V 12 THE BEE! OMAHA. SATURDAY. JANUARY 31.. 1920. 1 0 It la hnpeailbla for a man to b cheat1 by anyeaa but Mmi.lf, ae for a thing ta ba anri to ba at tha aama That la aaaiataiui abaat a wadding (nra prattler than la any ether fowa in the word. . Dauglaa Jarrold. Emereea. AOJCIETY W ' 1 1 1 . & Grimes-McDonald. i.The' marriage of Miss Nellie Mc- Sonald of Omaha and Albert rimes of New Holland, Ohio, took dlace Wednesday afternoon. Rev. A. F. Ernst of Lowe Avenue Pres byterian church officiated. Mr. and Srs. Grimes. will, make their home New Holland. . . , . Z Darst-Liverty. J Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Laverty announce the engagement of their daughter, Ruth, to Guilford R. Darst f Ashland, Neb. No date has been act for the wedding, but it will prob ably take place in spring. Engagement Announced. Mr. and Mrs. L. Kneeter an ibunce the engagement of their lighter, Sarah, to A. Maisel. No te has been set for the wedding. I.. Will Entertain at Luncheon. Mrs. Willard, Hosford will enter- '- tain at a luncheon at her home, Monday, in honor of Mrs. frank Wilhelm. Mr. and Mrs. Hosford had planned a dinner for Friday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Wilhelm, but owing to unforeseen circumstances they will not arrive until Saturday. They will be here to attend the wedding of Miss Esther Wilhelm and Mr. Samuel Cooper of Pittsburgh. ' ; . For Mrs. Weil. - ' Mrs. A. D. Cloyd entertained in formally at luncheon at the Com jnercial club Friday for Mrs. Harry Weil who is visiting Mr.v and Mrs. jbhn T. Yates. Covers were placed fiv?- IX' Kappa Sigma Affairs. JjA luncheon will be given af the Witiversity club Saturday, by the Omaha and Council BlujTs alumni Of the Kappa Sigma fraternity. Wtlobert Hughes will entertain at a smoker Saturday evening for the alumni at his home, 2420 Crown Point avenue. Affairs for Esther Welhelm. Miss Gertrude Stout entertained at luncheon at her home, Friday, in honor of Miss Esther Wilhelm and her fiance, Samuel Cooper of Pitts burg. Spring flowers formed the centerpiece. Covers were placed for Miss Erna Reed, Dorothea and Mary Cooper, Gertrude Stout. Esther Wilhelm, Messrs. George Stocking:, George Metcalfe, Burdette Kirkendall, Charles Allison, Robert Serre of Pittsburg, Robert McMurdy of New York, Alex Revelle of Chi cago, and Samuel Cooper. The groom, 'with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cooper, and sister. Miss Dorothea Cooper arrived Fn day morning. Charles Allison re turned home Thursday evening from Ames college, Iowa, Mr. McMurdy, Mr. Seeree and Mr. Revelle, also ar rived in Omaha f-nday. Burdette Kirkendall entertained at dinner at the Glenn C. Wharton home, Friday evening for the mem bers of the Cooper-Wjlhelm wedding party. Covers were placed for 14. Mr. and Mrs. David Baum enter tained at dinner - at . the Fontenelle Friday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cooper. FinK roses formed the centerpiece. L heir guests were Messrs. and Mesdames C. M. Wilehelm, John L, Kennedy, Walter Head, Luther Drake, C. C. George, Frank Judson, Clement Chase, and H. H. Baldridge, Informal Affair. Misses Ruby and Pearl Klingbeil entertained informally at their home Friday afternoon. numbered 10. Their guests Week End Dancing Club. The regular dancing party at the Fontenelle, Saturday evening, to be given Dy tne weeK una Dancing club, has been postponed until tea ruary 14. ' IAKEKSC0CQ ISXOOD fir : Breakfast Luncheon Dinner Supper Any tfme that any one wants a delicious drink with a real, satisfying, sustaining food value. We guarantee its purity and high 'quality. We have been making chocolate and cocoa for nearly 140 years. if 1 lJjjllls Heart Peats By A. K. Rights Ranrv.d ' WALTER BAKER & CO.. Established 1780. DORCHESTER' MASS z f :' -TT tL ' ..' f y . V in ' ii-' 1 T ' L " There is nothing sweeter or more genuine than the appeal these lit tle ones put , up, when asking Mother for some BREAD and But ter and Jam. It's funny how quickly they learn to specify their favorite BREADS. Neither price, weight of loaf nor the 'grocer's desire K to "push" a cheaper kind "" means anything to them. Their little mouths are the best judges of delicious, whole some BREAD, and the kind they always ask for is , (Hard Moll i All Just escapingl E very thin g And everyone On Broadway iust