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L 4 | . after which the bridal .~ a reception in honor of their new THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, Personal Gossip : Society Notes : Woman’s Work : Household Topics 1916. ol December 4, 1916. General and Mrs. John C. Cowin's grandson, 8-year-old Michael Cudahy, is featured .in the Chicago Sunday | Tribune for a scheme the little fel- low has devised to collect old news- papers to aid Belgian ‘war suflerer‘. Little Michael's mother, Mrs. “Jack!' Cudahy, was Miss Edna Cowin, only daughter of the Omaha Cowins. The Cudahy home is in' Pasadena, Cal,, in a specially built bungalow -on the | large tract of ground in connection with the Maryland hotel. Mrs. Cowin only recently returned from California, where she had gone for the berefit of her health, and spent considerable time with her daughter and grandchildren. Besides Michael, thert are three daughters, Edna, Ma- rie and Anne, who are pictured with their mother jn the Chicago newspa- per, surrounded by stacks of old news- papers, Little Michael, heir to millions and potential business man that he is, dis- covered one day that paper these days is worth almost its weight in gold, so he began merchandising in newspa- pers, devoting the proceeds to the Belgian poor. A round of news deal- ers in Pasadena resulted in the discov- ery that the Cudahy scion was a most persistent fiewspaper purchaser, Learning the value of nickels and dimes is aJneny tough occupation for a poor kid, yet the Cudahy children are taking a real interest in it Bradley-Elliott Wedding, Thanksgiving morning at 11:30 o'clock Miss Gladys Elliott, daughter of Mrs. Minnie A. Elliot, and Mr. Paul Bradley, son of Mr, and Mrs. G. L. Bradley of Omaha, were united in marriage at Westminster hall, Law- rence. bride graduated from Kansas umiversity with the class of '12 and has since been a member of the fac- ulty as instructor in the physical edu- cation department. She is a member of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Mr. Bradley is a graduate of the Agricultural college at Ames, la, a member of the Delta Tan Delta fra- ternity and a young business man of +Omaha, ~ 7’ | Dr. Stanton Olinger of the West- minster Bible chair. officiated. Wed- ‘ding airs were played by Miss Mar- gurite McMilan of Kansas City, Mo. A weddirg breakfast was urvie%, party occupies a box at the Kansas-Missouri foot ball. game. The young people left on an even- ing train.for a short trip before going ot Omabha, “where they will be at home, 606" North Twenty-fourth ave o L L - \Parties for the Concert. .. Mr., and Mrs. George Bernhard Prinz, Mr. and Mrs, Luther Kountze and Mr, and Mrs. O. C. Red; 1l occupy & box at the 0 " evening, will r &t the Redicks' lormance. | Mz, and Mrs. Louis C, Nash and Mr. and Mrs. Ward Burgess have a 2 ther. ) ¥ With Mr. and Mrs. George A. * Hoagland il be Dr. wnd Mrs'y, £, TS, b um Mr, and Mrs, George Brandeis will entertain at dinner before the con- it :in‘&nil evening and will occupy one clude; boxes. Their party will in- Mesgrs. esdame Jonn L. Kennddy, - raak Judson. Misses— Misses— Vlgtph Hanscom of Mary France of oW, York, New York, Dr. and Mrs. B. B. Davis will have as their guests Mrs. John W. Towle and Miss Marian Towle, and Mrs. W. A, Redick, Mr, Il" Foye and Mr. and tacy Burns will ec- cupy another box, Arthur Crittenden Smith is another ; { the box holders, i) l{ll; ilnd Mr'l. ?‘, L. Reed whi‘ll h“; as their guests this evening Mr, an Mrs. ‘Glenn C. Wharton and 'Mrs. " Charles T\ Kountze will also occupy scats in the box. Reception for Pastor. | Invitations have been' issued b « trustees of the Unitarian churcf‘; { the for pastor, the Rev. Robert French Leav- ens and Mrs. Leavens at the Metro- Bo;lmn club house, Tuesday evening, Jecember 12. The committee on in- vitations includes: Mesdames— Mesdames— Georgo W, Holdrege, Draper Smith, William Baxter, William Newton, Charles W. Russell, | i 5 LA B , Attends Juniér Prom. Mi?o Helen Walker spent the week end in Philadelphia, having been in- vited with some other girls of Miss Somers' school to attend the Junior | Prom at the University of Pennsyl- vania. She will be at home on De- cember 23 to spend the