Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 20, 1917, SOCIETY, Image 17

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: MAY 20, 1917.
SKS
S- 1
It's May time
It's Maytlme
All nature
Is so bright
And if you'd
Go a-shopping
You'll see ,
A happy sight
The shops abound
Attractively
In summer togs
For YOU
The merchants try
Their very best
To get your
Point-of-view
In styles
Up-to-the-minute
The windows
Are be-decked
You'll find
WE SHOULD aim to make our
Summer a joyous holiday and
to revel in the luxury of out-of-doors.
The Orchard & Wilhelm Co. has
furniture for our porches that will
create an atmosphere of ease and in
formality. No furniture could be
more attractive Ih Summer than the
cane and reed rockers, chairs and
tables on display there-! also a splen
did line of upholstered swinging ham
mocks with canvas covers always an
alluring feature for the porch. There's
a lawn suite such as you see pic
tured in English gardens consisting
of four chairs and a round table, with
slip covers of smart awning striped
canvas and a huge umbrella which
invites you to sit in its shade on a
hot Summer afternoon. Out-of-doors
jiving is economy of strength and
'twill be more than worth your while
to invest in some of these delightful
porch and garden pieces at Orchard
& Wilhelm's.
Along with the voguish gingham
hats and frocks we have gingham
parasols to match.
F
french rose-buds, exquisite filet
THE BEE'S SHOPPING
SERVICE is absolutely free of
charge to its readers and we urge
you to take advantage of it By
taking a good value in a blouse
from one shop, a coat from an
other and a dress perhaps from an
other, we are able to select for you
the best to be bought in Omaha for
the money and thereby reduce the
cost of dressing. When you write
please be very explicit in stating
your desires. Purchases will be
sent from the stores C. O. D.
Address Polly The Shopper,
Omaha Bee,
Or Phone Tyler 4000.
Most anything
In suits
Be-figured or
Be-checked
Such vari-colored
Blouses
Such boots
Such gowns
Such hats
Such bits
Of femininity
From Auto veils
To spats
Remember this
My Lady Faire
The Best You'd Have
'Tis true
Then you must
Patronize the shops
So they
Can BUY for YOU
T OW that Spring has so advanced.
Xl Mr. Man, you'll certainly be
pleased to have some of those fresh
wash ties Lucien Stephens is show
ing at his Smart Shop for Men. 1901
Farnam. Big Sister has also been
remembered, for Mr. Stephens has
swagger sticks with our nation's em
blem embossed on the top just too
nobby for anything! To see them is
to buy one.
WHAT a comfort to know of a
shop where you can have your
simplest frock embroidered, beaded
or braided to took like an imported
gown. The IDEAL PLEATING
CO., Brown Block, has an expert de
signerI've told you before about
this clever young Russian. This
week he was embroidering in white
chalk beads an intricate pattern on a
dainty Georgette frock really, it was
wonderfully beautiful! And one thing
you can always depend on they fin
ish orders ON TIME at this shop.
The new overalls for women will
certainly help vanquish work.
ILUFFY net dresses with pert lit- T'VE often mentioned in these col- TXthat n,rf t
tie shirrings, girlish fichus, 'dainty 1 umns Pry 'hop of La- W J"oraf Han
fii.t monas, nx floor ot the Kose Bldi. ' '. i.1'1 "'.v
. "m""y ut l t ,m .k.. .i..:- so by the caretul and
.rimmmgs ana riDoons y out tne - massage obtainable at The Comfort
Summer frocks are adorable which "encn niousesr Keauy, tney are cun r- dmc Tnht
Benson & Thome are featuring this Positive y enchanting m the.r loveli- ShP' f " Id . M s I hnitosu
veekforthe benefit of Misses about nessl Visualize, if you can, one of 5!5' "AM"J " "J'e " ?
