Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| MUSICAL CLUB WILL | HEAR NOTED ARTISTS || Tuesdsy Morning Musical An.| " nounces Program to Start | With Russian Dancers, | — | DOWSKY I8 COMING, T0O | By MELLIFICIA—Sept. 7, 1916. Rare artistic treats are in store for bers of the Tuesday Morning ical club, the winter program of which organization is annnounced by the chairman of the program com- ittee, Mrs. C. M. Wilhelm. Begin- ng in November, noted artists will be grucnted on the first Tuesday of ich month, the concerts to be given at the Hotel Fontennelle, most prob- “ably. As outlined, the Russian dancers, ndreas Pavley and Serge Oukrani- sky, with seven women dancers, and an orchestra of twenty-five, will open 's series by a brilliant A club program, fea- ‘turing Mrs. L. F. Crofoot, pianist, an M active member of the organization, es next, to be followed by Julia ‘Culp’s concert. Miss Corinne Paul- ‘son, another. local pianist, will give February rrogrnm; while Leopold ‘Godowsky will be followed by Pable 3 s, ‘cellist. A student program 1 conclude the year’s course. Mrs. Samuel S. Caldwell heads the sday club, which has done much to ourage musical education and ap- ciation in Omaha. Its influence markedly widened last year by a enrollment of student member- p, a movement which the Fine rts society is also sponsoring. Mrs. hur Crittenden Smith is the vice ident; ' Mrs. William Sears Pop- on, corresponding secretary; M Beecher Howell, recording sec i gw.w A, C, Johnson, treas- : Miss Helen Miilard, auditor, a C. T. Kountze, Mrs. T. J. ey and Mrs, Herman Kountze, di- tors. Mrs, Lucien Stephens is the press representative of the so- o Supper. Tau Nu held a stag the Fontenelle Monday ning in honor of alumni leaving city for school. Clarence Dun- acted as toastmaster. Several s responded to toasts, but the rt talks by Jean Gilbert Jones and Coach Harold Muiligan ofsthe high faculty were the feature of the Mrs. Elizabeth Neff will entertain Catholic Extension club Frida oon at her home, 3414 Nort tie street, e e o s nie Mercer, an instructor n the Omaha public schools, w ited in_marriage to Mr. Carl O. man Tus evening at 8 o'clock the home of the bride's parents, Mr. n rs. J. O, Mercer. Rev. J. S. , & brother of the bride, per- d the ceremony. Only relatives : at the service. Mr. and : n make their home Pwenty-fifth and A streets, South jest Mile Party, Prettiest Mile Woman's Golf s entertained Tuesday evening rs. Ralph Russell at her home. hostess | was isted by mes Arthur_Jones, T. W. Rog- . M, Clark; T, C, Rich, Cuthbert 4 t, "l‘homuanlconer. O. Hid- n. / vice president, Mrs, A, M. h, presided over the business in_the absence of the presi- rs. W. H. Flinn. The business n was followed by a social pro- he members present included: !"‘ g ‘”Hlfllnn—-' + 3. € €, A, Granden, % t.A" Zlnd.rtnvd, . J. Lucas, Ia L. Carr, . Rogers, mas Falooner, . 0, Hiddleston, C. M. Mortenson, Tda ¥linn, A, A. Wedemeyer, Rllfll W, Emerson, E. L, Caln, TFrank Russell, . C. Rieh, Bdward R, Burke, Ms y K. Emerson, Mingos— Edith, MeCurdy, Bridge Luncheon Club. ‘Mrs. W. H. McFarland entertained Tuesday Bridge Luncheon club afternoon for the first fall meet- The next meeting will be held 0 weeks, s¢ present were: nes— Mesdames-— W. A. Abbott, E. %. Ross, D N, #hrenk, A, Tousalin, "3 Jettrey Davey, at Hanscom Park. Mac club will give an informal general secretary of the association,| who is leaving the city soon for Ypsil- anti, Mich. At the Field Club. | Mrs. John Towle will have a party of four at the club this evening. Mrs, F. L. Tubbs had luncheon for two at/| 1 o'clock today, H Saturday evening Dr. W. K. Foote | will have a party of eleven at dinner, | At the Country Club. | W. F. Gurley will entertain a party | of six at dinner at the club Saturday, evening. Dance Cancelled. The dancing party which was to have been given at the University club this evening has been cancelled. 3 | Matinee Party. i Mrs. E. E. Sterricker -entertained | twelve at a matinee party at the Or-| pheum this afternoon. The guests | were wives of officers of the State Guard. Social Gossip. | The Misses Helen and Zeda Ding~ ley of Algona, la., who have been the uests of Miss Florence Russell, left| qudai; to spend several days with Miss Beatrice Tinley of Council Bluffs. Mr. Ted Eyler will give a dinner | party at Happy Hollow club Saturday evening for Mr. James Dyrenforth of Chicago, who is the guest of Mr, Ed- ward Fuller. Notes at Random. Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Stephens have moved to the Colonial from the Ham- ilton apartments. Mrs, C. M. Wilhelm has returned from Colorado, where she spent the summer, Rev. and Mrs. T, J. Mackay will re- turn Friday from a summer visit to the Ojibway Islands, Ontario, Canada, Mrs. Mary E. Van Gieson and Mrs, H, B, Lemere and children have returned from Colorado where they have been gend!n' the summer, Mrs. E. O. Hamilton and children, Allison_and Eleanor, returned today from Wellesley, Mass,, where Miss Ruth Hamilton was placed at Dana Hall, the preparatory school for Wel- Jesley. Mr, Warren Hamilton will attend school at Northwestern col- lege in Evanston this year. Tested Recipes Peach Roll. 1 teaspoonful lemon Few drops pink veg- Juice etable coloring 1 pint whipping cream 3 ekx yolks % cupful powdered 1 euptul nugar 1 pint oream sugar 1 quart ripe peaches 1 teaspoonful vanilla (measured after peeling and cutting in slices) Put the cream in a double boiler and beat the egg yolks and sugar to- gether until light. When the cream is_hot, pour slowly over the eggs, stirring gently all the time. Return to the fire and stir until the mixture coats the spoon. Strain and put away to cool, Mash the peaches and strain through a fine wire sieve; add to the cream with the lemon juice; stir well and color a pretty, delicate pink with a few drops of pink vegetable color- ing. Pour into the freezer can and freeze until solid, Whip the whip- ping cream until stiff and add pow- dered sugar and vanilla. Choose a plain, round mold, rinse with cold water and line it evenly with the frozen pink ice cream, packing it down evenly with a wooden spatula. Fill' the center with whipped cream; cover the top with pink ice cream; cover the mold and bury in ice and salt for two hours. Unmold and serve in slices on glass saucers. Esci Asparagus. 1 bunch asparagus. £ tablespoonsful flour 1 ?m wilk 5 hard.bolled egss & tablespoonsful RBread crumbs Butter, Salt and pepper. ‘Wash and cut asparagus in small pieces and cook until tender, adding the tips a little later than the stalks, Make a white sauce of the milk, but- ter and flour; season to taste with salt and pepper. Cut the hard-boiled eggs in pieces and add to sauce. Cover the bottom of a baking dish with asparagus, add some of the sauce, then cover with a thin layer of bread crumbs and repeat until the dish is full. Bake in a quick oven until brown.—Mothers' Magazine. White Foam Cake. 10 egg Whitea 1 cuptul flour 114 oupfuls wugar 1 teaspoonful baking 1 teaspoonful vanilla powder Beat the whites of the eggs very stiff. Sift sugar, flour and baking powder together several times and cut and fold into the beaten whites, Add vanilla and turn into a greased and ‘papered tin. Bake forty minutes in a moderate oven. ] irty at n;:l_c?lm Park on this evening. Eighty youn will attend. e i “members of the Delta Gam- - gave their annual lunch- y Hollow club today for who are returning to lchol;sl on the - Covers were laid for thirty- H. Garvin entertained at B at the Hlub today for Miss Ceyes of Westfield, N. J., who since Saturday the C:uut : ‘Covers s acd b J an 5 Wilcox also entertained Iunc‘i:- at - club. P - Saturday reservatio de hg’ ); fi gnl\nh;er E., er h for |yix I:; four, had luncheon in THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, Various styles of moc/casins. 1916. From left to right, the Winnebago, the Apache and the Black- foot. From the American Natural History Museum, By GARRETT P. SERVISS. “That's not Delaware made,” said Deerslayer, examining the worn and rejected foot covering with a cau- tious eye. “I'm too young on a war- path to be positive, but I should sa; that moccasin has a northern lool and comes from beyond the Great Lakes." In this passage, from one of Coop- er's inimitable Indian romances we et a vivid light on one of the most interesting inventions of the Ameri- can red man—his peculiar and tell- tale footwear. The moccasin is an American institution, nothtvithstand- ing the fact that skin coverings for the foot have been worn by the na- tives of ‘Siberia and European Lap- land. 7ven in this country, as Dr. Clerk Wissler, of the American museum, has shown, the moccasin was always confined to the tribes inhabiting the northern two-thirds of the United States territory and Canada. Mocca- sins have not been found in Mexico or South America. “The area of the moccasin was the area of skin gar- ments.” The material of which the mocca- sin is made is deerskin, or some simi- lar soft and flexible skin. It is cut all from one piece and thei slashed, fold- ed, and sewed into the shape of the foot. Some, however, have separate soles. Since puckering cannot pe al- together prevented even by the most skilliul worker, bead trimmings and other ornamentation were contrived to cover the unsightly places, and Ho wfar this art was carried may be judged from the arge collection of moccasins to be seen in the Museum of Natural History, It increases one’s respect for the Indian to study ‘these expressions of his love of the feautiful, and his sense of harmony, proportion and propriety. Each tribe had its own special pat- tern, and its own way of cutting and folding the skin, and this fact ex- plains the remark of cooper’s hero quoted above. An