The Omaha Sunday' Bee WOMEN'S SECTION SOCIETY VOL. 51 NO. 22. GeorcTe TfoiPell, dawn? atid PhiHis HCYM Gabby Gives Back By GABBY NY ONE" who" believes that teachers are apt to become old maids had better give Weed to two romances which are, blossoming (or whatever romances do) within sight of the blackboard. The odd part of it is that both the girls in the case teach in the same room and are good friends. And Gabby wishes to state that although their work is with subnormal children, there is nothing subnormal about either of these attractive young schoolma'ams. Just to show that she remembers some of the more general statements' in the third grade arithmetic, Gabby will designate one couple as A and B and the other as X and Y. A is a sorority girl, a graduate of Nebraska, who played havoc with undergraduate hearts i. few years since. ' She has dark bobbed hair and is frequenty seen driving a Stude baker coupe. B is a tall, blond young man whose family are well known in Omaha and-are old. resi dents, but who have lived in the east for the last five years. His father is a publisher. He. is in the advertising business. He has two sisters, and he himself returned to Omaha'only this summer. ' As for X, she comes from the Pacific coast and this is her first winter in Omaha. She met Y at a picnic, and at the same time she met Z, both of whom were decidedly im pressed, and arranged, as boys willr ta give pretty little X-a large,, joint rush. Notice the "joint" with special care for you. will never see it again. After the first week Y declared the contract ' null and void, and , poor Z hasn't been able to arrange a date with X since.: Y:is a tall, dark young person in the- medical profession, and ' he served in a medical unit overseas. And now, after these illuminating explanations, Gabby wishes to assure you that 'she is; not asking for the age of the captain, the price of five apples or the cubical contents of A plus B. The answer is simple, but can not be found in the back of the book, children. ' .. ((TF you are. well bred," runs' I the heading of the column, and each day the social arbiter lays down more rules for your behavior, 'ut if you are not well bred think of the good times you can have the endless array of ungentlemanly acts you can commit. ! - ' If you are not well bred you need never wait for food to be passed you at the table,' you can rise up and spear the wished-for viands with your fork and good right arm. You can sit in comfort on the street car with no qualms concerning the parcel-laden woman who - teeters perilously on the end of a strap. You do not need to say it with flowers. You can let your wife wheel the baby carriage when you go for your Sunday constitutional. You can tell the telephone operator just what you think cf the "service. You can ask yonr young man to come in and stay a while if ' you feel inclined, and you can help him on with his overcoat when he . tears himself away. You need never worry as to wnicn arm to oner a iaay, h any. or hcther vou should take hers. When ' ' . , Jon g A picasci jroq can .throw ti - rr I Algebra-Answer Not in i I1 . ' 'fcursrx nA . , iiwa ' , . o, 1 nun tlO . . (f . (( ..J j l I at i . 2v5'l I . a A I PHOTO a Lesson in ra--Answer Not in of Book DETAYLS. watermelon or hard boiled eggs .at your friends as the spirit moves you, If your great aunt slips on a banana peel you can laugh heartily. You can unostentatiously park your chew ing gum on the hall wallpaper be fore you enter the dining room. In short y&u save yourself endless petty worries and , you can get square meal any time at a quick lunch by a little judicious use of the elbows. ' Breeding counts, . but does it pay? In 1921, like other com mercial propositions, it seems to be passing ns aiviaenas. ((f OTS of glory for these foot I ball boys," said one woman to another while a certain playe( was being wildly cheered at a recent game. ."Yes, but it s only temporary fame; it doesn't last," replied the second. The boy of perhaps It) who sat between them looked up. "Well, you can't peddle glory all the time, he said, settling the matter. ITTER BYNNER; poet, told here this week of the reli' gious tolerance of the , Chi nese. ' One .Chinaman, when asked his religion, said: "I am a Christian, a Buddhist, Mo hammedan, Confucianist, Shmtoist and maybe there were others. Wc are getting almost as mixed up. or tolerant, here. ,; Father Flanagan's 'home for bovs at Overlook is headed by the young priest himself, -a Catholic. Morris Jacobs, a Jew, and Leo