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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 23, 1920)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MAY 23, .192. 5 B Many Parties At Field Club . Field club was the scene of many mart parties Saturday evening at ' ,he -opening dinner dance. The club colors, green and white, pre dominated in the decorations. Fluffy chiffons, crisp organdies, clinging georgettes- and stunning sport suits vied .with each other when worn by pretty maids and beautiful matrons. ' , One of the largest parties was given by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trimble. The centerpiece at their table was formed by lavender sweet pas and Ward roses.. Covers vyers placed for Messrs. and Mesdames Will Perry, T. I. Donohue, Will Styrker, Harry Weller, John Garni Me, E. M. Wellman. W. M. Giller, P. W. Miksell, Fred Dale, Harold Sobotker. Will Yohe, Carl Swanson, M. M. Murray, Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Pulver, Miss Roberta Trimble, Messrs. Arthur Trimble, H. Duvall of New York and Ralph Wilder. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Bover enter tained 36 guests. Decorations for i the table were pink roses and lilacs, j covers were placed for Mr. and Mrs. George Laier, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Manley, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Burleigh, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nicholson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Sturtevant, Mr. and Mrs. Righter Wood. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Mil liken, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baird, Mr. and- Mrs. Frank Engler. Mr. and Mrs. Claire Baird, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Oleson, Mr. and Mrs. Will Maloney, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Mil lard. Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Gordon and Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Gordon. Mr. and Mrs. Otis M. Smith en- ft,nj4 i r .. t. 1 I U. and Mrs. Zac Marr of Fremont, who are their week-end guests. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Reynolds had ss their puests Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Meader, Misses (Catherine Reynolds and Patricia Bender and Messrs. Alan Moritz and L. H. Lee. Dining top-ether were Messrs. and Mesdames J. V. Shiremah. M. J. Coaklgf. M. V. Porter. I. I. Shire- ,v.i.c,iiivu ij ursis rill IIUUU1 Ul iVl I man, W. H. Downey, C. E. Hutchi-: son, J. R. HcQuilton and J. J. Has ley and W. R. Butler. Another party included Messrs. and Mesdames F. R. Robinson. C. F. Stedner. Frank Roberts, W. W Troxell and A. W. Sidney and Dr. R. F. Johnston. Dr. W. A. AtcGrew and Leroy Gillespie. ' At another table were Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Foote. Dr. and Mrs. H. XV M. Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Hvson and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dalbv. To gether wTlL,be Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Arnold and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ready. In one party were Messrs. and Mesdames C. J. Clausson, R, A. Van Orsdel, Howard Kennedy and W. L. Randall. Another Dutch treat party included Messrs. and Mesdames E. H. Ward. E. L. Plat ner, A. C. Scott, C. R. Jewell,. V. W. Valking Club to Hold All Dayr Outing The Omaha Walking club will meet Sunday afternoon, 3 o'clock, at Fourteenth and Farnam stteets. The walk will begin in Council Bluffs, Ia.r at the end of the Upper Broadway car line, Oak and Pierce streets. The route will be north along the Lin coln Highway, a distance of two and one-half miles, 'thence two 'miles southwest to Iowa lake and Mynster spring. From there the route will 'e along the wooded ridge known as he "sky linevtrail" to the Lincoln Memorial. Miss Hattie Mueller, cader. , Arrangements have been made for an all-day outing, Sunday, May 30. Members will leave the Burling ton station at 8:20 a. m. and go by tail to Melia, a station 25 miles west of Omaha, arriving there at" 9:09 o'clock. The walk will be east about one mile, thence five miles directly south, Ihtnce one mile southeast to the Ne braska state fisheries, located of the north bank of the Platte river. It is expected that the party will arrive at the fisheries, at 12:30 o'clock. The walk will be resumed at 5 p. m. The first mile will be in 'a south easterly direction along th bank of he fiver, thence