THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY, APRIL .". 1921. Stillman Case Brings Up Question, 'Are Divorce Tend en cies Inherited ? ' Separations la a Number pf Proud and Wealthy American Families Seem to Bear Out Theory. Daughters Likely to Seek Same Solace From Marital Unhappiness As Mothers. Creighton Glee Club Returns to Omaha For Concert April 14 At Brandies Ilubbv Cooks As Wife) Works Bui Plan Is Failure She Just Couldn't Stand to See Him Walking Around With Baby in One Arm, Milk in Other. 10 c r By MARGERY REX. New York, April 2. Many moth ers leave their daughters an in heritance of beauty or charm. Others bequeath jewels and old lace. Some women relinquish wealth to their daughters, sonic a proud name. Is it possible for the tendency to divorce to he left as an inheritance from mother to daughter? The story of the Stilhuans is now common property. As prologue to the unhappy drama is the life story uf the beautiful and accomplished mother of Mrs. Anne L'rquhart Stillman. She is Cora Brown hot ter, divorced by a stem husband who did not approve of her espousal of a stage career. Now "Fili," her -daughter, is under going much the same experience, ex cept that James A. Stillman makes charges of a nature entirely different than those upon which the Potter di- voice was secured mat ca-.t. abandonment. . tendencies run through families, i."-- hcr.tcd it one were to juage i y ,on,e noted examples ot lam.ly groups, in which marital happing av I illi t Hi .Jv.n3i u iv, av.iuv v. Disposition Can Be Inherited. While the actual desire to divorce would not, of course, be inherited, nevertheless the disposition of char acter that would demand freedom from an unpleasant situation could be transmitted from parent to child. We know that certain diseases which are supposed by many to be "inherited", positively cannot be hand ed down from parent to ottspnng, But a predisposition can be trans- milted from a mother to her chil dren. People may say, for instance, that in such and such u family they have all "inherited" a certain malady, but the fact probably is that from one or the other parent the children have re ceived a tendency to develop such a disease, and perhaps living in such conditions as fostered the disease in the parent, have, themselves acquired it. It is quite likely that a tendency to social disease, divorce for example, might be present as well as the dis position to develop a bodily ill. Powerful Force of Example. proud and independent spirit which would make a mother break away from marital bondage, when irksome, might be transmitted to a daughter. The daughter, in turn, might find life so unpleasant with her husband that her high-strung nature would prompt her to get a divorce or, in the event of her leaving such 4' husband, might cause him to. divdrce her. . . Added to such a spirrtcd nature there yould be one of the greatest forces ii the world,' the force of ex ample. The mother's example will always impel a daughter. In a moment of doubt she will -be very apt to do as her mother has done in a like quandary. Daughters of divorcees, deep in Creighton Has For Medics' Part of Professor Schaefer's Manageric. Pigeons, rabbits, frogs, lizards, ' makes the experiment seem less in- nllio-atM-c o-iiinru titer; rlno i nnfl t "n"-"- ...... i i - - - o - " -- - cats ordinarily make up the men- ageric of Professor M. A. Schacfcr, of the biological department at i Creighton university At present however, the collec- j lion ,s not so complete, owmg to the fact that many of the specimens j have already been used up in the ; laboratory since school has started.! I his menagerie -is located m the at-: tic ot the Arts and .Sciences C0 lege. is not for vivisection, dissec- non ot living creatures, tnat tnese animals are used Animals Put to Death. T! iihysiological functions are not here much considered but are later studied in detail in the medical college. Hence morphology, which is the study of the form and struc ture of animals, is studied insijad. The animals are first put to death by means ot" anesthesia and then the forms and structure, of their bodies are studied. However, as morphology is based on comparative anatomy, "Professor Schaefer has also a varied assort ment of embryos and animal skele tons. But comparative anatomy and embryology involve development not only in individual organisms but also in that of the different classes. Con sequently heredity and evolution con stitute an important problem for the biologist. Confirms Theories. For this reason Professor Schaefer does not confine himself to structual studies of his animals and embryos, but also uses these fot confirming and disproving prevalent theories concerning heredity and evolution. The rabbitry forms the major part of his menagerie. Just now he has 50 rabbite, mostly. Belgian hares. It is with rabbits that Professor Schaefer has conducted many t)f his experi ments on heredity, for instance, the Mendelian principle of hybrids.' There are big rabbits and small ones, pure Belgians and hybrids of varying degrees and appearance. fuctance, not unmixed with a bit cU sentimentality, xo experiment www dog. A rabbit, he says, serves the purposes - practicaljy, as well and l marriage difficulties, will be likely to decide upon divorce themselves. Many in Family. Die .''Fashionable Frcnchs." of New Vork and Newport, exemplify one case in which a mother who was divorced bad two divorced daugh ters, a divorced aunt, and numerous other matrimonial complications throughout various branches of her family. ' Mrs. LcRoy French in 1914 di vorced Amos Tuck French. Mrs. Julia French Geraghtv, one of her daughters, in 1919 divorced Jack ; ueragnty, ner cnautteur nttsoanu. Mrs. Polly French Wagstaff, known as the beautiful Pauline LeRoy French, divorced Samuel .' Wagstaff. iw June. 1920. On March 11 last Mrs. Wagstaff was married to Donald Oliver Mc Rac, a clerk employed by the Cen tral l.'nion Trust company, five years her junior. But the first ot the French family 1 10 see a divorce was tt oveiy s, I ter of Amos Tuck French, Elsie, who j niarried and later sought freedom irom the late Alircd anderbilt In!1 919 shr ve d s,Iock , I ,,,c suddenI marrio j a av , , () VMrs hcr juni p , Fit2.Si One of the great difficulties, so it is said, in the problem of the Huhns living amicably together was the fact that both had been niarried before. Hulin's children -by a first marriage did not like the idea of Ethel Hubn, the child of the second union, inher iting any of the Huhn wealth. Bailey-Huhn Romance Shattered. Then came little Ethel Huhn's ro mance., Joseph W. Bailey, jr., in a training camp met Ethel not long j ng0 when she was a debutante. Bailey was the son of a former senator from Texas. The affair was called a "per fect story book romance." The two were married, but last fall , it was rumored that the young .people iiad separated and that a divorce action would be begun. Family heartburnings and money wrangles are said to have separated the parents of pretty Ethel. Is it sur prising, then, that when her own mar ital problems became troublesome she thought of divorce? , Huhn's daughter by his first mar riage also followed in her parent's footsteps when she decided to be come divorced from Andrew J. Car- ty. of Philadelphia, with whom, ac cording to statements made to friends, she became "frightfully bored." A son by that first marriage of Huhns is also separated from his wife, who, -cfuses, however, to di vorce iv.m. .Tit a famify tnat has never known Ac pangs of the legal rending apart that constitutes divorce it seema a strange and terrible thing. It looms up as a devastating, scandalous af fair, something to make every mem ber of the family hang his or her hed in shame. JJut. once experienced, this legal process docs not seem so terrifying. When a daughter of a divorced mother is herself suffering from un happy marital experiences, is it sur prising that she seeks the solace that she knows divorce gave hcr mother? Menagerie Experiments tlUmatl. Meet Their Doom. The star members of the profes- which were donated by a friend last ; year, but which have already met ' lf ,r G00m on L u ssec"S raoic. an(1 lizards sti rpmain but wJU bc no more before the school year is over. Cats a,e "s,llal'-v disposed of as ti)CV n)ust be segregated or -else they r.-rv nn a mntiimal warfare. Manv ja deadly battle has been. fought in ,ilff nA Ut- ',.n or more cliues unti the result was the same as that, of the celebrated Kilkenny cats. The most indifferent and unsuspect ing members of the group are the pigeons, which strut about in their cage cooing to each other. HTi ... t . i t .. uge British Aircraft Has .Berths for Ol) rassengers London, April 2. The first civil airship (R-3o), with sleeping accom modations for 50 people,, will shortly be in commission. The ship will be the first to come under the control of the Civil Avia tion department. In the passenger car there will be folding beds, curtained off, and w ash basins. Tables will be provided for meals. ' The intention is at first to