t THK lUiK: OMAHA. THUKSDAY. MARCH 30. 1922. Society Personal; Mrs. Wt PopuUr Viiior. Mr, I'ui.k J jii omi K4i .otm Vdii4y at a June limn tor Mi Jo Writ, st" ! lno), and l liouir gurt at k bridge fatty gu'" by Mrt. II Y. took. TlmfiJy Mr. Ittlir Car. rir will k a '44 'ity for .Mr, Vft, and I ri!uy lie wi'l te the gujft Ol Mist AliHIk vOI 41 4 limrhe-m at tbe ItUcV.ione and fl Mel Crri4 MvCimr t 4 bids l fiy. I ny eveinnu Mr. C J. Hubbsrd cntrruitt at an Or. I'hruin rsrty tomplnntiitry i Mr. Writ, and ,sgrj4v Ms Myrti Uutchillton Mill l mtr at lnmh ton at the Atlilrnc lul. ,iurjv (tfrnnon Mr. I', ii. M'Mlwit ill give lrtU '4tt. Mr, t Ifjve (or Inver SumLy. Mii Smith Entertained. Mr Arthur i". Smiili returned from I!fti MitiiiJav. Her daiigli it, Mi llilrii jMi.itli, nlm anuiii I'luitd lirr iiioiIkt r.i-'. Mill not 1 each Omaha until !tinl.iy. Mi mith'i .ii4(i,i4t, tu 1 Ii til ! tiray I.ovcll Ot laillbnJtjr, Mas., Hill lAc place line 111 I .iu r wtk the hm been liuimr gurM at numerous fcfljiru in I'.oC'ii tint 11 .g hrr May there. lat wed, lir va nitcu a liouieholij (lioner, am) lust week-end her aunt, Mr. Ckoinc L. Eai IwMrr. entrrtaiiird at .1 l.iie t'r!y lor Mi Smith ami Mr. l.ovr. Tea for Camp Head. Mrt. John KoMiitu will be liostrM at a tea at the Ilramki trst.iuiaiit Saturday afternoon from 4 to 6 in honor of Mm fcar.i ti. Holiday, who it visiting her. The other guests will be camp girls and their moth ers, either those who have aitendetl l amp Holiday at Lake Okoboji or w ho plan to go there this raoii. Mut Mfi Cole ta r'turnH (ram thret niouilu in CaWvrnia itU her parent, A. Creltm cl Columbus, 0, was the jge.t of Mf. end Mr. O. V. Kru g Monday, t. U l.,; .l V.I..,- tine, Neb, t vltitmg Mi Kathleen Doyle lor tle week Mr. and Mr.. I lei tier t N'eeele left today or a lsort stay in North PUtte, her Mr. Negele it attend tug a tiuinr;i routettion, . . . 1 ai 1 1 Mr. an Mr. t rie A. uou l lirady, Ncl , announce the birth of a daughter, March at the S'rart lOHUl. Mr. I rank Carey ha returned home fnmi St. Catherine ho.pital, where he recently underwent an operation. Mr. and Mr.. 1. R. Tukert an. lumni-e the birth tl a daughter, Dorothy Lorraine, at the Wise Me morial Iiomu!, Man h 27. Mr. an J Mr. T. K. Steven have tetiirned from Honolulu and are pending a lew weeki in California Ufore their return to Omuha. Mr. Frank Wilcox and two daitRhters. Margery and Katharine, leturned Tuesday evenini from I-o Angele. where they apent the winter. Mn. Robert Garret will leave Tlnirxl.iy evening for the eat. She will visit her brother, I'hihp Mete, and Mrt. Metx tit Buffalo, and wilt also be the guest of Mr. and Mr, lack KichanUon of Auburn. N. Y. Mr. Richardson was formerly Miss Marion Kuhn of Omaha. First Woman to Carry Electoral Vote The first woman to carry the elec toral to Washington was Mrs. 11. If. McC'Iucr of Kaiisa City, Mo., who i visiting here with her sister, Mr. F. E. Schwaiter, at the Knicker bocker apartments. Two days aitcr becoming a messenger Mrs. Mc Clurr placed her document in the hands of Vice President Marshall. Mrs. H. II. W heeler of Lincoln and Mr. Draper Smith of Omaha car ried Nebraska's electoral vote to Washington at the same time, in January, 1921. Mrs. Smith and Mrs. McClucr renewed their Washington acquaintance yesterday at luncheon at the Burgess-Nasl tea room. Mrs. McClucr was a sufXraglst in the days when it touk courage to stand for equal rights. She is a member of the Jackson County League of Women Voter in MN souri, is president of her local War Mothers chapter, vice president of the National War Mothers and pres ident of a local Scotch organisation which recently entertained Sir Harry and Lady Lauder. Mrs. McClucr -is a member of several clubs which arc affiliated with the General federa tion, A staunch republican is Mrs. Mc Clucr, who believes women should identify themselves