Christmas holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William I Walker, at the Blackstone. ? /’Brldgg for Guests. Mr, and Mrs. T. B. Colerhan are entertaining informally at bridge this evening for Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gal- lagher of Salt Lake City, who are the {;;estq of Mr, and Mrs. E. H. Barrett, ‘ednesday Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Kranz will entertain for the Gallaghers. Monday Bridge Club. rs. Arthur Remington entertained | the members of the Original Monday Bridge club at her home today. Ail members were present, On the Calender. Mrs. B. B, Wood i entertaining at tea on Thursday for her three daugh- ters, nn. Roy Wood of \Salt Lake City, Mrs, W. H. Cranmer of Denver and Mrs. Ben Wood of this city. Mrs, Archie W. Carpenter will en- tertain the Thimble club at her home next Tuesday afternoon, Miss Marian Kuhn will entertain the l‘1-915 Debutante Bridge club this wee ‘ Mrs. Franklin Albert Shotwell re- Lk '(b) Mein Lieb/ st Noles game, are expected to return Tuesday morning. The Misses Meliora and Elizabeth Davis are expected to return the last of the week from Minneapolis, where they have been visiting Miss Kather- ine Dwinnel. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bradley, whose marriage occurred in Lawrence, Kan,, on' Thanksgiving day, arrived this morning and spent the day with Mr. Bradley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G./L. BARLY SHOPPING BEGOMES DELIGHT Christmas Sale of the Churches Starts in The Bee Build- ing Rotunda. MANY BEAUTIFUL GIFTS Early Christmas shopping becomes | a delight if centered on the Christmas bazars being conducted today in the rotunda of the Bee buildin; by the North Omaha Methodist Episco- pal, St. Matthias and Pear] Methodist churches, and the Z. Z. Girls' club of the First Methodist church. Hand-painted china, ribbon cor- sages, rugs, comforters, hand- embroidered or tatted-edge handker- chiefs, party bags, crochet bags, laun- ry bags, aprons, bungalow, kitchen, maids’, téa or fifty-seven more varie- ties, doilies, scarfs, guest towels, sil- verholders—a host of pretty and use- ful articles are on display here, The 7 class, headed by Mrs. James Hodge, is proudly exhibiting a beautifully crotcheted doily of linen made by Gunhild, a young Swedish girl who came to this country recently to learn American manners and cus- toms.” Mrs. Hodge is assisted at the bazar by M#s. Vincent C. Hascall, Mrs. Knudson, Mrs. J. H. Ready and Miss Edith Rice, Pearl Memorial's tables are !in charge of Mrs. C, O. Huffstetter, Mrs, C. P. White and Mrs, Frank Whip- permén, . Mrs. Ed Sommer, Mrs. C. E. Par- sons and Mrs. A, C. Kugel preside at St. Matthias’ church sale, Mis Jen- nie. Brubaker, Mrs. H. E. Passoth, Mrs. Otis Plummer, Mrs. L. Williams and Mrs. C. Reynolds are conducting the sale for the North Omaha church, House of Hope Fund ' Is 8hy Thousands The House of Hope building, fund committee reported additional sub- scriptions of , which brings the total of the fund to §$17,026. The committee' started out to raise X t a noonday meeting at o!elj'l'omenelle announcement was made that the work will be continued in.defidmtely until ‘the $50,000 has been raised. ° i Program to Be Given by the - _ Tuesday Morning Musical Club The program to be given by the esday Morning Musical club at the ll’!rlnden theater this afternoon will ¢ (b) Un moto dl g l:n Has Eye: & ) Shepherd Thy W. A, Mozart «Henry R. Bishop nor Vary ... 4Old English Mrs, Liflllan Helmes-Polley. Miss !mut.( AAt;mmmmln, t (a) Des Abends i Evening) .. (b) Novelette, o (0) Warum (Why) {d) Grillen’ (Whims) C M L. +Robert Schumann Crofoot. my heart is +Goring Thomas ot Mrs. Walter Siiver, Accompanist, PART 1L “An April Hoart" Claugh Lelghter {-) When Spring Awakes, ), The World is Full of April. (©)' A Little Mpiden Loves a Boy, (4) Tho Magic oflthe Spring. (e) You and I and April. Mrs. Lilllan Helmos-Polley, Miss ‘Stuart, Accompanist, () Borceuse, (b) Impromptu. (e) Nocture, op, Mrs, L. (%) Sapphische Odo. / R Chopin ("r'o'(]mi. |..Johannes Brahms Jager (¢) Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt., Poter Tschalkowsky (d) Life and Dea -8, Coleridge Taylor Mrs. A Root, Mrs, Walter