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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1922)
tmil tvv. nr 111 1 i'kihiv innif T 1 illta V.tai WtHrtllflt r !-'. a rtl IIIH ft Vmm Society Personals Lunchton (or Commlties c( Junior The toaril ol directors cl li Oiiii. t club cntrruinrd si luncheon Thursday t! the club, complimentary to lite luonraiti committee I ihc Junior Lcut Frolie. Mi Marian l'ole U chairman of (he committee n4 Hit oiht-r member who were lienor gurf rr th Mrtdamei F, II. Pu.holir, (iuy Kiddoo, J E. Mrgrath, NrMiiun lrnon, illmn Wharton, Allen lukry, Albert Sitihrrntrn, Louis Meyers, Henry liililmg. I.atrrnce Flnnkrr. Willard llo.foid and M" Gladys letr. Slumber Party. M riiyl' Wtberg entertained I lie rlu Delta dull ol Central limn rhoo at a midnight supper and a tlumhrr party Thursday evening. 'Ihne pretcnt were the Mie Kdiu Thoitipaon. l.oi Walincr, lTrrnce Drake, Mildred Nien. Helen Meer. Jerry McMater, Helen Nng. Marjorie Pool, Helen Madden, 1 aura f'erkini, Alire Robert, Iva Heard. Rhea Whitmore, Christine Mcliaffin, Grace Hall and Inei Koherti. Mr. McCluar Entertained. Mr. C. F. Hetmati entertained at a bridge luncheon Wednesday noon (or Mr. II. H. McCluer, who is the guett of her titter, Mr. S. K. Schweitrer. Cdvers'were laid for 12 Friday Mrs. Schweitzer wilt be hoc less at Omaha club at luncheon and bridge for 12 friend complimentary to Mr. McCIurr. The latter return Sunday to her home in Kansas City. Bridge for Miaa Brandt. Mi Dorothy Hippie entertained Thursday at even tablet of bridge at the Brandeii tea room, when the honor guest were Mis Winifred Brandt and Mi' Almarine Campbell. Swedish-American Fun Makers. The Swedish-American Fun Mak ers' society will entertain at a danc ing party Saturday evening at the Swedish auditorium. Card Party, Women of the Blessed Sacrament parish will give a card party at their null, Thirtieth and Curtis, Friday evening. North Presbyterian Aid. The North Presbyterian Woman' Aid society will meet Friday after noon at 2:30 o'clock, at the home of Mrs. V. D. Percival, 1814 Binnty street. Mr. II. II. !ergMuit I spending a lew day in Liiiculu. Mr, Winder Mrgrath i spend ing two week in Minneapolis. Mr. and Mr. T. E. Steven have returned to Omaha troni llouolulu- Mr. and Mr. Andrew Netton an nounce the birth of a daughter llmr.iliy morning at the Methodist hospital. Mi Winiferd miih will leave Friday to spend the week end with her iter, Mr. William an Morn in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Talma: re turned Wednesday from Uiloxi, Mi., where they ent several weekt. They stopped in Chicago tnroute. Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Sachs of Cincinnati are at the Blackttone. Mr. Sachs was formerly Miss Blanche Hetlman. daughter of Meyer Hellman of Omaha. Mist Mary I'atton lias returned from a 10 day' trip to Dc Moines. She is Maying with Dr. and Mrs. .lames M. ration. Dr. and Mrs. t'atton are planning a trip to Wash ington later in the month. Dr. and Mr. Frank Conlin are in Rochester, Minn., where Dr. Conlin is attending meeting of the Amer ican College of Physicians at the Mayo Clinic. Friday evening there i to be a banquet at the Kadison hotel in Minneapolis, when honorary degrees will be conferred upon Dr. Conlin and Dr. Rodney Bli. Dr. sittd Mrs. Conlin will return Sunday. For Mrs. Fleisher. Mrs. W. H. Wood will be hostess at a tea next Tuesday from 3 to 5 for Mrs. Walter Fleisher of Phila delphia, who is visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Kohit. Mrs. Fleisher was formerly Miss Florence Kohn. She will be here until the end of next week. Joint Birthday Celebration, i Mrs. Charles Heaton and Mrs. Kit tie B. Hunter will entertain 200 friends at a joint birthday party at the Hanscom Park pavilion Friday evening. Luncheon. Mrs. A. N. Eaton, president of the North Presbyterian Woman's Aid society, entertained the division lead ers at luncheon Thursday at the Brandeis restaurant. Problems That Perplex Answered bf BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Friendship and Love. Dear Miss Fairfax: Six months Ago I met a young man at a dance. He Uvea a long way oft and I really know nothing about him. Our friendship after a couple of months terminated in love, and while he acts the attentive lover he never talk of marriage. Now, he comes to see me about twlre a week. Is it not strange that he should not wish to see me oftener If he cares so much? He has made me promises