Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 06, 1917, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1917.
- y March 5
Easter-tide rivals the month of
roses when the lovely young bride
comes to choose the auspicious date,
and at least two smart weddings will
interest society at that time. Miss
Harriet Copley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Copley, will be the first
of the springtime brides, for her wed
ding to Mr. Earl H. Burket will take
place at her home Wednesday,
March 21. , , i
While friends have known of the
young people's betrothal for a long
while, Miss Copley chose to with
hold public announcement of her
plans until just before the wedding,
ihe date for which was held, pending
the erection of the 'ovcly home for
the young pair in the Field club dis
trict. The home will be ready for
them when they return from their
honeymoon in California. Miss Cop
ley is a Brownell Hall girl and en
joyed a delightful trip to Santo Do
mingo after her graduation. Mr. Bur
ket is a graduate of Colgate univer
sity at Hamilton, N. Y.
Miss Mabel Allen will attend Miss
Copley as maid of honor and Miss
Helen Smith as bridesmaid. Mr. Her
bert Smails will be best man and the
ribbons will be stretched, not by girl
friends, but by two friends of the
bridegroom, Mr. Archibald Laurance
and Mr. Walter Byrne.
Another wedding of interest is that
of Miss Ruth Gould, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. R. H. Gould, whose mar
riage to Mr. Warren Howard -will
take place at the Good Shepherd
church the day after Easter, Monday,
April 9. The bride's sister. Miss
Katherine Gould, will be her only at
tendant. '
In the month of Mav MtSS Mary
Burkley and Mr. Lawrence Brinker's
wedding will take place, the ceremony
to be solemnized at the home of the
bride's father, Mr. Frank Burkley.
Thouzh no dates have been set, the
marriage of Miss Stella Thummel
and Mr. Fred W. Clarke, jr., will take
place in the summer, and that of Miss
Alice Kusnion ana mr. .lusxtiu oca
crest of Lincoln in the early fall.
Vnr Drama Leatrue President,
Sweet peas, in pink and lavender
profusion, conveyed a breath of
spring to members of the Drama
league and Fine Arts society, who
honored Miss Kate A. McHugh with
a luncheon at the Hotel Fontenelle.
The affair was also to celebrate the
great success of both organizations'
undertaking recently, bringing the
Portmanteau theater to Omaha, which
venture netted the society $J0O. In
token of this, t!e place cards, done by
Mrs. Lowrie Childs, were water color
sketches of a portmanteau with quo
tations from Lord Dunsany, and tied
with Dunsaiw green ribbon.1 One of
Lord Dunsany'a plays was included
in the Portmanteau theater's reper
toire. ,
For Rev. and Mrs. Maxwell.
Mrs. J. A. Maxwell, who leaves
late this evening, with . Rev. Max
well, for their new home in Wil
liamsport, Fenn., was the guest of
honor at a luncheon given by Mrs.
Edward Johnson. Water lilies ar
ranged in low green Japanese bowl
formed the centerpiece, and the place
cards, which were originated by the
hostess, bore the following names,
which the guests were obliged to
tigure out oeiore Deing Beaten, n.
Speedy Mode of Travel" were the
words on Mrs. Maxwell's card, mean
ing the Maxwell car, as those who at
tended the automobile show will
guess. "America's Foremost Rocky
Mountain Naturalist and Guide'
f YIMI. wit at- (r WiWnn
Mills' place; "A Packer of Meat"
signified t Mrs. J. Morris' place;
"Anwira Kriremnst Historian told
Mrs. C.,H. Bancroft where to bA
aeated; a celebrated Italian cardinal
and an important oortion of the hu
man body (representing Cardinal Del
and the arm) was on Mrs. A. A. De
Larme's place card; "Ex-Governor of
the Philippines' wa on Mrs. fc. B.
Taft's card; a name used in a poem
hv the famous Scottish Doet signified
to Mrs. Thomas Anderson where she
was to sit, and "An Author Whose
Books are Read Only Secondary to
the Bible" were the wordi inscribed
on the hostess' card.
