Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 15, 1916, Page 6

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OMAHA MUSICIANS -~ INCHICAGO CTRCLE Miss Ruth Flynn Attracts At- tention by Her Successful Work. MEMBER RESIDENCE OLUB By MELLIFICIA, August 14 Two Omaha musicians who have recently gone to Chicago to enjoy the broader musical opportunities which the larger city affords are being as- sociated in their successes. Chicago papers make mention of the work of Miss Ruth Flynn, who is making a name for herself as an accompanist Grand Opera company and Thomas {5 Kelly, who left such a big gap in maha musical circles, Miss Flynn 1s a member of a charm- ing residence club which was i tuted recently by a number of C cago club women of St. Elizabeth's parish, The old Elihu Washburne mansion, which was the scene of many notable scocial functions in the early days of Chicago when Mr. Wash- | burne was ambassador to France and later when occupied by former Mayor Washburne, was purchased by the club women and fitted luxuriously for the use at a moderate rate for young women whose homes are away from Chicago. £ “It is just like boarding school without the restrictions,” said Miss Flynn of the club home. At Carter Lake Elutg: A feature of the Carter Lake club program from this time will be the cabaret dance at the club house, not at the dancing Ypavilion, each Tues day evering. i {lr. Louis Specht gave a dinner party yesterday. l-liuM E:Ielil were: os— Martha Ward, um'-ch"d aret s, e Fu)); Chansky. 'este Ward, odfrey. Ward, Ghenn Cnilds, y | o Miss Lillian Dickman entertained f for Miss Frances Gammon of Lin- f coln: at dinner yesterday. Covers Minses— Haszel Cook. Messrs.— Prances Gammon o,‘f Lincoln, oonrs, — Robert Copsey of @ / Arch Maxwell of Chicago. Lincoln, e Rokahr of ncoln, Er. A. Von Dollen had as his din- lel: guests Sunday: e Missen— dette Martin, Katherine Carew. Mensrs.— Paul Moore, Other diners were: Mr. A. H. Han- gen, Mr. Charles Brinn, Mr. A. L. Bradley, Mr. T. E. Wood, Mr. { M H. Tiernty and Mr. lcnnwr Lake Country Club. :tglm J with Mr, and Mrs. Charles I H C were Mr. and Mrs. G, Gressley, Miss Ruth Gressley, Mr Mrs. H. and Windheim and Miss guerite Windheim. flr. and Mrs. W. Boyd Smith enter &hed at dinner for Mr. and Mrs Orlando McConnaughey of Gibbon, eb., parents of Mrs. Smith, and foe | Mr, and Mrs. O. J. Mils 4 Mrs. l‘il‘olm Bel ‘: ing as her guests: %fi iy ot i B-E‘-‘), Stoux Henry Prange, Mosars.— G _Prange, Waupon, Robert Bekins, Battle vocn, Ta.; ‘reak, Mic! . Dining with™ Mr, and Mrs. i s were: cand Mesdames— iy ville Holmes, Charles Trimble, - M os— Trimble, A. C, Dickerson, .aun} M_; }jhrryi C'hequ nter- g et ek B. Cheek, B, A. Rose. Miswos— Ntlslan. Marion’ Rose, he Sunday evening am in numbers by 3&!- "Churle jngum, soprano; M . M. Mul lins, reader; Mr. E. P. Baker, bari ne, and Miss Waunita Fitch, pianist . The children of the club and thei nds’ will enjoy a fancy cos e ball next Thursday afternoot m 3 to 5 o'clock., Guests of Miss Marguerite Fo. mday evening included Miss Wau- ta Fitch, formerly of Lincoln, Mr. ‘}‘fl- W. M. Quaid, T. F. Cough Kansas City, and D. J. Mara, ppy Hollow Club, es Morton will entertain a party of nine tomorrow for thy Morton. ry bert Cowell has luncheon a for five tomorrow. *Carpenter will enter- ee luncheon for thirty- four guests tomorrow. hose with dinner last evening were: Dr. C. O. Rich, G. Brown, Allen Talmadge, O. F. igodman, M. M. Robertson, J. A. Gil- E. Millard, W. Hildreth, W, R, on, J. L. McCague, A. B. Currie, W. S. Curtiss, R. M. , P. F. Peterson, J. F. Bloom, Carter, G. A. Roberts, W. E. es, H. B. Lemere, Guy Liggett West, H. A, Thompson and W. 088, arties at the ] chdlna, double wedding ceremony was med at the Dietz Methodist parsonage at 10 o'clock this yrning, when Rev. C. N. Dawson d Theodore Larson and Miss E. Sorenson, and Miss Soren- brother, Angus Walter Soren-! , and Miss Helen Dennis. All the people are from Fremont, the first couple will continue residence. The second couple make their home in North Bend. Club. uw:n cll;:b w'ill give its nesday afternoon at esdames G." H. Potah WCE Poey and relatives in Bo g for Francesco Daddi of the Chicago | | | | Fashion Hint A plain collar of striped silk, trim- med with covered buttons. This is one of the models recently selected in a neckwear competition to decide on standard styles for the cdming season, spending a week with her friend, Helen Palik, at