10 graduate. And, best of all, they're coI Nile Green Georgette embroid-
n n.n;.nt tiicn j, ered m self tones ahd t nv i vir figuring eyebrows, so tnat you win be
IWr. ,,. hrLli C; :,X beads with a vesree of delicate anri- n,ost naPPy ov" the effect.
and voile dresses-really charming cot color. Why, it's a veritable Spring tttALLA(-f Nuttin(. Pj,t, The
ittle affairs for only $500 Then Poem' and " makes me fe' tnercen- lAAl-i-AH1 cutting Pictures! ine
mere are the imported French voiles" Iy to.mnn"on that " has 1 th Vl'Z BriS'oTGiri Trad'
. .h,, m) rf.Jnt,, f, tiw Yes, it's $9.75. the heart of any Bride or Girl Grad-
iii m ti "c , uate glad. 1 particularly love his old
$14.50 The Misses Section at Ben- ..' fashioned or Colonial themes, show
I S V ,lne Patrl0t'c maid nay wear a ing quaint girls and grandsires at the
prettier things in every day, and such jabot or collar of Georgette in red, center of our ancestral life-scenes
Host ot tnerm white and blue. One of our stores of hearth-sides, winding stairs, old
ri4TTrv T a '""wing quite a line ot tnem. settles and hospitable and beautiful
i . . . e
nerr sne s certainly a neat,
imart little
house and
tC. I . "I5?. cT.. JttKMrv turf (a m,l. It T to. s Art hliop. Uip this item so
Wy Jane" K'taS SSS iOplG "FLOWER ISlL1 5r ihJi .VZ". !
which sells for $2.50-made of percale KViLE is based on a thorough -"8"' ............c.u
A. :uM. r t r-Ai. knowledge or what is nrnnr in etvU m
tifty Bungalow aprons and individuality. His bouquets have QJPECIAL1 Very special, Indeed!
that artistically lovely touch which J And you'll want several when you
HERE'S an item in which every Drmes CH!r,sn . much. Whether see tnem. ine vv. n. tiariage im
housekeeper or housekeeper-to- y?ur wedding be simple or elaborate, porting Co. is offering this week the
. .i,.m u. ti.!. Mr. Larmon is enuinneH tn unn1v prettiest, coolest looking porch or
Sant School of Business. 220 Omaha beautiful flowers for either church or Summer-time bedroom rugs for
Nat. Bank Bldg., is going to conduct "umc "oration. s"op is in the 8!' ''J ' " . "
i six weeks' course, beginning Tune Fontenelle Hotel. Phone Doug. 8244. ?'an inducement, so you 11 just drop
18. on "War-Time Food Problems," ' an1 Ket. cquainted with this at-
-jti, A,;u m.. ,a .ti,. ...i.V. . tractive Oriental shop. Its at 1318
t " sirana or peans in ainner lengtn, Farnam St
waste by Miss Irma Gross, B. S., of with a small diamond clasp, is a very rarnara ot' ,
h S Bettreg, aonc" PPU'ar A MONO the tables full of charm
,, , 'I query, "How shall I furnish Orchard & Wilhelm's Gift Shop I
KOSe I t,,t ;t(, ,l.-. i; r , ... . . , . K
front doors taken amidst the dignified
little thinVto have about the A PERFECT wedding ceremony is ,hegse fascina ine subfect, a?e
-and just another one of the n, T looked forward to by all WJVlf"'
thingJ made by Miss Cole of Part.c.pat.ng-and flowers are a most V.lflJ nt rt?A.S
A f XT ntr nir
Bide thev are offerinir 800 nair , ' , 1 lltt,e a,cove tliat reception found the quaint lacquered tin box
,f vfrj nifjy umps of thfs season" n0' that od.y of yester-year for Sweet-meats-but
Ihort lines in all sizes at the sne snapcd r00m? can be answered to in a new guise. The cover is topped
tially reduced prices, $3.85, $4.85 and y! utmo sa,.,sfaction and without with a very smart , looking painted
f5.85. The materials are parent, n wn " r.n' ady, whose (tin) crinoline skirts are
fclack, gray and ivory kid and white Jtr, D "wflhSw'P epftmen-t 0r--ted -Tu' ',1-fashf,oned P051;
Knen-and in Colonial and stranned chard & Wilhelm s, who main am ex- Filled with bon-bons, almost any girl
leaded effects. YoU can have vonr Pcrts to. nelP y" sone nome-turnish- would pronounce it "just the sweet
n have vour f t, r 7.
a walking or Louis heel. !.' I "V". ""'", , E"
WHEN I walked into F.
Thome's Uptown Shop,
W.
