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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1921)
) Council Bluffs Society Council Bluffs Visitor r For Orpheum Stars. On Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs. Clfij Wilcox gave a dinner at their home, followed by a theater party, in honor of the six Kiiksmith sisters who appeared last week in a very clever musical sketch at the Orpheum. One of the sister. Miss Pauline, is the fiancee of Vernon Smith of Seattle, Wash., nephew of Mrs. J. J. Spindler of this city. Style Show, flans have been formulated for a style show to he given Monday eve ning, March Jn, in M. ! ratios audi torium, where artistic decorations, beautiful lighting effects and good music will be added features to the entertainment. Some very stunning and "up-to-the-minute" costumes will be dis played by the different models, it is promised. Former Bluffs People Return. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keeline ar rived in the city last week from Grand Island. Neb., and in the future will reside in Council Bluffs. They are with the W. S. Keeline family temporarily, but expect to move soon into their own home. Concert Date. Monday evening, April 18, is the date set for the Creighton Glee Club concert which will be given in this city under the auspices of St. Francis Alumae association, at St. Francis auditorium. Visiting in Kansas City. Mrs. Blaine Wilcox and her sister, Mrs. Thomas D. Davis, are in Kan sas City, Mo., visiting another sister, Mrs. AL Dickenson. Mrs. Davis was formerly Miss Sarah Besley of this city. Her mar riage to Lieutenant Davis last Sep tember took her to San Antonio, Tex., where she and her husband now reside. During April Mrs. Davis will re turn with Mrs. Wilcox to Council Bluffs and spend some time visiting here. Luncheon. In honor of her house guest, Mrs. Loomis of Kansas City, Mrs. John G. Wadsworth entertained eight guests at luncheon on Thursday. . Klatter Club. The Klatter club girls will meet at the home of Mrs.,V. J. Heiser for luncheon Friday and spend the afternoon with bridge. American Legion Affair. J ican Legion daice last Monday, when a large crowd of the younger set gathered at the auditorium for an evening of entertainment, the proceeds of which will go to a fund for .wounded and crippled men who served in the late war. Engagement Announced. In Chicago last week, announce ment was made of the approaching marriage of Miss Victoria Bender j r i- a ..1.1 ...u.' u . 'ii uu,' ivir. uaiics i-vum, vyiuiii win .J 1 o CV S 1 71 - mmnumtatatmaji n-. s i?4 V 4T.JsBm ' f iff Omaha Society Continued Personals Halleck Rose is ill at his home. Walter D. Williams returns Sun day from an eastern trip. Miss Helen Smails, who has been ill for several days, is recovering. Ben Thomson and Fred Cottcr'are spending the week end in Lincoln. Thomas M. Orr is seriously ill at his home suffering from a nerv ous breakdown. , Mrs. Milton C. Feters left Wed- nesdav for Jacksonville, Fla., to join Mr. Peters. Homer Rose is spending the week end in Lincoln at the home of Judge and Mrs. W. B. Rose. Mrs. Conrad Young returned Fri day from a six weeks' visit in New York and Philadelphia. Mrs. R. D. Catherwood. who has been ill and who suffered a relapse last week, is improved. C. M. Skiles of Lincoln came to Omaha Friday to attend the wedding of Miss Ellen Cole and David Swarr. The condition of Luther Drake, who has been seriously ill at his home for the past 10 days, is unchanged. Miss Dove Mitchell returned Sat urday from St. Paul, Minn., where she visited her brother, Bishop C. B. Mitchell. month, is now at the Coronado Beach hotel where she will spend a few weeks. Charles F. McGrew has returned from a three months' stay in Cali fornia and is with his daughter, Mrs. Wilson Austin and Mr. Austin. Mrs. McGrew will remain in Cali fornia for a time. W. R. Adair has just returned from a five weeks' sojourn in Flor ida, Cuba and New York. He was accompanied by Mrs. Adair and Miss Majoric, who arc remaining in the cast for a few weeks. Mrs. C. E. Hulsebus of Harlan, la., who ha been wintering in California with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John McKicg, arrived in Council Bluffs Saturday to visit for a few days with her sister, Mrs, Howard Butler. take place in the early summer. Miss Bender is a lormcr Council JJlutts girl. Indoor Circus. One