Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 30, 1916, SOCIETY, Image 11

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    he Omaha Sunday
PAET TWO
SOCIETY
PAGES ONE TO SIX
TART TWO
SOCIETY
PAGES ONE TO SIX
VOL. XLV NO. 33.
OMAHA, SUNDAY MOHXINO, .TANt'ATiY :;n, inic.
sixcile corv fi i: cunts.
Odor of Printer's Ink Lures Her to Letters
rirv
Bee
CLUBDOM
Calendar of Club Doings
Monday
Omaha Vomtn'i club, T. M. C. A. auditorium,
2:30 p. m.
Omaha Society of Tine Arts, Hotel Fonte
nelle, '4 p. m.
Child Conservation league, Dundee circle, Mrs.
J. II. Beaton, hostess, 2:80 p. m.
Memory Day association, annual meeting. Me
morial hall, 2 p. m.
Chautauqua circle, Tennyson chapter, Mrs.
II. S. Curtis, hostess, 2:30 p. m.
"Pioneer Members' Day," Y. W. C. A.
Tuesday
Business Women's club, Y. W. C. A., 7 p. m.
Omaha Woman's club, oratory department,
Metropolitan hall, 10 a. m.
South Omaha Woman's club, literature depart
ment. Library hall, 2:30 p. m.
Business Girls' council, luncheon and prayer
meeting, court house, 11 a, m. to 2 p. m.
U. S. Grant Woman's Relief corps. Memorial
hall, 2:30 p. m.
Old People's Home, board of trustee, Y. W.
C. A., 10 a. m. '
Wednesday
Omaha Society of Fine Arts, seventh annual
art exhibition, Hotel Fontenelle.
Mu Sigma club, Mrs. Frank Boyd, hostess,
9:30 a. m.
Dundee Woman's club, Mrs. Leigh Leslie,
hostess, 2:30 P. m.
Omaha Woman's club, literature department,
Y. W. C. A., 10 a.m.
Clio club, Mrs. F. C. Newcomb, hostess.
Association of Collegiate Alumnae, story tell
ers' section, Miss Ruth McDonald, hostess,
4 p.m.
Miller Park Mothers' circle. Miller Park
school, 2:30 p. m.
Omaha-Rocktord College association, Mrs. C.
A. Woodland, hostess.
Y. M. C. A. annual election and tea, associa
tion auditorium, 8 to 6 p. m.
Omaha Suffrage association, Mrs. J. A. Keith,
hostess, 2:80 p. m.
Thursday
Omaha Society of Fine Arts, Hotel Fontenelle,
4 p. m.
P. E. O. sisterhood chapter E. Mrs. N. B. Up
dike, hostess. 1 pi' m. v ' v t
Omaha Story Tellers' league, Library ball,
4:15 p. m. .
Omaha Woman's club, home econbmtcs de
partment, Y. W. C. 10 a. m.
Benson Baptist Missionary society, Mrs.
Benjamin Fletcher, hostess.
Y. W. C. A., "Every Member Supper."
Drama league, city ball, 4 y. m.
Friday-
Child Conservation league, North Side circle,
Monmouth Park school, 2 p. m.
Y. W. C. A., "Mothers' and Daughters' Day."'
Saturday
P. E. O. sisterhood, chapter B N, Mrs. F. W.
Lebnhoff, hostess, 10 a. m.
Daughters of American Revolution, Major
Isaac Sadler chapter, Mrs. D. E. McCulley,
hostess.
Art exhibit gallery talk by Miss Gertrude
Young, Hotel Fontenelle, 4 p. m.
T
HE fine arts, which occupy the center of
the stage in local women's organizations
this week, will find a ready enthusiast
In Mrs. E. M. Syfert, the new president
of the Omaha Woman's club. Mrs. Syfert
ir secretary for the Omaha Drama league, and Is a
member of both the Omaha Society of Fne Arts
and the Tuesday Morning Musical club, the largest
art organization of the city. Mrs. Syfert Is also
a member of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae.
But it is with the Woman's club, which she no
heads, tha Mrs. Syfert has been particularly Identi
fied for the last seven years. For two terms she
was secretary of the organization and her election
as vice president was unanimous. She has served
as treasurer of the current topics department, asso
ciate leader of the literature department and has
been active in the oratory work of the club.
Mrs. Syfert was for two years a member of the
program committee of the Nebraska Federation of
Women's Clubs and at the last convention in Nor
folk was nominated for state recording secretary,
but declined to be a candidate.
As Miss Laura Belle Maullck, before her mar
riage, Mrs. Syfert. organized the geography work
In the first departmental work instituted In the
Omaha public schools, at the Long school. Previ
ously Mrs. Syfert taught in the elementary school
of the Chicago university under Dr. Jackman.
