Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1922)
THi; UKK: OMAHA. SUNDAY, MAKCM 2o 1922. 5-It Council Bluffs Society Ro Smith, olcninifYd iq gAlaml, at 4 o't! Ut Wfdllrtdiy iiltrl tlorill. klir Mill Murifl Sin 1 1 It n Hut it b cni t)iit of Mr. lit I?a ion of Mr. and Mri. l. I. r.c. 1'rtf filing the crfmany. which rf rfonue4 bv Utv. J. I- KUn c hrd of this city t the iinmt of Mrs, V, II, Trernun, griiulitioihrr of the bride. Mrs. V., I. II 4171.011 . Mix Uorit Hon, h sl4 .lytl lh wrMing march m the ungai party futrrfl th !nittir room through n ai.le of ribbons Mf'Uhrd by Mi l,v White nl Mi Eunice Luxem bqrir. Utile Jrn Vieih ornrd the eliding rmg ut tlie heart of lily. Mi Mury Ling at timid of honor i gowned in a comlnnation o( nu urecti crepe anl silver lace. Her bO' tiurt n of rink ert tra. The three nrilrmaiil, Mie Loii Tipton, Gladys McMartiii and Carrie Head, wore organdy rocki in the rate khatlrt and rartird old lath toned tmiieKay. Mri. Knti un nurtii ubrlv charm ins in white tatin under brocaded ittiffoti. She wore her mother' wed ding veil and her ihower bonnet wa of orchid, lilliea of the valley and white veet pca. The groom was attended by lii l.rrlher. Harold Hots. Kollowinir the ceremony, a wed ding dinner was served and during the evening the young couple left for Chicago, where they will spena tneir honeymoon. Bridge-Tea. A very enjoyahle bridge-tea was oiven Saturday attcmoon dv airs. Clarence Empkie at her home on Lafayette avenue. Dances, Two eniovable dances were lieM the early part of last week, both of which were well attended On Monday the Elks held their semi-monthly informal, and the Tuesday Dancing club met at the Eagles hall the following evening for the last of their parties until the one immediately after haster, Card Party. Plans are bcinff formulated for an afternoon card party to be given Thursday, April 20, at the home of Mrs. E. A. Wickham. Proceeds of the affair will be used for charitable purposes by the Cam- ehc omen s league. U Song Published. Council Bluffs ncople will be in terested in knowing that the words and music of the tuneful little melody "Memories of Childhood." were written by Mrs. A. Mctzger of this city who only recently consented to having her little song published. It will soon be sung in public for the first time in Council Blutts. Evening Bridge. Mr. and Mrs. Don Waller enter tained five tables of guests at bridge Friday evening at their home on Frank street. To Europe. Miss Celia Mulqucen will sail for Europe 011 June 21, in the party which Miss Anna Z. Ross is to con duct over there this summer. Club Meetinas. Among the popular clubs which held meetings during the week were the Klatter club, which lunched on Friday with Mrs. W. J. Hciser, and 1 lie lucsday Uridgc-Luncheon club, which met ut the home of Mrs. Don Waller with Mrs. Waller and Mrs. George Wickham as hostesses. The Wednesday luncheon and bridge club varied their entertaining last week by giving a dinner on Mon day evening, to which the husbands of the members were invited. The affair was held at the Robert Spraguc home and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Par tner won the prizes. To Visit Council Bluffs. . Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Stillman are j 10011 to have as guests their daughter, Mrs. John S. Brocksmit of Chicago, . who will arrive some time in April with her young son to visit for a fortnight. Supper. After the party held last week by the Tuesday Dancing club Dr. and Mrs.hV. E. Ash,' Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parmer and Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sheehan attended an informal sup per given by Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sprague. Purchased Home. Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Rohrer have purchased the J. C. Pryor home' on Fifth avenue and will take possession about April 15, at which time Mr. and Mrs. Pryor and children plan to move to Burlington, la., where they will permanently reside. Memories ot cnudnooa. Children's laughter brings sunshine, No matter how weary the heart, So with your worry and troubles They are easy to part. Just take a stroll 'round the corner, And watch the children at play. Keep your eyes open and listen, To see what they do and say. CHORUS. Memories, memories, bringing back thoughts of my childhood, When me and my pal, loved the same little gal And we roared through the wildwood. Memories, memories of dear old by- gor.e days, I'd give all I'm worth, to go back to my birth And live my childhood days. Little boys playing marbles. Are quarrelling and want to fight, And you are bubbling with laughter, It brings back memories bright. Two little girlies are jealous, , Over the same little boy, And as you watch them play kid games Your heart is brim full of joy. Personal. M. H. Green will leave this week for Creston, la., where he plans to make his home. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Bloomer re turned Wednesday morning from a sojourn of several weeks in the south. Miss Javenta Harper, who has re cently moved to Omaha from the south, will spend a few days next week with Miss Inez Peregoy. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Broderick and daughter, Jean, of Lincoln, Neb., who have been visiting in the city for the past two weeks returned to their home on Friday. Miss rranctna Uusicr. accom- To Summer in Europe Miss Attn Z.Ross WssAxxxiA Z.Ross When the 5. S. Melita tails from Montreal on June 21. there will be listed among the paengeri several Council lllufft and Omaha people who are' to start at that time on a tour of Europe. Mi Anna . Kot of Council Bluff is M conduct this party, which will be limited to 15, and she has ar ranged a most interesting itinerary including points in Belgium. France, Italy, Germany, Holland, England, Scotland, Switzerland and Bavaria, where a day will be spent at the 1 asion nay 111 Oberammergau. .Miss Ross is thoroughly familiar with all conditions in Europe, having spent a year there in travel and study after completing her college educa tion, and on 11 different occasion since Ivuu conducted parties over from here. Unlike most conductors Mi-s Ross gives most thoughtful consideration to all of her traveling companions. and for the benefit of any who may wimi coaching 011 the places to l visited she will select an evening or so each week during April and May at which time maps will be studied guide books arranged lor and genera nformation will he Riven on all sub tects pertaining to the trip. Among the Council Hlutts and Omaha people who have on previous tours accompanied Miss Ross are Mrs. A. Bere.hcim and daughter. Miss Theda, Mrs. Mary E. Dailey nd daughter. Miss Adah. Mrs. P. C. DcVol and daughter. Miss Mary Mrs. Hester Moon, Miss Mittie Pile, Miss Jennie Rice. Mrs. John N. Bald win. Mrs. Walter Page and daughter, Mrs. Charles Shiverick, Mrs. Arthur Remington, Mr. Hochstettler and his daughter Frances, now Mrs. Fred Dauehtertv. Mrs. Johannes, Mrs. Ed Undcland, Mrs. H. D. Neeley and Mrs. M. I. Wh ttall of New York, formerly Miss Gertrude Clark of Omaha. Washington Society Bureau of Th Bee, Washington, March 25, No more brilliant affair hai been liven thi season than (he luncheon cn Tuesday in honor of Secretary: .t Mace Where Your Dollar (ioa FarthtttA. I10SPE CO! departed last Wednesday evening for Los Angeles to make their home, Mrs. Clifford Wolfe of Rockland Me., is convalescing at Edmundson hosoital where she was recently oper- ater upon, and in Another week will return to the home ot her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Donald Macrae. Miss Inez Peregoy spent several davs in Lincoln, at the Nebraska state university last week, where she went to assist in the initiation or sev eral new pledges in the Fi-Reta-Phi sorority. Miss Jane Schoentgcn, who has been with her parents. Mr. and Mrs, r. iichoentgen, during the spring acation, returns to Davenport, la., tonight to resume her studies at St. Kathcnne. Mrs. Earnest Johnson of Moline, III., who