Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 5, 1916, Page 6

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6 October 4, 1916. ment of their son Phillip and Miss | Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. Mack. Mr. Mack was formerly h democratic na- tional committeeman and is editor of the Buffalo Times. No formal an- nouncement has yet* been made, but Miss Mack's family will make the an-| nouncement in Buffalo in the near fu- f 5 i ‘4 ) ¢ s 4 b ture. Miss Mack and her sister, Miss Harriet Mack, are the guests of the Metz family, iuving come in yester- day from the Metz ranch, where a house party of young people was iven for two weeks. Miss Gertrude etz, a sister of Phillip Metz, gave 3 large bridge luncheon at the Fonte- nellp today for the Misses Mack, who will be out-of-town maids of honor at the Ak-Sar-Ben ball. The Metz fam- ily is also giving a, supper at the Omaha club following the coronation ball for_their guests. Miss Mack and Mr. Metz met at a house partr in Buffalo at the home of Mr. William Decker, who is also i in the party at the Metz home. Miss Mack is a Briar Cliff graduate and 4 most talented ioun woman, Having lived considerably abroad, both young women speak four or five languages Both are noted for their exquisite i taste in clothes and are devoted to | sports, Miss Mack won considerable press notice recently when she as- cended in an airship with Lieutenant Phillip Rader, crossing Niagara Falls, the first young womar who ever took such a trip, e S e f [ Original Cooking F'lub. The members of the Original Cook- ing club were the luncheon guests of rn‘ George B. Prinz today. Since early all of the members have re- turned from summer vacations, there was a full attepdance. Pleasures Past. A luncheon at the Commercial club, followed by an Orpheum theater par- was given for Mrs. F. D, Gran Fodrea. A similar party iplanned for next week. " Party for Bride. g. The Charles Metz family are telling urday. _morning t(; be the guest of their intimate friends of the engage-'Miss Olga Storz. Norma Mack of Buffalo, daughter of i » dinner at the Omaha club before {later in the week, another guest at Watson | bourne, Island, guest of Mrs, Penn | Gsanter, secretary, is being | treasurer. Mr. and Mrs. W, J. Foye will give 1the Coronation ball and Mr. and Mrs. | C. T. Kountze a supper after the ball| for the .\finncapofls guests of the | Redicks and Kountzes. Guests for Ak-Sar-Ben. Dr. L. E. Leman, one of Denver’s best known physicians, and Mrs. Le- man, arrived this morning to be the uests of Dr. and'Mrs. A. F. Jonas| or the coronation ball. Mrs. Dewey | C. Bailey of Toledo, O., will arrive 4 the Jonas home. Mr. Leon Mitchell comes from Rock | Island, 111, Friday morning to attend | the Ak-Sar-Ben ball, as the guest of the M. Peters family. Miss Mae Engler is expecting Mr. and Mrs. Robert Victor of Kansas| City, Mo., to arrive the latter part of the week to visit her for a few days. Miss Elaine Freeman of Racine, Wis., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. M, Hayward, and Mr. Hayward for the Ak-Sar-Ben festivities. | Mr. Willard Butler will come up from Kansas City to be with Mr, and Mrs. J. T. Stewart for the week-end festivities. Miss Whittaker of Lincoln will be the guest of Mr, and Mrs. F. T. B. Martin for the Coronation ball. Miss Whittaker is a niece of Mr. Martin. Miss Irene Grosse of Pasadena ar- rived Tuesday ecvening, to be the guest of Mr, and Mrs. J. E. George. Miss Grosse is an_out-of-town maid of honor for the Coronation ball, Scottish Rite Dancing Club. A new Scottish Rite dancing club is being organized to give parties every other Saturday evening, thus al- ternating with the Cinosam club. The next meeting will be held at the Scot- tish Rite cathedral, Monday, October 16, at 7:30 in the evening. All who are interested may attend this meet- ing. The officers of the club are: Otto Nielsen, president; H. H. Clai- vice president; Dr, Hayes and H. C. Forster, Social Gossip. Miss Gertrude Porter leaves Sun- day evening for the east to enter The Misses Hazel and Helen An-|ciigol, derson entertained at a bridge party bride. Those preserit were: Misson— Misses— Bthyl Tierney, Terra Tierney, ‘Whaleh, Hulda Armbrust, lhelmina Armbrust,Hattle Kunsz, Borenso n, Rthyl. Mollor, Sdith Miller, Emma Feenan, 1 Loulse Hietfolt, Yern Wallace, Viola Morearty. Esther Nelson/ Mesdames— Mesdames— Kenneth Reed, Phelfter, ‘Wilkenson, Hanson-Freemont. Mention. and Mrs. A, est Mrs, Nunn's uncle, Dr. ] D. McKinney of Miami, Fla. m%:ncb«m at Fontenelle - Miss Gertrude Metz entertained at .a charm “Hotel Fontenelle today for her gue : llz!!l Harriet Mack Buffalo, decorated with %fik roses were set in the tea room for the fifty-three guests. After Iuncheon the bridge table: the three parlors on the r. Mrs, Ranso! E were set ezzanine For m, Mrs. Alex Fick entertained at a e luncheon at her home today rs. F. E. Ransom of Kansas who is the guest of Miss Irene ht. After luncheon two tabl l?!