r THE OMAHA SUNDAY-BEE: NOVEMBER 23, 1919. ' 8 B AM happy jrtaral Mti mora who would not ba a per? Byron. No horn fat, bo aptkod and panalUd door, Caa kaop out death, tha postman, or tha bora. Holm. Bradford-Bigler. The marriage of Miss Edith Brad ford of Omaba and Mr. George Big ler of Kansas City, Mo., took place Tuesday evening, November 18, at f the parsonage of the First Metho dist church, Rev. Titus Lowe offi ciating. Miss Nellie Meredith and Mr. C. S.' Proctor were the only attend ants. . Mr. and Mrs. Bigler will make their future home at SiuoxCity, la. Bridal Affairs. The ushers at the wedding of Miss Margery Smith and Mr. Wil liam Van Dorn, ,which will take place. Thanksgiving day, entertained at a -theater party Saturday even ing, followed by supper at the Ath letic club when the guests included Miss Smith, Misses Winifred and Esther Smith, Miss Erna Reed,. Miss Katherine Dufourcq of New Jork, Mr. George Metcalfe, Mr. George Stocking, Mr. Richard Mallory, Mr. Porter A'.len and Mr. Burdette Kir kendall. ' , Miss Efther Wilhelm will be hos tess at dinner Monday evening at her home in honor of Miss Smith and Mr. Van Dorn. Miss Erna Reed will entertain at dinner Tuesday evening in honor of Miss Smith and Mr. Van Dorn. Mr. and , Mrs. George Cassels ' Smith will entertain the members of the wedding party at the bridal dinner Wednesday evening at the n in i V a rliiK Thp wfdflino' rehear sal at St. Barnabas' church will foM the dinner. ' Engagement Announced. Announcement is made of the en gagement of Miss Leona Cohan, daughter of Mrs.'Sara Cohan of this city, to Joseph M. Fogel of Denver, Colo., son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Fogel, of St. -Joseph, Mo. No date has been set for the wedding. For Miss Perfect. Mrs. B. F. Marshall entertained informally at luncheon at the Ath letic club Saturday, followed by a matinee party. Miss Josephine Per- ieci oi new i ui it vny, wuu ia i" guest of Miss Helen Pcarce, was the honoree. Mrs. Milton Peterson will enter lain at luncheon at the Blackstone, Monday, for Miss Perfect. i i.. !,:.. t?1j.. A beautifully appointed luncheon was given at the Athletic club Sat urday by Mis3 Gladys Wilkinson for Miss Margaret Freeman, whose marriage to.Rees Wilkinson, both of Lincoln, will take place Novem ber 26. Red roses and ferns were used for decorations and silver monogramed cards directed the guests to their places Guests from Lincoln were the Misses Elsie Grainger, Lourene Bratt, Letha Adams and Sara Apperson, from Omaha; Misses Marjorie Barrett, Eleanor McGilton, Lois Robbins, Edna Stickel Cameron, Sara Cole, Myrtle Mason, Mrs. Joseph Polcar, Miss Ruth Morse, from Gillette, Wyo. On December 10, Omahans are to have a rare treat. ' John Philip Sousa with the famous Sousa Band is to give a., concert in Qmaha on that date. The affair is to be for the benefit of the Omaha Child Sav ing Institute. A number of prom inent women of the city will be patronesses for the event and it promises to be very successful. Mrs. Charles Witte of Elkhorn was a guest of Mrs. James Walsh last week. Mrs. Quinn, who now resides at the "Old Peoples Home" came out and spent the day with Mrs. Witte while she was at the Walsh' home.. A Mrs. Julius Weil and baby of Lin coln are spending the week-end with Mrs. Carrie Livingston. Phi Chi Dinner Dance. 'The Phi Chi Fraternity of the University of Nebraska will enter tain at a house dinner dance Tues day evening. Decoration will be suggestive of Thanksgiving and the fraternity colors, green and white, will be used in forming the center piece of .the table. The chaperons for tha evening include Dr. and Mrs.- H. A. Wigton, Dr. and Mrs. Ira Church and Dr. Lyman. Conae Club. . The Conae club will entertain at a dancing party at the Blackstone Thanksgiving evening. Week-End Dancing Club. The Week-End Formal Dancing club will entertain at a dancing party Saturday evening at the Hotel Fontenelle. Kappa Psi Delta. The Kappa Psi Delta sorority will hold thejr initiation ceremonies Wednesday evening. Informal Affair. Dr. and Mrs. F. O. Beck will en tertain informally at their home Sunday evening at a musical coffee. Mrs. EllouiSe Shephard Miller, Miss Tress eys and Mr. James Colvin will participate in the program. Theta Phi. Delta. The Theta Phi Delta fraternity will entertain at a dancing party at the "Blackstone January 2. Sigma Chi Omicrom. The Sigma Chi Omicrom soror ity will entertain at a Thanksgiving dancing party Friday evening at Dundee halk. Among the nonorees will be the Misses Izma Tucker, Margaret Powell and Mabel Ras mussen. Fidelis Club. The Fidelis club of St. Cecilia's cathedral parish will entertain at cards on Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock, at the school hall.Thirty ninth and Webster streets. Coming Phi Rho Sigma Affairs. The Phi Rho Sigma fraternity of the Nebraska Medical college en tertained at their annual banquet Thursday evening, at the Chapter house. Eighty-five guests were pres ent. Linford H. Lee was the toast master. Those