) V Society Mickel-Riley. Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Marearct Elizabeth Riley, daughter of the late ohn Kiley. and Thomas h. Mickcl, vhich took Dlace Saturday morning at St. Johns rectory, the Rev. Fit George Dineen officiating. Mrs. T. P Kelley of Los Angeles and Francis J. Green, the bride's nephew, were the attendants. After the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. Anna Greene, Mr. and Mrs. Mickel left Saturday for a western trip. They will be at home in Omaha after September 1 For Bridal Party. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Wcllman will entertain 16 guests at the dinner- tlance at Happy Hollow club Tues day evening in honor of their niece, Miss Elizabeth Duel!, whose mar riage to Wilton Andresen will take; place Tuesday evening, 7 o clock, at the VVellman , home, Dr. Harry roster officiating. In Honor of Miss Carncross. Miss Dorothy English entertained eight guests at a party at the Athletic club roof garden, Monday evening, in honor of Miss Arlina Carncross. Miss Carncross, who has been residing here for the past year with her sister. Mrs. Milton Dodds, is leaving shortly to return to her home in Madison. Wis. Miss Maud Miller will entertain Tuesday evening at Happy Hollow club for Miss Carncross. For Visitor. Mrs. W. H. Head entertained at luncheon at the Field club Monday in honor of Miss Marie Clarke of Rushville, Ind., who is a guest at the Head home. Others present were Mrs. W. S. if"HoIbrook of Los Angeles, the Misses Dorothy Arter, DcWeenta Conrad, Lillian Head and Messrs. William S. Holbrook, jr., of Los An geles, W. H. Richter of Davenport, Ia.f F. Lantry of Boston and Bar ton Kuhns. . Plans for Miss Clarke. Misses Ruth Miller and Florice Shaw will entertain at a breakfast Wednesday morning at the Miller home in honor of Miss Marie Clarke of Nashville, Tenn., the guest of Miss Lillian Head. Miss Head liid Miss Clarke will . motor to Fremont Tuesday for a visit with Miss Mary Marshall. Miss Clarke will probably leave Wednes day evening for her home. Auto View Rest G." H. Pratt entertained six guests at dinner, Saturday evening at Auto View Rest. W. B. Cheek entertained eight guests at breakfast,. Sunday morning. Dinner parties were entertained Sunday evening by L. M. Platner, W. E. Schaefer. Dr. t. U. Beck, Dr. j. A. Lyons!, W. H. Wood, C. H. Page and W. L, Holzman. v Country Club. F. W. Judson entertained six guests at supper at the Country club Sunday evening. J. A. Baum had six and Dean Weaver, three. Mrs. O. C. Redick had seven guests for luncheon at the club Mon day. .. Luncheon for Guests. Mrs. W. F. Callahan entertained at luncheon at the Athletic club, Mon day, in honor of her granddaughters. Lucy and Mary Ann Callahan of Columbus, O. The Misses Callahan have also been visiting Mrs. Edward Cassidy. For Visitor. Mrs. L. M. Talmage will enter tain 10 puests at the dinner-dance at Happy Hollow club Tuesday even ing complimentary to Mrs. George Strain of Galesburg, 111., who is vis iting Miss Lucy Updike. Helping Hand Society. The Helping Hand society of Kountze Memorial church will meet Friday at Camp Brewster. A 1 o'clock luncheon will be served. Special Meeting. A special business meeting of the Omaha Woman's club will be held Friday morning at 10 o'clock at the Burgess-Nash auditorium. Open Day Postponed. Open day. scheduled for Wednes day at the Field club, has been post poned until Wednesday, July 20. Personals Miss Ruth Anderson is convalesc ing at her home from an attack of tonsilitis. Miss Etta Schaber is spending two weeks at Minneapolis and the Minne sota lakes. Mrs. Molly Richards left Satur day to spend a month in Los Angeles and San Francisco. L. C. Hazelton is visiting his broth er in Vermont. En route home he will spend some time at Lake Geneva. Mrs. George Camp is at the Ford hospital, where she underwent an operation for appendicitis Monday morning. the Misses Ebba Sorensen and Velista M. Presson of Omaha are stopping at the Towhatan, Washing ton, u. u Mr. and Mrs. Fred Barker of Chi cago spent the week-end in Omaha at the E. C. Epsten home en route to Colorado and California. Mrs. L. M. Holliday and daugh ter, Miss Virginia, are spending the summer months with Mrs. fiolli day's sister, Mrs. H. S. Purvis, in Des Moines. Mrs. Austin Nattingly of Balti more and