escaping, lying motors Dashing madly ' ' Keep us darting Keep us dashing . For the drivers Have no thought ' Of human life We must escape them. The divorce .court's jaws Are yawning Iron-man judges" Scowling men and wives In life's triangles Are longing to escape. In the Village There's a night court Where young girls y Are dragged . And i questioned AndSvomen beg for leniency Release. ' But they're caught The drag-net got them And they're mired In moral slime. Millions more Are just escaping Who may be trapped One short hour hence v Little show girls Sometimes hungry Try to stay Within the-Jaw Of right and wrong. But their best And wisest planning Often slips And sends them down While the rest Are just escaping And know not when Their turn will come. There are battles - Ever raging On old Manhattan Isle The survival of the fittest Is the law They all observe. Hence the motor cars Divorce courts Subways Taxis Loves . And scandals Are all waiting , Hoping Watching ' For a chance to crush -And kill Even now they gloat O'er victims Who took a chance And missed the cue -Jn the mad Sad desperation r Of New York. . SELAH. Luncheon for Visitors. Mrs. RoBert Manley entertained at luncheon at the Athletic club Friday in honor of the Misses Cath erine and Margaret Joy or Marshall, Mith., whc are the guests of Mrs. VV. R. Wood. Spring flowers formed the centerpiece and covers were placed for eight. Omaha Peru Club. The Omaha Peru club will meet at 8 p. m. Saturday, January 31, at the Y. W. C. A. for an informal din ner and get-together meeting Former students and friends of the normal will attend. Professor W. N. Delzejl and Miss Mattie Cook Ellis will be guests of honor. Miss Florence West has been nominated by President Wilson as receiver of public moneys at Pueblo, Colo. How to Make Up For the i home, the street anT social affairs. Sane, sensible suggestions by The v Dolly 'Sisters Florence G. Kramer is the adver- j ." r . it' t r 1 using manager or a oig xew xorK concern, and handles advertising for nationally advertised boy's clothing. Ninety per cent of the letters she gets are addressed "Dear Sir." TORTURED TEXAS WOMAN WRITES V i a.. . The Use and Abuse of Rouge. Women buy rouge indiscriminate ly. Tfyat it is red is all they know about it. Most of them' don't know whether they want a dry rouge or a grease. If whoevertaught women to blush could see them nowl I have seen them blushing on the sides of -their chins and in one spot onne cheek and another spot on the other cheek. Sometimes this evidence of a lack of care is funny, but oftcner it is distressing. To hang over the kitchen stove long enough to see where the origin ator of pink cheeks intended them to be" colored ii an excellent idea. If you watch your face when it is slightly overheated, and natu rally flushed, you can see where the color should be placed most becom ingly. You can't improve much on nature's blushes, but you can pro vide a substitute for the pink cheeks nature denies you. Only please put them where nature intended they should be. Do not use too dark a rouere. That is a common mistake among women who don t know. Any rouge should be mixed with plenty of orange color, or it won't look natural in daylight. If you prefer a grease rouge, put it on after you have applied thf cream and massaged the face well. It is always well to use a little of the grease rouge for a foundation. It is easily blended. .If the cheek bones are prominent they may be rouged plentifully .be cause the color makes them less prominent. Put rouge on the fea ture tobe lessened. If the eyes are deep' set there should be no rouge around them. IP the', eyes are .protruding the rouge will make them appear better set. A hollow in the cheeks is filled with white powder and NOT with color. This is the commonest of all mistakes. Rouge makes the hollow look like a cavern. If the face is round and large, the temples and cheeks away back into the hair may be rouged with excellent effect. This gives the face the desired narrower appear ance. Liquid rouge chaps the face. It is not recommended. Touch the tips of the ears with pink if the hair is dressed so that they show. Religious Bars Not Let Down by Y.W.CA r- "The unalterable purpose f . th V W C. A. is to hrinar arirls an women into a closer personal rela tionship with Jesus