I 8 . 7 ' ' ' v - THE BEE : OMAHA, TUESDAY, ' -NOVEMBER 7; 1916.' ! . ...... "r- . PersMal-Gossip-: Society Notes : Woman's W.ork .: i Household': Topics Pm&& Do :Worm Have iMelligence? November 6, 1016 leinir a wife of t candidate for of fice has its disadvantages these atir Sine nre-election- davs. especially if ?:he candidate is.fof the office of sena- r and is out on long speaking tours :nrougnoui ine siaic. A tamily tnend was asking Mrs. ohV L. Kennedy something about er husband, so the story goes, when Irs. Kennedy replied: "I really can't tell you. Mr., Kenn edy, has" been away so much of the ime, and ne is so ousyr i scarcely I live time to talk to him at all. I The friend was sympathetic and fMra. Kennedy continued: I "And the worst part pf it, there fare two-questions I have to ask Mr. iKtiyiedy that are most important, yet It never get the opportunity. I think I ijshall have to go to some meeting Jwhere Mr. Kennedy is -to make an siddresa and when he is' speaking A shall 'heckle' him. 'I'm going fo cry rut: .. " "'JohniL. Kennedy, will you put mp the storm windows, or shall I?1 or komj such othei heckling question." I But Tuesday evening when the elec Mion .returns indicate that Mr. Ken nedy will replace our hyphenated con temporary s editor oown ine; street, M r: Kennedy is going to "enior the (victory along with hosts of the popu lar candidate s nenos and supporters. SurpriM PrtJ. ' v I A surprise party was given in honor lit Miss Marv Sorenson at her home 9iday evenirig. Those present were: ' Mle utH Hook, , par BwanlMrs, JSleanor Raven, , lUabel ffaneen,, Alyrtle Martin, Sllarlo O'Donnelt, blara Rnrenion, MeMa. nolin' u'Donnall, IKImar Banfon, lene Couain, Clra IlnMl. ' Mildred Baranion, Hlen I.lik.rl, Tekla Funk, . 1' Allra Swop., v ; AIM O'Dona.n, Orph Sorenaon. Joaeph Naohtlsaff, y l.olB Kavan, ' Rlahard KynaltaM , Irfulla KynatK, m , Uatrtl Mennle. y flwolil help. Mrthirynan, Return from Honeymoon. ' -i Mr and Mr.. Walter Scott Penfield fwere expected to arrive in New York jthis inornhig.- Waiting to greet mem lwill be Mrs. , Howard, Baldrige of iOmaha and Mr. John Cliftoniaiid Mr. dr. John Clifton and MM yonn oarrei tji nuuniKwu. Barret was in Europe at the time of Hheir marriasre and he ,wished to be khe first to greet them pn their return 1 i ! In Panama the Penfields were leasantiytertained. . At tne sta- !ftion they wer met by a carriage of fine "president ana an armiui m nuwers Hvas ent Mrs. Penfield. Their Woms opeired on a balcony overlook fen the Pacific and there they break- 1 ; ifasied, Recording to theujtoi:i of the P ;jicountr,yy,at 11:30. '- ' '- , '-. 'Society Night Pirtiei. ' , V ,' T.K. H.oaT anritw niirlif nartipl will 1 ! !be nivn at the Orphetim' this even Sing. Reservations hae been made by j Norrisf Brown, J. m. Baiarige, juage1 Baker. L. M. . Cohan, H. S. Clarke, Carl Furth, . J.-Hanigan, JJ. Hess, Q. C. Redick, J. T., Stewart an,d J. A. Cavers.,- 'V i v -' A psrty of twelve, which attends the Orpheum every twe; weeks to, gether. and follows the theater" by supper at the Fontenelle, will have seats. Mr. and Mrs. Mavnard Swartz ' Mr mnA V( Unwirri Hnrwlrirh. I t fMaa1lv tnnihara nfthlt 'oartv. will will be: iiur U. Hlatt, Hanrr Ityfaard, j Q. C. Homan, A. if. Kartman. k atVPIawar, ' .i Dr. and lira. Lrn Plsllftr. J. ' , E. McCullough has reservations for ten.