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| Society By MELLIFICIA. Monday, November 8, 1915, INNEAPOLIS is very proud of the fact that it is the only city in this section of the midwest that is In the Social Register and recognized in Fifth avenue or Newport, : There is no getting around it, or playing sour grapes about f it, Minneapolis is “In;" and it is but fit that sister cities keep an eye on this model of fashion and mo!d of form. For this year Minneapolis society has taken up the serious study of advanced French. Dr, Marcel Morand, one of the most distinguished pro- £, fessors of the Sarbonne in Parfs, {s giving a course in the graduate school of the University of Minnesota. 'Tis ~the doctor was wounded in battle ten months’ sick leave and wedding an ill wind that blows good to none and has come to this country on a trip as well. There is a charming romance to the latter, but it is another story. The French course, now engaging the really smart ones, comprises classes in “The Evolution of the “Modern French Poetry." Frénch Novel,” “Oral Diction” and It is not to be Inferred that Minneapolis is laying itself open in any " way to the charge of trying to be “high-brow." They are studying French ] ., merely as a refinement, not as an edeational or intellectual stunt, The average western French. ern circles. grounding in the dead tongues. But, girl is wofully deficient In fact, this seems her one drawback when she appears In east- She knows German almost aiways, and in conversational has a thorough as for French, as it rolls and flitters from the lips of the woman of fashion in the east, the western girl finds herself suddenly a wall flower. Perhaps Minneapolis is working up for recognition on the other side as well, and we may find ourselves farther behind it than ever. Fine Arts Society Lecture. (= The Omaha Boclety of Fine Arts an- . mounces that admission to its lecture .18 not restricted to members of the or- i ganization. Single admissipn tickets will be on sale at the door of the Hotel Fon- tenelle ballroom, where the lectures will ba given. Prof, Charles Zueblin of Bos- ton, will open the series Tuesday after- /I moon at 4 o'clock with a talk on “The + @Gothic Revival." For Miss Wagner. Mrs. Ralph Peters entertained this afternoon at luncheon for Miss Mildred Wagner of Kansas City, guest of Mrs. Paul Gallagher. The decorations were pink roses. Those present were: x Meosda. ubflu. Kenneth Patterson, E — o Misses— > Peters, Mildred Wagner, Prairie Park Club, The Prairie Park club held thelr regu- _lar week-end dancing party at thé club house Baturday evening. During the in- termission a demonstration of a number of the latest dances was glven by Miss Nellie ¥. Green, assisted by Mr. Fred i Wedemeyer. The following were present. and M . A, Wedemeyor, will _meet . C, Price. v A Bdna McCauley entertained in of her birthday at her home Sat- evening. The table was decorated ‘banked white and pink carnations. Minses— Genevieve McCauley. Ettle Marr. Theresa Kotch, Chris MoCuuley, Fiand iekis . | icomb or brush d’ T. B, Morris and J. V. made reservations for six |’ ve reservations for five. for the Wednesday mati- for Mrs. W, H. H. Walker, . E. Butler, and Mrs. B. C. Mrs, J. R. Carter six each. H, McCord will give & box £t si’! 4L I i £ i H i o Les Amies Whist Club, Mrs. George Keebler entertained the Les Amies Whist club Saturday after- noon, Prizes were won by Mrs. C. A McKengie and Miss May Rasmussen. The club will meet In two weeks with Miss Grace Mickel. In and Out of the Bee Hive. Miss Edith Puls left last evening for Chicago, where she will visit with friends for a few days. Miss Anna Tibbetts, principal of the Peru Normal school, who was the guest of her cousin, Mrs, J. W. Metcalf, dur- ing the state teachers’' meeting, left to- day for her home. Miss Ruth Weller, wno is a student at the state university, was a guest at her home over Bunday. At the Bold Theater Mr. and Mrs. Ward Burgess will enter- tain this evening at a box party for Mr. and Mrs. Glen Wharton and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Nash, Mrs. Charles T. Kountsze will give a box party in honor of Mrs. Arthur Jer- rens of Chicago, the guest of Mrs, Wil- llam Sears Poppleton. In the box of Mr. and Mrs. W. ». Bur- gess will be Mr. and Mrs. George H. Kelly and Mr. and Mrs. Danfel Baum, The Prairle Park Whist club held their first"meeting, to which women were in- vited, Friday evening. Among those W eynota wis, . ¥. Reynolds, 3 C. Barton, easrs.— Mesars. — H, ‘ Blckler, uls Nelson, F. P, Cowdery, . €, Conley. Cook, orr! For Mrs. !ogplc_u:'l Guest, Mrs. Arthur Jetrens of Cnicago arrived this morning to be the guest for week of Mrs. Willlamn Sears Poppleton. Mrs. Charles T, ®ountse will entertain at a box party at the Boyd this evening for Mrs. Poppleton's guest. Other events will be a dinner Tuesday evening by Mrs. George Turner, and M George Bernard Pring will e ain at din Thureday evening in Mrs. Jerrens' honor, Beautiful 7 , Hair Tinting \Absolutely and Positively Harmiess “Hrownatone” Instantly Changos the Hair to Any Shade of Brown , i (or Black it Preferred). ' Nothing so robs & woman of her good {looks and attractiveness as gray, streak- or faded halr. And there iz no more 3 The f reme s “Browna- !f&-‘s"" “"u' ‘-.l;fi-.::d eany to use. Just into your hair. It can- will not rub or ;O 3 tly, and is absolutely L T 1 de- e e e A t sells “Brownatone” or worth your insist upon this prep- 4 ton and n:l mthhlno{n A sam- and & bookl Wil be be detected, Instan! t will be malled 0f 10 cents, and your orders direct from our labora- {tories 1f you prefer. . | T'wo sines—26c and $1.00. Two_shades—One for Golden or Me- dium Brown, the other for Dark Brown or Black, Insist on “Brownatone” at your halr- .. Prepared only by the Kenton Phar: }l;fil Co, 629 E. Pike St, vingtoa, Sold and nur teed 1 Omaha M Bherman & ec‘:n"am Dnl:g Stores .J other leading dealers. e . La.Grippe and Colds 1o La @rippe and Colds, Anti-kamnia(A-K) are unexcelled, as they stop the nerves, and bring the resh needed by nature Lo restore the health, Physicians bave used iE i f;fé;g { f il & ¥ THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, Naval Hero Admits that He Paid NOVEMBER 9, 1915. e e e e e 'HURT IN TORNADO, $10,000 for First Wife’s Divorce MRS. HAMMER DIES Washington social circles are following with great interest the trial of a sult brought here by the former wife of Lieutenant Commander Willlam P. Cronan of the navy to recover #,000 from him in pursuance of an alleged agree- ment under which she divorcea him. Lieutenant Commander Cronan, who has a record for bravery in the navy, and whose second wife ls a granddaughter of General U. 8. Grant, has testified that he married the plaintiff while under the influence of liquor. He declared that he never realiy loved his first wife ana would not have mar. { rled her had he not been under the in- fluence of aleohol. He sald he had sought a lawyer's ad- vice about getting a divorce or an annul- ment of the marriage, and that the law- yer advised him to Induce his wife to get the divorce. His wife agreed to release him If he would make provision for her. He admitted that he paid his lawyer $10,- 0. He now contends that the alleged agreement to pay the first Mrs. Cronin §7,000 18 not valid In law because con- trary to publie policy. On Friday the Original Cooking club will meet with Mrs. Poppleton, on which | occasion Mrs. Jerrens will be the honor Suest. For the Future. 1 The Pagalco club gives a dance Thurs- day evening at the Metropolitan hall. The South Elde Progressive club will entertain at their hall Tuesday evening. Personal Mention. Mrs. J. E. George returned Saturday | evening after a short visit with - her | father in Denison, Ia. Mrs. Clarence Potter of Los Angelos, Cal, who before her marriage was Miss Dorothy Fredericksen of Omaha, s in the eity for a short visit at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. Fredericksen. On Tuesday Mrs., Potter will leave to join her husband in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Cuthbert Vincent spent the week-end in Lincoln as the guests of Prof. and Mre. George R. Chatburn., Mr. Vincent and Prof. Chatburn v-ore college classmates. Mrs. Bugene Coleman of Edmonton, Al- berta, Canada, arrived today for a short visit, having spent several weexs In Lin- coln, Miss Elma