Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 20, 1917, EDITORIAL, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1917.
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Vf!friinff'fiur CONOUCTCO BY AULLAIUL rLNNtKLY , DI
TOR A
n o ELL'A FLEI S H M AJM ,
ASST EDITOR V
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Jter5 1621 FARNAM ST. B8W$
i
Women's Garments Priced at Attract
ive Reductions for Saturday's Selling
A Splendid Group of Dresses
Containing Every Dress up to $22.50
Every dress in oir stock priced up to $22.50 is included.
The assortment contains silk and serge
dresse in mdhy of the season's most popu
lar models;all colon are included, as well
as all. sizes from 16 to 44 Saturday Price
ou is inciuueu.
$1495
You May Buy Any Woman's Suit in the House
Priced up to $39.50 for
This "is a truly remarkable bargain for mid-OcUber, and
our stock is unusually replete with snappy late style suits,
in Broadcloth, Serge, Velour, Gabardine
and Gunnyburl. Some fur trimmed, some
tailored. All suits up to $39.50 go Satur
day ;ajt. Saturday Price
lie styie suits,
$2750
You Can Save Considerable Money By Buy
ff ing a Coat Here Saturday
HUNDREDS OF COATS IN THREE SALE LOTS
Lot No. 1, $16.75
Lotrjo2, $24.75
Lot Mo. 3, $34.75
Space, limit ou dicripttoni. Every
thing flew and stylish In coats la In
cluded in these sale troups. Thii aarly '
in thi teaioa yon malts a saving- of
$5.00 to f 10.00 on your winter coat.,
A WONDERFUL SALE OF NEW BLOUSES
1.000 of them co on sale Saturday your
choice of all $5, $5.75, $6, $6.50 WaiBts in
our. entire 1 stock rGeoreette. Crepe de
Chine, Satin; all sizes in all the new shades...
$445
to
3
to
Co
,"3
8
1621 Farnam WOMEN'S SHOP 1621 Farnam
By MELLIFICIA-Oct. 19.
PRETTY FLOWEE MISSION
WORKER BETROTHED
Creed for the Women's Clubs.
Keep us. O God, from pettiness;
let us be large in thought, in words,
in deed.t
Let us be done with fault-finding
and leave off self-seeking.
May we put away pretense and
meet each other face to face, without
self-pity and without prejudice.
May we never be hajsty in judgment
and always generous.
Teach us to put in action our better
impulse, straightforward and unafraid.
Grant that we may realize that it i9
the little things that create differ
ences; that in the big things of life
we are one.
And may we strive to touch and to
know the great common woman's
heart of us all, and, O Lord God, let
us not forget to be kind. Anon.
At Prettiest Mile Club. i
Mrs, D. G. Craighead will enter
tain seventeen at 'dinner this evening
at the Prettiest Mile club. Her guests
will be the teachers of the Miller
Park school.
Nu Sigma Nu fraternity will en
tertain at dinner this evening at the
Prettiest Mile club.
Silver Wedding.
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Watkins will
recejve informally at their home on
the South Side this evening in honor
of their twenty-fifth wedding anniver
sary. Mr. and Mrs. Watkins were mar
ried in South Omaha and have spent
all of their married life there. - -
Assisting them this evening will
be their daughters, Miss Louise and
Miss Helen Watkins. and their sons,
John Burton, jr.; Irving and Charles.
Theater Parties. .
foursomes atthe'Brandeis Thurs
day evening was given by H. F.-Wcl-ler,
W. W. 'Patterson, Mrs: Harry
Smith, George Hopkins and George
Freeman. Parties of five were given
by John Hogan, J. G Timmons and
I MONEY
TO
LOAN
ON
DIAMONDS
AND
JEWELRY
AT
I Vital',
W. C.Flatau
Jeweler Sine 1S92
Can Save You 20'
to 40 on -.DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY
'and FINE REPAIRING 1
8th fl. Roie-Securitiei Bids.