with political parties and not try to "dean up" from outside. She docs not believe in a woman's party. Congresswoman Robertson inter ested Mrs. McClucr while she was in Washington, and though Miss Rob ertson is not a suffragist, Mrs. Mc Clucr believes "vc arc safe in her hands." . - ' "She has a world of horse sense, is not hasty, considers well, is not flighty, is not a llowcry orator, but indulges In homely talk," according to Mrs. McClucr. Mrs. McCluer doesn't care for Wm J 3 Healthy Boys drink plenty of good rich milk. It builds up their bodies and their brains. It is ft great feeling to be able to tramp all day with the rest of the kids. "OMAHA MILK" is good rich milk and, best of all, it is absolutely safe, be cause It is perfectly pas teurized. , "Let Us Be Your Milkmen" 1513-15 N.24th WEbster 0127 - 1- T . MraWi Manager 4 . Mrs, H. H. McCluer. Lady Asquith, whom she heard re cently in Kansas City. "We do not need Englishwomen to come here just for our American dollars. I am glad she likes our American men. I do. too, and wouldn't trade them tor any Englishman I ever saw. The sooner we quit chasing the rainbow of royalty, the better off we will be." Mrs. McCluer arrived here Sunday and will remain for two weeks. She will attend the League of Women Voters' meeting Saturday. Her ad vice to women is, "Don't dissipate your efforts. Be interested in all good things, but concentrate on a special piece of work and. get It done." Problems That Perplex Answered by BEATRICE FAIRFAX Home Offered. I have a letter from a woman In the state. It reads: "Are any of your readers old or middle aged ladies who would like a home in exchange for light work? We live on a farm in a very small house. We have two children and would like to have some one to help in the home for board and clothes. Mrs. A. B. C." Any replies received will be for warded to Mrs. A. B. C, but I am rather dubious about the success of this venture. If the house is very small and there are two children, I am afraid the situation would be something of a strain for an "old or middle aged lady." The Nagging Girl. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 20 and he is 25. We have recently become good round full minutes, and again in the morning, and keep that up for one solid month. M. D.: ' As I remember it, the Chi nese proverb you ask about goes: II who know not, and knows not that hs know not l a fool; avoid him. H who knows not, snd knows tht b knows not Is simple; teach him. He who knows, and knows not that h knows. Is asleep; wake him. He who knows and knows that h knows is wise; follow him. D. Regarding your hack trsrVel pay, etc. Write to the adjutant gen eral of the army at Washington, D. C, who will refer your letter to the right department. F. It IT.: Write the Ladies' Home Journal regarding the book you wish. McClurg & Co., Chicago, 111., could also supply you. engaged. He does all in his power to please me, and is good and sen sible. I love him dearly and I am sure hs reciprocates his love for me, as he shows it in every way. Lately I seem to pick at the least thing he does. It Is not because I don't love him, for right after I nag at him and an argument is started I regret what I have said and feel just as badly as he does about it. ANXIOUS. Often when folks are having some inner conflict they express their irri tation at themselves by being Irri table to others. Try to figure out what is worrying you, and above all learn to control the nerves which will destroy your happiness If you don't handle them a little better. K. C: Think I'll have to start a hairbrushing contest one of these days to inspire the more general us of the hairbrush and incidentally patch up a whole lot of differences between departing hairs and careless scalps. The brushing is exercise for the scalp, and at the same time it cleanses it of dust and grime and dirt from which spring all manner of hair troubles. So get out the hsir bnug. tonight and apply it for five My Marriage Problems AoeU uarruena Mew mate of 'REVELATIONS Of A WIFE' iOmukti l:it What Katharine Answered to Lil I Uan'i Questions. I ihiiik Ktherine itl in our Uen tlut she bad kUitl4 u by her gamin-likt joy at Lillian's iie, (or the net cond the dropped her hand while an rmbarraed fluh (tol over hrr rharming fe. "You mu think I've n-Mie daft." she said apologetically. 