Miss Florence Riley, whom she is visiting, went to Kan sas City for the past week-end to be the guests of Mrs. D. M. Nigro. They returned home Monday even ing. Mrs. M. A. Dillon of Omaha, who has been visiting her son, Stanley Dillon, in Berkeley, Cal., is recover ing from a serious operation at the Hehnemann hospital in San Fran cisco. She will, leave the hospital in about two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Judson A. Shaw and daughter, Constance Audrey, have taken a bungalow at Rockaway Beach, Lake Taneycomo, Mo., for a month, and will return, tq Omaha More Truth By JAMES J. ADVENTURE By Proxy I love adventure. Bearding bears In Unalaska's frozen passes, Or threading through the lofty lairs Where tigers lurk in dank morasses, Combating walrus, hand to hand Upon the floes above Point Barrow, These things all make my breast expand And thrill my being to the marrow, I fain would know the perfect bliss Enjoyed by the undaunted Laskar, Who hears the anaconda's hiss Among the wilds of Madagascar. To face the fierce rhinosceros, The janguar to tame and capture Amid the tangled tropic moss Must be the very height of rapture. And ah! 'twould be a joyous lark The apogee of the romantic To grapple with a raging shark . . Beneath the rolling South Atlantic. And as for giant octopi Which grab a man and drag him under, What man is there who does not sigh To conquer one of them, I wonder. I do not hunt these splendid brutes; Ungratified is my ambition. I haven't any hunting suits Or proper guns and ammunition, I let pot hunters fill their hides With deadly shot, for they are paid to. t HE'D BE BETER OFF. Admiral Sims must be sorrv he didn't follow the example of a dis tinguished predecessor and cut the cables before he went into action. SUSPICIOUS. The Sinn Feiner9 are afraid that in the event of home rule Ireland will be governed with Ulsterior motives. THE MAKING OF 'EM. An actor looks forward to appearing in a Broadway production; the lawyer to appearing ina New York Copyright. 1031. bj The HOLDING A -'' Adelo Garrison's H "Revelations What Lillian Said at Marion's Com mand. 'My eyes went involuntarily to Lil lain's face as Marion's weak little voice made her plea to see her "Uncle Robert." To the nurse, of course, the name meant nothing, and what Dr. Pettit knew or guessed I did not know nor care. A physi cian becomes a sanctuary when he is in charge of a critical case. But to me, -with my intimate knowledge of Lillian's soul, the name of Robert Savarin on the lips of her little daughter was fraught with startling significance. -How would she react to the child's entreaty? I knew that her poise under most circumstances was matchless, but she had just been through what was probably the most terrible suspense of even her eventful life, and she could not control the rush of color to her pallid cheeks at Robert Sav arin's name. But her voice was firm as she bent over her child. "Of course you shall see him, dear. Auntie Madge will write to him right away." I was not surprised at her quick acquiescence, although I knew that she was permitting no longing of her own to influence her one way or the other. But if Marion at this moment of restoration to her had asked for the most unattainabla thing in the world I think her mother would have tried to achieve the im possible for her beloved. "Can't she telegraph or telephone? Then he'll come quicker." The little voice, though weak, was inflexible and imperious. It was not Field Club Among? those who entertained at supper parties at the Field club Sun day evening were F.. P. Loomis, Howard Kennedy, J. B. Harvey, W. G. Nicholson, L. J. Millard, R. H. Manley, O. D. Kiplinger, P. C. Hy son, A. E. Hall, A. S. Mayer, C. J. Claassen, C O. Rydholm, L. H. Lon don, E. A. Baird, James Trimble, Claude Uren, C T. Merriam, A. B. Whitten and R. D. Carey. Guy Williams has made reserva tions for SO for luncheon Tuesday and reservations have been made for 70 tennis players' who will dine to gether Tuesday evening. Mrs. C. E. Corey will have 12 guests for luncheon Tuesday and T. W. Allen will have a party of 20 for dinner Tuesday evening. Happy Hollow Club. More than 275 reservations were made for supper at the Happy Hoi lew club Sunday evening, including 100 visiting real estate men from western cities who are en route to