4 B THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER. 12, 11)20. Council Bluffs v Society Quiet Wedding. The marriage of tMiss Florence Otis, formerly of this city and Mr. Howell Carter, jr., of New Orleans, La., was quietly solemnized Thurs day afternoon, at the home of the bride'i parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Otis. Mrs. Carter wore a suit of Hue tricotine, with hat to matcji. fcnd a corsage of Ward rosebuds; she had no attendants. The ceremony was perforraedby Dr. J. L. Blanch- trd of the First Congregational church and a prayer was read by the bride's grandfather, Dr. Rice, who will soonv celebrate his 101st birthday. Mrs. Carter has been absent from , the city for a number of years, hay ing, attended Newcombe college in New Orleans from where she was graduated, and where she later taught. After a visit of two weeks in and near., the city, Mr. and Mrs. Carter will return to New Orleans - to make their home. v Luncheon. ' Mrs. Donald Macrae gave, a pret tily appointed luncheon to a few of " her friends last Thursday. For Mrs. Merritt. In 1 honor of Mrs. Merritt of Washington, D. C, Mrs. William Coppock entertained a few friends informally at tea Thursday after noon, t , Mr. and Mrs Fred Hurd enter tained at a dinneV of 30 covers at the Grand hotel, Monday, in honor of Mrs. E. A. Merritt. The table was made lovely with autumn flowers. Later in the evening the guests mo tored to the lake, where the last dance of the season was held at the club. Mrs. W. R. Green antcrtained a few of Mrs. Merritt's friends very informally at luncheon, in one of the small dining rooms at the Grand hotel last Tuesday., Afternoon Bridge. Mrs. F. M. Scarr entertained 14 guests at her home Wednesday. Three tables were placed for bridge, the prizes for high scores being won bv Mrs. C. E. .Swanson and Mrs. Sidney Smith. ' A color scheme of , pink and white was carried out in the refreshments, which were served late ii the afternoon and asters in these shades were used as " table decorations. Circus Party. Master Bernard Wickham invited seven of his boy friends to the circus Monday, afternoon., Following the performance they were treated by their chaperones to real circus re freshments. In the party were John Coppock, George Tinlev. Yale Kro loff, Hugh. John and Will Higgins, Francis Burkley of Omaha and Ber nard Wickham. Miss Tinley to Trinity. Miss Mary Louise Tinley, accom panied by her mother, Mrs. Hubert Tinley, left Tuesday for Washing ton, where she will enter Trinity col lege. Enroute they will visit Mrs. Tinley's parents in Iowa City and make a brief stay in Chicago. Last Club Dance. 2 So many of the A-ounger set were " reluctant to have ihe semi-weekly club dances at the Country club dis continued that the committee in charge arranged one more party, which was held last Monday night. Kensington. Mrs. Leon Lafferty and Mrs. Karl KcrUt had a neighborhood gathering Thursday at the home of the latter. The afternoon was spent with needle work and at 5 o'clock the 20 guests were seated at two ls-.ge round tables for refreshments. Daisies were used as centerpieces. t Golf Tournament. (, Wednesday morniug the opening matches in the women's golf tjour ament were played at the Country club. Mrs. W. L. Douglass defeat ed Mrs. Phil Freider and Mrs. John Davis, last year's champion, lost to Mrs. Will iam Coppock. Mrs. B. O. Bruington won over Mrs. A. C. Brown. Miss Sasjih Beslcy defeat ed Miss Marian Turner and lrs. Duquette won from Mrs. Harold Ross. By refault Mrs. E. A. Wick ham and Miss Elizabeth Quinn de feated Miss Geraldine Hess and Mrs. Raymond Hughes. The semK finals will be played next Wednes day morning. ' Informal Tea. Mrs. A. W. Casady and Mrs. But ler invited X few friends in to tea at Mrs. Casady's Saturday after noon. European Traveler Home.., Miss Anna Ross arrived home last ' week after an enjoyable trip of two months in Europe. She sailed with a smajl party of friends and visited England, France, Switzerland, Bel-, gium and Italy, returning by way of' Canada. ' For Miss Keeline. Mrs. Herbert Duquette invited a few of " Miss Kathryn Keeline's friends to an informal kensington -Friday afternoon. Two affairs have already been planned for this pop ular bride-to-be this week. Mrs. Fred Spooner will give an Orpheum party Tuesday afternoon and Miss Rodna Hughes has issued invitations ' for a bridge next Friday. Evfcnts to Come. The bridge party planned by Mrs. Robert Lindsay and Miss Cora-f Quick for last Friday was post poned until next Wednesday, Sep tember 15. Mrs. X. W. Kyn'ett has also issued invitations- for a bridge that same afternoon. Farewell Reception. r" In honor qf Miss Ethel May . Gould, who has been assistant to Dr. Van Orden of the First Presbyterian church, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mc Gee invited a number of the church people in Friday evening. Miss Gould leaves next week for her home in Iowa City and later in the month will marry one Of the protes tors at the university. Washington Guests Leave. " Miss Virginia Merritt, who has been visiting here for several weeks, left for-Red Oak. Ia. On Friday Mrs. Merritt joined her and"after a short stay there they will return to their home in Washington, D. C. Both Mrs. Merritt and her daughter have been extensively entertained by fneir many friends in Council Bluffs during their visit here. . Personals. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rohling have gone to Minneapolis for. a, visit. Mrs. A. P. Hanchett. who spent the past two months in the east Plans1 Autumn Trip i til fi? V'J I r V Mv,il'" t i k M 9 fl ' WhW f Mrs. Albert G. Elias is planning a fall trip and will leave about September 15 for Chicago. Mr. Elias will accompany her. She will later go to Napoleon, Ohio, to visit her sister, Mrs. William Gomer. She will return .to Omaha about November 1. Mr. and Mrs. Elias are at present malting their home with the latter's father, Anton Hospe, in Council Bluffs, but expect to move to Omaha this winter. with her son, Alfred, returned home early last week. . Dr. Charlotte McCuSkey is back in thp city after a vacation spent in Colorado. Mrs. John Melhop, who spent the summer in Minneapolis, plans to be home this week. Mrs. Lyle Burton has returned to Council Bluffs after a-shert visit with friends in St. Paul, Minn. Mrs. W. J. Heiser has returned home after a visit of several weeks in Chicago, Minneapolis and St. Paul. Mr. and, Mrs. Don Annis, who have been guests at the Dr. Seyhert home, returned last week to Fort Dodge, Ia. e Mrs. F. E. Roff left Saturday for her home in Kansas City after visit ing here for a week with her sister, Mrs. Robert Mullis. i 1 Miss Dorothy Miller of East Orange, N. J., who has been visit ing with the Empkie family, left for her home last Thursday. Miss Ruth Cooper, who was one of the June high schoJ graduates, leaves today for Chicago, where she will take a course in kindergarten work". After an absence of several months from the city, Mrs. Lettie Montgomery will return n the near future, and open her home on Third street. Mrs. J. J. Kelihcr returned last Tuesday from Duluth. Mr. Keliher stopped over on business in Chicago for a few days and will be home late in the week. Mrs. Charles Beno and daughter, Miss Katherine Beno, ar home again after spending the summer in their cottage at Crandall's Lodge, Spirit Lake. ' ' Foster Farrell of Des Moines, Ia., who spent the past year in the city with his aunt Mrs. Elmer Shugart, has returned to' his home and will enter an eastern college this fall. Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Wood bury, who have been summering in Vermont, are expected home this week. -They maddhe trip overland,' and on their return will be ac companid by their daughter, Mrs. Harry Abbott. What's What' By HELEN DECIES. A letter of condolence should be prompt, sympathetic,- and as con soling as the writer can make It. When the bereaved one and the con doling friend belong to the same church, or even if they have but a general belief in a state of . future beatitude, it is possible, without any effect of sermonizing, to dwell On the immortality of the, spirit rather than upon the mortality the body. In any case, a letter of condolence should not tend to renew grief by undue emphasis of the loss sus tained. ' v When the correspondent is not an intimate friend, a brief and formal expression of sympathy is sufficient. Bloomers That Contrast i Bech toggery follows the modes of dry land attire, such as capes, in serted vestees, appliqued motifs of contrasting shades and the modified Turkish trouser hem. Some smart bathing suits have bloomers of colors contrasting with the upper garment. ? To Mend Waist When a kimono waist has begun to show the strain of year, an ex cellent plan is to cut off the top of the sleeve from neck to cuff and in sert a piece of embrdidery. This enlarges the sleeve and relieves the strain, and the waist will last about twice as long if mended in this way. Marionettes Are Capable As Actors When Tony Sarg began his work with marionettes in Loudon some eight years ago merely an elab orate and incidentally most expen sive game, the delight of his literary fnendsrGordon Craig wrote him a letter quite serious in tone. He was admonished to approach an ancient art with reverence, and not to make puppets at all unless he was ready to put into their construction all the earnestness and artistry of which he was capable. ' The theory on which Tony Sarg has worked from the beginning is that the most valuable function of marionettes is a combination of realism and the magical. In his play, "The Three Wishes." it was Dame Margaret's vital personality which made the sausages' wild leap to her nose so screamingly funny There is to be the same juxta position in Rip Van Winklr We shall see a lifelike Rip change from a careless young later to a wnne- bearded man with no drop of the curtain. The miracle will be per formed before our eyes, and as there will not be one in a hundred among the audience who under stands