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What is Going On in Society Circles | Cusick-Kearns Wedding. } The marriage of Miss Helen ' | Kearns, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. | H. Kearns, to, Mr. L. B. Cusick, of | Sioux City, took place at the home of the bride’s parents at 4 o'clock in the afternoon of Thanksgiving day | before the immediate relatives of the ! two families. The bride's father, who ! s state superintendent of the Home Mission board of the Presbyterian | ehurch, himseli performed the cere- { mony. P | The house was decorated with palms, ferns and yellow and white | chrysanthemums; red roses and ca- | thedral candles were used in the liv- | ing room where the ceremony was performed. The bride wore her go- ing-away suit of Burgundy broad. cloth, a black picture hat and a cor- sage bouquet of red roses and Eng- lish violets. Family dinner followed the cere- mony ‘and later in the cvening the young people left for a wedding trip in the east. They will be at home after January 1 in Sioux City. Mrs. Kearns and her daughter came to Omaha three weeks ago from their former home in Minneapolis to join Dr. Kearns in his work here. All af- fairs for the bride had been given b Minneapolis friends before she left and her wedding had to be solemn- ized without their presence. Interstate Fraternity Banquet. The Omaha Alumni chapter of the Delta Tau Delta fraternity held its | second annual banquet for meémbers of the fraternity in Nebraska and ' Jowa at the Fontenelle last night. Over 100 ‘were’ present. Hugh A. | Myers presided. The active chapters of the universities of lowa, Nebraska . and lowa State college were repre- ~ sented by delegates, who gave short cabaret acts. e ler, Linecoln; A. Cambridge; Marvin Sommer. B. Dewell, Missourl Val. hults, Stanton; Dale Milll- 8. Helser, Vl’l‘tdlllll C. 8 o IHE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: DECEMB 'Back from England to Reopen Omaha Hom LAKE MATRON VISIT- ING IN OMAHA. e SALT The organization is social and has given several hikes, chafing dish parties and theater parties. The club will have a candy booth at the dinner dance to be given at the parish house | Wednesday evening by All Saints’ Altar guild. With the proceeds from tie sale of candies the girls plan to supply a poor family with Christ- | mas necessities. The members are: Mieses— Minses— Isabel Poarsall Pleasant Holyoke, Madeline Johnson Carolyn Miller, | Mildred Rockwel!, Marion Coble, Phyills Waterman, Gwendolyn McCoy, Angelyne Rush, Trene Dyball, Leberta Huston, Tsabel McDonald, Bessle Howell Hernice Wildox, Elizabeth, Perrigo, Amy Howell, Grace Smith, For Eastern Star Matrons. Mrs. George Raymond Porter en- tertain at 1 o’clock luncheon Friday in honor of Mrs. Josephine Swigert, glrand matron of the Eastern Star in ebraska, and Mrs. Carrie Fisher, grand matron of the Eastern Star in Wyoming. A basket of yellow, chrysanthemums and tulle formed the centerpiece and covers were laid fu{: Mesdames— Mesdames— Josephine Swigert Frank J. Bires, of Gorden, Neb.; Carrle Fisher Qeorge R, Porter. of Lander, Wyo. Minges— Anne E. Hutehins, Misnes— Winifred Wallaoce. Entertain Notre Dame Team. Creighton men entertained several n J. Stevens, ; dames : @, A. Campbell, McCook Beatrice; Geotge Irwin, | of the illness of her grandmother, | Mts, Dubois, returned home Friday t, evenh:!, Mrs. Dubois being much im- proved. ool llxuud toh Llncoll1n Game. Ml mong those who motored to Lin- % "“._"‘(“M",‘"fi"” M| coln %hnrsdly for the Notre Dame. Reves, | Nebraska game were Mr. and Mrs, o Barton Millard, Joseph and Willard Y| Millard, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Stewart, 2d, Mr, and Mrs. Sam Burns, Mr. and Mrs, T. F. Kennedy, Miss Daphne Peters and John Madden, Miss wa In. use, Lincoln David 3 W, W, Wil- 2 Meaers, — M, C. Losch, race