THE OMAHA' SUNDAY BEE i - MARCH 28, 1920. Engagement Announced. Mr. and Mrs.'R. S. Morrow an ' nounce the engagement of their ; daughter, Florence, to Donald D. Elliott of this city. . Nd date has . been set for the wedding. - Wedding Date. Mr. Charles . Smith announces - the engagement of his daughter, : Delia Rosetta Smith, to Mr. Philip ' Jensen of this city. The marriage will take place April 7, at the home of the bride, 336 North Forty-first street. The couple will make their home in Omaha. ., Engagement Announced. Mr. and Mrg; J. Berstein an nounce the engagement of their daughter, Blanche Gerber, to Max Kaplan. No date has been set for ; the wedding. . Cohen-Meyers. The marriage ot .Miss Veta Mey ers, daughter of Mrs. Anna Meyers, "and Charles Cohen, will take place Sunday evening at th home of the bride. - Rabbi Morris Taxon will of ficate. " The young couple will re side at the Meyers home after ; April 15." ' ' Wedding Anniversary. Mr. nd Mrs. M. L. Corwich enter tained at their home, Sunday, March21v In- honor of their 15th wedding anniversary, r. 1 Merry Makers Club. v A dance will be given at the Ben Hur academy Wednesday eve ning By the Merry Makers' club. , e ' . ."-Drama League Notes. MraT George Prinz, chairman of courtesies of the Drama league will give a luncheon at the Fontenelle, Tuesday, in honor of Dhan Gopal Mukerji, the lecturer, who will ad dress' the Drama league at 4 o'clock at the Fontenelle Tuesday afternoon; ::Thfi guests will be the members .of the executive commit tee of the Drama league. Rabbi - Cohn, John L. Webster and Earl 1 Gannett will also be present. Mu kerji Ivill speak on "The India of Kipling jind Tagore." , X- - A Card; Party.: - . The2 women of the Holy Angels parish will give 4 card party Tues day afternoon i; ?t the parish hall,1 Twenty-ejghth and Fowler streets. ; Sorority Luncheon, v Misses Alice Shedy and "Hazel 'Cook entertained alumnae members of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority at an attractive luncheon at the Omaha Athletic club Saturday noon. Covers were jaid for 15. , , "y Recital , 1 Artist pupils of. A. M. Borglum, gave if recital Friday evening at the Borglum home. Those taking part were Eleanor Lear, Irene Trumble, Frances Robinson, Mary Ure and Richard Bender, . Fine Arts Lecture. - ThelOmaha Society of Fine Arts will present George-". Breed Zug at 3:45 Tuesday afternoon, April 6, " 'irXr Hotel Fontenelle in a lec ture on art' Mr. Zug is head of the ' department of fine arts in Dartmouth college. He is said to express his views in a vivid and entertaining manner. Leap Year Dance. A leap year dance will be given by the Thorpeian Athletic club, Sun day evening, March 28, at Kel-Pine's dancing academy, Twenty-fifth and Farnam streets. Dinner For Guest. i Mr. and Mrs. Edwin T. Swobe en tertained at a dinner of 10 covers, Saturday f evening, at the Athletic club in honor of their guest, Mrs. Alice Brideham Brown of Denver. J.'W. Club. Mesdames Earl W. Sherman and Charles Hubbard will entertain the J. W. F. club Thursday, evening at the Sherman home, 318 South Fifty second street. " : Card Party. A card party will be given by North Omaha Degree of Honor, at the A. O. U. W. temple. Fourteenth and Dodge ftreets, on Thursday eve ing, April 1. ' Benefit Card Party. A card party will be given Tues day afternoon jn the Palm room of the Fontenelle by the members of the Jewish Women's Relief society. . Dancing Club. ' A dance will be given Monday evening at Crounse hall. Sixteenth and Capitol avenue, by the Monday Night Dancing club. v '- To Give Dance Revue. Miss Adeliade Fogg will present her pupils in a dance revue at the Brandeis, the evening of April 30. Musical. Miss Loretta De Lone Is in charge of the musical to be given April 3, at the Creighton auditorium, for the benefit of the St. Philip Neri school. ; Fortnightly Musical Club. An amateur musical club recently! organized here has been named the "Fortnightly Musical - club." Mrs.; Howard Kennedy is president of the organization; Mrs. John P.. Morri son, vice president, and Mrs. Guy Cox, secretary-treasurer,; .The1 prov gram committee consists of Mes dames George S.' Johnston, . Roy Page and R. A. Walker. The mem bers ' include Mesdames Clinton Bromef Wilhelm Bennekemper, Henry Cox, William Ritchie. Wil liam G, Shaw, Raymond Ewing Davis, Charles Sykes, John Hasley and George Tunnisori and Miss Louise White. The club is making elaborate plans for next year. :--": Birthday Party. 