Tyler SSQ.
Ml V'-i
I I
JTZSS RUW SLABAUGH
Judge and Mrs. W. Wv Slabaugh an
nounce the betrothal of their daugh
ter, Ruth. Julia, and Mr. George E. En
gler, the wedding to take place some
time before the holidays.
Intimate friends ' have anticipated
the engagement announcement, espe
cially the Happy Hollow club set.
Miss Slabaugh is athletic in her
tastes and one of the best woman ten
nis players at the club. Since the mar
riage of Miss Ethel Tukey, now Mrs.
Louis Korsmeyer of Lincoln, Miss
Slabaugh has taken charge of the
corps bf young girls who distribute
flowers each Thursday for the Emma
Hoagland flower mission.
When Milady Goes Shopping
"And many a flower I longed for had a hidden
thorn of pain,
And many a rugged by-path lead to fields of
ripened grain."
Bjr ADELAIDE KEKNEBLY.
"I learn as the years roll onward
And leave the pist behind,
That much I have counted sorrow
But proves that God is kind.
That many a flower I longed for
Had a hidden thorn of pain,
And many a rugged by-bath
Led to fields of ripened grain."
And so it is with conflicting ideas
of merchant and customer!
In serving thousands of persons
every day the intelligent merchant
realizes that unless an element of
fair play is practiced he will not
only lose business but would be
committing a crime against those
persons who patronize his store in
good faith. 1 i
The return evil presents itself in
many and varied ways, especially
in the large department stores, but
the refusal of merchants to accept
the return of certain goods, for
sanitary reasons, is surely worth
consideration.
Hair goods, which includes orna
ments, switches and a hundred ac
cessories, is not returnable goods.
And it is surprising how many worn
en cannot understand why, if they
decide they want to change a switch
for something else, they are not per
mitted to do so. They do not real
ize, and probably do not even know,
that there are a great many scalp
diseases and that dandruff is ex
tremely infectious, easily carried
from one person to another through
combs, hats and hair goods. There
fore, for sanitary reasons, if for no
other, such goods is not exchange
able.. Would you shop in a department
store where you knew they accepted
goods that had been used by some
other person, no telling wha?
Would you consider, for one mo
ment, purchasing goods in which
there was a single element of dan
ger of contracting germs?
Would you want to shop in a
store where they were careless
about the brushes and combs on the
sale counters?
'No, you wouldn't!
You would say: "I shall buy my
hair ornaments and . combs in a
first-class place, where I can be as
sured of sanitary goods."
That is it exactly 1
The merchant who refuses to ac
cept the return of such goods from
you is, first of all, protecting you
against 10,000 others who are, per
haps, less particular in the hand
ling of articles they take away on
approval. The refusal to take back
your purchase is a small matter
compared to the risk you would" be
taking if such exchanges were per
mitted. "So after the earth comes
Heaven,
And out of our loss our gain."
Advice to Lovelorn
By BEATRICE? FAIRFAX.
A Lack of Fine Feellnc .
Dear Miss Fairfax: Is ft proper for s
young man who baa been riving- atten
tion to a girl for a year to be attentiv
to a friend to wham ah Introduced hlml
Klvea her everything and takea her out.
Hla aweetheart tores him. bat do 70 u think
it worth worrying overt . PCZZLED.
This is not a question of propriety, bn!
one of consideration and fine feeling. A
man who really lores one girl is unlikely
to want to make love to another and surely,
would not wish to humiliate his sweet
heart by demonstrating the charm anothei
girl had for him. He is either fickle 01
has a rather brutal desire to hurt th
girl who loves blra and to glory in showing
his power.
Dear MUs Fairfax: I am a high school
girl or IS and am corresponding with a
soldier four years my senior. My mother
does aot approve of him at all and since
he is coming home on a furlough soon I
am asking you to tell me some secret ways
to see him. jj q
Why does your mother object to him 7
You are very young and I should certainly
not advise any clandestine meetings. Ask
your mother to allow him to call if he is
a worthy young man. But don't imagine
that a soldier suit changes the heart of a
rogue.
