The Omaha Sunday Bee .WOMEN'S SECTION SOCIETY VOL. 51 NO. 11. PART TWO OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 28, 1921. 1 B TEN CENTS Tea Carts and Maternal Instinct Dundee Club Enlarges Scope By GABBY DETAYLS. NOW a teacart is really a very handy bit of furniture thinks Gabby and makes a room seem so cozy and intimate in the late afternoon. So did a certain group of sorority girls until but wait. The girls purchased a teacart for their house just to lend a homey touch and soon they were besieged with pleas for tea-hour invitations. Even the young men in nearby fra ternity houses clamored for the privilege of sipping tea at its side in order to be cozily tete-a-tete with a fair coed. Such a thing was, how ever, too go&d to last. One afternoon the perpetual bug-a-boo, a flat-heeled, round-toed, bobbed-haired, shirtwaisted, bespec tacled earnest senior student of psy chology announced to one of the flappers, "Nothing but the mater nal instinct after all. Ycu propel that not because you want to drink tea. but because you want to push a baby carriage." It was enough. The cart is in the attic. AMONG the modern definitions sent in to Gabby in response to a request are the follow ing: "Country club: A place where one meets other men's wives." "Apartment: A place where phonographic records are played." (I know because I live next door, the contributor concludes dramat ically.) "Jazz: A form of intoxication forced upon us by Volstead." Gabby still invites further up-to-the-minute definitions. Eventually we may be able to publish a diction ary which will exceed Webster's for popularity and will have no com petitor for truthfulness. DEAR, I wish B. wasn't II coming to dinner tonight," said an Omaha matron last hot Thursday afternoon. j- (B. was a young-old friend visit ing in the city from a western Ne braska town.) "Well, how does it happen she is coming," asked the- patient husband in surprise.- "Who invited her?" "f did," wailed the O. M. "Well, what'dyah ask her for if you didn't want her," said husband with less patience. "I meant it when I asked her," the dear lady said in defence. "I just felt so cordial and hospitable when I met her down town. I al ways feel that way when 1 invite people over, sort of grand and ele gant, you know-rbut I feel so dif ferent when they- actually come." "I give it up," muttered the hus band. ' ' Perhaps it was the weather, says Gabby, -r ' . . A N adage We learned in youth, A "You are judged by the com pany you keep," has been re placed by a new rendition which goes, "You are judged by the dances you like." "Won't vou play us a dreamy waltz," asked a blonde damsel of some 30-odd years, of the orchestra leader on the roof. He was an accommodating man and the next number was a real old time dum-dee-dee. dum-dee-dee smooth flowing melody. . All the fairly well settled married folk were on their feet quickly with faces beaming as they glided grace fully (?) around, dancing, to tr.e last sweet dying strain of the piece. At the end of the dance a flapper walked indignantly over to the or chestra leader. "What old hen asked you to play that, she flared , A tip from Gabby: If you want to . pass for anything less than 30, never .hint that vou enjoy a waltz, that you ever danced a waltz or that you know x even approximately what a waltz is. Refer to the time "when I learned the one-step in college," and your friends will think that your school days were in the last decade at least, and of course will judge your age accordingly. Reunion-Picnic By Relief Corps . U. S. Grant, George Crook. Custer and Bill Kearney Women's Relief corps will give a picnic Tuesday, August 30, at Krug park. 4 p. m.. to which they cordially invite War Mothers. Daughters of Veterr.ns, G. A. R. circles and auxiliary of Span ish War veterans. Arrangements are in charge of Mrs. G. W. Longnccker at Douglas 849. Excellent Program Of Fine Arts Society Willa Cather, author, who, in the opinion of many critics, has no peer among fiction writers of today, will appear' in Omaha before the Fine Art society late in October. An Omaha audience will have oarticular pleasure in hearing Miss Cather, for she is a Nebraska wom an. She has lived in New York many years, but still calls Red Cloud her Nebraska home. It was Sinclair Lewis who prodded Omaha on Miss Cather's books. In hi lecture last season before the Fine Arts society he referred in su perlative terms to "Youth and the Bright Medusa," "My Anioma ana other works of this Rifted woman. Although .Miss Cather will open the lecture season, she will be pre ceded in the Fine Arts year by an other Nebraska feature. . Early m October andcontinuing through" the ."onth. an exhibit by Nebraska ar I T j m e f. r -a .. s f. -. . maw - i- Society's Hours For Week To Come - Sunday, August 25. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Nieman, buffet supper for Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Sykes. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Sherman, sup per at Happy Hollow club for Miss Margretha Grimmel and her fiance, George Flack Monday. Elinor Burkley, luncheon at Coun try club for-Mrs. Robert Davis, formerly Olga Metz. Tuesday. Ulrich-McGovern wedding. Louise Clarke,, luncheon at Coun try club for Phyllis Waterman, fi ance of William Latta. Carolyn .Holmquist, luncheon for Margretha Grimmel .and. Dorothy Balbach, fiancee of Dr. Edwin Davis. Wednesday. Margaret "Williams, afternoon bridge for Eleanor McGilton, fiancee of E. J. Connor; Margretha Grim mel and Dorothy Balbach. Mildred Weston, dinner at Country club for Misses Balbach and Grim mel. Thursday. Emily Keller, bridge luncheon for Margretha Grimmel. , Marion Weller, evening bridge for Mrs. Ware Hall, Eleanor McGilton, Margretha Grimmel and Dorothy Balbach. Friday. Pan.-Hellenic luncheon at Happy Hollow club. Gertrude Stout, luncheon for Louise Clarke, fiancee of Harkncss Kountze. 1 ' Mrs. John Haarman, luncheon for Mothers and Daughters Luncheon club. Grace Robertson and Mildred Rhoades, tea at W. E. Rhoades resi dence for Misses Balbach and Grim mel. Saturday. Mrs. George Engler. afternoon bridge, for Margretha Grimmel. Ruth McCoy, dinner at Happy Hollow club for Misses Grimmel and Balbach. tists will be shown at the library. The excellent numbers which will be offered members of this society later in the year include lectures by Amy Lowell, November 8, on "Mod ern Poetry;" Louis Anspacher, De cember 8, on "Democracy and Ir responsibility;" Sir Gilbert Parker in 3 ( 4 - n I r '--.v. I ' TMVliiV4 II Skl Pre-Nuptial Parties Fill Social Calendar Many prenuptial affairs are planned for Miss 'Margretha Grim mel and her fiance, George Flack. Mr. and ' Mrs. Earl W. Sherman will ' entertain at supper Sunday evening at Happy Hollow club. Miss Emily Keller will be hostess at a bridge luncheon Thursday, Sep tember 1. On Saturday, September 3, Mrs. George Engler will give an after noon bridge party for this bride-to-be. - Mrs. Leonard Trestor will enter tain at luncheon, Tuesday, Septem ber 6. Mr. and Mrs. Miles McFay den will give a dinner and dancing party at the Country club the same date. 1 ' Miss Marion Cqad will be hostess at a din net-, ' Wednesday evening, September 7. The bridal dinner will be given by Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Grimmel, Friday evening, September Miss Grimmel and Miss Dorothy Balbach, fiancee of Dr. Edward Davis, will share honors at a number cf parties.: Miss Carolyn Holmquist will give a luncheon for them Tuesday, Au gust 30. . A dinner, at the Country club will be given Wednesday evening, August 31, by Miss Mildred Weston. ' Miss Margaret Williams will be hostess at an afternoon bridge the same day for these brides-to-be. Miss Eleanor McGilton, an Octo ber' bride,; will also be an honor guest at this affair. An evening bridge will be given by Miss Marion Weller, Thursday, September 1, for these three girls. Mrs. Ware Hall, a bride of last spring, will be among her honor guests. A tea at the W. E. Rhoades home is planned for September 2, by Misses Mildred Rhoades and Grace Robertson, to honor Misses Balbach and Grimmel. Saturday. September 3, Miss Ruth McCoy will' be hostess at a dinner Six Omaha Beauties January; Sir Philip Gibbs the follow ing month; S. K. Ratcliffe, English sociologist in March, and Royal Cor tissozo in April on "Art and Common Sense." Mrs. Warren Blackwell is chair man of the lecture committee which has secured this strong program. . Miss Helen Overstreet, daughter of W. M. Overstreet of York, Neb., will begin her work as director of recreation at the social settlement on September 1. Miss Overstreet has completed a year at the Recreational Training school of Chicago, living at Northwestern university settlement during that time. Since her graduation