Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1916)
THE BEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1916 Society Notes : Personal Gossip : Woman's Work : Household Topics 6 BRIDES HOLD THE CEKTER OF STAGE Several Affairs Planned for the Brides or Bridei-to-Be for This Week. .'. IALL WEDDINGS NUMEROUS By MELLIFICIA August 31. Brides are once more the center of social attention. The month of roses is no longer exclusively devot ed to weddings, for many a bride is setting the late summer and fall months for the auspicious date. Today three brides or brides-to-be are honored. Mr. and Mrs. George H. Payne are at home this evening for their son Philip and his bride, formerly Miss Corinne McDonald of Missoula, Mont., where the marriage took place Monday. The young peo ple leave tomorrow for Amherst col lege, where Mr. Payne will teach this year. Another prenuptial affair was the tuncheon given by Miss Dorothy Kiplinger complimentary to Miss Adele Davis, who will be married to Robert Daniels of Council Bluffs in October. Miss eVene Kenny will give a tea at the Fontenelle next Monday for Miss Davis. Miss Marguerite Klingbeil, who will be married Wednesday to Mr. YV. Bruce Young, was honor guest at still another bridal luncheon and theater party given by Miss Kath erine Richey. Friday Miss Luella Peterson gives a luncheon at Happy Hollow club for Miss Khngbeil. and Monday Miss Kathejine Norris enter- taint an Orpheum matinee party for her. The bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs.' G. L. E. Klingbeil, wilt enter tain the- wedding party at dinner at the Field club Tuesday evening, fol lowing which there will be a rehear sal at the Klinsbeil home. Mist Luella Peterson will be maid of honor and Miss Ruby Kliimbeil a sister, bridesmaid at this wedding. Mr. Frederick Seacrest of Lincoln, a fraternity brother of Mr. Young, will be best man and Mr. Clarence Stier nf St. Joseph, one of the ushers, Rev. U. V. Haltzly will officiate. At Seymour Lake Country Club. Mrs. A. A. Randall entertained at dinner last evening at the club for her guests, Mrs. F. M. Hunter and son, Archie, of Lincoln.. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Rose are now at Lake Jefferson. Miss Aileen Wolfe is the guest of Miss Grace Poole during this week. Mrs. C. E. . Parsons entertained twenty women at a bridge luncheon at the club yesterday afternoon in honor of her guest, Mrs. W. H. Hayes of Denver, who accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Parsons and family on their re cent return from a four weeks' trip in Colorado. ' ""' '- I Miss Grace Poole will leave Sun lay for Lincoln, where she will join Cireen's band as a soloist during the itate fair. While in Lincoln she will be the guest of her uncle, C, Poole, secretary of state. Mrs, tombs will accompany her. I Judge and Mrs. J. H. BurfordW Oklahoma City are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. VV. B. Cheek and family. Wednesday a party of club women enjoyed a golf luncheon. Those pres ent were: . atf-artamee t., : Mnflama A. MMtum, r (I. J. Illng-ar, John Urton. Hanrv rnratar, Raymond Orirnuvtr. nnr uui- J. n. carreii, n. Tube. Oeorga Mrftonald, lltorga Krancla, W. g). rhIIMli. r. H- Town, U. A. llalch.r. JllM liabel Melcher, Press Club Luncheon. Honor guests at the opening luncheon of the Omaha Woman's Press club at the Hotel Fontenelle today -jwere the quartet of Russian dancers who are at the Orpheum this week, Mile. Vlasta Maslova. Mile. Vera Fredova, Mile. Alice Maison ovt and Mile. lit de Wolfe. Other guests, at the luncheon, for which over thirty covers were placed, were; Afaadamaa Aieaaamae tatjll Roramayar ( of Llnooln, a HiaaM .laaala Millard, Katharlaa Jloraa, U.Ian Walriok ot Bouldar, Colo. R. A. Hlltlna, dW Van Camp. Mlaaao Halan Murphy. ' Martarot Bundorland ot Chkato. For Mitt XUngbtlL Miss Katherine Richey entertained at luncheon at her home today in honor of Mitt Marguerite Klingbeil, a bride of next. week. Yellow and white, carried out in goldenrod and sunflowers, formed an effective table decoration. The guests attended the matinee following luncheon, at which covers were placed for: Mlaaao Mlaaaa Marfuarlto Kllntball, Lualla Pataraon, ftubjr Kllnsnall, Kathartna Norata.. Poari KilnfbatL Katlwrino Rlchor, - - -I i