SOCIETY EDITORIAL The Omaha Sunday Bee AMUSEMENTS FEATURES VOL. 51 NO. 40. PART TWO OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 19, 1922. 1-K FIVE CENTS Geography as a Social Asset Better for Conversation Than Jewels or French, or Books or Looks. By CABBY DETAYLS. What it I social asset? Poise, yes. Knowledge of rtiuyc,, dancing, bridge, Kolf, riding, motor driving, the late f.ookn, Inolii yet all are of alue in appraising one'a social worth. All these and more, painting, the drama, 1'urriKH laniiuaget and many other desirable elective could be added. Kut these social virtues are at noth inir compared with that one great tillcr-iti of life good oi:cralloii. A good conversationalist ie an ar tist of the highcut rank. He who builds with words If not aecond to hint who chivla the chaste marble or to the swift-fingered violinist or maler of nongt. We lend our girls off to boarding school, we take costly trips, we read rapidly the reason's output of fic tion, in an cllort to keep uo with the conversation of our brilliant friends, but we gather our knowl edge so rapidly and assimilate so lit tle of it that it is not subject to comment when occasion demands it in conversation. If Gabby were to give her readers one tip on how to build up good conversation, she would sav "Study geography. Don't ound rce-z'n'bul we know, but consider. You who have studied French in college for three or four years: How many times in legitimate conversa . tion do you draw upon your knowl edge of French? Seldom. If you read all the best sellers of last year, how often are yoa referring to them in your day-to-day conversation now? Not often. But find if you can, ' any dinner party, any evening of conversation tnywhere, be it at a dance, card party or even prayer meeting, where geography does not come up in one wayor another as a topic for dis cussion. "Where is Oberammcrgau?" The question is .being asked almost daily now that the Passion Play is to be given this year. . "Is the Dead Sea still living?" some one asked the other night. "Tonight's paper said something about the Isle of Martinique. Where is it?" was another question Gabby liCird in polite society this week. "Why did Ratcliffe say 'Him-a-la-ya' when they are teaching 'Hi-mal-a-ya in the schools?" "Do you go througlf Santa Fe on your way to the Pacific coast?" "What station is the junction point for Glacier National park?" "What is the best road to take in driving from here to Sioux City?" These are only a few of the geo graphic questions, local, national and international, Gabby has heard in the past week or two. Stop, look and listen, and you will begin to appre ciate how Important a part geog raphy plays in the ordinary conver sation. Let it be a '"word to the vise." Get an accurate, working knowledge of the subject, either by ravel or book study and you will find yourself "t home" in any group. This truth was forced upon Gab by's attention in a striking way one evening recently, when a small group was visiting "over the teacups." There vfas nothing to do but talk. NoNone was well acquainted with anyone else; all were sizing- the others up, and everyone was on his conversational tip toes. Everyone except a calm, staid, middle-aged man. He was making , no effort whatever. Gabby soon noticed that in spite of his nonchalance, this man was brought into the conversation at almost every turn. Why? All be cause he had a clear knowledge of the geography of our land and oth ers. He was the only member of the crowd who was making no ef fort to shine. Yet he was scintillat ing more brilliantly than any one else, all because he knew something definite about distances, altitudes, rivers, steamship , lines, Biblical places. Verily, good enunciation and a wide knowledge of geography would establish one as a conversationalist par excellence . and such person would be the envy of kings. THE father of a flourishing young family of four was recently the victim of a hoax, originated, Gabby regrets to say, by none other than his wife. The man in question was away on a hunting trip, and wives are proverbially opposed to hunting trips, which may have had something to do with it. At any rate, he was more than astounded to re ceive in camp one of the convention al"stork cards" announcing the arri val of "a little stranger in our home," weight, hair, etc., all neatly filled out. JJ vs both surprised and pleased, Tnough slightly more surprised than pleased. The mystery was not unraveled until he returned in much agitation to his own fireside, when a placid wife explained to him that she had taken as a cook a young married woman with a 2-months-old baby. There was indeed a little stranger in the home, and he presently lifted up his voice and wept, but the relieved husband didn't even mind that. . Musical Tea for Benefit Ralston Public Library The Ralston Woman's club' will give a musical tea Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Ray Borken hagen for the benefit of the Ralston public library,, which was sponsored by the organization. The program will include a piano solo by Mrs. Ray J.. Abbott; whistling solo, Mrs. Florence Steun eibcrg; soprano solo, Mrs. J. H. Copenhaven; piano selections. Mrs. H. J. Pierce; song group, Mrs. I. V. Jones, accompanied by Mrs. Pierce; violin solo, Mrs. Grace Leidy IJerger. accompanied by Mrs. Hazel True Chaloupka, . , ' ' Walter JJeaJ. 