THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1917 Lovely Gowni at Club Opening!. This week will see the season at all the country clubs in full swing. Announcement! have been received from the board of directors of Sey mour Lake Country club of the for mal opening on Friday evening. "June 1 i the very latest opening date and everyone interested in Seymour Lake club is hoping that this fact will save the opening dinner-dance from the disagreeable weather which has greeted the other openings. Carter Lake club will hold its opening dinner-dance on Wednesday of this week. The opening parties Saturday even, ing at Field and Happy Hollow clubs were as pleasant, if not quite so large, as in former years. The weather must be blamed again, for it was dark, damp and dreary. Many new and pretty costumes were seen at the Feld club. Suits and the new neither high nor low dancing dresses predominated over evening gowns. Mrs.- Earl Buck wore one of these pretty dancing frocks of black and white net and georgette crepe with large black hat The hats, in fact, were a noticeable feature of the women1! dresi. Mrs. C D. Sturte vant wore an extremely pretty dress of gray georgette crepe. Mrs. Frank lin Shotwell wore a very becoming dancing frock of white georgette crepe and taffeta made wjth braided bodice. Mrs. John Mack wore a yel low silk evening dress. Mra. Sidney L, Smith of Hartford, Conn., who is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jotm -F. Dale, wore an attractive frock of black satin and a white hat Her sister, Miss Martha Dale, whose mar riage to Alexander Loomis will take ' place June 30, wore a black Satin suit ' with black hat. Mrs. George Laicr had a auit of American beauty shade with a pretty gray hat Mri. W. R. Wood wore a gold and blue sport suit with a black and white hat. Mrs. E. P. Boyer wore a gold colored suit with a hat to match. Miss Irene Mc Kmght was very charming In a white serge- suit With white hat Wedding Guests Return. J Mr, and'Mrs, G. A. Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. John Brady and Mrs. Thomas Latham ; Davis returned yesterday front St. Joseph, Mo.,' where they went Saturday to attend the marriage of Mr. Halleck McCord Brady to Miss Cecilia Rhodes. The young people ' hava been engaged for some time, but even the Omaha relatives had been expecting that the ceremony would not take place until after Mr. Brady had i completed hi!- three months' training in the officers' reserve train ing camp at Fort Riley, Kan. ' Ike, wedding was simple, because of the scarcity of time. Mr. Brady wore his uniform and the bride wore a pretty suit of white. They left for Kansas City to spend Sunday, but Mr. Brady was obliged to return to Fort Riley by this morning. It is expected that Mrs. Brady will come to Omaha the latter part of the week for a visit with her relatives here.- Can Oirl Chang to Vegetable? Does anyone Miow how to convert a perfectly good little girl into a car rot, a beet or ahead of lettuce? This problem confronts the costume com mittee: for the nature masque, "The Spirit of Walden Wood," by Mrs. Myron Learned, which is to be pre sented at Hanscom parte the after noon of June 16 for the benefit of the Red Cross and the Woman Service league. One of the several attractive dance numbers in the masque is a vegetable dance in which little girls impersonate common garden vegeta bles and the committee Is hard pressed to make appropriate cos tumes for vegetable children. Misa Arabell Kimball, promoter of the masque; Miss Gertrude Young, Mri. T. R. Kimball and . Mra. William Shanrron are member! of this com mittee. -' ' ; Miss Mary Irena Wallace will di rect the performance. Mrs. J, T. Stewart. and Mra. Sam Burns, for the Red Cross,' and Mrs, Lowria Childs for the Woman'! league, constitute a . committee on arrangements. Re hearsals will begin Wednesday. Social Gossip. V ..; Mrs. W. F.' Milroy and her daugh ter, Mrs. Mel Uht, leave Saturday for St. Paul, .where Mrs. Uhl has taken a house in order to be as near as pos sible to Fort Snelling, where her hus band ia in training. Mra. Milror will return later, and then ahe, with Dr. Milroy and Miss Isabel Milroy, will motor back to St Paul to spend most of the summer there. Mrs. Karl A. Llnlnser haa ' re turned from short stay at Excelsior Springs, Mo. -Mr. and Afn. O. C. Redick left Sunday evening for Chicagq, to be ffftnei until Wednesday. Mr, and Mrs. R. J. Dinning' Jeave next Sunday for the east to apend some time in New York with their daughter, Louise, who is studying nursing in that city. She plans to re main in New York some time after their return to Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. George Brandels re . turned Saturday from French Lick Springs, Ind. The weather was de lightful all the time they were there. War did not affect the gayety at the summer resort Mr. and Mrs. Bran deii bad their niece, the small daugh ter of Mr, and Mrs. Karl Louis, and her nurse with them. Miss Edna Cole motored to Lake Koronis, Minn, where she will spend several weeks with her cousin, Mr. Frederick Goodrich, on his ranch. , Mra. T, B. Minahan of Seattle, Wash., is the guest of her sister, Mis. T. J. Mahoney. . Misa Helen Eastman will not re turn from the Art institute in Chicago until after Juno 26. Mrs. Charles T. Kountse returns Wednesday from Washington, where she went to a Red Cross conference. Mr. and Mrs. Ward Burgess went on to New York after attending the conference. , Betrothal Announced. Mrs. Anna Keiner announces the engagement of her daughter. An iietta, to Mr. Alvin Nelson, aon of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nelson, trie marriage to take olace Saturday eve' ning at 8:30 at the home of the bride's mother. The wedding will be a verv fluiet affair, in keeninsr with the spirit of the times. Both young peo ple are graduates of Central High school, "d it was In their school days that the romance began. Miss Keiner also attended Stanley Hall in Mm neapolis after her graduation. 