THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JULY 25, 1920. 3 B Wedding Announcements Visitors at P. D. Askew Home , The wedding of Miss Margaret Stuart Lewis, daughter of Mrs. Elizabeth Lewis, and Mr. Louis B. Casey of Chicago was celebrated Saturday evening at 8:30 o'clock at the home of the bride's mother in . Dundee. The Rev. Harvey Hostetler of Cal ifornia Junction, la., who married the parents of the bride, performed the ceremony before a large gather ing of friends. The decorations throughout the rooms and the gowns of the bridal party were carried out in sapphire blue and white, the colors of the Achoth sorority, of which the bride is a member. Miss Helen Possner was brides maid and she was gowned in light blue organdie embroidered in sap phire blue. She carried a large bouquet of blue larkspur and daises. John Mercell served as best man. The bride was lovely in a gown of iuliette crepe, with trimmings of filet lace, and made round length. Her tulle veil was finished in cor onet style and trimmed with old duchess lace, an heirloom in the family of the bride for the past four generations. She carried a shower bouquet of bride's roses and swan- sonia. Miss Mary Lewis, sister of the bride, sang before the ceremony. A wedding reception was held for the guests immediately after the ceremony, after which he couple left for an eastern wedding trip. They will be at home in Chicago after September 1. A large number of Achoth soror ity attended the wedding. The bride attended Nebraska university, where she graduated in 1917. During the war she served as dietitian for the Red Cross. Miss Esther Johnson J and Mr. Harvey J. Tongue were quietly mar ried Tuesday evening, July 20, at the Dietz Memorial church. The Rev. Merrill Brown officiated, as sisted by Rev. R. H. Chenoweth of Lincoln, brother-in-law of the groonu The bride was married in a gown of white organdy and wore a long tulle veil. She carried a bou quet of bride's roses. Miss Mar garet Tongue, sister of the groom, and Mr. Charles Johnson, a brother of the bride, were the attendants. ihe groom served with the 27th Field Artillery in France. MRS. V. U. SAOUtt- an3 diilclrenJ J.Hx ETHEL - LENODA -3n3 CRYSTAL ASKEV The wedding of Miss Florence McHale and Mr. William Abels took place Wednesday evening, July 21, at the Dietz Memorial church. The Rev. Edgar Merrill Brown performed the ceremony. Miss Julia McHale, a sister of the bride, and-Mr. Henry Zimmerman were the attendants. After the cer emony a reception was held at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John McHale for the rela tives of the bride and groom, The coupie win De at name alter Aug ust 1 at 716 Hickory street. Mr. Richard Meredith of 3009 Marcy street announces the mar riage of his daughter, Nellie, to Mr. Carl S. Procper of Omaha. The "marriage took place Wednesday evening, July 21, at the home of Rev. H. P. Davis of the Epworth Methodist church in Council Bluffs, la. Mrs. Myrtle Johnson and Mr. Charles R. Meredith were the at tendants. Mr. and Mrs. Procpor are at home at 3009 Marcy street. The wedding of Mr. Dennis P. Cullen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Cullen, and Miss Stella Sprague of Nebraska City, daughter of Mrs. Anna Sprague, will take place Tues day morning, July 27. at St. Mary's church, in Nebraska City. The wed ding will be very quiet, relatives only being invited. The bride and groom will leave for a honeymoon trip to California. They will reside temporarily in Ogden, Utah. The marriage of Miss Kathryn Conry, daughter of" Mr. and Mrs. John Conry, and Bernard Hannon of La Porte, Ind., took place Wed nesday, July 21. at St. Peters church. After August 1 the couple will be at home in La Porte. The marriage of Miss Ruby Swin yer of Sheridaan, Wyo., and Clyde Bond of Omaha took place July 13 at the home of the bride. The cou ple will reside in Omaha after Au gust 1. Red Variations in Latest Modes Orchid shades, pale yellows, dain ty blue, cool looking greens and the erstwhile popular pinks have all been relegated to the rear in favor of red in which nearly all of New York is garbed. To be realiy up to the minute you must have something red. Not just red like wine color or cherry these shades are mild com pared with the flaming yellowish red seen everywhere in hats, frocks, coats and skirts. And the names of these new shades well, they are vivid, too raw beefsteak, shrimp, lobster and tomato. Seme very daring misses "are wearing bright red pumps with sheer lace striped hose to match. There are smart straw sailors of the same flaming scarlet and stunning street frocks of red serge and red satin. Evening wraps of red crepe and taf feta are most popular and even those of more somber hue are lined with red. At dances one sees chokers of red tulle. The demure maid of former summers is unnoticed among the crowd of those arrayed in the flamboyant colors. Hair Suggestions A woman, gray-haired, over- lump and short in stature, wore her air back plain, ending in an unat tractive wad at the nape of the neck. The srray in the hair was two-toned. the wad at the back of the neck be ing distinctly darker than the rest. She was persuaded by her husband to try it in a high coiffure The change, if you would believe it, was almost magical. A tall, thin-faced girl- may work as satisfactory a change in reversing the treatment from a high hairdressing to a lower one, thereby providing width for the face and taking off an inch or so of that looK-drawn-oufc look. Or, one who has been in the habit of wearing the hair sleek back over the ears may, by a frivolous wave of soit hair, hide the none too shell-like ear 'and provide an alluring touch ot .softness to the whole expression. .