THE BEE: OMAHA, -FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1919. Fum lulls til fever af the muI, sad makea Ua feel that wa bare ( raep'el an Immortality. Millar. Farewell I awoH that muat be, aa4 hath VaaeH A sound which makaa na Ungari yat . farewell- Byram, 1 Society THERE have been many "plain" honeymoons, but it remains for a twentieth century bridal couple to have a "pltne" one. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Smails, who have just returned from the east, have the distinction of being the first Omaha bridal couple to ride on a hydroplane during their wedding trip. Over Atlantic City they flew, with the great hotels and crowds of merrymakers on the beaches mere specks below them. Mrs. Smails was delighted with the experience and not at all timid. She says it was quite the most unique way to celebrate the Fourth she has yet discovered, for it was on the na tional holiday that she took her trip through the air. A motor trip through New Eng land was greatly enjoyed by this prominent young couple, as they took a leisurely tour, enjoying the wonderful roads and beautiful scen ery to the utmost. They returned by boat from Montreal to Chicago, arriving in Omaha early in the week. Surprise Picnic. Miss Grace Allison entertained at a picnic supper Thursday evening at Rosemere Lodge. It was an unusual affair in that her mother, Mr. C. C. Allison was the honor guest and that the party included her mother's intimate friends. Miss Allison had planned that it should be a surprise, to her mother and everyone tried to keep the secret. The guests were Messrs. and Mes dames A. L. Reed, M. C. Peters, Frank Judson, John Towle, Mrs. W. A. C Johnson and Messrs. C. T. Kountze and Joseph Barker. McEwan-Ireland. The marriage of Miss Edythe V. Ireland and H. W. McEwan was solemnized Saturday afternoon at the parsonage of the Christian church, Council Bluffs, Rev. C. O. Stuckenbruck reading the marriage lines. Miss Susie Ireland and Wil bur Ireland were the only atten dants.- After a short honeymoon Mr. and Mrs. McEwan will be at home in Omaha. For Miss Dudley. "Miss Regina Connell entertained at a small luncheon Thursday at the Blackstone hotel in honor of Miss Frances Dudley of Nashville, Tenn, who has been the guest of Miss Gladys Peters for several days. Miss. Dudlev left during the after noon for. Estes Park, where she will spend the remainder of the sum mer. Pre-Nuptial Affairs. Many are the pre-nuptial affairs for Miss Alice Coad. Luncheon and afternoon parties have followed in , quick succession, since the an nouncement of her wedding date. Miss Mildred Todd will entertain at an informal party next Tuesday. Miss Elsie Storz will give a lunch eon in her honor at the Country club Friday, August 1. FFf Bowen s Value-Giving Stora FrTX Dainty Serviceable J 1 Tea Carts I at Bowen 's s I ft. la Mahogany, Amarican Walnut, Golden and Fumed Oak and Reed. Our assortment of Tea Carts is, so large and varied it will be a pleasure for you to make your selection from our stock. To facilitate the serving of meals a Tea Cart is not alone convenient, it is a ne cessity. Tea Carts at any of the following prices are values of the better kind . $9.50. 911.00, I $12.50. $15.00 Mahogany Trays with glass tops 95 Nut Bowls And 6 Steel 1 Crackers 85 tin 1T On Howard, Between 15th and W 16th Street. 1 OMIMITUB Jj To Have Perfect I kin iTh oughout the Su. '.me: Thia ia the season when she who would have a lily-while complexion should turn bar thoughts to mereolised wax. the Arm Viand' of the summer girt. Nothing so effectually overcomes the soiling effects of sun. wind, dust and dirt. The wax lit erally absorbs the scorched, discolored, aitherew or coarsened scarf skin, bringing forth a brand new skin, clear, soft and girlishly beautiful. It also unelogs the porea, removing blackheads and increasing tha skin's breathing capacity. Aa ounce of mereolised wax. obtainable at any drug store, applied nis-htly like cold cream; and washed off mornings, will aradaally improve even the worst com Flexion. " There is nothVir better for the removal ol tan, freckles er blotches. Heart Beats By A. K. We are never alone. When human companionship Drifts off into The outer world There is a little spirit Within Who sails forth And we call her "Solioquy" After the day's Rumble and roar Have ceased Trucks have left The rocky