At tht Field Club. Miss Dorothy Kiplinger entertained at the Field club today at luncheon for Miss Adele Davis, whose marriage to Robert Daniels of Council Bluffs will take place tn October. The cen terpiece' wat a basket of Russell roses and rose-buds were used at each place with place-cards ot eupids. i hose present were: Maadamaa Frlta Baumalalar of Meadaniaa . L) Klpllngar, K Rlaly. Mlaaaa Giartya liana of Council Hluffa. ;rg.na Davla. lr na kenney. . council Biurra. Mtaaaa-- S'ara Sahara of Council Bluffa. Aoaia Davis. I art Lavortr. Evening Party. M r . and Mrt.' W. Stibolr entertained Wednesday evening at their home for Miss iidna fteilson ot Coulter, la Those present were: an Mlaaoa 11 D. Bartalaan, . Acnao amlta. rataraan. H Dartolaoo. Maaara.w 3. tDtrrr. 1. Wlld.rman. Maao-a. '- K.rle. . U. Harlalaan t. Borlolaao, U WUO.rman. Dr. A. P. Condon entertained twelve guettt at luncheon today at the sec ond of two prettily, appointed affairs at the Field club, yesterday and to day. The guests have been largely wivet of physicians. Yesterday Mrs. T. ,C. Wood, who is a recent arrival in Omaha, was the guest of honor. The company wat teatcd at one long table, with a rich centerpiece of yel low and purple asters, and place-cards decorated with yellow asters. The afternoon wat spent in kensington work. The- Scottish Rite Women't club gave the last of its summer luncheons at the Field club today. Covers were laid for sixty-five. Mrs. F.d Slater entertained at lunch eon at the club today. Mrs. Jar D. Fester had tweniy-two guests at luncheon at the club toddy. Notes of Interest ! Mrs. John Simmons ol lies .domes , I is visiting for a few days at the home i ot her father. Kev. I-, otoh Miss Rita Biggan of Cor!;, Ireland, arrived Monday to spend a month as the guest of Miss Elizabeth Craig. Miss Marjory Kimball of Lincoln, who has been the guest of Mrs. Ches ter Nieman for a week, will leave this evening for a visit in Platts moutfi before returning to her home. Mrs. W. M. Jeffers went to Grand Island this morning to meet her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Albert rich er of Salt Lake City, who will ar rive here this evening for a nhort visit, C- . Lieutenant antLMrs, H. D. McGuire. II. S. N., stopped in Omaha three days this week tor a visit with Lieu tenant McGuire's parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. F; McGuire They 'are en- route to San Francisco, where the lieutenant will have charge of the new (electric compasses on board the cruis ers, battleships ana submarines sta tioned off the Pacific coast and Ha waiian islands. '. , At Happy Hollow Club. - Mrs. 0. E. Bedwell entertained a party of eight at luncheon' for Miss Marjory . Kimball of Lincdln, who is; the guest of Mrs. Chester N'ieman. Miss Elizabeth Craig entertained at luncheon, today for Miss Rita Biggan of Cork, Ireland, who arrived Monday to spend a month with her. A ,bowl of pink asters formed a centerpiece; Cov ers were laid for: ... . . "... Mteeae"-' Mian - ' ' Rita ftlgfan of ' .. Riior-hue-a. ' Cork, Iraland:' .-. Toreea Hn-. .., And from Council Bluffs: v.. Mlnae'a .Mlaaen ,. Anna Hontbech, Helen Haker. ' ' ' Uerteret alaloner, Ruth Wloktinii ', ' E. F., Howe has; a reservation- for four guests at the Saturday evening dinner-dance, and-M. M. Robertson will have. a party of twelve the same evening. Social Gossip. Mrs. Walter H. Rhodes and daugh ter, Mildred, motored home Saturday from Crandall Lodge, Hunters, la., where they spent the summer. Miss Mildred hat since gone to Chicago, where the will be the guest for two weeks ot her cousin, Marion Judson, who visited her last summer. Miss Helen Weirick of Boulder, Colo., it the guest of Mrs. Louis Korsmeyer of Lincoln at the Tukey home in Omaha, where Mrs. Kors meyer is staying in the absence of )ier mother, Mrs. A. P. Tukey, , Club Luncheon. Mrs. J, P. Fallon entertained at luncheon and bridge informally today for ten guests, members of her card club. The luncheon which she had planned at the Happy Hollow club for today was postponed because of the absence from town of several of the invited guests. At the Country Club.. Mrs. W. T. Page ha a dinner res ervation for ten at the club Satur day evening. . - Stork Special. Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Buell announce the birth yesterday afternoon of a son. 1 Meeting Postponed. ' The .North Side circle of the Ghitd Conservation league has postponed its opening meeting, which was an nounced lor tint rriday, until rriday, September IS, when it will be held at the home of the president, Mrs. Rodman Brown On tht Calendar. Prairie Park club house will hold its opening dancing party Saturday evening, September 16. , j - ft. stisiisi mitwu.tt.t..m ! . i I L w'; ' x ' 1 " I I , . C " I Las ; M W-WSSSiyiwTORwewt I .'. ilMWiiimii IWII.I.I...I mumMMimm. imm,m!i. I A New Summer Drink By CONSTANCE CLARKE Cooling drinks are just-as necessary during the summer months as are warm ones in the winter time. One of the best , new hot weather drinks it called cherty-ade. ' Take three medium lemons to each quart of water and one cup of sugar. A great deal depends upon the acidity of the lemons, and the amount of sweetening is a matter of taste. Cut thin slices from the center of each ltmon and put aside; press the lemons and extract the juice and some of the ff flavoring from the 9km. mt the juice, chopped rind and sugar into a bowl, pour on the desired amount of boiling water, and leave it to stand in a cool place. When it it cold strain, half fill the glasses with cherry syrup, fill up with lemonade, and serve it Timely Fashion Hint a,m m aama aae-ana-M aaaaa ' (?) ji ii IV". This' dainty lace jacket, high in the back and falling in a waterfall effect in front, is one of the standard neck wear models for the coming season. Importance of Being Well Dressed ELIZABEST S. CHESSOR, M. D. Extravagance and love nf dress are generally considered purely feminine characteristics. Love of dress has been held responsible for much of the evil women are supposed to have wrought since the mother of us all first arrayed herself in leafy garments in tne harden ot fcden." l he modern bachelor shuns matrimony because he hears to much about the modern girl's extravagance. He spends twice the sum he would provide for his wife's dress in mascu line knick-knacks and odds and ends but nobody dreams of accusing him ofJ ten-iove ana extravagance, iiccause woman's extravagance is a nip-nili-cent excuse for irresponsible bachel ors, and unanswerable argument for close-fisted husbands, it has provided a stick for the chastisement of our long-suffering sex for centuries, and it is a myth that will survive as long as the human race itself. Let it be granted that must women are fond of dress. There are women who do not care in the least for cloth ing; in nine case out of ten they are dowds or slovens. They lack some thing: they are like the women who openly boast that they dislike chil dren. Love of dress, provided it is not an obsession, is a desirable qual ity in all women. When it leads to extravagance and waste, it is regret table, like anv other virtue carried to excess. But life must lose some thing of its savor to those unnatural women uninterested in chiffons. There is a popular fallacy in exist ence that the dowdy woman is more economical than the smart, ' well dressed girl. But ugly clothes cost just as much as pretty ones, as many a poor young man finds, out after mar riage, when he has to pay for them. The woman who takes an intelligent with chipped ice. A few stoned and halved cherries can be nut into each glass as a garnish. Cherry Syrup-rPut in a stew pan one pound of raw; ripe cherries, two tablespoonfuls of red currant jelly, the peel of one lemon (tied up with one inch of cinnamon) and a half cup of sugar, boil until the liquor is reduced to half the quantity, then remove the peel and cinnamon and set aside on ice until wanted. Should preserved herrirs be used, add six or eight Uropi of almond essence to bring up the flavor, half a oound of the ore served fruit will be sufficient in the place of one pound of the fresh.. &ZW Mm (Tomorrow Shrimp and delicioiuj. Salad New It was submitted by one of the promij nent neckwear manufacturers in a re cent competition to decide on stand ard models for the season. interest dress knows how to get the best results for the least expendi ture. An eye for color, the knowledge of how to dress according to one't own style, the instinct of suitabi ltv dress, are valuable attributes to all women whose circumstances compel wieni 10 