(orbr\n;(:cen wo tables donia, Ia, is vhidnfi +her niece, Mrs. L. H. Ouren, and Mr. Ouren of this city. day Mr. Dinwiddie motored 1 d Mrs. Dinwiddie's and T, s birthdays were cele- brated at a family dinner party. For Miss Sehlhb& Mr. and Mrs. W. A, Redick gave a dinner guty at their home Monday evening, followed by a party at the for Miss Ethyl Tierney, an October | pecting Mr., %heum and a -uyfier )inrtg at the tenelle, at whic! r, Stockton Heth entertained the dinner party. Those present were: Matral and Mostames— W. R. Redick, Miss Fannie Schibsby, qt‘. Redick, Mr, Stockton Heth. X lmt at Fontenelle. s Eugenie Patterson will enter- | tain the mémbers of the Vail-Jaquith wedding party at supper at the Fon- elle “hn evening after the parade, ¢ k Killarney roses will be used on | the tables. Covers will be laid for " _fourteen. Mr. Ray Lowe will fill the B left vacant until Friday by Mr. ) r Stibolt of Davenport, Ia. Dinner for Bridal Party. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford R. Weller will entertain the Vail-Jaquith wed- g:' my at dthe Sniveni_ty club be- e parade this evening. Shaffer-Crowley Wedding. The marriage of Miss Catherine Crowley to Mr. Burt Edmund Shaf- fer takes place today in Buffalo, N. Y. ‘Birthday Surprise Party. A :lnunt birthday- surprise party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. illiam J. Mathewson in honor of s M {:}m Mathewson on Mon- ; 8 1 ‘% evenin Thouelgresent were: 1paes— Mathewson, Ruth Hil, Mildred Urban, Est] Bo u Bog M s imen, men, Read, Hoden, Augusta Krelle. Hart, ‘adell, Measra.— George Klein, Joe Partsch, Ray Mathewson, Edward Mathewson, Fred Meyers, Mra Willlam J. Mathewson. Georfe Redick is giving a tea Wnoon. complimentary M Bacon, a bride of next Mrs. Adolph Storz are beef steak roast at “Oak- mile west of Florence, on The affair is for Miss Chris- r, the well &known_singer, a | Mr, and Mrs. J. B. Rahm are ex- and Mrs. A, D. Malory of Chicago to erive Friday morning for a visit with them. Mr, and Mrs. A. C. Scott left this morning for Excelsior Springs, where they will meet friends from Chicago and St. Louis. Mrs. F. B. Hochstetler left last week for San Francisco to visit her daughter, Mrs, Fred Daugherty, and Mr. Daugherty. Mrs. Waite H. Squier is now in Chi- A. D. Nunn have as|cago, where she will remain until Fri- day. Mrs. F. D. Wead is at Hastings at- tending the convention of Woman’s clubs, . Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Wharton bridge luncheon at the |returned Monday from a six weeks' stay in Boston and New York. Mrs. A. B. Smith is not expected to return from Honolulu for two or three months. Miss Marie Vernon has returned from Chicago, where she has been spending the summer studying at the art institute, Mrs, F. A. Nash is expected home Monday or Tuesday of next week from an eastern trip. Mrs. A. R. Keeline is expected back from the Keeline ranch at Gil- lette, Wyo., October 20, Miss Olive Quinn of Gothenburg, Neb., left Monday for National Parl seminary, Washington, D. C,, where she will attend school this year. The Misses Phillyn and Julia Haig, nieces of ‘Sir Douglas Haig, com- mander of the English forces in France, are expected the middle of next week to visit Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Clarke, jr., en route to their late fath- er's ranch in the northwestern part of Nebraska. Their mother is an American and the girls, too, were born in this country, but they were sent to England to be educated. Their home is at St. Leonard-on-the-Se The Misses Haig sailed from England September 30. Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. The Question of Forglveness. Dear Miss Falrfax: I am 26 Mo a good position and am golng about with a girl of 19 who Is divorced, What I want to know s, could we be happy it we married? Would anything of the past be a cloud to our future. 