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i [] { [ i i § 3 H October 19, 1916, \ © If you ever want to catch a train, don't take forty winks at the station : while waiting for your train to pull in. This is the rueful conclusion ; reached by a young Des Moines man, & a frequent visitor, who spent Monday ¢ in Omaha. . An ardent republican, he came down § especially to attend the big Hughes ! meeting at the Auditorium, and was { carried away by the enthusiasm of £ the monster crowd. A party of friends " pressed him to stay over until the next day. “Impossible,” quoth he, “I just came down to hear Mr. Hughes, but 1 absolutely must be at my office rly tomorrow morning. Important usiness, 1 shouldn’t have come. [ must take the late train back.” So he spent the rest of the evening with his friends, who at midnight drove him down to the station, where * he purchased his ticket and berth . reservation. . The train was late. The young man paced the floor, smoked endless igars, grew wearier and wearier. He “sat down to meditate upon the splen- ‘did speech delivered by Justice man to_be Hughes. ; . “By jove, he's the onl president of the United gmn," His . thoughts pictured the retutns on elec- tion ration, and Mr. | § i l}! “Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom!” The young man awoke with a start. - “Great scott, it's 4 o'clock.” e had slept ‘until 4 o'clock. The next train lef 6, and oh, ever so much wearier, sans comforta- e rest and sans berth, the young 1 departed. he keep the important business engagement? Did he? !l:u Bridge Club. : ¢ iss Daphne Peters entertained the m%‘;&fi club at her. h‘c::ne to- | day. This wa’ lth: h.cfim n;’ming Ialf 5 season al members, wit! L the exception of Mrs, Harold Pritch- ett, were present. IMiss Anita Car- 'New Haven, .Conn,, who uest of Misses Elizabeth and Davis, was a guest. Those r. and Mrs. E. H. Bowerman en- tain their home Tuesday eve- Personal Gossip : Society | ssohn march for recessional. The “Angel's Serenade” was played during the ceremony. |suit of Belgian blue, with trimmings of moleskin, and wore a white hat trimmed with the same fur. She car- lilies of the valley. She was attended by her sister, Miss Florence Rush, who wore a’ suit of taype wool velour ‘and a hat which combined taupe with delicate peach-colored trimmings. She catried a bouquet of Ward roses. his brother, Dr. Ralph Little, of this city. the birde's parents to the family and close friends. Mr. and Mrs. Little will leave this evening for Chicago and Niagara Falls, where they will spend their honeymoon, and will be :/t hkome after November 1 in New OrK. Pieiffer-Tierney Wedding. While the first snowflakes of win- ter fell thick and fast without, the marriage of Miss Ethel Margaret Tierney, daughter of Mr. George W, Tierney, to Mr. Frank T, Pfeiffer, son of Mrs. Mary Pfeiffer, was sol emnized by the Rev. R.-J. Judge at Sacred/Heart church at 9 o'clock this morning. ¥ The altar was banked with palms and ferns, among which white candles flickered. - Yellow' chrysanthemums, tied with tulle bows, decked the pews. The - Mendelssohn and wedding marches accompanied the en. ttance and exit of the bridal party. In addition to the choral songs, Mrs. J. C. Reed sang an Ave The bride wore a gown of flesh-col- ored silk tulle made over cloth of silver. Embroidery of silver covered the bodice and formed a deep girdle, Angel sleeves of tulle were edged with silver. A bouffant skirt of tulle with: ruffle, edzed with silver braid, was finished withi a long court train of flesh-colored satin. The French cap veil fell to the end of the train, Her divisible bouguet was of bride's roses and valley lilies. Her only or- nament was a diamond and pear! brooch, the gift of the bridegroom, Mondambe— THree. distinet t. ian, i 3 ypes, the Titian, the "‘:‘:’““”‘ blo‘nddo‘flad the h;un;m, vere the | eo— maid ‘of honor and the two brides- Rimosis givia maids, Miss Fern Wallace, maid of ary Burkiey, honor, wore a frock of deep lavender \ Katherine Thummel. 1 silk tulle over cloth of silver. A gton of New Haven, Conn. | hédice of silver cloth with -angel slecves of tulle, was embroidered with iridescent beads and caught in. the center front with a gold and silvér rose. The short, full silver cloth skirt The bride was dressed in a stylish | ried a bouquet of pink rosebuds and | The bridegroom was. attended by | After the ceremony a wedding | breakfast was served at the home of | Lohengrin,} THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, Notes : Woman’s Work : Household Topics PO OCTOBER 20, 1916. ) ata lowe'en party.