1 PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. r. B. Pirmtrv jnrthtnt tf BradsJww, li ! vliHInf friend la tht city. WILL BE ONE OF LOVELY BRIDES IN JUNE. . . 0t ft 1 1 ,4 A, I. f ! i '" t ' MISS AVONELL STICKLEY. Miss Avonell StLkley. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Stickley of the South Side, and Mr. C Wilbur Otis will be married June 6, Mini Stick- ley edited J he iooter, the south Side High school paper, and ia active in several church aocieties. The young couple will live in Omaha. Old World Viewpoint By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. We do things differently in Amer ica I Chaperons are a convention rather than a fact; freedom takes the place of protection, and the average boy or girl of 15 feels ready establish his or her own standard of conduct. The older generation and the younger are constantly clashing, and a good many representatives of the two opposing forces write and ask me to act as tneir referee. There are two sidei to the! tory. Over in Europe this does not mean in Russia particularly, nor yet in Germany or France or England, but everywhere in "the old country- there are conventional restrictions about which the young people of this country know very little. ., A year before the war T spent a summer in France and Switzerland. None of the girls I met waa in the habit of having engagements or going out with young men or entertaining callers alone and unchaperoned. The foreign born mothers and fath ers of our boys and girls were brought up in a country wnose social iraui tions were nothing like our own. When the girla of that Swiss summer had caller! they Were received in the oresence of the family. Generally, the girls' suitors were se lected by their elders. And these "made matches woraeo out pretty well, for girls who were brought up nmnlv and who sot tneir first real freedom through marriage were happy and satisfied in that simple freedom. The Younger Generation. Now the European born older gen erations got its ideals in the conven- 1 .--:-... At .1.- " I1UI1HI eUHCiJ Ml ,11 v...... o.u... Children live simple lives of work and duty. Good timea were few and far between. Love and courtship were more or leas arranged to order, and life worked itself out placidly and pretty well on the whole. Presto! Changel The old world in habitant was transported to the new but generations of heredity, years of training and ingrained ideala came along. .- And now we have -the younger ?;eneration. Seventeen year - old iretchen or Carlolta wants to wear filmy blouses and ahort akirta and silk stockings and cares never a bit about saving $3 a week out of her $7 earnings.' But Mrs. Schmidt or Mrs. Petra zini (lately frau or signora) came from a world where the peasants learn frugality even as they learn to try to earn and so they cannot ac cept the extravagant atandards of the young folk! of the new world who want to put their money on their back! instead of into the banks. And Carlotta and Gretchen feel abused and tvranniied over and write to ask me if I do not think their mothers cruelly unfair. Just what I think Is this. Car lotta and Gretchen have had a better chance than had the signora and the frau. And thev ought to be gener ous enough to recognize that if thev had not been hard-working peasants Ul me oia country mey nugni never In the old county, they might never have had the courage and . the strength to work and save and tome over here and make a place for their children in a land where these chil dren have a better chance. It ia the duty of Carlotta and Gretchen to be grateful to their par ents for that chance and to respect the principle ot saving whkjh pur chased it. . As for the older generation, it must accept agreat deal it cannot under stand. The love of finery, the love of food times, the youthful freedom rom restraint which are all about the younger generaton are bound to have their effect. There are things in this new world which parents must acknowledge they do not underitand. Recently a young Spanish 'girl wrote me a latter telling of her sis ter's unhappy runaway marriage and of her own desperate feeling that she wouia oe driven to taking some such foolish step, too, because her mother refused her all freedom, all pleasure, all youthful comoanionchin. i am atraia to invite girl friends my mother makes them feel so Un welcome in our home that I dare not take them there, and if I do not take the mhome. thev think I am nnr-r I dare not have a young man calling on me or go to other girls' houses if they have invited boys. I don't want io ue ro my motner Dut what there for me to do? I must have little pleasure and she won't see it. ASK FOR Md GET Horlick's The Original Malted Milk tubstltutas Coat YOU Sam Price Dress of Marked Distinction ' . I Mm ft THAT the "draped" skirt is to be accepted of fashion, and why it is accepted, too, is shown in this preirfet dress, which gives the most charming of silhouettes. The gown is of black and blue taffeta combined with 'great splashing poinsettias of jet and crystal beads and rhinestones. . She says what was good enough for her is good enough for me," wrote Dolores and a very unhappy Dolores at that . , Now mother forgot hat she was brought Up in Spain and that this is America. Customs and manners and conventiona develop with the yean. Yesterday was managed on yester day's standard, anU today has others. The parent who refuses to, keep abreast of the times is sacrificing the full quota of respect he might claim from his children. No one admirei intolerance. And yet the older generation is intoler ant of the liberty the younger is demanding- and the younger genera- ion refuses to be tolerant ot the tact that the older is living too much in the past. What would I do about it? Com promise, of course. 