The Baptist ministers of Omaha
and Council Bluffs gave a farewell
- luncheon this noon in honor of Rev.
Maxwell at the Hotel Loyal. Toasts
were siven bv Drs. A. A. De Larme,
who presided. Rev. Wilson Mills, who
presented a tnermos oouie in ncnau
nf the ministers, and Rev. Arthur J.
Morris, who spoke a few words of
good wishes for Dr. Maxwell. Covers
laid frt rt- fnllnwinbr: Drs. T.
A. Maxwell. A. A. Delarme. Wilson
Mills, A. J. Morris, Botts and Wilk
i t : i-... :i Di... v a T.ft
C. F. Holler, George MacDougal, C,
H. Bancroft, Oscar Auritt and Bost-
wirtr nf Tntinc-il Bluffs.
Rev. and Mrs. Maxwell will be
crivrn a farewell retention this even-
ing by the deacons and thtir wives of
Calvary Baptist church, when the
guests will include members of the
Baptist churches of the city. The
" trustees and deacons and their wives
will receive the guests in the parlors
.- o' the church, following which a pro-
gram wm uc given m uunvi ,uni.
FIRST OF THE SPRINGTIME
BRIDES-ELECT.
Photo
prettily decorated with a bowl of cro
cus ana mignonette.
Gossip of Visitors.
Miss Josepnine nusc oi ruucriou.
Neb., will arrive Friday for a visit
with her sister. Mrs. Guirher Nasburg,
after which she will go to Chicago for
several weeks. Miss Huse is spending
thin week in Lincoln, where sue is
being extensively entertained. .
Mrs. 1 nomas MooniiKiir. luurpny
who was the guest the last week of
her sister, Miss Ruth Thompson, will
leave tomorrow evening tor lier nome
Kansas Otv.
Mrs. Rentier McCloud of Chicago
is spending a week with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. K. n. uunsicati, on net
return from a winter s sojourn in
California.
Mrs. Perrv A Men of New York
City, formerly Miss Bertha Sloan of
Omaha, is visiting her mother, Mrs.
Slnan. at the Colonial. Many affairs
are planned for Mrs. Allen.'who has
just come on .irom wasniiigton, u.
L, where sue was, me giiesi ui nn,
Thomas Walsh, widow ot the well
known millionaire.
Fraternity Reunions.
Messrs. Ross ii. iqwie. ueorge n.
Thumtnell, J. deForest Richards and
Victor Dietz, Umalia mcmncrs oi
Sigma Phi fraternity, will have a re
union and dinner at the Fontenelle
this evening. Henry Clarke, jr., of
Lincoln plans V be JrtMnt 10'
Mr. H. J. Wnite ot i-incom is m me
city making . arrangements tor tne
Sigma Alpha tpsuon anair at me
Fontenelle Saturday evening.
riarnab Copley
On the Calendar.
The Junior club members are ai
readv nlannine a oost-Lenten danc
ing party, which will take place prob
able April 16. Whether it will be at
the Fontenelle or the Blackstone is
yet a much debated question among
the members.
Perianal Mention. '
Dr. W. f . Milroy lett Saturday
evening to loin Mrs. Miltoy at fcx
celsior Springs. They will both re
turn in a week.
Mra. N. H. Mercer, Miss Mercer,
F. L. Brown, L, W. Wakeley, Mrs
M. B. Wilson, Dr. and Mrs. E, J. Up
Hrirratf. Sidney M. Smith. J. W. Ag-
new and Sol Park are Omahans
registered at the Hotel-Clark in Los
Angeles.
Mrs. Mary M. Reed has returned
from San Antonio. Tex., and will be
with Mrs. Frank B. Johnson for two
or three weeks.
Misa Renina Connell is having
slow recovery from an operation for
tonsilitis, performed a week ago.
Informal Entertaining.
