THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1916. Personal Gossip : Society Notes : Woman's Work : Household Topics, - s November 13, 1916 Special interest is attached to the Society of Fine Arts' exhibition of contemporary paintings and sculp tures, opening Saturday evening at the Hotel Fontenelle, because works of Gutzon and Solon Borglum, for mer Omahans, who have achieved world-distinction, will be included in the exhibition. ' August and Arnold Rnmlnm hrnthera. and Mrs. Alfred Darlow, a sister, are stilt residents of Omihi. while Madame AuKUSt Bor- lum is also a sister ot Airs, ooion orglum. ... ' , .... i never see a piece oi worn uj Solon Borglum but what I raise my hat to it'r This is the tribute of Augustus St Gaudens, himself a won derful sculptor, to the work of Solon Borglum. Gutzon Borglum, who was in Omaha a few weeks ago. is en- , aaa-ed in the stupendous work of carving the story of the south in the civil war on Stone mountain, near At lanta. Ga. Twenty bronzes, marble, stone, wood and stone, and plaster pieces of sculpture by the two umana men will he shown and twenty-seven pho tographs of other works of art created by them. The bronzes will all be mounted on specially constructed ped estals. Major Jsaac Sadler cnapier, Daughters of the American Revolu tion, is promoting an endeavor to hive a bronze sculpture of Governor Thomas B. Cuming, to be done by Gutzon Borglum, placed on Central Nigh school campus. Invitations were issued today to members of the Fine Arts society and the Friends of Art for a private view of the exhibit Saturday afternoon be tween 4 and 7 o'clock, immediately following Prof. Stockton Axson s lecture. . The courtesies committee has ar ranged for a group of its members to act as hostesses at the exhibit, every morning, afternoon and evening while tne art gallery is open. Mrs. A. L. Reed has this in hand during the ab sence from the city of Mrs. Charles T. Kountze. The pieces by Mr. Solon Borglum included in the list are: Washington, 1753, bronze; Waters, marble; God's Command to Retreat, marble and wood; Notre Esclave, marble; Pros pector, bronze: Blizzard, small bronze; On the Trail, marble; Buck ing Broncho, plaster; Paul, marble' and wood; Benjamin Franklin, plas ter; Monica, stone; Blizzard, large wood; ScMeren Memorial, in plaster, inscription, The Gentle Closing of Two Lives; Man, Earth, Love, Chase, Sorrow on the Plains, in plaster. In addition photographs of other work by the same sculptor are being sent. Nine pieces by Mr. Gutzon Borglum will be on exhibition. Surprise Party. A surprise party was given Friday for Master Harry C Pitner on his fifth birthday. The children present were: and Mrs. Allan Parmer and Mrs. Walter G. Silver, who have played golf with her, now plan to skii in her company. This winter strollers will see, not golf balls skimming, but golfers gliding over the snow on skis. Jolly Ten Lotto Club. , All members of the Jolly Ten Lotto club will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. it. Heymsn. Luncheon for Bridal Party. Mr. and Mrs. Elias Vail, who rived yesterday to spend about a in umana before proceeding to home in Poughkecpsie, entertained i luncheon at the rontenelle today Miss Isabel Vinsonhaler, Mr. Caldwell and the memoers of Smart Styles Direct from Paris wedding party, White and mulberry chrysanthemums in three boquets were used on the long table, Covers were laid for: V Mlaaaa Mlaaaa . Mary Van Klaack at Anna Dlttor. Poushaaapata, Marian Towta, Retina CoanaU, Mallora Davla, MCaart. aiaaor.. nan uauaanor,.. Waits TMrathr Hill, Bllaahath Falk, Alloa COonald, Vara Strand. Alralra Cllnaa, Maraarat Cllnaa, Msatara Mas- Hoffman, John Wllllama. Wllkart Pltnar, , Mtaaaa I.uclla ralk, ' Sal ma Foralam, Bthal Pltnar, Anita Strand, Kllaabath Cllnaa. Maatara ' Wlllard Hill, Hannr Wllllama. Victor Caldwall, Itnh.rt Rum. Julian Thompaon of Baraaavllla. Hinn.l Monday Bridge Club. Mrs. George Squires entertained the Monday Bridge Luncheon club at her home today. A pretty center piece of Ophelia roses wss used on the table, Those present were: Maadama afaadamaa-- J. M. Matoalf, Ban qallathar, 1 Harry Clarka, ' Oaorsa Pattaraon. J. J. Sullivan. Crad Clarka. , , W. J. CoasaU, Degree ol Honor Reception. Mrs. W. S. Cleaver and Mrs. S. khmitt will give a reception for the embers of the Degree of Honor .edges at the home of Mrs. Scbmitt 1 uesday atternoon trom i to 5. Last Bridal Affairs. With the wedding rehearsal this afternoon, following the luncheon giv en by Mr. and Mrs. Elias Vsil, and the bridal dinner at the Blackstone this eveninsr tfiven br Judge and Mrs. Duncan M. Vinsonhaler, the pre .nuptial affairs for Miss Isabel Vin sAnhaler and Mr. John Caldwell will , come to an end. The supper given by the three ush ers, Mr. Julian Thompson of Barnes- ville. Minn.: Mr. Ben ballagher and Mr. Cuthbcrt Potter , at the Omaha , club last evening was a delightful af fair. Table decorations were in lav ender button chrysanthemums. The evening was- spent at the club. The bridal dinner this evening will be riven at the Blackstone. Three baskets of Killarney roses will form the centeroiece. The Kuests will in- , elude only members of the wedding party. . , . ' Orpheum Parties. Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Walker and ; Mr. and Mrs. O. C Lieben will be the miests of Mr. and Mrs. Maynard T. Swarti in a box at the Orpheum this evening and afterwards at the fon tenelle. J. C. Pepper has a reservation for ten at the Wednesday matinee and J. Herzberg will -have eight Thursday - evening.' ' ' ' With Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kirsch braun in their box will be Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kirschbraun. Mrs. C. S. Andrews of Council Bluffs entertained a party of ten at the matinee this afternoon. Parties to the number of six guests will be entertained at the Orpheum this evening' by J. H. Hanley, H. S. Mann, Norris Brown, O. C. Redick, W. J. Foye, A. V. Kinsler, D. B. Welpton, Miss Louise Dinning, L. M. -Cohan, Judge Baker, F, Burkley and H. Arnstein. . . Golf Gives Place to Siding: In the summer the golf balls skim lightly over the turf of the Field club course. The golf enthusiasts hsve re joiced over every fait autumn day, nrm until last Saturday, out today they are shut in with no prospect of good golf weather for many days to come. . To relieve this durance vile, however, tome of the ardent athletes are planning to organize a club for skung and skating. Mrs. C. H. Ash ton is said to be an expert on skis 3Sh ftr&VWk 1 . -tiTi John , ft .ll t VV VfcVsVf? U 1 1 their - H'AKPA II. I Ca jJrY f Is l;J ' ' I - rl fill IP mm it i Sr. Xwr'i yfcSjl l I -1 ' (. '14 ' i I'" ... . lr ' : & . . j 1 1 temsk ' i n Bringing the Cow, to the Customer Cuthbart Pottar. For Miss Chandler. ' Miss Helen Garvin will give an in formal matinee party at the Orpheum tomorrow afternoon for her guest, Miss Arline Chandler ot Kansas city. Other small affairs are planned for the week. , , - , Original Monday Bridge. The Original Monday Bridge club met today with Mrs. W. A. Redick, Mrs. r. f. Kirkendail suostitutea. Mothers' Club Meeting. ' . The North Side Mothers' club will meet Tuesday afternoon at 1:30 with Mrs. B. r. rark, 46)1 cvans street. Social Gossip. Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Root left Sun day-evening to spend several weeks tn new zora. Mrs. J. B. Stevens has had as her meat Mrs. De Voe of Chicago. Dur ini Mrs. De Voe's stay in the city she was the occasion of frequent en tertainments, i i Mr. and Mrs. George Brandeis re turned Saturday morning form a five weeks' stsv in New York. The trip was delightful and Mrs. urandeis is leaving the last of this week to spend another week or two in the eastern city. , Miss Anna Tibbetts of Pern college faculty has returned sfter visiting her cousin, Mrs. J. M. Metcalf, during the teachers' convention. Miss Tibbetts is president of the Woman s Educa tional club. ' ' Miss Annis Chsiken of the faculty of the Universtiy ot Nebraska re turned to Lincoln this morning. THIS gold embroidered brown chiffon Lanvin is the material of an afternoon gown. Vestee , and girdle facing are of peacock blue velvet. Collar, cuffs and wide skirt band of beaver. Hat i from Maria Gay. I LACK velvet and black satin are here skillfully combined by Jenny in an effective bridge frock. The hat is the creation by Reboux. Workers in Secret y FORTUNE FREE. Baker Here to Prepare For the San Carlo Singers Grand onera devotees will find in terest in the announcement that the San Carlo Grand Opera company, which is to appear, in Umana on Thursday. Friday and Saturday. Jan uary 25, 26 and 27, has just terminated the most successful engagment, ootn artistically and financially, ever held in St. Louis. The occasion was the fifth annual visit of the San Carlo stars to the Missouri metropolis, and the exchanges tell of the big audiences that turned out to all the eleven per formances of the organization. Nine different operas were staged, during the period mentioned. The coming engagement of the San Carloans in this city will bring the en tire organization here, including some twenty-two ot the foremost singers of the opera stage, a large and bril liant chorus and a superb symphony orchestrs. Four different productions will make up the repertoire, Mr. Lucius Pryor is the local man ager of the engagement, and was in conference with Mr. Charles R. Baker, advance manager of the company, thia morning, perfecting the details of the event. Hotel Guests Shiver ', When Engineer Vanishes If you see a missing engineer about town, notify the Star hotel. Thirteenth and Leavenworth streets. Early in the morning this important individual disappeared, and now the fire has gone out, and the guests are suffering in the throes of cold storage. "What: strange people there are in the world.