Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 09, 1916, Page 10, Image 10

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1916.
Personal Gossip -: Society Notes .' Woman's Work : Household Topics
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November 8, 1916.
Qutfits for destitute infants, regular
sewing classes, household visiting,
providing Christmas toys these are
few of the charitable things which
keep busy the members of the Christ
Child society. This society was or-
Snired about ten years ago by Mrs.
C. Stapleton, who is soon to leave
the city. At a meeting of the execu
tive board, which includes thirty mem
bers, yesterday morning at the Christ
Child center plans for the year were
roughly mapped out and some com
mittees appointed.
Of these committees the "most in
teresting was the one composed of
Mcsdames A. V. Kinsler, Arthur
Keeline and YV. A. C. Johnson, wlu;
are to provide Christmas toys for
really deserving families. Mrs. F. B.
Aldous it chairman of the visiting
committee. Anyone who contributes
to the society is considered a mem
ber, but active members are those
who actually work in the organization.
Perhaps the most extensive work is
the teaching of sewing, which is car
ried on by members of the society and
their friends who volunteer. Classes
re conducted at St. Phitomena's
tchool every Saturday morning and
at the settlement house sometimes
during the week. Among the volun
teer teachers are Misses Margaret
Mcbhane, Mary ruray, Mary burkley,
Margaret Bushman, Julia Mullen and
Wary Cotter. Mri M. K. Murphy, the
present active president of the society,
heads the list of matrons who teach.
Mrs. Arthur Mullen and Mrs. P. J.
Despecher are other, teachfrs.
, Each year the organization makes
three dozen sets of infanta' garments.
There ire always calls for that many
ets in really worthy and destitute
families in Omaha. Sometimes there
is call for more. The next meeting
will be held the first Tuseday in De-
' cember and at that time the newly
appointed committees will make re
ports, .f. 1
Bridal Affairs, '
Miss Regina Connell gave a pretty
luncheon for Miss Isabel Vinsonhaler
at her hone today. Bridal decora
tions, tulle and 'Russell roses, were
used on the tabic. Covers were laid
tor;
llleaea
O.rtrurie Mala,
ilarr Van Klaeck of
Poughkeepale.
Anna Olfford.
paphne Peters
leabel Vtnannhalar,
-Marian Towla,
aleedamee
. Y. J. Conn.ll,
' efeedatnae
V. J. Hill of Kaneae
Dunoan U, VKuonhalar.
Reynolds-Hobbs Wedding. ?
' The marriage of Mist Ethel Marie
Hobbt, daughter of Mr. and Mn. H.
A. Hobbt; to Mr, Paul Reynolds, will
take place this evening at 8 o'clock
at the home of the bride's parents,
Rev. M. V. Higbee of the North Pres
byterian church officiating.
Miss Dorothy Ransom of Bancroft,
who is now attending Bellevue col
lege, will play the wedding .march.
Mrs. Raymond Travis will sing "Be
cause." The bride will be attended
by Miss Virginia Weller at maid of
honor and Mr, Richard Reynolds,
brother of the bridegroom, (will act
as best man. 'Little Robert Hobbs
will carry the ring in a white chrys
anthemum. The house will be decorated with
pink and. white roses, carnations and
chrysanthemums, with palms and
ferns,' ' " .
The bride will be arrayed in white
crepe de- chine, with trimmings of
radium lace and pearls. - The gown is
made short and full, tight bodice effect,
with low round neck and puff sleeves.
Her bridal veil of tulle is caught in
cap effect by lilies of the valley. She
will carry a shower bouquet of bride's
roses and lilies of the valley. Miss
Weller"! frock is of flesh-colored chif
fon and she will carry pink roset.
A reception follows the ceremony,
at which seventy-five relatives and
friends will be present. Mr. and Mrs.