Ltinst, says Mrs. Carrie Campbell, general sec ntirv n( th Omaha Y. W. C. A "Wi ar not cnntemolatinfir letting oown religious oars io mciuucisiu We have ciscussed at our come mrpc this wpplr a (-)lATlire in OUT na tional constitution which would per nut girls who live up io xne spinx o h V W C A anri believe in it: .'i A. . I . v. .a. - - fnndatripntnl nrinrinlps Ck eniov full privileges of membership in the or ganization, ihis nas not Dcea cratitoH tieretnf nre ffxcent to those in membership with Protestant evangelical churches. ' T 'Viai' wnrHs arrnrrtuicr trt Mrs Campbell, one does not have to be a member of a Protestant evangel ical church in order, to become s memtifr in full stanmnir in the Y W. G A. It will be necessary for such persons, however, to mace a statement of their beliefs, and such beliefs must be in harmony with Y. W. C. A. ideals and ournoses. "In student association cabinets not more than cne-third of the member ship shall ' be non-members of Protestant evangelical churches. In national conventions only Y. W. members affiliated with Protestant evangelical churches can vote," says una, aiuy ucii. The two-daws' conference at the Omaha Y. W. C. A. closed Thurs day night with a representative Prominent Club Woman Suffragist and Republican. 1 Standing On Her Feet Torture to This Lady. Had to Ride Everywhere She Went, .Until Cardui Brought Relief. McKinney, Texas. Mrs. A. B. StovalU of this place, writes t "Some time ago I was in a critical condi tion. -We only lived two squares from town, yet I wasn't able to walk the two squares. ' I had to ide everywhere I went and suffered at that, but not so much as when I tried to walk. Stand ing on my feet was torture. My greatest suffering was in my right side. It was so sore and I felt if I stepped down or jarred myself the least bit I could not stand it so just walked mostly tiptoe. This kept up until I was just about dis couraged and decided I had best try something else. ' Someone told me of Cardui, and where it had benefited pases similar to mine. I felt at least it would not hurt to give it a trial. After my first bottle I felt better there was less pain and soreness in my "side. , . After my third bottle' of Cardui I was well and have been ever since." Cardui may need. Try ft be just what you Miss Mary Garrett Hay is regard ed by women in the past as an illustration of the effectiveness of women in the political circles of our nation. Her fearlessness, inde pendence and ability, they say, have been a revelation to men who have heretofore been afraid of the en trance of women into affairs of gov ernment. Miss Hay was the genius who guided the successful campaign for suffrage in New York. She succeeded in maintaining all the work on a strictly nonpartisan basis. After the vote had been won, she affiliated with the republican party and was selected by that organiza tion as chairman of the resolutions committee a position never before 9ccorded to a woman in the state of New York. She- is now on the re publican women's committee. In organizations of women's clubs, Miss Hay i,s- very popular, and her qualities as a leader have been of great value in the various channels of federated club activity. She is the second vice president of the National American Woman Suffrage association, and will be in attend ance at the Chicago convention, February. 12-18. Motion Picture Films. The educational committee of the Omaha Woman's club, has succeeded" in procuring Americanization films to be used at the community centers and elsewhere in Omaha. The mu nicipal reference library of New York made it possible for the educa tional committee to procure these films. The library has catalogued and classified all civic motion pic tures. Story Hour. The story hour is now being con ducted by Mrs. John Giles in the main auditorium of the city hall. Next Saturday morning at 10 the stories told by Mrs. Giles will be "Lillian's Lost Crown," "King Al fred, the Beggar," and "Jacob's Dream.", v , Art ' Department A special meeting of the art de partment, Omaha Woman's club, was held Thursday afternoon, Jan uary 29, at the home of Mrs.