Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 06, 1920, Page 16, Image 16
IG IHtt lyE: UA1AHA, A L U KUA If . KUVttMyttK to, Si. f Si ( f 1 f f IV frli I' -5 Society j June Wedding;. Miss Esther Smith, whose en gagement -was announced this fall to Richard Mallory. is making plans for a June wedding. , Miss Olga Mrtz, fiancee of Dr Herbert II. Davis, will also be a June bride. For Jeannette Johnson. N Misses Elizabeth Darker and Winifred Smith will entertain at a dinner party at the. Athletic club Saturday evening, the occasion being the birthday of Miss Jeannette John siiii. Covers will be placed for Misses F.rua Kced, Jeannette John son, Esther Smith, Virginia l'ixley, Elizabeth Marker and Winifred Smith, Messrs. I. Porter Allen, Richard Smith, Richard ' Mallory, (ieorgc Stocking, Fritz Koeuig and Morton Wakeloy. Birthday Reception. The Ladies.' auxiliary of I'arkvalc '"Presbyterian church helda recep tion and birthday party Thursday afternoon at the home of Dr. and Mrs. J. T. McCarty in honor of Mrs. . Larson, the occasion being her 8-'d birthday. Mrs. Larson is the oldest member of the church and is also oldest in the service of the church. A birthday cake formed the centerpiece for the table. Forty guests were present. ! For Miss Howards Jfrs.J. M. Kichards anM Mrs. J. ,A. "Fuller entertained at a lunchr-on of eight covers at their home. Fri "day, for Miss Hazel Howard and "her fiance, W.itson D. Smith, of :w York. : Mrs. Henry W. T'ierpont will en tertain at dinner at her home. Fri day evening, for Miss Howard and Mr. Smith. ( Informal Affair. j Laura . Detlef entertained iu- ' formally at her home Thursday eve lung. Those present were: Mr. and IMrs. J. F.lsasscr, Mr. and Mrs. S. fullivan, Mr. and Mrs. H. Berg, .Edith Petersen, Clara Bowan, Laura Detlef. Eric Karlen. Otto Koch. JIarry Detlef and John Petersen Junior League. t Seventeen new members admitted to the Omaha Junior league at the .meeting Thursday morning 'at the ISlackstone hotel are as follows: Mesdames Clarence - Sibbernsen, Charles Beaton, William Schnorr, (ieorge Johnston. Wilson Austin, .Edward A. Creighton, Edward Mc (leath and the Misses Ellen Creigh ton, Ruth Carter, Coriutie Elliott, Yernelle Head, .Elizabeth Parker, Mary Gifford, 'Dorothy Judson, Dorothy Belt, Virginia Fixley and Jlennette Johnson.' The Jqagtte now las a membership of 125 Bridge Party. ?Iiss Helen Walker entertained tight guests at bridge at her home J riday afternoon. . r ' Bridge Lttnchepn. . , I Mrs. Walter Davison entertained tight guests at a bridge luncheon at her home Friday. . Business Girls Meet. :' Girls ,'cf the Lion Bonding com pany met at luncheon at the Hotel Loyal Friday to discuss the feasibili ty of organizing a club. Covers were placed for 65. Among the speakers was Mrs. Arthur S. Baty Of Chicago. ' Lectures On Saturday Personal i Thomas Wakeley leaves shortly for Syracuse, N. Y, ! Mr. and Mrs.. E. H. Funk are tiow residing at 4915 Underwood avenue. , Mr. and Mrs. William Van Dom jand small son, William George, of jChicago, will spend the holidays in jOmaha with Mr. and Mrs. GcOrge Catsells Smith. Mrs. Van Dom was formerly Miss Margery Smith. " Dr. and Mrs. William N. Ander son have gone to Des Moines for .several days. i Miss Ruth Edwards of Montclair, N. J., is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. If.' O. Edwards,. Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Montgomery laud daughter, Beatrice, have gone fto Los Angeles to spend the win- Miss Kate McHugh has moved to jher new home at 4915 Cass street. tThe telephone number is Walnut U298. I ! Mr. and Mrs., Myron Learned 'hae closed their country home, ,'AValden Wood" and are at the IBlackstone for the winter. ' i Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Head have a their guests Mrs. Head's brother. W. E. Thompson, and Mrs. Thompson of St. Joseph, Mo. ' mV. and Mrs. Edwin R. Perfect are vacating their apartment at the Leetom and leave December 1 for Los Angeles, where they will make their home. Mr., and Mrs. Freeman Fitzgerald "have given up their apartment at the Till Beudor and arc now with Mrs. Fitzgerald's mother, Mrs. John Morrison. v Mrs. Anthony Rogers and Miss 1 Lillian Rogers of Chicago, who are ' . visiting at the George Brandeis ,home, will remain here until the lat- j-ter part of next week. Mr. and Mrs. Will Scliopp and i daughter, Rosemary, of Kearney, ire in Omaha and will remain here until after the holiday season when they will return to Kearney. Pauline Coad went to Lincoln Fri day to attend the Kappa Kappa 'Gamma dancing party at the Lin coln hotel Friday evening. While there she will be the guest of Mar guerite Fallon at the Kappa Kappa ; Gamma house Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Fordyce re turned Friday irom Minneapolis, i where they have been visiting. They will be with Mr. and Mrs. E. C "Mundelt until Tuesday, when they eave for California to make their 'uture home. - Miss Iel en Smith, a Detroit girl ;nd one of the only two women qual ified electrical engineets in the coun try, graduated from the