Note: This is one or a series of
articles being published in which
both merchant and customer will
not only be interested but profit.
For out-of-town readers The Bee
maintains a free shopping service.
Just address "Polly, The Shopper,
care The Bee, Omaha." Polly will
buy for you with the same care that
you would buy for yourself.
the $500 profit made at the Ak-Sar-
Ken lunch room which they
ducted.
con-
G. A. Young.. The Terpischore club
entertained a party of nine.
Church Women Buy Liberty Bonds.
The Ladies' Aid Societ of St.
Mary's Avenue Congregational
church will buy Liberty bonds with
V For many months past we have utilixed this space of 680 agate lines la nearly 400 newspapers of the United States to
t, give reasons why thoughtful people should buy and read The Literary Digest. This week we are devoting this space to a
V purpose Infinitely more important the sale of the Governmen t Liberty Loan Bonds.
athels:
and MO
thers
IF, YOU
BELIEVE
.; THAT YOUR SON YOUR NEIGHBOR'S SON -THE
I MILLION' FIGHTING SONS OF AMERICA-SHOULD
HAVE AN EVEN CHANCE FOR LIFE IN THIS WORLD
: WAR, AND t WOULD BE SURE THAT HE GETS IT-
I '-'v. ' V'".
1 Buy
Liberty
t ' The tvari of to-day are won .by , the ,
combatants with the greatest resources. Food,
' ammunition, clothing, supplies "of, every sort,
! count s much' as men, and often more.
Napoleon declared that an army f ights uppri, V,
its stomach. All these necessaries come down, ,
in the last analysis, to . moneys and morei ;
money-yqurs and that of every other realU
Americanthe Government must have and.,
have at once. v ? -V;,, 'v; - .... fV -. : - l " &
We are in ; a . life arid death struggle v
between autocracy ' - and democracy,; ; and H
democracy can not win without our ;help.'
Understand this clearly.- Let it; sink int youji
become a part, of you, and theri live it every' .
hour of every day,.' :: . '''Z
1 Hundreds of thousands of cur best and
bravest, clean-cut, splendid young Americans, -
are being trained for immediate service in the
trenches. Every dollar we Withhold strikes :'
directly at the lives of these boys who are
doing their bit for us. . They are giving their ,
all to the cause. If we can not fight beside'
them we owe it to them and to ourselves' to
back them with our last dollar. It can mean
ho more than a temporary pinch to us. Think
f or one moment what it means to them. , . -
. 'V The fight to which th?y go is our fight.
'Every one of them who falls is a sacrifice
for US. He dies far away from home that
WE may keep our home, live the life we have
chosen, pursue the paths of peace in security
'and shelter.
Go to a Local-Bank and
Bond
NOW
These young fellows who are about to
risk everything that makes existence worth
while in our defense are our own flesh and
blood.r Every one of them is YOUR, son,
- YOUR brother, YOUR nearest and . dearest ;
Let every one of. us get this fixed firmlyjin; "
his niind ; (for it is .literally true in a deeper
J sense than ever before in the world's history) ,
arjd he can not choose but 'give, just i as he
, ! w6uld strip himself of his last penny if his
: wife .were dying or his child had to be
operaiea upon 10 save 11s me. ,
WiivYou persdnally and the nation at large
nave never been -in '.such dire, such immi
' nent peril as that which threatens you at this ;
moment This is no figure of speech, indeed
there are no words in the language that can
adequately, bring -your danger home to you.
Think of ruined Belgium, devastated Poland,
and' remember that every Liberty Bond you
' buy is a barrier between your loved ones and
' such horrors as these. ., ... r .
. It is the safest investment on earth.