Silver, Accompanist, Anti-Suffrage Women Leave for Convention Mrs. William’Achibald Smith, sec- retary, and-Mrs. Harvey E, New- branch, a hoard member of the Ne- braska” Anti-Suffrage society, leave Tues_day evening for the national con- vention of the Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, which opens in Washington, D. 5 Thursday. Other Nebraska women who will be in the east at the time are planning to attend the sessions of the mecting, according to Mrs. Edward Porter Peck, local president, Funeral of Mrs. Mayer to Be Held Here Wednesday The funeral of Mrs. Hazel Irene Mayer, whose sad death leaving a motherless infant child has already been chronicled, will take plage from the First Christian church Wednes- day at 2 p. m,, the body in the mean- time being at Cole & McKay's rooms. Her sister, Mrs, [l C. Meyers, 18 coming from Mitchell, S. D, and another sister, Mrs. Jones, from Seat- tle. Three sisters and a brother live here: Mrs. Walter Hughes, Gladys Fowler, Bessie Fowler and .Ransom Fowler. Ak forand Gt o KINNERS THE HIGHEST QUALITY turned ‘last week from an extended stay in the east. Mr..and Mrs. W. H. Bucholz, who went east to"atterd the Yale-Harvard | i EGG NOOQ}.ES 36 Page Recipe Book leanFe (0. OMAHA, U.SA IMACARONI FACTORY IN AMERICA \ low about ODESTLY vet hat to the right, but the cro and, with the support of a band altitude. Two beaver ruffles, vided by a much reinforced 1 of blue ribbon, form the collaret and two more the muff, VERY bit, almost, of ‘the col- lar, muff and bag is made of Kolinsky. ) ] wherever there is the slightest ex brows began the brown vel- was bent upon rising in the world, beaver, it sent out two expeditions which reached a most unexpected the wi of di- ine te, O BEGIN at the very top of the set below there is a little round dome of Nattier blue velvet and ne:xt are rows of velvet with overlapping edges. Then there is a hoop of moleskin and a rose. Next *here is a very little of who- ever wears the set, and then a moleskin collar with fluttery blue picot-edged ribbons and a muff of moleskin lined with blue velvet to match the lining of the cellar, s and not the kitchen stove nor the mending basket. “Gee,” said a young man in an office to me the other day, “you don’t catch me worrying. Why, when I go home with my friends sometimes of an evening, it's dinner time, and | a: the Bethlehem Royal hospital in| strips of tan felt sejved together, ', and around the edges are ridges of Purple ribbons appear cuse, and cmbroideredLflowers, too. By DOROTHY DIX. | What does a man look for in a wife? | ‘What quality, above all other quali- ties, does he want in the woman he marries? i What is the one particular charm, by which a woman can lure a man to the altar? This is the conundrum that hun- dreds of thousands of good-looking and intelligent young women spend their days'and nights in an effort 'to guess without being able to unravel the riddle. Perhaps these earnest seekers for light on the reason why men marry, and more particularly why they don't marry, may find a gleam of informa- tion i tge story of Miss Clara Bishoff Miss Bishoff, it will be recalled, is the young womanswho announced in the columns of this paper, that finding herself unable to ‘support herself and her mother, by her own efforts, she had decided to transfer the job to a husband and that she would marry any respectable man who would give them a good home. Now, Miss Bishoff was admittedly penniless. She is only ordinarily 0od looking, and any man taking her ?or a wife was getting a mother-in-law thrown in with the fiatgain, which is | not generally supposed to add to the | glamor of domestic life. Yet right here in little old New York, where men are more averse to committing matrimony than the; age anywhere else on earth, within the space of twenty-four hours, this young woman | received more than 500 proposals of | marriage. Why «did so many men wish to marry a girl they had never seen, and of whom they knew nothing except what she told about herself? The only | explanation can be found in the fact that she declared: (a) That she was a first class cqok. (b) That she would guarantee to keep her husband’s buttons sewed on and his socks mended. (d) That she liked