Prescott, la. Miss Charlotte E. Graves and Mr. W. A. Graves are registered at the Estes Park hotel, Colorado, Dr. and Mrs. James P. Slater re- turned this morning from a month's vacation spent in northern Minnesota. Mr, and Mrs. James D, Reed, ac- companied by Mrs. Thomas Gentle- man, have left for an extended easteri| = and lake trip. Mrs. J. Updegraff -and son, Howard, have gone to San Francisco to spend the rest of the summer there and in southern California, Mr. and Mrs, G. D. Tunnicliff and family left yesterday to spend two or three weeks camping out in the moun tains of Wyr ning. Most of their time will be spen. in the Big Horn basin. Mr. Peter Elvard left Friday eye- ning to join Mrs, Elvard at Lake Oko- boji, where she and Mrs. E. A. Beards- ley expect to remain until Septem- ber 1 At the Country Club. Those with parties at the Country club yesterday were: G. C. Wharton E. A. Wickham, M. G. Colpetzer, Bea Gallagher, Dr. J. E, Summers, Georse M. Reédick, H. A. Tukey and H. L, Pritchett. Personal Mention, Mrs. Roe and daughter of Hia- watha, Kan,, are visiting Mr. E. Roe. Mrs. O. D. Cole of Valentine, Neb,, arrived today to be the guest of Mrs, Baird. / Mrs. W. L. Brayton, who has spent the summer, since June, visiting in Idaho, returned last week. Misses Helen and Elizabeth Ander- son are the guests of their sister, Mrs. Charles Stein, at Glasco, Kan. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hendrickson and children of St. Paul, Minn,, are the guests of W. C. Flatau. Mrs. N. R. Temple of Kansas City will arrive Wednesday to spend a week with Mrs. F. D, Dexter. * Mrs. A, D. Bradley, who left two eeks ago for an eastern trip, is now in Detroit. She expects to be gone about two months. Mrs. Frank Parmalee, who was in- h. . i ! ured in an automobile accident re- Tolina "ml. cently, leaves Tuesday for Glenwood Springs, Colo,, to_ recuperate, Mrs, Parmalee's nurse, Miss com‘uniel her. . Miss Mae Engler, who has been ?endin several weeks with Mrs. rank Cooper in St. Paul, is expected home about August 20, accompanied by her hostess. Many entertainments have been given for this = popular Oml)u girl during her sojourn at St Do You'Know That Roller skating in England. is said to date back to 1790, It is in the lungs that our blood becomes red. Before it gets there it is of a dark purple color. At five years old camels are fit to work; but their strength begins to decline at twenty-five: years, al- though they usually live to be forty. Only one out of more than 160 in- mates of a certain lunatic asylum had red hair, and only four were of light hair and complexion. The shamrock was adopted as the national emblem of Ireland bceause Saint Patrick selected it in order to explain to the Irish the doctrine of the Trinity. faxfield, ac-|, THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, ocz’ety Notes : Personal Gossip : Woman's Work : Household Topics The Bush Baby of Madagascar | The dwarf lemurs, the daintiest of all primates, are restricted to Mada- gascar, wher they may be said to rep- resent the galagos or “bush babies” of tropical and southern Africa. An example of the pretty little species jcommonly called Smith’s dwarf lemur is shown here. The soft woolly coat is delicate gray, the hands and feet are white, and there is a white stripe, | set off by dusky rings, around the | eyes, extending down the center of the muzzle, It is not much larger than the com- mon garden dormouse of central and southern Europe and presents consid- erable superficial resemblance to that animal. The ears are long and up- standing and the eyes are large, pro- | truding and circular.. A noticeable pecuiiarity is the | length of the hind foot. As might be lexpected from this modification, the | leaping powers of this animal are so H |great that it appears almost to fly ifrom branch to branch of the high P | trees in which it lives. % | Like a squirrel, it builds a nest of leaves in the fagk of a tree, and there | the female brings forth her young, “which are usually two. The nest is also used for the pro- longed sleep, equivalent to hiberna- tion in which the animal indulges dur- (ing the period in Madagascar, corre- i sponding to our winter, when the in- | sects and fruits on which it feeds are | scarce and difficult to procure in suffi- | cient quantities. | Before this time of repose, and as a nutritive provision against it, the dwarf lemur accumulates a quantity | of fat in the basal hatr of the tail; the | remnant of this accumulation is still apparent upon this spectmen. | A Dwarf Lemur, Not Much Larger than a Mouse. 