With so capable a leader, the members of the
Woman's club look for the accomplishment of big
things and for the carrying out of the splendid
plans outlined by the late president, Mrs.. X. II.
Nelson, prime among them the penny lunch for
Train school children.
Cognizance will also be given to Mrs. Nelson's
request that some feature of the exhibit planned
In connection with Baby Health week in March be
made permanent.
Mrs. K. R. J. Edholm, who Is the Nebraska
representative of the federal children's bureau, aa
rounces that the circulars and material sent out
last week wlU probably be better fitted for use
throughout the state. In Omaha and Lincoln, how
ever, there will be week-long exhibits jointly
financed by the Woman's clubs of the two cities.
There will be other programs given by various
organizations during the week of the exhibit, the
details or which will be announced later
Additional t'lub Xows on Page Four
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'OCT? -r5 NI5S IEOLA RANDE15
: ' eoSfaiA
ANOTHER daughter of wealth, bred In the
lap of luxury, has decided definitely to
carve her own career. She is Mlna Leola
Brandeis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur D. Brandeis, who seeks the ful
fillment of happiness in the field of letters.
The crisp orders of the editor, the lure of the
trail for news to feed the Insatiable hunger of the
reading publ'c; the click-clack of typewriters In
tusy newspaper offices just a few minutes before
press time; the Inky smell and the noisy racket
o' the composing room all this spells joy Infinite
to the young Omaha girl.
Although yet a senior at Vaasar college. Miss
Brandeis has already had signed articles published
in "Life" and other well known periodicals, and
the current edition of the Vaasar Monthly contains
several article from her pen.
After graduating. Miss Brandeis plana to take
a special course of six weeks at Cornell and then
will enter upon the two-year course In journalism
at the Columbia college for budding newspaper
geniuses.
"The Liberty Bell," the inspiration for whit r
came while Miss Brandeis was at the San Franelnrr
fair when tbe Liberty Bell was exhibited, is a great
, favorite' with the father of Miss Brandeis, Omaha'i
merchant prince and a prince of merchants, as
those who glory in tbe metropolitan airs tbe city
is taking on, will attest.
"TIIK LIBERTY BELL."
"It rested there proudly, on a .Persian rug,
roped off from the little crowd of spectators who
were surrounding and admiring it respectfully. The
day before, when it had arrived, people had crowded
up and kissed it in a wild frenzy of patriotism, but
now they had calmed somewhat, and were content
to recall to each other that great day long ago,
when it had rung out its glad call, warning the
nation that freedom waa at last at hand. A noble
relic, truly, but what a pity cracked!
"Across the fair grounds In one of the exhibi
tion buildings was a booth, stifling hot, and piled
so high with overalls that there was scarcely room
for the sightseers to pass along its narrow aisles.
However, they did squeeze In somehow, and stoo
crowded close, not to look at overalls, but to see
their manufacture. For In a narrow slit hemmed
in by machines, spectators and overalls, sat twelve
girls, pretty, all of them, sewing in a frenzy ol
haste.
' It was a fascinating occupation, watrbinf
them; buttons, buttonholes, suspenders, pocketi
seemed to sppear out of nowhere and jump into
place of their own accord. And it Is so pleasant
to stand Idle and watch others work, even though
the watcher be subjected to heat and noise and th
close unpleasantant odor of too many human betngi
much too near.
"Suddenly above the confutlon of crashing ma
chines came the clear, ringing chimes of a nearby
clock striking 12. On tbe last stroke tbe machines
stopped magically, the girls rose and stretched, and
the people passed out slowly, casting regretful eyes
on the interrupted work. Rome of the late-comers
felt cheated that tbe show had stopped so soon.
"One of tbe girls unwrapped a newspaper parcel
filled with lunch. She rested her back against the
machine her stool had no back to it and sighed,
a long-drawn, luxurious sigh of pleasure. 'Huh!'
she said to her neighbor,' In a deep gutteral, thick
lth foreign accent. That's the real Liberty Bell,
ain't It?'
"Her neighbor an American looked at her
with startled eyes. 'What a hell of a joke!' she ex
claimed. "But it wasn't the joke she objected to.
"LEOLA BRANDEIS, 1916."
SOCIETY
Social Calendar
Monday
Crelghton Vniverslty Mixers club dance at
Chamber's academy.
Entertainment for Comus club members' hus-
bands.gtven by Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Dlmmlck.
Thursday Morning bowlers, Association alleys
Monday Drama class Miss Kate McIIugh,
hostess.
Bible class, Mrs. A. F. Jonas, hostess.
Boyd theater parties by Mr. and Mrs. Ward
Burgess, Mr. and Mrs. C. Will Hamilton
and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wyman.
Luncheon at the Fontenelle for Mrs. lloxie
Clark, Mrs. C. T. Stewart, hostess.
Tuesday
Thimble club, Mrs. J. F. Carpenter, hostess.
Tuesday Morning Musical club, Fontenelle.
Dinner and box party for Mr. and Mrs. lloxie
Clark, Mrs. Luther Kountze, hostess.
Boyd theater parties.
Prettiest Mile Golf club entertainment, Mrs.
Milton T. Byrd, hostess.
Wednesday
Literary department Omaha Woman's club,
entertainment to Dundee Literary club.
Dinner given by Mrs. E. E. Harte of Council
Bluffs.
Omaha Rock ford College association meeting,
Mrs. C. A. Woodland, hostess.
Opening reception by Omaha Fine Arts society,
Fontenelle.
Wednesday Afternoon Drama class, Mrs.
Frank Colpetzer, hostess.
Tuesday Bridge club, Mrs. Arthur Keeline,
hostess.
Dinner for Mr. and Mrs. lloxie Clark, Mrs. E.
E. Hart, hostess.
Luncheon and matinee party for Mrs. IIoxU
Clark, Mrs. Herbert Wheeler, hostess.
Thursday
Leap year and box supper party of Clnosam
club, Scottish Rite cathedral.
Morning Glory kenBlngton, Mrs. Laurence Mc-
Kenna, hostess.
German Coffee club, Mrs. John Baumer,
hostess.
Subscription club dance, Turpln's academy.
Dinner preceding Subscription dance, Miss Ida
8harp, hostess. .
Dinner preceding Subscription dance, Mrs.
' Charles T. Kountze, ""' , L. ...
Tea at thV Fontenelle, Mrs. J. E. Summers,
. ' hostess.
Friday
Croix club dance, HarU's hall.
Friday Morning Drama class, Mrs. Howard II.
Baldrlge, hostess.
Trinity Parish Aid society session and lunch
eon, 10 to 2 o'clock, Mrs. Harry Clarke,
hostess.
Dundee Bridge-Luncheon club. .
Friday Bridge-Luncheon club. Miss Louise
Dinning, hostess.
Tea at the Fontenelle, Mrs. Charles T.
Kountze, hostess.
Saturday
Vaasar club, Miss Mona Cowell, hostess.
Saturday Afternoon Bridge club, Mrs. Roy
Ralph, hostess.
Saturday Evening Auction Bridge club, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence L. Jones, host and
hostess. ,
Saturday Evening Subscription dinner-dance.
Fontenelle.
Now Bridge-Luncheon club, Mrs. Paul Sleson.
hostess.
Saturday evening Subscription dinner-dance
at Fontenelle.
New Bridge-Luncheon club, Mrs. Paul Sleson,
hostess.
Week-end Dancing club dance at Chambers'
academy.
Tea at Fontenelle, Mrs. George Bernhard
Prinz, hostess.
F. OR THE coming social weok there are high
brow affairs galore, and one might think
It was Boston and not Omaha. Talks on
f art, discussions on art, architecture, the
proso of tbe seventeenth century, criti
cism and tbo return of tbe delightful Powys.
There sre bridges, dinners, dances, mere affairs
of play edged in between, but even over tbe Mon
day Morning Musical club's recital at the Fonte
nelle Tuesday afternoon the exhibit of the Fine
Arts society is tbe event of the week.
Wednesday evening is the opening reception
and private view for members of the Fine Arts
society, the friends of art and the officers of other
art clubs in the city.
During tbe exhibit prominent matrons In groups
of ten will serve as hostesses in the gallery. This
arrangement is under the management Vf Mrs.
George Bernhard Prlnz.
The receiving committee is composed of Mes
dames Charles T. Kountze, Halleck Rose and J. E
Summers.
One of the Interesting features of the whole
affair will be the reception teas at tbe Fontenelle
at which the following matrons will be hostesses:
Mrs. Charles T. Kountze, Mrs. George Bernhard
Prlns, Mrs. Ward Burgess, Mrs. Moshler Colpetzer,
Mrs. Luther Kountze, Mrs. J. E. Summers,' Mrs.
Harry Tukey, 'Mrs. Joseph Barker, Mrs. Samuel
Burns and Mrs. O. C. Redlck.
But this is beginning to read like an account
of the New York Horse show, where It is the ocon
pants of the boxes and blue book entries which are
more discussed and In view than the beauties on
the tanbark.
Additional Society News on Next Page