home. The modern young woman who thinks that matrinfony should mean just one tango parlor after another, and who believes .that she can fox | trot through the holy estate, will | doubtless sniff at the bait with which | Miss Bishoff went angling, an de- clare that it is old stuff. | To this one can only reply that the domestic fly is the fly that has been | used by all of our most successful lady anglers since time immemorial, and that it is the one to which the vast school of men have always risen, and will always rise. ) Times change, custons change, the | point of view changes; but a man's | to stay at The Surest Way to Get o Husband Is to Learn to Make a Home jown ends, for even while he admires of the Churches BEE Building Dec. 4-16 COME desire for a cpmfortable and awell- kept home, withka good dinner and a cheerful wif‘: waiting in it for him! at the end of a strenuous day, never changes. Any woman who icather's her hook with that certainly doesn’t have to hook her man. He will come up ‘and impple himself on the mar- riage license of his own accord. Women lay all the blame for the decline and fall off in matrimony, as Mr, Wegg would say, on men. They declare that Barkis is willing, but that men ,are too selfish, too fond of their own comfort and ease, two self- centered, to get married. They say men want to spentl their | - money on golf and clubs instead of of on a family, so they enjoy the pleasure of a girl's society withoat the penalty of having to pay her bills. Undoubtedly it is true that the young man of today is afraid of mat- rimony, but it is largely the women’s fault. It is the girls themselves| who have scared him off. They have hoisted the quarantine flag that makes him stees clear of setting up a home of hig own. . When a young man looks at a per- ambulating fashion plate and tries to figure out how far his salary would go toward even dressing a young per- son who looks like an uhderstudy to the Queen of Sheba, it is no wonder that he doesn’t any more think of setting up a wife than he does of setting up a yacht. Nor is he further inclined toward matrimony by ob- serving that the men he knows who are married mostly wear the furtiye look of those who are hounded by the bill collector. Girls dress to attract the eye of the man and to please him, and in so doing they often as not defeat their the effect of the scenery, he is count- ing its cost and deciding that it is not for him. No girl could make a better play for a husband than to announce that she makes her own clothes and is handy with the sewing machine. | Another reason why men hesitate | to marry is to be found in the fact | that the average woman seems to con- sider that the first duty of a wife| is to be amused, and that the place to look for pleasure is outside of her home. Bridge, and movies, and mati-| nees, and theaters, and restaurants are | the things that occupy her attention, Omaha i ) - m—— — ‘o the 'beds haven’t been made in the flat, nor the dishes washed, and ahout| the time we are thinking of sending | out a police call for: the wife she comes in with some sort of a mess she has bought at the delicatessen store for dinner.” “One of the reasons I don't marry,’} said the most eligible bachelor of my acquaintance, “is because I don’t want to be_ dragged around of evenings from party to party and restaurant to | restaurant by a pleasure-mad wife. I like a quiet evening over my books and my pipe, and I get that now and am fit for business the next day, while all my married friends are breaking down with nervous prostration trying | to work all day and dance all night to please their wives.” So, apparently, what men, want in a‘wife is the old-fashioned wife who will stay put and who possesses the | old-fashioned, virtues and 4the old- fashioned accomplishment .of making a happy home. And you can’t improve on that. to be a useful American If he were your boy, there isno extreme to wi you would not go to snatch him from the clutches of the White Plague. STATE DISTRIBUTOR | RED €ROSS SEALS MRS. K. R. J. EDHOLM, 483 Brandeis Theater Tel. Doug. 8230. | ORDER EARLY | Used for ¥; Century. MA own Malt Ta,o HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL Made from clean, rich milk with