WOMEN'S SECTION FEATURES The Omaha Sunday Bee. EDITORIAL f A'MUSEMENTS VOL Bl NO. 48. PART TWO OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 1922. 1 B FIVE CENTS . ar -.,- ' f r Tmm I'd ? v CJ ! 1 S iS, ft n wmmmmmmmm. Hi Jl . 1' v' - 1 V : . .IJtt ... .. I w fill ',UIT!' "Jill "LL ".- ; : ; - v,'jTYMB.v4ttav Diary of a Junior League " , Chorus Girl the Week of the Big Show Family Loses a Cook, and Chortis Girls Crack Their Throats, But All Lose Weight and the Day Nursery Is Safe for a Year. By GABBY DETAYLS.1 V Herald of the May, left to right: Charlotte Steventon, Elsie Schwartz, Helen Mancuso, Dorothy Edwards, ElUabeth Ralston, Janet Brunt, Thelma Wolfe. The atmosphere and cusoms of tl e court of Charles II will be revived when the 10th annual May festival and gala day of the University of Omaha is celebrated at Kountze park Friday, May 19. Helen Gwin, a university senior, will be crowned queen oi the May following a court dance festival and the presentation of an English Maypole dance. . Miss Gwin, as the 10th May queen, will be attended by Miss Flora Jones, junior maid of honor; Lillian Wallingford and Constance Perley, sophomore and freshman maids. Three-year-old Patricia Ferguson as the flower girl will precede the queen. Daniel Jenkins, S-year-old son of Dr. D. E. Jenkins, university president, and 4-year-old Gene Grenwalt, will also attend the queen. . The herald, Miss Dorothy Edwards, will lead the procession from the university campus to Kountz park, where the English court dances and the Monday: We got our . parts assigned today for the Junior league show. I'm in the hottentot chorus. The costumes sound terribie, and we have to do kind of a war dance that isn't going to be a bit pretty. They've picked the queerest people for the Dimpled Darling chorus. Some of tliem are all right,' of course, but I've seen Mable's knees. That girl hasn't got a thing below the neck. Just because she has a pretty fs.ce they put her in. I'm not vain about my owh looks, goodness knows, but I can dance. I taught all the girls in school last year to shimmy. . ,: - . . Tuesday: . I'm learning to inhale. It still makes me rather dizzy, but I'm getting the hang of it Every body smokes at rehearsals, and all iho girls are crazy about Melachrinos. Mother thinks it's awX we had quite an argument abuJ.vit, but I tell her you have to do something to kill time and keep yourself awake. I'm going to practice out on the sleeping porch before I go to bed. Wednesday: I tried on' my cos tume today. It was oceans too smalt. I'm going to have to reduce somehow. One thing, all this danc iug ought to help; I never got so tired in my life. One of the boys has lost IS pounds already. The cook left today. - I; had started ,the -Victrola and was practicing my hottentot dance, and she came in and saw me and was shocked to death. She was a colored Baptist and thinks any kind of dancing will take you to perdition.' She said she . wouldn't stay in the house if I was going to do that dance, so, of course, I told her she could go: Mother was rather put out about it for some reason. But Eliza never could make a salad that was fit to eat, so I don't see why she cares. . . Thursday: Rehearsed all day and had two fittings. I'm a total loss. Nobody knows what work this thing is. I'm going to be a choir boy in the mock wedding I just found out, and gee but I look cute in a cotta or a cassock or whatever they call those little white things. "They set off bobbed hair so well. I almost think I'll see if I can get into the choir at church. ' It would be loads of fun to come down the aisle in one every Sunday. Friday: Honestly, the funniest things do happen in connection with the revue.. VVe were getting up some advertising literature and Will Hays wrote us a letter and - said -how in teresting our work mould be for "us grown folks to read." What does he think the Junior league is, any way? A lot of school children? And then on top of that when they called the all-night - rehearsal the other day one of the girls kicked about the late hours and said the League girls had to go to bed at a decent hour, and some man, an old crab who's 45 if he's a day, laughed sarcastically and said, "Poor little things! I went to school with most of them." ; Nobody seems to under stand what the League is. tonight. I'nTso scared that I can't eat, and if anybody speaks to me I simply want to scream. I'm sure I've strained a ligament I can hard ly step on my right foot and the doctor has my ' ankle all strapped up. My costume isn't finished yetl It will probably fall off me unless I literally sew it on. Our last re hearsal was this -morning and no tie in our chorus knows the words to the song it seems to me. All I can think of is that wedding, chorus, "I want a veil ' . -That will trail . v . 