puppet mechanism, it will be a miracle indeed. In the woods among the hills, quaint gnomes will roll their thunderballs, and weird rees will bow and wave their branches, which will gradually change 1o long, uncanny arms, beckoning. Tlrere is to be a tiny maij-coach, drawn by training horses through a snowstorm. There is to be a stately ship on the Hud son, done in shadowgraph, and a rainbow, with all the colors of 'the spectrum, which will fade out to nothing . If the completed production fulfills its present promise, it will be a glad sign-post for American children, grown over-sophisticated through too many movies. Girls anjd bpys who can reel off the names of film stars and the salaries drawn do not in many instances know what the word marionette means. It. is their right to know and to have seen, but the word in America has almost high-brow associations. One of the shoppers for Tony Sarg was buying stockings in a toy shop for a boy puppet. "How large is the doll?" asked the girl behind the counter. "They aren't for a doll. They're for a marionette." "Oh then you'll need two pairs." Never having heard of a marion ettt, she had a marmoset in mind! There is a pathos in the response of children to a marionette perform ance. , With them it is no cultivated taste. They merely Come into their own. After the, first production at the Punch and Judy there was some con fusion. A few friends had beSn in vited bv Mr. Sara to come behind the scenes and some of the children, misunderstanding, had rushed past the attendants into the mysterious region of strings and . ladders. In the excitement one little girl of six was lost. The young mother, dis tressed, called her name loudly. There was no answer, but one of the operators found her among the dolls. She was clasping the donkey as he hung, dejected, from his 16 strings, contorting him with ns and kisses a silent appeal for a per manent marionette theater. C7 S. In Drawing Threads In drawing threads for hemstitdi ing or drawn-work, .wet a small brush and rub it on a cake of soap and then on the threads desired for drawing, and they will come .out easily and without breaking. ilbuvn LIGMTI ELECTRIC '"THE Milbtn Light Electric he-r- longs just aa muck to tke man vvKo pmokea a pipe and likes kis dog and gun as to tke woman wko wants a smart easy-to-drive car. He appreciates tke way tkis car gets him over tke ground, wkile ke rests as ke drives. HANSON and TYLER AUTO CO. Joe Elf red, Mgr. 2514 Farnam Str' st ' The' Milburn Wagon Company '':tablisked 1848 iiSSSSJi saissssiSM ! - , r , - ; - i , I 1 1 Enters State University Miss Dorothy Faul, wife of Mr. and Mrs: A. f. Faul of Council Bluffs, and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Carse of Omaha. leaves this week for Lincoln to en ter the University of Nebraska there. Health and Beauty Rewards for Swimming "Regular vigorous swiminine is the best aid to beauty', and health that girls can find," says a Y. W. C. A. swimming director of New York City. "The exercise is easy. requires little strength and'therefore does not develop large, ugly muscles as some sports do. Jt sends the blood, racing through the body and thus removes blotches on the skin and othr unsightly effects of a slug gish circulation. It soothes the nerves and does away with frowns and discontented looks. And sleep lessness a great enemy of good looks is unknown to the good swimmer." Women and girls are taking an Increased interest in swimming, ac cording to reports of Y. W. C. A. swimming pools in some of the, large cities. This is the time of all sports but the water sports hold first place. In one Y. W. C. A. pool in New York City during the month of July, 4,016 girls were registered for swim ming lessons, 1,084 for dips. Winter figures . show an average of 2,000 monthly. , Dr. Lulu H. Peters of Los Ange-! les,' Cal., has a record of 16 months of relief service in the malaria soaked mountains of Albania with out a single minyte off duty. Ske likes tke feeling of proprietor skip as ske grasps tke starting lever and knows tke car will instantly respond., Tkere is no car quite like tke Milburn to win you by its appear ance and tken kold you by its per formance. Phon Other Council Bluffs girls who will attend the state university are Misses Inez Peregoy and Katherine Searles. UtVKBTISE.MEM. Why Suffer With Piles? So Matter If Yon Hove Trird Many uiupti mere still is nope in 1 Pyramid Pile Snppoiltorle. I Try Pyramid just aa quickly as you ean. It snould give quick reliet and has saved many from an opera- Get a 0 cent box of Pyramid Pile 6uppoaitorla at any drug store. It la the right thing to do. Do it for 4 your own sake, to relieve itching-, bleeding or protruding piles, hem orrhoids and such rectal troubles Take no substitute. Send coupon for free trial. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PTBAMID DHf-Q COJfPANT. m Pyramid Bids.. Manhill. Mtcl. Kindly cnd ma a Frea aampla of PyramIS PI la Supposltorlei. in plain wrappar. Name , 6treet , Cltr State ill Tyler 1368 . Toledo, Ohio I A Pledge of the Club women attending the gen eral federation biennial meeting held in Des Moines last June, eressed particular interest in an address by Charles S. Medbury, a local min ister of that city. He closed his lecture with "A Pledge of the New Patriotism" as follows: "To this day that is mine, my country's and my God's, I dedicate my all. My talents, every one, shall be held subject to the sight draft of the emergencies of others. I will enlarce mv soul bv cultivating love for those from whom I Jind myself recoiling. "No man shall ever feel his color or his caste in my presence, for within my heart of hearts theie shall be no consciousness of it. The man who has fallen shall find in me a friend, the woman down, a helper. "But more than this, those fall ing shall have mv trust that they may still stand. The cry of every child shall find my heart whether cry of need or aspiration. Not one of all the nation's "little ones" shall j be despised. "Cherishing ewty life of what ever land or race and mindful of hiddeit struggles, in all things I will Touring World on Stenographer - Salary , A girl has been discovered at Y. W. C. A. headquarter 'n New York Gity who is taking a world trip, making the money for it a3 she goes along by doing stenographic work in whatever city she wants to visit. She left Australia, her home, a year ago and sailed for Van couver where sh; made her first step. She visited Canadian cities on her way east and after four months in New York will go to England. She stops bt the Y. W. C. A. in each city. Stenographic positions are easy to find in all cities and apparently sup The Crown Jewels of Russia Are being Sold in London At prices far in advance of their original cost, shoving, that DIAMONDS ARE ALWAYS a sound investment. We have been tvorlfing all this year mounting Diamonds and creating for our Fall and Christ mas trade the most beautiful display ever shorvn in Omaha. The great majority of our stock tas bought before the high prices and this Fall tve are in a position to offer and rvill sell the diamond buyer REAL BARGAINS, regardless of rvhat others may offer. We not only invite you, but urge you, if you are at all interested, to compare our prices on DIAMOND JEWELRY. C. B. Brown Co. Diamond Merchants, Jewelers 16th and Farnam Free Our Little Booklet, "How to Judge Diamonds" lAEil ! I 1 all fJ 1 1 wl .-..j-a-.--r , . , i a :,, Mouth Reconstruction i When only a few teeth re main and fixed bridgework is impossible, then Combination Denture should be used to reconstruct the mouth. This denture is held in position by the natural teeth. More comfortable and serviceable than plates. Virtually a removable bridge. Before installing a LAM. U aA a VACUUM This it the famous Heating Plant, the on the market today--saves one-third in fuel built to last a lifetime absolutely guaranteed. WE CAN SAVE YOU FROM $50 to $100 on first cost and give you very liberal installed in Omaha; information free if lanunm Fnrnano UUUUIM I UIIIUUW New Patriotism strive to help. No word sh.ll ever pass my lips that hurts another in things of face, form, station, or estate. My own weaknesses, foibles, sins, shall chasten speech and spirit and deny me pride. "My life shall be a dedicated thing. I shall count it desecration to pervert it. The vandal hands of fust and hate and greed shall not be permitted to despoil. "And thus I resolve, not because I am good, but that I want to be: not because I am strong, but that I fear, weakness; not that I feel abov others, but that with all my soul I long to be of humankind botH helped and helper. So do I nedicat my days. So do I set .part my culture. So do I receive but to give again to others. So do I press humbly into the presence of the sacrificial Son of Man, crying out in eager consecration, "Let me fol low Thee, Master, wherever the world still needs ministry, wherever life is still to be given for the many. Help me, Thou whose manger cradle brought depiocracy to light, io meet in my own worth, democracy's final test, and to my 'own great day to be true." ply enough funds to provide for railroad tickets besides living ex penses. This is not the lirst "itin erant lady typist" to be found. A New York City firm has just said goodby to two tvpists who are "seeing America lirst," by the same scheme. They are girls who are eager to see the country "before settling down to married life or some other steady job," they say. Their em ployers are wondering whether this is a new manifestation offjminme unrest or merely a novel way for venturesome, capable girls to widen their knowledge and experiences, realizing that the demand for typists has made the expert in thii line a remarkably free agent. Mrs. Martha M. Rogers, recent ly appointed pastor of a Brooklyn church, is the first woman in the east to receive a (license to preach in a Methodist Episcopal church. V3 IMC m iim SWXMIIIUHJr. 1 Ml U - CHUPCKl This work is skillfully and carefully done by Drs. 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