of taking me to different places and to get me different things, and has not kept one. Should I , place our relation en tirely on a 'friendship" foundation until he "comes down to brass tacks?" I have never gone with an other man. What do you think of his 'broken promises? He is very fine, and although he does not talk seriously, in little, veiled words he lets me know that I am the "one girl." . JANICE. Don't consider this man as a pos sible lover. A girl must know far more of a man she thinks of marry ing than you understand of this man. Remain on a basis of friend ship. If he wants to be taken seri ously, my dear, he must speak seri ously. Don't deceive yourself. Men often make a little idle love to a girl who attracts them and eb no harm In it. But If the girl doesn't hold herself high she is all too like ly to know heartache and disap pointment. Tou can be good friends provided you handle the situation well. v . . A. Secret suitor. ; Dear Mia . Fairfax: I am going about with a young man and he keeps asking me to marry him. Now. don't you think a chap as serious as that ought to introduce a girl to his parent and tell her how he stands in the line of moneyi posi tion, etc. v But, no, he never does. Why, I don't even know what his profession is. I think a great deal of him and it troubles me not to have him ask me to his home or tell me of his financial position, so mat I can plan and -decide, because I have other of fers besides his. A CONSTANT READER. tour not meeting the man's peo ple need not worry you. There is plenty of time for that when you are formally engaged. But If there Is any talk of marriage you ought to know something of the man's ability to suport a wife. Moreover, It is very peculiar that you do not know what his profession is. Talk to him as frankly as you did to me. Don't be afraid of facts. Sally: Why shouldn't we all get into the habit of giving other folks the benefit of the doubt? Which of us has not been in a situation which might look peculiar or even all wrong to soneone Who didn't know all the facts in the case? ' Knowing the complicated fabric of our own natures, it is surprising that we can't allow more generously for the same thing in others. Know ing how often we intend exactly the opposite effect from the result we get, it seems odd that we can't be more tolerant or at least less cock sure about other folks and their meanings. ' To condemn any one unheard is to show one's self as much in need of condemnation as the victim of one's judgment. Black is not al ways of equal density and what, looks white in some lights niaye b revealed in clear enough sunlight as gray. By our Judgments of others we indicate pretty clearly, what we our selves are. If you can't believe that Betty James has any decent motives, isn't it because in Betty's place YOU would be cheating and lying and doing unworthy, things? Don't you show clearly what you are by the way you insist on what someone else is? If in a given situ ation you yourself would play fair, why can't you allow that someone else is doing the same? To go up to a mountain top and look steadily down one side at the forests, refusing to turn around and see the lakes in the other "middle distance" would be absurd, wouldn't it? Well aren't human beings and human motives about as important ss any well-advertised, and beauti ful view? K: Buy1 a small pumice stone and after soaking the feet well in warm water rub the stone vigorous ly over the calloused spot. Then rub some cream on it. Easter Footwear we D EAUTY dominates the lines of O early Spring footwear are showing. The exquisite blending of worth, fit and fashion makes our display worthy of especial attention. The latest Spring models for : all occasions, ranging' in moderate prices from . $4.95 to $7.95 Shoe Market "Omaha s Popular Priced Shoe Store" 320 South 16th Street ' -' ' My Marriage Problems A dele Garrison's New Phase of "REVELATIONS OF A WIFE" Crnst i:: Tht Reason Madia Racked Her Memory. "What's tht matter with the car?" I struggled valiantly to uue my tuive a tuatter-oMail a Dicky lud sounded. 