Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 11, 1917, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1917.
- i
10
TO
ui wuus us auxus run
W REGISTRATION DAY.
By MELLIFIOA-Sept.
Gay Respite from Somber War JTimes.
The Country club presented a sem
blance of its former gay aspect Sat
urday night for the first time this
summer, when Mr. and Mrs. J. Ed
ward George entertained at the larg
est dinner-dance of the season. Every
one of the eighty guests present pro
nounced it foremost of the prettiest
parties ever given at the Country
club.
' "It seemed like old dinner-dance
nights again," said one charming ma
tron. "The women were so prettily
gowned and wore such lovely new
hats! Then it was quite cool, so they
. all stayed indoors, which made the
club house more gay than usual,"
Another thing which contributed to
making the affair so enjoyable was
the fact that most of the women have
been so deeply immersed in Red
Cross and war relief work there has
' been little or no entertaining all sum
mer on any lavish scale.
" So many of the guests, too, had
been away for the summer and had
; just returned and were meeting all
their old friends for the first time
since their departure.
The charming visitor for whom the
Georges entertained, Miss Irene
Grosse of Pasadena, wore a lovely
beaded, white .GeorgetVc crepe frock
with black hat- Her hostess, Mrs.
George, was gowned in a light blue
embroidered net, fashioned over lacs,
and she wore a large black hat.
Presiding at additional tables in
lieu of the host and hostess, who
each took one table, were Mrs.
George Mayne and Mrs. J. J, Hess of
Council Bluffs,' Mrs. ,Harry Tukey,
Mrs. O. C Rediek, Mrs. Herbert
Wheeler and Mrs. George Tunni
cliff. The guests were seated for din
er in the. south dining room.
Miss Grosse and her father, Mr.
John E, Grosse, left Sunday even
ing for Chicago, enroute to New
York.
Seymour Lake Country iClub.
Mr. anC Mrs. T. L. Combs cele
brated the twentieth anniversary of
their weddinir on Sunday by giving
family dinner. Covers were laid tor
nineteen. The guests presented Mr.
and Mrs. Combs with a handsome
salad set. Following the dinner Mrs.
Combs departed for Chicago, where
she will visit friends for ten days.
S. E.'Mathson entertained at din
ner Sunday evening, having with him
Mr. and Mrs. H. CJForster and Mr.
and Mr. Raymond Ovefmire.
Mrj. S. J. Bell leaves today for
Minneapolis for a two weeks' visit
with friends, after which she will go
to Battle Creek, Mich., for several
weeks with her mother. ": .'
Mrs. George Francis has issued in
vitations for a bridge-luncheon to
morrow, when she will have thirty
five guests, i 1 '
Big events are planned at the club
- for the balance of the season. The
birthday dinner-dance is set ,for Fri
day evening, when the guests will be
seated at tables according to their
birth month. Each guest is asked to
bring a birthday gift, not to exceed
15 cents, for the other fellow. It
promises to be quite a jolly function,
Friday, September 21 is the date set
for the annual masquerade. The har
vest home dinner $, week later will be
the closing party. The women will
have a grab bag,' the proceeds of
which will purchase some necessities
for the clubhouse Mrs. Roy H. Den
nis and Mrs. Raymond Overmire have
it in charge. ,
Surprise Party.
A surprise patty was given In
honor of Miss Cecelia Nachtigall
Thursday evening at her home. Miss
4. achtigaii leaves Wednesday after
noon to attend the) Sacred Heart
academy and will graduate at the
end of this term.
Those present were:
KllMbetli Hoffman, tnNte!,
Adelaide Oeldeman, Anna Shields,
Th.ra.ta NarhtlKkll, Theresia Klein,
llarfareth Nich!lall. Frelda Soren.en,
Ellsaketh WachtUr, Maffareth Pate. -He
s- Messrs. . -.: Hr. '. ; '; f
Aatoa eawatika," ' neorce fehl.td.. v
Andrew Sandhoafner Robert Nachtigall.
riorlaa Follr.li, Paul Gross. .