1 Mrs. John K. Hazzard entertained for 20' guests at her home Friday evening in honor of the 18th birth day of her grandson, Benjamin Mead. .Miss Cora Lorance assisted the hostess. , Dancing Party. - Students of Central High School will hold a subscription dance at Harte hall, Friday evening, April 2, Makes Plans for, Summer ( ( - 1 r ' " r - s r 4 O .' X ' ('! J'S V Its Mrs. T. F. Quinlan spent the summer two years ago at Long Beach, Cal. The golden sands and moping waves of the seashore are lurinsr her back. With her three sons, Gerald, John and Tom, jr., she will leave Julie 1 for a sojourn in that great out-of-doors. ' Informal Affair. Mr. and Mrs. MdTris Cohan were honorees at an informal affair given at their home Thursday evening. Those present were Misses Betty, Evelyn and Eva Cohan, and Messrs. and Mesdames Max, M., Jack, Joa and D. Cohan, H. .Rimmerman, H. Krasne and I. Klein. Miss Winifred Lathrop arrived Saturday from Rockford college, Illinois, to spend the spring vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lathrop. Miss Lucile Lathrop will not return, as the Uni versity of Colorado, which she at tends, will not have a vacation pe riod. ' Misses Elizabeth and Meliora Davis have returned from New York City, where they stopped on their return from Sea Breeze. Fla. Benefit Lecture. The illustrated lecture on Rome and the Temples of God which will be c''v'en Easter Sunday night at Creighton auditorium by the Cath olic Womens' Research club, will be first shown Easter Sunday afternoon at 2:30 for sisters of the different communities. The proceeds of the evening lecture will start a library fund for the new Mercy home at Nineteenth and Davenport streets, where the Sisters . of Mercy have taken up, the work of providing homes for working girls coming to Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Borghoff an nounce the birth of a son Friday morning at Frederick hospital. ' Arthur Crittenden Smith, jrM re turns Monday to St. Marks school, after spending his vacation with his parents. " v Th ' Working Horn . of tha .' "Vfwn of pcV N a "mcghihy fine All. the romance of a twentieth century, business day is passing between the four, walls of this building every, minute of every day, offering " Steady, profitable and agreeable em ployment, with promotions to more re sponsible positions as rapidly as your ability is shown, -l . The best possible working conditions in the most modern of office buildings, with congenial associates a beautifully fur nished rest room for your enjoyment in your rest periods and," what is more to the point, good pay from the day you start, with frequent increases. ; ' A training course given to. every em ployee by our efficient instruction staff, fitting her for her position before she is assigned to commercial work. - If your present employment does not of fer these advantages, you should by all means look into this offer very thor oughly. Call Miss Bell, 318 New Tele phone Building. The American Telephone and Telegraph Company Long Distance Lines Department , ' Personals - Mrs. Ella B.. Maher left Friday for Hollywood, Cal., where she will spend several months. She was accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Lou Waddick of Norfolk. Miss Gladys Wilkinson of Lin coln will come to Omaha early in the week. , v idarjorie Barrett left Saturday for New York and other eastern points. She will return in June. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Jenkins will leave Omaha within the next two weeks to reside in Galesburg. 111. Mr. , Frederick Daugherty, who has spent the winter in Omaha, re turned Monday to his ranch in Bel mar, Neb. Miss Erna Reed, who has been at Excelsior Springs, will spend this week-end with friends in Kan sas City. fr Rohcrt fiarrptt. who was called to Cleveland, O., last week by the death of his arrandmdther. re turned this morning. . Mrs. W. A. Fraser, who has been in Excelsior Springs the past week, is suffering from a broken leg. I Mr. Tames Connell. who a'.tends Yale, will spend a lew days of his vacation in New York, after which he will join Mr. William Nicholson, who is at Dartmouth, and they will spend several days on a camping trip near Dartmouth. Mr. Robert Bradford and mother, Mrs. Louis Bradford, who spent several days in Omaha, left Wed nesday for Washington, D. C Mr. Bradford expects to return to Europe as a member, of the diplo matic corps, but does not know to which country he will be sent. Elizabeth Beech of Chicago ar rived Saturday to spend a week as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Drisjiaus. ' ' , Mr. an'd Mrs. George Christiancy of New York City arrived yesterday on 'their return from California, and will spend the week-end as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Barton Mil lard. . ' Colonel and Mrs. William Cowin and children of Battle Creek, Mich are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crittenden Smith. 7 Mr. and Mrs. John Cudahy and son, Michael, who arrived Thursday from Hollywood, are stopping at the Cowin home. Mr. and Mrs. Hoxie Clarke and slaughters, who have spent the win- Eleanor Austin Niles Returns to Spend Easter Here. fH f V ,. --V-- n1' r - - -I mmw P v 1 v. "TNT, 7 m?.S si l 1 V. Mrs. Thomas Burnet Niles. Mrs. Thomas Burnet Niles, nee Eleanor Austin, arrived Saturday evening to spend Easter .with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Aus tin. Mrs. Niles since her njarriage last summer, resided in Indianapolis, but is now making her home at Sewickley, a suburb of Pittsburgh, where Mrs. Samuel Cooper, jr., for merly Esthen Wilhelm, also lives, Mrs. Niles', will remain here for sev eral weeks. Mr. Niles is expected to join her later. ter