1 saw that he had dm muted our recent tempestuous ad venture a if it never had occurred, and t resolved to match hit apparent nonchalance with equal poi.e. "If I knew, I wouldn't have been doubling a a daschuud just now," he retorted with a rueful glance at hi natty suit, which showed the el flit of hi crawling beneath hi rar. "The blamed thing simply died at first out there. Luckily it gave me a few dying gaups to warn inc. anJ I wat able to lole it in here out of the road. But I don't know for the lite of me w hat the trouble is carbu retor trouble, I suppose." "Is there anything I can do?" I asked innocently enough, but Dicky's tour glance showed that my query had irritated him. However, there wa no (race of hi annoyance in hi answer. I'rrhaps the remembrance of the latt hour or two wit more vivid than I had thought. "Not a thing, here, he aid, then with a reluctant grin, he added, "but neither can I, to which would you rather do, go to the nearest telephone and tumniott'a garage man, or day here while I do it?3 "I think I'll stay here, if you don't mind," I answered with the swift re action against driving which I might have expected to follow my mad dash through the wood road. "All right, I won't be long. I don't think that roadhouse a couple of miles back is cloted yet," and in an other minute he had climbed into my car and had driven away, leaving me sitting on the granny bank by the side of his stalled car. I was glad, indeed, of the chance to pull myself together after the nervous strain and shock of the past hour or two. Resolutely, however, I put out of my mind the quarrel with Dicky. I had left nothing settled as to my aiding Lillian, but I guessed that Dicky would be as willing to compromise his position on that as I secretly was, and therefore we couM find a common meeting ground upon the proposition. So I gave myself up to the lure of the autumn woods stretching around me on every side and revelled in the rich - sensuous Epworth League Dinner, The young people of the Epworth league, First Methodist church, will give their annual dinner Friday even ing at the church parlors. It will be a carnival affair, with streamers and balloons of blue and yellow, favors and place cards. The dinner will be prepared and served by the young married women of the church, and 250 reservations have been made already. The new minister, Dr. J. W. G. Fast, and Mrs. Fast will be honor guests, as will the superintendent of the Sunday School, Ford Hovey, and Mrs. Hovey. Dr. Fast will speak, the Y. M. C. A. quartet will sing and the Wops' orchestra will play. ; Chairman of the committee in charge is Miss Ethelwynne Hodge, and on her committee are Miss Dell Kern, Miss Evelyn Ennis and Rich ard' Cole. This is the last of a series of dinners given this winter by the Epworth league. coloring of team and vine and llltlC. $0 exluu'ed mentally wa I Out (or minute oi uhoe duration I had no nieaiire I thought tit nothing save the beauty around me. I or iu the problems which were troubling Lillian and my own more personal ones were n though they never lud been. Then, a the heady autumn air and the scents of the wood brought Mrrngth and hraling 10 my over wrought nerve, my brain began lo function again, and there came again to nic a. there had come many time in the hour since my return a searching inquiry at to the poiblc identity of Ihc mytterioui foreigner who had annoyed me on the train with hi aeitMi .( knowing my father and inr. I lie butie MiUiwii'g my home faming h'4 becu 4. h t'ul 1 had. had no rpprtuiiiiv io g over the invi' 'tin. iuy juururv "d Irv to fit them logeiher ' one would llif incifi oi pictm puMlr, And ye I fell that the complete pattern wa there a 1 cuuM but lunl a iiu.ing piece or !o which something told my iiieuwty outfit! to supply. Vague Memories. It wat maddming this seiue of ' tomeilimg which (might to know. but which wa Jut heyemd my grap I carrlully went ttr ttty minute ( my enforced aci4tioii with the ,nyieritm loreigiur. trying to recall every detad of hit appearance, He had been unusually tall and well-bmll. hi abundant liair wat white, I) is iiiu.tachf and imperial whuli I lud decided were a diguie were ulo white, his eyebrows With ii Uliii leap of my puUet I trid to recall hi eyebrow, remem brnng the thing Lillian had said when 1 was dckcribiuir. the man Smith of the Athokan reservoir im- biotftio lo her, I had noticed thai pari pf JmiiiiIi'i eyebrow bad been plucked I ke t'ut oi tau woman, and she had declared her txhrf that lb man bad done it to tluguite a di:iiiiguluiig maik of 4 tutted eye brow, How I anathematised my lack of ..rrvuui a I rcalurd llut I nuiU recall iMtliing definite about the in terinu foreigner's eyebrows. I bad a vague ini'ieii)ii tlut iliry were beavy and white, but with nothing I'liu.ual about iheni, Wa it potible thai The sound of