from York and graduate ot at. Marys scnooi, unoxvuie, iu., and nas attended both the University of Nebraska and the University of Southern California. While at the latter she did International institute work in connection with her sociology courses. . Miss Overstreet is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and has many friends in Omana. Mrs. Ula G. Echols returned from New York early this month after a year at Pratt institute in Brooklyn, and is re-established at the Omaha Public library, where she is in charge of the children's department. Among the excellent lectures Mrs. Echols, heard in connection with her library study in the east was one by Dorothy Canfield Fisher, well known author, and formerly a Nebraska girl. "Now this is a good book is a suggestion which children resent, ac cording to Mrs. Echols, who has many splendid plans for the Omaha department. Boys and girls are very "suggestible," she declares, but as much tact is required in dealing with them as with older humans. Mrs. Echols is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Waterhouse of Fre mont She was graduated from Central High school and Peru Normal. Mrs. Ray J. Abbott is the new chairman of music for the Dundee Woman's club. A story on this page tells in detail how this club, which has been noted for the excellence of its study in literature, plans to add music in a correlated way during the coming season. "Let's move to Hawaii," is the wish of many when Nebraska's ther mometer begins to act tempermental. Their wish is just about 20 times as fervent if they have heard Mrs. James Drakeford tell about her stay there. Mr. and Mrs. Drakeford came to Omaha last winter following a residence of two years in Honolulu, where they lived on the famed Wai kiki beach itself, and where Mrs. Drakeford became a most enthusiastic swimmer. Swimming is the chiaf diversion of visitors and residents of this beauty spot, according to this Omaha matron, who says "Bathing suits and evening gowns are the most important articles, of dress in Hono lulu." Perhaps this is the reason women wish to move. While living at Waikiki she met many famous swimmers, among them Ethelda Bleibtry, world's champion; Charlotte Boyle and Duke Kahan omuka, the Hawaiian champions, and a number of others. Mr. and Mrs. Drakeford at one time resided in Alabama and it is probable that Mrs. Drakeford will make a southern trip during the winter months. Flack-Grimmel Wedding Plans for the marriage of Miss Margretha Grimmel and George Flack on September 10 at the First plete. Miss Ruth Grimmel, sister of the bride-to-be, will act as maid of c'ance at Happy Hollow club for them. Sunday tea on September 4 will be given by Miss Elizabetli Barker at her home for both of the coming brides. Will Sell Cigarettes and Candy at Charity Six beautiful Omaha girls have t:cen chosen to sell cigarettes, and i-andy at the Associated Charties' dinner dance and revue to be held i:i the Braudeis Italian Renaissance tea room September 15. They will appear in stunning costumes. Three of the number will be brides of the fall or early winter. Miss Re gina Connell and the Misses Gcr- v 'fc RODSTKOn sruoip High school she has been a student honor. Miss Grimmel's young cousin, Marjorie Edinburg of Brook lyn, N. Y., will be flower girl. The bridesmaids will he Misses Em ily Keller, Marion Coad, Dorothy Balbach and Ruth McCoy. Dr. Edwin C. Davis, fiance of Miss Balbach, has been chosen by Mr. Flack for his best man. The ushers w.ill be Dr. Allyn Moser, Fritz Koe m'g, Allan McDonald, Dr. George Boehler and Harry Coffey of Chad ron, Neb. The ceremony will be followed by a reception at the Grimmel home for the wedding party and a few mem bers of the younger set. Mr. Flack and his bride will take a honey moon trip abroad. ajdine. and Grctchcn Hess. Mrs. Naasson Young, a most attractive blonde, was Miss Lula Mitchell of Lincoln before her marriage. Miss Mildred Rogers, who is' in Estes park at present, has given promise of return in ample time for the din ner dance. Mildred Weston, recent ly returned from Colorado, is a charming member of this irresistible sextet. znevs. cJ. Ptrabieforcl Girls Lose Hearts In Nice and Venice Miss Marguerite Schafer, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Schafer, who has been spending . the summer abroad, writes to her par ents of the many interesting sights she