in Omaha, leave April 10 for St Louis and a southern trip before re turning to their home in Belvedere. N. Y. t Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Byrne have sold their home at '2101 California street and have bought Mr. Louis Doup's hove at 3607 Jackson street. Y; W. C. A. Vesner Service. "Suhdaj'T March 28, opens health week at the Y. W. C. A. with a talk by Dr. Abbic Virgina Holmes dur ing vesper service, from 5 to 6 p. m, The vesper service is in charge of the gymnasium department and a so cial hour will follow with a program of special music. . Health Week. The other lectures by Dr. Holmes will take place on Monday at 7:30 p. m., iuesday at 7:30 p. m. and Thursday at 7:30 p. m, in the audi torium of the Y. W. C A. 1 he gen eral topic of the series is "The Bus iness of Being a Woman. These lectures are open to all girls and women of Omaha, and a most cor dial invitation is extended to all to take advantage of this opportunity of hearing Dr. Holmes, who has been lecturing for the past two years before students in the colleges, uni versities and normal schools. ' A special course of lectures have been arranged for girls of the high school age on Monday and Tuesday afternoons at 3:3U and a third Iec ture, the time for which will be an nounced later. : On each day of health week a free clinic will be held from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m., at which time special ad vice will be given on feet and posture. We hope that many will avail themselves . of this oppor tunity. ' Col. Edwin A. Havers of New York Citv. who for years has been lecturing on the Chautauqua plat form on historical subjects, is now devoting his time to industry. On Thursday evening. April 1, at 8:30 p. m., he will give an illustrated lec ture in the Y. W. C. A. auditorium on "The Evolution of the Pen." Be ginning with the stone age, the an cient writers on stone, he carries vou through the history and romance of the days of Abraham up to tne pres ent day. He comes to Omaha very highly recomn :d. The mayor of New ,- aven. ' say . "The story 1 .d by Colonel Haver is a story " that shows the civilization of the world in a manner that thrilled the listeners." This lecture is free and will be given following the health lecture by Dr. Abbie Virginia Holmes and the public is cordially invited to attend. The board of directors of the Na tional Woman's Association of Commerce in session at Columbus, O.. adopted a resolution favoring the standardization of dress for business women to combat the high Cost of Mrs. Winona V. Summons, the first woman rural mail carrier in northern California, makes a 52-milc trip daily. Is Urderly : Home rw Y'fi MS , Mrs. William Archibald - Smith, chairman of the Day Nursery, is expected home today from a three weeks' stay in Excelsior Springs. During Mrs. Smith's absence, Mrs . George A. Joslyn has had complete charge of the Day Nursery. Under her efficient management the nursery is runnfng with the smooth ness and regularity of the well ordered home. Despite many othet duties Mrs. Joslyn has been at tin ' nuisery. each day from 8:30 in the morning until 5 or later in the' after noon excepting on Fridays whet. 1 Mrs. Baldrige has been in charge. :' The children in the nursery rang! ' from 4 months to' 5 years. " Mrs Katherine Glenn, the head nurse has demonstrated the ease Witl 'hicl all of the children, althougr representing different homes, rtiaj' ' be induced to take their afternoof -naps at the same hour ' Before children may be admitted to the nursery they must be regis tered by the parent or guardian. Assisting Mrs. Joslyn in caring for the children and in sewing are: Mesdames W. S. Robertson, J. C McKinnan, Roy Page, C. L. Blis sard, Ed Agee, H. H. Baldrige and ' group. E. A. Pegau, George Ashton, ' Stevenson, Robert Garrett, Hal Pritchett. Osborne. Milton Peterson, Tack Webster; Misses Marion Wei- ' ler, .Helen Pierce. Nan 'Murphy, Elsa Storz, Gertrude Stout, Vir- ' ginia Offutt and Elizabeth Bruce. Democratic Women Will . Present Mrs. Olson of - i Minnesota. - . " Mrs. Peter Olson "of 'Cloquct, Minn., will be .in Omaha Friday under the auspices of the women's ; democratic dry committee. "A lunch eon will be given in her honor at '4 the Hotel Fontenelle. Mrs.-Olson"7 will address a meeting for women in the ballroom of the hotel fol lowing the-luncheon. In the eve, ning she will speak to a mixed au dience in the Swedish auditorium. ' : Mrs. Olson was one 'of the' most ' effective orators among wdmen at- tending the recent Chicago suffrage " convention. v Mrs. Georgianna Duer is New jerseys only woman sheriff. Since she begun her campaign against crime in the little town of Red Bank, of which she is also mayor and chief of police, there has been a noted ab sence of crooks 4n that territory. IB - - No. 8. ;1 . " - - J 40,320,000 Gallons 40,320,000 gallons of water are used daily by the Nebraska Power Company. This is more than the daily out put of Omaha's . Metropolitan Water District to all the rest of Omaha. The power company maintains its own water plant Nebraska Power Go. 8