Ueorca Klelne,
Mr. wd lira. j. U, KaebtlgalU, i
Tht engagement of ; Miss Ann
, bach of Omaha Was announced in
y a
imcago aunaay.
On the Calendar. J I
The Columbian club will give a card
party Wednesday at 2:30 o'clock at
Lyceum halt. Mrs. Charles 'Fitzpat
rick and Mrs. J. C Iwersen are the
Hostesses.
Parties of six will be entertained at
the Urnheum theater ton aht bv E.
H. Howland, H. McFarland, Norris
Brown, fc. U McPheland and 11. S.
Mann. H. F. Wallace of the First
Irust company has reservations for
a party 01 seveniy-nve.
' Bridge Club Meets.
Mr. Paul Wariawnrth nf fminril
Bluffs was hostess for one of the
Dundee bridge luncheon clubs, the
memoers ot wnicn are:
Mesdames ' Meadames
R. S. Davie, . C. L. Bykea, f
Mai Cfct V KHat brake.
Chaatar Nlemaru Harold Sobotker.
F. B. Wallace. '"""'
Entertain for Visitors.
f r T F. Pnarf ar tnu ftttif
eon at the Country club in honor
or Mrs. limothy Dyer of Berkeley,
CaL guest of her daughter, Mrs. J.
F. Coad, jr. Covers were placed for
ten. -. .'..:
' Miss Marion Writer ni hncte at
an Orpheum tnatmet party, compli
mentary to Miss Helen Bess Ritchie
of Idaho Falls, her house guest, and
Miss Adelaide Moore of Chicago,
guest of Miss Evelyn Ledwich. All
theyfeirls attended St Mary's college.
Mrs. Wilson Low entertained a
party of nine, at luncheon at the
if a ' f
i hi i hi f
MRS. HARRY G. JORDAN.
Many prominent Omaha women
will use their cars Wednesday in tak
ing women to the polls to register for
war service. Some women would not
be able to leave their home and chil
dren alone long enough to register if
these machines were not placed at
their disposal. Mrs. John Madden
announces the following women who
will drive or send their cars: Mes
dames II. G. Jordan, E. S. West
brook. O. S. Goodrich, C. M. Taylor,
Manning, N. P. Dodge, Murphy, J.
T. Stewart 2nd, M. B. Calvert, Jay
D. Foster, H. Bergman, M. B. New
man, Harry Montgomery; and Misses
Dorothy Morton, Hazel Degen,
Gladys Rohrbough, Ruth Mills, Mar
ion Kuhn, P. Ophelia Hayden,
Daphne Peters, Myrtle May, Jessie
Millard and Ruth Arnstein.
Mrs. D. G. Craighead and Mrs.
Reuben Kulakofsky have nine auto
mobiles promised to help in register
ing ivomen in their ward.
Country club, honoring Mrs. Albert
Brogau of Austin, Tex., who is visit
ing Mr& F, A. Brogan.
War-Time Wedding. i
Mr. Lea M. Daly, hi the regular
army, stationed at Fort Leavenworth,
received a brief furlough to return to
Omaha for his Nwedding with Miss
Mary Rager of Omaha. Rev. T. J.
Mackay performed the ceremony Sat
urday evening at All Saints rectory.
Ray L. Carter of the aviation corps
at Fort Omaha, and two sisters of
the bride, the Misses Edna and Ellen
Rager, were the only attendants.
At the Field-Club.
Yesterday's golt tournament at the
Field club brought out a targe at
tendance. 100 guests remaining for
the luncneon. Carl Swanson and R.
H. Manley had small parties at sup-
Social Gossip. ' 1 -- w:
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bosworth of
Chicago are at the George Brandeia
hbme, Mr. Bosworth recovering from
the auto accident which occurred
two weeks ago. They plan to leave
the latter part. of the week. Miss
Lillian Rogers, another sister of Mrs.
Brandeis. returned to Chicago last
week. .
Mrs. J. N, Konald leaves Wednes
day for a visit in Buffalo, N. Y., after
which she will be accompanied home
by her daughter, Miss Hannah Ko-
pald, who spent the summer there.
miss cmuy neve nas returned
after spending several weeka .at
Minnesota lakes.