-' . 's" ' -. . . . ' "We ought to be glad there are." "But am they really strange after all." A ? Those we the temarks t heard made respectmg a little incident one. of the party h.td told us of the story of an anonymous gift, The teller of the story knew a little house in the suburb-in . which he lived a little house that had a short time since been a peculiarly happyyiome, but which had of late sheltered much care and trouble. V "He" was away and "things were bad" in that home. It was one of these houses that had always seemed so bright, too. There are (houses that somehow seem to enter if) a way into your life when you pass them day by day. thoueh you don't rekllv know anything of the people inside them. ihe husband looks like a decent fel low and how fond ''she" isof him. You realize it when you see ftjm set ting off in the morning, when you see her watching for his homecoming in the evening. Then there is. the child. ' - . ' V I remember Father Stanton once saying that if you saw a child on the lookout for its father, "spotting" hhn far off and rushing to meet him with that cry of VDaddy," you "may bet your boots that man is a good chap. There was all that about the little home. And then there was the care fully watched over bit of lawn in front and the flowers in the window boxes, so bright and happy looking. They were happy folk. - Sometimes one envies happiness, but this was happiness of a kind that one could only wish to continue and increase. That was some time ago. Things are different today. "He" has gone and "she" has missed him sorely. The house is not so bright. ' Amid her distractions "she" has forgotten to water the flowers in the box. We have only caught sight of her occa sionally and she has been paler than she was. ' ' And the child? What has become of him? .We learned that he was ill. There was a light late at night in the window of a room upstairs. She was sitting up with the child. It quite worried us. At last some of us called at the house and, with many apologies for intrusion, inquired how the child was going on. She was quite surprised. She did not know that house had unknown friends. "Tin- rhild'a much better." said the caller there the other morning. "Go ing on splendidly, the doctor says. And "she" that was the mother "has had good; news from him. ' . "Htm, of course, was the father. "By the way, a queer thing has hap pened. What do you think she found in the letter box yesterday? A letter with ten $10 bills in it and not a word with them not a single word. I ?uess they'll come in remarkably use ul. She told me she didn't know what to do with them. Ought she to spend the money.. Couldn't think who could have sent it? Queer, isn't it? The news of the $100 quite bright ened us up. Each one of us felt somehow as if he had, personally had a stroke of luck. Who could have stuffed that sorely needed money into the letter box stealing to it like a thief in the nighl, and carting off in terror of a policeman? We could not fix the deed on anybody. "What strange people there are in the world?", remarked one. V "We rjuffht to be glad there are," exclaimed another with a gasp of sat isfaction. . "But are they really strange, after all?" suggested another. That is a remarkable feeling. ."Old Joe requires no supervising," the manager of a factory told me some time back, looking after a grey haired grimy-faced old chap who nasaed hv. "A strange fellow. Fortune. One of the best a man to take one's hat off to. Put him at any work and I shouldn t want to do more than ask him if he had done it, and I should be ready to lay every penny I'd got he had done it well as thoroughly as he could possibly do it, He would never rest otherwise. '; "Old Joe" was, he informed me, one ASK FOE and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Chaap Snfcatttuta coat YOU aama prlca. By WOODS HUTCHINSON, M. D. Necessity is the mother, of inven tion and there are no necessities like those of war. The stress and emergencies of the milk war drove the companies to sug gest a temporary measure, which might prove of real value to city babies that of bringing small groups of cows close to the edge of or even into the suburbs of the city. J his, at first sight, sounds like a backward step to village and country town conditions, and hands of horror will he raised at once at the thought of dirty, fly-swarming stables and barnyards trodden into a filthy bog, which would be a nuisance and a men ace to the health of the entire neigh borhood. And, of course, as a source for the whole or any considerable