make ex perimental flights in passenger and cargo carrying, and it is propscd to send R-36 on a round trip to Egypt and back in the near future. Bay Rum Bares Haircuts And Shaves Stolen by Trio Atlanta, Ga., April 2. Three ne groes broke into a barbershop here during the night and gave each other a haircut and shave, face massage, hair tonic rub, etc., etc. What a case j tor a Sherlock Holmes. The hair on the floor, the hair tonic odor, etc. Out went the officers with a sample of the bay rum tonic. And in a jiffy three negroes, cleanly shaved, with hair cropped close and simply reeking with hair tonic, were landed in jail, Marvellous, , V- v Vq l a J W a w aJ m L ML II -usaa fsALnx. mi i) If lii Ml , ' 1 i i mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm mm T iiiiimw ikmmmmmJt First Row Robert Fitzsimmons, incidental artist; Joseph Kealy; Grattan Fitz Gibbon, secretary; Harry Burkley, business manager; J. Clifford Young, president; Charles Kruger, librarian; Elias Camel; Matthew J. Severn, bass soloist; Claude J. ' O'Donnell, violinist. Second Row Fred Wachtler, Joseph Moylan, Adrian Zeman, Louis Barkmier, Theodore Serr, Joseph Grace, Robert Burkley, Harry McGlone, Julius Berger, William Klemm. . After a concert tour through the western part of the state, the Creighton university Glee club will return to Omaha on April 14 for a World Air Center Is Now Located i If) firPllPIl I AWN M.M.M. M 1,11C1I 1. U T ! 11 Miles of Landing Fields Flanked by Almost Un broken Lines of Landing Fields at Le Bourget. ( hi'HK Tribune-Omaha Be Xwi Service.) Paris, April 2. Le Bourget, to the northeast of Paris, lays claim to being the aerial center of the world. Color is given to the assertion that at this field is to be- found aviation in its most advanced and well or ganized form by the suspension of the last British air service between London and Paris, and by the ap parent reluctance with w hich the congress of the United States comes to the support of aerial development. France, with the liberal aid of its parliament, is making an extraordi nary, effort to obtain the aerial supremacy of the . world, an effort with which only Germany at present could compete, and Germany is re strained bv the aerial clauses of the treaty of Versailles. Just as its geographical position has always made Paris the logical hub of the French railway systems, so Le Bourget, situated about three miles outside of the portc de la Vil lette, is ideally located to become the center of the French aerial pas senger, mail and freight routes. Hundreds of Hangars. Mile after mile of perfect landing ground is flanked by an almost un broken line of ' hangars, " and while the ground is higher than the city the average wind is moderate. Figures were made public recently to show the recent progress of French civil aviation and to justify the faith of parliament in its future. Recent reductions in French pas senger fares and freight rates have put the British companies out of competition. The government sub sidy has helped in this, but there are other good reasons. According to these official statis tics the establishment and main tenance of air linep, including de parture and landing grounds, hang ars, and repair work shops, cost 10 times less 'than for railways 20,000 franifs per aerial kilometer, com pared with 200,000 francs "per kilo meter for railroads. i The rapid increase in passenger and freight traflic promises to re duce the running costs proportion- ! ateiy. Twelve Hours in Warsaw. The main French services all uf Avhich connect with Le Bourget arc Paris to London, Paris to Brus sels, Bayonnc to Bilbao. Toulouse to Casablanca, Paris to Cabourg. and Paris to Warsaw via Strasburg, the last of which began a few weeks ago. The number of complete journeys in 1919 was 1,173, while in. 1920 it was 4,428; distance flown in kilo meters in 1919 was 354,115. and in 1920 a total of 1,582.835; paying pas scnge.rs numbered 729 in . 1919 and 0,679 in 1920. . ; ... .By the new line to' Warsaw the jouney is reduced t-0 12 hours com. pared with three days! and two nights by train, .while the fare, 1,000 francs, is the same as for a railway ticket with sleeping car.' accommo dations. . -. . " , . 