-in honor rs, Bowerman's birthday anniver- ests were: had a double ovérdrape of tulle, edged with silver braid, which. fell in. four ROM the round little hat of her to the little French heels of her the manikin who exhibited this attrac- R was so successful last season in the role of high FU tar i yielded to specific gravity and puffed over at the THE crown of this hat of black hatter’s plush finally Mesaames— \ collars, it returns to the stage of fashion this year 1 h kn Fulton, ?fl‘:."v‘,":,?'fi,.?.'fi! °§§f§"'mhf: ,Peif; in the same part, but varies the round of its ex- tive costume was French. The coat is of plum-col- top. Of cdurse, there are ever so many ways to keep ¥, Calsan, ( istence at the bottom of coats, as shown in this model; | ored “sylvette”—a soft, long-haired material. .e cuffs | warm in winter, but one of the nicest ways is shown by of irlduce;u beads, ‘A fluffy drape of tulle fell from the shoulder. = Silyer slippers and hose and a crownless hat 80, "uA' also, to be “different,” it often forms the deep gauntlet tuffs, The coat above is brown cloth and sealskin, with the French coat above of burgundy velours cloth with a fox collar. Instead of going around the coat, the fox and belt, which ventures off into pockets, are hemstitched, s and the collar is fox. The turban is purple cashmere with I e CI o Moul Colnay. ) i ~was given Tues- mh‘ in"l‘:gor of Mrs. Roy M. : e e\!;:in; was spent in mu oll.e present were! uh Flacher, well, - throp. | Mensra.— V. McPherson, Leslle Griffith, 011-: Rosengren, 1 Willlam Abels. Mrs. J. L. Frans. Irs, Leed y Bridge Club. The Tuesday Dundee Bridge- eon club will meet this week the home of Mrs. Donald C. Bol- d.' Mrs. H. G. Vosburg was the st of the club, The regular mem- e jadam Mesdames— H A P ay Auction Club. ‘uesday Auktion Bridge club ed at a matinee party at the im this afternoon. Those pres- rs. T. P, Davis was re-elected dent of the Miller Park Mothers' at their annual meeting held in Miller Park school torium. Mrs. A, Melvin is vice resident; Mrs. B. B, Anderson, sec- retary, and Mrs. Gwinner, treasurer. 4 den Ziebarth is the press corre- d November 1 at the home of Mrs, The next meeting will be ociety met Mr. Charles A, Cai- eon at the Hotel ‘Fonte- 1 “J?ecedhi} his lecture .on ol v '.gfirm d’nner this evening 3 r, fin will' be the guest of Mr, and Mrs. Edgar H. Scott. o : wer ‘fog the new club rooms be given by the ladies’ auxiliary of Y Men's Hebrew association ixton block, A program has Arranged for the ocension. for of directors of the Finc % Sake," before the e ddy afternoon at theclub rooms, M ohtéagw entertained ten ts at I at the Omaha club y %&M‘er J. Hunsaker Mich., and Mrs. B. , who leave tomor- ng after a visit with their ‘H. Clarke, jr., :n‘d =, of Miss Philomena of Mr. and Mrs. John &’i}'fill vft;:merl t g “at St%mi:l?'a " Stenson of organ “the Mendel. v J §, | severdl weeks in New York, of silver lace, with an arm bouquet of vviolets and white| roses, completed this costume. : i Miss Viola Morurg wore deep yel- low silk tulle 0"3 cldth of gold with trimmings of gold lfce. The bodice of gold ¢loth had angel sleeves. A short fulll skirt of gold cloth was cov- cred with a Billie Burke overdrape of tulle trimmed with gold lace. From the wiring®t the hips the tulle ?ell into little kets ht with tiny vellow rosebuds. A short panel of old lace fell over the back. A er ess hat of gold lace, gold slippers and h d an arm bouquet of yellow themums were the finishing touches, Miss Helen Anderson wore a gown of orchid silk tulle over cloth of silver, with bodice similar to that of the other bridesmaid. Her short, full skirt had a draped ruffle of tulle em- broidered in silver and wired in hoop cffect, She also wore a. crownless Lat of silver, silver slippers and hose, and carried pink roses. Following the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served at the home of Mr, George W. Tierney. Baskets of pink rosebuds and chrysanthémums decorated the house. Mr. and Mrs, Pfeiffer left this afternoon for Chi- cago enrqute to Columbus, Ind, where they'go to attend the marriage of their brother, Mr. Charles Pfeiffer, to Miss Helen Kitzinger. They will visit Kansas City and St. Louis be- fore their return to Omaha, where they will be at home in the Angelus after November 15. Dietz Club Party. The Dietz club will celebrate Hal- owe'en