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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1916)
Personal y October 4, 1916 The Charles Mew family are telling their intimate mends ot trie engage ment of their son Phillip and Miss Norma Mack of Buffalo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Mack. Mr. Mack was formerly k democratic na tional committeeman and is editor of the Buffalo Times. No formal an nouncement has yet been made, but Miss Mack's family will make the an nouncement in Buffalo in the near fu ture. ... Miss Mack and her sister, Miss. Harriet Mack, are the guests of the Metz family, having come in yester day from the Metz ranch, where a - house party of .young people was given for two, weeks. Miss Gertrude Metz, a sister of Phillip Metz, gave a large bridge luncheon at the ronte nelb; today for the Misses Mack, who will be out-of-town maids of honor at the Ak-Sar-Ben ball. The Metz fam ily is also giving a, supper at the Omaha club following the coronation ball for their guests. Miss Mack and Mr. Metz met at a house party in Buffalo at the home of Mr.- William Decker, who is also in the party at the Metz home. Miss Mack is a Briar Cliff graduate and a most talented young woman. Having lived considerably abroad, both young women apeak four or five languages. Both are noted for their exquisite taste in clothes and are devoted to sports. Miss Mack won considerable press notice, recently when she as cended in an airship with Lieutenant Phillip Rader, crossing Niagara Falls, the first young woman" who ever took such a trip. . Original Cooking Uub. ' . The members of the Original Cook ing club were the luncheon guests of lyfrs. George B. Prinz today. Since nearly all of the members have re turned from summer vacation!, there was a full attepdance. Pleasures Past .... A luncheon at the Commercial club, followed by an Orpheum theater par ty, was given for Mrs. F. D, Watson of Grand Island, guest of Mrs. Penn Fodrea. A similar party is being planned for" next week. Bridge Party for Bride. ' The Misses Hazel and Helen An derson entertained at a bridge party for Miss Ethyl Tierney, an October bride. Those present were: MlMM lllMM ' Bthyl Tlmy, Tnrra Tltriw, . Rom Whnl.n, Holda Armbruit, ' wuhalmlna Arfnbnwt,Hattta Kuni. Alma SANONn, i Hdlth Mlllir, ' Kthyl Jorf.naoty Vera Wallaea, . Either NelaonV Ma.dam?n Knnilh KMd, Wllaenaan, Mthrl Moll.r, lemma Finnan, Loulaa Htattelt, Viola Moraartjr, MMdamaa , Pholltor, Hanaoa-fraHnont. . Personal Mention, Dr. and Mrs. A. D. Nunn have as their guest Mrs. Niinn's uncle, Dr. J. D. Mc Kinney ot Miami, rla. Bridge Luncheon tt Fontenelle. Miss Gertrude Metz entertained at .a charming bridge luncheon at the Hotel Fontenelle today for her guests, the Misses Norma and Harriet Mack of BulUlo. Small tables decorated with pink roses ware set in the tea room for the fifty-three guests. After luncheon the bridge tables were set m the three parlors on the mezzanine floor. .. For Mrs. Ransom. Mrs. Alex hick entertained at a bridge luncheon at her home today for Mrs. F. E. Ransom of Kansas City, who is the guest of Miss Irene McKnight. After luncheon two tables -jvere set for bridge, Personal Mention. . . MVs, . W. P. Dinwiddle of Mace donia. Ia.. ia visit inn .her niece. Mrs. L. H. Ouren, and Mr. Otiren of this city. Sunday Mr. Dinwiddie motored to Omaha and Mrs. Dinwiddie's and Mr. Ouren'a birthdays were cele brated at a family dinner party. For Misa Schibsby. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Redick gave dinner party at their home Monday evening, followed by a party at the Orpheum and a supper party at the Fontenelle, at which Mr. Stockton Heth entertained the dinner party. Those -present were: Motors, and MMdamin ' W. R. RoStck, Mlia rannla Schlbibr, O. C Rodlck. Mr. Stockton Hith. , Sapper at Fontenelle. Misa Eugenie Patterson will enter tain the membere of the Vail-Jaquith wedding party at supper at the Fon tenelle this evening after the parade. Pink Killarnev roses will be used on the tables. Covers will be laid for ' fourteen. Mr. Ray Lowe will fill the v place left vacant until Friday by Mr. Victor stibolt ot Davenport, ia. Dinner far Bridal Part. - Mr. and Mrs. Clifford R. Welter , will entertain, the Yail-Jaquith wed ding party at the University club be lore me parang tnis evening. Shaffer-Crowley Wedding. The marriage of Miss Catherine Crowley to Mr. Burt Edmund Shaf fer takes place today in Buffalo, N. Y. Birthday Surprise Party. A pleasant birthday, surprise party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Mathewson in honor of Miss Margaret Mathewson on Mon day evening Those present werer- Marcant Mithiwion, Hum Hill. Elilo MftiKlraon, Mildred Urban. Rllher Bob-kin Marsaret Bocn. Maraaret Patca, Beeele McOlll. Auiujta Kralla. - Meaars. Oeorse Klein, Joo Parteolr. Bay Mathewnon, Edward Metheweon. " Ila Meaklman. Ruih Wrlsht, Ida Wrlsht. OartraAa Road, Oortnido Hodoo, Uoitor Hart, Miaarn Sort Kralla, Waltnr Kralla. Herman KnIU, Claado Widen, Ben Koopman, Fred Meyere-' Mr. and Hra William J. Matnawion. On the Calendar. Mrs. George Redick is giving a tea Thursday afternoon, comolimentary to Miss Lucile Bacon, a bride of next week. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Storz are planning a beef steak roast at "Oak ridge," one mile west of Florence, on Sunday. The affair is for Miss Chris tine Miller, the well 'known singer, who come up from Kansas City Sat- Gossip : Society Notes - Woman's Work bymelUflcid urday. morning to be the guest of 1 Miss Olga Storz. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Foye will give a dinner at the Omaha club before the Coronation ball and Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Kountze a supper after the ball for the Minneapolis guests of the Kedicks and Kountzes. Guests for Ak-Sar-Ben. Dr. L. E. Leman, one of Denver s best known physicians, and Mrs. Le man, arrived this morning to be the guests of Dr. and Mrs. A. F. Jonas for the coronation ball. Mrs. Dewey C. Bailey of Toledo, O., will arrive later in the week, another guest at the Jonas home. Mr. Leon Mitchell comes from Rock tstand, III., Friday morning to attend the Ak-Sar-Ben ball, as the guest of the M. C. Peters family. Miss Mae Engler is expecting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Victor of Kansas City, Mo., to arrive the latter part of the week to visit her for a few days. Miss Elaine freeman of Racine, Wis., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. M. G. Hayward, and Mr. Hayward for the Ak-Sar-Ben festivities. Mr. Willard Butler will come up from Kansas City to be with Mr. and Mrs. ;. T. Stewart for the week-end festivities. Miss Whittaker of Lincoln will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. T. B. Martin for the Coronation ball. Miss Whittaker is a niece of Mr. Martin. Miss Irene Grosse of Pasadena ar rived Tuesday evening, to be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. George. Miss Grosse is an out-of-town maid of honor for the Coronation ball. Scottish Rite Dancing Club. A new Scottish Kite dancing club kim rrtjmiTA in ffive narties every other Saturday evening, thus al ternating with the Cinosam club. The next meeting will be held at the Scot tish Rite cathedral, Monday, October 16. at 7:30 in the evening. All who are interested may attend this meet ing. The officers of the club are: Otto Nielsen, president; H. H. Clai bourne, vice president; Dr. Hayes Osanter, secretary, ana n, v.. rorstcr, treasurer. , Social Gossip. ' Miss Gertrude forter leaves sun day evening for the east to enter school. ' Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Rahm are ex pecting Mr-and Mrs. A. D. Malory of Chicago to arrive Friday morning for a visit with them. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Scott left this morn ning for Excelsior Springs, where will meet friends from Chicago thev and St. Louis. Mrs. F. B. Hochstetler left last week for San Francisco to visit her daughter, Mrs Fred Daugherty, and Mr. Daugherty. : , Mrs. Waite H. Squier is now in Chi cago, where she will remain until Fri day. . ,r Mrs. F. D. Wead is at Hastings at tending the convention of Woman's clubs. " v ' Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Wharton returned Monday from a six weeks' stay in Boston and New York. Mrs. A. B. Smith is not expected to return from Honolulu for two or three months. Miss Marie Vernon has returned from Chicago, where she has been spending the summer studying at the art institute. . Mrs. F. A. Nash is expected home Monday or . Tuesday of next wee from an eastern trip. ... Mrs. A. R. Keeline is expected back from the Keeline ranch at Gil lette, Wyo., October 20. Miss Olive Quinn of Gothenburg, Neb., left Monday for National Park seminary, Washington, D. C, where she will attend scnool tnis year. , The Misses r hiilyn and Julia naig, nieces of 'Sir Douglas baig, com mander of the English forces in France, are expected the middle ot next week to visit Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Clarke, jr., en route to their late fath er's ranch in the northwestern part of Nebraska. Their mother is an American and the girls, too, were born in this country, but they were sent to England to be educated. Their home is at St. Leonard-on-the-Sea. The Misses Haig sailed from England September 30. Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. The Queetton at PartlvenOH. Dear Mill Falrfai i- I am II, have a (ood poilcion and am solus about with a lrl of IS who II divorced. What I want t; know la, oould wo b harpy If we married t Would anything of the put be a cloud to our future. I know ihe lovei mo and ihe think! i am maklnf too bl( a rl:- There is no reason why you should not marry this girl and be very happy with her. But if you are going to have a feeling of righteous superior ity and keep reminding her of your "nobility"in overlooking her past that will wreck the lives of both. Suppose she did make mistake and marry, unfortunately, there is nothing crim inal in that, and if you examine your own record and find that she has nothing more serious than that to for give you yon may feel proud of your past, ihe girt evidently nas a tine sense of honor. I hope you will be worthy ot her. Willi Him Hnpplaeee. Dear Mlai Fairfax -I am tl and In lova with a man of IT, who la a widower. Three yeare aso my parenti turned me from their home. Lait winter I met a youni man I had known alnca childhood. After ho had talked with me I looked at life In a differ ent way, and throush hli Influence any par ent took me back and ne obtained a poll tlon for ma In hli father1! firm. Thla young- man told me ha would not me me for a long time, but hoped I would live the way my parent! wanted hi to. I have not aeen him tor ilx montha, atlll rva been happy in my new llf until the other day when hla father Informed me of hi on coming angagement, and now my heart 1 nearly broken. He la going to live in New Hampehlre after hli marriage, which meam 1 ehall never eoe him again. Would you advli me to writo him, telephoue, or what 7 8. M. Tour letter ehowa that you truly appra otat what thl young man has dona for yon undoubtedly ha did It for tha aak of old frlondihin, and now that h la to marry th girl of hla eholc It la your duty to wlih him all hauplneaa.. You will alwaya think of him with th deepest gratitude elneo ho hai roatord yon ta your family and given you a new insight lata use. . THE BEE: "My Sfnr" ,ByNellBrinkley J KJvMI Copyrtltit. ISIS, International Nairn Sonrloa. yr' ' INGERS of the sea need stars. They speak of Sthe velvet night and the diamond stars to make you see and feel the swing of the ship and the world of water and sky. . And -little boy and big, and 'girls, even, too, get a singing in their ears, the call of pirate tales, the "Dry Tortugas," and the music of the southern stars.. All because their tale was gemmed withthe diamond of a star. Poets need stars to rhyme with, to fill the sky that lovers walk beneath, to liken the conjuring eyes of a lady unto, to girdle their songs with, to put there the shimmer and glimmer that must silver the tip of a poet's, pen. The little child looks at the star that opens and closes its glimmering eye of silver and blue and red fire, the star that hangs from the sky like a beau tiful lamp,, in the pinon-tops in the desert, the star that winks remote in the moisture lands like a far , away lighthouse in a sapphire sea, and the little 1 child wonders if another little child looks out and down, with a fat hand on a windowsill. Women's Activities VVVII1C1I ! wn w".vjv ' ... first time as factory inspectors in rrussia. T7..1. Cmit a 1C..vear.n1H girl of Atlanta, is an expert veterinary surgeon. ( TL. !M n,itnne rtriee In Japan have not changed materially in ,SUU years. - A D....n, wnmifl anrl her 17- year-old son are classmates at the University ot California. Eor the first time. in the history of Prlin a wntnin has recently been ao- pointed principal of a public high school. 4 t St-. ( . l. In i.m,i !n tifteiK;iltia of the' coming general election is that three women may take seats as mem bers of the sixty-tirst congress. Mme. Juliette Adam, founder of U. Ma.vII R,vn, and F.tirone's most famous woman journalist, will celebrate her eightieth birthday anni versary next montn. tl!.. P!U Vtnnv tha ariilntor. has completed an imposing monument to southern women lor eretuun on mc grounds of the Tennessee state capi tol at Nashville, t: ........ urili1v tha rlanirhter of the famous field marshal, who in k.:.M Umw (ether'e tit1r han for sev eral years conducted a school for gar dening upon ner estate ai viynue. A lj fire, etiirfont mrolled .1. . ...... rntla.rr nf hiiainfen aitmtn- III IMC lit,. v, . - . istration of Boston university is Miss Mabel (.nen rong. one is me mai Chinese girl in the country to special- : M.J. k,,aini.ee mthnrla with 1C 1,1 UiVV,.!" n - the idea of returning to her country to teacn. , The first woman to be granted a j . i. . . .i .1,. 1 1 pension unacr tun icmio ui m J pension law passed by congress t its recent session ia air a.- wary i-oTcjuj OMAHA, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 5,, 1916. k. .T- -UXl. - 41 of Frederick, Md., who was an inti mate friend of Barbara Frietchie. Mrs. Lovejoy will receive a pension of $20 a month in recognition of her husband's services as a private in the Fifth Ohio infantry. ' The .states in which women may vote for president November 7 are Illinois, Kansas, Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, Utah, Arizona, Idaho, Ore gon, Washington, California and Ne vada. . These states have a total of ninety-one votes in the electoral col lege. It is easily conceivable that if cast as a unit they might decide fhe election, as there are more than 4,000, 000 women to vote. WE FEATURE all . L COLOKS U.UALJllC'S FOR MEN, 55c to 11.00. FOR WOMEN, 75c to $2.00 FADDEN & BITTNER 61 1 South 16th StrawL THE HIGHEST QUALITY : MACARONI JWKHERMFG.C0uOMAkA.UiA. The girl spreads wide her white hand with the pretty nails and sees the rays of a white stone on her third little finger. And she looks up at (he star and thinks only that it looks as her diamond did against the blue velvet of its box. And the-star winks. And wakes reflected fire in the poor bit of lover's glass. Mothers look at the star and see there the face of a child long dead. , A man looks up at the stars and sees My Star" the ace that helps him to lift his feet lighter on rocky ground. The man at the wheel on the sea, the trudger in mountain-land, finds his North Star andsteps out with a feather-like heart tramp-tramp. The lover on the busy trail, through brambles and over terrifying trouble-spots, tips up a chin once in a white to find his Lodestar, and steps out with a singing heart on the right trail tramp-tramp I And tramping he sings him f song, "My star ts a high star, shining down on me: Its silver ray comes all the way and touches my heart I am not afraid." - : . , NELL BRINKLEY. , "1 Bought My Piano - on Installment -Why Can't IBuy My Fall Suit That Way? . "You can, Patricia. I'm sure it's as sensible to pay for our clothes by the week as it is to pay for our homes, pur furniture and almost everything else little by little. I ALWAYS get MY wearables that way I go to Beddeo'i." ' "Yes, that's where I intend to go, too, Margie. Beddeo's at 4417 Douglas street I wouldn't think of trading at any other credit store in fact, Beddeo's is where a dozen girls I know buy everything they wear, and' they say the styles there are exquisite. ; "Oh, they ARE, Patricia ! I don't know WHEN I've seen such dar ling suits as they're showing now Jots of cute Norfolk and a won derful line of those graceful, semi tailored models with coats that flare below the waist line. All the good shades, of course, and the correct materials, too. You ought to see them right away,- Patricia." . "Indeed, I shall 1 I can buy my suit for about a third of the price, can't I, Margie? So I thought and I'll pay the rest by the week, because that's how I get my salary. "Now, let me see if I have the address right 1 Oh, yes, Beddeo's Three-Floor Credit Store, 1417 Douglas street, and the ladies' dept. occupies the entire street floor. I'll go tomorrow." : Household Topics. The Wife's Share . By DOROTHY DIX. Hope and courage are the founda tion stones on which success rests. We can only do as much as we be lievewe can do. Take away from a man faith in his own ability to achieve and you foredoo him to failure. Dis courage him by glomy forebodings and you paralyze his energy. Theres are a few bromidic facts hat I wish to call to the attention of those wives who complain of their ack of luxury because their husbands are poor and they 'suppose they must get use i to being shabby, since Jdhn isn't one of the kind who just compel success. Most women whose husbands can not provide them with limousines lift up their voices in this wail of woe. They cry out that their husbands will never succeed, which is the crudest and most foolish thing they can pos sibly do. It is fcruel. because no other criti cism cuts to the quick of a man's soul like his wife s. Of all tre world she is the one being