1 9 - ;J . jffiss ternelie fazd ' V ' iJ h i - . GIFTS I Trvo lovers of horses and of hotseback riding, mho are most regular in their devotion to the sport, are Walter Head and his daughter. Miss Vernelle Head. Since Miss Head's return from the West Indies she and her father have ridden nearly every afternoon, and their tanlcrs take them over no mere park cinder path', lul over seven or eight miles of good open country. Ward Burgess often accompanies them, and the horse which Miss Head best rides, in the picture above, was the gift of Mr. Bur gess. His name is Marvin, and he is of thoroughbred slock, an has already been a prize winner. He is a 4-year-old, dark bay and is a favorite not only with Miss Head but her father as Well. Marvin s mistress expects to take him with her later in the spring when the family leave for their country home near St. Joseph, Mo. ; Miss Head is an excellent horsewoman and has ridden since she was a small girl. At Rosemary Hall she had her own horse, and used to ride' every year for the Vanderbilt cup, which was ofred annually to the Rosemary girls by Mr. Vanderbilt, who had a home near the school. jWrs Charles C. Allison Doodles II is the impressive name of the handsome blue gray angora cat, which Mrs. Charles Allison is holding in her lap. Doodles is only a year old, but his color and markings, and es pecially his beautiful tail, make him a k'mg in catdom. He was born on the Allison country place near Calhoun and was a present from Mr. Allison to Mrs. Allison before their marriage. Social Settlement to Hear Program of Music ; . The following program will be given for the children at the Social Settlement house this afternoon at 3 o'clock: Piano solos, Mary Alice Kirtley, Cora Laverty artd Jean Lav-erty;-cornet solos, Paul Swoboda, ac companied by Mrs. A. F. Leermak ers; violin selections, Bernard Hanig hen, accompanied by Mrs. J. E. Brill; story telling, Mrs. John W. Towle. The W." I. L. L. club meets for dramatic art on Monday evening at the Social Settlement house. Tues day evening, the H. E. L.: P: club meets for supper and dramatic art and the Royal Q. B. C. club has sup per Thursday evening. Psychology Course Opens. Prof. Walter N. Hatsey of the Uni versity of Omaha will give the first of a series of 10 lectures on "Psychology and the Day's Work," by Edgar James , Swift, Monday afternoon, 2 o'clock, at the Y..W. C. A. auditorium, under the auspices of the day chautauqua circles. The sub ject of the first talk will be "Organ ization for Mental Efficiency." . .. The lectures are open to the public. All clergy are invited to attend as guests of the committee. For further information calLMrs. W. B. Howard or Mrs. E. R. Redding. Parties for Returned Bride and Groom. Friends of .Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shirley, who were married about six, weeks ago very quietly, are taking this opportunity to entertain for the young couple since, they had no hance to do so at the time of the wedding. Friday evening Mrs. Sophie McDermott gave a buffet sup per and bridge party at her-home for them and for 24 of their friends. Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Al bert Sibbernson entertained infor mally at bridge for Mr. and Mrs.' Shirley, and next Friday Miss Dor othy Judson is to be hostess at three tables of bridge in the afternoon for Mrs. Shirley. Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Allison will en tertain three . tables' of bridge at their home for .'the Shirleys. v Lyman Bryson to Return. Lyman Bryson, a former resident of Omaha, who has for the past two years been head of the .Junior Red Cross in Europe, is expected to sail shortly for New York, and will ar rive in Omaha sometime next month. Mr. Bryson was engaged in news- Ipaper work here, prior. to the war, and was later an associate protessor of . English at the University of Michigan'. During the war he was in Europe engaged in Red Cross work, fhiefly , in the Balkans and Russia and ij at present in Paris attending a conference of all the di visions, of the Red Cross. The April Brides Choose Church Visit Former Home ) Weddings 74iss lenore Norton 