I' r B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUNE 13, 1920. IK 1 S" Itl. 4 !- Society Sellers-English. The marriage of Miss Ruth Ger- , trude English, daughter of Mrs. . James English of this city, and Walter Vernon Sellers of Council Bluffs, will take place Tuesday ' mornir.g at 10 o'clock at the home - of the bride. Rev. J. F. McCarthy will perform the ceremony. Miss Anne Grace English, sister of the bride-to-be, will act as brides maid. She will wear orchid shade or gandy with hat to match. The bride will be gowned in flesh 1 colored organdy with hat to match and will wear a corsage of roses and lilies of the valley. James Thomas English, brother of the bride, will be best man. A wedding breakfast will be served immediately after the cere mony for the Immediate relatives. Mr. Sellers and his bride will go . to Denver and Colorado Springs on their wedding trip and will be at home after July 1 in Council Bluffs. Smith-Staples. ' ' The marriage of Miss Marion - Staples, daughter of Dr. L. H. " Staples, and Arthur Atkinson Smith, '" n of Mr. and Mrs. D. K. Smith, will take place Wednesday evening. June 16, at the home of the bride. Rev. E. H. Jenks will officiate. "Miss Blanche Staples, sister of , , the bride, will act as bridesmaid. She will wear orchid shade organdy. The bride will be gowned in '.' feeaqh-blow organdy. ' Kathyrn Smith, sister of the ' ' groom, will play the wedding march. Joseph Drummond will act as best man. Mr. Smith and his bride will be at home after July IS at the St. George apartments, Thirty-second avenue and Dodge. , , Woodruff-Pritchard- The marriage of Miss Agnes Pritchard and Lester Woodruff took ;place Thursday morning at St. Peters church, Rev. Father, O'Flvnn officiating. The bridesmaid, Miss Blanche Pritchard, sister of the bride, wore pink organdy with hat to match and carried pink roses. The bride wore a white georgette gown and a tulle veil and carried white roses and sweet peas. Stanley Pritchard was bestman. Mr. and Mrs. Woodruff will be at home in Omaha after July 1. Kirkpatrick-Hansen. .. TH marriage of Miss Virginia Hansen of Edson, Neb., and Dr. M. EKirkoatrick of Sumner took place June 9, at the home of the bride. Dr. Kirkpatrick was graduated from University of Nebraska college of medicine and was a member of Phi Rho Sigma. The couple will reside at Sumner. Cline-Martins. Mrs. A. A. Martins of Plattes- mouth, announces the marriage of .her daughter,' Mary, and Harry A. Cline of Omaha, which took place Saturday evening at her home. Rev. O. D. Baltzly officiated. Mr. and Mrs. Cline have gone to New York ,and will be at home after August. 1 :at 210 South Thirtieth street. n Engagement Announced. -,y9,Mrs.' Anna Peycke, now residing ;Hi Seattle, Wash., formerly of '" Qxnaha, announces the engagement rc joLi her daughter, Helen Elsbeth t--- Eeypke, to David E. Baldwin, son .4aLrtMr. and Mrs. A. D Baldwin .of (Seattle. No date ha been set jorhe wedding. Miss Peycke is ' Jt "W06 01 Mrs Lnarles Metz ot ..VWf 9y- 8. :lLI blWedding Anniversary. vjMj. and Mrs. Hans Stoltenberg jf '' .ccated their 49th wedding an- rJ?rVfl,lau8nter Mrs. 'G. Lade at Cal ,4 Lfi5uPfa'rhe"' otner children, Mrs. H. 8 iqrffniiru Lei8n Web.; Emil btolten 3 !M'gflPlai am Henry, Will and :t ' "it 'tS ;5yflteberg of Florence were MFI n .H .I, .ilicnic and Meetinir. imbers of the Woodmen leration held a picnic and tJaffiwH m ' '"lKS ui( uic county .wrT ollJn their ' next meetinsr, oilj lr "Columbian Clubv rcTKe CJ61MbianSclub of the Sacred 'Hlnit parish will 'give a card party tt tbelrSllTwenty-second and Lo-i-etlHrtPeWsy Friday afternoon. Mrs. TX:!;!-Mwftfy and Mrs. J. Nestle zbiih willnJct as hostesses. li;:rnot! 9tnt3 oJrjoJAngels Card Party. , The women of Holy Angels parish twyi:gtf leard party at their hall, TweiMHrghth and Fowler streets, TPMeejf,ining. junaiyi, ,a;iu 1U19, rNUITlS Will CO tMfWttmt in McCook. Neb., this ougn iney nave maae no St when, llieir vountr- , .miss ueriruae xorris, e State university will n her sister, Mrs. Nelson, ind await her parents. tative and Mrs. 