before whom he wants to shine and there can come no bitterer humiliation tq him than to realize that she regards him as o poor, weak, incompetent, who isn't capable of holding his own. No man is ever down and out so long as his wife believes in him, so long as he can come home at night in a brave and smilinsr face, to a woman who inspires him with her own optimism. The man who has that sort of a wife always has another fiffht left in him. ' He can't be con quered, because he js bound to justify his wife's opinion of him. The strongest force on earth is' fighting with him, and in the end he succeeds. The man who never comes back is the man whose wife's complains be cause he isn't a Rockefeller pr a Morgan add the last straw under which his courage breaks. He is the nun who comes home to a whining wife after a hard and anxious day, who has all of his mistakes flaunted in his face, perhaps before strangers. In justice to the complaining wife who takes a despairing view of her husband, and tells him he wil never succeed, she seldom means halt she says. She really doesn't think that her husband is a failure, or the pros pects are as gtomyi as she pretends that sne aoes. ane is merely mauig ing herself in woman's besetting sin of self-pity. 11 IB a pity -women uu nut rciic tow hungry their husbands are for ? little praise -and encouragement, how they long to hear from their wives' lips Some appreciation of what they have achieved, some prophecy of hope and faith in their future suc cess. The curious rserve that exists between men does not permit them to praise one another to their faces. Fireproof s Europou Hotel Loyal ' tStk and Capital OMAHA,. - - - NEBRASKA Rooms, $1.00 and $1.60 With Bath, $1.80 and Up Cafe the Very Best Popular Prices STOP AT THE LOYAL No Matter If the Ice Gives Out r You can always be milk and cream if you 1 Co flfcitVKPJ nvionn a. i ED KIllllaK Sterilised Cottage Milk is the richest milk nth oothmg taken out ex. cepi ster and with nothing added. (tt perfect stenlization makes ic more sanitary thinbottle milk. There it no danger of contamination at to the bottling, handling and delivering of ordinary milk. All animal germs have been eliminated from Cottage miia. Thai s why lasts longer and doesnt take on the odors of other foods m the ics bos aftei it is Conis Milk is made in Bar than twice use looa rsuutt m isw ' milk. . Fa flavw. richness, . convenience ' and acoonnsy Cottage Milk 11. unexcelled . ; THS MUJC WITHOUT THE COOKED TASTS III Two Sizes -5 and 10c : " As all GaW Dealers' y 1 AMERICAN MILK CHICAbU n ii A man cannot tell another man that he thinks he is wonderful, that his work is a marvel, and that he believes he is going to do stupendous things. Only a woman can say that to a man. That is why every mn must have some woman about him. That i why men marry, and it is when the wife fails to bolster up a man's faith m himself by her faith in him that he goes out lo king for some other woman to do.it. And when he finds her he cats her his a nity. Between the woman who, when her husband lags along the road, says to him, "I know you have it in you to succeed. I know you are going to do big things," and the woman who says ,to her huhband, "You will never gel cn. You are not , one of the peopk who get on," . is the difference be; tween success and failure. Between the woman who, when hci husband meets with misfortune iu business, says to him, "You've madi one success. You can make another: this is just a setback. We'll start ail over again, and do better than we did before," and the woman who saysvtti her husband, "You've made a failure ;ou've shown you don't know how to get on. Take a small job and work for somebody else," is the difference betweei! the man who comes back and the man who is down and out. It pays to believe in your husband, ladies. Think it over. Miladys Slippers for th Coronation Ball , Should be a Pair of Walk-Overs It She Detiret FuhionV Newest Styles. ;" Th molt popular this season re. ,t. - " Gold and Silver Cloth Pumps, i Black and Whit Satin Beaded ! Slippers. Patent one, two and j threeatrap Slippers, Plain Satin Pumps and Boots, which we will tint to matcn your gown. . Gold nd Silver Cloth Boot with white satin tops. Beautiful styles, $10 -The prices of our pumps and slippers are from"-. $3.50 to $10 - We have Phoenix and Onyx Silk Holier? to match any of our pumps and slippers. WALK-OVER BOOT SHOP sir So. ietk St. sure of pure, sweet, fresh haye on hand a supply of Uniwaatened opened, as reaaiiy spotless conaensenc. vtu uw COMPANY ttaqe