7133 Theresa Flanagan) Miss Lenore Norton and brother, Matthew, accompanied by Miss Theresa Flanagan, sailed yesterday on the Baltic for a three months' visit with their patents, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Norton of Ballygar, Ireland. . Miss Flanagan, who is a sister of Mrs. Norton, will also spend some time with another sister. Mrs. Owen Stanton. ... Rev. P. A. Flanagan, who is at present in Rome, will join his sisters some time in April. The party will visit the Lakes of Killarny and will also spend some time in Roscommon, the former home of the Flanagans. They will return to Omaha in June. April brides and church weddings are synonymous this spring. April, most capricious of all months, is easily the favorite with the season's engaged couples, who, with optim ism as dauntless as the croquses and pussy willows are counting on April's smiles and not her showers. And the church weddings will rival in beauty the lovely ceremonies of last fall, for brides will have all the spring blossoms from which to choose and a dozen shimmery new hues sponsored by fashion for their bridesmaids' gowns. All Saints Episcopal church will be-the scene of two weddings. Miss Helen Smith, daughter of Mr.' "and Mrs. Arthur Crittenden Smith, will be married there on April 18, the week after Easter, to Philip Gray Lovell of Cambridge, Mass. Her bridal party will include several east ern friends. The wedding will be an afternoon one, and the 'reception will be in the parish house following the ceremony. Miss Winifred Brandt and James Hunsaker have also decided on a church wedding, and will be married in All Saints next month. It is a matter of sentiment with Miss Brandt, her desire "to be married at All Saints, for her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Brandt, were, the first couple to be married there after the church was built. - Miss Lois Howell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Emerson Howell, has chosen April 22 for the date of her wedding to John Dwight Evans. They will be'' married at the First Presbyterian church. Miss' Geraldine Hess, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Hess of Council Bluffs, will become the bride of Douglas Peters of. Omaha on April 20, and their wedding will take place tn St. fauls Episcopal church in Council Bluffs. It will be in the evening. 1 . Aloha Camp Head Will Spend Next Week -End Here : Mrs. , E. " L. -Gulick of Brookline, Mass., will arrive March 24 to spend the w:eek-end with . Miss Helen Smails. Mrs. Gulick is making a tour of the larger cities in the in terests of Camp Aloha, the famous girls' camp' at Vermont, which is managed by Mr. and Mrs. Gulick. This is the-- 18th season that the camp for, girls has been open, and this next summer the Gulicks plan to open a camp for boys as well. The camp lies in the Green moun tains.' Miss Smails has been a coun sellor at Aloha for several summers and a number of Omaha girls have gone there. On Saturday at 1 o'clock there will be an Aloha lunch eon at the Burgess-Nash tea room for all those who are interested in the cam? Society Slow in Healing Breaches 0 Reception by German Charge d' Affaires Event of Week. Bureau of The Bee, Washington, March 13. An interesting event of last week was the first "at home" of Mrs. Karl Lang, wife of the' charge d'affaires of Germany, who had a reception in the repaired and redecorated German embassy which has . not been open for social affairs since the ignomini ous departure of the. former ambassa dor and Countess Von Bernstorff. The familiar old drawing rooms were not crowded with visitors. Mrs. Lang and Baroness Von Thurmann, wife of the counselor of the embassy, have made a ' pleasant impression wherever, they have gone but they have not had an easy time making friends. Society is distinctly slower in healing the breach than govern ments, j', The announcement of the engage ment of Secretary Hughes' daughter Catherine to Chauncey L. Waddell of New York came as something of a surprise to society. Miss Hughes as the leading . cabinet girl did not plunge into society and is really not generally known. , She is anything but the butterfly type. She is a graduate of Wellesley, her mother's alma mater, class of 1920, and previ ous to that she graduated from the National Cathedral school in Wash ington when her father was on the supreme court bench. Her sister Helen, who died during the war, also was a student at the Cathedral school. Mr., Waddell is a Harvard man, class of 1918. He has had war service in the air department and is now a business man of the metropo lis. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Waddell of Greenfield, O. He is not known in Washington so ciety. The wedding will take place in the -Washington home of the Hughes' this spring, possibly next month, though no definite date has been ret. ; New Postmaster Arrives. The new postmaster general and Mrs. Hubert Work are estab lished in the same apartment occu pied by former Postmaster General Hays, at Wardman Park Inn. Mrs. Work was formally presented to the cabinet hostesses in her new role last Saturday by Mrs. Wallace, wife of the secretary of agriculture, who had the other cabinet hostesses to meet her at luncheon. Secretary and Mrs. Wallace live at Wardman Park Inn, and Secretary and Mrs. Fall and Sec retary and Mrs. James J. Davis also, making quite a colony of cabinet people there. Mrs. Work is not strong and will not enter into social affairs with much activity this spring. While she looks the picture of health and as the wife of the head of a fa- ITorn U Pag Three, Columa Three.) '. (Sonnt ttad b Constance Rummon, mthmatlc Instructor and (radu ate student, I'niverslty of Nebranka. Lincoln, at the annuij tiannquet of Chi KelU Pht llierary sorority. In Lincoln, Thursday evening, March it.) - I would have given thee jewels exquisite Bright .sapphires, ropes of pearl coiled serpentine And shimmering silks, diaphanous and fine, And furs rich sables for an empress fit. . I would have brought thee hyacinths, passion-sweet, With fragile, shy, blue mountain columbine, : And amorous violets in thy hair to twine, And orchids proud to strew beneath thy feet. I would have given thee all that is in me Thine utterly, my body and heart and brain My strength to fend, my wit to pleasure thee,' My heart with love's glow to irradiate . t . Thy life-see, then,' how bitter was my fate, . , Who could not give thee anything but pain ! Beloved Nebraska Mother To look back over 76 years spent largely in a pioneer country, mother of four children, 13 grandchildren and three' great-grandchildren, and be able to say, "Life has been good," is eloquent, evidence that the, life it self has been one of service and love." Tlfese were the words a few days ago ; of Mrs. Annie M Reavis of Falls City, widow of. the late Judge Isham Reavis, who is spending the winter here with her son, Burt I. Reavis, and family. Mrs. T. J. Gist of Falls City, a past president of the Nebraska Federation of Women's Clubs, is a daughter, Congressman. C. Frank Reavis of the First Ne braska district and David Reavis of Falls City t are ,other sons. The larger family of, Mrs. Reavis is all of Falls City, where she is beloved by everyone. , , . The grandchildren include Mary, Isham and Burt, jr., children of Mr. and Mrs. Burt . Reavis; Frank, jr., and John Wallace, sons of Mr. and Mrs.' C. Frank -Reavis; . David, jr., Grace Anna, Nellie and -Joe. chil dren of Mr. and Mrs. David Reavis; Frank, Anna Margaret, and Eliza beth .AV, children of Mr. and Mrs. T..J. Gist, whose son, Isham Reavis Gist, died in service during the world waf.s Mrs. John Martin and iirs. Pleasant Hyson of Omaha are uieces of Mrs. Reavis, and John W. Towle, a nephew. ' "I am going home when the tulips show their, leaves," said Mrs. Reavis of her return to Falls City, where she has lived for SO years on the same piece of ground. It was there where, as a young bride., she made her first home; it was there her chil dren were born and from there were rnarned. ' Most of the 13 grand children were born there;' Hallowed is that vicinity to her. ' Next to her family, . her greatest joyi is in her home and flower garden. "I love every ; tree in the yard and every corner in the house," she said. Per haps it is her love of nature and the wholesome life it inspires that have kept' a warm glow of color in her cheeks and a light in her eye. Just at the entrance 'of her home in Falls City there stands an old tree which she planted, a mere twig, the Sabbath before she was married; it has gTown and spread itself until it has become one of the .beauty spots thereabout. Many of the fondest memories of her children and her children's children, like birds, have built their inests in the boughs of that old tree. At the age of 17, Mrs. Reavis. then Miss Annie M. Dorrington, came to Nebraska, fresh from college, World Noted Women Come Of Historic ftote Four Distinguished Women Here in One Week. Four of the world's ditiii;uihcd women will be in Omaha this week, Mi Anne M'k.iii in the interest of devastated Fume, l ady M argot At(uitlt, lecturing m the political field, Margaret Matiffnauer. vho peer at a contralto iintrr cannot be named, and Evangeline Booth on her Christian round. These women will be the center ol attention while they are in the city. It i doubtful if it any time In the history of Omaha many noted women have appeared here be fore public audiences, Mi Morgan, daughter of the late J. Pierpont Morgan,' will Meak this afternoon at 4 