1 kunow she loves me and she thinks [ am making too blg a waprifice. There is no reason why you should not marry this girl and be very happy with her. But if you are going to have a feeling of righteous superior- ity and keep reminding her of your “nobility”in overlooking her past that will wreck the lives of both. Suppose she did make a mistake and marry unfortunately, there is nothing crim- inal in that, and if you examine your own record and find that she has nothing more serious than that to for- give you yott may feel proud of your past. The girl evidently has a fine sense of honor. 1 hope you will be worthy of her. Wish Him Happiness, Dear Miss Fairfax—I am 22 and in love with & man of 27, who Is a widower. Three years ago my parents turned me from their home. Last winter I met a young man I had known since childhood. After he had talked with me I looked at life in a differ- ent way, and through his influence my par- ents took me back and he obtained a posi- 'lh\n for me In his father's firm. This young man told me he would not #ee me for & long time, but hoped I would live the way my parents wanted me to, I have not seen him for six months, still I've been happy in my new life untll the other day when his father Informed me of his coming engagement, and now my rly broken. ng to live in New Hampshire which means 1 shall never sce him again. Would you advise me to write him, telephoue, or what? 8, M. Your lstter shows that you truly appre- clate what this young man has done for you—undoubtedly he did It for the sake of old friendship, and now that he s to marry the girl of his cholce it ls your duty to wish him all happiness. You will always think of him with the deepest gratitude after his marriage, THE BEE: OMAHA, THU INGERS of the sea need stars, They speak of the velvet night and the diamond stars to make you see and feel the swing of the ship and the world of water and sky. And dlittle boy and big, and ‘gitls, even, too, get a singing in their ears, the call of pirate tales, the “Dry Tortugas,” and the music of the southern stars, All because their tale was gemmed with ‘the diamond of a star, Poets need stars to rhyme with, to fill the sky that lovers walk beneath, to liken the conjuring eyes of a lady unto, to girdle their songs with, to put there the shimmer and glimmer that must silver the tip of a poet’s pen. The little child looks at the star that opens and closes its glimmering eye of silver and blue and red fire, the star that hangs from the sky like a beau- tiful lamp, in the pinon-tops in the desert, the star that winks remote in the moisture lands like a far- away lighthouse in a sapphire sea, and the little child wonders if another little child looks out and down, with a fat hand on a windowsill, / RSDAY, Copyright, 1916, International News Service. OCTOBER 5, 1916. Personal Gossip : Society Notes : Woman’s Work : Household Topics By Nell Brinkley The girl spreads wide her white hand with the flreuy nails and sees the rays of a white stone on er third little finger. And she looks up at fhe star and thinks only that it looks as her diamond did against the blue velvet of its box. And the star winks. Alnd wakes reflected fire in the poor bit of lover's glass. - Mothers look at the star and see there the face of a child long dead. A man looks up at the stars and sees * * * “My Star” the ace that helps him to lift his feet lighter on rocky ground. The man at the wheel on the sea, the trudger in mountain-land, finds his North Star andsteps out with a feather-like heart—tramp-tramp. The lover on the busy trail, through brambles and over terrifying trouble-spots, tips up a chin once in a while to find his Lodestar, and steps out with a singing heart on the right trail—tramp-tramp! And tramping—he sings him & song, “My star is a high star, shining down on me. Its silver ray comes all the way and touches my heart, I am not afraid.” —NELL BRINKLEY. A man cannot tell.another man that he thinks he is wonderful, that his work is a marvel, and that he believes By DOROTHY DIX. | he is going to do stupendous things. | Only a woman can say that to a Hope and courage are the founda-| man. That is why every mgn must tion stones on which success rests.| have some woman about him. That We can only do as much as we be-! :.