Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 17, 1915, Page 10

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Friday, July 16, 1915. By MELLIFICIA. Just now, When Mr. an@ Mrs. Robert Vance return Sunday from Chicage, where they were married last Tuesday, they will occupy the home of Mr, and Mrs. Clifford Weiler for their boneymoon days. Mr. and Mrs. Weller left the first of the week for Weller, Colo., to spénd the remainder of the summer. The'r object in selecting Wéller is 10 enable them to retrace the steps of their own honeymoon. Mr. Weller met his wife at Weller, and after their marriage they returned there for thelr wedding trip. Now (following a romantic whim) they are off to spend it all over again. Summer Plans. Mrs, N P Dodge and children Teft this SO THE Weller house is a real honeymoon-in and honeymoon-out Inn | Rachel Metcalfe. home last week from a Miss Metédife arrived trlp through The Misses Marle and Grace Moreland | | week for Clear Lake, la. Mirs, W, I. Curtis and Asughter, Helen, left Monday for Lake Minnetonka Miss Irina Jones leaves this evening for Lake Minnetonka for a three weeks otay. Mish Margaretta Burke leaves Saturday for a vigit with Mr. and Mra. A. T. Kilopp and family, on thelr ranch near Mule Shoe, Tex. Mra. George A. Hoaglahd left Saturday for Dennis, Mass., where she will re- main ‘the irest of the summer. Wedding ‘Cards. The wedding of Mr. Harry Hebner, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. MeCarthy, and Miss Grace Wiehelm was celebrated July § st the church of Our Lady of Lourdes, In OChlcago. The ‘ceremony was performed by Father Duste, assistéd by Father Seanlon. Following the ceremony a wéd Ging breakfast was served at {(he home of the bride. The attendants were Miss Marion Wehelm, sisterof-the “bride, dmi Harry Meoh gc. 10 Vietor H. Davis of Loveland, _Mrs. Davis s the nisce of Mre. A. B, Currio and has made several visits Omaha. S - The wading of Miss Luretta Dooilitle of Councli Dlutfs and Mr. J. L. R. Dick- Dikvie Wik one of the maids at the wed- ding of Mr. and ‘Mrs. Belwin Jjacobs Omaha two years ago, his visl here several times. Mer future home 10 b6 In Memphis, Tenn. - —_— R The Delte Zeta, | Pan June! s filflt "y, i ARE QOING VERY FASY, AND ‘ IN HAPPY HOMES, - THE TERMS ASSURE THIS, FINE NEW PIANOS - $179, $190, $225 and Up son of Omaha was colebrated very aléstly Thurrday afternoon at 6 o'eclook Annpuncement ll’ made of the marriege of Miss Carrol Duvie to Mr. Lawrence Stein Levy on Juw 11 at Bt. louls. Mids » .| At the' were guedts at the t the Happy Hol- | For House Guest. ot St Paul, Minn, are houke guests of thelr cousin, Min Leigh Leslle, Dundee. Giacler National park and the San Fran-| ciaco exposition. The two young ladies | are both students of Washington uni-| versity, 8t. Louls, and made the western | tour together. They spent a week at| Glacler National park with ten other| classmates and Prof. and Mrs. McCourt. | | After leaving Glacier National park M Bain and Miss Metealfe sitended Theta Nattongl convention, which was Beld at Gearhart, Ore. Miss Baln, after het vimt in Omaha, wili spend. the bal- anee of*the summer in Mich gan | Pleasures Past. | Miss ¥lther Ellinghusen entertained at dinner At hor home Wadnesday evening for herssorority sisters and friends. The | Gecorations were In pink roses, the Delta | | Zéta’ flower, and the place cards were i | | o T " s ) i .. Ehamp, tt, Rul usen nghusen Dr. and M. H P Willace enter- tained informally at dirner last evening At their home. Garden flowers decorated ihe telile and tne were: s Ruth Willlace. C. Fowler, m.w;-mn On the' Calendar. On-Thirsday of fext weak a luncheon will be given at the Happy Mollow club By the Misses Alice Rushton, Carolyn Holmq! “nd- Kllen Shapard. ' Mine stors will entertain at lunely eofi Baturday at the Fomtenello, The Tuesdiy Bridge club will discon- tinue its meetings unt fall, owing to most of the members beirg out of the olty. IOV - Mr, W. M. Taylor will entertain eigh- toen guests ai dinner evening at the Field club. Mr. And