has seen. Her tour has taken in points in England, France, Switzerland and Italy. The following are extracts from her recent letters. "From Avignon, that little French village, we went to Nice and lost our hearts. All the girls fell in love vitb the place. ; It is on the Medi terranean sea and all we had to do was to w alk through a - beautiful garden and '.we-were at the water's edge." ' "On one of our tours we-visited Monte Carlo, the famous gambling place. When Miss Fitzgerald went to buy tickets for us to enter the guard asked our ages but 3he lied and said we were all over 21. He looked doubtful but let us into the Casino. Five of us bought a red chip and placed it and wou five francs. We tried again and lost I "We arrived in Rome on July 22 from Genoa. On our sightseeing trip we saw all the old Roman build ings and famous places I have been leading about in my Latin classes the last three years. Just imagine, I saw an Egyptian obelisk here which dated from 2000 B. C. "We have visited numerous churches. In one we saw the stairs on which Christ walked just before He was crucified. There is a place on one of the steps where His blood was spilled. Another church has a part of the original cross which Christ carried and also part of the gown o fthorns. Oh, those things were all wonderful. "We also visited the Vatican it has only about 1,100 rooms. "We all thought we were -to have an audience with the pope but it couldn't be arranged. "Pompeii was one of the cities in " " Turn i " , . LnJ&LX&J&sJ. State Convention Speaker. Mrs. Rose S. Berry of Berkeley, Cal., general federation chairman of fine arts, will come to Nebraska the last week in October to speak at the state convention of the Nebraska Federation of Women's clubs at Sew ard. Mrs. Berry has a wonderful i an CINHAHT- AAR5DeN: cluded in our trip. It was destroyed in 63 A. D. by Mount Vesuvius, that treacherous volcano. It was smOK inar just a little when we were there. We saw the ruins of houses there and the bones of those who were buried in the lava and ashes at the time of the eruption. When we were stoownE at the Victoria hotel in Sorrento, Caruso was staying at the Tremantano ho tel there. From ' Sorrento we went to the Island of Caori to visit the Blue Grotto the most famous thing there. We had to lie perfectly flat on the ground to enter it. "Venice is a land of dreams come true. It is heavenly to ride in the gondolas about the streets which are canals. One night we went out on a gondola to the music boat where a group ot singers gave a concert, Everyone in our party laughed be cause one of their ' numbers was 'Margarita.' It isn't everybody who can be serenaded in -Venice! "Aueust 6.' we went to Lido, the most famous "of Italian bathing re sorts and while there took a swim in the Adriatic sea. Just think have been swimming in the Adriatic and Mediterranean seas. Miss Schafer sailed last week for home. She will enter Wellesley col lege this fall. - Omahans Abroad According to letters received by Omaha friends, Mrs. Walter Head and Miss Vernelle will arrive in Omaha OctDer 10 from a summer trip abroad. On August 7, Mrs. Head's birthday, the mother and daughter spent the day at Lucerne, Switzerland, in the company of Drexel Sibbernsen and Jabin Cald well, who went to Europe this sunv mer. Thev' spent August 6 at Lake Geneva with Mrs. Frank Boyd and her niece from this city. From Switzerland they planned to go to Pans to make a motor trip with Mrs. I. E. Summers of Omaha, Mrs. Head and Miss Head have recently been visiting the French watering places and motored through the Pyrennes mountains into Spain for a short stay. Benefit conception of the work of her de partment. It is thought her presence will add greatly to the success of the state meeting. Mrs. Berry will be in Colorado late in September, in North Dakota, October 5; Minnesota, October 7-13; Indiana, October 21. j. ne uunciee woman s ciuo win - enlarge the scope of its work in a very beautiful way this year. This club has been known in the past for the high standards maintained in its intensive study of literature. This year it will correlate music with literature with the same excellent discrimination applied in the past to literature. Mrs. Ray J. Abbott of the pro- ... i gram committee is cnairman oi music. Other members of the pro gram committee are Mrs. John Yeiser and Mrs. George C. Edgerly. Mrs. N. K. Sype