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

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TV T R S e Sl ARRIED COUPVES AT DINNER DANCE Form of Entertainment at ~ Happy Hollow Seems to Be Meeting Popular Favor. GUEST LIST QUITE LARGE ?{ MELLIFICIA, September 14. appy Hollow club seems to have tituted the most popular form of entertainment this season when it thegan its married folks' dinner- ances. Tonight the second one this fvar will be given, and it promises to se even.more popular than the first. Mr. and Mrs. Don T. Lee will have twelve guests, Mr. and Mrs. R, W. ayward and Dr. and Mrs, G. D. Shipherd will each have ten guests; ,r. and Mrs, A. G. Edwards will ve a party of six, Mt, and Mrs, rris Brown, Mr, and Mrs. H. G, Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Porter will feach have five guests; Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Shafer will have a foursome, | jand others who will have small par- jties at the club wijl be Messrs, and [esdames R. C. Peten# W. E. *Weller, [Rhiodes, Walter Dale, C. G. R. Wright, L. V. Nicholas, Cuth- ert Vincent, {) F. Prentiss, hrist and nd Mrs, G. T. ey. r.and Mrs. J, A, Linderholm will as their guests: _Messrs. and Mesdames— : v, 0. M .8mith. 9. H. Conrad, Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Howe will have lin. their party: . . . and Mesdames— Edward A. Knapp. i i ith Mr. and Mrs, E. B. Carrigan i, Pa., ' One of the largest partiep of the k hiz:ll be given by Dg<and Mrs. B, emere, heir guests will be: = ..?fl"" A H, Fetters, sorge Later, Harry Plorpont. a1 W. R. Wood, ¥ W fis:. R. R. Hollister. — S af fi'nd‘y she will _luncheon party of dgom‘mu were asters, P, Sweeney entértained at at the ch;gé. otte of ; Weber of Herman :6. Quin tlm:‘ o guests of honor: , e Miss Ruth Blabaush. lg.‘mkreuumlm i b today. Her were f | e ; ""Hayden had ' six m:h club today, Meyer entetained fif enter! ty b ‘3 summer - Meyer, he on one of the. s of marigold will en- entyoue fufi&' o e b ! 3 m‘m (3 ul: l:u. ! )(r.:wd Mrs. Dt cecnng 30 H ill have eight guests. a Woman's Club Luncheon. A mars chu I y Hollow to e e of enry Yy ng the lufl:}loo vocsl o:;n:g. 7 o Mrs. Thonn{ membeér, 1nd rs, eader of assistant eaders luded a confémplated for nfi her Mrs. Edward n, a club Thomas, i A ory: C. J. art; F.. war eflmmu a?plcé,elfi the 8 :filic;' Mrs é‘ . Coltins, hy and ethics; Mrs. C. W, itical and “Social science, E. E. Stanfield, parliamen- ho . W, Mike- | di arrived to be with Mrs, Love for sev- eral months, and for Mrs. Henry Pen- nock of Seattle, Wash., formerly of Omahd, who came Wednesday to visit her sister, Mrs, I. S. Leavitt of Dun-| dee. Mrs. Pennock was one of the or- ganizers of the Fine Arts society and | Mrs. C. H. Ilohannu and Mrs. A, W, | Jefferis will entertain a number of | her old friends ofthat society at| luncheon at the Fontenelle Saturday] in her honor, ! ; | Mrs, Philip Potter will. give a luncheon for Mrs. Pennock at her home Friday. Sunday she will be the guest of Mrs. Charles Offutt and on Monday Mrs. F. E. Cole will enter- tain at luncheon at the Fontenelle in her honor. Davis-Wait Wedding. The marriage of Miss Alice E Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jo- seph S, Davis, to Mr, Augustus Wait took place Tuesday evening at 5 o’clock, Rev. T. J. Mackay officiating, The bride wore her traveling suit of dark blue broadcloth and a black hat. Her corsage bouquet was of Ward roses. Mr. and Mrs. Wait left Tues- day evening for Chicago. They will bg]lnt ?fime after October 1 at Perrys- ville, 3 For Miss Torrance, In honor of Miss Katherine Tor- rance of Los Angeles, who is the uest.of Mr, and Mrs. Charles E. etz, Mrs. Ross B. Towle gave a luncheon at the Country club today. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Metz will entertain at dinner at the Country club Saturday evening for Miss Tor- rance. Delta Tau Delta Luncheon. The Delta Tau Delta fraternity had | employ them in Tuncheon at the Fontenelle today for | do many cities he h ing back | dogs it ot e g "e|:m311 {ilrc“ inals, but in Holland they are among ly luncheons the most zealous guardians of that to school. This w of a series of fort THE BEE; OMAHA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER, 15, 1916. Society Notes : Personal Gossip : Woman’s Work : Household Topics Worry Thought Into Work Thought Dogs as Trackers of Evildoers Military Dogs of the Dutch Army Which Assist in Guarding the Frontier. By GARRETT P. SERVISS. The value of dogs is becoming more | and more appreciated by those who in police work. Not only here and abroad use to assist in running down crim- which the fraternity expects to give. | War-surrounded land. On the Calendar, McKinley Ladies’ auxiliary of the B'nai B'rith meets this evening at 8 o'clock in Miss Coo?