Univenifv sf Michigan with the highest pos sible honors that were earned with never a concession made on account of her T1 ' p t; " if- 3 ' 1 Holding a Husband Adele Garrison's New Phase of. Revelations of c Wife , What the Driver of the Covered Wagon Brought to Madge. I have never called myself a timid woman, but T shamefully confess that I shrank back , involuntarily when my eyes fell upou the man standing in Betty Kane's kitchen. ,The idea of Grace Draper had be 'come suc! a terrifying obsession 'with me that the-sight of this man, J who, I was sure; had been employed . bv her in some wayaffected me in much the same manner as if I . had suddenly -tome face to face with the girl herself. Betty Kane, whp. had, preceded me, reached out a hand from her wheel 0 Miss Kate McHugh. Miss i Kate McHugh,' . honorary president of the Drama league, "will give he'r'only lecture before that or ganization this season on Saturday afternoon at the Fontenelle hotel, 4 p. m. Her subject will be "Caliban in English Lherature." "We may speculate on some lec tures." said Mrs. H. H. Baldrige. chairman' of publicity for the Drama league, "but there is never any doubt of the art arid worth of Miss McHugh numbers."' j Mrs. E. M. Syfert. president, will present Miss AtcHuglu Washboard ip's 'Washboards reduce the work of cleaning a garment, but arc some times hard on clothes. A glass board, although more easily broken, I? preferable to a metal one,. because the corrugations ;ire rounded and the friction on the clothes is less. When the surface of a washboard is broken it should not be used. Wash boards should always be pit'- away dry so that they da net warp or at tract wrderbugs": ' BACK HURT ALL THE TIME Mrs. Hill Says Lydia E. Pipkham's Vegetable Compound Remored The Cause. .. Knoxvillo Tenn. "My batk hurt me al the time, I was all run down, could not eat and my head bothered me, all caused by feifealc trouble. I was three, years with these trou bles and doctors did me no good. Your medicine helped my sister so she advised me1 to take it. I took Lydia E. Pink-f ham's Vegetable" Compound and the Liver Pills and used Lydia K. Pinkham's Sanative Wash and now I - am well, ean eat , heartily' and work. I give ybu'my. thanks for your great medicines. You . may publish my .letter and I will tell everyone what your medicines did for me." Mrs. Pearl Hill, .418 Jacks boro St., Knoxville, Tennessee. Hundreds of such letters express ing gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoun has accomplished are constantly being re ceived, proving the reliability of this grand old remedy. If you are ill do not drag along and continue to suffer day in and day out, but at onee take Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, a wo man's remedy for woman's ills. AlivERTISEMKM To Give the Hair a Naturally W&vy Effect Ever since the virtues of the silmerine hair-curling method first became known in this country, drupgists here have been having a really extraordinary demand for liquid silmerine. Its ' effectiveness, its convenience and its entire harmless ness doubtless have been responsible for its increasing use among well groomed women. One need only apply a little of the liquid with a clean tooth brush before doing up the hair and the tresses will I V 1 I . 1 n.ve h oeauiuui wavy ana glossy ap pearance which bears no. marks of arti ficiality. The best way is to 'divide the hair into strands and moisten each of them from root to tip. There is no dis coloration,' no sticky, streaky or other unpleasant feature. Liquid silmerine is fine also as an aid in shaping "car muffs" and in keeping them in place , over the ears. y ; AT ITS BEST The strongest com pliment ever paid to scons EMULSION is the vain attempts at imitation. Those who take cod-liver oil at its bet, take Srett Pown. BfoomtVM. H. J. ZO-42 I chair and touched mine encourag ingly. .'U know hiin," she whispered, anj the simple words heartened me. No one whom gentle Betty Kane knew could be whqlly bad. "Tim's" Furtiveness. That the man had also noticed my start 1 saw from the look which (lashed into his faceta look which his first words confirmed. "Don't be afraid, lady," he said. "I won't hurt you!" 1 looked at him attentively, Some thiug ii his maner,..nervous, ingra- as unwilling for this interview ,as II that sbmethinir bevond his volitiotT had sent him in search of -me. The impression slowly forced itself upon me that the man was actually afraid to he talking to me. He cast fre quent furtive glances toward the door, almost as if he expected some Nemesis to burst in upon hiin. deep Hetty Kane's rich broke the tension. I "Tim was in my Sunday school class years ago," she said, with the third person tone in which one speaks-of a child, and I saw that, to her. "Tim" was still the tow-headed. ,rlaA 1,.t ,t, UnJ firt,t "T sm I UlLIklVll I,,., ."Ml. 11(111 ,,,ip,ll,. i ." afraid he has forgotten much of what 1 taught him, but he knows that he can come to me at any time when be is perplexed or in trouble and I will do what I can ti help him out." I was looking steadily