1812
Farnam St., last Wednesday the
clerks were all as busy as bees re
marking merchandise from one end
choice of
r:i .:u u. n.j .t.:i .t rials
wait viuui win uc micu wiuic uiev .1 .
v ' mere a no excuse lor our having m-
artistic nooks in our homes with this
PHEERS1 I made a discovery this sphniid department to aid us.
C week. If you want a pretty sun
shade to match vour SDort costume. TOTHING besneaks ri-finrmrnt
fou can have your own parasol frame ' more than a daintily gloved of ne store t0 'he other, for, since
fe-covered at a very small cost at the hand! If you want gloves properly Mr- Thome's announcement that he
western umDrena LO., lutli and far- cleaned, 1 urge you by all means to woum piace nis Diisiness on a casn
nam. It's beautifully done, too! send them to the Pantorium, but if basis, he has decided to show his
you buy washable gloves never send patrons what an advantage this policy
FETCHING Fashions in Millinery them to be dry cleaned if you ever is y offering everything at greatly
for Wee Maidens are shown in expect to wash them yourself after- reduced figures. This, as you know,
The Little Tots' Section of Benson & wards, for they come out dry and was a comparatively new store when
IIIUIIIC 3. OlIIipiC IIllIC XldlS IH Tan- ami HHU lUcttllLdliy rilineU. l"""" iww i uc managl-
ama and Leghorn some demurely ment of it a few weeks ago from A.
trimmed with ribbon, others gayly be- Js THERE anything -expresses T- BenS0I, 80 a" tIle Pretty modish
decked with dainty rose-buds. There 1 youth and buoyancy more than the froc,ks' boai"- sui. coats, etc., are
are cunning chin straps to hold them lndl.,,,.Ki. r,AA pi....5 o spick and span new, and you 11 be
on. If you've a little fairy in your ation Paul Tone? and Rnh Fvan. very wise indeed to take advantage of
home, 2 to 10 years old, she must have Middies, with navy and scarlet trim- Le "markable values ottered. Mr,
one of these pretty hats. mings-no girl's vacation outfit is Tr"s name wins instant recogni-
. u, , complete without several-can be t.on from the. Omaha public for hon-
A convenient toilet table for baby found at Benson & Thome's. There's ist merchandise.
"k-T k"0".'0" a "andard with a big table of them for $1.00 and $1.50. , , V
a big handle to lift it around. There s Tilere are new midd;es with appie. TJUST can't resist tucking in this
a tiny basket underneath to contain green trimmings that look so clean 1 bit of news at the last minute,
the needed toilet articles. and cool and pIajn Norfolc styes. Over at Benson & Thome's they have
... ... Pleated Middv Skirts in plain white iust received the most jaunty riding
TJ EKES another beautiful SUCfres- ...-.I. i"c ..I... I hahit nf natural mlnn-H lirlffi lint
I I ... ... ... . itiaici ittia anu ovuauv uiiu uiilKllitnis j
LX tion for a wedding gift A m, I,- ..,l,.. .1,:. s like Mrs. Vernon f asl e wears on her
$2.50 and $3.95.
Middy sweaters are extremely pop
ular among the younger set now.
morning rides through Central Park
and separate trig white breeches
that would be wonderfully stunning
worn with a dark serge or tweed
coat. Riding has become such a fad
among our society women that I'm
EXT time you re downtown drop lure they wj be glad to hear of
. !n. the Prctty Japanese shop of .... Summer toas.
HAWTHORNE VASE would be
distinctive ornament that any bride
would love in her new home. At
The Alia Shop, 207 S. 18th St., there
are a few of these rare and exquisite
vases. One of black, with faint pink
blossoms (a decorator told me it was
an exceotional soecimen) then there
re those in Chinese b ue and de rate ine Nippon Importing Co.. 218 h.
lavender and pink. Mrs. Smith will 18th St., for the proprietor, Mr. Taso,' Ljst to my song, it won't be long
tell you the interesting story how m his delightfully, courteous manner, BRIDES and MAIDENS GRAD
Ihese vases are made. will show you through the shop even UATINGI
if -you do not come to buy. There's Gowns of Fluffy Net you'll find "so
TUST tell me what girl or woman a table of beautiful baskets which sweet!"