a convention in Chicago. Mrs. A. H. Nabstedt entertained nine guests at luncheon Monday and Mrs. G. M. Durkee had a party of five. about August IS. They ' will visit friends in Kansas City, Mo., before returning home. Mrs. E. C. Epsten and sons, Tom and Robert, leave the latter part of the week for the Minnesota lakes. Mr. Epsten will join them there lat er, as will also another son, who is at present visiting in California and other points along the western coast, Louise Jansen Wvlie, Robert S. Wylie and little Louise Roberta Wylie and Mrs. F. Jansen are at Long Beach, Cal. The middle of August they will go to Giant Forest lodge, in Segnoia National park. They will return to Omaha Septem ber 15; . Than Poetry MONTAGUE - divorce trial. BeU Syndicate, Inc. HUSBAND New Phase of . . of a Wife" like Marion to be thus insistent. She is usually the most docile child im aginable, though one can see that she has her full inheritance of spirit and dominance. But I remembered that the famous artist who loves her mother so faithfully was, next to that mother, enshrined highest in the child's adoring heart. A Fear. Lillian hesitated a second, and I knew that there had come to her a vision of the way Robert Savarin might interpret so vehement a sum mons, and of his probable renewal of the plea that was always in his heart and on his lips when he saw her. Dr. Pettit's deep voice broke in abruptly: "Of course. Auntie Madge will telegraph or telephone, Marion," he said. "And you shall have your uncle as soon as he can get here." Lillian looked up at him with startled eyes, and for a dismayed in stant I shared the fear that I knew had leaped into her brain. Was the reason for the physician's haste ? Dr. Pettit smiled reassuringly, and we breathed again. "Please don't jump at conclu sions," he said significantly. "I told you that everything was all right so far. But the more quiet and peace of mind we can give this little ladv. the more swift will be her recovery." i iuauuus eyes iwinKiea. "Suppose I ask for the moon?" she queried saucily. . : "You wouldn't want me to break my neck climbing for it, and that's what I should do immediately," the physician" replied, with the smile which he reserves for children. He is at his best with little people, seeming to shed the stiff aloofness in which he .'socially wraps himself, and Ma rion is very fond of him. Blessed Relief. "I wouldn't want you to break your neck, but I'd love to see you climbing for it," Marion said medi tatively, and it was so evident she was visualizing the upward climb of the dignified, rather awkward phy sician, that her mental picture be came suddenly visible to the rest of us. I saw Miss Jones, the nurse, bite her lips to keep her professional dignity, but Lillian and I, in the re laxation of the strain to which we had been subject laughed outright, a laugh in which Dr. Pettit after a palpable annoyed second, partici pated. But he resumed his profes sional manner a moment afterward, in much the same fashion as he would have drawn a cloak around his shoulders. "This will be quite enough excite ment for this afternoon," he said authoritatively. "Mrs. Graham, you may use the office telephone for your telephone or telegraph message. Then, if you wish, I will take you home, as I pass the farm, anyway. Things are progressing so nicely here there is no need of your staying. Miss Jones, if you please." v The nurse stepped to his side, and out of our hearing, while he gave her the instructions for the night. And my eyes caught and held Lillian's in blessed comprehending relief. If Dr. Pettit were giving me permis sion to go home, then he anticipated no danger to his small patient, no sudden complication which would make my presence and support nec essary to Lillian. She rose from Marion's side and came toward me. 1 "Will it be possible for you to let me know the result of your message to Robert?" she asked, and I knew what a volcano the quiet question covered. "I will have the answer to the wire come here if I do not get him by telephone now," I returned. "If I get him on the telephone I will come back and tell you before I go home." Continued Tomorrow.) THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1021. Romance in Origin Of Superstitions By H. I. KING. Dogs and Health. It is a general superstition all