Miss Charlotte Rosewater arrived
this afternoon from Los Angeles to
spend a week in Omaha enroute to
Wellesley college, which she enters.
Miss Rosewater will be the guest of
Miss Virginia Pixley. .
Mr. Alan McDonald is ill at the
home of his oarents. Mr. and Mrs.
John McDonald.
Miss Mary McAdams leaves Tues
day for Iowa college, Cedar Falls, la.
Dr. Will Ross, jr., son of Dr. and
Mrs. W. L. Ross of Florence, has
been assigned to Camp Upton, Min
eola, Long Island, j He received a
hrst lieutenant s commission in the
medical reserve corps and last Sun-
j i - r. yv : . ' i ,
uuy icu v-intinnaii, wnere ne nas
been for the past year, to take up his
duties. ; ' f'
A Bit of Brown Study
ft
WHEN a dress
makes up
its mind to
be serious it is bet
ter in these sober
days to encourage
it. Here is. a trig
and dapper tailored
suit which has se
lected a sensible
shade of cinnamon
brown for its self
expression, and
which follows a
quiet ' and unob
trusive outline with
out losing any of its
distinction. . How
ever, it is quite up
to mode of the min
ute vith its bustle
skirt, its tight fitting
jacket, its big but
tons and its only
trimming being
many rows of stitch
ing. V
The hat which ac
companies it is tali
and dignified and
boasts of the new-
est thing in pom
poms. The hat is of
exquisite fawn-colored
felt, while the
pom pom is the "tie
that binds", the
shade of fawn , to
that of the cinna
mon brown found in
the dress.
A People of Mystery
Evangelist Draws Well ,
At the Plymouth Church
Good crowds greeted Dr. Fifield at
Plymouth church Sunday morning and
evening in the Bible mission now
opening. In the morning he preach
ed on "Lost and Found." In the even
ing on the text "Come Now, Let Us
Reason Together." He showed that
it is reasonable to be a Christian if
there were only the rewards of this
life, more still if the Bible promise
of a future life is true.
Special 1 music each evening this
week, solos by Mrs. F. W. Leavitt
and Miss Jeanette Cass; duets by Mr,
and Mrs. A. G. Kittell and Misses
Blanche and Elsie Bolln; quartet se
lections by the choir. , ,
Asks $25,000 Damages
For Death of Son
Emil Flacek, father and adminis
trator of the estate of Bennie Placek,
6 years old, who died April 9, 1916,
is suing Dr. John W. Koutsky for
$25,000 in district court. He alleges
the physician was negligent In "not
Dr. Mackay Says Better to Knit in
Church Than Sleep During Sermon
; Whether to go to church or work
for the soldiers was the quandary in
which Mrs. Robert Cowell and Mrs.
William Archibald Smith found them
selves, Sunday morning. Although
both faithful church workers, they
cast he decision on the scales and
decided that their duty was to remain
at the post and finish the 600 comfort
kits the Woman's Service league is
furnishing the men in the "Dandy
Sixth.
Mrs. "Smith is chairnran . of "the
league and Mrs. Cowell chairman of
the comfort kit committee.
From- 8 in the morning until 7 at
night the two women worked at the
headquarters of the national league
and completed . the kits. Their hus
bands were pressed into service late,
in the day. Becoming alarmed over
their ceaseless industry, they called
for them, only to be put to work
sewing on the red binding.
Confessing their sins to Rev.
Thomas Mackay, they were entirely
absolved. "It was better than going
to church and your consciences may
rest at ease," he said. "It did you
more good than any sermon," he
added. ; , ;.,
When asked whether or not he
would countenance knitting in church,
he replied. "By all means. It is a
good work and you will have to ad
mit that it is better than having the
women go to sleep listening to a ser
mon," he added jovially.' ,
Women are now becoming such ex
pert knitters that they do it mechani
cally and it does not require any con
centration. A number of college girls
tell of knitting while they study with
out it distracting their attention in
the least. '
Father Lloyd Holsapple of St. Bar
nabas church is another clergyman
who is said to have no scruples
against women conserving time by
knitting in church.