~'wh_v men marry, and it is wl}fn the lieveswe do. Tak o, wife fails to bolster up a man's faith veican co, 1ake awayjirom | vhimself by Ner falth'in him that he man faith in his own ability to achieve| goes out lo king for some other and you foredoo # him to failure, Dis- | woman to do.it. And when he finds courage him by glomy forebodings her he cals her his a%nity. and you paralyze his energy. Between the woman who,dwhen her husband lags along the road, says to Theres are a few bromidic facts that I wish to call to the attention of | him, “I know you have it in you to cucceed. 1 know you are going to du those wives who complain of their| hlghlhmlss};bflflg lh\ty “'0‘“?]‘1" “e'hg :a_\; . . to her huhband, "You will never gc jack of luxury because their husbands b\ “"yo are not.one of the peop! are poor and they suppose they must| who get-on,” is the difference be get usc y to being shabby, since John | tween success and failure. 1sn’t one of the kind who just compel | Between the woman who, when her success. husband meets with misfortune i Most women whose husban.ds can- | business, says to him, “You've made not provide them with limousines lift | one success. You can make anoth up their voices in this wail of woe They cry out that their husbands will | never succeed, which is the cruelest this is just a setback. We'll start ail over again, and do better than we did and most foolish thing they can pos- sibly do. before,” and the woman who says.tc It is cruel, because no other criti- ser husband, “You've made a failure sou've shown ybu don’t know how to ‘ cism cuts to the quick of a man’s soul itke his wife’s. Of all t~e world she| wet on. Take a smafl job and work is the one being before whom he} for somebody else,” is the difference betweet the man who comes back X and the man who is down and out. wants to shine and there can come no| [t pays to believe in your husband, bitterer humiliation tq him than to| jadies. Think it over. realize that she regards him as o poor, weak, incompetent, who isn't capable of holding his own. No man is ever down and out so| long as his wife believes in him, so long as he can come home at night to a brave and smiling face, to a woman who inspires him with her own optimism. The man who has that sort of a wife always has another fight left in him. He can’t be con- quered, because he is bound to justify his wife’s opinion of him. The strongest force on earth is’ fighting with him, and in the end he succeeds. The 'man who never comes back is the man whose wife’s complains be- cause he isn’t a Rockefeller or a Morgan add the last straw under which his courage breaks. He is the man who comes home to a whining wife after a hard and anxious day, who has all of his mistakes flaunted in his face, perhaps before strangers. In justice to the complaining wife who takes a despairing view of her husband, and tells him he wil never succeed, she seldlom means half she \The Wife’s Share - R4 e Mii;ays Slippers says, She really doesn’t think that her husband is a failure, or the pros- for the pects are as glomy as she pretends that she does. She is merely indulg- Coronation ing herself in woman's besetting sin of self-pity. It is a pity women do not realize kow hungry their husbands are for # little praise -and encouragement, how they long to hear from their wives’ lips some appreciation of what they have achieved, some prophecy of hope and faith in their future suc- cess. The curious rserve that ‘exists between men does not permit them to praise one another to their faces. Ball Should be a Pair of Walk-Overs 1f She Desires Fashion’s Newest Styles. I The most popular this season [l are:— il Gold and Silver Cloth Pumps, Black and White Satin Beaded || Slippers, Patent one, two and [4 three-strap Slippers, Plain Satin i} Pumps and Boots, which we will §{ tint to match your gown. Gold and Silver Cloth Boots with white satin tops. Beautifyl styles, $10 The prices of our pumps and |f | slippers are from*— $3.50 to $10 We have Phoenix and Onyx Silk Hosiery to match any of our pumps and slippers. WALK-OVER BOOT SHOP 317 So. 16th St. | Fireproof Hotel Loyal | 16th and itol loth and Capltg e BRASKA Rooms, $1.00 and $1.50 With Bath, $1.50 and Up Cafe the Very Best Popular Prices STOP AT THE LOYAL SEESS = Women’s Activitie Women are now employed for the first time as factory inspectors in Prussia. Miss Ruth Corker, a 15-year-old girl of Atlanta, is an expert veterinary