‘:n studio, the Lyric building. Maxim Konecky will be the speaker. Parish Aid Dean and tain the Parish Aid nocie({ cathedral at the Field clu 5 Friday afternoon. Pleasures Past. Mr, and Mrs. Forbes entertained at their home last cveninf at a dinner- dance. Covers were laid for four- of Trinity from 2, to Mise Helen Wostegard, Byers-Richter Wedding. The marriage of Miss Anna Byers to Mr. John Richter will take place at St. John's church this afternopn at 4 o'clock. They will be atterided by ret Hansen and Mr. Louis Burke, S. D.. A reception ceremony at the home of the bride- uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Nickell. Mr. and Mrs, Rich- ter will be at home after October 1 at 2626 Caldwell street. P«uu! Mention. Miss Mildred Rhodes arrived from Chicago -yesterday. Tuesday from a summer spen Bailey Island on the Maine coa Mrs. C. C. Belden, who met .with a painful accident last week when an artery in her ankle was severed, is recovering rapidly. r. and Mrs. Julius E. Rau and ily have returned from a six 1 ! to the Pacific coast, stop- 'pln‘ at all the points of inter F T Women from the Far East Will Speak Here Sunday W. A, fith of Japan, sister, . W. at the mo 4s in charge of the ¢ society, of which M: is district president. reh missionary ancock will enter- l and wedding supper will follow the h One instance of a dog that seemed to have a special instinct for tracking | crime is on record in Vienna. The police of the city possessed a collie which tracked the murderers of a boy and girl whose whereabouts were unknown, and on another oc- casion discovered theb ody of a wo- man missing for a week. Left in her went to his master's house, and by barking before the eldest son, run- ning to the door, succeeded in rousing his_curiosity, The son followed the dog to the newly dug grave, where it began scratching; and the body being dis- covered, the police were informed. After this had been done the dog con- tinued barking as before, and was not satisfied until it was again followed. Then, leading the way to a cafe, it sprang at a man who {ncr confessed. Sometimes dogs have been the un- witting causes of bringing a criminal to justice. Some time ago extensive poaching occurred on a state reserva- tion, but the wardens were unable to catch the delinquents. After an un- room for three days, he was released, | successful day, a warden, accompanied and then went direct to a river, plung- ed in, and brought her body ashore. 1t was a dog, too, that brought some Spanish slayers to justice. His mas- ter was killed in a quarrel and his| body buried, but the dog succeeded in escaping from the criminals. It By DOROTHY DIX. A young girl asked ‘my advice the other day about whether she should ‘marry a certain man who had asked her to be his wife. g “Do you love him?" I inquired. “No,” she replied, “but he is a good ‘man. He is comfortably rich, and my mother wants me to marry m.” “Well, then, lot mother marry him,” said L. “Don’t you do it, for if you mafry a man you don’t love you will be miserable ever after, no matter if he is a saint and a- millionaire com: { bined.” I. S. Leavitt | ately they make it, when t A woman’s affections are thé me- dium through which she looks on life. 1f she does not love him her husband cannot please her, though he were a model of all the virtues. 