1 ' ' HE PPODICjAL .PETUPNS - WELCOME ; MnEPPODlCiAL PTU(?NS I , ' Hi' lyw X formal concert at the Brandeis the ater. This wilt be the first appear ance of this musical organization since the wart disrupted its activi ties. The members of the present He Reporter Finds Much Is Bared In Women's New Spring Styles The charm and beauty of woman's i i v. taring apparel is never fully appre- j dated by man, especially when out- ' lined arid described in the style ! I sheets. The writers, all of feminine i gender or type, use so many tech-! meal phrases m describing miladv s gowns that'it is all Greek to mere ....in. man uauau,y lily s lui IMC pretties of women it is only just that be know what he is paying for and that he be forewarned what is to j come. That they may fully under stand the styles for women, for 'i spring and summer, the styles have ' been investigated and written in he ; language. We will suit with coloring. Of ' course villtt color woman is like i the rose without its fragrance. Col- j ors this season will be riotous. Dis pensing with all Greenwich Village ' titles the colors are wearing this year and speaking man fashion, we find ' the predominating colors will be blue, robin's egg blue, box car brown, bar- I ber pole red, turkey and in some instances, "Chicken red, battleship gray, high browi low down black,' purity white and bathing beach tan. Can't Agree. ' Starting with hats, and going down. The hats will bc of no set style. It -appears as though' all the millin ers met in convention' and couldn't come to any agreement as to the style of headgear they would popularize, for 'many of the milliners realized man had been imposed upon long i enough After a long discussion which led them to nowhere, a milliner from St. Paul, Neb., settled the argument by delivering her ultimatum. "Vouse guys can go your way an' I'll go mine." This tip was followed by the whole tribe: of hat designers t with the re sult that styles vary, considerably. . ' The hats will be soft -this year, that: is, the material will bc, chif fonesquc and mosquito bar effects being used as the principal material. The men will be hejrd when they get the bills. There will bc no more hard crowns, as most of the hats .Events of the Week in Omaha OfA VLV -QW- SPECULATING ' 11 v:' club have been preparing for the tour and formal concert during the past two school years -when the club was reorganized under the direction of Professor Henry Cox, who is have no crowns. However, women j who suffered sunstroke last summer from going without crowns will j wear them this year. ' . ' At Old Sol's Mercy. .The brims are large, shading the I face from the hot sun. Thfs does not need to be bad news for for the i purveyors of freckle cream and tan ! lotion. There will be more than 1 the usual demand for them, because' ithe neck, 'way down, arms, knees I ; and ankles will be at the mercy of j Sol as the. length of the skirts has 1 ; been shortened. ! The hats are of various shapes, ; sies, colors, textiles and prices. : j Pearl gray for the misses and battle- ; i ship gray for the sophisticated, will.; bc the prevailing modes. Among dresses the evening gown ! is discussed first, because it is the ! i most swagger and hardest to under- ! ; stand. These dresses or gowns arc i j usually worn at theater parties, balls ! ! and parties. . , j ! These social functions have lone i been the means of getting people win wcar tailored suits thus de-better- acquainted. . fyillg thp dements as well as man. Answers Conjectures. Men, knowing little of their neigh- j bor's wife or even their own. can : come away irom a social function ! feeling on most intimate terms with j them. Thus evening dress fills a ; long-felt want and proves an answer ! to many conjectures made at ran- ' 1 doin. " The prevailing colors will be i M-,,-1, o ,i:,... !L... , .1 .. i white! pearl and fleMj. ' ' tu. i ,1.. .. .. of a Hastiims (eb ) mndiX I This modiste declared, on intrn- i ducing her first flesh-colored gown that by popularizing flesh color, in quisitive men could be entertained during the .evening with other than what was on the program. They could amuse themselves by making bets among themselves as to whero the material left ,off and the flesh began. ' . t t ; ; Place for. Arms and Head. Sin evcry-day wear organdie is a very popular material for afternoon and evening wear. ' ' There' isn't, much to the waist Just a place to stick the head and Third Row John Otte, Bernard Stone, .Harold Downing, J. Sterling Maddox, John J. Foley, Brendan Brown, Paul Koehn. . ' Fourth Row George Koehn, Julius Humphrey, Ralph Svoboda, Sidney Barson, David Kavanaugh, Willard Kranz. Back Row William McTaggert, Frank Diedcrich, Vernon Edwards, John Vasko, Charles Rain well known in musical circles throughout the west. An attractive program is being planned for the evening's entertain