Nowhere can earnings, savings, trust funds,
or income investments be placed so securely
-and you can sell your Liberty Bonds at any'
time you need the money. Think of getting
FOUR PER CENT INTEREST on such an in
vestment! - And remember that the day the
Var ends, these bonds will command a large
premium 4 Government bonds before we
entered the war were selling at $116 on the
stock exchange. There never was such a
profitable bargain as the Liberty Bond, and
money never did such glorious service.
Buy a Bond TO-DA Y
t
FUNK & ' W AGN ALLS COMPANY v- Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK
For Mr. Taft
At the luncheon given in honor of
Hon. William Howard Taft by the
Society of Eine Arts at the Fon-
tenelle, covers were laid for the fol
lowing guests:
Mesdamss: Mesdames:
Edsar Aloroman, Jr., J. E. Summers,
Lsonard Everett, Palmer Findley,
Duncan Wlnson hater, Z. T. Llndsey,
Walter D. Williams, W. J. Hynes.
Charles O. Rich,
Miss Lida Wilson.
Ward Burgess,
C. T. Kountse,
George B. prlns,
Messrs:
William H. Taft,
Norrts Brown,
Randall Brown.
Frank Judson.
At the dinner
Messrs:
Gould Diets.
Edgar. Morsmnn, Jr.,
W. D. Hosford,
John It. Webster,
given this evenine
by the Palimpsest club at the Fon-
tenelle in honor of ex-President Taft
the following guests will be seated at
the speaker's table: .
Mesdames: Mrsrtames:
O. M. Hitchcock, , George B. Prlns.
Norris Hrown, 1
Messers: Messers:
Hon. William H. Taft,
Mr. G: W. Wattles, John k Webster,
Senator G. M. Hitchcock,
Ex-Penator J. H. Millard.
Ex-Senator Norris Brown.
Miss Jessie Millard.
Large Bridge Party.
Mrs. Ben H. Elliott tnd Mrs. A.
C Strang 'entertained at a large after
noon bridge at the home of Mrs. El
liott this afternoon. j
At University Club. .
Reservations for the harvest dinner
to be given at the University club
Saturday evening have been made by
the following: Walter Byrne, eight;
Arthur Overgaard, fourteen; L. V.
Nicholas, eight; J. K. Morrison,
twelve; Joseph Barker, fourteen; and
Dr. C. W. Pollard, seven.
Miller Park Mothers
Circle Buys Liberty Bonds
A $50 Liberty bond will be pur
chased by the Miller Park Mothers'
circle, the members decided after a
talk made by Mrs. D. G. Craighead,
Wednesday at the Miller Park school.
A Red Cross knitting unit was also
formed, which met Friday afternoon
for instruction at the home of Or.
Stella Jacobi.
Mrs. J. G. Quisenberry wa"s elected
president of the. circle, Mrs. D. T.
Gregg, vice president; Mrs. Herman
Clark, secretary; Mrs. Frank Russell,
treasurer, and Mrs. B. B. Anderson,
press reporter.
PERSONALS
Mrs. E. P. Kirkendall, who was
quite' seriously injured in an automo
bile accident Wednesday, is reported
to be resting comfortably.
Mr. andi Mr. C, T. Taylor have
returned from a two months' visit in
the Black hills. "
Mrs. S. J. Weekes of O'Neill, Neb.,
is a guest at the home of Judge and
Mrs. C T. Dickinson.
Mrs. George P. Mathews will spend
the winter in South Haven, Mich.,
with her daughter, Mrs. John S.
Lozier.
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Merkel and Mrs.
M. Benn are at the Hotel McAlpin
in New York City.
Mri J. E. Davidson, who was badly
bruised in an automobile accident
Wednesday, is able to be out.
Corn Advances Thr;ee Cents
On Omaha Grain Exchange
Corn on the Omaha grain market
advanced 3 cents Friday, selling at
$1.861.90, with twenty-six carloads
of receipts. There was a good de
mand and but little of the stuff was
carried over.