three weeks ago was sunv moned here owing to the serious ill ess of her 'mother, Mrs. Mary ailev. returned home Friday, and with her went Mrs. Dailey, who is ow greatly improved. W.I.L.L.Clubof Settlement to Present Play The W. I. L. L. club will present A Southern Cinderella," a three-act comedy drama, in the South High chool auditorium, Thursday, March 30. at 8:15 p. m. This club, under the leadership of Miss Gladys Shamp, is one of the most active girls clubs at the bocial Settlement. They meet once a week for dramatic art with Miss Rcna Fox- orthy. Miss Helen Nightengale, an active member of the club, who is the pos sessor of a lovely soprano voice, will eiyc vocal numbers between the acts. "A Southern Uudereiia, t"e piay they have chosen, is a charming story of a rich old aristocrat who has banished her only child from her house because of an unsuited mar riage. The daughter dies, leaving a grandchild to eke out her living in the cotton mills. A:: old friend of the mother finds her and takes her home to her grandmother where she finds a friend in the daughter of her mother's childhood chum. All this is interrupted by two unprincipled En ghsh women. Comedy is woven throughout by Mammy, a black blue grass widow. The cast includes: Lo- retta Gnrum, Mane Grimm, Made line Olson, Vera Olson, Lavina Mentzcr, Bertha Nyce and Frances Shannon. The South High school or chestra will furnish the music. The W. I. L. L. club meets for dramatic art on Monday evening at the Social Settlement house. Tues day evening the H. E. L. P. club meets for supper and dramatic art and the Royal Q. B. C has sup per Thursday evening. Things to Remember. That it is pleasant to cook if you have pleasant surroundings. That when the cook takes French leave you needn't be miserable if you bring a fair amount of knowledge and a big amount of enthusiasm to your task of filling her place. That there is an eagerness to learn western ways among the Chinese girls is evidenced by the fact that a group of Chinese girls, daughters of aristocratic families in the Celestial f anicd by her sister. Mrs. Genevieve country, now are students" at "finish Oualcr MiUcr and little Dick Miller, mg' schools in Paris.. lluthft, given by the Tertian "win iter. Mint Kustein Khan Alii, f"l lowed by a Urge reception with dancing given in celebration of the I'rrtian new year. The luncheon company was a stag one but at the reception Mine. Ju.eraud, wife of the French ambaador. who is dean of the diplomatic corps, acted a nasies ana received the cucMs with the minister. The legation which it ru.h in oriental atmosphere of rare 1 nit and hangings, embroiderirt and such was made more attractive with spring flowers and foliage in green, white and red, the Persian national color. The great national dih, polow, mainly of rice and chicken and made familiar to Washington society by the former minister, Ali Null Khan, and his charming wile, was the piece de resistance, while at the reception the well filled punch bowl which would have made Vol- ttead frown, but over which the dry agents bad no control as it was on' foreign toil, was not notable for weakness. All the diplomatic corps and nearly all officialdom were in the company, with a goodly number of smart resident society men and wom en, who. celebrated fittingly the new year ot the old calendar. Lady Asquith Criticized, Mrs. Herbert Asquith't departure this week for "other visits did not cause the shedding of tears or the voicing1 of general regret. She did not make a host of friends. Nearly all the women in Washington resent Mrs. Asquith s comments on Amer ican society, particularly that part of mem relating to me young people 01 the country and their behaviour at parries. Mrs. Asquith made a very distinctly bad impression as she sat in the front row of the diplomatic pallery of the United States senate one day last week, round asleep. When she entered and sat down in the front row she proceeded to make herself comfortable by remov ing her neckpiece, opening her smart tweed box