Mra. Charles Ware will have eights M. H. Buehler, four; Owcar Allen, six: B. P. Smith, elght, and C. D. Sturdevant, fourteen. Miss Mary Dugdale gave a 1 o'clodk luncheon Thuraday st her in honor of her house guest, Misa Raé of Des Molnes. A centerplecd. of Mrw. Ward roses decorated the table and covers were placed for! bl M M A ary P, Dugdale, Mary Personal Meation, Mr. Roger H. Willlams, formerly of Mrs. R. C. Peters and dsughter, Miss Catherine, are in Chi Henry Stewart, son of W, L. Stewart has returnéd home from Vamcouver. Mr, Kdward Johnson leaves this even- fog for u woek's trip to Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. W. B m‘u‘ Miss Rago Y WILL SEE PRICES SELL THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY * Hold Golden Wedding Ceremony Years ago Friday, In Pittsburgh, Pa., yesterday, surrovnded by a majority of | their nine chi'dren, crlebrated their golden | wedding ammiversary at the home. They | to Omaha elght years ako. ol _MP. and Mrs. Thomas McCoy, 54 SBouth | came to Nebraska forty-thres years ago, Twenty-sixth avenus, were married fifty | setting in Saunders county, apd were real ploneers, bearing the ups and downs of the hardy early settlers of the days when Nebraska was young. They moved visit with her brofher, Edwin Harte, at Brandon, Manitoba Miss Mary K'ine and Miss Mary Mo-| Cautey Thureday for a months' so- Journ at Estes Park and other points in Colorado. ) Omaba, has been detailed as instructor &t the United States Military scademy, West Point, N, Y., to take effect August M, 8. News of the Wayfarers. A The Misses June and ‘Luclle Brown On an Omaha Site. towns of Culifornia. | Miss Loutse Curtls is attending the Delta Gamme Sorority conwention in California. now under way, visiting cago. GENERAL MADERO AND MISS GARCIA MARRIED ¢ LOR ANGELRS, Cal, July 16.-General Julio Madere, brother of former Presi- dont Madero, of Mexico, and Miss Car- men Carcle, daughter of Francisco Gar- cla, of rmosillo, were married here today. The bridegroom's father, Fran- [clacd 1. Madero, and prominent Mexi- cans in Los A le# witnessed (he cere- mony, ' Jullo Madero Is spid to be ome of the wealthiest men of Mexico. He met his wife. while & prisoner of war in lu::‘ Moxioo and obtained & parole in r to come to Los Angeles to clatm his bride, ' and Isard. up the titles, D Stop that Cough—Now. ‘When you catch cold or begin to cough take Dr, Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey. It pen- etrates the throat and lungs. All drug- glats.—Advertisement. Bee “For Rent."" S A — veral days crowds our big East windows, and keen has been the interest in the BABKET display. We bought all the samples, odd lots, broken stocks, prac- tically every kind of basket—tiny baskets for For ve gathered at faney work, :cr favors, for flowers, for candy— lunch baskets, work baskets, baby baskets, waste baskets, Made from fibre, sweet grass, straw, ete., ete.—bought at a very big discount —all to be disposed of at such trifling prices. For inihnee—mhoy start at, then B¢ l%, 29¢, 59¢, , 98¢ and upw‘l. 3 Every one away below usual prices; many, in- deed, less than 14. NEW PLANT HERE Big Automobile Ooncern to Put Up Shop for Assembling Machines TAKES AN ENTIRE OITY BLOOK Another big bullding for Omaha are visiting the expositions and ocomst|to house another big faotory is prac- tically assured by a real estate deal The enterprise is to be an aseem- Mrs. George Summner and ohlldren are | bling plant for the Ford Automobile Mrs. Bumner's parents in Chi- company in which the parts of the machines are to be put 4ogether to make the finished product for dis- tribution in thig territory, snd the location is the square between Fif- teenth and BSixteenth and Nicholas It is reliably reported that the work of securing the options on the property has been completed, and the abstractors are now checking The assembling factory when in full operation will give employment to several hundred men on the basis of the Ford high standard of wages, and ‘mak® Omaha, which has hereto- fore had a ‘distributing agency, one of the most important points en the map of the Ford automobile industry, B — Apartments, fiats, nouses and cottages can be rented quickly and cheaply by a|the North JULY 17, 1 (GREAT LECTURERS Internationally Known Artists Are Secured by Omaha Society of | Fine Arts for Coming Seéason. MAKE OMAHA AN ART CENTER “Omaha, an Art Center,” fis the slogan of the Omaha Soclely of Fine Arts, which announces an impressive list of lecturers for the coming season. The lectures will be given in the ball room of the Hotel Fonte- nelle, afternoons at 4 o'clock, begin- ning November 9. Alfred Noves. the young English poet; Prof. Charles Zueblin of Hoston, who ap- peared here last winter for the Palimp: #ost club; John Cowper Powys of Ox- ford, England; Walter Scott Perry of Pratt Institute, Brooklyn; A. D. F. Haw- Iin of Columbia univerdity, New York; Lorado Taft. noted soulpter of Chicago, and Raymond Wyer of Muskegon, Mich:, of tho Hackley Art ry, are includéd in the Nst of speakers Following is the program November 6—'Heralds of Art.” Charles Zueblin, ber 17—"Saracenic _Architecturs; _Novem § November 19. ““The Tal Mahal” ~"The Alhambrs," w-m; Scott Perry. . the Uh- November #0—"The Real and real," ymond Wiyer, January 7="Optimism in the Poetry &t the Futire' (with readings - from = his oyes. Democratic Januar, of the Granfl Btyle,'" Vg ary (2, “Shakes- peare.” Jol Cowper Powys. LA Jenuary I, 27, @, 31-"Gothic Arohitect- ure” “Henafssance Architecture,’” A. D. F. Hamlin, Fobruary 1l="Russian Literaturé: Dos- tolevaky, the Soul of Russia.” John Cn.m\’ow& M 3--“Gothie Beulpture;’ March 14, “Renalssance Sculpture.” Lorado Taft. Nirs. Charles T. Kountze 1s president bf the Fine Arts society. The program coth- mittes jo Mre, W. G. Ure, chairman; Mra. C. W. Russell, Mrs. Leonard Everett, Mrs. Lioyd Osborme, Mre. F. H. Cola Mrs. Frederick Rouse, Mrs. Osgood Kastman, Miss Lida Wilson, Miss Careline Dodge and Miss Laura Scott. @irl Breaks Arm, but : Tends to Her Garden Despite the Injury A broken arm, the result of a hard fall, i not enotigh to deter Lals Goodwin, a pupll in the Park school, in keeping up her summer garden. The lfttle Jaes, who lives at 1525 South Thirty-third strGet, suffered the break the other day, but siie gamely Informed E. B. Dale, super- visor of tho Boys' and Girls' Garden club, that it would take more than a broken arm to prevent-her constant at- tention to her garden. CONGRESSMEN GO WEST TO INSPECT HARBORS On a junket to the Pacific coast, where they will look over the water fromtof a number of the cities, headed by gressman Sparkman of Florida, the coh. gressional rivers and harbors committés went west today, rémaining here twenty | | minutes. There are twenty in the party, and the members will be out a month or #0. In two special cars they arrived over tern froi e east and went out over the Union Puacific. A FOUR RINGED CIRCUS with 4ll the side trimmings— pink lemonade and balloons—should not awaken greater in- terest or present greater aftractions than the Series of Famous Sales at ¢Saturday, July the Nineteenth Hats! Hats!! Hats for the Young!!! 300 of them fresh from the hands of expert milliners, to be sold on Saturday at half afte: eight in the morning, Old Noah Webster in defined them as a covering for the head—hav- ing a crown and brim. - The modern Chapeau is something more than thpt and freqyently not that at all-thus do times. fashions and defini- tions change. Now some of the articles called hats have no erowns, others have no brims— most of them, indeed, are so fearful and won- derfully made as to defy description. Corsets of kind. best Irene, Camille, Justrite, ete. All season they sold some as high as Saturday at $3.79. Summer Nightgowns, sheer, crepes, etc.; also some in dainty tints and stripes; 69¢ each. On Thursday, last, we attempted a sale of Im- ported Dress Fabrics; goods had been in windows a few the * finer best treely, | 5D 10.00; white, soft; In larly up to $3.95 each. ' T0 SPEAK IN OMAHA| Sprouse Hanged for Murder of Wife 8T. LOUIS, Mo, July 