of the largest and most en joyable stag events ever staged in Council Bluffs took place in the city auditorium last Thursday evening, when the members of the Goodfel lowship club of the Chamber of Commerce entertained their friends at a winter circus. From the manager of the show to the snake charmers, all were men, ladies not even being invited to wit ness what was termed the most suc cessful event in the history of the circus. i Kreisler Concert. Among .the Council Bluffs people in the audience at the Omaha Auditorium Friday evening for the Kreisler concert were Mesdames John G. Woodward, -Carleton Wood ward. Wood Allen. Robert Turner. Milo Smith. Lucius Pry or, Leonard tverett, h. A. Wickham, John Mel hop, Robert Mullis, James Hunter, Kar Kchrer. X. W. Kvnett. C. E Woodbury William Maxwell, H. W. Clark, K. H. Nichols. Misses Eliza beth Quinn, Marian Turner, Ger trude Clark, Marguerite Moorehouse and Vera Wind. To Celebrate. - On Thursday evening, March 17, which is the anniversary of the first battle in which Company L par ticipated in France, the boys of this organization will entertain their fel low comrades from Sioux City, Avoca, Red Oak, Ottumwa and other Iowa cities at a banquet in the arm ory. About 150 former sevice men are expected and the affair will be fillowed by a dance. Personals. J. J. Hughes of Des Moines, la., was in the city last week. Mrs. Garland Rounds is in Des Moines, la., visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Mackland and daughter, Genevieve, returned Tues day from a stay of several months in California. - Mrs. John O'Brien who has been visiting her father, Dr: W. P. Horn bach, for the past few weeks, plans to leave soon and join her husband at Little Rock, Ark. Miss Helen Leahy left Monday for Mrs. K. C. Barton of Boston, wfco has been spending several days at the Fontenelle, left Saturday for her home. Mrs. V. P. Unitt left Sunday for a visit of two months in the east, in cluding New York, Philadelphia and other points. ' Miss Helen Reed, who is attend ing Wells-college, Aurora, N. Y., will spend her Easter vacation in New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton B. Stuht an nounce the birth of a son, William Churchill, at the Clarkson hospital (n Sunday, -March 6. Mrs. H. H. Wheeler will be the guest of Mrs. Mary Heath at the Colonial the latter part of next week, when she conies to Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. C. Louis Meyer and Harry Koch, who havr been in California for the pasjt two weeks, are at Coronado Beach. i Mrs. Howard H. Baldrige, who has been in Los Angeles, Cal., since her return from Honolulu last points in California. Her itinerary includes Riverside, where she will spend a short while with Miss Mar garet Wolfs, who visited here last year 'with her sister, Mrs, George Wickham. t Danger signals of the skin Pimples, blackheads and boils are signs of towered vitality ttf I HE causes of acne (pimples and black I heads) are always found in a lowered B. vitality," writes a skin specialist connected with several of New York's important hospitals. And "the repeated occurrence of boils should always be looked upon as an indication of lowered vitality," he also states. Scientists now know that the real cause of the trouble may be some error in diet. If the food we eat is poor in the newly dis covered substance called vitamine, we fall off in health and easily get such ailments as pimples, blackheads and boils. Something is clearly needed to correct the basic trouble of these widespread complaints. And now scientists have discovered it in a familiar little cake of food. It is now known that yeast is rich in a myste rious factor called vitamine just the familiar cake of yeast that we have all known as good for just one thing, to raise bread. This vitamine we need throughout life. Without it we cannot get the strength and vigor from our food that we must have in order to keep in health. Yet many of our everyday foods lack this necessary vitamine To correct the widespread ailments of pimples, boils and constipation, physicians and hospitals are therefore prescribing Fleischmann's Yeast as an addition to the regular meals. As a result thousands of men and women are being freed of these painful and embarrassing minor ailments! Yeast (may be eaten like any other food. It is highly digestible. You may eat from one to three cakes a