Mrs. W. A. Willard entertained the
Alpha Phi Alumnae association at
her home at the regular monthly
meeting. The afternoon was spent
informally with their sewing and at
4 o'clock tea was served. Mrs.
Thomas Moonlight Murphy of Kan-
sas( Ciy was an out-of-town guest.
SUMMER IS EARLY
. AT HANSCOM PARK
Rubber, Bananas, Oranges and
Lemons Grow Right Near
Alligators' Swimming Pool.
NUISANCE' PET PORCUPINE
By A. R. CROH.
It is tropical summer out in the
city greenhouse in nanscom par.
(What do you, think of that expres
sion, "out in"?)
The warm, moist smell of ground
and growing plants is there and the
tinkle of flowing water. You can
hear the chattering of a monkey now
and then or the call of a duck or the
'little splash as an alligator drops into
the pool.
A jungle of tall palms and ferns
raises itself in one room. Three rub
ber plants, five banana trees and an
orange tree are thriving. Two lemon
trees are in full bloom. One of these
produced thirty-two lemons last year.
That didn't unbalance the lemon mar
ket, but it was rather a proud achieve
ment in Omaha-grown lemons.
In one corner of the tropical jun
gle is a pond surrounded' by gravel
banks. Here fifteen alligators, large
and small, swim and crawl and lie at
lazy ease.
In another corner is a wire-cov-
rreA box in which the municipal por-
cunine is soending the winter. His
name, the hothouse man assures me,
is "Nuisance- Nuisance carefully
investigates a lead pencil with his
brown teeth. The hothouse man
blows up his fur to show the quills
underneath. These, he asserts, arc
used in the arts of peace as well as
in the science of self-defense.
"He rushes out of his hole," he
says, "and rolls over apples, that may
be lying under a tree and then rushes
into his hole, where he can pull the
apples off the quills and cat them at
his leisure. (Loionci Koosevcu,
please take notice.)
In a spacious cage Jocko, the mon.
key, dwells during the cold weather.
Jocko evidently doesn't like our
looks. He chatters at us and makes
quick jumps at the wire, hoping to
scare us. Finding his bluff unavail
ing, he retires to his perch and makes
faces at us.
One day they put the porcupine into
the cage with Jocko. Jocko didn't
like this at all, but he was afraid to
attack the porcupine. There was an
empty box in the cage. Jocko
watched his chance till "Nuisance"
was in the right, position. Then he
tipped the box over on him and got
on top and jumped up and down,
chattering with all his might.
As we walk down the aisle of the
jungle room we meet five Mexican
ducks, parading along, single tile, en
route to the pond. They are so tame
that they hardly turn out for us. But
when 1 stoop down to touch the beau
tiful feathers of one of them the
whole quintet give a horrified screech
of outraged dignity. Then they pro
ceed solemnly on their way.
A little pup who has been following
us around also goes up in friendly
manner to one of the ducks. The duck
doesn't seem to mind him, but ob
jects to his breaking up the line and
gives him a little tweak with its bill.
lake your ukeicic ana go our to
this tropical spot in the midst of
wintry Omaha- There you can strumm
your ukelele and sing "Yocky Hoola
Hickey JJoola in tne proper atmo
sphere, .
Governor Neville
vWill Join Sons of
Veterans Saturday
Straight Lines in Spring Frocks
Women' Activities
Cigar factories in New York City
employ twice as many women as men.
Women s clubs in St. Louis nave or
ganized a safety committee to report
violations of the automobile traffic
regulations. ,
Miss Clare Kummer has been
playwright less, than a year, but in
that time she has written two of the
most successful plays seen in New
York this season.
The distinction of being the young
est Portia in Massachusetts belongs
to Miss Jennie Shaine, a 21-year-old
girl who has just been admitted to
the bar in Boston.
One of the youngest wireless oper
ators in the country is Miss Winmfred
Dow, a 14-year-old Tacoma girl, who
has been granted an amateur wireless
license by the government.