aress wen on a small allow, ance. i Men acknowledge that a smartly dressed wife is a help in many cases to ine struggling professional man, to the business man who makes a bid for social and commercial success. Only the very rich man can afford to disre gard the importance of appearances; but it is an expensive matter for a woman to look well dressed if she has no love of clothes. It meant ex pensive shops; it means paying well to get somebody else's taste in dress. The woman who genuinely loves pretty frocks, who has- the artistic feeling for chiffons, studies her sub ject, and does not suffer to much from the tyranny of fashions, She has in dividuality and initiative where dress is concerned. She can get her "money's worth" when she goes shop ping. ; It requires brains to dress well on little. It means the .exercise of cau tion and judgment to avoid fashion's pitfalls in the shape of passing atroci- j ties, to choose what is at once suitable, becoming and according to the mode. There was a time when English wom en were popularly supposed to be de void of taste in the adornment of their own persons. They were compared unfavorably with French women and Americans. -.. . , . Arrayed in severe tailor-mades, flat of feet and broad of waist, they .were Jo be met careering over the countr intent upon improving their minds. It is an excellent thing for women to improve tlier minds if they attend to their coiffures and clothes into the bargain. Unfortunately, three women out of four seem incapable of paying equal attention to the inside and the outside of their heads at the tame time. . But we are improving in this re spect also. Women even intellectual women are not nearly so badly arrssea as they were ten or fifteen years ago. We are beginning to real ize that a nice taste in science or phil osophy is quite compatible with ele gance that it is possible to love books and chiffons at. one and the same time. The wonder is, that with so many women who have to dress on a small allowance there-are so few who can even turn out a blouse with their own hands. Many women train as typists and teachers and inspectors,, but few make any effort to qualify themselves to be wives of poor men.' A knowl edge of dressmaking and cooking are the main essentials. The woman who !:nows how to make her frocks can in lulge. in her love of chiffons with an asy conscience. open a Chargt Account With Lottls Bros. & Co. DIAMOND RINGS. l I BROOCHES, LMUIEREt, rJ I WATCHES, Wrlrl Witektt, 11 EMBLEM GOODS, Etc a7B 01 aw en a Ring, 14k sella gold, Loftia "Per. teeMon" can mounting. .. . .. tt a Week. 78 Men' Ring Flat Belcher, belt engravee, ia aolid J old, fine iamond. . . $45 tl a Weak INatEKt w butt a moat oomplate eamrtaiwt of Km him tfcarma. Button. Pins and Rinra for II 'raiornal otaAlaaUoaj. Prtoss and tarma to utl aiur iH.ru. v Off Mfy TiBI tt as. WeVs mt:M Call or write tor illnetratvd Catalog No. OS. Phone Douglaa 1444 and our lalee- Man Will aaaill ' Eur I lo ""!JH2 pry for Workers Will , Solve After-War Problem BY GARETT P. SERVISS. I A trip, from whihe I have just re ; turned, among the rich farms of the i Mohawk valley and its bordering hills, , furnishes, to my mind at least a solu tion to the problem of what the work ers at the present "war industries" can find to do when the war is over. I found farmers' ' families taking breakfast at 5, and even 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning, and working as long as there was light enough to sec by, not because the nature of their occu pation demands such endless houri of labor, but because they can get no "help." Productive fields are being aban doned or left uncultivated, splendid herds of milch cows are being sold and sent to slaughter, some of them worth several hundred dollars apiece. because not enough hands can be found to care for them, even when the labor is reduced to a minimum bv such ; devices as ranks of milking macnines, driven Dy engine power an invention surely as notable and as admirable as any submarine mechan ical monster or any explosive shell fliat will destroy a fort or knock a peaceful village into1 ruins. In my opinion the machines that the modern American farmer em ploys are as interesting to work with, as easy to manage and as inspiring to the imagination of