Eillot Lumm, y e 9RD A onetl, Allison, Miss Claire Daugherty, Paul :ia:h.r't' }Eew:l'nl}l'. )Sderley'hCh‘fflLels Allison and Charles rge Mayne, cCarthy o inneapolis; Miss Jose- Burnworth Mioniex' | phine Congdon, Miss Elizabeth Reed, R Moser, rexel Sibbernsen, Isaac Carpenter, Allyn Ellsworth Moner, B Malligen, jr., and Mrs, Lockwood; Miss Irene sland Miss Beatrice Coad, Hugh A, Myers, Brinkley Carl F. J. Nagl. Evans and Frank Mead. $ H Niehol Robert H. Olmstead, =% A, E. Parmeles, Pleasures Past. 2 bt ad g vy e ®1 Vesta-Xis club entertained at a col- J. C. Reynolds, lege Thanksgiving party at the home C. W. Russell, of Miss Mattie Farmer Tuesday even- vy ing. Those present were: Willlam Schmitt, Minaos— Misses— W. F. 8chnorr, Gertrude Furness, Marte O'Connor, R. H. Shields, Rose Dixon, Marfon Anderson, Winifred Farmer, Mattie Farmer. Betty Dixon, Foote and O. W. Johnson. The club will meet in two weeks with Mrs, Peter Mehrens. | Mrs. Louis A. Keller entertained the Friday Bridge club at luncheon at the Blackstone last week. Wedding Date Set. The date for the wedding of Miss Eleanor Mackay, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. T. J. Mackay, to Mr. Austin Gailey of New York has been set for Wednesday evening, December 27. The ceremony: will be performed at Al Saints’ church by the bride’s father. Mr. Gailey was a resident of Omaha for some month a couple of years ago, ‘' He is a native of Baltimore. iss Mackay made her debut three years ago, The newly married pair will:make their home’in New York. Holiday Week -Afillfl. Another affair for Miss Chase is the luncheon Mrs. Waite Squier and Mr. and Mrs. A, V. Kinsler are planning a dance for their daughter and son, Miss Ruth and Tom Kinsler, at the Fontenelle Friday evening, De- Miss Katherine Squier give Wednes-| | day, December 27. members of the Notre Dame foot ball team in this city after the game at Lincoln on Thanksgiving day. Mr. D. M. Nigro, a former Notre Dame student, brought six of the Notre Dame men home with him Thursday evening to be the guests of the Phi Beta i’i medical fraternity at the chapter house on West Harney street. The Notre Dame men were enter- tained at breakfast Friday morning, after which they were taken around the city for an auto ride by Mr. Ray Byrne. The Notre Dame men who gathered around the Phi Beta Pi breakfast table were: Measrs.— Mes Phelan, Caughlan, Rydeuswski, De_Gree, Bachman, Molnerney. Cteighton men present were: Messrs.— Messrs, — 1gro, Byrne, obitts, Young, Burhs, Callaghan, Do, Backer, Draney, Tn Old Home. Dr. and Mrs. Nelson'D. Mercer and little ‘daughter, Peggy, with Dr. Mer- cer’s sistey, Miss Mary Mercer, who arrived week before last from Eng- land, have moved from the Blackstone to the old Mercer home on Fortieth parents on Florence boulevard. She! I has with her a house guest, Miss | Viola Kleinke of Cheyenne, a class mate at the university. Mrs. P. A, Wells will leave Monday | evening for a business trip to her summer home at Akeley, Minn. Social Gossip. E. W. Dixon returned Wednesday from New York. | Miss Helena Chase is coming| home for the holidays froth school at| Providence | _Harry McCormisk came home| Sunday from his ranch in Wyoming. | Mr. and Mrs. Ross Hyde have Victoria to one at the Colonial | Mrs. C. T. Bfyne has returned; from visiting her daughter, Mrs.| William Fitzgerald, in Troy, N. Y. | Robert Howe, who is now in Chi- cago wtih the Armour company, will be home for Christmas, Miss Ruth Sayles of Oak Park,| 111, is the guest of her aunt, Mrs.