The comfort kits were distributed
at the Auditorium by Mrs. Smith,
Mrs. Cowell and Mrs. Frank Myers,
vice chairman of the committee.
administering antitoxin to Bennie
when a daughter. Rosie Placek, was
ill with diphtheria." 1
Of Child Turned Into Blisters
Also on Back. Burned and Itched.
One Cake Cuticura Soap and One
Box of Ointment Healed, Cost 75c
. ,"My little granddaughter had a skin
trouble that came first in large red spots
and then turned into blisters, that were
mosuy on her face, but
some were on her back.
and the skin was sore
and red. The blisters
burned and Itched, an
noying the child a great
deal. She was cross and
fretful, and did not rest .
well at night The eruo. 1
-tion disfigured her face
ior me umc Deing a lot.
1 hl
Then wa used Ciitidiri ind T nut
one cake of Luticura Soap and one box
of Cuticura Ointment,' when she was
healed." : (Signed) Mrs. Nan Faulk,
Worthington,'Ind. , March 5, 1917.
Prevent further trouble by using Cu
ticura Soap for the toilet.
For Free Sample Each by Return
Mail address post-card: Caticnra,
Dept. H, Boston." Sold everywhere. .
Soap 25c Ointment 25 and 50c.
i r
f ( vk 1
You Know ItV Right If It's a CHARTER OAK
For seventy years CHARTER OAK Stoves,
Ranges and Furnaces have been the standard
by which all others are judged. ,
Ask your mother or Btrt or anyone who hit utd a Charter
Oak. The experience of others is cheapest you can get, and
fcoire folks will always tell you that the nam CHARTER OAK
c yocr absoluta Insurance of satisfaction.
iryoar Jtmltr (n' (e talk yoa into buying
another makm, writ ro u.
CHARTER OAK STOVE & RANGE CO., St Lonis Mo.
By GARRETT P. SERVISS.
. "A friend ba ben telling: me tail ito
rtee about a ptopla called Cro-Magnoni. Re
aayi aeologisti have found them and that
they were the moat wonderful race that
ever lived and aoeeatore of the Oermana.
How much truth la there In this? P. C."
Your friend may have been reading
Prof. Osborn's b6ok on "Men of the
Old Stone Age," but he has not cor
rectly apprehended all the facts. To
say that geologists discovered the
Cro-Magnons is to give an entirely
wrong implication that their remains
have been found embedded in solid
rocks like the fossils of ancient ani
mals and plants, whereas, in truth,
they have been discovered mostly in
caverns, covered, to be sure, with de
posits of silt, sand, gravel, clay and
sometimes beds of stalagmitic lime
stone, but not petrified, encased in
stone or buried in deeo strata of the
earth's rocky crust.
While geologists have, naturallv.
taken a share in the work, yet the
real discoverers of the ancient human
races have been archaeologists, or
students of the antiquity of man.
Then so far is it from being true that
the Cro-Magnons are the ancestors
of the Germans, that the fact is the
Teutonic race came long after the
Cro-Magnons and entered central
Europe from an entirely different di
rection. The two races were quite
different in their physical and psychi
cal characters. - '
But your friend is right in telline
you that the Cro-Magnons were a very
wonderful race, though it is too much
to say that they were the most won
derful thaever lived we must re
serve some superlatives for the later
races, including our ownl Yet they
do loom up in the dim vistas of pre
history in a very extraordinary man
ner. There is no history of the Cro-
Magnons, tor they antedate history.
But they have left their bones, skulls.
implements, carvings, engravings,
paintings and ancient homes to tell
their story, a story which begins not
less than 25,000 years ago. at the close
of the last glacial period in Europe,
known to geologists as "the -fourth
glaciation."