Bozell, Epis- copalean, are doing the 1 admirable publicity; for this week's benefit drive for the home. Henry Monskv, also a Jew, is in charge of the speak- ers bureau in support of the drive. the Y. W. C. A. has been supply ing from town the delicious lunch eons served this past -week to the various organizations which have in spected the home. - : Dan Desdunes, spectacular negro band leader, is directing the Flanagan horns and drums, and little 6-year-old Toma tato, Japanese member of the Over look family, is saying Christian prayers in English for the success of the drive. What Happened in Kansas City. A Most Melancholy, True Pitty. A gallant youth to K. C went His soldier frlnds to sae, And there he found a goodly baad A gladsome company. ; They rolled noma ash cans down a, hill The soond did all entrance. And when the crap gamea wearied them Thejr hied them to a dance. Our youth espied a pretty girt . A-slttlng at a table. "Now prithee, gentle fair," he prayed, "Com dance, yoa sure look able." The damsel looked him coldly ap And down. She ehook her head. , An ancient crone was sitttng Bear, "Ask me," ate archly said. The courteous youth with manner suave Then took her by the hand, Intending to asalst her (Of eourse, you understand). . The dame, hot-headed, read him wrong. Which scarcely ha foresaw, And in the lad s Ternacolar, She poked him la the Jaw. Then TJidy. quoth he. red with Ire. "r did mistake me quite. And after your apologies I'll hid you all good night" - j So hom h wendM, lonrin tm j ?.0n tor to v,mu. ( Forgtttiif quit th advkt JT, tnJ ttiw ' - VU here this week of the reli- Muller. . vfifi(LSTW"r JBS -dO . 3tKI r&t70r I TWO Mrs. ueorge U Howell and her -6-.. JCa1B Bu u monins, respectively, re links in a chain of four genera tions, all of whom five in Omaha. . Col. C. F.' Weller is the great-grandfather of these two little girls, and Mr. .and Mrs. F. W. Clarke are their grandparents. Janice goes to kindergarten and in her spare hours her grandfather, Mr. Clarke, is her favorite companion and playmate. In fact she deserted her own home this summer to spend a month in Estes park with her grandparents. She thinks there never were such stories as grand pa's, "all about animals and little girls." " .a wttie Marcia j. nummel, aged ;3, is an. only child. . Her constant com panions are her two teddy bears, for whom she gives elaborate tea parties several times a day. Her mother, Mrs. George B. Thummel, fears, how ever, that teddy bears are losing their popularity, for little daughter has been teasing for a dog. When questioned as to what kind of a dog was U,,VV1 1UflM-' yum,cu, vn, motner, any Kina u u s just dog." : - Mrs. Robert P. Hamilton, jr., says that Bobby already has a passion for automobiles at the tender age of 3yi. And as a logical outcome he takes a great interest in good roads and makes them his chief subject of conversation.. The fact that Bobby's adoring grandfather, Mr. T. F. Stroud, is county commissioner may have something to do with it, though. Jeanne, who has only observed the roads of this globe for 13 months, has no formulated opinions about them as yet.: Or perhaps they won't bear repetition. , a Mrs. carl ti. Muller is the wife of Lieutenant Colonel Muller of. Fort Crook. She came here a year ago from College Station, Tex., where her husband was in charge of the military department of the Agriculture-Mechanical college, the largest military school in the country, excepting West Point. Janet is the attractive 9-year-old daughter of Colonel and Mrs. Muller. . ; Mrs. Muller has already made many friends in her new environment. This section of the country was not strange to her, for as Gertrude Jandt she lived formerly at Crawford. Neb., as well an at Sioux fi'rv in th. roint Janet is the attractive 9-year-old daughter of Colonel and Mrs. - 1 "gSfiBLJLj boring state of Iowa. , Rag-A-Jazz Boys See Pershing Tj-pically American ' is " the letter Donville Fairchild of the Southern Rag-A-Jazz band, University of Ne braska, wrote, to his parents at Lin coln, from London on the .occasion of Gentral Pershing's recent visit there. - He said: . . ; .,. "Believe me the . five hundred American soldiers "and Colonel Har vey sure looked good to us all. As usual, they outclassed the British. There are only two or three things that the British rival' us in. The tubes (underground) are very won derful. The system is fa better than the New Lork subways and is much easier to get to. The trains are all the way from 70 to 200 feet underground. The