Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 18, 1917, SOCIETY, Page 10, Image 24

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    10 B
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MARCH 18, 1917.
What
Women Are
Doine in the World
CLUB CALENDAR
Monday
Omiha Woman't club, Metro
politan club house, open pro
gram, 2: JO p. m; political and so
cial aciencc department, 3:30
p. m.
P. E. O. Sisterhood, Benson chap
ter, Mrs. E. A. McGlasson,
hostess, 2:30 p. m.
Association of Collegiate Alumnae,
music 'section, Y. W. C, A., 4
p. m.
Child Conservation league, Dundee
circle, Mrs. Walter Crook, host
ess, 2:30 p. m.
Tuesday
Business Woman's council, court
house, 11 until 2 p. m.
Business Woman's club, Y. W. C
A., 7 p. m.
Omaha Woman! club, oratory de
partment, 10 a. m.; parliamentary
practice class, 2:30 p. m.
Belle-Lettres club, Mr. Edward
Nelson, hostess, 2:30 p. m.
Wednesday "
Omaha Woman's club, literature
department, 10 a. m.i club lunch
eon at Blackstone, 1 p. m.
Mu Sigma club, Mrs. A. O. Peter
son, hostess. 9:30 a. m.
Association of Collegiate Alumnae
story teller' section, Mrs,
Esther Thomas, hostess, 4 p. m.
Railway Mail Service Woman's
club, Mrs. John Nash, hostess, at
Blackstone, 2 p. m.
Clio club, Mrs. E. McEachron,
hostess, 2:30 p. m.
Miller Park Mothers' circle, school
auditorium, 3:30 p. m.
W. C. T. U, Omaha chapter, Mrs.
Eric Nelson, hostess, 2:30 p. m.
Custer corps, Sunshine club, Mrs.
W. N. Johnson, hostess, 2 p. m.
Smith College club, Mrs. Ralph
Kiewit, hostess. '
Thursday
Wyche btory Teller' league, pub
lic library, 4:15 p. m.
Omaha Society of Fine Arts, Hotel
Fontenelle, 3:45 p. m. .
P. E. O. Sisterhood, Chapter E,
Mrs. R. B. Zachary, hostess, 10
a. m.
South Omaha Woman's club, musi
cale for Social Settlement, Mrs.
J. W. Koutiky, hostess, 2:30
p. m.
Omaha Woman'a club, home eco
nomics department. 10 a. m.; mu
sic department, 2:30 p. m.
Friday
Scottish Rite Woman's club, recep
tion at catnedrai, i p. m. ,
Omaha Woman's club junior mem
bers entertainment to scholar
ship fund at Mrs. Edward Phe
lan i home, 2:30 p. m.
West Omaha Mothers' Culture
club, Mrs. Blame Truesdell,
tinittPftS. SlLRI.
Child Conservation league. North
Side cncle, Mrs. W. A. trisman,
hostess, 2 p. m. . .
Saturdav '
Association of Collegiate Alumnae,
drama section, Mrs. Kobey Max
well, hostess, 11 a. m. .
IN 'THE WAKE of the suffrage
school and the Second district
convention, annual meetings and
elections oi officers claim the
clubwoman's attention almost exclu
sively. Thursday of this week the
Omaha Society of pine Arts holds its
election at the Hotel Fontenelle at
3:45 p. m., while that of the Tuesday
Morning Musical club is scheduled
for April 3 and the Omaha Woman's
club proper for April 16. Depart
mental elections also take place next
month. o .
Of the large women's organizations
which have already named their new
sets of officers, there are the Drama
league, the Social Settlement and the
Young Women's Christian associa
tion. A popular member of the executive
committee of the Fine Arts society is
mentioned as the most probable can
didate and that Mrs. Ward Burgess
will continue as chairman of the ex
hibition committee next year is more
welcome news, especially in view of
the fact that next year the society
will devote itselt more tuny to Dnng
ing art exhibits to Omaha, rather than
extensive Jecture series. Besides the
300 paintings in the Franco-Belgian
exhibit which will be shown here
about April 20 under the direction of
Mrs. Burgess, many piece of sculp
turp wilt also be exhibited.
Mrs. Frederick H. Cole, General
Federation chairman of civil service
reform will attend the council meet
ing at New Orleans, April 9 to 14. En
route south Mrs. Cole will stop in
Chicago to attend sessions of the Civil
Service Reform association, on invi
tation of the president, William B.