eJ doesn't dote on pretty hosiery? could be used for sewing or a variety Dreams of Blouses, Sunshades capti-
And if she'd but see the captivating of things and if you like can be at- vating,
fancies in silken foot-covering that tractively decorated with tassels or Summer Boots and Hosiery elite
are shown at Thompson-Belden's she beads. There are unique incense For your wedding gown wonderful
would dote on them more than ever burners of queer Chinese figures. Mr. Beading.
before. For the Bride or Girl Grad- Taso receives his merchandise direct- Wedding Flowers you'll soon be
uate, there are white silk stockings 'y from Japan and the low prices will needing.
that are exquisitely hand-embfoid- astonish you. Wedding or Engagement Rings
cicu, iiniiy inci anu simple sweet - - -
TN THE Spring a young man's
J. tancv lightly turns to thmiehts
of love" and an ENGAGEMENT Baskets very beautiful for sewing,
RING for the "dearest girl in the "War-Time Food Suggestions" will
world." He mav not know that a save "stpwinir "
jour sweater or Sports frock. Ask genuine diamond yes, a beautiful, lit- Little Sister's "Flower Girl Hat"
Miss Leech at SThe Hosiery Section tie sparkling gem, mav be pur- you'll find,
to show them to you. chased at Arnold H. Edmonston's Then all your worries will be off your
. Jewelry Shop. Rose Bldg., for only 'mind.
Show your patriotism by joining $50.00. Write or ask Mrs. Nieman Sincerely yours,
the Red Cross Society this week,, in this shop to trll you about how von POLLY.
You'll be proud to wear a button. can arrange for the payment of it Advertisement.
clock effects. For the Sports Girl
there are rose and white and gold
and blue horizontal striped hosiery,
r plain shades of Kelly green and
ld blue most any color to match
cases.
Such exquisite
Vases.
gifts of Hawthorne
What
Women Are
Doing in the World
CLUB CALENDAR.
Monday-
Nebraska Episcopal women's aux
iliaries, Trinity cathedral parish
house, i v. m.
Association of Collegiate Alum
nae, music section, Y. W, C. A.,
4 p. m.
Convalescent Aid society, city
hall. 10 a. m.
Business Woman'a club, Y. W. C,
A.. 7:30 n. m.
Dundee Catholic Women'" circle,
Mrs. Edward Callahan, hostess,
2 p. m.
Clio club Mrs. F. M. Clark, hos
tess, 2:30 p. m.
Tuesday
P. E. O. Sisterhood, Chapter B
P., Mrs. W. H. Peacock, host
ess. 2 p. m.
Business Women's Council, court
house. 11 to 2 p. m.
George Crook Woman's Relief
corps, Red Cross benefit,
Crounse hall, Z p. m.
Wednesday-
National League for Woman Serv
ice, hontenelle. iv.io a. m.
Mothers' Culture club, Mrs. Frank
field, hostess, 1 p. m.
Omaha Woman's Press club, Ho
tel Loval. 12::45 n. m.
Order of St. George, Queen Mary
lodge, card party. Lyric hall, 8
p. m.
W. C. T. U., Frances Willard
union, Y. W. C. A., 2 p. m.
Thursday
B'nai B'rith, McKinley ladies'
auxiliary, Lvnc hall. 8 t. m.
Wyche Story Tellers' league, pub
lic library. 4:lo p. m.
Benson Woman'a club, annual
meeting, Benson city hall, 2:30
p. m.
Friday
P. E. O. Sisterhood, Chapter B,
K., evening meeting, Mrs. W. K.
Matthews, hostess.
Society of American Widows,
Mrs. B. L. lurpin, hostess, 8
o. m.
Dorcas club, Mrs. M. N. Wood
ward, hostess. 2:30 p. m.
West Omaha Mothers' Culture
club, Mrs. G. A. Roberts, hos
tess. 2:30 p. m.
Scottish Rite Woman's club, ca
thedral, 2 p. m.
Saturday
P. E. O. Sisterhood, Chapter B.
N., Mrs. J. C. Buffington, host
ess, 2 p. m.
WILL HEAD COLLEGIATE
ALUMNAE NEXT YEAR.