tubes in which they run are so air tight that there is a . constant draft through them from end to end. ; The trains come out of them at each end of the line. I he police system is also vert god. They seem to anticipate all trouble and are ready for it Tust the other day the unemployed had a march and started for Trafalgar square where nearly all such erouns head for a demonstration. They found University Woman's Club Reservations for the luncheon of the Omaha branch cf American As sociation of LTniversity Women Sat urday at 12:30 o'clock, at the Bur-gess-Nash tea room, should be made by 9 a. m. Friday with Mrs. H. B. Patrick. The general meeting of the club will open Saturday at 11 a. m. in the Burgcss-Nash auditorium, the pres ident, list, J, E. .Wallace, presiding. OMAHA. SUNDAY MORNINfl. vnvEMRKii am ::. s .aaaae.. J v.'.ato p. v.---v-'-v .'.-'--.'. -.v. n a i j a. - i mm . i - T.n(rflI( , r vy X; Arobett stroact atia cieatitte two daughters, Janice and Phyllis,? a a ' e a - ; over 400 "Bobbies" standing shoul der to shoulder in a double cordon around the square.. Some one yelled 'Come on boys, let's charge them.' Upon this the. Bobbies themselves charged and with their batons dis persed the mob. Believe ' me,- they did it quick too. . "We have a trip planned when we leave here or when we are ready to sail for home. It includes Edin borough, Aberdeen, tJlascow, Zeel bruggee, Amsterdam, Berlin, Co logne, Brussels, Antwerp, . Ostend, the battlefields of France, resorts ir. Switzerland. Monte Carlo, Nicj Florence, Milan, Venice, Rome, Ge noa, Barcelona, Marseilles and home. This may be changed. This is instead of .coming - home we may go to Cairo for a while and then to Shanghai. We are now dickering over that and a trip to Christiania and Copenhagen." The Rag-A-Jazz boys played in Omaha a . season before going abroad. ,'.,.. The Old Bridge ; On the old. old bridge, with its crumbling stones All covered with lichens red and gray, Two lovers were talking in sweet low tones! And we were theyl As he leaned to breathe in her willing ear The love that he vowed would never die. He called her his darling, his dove most dear: And he was II She covered her face from the pale moonlight With her trembling hands, but her eyes looked through, And listened and listened with long delight: And she was you! On the old, old bridge, where the lichens rust, Two lovers are learning the same old lore; He tells his love, and she looks her trust: But we, no more . Henry Van Dyke. Katherine Worley Will Address: Club Women " Miss Katherine Worley. chairman of state board of control, will speak on . state institutions, at: the gen eral meeting of the Omaha Woman's club Monday afternoon, 2:30 o'clock '. n u c , i . ti ' me auuuuuuiu oi ine , curgcs.S' Nash store under the auspices of the civil service reform committee, Mrs. John Mullen, chairman. Mrs. Leo Hoffman will sing "Till I Wait," by Amy Woodforde-Tine and "The World is Waiting for the Sunrise," by Seitz, accompanied bv Jean Dufiield. Miss Worley will be the guest of the civil service reform committee at luncheon in the Burgess Nash tea room preceding the meeting. Covers will be placed for Miss Worley, Mrs. Johannes, Mrs. F. H. Cole. state chairman of civil service de partment: Mesdames Tohn M. Mul len, C T. Hubbard. W. A. Baldwin. James Dahlman and James Bone. Christmas Shoppers . B e g in v Annual Parade ;Up ; I "The" Avenue . : BY WINIFRED New York, Nov. 12. Like leaves racing before a coming' storm, the tirst ot the holiday shoppers rushed through shopping districts here to day. ........ So crowded was the avenue at the high hour of the afternoon thatva solid line 'of traffic reaching from Fiftieth street to Thirty-fourth street compelled many an anxious eyed woman to gather up her furs, handbags and Pekingese and take to her own trusty feet for locomotion. Many a one succeeded in buyinsr. or at least ordering, such gowns and wraps as should make the Christmas season . one long series of joyful shocks to beholders. Others, farther sighted, fared un to Fifty-seventh street and laid in the first installment of Palm Beach wardrobes. For this town manaees at least to pace the seasons as they go by. And what more appropriate Christmas gift for-madam than ' a summer wardrobe? Especially if it contains two such delectable gowns as a famous importer offered today. -One was so verv French that one hesitates to describe it save in the language of that so dear to Paris. A basque of buff taffeta was fash ioned close to the figure, but