east and northeast Graduate North western Jniversity, Chicago T I have been studying and f wy 'A . thing pam m dentistry and my method is now rec ognized by leaders in the profession everywhere 1 take pride in the quality of dental work I do and I do not permit any work to leave this office unless I Am Willing to Have Every Bit of Work Inspected by Any -, ' ' ' State's Dental Board ' Can you afford to entrust such an important matter as your teeth to an inexperienced or incompetent assist ant? Dr. W.F.Crook 206 NEVILLE BLOCK, OMAHA . Entrance on 16th St., at Harney. Office Hours 8:30 to 6 P. M. r Helerr Brandes a Bride Mr. George A. A recent marriage of interest is that of Helen Brandes, daughter of Walter Brandes, and George Ar mour Steinheimer, which took place Wednesday in Kansas City, Mo. Boyle and H. A. Abbott. One four some included Mr. and Mrs. James Blakeney and Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Clark. Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Carney and Mr. and Mrs. Guy "Williams dined togther. Shirley Wilson entertained 14. Mr. and Mrs'. Earl K: Buck had 16 guests. A group of 12 was enter tained by John Lavelle. Parties of eight were given by Franklin Shotwell, Charles Sevick, Carl Modesitt, E. M. Slater. C. H. Ashton, W. G. Brandt, C. W. Mar tin, Chester Nieman and D. C. El dredge. . Those entertaining seven guests included J. E, Goodrich, W. P. O'Brien, E. F.. Riley, sr., TeYry Reimers and Hale Bixby. Parties of six were entertained bv Albert Krug. C. E. Hunter. J. O. Laird, Harry Steele, Douglas Bowie, T. H. McDearman, John Harvey, jr., L. C. Sholes, Oscar Allen, F. J. Bender and M. M. .Levings. i Dr. F. J. Schlier and B. B. B-own each had five guests. Foursomes were entertained by O. S. Goodrich, C. L. Phipps, W. R. Alleman. S. W. Reynolds, G. H. Miller, E. F. Riley, jr., J. L. Hiatt, P. J. Dreibus, D. K. Ellingwood. M. T. Swartz, Charles Hijrdon, W. P. Thomas, Florence Riley, G. H. Sea- bury, R. C. Goodard and Lester Drishous. about five miles to Meadow, a sta tion on the main line of the Rock Island railroad, 23 miles out of Omaha. The party will return to Omaha on the 9:07 train, arriving at the Union Station at 10 p. m. Each member, is expected to pro vide his own cup, sugar and enough food for lunch and supper. The readers, E. M. Kennedy and Homer F. Pennock, will frovide coffee and cream at a small cost. This will be the fourth aU-day outing given by the Walking club. I Extract Teeth Without Pain If you are nervous, if your teeth are very sensitive, my absolutely painless method is a boon beyond words. For Fourteen Years. practicing to overcome one Sundays, 9 to 1. IT Steinheimer, Miss Essie Brandes, sister of thj biide, and George Eggers were the only attendants. Mr! and Mrs. Steinheimer will re side in Omaha upon their return from a southern trip. . The business world today is awakening to" a new order of things. We are in the midst of an evolution, working toward better things and more stable conditions. ' ' "Efficiency" is the watchword. Wasteful methods, "slip-sHod" ways and worn-out theories are being dumped into the scrap heap along with discarded machinery, and out-of-date battleships. Each in then; time and place have served more or less well some good pur pose, but today, confronted by new and more exacting standards, 4hey must make way for better and more efficient agencies. The standard of high quality manifested in the Cadillac car has been built up through efficiency and co-operation throughout the en tire, organization of the Cadillac Motor Car Company, developing what is known in the world of industry as the "Cadillac Spirit." It pervades the administrative offices; it permeates the shops. It diffuses among the production heads; it extends to the workmen at the bench. 9 To further this spirit of co-operation and efficiency, the head of this concern, himself having studied the Alexander Hamilton Insti tute Course, is making it possible for his employees to better their con ditions, making themselves more c apable and better fitted for a greater service to the public, by enrolling them for the Modern Busk ness Course, as taught by the Alexander Hamilton Institute. ' This applies to the Service Department as well as to the sales ahd office organizations. , . Added to the already well-defined and established business and service policies of this concern, this is one more means of attempting to create an organization here, fully as efficient