watch, 20 year gold filled case, best watch for the monev in Omaha. Price 813.50 No. 6 La Vallieros, in all the latest creations. We have them in platinum, white, gold, green gold, set with the fin est diamonds and other pre cious stones. Priie from 87.25 and up. No. 7 14-karat gold filled La Vallieres, beautiful designs,' from 81.50 up No. 8 Ladies' Toilet Sets make a lasting graduation present, go on sale this week from $4.50 nd up. No. 9 Sterling Silver Gradua tion Spoon, all this week, go at 70t each No. 10 Sterling Silver Hat Pins, at 5s each this week. FOR THE YOUNG GENTLE. MAN GRADUATE No. 11 Blue White Diamond, in solid gold stick pin, swell designs, special, this week at 87.75 No. 12 This is just the watch for a young gentleman grad uate, beautiful dial, neat 12 size, open face, plain gold filled case, movement guaran teed; good timekeeper. Price only $11.25 No. 13 16-size Illinois 17-jewel wonderful timepiece, 20-year gold filled case, hand en graved or plain with non-pull-out bow, on sale this week for $13.75 No. 14 A watch that will last a lifetime, Hamilton 17-jewel, open face, in 14-karat perma nent dust-proof Paragon case, place for monogram this week only $26.50 No. 15 Hamilton Coat and Belt Chains, extra choice pat terns; regular price $2.75 to $3.25, this week, at $1.49 No. 18 We have the most com plete line of gentlemen's Belts and Buckles on special sale, this week 98d No. 17 Gold filled Waldemar Chains, soldered links, 12 de signs; regular price, $'1.50, this week ... 98t You can order any of these articles by mail, which will be shipped same day as order is received. Any article not satisfac tory can be returned and money refunded. At th. Sign of th Crown Brodegaard Bros. 16th and Douglas Sts. OMAHA, NEB. Up th.' Golden Stairs mia i 1 1 1 1 1 1 'tii i rn iiwiiiiswiiiiiiiiiiiisiiiMiiMiiiiiaai nT" -r Logan Inn Eighteenth St. Entrance Hotel Fontenelle This delightfully informal room will be open until 12 o'clock every night beginning Monday evening, May 21. Christrnan's Fontenelle Orchestra llnripv the rhTW'tinn nf Mr F.rnpst Nnvrhn will vendor a snpial mn- MB sical program each evening from 9 to 12 o clock. Dancing Permitted MM 1; Here you will find the best to be had in the way of soft drinks, served by those who know how. When it costs no more than elsewhere, you will doubtless use your good taste and add the best surroundings in the city, the best service in the city, the best cooking in the city, hear the best music in the city and enjoy the associations of the best people m the city. LOGAN INN Eighteenth Street Entrance Hotel Fontenelle Management John F. Letton