is president of the club. i An example of Mrs. Abbotts idea' for presenting music at the club pro grams is found in the first meeting, September 28, which will he held at the home of Mrs. Ralph Russell. The play for the day, under the di rection of Mrs. W. O. Perry, will be "Two Faces," an allegory of life. A garden forms the settuig. The play is light and fantastic. Music for the occasion, suiting the spirit of the play, will be a presentation of "Dancing as a Synthetic Art," with a gypsy dance solo by Miss Pauline Lapps. Mrs. Abbott will accompany throughout the season. On November 23 at the home of Mrs. W. R. McFarland, when a play by John Drinkwater, Englishman, will be given, the music will include poems by Rudyard Kipling set to music with interpretations. Rev. A. H. Marsden, baritone, will present hem. Mrs. Jack Yeiser will direct the play of this date. "Back to Methusaleh," by Bernard Shaw, will be the play for December 7 at the home of Mrs. E. A. Beards ley, directed by Mrs. George C, Ed gerly Rachmaninoff as a Composer, illustrated by a group of songs, by Mrs. Gilbert Brown, soprano, wiil accompany a presentation of the book, "Father and Son," by Turge nev, on January 4 at the home of Mrs. Henry McDonald; Mrs. Millard Langfelt and Mrs. Ida Hanchett, leaders. "A Musical Aanalysis of Bee thoven," Sonata Op. 13, illustrated by adagio movement. Mrs. Abbott, pianist, will accompany a 16th cen tury play, "Beauty and Jacobin." Mrs. J M. Lord will be director and hostess for the occasion. "Merry Cuckoo" is the chosen play for March 29 when Mrs. W. T. John son will be hostess and Mrs. Roger Holman, director. "Music in Bird- (land." by Florence Stennenberg, will be the appropriate music theme tor that date. Twelve Hours in a Lifetime to Be Good Dancer "ft takes 12 hours of a man's life to make him a good dancer, if his thought is properly directed," said W. J. Ryan, in the city to direct an entertainment projc- for the Ameri can .Legion. He is stopping at the Blackstone. Mr. Ryan was formerly ball room director of the New Eng land Normal School of Dancing and Physical Culture at Boston. "I am surprised that your local educators . prohibit dancing in the public schools," he continued. "If they will teach the public school child the proper routine for its natural movement... real mental and physical co-ordination of thought and action, if they will define for the child the things that are accepted by society as beir.g proper for this form of social recreation, the present ob jectionable types of dancing will soon be eliminated. "At one of the largest American colleges, the dean of student affairs said to me recently, 'We don't owe it to the student to teach him dancing,' yet the dancing in that school was abominable. My view is that the educator does owe it to society to keep the student's morals on a par with his intellect as far as possible, If they let misguided youth think that dancing is merely hugging to music they have failed in their op portunities. "Omaha dancing, thoush clean. U poor and stiff and awkward. They just do the one tiling here, they walk to everything." Mr. Ryan rec- ment offer municipal training in the dance. "It is much easier to dance well than poorly, if the thought is direct ed in the right channel of instruc tion. There is no difference in danc ing from Maine to California, save for combinations that may differ lo cally. The principle of dancing is always the same. "Much has been said about mod ern dancing and many claim it the cause for deplorable conditions. It makes no difference what the dance, modern or olden, it's what they make it." Mr. Ryan claims that in dancing man finds a universal source of pleasure. Motion is universal, he says, and man is endowed with a capacity to appreciate its beauty and rhythm. Dancing is the art of ex pressing sentiments of music in mo? tion. Miss Darlow's Return Miss Dorothy Darlow, who has been visiting in the east since early in the year will return September ID. She has been at the country place of her uncle, Gutzon Borglum, this summer, near Stamford. Conn., and has had the unusual pleasure of see ing Micho Itow and his 12 famous dancers, who have been extended the courtesy of Mr. Borglum's green for thcr rehearsals. Miss Darlow attended the spring week festivities at Dartmouth col lege and the inaugural ceremonies at Washington last March, i