over the United States that the health of children is improved by having them play with dogs; and in many localities it is believed that a sick child or, as many say, even a grown person can be cured by hav ing a dog sleep in the bed with him A publication of the American Folk' JLore societj' has the following m stance: "A few years ago a young man in Holyoke, Mass., (a common sense person) had a child ill with dumb ague. By advice he got a pup and put it in the child s cradle, The dog broke out in sores and the child got well." . Here, again, we have that form ot sympathetic magic known as the magic of contact the ancient orim five belief in the law of transference. The dog sympathetically absorbs the disease of the patient by being Drought into contact with him draws it out, as it were. As to the selection of a dog for tne curative process the dog was one of the three animals the other two being the lion and the goat sacred to Jove, Mercury, some say Mars, and Pan. To put a goat or a lion in a child's crib might be a triHIe inconvenient but the dog is easy. Thus in working the cure we not only get the benefit of sympa thetic magic but invoke the benefi cent power of the great gods to whom the dog is sacred. Copyright, 1921, by The McClure Newt- paper Syndicate. Jewel, Flower, Color Symbols for Today By MILDRED MARSHALL. The talismanic gem for today Is the sapphire, which was believed by the ancients to protect its wearer from danger. When worn in a ring, it is one of the luckiest stones that one can possess, attracting good fortune to its wearer, bringing him great riches and the respect of his fellowmen. The sardonyx is the natal stone of those born on an anniversary of this day. It is supposed to make them sharp-witted, and to bring them good luck in legal matters. There is an old legend which claims that no one who wears a sardonyx can be falsely convicted. Today's lucky color is black. Worn by a young girl, it signifies coquetry, On those who are frivolously in clined, it exerts a quieting effect, making them grave and industrious, The flower for today is the orange blossom, symbolic of beauty and youth. Copyright, list, Wheeler Syndicate, Inc. Dog Hill Paragrafs By George Bingham The Tickville Town Marshal, who has just received his new uniform, is now better prepared than ever be fore to cope with the lawless ele ment, and has warned all violators that they lay themselves liable to immediate arrest if they do so again. Sile Kildew's cousin on Musket Ridge was united in marriage Satur day night. A present was expected from Sile, and as he didn't have any money to throw away he just sent them his best wishes, which are cheap and durable. . Cricket Hicks says in reading one of your private letters out loud to a friend who will not say anything about it, it is customary to lower your voice and read through your nose when you come to a paragraph that is of no interest. Copyright, 1921, George Matthew Adams. Where It Started Pennants. These long, pointed banners origi nated as follows: When Van Tromp, the Dutch admiral, appeared to at tack England, he hoisted a broom to his masthead to indicate his inten tion of making a clean sweep of the English fleet. The English admiral replied by hoisting a horsewhip as a sign of his intentions toward his foe. The slender, pointed horsewhip was adopted by the. English fleet as a mark of a ship of war, and long, slim flags were made to represent it. (Copyright, 1921, Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) What is wrong with your skin? Clogged or enlarged pore, blotches, roughness, etc. f Try Reainol Soap end Oint ment They usually over catnesuch trouble prompt ly, easily and at little cost. Sold brail drunfrta, Resinol ySLtoPY -TIM CHAPTER III. The Bumblebee Family. The farmyard was not the first place that Chirpy Cricket chose for his home. Before he dug himself a hole under the straw near the bar.i he had settled in the pasture. Al though the cows seemed to think that the grass in the pasture be longed to them alone, Chirpy de cided that there ought to be enough for him, too, if he didn't eat too much. He had been living in the pasture some tjme before he discovered that All that day, between saps, Chirpy could star the humming a very musical family had come to live next door to him. They were known as the Bumblebees; and there were dozens of them hud dled into a hole long since deserted by some Woodchucks that had moved to other quarters. Although they were said to be great workers most of them the Bumblebee family found plenty of time to make music. They were very fond of humming. And in the beginning Chirpy Cricket thought their humming a pleasant sound to hear, as he sat in his dark hole dur ing the daytime. 