Conventions Two big convention* In the wo man’* organization field are sched uled for the next two week*. This week, Tuesday to Thursday, the federated club women meet st Grand Island for their state convention. From 40 to 50 women will go from Omaha. Next week, beginning Sunday, the State League of Women Voters will convene In Lincoln for their state convention. .They will feature two nationally known women, Miss Julia I .a, thro, first vi.ee president of the national league, and Mis* Grace Ab bott, formerly a Nehraskati, now chief of the children’s bureau, AVash ipgton, I). C. Eustice-Erickson. ' The marriage of I^uth Helen Erick son, duughter of Mr. and Mr*. C. Erickson, Cheater, SJ. P., to Thomas A. Eustlce. son of Mr, and Mrs. Charles E. Eustlce of this city tihfl grandson of M. A. Brown of the Kearney Hub, was solemnized at 8 jp'plock Friday morning in Trinity ^Episcopal church, Arkansas City, tj4 Rev. Frederic F. Busch officlat fee ■.Mr, Eustice is a graduate of the Cfrnaha Technical High school. Miss ■feriokson was a popular visitor this liunmer. -»Mr, and Mrs. Eustice Will be at Chine at the Kinslef apartments, Ar Jhtnsas City, Kan. •; Press Club Luncheon. X-cjkaha Women’s Press club will tliem for luncheon at 12:30 AVednes Jiy at Burgess-Nash tea room. Miss ji$rie Meeker, who appears at the fjrpheum theater this week, will •tjtertaln the club with a talk on re Ckii’ing exercises. 'iA business session will follow. 'ls Miss Burke Engaged. • The engagement of Berenice Burke, da lighter of Mrs. K. H. Burke, to ti»: J. Eeverett Perieg of this city announced at ft luncheon given her mother Saturday Ofterfioon. wedding will take place Novem 8* 12. Miss Burke was graduated ftirm Sacred Heart High school. V Saw College Dances. The AA’ig and Robe club of the Creighton University College of Law plans to give a series of nine dances this season at the Blackstone hotel. Tllfc first dance will be held Wednes day evening, October 13- Music Mas ters will play. _ •1*0le Ladies of Elks will have a party for members only at the 80»s club at 2 p. m. Tuesday. Mrs. Vat Quinn, hostes. "St. Phllomena’s parish will give a j dance and card party next Wednes-i dSy evening at S In the Burgess-, .Vasli tea rooms. Twenty prizes will lj»* awarded. Mrs. Margaret Wag tf*t is chairman’ of the high five f a team of tight oxen. The sand was quits bad for a ways, too, and we all had to get out and push. African Football Game. Returning to Johannesburg, Mr. Adams Is engaged in a gay round of pleasures. He goes on: After luncheon we went to an English football game—which la quite different from the American game by the same name. There are 15 men on a side and If any of ’em gets ifurt they’rs not allowed to put In a substitute but are required to play without him. I failed to get the same thrill out of It. however, even after beginning to understand it. It Is much more open, llfo our basket ball and soccer. The game was be tween a visiting English team sup posed to be made up of the best players In Britain—quite a number of whom Peg knew—having met them before at an earlier game at Jo'burg. The local Pretoria team, however, beat them all hollow, 7 to 0. I'm afraid the English players | had not been keeping the best of training, as the party after the game showed. Visits City Deep Mine. Had to be up early the next *iorn Ing to visit one of the deepest mines in the world—the City Deep—a gold mine. Johannesburg Is situated right in the middle of a gold field about 70 miles long and known as the Rand. Most all the big mines are known as '‘Deeps”—Dutch, I guess. After going down Into the mine, Mr. Adams says: "At the end of the long passage we came on a new shaft, 30 feet In diameter and lined with concrete blocks. It was a wonderful work— came straight from the surface and went 1,600 feet below where we stood—6,700 feet In all, making It be low sea level! They had special per mission to take us down to this new lowest working level and we were lowered down In a big bucket to see them drilling and working from a platform suspended a few feet above the bottom. Before they finished they Intended going below 6,000 feet. The shaft had already