Episcopal church women of Ne
braska auxiliaries will hold their
thirty-first annual meeting at Trinity
cathedral parish house Monday and
Tuesday. Mrs. Albert Noe, vice presi
dent at large, gives the address of
welcome at the opening service Mon
day at 2 o'clock. Reports will be given
by officers as follows: First district
vice president, Mrs. Charles Leslie;
second district vice president, Mrs.
D. L. Thomas; third district vice
president, Mrs. Blondell; fourth dis
trict vice president, Mrs. Yoder; sec
retary, Mrs. T. H. Tracy; educational
secretary, Mrs. A. L. Williams, cus
todian of boxes, Mrs. J. A. Tancock;
librarian, Mrs. Charles Trimble;
junior president, Miss Eleanor
Sprague; junior secretary, Miss Caro
line Barkalow; church periodical club,
Mrs. Leete. and bishon's Euild. Miss
Updike. Constitution changes will also
be considered.
Bishop A. L. Williams will be the
celebrant at noiy communion lues
dav at 9:30 a. m.. following which he
will give his annual address. Reports
of the treasurer, Mrs. Fairchild, and
of united offerings by Miss Koyce,
with pledges, will follow. Luncheon
will be followed by Ben Stanley's or
gan recital.
Election of officers and delegates,
address of the president, Mrs. Philip
Potter: address by ur. Koogera on
"Our Boys" and a play, "Manana,
given by the Juniors, will occupy the
afternoon session.
The receDtion committee includes
Mesdames A. L. Williams, J. A. Tan-
cock, T. J. Mackay and Noe; hospi-
ta tv. Mesdames i. ti. i racy, jean
Johnston and Charles Haller, and
badges, Mrs. Robert H. Doherty.
Delegates from all over the state
are expected to attend.
stereopticon will be given at the
Young Women's Christian association
at 7:30 o'clock and is open to the
public.
Chapter B. P. of the P. E. O. sister
hood will meet Tuesday afternoon
with Mrs. W. H. Peacock.
Mrs. W. R. Matthews will be hos
tess for the evening meeting of chap
ter B. K. of the P. E. O. sisterhood
Friday.
Judge A. h. Sutton will address
the members of the House of Hope,
Klorence, Sunday at 3 p. m. Musical
numbers will be given.
Mrs EttSunderJanot
Mrs. E. M. "Roy" Sunderland was
eiecteo president of the Association
of Collegiate Alumnae at the annual
meeting Saturday at the Fontenelle.
Mrs. C. Roby Maxwell was re-elected
vice president, Miss Helen Robinson
secretary and Miss Ruth McDonald
re-elected treasurer. Mrs. H. E.
Newbranrh, the retiring president;
Miss Mary Irene Wallace and Miss
JJumont were chosen for directors.
party in its Lyric hall clubrooms
Wednesday evening.
The Wvche Storr Tellera' learnt
will hold i business meeting Thurs
day at :is o clock in the library.
The drama section of the Aaanria.
tion of Collegiate Alumnae has oost-
poned its meeting of Saturday until
June 2, when it will be held at Happy
Hollow club. Rostand's "The Ro
mancers" will be given on the lawn
outside the club house bv a cast in
cluding Mesdames Herbert Woodland,
rranK ttergquist and Misses Kathe
rine Lowry, Josephine Duras, Janet
Watson, Vera Du Bois and Anna
Lane. Reservations for the luncheon
which follows should be made with
Mrs. Philip Horan he Thursday ore-
ceding. Officers for next vear will be
elected. Miss Elizabeth Mitchell is in
charge of the play.
Mrs. Ida K. Martin of Minneaoolis.
national president of the Woman's
Relief Corps, who was present at the
Columbus meeting last week, was
called to Denver, so she had to give
un her visit to Omaha. II. v C.rnt
YVoman's Relief Corps has cancelled
the luncheon planned for her Monday
at the Castle hotel. Mrs. Martin was
to be the guest of Mrs. Abbie A. Ad'
ams.
North Side circle. Child Conserva.
tion league, will have its last meeting
of the year Friday at 2 o'clock at the
nome ot Mrs. I. l ijheeran. This
will be a social meeting. Officers for
next year elected at the last meeting
were Mesoames i it. savidge, pres
ident; Kodman Brown, vice president
f. aneeran. secretary; 1'. A. Mil er.
treasurer, and K. ti. fair, press re
porter.