-for Thursday fijatinee. . . Needlework Guild Reception. , ' , Any woman who will make an Vn- tiuai donation oi iwo new- riicica ui weiring ajparel .or household linen may become a Inember of Omha hranch of the Needlework Guild of America and iftav attend theanniAl meeting, and recerrtion edneeday; anu lllUIDUar Ul I " I. t jm.wm hall 1716. Dodge street. The recep tion Thursday afternoon, when all the garments collected atft on exhibition, is open to the publicVas well. .The I business meeting . is called for "Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock. Social GflasiD. ? .. i-. : Mr. and Mrs. Isaac' Miller Ray mond, jr., of Iliticln motored to Omaha-Sunday; ' '', . : ( Miss . Eugenic, Patterson returned Sunday evening from -Kansas City, where she went to attend the wedding of. her cousin, -Mr. John ' Patterson, to Miss'itlildred Wagoner on Octo ber. 28, at the Wagoner home. Miss Wagoner visited in Omaha last win ter with Mrs. Eaul Gallagher. , ', " -" y. " " ' ' Entertainedin l,incolri."V. , A party of Omaha people who went to Lincoln Saturday for the foot ball game took dinner and spent the night with Mr. and Mts. Jsnac Miner Ray mond, jr., of that city, returning, to Omaha by 'motor Sundayr The party included: ' ir- ' , SIan-a. an Meadaa T; RtiM U. Tciwle. B. A, Cnlhn,, , Mra 1Valtf Roberta, t V t Mr.' Rlrt ConnaU. ,' Tuesday Dance Cancelled. , : ,-u The regular Tuesday evening danc( at- the Metropolitan club will not be given this week because "of electmn. Miss Evelyn McCaffrey, manager, de cided that the majority of people would prefer , to remain downtown to hear cjectioii. returns, f . ,,. ' Luncheon for Mist Carrington. V ' - Mufs Emily Keller efttertained at luncheon at hef home. today for, Miss Anita Carrington t of !lew Haven, Conn., who is the guest of Miss Me liora 'Davis. A centerpiece of yellow flowers arranged In a basket with harmonizing place cards termed the (able decorations.. Covert -were laid 'i6r sixteen. . ... T 1 .. For Bridal Partyi ' - Miss -Daphne retff will entertain fourteen guests, the tnembera of the Caldwell-Vinsonhater wedding yrty, it 'the-prpheum this evening, fol lowed, by supper at the Fontenelle. " - r - Personal Mention, ' 1 - Mrsi DelvaiiT.f Beckfi1 of Mitchell, S. D.. vrbo BDefit a few days with her jothef, Mrs. H. ltosenstock, returned to lirrJiome yesterday. ; ., , Mrs. Alfred Ko:he of TroyTN, Y., hyeltytcid who is the guest of Miss Irene Coad, will visit in Omaha until Thanks giving. On the Calendar. ' The sisterhood of Temple Israel will give a bridge party thjs afternoon in the vestry room of the temple. The Columbian club will , entertain at its half, Twenty-second and Locust streetsat 2:30 Wednesday afternoon. The hostesses, for the occasion will be Mesdames Charles Burns and Will iam Collamer1. V - S.ending Girl to ' Expensive School By DOROTHY DIX. A woman in verjp,moderate, financial circumstances said to me the pther 4iyt . V' "We' are going to serld Mamie off to Miss Blank's school this year. It ia friirlitfullv ' exoensive- ana costs more than' we really can afford. But i it s very fashionable, and she will be thrown with girls who belong to the real (society set. so I felt ' that we (.should make the sacrificed -, Poor, silljt mother I Poor un fortunate little Mamie, who is to De the victim of the greatest uninten tional oruelty in the - world that of having tastes, habits'1 and aspirations cultivated in her that she will never have the means to gratify!- '" Surely -of all sad sigh t no spectacle' is more pathetic than that of i)oorut foolishly ambitious parents who work themselves to deaths and deny Jhemr selver every comfort in order to curse their daughters by sending them off to fashionable schoWs. 