surgeon. The fashion in women's dress in Japan have not changed materially in 2,5P00 years. A Pasadena woman and her 17- year-old son are classmates at the University of California. or the first time in the history of Berlin a woman has recently been ap- pointed principal of a public high school. One of the interesting possibilities of the coming general election is that three women may take seats as mem- bers of the sixty-first congress. Mme. Juliette Adam, founder of the Nouvelle Revue and Europe's most famous woman journalist, will celebrate her eightieth birthday anni- versary next month, Miss Belle Kinney, the sculptor, has completed an imposing monument to soutgern women for erection on the grounds of the Tennessee state capi- tol at Nashville, Viscountess Wolseley, the daughter of the famous field marshal, who in- herited her father's title, has for sev- eral years conducted a school for gar- dening upon her estate at Glynde. Among the first students enrglled in the new College of business admin- istration of Boston university is Miss Mabel Chen Fong. She is the first Chinese girl in the country to special- ize in modern business methods with the idea of returning to her country to teach. The first woman to be granted a pension under the terms of the new ce he has restord you to your family and glvén you a new insight into lite. pension law passed by congress at its recent session is Mrs. Mary Lovejoy e of Frederick, Md,, who was an inti- mate friend of Barbara Frietchie. Mrs. Lovejoy will receive a pension of $20 a month in recognition of her husband’s services as a private in the Fifth Ohio infantry. The ,states in which women may vote for president November 7 are Illinois, Kansas, \Vyominfi. Colorado, Montana, Utah, Arizona, 1daho, Ore- gon, Washington, California and Ne- vada, These states have a total of ninety-one votes in the electoral col- lege. It is easily conceivable that if cast as a unit they might decide the election, as there are more than 4,000,- 000 women to vote. e WE FEATURE ALL W “ALL COLORS. QUALITIES FOR MEN, 85¢ to $1.00. FOR WOMEN, 75c to, $2.00 FADDEN & BITTNER 511 South 16th Street. THE HIGHEST QUALITY | MACARONI 36 Age Recpe Book Free SKINNER MFG.CO. OMAHA,U.SA BARGEST MACARON) FACTORY tN AMERICA homes, everythin; IALWAY: way—1I go to Beddeo's.” “Yes, that’s where I intend to 0, too, Margie. Beddeo'’s at 1417 ouglas street. I wouldn’t think of trading at any other credit store— in fact, Beddeo’s is where a dozen girls I know buy everything they wear, and'they say the styles there are exquisite.” “Qh, they ARE, Patricia! I don’t know WHEN I've seen such dar- ling suits as they’re showing now —Ilots of cute Norfolks and a won- derful line of those graceful, semi- tailored models with coats that flare below the waist line. All the good shades, of course, and the correct materials, too. You ought nfiht away, Patricia.” . “Indeed, I shall!'I can buy my suit for about a third of the price, e? So I thought— and I'll pay the rest by the week, because that’s how I get my salary. “Now, let me see if I have the address right! Oh, yes, Beddeo's to see them can't I, M Three-Floor Credit Store, floor. I'll go tomorrow."” “| Bought My Piano - on Ilgqllment--- Why Can't |Buy My Fall Suit That Way? “You can, Patricia. I'm sure it's as sensible to pay for our clothes by the week as it is to pay for our ur furniture and almost else little by little. I get MY wearables that Douglas street, and the ladies’ dept. occupies the entire street | No Matter If the Ice Gives Out v You _’can always be sure of pure, sweet, fresh milk and cream if you have on hand a supply of Cottage EVAP ATED 7 Sterilized Unsweetened Cottage Milk 1s che nchest aulk wich nothing taken out ex- cept-water—and with aothing added. les perfect stenhization makes it more sanitary than bqnln milk. There is no danger of contamination as in the bortling, handling and delivening of ordinary milk. Al animal germa have been elimigated from Cottage Milk. That s why 1t lasts longer and doesn’t take on the odors of other toods i the ice box after 1t is opened, as readily as bottle milk. . Cotage Milk ts made in spotless condenseries and has more than twice the food value of hottle milk. For favor, nchness, convenience and economy Contage Milk 1s_unexcelled In Two Sizes—S and 10c * At ol Good Dealers 1417

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