pavement Yelling motorcycles Have taken to The open road We sit in the twilight And call to us Wonders of the past. We heal old wounds Made by our sharp tongue. Friends and enemies Of the past We gather around us.' Deceased authors and poets We welcome to our Campfire communion And discuss their writings Their lives Their human sympathies And sufferings. Those cynical old poets! Those studious old authorsl Risque old Balzac 1 All possess subtlety Keen wit And some a Lovely, Wholesome humor. Only Ibsen Is really wounded By what he's seen of Life. With "Soliloquy" We put the world Aright And are as one With Past and Future. We enact the drama Of human joy and tragedy And sooth the heart ' Of the world for the night. There is no gap For loneliness When the world's Greatest and best Come at ou call. SELAH! Girl Scouts The Tenderfoot Scout. No girl may wear the, Girl Scout pin, insignia, or uniform until she is formally accepted as a tenderfoot scout. To arrive at this distinction she must be at least 10 years old and she must pass the following test to the satisfaction of the Girl Scout officer in charge: For headwork she must fiist of all know the Scout promise and laws, and the Girl Scout motto, "Be prepared," and the Girl Scout slogan, "Do a good turn daily;" she must also know by heart the first and last verses of ('The Star Spangled Banner" and the full name of the President of the United States, the governor of her state, and "the head of her city or town government. For handwork she must be able to tie four sailor knots in approved fashion the reef, bowline, clove hitch, and sheepshank. For health knowledge she learns the simple setting-up exercises and tenderfoot drill. For helpfulness she promises to try to do a good turn daily to her troop, her school, her home, or her community. The tests which must be passed for rank as a second-class scout carry on to more advanced stages; the development of headwork, handwork, hygiene, and general helpfulness, begun in tenderfoot scouthood. Country Club. -. Many informal affairs are being given for Miss Alice Coad, whose marriage to Lieut. Milton Peterson takes place next week. Mrs. T. J. Dwyer entertained at a delightful luncheon Thursday at the Country club in her honor. A large basket of pink and white roses tied with tulle formed the centerpiece. Cov ers were laid for Mrs. T. E. Dailey, Misses Ellen Creighton.,. Beatrice Coad, Nan and Helen Murphy, Eva Dow, Carita O'Brien, Claire Helene Woodard and Katherine Krug, who is visiting at the John F. Coad home. i Carter Lake Club. The water carnival Saturday eve ning will be the event of the summer at CartetLake club and many par ties wiil be entertained. Mrs. M. J. Ford entertained a small party at luncheon Thursday at the club and W. R. Pratt will enter tain at dinner. Dr. and Mrs. P. F. Kani are mo toring through the west. Mr.. and Mrs. Max Smith and fam ily have returned from a motor trip to Estes Park. Happy Hollow Club. The children's matinee dance at the Happy Hollow club is quite an attraction. Mrs. Lee Leslie enter tained IS guests at the dance Thurs day afternoon. Miss Elizabeth Roberts had four guests at the dance. Mrs. Earl Burkett entertained eight guests at luncheon Thursday. Mrs. A. W. Amis had five guests at dinner Thursday evening. ' For Suffragists. Mrs. Antoinette Funk and Mrs. Elizabeth Bass were honor guests at a reception given Thursday at the Fontenclle. Mrs. A. C. Shallen berger presided and the two promi nent suffragists spoke on the "League of Nations" and other timely topics. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Edwards, who returned Tuesday from an ex tended trip through South America are with Mrs. Krfward' mother Mrs. J. B. Porter -. Solving Servant Problem Here's one wav to keep your maids. Gain their affection, says Ethel Clayton. Treat your maid as you would a sister or rather, as you ought to treat a sister. It's a method which works even better with butlers and chauffeurs. Serv ants are men and women, and it takes more than money to hold them in, fact, this is a scene from Miss Clayton's latest picture, "Men, Women and Money." Personals Mrs. E. A. Locke and Miss Editli Locke of New York, who have been visiting Omaha friends for several days, leave Thursday evening for Wyaconda, Mo., to spend two weeks before their return to Nyv York. Three Salers Sergt. Henry W. Thornton ar rived here Wednesday after receiv ing his discharge at Camp Dodge. He was overseas a year. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse McLaughlin announce the birth of a son, Thurs day, at St. Joseph's hospital. Mr. Channing Jordan arrived Tuesday from Wyoming to visit his mother, Mrs. Harry Jordan. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Evans Nel son arrived at Pernambuco July 7, according to word received by Mrs. Nelson's parents, Col. and Mrs. F. A. Grant. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Lawson ar rived Tuesday from New York and are with Mr. Lawson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Lawson. Miss Frances Nieman, who has just returned after1 a year's service overseas with the Red Cross, is stopping at the Hotel McAlpin in New York. Other Omahans regis tered there are Miss Jean Foley, Miss Ann Marquis Lieut. H. F. Sarmon, Messrs. E. R. Porter, R. C. Fielding, A. W. Euckoon and B. B. Corliss". The Misses Elizabeth, Anna and Ethel Frye left Wednesday for Madison Lake, Minn., to spend the remainder of the summer. Miss Weona Engle of Chicago, who has been the house guest of Miss Peggy Reed for the past week, will return to her home Sunday. Misses Gertrude and May Keat ing returned Wednesday after more than a year's service as Red Cross nurses overseas. After spending the day with their sister, Mrs. G. Alexander Young, they left for Co lumbus to spend some ;me with their mother. Word has been received through the Red Cross that Miss Effie Cle land will arrive in New York Sat urday, July 26. Miss Cleland has been overseas a year and has con ducted canteens in France and in Germany. She is expected to ar rive in Omaha next Tuesday. King Denaman arrived in New York Wednesday after several months' service overseas. He will be stationed at Camp Merritt until he receives his honorable discharge. Three Salers went sale-lng out Into the west; Out into the West as the sun rose high. Each thought of the bargain that she would love hpst, And wondered what marvels her money would buy, For men must work, and women must spend, Though money Is scarce, and no one will lend, s And the Bargain Sales be raging. Three wives sat up In their bedroom dim. And they turned up the gas aa the.. sun went down. They looked at fat parcels, and purses so slim; And happily planned their next Jour ney to town. For men must work, and women must spend, Though ruin be sudden, and credit will 'end And the Bargain Sales be raging. Three husbands still gaze on the silks and lace. In the morning gray, when all hope has flown; But the women are sleeping and dream ing in peace Of a land where the sale bills are never torn down. For men must work, and women must spend, And the sooner 'tis over, the sooner the end. And goodby to the sales and their raging. From Blighty, (London.) Y. W. Secretaries Are Teaching Tokio Girls Table Sociability is strange, unfamiliar food satis fying t. the palte? Elizabeth Dun ing Y. W. C. A. secretary at Tokyo, Japan says it is not, even if it is good. Miss Dunning has been in Japan almost a year. She writes thtat it is th. custom for the secretaries to go t the dormitories, where Japan ese girls who are attending schools in tne city or the Y. W. C. A., train ing classes live, on Sunday nights to l.av. dinner with the girls. "We go to the dinning room and eat fish, rice and other things that are very good with the girls eating with chop-sticks, of course which is gre.it fun We always go home to our own Sunday evening supper afterwards though, as the little Jap anese food we eat always makes us hungrier for our own supper, as they no doubt would be if they were dining in America. "I am learning to have great sym path; for the little Hindoo girl who attended my own American college onc;.upon a time and got pretty thin t.-ying to subsist on American food. It isn't that the food is not good; it is the strangeness of it." Miss Dunning says that the girls talk very little at meals, as it-is not customary to conserve much at the table in Japan, but the girls in the Y. W. C. A., dormitories are learn i lg American sociability. Dust By LOUIS UNTERMEYER Listen! The dust at our feet whis pers and breathes."