K. Jenkins of Lincoln is visiting friends In Omaha, Miss Alice Hayward of the Clarkson hospital training class school spent the weelk-end in Lincoln, her home. Mrs, Isidore Witmark of New York City, who Is the guest of her father, Mr, Albert Cahn, at The Ulntah, plans to re- main until Thursday. Mrs. Witmark is being entertained Informally by a host of friends who welcomed her return. Mrs. Witmark was formerly Miss Viola Cabn. Women Should Take Warning. If the statement made at a New York assembly of women that healthy Amer- fcan women are so rare that they are almost extinct, iy true, it is time for the women of America to take warning and 100k to their health. It may be headaches, backaches, dragging down pains, nervous- ness, mental depression that are telltale symptoms of some organic derangement for which Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound—a simple remedy made from roots and herbs<is a specific and may bo relled upon to restore women to a healthy normal cofflition.—Advertisement. RS NELLIE ported Lol A f | GRANT ERONAN Contagious Disease Cases Are Fewer for Month of November Health Commissioner Connell reports a diminution of diphtheria cases throughout Greater Omaha. The spread of the disease in the Bouth Side has been checked. During this month twenty-one cases have been reported, eleven being in. the South Bide. month. X Only one case of typhoid fever was re- during October and in that in- stance the patient was a nonresident. There were 12 cases Entire Shoe Stock of Otto Glck’s 0.-G. Shoe Store, W. 0. W. Bldg. On Sale Next Thursday All the Women's Pumps and Ox- fords, patent and dull leather, regardiess of style or uality, worth to s o7 P B l'zs BRANDEIS STORES last Wife of Vice President of Byrme- Hammer Fails to Recover from Shock of Two Years Ago. WILL HOLD FUNERAL TUESDAY Mrs. George L. Hammer, wife of the vice president of the Byrne & Hammer Dry Goods company, who with her husband was seriously in- I_‘ured in the tornado of 1913, died { Sunday morning at her home in the i "'lnrlndn apartments, 3027 Farnam | street. | Her death was rather sudden, although |she had long suffered from llness, as | well as having been weakened by her |tornado Injuries and an accldent ten weeks ago, by which her left thigh was broken. Ehe never fully recovered from the shock of the tornade. Mr. Hammer | 108t & leg in that disaster,” when he and his wife were buried in the ruins of thelr former home on Thirty-ninth street, which was in the direct path of the cyclone. Mrs. Hammer, before her marriage, was Miss Mabel Templeton. She was born Greenville, Pa., and married M Hammer in 1850, The Hammers lived for awhile in St. Joseph, Mo., and came to Umaha in 1900, Ske is survived by her husband, and two daughters, Miss Hild® and Mrs. H L. Pritchett. For years she had been a prominent member of the First Pres- byterian church,” and was a leader in charitable work Funeral services will be held at the residence Tuesday afternoon, and the in- terment will be held privately at Forest Lawn cemetery. — Night Cough Relleved. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey eoases your cough, soothes the lungs and invites sleep. Only %6o. All druggists.—Adver- tisement. GREEK CHARGED WITH STABBING BOUND OVER Harry Poulos, Greek, charged with the stabbing of Oscar Carlson, 2180 South Ninth street, on the night of October 10, was bound over to the district court un- der bonds of $§780, v i Brandeis Stores. A Cluster of They must be kept moving. . Special Values' Selected for Tuesday’s Interest No laggard lots of merchandise are allowed to hold valuable shelf room at Therefore, these excellent values for Tuesday, much below regular prices. On sale in our Great Enlarged Basement. Millinery 50 Dozen New Black Silk *|\wivet Sailor Shapes, worth *| .80 $1.98, special /| 100 Dozen Flowers, Orna- ‘ments, Gold and Silver Trim- mings, ete., positively 19¢c IN THE BASEMENT CLOAK AND SUIT SECTION Look-Like-Silk Petticoats, black sateen, imitation black sateen, imitation heatherbloom, in all colors. Values to 75¢, speglal Beautiful chine combinations, linens and Jap silk blouses. Sizes ‘ 34 to’ 46. Specially $l priced, at PETTTTR worth to 75¢, choice. HMosiery ' and Underwear #1t: Women’s Pure Thread Silk &:‘ Hoslery, black white and ;all‘the latest shades. Dauble l«“”" toes and ‘soles. | vaiz /| . Women’s Cotton Fleecy Lined | Union Sults, in medium and ‘| light weight; white ‘gl oream; all styles. 