They were not the first men in Eu
rope; they were invaders who prob
ably came from Asia. They drove out
a far more ancient race, the Neander
thals, who had existed for at least
25,000 years before their 'arrival. To
the relatively puny Neanderthals the
Cro-Magnons must have seemed a
terrible race of giants. They were
big-bodied and big-brained. The
skeleton of one that has been found is
six feet four and a half inches in
height and the average height of a
whole group of their skeletons was
found to be over six feet One. Cro
Magnon woman had a brain case ex
ceeding in capacity that of the aver
age man of today. These people lived
by the chase and may have had bows
and arrows when other men had only
stones and clubs to fight with. They
came suddenly and evidently prevailed
at once. How long they had been
developing in their Asiatic home it is
impossible to say.
"No evidence has thus far been
found," says Prof. Osborn, "that even
the Neanderthal women were spared,
or allowed to remain in the country,
because in none of the burials of Au
rignacian times (the period of Cro
Magnon ascendancy, covering many
thousand years) it there any evidence
of the crossing or admixture of the
Cro-Magnons and the Neanderthals.
The chief source of the change which
swept over western Europe lay in the
brain power of the Cro-Magnons, as
seen not only in the large size of the
brain as a whole, but principally in
the almost modern forehead and
forebrain.
"It was a race with a brain capable
Of ideas, of reasoning, of imagination,
and more highly endowed with artis
tic sense and ability than any unciv
ilized race which has ever been dis
covered. After prolonged
study of the works of the Cro-Mag
nons one cannot avoid the conclu
sions that their capacity was nearly,
if not quite, as high as our own; that
they were capable of advanced edu
cation; that they had a strongly de
veloped aesthetic as well as a reu
gious sense; that their society was
quite highly differentiated along the
lines of talent for work of different
kinds."
This wonderful oeoole soread' its
civilization in western Europe during
a period of about 9,000 years before it
attained its culmination. Later, two
or three other races arrived, also
from the direction of Asia; but they
were not thtf intellectual equals ot the
Cro-Magnons. Nevertheless the lat
ter appear to have gradually declined
in stature, and later in mastery, until
they disappear or were swallowed up
in the flood of new races.
Yet there are many archaeologists
who believe that descendants of the
Cro-Magnons still exist in Dordogne,
in southwestern France, where the
great race had its geographic center
in its days of glory. It is also
thought that the Berbers, of north
western Africa, and the Guanches, of
the Canary islands, may have de
scended'lrom the Cro-Magnons.
The beauty and the astonishing
ideality of some of their artistic cre
ations, combined with their intellec
tual and physical powers and the ex
traordinary character of their envi
ronment, throw a romantic atmos
phere over the times of the Cro-Magnons-
How in the imagination
rines thctraeedy of thaf woman
whose skeleton was found in a Cro
Magnon cavern, with the mark of a
death-blow on her skull, while close
beside her huddled the fragments of
a child's skeleton, and nearby lay
those of two youths 1 The chord of
human sympathy loses no sensitive
ness in stretching back more than
200 centuries.
Red Cross Gives Amoulance
And Supplies to Russia t
Washington, Sept. 10. A gift of 125 T
motor ambulances and automobiles ,
to Russia is announced by the Ameri-
can Red Cross.
The shipment will go forward im
mediately.
1
-no
professional
man
would call on a client with Ills
collar off and his hair unbrushed,
because it would create a bad tm
' prtaoion.
And When
the Client Calls
On You
yoa will want your office to Just
radiate efficiency as a reflection
of your own capability.
"Modem
Equipment"
that's what we mean modern
desks, filing cabinets, sectional
book cases all space economis
es and labor savers.
And While You
Are Fixing Things Up
ret some new linoleum. Oar ex
pert measuremen and layers as
sure yoa complete satisfaction.
i Orchard & Wilhelm
Company
ASS. FOR and GET
IHIorlick's
The Original
Malted Milk
Substitutes Cost YOU Sam Fife
HENRY COX
MUSICIAN EDUCATOR
Specializing in
Applied Aesthetics
For Happiness
and Social Service
Airmen in the great war
are using regularly,
It steadies stomach and nerves.
It is Pleasantly lasting in taste.
Teeth set firmly in VRIGLEYS
make sure of achievement
Our (and and water forces are
strong for it. And the home-guard
finds refreshment and benefit in
this economical, long-lasting aid to
teeth, breath, appetite, digestion.
X
FLAVOia jllP j EUERV MEAL