and serviceable as the Cadillac car itself. OMAHA Apple Blossom . Time By Mary Learned. It is the raresf pleasure in the world "to pack a small basket with sandwiches, fruit and thermos bottle of hot coffee and walk with a May time comrade to the big apple tree in the orchard, and there, under the fragrant cloud of pink-tipped blos soms to pass an hour in lazy, casual talk. This year the apple blossoms tre large and very perfect; the illu sion of being suddenly transported to fairyland is. quite vivid. In the woods, if one hunts long enough and hard enough, clumps of columbine in all the freshness of their dainty dress may be found, and in the carpet of fallen leaves the morel mushrooms stand like half closed, ragged, tan umbrellas.' In the market these are almost prohibit ively expensive, but in the woods, i for a stroll one may have all a mod erate family can eat. They are very easy to identify. Along the river just now there is an odd picture taking place. The water is flush with the lower road; great quantities , of trees have float ed down and have been caught and cut into firewood and stand in cord piles along the shore. Many houses and farms are inundated and one may sre a solitary plowman appar ently preparing to sow his seed in the mud. In the evening the river road is a. mass of automobiles and people walking and watching the angry flow of the river, which looks like an endless lake. A picturesque note is added by the swift flying of many red-wing blackbirds in and out of the young willows. Rather a strange sign of the time is sounded by the appearance in one village, block, of five fat. motherly nanny goats. Most of us have mem ories of some little village in. the Swiss or Austrian Alps where we have been refreshed with goats' milk and honey, and we know that the milk, is exceedingly rich and full of nourishment. The little an imals are economical to feed, and faithful in their return for very small kindness. We are likely to see a good many of them on duty in this country. Loveliest of all just now are the lilacs, which are ready to burst into full bloom. In the parks they show plainly and will be the next mass of color for which to look. At Forest Lawn there are hundreds of very old bushes, and in the full tide of their bloom there is nothing any where as gorgeous. If Frederick the Great could djp in a phantom aeroplane from Sans-Souci he would have to say "they are more beautiful thin mine!" Walt Whitman gloved the lilac, and the finest tribute ever paid this lovely flower is part of "President Lincoln's Burial Hyntn," beginning: Cadillac Spirit J. H. Hansen Nebraska Song Writer r 11 PdLh II 'II II r m fx y " ' Nebraskans are always interested in discovering people of talent in their, own state. Mrs. A. I. Mc Kinnon of Lincoln has recently come into recognition as a composer of songs, writing both their words and music. "When You Look Into My Eves. ''Ouiji" by Mrs. McKinnon, who writes as Margaret D. McKinnon, were song hits in "Isle of Dream, s" a French fund benefit given in Lin coln last month. A musieal skit, "My Dream Girl," in which the songs, words and dance steps were "When lilacs last in the door-yard bloom'd, And tlie great star early droop'd in the western sky in the night, I mourn'd a'nd yet shall mourn Cadillac LINCOLN w by Mrs. McKinnon,-was presented in a theater of her home city Jast January. It has drawn .high praise from theatrical managers and . pro fessionals in the music and theatri cal world. "Lonesome Broadway Chappie," "Mister Moon," and "My Dream Girl" were the song numbers of this musical act. Plans are being made to present "Isle of Dreams" in Omaha early in the fall, but Mrs. McKinnon's songs will probably be heard here before that time as many of them are now in publishers' hands and will "out" at an early date. with ever-returning spring." Tt is a uood time of year to renew one's acquaintance with Whitman. He was the great prophet of pri meval and wholly natural things. Co. Country Club Successful Opening The Omaha Country club opened j Saturday with a formal dinner dance at which many parties were given. The club was elaborately decorated for the occasion. One of the largest dinner parties was given by Judge and Mrs. Wil- : liam Redick, when their guests in cluded Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Kountze, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Reed Mr. and Mrs. W.-H. Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. William T. Burns, Mr. and Mrs. William T. Fove, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. C. Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Burgess, Mrs. Arthur Remington, Mrs. F. A. Nash, Mr. Harry , McCormick, Mr. Charles Hull and Mr. Howell of New York City. 'With Mr and Mrs. Francis Gains were: Mr. and Mrs. Charles George, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Towle, Mr. and Mrsi John L. Kennedy, Dr. and Mrs. F. N. Connor, Mr. and Mrs. LMilton C. Peters, Miss Bridges and Dr. W. O. Bridges. Mr. and Mrs. William F. Baxter entertained Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Burke, Dr. and ' Mrs. Harold Gif ford, Dr. and Mrs. Palmer Findley, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Russell. A "Dutch Treat" party dining to gether included Mr. and Mrs. George Redick, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Clarke, Mr. and Mrs. Barton Millard, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Roberts, Dr. and Mrs. Clyde Roeder, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Towle, Mr. and Mrs. Clarke Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lu berger, Mr. and Mrs. , Sutherland Dows of Cedar Rapids, la.; Mr. Arthur Keeline and Mr. Marcus Curran. ' Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sibbernsen entertained at dinner in honor of their guests. Mr. and Mrs.. Emerson Ward of Minneapolis, and covers were placed for" Mr. and Mrs. Ward, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Carpenter, jr., Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garrett, Miss Josephine Congdon, Mr. Cuthbert Potter and Mr. Denman Kountze. ( Mr. and Mrs. John Caldwell, Mjss ii Think of the number of steps you take each day in performing your household duties. If your shoes pinch or cramp; or do not prop erly support the arches, your feet cannot stand the strain. ,,. When your feet fail the entire body fails, and your work becomes 50 harder than it should be. Our shoes FIT yoijr feet PROP ERLY, and you get the advise of a Sc?5aon Chiropodist at this store Free of Charge. W. S. STRYKER DOUGLAS SHOE STORE, 117 North 16th Street Opposite Fostoffice ' ' SEE STRIKER" Get Some Pep In Your Step! Walk away FROM HIGH PRICES. Save Dollars at every step by walking over to HAYDEN'S. -The World's Best Pianos Grands and Uprights EVERY INSTRUMENT MARKED IN PLAIN FIGURES Come and Se How the Cash System Trims Down Piano Prices TJAYIEM' 1L LL THB CASH STORK Anne Giffoni and Mr. Newman Ben son dined together. At another table were Mr. and Mrs! John P. Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hubbell of Des Moines, la.; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Wharton. Miss Menic Davis, Miss Daphne Peters, Miss Elizabeth Davis, Miss Louise Dinning, Mrs. Harold Pritchett, Mr.' Ware Hall, Mr. Francis Gaines. Mr. Roger Keeline, Mr. Reed Teters and Mr. Charles Young. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sibbernsen entertained at dinner in honor of Miss Helen Clarke and Mr. Lloyd Smith and their other guests will include Miss Helen Murphy, Mr. I lrvl Si KKMt-11 a it n 4 Mr K rri Smythe of Philadelphia. Mr. Robert Morz was host at din ner. His guests included Miss Mil dred Todd, Miss Elsie Storz. Miss Phyllis Waterman, Miss Florence Barnes of Springfield, 111.; Mr. Wal lace Shepherd, Mr. Loring Elliott, Mr. Temple McFayden and Mr. Lewis Burgess. Mr. and Mrs. George B. Prinz had 14 guests. Ofhers making rebcrvAUiMis iiitiuucu x-m. iiu mis. C. A. Hull, 12; Mr. and Mrs. Everett Buckingham. 1; K. ii. storz. i Mrs. W. M. Baxter, 10; George Van Brunt. 8: C. XV. Hamilton, jr., 6; Adolph Storz, 6; Judson Squires. -' 6, and Edward M. Martin, 6. Mrs. Gege Still Believes women jviusl xviaKe vote v a Positive Factor.. M OI1ICI1 MIUU1U lflir a puauiYi. stand on all political questions, ao cording to Mrs. George R. Still,.' president of the Missouri Federa- -tion of Women's Clubs, in a recent talk before the Women's Commer cial club of Kansas City. "The na tion needs the women's vote and the women should make their vote a positive factor in politics. Their ' acts as voters will be carefully scrutinized and the great body of women voters will have to pay for the mistakes of the few. Women should get into one of the patties and work from the inside." The women of London have 1,350 dressmaking establishments to cater to their needs. A Fatiguing Task If Your Feet Hurt! Inc. 7 Reproducing Player Pianos Phonographs it Phone Tyler 5117 r