'Reavis urday for their home in to remain a month. Tliev ed their Cleveland Park e t7s?rsix months. etffesentative and Mrs. Tefferies 11 a . , .. ' ana ana their tamily ar lea- gi Washington next week with iff ramily, tor their home m Onia 71 mm BSls'.Clty n ; -JaSs. Edwa J liotmerly Miss utomobile. Edward Hood Watson. Dorothy Snyder who s married in Omaha several vears o. has cone to CJrecron tn attmA "the convention Of the Mn Phi Fnsi. - r J t aa sorority, as president of the Rho "Beta chapter of this city. She will make some visits in the west before . returning to her home here. A. A. R. Card Partv. Garfield Grde, No. 11,. Ladies of the G. A. R., will hold a card party at the home of Mrs. J. E. Turner, at 2922 Izard street,, on Tuesday Picnic Party, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Reed will en- f tertain at a picnic Sunday evening ' in honor of Mrs. Augustus Kountze and Mrs. E. E. Haggin of New York Qty, who are visiting Mr. and Mrs L- 1. Aountze. For the Mis sea Warren. The Misses Helen and Caroline Cain entertained the members of the A. K. club of Central High school at their home Friday afternoon, in honor of the Misses Thelma and Edna Warren, who leave Sunday for 1 Los Angeles where they will reside. Marion Fisher, Katherine Hadfield, Gertrude Harte, Valeria Rohr, Ann Wyman, Adrienne Westberg, Eliza beth Howell, Amy Howell, Eleanor Madgett, Lucille Musgrave, Olga Schermerhorn and Lillian Kavan. To Summer in Chicago. Miss Loretta De Lone of Omaha plans to spend the summer in Chi cago. She is now residing, at 3519 Lincoln boulevard tn that city. Miss De Lone, who has been teaching harp, will discontinue her instruc tions for the summer and will devote her time to composition. Luncheon. Miss Ethel Lewis entertained Thursday at luncheon for Mrs. Helen Cook Dumas and mother, Mrs. M. F. Cook, who have returned from Denver. Mrs. Kulha Honored. The members of-Abha Grove No. 2, Woodmen Circle, gave a party in honor of Mrs. Edna . V. Kulha Wednesday evening at her home. Those present were: Mesdames Katherine Remington, Julia Sanders, R. S. Nelson, B. E. Bray. Anna Kra- jicek, Maud. Schnellbacher, Emma Loosemore, Emma Jensen, Amanda Lohmann, Stella Doherty; Misses Elfreaa Wehl. Anna Lohmann, Mary Strong, Frances Sanders. Lakoma Club. The Lakoma club, formerly the Seymour Lake Country club, opened Saturday evening with a dinner- dance. The club house had been re decorated and flowers were used through the rooms. James Allan entertained 19 guests at dinner. Members of the Concord club were entertained by Art Swanson. In this party were: Messrs. and Mesdames Elmer Beddeo, Sam Dresher, Joseph Skoglund, Walter Roessig,, William RoesSig, Lester Palmer and Mr. L. E. Norslet. Groups of ten guests were eater tained by T. J. Donohue, Frafccis Morrison and H. G. Windheim. C I." Vollmer had six guests; J. M. McCarthy, five. Foursomes were entertained by H. D. Sabotker, R. M. Austin, Dr. W. J. Berry and F. J. Hartley. In a Dutch , treat partywtre Messrs. and Mesdames .A. J. Ran dall, C. H. Hopkins and Charles Frise, Mrs. E. F. Hopkins, Miss Kelliher, Miss Margaret Wagfier, Harry Marling and Mr. Kelliher. A total of 250 reservations for the dinner were made . Pupils' Recital. A recital will be given Tuesday evening, June 22, at the First Cen tral Congregational church, by the pupils of Miss Mary Munchhoff. Canteen Meeting. The next meeting of Company. B of the Red Cross canteen will be held Tuesday afternoon, , June 22, at the home of Mrs. Glenn Whar ton. t r Song RecitaL Lynn G. Sackett of Shenandoah, la., formerly of Omaha, assisted by Mrs. Edith Sackett, gave a song re cital at Grace Lutheran church Wednesday evening. Mrs. Sackett J also assisted with several readings. Mr. and Mrs. Sackett will leave for the east Soon. Piano RecitaL Jean P. Duffield will present his pupils in a piano recital Monday eve ning, June 14, at the First Central Congregational church, Thirty-sixth and Harney streets. Mrs. Bradley June. Brings Return of 1 Students The first week? of June will bring a number of Omaha school girls from their colleges in the east. On Saturday, Miss Camillia Edholm, fiaughter of Mrs. K. R. J. Edholm, and Miss Elizabeth Austjn, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Austin, arrived in Omaha from Simmons college, Massachusetts. They were accompanied by -Miss Jean Ken nedy,, daughter of Mrs. Alfred C Kennedy. She has been a student at Mount .'Holyolee college during the past jfcar. Many are the inter esting stories these . girls have to ttfl of their school experiences and letters relating these incidents are treasured very'mqeh by their pa rents. The following are excerpts from a letter written by Camilla Edholm to her mother, shortly be fore the' closing of the school year at Simmons college, "This has been the most exciting weekl It's junior week, you know, when the juniors have their first prom and are waited on by all the other classes, and begin to come into their own as the topmost class in college. It's the custom for the seniors to surprise the juniors some night of the week with a serenade. and the juniors are so afraid they'll be caugpt away from their tradi tional perch on top of the colonnade between the south hall and the