16~Willlam . Sprouse of Kast St Louis, 1iL, was {hanged ot Clayton, Mo, a suburb, today, for the murder of his wife. His last re- quest was to see his six ohfldren who had testified against him. They refused to_come to him. The evidence against Bprouge was cir- cumstantial. His wife, Annle Sprouss, disappedred from their home in East St. Louls, 11, on the night of October 81, 1914 Her body was found near Brent- wood on' November W, following. Evidence Introduced at the trial tended to show that Sprouse left home on the night of October 31 with his wife and réturned without her. Forty five minutes before he was to be hanged Sprouse vainly attempted to commit sulcide by slashing his throat with a sharpencd steel spring taken from his shoe He Lind also eaten half & bar 4 soap during the night in an attempt i,ightning Strikes at Police Station Lightning struck the window of the doctor's offices at police headquarters, Thursday night, broke the glass, diss jointed a pair of surgical sheatw and eplit & big plate glase mirror. James Maver of Wyoming, Neb., was in the room at the time having a scalp wound Mreated by the surgeons. Drs. Shook and Zimmerer, who were called out for & fow moments, returned to find the man in a dased condition, but he was soon restored and this morning fs none the worse for his narrowescape. CITY COUNCIL THANKS .MAYOR OF PILADELPHIA The city council adopted a resolutior thanking the mayor and eouncil of Phila delphia for courtesy shown by stopping here with the Libarty BUil. e e to dte. Rent houses guick with & Bes Went Ad this California Raisin Bread freshly made with seeded _ . “SUN-MAID” RAISINS Tu other words, we will give away FREE COUPONS worth 10¢ each, which, when presented to your grocer with 256, will securé for you TWO packages of ‘‘SUN- MAID”’ Raisins worth 25¢, and in addition you will be given a loaf of Raisin Bread FREE, made with -y -MAID”’ Raisins. How to Secure Free Coupons Tomorrow, Saturday, July 17th, will be ‘‘Conpon Day.”” The U. P! Steam Baking Co. will ingert Cou. poms in the wrappings of Tip Top bread, and The New England Bakery Co. will pack the Coupons with But- ternut bread. Wateh for the Coupons and insist that each loaf of bread you buy of your grocer on Satur- day morning contains one of them. Important Notice! When you secure Coupons be sure to write your name and address upon the back, because each Coupon, to be redeemed, must have the name of holder together with street address. ‘Watch the columns of The Bee for more details regarding the redemp- tion of the Coupons. More interest- ing information will be given out California Anociat'ed ; talking about hats, Little men can be fitted to Romipers, Beach Suits, Dresses, etc.; 2 to § yrs. Some dollar garments for Little Women will be pleased with the Summer Dresses, § to-17 years. Dresses sold regu- $7.50, Hats for the Elders!!!! Not thus do women regard the HATS WE | SELL. We have set a new. pace, and are con- i stantly making new records. Saturday’s sale should beat-’em-all. Never have we offered a cleaner, newer, better or cheaper lot. PRICE §$3.00 EACH. LADIES—Now a word with you. Please, pretty please, don’t hold a number of hats in’* vour hands without deciding, thus depriving some anxious patron from getting what she may want, If you are not going to buy it. give some- body else a chance. We are not scolding— merely appealing for your help. Now for the Other Extreme, we bave hatted you, and it you please, we will now care for your pedal extrem- ities— A Shoe Sale of Baker Shoes Made for Us ALL our women's low shoes, do you get the word all-—means all in this store. No high grade low shoe withheld, not one rlr reserved, whether former priteés wag §6. or §6, or $7. Yours on Saturday u&w”rfl. And now, dear friends, & word of oo ese - end the season. Clean-6ut sales at Kilpatrick's are dif- fevent. People know our quality, people believe our statements. There will be a crowd, therefors, Come in the Morning Barly. dainty at - ~

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