day. Within two weeks you should notice an improvement, but obstinate cases may require four or five weeks for tht benefit to be apparent. You will quickly learn to like the "cream-cheesey" taste of Fleischmann's Yeast spread on cracker or bread, or just plain. If troubled with gas, dissolve yeast in boiling water. . Place a standing order with your grocer for Fleischmann's Yeast and get it delivered fresh every day. To get the vaiuawe tree booklet, "The New Importance of Yeast in um, iuuich itt&r LiKisCHMANN COMPANY, Dept 701 Washington Street, New York, N. Y Deali James A. Tancock left Wed nesday for the western coast and plans to reside in Los Angeles or San Francisco. Mrs. Tancock, who is ill at the Fenger hospital, will join her husband as soon as she is recovered. Mrs. Harry Cohn and sons, Don ald and Henry, of Far Rockaway, N. Y., who have been visiting Mrs. Cohn's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Meyer for the past two months will return home the latter part of next week, accompanied by Mr. Cohn, who arrived Friday evening. Shoulder Straps. SJiouldcr straps on lingerie gar ments never wear well. They fray and pull away from the material and become stringy and faded. Try cro cheting a strip of filet one inch wide and of the desired length. Filet is quite simple to make. Chain the unmher of stitches re quired to make the width, chain five for the turn, make a double crochet into the seventh from the end and you will find you have made a tiny square. Chain two, and repeat the double stitch into the third from the one caught by the "first double cro chet. Back and forth this block pat tern is repeated. These may be made of the colored threads, unless white straps are desired. An edging to match is easily made with a picot top for the garment. Golden Fleece In Annual Luncheon The Order of the Golden Fleece, an organization at the University of Nebraska made up of girls possess ing red hair (shades from sorrel to samion pink), jioiu its annual lunch eon Saturday noon in the palm room of the Victoria hotel, with Miss Louise Pound presiding. Miss Mary Gant of Omaha served as one of the four judges. Prizes were offered for the most brilliant red hair, for the "most fascinating scintillating golden glow,", for the greatest quantity and for "the red haired girl having the most fascinat ing freckles." Two consolation prizes were given to those having tresses nearest lemon in shade and nearest brown. The first prize, dedicated to the girl having the reddest hair, "was written by Jessie Gretchen Beghtol Lee, formerly of Lincoln, now re siding in Chicago. It was called "A Chile Con Carne Queen," and read: "(Free verse after the manner of Carl Sandburg and others who fill our best magazines and books.)" "When It Is night And I atop out to quaff A silver drink from off th corncri of th moon, I hear a crying ( Like the wall of weeping- women. "It la the moonbeams Spluttering- and scolding- to themselve. They wrap their heads in sliver shawls And nod and sparkle as they speak. 'Here's that old sun again,' they sav. 'lie's cheating us he's shining overtime. We'll speak to God and have him repri manded. Curse his rays' "And I draw hack One cannot fight A million maids." A chief feature of this meeting of the Golden Fleece was a contribu tion by H. L. Mencken, literary editor of the Smart Set, who referred to "Red-haired girls who wear their hair in high, wild heaps, like red-hot spaghetti. . . . Red-haired girls with brilliantly black eyebrows, too black, in fact, to be God's unassisted gift. . . . Red-haired girls with their hair bobbed,, looking like fab ulous chrysanthemums. . . . Red haired girls wondering whether to thank God for it, or to curse Him. Red-haired brides. Red-haired,, wid ows. Red-haired grass widows. Red haired women marrying their fifth husbands. Red-haired women in battalions, regiments, brigade, di visions and army corps. Red-haired women . . . Red-haired women I" v It costs $2,940 to elect Miss Alice Robertson as a member of' the I'mt cd States congress from Oklahoma. Hardman Welte-Mignon Reproducing Piano Not an ordinary) player, but an instru ment that RECREATES the exact in terpretation of the great artists nig have played expressly for it. Paderewski, Busoni, Hof mann, Chaminade and about all the rest of the world's greatest artists. When you aVe listening to a Welte-Mignon perform ance of