Hale. .
Mrs. L. J. Healey will report the
second district convention of the Ne
braska Federation of Women's Clubs
held in Omaha Thursday, during the
business session of the Omaha Wom
an's club, Monday at 2:30 o'clock at
Metropolitan club house. The open
program which follows will be given
by the political and social science de
partment, headed by Mrs. -C. W.
Hayes.
Karl F. Adams, principal of the
High School of' Commerce, will tell
about an anti-cigaret club in his
school and Arthur L. Weatherly of
Lincoln on "The .Menace of Compul
sory Military Education in Schools."
Mrs. E. A. Weathers and George
Compton will sing, with Miss Amanda
Tehbins as accompanist.
Of special interest this week in the
Woman's club is the big club lunch
eon which will be held Wednesday
at 1 o'clock at the Blackstone and for
which Mrs. C. A. Sherwood, chairman
of the house and home committee,
will receive reservations until Tues
day noon. ,.
Mrs. Mary I. Crcigh, the vice
president, reports" the other interest
ing feature with regard to the junior
members of the club who have been
asked to work for the scholarship
fund. In this interest they will have
an afternoon of song and story at the
home of Mrs. Edward Phelan, Friday,
at 2:30 o'clock. All club members
have been invited to this meeting and
a fee of 25 cents will he charged.
The patronesses, for the affair will be
Mesdamea F. H. Cole, F. J. Birss,
Mary I. Creigh, C. L. Hempel, Thom
as Brown and Miss Euphemia John
son. ... . f
Extemporaneous talks will be con
tinued by the oratory department,
Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock. The
parliamentary practice class meets
the same day at 2:30 o'clock, when
the subject for ithdy will be "Mo
tions' the motion to be amended be
ing the following: "All subsidiary
incidental and privileged motions will
be applied to the principle motion,
which is, that the leader of the par
liamentary law department appoint a
committee to confer with the mayor
and the city commissioners in regard
'to cleaning up the down town dis
tricts." E. R. McDonald is the in
itructor.
Mrs. A. L. Fernald. leader of the
literature department, has charge of
the program Wednesday morning.
Dorothy Canfield's 'The Bent Twig"
will be given by Mrs. Fernald and
Mrs. Edward Johnson, and Mrs. F.H.
Cole will give personal reminiscences
of the author, whom she knew as a
little eirl in Warren. III. Mrs. Can
field was a cousins of the family
who were patients of Mrs. Cole s
father, the woman heftelf being a
cousin of Horace Mann. Mrs. Can
field had a summer school every year
for children and Mrs. Cole attended
it. Later Mrs. Cole visited in Chicago
a family where. Mrs. Canfield and
Dorothy visited at the same time.
Dorothy Canfield lived , in Lincoln,
Neb., when her father was chancellor
of the University of Nebraska, but
she was a small girl at that time.
Later they moved tf Columbus, O.,
and now are in New York.
The home economics department of
the Omaha Woman's club will meet
Thursday morning at'IO o'clock, when
Miss Loa Howard will give a lesson
on making fribbon flowers.
The music department of the
Omaha Woman's club will meet
Thursday at the Metropolitan build
ing at 2:30 o'clock. The program will
be given by the members of the de
partment, after which a social meet
ing will be held to welcome the new
members. Mrs. F. J. Bell, Mrs. Ray
mond Young, Mrs. E. A. Thomas and
the Misses Edith Miller, Isabelle Rad
man, Dorothy Brown and Marie Mas
sey will give musical numbers, ac
companied by Mrs. Ray Abbott and
Miss Nora Pred.
A jubilee of the Women's Foreign
Missionary society of the Methodist
churches of Omaha, Council Bluffs
and vicinity will he held all day
April 17 at the First Methodist church
in this cityi Omaha is one of the sev
enty cities which is holding a simul
taneous meeting and plana have been
made to have telegraphic commumca.
tions from the meetings in the other
cities at the .Omaha session. Dr.
John L. Hellman of Dea Moinei will
be the chief speaker at the evening
meeting.
Mrs. C. L. Smith's section of the
Omaha Woman's Christian Temper
ance union will hold an educational
meeting Wednesday afternoon at 2
o'clock at the home of Mrs. Eric Nel
son. Mrs. W. T. Graham will talk
on "The Responsibility of the Indi
vidua! Woman Toward Civic Right'
Mrs. Edward Nelson will be the
hostess for the Belle-Lettres club
Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock.