| C. E. Yost, and Mr. Yost. | "Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Crofoot >pcm“ the last week-end in Dubuque with | Mr. and Mrs. George Meyers. Miss Martha Folda, who is at the Gotham in New York, sails Decem- ber 26 for Japan with a New York friend. Harold Van Dusen arrived Sunday from Holyoke, Colo, to spend Thanksgiving with his mother, Mrs, J. H. Van Dusen. Mrs. A. V. Kinsler returned Sun- day from a month in the east, having stopped at Mount Clemens and De- troit with a party of friends on her way home. Mrs. E. W. Nash spent Thanks- giving in Dubuque with her daughger, Mrs. George Myers, on her way home from the east. Mrs. Nash is expected in Omaha today. Miss Frances Nash has gone to St. Louis, where she appears in con- cert before coming home for her recital December 10 at .the Metro- politan club house. Miss Dorothy Ringwalt, who has been east wtith her sister, Mrs. Thomas Hayes, at West Point, since April, arrived home last week, hav- ing stopped in Detroit to visit rela- tives on her way back. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Davis returned Monday from Topeka, where they at- tended the funeral of Bishop Mills- paugh last Saturday. Bishop A. L. Williams, who took part in the funeral services, also returned Mon- ay. Colonel S. S. Curtis and Miss Lynn Curtis, who have been at the Fonte- nelle for two months, left Saturday for New York, where they will re- main unti! after the holidays, when they go to Palm Beach for three months, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Fuller went east on Friday of last week to spend the Thanksgiving vacation in New York with her son and daughter, Ed- ward and Mary Fuller, who are at school, the former at Culver and the latter at Mill brook, N. Y. Mrs. W. D. Bancker returns to her home in Indianapolis the middle of the week after visiting Judge and Mrs. D. M. Vinsonhaler. Mrs. McCaskell of Salt Lake City is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Ben Gallagher. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Swobe of Berkeley, Cal,, arrived Wednesday in Oniaha to spend Thanksgiving with e moved from' their apartment at the S. his parents, Colonel ana Mrs. Thomas Van Rensselaer, 17 East Eleventh strect, New York City. They passcd the summer on Mrs, Howard's cow try place at Milton, Conn. Mrs. Hilton Fonda is in Milwauke called there by the illness of lict Swobe. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Swobe have been cast and stopped over on their way back to Californa Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Root returned Wednesday from New York. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gallagher spent Thanksgiving in Kansas City with|mother. her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kincaid. Mrs. George H. Payrde will bt Mrs. C. L. Farnsworth is spend= home early this week from Ambherst ing the week in Chicago. . | (Continued on Page Ten, Column One.) Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Robinson now | — - S i A occupy their new home near Happy Hollow club. | RINEHART Notes at Random. | Virginia - and Sam Carlisle, jr., SESS—y daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs, S. S, Carlisle, went to Chicago' Wednesday to spend Thanksgiving | with Winston Cowgill and to remain | over Sunday. | Miss Marion Towle expects go to New York after Christmas to join her sister, Miss Naomi Towle,l at Mrs, Hartman's school on West| Sixty-ninth street. Miss Marion Coad, daughter of| Mr. and Mrs, Frank Coad, has gone to Berkeley to enter the University of California. Miss Marion FHowe, who was at| the Wise hospital for an operation | to remove her tonsils, is home again | and plans to leave the first of the year| for New York to resume her study of | music. Miss Howe will be at Miss | Comstock's school. | Mrs. L. D. Nelson is spending the | Thanksgiving vacation with her sons, | Howard and Dietz Nelson, at Culver, | Ind., where they attend the Culver | military academy. | Mrs. John Madden and her uncle, | Joseph Hayden, are expected home | today from Excelsior Springs. Charles McCarthy of Minneapolis | is the guest of Paul Shirley. Captain Charles