69C 2 to $1.25, each ... L m’s Fine Cotton Fleeey i|iddued Union Suits, all sizes, in 4 :Dutch neck, elbow sleeves, high neck, long sleeves, 3 i 2 50c sale price 9 -~ 7.500 Yds, Stylish Fabrics A remarkable purchase of all- wool dress goods, suitings and coatings in medium and heavy weights, embracing all the most fashionable weaves and colorings for fall and winter wear. There isn’t a woman who can fail to find among these splendid fabrics cor- rect materials for tallor-made suits, automobile and street coats, afternoon dresses, house dresses, separate skirts, walsts, etc., at such prices as will appeal to the most economical. Values from $1.50 to $2.50 a yard— 95c Anp $1.29 $aro rms»-pl d Shrunk Free DO THESE SMOKE-STACKS CARRY A MESSAGE TO YOU? small sizes, at pair.. Shoe Specials Misses’ 8hoes, made of bbx calf, lace styles, very serv- iceable shoes, sizes 1134 to 2, at pair.. $l-]9 200 Pairs Women's Odds and Ends Shoes, tan, patent and dull leather, button and lace styles, mostly 75C THREE SPECIAL BARGAINS In Basement, Drapery Section’ About 600 Extra Fine Lace Curtains, serim curtains and Swiss curtains, values to $2, specially priced, Two Gross of Regular 10c Mhomn Rods, as long as they last, Tues- : . 18 Pieces of Real Imported Oolored Madras, values to 75¢, special Tues- Did you ever stand in the window of one of our high office buildings and gaze out over the rolling clouds of smoke from Omaha’s factory smoke stacks? You have, we know—but did you get the message that a 16yal Omahan should have received? Did you realize that every cloud told the story of thousands of dollars worth of Neb- raska’s raw products being turned into finished manufactured articles? Did you think of the great profit this ready market meant to the farmers of this state—farmers who are your customers and spend their money with you? When you see the switch-engine bumping the freight cars along the side-tracks in Omaha’s factory district, do you think of the millions of dollars that Omaha factories are each year paying to Omaha laborers? Do you think of the prosperity that this money-circulation in home channels brings to each one of us— to you? Go now to some commanding edifice—gaze out upon the great Omaha factories—picture to yourself the wonderful future that this great industry will have if each one of us does his part —if he boosts and uses and serves Omaha-made goods. By always buying Omaha-made goods we help make Omaha prosperous. And then, too, we secure better goods than the same money would buy if purchased from outsiders. It costs less to sell Omaha- made Goods in Omaha than it does goods which must include a heavy freight rate in their selling price. You may always depend upon this rule: Omaha-made Goods cost less for the same quality, or you secure better quality for the same money. Omaha-made Goods must satisfy. The manufacturers live here, they are your neighbors—they are on the ground person- ally to back-up every guarantee, to make every promise gcod. Always Talk, Use and Serve Omaha-Made Goods Omahha Products That Make Good More Omaha housewives are learning the high qual” ity of Omaha food products each day. In food prod- ucts especially should one be careful of her purchase. The particular housewife can always depend upon Omaha-made goods, not only being of the highest quality and the most economical in price, but the freshest and most palatable, Four Omaha manufacturers of food products bear a reputation for quality products that has been justly earned through long years of service. THE FAIRMONT CREAMERY among pure food products, manufactures the famous Delicia Ice Cream—a wholesome, satisfying dish that brings rosy cheeks to kiddies and smiles of sat- isfaction to grown-ups, whether served in summer or winter, THE WATERLOO CREAMERY manufactures Waterloo Creamery Butter and Elk- horn Condensed Milk. The high quality of both is making new and lasting friends each day.