1916. \ éf/mpatl\zy and Love By MARIAN LOTUS. I notice that a gentleman in a re- cent breach of{pgomise case put up the defense that' he had mistaken sympathy for love, and the fact that he.got away with only $50 in dam- ages against hfm seems to show that the jury thought his defense a sound one, It's certainly a useful get-out, and if every young fellow who gets hauled up in the future for breaking hearts or anticipating honeymoons, is go- ing to click in the same way, girls had better chuck the courts quick. Personally, I'm no believer in breach of promise cases, as I have told you before. Engagements are | like pianos—you want to try both of them over first, and until you've |tried 'em thoroughly you can’t say if they're your exact fit. Pity is akin to love, we know. Sympathy may sometimes be mis- taken for it, too, but if you are go- ing to establish a precedent by mak- ing the two interchangeable terms, yol're going to give the man a big advantage over the girls, Man invariably tires when you give him what he wants, and it's so simple when he has helped him- self freely to love for him to turn round and say, with perfect faith, too, that it was really only sympathy. And half the dictionaries in the country would help to support. his case, don’t forget. As 1 said just now, I should like to see all breach of promise cases done away with. The solatium for a really broken heart can never be ade- uately represented by pounds, shil- is not badly fractured should find excellent and real compensation in having got rid of something that was but a flash in the pan, But as our authorities evidently intend to continue breach of promise cases, it is surely better to handle them judiciously and not to give too many loopholes to either side. 1 have always been brought up to look upon the word love as a very dangerous one—not lightly to be handled. You love your own wife, for instance, but you're awfully struck on someone ele’s. There's the difference. \ You tell a girl you're awfully crazy on her, that she’s the sweetest thing that ever happened, or that, she’s the dinkiest thing you've met for a de- cade—and you can get away with it safely, even though she probably doesp't believe it. But then, you see, she knows, same as you mean her to know, that there is nothing more to it than an oc- casional supper when you both can manage 1t. . But the moment you tell her you love her she reckons it’s a dead square deal, and you intend to see it through to the other side whatever happens. That's when she watches you—and heaven help you if she /finds you've put it across her, and don't intend to lings, and pence. And a heart that|d carry out youy contract. = = - Summer Salad One of the' prettiest of summer sal- fam-|ads, which looks attractive and tastes neva, va(l:l‘ is this: 1 ut in half some fresh tomatoes, ne for | carefully scoop out the inside so as Angeles | not to break the skin, and wipe dry with a clean cloth; place in each a lut.’week teaspoonful of thin mayonnaise sauce, will re.|and fill in the shell with some marin- added fillets of herring cut into small n * is|pieces, tender green onions cut into AT D By CONSTANCE CLARKE. thin slices, and cooked beets and cel- ery cut in little dicé shapes; this is seasoned with olive oil, taragon vine- gar, a little salt and paprika pepper. Arrange on top some thick mayon- naise, decorate with capers, and serve on individual salad plates with celery and parsley garnish. (Tomorrow—Baked ~ Beef with Vegetables in French Casseroie). Wtisdom of the Streets By ADA PATTERSON. “Lookout, my son. You turned ay sharp cofner.” I heard the words uttered by a benevolent policeman. Gentleness had come hand in hand with wisdom, along with his grizzled hair. younger “cop,” anxious for promo- tion, and ruthless in his means of get: ting it, ‘would have “run in” the pink- faced youngster, intoxicated with his new car, for speeding. He would have Eainted the pink-faged one with the lack dye of villainy. He would have seen in him a deliberate breaker of the law. But older eyes see farther. Perhaps because they are not blinded by the dust of selfishness. The old man of the force was* content with his warning. “I've warned thé youngster. That's all any of us old 'uns can do,” he said to a bystander. 