1 hey re having a party in there! he said, the first time he noticed the droning music. "No doubt" he added "no doubt they're enjoy ing a dance 1" The thought made him feel so jolly that if it had only been dark out of doors he would have left his home and leaped about in the pas ture. All that day, between naps. Chirpy could hear the humming. Its certainly a long party 1 he ex claimed, when he awoke late in the afternoon and heard the Bumblebee family still making music. But about sunset their humming stopped. And Chirpy Cricket couldnt help feeling a bit disappointed, because he had hoped to enjoy a dance him- ADVERTISEMEJiT CUSTODIAN OF SCHOOL BOARD STATES FACTS Lincoln Man Says It Would Be Downright Injustice . Not to Speak Out. "I feel I would be doing a down right injustice to people who suffer like I used to it I did not tell them about the way Tanlac restored me to health," said A. J. McKnight, 845 South 18 W, Lincoln, Neb., custo dian of school supplies for the Board of Education. "I had been in a bad fix for some time and was steadily going down hill. My appetite was poor, my kid neys bothered me a good deal and I had frequent attacks of dizzy spells, when I could hardly stand it. i never was free from an ache in the small of my back, and this hurt me so that I got very little rest at night. When a niece ot mine who was given up to die was completely re- tored to health by taking lanlac, I began taking the medicine myself, and it has just made a new man out of me. My appetite was never bet ter and my digestion seems penect. I sleeo like a log at night and get up in the morning feeling just fine. haven t a trouble of any sort now and Tanlac is entitled to the credit. recommend it without a single reservation. Tanlac is sold in Omaha by Sher man & McConnell Drug Co. (PREMIUM c SODA CRACKERS 7irHin kup a m A glass of milk and CRACKERS make an appetizing, sus-, taining pick-me-up between meals on a hot summer day or any other day. These mildly-salt crackers have a goodness all their own. Sold from glass front from the large size QU in the new Family Qubox; In-er-seal Trade Mark packages. Keep a sup ply in the pantry. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY E TALES! HE TALE OF CHIRPY R ICKET RTHUR SCOn BAILEY. self, to the Bumblebees' music when he left his home that evening. A little later he told his favorite cousin about the party that had lasted all day. And Chirpy said that he supposed the Bumblebees had only one party a year, because he understood that most of them were great workers, and he didn't believe they would care to spend a whole day humming, very often. The favorite cousin gave Chirpy a strange look in the moonlight. And then he began ' fiddle, making no remark whatsoever. He thought there was no use wasting words on a fine, warm night just the sort of night for a lively cr-r-r-i! cr-r-r-i! cr-r-r-il Chirpy Cricket lost no time in getting his own fiddle to working. And each of them really believed he was himself making most of the music that was heard in the pasture. Once in a while Chirpy Cricket and his cousin stopped to eat a little grass, or paused to carry a few spears into their holes, because they liked to have something to nibble in the daytime. But they always re turned to their fiddling again; and they never stopped for good until almost morning. But at last Chirpy Cricket an nounced that he would make no more music that night. "I'll go home now," he said. "I expect to have a good day's rest. And I'll meet you at this same spot tomorrow night for a little fiddling." "I'll be here," his favorite cousin promised. (Copyright. Gosset A Dunlap.) A BETTER SOAP Pril trf At daMMl MlfcMt teUltf lit tasskmtadksfc Accept ae soiea. Ask Your Grocer for Crispy Potato Chips 10c Put Up in Glassine Bags for Cold Dinners and Picnic Lunches PREMIUM SODA by i 1 AConfession mm n mmnillllllmiBwililuM, n cans and (jfigSSpl