crushed toward the low waist line to estab lish a look of softness. It was sleeveless, and the throat line, just above the shoulders, was finished with a straight band of taffeta cov ered with gold lace . "Oo La La- Skirt. The skirt, an "oo la la" thing of ivory chiffon, was wired bouffant ' over the hios like a ballet rlanrrrV 1 1 be ticiu was deeply scalloped. VAN DUZER. Three rows of box-plaited taffeta and net, set on a line with ' the scal lops, trimmed it. The other dress of crepe de chine suggested ivory lilies for pale &au ty and grace. . Falling straight from the shoulders, it was finished with pin tucks, back, and front to the moyan-age waist line. : The skirt was done in shallow accordion plaits. A sash of crepe tied at each side fell in streamers longer than the skirt. There were no sleeves, but a band of crepe two or three inches wide, was hemstitched to the arm holes, and above the oval throat. Such a floating spirituelle bit of drapery might Beatrice have worn when Dante saw her first under his Tuscan stars. , - '. . . But the high light of the fashion array struck from a wrap, a most gorgeous effulgence of redder than flame velvet cut to the slender con fines of woman's adornment, des tined to maKe or mar the beauty of one among the thousands who shall see and covet It was wide and billowing and the searing redness was- of the inside as well as the out. Two broad bands of ermine ran round the inside near me Donom. utnerwise it was tin- tnmmed save for the exotic design of the collar. . That was neither more 'nor less than a scarf of great velvet roses. They were so huge that any femi nine head nestling among, them would be quite lost. Slipper Buckles a Novelty. The newest of novelties are slip tier hll'.!c!f' aill nrnmA... 1 :- . .,,,,.,..,. ,! IS i.iiard to imagine anything more at- Young Social Set Are Not ; Parasites ; . Mrs. Samuel McKelvie protested the other day about the "jazz wife," the gay,' incompetent young woman who treats her husband like a cash j-egister, and who could not keep house even if she would like to. There are doubtless plenty who an swer the description, but young; married women of Omaha as a whole .do not. Many are those who; have grown up in homes where they; were not called on to do housework and who have buckled down with a vengeance to cooking and (Justin, for two, and who arc proving them selves able housewives. Mrs. Herbert Davis has been taking all the care of their pretty new house in Dundee since her mar riage in June, only treating herself to manicures as a reward. Mrs. Kenneth Norton , has been proving: valiently that the college graduat can be efficient with her hands aa well as her' head. ' ' Among the recent brides are Mrs, Edwin Davis, who confesses that they go to "Mother's" now and then for an extra square . meal, but b6asts that they "make out" most of. the time, and Mrs. Byrne Holmquist, .who enters ' on matrimony already an;, accomplished cook and house keeper. Mrs. Richard ilallory is an. other bride who "shakes no mean, frying pan," according to the state ment of a bachelor who has diner at the house.' Both Mrs. Charles ' Burgess and) Mrs. Lewis Burgess, brides of the year, have been navigating the culi nary seas successfully, and Mrs. Al Hunger's deprecatory remarks! about .her , housekeeping are no borne out by her friends. Mrs. Milo Gates is noted for the good thine' to eat which she concocjs for hcrjj guests. And the incentive of a husband isn't always necessary to make a so ciety girl an accomplished house wife. It is hard to get to market before Miss Gertrude Stout in thea morning, and Miss Eleanor Burklc3'4 who goes to school as well as man-4 ages a house, occasionally takes tha) family socks along to bridge parties; to darn while she is dummy. If Mrs. McKelvie is discouraged she should visit Omaha. ' tractive or desirable in the way of holiday gifts.. One set is designed much like a brooch, with a setting of any color either to correspond or contrast! with the multi-shaded pumps of vel vet, brocaded satins or feathers, style slogans of the moment. The setting is circled with bril liants or pearls, and a pair of dia monds or pearl droo dan?lr frnm the ornament almost to the ground. Another ornament, attached t bronze kid pumos. is a srold frintrc. made of hair-fine chains below si small gold band set with tnn.. The third and Derhan most utrilr- ing design is a oair of win it maH- of brilliants. They are attached, cne winar to each slinnpf. ta flit wit side of black satin or paten; jumpa