Hamilton, who has | been on leave from his regiment on | the border, returned Thursday eve- | ning to Llano Grande, Tex. Mrs. Guy Howard and her daugh- ter, Miss Helen Howard, have taken rooms’ for the winter at the Hotel! U need never envy another her hair. Make the most of nature’s richest gift to to| Thru the Courtesy of Combs-Agnew Optical Co. * We are exhibiting in their window at the new location 309 So. 16th St. Rose Bldg. Our New Method PHOTOGRAPHS They cost no more, but they are better. The very latest achievement in the photographic world. Rinehart-Steffens are a little in advance in adoptihg this method. Rinehart-Steffens |l Weed Bldg., Opp’te Courthouse 18th and Farnam Sts. The dainty, exquisite fragrance for Herpicide & place on the dressing tables of those of recognized refnement end discrimination. hfl;g“ imparts to the hair Hfe, luster and Sold everywhere. Applications at the better barber Guaranteed The Herpicide hnmdflm b ek ewbross, | Sunday, Docember 3, 1916 STORE NEWS FOR MONDAY cember 29, John P. Webster, Glenn D, Whitcomb, Don C. Wilon, W. Woodland, o-n:'-: in the East. Ritz in Philadelphia Thanks+ fiving day after the Cornell-Pennsyl- - game, eleven Omaha people together. They were Mr, and Mre. H, O. Edwards and Robert Ed- Mr. and Mrs, W. H ucholz, M i Stout and Miss Gertrude | ohn W. Towle and Miss i gmml ‘owle. Others who were in 1 hia Thanksgiving dn{ for ?me were Lucius Wakeley, is sons, Morton and Thomp- and Warren Breckenridge, who t over from Harvard; Miss Flor- ence Neville, who went from school | in New York to be with some Ogontz b ucomg-ed by her brother, from Exeter. rs. Howard Baldrige and her son, m, were in Boston with friends, for Thanksgiving, as were also Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Bradford. ~ Mrs. M. C. Peters and Miss Peters, who have been at the Knickerbocker in New York, were joined by Clarence . Peters from New Haven. Mrs. H. Gaines also had Thanksgiving din- ner in/New York with her son, from Yale. Mrs. F. A. Brogan is thaca with her son, Maurice, and i be there visiting a friend for sev- ~eral days longer. = Ralston Scobie i went from Princeton to New York to | be with Robert Leming of that city. - Burdette Kirkendall was the guest ©of a college friend at Glen Ridge.gNA J. . Robert Loomis, who is at Dart- mouth, went to New York to be with his brother and his wife, Mr.. and s, John Loomis, and his father, N. is. " Omaha With Yale Glee Club. The Yale Glee club, 'which giyes ‘a concert here December 30, will bring g its members Jarvis Offutt, an tha, senior at Yale, the grandson Mr. and Mrs. C, E. Yost. His moth- and sister, Mrs, Offutt, and Miss Offutt, are in New York this butfwillmbe ‘?olp‘l‘e just :elare istmas. for the holidays and will ‘give a tea for the Glee club the after- ‘moon of the concert. ‘gqin Notes. iss Augusta Bowen, who under- “dent an operation In St. Joseph hospi- .hllh"i Ewdeek. i‘:“impro;inm b 5. len, who was called Long &h. .Caf.. by the serious ness of her sister, Mrs. Hughes, i arrive there until after Mrs, had passed away. Mrs. was well known in Omaha, d here several times. was called to illness of his I i, wi who came over Wednesday on account F.|Table decorations Mr, and Mrs. E. W, Dixon enter- tained at a Thanksgiving dinner party. Thursday cvening. This is an annual affair and < the guests are generally the same each year. Cov- ers were laid for Dr. and Mrs. {_ E. Summers, Mr. and Mrs, E. M, Fair- field, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Guiou Mrs. Vietor Coffman, E. W. Hart of Council Bluffs, C. W. Hull, Luther Drake, Hal Iyes and Dr. W. O, Bridges. A surprise was given Mrs. Frank Machal Friday afternoon in honor of her birthday. Those present were: Mosdames— Mesdamos— Joseph Roucek, James Myers, Charles Swanson, Anton Horky, Otto Schlick, Anton_Fus Frank Krecek, Emil Prohay! Anton Krecek, Mr, and Mrs. John W. Gamble were guests of Mr. and Mrs, L. A. Keller of the Blackstone at dinner Thanks- ,(ivlnz day. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. eller in the evening were Messrs, and Mesdames S. E. Matsen, L. M. Holliday and W, R. Overmire Mr. and Mrs. William ], Pulte gave a Thanksgiving dinner for Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Walkin and son, Miss Florence Long and Mr. J. W. Arnoldi. were in Thanks- giving colors. The F. B. C. club met Saturday afternoon at the home of Miss Melba Nisewanger. Nine members were present. Le Mars Club Dance. Le Mars club will entertain at a dancing party at the Hotel Blackstone Friday evening, December 15. With the Social Clubs, Mrs, C. F. Barrows was hostess Tuesday for the Clairmont Bridge club, . Mrs. J. Dongren entertained' the members of the Swastika club at her home Friday afternoon. Prizes were won by Mesdames ). C. Reeder, J. e e e Visit Toyland at the Central An enormous showing of Toys for Children of all ages—Toys that are practical and instructive, yet amusing as well. Our buyers have had your inter. est in mind in your selection of gifts for the entire past year, and you will find when you Visit Toy- land at the Central that there is no Shortage in Selection. Shop early to get just what you desire. Central Furniture Co. 17th and Howard Mrs. Edward Aron of Kansas City, Mo., comes this evening to visit Mr. and Mrs. Simon A, Meyer, Miss Elizabeth Redman has gone to Dunlap, la, to attend the marriage there on Saturday of Miss Maric Liscomb to Mr. Cecil Hecht. Mrs. Victor Gladstone left Thurs- day for San Antonio, Tex,, to attend the marriage of her brother, Mr. Dave Marks, to Miss Gertrude Baum on December §. Mrs. Fred McConnell and daugh- ter have gone to Phoenix, Ariz, where they will remain during the balance of the winter. Mrs, F. Bousberg of the Mayfair has left for a short visit. to Kansas City and St. Louis. l\i’rs. C. K. Martin, mother of W. E. Martin, who has been visiting here, returned to Chicago last eveéning with Mrs. Anthony Merrill. Howard Baldrige returned Wednes- ! day from the east, where he attended the Yale-Harvard game last Saturday, in which his son, Malcolm, played right tackle. Miss Elizabeth D. Bertsch re- turned Saturday morning from an extended visit to relatives at Center- ville and Williamsport, Ind. Miss Gene Brennan is spending her holiday vacation at the home of her ber 28, in honor of their nieces, Miss Olga Metz and Miss Helen Peycke. On the same day Mrs. F. J. Fitzger- ald gives a buffet luncheon for her daughter, Miss Josephine Williams, and Miss Helena Chase. § Sorority Luncheon. 4 Delta Delta Delta sorority will have its monthly luncheon Saturday at 1 o'clock at the home of the Misses Anne and Clara Hermansen, They will be assisted as hostesses by Miss Ruth Young, Children’s Party. Mrs. William D, Brydon entertained at a luncheon and Orpheum party for her small niece, Miss Dorothy Sandberg, last Friday. The guests were scated at two tables with bas- | kets of La France roses as center- pieces, Those present were: Missen— Missos— Qladys Reeves, Darothy Zust, Adnee Hamilton, Polly Robbins, Adeline Lehmann, Florence Gaughran, | Helon Sandberg. Dorothy Guckert, Eleanor Hamllton, Sara Smeaton, Ruth Carpenter, Rosemary Kemmerer, O Pi Lsa Club. The O Pi Lsa club, composed of some of the younger girls of All Saints' church, has been organized re- cently by Mrs. Rob: E s ey Of Suits, Overcoats, Dresses and Jackets in Omaha and vicinity need our careful attention after the hard serv- ice they have seen during the past two months. You can’t realize, unless you have tried it, the great benefit Thorough Cleaning and Careful Pressing is to soiled garments. They actually will wear enough longer to more than pay for the Cleaning—and we guarantee satis- faction in every