- Foreign Exchange, , , Jimerican State Sank, s 178th and Farnam Sts. Adv. & TESJT hBA Y An attractive family group who are guests in this city are Mrs. W. L. Sadler and children, Crystal, Ethel, J. B. and Leonora Askew from Little Rock, Ark. They are visiting Mrs. P. D. Askew and will Osato Photo. remain here for several weeks. A number of informal affairs have been given and others are planned for their stay. Personal Mrs. Edward Megeath has re turned from Denver. Mrs. F. J. Despecher is seriously ill at St. Joseph hospital. Mrs. and Mrs. George Redick left Monday for a short eastern trip. 11 Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Leary are on a motor trip through Minnesota. Mrs. ,W. H. Bucholz leaves soon for Los Angeles, Cal., to spend some time. Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Kuenne have returned f rom ' a trip through the Great Lakes. Mrs. W. G. Ure leaves next week for Lake Sylvia, Minn., to remain several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh T. Cutler have returned from a trip to California and Oregon. Mrs. L. D. Nelson and son. Dietz Nelson, are spending the summer at Cutbank, Wyo. Mrs. Joseph Fechtem of Portland, Ore., is the guest of her brother, Oscar J. Brady. Miss Genevieve Krey of Brook lyn, N. Y., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Howard G. Loomis. Miss Helen Walker leaves Aug ust 10 for a several weeks stay on a ranch at Whitman, Neb. rharlntt Patek of Milwau kee Wis., arrived Fridav to be the guest of Miss Emily Birke. Mrs. Titian Coffee arrives next week to be the house guest of Mrs. Howard JUaldnge lor a montn. Mrs. Herbert Wheeler, who has been in' the east for the past three weeks returned home Tuesday. Dr. and Mrs. E. H. Tenks left Tuesday for Selkirk, Manitoba, Can ada, to remain until September. Iff anA fr M Srtirlev leave early in August for northern Wis consin to spend several . weeks. Mrs. W. H. Koenig, Miss Gert rude Koenig and Fritz Koenig leave this week to motor to Kansas City. Mrs. William Hill Clarke left Sun day for Elkhorn Lodge, Estes Park. Colo., to remain for several weeks. Mrs. John W. Gamble returned Saturday from a month's vacation spent on a ranch in northern Wyo ining. Mr. and Mrs. John H. McDonald and their daughter, Miss Elizabeth McDonald, are touring the Great Lakes. Mrs. F. A. Nash' has gone to Fish Creek, Wis., where her daughter, Miss Emma Nash, is spending the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pritchett, who left early in June for New Hampshire will not return to Omaha Engagement Announced W. E. Mitchell of Council Bluffs announces the engagement of his daughter, Mary Elizabeth, to Robert M. Sample, son of .Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Sample of Uniontown, Pa. Miss Mitchell has attended Ferry Hall at Lake Forest, 111., and BeechWood school at Philadelphia Mr. Samplo attended Culver Mili tary academy, and the University of Virginia, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi He arrived in Council Bluffs Friday and will re main here' until the first part of the week. No date has been set for the wed ding but it will probably- be an event of the fall r " ' until October. They have given up their residence on Thirty-eighth street. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Wolfe with Orpha and Victor Black, left Sat urday for Estes park to spend sev eral weeks. Edward P. Murphy returnsto St. Joseph, Mo., today after a week's visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Murphy. Casper E. Yost, who has been ill for the past month at his home, is greatly improved and expects to be about in the near future. Mrs. R. W. Council and Mrs. M. C. Peters leave Tuesday to spend the remainder of the summer at a summer camp in Ashville, N. C. Mr. Ephraim A. Dixon, who for. the past year has been in California with Mrs. Dixon and children, is spending a few weeks in Omaha. Mr. C H. Remington of the Ken nard Glass and Paint company has returned from a month's stay in California and intermediate points. Miss Eugenie Whitmore and father, H. P. Whitmore, returned this week from New York ciw where they have been for several weeks. C. N. Dietz, Mr. and Mrs. Victor White and Miss Louise White left Thursday for Dome Lake, Wyo., where they will remain for a few weeks. Miss Josephine Congdon leaves next week for New York City where she will visit a few weeks with her sister, Mrs. Robert Forgan, and Mr. Forgan. Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Burke and Miss Emily Burke leave August 1 for the Davis ranch at Parkman, Wyo., where they will spend a month. Helen Ruff of St. Paul, Minn., who is the guest of Mrs. S. S. Caldwell, will go Monday to be the house guest of Mrs. John Caldwell for a time. Mrs. W. B. T. Belt and Miss Dor othy Belt, who had planned to leave last week for northern Minnesota, have postponed their trip- until later in the summer. Mrs. Edgar Morsman, Jr., Miss Mary Morsman and Edgar and Tru man Morsman, left this week for Estes Park where they will remain until September. Mrs. Arthur Metz and son, Louis Metz, accompanied by Robert Wylie and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Metz, left this week to spend a short time at the Metz ranch in the western part of Nebraska. A son was born last Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Bucholz., Mrs. Bucholz was formerly Miss Mona Towle. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Towle. Mrs. Frank Judson 'and daughter, Miss Dorothy Judson, left Tuesday for Minneapolis and Duluth, Minn. They will be joined later by Mr. Judson and will then motor to Buffalo. Mrs. John Haite Morrison left Saturday for the Organ mountains in New Mexico, where she will re main for several weeks. Her daugh ter, Mrs. J. A. Sweet of Las Cruces. N. M., will, spend the summer with her. Mrs. Robert York returned Sun day from Chicago, where she spent a month as the guest of Mr. York's mother. Mr. York returned two weeks ago from Chicago after spending two weeks at his mother's home. The transport "America," on which Miss Eugenia Patterson was to have sailed Saturday for Prague, Bohemia, has postponed the sailing date. Miss Patterson will remain in New York until she sails, which will be in the near future. Mr. W. J. Hynes returned Thurs day from New York where he ac companied Mrs. Hynes and Billy Hynes last week. Mrs. Hynes re mained in New York and is at the Waldrof, her son going to New Hampshire to a summer camp. Miss Helen McCaffrey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen McCaffrey, returned Friday from Chicago, where she has been studying voice. Miss Charlotte Alien of St Joseph, Mo., returned with her and wilr visit at the McCaffrey home for several days. Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. Page ac companied by Miss Claire Helene Woodard, have gone to Glacier Park to spend the remainder of the summer. They stopped enroute to visit Miss Woodard's sister, Mrs. Kremer Bain and Mr. Bain, at Butte, Mont "' 1 L - Mrs. Frank Hamilton and chil dren, miss txeiona and frank, jr., who have spent tjye past several months in France,' will return to Omaha this fall, arriving in New York September 24. Mrs. Fred Hamilton expects to go east the first of September and will meet the voy agers when they land. The Hamil tons spent the winter in Paris and are now at Biarritz, a popular resort near Paris. Stitching Ruffling. When stitching rows of ruffling on a net or georgette crepe founda tion much time and patience may be saved and tedious measuring es caped by the following metkod: On a piece of paper draw lines the width apart you desire the ruffling to be when the garment is finished. Baste the net onto the paper. The lines readily show through tht net and are easily followed either in basting or stitching on the machine. Tear the paper off after the ruffling is sewed on. Effective Collar. The practical black taffeta dress has achieved new laurels by the added accessory ot flaring white or gandy collar. Motel It takes hot weather i to make corn. Shade, ventilation, fans, produce comfort. We have all of these in . ROME MILLER Popular (Visitor Holds Athletic Record Miss Helen Touzalin of Chicago, who is visiting Miss Grace Bailey, has distinguished herself as an all around athlete. Miss Touzalin holds the woman's golf championship for the western division at the Ridge Country club in Chicago. She has won many honors at Rockford college where she has been a student for the past two years, Winning the purple ' "R" in her sophomore year. Five hundred points in athletics are necessary for this honor and it is seldom received before the senior year. Miss Touzalin has played on every class team including hockey, basket ball, base ball and tennis. She is an expert skater and enjoys all out door sports. She is exceedingly popular among the Rockford stu dents, having been chosen president of the, freshman' and sophomore classes.1 She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Touzalin of Chicago. Handicap to Matrimony. A littlp cirl in one of the Hindu mission schools showed no interest whntiver in her work: in fact, shs seemed determined not to learn to r.irl. Finaltv the missionary de cided to go see the child's mother about the case. At great length she explained the benefits derived from learning to rnA ihf rlcfirirnr.ies of that particu lar pupil, and the desirability of im mediate improvement. 1 ne motner listened in silence for a while, then she said: "I never learned to read and I got married. My husband's sister never learned to read, and she got married. You, learned to read, and you didn't get married. I don't care whether my child learns to read or not." World Outlook. Palm Beach Suits When we clean your Palm Beach suit, we make it fit and feel more like a wool than a cotton suit. We take the same care and pains as with your wool that's why we clean so many Palm Beaches. Try us on your next order. P The antorium "Goo- Cleaner and Dyers" 1515 Jones St. Phone D. 963 So. Side, 4708 So. 24th. Phone So. 1283. - Guy Liggett, President. Phoenix Hose Are Wonder Hose Nothing speaks louder for the QUALITY of PHOENIX HOSE than the enjoyment and comfort they give during these hot summer days. Cheap hese arc dangerous now the dyes are apt to sweat out and rot. Don't gamble buy PHOENIX n HOSE and be certain of your HOSE SATISFACTION. j4 YC FOR 508-10 South 16th ' and 1908 Farnam St. HeadquiTtcrs or PHOENIX HOSE Men and Women. OF Phone r-- - "j. Tyler jfe" -j-J n yrm t r s s r STRAW HATS Cleaned, Blocked, Re styled, Retrimmed, to look just like new. And we DYE Men's and Women's Palm Beach Suits to any shade. DRESHER BROS. CLEANERS DYERS -TAILORS ETC. 2211.17 Farnam Street ' Omaha Washington Society, (Continued from Face One D.) Ruth Hitchcock, who will return here with them after a short visit there. Mrs. Earl B. Gaddes is in New Hampshire with her children to re main during the absence of Mr. Gad des, who will join his family later in the summer. Representative McLaughlin, ac companied by his daughter, Miss Esther McLaughlin, returned early in the week from their home in York, Neb., where they went several weeks ago. They made the trip by motor, i James M. Hahley of Omaha, who was secretary to former Representa tive Lobeck of Omaha during the years he was in congress, accom panied by Mrs. 1 Hanley, are spend ing a week in Washington at the HoteJ Washington. Miss Eunice Ensor, formerly of Omaha, who is now connected with the federal board of vocational edu cation, returned this week from a several weeks' trip through the mid dle west Protect Baby's Feet One of the severest injuries you unconsciously do to your child's health is to permit the wearing of ill-fitting shoes on the little foot, which carries the owner to invalid ism in later years. The baby, unable to express ade- ouatelv its sensations, is a worse sufferer than one of more mature age who can remedy ill-shod -conditions. Keep the child's foot free and un cramped. allowing the blood to free ly circulate. More than one daily change of soft stockings and light weight boots should be made, ana for warm months stockinfeless san dals are ideal. Beautify t& Complexion IN TEN DAYS' Nadinola CREAM TkUatftiMB-Mttfiit Ud art J By Thoutandi Guaranteed to remove tan, freckles, pimples, liver-tpots, etc. Ex treme cases 20 days. Rids pores and tissues of impurities. Leaves the skin clear, soft, healthy. At leading toilet counters. If they haven't t, by mail, two sixes, 60c. and $1.20. NATIONAL TOILET CO., Turn,' Sold by Brandel Store ud Other Toilet Countere. B I Extract Teeth Without Pain 2 Moreover I use only the BEST of materials for all bridge and plate work and all work, leaving this office is ready for inspec tion by any atate's dental board. DR. 17. F.CROOK 206 NEVILLE BLOCK, OMAHA Entrance on 16th St., at Harney Tyler 5117. Hours: 8:30 to 6 Open Sundays Until Noon jyCOFFEE wiTWk ' lced "COFFEE ' is subi tMmtf WL itantialljr refreshine. v . Wt Delightfully cooling-; ' p wjf but with a sustiining , W 4w- quality that revives lag-, ' ' 40 ' ging energies and lightens, the draggingfatifSW ra&rai& (iiJii9 rt ii r. What a Young Bride Learned About the Washday Problem This is a true story about laundry service, and a bride. y It was just a year ago that this young wife set up housekeeping. What to do with the family wash Log was one of her first problems. Many of her neighbors, she observed, did their washing at home so bride like, she followed their example. And she applied to her housekeep ing, also, the budget system for fam ily expenditures she had learned at school . At the end of a year she summed up the bills for starch, soap, fuel, electric current and other incident als, added in her own time at 25 cents an hour about half what a laundress would have charged-and discovered that it had cost her $188 in money alone to do her wash ing at home. The next day she invited us to call for her family bundle the testimony of her' budget book could not be disputed it proved the false economy of home washday methods. And a majority of the other think ing housewives in this young wo man's neighborhood the women who have stopped to reckon the real cost of washday at home have joined her in entrusting their family washing to us. We're sure, too, that if you'll do likewise you will quickly be as en thusiastic as they. May we intro duce to you this family laundry serv ice that so nicely combined effi ciency with economy? Omaha Laundry Owner's Club