BEADY RECEIVER.
"Maybe he hasn't found
yet, consoled the
friend ."Isn't he gifted in any way?"
"Gifted?" qoeried the father.
"Well, I should say he is! Every
thing he's got was given to him."
Harper's Magazine.
himself
confidential
Children Health Officers
Dr. J. C. Montgomery, city and
county health officer of Manhattan,
Riley county, Kansas, has found the
children most valuable assets in the
work of cleansing ud and aidine the
public health. He has a regular offi
cer in every school m the countv.
These boys and girls are appointed
with certificate and badge, and they
make a report each month on local
conditions.
If there are insanitary disease-breed
ing dumps they have authority to
have them removed. If there are ab
sences from school they report '&J
once in case oi niness, ana thus the
health otticer can prevent the spread
oi contagious diseases, ine year pre
ceding the employing of the children
in this work the death rate was 11.1
per cent per thousand. The next year
the rate dropped to 9.9 per cent; the
year following this the death rate was
even less, 8.1 per cent, and the third
year of the juvenile health aid the rate
had dropped 4 per cent from the first
year of its trial to 7.1 per cent.
Joe Haines, a 12-year-old lad, is the
health officer of Central school build
ing io Manhattan and Joe is most effi
cient. No fly-breeding filth is per
mitted in Joe's domain. Miss lona
Hassebroek is one of the rural
juvenile health officer. Woman's
World. ,
Buffalo Cushions
The hides of the buffalo in Golden
Gate Park these days look like the
next to the last picture in the "going,
going, gone" advertisements of cer
tain hair restorers. Attendants have
been wondering why women who
passed up the herd in the days of its
hi.sute glory have been flocking
about the corrals as the buffaloes be
come homelier than ever, says the St.
Louis Globe-Democrat.
"They even pet the big brutes," said
one puzzled attendant. He walked
over to the pen, determined to get the
secret of the feminine change of
heart. 1 ,
He learned the women were not
fondling the buffalo, but trying to
help nature along by pulling out
their fur. The big beasts seemed to
appreciate it as they stood quietly by
the heavy picket fence through which
the women reached. Now everybody
is happy.
The park attendants are glad be
cause the buffaloes, if their fur is pil
fered by women, won't try to rub it
off on the trees, which generally suf
fer in the process.
The buffaloes are happy because fur
pulls off a lot more easily than it rubs
off, and the former system sort of
tickles.
And the women are joyous, because
they are getting a lot of buffalo fur,
which is ideal for sofa cushions.
What Are You Saving Toay?
If you saw a little child lying on your doorstep dying of hunger, would
you pass him by and go in to your own abundant meal?
Or would you leave him there because you thought some one else in
your street would probably feed him as much as he needed?
. Or, perhaps, because your husband is very particular about his food
and the child might require something that he wanted and he would be
cross? , i
Or, just because it wasn't your child, anyway, so why think about it?
The idea, even, of such cold-hearted conduct would bring ary of pro
test from the women of the United States.
Yet, ,that is substantially what many of you are doing.
The fact that the child is not actually on your doorstep does not alter
the principle. Realize him! Visualize htm and all his tiny, suffering brothers
and sisters in Belgium' and northern France. , ' .
j Realize also that from America must come the food -for them.
! Sign the pledge card of the United States food administration and be
comforted with the knowledge that your thought and self-denial are help
ing to feed the babies across the sea.
Mother's Pensions in Ohio
Ohio oeoole are a.1 unit as rrsrds
the popularity of mothers' pensions.
Its beneficiaries and the thousands of
workingmen in Ohio's numerous
factories, throutth the instriifTipnfal it v
of this law, now know a peace of
mind concerning the future of their
families they have never known before.