responding to toasts were W. A. Campbell and Drs. C. W. Poynter, A. S. Tones, A. D. Davis, I. S. Cutter, J. J. Hompes and W. L. Shearer. The fraternity colors, gold and scarlet, were car ried out with yell&w chrysanthem ums and red roses. The fraternity will give their an nual fall party Tuesday evening at the Blackstone. Invitations have been issued to 100. Paramount Club. At the Paramount Social club's "Sinner and dance Friday evening at the Blackstone hotel, Professor Moskovitz, who was the guest of honor, gave a short talk. Covers were laid for the following: Messrs S Messrs Julius Moskovlt. Ben Grata. Ijaclore Abramson. Phlneas Whlntroub. Jaok Fleishman. Herbert Lohrman. William Racusln. Bon Telpner. Isadore LeWnson. Isadora Fanger. " Nathan Brown. Misses Misses Ruth Brown. Marian Blalac. Ceclll Fox. ' Ida Telpner. Marie RBCUsln. Lottie Stein. Annette Fanger. Sylvia Telpner. . Nan Fanger. Dorothy Zucker. Tillle Burnsteln. Mrs. E. W. Nash has returned from three months spent in New York City. She visited for a .few days this week with her daughter, Mrs. George Myers, in Dubuque, la. Miss Frances Nash, who has been appearing in concert, will arrive the first part of December to remain over the holidays. i Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Rose- urntor and snru Seth' will snend Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. N. Feil. Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson will give Shakespearean readings under the, auspices of the Society of Fine Arts, Wednesday, Novem ber 26, at the Fontenelle hotel. This English actor of note has achieved success both as Shakes pearean characters and as a painter. Forbes-Robertson, born in Lon don, son of J.- Forbes-Robertson, the eminent art critic and journal ist, was educated at Charter, House and in France, and also studied painting at the Royal academy. He came to America the first time in 1885 with Mary Anderson, and with her played the roles of Pygmalion, Romeo, Orlando, Ingomar and Claude Melnotte". Later he joined Sir John Hare in "Tosca," "Lady Bountiful," and other plays, and then returned ' to Irving's produc tion of "Henry VIII." In 1900 he married Gertrude El liott, who had been a member of his English company for a year. She has since taken leading roles in almost all the plays in which he has appeared both in this country and abroad, and won great success. He was knighted by the king in 1913. So great has been his success as an actor that comparatively few people recall his talent as a painter. His original purpose was to become an artist, and with this in view he studied for several years in the Royal academy and in France at Rouen. He was commissioned by Irving to paint the famous church scene from "Much Ado About Nothing." This notable work of art was bought by the Players club of New York, and now hangs in the club house where it is an nually shown to thousands of the admirers of both actors. Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson Personals Mrs. N. Bruner and granddaugh ter, Mrs. Vera Wissler of Exira. Ia., were guests at the Gorton Roth home last week. Mrs. Frank Wulff , of Colorado Springs has ben a guest at the home of his brother, Mr. Herman Wulff and family. Mr. George Somes of Percival, la., and daughter,. Mrs. Ulrich Snead, who is on her way to Hamp ton Roads, Va., to join her hus band, were week-end guests at the C. C) Williams home. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Heneley and sons, Joe and Raymond ,are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Heneley. They are on their way to San Diego, Cal. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Green and little daughter of DeWitt, Neb., were week-end guests at the home of Mrs. Green's brother, Mr. C. H. Penoyer and Mrs. Penoyer. Mr. and Irs. Ben Morton have sold their home to Mr. W. D. Green of DeWitt, Neb., who will soon move to Benson to make their fu ture home. New Method Removes Superfluous Halt Roots! Have you "tried everything" for that annoying hairy or fuziy (trowth and a,bout given up in despair? Well, there's just one thing more to try, and you must try it, because it is the one home treatment that reaches the very root of such troubles. The new process is not to be compared at all with depilatory, electrical or any Trther method you've ever heard of. It is differ ent because it actually removes roots and' all you see the roots with your own eyes. Just get a stick of phelactine from your druggist, follow the simple instructions, and you will be delighted with the result. Phelactine is odorless, non-irritating, and can be used with entire safety you could even eat it with impunity. It is an in stantaneous method. Mr. and Mrs. J., J. Rickenbrode left Thursday for Owasso, Okla., where they will spend the winter. Mr. Charles Robinson, who re cently returned from overseas, has re-enlisted and will be stationed at Fort Logan. PAjU etaoshrdlu u u uetau auauau Little Frances Rivett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Rivett, is home from the hospital where she had her tonsils removed. Mr and Mrs. Frank Kelly Reida have returned from their wedding trip and are at the home of Mr, Reida s parents, Mr. ana Mrs. G. C. Kueiine. Misses Eunice andEusebia Man- gan left last week for Denver where they will spend a month. Miss Katherine Reynolds, who is 'attpnrlintr the University of Ne braska, is spending the week, end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Reynolds. Miss Eugenia Patterson has re covered from a slight illness. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fraser will leave the first of the week for War Work and Fresh Air Gave British Women Big Shoulders By FLOYD MACGRIFF, International News Service Staff Correspondent 'London, Nov. 22. The English beauty is broad-shouldered, Lon don's fashionable tailors have discovered. This is due to war work. Fresh air and exercise, which hundreds of thousands of. British women enjoyed for the first time in their lives owing to outdoor work in which they supplanted men, have developed such women physically. The sylph-like, angular and sometimes elegantly slender type of British beauty is mostly a war memory. The petite type has become rare. Now the full-busted, broad-shouldered beauty stands for the typically English girl. Four years of loose-fitting garments altered slim women as regards waist, expression, hips and bust. . To confirm the tailor's verdict, a Daily Chronicle representative, sex unstated, visited a famous swimming club for women. A few semi-dressed women admitted war had made them muscular. Lifting heavy weights, which would have been a difficult task for them before the war, was now easily accomplished; some of them have become proficient at driving motor cars, whereas before the, war they hadn't either the nerve or strength to do so. The club's consensus of opinion was that the women had lost flesh, while their proportions had in creased by breadth and muscle. And several stood up to prove that contention. . Seaside bathing resorts ' report that women with medium-sized figures before the war now require a size larger bathing suit, and often the larger size suits are all taken, while a line of women clamor: "This suit's too tight 1" Tailor.8 have observed that tht rather inelegant war costumes have tended to make the English women, never noted for her trimness, even more negligent of her attire; fhat she is less fussy than before the war, and that she prefers to wear tailor-made suits rather than the more elegant and flimsy costumes. has a fine presence, an intellectual fac and unusual personal magnet torn- His beautifully modulate( tones possess the charm and power of organ notes, ranging trom ten i4rnce tn Hpnths of suooressei passion. His portrayal of Hamlet was one ot the greatest oi mis gen eration. MOVIE ACTRESSES AND THEIR HAIR TV1 it. evpr nrrur to VOU that every movie actress you have seen has lovely hair, while the most popular nnnt tVipir nirls as their chief beauty? In fact, many are leading: ladies just because of their attrac-fi-im 1nnV Tnmiirv amoncr them discloses the fact that they bring out all the natural beauty of their hair by careful shampooing, not with any soap or makesnut, dut, wnn a simpie mixture by putting a teaspoonful of canthrox (which they get from the druggist) in a cup of hot water and applying this instead of soap. This full cup of shampoo liquid is enough so it is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. After its use, Ihe hair dries .nn;Hu ivith uniform color. Dan druff, excess oil and dirt are dis- sn vpd and entirely disappear, ine I,; io ca finffv that it looks much heavier than it is, its luster and soft ness are delightful p niPiiiiffl HiiiiiiiiiiwiiiiiEiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiw iHiiiii m ' ! . SUITS Snappy styles, strictly up-to-the-minute. Included are: Serges, Tricotines, Velours, Broadcloths, Poiret Twills and many other wanted fabrics made up in a faultless manner. Come and look them over $35, ?45. $55 A CHARGE ACCOUNT AT -BEODEO'S means you enjoy a much longer period of payment of your purchases than you enjoy at ordinary stores. . 1417 Douglas Street America's Best ' v FasMoins The woman who is looking for a high-grade coat of character and has delayed her purchase because of the prohibitive prices attached to desirable coats will take great satisfaction in selecting from these assortments. v Handsome, luxurious models that have every char acteristic of expensive garments from the genuine fur collars to the. exquisite silk linings. FINE BROADCLOTHS, SILVERTONES, 4 WOOL VELOURS, NORMANDY MIX- 1 TURES, SILK SEAL PLUSH AND EVORA CLOTH. $35v$85 Coat I "" t Bn T ' mm "Tr r"m Texas, where they will spend Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. T. Belt .have given up their apartment at the St. Regis and have rented the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Dodge for a year. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Mege'ath ex pect to leave the first of December for Long Beach, Cal., where they will spend the winter. Mr. Burdette Kirkendaty, who has spent the last four months in Lynn, Mass., arrived home Monday and will enter the Kirkendall shoe busi ness. Mr. H. O. Edwards is ill at his home, where he has been confined for the last two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. James Woodard of Roundup, Mont, announce the birth of a son. Mr. Woodard formerly lived in Omaha and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James I. Woodard. Mrs. Fred . Hamilton has gone to New York City, where she ex pects to remain several weeks. She wis accompanied by her mother and sister, Miss Anne Robertson, who arrived last week from California and have been the guests of Mrs. Hamilton. E. A Bullock' has gone to Califor nia to spend the winter. Miss Olga Metz ieaves Sunday for New York where she will spend several weeks. . Mr. and Mrs. Herbert French and small daughter, and Miss Jose phine Congdon, arrived Saturday flr-, IT PLEASES from St. Louis. Mr. and Mrs. French will reside In Omaha perma nently. They will be at the Isaac Congdon home for the present Dr. Waldo Scott of Chappell. Neb., who has been the-guest of Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Scott, returned to his home Saturday accompanied by his mother, who will spend Thanksgiving there. Mrs. Jennie Elliott and her grandsons, Ray and Lloyd, spent Saturday in Omaha. Mr. Henry Doorly has purchased the home of George Platner at 322 South Thirty-sixth street, but will not occupy it until next spring. Mr. Howard Baldrige in on a business trip in the east. Mr. Milton C. Peters and son, Mr. Douglas Peters, left Tuesday even ing for New York City where they will spend 10 days. They attended the Yale-Harvard game Saturday. Mr. and Mn. Isaac Carpenter, jr., will leave .Tuesday for Chicago, where they will spend several days. Mrs. Raymond Lowe expects to leave December 1 for Little Rock. Ark., where she will visit her pa rents, Mr. and Mrs. toward, uor nish. ' Barber Gives Recipe - for Gray Hair Mr. A. E. O'Brien, who has been barber in New York City for many years, made the following state ment: "Gray, streaked or faded hair can be immediately made black, brown or light brown, whichever shade you desire, by the use of the following remedy that you can make at home: "Merely tret a box of Orlex pon der at any drug store, it costs very little -and no extras to bay. Pis- j solve it in 4 oz..of distilled or rain water and comb it through the hair. Full directions for use and a gold bond guarantee come in each box. One box will last you for months. "It is safe, does not rub off, is not sticky or gummy and leaves the hair , fluffy. It will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger." it) D HARP E SCHOOL - L Harp. Q Furnlskad N Pupil 308 Lyric Bldf. Phon Douf. 8704 0 Diamonds -1 Wise Purchase Quality Stones of Permanent Value Diamonds good diamonds axe now at the height of popularity. With curtailed production and an ever increasing demand prices are bound to advance steadily for years to come. You may purchase here only diamonds that have been selected after minute inspection and critical comparisons. The finer the dia mond the greater its natural in create in value. You may depend upon our recom mendations as honest and authoritative. C. B. BROWN CO. Diamond Merchants Jewelers. 16th and Farnam Sts. The United States Government's spending more than twenty mil-' lion dollars in San Diego in permanent stations for its air, land and sea forces, because official tests proved the ad vantages, in comfort and efficiency, of its equable climate and continuous sunshine. Home gf your dreams Rose-clad in January and immune from the rigors of heat and cold, your ideal home is ready for you in. San Diego, California, where the sun shines more than 350 days each year. Here, orchards and plantations of the apple and pear, . the navel orange and the fig, the grapefruitf lemon and guava, vineyards and produce gardens, slope to the edge of bay and ocean and rise through upland valley around a thriving modern city of 85,000 inhabitants. Warships in the bay, army and navy aviators flying daily over the city, the free out-of-door pipe-organ recital every afternoon in the great park, the early Spanish mission buildings, four hundred miles of splendid boulevard reaching into the mountain passes, combine to make every day v an adventure in happi ness m Califo X continuous sunshine. J JJJJ ; m- Sign tha coupon Ij'w and get - it free return lS-1"" mail. - rnia. Through Pullman service between San Diego and Chicago on the new San Diego and Arizona Railway, in connection with the Rock Island and Southern Pacific, commences December 10, 1919. A delightful trip in winter months through mild climate and new and interesting country. SAN DIEGO-CALIFORNIA CLUB, 631 Spreckels Building, San Diego, California. Gentlemen : I should- like to know more about San Diego, California. Please send me your free booklet. Name. Street City. ; .State