Indian, or an ex- | perienced white scout, like the “Leath- erstocking,” could at a glance tell to what tribe the lost moccasin picked up in the forest belonged, and thus im- portant clues were often furnished to the secret march of war parties, Even the footprints of a moccasin often reveal the tribe of its owner. The Indian women were skilled in making and adorning moccasins. But any Indian could make a moccasin quickly in case of necessity, and a tough bark would serve a temporary purpose. : The moccasin was so essential a part of the Indian dress that, natur- Living Up to I dea‘lhs# By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. “It {8 so easy to drift’ back, to sink; so hard to live abreast of what you Having courage and having the courage of our own convictions seem nfortunately far apart in this world. hey lie at the poles of physical and moral bravery. Being a moral coward is a far more tragic thing than being a physical one. Shrinking from physical pain may not be a sign of weakness at all in one who has the moral courage to hold himself firmly to his own standards of enduring things bravely, Even a weakling may have his mag- nificent moment of meeting visible danger bravely, It isn't as hard to face death or even to die as it is to live honestly and consistently. A good many people start out with a few honest convictions and discover that their honesty and sincerity aren’t paying as well as the trickery and charlatanism of other folks. {‘or a while they fight for their ideals—for a time they make an honest effort to live their lives as they think right and fitting. But over and over in their minds goes the refrain, “It doesn't pay—it isn't paying! What's the use?” And too often an individual who starts out with splendid ideals resigns them as impractical and lives a life of compromise with conscience and conviction. But that doesn't pay. No one ever got away from his own inner conviction of right and wrong. Whoever believes a thing strongly By CONSTANCE CLARKE. Macaroni is one of the simplest and least expensive foods, equally good in summer and in winter, It is especiaily palatable served with tomato butter. Take some boiled macaroni—a quarter pound will make a good dish ~drain it in the collander or on a sieve, then cut it up into lengths of about one inch, and then mix with a good pat of butter, a pinch of salt and paprika peppersand one ounce of ion | grated cheese, and turn out on a hot entree or flat dish, pour some hot tomato butter over and serve for luncheon, or as a second course dish, or_in the -place of a vegetable, Tomato Butter—Put two or three tomatoes in a stewpan with tweo tablespoonfuls of butter, one-half cup of light gravy, the juice of half a lemon, and one tablespoonful of ar- rowroot that is mixed with a table- spoonful of cold gravy. S:ason with a little salt and a piucn of pepper, and put on the side of the stove for fifteen to twenty minutes, then strain, rewarmi and use. Tomorrow-—Cambridge lce. and fails it weakly has to lufigr the reproaches of his own thoughts. There are always quiet hotrs when the ghost of an honest past rises to reproach a dishonest present. And yet it is pathetically easy to drift into compromise with ideals or even to sink to a level where they are no longer visible, And it is pathet- ically hard actually to live up to con- victions of right. But the only way for any human being to be at peace with himself is to do the right as he sees. it. 1f he fails to do this he may win money and place, but he cannot win a moment of peace of mind. Peace of mind is about the most impartant thing in the world for any- one who wants to be happy and con- tented. ? The effort it takes to live up to ideals is well worth making. It means a struggle at first—that is quite true. But it means clear vision, strength and the ultimate success that has to come to anyone who looks at things honestly and strives toward them unceasingly. No one ever yet compromised with his own ideals and achieved a success that wasn’t dust and ashes in his own Imouth. No one need flatter himself that he is going to be the exception to this rule. A man who has ideals, a perception of the honest thing to do land an inherent desire to express his best self will achieve only misery if I he fails them. “For what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?” DIAMONDS ot o e We are selit high grade Diamonds, Watches And Jowelty on crodit, for lees than you find anywhare olse In the coun- “less” we do mot mean simply cap, but we mean a combination of ga: (1) Low Prices. (1) Re- || markable values for the money spent. (3) Our lberal credit terms-—payments #0 casy that the most modcat salary: can meet them. Your credit—every honest porson's credit—in g3od with Loftis Bron. & Co. No red taps to go through—no embarrassing dotullv—everything dentlal. You pay in small amounts, }y ¢r monthiy, 83 sults your conven! confi- :u— {:‘ amen O Wk, EMBLEMS ‘We carry a_mcst complete sesortment Charms, Buttor of Emblem Pins and Ringe for all Fraternsl O Prices and terms to sult any purss | Daily to 8 p. m. Sa Till 9:30 { &fi'u write !w:.flhnn eatalog ;Jo. |} 908. Phone Douglas 1444 and our sales- || man will call THE NRATIONAL JOFTIS et sl | I BROSECD AR s Mot Smes mond Ring, § p tooth mounting, 14| solid | Advertising is the pen- | dulum that keeps buy- | ing and selling in motion thus arose the real art of moccasin. | ally, legends grew up about it. The Indians had sufficient creative imag- ination to ascribe to moccasins the same power of transporting the wear- ers that the Greeks ascribed to the winged sandals of Hermes. Thus in Mr. Longfellow’s “Hiawatha” we read of the great Indian hero taking strides a mile in length when he put on his magis moccasins. The flexibility of the moccasin was its most valuable quality. It was soft to the fott, it made no noise, it did not confine the action of the mus- cles, it took a good hold in slippery places, and it was sufficiently re- sistant to save he fo from ordinary injuries. Besides, the foot of the In- dian, like that of the barefoot boy, was hardened and inured to the ac- cidents of travel. In winter it was supplemented, when necessary, by snowshoes. The excellence of the moccasin for forest and wildérness use was proved by the wide adoption of it by the white men who went on Indian trails The hard, thick boot was too noisy and heavy for the warpath, where there was no artillery to be dragged, | where each warrior went light armed and must be light footed, and where a stolen march, as silent as the creep of a serpent, or a midnight surprise crowned a campaign. The-introduction of the white man’s needles and thread naturally produced | a revolution in moccasin making, The ornamentation Became more elabor- ate and less essentially, because less structurally beautiful, so that the orgeous moccasins turned out today or sale to tourists and to fill curios- ity shops often bear little resemblance to the simple products of the original art of the red man. The moccasin'is not at. home in a white man’s house and is not itself when worn as a slipper on polished floors. It was the child of the wil- derness and the brother of the bow and the arrow. 0 1RO N AN NI O T DN i N Siz Soul Stations in Life | BY ADA PATTERSON. , A% A little girl 3 years old tried to steal a baby. The baby's nurse looked for a policeman. The little girl's mother saidy “I'll ‘spank you hard with my slipper when we get home. The baby and the perambulator were pushed around the corner into safety. The 3- { year-old was led away in a howling rage. What 'set the bystanders agtin | and aroar was a soul station in the life journey of that little girl. i £ There are six main soul stations in | the journey of life. Way stations, switch stops, changing of cars—yes, there are all of these. But when you | plan a journey you think only of the chief stops. The first is the discovery that you are not the center of the uni- verse, Every person is amazed to learn that the world does not revolve {around him. The discovery comes | earlier to some than to others. It may come in childhood or later 1f later it hurts worse, or if not worse, longer. What the babe first sees is a group of faces about his crib looking anxiously and straight at him. That is the first impression. First impressions are stubborn. These faces are the family, and the family revolves about him, That is the reason that it is a time of tragedy to some children when,anA other baby comes to the house. The little 1ad or maid finds that there is another figure on the horizon'of his life. Slowly and unwillingly we learn that there is a vast family in' the home we call earth and that there are others who may claim a place’there as well as ourselves. It is an unwelcome truth and dimly perceived. If it were clearly perceived there would he no war. The second main station is co-oper- ation: The boy or gir! may learn-it in the home, when the boy is com- manded to bring a drink of water to his little sister, or when sister has to submit to the noise that brother and brother’s friends are making in the room, although she tearfully explains that dolly is asleep and the “racket” will surely awaken her. Or the lesson in co-operation may come with another, when the boy or girl “goes to work.” A main stop that is in every life. No one will ever for- get that' first day at work. Nobody thought much about it except “the folks at hqme” and the boy or girl. Other persons in the store or factory scemedpnot to care at all. That hurt. There would be hurts like that all along the way. The knowledge was a soul awakening. It fovced the timid one to draw upon his or her own powers. It was the soul station of self- reliance. It was the first gleam of