As administered in Ohio the allow
ance of a mother's pension 'is not
charity. It is on a par with the free
school system, supported by taxation
tor tne good ot the individual and the
state. Ohio has cdme to look upon
her children as her greatest asset and
has thriven on the theory that chil
dren,, properly reared make men and
women worth while. Ohio has pos
sessed institutions of the better char
acter, good houses well managed and
well systematized. But Ohio learned
that no institution and no hired per
son could take the place of mother
and the home. Three years has so
demonstrated the truth of the idea
that now Ohio has appropriated
$100,000 for the erection of a hospi
tal for crippled and deformed chil
dren. The mothers pension is ad
ministered by the juvenile courts.
Any mother who is a widow, or
whose husband is absent or unheard
from, or whose husband has fallen
afoul of the law, who is in need and
who has children under the school
age, is eligible to receive a pension
for a six months' period, renewable
as long as may be necessary. The
scale is $15 for the first child and
half that amount for the second fend
additional children. Under the eye 'of
competent court officials this has been
found satisfactory, but it is likely that
a scientific basis will be worked out
by which the mother will receive
difference between what is necessary
to maintain her home and what sh
is able to earn.
Social service investigators and of
ficials of organized charity, who are
best able to pass upon the working of
mothers' pensions, say that the sys
tem has aided them wonderfully and
relieved them of many burdens. There
is a noticeable falling off in the rate
increase of vouthful
homes are kept Intact. With the ex
tension of the work of juvenile re
search and orohan placing it is be
lieved that many of the problems
of a growing state will be solved.
The public institutions are becoming
a burden to keep up and manage and
the home idea is winrfing. g
The mother of mothers' pensions
in Ohio is Mrs. Eliza R. Cox. Mrs.
Cox now deceased, is the mother of
James M. Cox, Ohio's present gov
ernor." With almost three .years' ex
perience mothers'! pensions ' ha?
demonstrated that the system must
be expanded and enlarged. There if
nowhere heard a demand that the
pension system be -abolished. In Ohic
it is making good. Woman's World
Every Woman Wants
QUINCES- Every well-balanced
fruit shelf should have a supply oi
canned .quinces, says today's bulletin
from the National Emergency Food
Garden Commission, workinar in con
junction with this newspaper to con
serve the nation's food resources.. '
in canning quinces, peel, core and
quarter the fruit, removing all-rlefec-;
tive parts, and drop into slightly
salted water to prevent discoloring.
Blanch in boilin? water one and-
half minutes and plunge for an in-
stant into cold water. Pack into hot
jars and pour in hot syrup made of
three cups of sugar to four cups of
water boiled until the suirar is dis
solved. Put rubbers on and tons in
position and sterilize twenty min
utes in boiling water or twelve min
utes in a water seal outfit, or eight
minutes in a steam pressure of fiye
pounds. Remove jars from sterilizer;
fasten tops, wrap in paper and store
in a cool place.
QUINCE JELLY Wash the fruit
cut into quarters and remove any bac '
spots. Place in a preserving kettle,"
add a little water and cook to a pulp.
Put the hot pulp into a jelly bag to
drain, and to each cup of juice add a
cup of sugar. Let the juice boil a
few minutes befori adding the sugar,
then continue boiling until it thickens
into drops on the edge of a spoon
dipped into it. Pour into hot steril
ized glasses and when cool cover with
hot paraffin.
Quince juice may be mixed with
juices of other fruits if desired to
make a combination jelly.
QUINCE BUTTER Select fruit
ripe but still firm and do not peel the
fruit. Wash thoroughly and quarter
and core, and put- into a preserving
kettle with a little water. Cook to a
pulp and put this through a colan
der To each cup of pulp use half a
cup of sugar and stir constantly while
boiling down to desired thickness. .
Then add spices to taste. Pack in
hot sterilized glasses or jars and
cover with hot paraffin.
QUINCE MARMALADE One
cup of grated quince, one cup of su
gar and one cup of hot water. Dis
solve the sugar in the hot water and
boil for twenty minutes, stirring con
! ,
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