There will be a meeting of the
Wyche Story League Thursday at
4:15 p. m. in the library. Miss Marie
Berry is leader and Mrs. Kuseeli
Jackson and. Miss. Marie Polian will
also tell stories.
At vespers today Rev. A. A. De-
Larme, pastor of the First Baptist
church, will give a stereopticon talk
on "Travels in the Holy Land." Miss
Catherine unman win sing.
The Many Centers club will meet
Monday night to sew for the Visiting
nurse association. . .
' Miss Rose Grodinsky will give a
general survey of American
dramatists when the Clio Study club
meets this afternoon at home of Miss
Jessie Kruger. Miss Lillian Cher
niss will give characteristic) of the
mm
a, tfk rj Art wxro' ci
Preparedness ! Nature now ha Spring
prepared for you. But are you prepared to
&et the most out of Ker alluring pleasures?
. Buds! The soon-to-arrive Now there are many
splendor ot the hickory began Packard models tor yon to
its development last October . choose from. They have been
and earlier. Nature never a-builtinA for many months
does fine work hurriedly.
Cars! Machines may stamp
out carpet tacks by the mil-,
lions any working day. But
when beauty is to be created,
and blended with the might of
theTwin-six engine, die work
can't be done hurriedly.
A more beautiful car for
you this year? ; '
that you may have the car
you need at exactly the time
you need it that you may
nave smooth and ' mighty
power coupled with un
matched luxury and comfort.
But already some of the body
-styles are being exhausted.
( Spring will soon be bloom
ing! A short time to prepare.
Ask the man who owns one
Cbotoe of twenty body styles. Pries, open'oani, 13030 and $3500, M Detroit
See THE ORR MOTOR SALES COMPANY
40th and Farnam St., Omaha. Branch at Sioux City, la.
American drama, and Miss Edna Le
vine will read from "The Great Di
vide." Benson chanter of the "P. E. O
Sisterhood will meet Monday at 2:30
o dock at tne nome ot Mrs. n. a.
McGlasson, when a discussion on the
"Resources and Industries of Ne
braska" will be led by Mrs. J. T.
Pickard.
The music section of the Associa
tion of Collegiate Alumnae will meet
Monday afternoon at.,4 o'clock at
the Young Woman'f Christian asso
ciation "with Miss Mabel Henrikson
as the leader. "II Trovatore," by F.
G. Verdi, will be the subject for study
and Mrs. Moore wilt act as the host
ess. Mrs. Roby Maxwell -vill enter
tain the drama section Saturday
morning at 11 o'clock, when "The
Lonely Wat. by bchnttzler. will be
given by Miss Zora Shields. Miss
t.sther 1 nomas will be hostess to I he
story tellers' section Wednesday aft
ernoon at 4 o'clock. A Russian storv
will be given by Miss Vera Dubois
and a selected story by Miss Grace
Vollmar.
Mrs. W. D. Merrow will lead the
program of the Clio, club Wednesday
afternoon, when the club meets at the
home of Mrs. E. McEachron.
The entertainment given by the
Woman's Mission circle and World
Wide guild of Grace Baptist church
at Tenth and Arbor streets will be
repeated next Tuesday evening at
8 p. m. for the benefit of many who
were kept at home by the weather.
Mrs. A. O. Peterson will be host
ess for the meeting of the "Mu Sigma
club Wednesday morning at 9:30, with
Mrs. Frank Norton as the leader.
Mrs. George Platner will give the
classification and history of the son
net; Mrs. G. W. Noble, sonnets to a
man friend; Mrs. A. L. Patrick, the
dark woman of the sonnet; special
classifications of the sonnet as writ
ten by William Cullen Bryant, Mrs.
George Damon, and readings from the
sonnet, Miss May Riale. Several solo
selections chosen from Shakespeare
will be given by Mrs. Noble.,
W. F. Baxter will speak before the
West Omaha Mothers' Culture club
Friday evening at 8 o'clock at the
home of Mrs. Blaine Truesdell on the
subject of "Progress and Poverty."
The husbands of the members will
be guests of the club and after Mr.
Baxter's talk a program of special
music will be given.
Miles Greenleaf when Dundee circle
of the Child Conservation league
meets Monday at the home ot Mrs.