'tlut, th, if ou know how tired I am being on my digmt)! icu ee, Juki portion in the little town in which e lived required that I keep the propr v preoption of the inM formal rem duct in mind, o you'll jut have to lorgive iner "Forgive you!" J echoed, reading between her word that it wat not Tick's portion, but Jack liiuikclf, who h'l o rcpreied her. "Of conr. yur levity is a great trial to both Madge and iiiyaetf," Lillian iiiternoed with an impudent grimace at me, "hut we'll try to struggle along under the handicap. And when we act out of the farm we'll put you out with Marion to turn a lew tiauti'pring. "I wonder if I've lorgoileu tiovy. Katheriue aid. snecuUtivvli'. with such ierinuuc in her lone that Lil lian and I laughed outright. But I really felt more like tear. There was such unconscious bctiayal in her abnormally hielt ii'irit. 1 re membered suddenly a treasure of my small girlhood, a jack-in-the-box, for whom I uej to teei o sorry in queer childish fashion whenever I wa allowed to play with him. and I never would willingly crowd him hart- into his confined nuarlcr. Ab surdly enough, the joy and relief which hameriiie was unconsciou-iy betraying at this interval of respite from her life with Jack Hiekctt rcem cd to me like that old-time escape of my plaything. Madge ia Thankful Something else came to my mind, and came with a little feeling of panicky joy, as if I had escaped some Common Sense By J. J. MUNDY. Have You the Partnership Spirit in Your Home? Many couples are not congenial because one will not become interest ed in the work that the other is do ing. 1 ta mill natural for a husband or a wife to seek advice, to express ideas which will get mtormation ana neip from those interested in their line. nfn if tho liiichaiu! nr the wife is not interested, one or the other gets to drifting toward someone ot similar tastes- who will listen in terestedly. TViff first Virparhes in the homes 01 many couples have come about as tli. rocult nf larlr nf svmnathetic in terest between the husband and wife. Perhaps a man. should not taiK shop" in his home, but if he feels he mucf tall- with Enmeone about his work, he should feel that he has at least an attentive listener m is wue. if u-if mmii tn talk thine over u,i,ii cMn,Ati chi miffht to feel nriv- leged to talk with her husband and get a sympathetic response. At times every person feels the nul nf aAvirr Hirnssinn of noilltS pro and con with another mind, to get a better view point. Therf is not cnoueh partnership spirit in some homes. How about your own nome m mis respect? I Dog Hill Paragrafs ' t: i . " oy ucorgc Dingnam In the Western play at the Tick- ville opera house Saturday night, four of the desperadoes were shot. However, the Coroner, who sat in the audience, does not believe any of them were shot internally. Miss Flutie Belcher announces to her friends as well as the public, that she is now prepared to do staple and fancy singing at all hours on short notice. No extra charge is made for Cricket Hicks, who ac companies her everywhere on his fiddle. Sidney Hocks is assisting nature in its task of bringing about Spring, by wearing a pair of green eye glasses. . ' The Bee Leads Other Papers in Sport News. ADVERTISEMENT. CREAM CLEARS A STUFFED-UP HEAD Instantly Opens Every Air Passage Clear Throat. If your nostrils are clogged and your head is stuffed because of nasty catarrh or a cold, apply a little pure, antiseptic cream into your nostrils. It penetrates through every air pas sage, soothing and healing swollen, inflamed membranes, and you get in stant relief. Try this. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm at any drug store. Your clogged nostrils open right up: your head is clear; no more hawking or snuffling. County fifty." All the stumness, dryness, struggling for breath js gone, .You cel tine, danger ly a narrow margin, I re member the devotion which my "hroihrr-foiikin, Jjrk Die ken. hid tliQwered upuii n Iroru childhood, and the memorable day when he had come back Ironi a long trip, and ignorant of my marriage to Dicky had aked me to marry Mm before I could tell hint my newt and stop the revelation, o urpriiiij to me, ot hii love. I had often womlircd what would have been my anwrr to Jack if I had never met Dicky. And in the early, strrsttul. sometime miserable (!av of my first year of marriage, ! had tomctimri been guilty of won tier in i whether Jack' quiet dignity and urengtli would not have been a better author to my marriage ship than Dicky's volatile, tempestuous luvahlrncM. I had aiwwcrcd the question long ago decidedly in Dicky's favor, but Katheriue' uiicoiiscioui attitude brought home to me most forcibly what marriage with Jack tlitkett would have meant to me. True, I have not Katheriue' high girlish spirit, but I have a stronger will than she, a more tenacious grip upon "my own way," and I sent tip a silent little prayer of thankfubic. that 1'rovideure bad given me Rich ard Graham instead of Jack Eickett at my life companion. Lillian tumbled Katheriue'i bag into the tonneaii oi my car. and motioned Katheriue authoritatively into the rear seat. "Undertake Itl" "It will save time to tell you what's tip while we are going home," she said, "to get in here with me. Madge knows all about it already." "I am fit ears," Katherine laughed, settling herself in the car. For several minutes there was no sound save the steady murmur of Lillian's voice relating the story which I knew so well, the story of Katie's strange terror of the un known man, of her domination by him, of her queer, furtive rearches of the house, and my father's room especially all evidently under the mans directions and of that hnal tragic night when we had planned to overhear, by Katie's connivance, her talk with him, and when the man had been struck down by an automobile while cycling to the rendezvous. There was no word of question front Katherine, snd 1 knew that ! had klipped at once into the old mttude ot absolute attention and cbedience to Lillian when ititiii her lit secret government work. "He I in the hoipiul now,". Lil. Kail fini.hed, "and while he h not been inquired for yet, he will be. You see your job, don't you? He will need a nurse for weeks to come indeed, it U doubtlul if he ever recover. and ! want you to make yourself indispensable to him, so that when he j removed, at he will be. vou will he stked to accompany him. I ought to warn you that going viih him may he dangerous for you, for hit employer. I am sure, would have neither scruples nor pity if they should discover ou were a spy upon their movements. o, if you don't ih to undertake it" "What are you trying to do?" Katherine said half roguithly, half, indignantly. "Undertake it! 1 vouldn't mi the chance to do a l-iece of work like that for the whole slate ofNebra.ka." AOtkKTIftKIOT. Homi-mad RmJp Stop$ Coagh$ Qutekfy Tk twst muiti aisdtrtM wmI, A fsmilr svpiitr Mlb tiutrkt SMdf. MIM about ft. You might be surprised to kaesr that the tt thing you can us for a severe cough, is a remedy which , is essilv nreosred at home In lust a few momenta. It's ebesp. but (or prompt result it beats scything ele you ever tried. I'suslly stops th ordinary cough or chest eold in 24 hour. Taste pleasant, too chlldrto like