3 1 was glad he did not add: “But, of course, it will do no good. They won't learn save by experience.” Do you believe that? I don’t. I knew a girl who looked timidly over the rim of her little bowl-like life into the wide one she was going to enter by way of a great city, as one of its wage earnefs. I heard a woman say to. this girl: “Never let any man spoil your life” Again and again that girl remembered, and remembering, profited. Her counselor had not said: “The wages of sin is death.” The girl, looking thoughtfully on, saw that some sinners were a long time {.ing Her adviser did not say: “The city is full of dangers toyoung and unprotected.” The girl was in- telligent, and soon, without pain to herself, discovered that. But whenever 2 man talked mucl about love and not at all about mar- riage, the girt looked at him with calm, measuring eyes and asked her self: “Would this man spoil my life?” And he was frightened at the rage she showed. “Never saw a girl cut up like that before,” he grumbled as he was swept.away by the tornado of her wrath. And so she received all those plausible persons who boasted of their “broad views of life” and their Scorn of the “conventions.” Men classified themselves to her. She cata- logued the two classes, “life spoilers and others.” The way of her life lies among the heights, but .often she looks far below the seared, anguished faces of the girls she knew. Her friend’s words echo in her grateful memory: “Never let any man spoil your life.” Yes, “it does some good.” Yes, they remember. Those who think, do.” It is only the thoughtless who bruise their brows against the stone wall of fotewarned experience.. That girl, warned of the sharp corners had avoided them. Her elder friend had done for her what the policeman did for the pink-faced youth. Both had ;yfarned against the sharp corners of ife. Life has many sharp corners. Turn- ing from childhood into young man- hood and womanhood is one of the sharpest. The turn from obscurity into celebrity, from commonplace sit- uation to one of power, is an acute one, No sharper than the corner that turns from the simple life into the complex one, Mind your corners, Allcorners are sharp. And give grateful heed to those who are at pains to tell you of them. They do not “love to preach.” They are not enamored of their own voices, They have seen head-ons, watched smash-ups, and they would save you from them. - & AT STORES AND FOUNTAINS ! ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S | THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Buy It in the sealed glass jars, The Best is always the Cheapcst Substitutes cost YOU same price’ Experienced Advertisers Always Use THE BEE S \The Light \After Darkness | After the sorrow of the ebbing tide o e AR By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. hall not ablde, For darkness passes; storms is past; A little patience and the fi The singing floods return in joy at last. The night s long, and pain welghs heavily, But God will hold His world above de- spair. Look to the east, where up the lurld sky The morning climbs! The day shall yet be fair, —CELIA THAXTER. Nothing in all of life is final. Per- haps even the end of life is not final. But at least we know that everything in life itself changes, grows, moves | on. Despair is the most tragic waste of which human nature is capable. What today is a wound tomorrow is only a heavy scar and a week from now per- haps but a faint mark. Even a grave is some day sure to be grass grown —a silently smiling memento of a once agonizing and tearing sorrow. In the wisely ordained balance of wur natures it has been arranged that we may adjust ourselves through all the stages-from pain to forgetting. It is even true that joy is never more superb and splendid than when it follows misery. Think how gilded the sunshine seems when it follows the dreary ddy of rain. So for life itself. 