with a fancy dress party at its clubhousé Tuesday ' evening, October 31. A serious fine is to be imposed on any man who comes unmasked and without fancy costume. * 9 . | On the Calendar. The members of Kappa Alpha Theta will have luncheon at th Commercial club Saturday. Active tortoige shell buttons. The cloghe-shaped toque is of black ‘velvet. purple ribbons in points. \ bands this season divide themselves into short sections. The Girl Who Would If She Could, . By THE JESTER. _ I am asked to say a few words about the girls (and they are, curious- ly enough, a lfairly large number), who seem to be, as far as the marriage market” is concerned, superfluous. Well, T have no objection to doing so. Even if my words are accepted as final in certain quarters, I don’t sup- pose they will materially affect the course of the world's history—or, for that matter, the judgment of one sin- gle male soul who is contemplating taking a wife. i My petitioner is inclined to forget that superfluities are bound to exist. It is no use our worrying our heads as to why they exist, still less attempt- ng to legislate for their usage. The fact remains, and we have got to ac- cept it. She also overlooks the fact that twenty centuries of alleged civ- ilization have failed to convince any one except a few odd eugenists and other congenital lunatics that mating, except by the process of attraction, is not the right and proper thing. It is all very well to argue, as a|lot of people do, that certain girls and certain men would make excellent wives and husbands. Very possibly they would, only—nobody happens to think so, except those people who make the remark, and, curiously enough, they are the ones who never seem inclined to ppt their theories into practice. Frankly, I can never understand why anyone ever attempts to argue out love or anything connected with members of the chapter from Lin-| coln who are coming for the wedding | of Miss Louise Bedwell and Mr. Fu- | gene Holland of Lincoln will be the | <uests of Bonor. D in honor ‘of Miss Anna Dwyer of | Butte, Mont,, her sister, Mrs. T, J. | Dwyer, will entertain at luncheoti at the Hotel Fontenelle on Monday. Mrs. Hugh Wallace ‘will entertain at bridge at her home Saturday aft- ernoon. Mrs. Edgar Morsman,' chairman of the coutesies committee for the Dra- ma league, will give a luncheon at.the Omaha cfub, honoritig Prof. S. H. Clark of..the University of .Chicago, the day he comes to lecture, Saturday, October 28. In and Out of the Bee Hive, Mrs. W. A, C. Johnson is spending Mrs. J.. W. Williams of Omaha is a guest of the Elins hotel, Excelsior Springs, Mo. A “Mrs. H, R, Gould, Miss Ruth Gould and Mr. T. H. Platter leave this even- ing to spend two weeks visiting Mr, and Mrs. E. G. Polleys, in Missoula, Mont. Miss Katherine Gould, who'is now in Missoula, expects to remain it, on the book. One has only to look sround and see the people who do wet married to appreciate the fact that uothing is impossible where love is concerned. Ii 1 see a man who is to me the apothesis of upselfishness, through land through a white man, married to a little brainless butterfly, who merely lives to spend his money and ignore the strength of his affection, I can- didly confess I am not filled with bewilderment, Being what he is, he was bound in the ordinary course of events, and chiefly by the eternal law of polarity, to choose someone who lacks all the qualities he possesses. Realize once, humanly speaking, there is neither rhyme nor reason in love, and you will cease to “want to know Wh{' about anything connected with it. [ have seen numberless vast- ly attractive girls (to me!) who haven't got married, and an equal number of vastly unattractive girls (also go me!) who have, It 18" just an indefinable something, call it what you will, which attracts people to each other. When we can find out what it is, how to acquire it, and how to instruct other people to another month, Pérsonal Mention. Mrs. R. C. Craig of Indianapolis is the guest for a few weeks of her {‘l::er‘. Mrs: J. D. Hiss, 2211 Grant obtain it, we can then help the “ones left wyer” to get married, for there will be no superfluities then. ‘The most desirable furnished rooms are advertised In The Bee. Get & nice room for the winter. T%é Times When Human Hearts Are United 2 . correspondent, “and you ask what is true would only unite with the brave, You cannot | the honest and the true in their strug- gles. For in the happiest times, peo- ple have