'Z B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AUGUST 1. 1920 Society Keyter-BennewiU. ' , The marriage of Mis Marie Ben- newitz, daughter of Mrs. Caroline G. Bennewitz, to George Keyser ' took place Friday morning at St. I Anns Catholic church. The cere ? mohy, which was a very simple af i&ir and witnessed only by the im- mediate families, was performed by Rev. Michael Stagno, a classmate of the' groom at Creighton university. I .' The bride wore a traveling suit of - dark blue and a corsage bouquet of f ifceetpeas. She was attended by ! Itlss Mabelle Spitznaple, a cousin, !iq was attired in a dark blue suit 'sbftd also wore a corsage bouquet of sWeetpeas. T John A. Bennewitz, a brother of the bride, was best man. i The bride was educated' by the ;Sislers of Mercy and th? madames ! of. the Sacred Heart, and is well .nown in musical circles. ',-,Mr. Keyser is- a graduate of , Creighton tiniversity and of the Creighton College of Law. , He is a -son of Mr. and Mrs. John Keyser. iP.uring the war he served overseas S aslieutenant for two and a half years and merited a Croix de Guerre land two citations for distinguished service. The couple left for New lYQrk immediately after the cere jme)ny. Because of the illness of her Another the bride will return to Opiaha shortly and will later join Mr. Keyser in the Virgin islands, wftere they will reside Jacobs -Greenblatt. Miss Tillie Greenblatt, daughter of. Mrs. S. Gerber, and Joseph Jacobs will be married v Sunday evening at the home of the groom's 'parents. Air. and Mrs. in. jacoos. iRiv. II. Grodzinsky will officiate. will be no attendants. he bride attended the Omaha university. Mr. Jacobs is a rnein kefof the editorial staff of The Bee ; The couple will make their home wfth the groom s parents. ' J Wolcott Becker. The marriage of Miss Alice Beck erfformerly of Peoria, 111., and Dr. i Eugene Wolcott, will take place TAcsday at the home of Mrs. John Harvey. The wedding will be very qujet. I Wedding Announcement. tfr and Mrs. C. E. Hutchins an nounce the marriage of their daughter, Helena to Mr. KODert Howell Clark. The wedding took plice Saturday, July 31, at the North Pijtsbyterian church, the Rev. D. E. Jenkins officiated. Only the im mediate members of the family and a Jew intimate friends of the bride anti groom were present. Following thj ceremony a wedding breakfast ws held at the Fontenelle hotel. Mrs. Louis Killian of Mason City, Iai sister of the bride, came on to attend 1 the wedding. After n eastern trip Mr. and Mrs. Clark will res"ide in Omaha. i . , . 5 ; Wedding Guests. ? Mrs. John A. Agramt of Sioux Falls, ST D., is the guest of her sis ter, Mrs. M. Brown. Mrs. Agramt Ssere to attend the Brown-Rothen-berg wedding, which takes place Sunday, she was accompanied by ithe Misses Sarah and Jeanette Agramt and Mr., Ben Agramt of Sioux Falls. Mr. ajnd Mrs. Louis Hi Brown of Sioux City. Ia., ar tied Friday for the wedding. I 1 ' ', . I ! Engagement Announced. ! ;Mr. Edward C. Moore announces the engagement of his daughter, r&len, to Mr. Ralph La Chappelle pt Omaha. The wedding will take ?teee late in September. r ' " For Mrs. Kurtx. number of informal affairs have bien .given for Mrs. D. E.Kurtz of Chicago, who is the guest of her jister, Mrs. E.. H. Sprague. Mrs. Spiague was hostess at a lartje Wjnfcheon nt the Country club Fri iay for Mrs. Kurtz. She leaves in few days for her home in Chi- For Mrs. .Megeath. Mrs C N. Diets entertained in formally at luncheon at her home Thursday in honor of Mrs. Edward Megeath. Card Party. ' N Tli women of St. Bernaards ;iirch will give a card party at I ?Ueir school hall m Benson VVeanes-! IfX evening at 8:30 o'clock. Church Luncheon. The Young Woman's Division of he' Ladies' Aid society of Lowe Avenue Presbyterian church, will fntertaiii the ladies of the church at k picnic luncheon at Elmwood park, h irjQay, ugusi o, ai i o ciui.k. ' c ' t 4 y i.anu suviai. I mtmliiri rf ? Patricks riaiish will give, their annual lawn S jaeial, Thursday evening, August kl.at Rourke's Baseball park, Fif- n . . . . , r j . . T".mm!hm entn ana vmion sirccis. jauuiK . will be a feature of the evening's !. Entertainment. , l ;3 Iowa Resort Popular. ( Sjtake Okoboji has claimed many lidmabans during the hot weather, j&fs. T. H. Hussie is one of