refectory, that they send for us little freshmen to come in and do some spying! Then the ophomores run to the aid of their sister class, and for no particular reason, I guess, except to make trouble, they do all they can to get possession of the Suite leading out on the colonnade and then they steal a few caps and, gowns to parade around the campus in and worry the poor juniors. The classes are so big that even the dor- uuiuiy gins aicu i buic oi uicir classmates (except the rn$t promi nent ones) and almost any one in a cap and'gown can 'get away' as a senior. v "We were down on the cairmus two nights before the serenade came off, and many were the tricks played in spite of onrjraliant barri cading ot stairs and mysterious passwords. By Wednesday night the1 sophomores had the Suite in their possession, the glo6my Bos ton drizzle had ceased and the moon was out, so that everyone jvas sure the seniors wouldn't hesitate to take advantage of the change in weather. And, sure enough at 9 o'clock the whole class of seniors came singing around 'the corner of the refectory, all in caps and gowns and carrying Japanese lanterns. Then, at the last moment, the sophomores re lented and vacated the suite and '21 rushed in and scrambled out on the colonnade, from where they received the greetings of the seniors and re plied with, some of the cleverest songs I hive ever heard. They Roe, soprano, pupil of Louise Jan-sen'-Wylie, will assist. The program will be given by the following: Mary Jane ' Monaghan, Frances Simon. Cornelia Storrs, Gertrude Marsh, Elice Holovtchjner, Beverley Man ning, Ruth Manning, Frances Edger ly, Bertha Van Doran, Martha Dox, Gertrude Tatle, Emma Ritchie, Emily Ross, Margaret Bourke, Edna Anderson, Delia Erixon, Evelyn Ledwich, Enid Lingborg, Theodore, Carl and Bernard Peter. THE UNIVERSAL CAR The Ford Coupe is one of the rnort popular memben of the Ford Family. It k a permanently enclosed car, with sliding plate tlaw windows an open ear with plenty of shade. Then in inclement weather, enclosed and cozy, dust-proof and rain -proof. Big deep seat liberally upholstered. Just the car for travel-, ing salesmen, physicians, architects, contractors, builders, and a regular family car for two. Equipped with electric starting and lighting system. Demountable rims with 3 -inch tires all around. Tire carrier. A car of comfort, winter and summer, spring and autumn, with all the Ford economy in operation and main tenance. The demand is big. Leave your order with any of the dealers listed below. McCaffrey Motor Company, 15th and. Jackson Sts. j Sample-Hart Motor Company, 18th and Burt SU. Universal Motor Company, 2562 Leavenworth St. C. E. Paulson Motor Company, 20th and Ames Ave. Adkins Motor Company, 491 1 South 24th St. Would You Buy ? i i - trjf V- -s x ) Lav When the'se pretty Omaha girls display their wares at the Junior league frolic the evening of June IS, at the Country club, do you think anyone will be able to resist? Won't everyone wish to purchase cigarets when Miss Louise Dinning is the sales girl? And what "sweet tooth" will not long for candy as Meliora Davis offers dainty bon bons? Even a flower stand is not to be omitted from the many at tractions at the frolic. Mrs. George B. Thummell will be in charge and hopes to put a dainty corsage or gay boutonniere on every one who at tends. Several numbers have been added to the program of vaudeville stunts for the Frolic. Kenneth and Rud yard Norton will give an imitation of Fanny Brice's spring dance; Dr. H. A. Wagoner will have his saxo phone band and give selections and sanjr, of course, with all the good will in the world, although up to that minute the contest had been quite bitter. I never realized the full meaning of student government until the other nht before the' ser enade, when, at 10 o'clock, Mary Kimball, president of student gov ernment, came to the head of the stairs and said ouietlv to that sauab- bline bunch of juniors, soohs and freshmen, "This is going to Stop now, girls, and we re all going to ted right away." That crOwd sim ply melted away without a murmurl It certainly is a different spirit from that of always leading the matron a merry chase. "If I weren't in such a hurry to get, home I'd like to stay over for commencement, for it's to be the most impressive they've ever had. That week, of course, outshines the juniors' week by "far with its many affairs. It certainly breaks my heart to think of that wonderful senior class leaving us they're all Such peaches." Maud Powell's Life and Work. A book on Maud Powell's life and work is in preparation. Her husband, who is furnishing the larger part of the material