1f, on the Other hand, she loves the man who shares it with her, she can be perfectly content in a two by four flat. She can prefer doing her own cooking to going to balls, and be blind as a bat at weaknesses at which all the world jeers. For this reason no woman should ever marry unless she is wildly, fran- by his dog, passed alohg a station where a small crowd was waiting for the train. A coffin was lying on the platform and the dog immediately approached it and pointed. His master consid- ered this rather unusual, and his sus- or the marriage of ambition, or the marriage for money is a failure, they have no shame in squealing, as our sporting friends say, and thus it-hap- pens that the unloving wife is invari- ably a complaining and disagreeable one, - Now, no woman can live with a husband she does not love and be happy, and not one woman in a thou- sand has the strength of character to do her duty as a wife unless she is happy or treat a man right not because she wants to, but because she nught to, f course, the girl who marries a man for whom she has only a pale pink friendship deludes herself by thinking that her liking wil warm up into hectic love after marriage and that she will make him a good wife whether she is fond of him or not. Neither of these miracles takes place. The man who failed to fas- cinate her when she saw him with his company clothes and company man- ners on is not going to enthuse her when she has a steady dose of him in everyday/attire and negligee con- duct. Nor, unless she is a wonder of her S¥x, Can she always remember to be tically, madly in love. A man may marry a woman for whom he has only a mild and lukewarm regard and get along in reasonable comfort, be- cause after marriage love is only a side issue with him, anyway. Besides, the masculine code teaches a man not to welch, and when he makes a bad bargain to stick to-it, so the indifferent husband is not in- frequently a fairly comfortable one to live with. . 3 But women are notoriously poor losers, ahd, no matter how deliber- y find out"that the marriage of conVenience, By CONSTANCE CLARKE. A variation from the plain ve table dish may be found in the fol- lowing recipe on stuffed cabbage, which is appetizing and easily pre- a large head of cabbage, cut outa plns—thaped piece from the cen- ter and dig out the interior of the cabba, inkle the inside with sait, er and melted butter and ‘with the meat filling (prepared as below). Replace the plug and tie with a ¢cord and steam the cabbage in a stewpan with a rack in the bottom. Meat Filling—Take two or three | 7 peeled onions, chop them up in lttle dice shapes and put them into a stew- pan with two ounces of butter. Fry them together for about fifteen min- utes, then season with a little salt and pepper, add a teaspoonful of finely chopxed sage, two ounces of white breadcrumbs, half a pint of brown gravy or stock and one pound of round: steak as finely minced as pos- sible. Let these boil together for about fifteen minutés and use as di- rected above. Serve with brown sauce. Tomorrow — Beetroot and Bean Salad. considerate, and kind, and forbearing, and patient, and agregable to one who gets on her . nerves, and towards whom her only sentiment is one of ohlignion‘ and duty. The plain unvarnished truth is that it takes a lot of love to enable any- body to endure matrimony, which may be a holv estate, but is certainly one full of trials and tribulations that tax both the flesh and the spirit to the utmost. There is no human being with whom we are brought into close contact but ~who necessarily makes large drafts upon our temper, our taste and our patience. So the girl who is thinking of mar- tying should not ask herself if a cuitor can give her this or that, or if he possesses certain graces and ~harms, but only if she loves him well nough to ‘do without things for his ake, and to forgive him his cranki- ress and love him still. There are times ‘when every hus- band is cross and unreasonable, and stingy, and mean; when he rows about little things, and criticises his wife's people; wfien he refuses to go out with her and is otherwise pesky, and the onI{ way this is bearable is for the wife to be so much in love that she blames his cantankerousness on_his business and begs him not to! work/ so hard. It is far more important for a woman to bé in love with a husband than it is for him to be in love with her, because love's spectacles are rose-colored, and while a woman looks through them she’ sees in a man just what she wants to see. < And as long as a wife is satisfied ;I‘Vifh a husband he is satisfied with er, ll_')!l_mu AND COLLEGES. CENTRAL COLLEGE For Women, Lexington, Mo. 3 . A te e i picions were aroused when the man accompanying the coffin showed signs of confusion. . His replies to the ques- tions concerning the identity of the body, and particulars of the death, were so