o'clock at the Fon tenelle ballroom in the innrres.1 pf the American committee, for devas tated France. The lecture is otcn find free to the public. She will be an honor guest at a luncheon at the Fontenelle hotel Monday at 12:1?. Prominent groups of men amf womeri in the city have already made large reservations for the af fair France Not Militaristic. As chairman of the executive com mittee of the American committee for devastated France, Miss Morgan has recently returned from Franc with an appeal for $750,000 with which to round out the committee"! work. She does not believe that France is militaristic. ' Miss Morgan remarked that it seemed, strange that, while Germany was complaining about reparations and voluntarilly making herself bankrupt on paper, the German peo ple were paying practically no taxes and had rebuilt their merchant ma rine to two-thirds of its prewar strength, while France had been un able to finish two ships she had begun before the war. She thought that France had been called upon to give up entirtly too much in the various conferences. Frank, Fearless, Informed. .Lady Asquith, wife of the former prime minister of England, is one of the most conspicuous speakers of the day. She is frank, fearless, active-minded and informed. Mrs. As quith has been a leading figure among the women of the world since she took the leading part in the or ganization known as "The Souls" in England. Leaders of London so ciety are members of this organiza tion. According to word received here, Mrs. Asquith spoke ta a ca pacity house in Buffalo Wednesday right. Her engagement here Is Thursday afternoon, 4 p. m.. Bran deis theater on the subjct,."PeopIe. Pofltics and Events." Her topic" will deal with the numerous celebrities she numbers among her intimate friends in the realms of sjciety, lit erature, science and art. . Consummate Artist. Mme. Matzenauer will be greeted by an alidience of thousands, the ad vance sale would indicate, when she steps on the platform at the Audi torium Friday evening. Called by many the world's greatest contralto, She has just been re-engaged for sev eral years to sing leading roles with the Metropolitan opera company. She is not only an .opera star, but also the most eminent recital artist on the concert stage today. Of her appearance in Cleveland very recent ly, James H. Rogers said in part: "She sang . . . with consummate art in modulated tone and rounded phrase, and moreover with a reti cence in respect of volume that be spoke surpassing control of her amazingly opulent vocal resources. As we have already indicated, Mme. Matzenauer won a triumphant suc cess." Commander Booth of the Salva tion Army will deliver her lecture, "The World's Greatest Romance," in the Brandeis theater at 3 Sunday afternoon, March 26. At- 2 hc fol lowing day, she will dedicate the new rescue home at Seventeenth and Grace streets. There will be other meetings in connection with her visit. A party of more than a dozen will accompany her here. a female seminary at Elmira, N. Y. Perhaps it was the atmos phere of that section of New York that made Mr?. Reavis a believer in "equal rights." She never fails tor cast her ballot on election day and has . even had the pleasure of voting to send her own son to congress. As visitor to Omaha, Mrs. Reavis is not cast in a new role. She came here with her husband many times in an earlier day to attend federal court. She remembers this city when it had no pavement and no churches. She remembers it when the territorial capitol stood where Central High school is now located,- and later, when the Millard and the Paxtou were hotels of fashion and the Boyd theater a place of splendor. She recalls, too, the annual excursions for salt to the present site of Lincoln. Her father and mother were born and married in England, coming to this country in 1842 and to the west in 1857. The story of her mother's life in Nebraska is the thrilling drama of the stirring pioneer and war days. Many a night, carrying food and drink, she groped through the darkness from the house to "the Squire's barn," which was an under ground station for escaping slav. Of her, Morton's "History of Ne braska" says: '"Though the cabins were few and far between no night was too dark for her to go across the prairie to administer to the sick, carrying her own stock of medicine and an old fashioned walking stick for her protection." She was a delicate, refined woman, fitted only in spirit for the rugged life of the day. It was she who organized the first Sunday school in Falls City. Mrs. Reavis herself taught a Sun day school class in the Methodist church of Falls City for many years. She is still active in the church, be ing a member of the official board, (Tura to ra Three, Oluma fix.) . 1