- L. F. Easterly, department leader. Fif teen members were present to hear arrexcellent prosrram given bv Mrs. CI.. Roberts Personals , Mr. and Mrs. Guy L. Smith are recovering from an attack influ enza. - A son, Robert Douglas, was born. January 22 to Mr. and Mrs. R. D. frown. Mrs. brown was tornierly Miss Isabclle Frances Ham. Miss Mildred White has returned from Chicago. Mrs. O. Y. Kring is convalescing from an illness at her home. Mrs. J. E. Helms left Thursday for her lome at Webster, S. D. She has. been visiting her sons, Donald and Harold Helms, and daughter, Miss Eva Helms. Prominent New York , society women, members of the National League for Women's Service, acted as judges in a series of boxing bouts staged recently in the army base liospital at Fox Hills, Staten Island, for the entertainment of wounded soldiers. ESCAPED AN OPERATION Bv Taking Lydia E Pink ham's Vegetable Com pound Many Such Cases. Cairo7 111. " Sometime ago 1 sot so bad with female trouble that I thought I would have to be oper ated on. I bad a bad displacement. My right side would pain me and I was so nervous I could not hold glass of water. Many times I would have to stop my work and sit down orl would fall on the floor in a faint I consulted several doctors and every one told me the same but I kept fighting to keep from having the operation. I had read so many times of Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Comnpnnd and it helped my sister so I began taking it I have never felt better than I have since then and I keep house and am able to do all my work. The Vege table Compound is certainly one grand medicine' Mrs. J. R. Matthews, 8311 Sycamore Street, Cairo, 111- Of course there are many serious cases that only a surgical operation will relieve. We freely acknowledge this, but the above letter, and many others like it amply prove that many operations are recommended when medicine in many cases is all that is needed. , group in attendance. The Industrial Section club acted as hostess for the occasion. Members from the Busi ness JVomen's club, Omaha univer sity and other groups participated in the meeting. The purpose of the confere..ce was to educate the. membership in re gard to issues which will come up at the national convention of the Y. VV. C. A. in Cleveland, April 13-20. The three big issues discussed lo cally were; (1) Proposed student amendment to the constitution which would allow for the alternate basis of membership above referred to. (2) National policy of finance. (3) Industrial standards. New Mexico Will Ratify. Washington, Jan. 30. Governor LarrazoTb, of New Mexico, while in Washington attending conferences pertaining to irrigation and publi lands questions, said he would caU. & special session of the New Mexico legislature to act on suffrage as soon as he returns home. He is of tha opinion hat the suffrage amendment will be favorably acted upon som time between February 10 and IS. Governor of Arizona says his tat will ratify before February 10. Mrs. Robert H. Elder, who i head of the, women's police re serves in Brooklyn and Queens, is soon to have a corps of women aviators attached to her force Women between 18 and 25 years oi . age are eligible, providing they can pass the physical tests, which call for perfect condition. The flights will be made at Fort Washington, where men flyers will train the women. Berg's ae 06 ce 03 as 05 SPECIAL Coat and Dress SALE Berg's Women's Shop 1621 FarnamSL Our Entire Stock of Winter Coats All styles and materials, at five special prices $15.00 Worth to $35.00 $25.00 Worth to $49.50 $35.00 Worth to $75.00 $45.00 Worth to $95.00 $59.50 Worth to $150.00 Dress Sale Dresses that sold pi QQ up to $45.00, now Serge -AH Wool Paulette, Jersey Satins, Taffeta, Georgette. WONDERFUL VALUES Blouses Specially Priced at $4.95-$8.95-$10 and $12 t9 TO "I to OS to 90 CO TO 1 OB (7frrw Till -.v" '.vc- caai JV i yi V I I 1621 Farnam St. i ; yl F. fi fil ' MR. GROCER:' fjt D BOOt Shop( We Have Created a Demand ?or Y H 16th and Farnam i UUlvA Anchor Nut Margarine WSO Ladies' -Boots Have IfST&l H A VV 111. portunity 16 purchase- high y JS" J 1,aND Slinnlv? r fW grade boots at uch a aacrifice. l lOU Vi "JUppiyi PT AU F' M' booU to 19 at7 I OLEOMARGARINE W ' & $5-45 I 'V AN I ' Di8t"Me?by iT fSSiM B Fairmont Creamery Co. U 'lpffWf ah f.am. H 7 AT ALL GROCERS I V-l 'V'4p 8S ' "JIF !L phone Duga' 2793- lwmt lk$k? if t PRINTING f V BJJ tlf X 1 I COMPANY X . If ftSStVo COHMCRCUlPRIMTERS-LlTHOGRAPHERS-STEELOlEEMBOSSMS Ur 3aa toosc LEAF Evicts