fraction of the supply, dairy barns in the suburbs would be out of the question. But for a limited and spe cial part of the city's milk supply, namely, that required by babies and very young children, the plan is both practical and possessed of real value and advantage. Esneciallv. in view of the tact that most of our city milk is from forty- eight to seventy-two hours old before it reaches the homes and that stale milk is both indigestible and un wholesr.ne for babies, to say nothing of the generations and millions of germs who are given time to breed in it. . Indeed, it has several times been suggested by careful and competent students of the city milk problem ana, in one instance at least, has actually been put in operation on. quite an ex tensive scale. 1 he great metropolitan city of Buenos' Ayres, with a popula tion, of nearly two millions, after a very careful and competent survey ot the situation by eminent experts, has established or licensed one dairy of ten to fifteen cows in every area con tainine 10.000 population in the city The cows, of course, are carefully se lected, tested by tuberculin and rigidly examined by competent veterinarians before being permitted to be brought into the city and kept under the strict est and most hawk-like sanitary super vision during their stay. . They are housed in model dairy barns, with cement floors, flushed down with hose, tiled walls, all ma nure and other waste either cremated upon the spot or hauled out of the city every night and, in fact, are made not merely not a nuisance and an eyesore, but an ornament and attrac tion to the neighborhood. A valuable object lesson to all children and their parents of how a model dairy should be conducted and what clean, pure milk really looks and tastes like. The milk from these exclusive bo vine dames these daughters of the hygienic revolution can be sold only upon written permission from the dis trict health officer to babies and also, it is said, to a certain number of invalids, and the surplus may be con sumed upon the premises in the form of milk or ice cream or soft cheese. The method is said to work admir ably and these "milk-on-the-half- shell" stations are extremely popular and successful, ihere is no reason whatever, given competent health of- ficers and intelligent dairymen, why cows cannot be kept almost as clean and in fully as sanitary condition as humans. . As the traveler in southern Europe will probably recall, several of the Italian cities, notably Rome, Florence and Milan, have beautiful model dairies in their city parks. The great one in the famous Villa Borghese, in Rome, is a delight to the eye, and its ice cream and bread and milk a pleasure to every other sense, and every visitor to Rome ought certainly to put it on his list of sights along with the Sistine Chapel and the Forum. It is not so old, but far pret tier and more attractive and infinitely more useful. .. . c; Your teeth can be only as good as you keep them start a good habit today by asking- your druggist for 0 For The Teeth, Powder Cream - nt mtrtr Send 2c tamp tor a generoun w"H" . Dr. Lyon's Perfect Tooth Powder or Dental Cream. t W. Lyon A Sons, Iml, B77 W. 27tfc St, W Tor. zy of those people who feel not merely that they must do their best, whether anyone else discovered it or not, but an actual delight in doing it. They would sink frightfully in their own estimation if they did not do it. Doing it they feel' satisfied quite happy, Christie Murray knew a man who had spent some months upon an unin habited island where - he had been thrown by a shipwreck. Relating his experiences on the island to a circle of his friends one day. he told them how, after the first week or two, when he found that he would be . able to keep himself alive, he began to take things "comfortable." When he got up in the morning in the hole he had discovered in the rocks he trotted down to the sea and washed himself and "made his toilet." . '"Toilet I" exclaimed one of the com pany. "What difference could it make when there was no one about to see you?" It seemed quite "ridiculous to him that that unseen one felt most miser able over not being able to "keep him self tidy." He had no conception of taking care of oneself apart from the necessity of securing the approval of other people. The approbation and admiration of other folk are an immense stumulus. People do wonderful things to gain their applause, and quite right, too. But the person who won't do his or her best except for such a reward is not on the best lines to obtain it. Signers THE HIGHEST QUALITY EGG NOODLES 36 hp littip Book fnt ; SKINNER MFG. CO.. OMAHA, USA UUtGCST MACUONI FnCTOSY IN AMFJHCA Druggist Says- 3 Black-Draught Best M. R. Flowers, druggist, ot South Creek, N. 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