coat and setting her tall, lat, cut glafs smelling salts bottle on the rail in front of her. It is a nice, broad, tempting rail for the setting of articles, but it is a very pronounced rule that nothing shall be set there. Not even a coat or neckpiece of any kind may be thrown over it for fear of injury or annoy ance to the distinguished heads which are held proudly upon ' the shoulders of the statesmen beneath. No sooner had Mrs. Asquith fixed herself in her conspicuous seat than she put her head to rest in the palm of her noble English hand. And not long afterward she was discov ered to be sound asleep, with her head in grave danger of toppling over and touching off the bottle of smell ing salts, without which no well-bred English woman ever travels. The erratic wife of the famous one-time premier of. Great Britain had a good nap and shortly after she awoke, re freshed, gathered up her belongings and stalked out of the gallery. It will be interesting to read what she has to say of the proceedings of the senate. Princess Bibesco, the pretty daugh ter of this astonishing woman, and wife of the minister from Roumania, has made no friends for herself through her book, recently .published. Mrs. Harrison Entertains. Mrs. Russell B. Harrison had a "round table tea" Monday afternoon at the Washington club She re ceived in the main drawing room, assisted by her- mother, Mrs. Alvin Saunders. I he table, with several shades of red soring blossoms in mounds upon it, was laid at the back of the room. Among the guests were Mrs. Shields, wife of the sen ator from Tennessee, and Mrs. Mar shall, widow of Gen. W. L. Marshall, both of whom were schoolmates of Mrs. Harrison in Washington: Mrs. Young, wife of Lieut.-Gen, S. B. M. Young, retired; Mrs. Carter, widow of Senator Thomas H. Carter; Mrs. Rurlc. widow of Maior John Burk, well known in Omaha; Mrs. William Haywood, a girlhood friend or the hostess; Mrs. D. C. Stapleton, for merly of Omaha; Mrs. Truman G. Palmer, Mrs. William F. Dennis, Mrs Brooks and Mrs. Alvin Saunders. Mrs. Truman G. Palmer, formerly of Chicago, had a luncheon at the Cosmos club last week in honor of Mrs. Harrison and had in her com pany Mrs. James Watson, wife of the senator from Indiana; Mrs. Charles E. Townsend, wife of the enator from Michigan; Mrs. Milton E. Ailes, Mrs. Henry T. Oxnard, Mrs. Stephen Rand. Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley, Mrs. Charles Wood, wife of the pastor of the Church of the Covenant and several others in resi dent society. Mrs. Flarry A. Williams, jr., ar rived the middle of the week from her home in Norfolk to visit Miss Lowe and to be here during the visit of her mother and grandmother, Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Saunders. JMrs. Harrison and Mrs. Saunders were entertained at luncheon on Wednesday by Mrs. Thomas H. Car ter and on Ihursday evening they were entertained at dinner 'by Mrs. D. C Stapleton, Mrs. . Carter will sail next mouth for Italy to attend the eucharist conference to be held in Rome in May. She goes as a dele gate to be one of the representatives of the "Work for Poor Churches." Mrs. Stapleton had expected to ac company her and spend the summer abroad, but has decided to remain on this side this year. Mrs. Frank Hamilton, sister-in-law nf re Clinlafnti rotumf A o r apartment at W:ardman Park Inn for few weeks. ihe has been m Omaha for some time and is sailing on May for France where she will spend the summer. Mrs. Charles Barton of Omaha, and her sister, Mrs. Markell, who ave been at Wardman rarle Inn through the winter have gone to 2029 Connecticut avenue where they ave taken one of the apartments de luxe" for the coming year. When water or milk is added to baking powder carbonic acid gas or carbon dioxide is given off, just as it is given off from fermenting yeast. This causes the dough to rise. The residue of the baking powder left in the cake is rochelle salts. From All Adjoining Counties People Are Attending A. HOSPE CCVS REORGANIZATION PIANO, PLAYER-PIANO and