Reynolds will leave this evening for
Minneapolis, and from there will go
Advice to Lovelorn
. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
Emotion or I .oyer
Hear Mies Falrfai! While awer In the
country thle aummer, 1 renewed acquaint-
nee with a young man-whom t have alnce
learned to love very dearly. My coueln. at
whoae home w m atayed. la lecretly en
cased to 4 young slrl. but before ua they
never contreal their affectlona. Now Ihla
young man alwaya reel blue when he aeea
them totother and admlta that he alao needa
affection and aa we four are alwaya to
Bother ha comet to me. He haa never
poken a word of love to me and therefore
1 am very mlaerable. Mow ran 1 find out
ate true feeling resardlna met B. K. R.
It Is not well bred tor your- coueln and
kla fiance to Indulsa In a ahow ot affection
nefore you. And If thle youns man la high
strung and emotional he may limply reepond
to tha ntmoaphere whan he altempta to
arena you. I think youra Is ana of tha
rohlema lima muat solve. Poeatbly you
might aak him If ha la Judging you to be
f m little aelf-reepecttnt dignity that you
don't mind beln aublected to tha whlma
of a paeolns emotion.- If you can handle It
delkataly a diaeuealoa of the altuatlon may
clear up matters, . , . - . '
Whan Lav Cornea Lata la Ufa. '
' Dear Mlee Falrfai: I am II and In love
With a man eome yeare my eenlor, whom
i neve Known etnee entianood. unlit re
eenlly I had no treat affection for him,
out now I find myaelf thinklni of him verv
often. Weuld you advlae me to make known
my feellnae to hint, or remain aa I am.
an old maldT ' Are marries ee at my ate
In a eonveraatlon with my mAiw
oently he told her he alwaya thought a
o'a, oeai mi ma ana to mm l appeared
eo different from other women he kn
le It 'net alrenae that t feel thla way
now? When my girl frlenda were maklns
hmea for themeelvea I waa ao Indiffer
ent toward men and never courted favor
with any af them; In fact, avoided them aa
much aa aoeetble. And now 1 am aeeklnc
UI8CONTENTKD WOMAN.
' The love sf maturity la often far bluer
and finer than that of youth. Don't deny
youreelf happlne becauee your emotlona
naa -forae te flower lata In life. You
have beila of, nnderatandlng and old
frlondahle, upon whloatf build. I think
(mat happtneea will atlll be youra after
all, the autumn haa beauties aa treat aa
any the euring can ahow.
fiat One, Anyhow. (
The aAeoaed waa a beautiful woman. Un
der the ctreumalaoeea her-xamlnalloa waa
purely a matter of form, atlll legal formal!
Ue had to he oneerved.
"I ondemund." eald the detective, "that
elurlng the abaeneo of your . hue band you
ehot a burglar?
I ale." the beautiful lady admitted, a
''What became of him?"
"Why, the other burglar took him away.1
. "Which other burglar rk
"The one 1 Boot at,' Philadelphia ledger.
to Chicago and farther east. They
will return to spend the winter at the
Hobbs home m Omaha. Mr. and
Jits. H. A. Hobbs leave the middle
ot uecemoer lor lantoriua.
Out-of-town guests at the wedding
are: .
Mwrv. end Meedamee
G. H. Rarmnm of W. H. Harrlaon of
Bancroft,
Omer Baker of
wiener,
M !..
Anna Kanaom of
Bancroft,
Naomi Owen of
Memphle, Neb. ;
Mterea
Clyata Harrlaon of
Weat Point,
Ruth Harrlaon of
Bermer.
Bridge Club.
The ranks of the Bridge club, which
was known last year as the Tuesday
Debutante Bridge club, have been
sadly depleted by Cupid. Miss Char
lotte Callahan was the first member
lost, Miss Hariet Metz, now Mrs.
Will Schnorr, was the next, and Miss
Alice Jaquith and Miss Lucile Bacon
are the latest to marry away. Mrs.
Will Schnorr is the only married
member still living in town. The
club met this afternoon with Miss
Eugenie Patterson. Miss Elisabeth
Reed and Miss Josephine Congdon
substituted for the members of the
Caldwell-Vinsonhaler wedding party,
who were unable to be present.
For Miss Chandler.
Following a little luncheon given
by Mitt Eleanor Austin at the -University
club, Miss Esther Splndler en
tertained at the Ornheum for Miss
Arline Chandler of Kansas City, who
is the guest of Miss Helen Garvin. ,
Error in Announcement.