ment, including a number of instru arms through, set off with a few ruffles. The waist or belt line is very decided and the skirt is full, falling to the knees in a series of tucks and gathers. It isn't necessary to fit this dress. As long. as the waist is plenty tight everything else is k. o., for in a slight wind the 'dress will fit any figure like the paint on the kitchen wall. Organdie is a very blowable The stockings in most parts, match the dresses. Plain blues, " tans, whites, grays. Most of the stock ings are clocked and will bear watch ing. Sixteenth and Farnam on a breezy day is the best place for this. With organdie dresses a woman is at a great disadvantage as only the most militant will attempt to wear ! them in the sun. This will keep all feminine traffic on the shady side ot xt,. ..,.,.irf Might "Prove Fatal. There will bc a great many waists and skirts worn this spring and sum- mer- lne waists are nimsy anairs, vvhieli, if worn alone, might prove ,:ilal t0 tl,c wearers troni sunstroke, 15cie woman's ingenuity again proves her protection. Beneath these waists a brightly colored .bandlike affair which reaches, from the waist to the armnits is worn, lhc band, usually l"f ?on'c so'k,1 color makes a fitting background for the little waists anil acts" as a very efficient chest pro- tec'.r- . . , , f ... " Vu "' colors. They are of various patterns and of sufficient thickness to be worn in comfort in the s.un, shade, on the golf links or tennis court. Purchase & Gnash has a line of beautiful silk goods on display. Most of them are solid colors, black, red. vdnite, orange and green. The orange and green are displayed side by side, but this doesn't matter, since St. Patrick's day has passed. Gingham is very 'stylish, made so by-the many heroines of popular tongs, who wore gingham. It is much more stylish, for the young. th?n silk. mental and solo numbers. Mr. Harry Burkley, jr., is manager of the club and J. Clifford Long, a member of the' Creighton foot ball team, is president. Chautauqua Shiny To Be Produced In British Isles Mark Ijwain's Cousin to Carry Hawaiian Troupe to Lug land to Start Move ment There. Lcmdon, April 2. The "Chautau qua movement" has at last spread to England and another link has thus been forged in the bonds uniting the British Isles with its dominions and America. ( Miss Mildren Clemens, cousin of Mark Twain, is 'the American lec turer," wlio has decided to bring the ''Chautauqua' to the attention of the British people. In discussing its venture, Miss Clemens said:' Is Forerunner. "We are anxious to introduce the Chautauqua movement into Eng land and elsewhere, so that all Eng lish speaking peoples may be brought into closer relationship. "My little show is not exactly a 'Chautauqua,' but it is its forerun ner. I have toured with it all over America, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, and 1 hope it will prove the beginning of a great inter change of speakers throughout the United States, the British Isles and the dominions. Meets Prince. "My miniature Chautauqua con sists .of the presentation of 'Happy Hawaii.' 1 have six native assistants who .sing and dance in the native fashion and I show a number of moving and still pictures illustrative of life in the islands. "My cousin, Mark Twain, visited the islands 50 years ago.' It was a great pleasure to me to follow where he had been. "I met the charming prince of Wales in Honolulu. I never found anyone more truly democratic. He s a great sport." Shape of Boy's Hands May Win Grandfather's $130,000 A little boy's hands may win his grandfather a $130,000 legacy the estate of the late Jolin O'Connor, Hastings shoemaker-recluse, who died August 16, 1913. I lie little tellow is Harold, Kirk-j man, o. grandson ot John t Nirx- ; man. 1538 North Sixteenth street. A curious undcrlapping of the little fin ger on each hand, asilfustratcd in the picture, is relied upon to establish whether he is of the same line as O'Connors Kirkman claims O'Connor was rcallv Matt Kirkman of Grecnboro, X. C, his father. Hands as Evidence. The hearing, originally set for May in Hastings," has been postponed un til the fall term of court, notice came this week, according to S. A. Har ris of an Omaha law firm, which is handling Kirkman's case. Fully 50 photographs of hands and feet of members of the Kirkman family, exhibiting a family trait of crooked little fingers and extraordin ary long thumbs and great toes, will bc introduced in evidence. The late O'Connor was distin-1 guished by the same