1 , , ' there .the girl without money is thrown with the' girl who' has rnoney tlTburn. There the impecunious maid, whose lot it is to walk through life, learns that it is better Jo have been born dead than ot to "have been hnrn in a TuiulV-rvlinHr litnmlsine. -ri..... rk. ;.i nt inu,1u rank Inrtia '"-rthat society is the ultnwate end otnu man imbition, and that the chief ob ject of life is to wear Paris importa- tinna and mitHraa nne m neiffhhnr. - Perhaps- that it alf very well for lit tle Mist Millionaire, to. whom society is going to bva career ansl a business. Ik is doubtless important ' that , she should spend much time in learning the" art of dinner giving and learn how to devise amusenTents that will keep overfed, blase guests from yawn ins in her, face. ' But no education could be more demoralizing than this to a poor girl. . It teaches the poor girt fo took with Contempt upon -the plainness of her own home, and to despise her hard worked paretits. .More than that, sha must- be continually mortified either by the simplicity of her clothes or else, by ,1V extravagance 'in trying to keep up.'.with her tchooltnatca and thut adding1 fresh burdens land more hardships on her mother and father. She must either withdraw from the corrfaraderie -of school life and seem niggardly and mean by not playing her part m achool affairs, or else she becomes a .parasite and a dead beat by participating in-- pleasures for which s,ome one, else 4ayt. ,' The inevitable esult of such school life must be, to 'make her either an anarchist, hating the rich girl who has more than she !hatV or "else t aycot nnant who lawns and flatters in. the hope oi holding on to the skirts of ihV wMlthv. i . Nor need any fond mother deludes herselrwtth the belief that the friend ships formed with victt girls at such schools open tin? "door t of, society to the poor girl. No matter, how inti mate ithe poor girl and .the rich girl have been in aetiool the poor girl finds that, the relatioixhip ends at the schoolyeate, '! ". 'M i v If, the. rich girl ' if good natured, there may be a few invitatiops.to quiet affairs extettded the poor gr), and when they meet there may he a sus picious warmth of. affection on th pen. girls part, but : their paths lie in different directions. - and school friendship it not strong enoinb to bridge over tljetiasm that lies be tween the mansion, on-ihe avenue and the cheap flat on. a bark streef But for the poor gitT the tragedy is completyt. She j hat ' been made dissatisfied with her own -horns and friends and her Own lot in life, and has been given no. other. She has learntd to despise the -worthy poor young. trk or- bookkeeper who"1 would 9arry her, and there is no. fairy prince, loominK up on the hori-. ion to bear her. away to palace on -the Hudsdn. , ., She yearns . for society, and the nearest, she ever gets' to if it reading in- the papers ,the accounts of .balls and parties to which the- is never asked. he has been1 given a cham pagne tUrt, and the has only, "hy vant Vatcr with which to quench it. . . V. ; ; . .: 0 X -impjorc'poof parents not fo be. gviUy of, the .supreme 'folly of sending their' dauglvrers, off. to fash-, ionablt schools. Send "your girls to school Tvlicre she will associate with. girlsf her. own cl class, where. she wiM learti- the things that will' sweeten iftd not embitter her, wher she will aefmire practical knowledge that will 'be Vf .use .to her, instead of frjlls that will be in her way. , Do not believe for one minute-that , a lociety education will onen the doors ol the FourV Hundred for a poor gjrl. huoliNan investment -is a ticket, that alwavt draws a blank, in phe lottery of life. ) , furthermore, don t .sacrifice your self and jlo without a winter over' coat, or. a new suit, to try fo hjve yoor daughters Maught -complish-ments" for'which they have no apti tude., Ha g(rl hat talent, develop, jt, htrt'for aity's sake don't force her into trying to do, aofiiething that lature nverrtntended her to do. Remember that a school lets itt ineffaceable seal upon a .girl. She it t the ... plastic and lnrpcessionable time ol life. Her teachcri form her ideals. Her -schoolmates make her traditions. Therefore, . nd i your daughter, to- a school that will edu cate herto M a happy, contented woman; itfstead