The rumor of the engagement of
Mr.. Brinkley Evans of , this city,
which appeared in Wednesday's Bee,
was due to an error. Mr. Evans was
confused with a Lincoln man whose
engagement was announced last week.
Social Gossip.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Weller have
just returned from a very extensive
eastern trip and have taken apart
ments at the Fontenelle for the
winter. '
' Choosing
By ADA PATTERSON.
She' is a charminir. dark-cved airl
who has a cafeteria in New York.
She is a slender, soft-voiced, gentle
mannered girl of the kind you misht
expect at a fine tea, a house party, or
me opera, sne is tne kind ot girl
who likes a good book, good pictures,
good plays, good conversation. She
ts the kind who likes pretty,' well
chosen frocks. She would enjoy an
automobile tour. She would be happy
in a town house, with a country
house and a yacht in anticipation for
next summer. But she has wasted no
time coveting the thing's which are
not hers. . She has smiled, put on a
neat blue-serge gownv and gone to
work.
She hat gone to work. Of necessity.
you may be sure, for she would have
preferred to avoid balancing a ledger
of her own. This girl would have
followed easily the path of charge
accounts and no worries, I do not
know whst circumstances made it
necessary for her to keep her own
book of expenses. I do know, how
ever, that tne natural channel of this
girl's preferences would have been
music or painting or sculpture, or per
haps, acting.
but painting pictures or concert or
church singing or acting are not for
the many. Few are adapted to them,
though all at some time believe they
are. Besides there are "hard times,
many of them. During hard times
sensible folk forego luxuries. Others,
sooner or later, must. Music, pic
tures and plays are luxuries that can
SALES ROOMS
2047-49 Farrtam Street "
Douglas 3292 .
Timely Fashion
' ' 1 W' I -aa 'af.
t Yv.!
W A.4
a Practical Profession
be foregone. But there are ncces-l
saries which all must have to live,
These necessaries are food, clothing
and shelter.
Those who purvey food, clothing
and shelter will always be sure of a
livelihood. This the girl who keeps
the cafeteria must have determined.
Or perhaps someone a little older
and wiser may have led her to the de
termining. At any rate, she has had. the walls
of a loft building painted a soft yel
low, has placed yellow awnings at the
windows, has arranged
and blue cushions on
the yellow
the window ,
seats to coax sunshine into the dark
corners, has had little round tables
painted gray, has placed a little gray
desk with the invitation above, "Write
your letters here," in a bright corner.
She has thought out simple, nour
ishing menus for each day and has
saved waitresses' wages by letting the
Fall Fashions
The new high-back cape-tike collars
are of organdie, net and voile; some
of these are so cut that they stand
up without reinforcement. In others
collar stays of wire are employed.
Sleeves are becoming more and
more worthy of attention, for they
are of many designs and lengths.
Favor seems equally divided between
wrist length and those that reach to
the elbow or just below it. The leg-o'-mutton
is being used both on tai
lored and dressy garments.
Which
Do You
Prefer?
Pullman or
No one would think of riding in a
freight car if he could enjoy the
comfort of a big, comfortable easy
riding Pullman parlor car. '
So with automobiles. Most of the
popular priced cars ride like
! freight cars. This is due to the
old fashioned type of springs
Willys-Overland, Inc., Omaha Branch
Tba WUlya-OwrUnd Com pauty. Toledo, Ohio
"MaJetnU.S.A." 1
Hint By Raconteur
The notable
feature of most of
the winter suits is
their simplicity of
lines. However, the
lavish treatment of
fur makes up for
this plainness. The
suit illustrated is
shown in navy blue
duvetyn, with
flaring coat and
skirt. Navy silk
crochet buttons
are introduced on
the cuffs and front,'
these affording:
smart trimming.
The high collar is
of possum fur.
ft
4 1 vJ
business girls-who are her patrons
wan upon tnemseives. tvery day sne
sends a net little profit to the bank.
She has found the way of success.