Dcbussv's "Tfllios et Melisanrfe"
will he studied bv the mmir. sri-iinn
of the Association of Celleeiate
Alumnae at its final meetins Mondav
at 4 o'clock at the Young Women's
Christian association. Election of of
ficers will lake place.
There will be a meetino: of the Sent.
tish Kite Woman's club at the cathe
dral Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock.
The West Omaha Mothers' Culture
club will meet Friday with Mrs. G. A.
Roberts. Annual election ot otneers
1 be held. Quotations from the
works of Henry Thoreau, the natural
ist, will be used to answer roll call.
Mrs. R. C. Dozier will give his biog
raphy; Mrs. C. D. Hutchinson, a re
view of his essay on economy; Mrs.
C. Dugan, the one "Where I Live
and What I Live For;" Mrs. C. B.
Swan, on "Solitude." and Mrs. W. N.
Baker, on "The Village. All tnese
I be taken from the collection ot
essays, vvalden, or me in nie
Woods."
Elsie Vandergrift Benedict, suffrage
organizer who worked in Nebraska
in the last campaign, spent an hour
with Mrs. H. C. Sumney Thursday
evening enroute irom uenver 10
Rome, N. Y., where she was caned
for campaign purposes. Mrs. Benedict
has recovered from what threatened
to be serious ear trouble, with which
she was afflicted while working in the
western part of Nebraska this spring.
Benson Woman's club will hold its
annual meeting and election of officers
Thursday at i:M o clock at the Ben
son city hall.
The Dorcas club will meet Friday
afternoon with Mrs. M. N. Woodward,
iM3 Manderson street.
The Clio club's meeting of last
week, which was postponed so mem
bers could attend the art exhibit, will
be held Monday afternoon at the home
ot Mrs. t. M. Clark. Officers for
next year will be elected. This is the
last meeting of the year, exclusive of
the picnic dinner at the home of Mrs.
E. W. U. l'ercival, June 26.
Rev. Edwin Hart Jenks of the First
Presbyterian church will lead the
prayer meeting of the Business
Women's council Tuesday at the
court house. Women of Kountze
Memorial Lutheran church will serve
luncheon between the hours of 11
and 2.
Red Cross work and that of the
National League for Woman Service
will be discussed following a 1 o'clock
luncheon of the Mothers Culture
club Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Frank Field, 126 South Thirty-first
avenue. Mrs. Ira Porter will assist
the hostess and Mrs. C. E. Hall and
Mrs. E, G. McGilton will be guests
of the club.
An illustrated talk on our national
parks will be given by Mi5S Emma C.
Johnson for the Business Women's
club, Monday evening instead of Tues
day, the usual meeting night. The
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt ad
dressed a large national defense
meeting in Denver Friday evening.
Local suffragists hope she will come
to Omaha for the same purpose.
The Dundee Catholic Women's
circle will meet with Mrs. Edward
Callahan Monday between the hours
of 2 and 5.
George Crook Woman's Relief
corps will give a Red Cross benefit
card nartv Tuesdav afternoon at
Crounse hall. A prize will be given the
member bringing the most guests.
Admission is 25 cents.
Frances Willard Woman's Chris
tian Temperance union will hold its
regular meeting Wednesday at 2:00
in the assembly room at the Young
Women s Christian association.
Omaha Women's Christian Temper
ance union will abandon its tood con
servation program planned for Wed
nesday afternoon in order that mem
bers may attend the state food con
servation meeting at the Auditorium.
Wednesday's program will be given
at the next meeting.
Queen Mary lodge, Order,, of St.
George, wilt give a social and card
Health Talks
A perfect spine insures perfect
health.
Dr. Burhorn can read your
spine as you would a book.
It is from this analysis that he
can and will locate the cause of
95 per cent of your ailments.
I do not treat the effects of
your disease I adjust the cause
Nature does the rest.
I want the chance to prove my
above statements.
Consultation free. No obligation.
Adjustments ar $1.00.
Outside Calls are $2.00.
Dr. Burhorn, Chiropractor
Cor. 16th and Farnam Sts.
Suit 4M-4IS Rosa Bldg.
Phon Doug. 8347.