the ex- tract of select malted grain, malted in our Infants and children thrive on it. the weakest stomach Needs a0 cooking nor Also in lunch tablet form for Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price LTED MILK Houses under sanitary conditions. Agrees with xthb-dd’ or the aged. ion of milk. a Package Home The Border Line of Sanity la |is By GARRETT P. SERVISS. The boundless interest which man must always feel in everything per- taining to the organ of his intelli-| gence, the brain, gives importance to | any speculation on that subject. | Some time ago there was an cxlubl-J tion of sketches made by the insane is London. It has been remarked that some of these pictures strangely re-| semble the productions of the so- called “futurist” and “cubist” styles | of art. But too much weight should not be ascribed to that, because an artist who would be recognized by any. alienist as perfectly sane may paint or draw pictures of the most eccentric character with a perfect un- derstanding of what he is about, If he is working out a consistent theory he can hardly be called insane simply because the majority of people ‘do not believe in his theory of art. Antoine Wiertz filled a large gallery in Brussels with paintings which many people now stare at as if they were the productions of a madman, and some do not hesitate to assert that Wiertz was at least half mad. Yet Wiertz knew exactly what he was about and painted his extraordi- nary fancies with a definite purpose. So some people say that the “grotes- que and arabesque” tales of Edgar Allan 'Poc are insane writings, but such criticism is too narrow. The distinction between sanity and insanity is often very hard to trace. The assertion that genius is only an exalted form of insanity simply leads to confusion, besides being absolutely groundless. Genius is an expression of the most perfect sanity. The man of genius has a mind of absolute clearness, at least on the side toward which his genius inclines. .If this were not so, genius, instead of lfidr‘ ing to success and triumph, would lead to failure and disaster. In spite of all the definitions of the alienists, insanity cannot be complete- ly corraled. There will always be some persons on the outside of the fence who others will think ought to be placed on the inside, and vice versa. If we were to accept all the marks, signs and “stigmata” devised by Lonibroso and other theorists as indicating insanity, we should have to regard half the people we meet as more or less developed lunatics, and > - vw e TRV A a we' ourselves would lie open to | similar suspicion. s What is insanity, then? For it will not do to assert that there is no such thing. ‘A practical definition is that insanity means so wide a departure by certain individuals, from the or- dinary, and almost universally pre- valent, laws of human thinking and conduct that such individuals stand in a class by themselves. People are often insane only on some .particular side, their minds re- maining entirely clear and normal in other respects, and’ in such™tases I believe it would be possible to dis- cover the special lesion in the brain | causing the partial insanity. Insanity is also sometimes only temporary. But how great a degree of depar- ture from the ordinary should be re- garded as constituting real insanity? There are many families which have an asylum. All through nature there and these v + ‘:‘ et & . “queer™member, who nevertheless not regarded as a proper inmate of % a certain tolerance of irregularity non-confomity, because efen have their laws of action. R4 & 024 RO +CeT ‘. 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And Sawtay frying proves the “vintage” of an egg as conclusively as does poaching, SAWTAY FRIED EGGS—SPANISH STYLE To by, the hested, ‘o the whie of thes bl one special pan for frying Sawtay should be hot and Send 10¢ in stamps for ““From Soup to Nuts®'—- 4 Big Book of New Recipes and Reasons. SAUTE PRODUCTS CORPORATION ‘Woolworth Tower, New York scrupulowly clesn and modermely will be spoiled. Tt is best to use and not use it for enything one egg it into a ssucer first, Dip #poon upon the eggs until they are cooked, at a time into the e ko the hot Sewtay o’} then serve. y .