I go there for luncheon now and
then and come away refreshed and
admiring. Some day I may invite a
society friend to join me at the little
yello,w cafeteria. I wonder if it will
teach her the same lesson it did me?
The uptown friend lives in s soiled,
shabby, little studio and thinks she
?aints. Perhaps she doe's. Personally
doubt it. Nor have I ever met anv-
lone who has a different opinion, ex-
cept herself. I believe with all my
heart in following the beckoning
finger of special aptitude. If anyone
has a talent let her cultivate it and
give the world the benefit of it.
But isn't there another duty? Isn't
it our first duty to ourselves and to
society to earn living? ' Earn it by
brilliant performance if we can or
may, but earn it. Beside that, to tuck
away the nest egg, so that if we are
ill or unfortunate we may not become
the polite kind of mendicant, the bor
rower. After that the frills and em
broideries of living-earning.
I am sure that pretty girl who runs
the cafeteria would like to paint
pictures. She has artistic talent in some
degree, for she has made a thing of
beauty of the loft room that she has
turned into a cafeteria. But her eyes
are never clouded nor her smile
dimmed by regrets. She does one
thing she can do well. Some day she
may do the other, may paint pictures
that sell. Meanwhile she has earned
her self-respect.
Freight?
m
!jjpf
""""""ggaSSaaaiEaanaai
Many manufacturers still continue
to use them. N
The Overland 'does riot The 75 B
Overland has the latest type of
cantilever shock absorbing
springs. As a result it is one of
the easiest riding cars in the world.
One demonstration, will prove this.
635 f. o. b. Toledo.
SERVICE STATION ,
20th and Harney Sts.
Douglas 3290
Swearing at Your
By DOROTHY DIX.
A nian who was guilty of using
abusive language to his wife has been
sentenced by Magistrate Miller of the
Lone Island city police court not to
speak to his wife for six months. !
A Daniel 1 A second Daniel come i
to judgment! Thus is the punishment
made to fit the crime of wile baiting,
for the chief indoor amusement of
many a husband is saying the thirds
to the defenseless woman who is mar
ried to him that he would not dare
to say to a man even half his own size.
But There Are Some Silences that
Are More Eloquent of Hatred
Than Words.
Would that there were some way to
extend this luminous legal decision to
all the bullies and naggers and vira
goes, male and female, who make the
holy estate a torment with their
tongues. Would that they might be
enjoined from speaking at all unless
they speak pleasantly! What a place
of peace and rest would home, sweet
home, be if buttressed up with a few
legal gags I
But there are silences and silences.
There is the silence that refrains from
speech, and there is the silence that
says things more loudly than a
megaphone There are silences more
profane than any crusing could be.
All of us have witnessed the silent
pledging of hatred between two peo
ple that meant 'a duel to the death,
and each of us has withered up under
a criticism of our faults and frailties
that was all the more blighting be
cause no word was said.
Silence may be the first aid toward
making matrimony an earthly, para
dise, but, used in the home, it can also
make Reno seem a city of the blessed,
for it can become a brutal and ef
fective weapon in the hands of the do
mestic tyrant.
Who has not known some house
hold in which the husband and father
kept his trembling family in order by
means of the great silent grouch?
Some days he will come home for din
ner, or down to breakfast, with a face
as grim and unsmiling as death. Some
thing is wrong. He eats and drinks
in silence, refusing even to ask for
what he wants. He reads his paper
with a portentous dumbness that
strikes terror into his wife's bosom.
The Silent Grouch is Always Proud
that He Never Says Anything in
Anger. '
Finally some one screws up courage
enough to ask what is the matter. Is
he ill? Has anything gone wrong?
Has the wife done anything to offend
him? Have the children? To all
queries he responds "nothing," iit a
tone of voice that indicates the uni
verse is out of gear, and that arraigns
everybody in the house, from the baby
up, to having criminally conspired
against his happiness and peace and
comfort.
Such a man always takes great
credit for never saying anything when
he is mad, but he would be less brutal
if he smashed the furniture and swore
a blue streak. A wife cln deal with
a red-hot, angry man, who says things
and gives her a chance to talk back
and explain, but with a dumb one, she
is utterly helpless. She can't argu
with silence. She can only grit her
teeth and endure what she knows to
be an injustice and an outrage.