2 Perhaps the greatest tragedy of life is the impatience—the wild unrest that says: “I am suffering. I can’t bear it and I won't try. I am un- Hap;')y. Things will never be any bet- ter.” In the lovely verse by Celia Thax- ter, “My Creed,” there lies the germ of all philosophy. Scarcel{ a word of explanation is needed—only a little light on the picture. The very keynote of sanity, of brav- ery, of \adjustment to life lies in her philosophy. One has but to endure bravely whatever of unpleasantness | the present offers and believe strongly in the hope of the future When things are at their worst—when the smreme calamity has been faced, what more is there to fear? And out of the strength that comes from sorrow nobly borne there grows breadth of vision and power fully to enjoy the beauties that come after storm and stress, Al Fat People Should Know This | o T remedy to tablet form. arme ip- tion Tablets can now be obtained at all drug ! stores, or by writing direct to Marmol Cex.i | 364 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich.) and | their reasonable price (75 cents for a large | case) leaves no excuse for dieting or violent | exercise for the reduction of the overfat | body to normal proportions. ~ Tested Recipes |- Potato Salad. Boil the potatoes with their skins on, and wait until they are cold to peel them. Slice an onion, separating it into rings. Slice the potatoes and mix sliced cucumbers with them, put in the salad bowl and lay the onion rings on top, then turn over all a dressing made by beating together five tablespoons of salad o1l with. two of vinegar, a half teaspoon of saltand a shake of red pepper. Turn this over the salad, then sprinkle with finely chopped parsley and let stand in the ice box for an hour before serving.— Woman's World. Spiced Salmon. Turn the contents of a large can of salmon/ into an earthenware bowl. | Heat to thé booiling point vinegar suificient to cover the fish, with a few whole cloves, pepper corns and a blade of mace. Add a little salt, turn over the fish and tover closely for several hours. When ready to serve have | very cold and after draining off the | superfluous vinegar lay on lettuce | leaves -and garnish with slices of | lemon. Creamed Salt Mackerel. This is most acceptable on a hot | morning. Soak the fish over night, flesh side downward. Rinse well in the morning, boil up once in fresh cold water, drain and put on hot platter. Blend a tablespoon of butter with one | of flour and add milk sufficient to make a thick cream. Turn this over | the fish, then-set in the broiler until | browned on top. Garnish with parsley. | ’ - WHITE MTS., N. H. MAPLEWOO HOTEL and COTTAGES MAPLEWOOD, N. H. High Altitude. Free from Hay Fever. MAPLEWOOD INN Opposite Hotel. Capacity 148. Terms Moderate. Superior 18-Hole Golf Course 6060 yards ; Motorists’ Best Radiating Center in Mus. | Booking Office, 1180 Broadway, New York, Also Maplewood. N. H. .With _Eath $2.00 up HOTELS AND RESORTS. New -~ aiserfiof Clark Near Jackson Blod. The Hotel Success of Chicago fortable, A Egzegiieahot:l in the business cen- ter of the city offer- ing every convenience and every service. The best food is served in the New Kaiserhof Restaurant at moderate prices. 450 Rooms $1.50 up th Ave.Boston The Distinctive Boston House A pretty skin—the "evidence JAP RO Use but little—It’s Puts Roses In Your Cheeks glowing health—distinguishes the woman who uses The Wonderful “Sunday Morning B\nth” ‘SOAP : The perfect soap for toilet, bath and shampoo. Fragrant, cleansing and refreshing. Large cake 10c, at leading Druggists and Grocers. | For Free Sample Write James S. Kirk & Company, Dept. 850, Chicago, U. 8. A. of cleanliness and SE all lather Colorado — ““ To_think — only yesterday morning I was sweltering in the city and tonight, here in first aid for skin les ““Will Resinol Ointment really stopthis dteadful itching and clear my eczema away 7" #“Madam, if you only knew as much about Resinol as doctors do-- how safe it is to use, how promptly 1t acts—you would not doubt, you would use it a2 once. Usually it stops itching immediately and soon removes every bit of eruption.” Resinol Ointment is s0 wearly flesh-colored thatitcan be used on exposed surfaces with “ out attracting undue attention. Sold by all druggists, For sample free, write to Dept. 7R, Resinol, Balimore, Mol 'l am sitting before a fire of crack- ling logs, watching the sparks fly up- ward and actually enjoying _the warmth. I don’t feel like-a stranger as there are anumber here who came out with me on the Rock Island’s " Rocky Mountain Limited " “T don’t believe a finer train is operated.” / This and other excellent trains daily _ make the trip a joy. Low fares for round trip daily to September 30th. Automatic Block Signals Finest Modern All-Steel Equipment v Superior Dining Car Service For vacation suggestions, detailed information and fares anywhere, phone or address J.S.McNALLY, D.P. A. 1323 Farsam St. Phoane Douglas 428 M . e B 550 et B s i Mool s s e Ao Shop in THE BEE Belore You Shop in the Storea

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