those 4d s"e spends the 'greater part of bSef time at the lake swimming. Mrs. I Harry Steel is another of the liSatrons who -are there. Harley ' Cdhant and Harvey Milliken are the guests at the cottage of Gene Huse Norfolk. Mrs. H. W.Hicks is 'iAnnincr at Milter Bav at the lake. VKK; en1 Mrf Frpdrick Cohn are $iher Omahans at this Iowa re Si j. - ij jKrs. Caldwell Qoes to Europe, fl lSlrs. Marie Leff Caldwell of the I 'Social Settlement expects to sail (Sotn New York on August 20, a aboard the "Lorraine for Havre, 1 fiance. ' She will remain for six Sleeks and on her return be ac '. ccmpanied by her small son who his been in Europe since before JOmaha Boys Entering Yale. t Iwillard Millard, jr., leaves Sun i&y for Boxbury school, Cheshire. iGonn., where he will remain until ifiklenters Yale in the-fall Denman iKountze will enter Yale in the fall t&kb having last year attended the f tjniversity of Nebraska. I 5Ten per cent of the women in Jkftnri anrf 3 ner cent of women M department stores in New York SOty earn less tnan-o per weex, WEnilC UO per VI HUUICU 111 WV" tijries and the same per cent in mer cantile establishments earn less than An interesting family group is formed by Mrs. A. C. Anderson and her children, who in the order of their ages are A. Clark, Lillian, Grace, Clifford and Elizabeth Frances. The last named has the Carter Lake Mrs. H. B. Noyes entertained a party of 18 at the dinner-dance at Carter Lake club Saturday evening. Dr. F. Conner had eight guests for dinner at the club Saturday. Dr. and Mrs. P. F. Kani and son, Philip, leave Sunday for New York City, where they will embark Au gust 14 on the La Touraine for Havre, France, and other European points. They will be abroad six months. The Proctor Shelby family will occupy the Kani cottage for the re mainder of the season. Miss Grace MahafFey and Miss Frieda Spenner left Friday evening for Denver and Colorado Springs for a two weeks' stay. R. W. Hyatt returned Saturday from Minneapolis, Minn. F. L. Haas returned Friday from New York City, where he spent three weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Haas and son, Lowell, motored to Pawnee City for the week-nd. Return Home ' HEV4 ' Mrs. C. L. Bergman and daughter, Frances, will return home Sunday after having spent six .weeks at Paw paw, lake, Michigan. As to Dressings There are ways of making mayon liaise dressing diluted with a founda tion sauce of some sort. A (rood white sauce or drawn butter sauce may be used. And. too, egg whites beaten very stiff may be added to finished mayonnaise to increase its bulk. A little more seasoning must of course be used when any of these methods of increasing the bulk of the dressing are used. Plain garden lettuce can be served three or four timei a week for din ner without too much monotony if you learn to vary the French dress ing. A tablespoon of tomato catsup added to half a cup of dressing makes a pleasant variation. Sometimes use vinegar of one kind and sometimes use vinegar of an other white and brown, wine and cider, with sometimes a dash of tar ragon. Georgette Gowns Dyed Any Shade You Desire You will be surprised what fine colors we can get in pink, pale blue, light tan, light green, lemon, old rose, etc. You need not rip tltem up just remove perish able trimmings and we will do the rest. We have one of the very few high-class gar ment dyers in the United . States. Come in and see some of our work.; The Pantorium "Good Cleantr and Dyan" ISIS Jone. St. Dong. 963 South SidV 470S So. 24th So. 1283 Attractive Family Group distinction of being the first suffrage baby in Omaha. Sbe was named Elizabeth by suffrage workers and Frances by members of the Frances Willard W. C. T. U. MrSh, Anderson has always taken Bird By DORIS BLAKE There is an endless amount of lore woven around biids. Last week I gave you some general lore, but did not touch on doves, or pigeons, about which there seems to be much meaning for the superstitious. . The appearance of a white dove at the window means in some coun tries a recovery, while in others it is interpreted to mean an angel has come to take away a soul. In India a young woman whose husband is away reads a sign he will soon return if she sees a pair of doves. If you hear the first notes of a dove in spring while you are lying down, you will have ill- health for a year; if you are walking, good health; if sitting, just fair. The pigeon is supposed to look well to its own stonfach; hence pigeontoed people are said to be stingy. Feed strange pigeons and they will bring you true friends. The cooing of a strange dbve in your window is the sign of coming sad intelligence. In India pigeons are thought to bring good luck. They are care fully reared in houses, which they are believed to keep from decay. Pigeons flying-in a ring over a body of water give a sign of rain.- When the doves around the dove cote make a more than ordinary cooing and pass incessantly in and out of their cotes, it is a sure sign that there is to fee a change of weather. It is bad luckvtp drive a dove or pigeon out of the nouse. When pigeons stand in a perfect row on( the ridge pole of a house it is a sign of receiving a present within a week. It is a common notion that if a dove were let loose with its eyes blinded it would fly straight up into the air until it fell from exhaustion. To meet one single time pigeon is a sign of surprise. Meet two is a sign of joy; three, a wedding. Thi" story goes that pigeons have no gall because the dove sent from the ark by Noah burst its gall out of grief and none of the pigeon family have had a gall ever since. Another belief is that the dove is holy itself; tender, loving, with dhits'any bitterness, and therefore has no gall. ' ' It it lucky to see a crow sitting on one leg. - When crows -forsake a flock it is a sign of famine. To see a crow flying alone is a sign of disappointment. a Rooks building in a house is a sign of prosperity. SFiirs1 - .i Now is the time to have your remodeling and repair ing done. A discount, of 25 will be given on all work received before Sept. 1st. Avoid the rush of the busy season by bringing your furs to us at an early date. 1 '! ' 1 ? ' . ' L Berkowitz Fur Co. 2818 Leavenworth part in women's activities of various kinds, among them being suffrage, W. G T. U. and Woman's club work. This family will leave in August for a short trip, their destination bting yet undecided. Lore There is a widespread belief in the ominous croaking of the crow. When you see jim crows flying and crying in the early fall, prepare for winter, for it is a sign of cold weather. , If the first crow you see in the spring is flying, you will soon take a journey. If rooks desert a rookery, it is a sign of the downfall of the family to whom it belongs. When rooks seem to drop in their flight as if shot, it foretells rain. To 'see flying crows .means the following: "One for sorrow, two for mirth; Three for a wedding, four for . birth; Five for a funeral, six for a dance; Seven for old England, and eight for France." Of crowds flying1 toward you: One's unlucky; j Two's lucky; Three Is health; Four Is wealth; Five Is sickness; Six Is death. The Villages By MARTHA HASKELL CLARK. I can not hope that Sorrow's feet forever and a day Will rnss my little House of Love where -. latticed aunbeams strav. Eut when she lays h;i- hand at last upon the swinging latch, And steps wbere happy years have smiled beneath our spring-sweet thatch. Grant me, ah, God, this heartfelt prayer, that somewhere It may be Where little, small-t"wn sympathy may iota ana comxor me. The little, small-town sympathy that runs across tne neids In blue-checked gingham aprons, and with flour UDon Its hands. That bakes and brews, and sweeps and dusts, that wakeful serves and shield The little,' small-town sympathy that Knows ana unaernanaa. Thy cities, God, aro bullded high with carven stone on stone. But hearts may ache, and Uvea may droop unheeded and alone, And souls may dwell unknown, unloved, a single wall between Not so the quiet, home-sweet Uvea that fringe the village green. Let others reap the splendors, Lord, but give Instead to ir.t The homely round of living blent with small-town - sympathy. The little, small-town sympathy that steals on neighbor feet From tiny lamp-lit houses down a maple shaded street; That lends Its strength on tear-dimmed ways Its own bruised feet have trod, , The little, small-town sympathy the very soul of God. July-August Good Housekeeping. For White Shoes. Get your druggist to make, a solu tion of orange shellac and alcohol. With a small brush