Or perhapslit is a woman who uses
that awful silence to club her husband
into submission. He tells her that
he can't afford some extravagance on
which she has set her heart. She
doesn't argue or protest, or ,weep a
few tears over it, after the 'normal
manner of women, and then kiss and
make up, and be pleasant again. Old
no I she merely passes into a state
of frozen silence that makes the
Skinners
THE HIGHEST QUALITY
MACARONI
36 ftgrRrdf Book fat S
SKINNER MFG. CO OMAHA, U.iA,
Wife is Bad, but Silent Grouch is Worse
North Pole seem warm and compan
ionable by contrast.
She doesn't utter a word of re
proach. Oh, dear, no. She merely
f,oes about with a sweet, sad smile on
Iter face' and the air of an early
l.hristian martyr. She doesn't take
any interest in anything. She doesn't
want to do anything or go anywhere.
You couldn't inveigle her into a con
versation to save your life.- She only
savs "yes," or "no," when directly
addressed, and then takes refuge in
speechlessness.
She sends the temperature of the
house down to the freezing point. She
fills it with an atmosphere of gloom
and melancholy so thick that you
could cut it with a knife, and she
keeps things this way until her hus
band takes to drink or gives in to
her.
Not Easy to Ignore Silent Grouch.
And she thinks she's been a per
fect lady because she hasn't uttered
any of the mean, hateful, selfish
things that she has been thinking.
Yet any husband on earth would a
million times rather have dealt with
a spit-fire wife who would have
blazed up in a passion of disappoint
Good for AC taw Family, Mornhu. Noon and Night,
lO Cents A.t Grocers
"O-EAT-IT" is a new cmbinationbrain, blood, nerves and growing
fully baked, ready-to-eat, pure, de-children, and insures freedom from
licious, nourishing bran bread food, constipation and indigestion without
Its crisp tasty toasted slices keep in-the aid of medicine or any added ex
definitely made from rich golden pense of living. Physicians heartily
wheat-bran and other cereals. "O-recommend it. For sale at all grocers,
EAT-IT" takes the place of all old- 10c, or' sent postpaid on receipt of
style bread and breakfast foods, price. Address O-Eat-It - Co., 188
morning, noon and night; good foi; Studebaker Bldg., Chicago, 111.
Atk For Get
The Original
Nourishing .
DaHcious
Digcatibls) '
Safe Milk
for Infanta, Invallda and Growing Children.
The Original Food-Drink For all Agoe.
WHY THE PRICE IS SO LOW
ON THIS CAR OF QUALITY
If the 6-30 Chalmers
were built at the rate
of 2000 a year, the
chances are you might
have to pay $1600 or
morefor one. But
more than twelve times
that number is made.
So that the price be
comes only $1090.
Quality runs all the
way through. It is the
quality car at a quan
tity price.
(All prices f. o. b. Detroit)
R. W. CRAIG, Inc.
Phone Doug. 7888. 2512-14 Farnam St
ment and wrath, and fought the mat
ter out in five minutes and then let
it 'rest.
It's nonsense to say that those who
are unfortunate enough to have to
live in the same house with silent
grouchers should not notice their
glum moods. As well might you say
that you should not get wet when you
go out in the rain, or that you should
not catch malaria when you breathe
the fetid air of a swamp.
Such silences are a dank, damp ema
nation of an evil spirit that takes pos
esion of a house and lays its blight
ne hand on it, chilling every joy and
killing cheerfulness in every heart and
the laugh on every lip. You can no
more escape it than you can escape
the raw air o( a foggy morning.
"Speech is silver and silence is
golden," says the old proverb. But
this is not always true. Sometimes
silence is lead that crushes the light
and joy out of life itself, and so it is
doubtful if the woman whose husband
has been ordered not to speak to her
for six months will not be yearning to
have him swear at her rather than
sit up in that awful and accusing
dumbness.
- Rich Milk, Malted Grain Brtraot In Powdatw
SubaUtutea Qoit YOU Scum price.