'To the altar rail. ....... ? I want a male - . ..Turning pale...ri." ' ; ' Oh, if it doesn't stop going round in my head I'll go insane. . ; Sunday evening: I haven't had the strength to write till now. Oh, it was so thrilling!!!!!! The show was a howling success, everybody said, and we made an awful lot of money. It was worth all the time we spent on it and the effort and everything, in my estimation. People in the au dience said our costumes were the" most effective things! And they didn't see how we ever got the steps in that dance. We were all so ex cited that we just had to make good, and we fairly cracked our throats. Thank goodness, Ernie-I danced ' with him in the show was cold sober. I was afraid he wouldn't be. The older people are all enthusias tic, too. They're usually so" critical, the women anyway. I'm on the verge of a collapse I know but I've lost 10 pounds. It wsjcertainly worth while being in the show. I wouldn't have missed it lor worlds. And w'v. made enough to run the Day Nursery an me rest or ine yean ( (-Q ROTHER is leaving town JD ton'8n?" said a young ma tron inadvertently in the society editor's presence the othtr day. "A personal;" said the S. E. glee ful'y. , . , "Oh. oh. please don't use it in )h paper," begged the y. m. "He would hate it so. But." and, here d,- paused for a moment, "but yep, I wish ydu would. Go ahead," she ex claimed with enthusiasm. "Perhaps some of his girls will read it and give us a little rest from answering phone calls." - GABBY overheard two men on the street car. They were evi dently laboring men. Both were glancing over the same news paper. "Now look at that name." said one, pointing to "Helen" which, in this instance, was spelled "Hellen." "Funny way to spell it." "Can't tell anything about spell ing people's names any more, spe cially with these here girls. They're always getting some new-fangled way." "Yes, that's it.' They're all trying to Americanize their names!" Business Woman Club May Breakfast. The annual May breakfast of the Omaha Business Woman's club will be given in the Y. W. C.A. audi torium Wednesday from 7 until 9.30 a. m. Tickets may be obtained from members of the club or at the . Y. W. C. A. office. Miss Katherine Davis is chairman of the ticket committee; Miss Flor ence Hathaway, decorations; Mrs. Ora Stage, chairman of waiters" com mittee. Proceeds from the affair will be used in sending delegates to the national convention of business and professional women which meets in Chattanooga in July. Press Club to Meet There will be a meeting for the Omaha Woman's Press club. Tues day noon at 12:30 at the Brandeis tearoom. Mrs. Myron Learned will speak on her recent experiences m Washington, where she met Harding, With the queen, left to right: , Patricia Ferguson, Constance Perley.? Helen uwin itne queen;, riora jones, uuan niuunium, wards. , English Maypole dance will be presented before the final coronation of the queen. An old English garden dance as a solo number will be interpreted by Bessie George, senior premedic. Miss Helen Burton, director of physical training, has charge of the dances. Taking part in the Maypole dance will be: Elizabeth Ralston, Grace Gallagher, Mary Logan. Evelyn Ward, Charlotte Stephenson, Clara Pease, Thelma Wolf, Helen Mancuso, Janet Burns, Wiltimina Hibbeler, Dolores Partch, Irene Carlson, Dorothy Sandberg, Marie Roach, Helen Muxen and Marian Zickefoose. v v . The members of the gala day committee, in charge of the affair, are: Edith Merriman, chairman; Helen Gwin, senior; Flora Jones, junior; Les lie Van Nostrand, sophomore; Lucille Bliss, freshman; J. L. Fallat, voca tional, and W. R., preparatory. Wamen at Oxford Winning Social ;; : Recognition 5 j Paul Means, an Omaha boy who is studying at St. Johns college at Oxford, writes Of some of the changes that have come over - this venerable and aristocratic institution -since the war. He says the 500 wo men . undergraduates . have been granted equal membership In the university, but that the growing amount of companionship and social intercourse between the men and women are still rather frowned on by the vice chancellor. The Ameri can club, which has 150 members, has been spreading American . ideas of coeducation, far they invite the American girls at the university to attend their club meetings. Mr. Means described, too, the Ox ford International assembly, which is a miniature league of nations', and in which, in its interest in world problems and its .democracy, its strongly typical of the spirit of the university. There are .young , men and women over there from all over, the world 130 from India alone. Of the assembly the Omaha boy writes; "A glance at the many national clubs at Oxford will show how trbe this is. There is the Colonial club, the American club, the Indian club, the French club, the German club, the Japanese club, the Spanish club and others too numerous to mention. "Some' of the' clubs and societies which have had their origin since the war perhaps best indicate the charac ter of new Oxford. Although the Union Debating society still stands pre-eminent as the parliament of Ox ford, and the president of the union still feels that , some day. he ..may be prime minister, yet a new assembly has sprung into existence, which, though not the peer of the union, can Your Mother By IRENE M'DONALD. (The following wm written by a 17-year-old high school girl t Murdock. Neb. - The class was given to minutes In which to write an essay on "Mother and no corrections were allowed. Thia beautiful essay ( was tha