apply this care fully to the heels and soles of your white shoes whenever the latter are cleaned. It leaves a satiny finish and a 10-cent bottle will last for months. Discount on all Furs until Sep tember 1st. Lynx Scarfs and Chokers of All Kinds Hudson Seal Coats Mink Capes Gilinsky Capes Puppets Prove tp Fascinate Highly . Helen Haimen Joseph's introduc tion to the world of marionettes was through the concrete. ' She made and manipulated puppets. It was when she was in the act of fashion ing tiny and, as she says, crude images of the human form that she fell under the fascination of the whole vast subject of articulated dolls. Puppets, she says, intensify the fascination of make-believe: though properly the toys of the people, moharchs have fallen under their spell. She tells the story of King Muh. King Muh lived in China in 1000 B. C, and had many wives who were much in need of amusement. Yen Sze was a showman of shadow plays. He was commanded to come to the Celestial Palace. A screen was placed between a light and his audi ence. Yen Sze manipulated moving. translucent figures which thew sparkling, colored shadows on the screen. All went well until King Muh. jealous of the beauty of the puppets and their realistic glances at his be loved ones, ordered his executioner to removfe Yen Sze's head. Yen Sze barely saved himself by pres ence of mind and a great sacrifice. Before the eyes of the king and his ladies he destroyed the precious fig ures. Was King Muh really jealous of bits of perforated buffalo skin? Pos sibly his rage was only a ruse, since the men of the East were wise even in 1000 B. C. t But Mrs. Joseph asks us to be lieve and we do that, as late as the 17th century, the Italian Brioche took his puppets into Switzerland, and there gave performances so lifelike that he came near to being burned at the stake on the ground that his tiny actors were devils. He straightway invited his accusers be hind the scenes; undressed his pup pets, displayed joints, strings and rods, then hurriedly packed his be longings and went to France, where he entertained the son of Louis XIV. Mrs. Joseph writes that Prof. Richard Pischel believes "that the puppet was botn along with fairy tales on the banks of the Ganges, in the wonderful old land of India"; that "Yoreck claims that the marionette originated somehow with the aborigines of the Nile," and that "Dr. Laufer maintains that marion ettes first appeared in Egypt and Greece and spread from there to all countries in Asia." Winthrop Ames and Clayton Hamilton conceived a delightful plan which was wrecked by the outbreak of the war. They were to bring the .realistic marionettes of Munich to New York. About a year later Mr. Ames dis- SAND POINT BEACH Omaha's Natural Swimming Resort N6W OPEN Many secrets you will find revealed in the green box of Nadine Face Powder Thaw at aaerata which avarv woman would iolva aacrsu of personal charm. The itcrst of a roaa-patal com plexion N A win a a flit TO womanhood. Tha secret of lasting charm charm which ndurea through out tha day. Tha itcrat of akin-comfort with navar a hint of barm. To yon, aa to a million othara, NAD I M B Will ravcai waaa intimaw aaerata, Tea caa procure NAD1NS from 'yoar tavoma mm w or by mail wc NATIONAL TOILET CO., rark.W, U.S. A, Li Sold br Brandeis Stores and Other s Toilet Counters. Motel T This warm weather has X prompted the management of t to excel itself, if possible, in T its salads and pastry. Yon can only be convinced of this I fact by patronizing us. OnilirP TVfTT T CT Engagement Announced n Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Meredith an nounce the engagement ot their daughter. Mabel, to . Clifford Earl Boand of this city, son of H. L. Boand of Chicago. No date has been set for the wedding. covered that the artist, Tony Sarg, had brought from England puppets which he had made for his own amusement; little actors as evolved, elaborate, and mechanically ingeni ous as anything Germany had pro duced. The result was a happy com bination of forces which culminated in the production of three plays dur ing the Christmas holidays of 1917, at the Neighborhood Playhouse. The same bill was repeated in a series of performances at the Norworth the ater and later at the Punch and Judy, a house in which the puppets seemed f O AUGUST.Q . 