the pound: WW&k WHY Do Heights Make Some People Dizzy? Using it unconsciously, as we do, we are apt to forget that the brain is an extremely delicate mechanism which may be thrown off its accus tomed track by anything which is distinctly out of the ordinary. The sense of balance is one of the func tions of this mechanism which we have developed by constant use and which we employ unconsciously but, unless we are skilled in its use, wc find that unusual surroundings may impair its proper usage. Such, for example, is the effect of looking down from a high building, when one is unaccustomed to heights. The eye notes the sheer drop into space and unconsciously transmits a "fear message" to the brain which, in turn, augments the trouble by disturbing the delicate fluid which acts as a "balance wheel." As a re sult, the person becomes dizzy and is as prone to fall as if he had been whirled around rapidly a number of times. In fact, the two reactions are practically the same only in one rHOtOPI-AYB. Now and All Week "Blind A Drama for Not for NOW PLAYING -- H.' Bo Tou Want Thrills? Then FOLLOW THE TRAIL ALONG THE TAKE A PLUNGE TO THE VERY BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN NOW PLAYING Josaph . Constance Talmadge "LESSONS IJNLpVE; A. HOSPE CO. PIANOS TUNED AND REPAIRED All Work Guaranteed 1513 Douglas St. . Tel. Dour. 65S8 Cuficura Soap IS IDEAL For the Hands Soap.Ontnwnt.TaUrTm.a.vvMTwhm. Forwn<M tvMr : CtUmr UbsrrrrtJpt.X. HMt,M t Write your name and address below mail to Loring Park Sanitorium and re ceive Diet List and Menus FREE. Name Street , City OB 4. PBfO" HI Psta Fistula A mOd system of A euro guaranteed in aver eaae aeeentMl fnp IcBfTT nun i or oooK on KKtai viaeases, wtta aaaea aa taaUmoaialt of more l.OOS prominent people who have been permanently cured. DR. B. . TARRY SjMrJeamajaxa TiBJfeOfiM BMg.) Oeaaha, Nob. case it is the effect of an outside movement and in the other the ef fect of sight. This predisposition to dizziness, which is perfectly natural, may be overcome by practice and by refusing to look down, taking in only the portion of space immediate ly in front of the eyes. Steeple jacks, structural iron workers and sailors have conquered this fear of heights and go about their work as freely as if they were on solid land, but the novice would do well to do his training slowly, lest he over reach himself and fall. Copyright, 1931, Wheeler Syndicate, Inc. Parents' Problems Should a child who refuses to apol ogize to another child be compelled to do so? , A child who has in any way wronged another child and there fore needs to apologize, should be led, not compelled to do so. First, he should be helped to see that he has been in error; then to admit it, and, finally, to express his regret. If quietly and affectionately done, this method of procedure is almost invariably successful. Wives" Men and Women the Child Mind Hour: 11, 1, 3, 8, 6:30, 8 and 9:30. AMUSEMENTS. EMPRESS TWO SHOWS IN ONE VAN CANTWEU, pritinf "My Cousin." ACKLAND A MAE, "VeraetUe Pep." ANDREWS & MAY, "The Wonder Kettle." Three Marvelous Well. Photo play attraction, "ALL SOULS EVE," featuring MARY MILES MINTER. ElTTY'S Cooperative -Cafeterias We Appreciate Your Patronage. 'Bowen'8 Big Values in Dining Room Furniture This Week 4 At Bovven's J3S8SX9 Money back without question if HUNT'S GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES . Uiunt'e Salre and Soap) .fail i the treatment afltch. Keseau RlMrworm.Tetterorottiritch- I Ing sUo diseases, Try this ' treatment at our risk. Sherman A McConnell S Drug Stores IIULSE&MEPEn Undertakers MOVED to 2224 Cuming Street ADEBTISEMKJT. 666 quickly relieves Constipation, Bi! iousness, Loss of Appetite and Head aches, duo to Torpid Liver. When in Need Use Bee Want Ads f.REE:.m.p,,, Li j Menu Schedules with Table of Food Values and full inttruebofu,racent)r compiled and based on seven years of experience end tucceu in the treatment of Diabetes at Loring FaikSanatoriura. Write for above and book let of Loring Park Sanitor ium. Both sent Free. tORING PARC SANATORIUM? ixa hwkw rw tWAitueieeM - Pay Whosi Cured treatment that enrea Men. Flatnia n4 . Kids 15c A-aVl rut l i xa m Rectal Diseases in short tine, without a severe nrrteal mp. a ration. No Chloroform- Kthae or nth Mfii1 MMkAi treatment anH n. mam uuh. mjj .a