of a disappointed; disgruntled one. t , V ' - A r. I?' f5 -.a i. r -" ' " , o f - t- ., in -Tinir-n-r-irrfrTff--r"lilMBaiiiii i " r i i f n , In -this' ' '.V case -". this, worm cJiose 'j -"the .straight ', - "'path'- to the turf after ' , one or two attempts, hy GARRETT P. SERVISS. It is always interesting to fflce an animal strrring to do things which re quire something resembling hunian In telligence for their accomplishment. There is an irrestible fascination about every glimpse of mind action that we can catch in the world beiow us, per haps because it is mind alone that gives ut our, superiority. j ' ' . ( The scenes of an ant-hill are' some-J timet at absorbing as those of a thea ter. But'ants rank high in the in' tellectual aristocracy of the sub-human branch' of the animal kingdom, and. their prestige is so great, owing to the praises of naturalists, ' that mary reader's no doubt think that they are', in respect! t intelligence, - i .iMn.. k.. . u . k.... ' 'the 'fact that creatures so humble as earth-worms exhibit glimpses "of what seems like mind, which, In some respects, eius the similar exhibitions of 'the patrician ant. Locomotion supplies orre of-the 'best - -t Ti-ri-m-iMfl-T "' I 32? ULf I Forlnigestion-Three Square Meals ti Big doctors' now prescribe' delicious jt Big foods for indigestioni, What you 7 Want and ail you intent, prepared with 100 Pure Butter-crf-Nuti i for S&isg Used exdusiveiy in Dr. Liercliin's famous ihstitutioii fot .digestive diseases , at Zurich, C and endorsed by priysicians and food l chemists the world over. ' ! ' . 1 Dr. W; Wiley-SA'wTiy hi Buriu at Wuhitigton, D,- ' anted bV the 1 Dr. Edward S. Hodgikij, Food EiW-I give yoa a most unqualified endonemenc of SATAIf . - . . Alned W.'McCPuRcaEipr-Jt reallfc a wnsdotul : , . feodituff. -1 can't owntiiaiaui its virtuta, , A ' ' 't ' Pror'UB.rii,aiDji-& . , itself the duality a aaxUenc Th anJyii. ahowa no preaetva, -.-i tivts, no Mulonuvea, :' , , v . , (. MAJMHMAXLOW CAftAMEL PUDDING . mat luca onaa f-aulk . . " BUapeaUyTSaMar - i n twttpoonful vanillt Swfc krjaa la eaM aatar Kalf hour, acaa eut naiaan A4 cn&afclabmalanlMU. Milt tha utl-poonfulof n aUtp LA llllk Iht lllllll Ill II SaMajjiad.aBilU.Baka in Snharad pwUma Ma atodarataJ ane aaa uTBrma oaiuaulr. t W tat tumf, aV SAUTE PRODOpTS WoolworthTowtt, PILlEtS diaaaaaa Ctarad Mr Frea Boak for , rrf-n tV O. V. OLEK IV mill FiitulaV, PI Bptl women. Eitabllihed 1ST, SrHOIAtlBT. A photograph after a ... rain, Showing - t the tracks left earthworVns in an. ..effort to cross ar road. tettt of animal intelligence. When any creature shows purpose in its movements we are'justified iat-assurh- mg that it has a mind of its own. The theories of. "tropism," i. e. the tendency of a living being to respond in definite ways to extern jl impulse's wfthout any conscious choice of its own, do hot convince me that the lower animals, are mere physiological mechanisms. The human brain is filled with a great fire of intelligence; tlje animal Vain contains , only a spark, but it is fire of the same es sence. - V ..- - -. To return to earth-worms, herewith are photographs of the 'tracks made on a rain-wet road by some of those creatures when crossing the carriage way in search of the turf bordering it. The track f, one worm, to which, ujc pnuioarapncr paiu particular at tention, consisted of a series of rough circles, each larger v than its .prede cessor, or of one gradually Enlarging circle, so that the worm was really making' a reconnaisancef ; i Why should it do that if it Had. no will and no. idea of. what it wanted? It is interesting to compare the con duct of -(his worm trying to findthe way to food whose existence "was eiincr sign mca Dy ns senses, or. cer- u been malaxed 'tnA DrC, iRh tha roult that f .L.. u . II L sr.that Sarva ntk enaau f'Trtm Smf h Nutn- . ' CORPORATION New York Z , 4 " vr CJ1 m ylllll iiiiiii " Jm I I I I I rTTITTlTTlTrwfl 1 1 1 1 1 1 uara and all nlmilar LC ll I d 1J irad undrr a poaltWa IV I M I r I'm ondea a DOaitl Batll euri Eitabllihed permananttv ta Del Mnlnaa for Sir Ooad Blookr Da MOtHBS, IOWA. tified by its previous experience,- with what the great Napoleon did in Egypt when, with his staff, he was caught in thelrising wafers of the 4tu u Willie .ivukiiib ,'ivi -iiiv ayj where Moses is said to have -led thi escaping Israelites across. The members of the youn& gener al's staff were-dashing vainly hither and thither insearch of the ford,' when he called them together and started them simultaneously on radial lines toward all points of the com pass. Evidently tins' was the quick est way to find where the fori lay. The worm-, singly, could not, do that, but it did what Napoleon, it he had been alone, would have done if rah around in a widening circle, to find its wav out .of the road. This study of the. intelligence of animals by inspecting their tracks has often, been pursued by natural-, isfs, and it has been most interesting ly applied -in. the case of ants, which follow methods similar to that above .ascribed to the worm when search ing for'something which they cannot see, bjit of whose existence they are, in some way, aware. . At this time of the , year anyone driving along a country road is surei- to see , caterpillars making tneir way straight across the road, hardly turn ing aside to avoid obstacles. If one of them descends into a deep rifli it invariably climbs ouKof it on the Tide toward whichit was originally fiav eling, and, if itgoes around an insur mountable obstacle it resumes the original direction when the traverse is finished. , v'. If you stop and turn one" of these caterpillars around, and set it going backward, or at right angles to its course, (it'will turn again to -its' chosen direction, like -a needle to the.pote, and this it will da. so persistently that there is no, escaping the conclu sion that the act is either the result of an exercise of will or a deliberate and 6xed choice, or. that it is an im planted "tropism," resembling in "its effects tha gowth of a tree, upwaYiJ against the force of-gravity. -. For ' my part, 1 find it difficult td believe that the caterpillar has, wot an individual 'consciousness of the di rection it Wants to follow. The op posite belief" when pursued -to -its limit leads inevitably to tlje hypothe sis that we ourselves are mere' me chanisms,' and that, whatf! we sup pose to be our- free wjll Is nothing more than a moral gravitation, which we obey as the tides. obey the 'pull of tne moon. ' Don't forget ; WRIGLEYS , after every meal , ' i WM. I 1 If llll I - I II If I I I I ' A V s i ' l i a; 3 . e i it a i .. . , i ",' . ) - SSS!J.W M ,,,,,,,,.-m. a-, t-i. ...... I ' r Wives' L Might Have Been By JANE M'LEAN. , Sometimes "I" actually regret not marrying Terry . Walsh. He was: sa dearand so big,, and so sincere, . and most of. all, so Irfsh. HU face was Seri ous, but when he smiles little wrinkles appeared at hf? eyes, arid then, be side, he loved me. Somehow there is fascination . about being really adored. ' " , . I don't hiean just having a man like a girl well enough to take her around. A i ...i : i .J miy Kin wnu is siumiiiiK iuukuik ana makes a good appearance can have suitors of (hat kind, i mean "the kind 1 1 ever do regret it at all,-1 .regret giy- -of a rnad who follows a girl around ling up Terry. J don't think I loved with his eyes, a man who would sacri- I him too selfishly, either: . I think it . ' ficeianything to buy tittle things to give a girl, and who would take no Sains to hide his adoration because it just'bubbled; up and choked