truth that no soul may really lean up- on another, that all must stand alone and stand upright. The soul station of falling in love— was there ever a glory or a folly like it? Human beings differ in a thousand ways, but never in falling in love. The way is always the same. They fall in love, not with the person that is but the glorious object that their fancy makes of him. Draped in the gold and purpose of our fancy he becomes a god, and she a goddess. And others looking on smile. They have created some such wonderful being them- selves and they shake their - heads sagely about what will follow. It fol- lows as inevitably as night day, the readjustment of love. he god or goddess falls from the pedestal and breaks its nose. Or some other nec- essary feature is marred. Instead of the god or goddess there is revealed a commonplace creature. That may be the lesson schoolmaster Shakes- eare taught when he made Titania all in love with an ass’s head in “Mid- summer Night's Dream.” Mark Twain told of this soul station of Eve’s in “Eve's Dairy.” “I don't know why I am fond of Adam,” she scribbles with a tree twig dipped in rose stain. “He isn’t good looking. He isn't smart. He isn’t even good tempered. I sup- pose I love him because he is male and he is mine.” We have lived and journeyed long before the meaning of the next soul station is clear to us. We have heard as often as we have dressed ourselves, ae often as we have sat at table, “Mind your own affairs. Let othef people look after theirs.” We have been brought upon the platform of “Me and my wife, my son, John, and his wife.” "And all others may lose themselves ‘in sheol. Women have been told that their place is the home until only the boldest and bravest of them doubted it. The governor of New York agreed to that when he talked to 10,000 women in the Sev- enth Regiment armory, but added he, “The nation has become your home.” So with the man who evades jury duty, And the man who doesn't take the trouble to vote, be- cause “he can't spare the time from his business.” The government of the nation is his business. His neigh- bor's welfare is his business. The program of humanity toward better things is his business. At this soul station we amend “Mind your own business.” We say, “Mind your own business. Part of it i the betterment of the world and of the conditions of living in the world.” The last station is that of tolerance. It is the time when he stoops to un- derstand. Youth is crude and cruel. | Everything is up and down, positive, | perpendicular, uncompromising. But at the last station we understand, and understanding we pity. It is a late station in the journey, When we reach it the beauty of tenderness is in it softer, for we are seeing them in the light of the afterglow. i \Tips on Fashions Blue veils are worn over pale pink hats, Crinoline has fashion. Some of the new coats are lined with velvet, The collars of motor coats are ex- tremely high. Fur is found on many of the sum- mer suits. High waistlines and less full skirts are hinted at. . Charming hats are made of linens ‘n pale colors. Ask for and G;n_ ‘SKINNE THE HIGHEST QUALITY EGG NOODLES 36 Auge ecpe Book Free WHMMFG.CO. OMAHA,USA. - IMACARONI FACTORY IN AMERICA: been dropped by 9 = @Automatic' Time-Savings per letter with the new Remington Self Starter HIS Remington invention eliminates whole groups of slow hand motions. It gives your typist an average of 12 flying starts on every letter that leaves your office. . See how: She slips your letterhead in the Remington paper- roll. She presses a column selector *‘self-starting’” key. The carriage automatically toes the. mark sust where the typing of the date should be started. TIME SAVED. She writes the name. Then she presses another self-starting key. Instead of “‘inching’’ along, the carriage number.” to exact position for *‘street and TIME SAVED. Another key speeds the carriage ta position for “city and state.”” No slow hand spacing. TIME . SAVED. Down the page it goes, automatically fixing the carriage in position for paragraphs, ‘“‘yours truly” lines, name and address on envelopes, as precisely as though measured by scale—and infinitely quicker. TIME SAVED TIME SAVED TIME SAVED The new ‘‘Self Starter’”” insures a neat uniform- ity in all letters that leave your office. It gives your typist more time to type. She doesn’t waste time doing things her machine should do-for her She doesn’t have to look on and off her notes. TIME SAVED. These “‘self starting’® keys come only on Rem- ingtons. They are a built-in part of all new Remington No 10 machines. No added cost. e a—— THE CIRCLES SHOW THE 12 FLYING STARTS ——— Grand Prize, Panama-PacificBxposition ‘They save enough time to pay for the machine. Come to our office and ask for a demonstration. REMINGTON TYPEWRITER COMPANY 201 S. Nineteenth Street, Omaha, Neb. Phone Douglas 1284. T T e