for this volume, will be grateful to any one that will send an account of any in cident or permit examination of letters or other ftiemoranda throw ing light on her career. All papers will be carefully copied and the originals returned to the owners. Communications should be ad dressed to H. Godfrey Turner, 1400 Broadway, New York. w Nil; n . Regina Connell will lead IS girls in a song and dance called "An Old Fashioned Garden." Miss Louise Dinning and Matth ews' book store are in charge of the ticket sale. Mrs. . Guy Kiddoo an nounces that the public is invited to attend the affair. There will be dancing for the guests between the vaudeville num bers. Country Club Dr. Kart Connell entertained 20 guests at dinner Saturday evening at the Country club in honor of Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Raymond, jr., of Lin coln. Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Kountze were dinner hosts Saturday evening at the club in honor of their house guests, Mrs. Augustus Kountze and Mrs. E. E. Haggin of New York City and Mrs. Charles Sweet of Min neapolis, who is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Barker. Garden flowers were used as .decorations and covers were placed for 30 guests. Mrs. Charles Sweet will be hon oree at a luncheon Monday at the Country club when Mrs A. L. Reed will be hostess.' Mrs. Jack Summer entertained 12 guests at luncheon at the Coun try club Saturday, in honor of Mrs. Augustus Kountze. E. S. Westbrook had eight guests at the Saturday . evening dinner danceN Harry Koch, eight; R. L. Kloke, six; Mrs. Victor Caldwell, six; H. O. Edwards, six, and Luther Kountze, five. Field Club. . Among those entertaining at the dinner dance at the Field. club Sat urday' evening were: Frank Engler, 10; E. H. Howland, eight; Charles Sevick, eight; P. W. Miksell, six; Dr. Schalek, six; C. D. Sturtevant, six; W. A. Sinclair, six; F. C. Best, 9 . Russian Children Have Scout American Girl Scouts received the first word from their Russian col leagues in more than a year when Maurice Ross of Stooklyn, who has just returned from Siberia, called at the Girl Scout national headquarters in New York City recently, bring ing the greeting of the combined troops of Sibera. The headquarters of tne Siberian Girl Scouts are "at Irkutsk, a city of 150,000 people and the capital of Siberia. Irkutsk lies in the midst of the vast Siberian steppes near the shore of Lake Baikal, five days' journey from Eu ropean Russian. According to Mr. Ross, no girl scout organization had ever been formed in Siberia, until a book on scouting, by Sir Robert Baden Powell, which had been translated' into Russian, found its way into the city. The Russian girls were so en thusiastic that they organized them selves into troops and persuaded the boys to join them. During the time' when the armies of Admiral Kolchak were fighting with the bolsheviki for possession of Irkutsk, the boy and girl scouts rendered valuable serv ice in much the same manner as they did in this country during the way. ; Mr. Ross organized a playground in his work for the children of Ir kutsk in which the Boy and Girl Scout sassisted him. The Russian Girl Scouts learned with great in terest from Mr. Ross of the pro ficiency of their American Girl Scout sisters in domestic activities, cook ing, first aid, dressmaking and child nursing and wanted to be taught these things in their own troop w6rk. All of the- Russian Girl Scout troops are drawn from the in telligent classes of Siberia and are non-bolshevik in sentiment, accord ing to Mr. Ross. six; L. V. Wilson, four; S. G. Reed, four; H. H. MacDuff, four; F. S. Knapp, two. Reservations for Dutch treat parties were made by E. H. Ward for 16 and HarVey Milliken for, 12. Happy Hallow. L. P. Campbell entertained 16 guests at dinner at the Happy Hol low club Saturday evening; C. F. Weller, 15; Howard Goodrich, 14; Will T. Graham, eight; N. H. Ty son, nine; M. P. Smith, four, and H. E. Rogers had eight guests; Ned Williams, four; J. H. MacNeil, four, and C. L. Mattson, four. The police records of London show that every day in the year an average of 30 girls are reported missing in the British metropolis. Fourteen Important Traits in a Girl's Make-Up. Love of hef mother.