hour feci from the woodland road into which Du'ky lud drawn hi car startled me from my reverie. There were voice, loo, one t" crip, authoritative accent of an American man of attair. the other, the apparently deferential, alino.t trrvile voice of laborer. But there wa something in the acrenit of the second voire which brought me to my feet breathle waning. Popular Saturday Afternoon CONCERT Yew are cordially invited to our free (cert U be held Saturday, April . at 3i30 p, "., in our large recital ball, Tbi "one hoor-of mui" eoneerls ar lo be held every Saturday at 3i30 frem mom . The proir.m Saturday Ui !) Nordin's OrsHetlrai Leer Mule, soni. pupil ct Martha Randalli Msurle Ingram, sasophea solo, pupil of Will Hslhsrimlom Irene Stuart. !' ' Pu f Mrs. J. V. Hilberti Ssrsh Ad.l Janoff, sin(ig and pupil ef Ats Brilloni Mrs. J. O. Bunsr. violin solo, ; sod Haael True Cbaloopka, aecempsnUt, pupil of J. E. Brill, mni Orcbeilra Selection by the Raggy Rubin' Orche.tr. Schmoller & Mueller ISI4 I II Past l. Omaha PIANO CO. Jutt Cut of ih rioiiK oa Rot STOP IN SATURDAY W are conveniently located at 66th and Dodge. Inspect our display of the largest and moot complete line of Evergreeni, Shrubbery, Trees, Vine and Kose Bushes In the city. Let lit ihow you what we ore doing and what we can do for 0U 6UR PRICES ARE RIGHT ' Landscape planting is our specialty. Our service is FREE. BYRD NURSERIES "Let U Beautify Your Home" . 66th and Dodge Wal. 3S76 and 6107 Florence Blvd. Ken. 3430 It'll Hake a Big Boy Out of Him CREAM OF RYE, served with milk or cream and sugar, is delicious! Chock full of bone-and-muscle building nourishment. You'll like its different flavor. ' Buy it at your neighborhood grocer's in clean, "air-tight" fibre cans. It is never sold in bulk. Get a package and read the many fine recipes for serving it. Treat your family to a new taste. ("More than a TZrealcfast rJ'gosl T "Look! Then' tats Light of Hop.mn Unfailing Omn of Good HtpHh mnd a Long Lift. " LYKO Illuminates the Future With Its Rays of Hope For All Who Would Enjoy Perfect Health This remarkable tonic is the inspiration and joy of the weak and debilitated. It brings back the sunshine of existence to those of lost vitality. It opens up wonderful visions of the future to the. down-cast, weary-laden souls depressed in spirit and body. It creates the strength and the courage to fight winning bat tles ia those who have lost heart, given up exhausted under the strain and weight of their daily burden's. It kindles anew the vital spark of life in the slumbrous body of the languishing, causing it to burst forth at last in a radiant glow of perfect health. "LYKO" is, icdeed, of great restorative power, in iact, Nature's first aid in nearly all sub-normal eondi- tioua. A general onic in the broadest sense, it rebuilds the entire system because of its effective and beneficial action upon all of the principal, organs of the body. It increases the appetite, promotes digestion and proper assimilation, strengthens the nerves, tones the heart, im proves the function of the liver, regulates the bowels and tends to relieve suppressed conditions of the kidneys. If you are thin-blooded, pale and weak, physically and nervously exhausted, generally run-down, devoid of animation, or lacking in endurance and staying qualities and mentally depressed in consequence, let "LYKO" recreate your vital force and bring back to you that buoyancy, energy and cheerfulness of former days. Try ii toaay ana see now mpm, much better you feel j tomorrow. Yourdrug- I , gist has "LYKO." Get I fef, a bottle today. I t JUr'Ji The Great General Tonic "As Strengthening As the Bracina Sea Breeze" Sole Manufacturers LYKO MEDICINE . COMPANY NtwTark Kansas City, Ma. Hz Sate? 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LYKO la told In original package only, like picture above. Refute all eubatltutea FOR SALE BY BEATON DRUG COMPANY, 15TH AND FARNAM STREETS, AND ALL RETAIL DRUGGISTS t Boys $9 6k hi pip1 J Here's Big Vacation Specials iir pi? Suits 75 AND , UPWARD Sturdy Suits for the young ster; full measure of style; every suit with extra trousers. Outfit the boy in his new Easter Suit and take advantage of our liberal credit service. Fidelity Chocolates Full Pound Box ....... Delicious to the last bite, a real $1.00 value. Cream and fruit filled. 39 c twWAV.v.v.v.v.Vaa.v.v.v.wv.v.v.v.v.v.v aW.V. I v.v.v.s. 1417 Douglas Street j: WAV.W.V.SSVa,AVAV.V.V.VMV.V.V.Va,a,.V.V.V.'i' wv.w.v-v.v-vw