result from Mlas McDonald.) , ... . , "Like mother, like son;" --Yes 'tis an old saying and, perhaps, all W true. This old world does judge largely of mother by you. Her name should not be tarnished by you when she is the very fiber of your heart. Show that you remember, care and appreciate that which she has done. Every day should bring thoughs of her and you will not ignore them, but in the, springy when everything comes to life, don a carnation and go to her on Mother's day. She will understand and feel a tinge of pride in your remembrance. Your mother is the greatest friend you have. - To her alone you owe a debt that cannot'be overestimated. She was the first teacher re ceiving a primer from your eager hands; the first surgeon who mended the scratched and bruised knee; he first peace maker that changed a tightly clinched fist to soft caressing fingers;, the first minister who taught your faltering lips to say, "Now I lay me down to sleep." After these emotions have surged in your heart for 12 long months, you should give vent to them on Mother's day. ; ; .The face may no longer be fair as in life's prime.- Her face may be furrowed by time and care. Silver may streak her once brown hair. Yet, to you she is more than a sculptor's dream she is your mother 1 claim to be more truly representa tive of Oxford life. I refer to the Oxford International assembly, which is by no means to be despised hv.-ati nrntntvnp. tho leaciie of na tions assembly in Geneva. ml . .- inirty-SIX nations are repincmcu by their own nationals in this as mhlv uihilo thrfp . other nations have been admitted and are repre sented by "experts, non-naiionais oi the country. Its purpose is to pro- ,AA fnrtnitrhtlv an flSM-mhlv for tllC discussion of international questions. "Although it is a working model of the league of nations, it is com mitted to no articles oi ine cove nant, and therefore, is working out its constitution and procedure in the freest possible way. By means of standing and special committees, petty international disputes are critically examined, so that most of ,mnU nf national hatreds has cleared away by the time the com mittee presents its report to ine as sembly. The atmosphere of the as sembly is by no means that of a debating society, for there is all the fire of national self-consciousness burning in each delegate. The repre sentation has been limited to three delegates fromach country. The secretaries and . delegates may be right in thinking that the Oxford In ternational assembly has done more to promote the leapue of nations idea than its model in Geneva.": National Gamp Fire Girls Observe Mother's Day I Washington Society Bureau of The Bee. Washington, May 13. Washington in Maytime must be seen to be appreciated. Never has the city seemed so lovely as this auspicous year of unprecedented conventions of women to be followed now by an unprecendlnted number of conventions of men. There have already been important conferences of surgeons- and physicians, and this week the motion picture owners and managers were here In convention. Next Monday morning the Chamber of Commerce of the United States will meet in convention in the great old convention hall of Washington, a mammoth, barn-like place over the K' street - market. An interesting little party of Ne braskans met in the picturesque tea house known as "The White, Pea cock" (as before it fell heir to that spectacular title it was the stable of the late Judge Shallsbarger). Now it is the most adorable pale green and gray tea rooms with the quaint .cst and most adorable little studios above. An accomplished Japanese cook presides over the kitchen, from which emanate the most delec table dishes. The Nebraskans who met there were Mrs.. Edgar Spott of Omaha, who had with her Mrs. John A. Baldwin of Omaha and .Mrs. Barkalow, mother of Denise Barka low, formerly of Omaha. There they met Mrs. Russell B. Harrison and her mother, Mrs. Saunders, who had gone in for luncheon. . . Mrs. Harrison and her mother, ac companied by Miss Sally Ann Wil liams, great granddaughter of Mrs. Saunders, left on Monday - evening for Omaha, where they arrived on Wednesday after a week here at the Hotel Lafayette. They have : been east about three months. Little Miss Williams will spend the summer with them. Gen. Pershing had another one of his Sunday 1 o'clock breakfasts last Sunday at the Shoreham. His guests were asked to meet the secretary of war and Mrs. Weeks. Representatiye and Mr. M. O. McLaughlin will reach their home in York, Neb., next week, Mrs. Mc Laughlin having left yesterday with their children, and the former going through by automobile. Mrs. Mc Laughlin and the children will prob ably remain in York the remainder of the summer, but Mr. McLaughlin will return here after the graduation of their daughter, who is a senior in I the York college. Representative ana Mrs. . tvans Left to right Virginia Harte, Jane Fonda, Betty Black well, Ruth Sumner, Harriet Fonda, Helen Weltv, Rogene Anderson and Fran- Mrs. ' cis Cunningham. 