at "Tim" as she spoke, and I saw a brick-red flush steal over his face, and I won dered, if Betty Kane's tender spirit realized what I saw onty too clearly that there were many passa(fs in "Tim's" life which he would never dare to unfold to her horrified eyes. "He came to me this morning," he. went on, and I 'saw that in hr voice j she. could, 'nd Jsked me if it" were i possible for him to -see you here to- iiay. in some way ne nau touna out that you came rb see me occasionally, and it seems he has some message which he is very anxiotrs to deliver to you. He has assured. me that his errand is nothing which can distress you.),' A Strange Message. S , ing the embarrassed "Tim" asymuch of the ordeal of explanation tomc as . Her tone showed her anxiety, lest this summons which she had ipno cently given me might turn put to be something which would cause me Minciyance. But IJiad no-strength for the moment to reassure her, for the word "message" had brought again to me the terrifying idea that the man was the emissary from no other than Grace Drapee. An instant's reflection, however. brought to me the same conviction that, no matter what his errand, I gentle thoughtfulness she was spar-Jhad nothing to fear trom litm while 1 was under me root ot petty R.ane, I ftimed to her quickly, anixous.to. iuiet the mounting anxiety in her eyes. "I am sure everything is perfectly all right," I said, with as brave an attempt at "carelessness as I coult muster. "What is your, message?" 1 added, turning to the man. who still kept up his furtive watching of the door behind him. ' . . He hesitated, shifting front one foot to the other. I "Would you mind, Mis' Kane," he asked, finally, "if I asleed to see the lady alone f You see, that is part of the message that it be delivered to her by herself." Betty Kane's voice suddenly grew stern. "Vhat is the message? A box, or anything, -like that which could hold anything' dangerous?"' she asked, and I wondered if she had telepathic powers to voice the thought which had already come to inc. "No, nothing like that," the man said, eagerly. "Ican give.yoti my vtird 'tain't tiothin' that could hurt hex." "Very well, then," Miss Kane An swered with digiftty, and in another minute her wheel-chair had rolled into the other room, and the dooi nt had closed between her ami me. i,,,nat' The man named "Tim1 drew a let-r-' ter from his inside pocket as soon - as she was safely oitt of hearing and VN held it out to me. 1 took it, with a little chilled feeling at my heart. For upon it my name was written in the unmistakable chirography of Grace Draper! . (Cntittniu'd Tomorrow) DR. LEE W. EDWARDS Chiropractor OPEN EVENINGS 306 So. 24th Street Corner Farnam 11 332 m r II V a alt-r7JrW V 3atrAJi 'SSI o Get this Xmas guide book to Period Furniture Come in and let us giv you a copy of "Edison and Music". Telia about . the chief period design what they. look lika, what they stand for. Pithy descriptions. Beautiful illustrations. Just the information you want. v. Other Models: Elizabethan ' Queen Anne Umbrian , , Jacobean -n Louis XIV Heppelwhite, Sheraton (without inlay) XVIII Century English Italian (Consol table) Sheraton (Consol table) French Gothic (3 styles hand-carved) iLet us show you what an exquisite thing a phonograph cabinet can be. Every . New Edison on , our floor no matter what its price is encased in a genuine period cabinet Period Furniture is the world's most ex quisite development of furniture. It originated in the 16th, 17th, and 18th Cen turies. Europe was ruled by a Gorgeous Aristocracy. Fine living was the ideal of the day. An unparalleled -race of artists, architects, and 'designers built palatial living-places for kings and nobles, and furnished them. The palaces of the nobility became ..treasure-houses of - fine furniture. It was called the "Golden Age of Furniture." ' I So Mr. Edison had his designers go back ( into the manor houses of England, the j chateaux of France and the castles of Italy. They adapted 17 designs fromJ historic masterpieces. They preserved . j entire "the character and feeling of the best periods" in these superb phonograph J cases for the modern American home. : No matter which Edison cabinet you s choose, you get both the arts that make your house a cultured home music per fectly Re-Created and furniture of pur est period source. What finer gift for all the' family? with a Soul" Chippenduh Tha French Gothic frilla, the long poata, and tha ar tiatic outward curva of tha leg lend full length grace and dignity t this cave. ' a William and Htry Charming lr eipree aiv of the grace and delicacy of thii paried. TaJcae si back to Ring Wll liam'a marqnetry worker. Sharafon ialtid Embodlet the gracefol tapering leg, and the rectangular treatment ao dear to the greet Engliih deeigneai Doyou jcnow about our Budget Plan? ' how it brings your New Edison for Christmas? how it makes 1921 help pay , for it? how it utilizes thrift and system to stretch your dollar? Ask about -t I Rouse's Phqnogfraph Parlors 1916 Farnam Street '. c . . . '.''' Pfcone Douglu 7782 I