him so that he coulan t. Mv first meeting with Terry Walsh was when I was rather young, am it Was my first romance. I thought Ihere was nobody like him, but that was in the days when I was too younj? to be married, and 1 could flirt with anyone I liked' without ..jippearing too 'scriivivs,. A very young girl never stops to think ,that 'a was who is older than she is has diffexentdeas dnlhe subr ject, and Terry 'did noi want, to let me, go without making turn a promise. Of course I didn't actually promise. I was- just a little bit frightened when I saw how serious he was. f didn't see him again for three years. When Terry came into my life the! econJ-ime I was vtired of the menj one meets tfi the city.' All the end-fl less round of frivolous- amusement sickened me, and I was glad to turn back to" a man who, wasvsolid and had something to him. ," : But when I began' to-be serioiis myself there were. other things to consider. I have never cared anything at all about Terry's grandmother, 'nor his mother, nor nrs sisterj tney were not at aH likeJTerry;-in'facf, I always thought they tbok advantage of his gooduess, but, of course, he tould neve'r-look at it that way. I was almost 'ready to throw Over everything for Terry, and I should have done irJoo, if I might have had a tiny apartment with him .all alone. I could have laughed over doing my own work,-and even making, my own clothW, and-I would have loved Terry more every day, for he deseVves it. But I just couldn't have part of the family to liwe with me. s : " ,' "I'd be willing to give them so much a week to live elsewhere," I said al- Soldiers cheer it' because it cheers them. On the march or in camp, this delicious, , soothing,' thirst-quenching confection, sua' tains, refreshes and steadies nerves, the armies in Europe ' have consumed greats quantities. ; It has proven its merits to them. , TW Mirror' - , '. y, n ; Writ for tht WrigUy Sptarmty't fm book of jtngla'md pictttrts, in color. WRIGLpYJR CO.. 'Dipt 1627, CHICAGO most tearfully, "when Terry and I talked it over. " But Tery said that bis mother had .. no other- place to go, and his .sister w'a taklnc care of her now. but that he had promised to share the' burden v: as soon as he was able. Besides that, Terry's yflunger brother was at col- lege, and of course he-would want to spend his vacations with us in the city. ' Terry almost admitted this .... fact, and in my mind's eye I could see his sister afld their commonplace -i husbands making us frequent visitt, ; and perhaps arriving' just as I was .. about to-entertain a little bit myself. ; Anyway; it s all -over now, and if was just a case Of being able to read' the future. I loved Terry Well enough to marry him, but I knew as, sure as ' fate that as soon as it meant stretch-. '" ing ihy love to the extent of having , , his entire family precipitated, upon me, I should grow to hat my life and incidentally be sorry that I had married Terry at all. , i . Terry loved me mare than I loved , him eVen, but he simply sacrificed me to his family, because he thought : his duty lay that way. Perhaps it did, and for'their sakes I. am glad he -held out.' I'm sure I don't know how " many girts thereare in -he world who are happilv settled with mother- ,f in-laws, but X do know this no two-.,-. young people should ever expect' to live with a third party in the house.4 I have seen (his disturbing elements break up love -and trust, and do more harm than- it eyer. could benefit "5 THE HICHE5TQUAUTY ' - EGG NOODLES 36 hp'Rtdpt Book fttt , SKINNER MRG.Cdu OMAHA, USA . i, v4MGfST HACAKONt fACTDIV IN AMERICA " . PHONE TYLER 1000 tea yoa wOJ raoalTa .tha taas oonrtsons sanlM as tnoufts raa war Oaiivirlas' rnu Wamuaa ia m aaa offla ta pmsoa. ' '. I . f . ' . '..' ' ' M for and Get Skinner5 J