unsatisfactory that the coffin was opened and found to be packed with patridges. g One day the Paris police were over- joyed at laying their hands on a noted coiner, for whom they had been hunt- ing, but they were unahle to find his address. Fortunately, he had a dog with him; when arrested. This was let loose in the streets, and the detec- tives followed the animal to its home, where a large collection of spurious coin and a complete counterfeiting plant were found. A woman was murdered at Lyons, and on top of a cupboard crouched a cat, its eyes staring in terror, which no persuasion could move. Suspicions were directed to certain persons, who were confronted with the cat, which arched its back, spitting and growl- ing. %oth turned pale, and one attempt- ed to strike the animal, which fled with a yell of terror. Circumstantial evidence was also strong, and a con- fession followed conviction, though, without the cat, they might have gone dree. " An ape once identified the mdrder- er ‘of its master in the same manner. It was the only witness of the crime. Clues were few, and no one was strongly suspected; but one day a certain man passed the animal, which threw itself against its cage and show- ed the most intense rage so long as he was in sight. Suspicions were aroused, the clue was followed up, and a strong chain of circumstantial evidence adduced, the ape being produced in court at the trial, giving evidence by its actions. . Three monkers showed the most extraordinary intelligence in India when their master was murdered, be- cause he refused to give up a goat he had with him. One seized the goat- skin—the goat' being killed and skinned to provide a meal—and took it away unnoticed, a second re- mained near the grave in which the body had been hastily buried, while the third went into the village and attracted the attention of the head- man. Its. signs were unmistakable, so he followed it to the jungle, where two of them began tearing up the earth, The body being found, all three monkeys then proceeded to the hut of the man who had done the deed and attacked him tooth and nail. s We Clean Lace Curtai DRESHER BROS., 2211-17 Farnam. St. Phone Tyler 345. DIAMONDS WATCH E S| ON CREDIT LOW PRICES—EASY TERMS AT LOFTIS BROS. & CO. No. 4—Men's Dia- mond Ring, 6 prong tooth mounting, 14k loll| ua:ld. Rom mond ' Ring, solid gold, fection™ We carry a most complete ass of Emblem Charms, Buttons, Pins and Rings for all Fraternal Organiszations. nd terms to suit any purse. Open Daily to 8 P,- Saturdays Till 9330 Call or write for illustrated catalog No. §03. Phone Douglas 1444 and our sales- man will eall with any article you . [OFTI ;\ifinnmn‘lumummminnmnmmumlmmnmmuiilmn ’nummnmlmmnmmmnna Lincoln Medical College FOUR-YEAR COURSE Registration September 13—16 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA U T lll!lmlflllm’ IIHII' By ADA PATTERSON. Do you think straight through a subject or do you think under, above or around it? i Thought is more precious than money. Are you careful of it as you are of your purse? That machine whose wheels are grinding against each other, at .the | same time rasping your nerves in the streets, is wasting its force. More, it is destroying itself. When you worry that is what your mind does. Turn your worry thought into work thought. Too many persons think as a grass lhopper jumps, and arrive where he; arrives, in winter. Too many others think as the water spreads over a swamp, without a channel, withou! distinction, without purpose. ¢ We should think as a pathfinder cuts his way through a jungle. As an arrow flies to its target. We should make our thinking bear fruit in ac- tion or in principle. You like this person. You enjoy her society, Yon are stimulated, strength- ened by an hour with her. Why? Be- cause she thinks right. You dislike that person. You avoid her. You are weakened and rendered despondent by a conversation with her. Why? Because she thinks wrong. The chief the color of their eyes, not in the slant of their features, not in the vigor or weakness of their frames, but in the way they thirk. K Few ‘have the habit of thinking their way through a question. They begin determiredly, even noisily, but they wander off into bypaths and re- turn.to the maifi track in the heavens, because they would, oftener than not, Istray out of their orbits, into tan- gents, and disturb the poise of the neighboring planets. A woman sits down to hem a towel and she generally hems until she has finished, If she dropped the towel six ‘or eight times to look out of the window, to run upstairs, to look in the { mirror, or to read the morning news- paper observers would say she was scatter-brained\ and would be right. But like such towel hemming is the too-common habhit of thinking. The world would be a far more hab- itable and comfortable place if we would all cultivate the habit of con- secuiive thinking. 