their sorrows and dire srug- gles that ought to make our hearts beat at one with them. Thank God for the hand that is extended to us in our dire need. But, oh, if only that hand had been with us to avert the calamity that has befallen.” Just so. Thank heaven for the hand that wipes away tears, but how price- less is the hand that prevents them! By FORTUNE FREE. Napoleon was a wise man who knew much about the human heart. He recognized the strange power of misfortune to ally people whom no prosperity would ever unite. When one of his proudest marshals achieved a wonderful success against the forces of two of his enemies he ap- proached Napoleon fbr his praises. Napoleon declared he had done well and ‘expressed his admiration of his measures against such a union. But he warned him there might be a big danger still. The marshall shrugged his shoulders and scattered the pinch of snuff he was conveying to his nose as if he were scattering the combination of those 'shattering | enemies, “What could they effect now?” he asked. “You may defeat two people while they are prosperous,” pointed out Na- poleon, “and find them more serious enemies than ever when unfortunate. When prosperous, armies rarely act together. Scores of small causes of dissension arise which separate them. All these disappear in a time of ad- versity, They are swept aside. Then leaders are apt to become really united as they never: have been be- fore. Beware!” Bret Harte once told the story of+ a community in the wild west who learnt a lesson to that effect. There was one man among them who had picked up a considerable smartness in medicine and surgery. He was de- cidedly useful, but that did not pre- vent one of the community who ob- jected to him shooting him one day. No one bothered particularly about the incident until sickness broke out in the camp. Then people used to walk from one cabin to ahother, la- menting that “Old Pills” had been so unfqrtunately cut off. They recalled then all of his good qualities. He was a fine fellow, “Old Pills.” One man remembered how he had traveled ten miles one fearful night, when every yard was full of danger, to visit his sick child. Another re- membered that “Old Pills™ never worried him for pay, but was always ready to do his best. They was quite right. He had been a thoroughly good fellow. But they had thought remarkably little about him when he had been so helpful to them. They sighed now. Why had they not shot the scoundrel who had shot “Pills” before he put an end to such a good fellow? But is not that the way of the world? Doesn't it withhold sympa- thy and help from those to whom it would mean so much till—disaster having come which they might have prevented—sympathy and help cannot do very much? 5 Criminals would have no-.chance if honest men were really united in brotherly love of one another. “Nine-tenths of the disasters of families,” declared Lord Chancellor Cairns, “come through family division in times of jprosperity. If brothers { and sisters only helped one another then, as- they very often do later to get out of. troubles, the troubles would never come.” We are often at our wits’ ends to do our best for people who, if we had only done our best for them be- fore, would never have got into the trouble from which we are s¢ bent on rescuing them. “You say you have a dishonest to be done with him. tackle him by the law. Well, throw all your support on the side of the honest tradesman. Don’t wait till the other's made him bankrupt, and then open a subscription for him.” “Sympathy is the most precious thing in the world in distress,” re- marked Cardinal think what it might effect if it were tradesman in your village,” answered,|only accorded in time of prosperity the editor of a paper in reply to a|—if the brave, the honest and the Manning. “Just or (ORSETS TANDA T——AND—™> R oS ERVICE \ T’f‘.NEW\NEMO Back-RES 7t Rests Your Back! FASHIONABLE Flattens the back. Ex- pands the chest. Assists in contracting the abdomen. Induces an erect bearing and a healthful poise. Gives lines of ultra fashion. COMFORTABLE Relieves ~ backache by supporting and strengthen- ing the tired muscles. Pro- duces a sensation of restful comfort. Soothes irritated nerves. FOR ALL FIGURES —from the “slip of a girl’ to the substantial matron. ) N\ = 'i//‘fi S ] o) No. 338 BACK:RESTING, for vey slim figures; wide unboned itV side-sections protect sens; light—weighs only 15 ounces. 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