PHONOGRAPH SALE iT IS A TREMENDOUS SUCCESS ! r"Z; 2ztiti ( I AIL 'BOARD FOR A. HOSPE CO.'S GREAT PIANO I SALF YntI PA N'T Arrnon nrn Mice iti I YOU WILL HAVE TO HURRY AS THE BEST I BARGAINS ARE BEING PICKED UP 1 DONT WAIT! Come In Monday! Act Quick! You can t ft liih rd Piano or PUjrar Piano now at ridicutoutljr low prica in om catat at tmott coil, anc en tha aatiatt paymanU. TMs Is tha ckanra of ft lifatima to t Piano or Player Piano chaap. COME IN MONDAY! BUY NOWl PAY LATER! We kindly aik those who have purchased pianos with promise of immediate delivery to be patient, as our shipping department has been swamped with deliveries. Let Our Experience Be Your Guid Our Financial Responsi bility Your Protection The most startling offer ever made an offer that means the placing of more than $250,000.00 worth of high grade Grand, Upright and Player Pianos and Phonographs in as many homes on terms any home can afford, and at a sav ing of THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS to buyers. Read carefully every word of this remarkable announcement. Exchange That Silent Piano as. Part Payment on a New Player-Piano. People Are Coming From Miles Around to Take Advantage of This Money-Saving Sale The Greatest Sale of Pianos and Player-Pianos Omaha Has Ever Known Open Evenings Until 9 P.M. Friends Since our first an nouncement a week ago many people have vis ited our store. They were seeking: unusual values as we had adver tised, and it is with just credit and pride that we are able to say, not one has gone away disappointed. Don't Miss This Sale This is a sale that will not permit de lay on your part. If you want to be among the shrewd buyers that are get ting the greatest value for their money ever known in the history of the piano business in this city, you will have to act quickly. A few people left Saturday without being waited upon. We promise that this will not occur again. Obliging salesmen will assist in making a satis factory selection. To the Piano-Buying Public An opportunity such as presented by A. Hospe Co. will seldom, if ever again, be offered the piano buying public. In fact never in our experience have we been able to offer such remarkable in ducements. It will prove to the advan tage of every family in the city and sur rounding counties to make a sincere effort to call here during this sale. The prices and advantages offered are with out parallel. Many Buyers are attending A. Hospe Co.'s sale. They come from far and near: Nebraska City, Lincoln, Fre mont, Schuyler, Oak land, Louisville, Ash land, Shenandoah, Atlantic, Red Oak, Creston, Plattsmouth and other places. A Few of the New and Used Bargains for Monday This magnificent bargain in a used Player will go on sale Monday at Bench and 12 Rolls of Music. $198 ALL FOR $198 $2.50 Weekly Bp MANY WONDERFUL BARGAINS IN BRaND NEW PIANOS TO SELECT FROM A Brand New Player r5 2SSS5Sm us MANY OTHER FINE PLAYERS TO CHOOSE FROM 50 SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK 50 RECORD SELECTIONS Are Included With Each Talking Machine Purchased During This Sale Thete Phonograph play all rec ords, including Victor, Columbia! Ediioa and Pathe. These ma- chinea ara made in the style of cabinet so much in demand. Cabi nets are different sizes, con structed of double reneer, fancy figured wood throughout. Tone, is simply marvelous. Must be heard to be appreciated. SPECIAL We include with these machines this week a jewel point with which to play Edison records, and a sapphire ball point for the Pathe records; also a full assort ment of steel needles. And, re member, these machines play all makes of records correctly, in cluding ' Edison, Columbia, Pathe and Victor 50 II Former I Pric $200; Sale I I Price I f '125 If ? 150 Per week Former f. Price $95; J I Sale II 8 Pr!e J' j M250 jH J Si 00 peril 5 d 1 week 1 RAILROAD FARE REFUNDED TO OUT-OF-TOWN PURCHASERS WITHIN 150 MILES OF OMAHA Mm FREIGHT PREPAID WITHIN 150 MILES OF OMAHA 1513-15 DOUGLAS STREET OMAHA OPEN EVENINGS BUY HERE NOW OR PAY MORE LATER.