When Henry A. McKeene, secre
tary of the Illinois State Farmers In
stitute, died recently the organization
promptly elected his widow to fill the
office" made vacant by his death.
Miss Jane J. Martin holds down the
position of general advertising man
ager for one of the big trading stamp
concerns with headquarters in New
York, and receive an annual salary
of $10,000 for her services.
The Fort Worth Housewives'
League, has organized a campaign for
meatless days, ny wnicn acvci.ii
days each week all the housewives in
FortnVortu will abstain from pur
chasing or serving meats. The aim is
to reduce the coat of living.
Two leagues of working girls' clubs
in Detroit, one composed of girls em
ployed in manufacturing establish
ments and the other of store and
office employes, have been merged
into one organization, which has a
total membership of nearly 2,000.
Mary E. Lathrop, who is the first
Colorado woman to be admitted to
practice in the supreme court of the
United States, has a nation-wide rep
utation as an authority on probate
law and has served as counsel in some
of the most notable will cases fought
in Colorado.
As one of the results of the present
activity in the navy girls have been
employed to take the places of ma
rines who have done duty as telephone
operators at the Charlestown navy
yard. It is the first time in the his
tory of the navy yard that female
workers have been employed in any
capacity.
To Honor Visiton.
The Misses Fern and Lois Goodwin
rntertained at luncheon Saturday
honor of the Misses Luce of Lincoln
daughters of Prof. C. b. Luce.
Misi Stella Robinson entertained
at luncheon at the Blackstone in
honor of Miss Marian Hall of Lin
coln, th guest of Miss Alice Rush
ton and'1 Miss Mildred Footc, who
leaves soon for her new home in
Pasadena, Cal. Mrs. Howard Rush
ton chaperoned the party, which in
cluded ten guests. The table decora
tions were of pink roses. After lunch
eon the party attended the matinee.
Mrs. Robert Vance entertained in
formally at luncheon at the Black
inn (nr Misi Helen Miller of Chi-
caeo. who is visiting Mrs. H. K.
Adams at the home of her mother,
Mr. I. F. Prentiss. Her guests in
cluded Mrs. Adams, Miss Miller and
Miss Adelaide Vance. After luncheon
thrv went to the home of Miss Adel
aide. Vance, where with several other
guests they spent the afternoon in
formally with their sewing.
With the Bridie Clubs.
Mrs. Mel Uhl, jr., entertained her
bridse luncheon club when eight of
the members were present. The lunch-
ton table had lor a centerpiece a oowi
of daffodils and the place cards were
cards representing the same flower.
Mrs. J. W. Griffith was hostess to
the Monday Bridge Luncheon club at
her home, when eight guests were
present. The luncheon table was
Stork News. .
A daughter was born Sunday to
Mr. and Mra. Frank Pence. Mrs,
Pence was formerly Hiss Irene Hor-
ton. -
Reviled Uniform .
Of U, S, Soldier,
Three Men Fined
Reviling the United States uniform
cost R. C. Williams, 1720 Dodge
street, and Lee Campbell and Ray
Ludlow of 405 North Nineteenth
street, $2.50 each and, costs in police
court.
John Le Bouf. private in the medi
cal corps at Fort Omaha, testified that
he was standing in -front of the post-
office Saturday evening when the
three men made uncomplimentary re
marks about his uniform and the serv
tve in general. When he resented their
remarks, he said they handled him
roughly and pushed him against the
side of the building. The three men
denied the charge. x -
Mother of Probation
Officer Miller is Sick
Mrs. bluabetn Miller, a pioneer
resident ot uinana, was taken serious
lv ill Sunday at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. P. H. Dearmont, 3312
Meredith avenue. She is the mother
The afternoon frock of a youthful type is this.
The "little more length of skirt" tire mode de
nands is shown in this frock of crepe meteor, with
Georgette crepe to form the sides of the waist, ap
plied tucks on the skirt and sleeves. The collar
and vest are white Georgette crepe, and the frock
may be had in navy or Alice blue, black char
mcuse, gray or tan.