it snd it is pure and good. Pour Vt ounce of Pine ia a pint bottle; then nil it up with plain granulated sugar svrup. Or ui clari fied molae, honey, or corn syrup, initead of sugar svrup, if desired. Thus you make a full pint a family supply but costing no more than a small bottle of ready-made cougk syrup. And as a cough medicine, thsre Is really nothing better to be bad al any price. It goes right to the spot ana gives quick, lssting relief. II promptly heals the inllamed mem. brsnes that line the thro, and air ratsages, stops the annoying tbroafc ickle, loosen the phlegm, and soon .your cough stops entirely. Splendid tor bronchitis, croup, hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinez is a highly concentrated com pound of Norway pine extract, famous for healing the membranes. To avoid disappointment atk youf druggist for "i'a ounces of Pines with directions and don't accept any thing else. Guaranteed to give abse lute satisfaction or money refunded, Th Pioex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Zf INFANTS INVALIDS ASK FOR r UMunguiu Avoid imitation Substitute Rich nltk, milted ersia extTKt In Powdsr The Orisinil Food-Drink For AS Aps No Cooking Nourishing DiftUle mLU'nn, Pffy tvtry malitr fit htr hiidl KSLLOGC'S b grt big bowlt an Ihmy tt orf-sr an' thty'rm all crispy k r yrf tl&V&b tasted CbmHalcefl tfo joyously hm& ao $ cnspy-citincbjr as llelloggtf That's why big and little folks who know the differ ence insist upon EELLOGG'S! The thin; to do is to make comparison Kellogg's against any other kind of corn flakes you ever ate! If it's quality, or all-the-tiraa crispness or delicious or appetizing flavor you want well, just wait till you eat Kellogg's t. And, what a do light to know they're never leathery I You'll get so best hours will family in front ing with those TOASTED CORH FLAKES cheerful about Kellogg's that the day's be when it's time to sit down with tin of generous bowls all filled most to burst big, sunny-brown Corn Flakes I Never was a better time than tomorrow ' morning to prove that KELLOGG'S Corn Flakes are about the "gladdest of all good things to eat" Insist upon KELLOGG'S thi kind in the RED and GREER' pack age if you want to know how won derfully good corn flakes can bol 'mm CORN IXAKE9 i suksr el tmOGCS HUMBLES and ttlXOGCS BEAR. ceekeJ sad fcn-MJ 0 days Chicago to LONPON IPADuDS Two dm down the Sr. Lswroe River and Guo only 4 days open see, snd job land la Cherbourg. Son th tin pun ee Htmburg, tf you go vta ODaysfo BERLIN Canadian Pbcific fmrtktf imfom6em from local ttttnukip rngtiM or K S. ELWORTHY, 40 N. DwWi St, Chic, IB. CANADIAN PACIFIC AGENTS EVERYWHERE MotfMm 1512-Dou$las St Important Values Offered Thursday An Exceptional Sale New Spring Dresses Regularly 1 Q fifi to $35.00 10. UU EVEN a casual inspection of these frocks will reveal their excellent styling, good quality and fine workmanship. De veloped in Canton Crepe, Satin-faced Canton and Taffeta, they depict the newest silhouettes for Spring, and come in light and dark shades for street or informal wear. Sizes 14 to 42. L2-Doulas St. 151 s Ana Thursday, Friday and Saturday Annual Half-Price Sale of Blouses French Beaded Costume Blouses, Embroidered or Beaded Overblouses, Lace Trimmed and Tailored Suit Blouses Reduced to 3,05 Formerly 7.95 (Take off one-half from original price at time of purchase.) 8.75 formerly 17.61) Originally $5.00 to $3U0 Now $2M to $19.75 Every type of blouse is included, from the sports blouse to the exquisitely beaded cos tume blouse. The widest selection is offered in Canton Crepe, Crepe de Chine and Georgette Crepe, featuring the smart new colors and styles. At halt price Assuredly, these are unsurpassed values! Many one-of-a-kind models, but all sizes are here 36 to 46. 8.75 Formerly 17.50 irni 2.50 rormeny 5.00 F1 M&k ::: 2.50 Formerly 5.00 6.25 formerly 12.fc I i