the operators as anything that the machine shops and factories possess, besides being iiicomparably more healthful and stimulating, and yet it is almost im possible to find men willing to handle or supervise them. Again and again I asked: "What has become of the help that you used to have?" The reply always was: ' Gone to the muni tion factories." One immediate consequence of the helpless situation of the farmers has been that the prices of farm and garden stuff in the villages and small cities have been climbing higher and higher, so that those who have thrown up their healthful farm work and abandoned tha pure air of the coun try to flock into the congested cen ters of population and manufacture, find that their increase in wages has been offset by equal and sometimes greater increase of the cost of living. It is both useless and unjust to blame the farmers for this state of things. When the supply of milk and butter, for instance, falls off because there is not enough helpers to keep up the production at the former level, while, at the tame time, the number of moutht insistently demanding food, without doing anything directly to produce it, grows . constantly greater, an increase of price is abso lutely inevitable. I I heard, of an old friend, a farmer. who was mourning, almost with tears in hit eyes over his forced sale of a splendid herd of cows, famout pro ducers of milk and butter, but which he could not, keep simply because there wat no "help to be had. They had gone, as be said, to be cut up and fed to the munition makers." Thus Europe's war reaches across the tea. and not only taps the immediate sources of life, but tends permanently to lame and weaken the common mo ther pf us all agriculture for the workert who leave the farm almost never go back again. This fact might seem to be, in itself, condemnation of farm life. But it is not truly a condemnation. It is the result of an illusion, or a decep tion. It is a recurrent phenomenon, which has repeated itself often in history, and its final result has always fieen the tame. One great example is sufficient. When Rome's fields ceased to be cultivated Rome quickly 'T'HE manufacturer whose product is entrenched by newspaper advertising is not worrying about what will happen when the war is over. Great industrial changes are coming, of course, not hard times, but a shifting in industrial centers. - The man with his home market under , his thumb, his good will es tablished by newspaper advertising, is not worrying. He knows he wilt go right on selling more goods than ever. ' Wise manufacturers are reaching out.today to secure this homo market through aggressive newspaper campaigns. These campaigns are backed up in such a way as to gain the dealer's enthusiasm. The manufacturers who are doing this are not only making im mediate profits, but entrenching themselves for the future beyond per adventure. Manufacturer auious to get a b.tt.r grip on tha ham market are in vitaal to gat ia touch with the Bureau of Advertising, American Newspaper rublishera Association, World Building, New Yerk. ripened for barbarism, and barbarism possessed the world until the monks taught Europe once more the forgot ten art and science of agriculture. Our immense advances in the me chanic arts will not, and cannot, save "Vm. ,ne operation ot the same unpensning law of terrestial life. Only a few in a thojsand of us can, under any practicable arrangement of human affairs, be millionaires. If everybody lived in cities all the citi zens would starve to death. The con stantly recurring trouble of men and women in all times is that they will not recognize their personal limita tions. They reject and despise their own gifts, and can see no use in liv ing unless they live like somebody else. They will not cultivate their own talent because it bears a different inscription from the talent of their neighbor. What would a wnrlHfnl of Shakespeares be worth, or a world ful of Edisons, or a worldful of Roth schilds, or Rockefellers? - The writer, the inventor, the mer chant, the banker, raises no wheat and bakes no bread; his peculiar tal ent is limited to employment in a world that is filled with men and wo men who tlo more fundamentally useful work. He may be like leaven, but he does npt furnish the substance