The tunic line is smartly suggested in this beaded
irock, which is as freshly pretty as a day in spring,
and of a quality of Georgette crepe that will easily
outwear the summer. It is charming for either
house or street, according to the color. For the
house it is white chartreuse or old rose; for the
street navy blue, toupe light gray or tan are most
desirable.
KUNNE'S
MAKE
GLUTEN
DIABETIC
BREAD
Bakery and Lunch
16th and Howard Stt.
2916 Leavenworth Stmt
(From a Staff Correiipondcnt.)
Lincoln, March 5. (Special.) Pa
triotic organizations ot the state are
preparing foY a big meeting in Lin
coln on Saturday evening, March 10,
when the Lincoln camp of the Sons of
Veterans will hold a special meeting,
to which all Grand Army comrades
are invited.
The occasion will be the mustering
into the Lincoln camp of Governor
Keith Neville. Senator C. A. Lhap-
pall of Minden and Department Com
mander Stewart ot the Grand Army,
who, besides being a veteran, is also
a son of a veteran.
Commander-in-Chief Church of
Chicago, at the head of the national
organization of the Sons of Veterans,
will be present. 1 he meeting is m
charge of State Auditor W. H. Smith,
who, besides being commander ot tne
local camp, is junior vice commander
of the) state organization.
Aged Parent Asks Police
To Locate Missing Son
Facing hunger and possible evic
tion from his home, an old man tot
tered into the police station and
asked officials there to find his son,
his only means of support. The peti
tioner was James Hugncs, B years
old, of 2922 Indiana avenue. Joseph
Hughes, 32, a carpenter, has been
missing, he says, since Saturday,
when he gave his father his week's
wages. The aged parent suspects that
his boy has met with some mishap.
Fremont Man's Check is
First Given to Land Bank
The Federal Land bank of Omaha
got its first payment on stock Mon
day when a check for $2,400 was
received froir D. Wilbur Hotchkiss of
Fremont. Mr. Hotchkiss subscribed
for $3,000 worth of the stock, but his
original payment of $000 was for
warded to Washington and was not
handled by officials of the Omaha
bank.
He Failed to Support
Her for Years, She Says
Lydia V. Chancellor has filed suit
for divorce in district court against
James Chancellor, alleged that he has
tailed to support ner ior me lasi
twenty years.
Dora Steir was freed from Fred M,
Steir. She testified that he threat
ened to kill her. .
""ASK FOR and GET
florlick's
The Original
Malted Milk
EutntltutM Cost YOU Mm Prlc
Peculiar Facts
Abovt Treasures
Of the Earth
By GARRETT P. SERVISS.
"How do you account for the presence of
the minerals, such as gold, silver, Iron and
copper: also precious stones and mineral
oils, petroleum especially? 11. J. E
The existence of these things is no
more and no less mysterious than that
of common dirt, or of air or water.
They are all constituents of the earth
as we find it. Cut their distribution,
their mode of origin, and thear greater
or less abundance present many in
teresting questions, sonic of which, at
least, can be answered.
-Take the four metals that you men
tion gold, silver, copper, iron. Their
abundance is in inverse ratio to the
value that we set upon them, or, turn
ing the statement the other way
round, their value (to us), is in in
verse ratio to their abundance. If
gold were as plentiful as dirt, and iron
as rare as gold, then our curiosity
would be concentrated upon the iron,
while the gold would be taken as a
matter of. course. i
However, iron does not possess the
peculiar qualities which make gold
precious, and gold, on the other hand,
lacks the properties that make iron
useful, so that there' remains much
food for thought in the fact that rare
metals are precisely those whose
properties render them suitable only
for narrowly limited use, is in coin
age and jewelry, while the abundant
metals are those which.Nike copper
and iron, possess qualities of wide
spread importance in the every day
work of mankind.
Of course there is a human element
which enters into all of these judg
ments of value and of usefulness, but
that only shows the more clearly how
close is the adiustment ot our lite re
quirements to the properties and the
relative abundance of the inanimate
obiects around us.