respect. Remember our work is done right—there’s a dif- ference, you can see. Just call Douglas 963 and one of our hurry-up delivery cars will come for your work. If you live out of the city, send it by Parcel Post and we'll pay the return charges. THE PANTORIUM “GOOD CLEANERS AND DYERS 1515 Jones St. Phone Doug. 963. Branch Office, 2016 Farnam St. SOUTH OMAHA OFFICE 4708 So. 24th St. Phone South 1283, Man, Harol Wright. Beach. Gilbert Parker, ‘Georgina of son, at $1.25. Tannhauser Lohengrin. Parsifal. All beautifully illustrated. Were $5.00 the Edition and worked her way up life’s soc cess, by Elinor Glyn, $1.30. “Just David” A story that will make you fee ing it, by Elf‘u\or H. Owen Johnson. Price $1.40. A romance of the $1.40. “TISH” Roberts Rinehart, at $1.50. JUVENILE BOOKS Maurice Maeterlinck, $2.50. lac, $1.75. Dulac, $1.75. Dulac, $1.75. Peter Pan, $1.50. $2.00. gift edition, $1.98. G‘]r(‘:::' 'Gll.-::;\nmy‘s The Piper of Hamelin, $1.50. Japanese, Fairy Tales, 75c. Eugene Fields Reader, 50c. Books That Will Please the ‘Most Critical of Book Lovers MANY a long winter evening may be pleasantly whiled g 5 away through the generosity and affection of a friend at Christmas time. When a Man'’s a Rainbow’s End; Rex The World for Sale, Enoch Crane, F. Hopkinson Smith. “The Romance of a Xmas Card” A beautiful Chr.istmas story, by Kate Douglas Wiggins, at $1.00. A story appealing to both old and young, by Annie Fellows John- $2:50 “The Career of Katherine Bush” A story of a girl who mastered her own destiny Porter, at _81.28. The Woman Gives” A story that is pulsing with life and love, by “The Old Blood” great war, telling of human | values and of human issues in the crucible of the great world’s conflict, by Frederick Palmer, Adventure after adventure introduces Tish, all told in a humorous and interesting way, by Mary Children’s Blue Bird, Madame The Tempest; illustrated by Du- The Nightingale, illustrated by The Snow Queen, illustrated by Peter & ngdy, the story of Robinson Crusoe, gift edition, Hans Andersen’s Fairy Tales, Kate Greenaway’s Marigold Pied x"&'.’",‘.;‘:"“ o Whea Rl M 4 Mrs, Charles Metz have | 209 Cuming streets. el Hurry R Swansen, | B. V. Kelly, C. Conbelner. Daal Sadiibias Ll ol Suggestions for Christmas Gifts— . Roy N. Towl, ' H, Wotherspoon, Willlam Stusrt. cards out for a dance at their home Gurdor, W, Wattien, | Ivar Anderdon, on the evening of Thursday, Decem-|In and Out of the Bee Hive. Featuring—NEW FICTION, The Wall Street Girl, Frederick Orin $ 1 .35 {Bn’;fizmhnof of the d Bell Pudding, Meredith Nicholson. Penrod & Sam, Booth Tarkington. the Rainbows” ‘Poems of Love. Poems of the Heart. Leather Craft. | Edition. Maeterlinck Blue Bird. .20 778 & Gift Books and Standard Sets Riley Book of Hoosier Verses, full Morocco, brand new, $3.00. Riley Book of Lockerbie Verses, full Morocco, $3.00. The Prince and Pauper, Mark Twain, $1.75. Innocents Abroad, Mark Twain, $1.75. Sixes & Sevens, leather bound, thin paper edi- tion, by O. Henry, at $1.50. Dunbar’s Poems, complete for $2.00. Art Leather Series, hand tooled, leather bound, | $1.00. at 1 Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, handsomely illus- | trated edition, at $6.00. Dickens, half leather, 15 volumes, $18.50. Scott, half leather, 12 volumes, $17.50. ' Eliot, half leather, 10 volumes, $16.50. ' CHILDREN’S BOOKS ; Mother West Wind Story, by Thornton W. Burgess, $1.00. Hollow Tree Stories, Albert Bigelow Payne, 50c. Billy Whiskers Series, 79¢ each. Billy WhiskKers, first book, only 35¢. Traveling Bear Stories, Alymon Eaton, 35c. Arthur Bailey’s Bed Time Stories, 35¢. That’s Why Stories, Dyer, $1.00. The Story Teller’s Book, 75c. The Goop Directory, 50e. The Goop’s Books, $1.50 each. Mother Goose, complete, 59¢ to « $2.50. | ial ladder to suc- 1 | 1 better for read- Ruth O. Burgess-Nash Co.—Fourth Floor.