peculiarities, I Hastings menus will testily, i rac ings of his hands to show this, will be introduced. The body of O'Connor was ex humed after two j-ears' burial iu or Baltimore, Md., April -'.This story has to do with a wage-earning young witc who, alter swuenmg jods with her equally young husbanu, balked and. kicked for better food. One meal cooked by hcr husband was enough, according to Mrs. Mary Sheldon, 21. and she repented her agreement and quit. Mrs. Sheldon afj.'cd in court De Ure Justice Joseph Kanft to go to work and make a living tor me family if her husband, F.dward Shcl don, also 21, would stay home, cook and take care of the baby. After seeing her husband walking- rbout the house with an apron tied around him, the baby on one arm and a bottle of milk in the other well, she just couldn't stand it. Must Have Food, t A . few hours after the Sheltons had returned to their home follow ing'their interview with Justice Rant't the young husband started in on supper. Right there when they sat down to that meal t6gcther Mrs. Shelton repented her bargain and de termined she would not. go on with it. 1 he voiinsr wife, forthwith mint ed up Mayor William F. Broenin?. wi m,.- win;,,,, l." Ut-,iiiiti7. it his home. To the city's-'chiei xecutivc she unfolded her troubhs.V "I said rook," she told Major ai exc Broening, in the talk with '"his bon er, to whom sne hurried trom tne supper table. "You just ought to have seen what he gave fe to cat. If 1 am going to go out and make the living I've got to have food, not the kind of a meal he gave me." vereinently declared the young wile. She Tries 'Em. "And I just couldn't stand tic sight of him contented to walk around with an apron tide around him and the baby on one arm and a bottle of milk in the other. I iui can't go. on with it and 1 came :o you for advice." ' J he mayor sent .Mrs. Sheldon u the state's attorney's office and there she saw Assistant State's At torney Herbert O Connor. Mr. O Connor has the spirit of concilia tion in large measure. He believes that a man and his wife should agree if there is any way in the world to manage it. lry his meals a little while lone er," suggested O'Connor. Mrs, Sheldon s eyes got big ami her mouth opened. Mrs. Sheldon s mouth shut again without any sound. She'd follow his advice. The expression on her face indicated she'd wait before she did anything further in the matter of prosecuting her husband, nut she wouldn t eat his meals. Ao; she wouldn't do that. "If vou don't agree we'll . find a man's job for him," O'Connor as sured her. "Ma3-bc women are allowed to vote," interrupted Mrs. Sheldon in answer to a question. "But that hasn't got anything to do with it. a This is an upside-down arrangement, and I am not going to stand it. He says a woman in a house has a 'cinch' and that he wishes he could spend the rest of his days in such a soft berth. Well, he won't," came with some evidence of defiance from the young wife. Jus't 12 hours after Mrs. Sheldon made the suggestion that she grt a job and support the family while her husband did the housework Mrs. Sheldon had exercised the woman's prerogative and changed her mind. A. quarrel took place and the young husband packed up his clothing anj departed. Edward, "the model house wife," was later arrested at the homi of his mother, and again faced Jus tice Ranft, who held Sheldon in $300 bail. Thus feminist metaphor, model 1921, was shattered. der that photographs might be taken These photos bear a striking resem blance to the Omaha claimant. Two other photos, said to hav J been part of O'Connor's effects, wil ;' have an important bearing in tin case Principals Dead. One is the photo of a woman anl child. Kirkman claims the womar is his mother, Matt Kirkman's-wife and the baby ts himself. He mad a vain trip to Greensboro in an at tempt to locate a duplicate of th photo among his relatives. The othet i photo is that of a bearded mar ! whom the eastern relatives identify as "Bush" Edwards, husband of Nan cy Kirkman, Matt's .istrr. All thcs principals are now dead. The Omaha Kirkman, former presi dent of the Omaha Auto Body com pany, is spending his all to establish his claim of relationship to O'Connor. Matt Kirkman, a shoemaker, de serted his wife, Mary Trickman Kirkman and his son John, when the latter was four years old. Boudoir Bag Is the Latent London, April t.The boudoir bag is one of fashion's latest novel ties. Quaint-shaped bags of silk brocade or crepe de chine in color to match that of the whole toilet are now all the rage. 1