1 In observation of Mptherj'-gay, Camp Fire Girls throughout the country will cook and serve at least one meal in their homes today. For the past few weeks Omaha Camp Fire groups have been secretly test US Put tQQthiojne retioss, and many a little mother is sure to be pleas antly suprised today at the culinary skill of htr daughter. Perhaps many a mother would welcome a Mothers Day every Sun jjLVs o aftt fisgking three eals a day all through the week, thC day of rest loses some of its restful meaning. The girls pictured above are mem bers of Hashat-u-aya group of which Miss Mildred Wjsjton y guardian. and their daughter Miss Anna Evans, 1 a greTt had as their guest for this week a ri, . .Y " classmate of . Miss Evans in the Na tionat Park seminary, where she graduated, Miss Margaret Hine, of Akron, O. The girls dined with their former teachers last Monday evening t the seminary, and on Tuesday were, out there again for the junior parade. Miss Hine will make a visit in East Orange, N. J., next week, before returning home.' Mrs. Jefferis, wife of Representa tive A. W. Jefferis of Omaha, was a hostess at the Congressional club for the Wednesday luncheon. She had among her guests Mrs. Edgar Scott and her sister. Miss Dodge; Mrs. Barkalow, Mrs. John A. Baldwin, Mrs. Morrill, wife of Col. Morrill, and Miss Janet Scott Mrs.. Robert E. Evans, wife of the representative from Dakota City, was the luncheon guest that day of Mrs. Hadley, wife of the representative from Belling ham. Wash. Mrs. Jefferis had an interesting luncheon last Saturday for the wives of the Nebraska delegation in con gress, but because of illness in so many cases there were only three of them present. They were Mrs. Reavis. wife of the representative from Falls City; Mrs. Evans of Da kota City, and Mrs. McLaughlin of York. Among other guests were Mrs. Cleveland A. Newton of St. Louis, Mo.; Mrs. George Young of IXwa to fan Iw. Caluu JTtarJ - Homemaking Biggest Job for Woman The making of a home is the greatest job in the world for a woman, in the opinion of Mrs. Lena Lake Forrest of Detroit, president of the National Federation of Bust- ' ness and Professional Women, tht largest organization of its kind in the world, and Mrs. Maude Adair, president of the Omaha Business Woman's club, who declares that homemaking' is - woman's biggest "The young woman who marries should expect to give herself to tht home as she has given herself to business," says Mrs. Forrest, who is a successful life insurance execu tive. "The home should be run on business princples. It is very un fortunate for a young girl to marry unless she is willing to assume the full responsibility of homemaking," says Mrs. Forrest. "Women who have special gifts or special training which enable them to make valuable contributions to different fields of effort should not withhold those contributions because they are married," she said. "I be lieve it is perfectly possible for a urnman tn Viavm a hnm. anil tn rnn duo,t it properly even though she is a figure in the professional or busi ness world. I know of many such women. . One . whom I recall has possibly contributed more to educa tion in this country than any other one woman. Yet she has a charm ing home and three beautiful children.- ' ... "Women who refuse to have chil dren after they have married just because they want to keep on draw ing a salary that they could do with out are not of the type to make good mothers in . any event, are they? The woman who will make a good mother does not hesitate to put business aside, if it is possible, for this end. . ' f , - "When the crisis comes and it is a case of failing .the home or letting outside work take second place I think I know women well enough to say confidently that the home will always triumph.". -: ..." "Many women farmers are'adtive in the business women's organiza tion," says Mrs. Forrest,, "especially in the west." Miss Carrie Cam merud, a state officer of the North Dakota organization, operates a big tract in Canada; Miss Louise Boeh ringer, president of the Arizona or- rancn ana also soeciahzes in nut groves; Miss Lila White, president of the Florida - organization, is : a promoter and agriculturist who has the honor of having introduced tht white potato into Florida. 'o Miss Charl Williams; president of the National Education association; Judge . Florence Allen of Cleveland, and Judge Jean Norris, president of the New York State league, are ac tive members of the workers in the federation. . Bank presidents, leading lawyers and physicians, successful dressmak ers, bakers and manufacturers are in cluded among the pioneerrof the fed eration, which has only been in exist ence four years. . One of the great objects of the fed eration is to promote better stand ards of education for girls entering the world of business. The clubs which constitute the federation hive various special purposes in 'addition to that common to all, the promotion of women's usefulness in the world of business and the professions. The clubs are, many of them, social, while, others devote much of their time to work helpful to community life.- Mrs. Forrest is a remarkable woman, according to Mrs. Adair, who met the national officer of the convention last year. The confer ence this year will be held at Chatta- -floosa. .Tna- ib inl juaak isa J aOr t