8 J Our Entire StoroTyj JL furs as well. from turer - factory: 1921-29 South 13th Street L aaaat . ' ...... Preparedness At best ironing is warm work and as summer days call for a more plentiful supply of wash frocks the weekly ironing becomes overwhelm ing unless we use forethought and good judgment. The truth of that little adage about the ounce of pre vention that is worth a pound of cure comes in right here and sug gests that timely thought on wash day will minimize the work of iron ing day.. A few minutes and a little thought when the clothes are dried will save many, many hours later on. For instance, table clothes and sheets are very much more easily ironed if they are hung straight, and they are hung straight very much more easily if they are put through the wringer straight. That is if they are folded to go through the wringer they should be folded straight It is really worth while to have a second person take a hand when the clothes are put through the wringer in order to help with this folding. , If you have a good drying day it is sometimes a good idea to have the kitchen towels and other towels for that matter wrung and hung folded double. It saves just that much work later, and if you choose, you can put the towels away unironed. Many persons never do have kitchen towels ironed. particularly at home. This was Broadway s puppet initiation. Thackery's "Rose and the Ring" was given the next year by Tony Sarg at the Punch and Judy, and Ellen van Volkenburg's airy mari onette production off "A Midsummer Night's Dream" was given at the Little theater in Chicago. Tony Sarg is now making marionette act ors to play. "Rip Van Winkle." The bare statement calls up a picture of delightful possibilities: Joseph Jef ferson two and a half feet taUl Christian Science Monitor. Radically Reduced Beauty, Richness and Unrivaled Value Char acterize Our August Fur Sale; Our designers have outdone themselves, 'never have our Fall and Winter Fur Fashions been so varied, so original and exquisitely beautiful and they are indeed notable from a" value standpoint A truly magnificent assemblage of luxurious new furs and fur . garments in exclusive new modes for the winter of 1920-21 made in our own daylight factory, of carefully selected and perfectly matched pelts of the very finest quality obtainable. DURING OUR AUGUST SALE THE DISCOUNTS ARE FROM 20 to 30 our regular low manufac to - wearer prices. On payment t of one-fourth the purchase price, we will store your selection in our COLD STOR AGE VAULTS until needed in the fall. Balance may be paid at your convenience. . " 1710 Douglas Street phon 120 on Ironing Day and if hand towels are fresh from the air and sunshine there are per sons who really prefer not to have them ironed either. It is a help if you always have the clothes sorted when put up to dry. It doesn't take any longer, but it saves time later if the stockings are hanging in pairs, if all the clothes that need starching are in one place and all that can be sent up unironed are in another. A good many housewives have sheets and. other "flat" pieces sent to the steam laundry. It is a good plan never to send sheets or pillow cases that need mending, for the rents only become increased in size. In fact, when sheets begin to go it is better to have them washed at home, for they will last many washes, whereas if they are, sent to the outside laundry they will not receive special care and will , very soon go to pieces. Economy Hints Brown sugar is obtainable and it can take the place of the granulated in much of the cooking. It is pref erable to the white sugar in cereals, as it gives a richer taste to Ihis breakfast food. ; For best results in painting, the undercoat should be a dull finish. Gloss paint should never be put on over gloss. ' ! Good cooks say an iron pot is the proper utensil in which to cook po tatoes. They assert the potatoes have a much better flavor when thus cooked. 1 When hanging out clothes hang them with the openings facing the wind. They will dry more quickly. The cards sent with wedding pres- kIiamU ka amAitl It -lis, rum milium us- riiiuvru uciuic Lite gifts are shown on the wedding day. Oiling umbrella ribs with machine oil will prevent rust. mmm- if - . i j. .-v.. J. - . .... . -'