cost more than a million pounds, and everything seemed to be built In so permanently —they said the nAne was getting richer as they went deeper and the ore was testing about 8 c^t. to the ton. It was tefrlbly hot down there— even the rock was warm to the hand, and although they said It was only 90 degrees It seemed much hotter be cause of the poor ventilation. There was a complete ventilating system operating but It was not working very well at this new level. Sifted Across Corduroy. We saw all the enormous crushers which reduced the hard gold-bearing rock to a regular powder. This powder la then mixed with water and flows over heavy-ribbed corduroy tables—the gold settling out and catching in the tufts of corduroy. This catches about 60 per cent of tfee gold and is much more economical than the mercury amalgam process. The remaining 40 per cent of the gold Is dissolved out of the sludge by a cyanide process which causes it to be deposited on xinc filings or chips —and the amalgamation process la used to remove this—and they get all but about 4 per cent of the total gold. Engagement. Mre. S. Kaplan of Seattle, Wash., announces the engagement of her daughter. Esther, to Julius M. New man, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. New man, of Omaha, Neb. Gabby (Continued I mm I'Hfp One.) view of the Presbyterian hospital where Bobby made his first call on little Charlotte Chase Cullingham. Pr. Karl Sage, who was among those present when little Bobby Allyn was bom, leads the book, a genial patron saint to all the little folk there in. ---4t-■ Tito SCHIPA, noted tenor, who will sing here October 22 for the Tuesday Musical club, t>as at least one enthusiastic admirer In Omaha who signs himself "L. T. Gullfoyle/’ In writing the club for 10 tickets, this appreciative man said: "Schipa Is without doubt the most remarkable tenor of the day. His singing is flawless and his lnterpre tations are masterful. Tils voice has the sweet, lyrical and appealing quail ty of John McCormack, though to a greater degree. Besides. Schipa has a greater range and is as much at home In music of the dramatic type as of the lyric. The head tones of McCormack are beautiful, but the head tones and fine spun pianissimo notes of Schipa are of a quality and perfection that human ears have not heretofore been privileged to hear." After this song of praise, the writ er added a postscript: "No, I'm not an Italian. Sure, I's an Irishman.” Mother Training Class. f A Mother Training class will be or ganfzed Monday, October 13, at 7:30 p. m.t on the sixth floor of th# City Hajl. This evening class Is being or ganized to accommodate women who fln^ It Impossible to attend the day time classes. There is no charge and Beds for Comfort 00 Style! to choose from. Any finish or sise. Special Outfit All Steel Simmons Bed, In beauti ful walnut finish; 24-Tear Guar anteeed Spring; all cotton felt Tailor-made .Hattress, with four row side stitching. Outfit Complete, $27 all women who are Interested, ars to vlted to come. Wooden Paper Knives. Painted wooden paper knives com* in several sizes and many dealgu. . The lovers of animals will find a head of a dog, a horse, a cat. a bird or some other creature of the jungle* am#ig these knives. The lover of quaint peoples will find a selection from Indians to Dutch, from Chlne«a to characters of the Imagination. A Lenlef evening gown has a fluted ruffle for a hem appearing below a heavy band of gold spangles on whits georgette crepe. 9 i" iH',. e' ■* m ■ ■■ m. ; Jj m | .JIJpDXRT ^ORSETS I 1 §pf A A m 19 fg ’ > - ■— HI I p Look- in Your Glass I Will your figure keep its Is loveliness or will yoii let 1 it spread and sag? | Let our corsetiere fit you 1 with a Modart especially g designed for you. See. r | in your glass how it I smoothes and gently cor- ■ ' rects your figure. Then | slip on your smartest | frock and see how beau- , 5 tifully it fits over this I perfect foundation. | There is a Modart for ;, | every figure, in lacing ' I and non-lacing styles and . | many materials, priced ; | from $5.00 up. A fitting | does not obligate you in | any way. 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