Palmar School Gradual
"Chiropractic Fountain Head"
T. W. C, A. Notos.
ThU will be th last week lor spring term
ctanaea,
A new rlaii tn flnt aid will b organised
Friday nlht at 7:30.
On Tumidity th LoPie-WUa club wll
meat with MIm Adams to fltilah club organ
I nail on.
Monday vontni tha coinmsnimnnt .
rclaea for gymnasium glria who liav won
snvctal honors or letters, during tho yaar
will bo held.
Th houiithold arli department will eel.
oraie mo eioung or tne year by giving ban
quela Two or three clauea will go tn to
gether and glva thefee farewell banijuetg
Thursdav even nv tha rnrBtiinn oi.....
which have been under tho Instruction of
aire, kuk meen Kltteleon, will present a
play, "Sctenra In tho L'nlon Depot.' All
memoera oi in dais will take part.
Mini Csra May Adams, city field secretary
of the north central field, with headquar
ters at Minneapolis, will ipsak at vespers
at 4:80. Miss Adama will be here until
Wednesday, masting clubs and advising with
board m unbare and aenratarl. On linn.
day tha Many Centers olub will hold Its
reajuiar mommy meeting, with Miss Adams
mm apeaner.
What Should Be
Done in a Case
Like This One?
i
Plow would vou aolve the nrnhlrm
of the neglected wife?
Where husband and wife are drift
ing further and further apart, not
necessarily because of an onen sr a ti
dal between them, but more frequent
ly because their interest and view
points no longer coincide, what would
be your remedy?
What would you do with the other
woman, who need not he a mere so
cial derelict who may, in fact, repre
sent a higher type of womanhood
than she who is displaced? How
would you satisfy the demands of a
husband who has progressed men
tally and it may be spiritually, while
his wife has remained stationary?
One need only look about him to
be certain that these- questions are
vital ones in many American homes.
Short of the gordian remedy of di
vorce, how shall these snarls lie
straightened? What would you do if
you were the neglected wife? W'hal
if you were the husband torn betweer.
rooted conceptions of duty and the
feeling that perhaps a higher debt to
himself and all about him demands
a frank recognition of changed condi
tions? What if you were the other
woman, swept along in the tide of cir
cumstance, struggling' to escape
through some channel that would
leave your selt-rcspect to you, and yet
not denude your life of all that had
become dearer than life itself?
"The Neglected Wife," Pathe's new
serial, founded on Mabel Herbert
Umer's stories, starts at the Muse
tliealer today and shows graphically
how one crisis was met. But its so
lution is not the solution. You mav
approve the last great choice that
poor Margaret Warner made, or you
may ace beyond it to another and
more compelling solution.
Pathe has offered a series of prizes
for the best letters presenting answers
to the problem of "The Neglected
Wife." A first prize of $1,000 will be
awarded, with another of $500, and
live additional prizes of $100 each, the
winners to be chosen by a committf
of prominent men and women.
What is your way out?
America a Music-Loving
Nation Without Composer.
Count Eugene d'Harcourt, a noted
composer, conductor and critic oi
Paris, who has been visiting in New
York and touring the United States,
in a recent interview said:
"You Americans are singularly mu-ic-lovitig
as a nation. If you were
not devoted to music, why should
you have it everywhere and alwaysf
Americans have to have music at
every hour of the day more than an
other people in the world. You hav .
all the feeling for music and all the
love of it necessary to make you t
great musical nation, but yon hav
no musicians, because ou have n
musical education. It is like trying ,
to work without tools you havl
everything but the toola."
He contends that we should tooif
produce many excellent composeri
and develop a popular taste for tha
finest music if the principles of diik
sic were properly taught in our pri
mary schools and if there were a few"
endowed conservatories where tal
ented men and women could receive a
musical education free, aa they do in
Europe.
"You have your Carhegies giving
millions for free libraries and Rocke
fellers who give as many millions to
the cause of medical research, bul
none of your millionaires seems to
feel the great need of the American
people for musical education. Yet it
should be the shame of America that
your musicians nil go to Europe to
study."
Indiana Congressman -
Dies at Washington
Washington. Mav 19. Representa
tive Daniel W. Comstock of Indiana
died here today of pneumonia. He
was 77 years old and a veteran of the
civil war.
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I "And a hot bath would
I rest me so"