of the loaf. The kind of philosophy that I should like to preach is that of con tent not absolute, ignoble, slothful content, but the kind of content which is not perpetually growling against "luck" and eroding itself with envy. Let your discontent be directed in ward, toward your own neglect to cultivate such talent as you have be cause it differs from another's. There is, and will be, no lack of work in this country as long as the harvest fields are ready to yield their harvests. They, could cheapen the cost of life tomorrow if only there were womcrs cnougn 10 nil mem.. Buttered Rice With Peppers. I cupful rlco 2 awoet sraan pappars I quarts boiling 8 tablaapoonfuu) ot aattad watar buttar . Cook the rice in the boiling salted water twenty minutes, or until tender out not broken. Drain in a colander and set in an open over for five min utes to dry off. Seed the peppers and chop fine. Put butter in a frying-pan over the fire and when it' hisses add the minced peppers; toss and stir un til smoking hot all the way through. Put the rice into a dish and pour the peppers all over it, -loosening the mass with a fork to allow the sauce to penetrate it. , Skinner5 THE HIGHEST QUALITY EGG NOODLES 36 hgt Redpt Book Fttt SKIHNERMFG.CQ.OMAHA.USA IjMGCST MACMOM MCTORV It AMUICA SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. STATE NORMAL SCHOOL 1 AT MARYVILLE, MISSOURI. ' The standard State Teachers' College of Northwest Missouri. Usual courses for training of teachera, with customary diplomas and degrees. Training in Agriculture, Home Economics and Manual Training. Opens September 12, 1916. Write for bulletins. IRA RICHARDSON, President. Securely Entrenched! Tested Recipes (All measurements are full unless otherwise specified.) Ham Mousse. I tablcapoonful . 1 tflaapoonful nuxod lelatla. niuaUrd. CUDful COld Watar. KffW rraln rar.nn. 2 cupaful chopped coldft cupful haavy create nam. ft cupful not wulcr. Soak gelatin in cold water and dis solve in hot water; add to the chorpec or ground hanrj when cold add mus tard, cayenne, and the cream beater until stiff. Turn into a mold, previ ously dipped. Chill; remove frotr mold to serving dish and garnish with parsley. Timbale Cases. 1 cupful (lour l loupoonlul ollvo 1 cupful awoct milk oil ta teaepoonful sugar" 7 aati . Mix flour and egg; add oil and milk. Let stand about three hours before cooking. Have 4 deep pot well filled with hot fat. Put the timbale irons in the fat until they are very hot, then dip them into the bar, and: then right back into the hot fat.. They will brown in a few seconds and will, slip off the irons easily. This recip will make about forty cases. The cases are nice for serving oysters, mushrooms' creamed chicken, peas, etc. An Unfailing Way To Banish Hairs ' (Beauty Motea) . Uf ly hairy growths can be removed In lh privacy of rour own home If you. gat a small original package ot delatone and mix Into a paata enough of tha powder ant water to eover the hairy eurface. Thir should; bo left on the skin about 2 minutes then removed and the akin washed and every trme ot hair will have vanlahed. Nc harm or inconvenience can reanlt from thir treatment, but be sure you buy real dels- tone. Advertisement. . . .SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. tFINlJYEBcgXV.,,, tOd and lofDuift kit., Kansas City, Ho. Only school of th ktod in the mat. Elw tnosJ, Maun. laa. auto, tractor anainaat lwo and Urn Booths, jaar and two-7M . Day and niabt aasaiona. Enroll anv tim. Call dUiar paona, or writ for Inforautioa. CENTRAL COLLEGE For Womtn, LtXington. Mo. 1 An AccraWtad Junior Coltetn. Kansas Cltv's near Mt WoBfcan "a CU, LITERARY, SCIENTIFIC, HVSXC.ABT, r&PRESSION and DOMESTld SCIENCE. Knwntlrm! far-iiltT I ttittinn with njr frae a1antM. Catalog and V.w Book aent mcc Aaareaa, . iw.niLLiAa, . m.d.d., PrwtdwMtt, I lata at., Laalnctoti, Ma. LORETTOCLLEGE AS it Al'AIIKHV v ' " it - nUngl'EB iiROVKJa, SI. LOUIS, MO. A Boardlnf unt Day School for wtrla and fount ladlta. Under d traction of Blatara of Loratto of Kantneky. Hetru lar oouraaa ta Collate Acadtntle and Preparatory. Conservatory of Music. Bpaolal Departmanta. PJrtproof build- tum. owuinui surrounainca. raw cwhii lajrt, addree Mother Superior, Uapt. ( i raoaTvr umraa. nc ijtraie. no. rf .... . . I. aarffiir'rw