--It speaks in a voiceless air that is delicate but august. Hurry, it says, for the wave that rushes and seethes ' Will spend itself on the rocks and crumble with you in the dust I turn from the earth to your eyes; they are bright as before. Your ears can hear nothing grave. That is merciful and just. Thank God that you are not bur dened with knowledge and useless lore! You can dance through a world that surrenders to murder, to squalor, and lust. Thank God that your eyes are screened from the day that I see, When your laugh is a bony grim ace and the gold in your hair is rust; When your flowery hand, with its five white petals, will be A sensitive flower turned yellow, that withers and droops in the dustl And we shall be lying apart, but compassionate winds will blow, Mingling our little separateness, a handful of doubt and distrust. .And the years will come thunder ingly by, triumphantly as they go, To creep back broken and join us, with the night, in the frail dust. From the Century Magazine. I ' Student Affairs. The first graduating class of the Accelerated school will hold their class picnic Thursday at Elmwood nark Mi Nnrma Mark will eive a luncheon for the members of the class on Friday. Licensed to Wed. Charles Schneider of Fremont, Neb., was licensed to wed Miss Bernice Hamack in Chicago, Thurs day. The Chinese bride-to-be has to stand in a round, .shallow basket while she dresses for the wedding, in order to make her of good tem per and amiable disposition. GIRLS! use lemons FOR SUNBURN, TAN Try Itl Make this lemon lotion to whiten your tanned or freckled skin. Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion, and comolexion whitener, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck,- arms and hands and see how quickly the freckles, sun burn, windburn and tan disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harm less. Adv. ' "Mrs. Graham's Hair Color Restorer is Simply Wonderful" Mrs. Williams says, "I pro cured a sample of Mrs. Graham's Hair Color Restorer and was curious enough to try it. It is simply wonderful and I would not do without it." The results she obtained from this preparation can be obtained by any woman. Gray and faded hair is quickly restored to its natural color and made rich and glossy. It is a clear liquid that does not stain and is-absolutely harm less. Easy to apply and it is im possible to tell that you are using it. Can be had at the following stores: Sherman A MfeConnell Stores, Rlalto Drug Store, Beaton Drug Co., Green's Pharmacy, Haines Drug Co., Thompson Fenton Co., Merritt Drug Stores, Fen ton Drug Co., South Omaha. WOMAN'S WORK IN THE WAR It forms a glorious chapter in the history of American womanhood. She has nursed the sick and wounded- she has cared for the widows and orphans. While working for theNation her work for die Home can be lightened by serving Shredded Wheat BiscuiU ready-cooked whole wheat food that combines deliciousjy and whole somely with berries or other fruits. A Summer life-saver Cash Style Store a! WW T3 k"s Wllill'I'illlllillllilliiiiUiniiiMJn., PA A Cash Style Store ywrmk-:-. u 1812 Farnam St New Autumn Dresses New First Showing and Advance Sale Tricotines, Poiret Twills, Serges, Jerseys, Tricolettes from our New York dressmakers; values to 75.00 24.75 34.75 49.00 59.00 Stunning creations in Beautiful Autumn Suits at July prices. Silvertones, Tricotines, Velours, Serges and Goldstones. 85.00 values, this week. . 75.00 values, this week. . 74.50 64.50 65.00 values, this week. . 50.00 values, this week. , 54.50 44.75 Tricolette-Home ofTricotine Dresses, Blouses Suits, Dresses All Spring and Summer Fashions must go TWENTY TO FIFTY PER CENT REDUCTIONS. I 0 Out of the High Priced District. ' l 7 i This is not just a claim it is a fact. We testedOmar in our baking laboratory, with forty other brands. The result with Omar was about five nore loaves (per 48 pound sack) of creamy white, whole some bread, with an even texture, and a satisfying taste. Then too, Omar bread stays fresh longer than all the others. There is a scientific reason for this, but it would take a book to explain all the processes, so just try a sack of Omar next time. We know what the result will be. That is why, with every sack of Omar, there goes this guarantee: "If Omar doesn't bake the best bread you ever baked, simply take the empty sack to your fcrocer, and fcet your money." OMAHA FLOUR MILLS COMPANY Omaha, Nebraska 3500 Barrtlt Dmily Cmpity 6 H , : .Jab. - 1 UOUHAI r1" OMiUH niMiBUilKrtl 7 M