Walter Crook. Mrs. David McGahey
will tell "lustances of Law's in Jus
tice to 'Women;" Mrs. Fred Elliott,
jr., about the "Mothers' Pen:.on
Law," and Mrs. Greenleaf will talk on
inheritance and property laws. Miss
Angeline Rush will give readings.
. Miss Glen SleepeV will lead the pro.
gram which the music department of
the Business Women's club gives
Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock at the
Young Women's Christian associa
tion. '"Favorite Hymns" is the subject
of the program.
An all-day meeting, beginning at 10
a. m., of Chapter E of the P. E. O.
Sisterhood will be held Thursday at
the home of Mrs. R. B. Zachary, when
the time wilt be spent in sewing
braided rag rugs, which will be sold
for the benefit of the supreme con
vention to be held here in the fall.
At 2 o'clock a Browning program will
be given. Mrs. W. S. Hogue will
give a paper on Robert Browning and
Mrs. T. M. Giltner one on Elizabeth
Browning. Browning quotations by
all the members will be given and
Mrs. G. W. Hervey will give several
musical selections.
The South Omaha Woman's club
will not meet --'sday, but 111 meet
Thursday instead. It will be at the
hame of Dr. J. W. Koutsky and the
music section will be in charge of the
program, the prtfeeeds of the enter
tainment going to the Social Settle
ment Mr. N. M. Graham is in
charge of the affair and together with
the officers, wilt assi.t Mrs. Koutsky.
They are Mesdames T. J. Farrell,
president; R. IJ. Falkner, secretary,
and H. C. Vermillion, treasurer.
To honor visiting women of the
Scottish Rite reunion this week, the
Scottish Rite Woman's club will hold
a reception add musicale at the cathe
dral, Friday at 2 o'clock. The club
will serve luncheon to Scottish Rite
members all of this week and will
take charge of the banquet Thursday
evening.
"Laws of this State Concerning
Women" is the subject to be dis
cussed under the leadership of Mrs.
Mrs. W. j.-Vash will entertain the
Woman's club of the railway mail
service at its regular meeting at the
Blackstone Wednesday at 2 "o'clock.
Roll call will be answered by current
events and the topic of the lesson
will be "The Romance of San Fran
cisco." Leaderswill be Mrs. J. M.
Reynolds, Mrs. J. N. Strand and Mrs.
L. Langfellner.
North Side circle of the Child Con
servation league Will meet Friday at
2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. W. A.
Crisman.
The Sunshine club of George M
Custer Woman's Relief Corps will
meet Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
W. N. Johnson, 1516 North Twenty
eighth street. .
Mrs. C. W. Hayes will speak at
the monthly business meeting of the
Miller Park Mothers' circle Wednes
day afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in the
Miller Park school auditorium.
will be addressed at its regular Tues
day noon meeting at the court house
by Rev. Fred J. Clark qf the First
Congregational church. . The women
of the Florence Methodist church
will serve the luncheons. These
luncheons ire a boon to the business
woman in these days of high cost of
living. Last week some girls kept
downtown by the rain found to their
'great satisfaction that they could pur
chase there for the sum of 10 cents
a substantial meal, including a cup of
cuncc, iwo gcuciuus saituwiiiica, t
piece of cakv. and a piece of fruit.
Casualty Building Sale .
Confirmed by Court Order
Judge Day of the district court has
confirmed the sale of the National
Fidelity and Casualty company's
building at Twelfth and Farnam
streets to Reese Wilkinson of Lincoln.
The building was sold to the highest
bidder by the state insurance board
to wind up the affairs of the company.
It brought $65,250. Some time ago the
building was , sold- for $45,000, but
Judge Day refused to confirm the
sale. Attorney General Reed and Au
ditor Smith filed the report of the sale
as members of the state insurance
board.
The Business Woman's Council
Strike Hits f!nnirl's Plan
For Railroaders' Union
Because of the" threatened railroad
strike Elmer Lobb, fireman for the
Missouri Pacific, could not get away
even for an hour to take out a mar
riage. license. The day of the wedding
had been set, so the hride-io-be, Daisy
Dixon, explained the situation to "Cu
pid" Stubbendorf, marriage license
clerk, who gallantly issued' the nec
essary certificate to her. The Lobbs
will do their domestic railroading at
622 South Nineteenth street.
For quick andsure results use The
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2-ton model a heavy
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B-ton model the largest
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other trucks of heavier
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8 -ton special model
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I Ctese ff
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roinni till e
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3V2-ton truck '(cfCl) $3350
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