The same thing is seen in the case
of precious stones. Those having the
greatest value are not merely the most
rare, or the most difficult to obtain,
but they possess peculiar properties
which greatly enhance the effect of
their rarity in giving them special
value. Nature might have made com
mon quartz as hard and as brilliant as
diamond, but that was not the way
things were ordered. Rare qualities
were bestowed upon rare things, and
these qualities are often such as
would have made the world less use
ful to man if they had been imparted
to the more abundant minerals.
The distribution of the precious
things of the earth is a profitable
subject of reflection. -Gold is found
in certain kinds of rocks, but by no
means in all rocks of those kinds.
It exists in many places in such
small quantities, or so widely diffused
in minute particles, that either it
would cost too much to recover it, or
it could not be recovered at all. Yet
in certain localities it has been col
lected, throueh various natural agen
cies and deposited in veins, reefs atid
nuggets, so rich and abundant that its
presence gives those localities a pres
tige which all tne worm wuiingiy ac
knowledges. . But the geologist can
not tell before hand whether a newly
discovered spot will or will not prove
to he a land oj gold
a I9. ,J B
a simir, z - w 1
Oranges eaten mry
day will help you
stay well. Ordar
Sunklat now and keep a
supply of these) uniformly
good orangea in tha houa
always.
Simkist
Uniformly Good
Oranges
CelitWalaFrait&ewenEicauuu
Sill
I
X KindlWant!" g
V "Mother tried'allbrandi, &
rfij she know which is best OT a
Sr Anows how' to get good, QT f
Kf wholesome bakings tvery ftQ 1 v
Qr bake-day how to lav SQ jj
fQ Baking Powder money Qs 1
Of stvoid haka-dav sorrows. Ot m
K 'Shelikei the wonderful Q
QC leavening strength fin XJ
QC raising qualities absoluta X
JC purity great economy of JQ
g CALUMET
9 BAKING POWDER ft
Sj "Don't think the Bakinj Oj
PX PowderyounowaMisbest. SJJ
Ol Try Calumet on ct find VJ
jOj out what rsobakingsare," Kp
K Xentred Hlldeel Avar K
Or A'nv Ceei itet Free QC
Kr Set Slip la PttiU Cam fVj
Messages
TvUbcIcTick
Last year the Wettern Onion transmitted one hun
dred million messages. 273,954 telegram! was an
average day'i business, 11,415 an hour'! work, 190
cleared the wirei eTery minnte. Every time the clock
ticked 3 meuatet were received and utlivered by
WESTERN UNION
THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO.
5iiiii
Many people will read tomor
row's Want-Ads, looking for
that used piano or other mu
sical instrument you wish to
sell. They will respond to
your ad if you
Phone Tyler 1000
Between 8 A. M. and 10 P. M, Today
You are as close to -THE
BEE WANT AD DEPT.
as your phone is to you
II mi h miMlll Illl III I II llliil iiliillllllllrWI1lilW
P,ri!lK.mtl!i!iL!E;iiillilllfc.1i
LIKE A NEW WOMAN
Mrs. Louisa Wataon, t( Vienna, 111., writes: "I have received so
nuch benefit from the use of Cajuhji that I wtsn to tell you. When I
was a young girl of twenty-one I became run down. I was. . . , caused
I think by my having taken cold. I was in much pain at those times
tnd usually had to go to bed. .. I had bad headaches and backaches
..s . riro.rffni hurint- down uain. . . I can't tell Just who told me
.k., r,.kn hut . . I baa-an to use it. . . The very first bottle
helped me and made me like a new woman. . . I truly think there is no
remedy like Pasdui. . ." For forty years Caboii has helped women in Just
such cases as this. Try it. It may be Just what you need.
rraicn o years
ill Jl The Woman's Tonic
CABO-YOU-IYI
0
AT ALL DRUO STORES
of Probation Officer Miller.
I