Paderewski, for instance, you are liter ally listening to Paderewski, with all his majesty and sweet delicacy, his power and every shade of feeling and sentiment. The Hardman Welte-Mignon is electrically operated and pneumatically controlled to coincide precisely with every shade of expression as played into the roll by the artist himself. It is the supreme instrument in its field and an endless joy to the musical connoisseur. Call tomoiTOw and let us demonstrate this won derful instrument to you. Pianos of other makes accepted as part payment. Convenient terms ar ranged on the balance. Schmollr ? Mueller Piano Co. 1514-16-18 Dodge St. Omaha, Neb. EXCLUSIVE HARDMAN REPRESENTATIVES ' . - 't 98-B Typical cases: how they were helped In investigations emnied on in hading institutions in Philadelphia and New York, the value ol Fleiachmann' s Yeast in treating pimples and boils waa clearly demon atrated. There was rapid improvement in cases ol acne, and cases ol boils were either greatly improved or cured within two weak. One typical case ol pimples waa that of a patient who had had a moderate eruption on face and body for three years. Three cakes of yeast daily bafora meals were given and the eruption cleared almost completely in four weeks. For pimples and boils eat one to three cake a day, Ih acute cases always consult your physician. We Use Refinite Perfect Soft Water no gummy soap curd; no lye or chemicals to injure tho fabric. Your linens will be clean, sweet-smelling and snowy white. Clothes wear longer look better. Your wash is delivered damp not wet light pieces ready for ironing. We launder each bundle separately the safe, sanitary way. No laundry marks. Moisture is removed by suction cannot break buttons. Your clothes are weighed dry. Costs you but a few cents a pound. We also air-dry your wash if desired all pieces ready for im mediate ironing. 'Phone us to call for, your wash. Harney 0784. 1608-10-12 Ha may Street Douglas' 1796 Come Once and You Will Come Always Specials for Monday Pig Pork Chops, per Best Quality Pure Stringless Wax lb ..27J6i Rendered Lard, per Beans, 20c grade, 3 : : : lb. 14 i cans for 25d 1-lb. jar Pure Pre- -. . serves, 2 for.. .256 1 ,, 10 bars Electric C8nS Car0lI ark Soap for.45 We .Ml sell our Cen- MJk' P" tral Special Coffee, Fancy Country But- pcr lb ....356 Delicia and Winesap ter, in 2-lb. rolls, per 3 lbs. for. .SirOO Apples, box.. 83.25 lb 356 if 2NNO UN CINQ A New Invention that makes possible an Amazing New Saving, and a wonderful New Smartness in HomeCreated Clothes DELTOR WITH The Deltor, the wonderful new patented "Picture Guide," any woman can now produce a frock or gown that has a Parisian finish and charm never attained in home sewing before, with full certainty of a per fect result, and at a saving of as much as $10 on materials alone. These are the three marvelous new achievements of The Deltor accomplished by means of amazingly simple pictures and explanations that every woman understands at once: 1 50c to $10 Saved in Materials THE Deltor "trick-lay" solves every problem of placing the pattern cf folding, piecing and mak ing sure that every piece is cut the right way of the goods. It is worked' out so economically for every size and every suitable width of material that, by following the Deltor guide, you use from K to yards less. 2 A New Certainty in Assembling EACH step in putting together that an expert would take pictured so simply, explained so clearly that all you have to do is to follow with your needle, and you almost magically attain the perfect fit, set and "drape" that say, without words, "Fifth Avenue" or "Paris." "l Paris' Own Touch in Finishing EVERY single detail, every tiny touch that gives a garment individuality in the clever hands of the Parisian modiste imparted to you by instructions that the least skilled of needlewomen can follow. IT does not matter how much or how little experience insewingyouhave, The Deltor can save you money and secure such re sults as you never hoped to attain in frocks you made before. The Deltor now ac companies all new Butterick patterns and Butterick patterns alone! Make use of its invaluable guidance in the very next garment you plan to make! oAskfor The DELTOR at Your Favorite Store BUTTERICK Style Leaders of the lOorld for Fashions Ivith the charm of Paris for Money-Saving in the home for Authority in Etiquette for Ration 1Q