1 would have Gretchen and Carlotta acknowledge that the ideas of Germany in 1895 or of Spain in 1880 may have been very good for their time and place and might something worth while to con tribute to the standard! ot today. 1 would have Mri. Schmidt and Mrs. Petrazini try. to He that if Carlotta and Gretchen art surrounded by girls who put rouge on their faces and that tell where to go, what to see and what it costs to enjoy a vacation in cool, sunny Colorado. Address Ou- Questions Cheerfully Arawered j " . IN COOL, SUNNY Ci, COLORADO 47 wmsmm foolish clothe! on their backs, and stuff their heads with romantic novels and go around seeking for emotion and adventure. Carlotta and Gretch en wouldn't be human if they did not wan to do what the other girls are doing. Plenty to Understand. ' Amother who lived in the days of the hoopskirt wore it. The mother whose generation affected bustles and "waterfalls" aspired to them, too. The Italian peasant girl wanted the brightest kirchiet and the most won derful carol earrings in all her neigh' borhood. And the German girl fast tned her thick braids about her head with the finest pins she could afford to buy and put the best looking silver belt she could get around her waist Every girl lives a little bit by the standard ot the people around her, The younger generation must try to understand that it, too, will out grow its gayety and frivolity and misunderstand the next "younger generation." The older generation must allow for youth's desires and longings and for the tendency of every live thing to follow ita kind. If this were not so, flocks of sheep and flights of birds would not huddle together and swarm after each other. Visit Denver's New Mountain Parks and Rocky Mountain National Park (Estes) the most wonderful Mountain Scenery and Automobile Trips in the world. No toll roads or entrance charges. 38 other Short Scenic Trips by Rail, Auto and Trolley. 1 4 one day trips. Low rates on all railroads to Denver, the Gateway to 1 2 National Parks and 32 National Monuments. Miss Rankin's First Speech in Congress Washington, May 28. Repre sentative Rankin of Montana made her maiden speech on the floor of the house today and incidently won her fight. She succeeded in amend ing, by unanimous vote in the com mittee of the whole, the food bill so aa to provide that in making the proposed food survey the services of women shall be used, insofar as practicable. "Women must take an intelligent and responsible share in the world'a work if we are to see that all the people are fed all the time," de clared Misa Rankin. Tremendous applause greeted Miss Rankin when ahe arose to apeak and when ahe concluded. It is all very simple and very natural lor people to get the "everybody'a- dcing-it" attitude. Getting together and attecting a generous compromise is the only way tor the two fenerations to work out their differences of opinion. I cannon act as referee in individual cases. 1 will not interfere between parents and child. But I long to see them make a decent honest effort to un derstand each other. i Each generation owes the other a respectful right to live I The older has won by ugly frugality the oppor tunity the younger possesses to know beauty and gayety. Let each ponder that Half of "Y" War Campaign Fund Subscribed in 8 Days To date 268 separate subscriptions, ranging from 50 cents to $500 each, and averaging $35.47, have been made in Omaha to the $20,000 fund which is being raised for the Young Men's Christian association war work. The working committee met at noon to get up steam for a more intensified canvass this week. It is believed the fund will pass the $10,000 mark by night and that the full $20,000 will be subscribed by the end of this week. George D. McDill, international sec retary of the Young Mens Christian association, will speak on "The Work of the Younar Men's Christian Asso ciation in the War" at the public af fairs luncheon at the Commercial club Thuriday. Subscriptions to date: Previously reported tl.OM Oeoige A.' HoeRland..., 100 Everett Buckingham 100 Oeorge T. Ollmore .' 100 K. P. Peek 100 J. IS. Goodrich.. &0 O. L. Allemin 60 Smaller lubecrlptlonl S27 Tol.l. .! Library Will Let You Keep Books All Summer Books may be borrowed from the Omaha public library and retained all summer, the librarian announces. Pa trons may arrange to take books after June 15 to be returned on or before September 4. This, however, does not apply to seven-day fiction, to books on fne war or books purchased dur ing the last twelve months. Memorial day, May 30, no books will be issued. The reading room wilt be open from Z to 6 p. m. HOW TO JUDGE A WOMAN BY HER HAIR - There is real common sense in just noticing whether the hair is will kept to judge of a woman's neatness, or good taste. If you are one of the few who try to make the most of your hair, remember that it is not ad visable to wash the hair with any cleanser made for all purposes, but al ways use some good preparation mane expressly for shampooing. You can enioy the very best by getting some canthrox from your druggist, dissolve a teaspoontul tn a cup ot hot water. This makes a full cup of ahampoo iiquid, enough so it. is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. Dandruff, excess oil and dirt are dissolved and entirely disappear. Your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than it is. Its luster and softness will alio delight you, while the stimulated scalp gains the health which insures hair growth. Advertisement.