1f our thoughts were all as consecutive as mounting a paij of stairs. GVc should discipline our power of thought. We should bridle and sad- dle it and guide it in the course we wish to follow. We hear that this man has turned right about face and begun a new manner of life. . We hear that that THE HIGHEST QUALITY EGG NOODLES 36 Puge Recpe Book Fiee SKINNER MFG.CO. OMAHA, USA | ARGEST MACARONI FACTORY IN AMERKA ATYPEWRITER of unknown make. keep it, the price is $5o. ments of $5 each and the machine is yours, Just the machine you have always needed, made by the most celebrated tvpe- writer makers in the world, and sold ol;gust the terms at suit you. The Magic Box Is one in which Balfigtar. Thds In E¢g-o-latum we have a ma; difference between people is ndt fin | six woman has won new and startling success. We are apt to impute this change of fortune to some change of circumstances and environment, It is far more likely to have been the result of ‘an hour of hard, close, determined thinking, and of arriving somewhere. The great epochs of our lives come from within, not without. First | thought, then resolution, then action, I then change. Ledrn tc think right. To think right honestly. Don’t let-your thoughts lie to ryou. They will try it. To think -ight is to think directly, straight as a crow flies or an arrow sings its way through the air. Fashion Hints Square-cut decollete ls much in evidence in some of the most recently imported even- ing gowns. This is a generally becoming line which should be halled with dellght iby many women, ' = Dash and youthfulness best express the charming features of some cleverly de- signed neckwear, high stocks with trim overlap sections at the chin and full jabots that give a much desired swaggerness to smart tallored sults. — Get Your Heavy Clothes Ready To Wear ~ Now! OW is the time to have them cleaned, dyed, altered or re- paired—don’t wait till it is eold. We clean or dye all kinds of wearing apparel or fouse furnish- ings that require CARE and SKILL in handling. With the finest equipped plant in Nebraska, with the best trained and best paid corps of employes in the city; with many more years of experience in the business, we should do the best work in town. We do—and will prove it to you the very first time you give us a chance. Let one of our autos come for your work. The Pantorium “Good Cleaners and Dyers”’ 1515-17 Jones St. Phone D. 963. GUY LIGGETT, Pres. BY PARCEL POST ON TEN DAYS' FREEEXAMINATION ? This typewriter is not an unknown macHine It isthe REMINGTON the very latest addition to the great Remington family of 3 t{pewritem. A new and smaller Remington—built tor the needs of the professional man and the ome. At the end of 10 days, if you decide not to keep it,send it back—no obligation involved. If you decide to Send us 10 monthly pay- MAIL IT TODAY" ington Typewri n"‘l‘“fi 'ypew: ::) Company, 327 Broadway, Now Yerk. Send me a Remington Junior Type- writer, price $50, on free examination. It isunderstood that § may| THE MAGIC BOX lay away & 25-cent pjsce, with en e G el B eens g e the six months. olntment that doubles values just the same as the magic box—and really, truly, too. You take a dozen fresh or | afi ‘more, during mmmh« October—1 on a cent's wqrth of Egg-o-! m.mdhynwny‘hcgo.“:nfl"ln:!haNmY:rb, Tt Rl e lacum Keehs e It's just the same thing, Theeasiest and surest Egg-o-latum is 50 conts per jar, postpaid, 427 Lee Building H. LEE CO. " the value has Tresh one year. money-maker in the world. m‘h) for 600 egge double, and the eggs R of Rats,Mic Used the Worid Over - he Old Reliable That Never Fails = 15¢.25c. At ista THE RECOGNIZED STANDARD-AVOID SUBSTITUTES Unbeatable Exterminator SR Ry e and Bufs Used by U.S.Government ~ 4 \ i \ q

Other pages from this issue: