PART TWO SOCIETY PAGES ONE TO FOUR The Omaha Sunday Bee PAST TWO SOCIETY PAGES ONE TO FOUR VOL. XLVI NO. 6. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 23, 1918. SINGLE COPY" FIVE .CENTS. Queen and Princesses Ride with1 Aborigines CLUBDOM Calendar of Club Doings Tuesday; Business Women's council, court house, 11 to 2 p. tn. Society of American Widows, 206 Crounse building, 1:30 p. m. U. S. Grant Woman's Relief corps, picnic-supper at Miller park, 6 p. m. Wednesday Woman's Christian Temperance union, Omaha branch, Mrs. W. E. Callfass, hostess, 2:30 W,. m. Oman's Christian Temperance union, Frances Willard branch; Mrs. J. A. Dalzell, hostess, ' 2 p. m. I Thursday Society of American Widows, Crounse block, 7:30 p. m. THERE is a general impression abroad that club women devote themselves to the study of poetry, art, music, classical literature and other ornamental furnishings of the futilely feminine mind," writes Corra Har ris, a well-known noveltist and writer of feminist articles, in a recent issue of the Saturday Evening Post. "And it is a fact that for years they were sadly involved in the Encyclopaedia Britannica, digging up material for club papers; and they reveled like deaf-and-dumb idiots among the poets. But, again, it is easy to understand if you are willing to be honest. When women start they always start at the mystical top, somewhere in the poetic region of illusions, and work down to the dingy facts of everyday life. They have a mind like Saturn, with luminous rings round it. But this is not a deformity. It is a lack of for mity, if I may be permitted to clip a word. "Saturn will be a fine planet some day if it keeps on cooling and revolving, and women will have good I substantial minds some day if they keep on think ing. You will always find them frailing fruit off the forbidden Tree of Knowledge, as you will always find men feeding on it, as Adam did in the begining. Even now, if you ask me, I say the average woman has more knowledge and more breadth of vision along humanitarian lines thanthe average man. In order to be humane a man must specialize in the humanities; but a woman is born that way, endowed with pity and compassion." Mrs. Harris ateended the biennial convention of the General Federation of Women's clubs in New York City and has some pertinent observations to make with regard to it. "Club women are devoted students of parliamen tary law," says the celebrated writer, "but they em ploy it too often and too literally, like illiterate peo ple trying to learn what literature is by studying the v best writers and speakers, and never daring to use their own judgment apart from the printed canons of this art. So, too much energy of the convention went into the effort to preserve all the rules and regulations of the organization to the very letter -of parliamentary law. . "Women are, about the practice of parliamentary rules, as a little girl is about practicing her scales on the piano when she takes her first music lessons. She counts her one-two-threcfour carefully, and comet down hard on the four, and she loses the rhythm of the thing, because she has not yet got the use of her fingers. But give her time and eh may become an accomplished musician. So these 'women who thump out their rules and regulations so awkwardly and conscientiously are taking the right method to become a good governing force." Mrs. Harris ascribes the faithfulness with which the club women adhered to the convention program to woman's strong sense of duty. . "On the night of the formal opening of the con vention these women demonstrated their sense of duty. They all came delegates, alternates, visitors, presidents and officers twenty thousand of them. They were serious about the performance of this duty. No theaters or-Broadway lights for them! "At the door of the convention hall every woman was required to remove her hat, which was a hard ship. When you consider how much money 20,000 women had spent for hats, they might have been permitted to wear them as far as the seats, which is the usual custcjtn. "It was a good time to observe the character and ' quality of the convention. Most of the women had gray hair and young eyes. Most of them were well dressed. Useful women can look very handsome in their convention clothes. And they all had that ex perienced expression of long patience peculiar to gray-haired women, complemented by a kind of weakness-to-know-more look, peculiar to women who wish to do right, but in any case to dol "The federations of the northern and western states are actively engaged in teaching foreign-born children and their parents the American standardi of life, sanitation and domestic economics. The Ne braska women have a portable school, which they send to communities in need of it. The Dakota women have concentrated upon efforts to lighten the drudgery of farmers' wives.' Seven thousand women in Oklahoma are educating teachers. They sent thirty-eight into the schools of that state last year. The Arkansas women have organized 11,000 college girls into an active domestic-educational force, de voted to service in rural communities. The Wiscon sin clubs specialize upon the health of children, free clinics for babies, and eugenics. Illinois has more , women in its clubs than there are soldiers in the wgular United States army. Ten thousand of these ;ire giving all their time to social service. The New England clubs are engaged . in crery kind of service by which the immigrant is pro iccted as an immigrant, and by which he is developed into an American citizen. The New Hampshire clubs have o fund ior educating teachers, who, instead of returning (he moriey spent, pledge themselves to teach ior two years among immigrant! or in rural c-mmun:l:ca. ' N 'Kentucky, Georgia and-the 'Carolina women are conducting and financing 'moonlight' schools for illiterates. This is the name given any group of illiterate men and women in a rurnl community who KMlief at the end of the day to leirn their A 1! C's. The t.:nbitton of these club women is to wipe out illiteracy in the south by the end of 1920. The clubs of (jcorgi:i are educating eighty-six mountain b,vs ind Kirls in an industrial school jwntd and supported by the state federation. "In addition tj these activities there were reports 'torn five ilcparlinent of vocational training, where the club women united with every possible means to lit girls for business life, as nurses, sileswomrn, stenographers everything but cooks, laundresses and housemaids which is queer when one considers tiie growing problem of domestic service. It is an other rase where they miss their cu. and become in volved in the farther-from-home things first The "handling of servants and the training of servants lire such immediate needs that they shrink from them, for that means a revolution in the character of the women who have servants; and, like other peo ple, women prefer to revolutionize other people and conditions not themselves. "There was not a single report from a Browning club, not a word about the Maeterlinck bee culture in mysticism. Nobody, it seems, has been studying the origin of Shakespeare's plays." Miss Marian Howe and Attendant Lead Proces sion Formed by Wild West Indians and Cowboys Amid the Plaudits of the Crowd and Unfeigned Homage of the Big Sioux Chiefs Then Present swy 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 MARIAN TOWLE, MARY MEGEATH, FLORENCE NEVILLE, ANNE GIFFORD, MARIAN HOWE HEAP PRETTY MAIDENS," thought the Indian chiefs and their squaws when they beheld the Ak-Sar-Beh queen, Miss Mar ian Howe, and her attendants, Miss Mary Megeath, Miss Anne Gifford, Miss Flor ence Neville and Miss Marian Towle, leading the parade at the frontier days' show on Thursday. , Cowboys and western plainsmen, too, nodded approval at the graceful manner in which the Oma ha young women sat their mounts. "A body'd think those girls were brought up on a ranch, they ride so well," said Charley Irwin, head of the whole show. ' ' And the spectators? Well, they just applauded and cheered and otherwise expressed their delight when the nattily-attired young horsewomen hove into view. Many summers spent in the west and long rides through Estes and Yellowstone National parks have contributed toward the masterly manner in which these young women manage their animals. Miss Neville, too, is of the same family as the North Platte Nevilles are. While a guest in North Platte, Miss Florence has spent a great deal of time at Cody ranch, the home of the veteran plainsman, Buffalo Bill. The atmosphere of the wild west show, therefore, was quite familiar to Miss Ne ville indeed. The young women are one in stating how much they enjoyed their experience. "It was great fun," they say. Queen Marian has one regret, however, and that is that the big Sioux chief whom she was greeting when the cameras clicked wasn't able to talk to her. She was ever so eager to converse with him, but he couldn't speak a word of English. "Some of the Indians looked at us in a friendly manner, even if they couldn't speak to us, but some of them weren't even friendly," laughed Miss Ne ville. The Omaha young women met Miss Frances Irwin and Louise Mulhall, the star horsewomen of the show, and expressed great admiration for their horsemanship. Good Manners Not Insincerity, but a Law of Kindness BY DOROTHY DIX. Not long ago I wrote an article for this column in which I spoke with enthusiasm of the school. for manners that the University of New York is going to inaugurate. A man reader takes exception to my views. He writes: "I disapprove highly of all the etiquette, because etiquette robs us of sincerity. "If you go into a room and find people there who are not of the slightest interest to you, why should you hypocritically be sympathetic to their troubles, and rejoice in their happiness, when in reality you do not care whether they live or die? Yet etiquette requires you to do that. - "Etiquette will stop you from telling a man that he is a liar, or a woman that she is old and ugly. "Etiquette prescribes that you smile when you have not. the slightest desire to do so. "Etiquette forces you to do that which you would not desire to do,, and to leave undone that which you wish to do. "What is the good of etiquette?" Etiquette is simply one of the rules of the game. When human beings rose above beasts who were continually at each other's throats and decided to live together in peace and harmony, they found out that they would have to agree upon certain things that they could do, and couldn't do, and that every one must respect these unwritten laws because it made things pleasanter for everybody. Out of this grew what we call the conventions of society and etiquette, and, foolish and arbitrary as they sometimes seem, they invariably rest upon some human need and represent the accumulated ex perience of centuries of man's dealing with man, and the best way to do it. Moreover, etiquette is nothing more nor less than the Golden Rule dressed up in party clothes and with a flower in its buttonhole. It teachers us to treat others as we would like to have others treat us. It makes us respect other people's privacy and susceptibilities as we would like to have them re spect ours. You can have no better illustration of the happy working out of etiquette than in the very instances cited by my correspondent. He asks scornfully why he should appear to sympathize with the joys and sorrows of people for whom he cares nothing. Doubtless this man never takes the trouble to write a note of condolence when there is a death in the family of some acquaintance, or telephone a con gratulation when some good luck comes the way of a neighbor. ' Yet how would he feel if, when he entered a room, nobody greeted him with a pleasant and cor dial word because no one happened to be vitally in terested in him? Would he not be cut to the heart if his wife or child lay dead and no human being spoke a word of sympathy to him? Would not the Summer Fancies Hooded coats have linings of silk striped like peppermint candy. The hood turns completely in side out to show its lining. A simple full bodice is finished around the bottom with three tiny ruffles, the ruffles also appearing at the bottom of the sleeves. A novel addition to the wardrobe is the tailored basque of white satin. It may be worn with a skirt of black tulle. There is no prettier hat for the little girl than the simple drooping leghorn trimmed with flowers or a graceful bow. Flowered cretonne is being used for summer frocks and generally they are topped with a coat of plain color. A new skirt is called the zone-cut because it con sists of a series of widening circles stitched each to. the zone' above. Cotton voile and the old-fashioned etamine are being used more and more for summer frocks. The new serges are not rough, but fine and thin; they can be shirred or pleated without being bulky. Quaint posies of blossoms and brambles are charmingly tucked into soft neck ruffles of tulle. Smocks and a serge skirt will make a very pretty and economical outfit for spring school days. ' , DeP pleatings are seen on the necks, sleeves and draperies of some of the new frocks. Little girls' coats are made crisp and spring like with collars and cuffs of white linen happiness of his success be dimmed if not a man put out a hand and said: "Good for you, old chap; I'm awfully gild for you?" My correspondent says that etiquette forces us to listen with an affectation of interest to tedious conversationalists, and laugh over jokes that we cut our teeth on in our cradles. Let us thank heaven that it docs. Precious few of us are such spellbind ers that we can hold an audience on the intrinsic thrillingness of our discourse, nor are we brilliant enough humorists to provoke with our wit the ready laugh that etiquette hands us. Yet which one of us would enjoy a listener who frankly yawned when he was bored, or felt called upon to tell us that he had heard our cherisHed best story a million times before? And if etiquette prevents us from enjoying the sacred joy of telling a man that he lies or a woman that the least observing one can see that she is ten years older than she pretends to be, and that any body can tell that her complexion and her hair are only hers by right of purchase, is it not as broad as it is long, for it keeps other people from saying the same brutal things to us? As for etiquette being the mother of insincerity, that is nonsense. There is more to praise than to blame, more to admire than to criticize, more to like than to hate in the world. Why is it not as honest to speak of a person's good qualities as his bad qualities? Why isn't it as sincere to turn a cherry, bright face upon the people at your breakfast table and in your office as it is to gpouch in gloom? And as for sympathzing with the joys and sorrows of those about us, even if we don't know them very well and are not particularly attached to them, surely that is just the throb of a common humanity that makes us all kin. At its worst, ettiquette is merely assuming the virtue of consideration of others by those who have it not, and that is better than the brutality of the savage, who goes his own way unmindful of the rights of others. - When we all get to be angels, altruistically in tent on prompting each other's happiness, we can do without etiquette; but until that time arrives blessed be good manners, that make it bad form for us to step on each other's toes and do and say things we are prompted to do. . SOCIETY Social Calendar ' ; J Monday Luncheon at Field club for Miss Clara Louise Wright of Chicago, Miss Gertrude Porter, hostess. Jewish Women's Relief society, Synagogue at Nineteenth and Burt streets. Farewell party for Mrs. W. O. Henry given at First Presbyterian parish house. ' Women's State Golf tournament at the Field club. Afternoon tea for Miss Amy Glaser of St Louis. Miss Mildred Rubel, hostess. Luncheon at University club for Mr. George Post of New York, Misses Marion and Naomi Towle, hostesses. 1 Tuesday Dinner-dances at Happy Hollow, Seymour Lake and Carter Lake clubs. - Matinee dansant at Happy Hollow club. Women's luncheon at Carter Lake club. Bridge tournament at Field club. Dinner at Happy Hollow for Miss Elizabeth Jones of Chicago, given by Mr. Dwight Evans. - Luncheon at Happy Hollow club for Miss Mar ' jorie Wilkins of Des Moines, Miss Helen Streight and Miss Katherine Gould, hostesses. Bridge for Miss Mildred Rubel and Miss Amy Glaser of St. Louis, Miss Jessie Rosenstock, hostess. Wednesday Dinner-dances at Country and Field clubs, t , Kensington and matinee dansant at Carter Lake club. ' Golf luncheon at Field club. Afternoon affair for Miss Mildred Rubel and Miss Amy Glaser of St. Louis given by Mrs. J. B. Kati and Mrs, Herbert' Arnstein. Original Cooking club at Country club, Mrs. Ward Burgess, hostess. Thursday . - Women's luncheon at Carter Lake club. Hayes-Soay wedding at Atlantic City. Friday '' Dinner-dance at Seymour Lake club. Les Amies Whist club at the Cricket room, Mrs. H. L. Buckles, hostess. Saturday Dinner-dances at Country, Field."Happy Hol low, Carter Lake and Seymour Lake Country clubs. Women's luncheon at Carter Lake. GOLF is spelled in big letters for women. en thusiasts of the great sport, for on Monday the state championship tournament for women golfers opens. Field club links, where the tourney will be played off, was , alive with golfers every day and all day of the sweltering last two weeks, for the women were out practicing. Each of the six clubs, which are included in the Omaha association of women golfers, expects that its champion will carry off the winner's cup, but there are out-of-town aspirers to the championship cup who are a host to be reckoned with also. . The Country club stars are Mrs. C T. Stewart, . 2d., present champion, and Mrs. E. H. Sprague, with whose name "golf" is indissolubly linked. (We didn't think we were such a punster I) Field club has a bevy of stars, Mrs. Walter Sil ver, Mrs. Allan Parmer, Mrs. J. W. Tillson among them. Mrs. Karl Lininger, Mrs. Howard Goodrich and Mrs. W. E. Shafer represent Happy Hollow; and the Prettiest Mile Golf club has a representation which includes Mrs. Fred Craine, Mrs. C. S. Rain bolt, Mrs. Glenn Smith, Mrs. C. J. Ziebarth and Mrs. C. W. Dresher. Miss Mabel Melcher is the Seymour Lake Coun try club champion, and Mrs. L. M. Lord, president of the Omaha Woman's Golf association, the hostess organization, and Mrs. Dean Ringer, also play from the same club. Mrs. Felix Despecher is the promi nent star of the Council Bluffs Rowing association. Formation of a state organization is one of the things contemplated for Wednesday at the big golf luncheon. ' We almost forgot to tell about the prizes. They are going to be many and beautiful, according to the committee in charge, Mrs. Lord, Mrs; Parmer and Mrs. Silver. , . This is strictly entre nous.' I am led to believe) that divers pairs of silk hose and gloves are going to change hands when the various winners are an nounced. No, I didn't think women would bet, either, but then If the sweet things are going to go to wrestling matches in such numbers as to the most exclusive society function, it looks as if they are go ing to be real sportsmen. Last night the Country club was a merry place. Forty young people in Mr. Herbert Davis" party for his Cornell college classmate, Mr. George B. Post of New York City, greatly enhanced the gaiety of the usual week-end dinner-dance. Mr. Post and Mr. Wallace Shephard of Omaha made the trip from the east in Mr. Post's car, stopping in Des Moines to bring with them Miss Marjorie Wilkins. Miss Clara Louise Wright of Chicago, a schoolmate of Miss Gertrude Porter at "The Castle," has also arrived. These young people will furnish the inspiration for a round of luncheons, dinner-dances and picnics such affairs that not only bring them enjoyment, but delight the hearts of the staid elders who look on. Prenuptial affairs for Miss Mildred Rubel, who ' will be married Monday, July 31, to Mr. Edwin Vaughan Glaser of St. Louis, and for Miss Rubel's - ?:uest, Miss Amy Glaser, herself a bride of the near uture, also occupy the social calendar this week. Miss Glaser arrived this morning and will meet some . of the Omaha girls at an informal tea at Miss Rubel's tomorrow afternoon. Miss Jessie Rosenstock gives a bridge for them Tuesday, and on Wednesday the bride's sister, Mrs. Jay B. Katz, and Mrs. Herbert Arnstein will entertain for the two brides-to-be. The mid-summer exodus is on. Each departing train bears hosts of Omahans seeking cooler climes. The nearby lakes, Okoboji in special; those farther north in Wisconsin and Minnesota and far off Atlantic City, Wianno and other points along the New England coast attract many from our swel tering midst. Estes Park, Long's Peak Inn, Enos Mills' place, Yellowstone National park and nearer Colorado points prove an irresistible lure for others, espe cially those who are fond of horseback riding and other features of western life. The numerous ranches and lodges in which this country abound' Motoring trips, too, find favor with summer trav elers now that good roads have become a reality in stead of an ungratif ied desire. To motor to one's summer sojourning place is now quite the thing and decidedly enjoyable at that. . A cross-country drive even does not awaken any qualms. It's a great lark, say Mr. Wallace Shepard and Mr. George Post of New York, who arrived yesterday after making the trip from New York. ! , (Additional Society News oa Next 7lf4 J