- Truth. Honesty. Discretion. GraciOusness. fc Cheerfulness. , Humility. Kindnlss. Tolerance. Lack of inclination to gossip. . Promptness. Lack of conceit. Charm. Dependability. CONANT WH1. Sell' their t nates Stoelk E of COATS, SKIRTS, and C Summers in East With the closing of the school year many of the sub-debs are plan ning to leave for summer camps in the mouhtains, either of the west or east. Charlotte McDonald, accom panied by her mother, Mrs. C. G. McDonald, leaves June 27 to remain until September 1 at Aloho camp, Lake Morey, in the Green and While mountains of New England. Mrs. McDonald will remain at the la near the camp. Mrs. Everett Clarke will also go east with Mrs. McDonald and will summer at Mil ford, Conn. Community Service Monday, Cluga club will meet at 6 p., m. for a picnic supper at club house. After supper plans will be made for the big picnic on Thurs day. Tuesday, Patriot club will meet for instruction in "Home Nursing." Saturday the girjs will entertain at a big dance at the Girls' club house. All members and their friends invited. Community Club Girls Don't forget the big picnic at Elmwood park, Thursday evening, June 17, at 6 o'clock. Also the. big member ship drive. Which club is going to win the prize for the most new members? Make it your club. All girls planning to go are requested to report to their club presidents as soon as possible. Any business girl without friends in the city to recom mend her for membership may ap ply to Mrs, Wallace at the Girls' club house, 416 South Seventeenth street. Henri Scott, baritone, formerly of the Metropolitan and Philadelphia Chicapo Opera companies, made his vaudeville debut recently at Phila delphia. Mr. Scott sang for the Epworth assembly in Lincoln two years ago. Twelve thousand members of the Congress of Women's clubs of the Pittsburgh district hare pledged themselves to wear only staple" clothing until prices of more modish garments 'drop, and to place a two weeks ban on potatoes in a cam paign against the high cost of liv ing. I UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE HOTEL BLDG. SIXTEENTH ST. SUITS, DRESSES, FURS BLOUSES, SWEATERS . SILK UNDERWEAR att Hi Dr. Anna Shaw Memorial Is Defined Mrs. H. C. Sumney is the Ne bra'ska state chairman for the Dr. Anna Howard Shaw memorial. An appeal for this memorial, sent out from the national committee in charge, says: "Dr. Anna Howard Shaw has won her long fight. x "She toiled for four decades that women might be free. All that the women had struggled to attain through the years she gained for their heritage. "That other women might know the joys of achievement, she broke new trails to far horizons. . A be loved pioneer, she led in securing higher education and the opening of new professions for women. She always maintained a steadfast and unshakable belief that God created all men and all women equal. "So simple, sincere and true was her faith, it did not matter to her that she traveled so much of the dis tance alone. Forsaken by her fam ily and friends, she faced cold, hun ger and personal sacrifice to become a minister of the gospel. "From the little parish on Cape Cod, she went to Boston to study medicine. She made the war easier ! for the women physicians who came after her. "Guiding force of a new era, she faced the endless tedium and dull ness of long campaigns that the messages of the political equality of women might go forward. And always, even when she faced the sun set, there was one great inspiration in ner me wnat tnis would mearf. J to the women who would follow her. rVT "Anna Howard Shaw was a great figure in the history of the women who have helped to make America. The memory of her life will live in the hearts of women who stand to day on the threshold of a boundless future. "To those of us( who knew and loved her best, stone or bronze would fail to symbolize her spirit. Her far-reaching vision is better ex pressed in a living, growing me morial, which will open other new fields for women in the future, as she opened them in the past. "It is therefore planned to raise $500,000 to establish a two-fold me morial a foundation in . political science at Bryn Mawr college and a foundation in preventive medicine at the Woman's Medical college of Pennsylvania. "This will be the first great na tional memorial dedicated to a wom an by the American women she loved and served. "Every woman in America should join in this thank-offering to express her gratitude, for the great victory, so hardly won. "Give as your heart dictates. "Anna Howard Shaw gave her best. The astonishing statement made recently to the effect that in some districts of Wales miners have been known to sell their wives, is a re minder that the practice is the sur vival of an old custom. Less than a century ago wives were offered by auction to the highest bidder in public places in different parts of England, although the practice was never sanctioned by law. Prices ranged upwards from 1 shilling. from ) to di shillings appears to have been considered a good price (I I! s '