lg - THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MARCH 50, 1918. - . BRII UP FAT Cot Intel , ? St - tt t I Dra Th( by Get Mc TO Sh hi Oi CO 'SI' cli ' dt II Kf , T , ft 'a: ft p t! I ft 1 ' I I ! 1 4 s ' 3 I I I. f I i ' II' f - . , . . . . . By MELLIFICIA, March 29. ''Dates for Opening Dinner-Dances of T HE COUNTRY CLUBS are beginning to show signs of life. The golf I - . I. .)... . V. . . t r m IaOpH ultn links are growing green ana on incse duuhj uya j " . ti. -t..L i . i.... . Irtf.w Hardeners are piayers. ne ciud nouses, iuu, nave a ivju... . - ---- heds and caretakers arc seen working busily in preparation for the coming summer season. ' , This year promises to be a bright one at the clubs, for with the large number of officers stationed at the nearby forts, the dances will no doubt be real military affairs. . . . . ' . Country and Happy Hollow clubs will have their formal openings the lat- ter part of May, nd o it will not be long until the pretty girls will be running .up and down the broad stairway again and alluring strains of the orchestra -;wiil come floating out over the grounds. The Field club will probably open - about the same time and if the girls don't wear their filmiest frocks and the ' young officers their shiniest bars, Mellificia will be1 mistaken. V. ... . w i i 1. - 1. -... nil n'liit.r inri irfrv week It haft I J ' Jeen "horn 3 neigl , th. uronf rf a lanre number of 'homey" club, foV the little group of . i . :n . lieigriDora ana you wm mm 1". jij; . billiards down stairs, while the younger folk one-step to their hearts delight in the ball room. . , iL . For those who love sailing and other water sports there li nothing so attractive as Carter Lake club. A number of people have already opened their cottagei and the formal opening of the club will take place some time in May. For Miss Hartigan. Miss Kathleen Hartigan of Fair bury, Neb., who is Miss Dorothy Hip ple'i roommate at the Nebraska uni versity, will spend the Easter vaca tion with Miss Hippie. Miss Hippie will entertain at luncheon at the Blackstone Saturday in honor of her guest, and this afternoon Miss Kath- 9 45 S We show Silk Coats, Sport Coats', Auto Coats and Street Coats. Unusually smart styles, around $17.50, and beautiful creations around $18.75, $22.50, $25 afid Up. We feature Satins, Delhi,' Gabardine and Tricotines. . Blouse Special for H Easter Saturday Crepe de Chme and Georgette, ' worth $6.50, ; i : . ' . 1 J - , Sale Price, ? With bowl of milk or t With a bowl of soup or cream othalf-and-Jialf with salad' oi- cheese ; ' PLAIN 1 SALTED ITEM-VICTORY SODA; CRACKERS i V' f i Ask your grocer Help I ten Victory t Soda Crackers are small, dainty goodness, made of 40$ wheat-saving flours. For At ypur grocer's OTHER HEN QUALITY WHEAT - f or serring mo: . Iten Cora Crackers, Jtea Oatmeal Bi -I,..,' ' ' BAKED AND GUARANTEED BY " Iten Biscuit Co. Snow White Bakeries H Uait4 eUUt TH AimiaUtniUoB Lie.nM Xt, B-B414. (RCO. V. S, FAT. OFFIck) W SatVdiy, April flrtt ivtntnr f w ar, .... .-..' . (UrU Umi tMrd Liberty Lout iri-n, RmoIv t 4. jr.ur pvt. remaps iue r " "". t2lurlA his final effort thej.arJefc Country Clubs Set for Month oj may gay dinner parties. It is real y a very! people who belong are warm inenas ana nf mrrt-A tnll eniovinflr a same of enne Goss gave the Orpheum. a matinee party at High School Set Affairs. tTht Maltese club will give a danc ing party this evening In Harte hall. A number of the students at the uni versity in Lincoln will be guests at the dance. Miss Frances Howell and Miss 1621 FarnamSt Berg's Women's Shop 1621 Farnam Street la Prepared to Take Care of Your Easter Needs with a charming: exclusive collection o women's stylish Garments for Spring SUITS You don't have to pay an outrageous price to get a smart suit here! We have all the. kinds of cloths and silks in' styles for sport or dress wear, and everything in our select stock is new. $25.00 $29.50 $35.00 and Up . We'll alter it in time for coats Easter Saturday Special of Spring Dresses 'Serges, Wool Jerseys and Taffetas. All this season's models, values easily worth $25.00 v Sale Price, $12.50 $4.95 Women's Shop , for these wheat-savers. A Ask your eating place to serve them. Save tthe Wheat 20c Per Lb. HELP SAVE THE WHEAT! SAYERS You can ned in n rnlnflr: noon or eveninp U meal, including .all T Na auirar reauircd In iten acoicn nannoots itn Wheat-Savers. at . M.tfrB . iscutt, lien uranam niscuic j sweetened in baking. Your Grocer can supply you with I-ten Wheat-Savers Be sure to get the genuine I-ten Quality Products ' .'V'vV I r, TWntW oroei that tne Ka.!ti Margaret Harte are inviting their inenas to me mric-nuwcu uu i Harte hall," which will be given April 19. The Cheopian club has issued in vitations for a dancing party tobe given May 10 at Harte hall. A subscription dance will be given tr... 17 at Hart hall fnr th hieh school set Mr. Robert Wylie has charge oi tne anair. , Pleasures Past. Mrs. Gus Hollo, assisted by Mrs. E. A. Lucke, entertained the Loyals club at her home Wednesday. Mrs. Wulf was a guest of the club.. Colonel and Mrs. F. A. Grant en tertained informally at dinner at their home Thursday evening. Covers were laid for General and Mrs. John C. Dr. and Mrs. Paul Ellis. Cap tain Klicne and Major Steam. Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Kaymer oi uni cago entertained at dinner at their home Saturday evening in honor of Mrs. L. H. Strong of Clevebmd and Mr. Theodore Fertig, the occasion being his birthday. ' St. Patricks decorations were used on the table. On the Calendar. Mrs. Ward Burgess will entertain1 the Original Cooking club at her home at luncheon Thursday. Ellen Harriet Capon worked in male attire in an English- munition factory for two years before the army authorities discovered that "he" was a S'rl- In Multnomah county, Oregon, which include- the city of Portland, nearly 40,000 women voters have reg istered for the coming primary elec tion. s? Co 9 Easter, too; Co 2 squares of tasty, flayory general soda cracker use. sf your grocers serve Iten Wheat-Savers at any wheatUsa meals. erving any of these they are sufficiently baking. t Visitor from Chicago PeiPSOTSllls j WOMSLllVS CMOS Entertained by Friends 1 . , 1 1 1 I 55 mm Irlf rt(NCHART-5Tt.FrCS PHOTO Mrs. I. L. Longworth, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. F. Truelsen, for the last 10 days, has been honor guesKat a number of af fairs. Mrs. Longworth has a little coterie of friends in the city, who en tertain extensively for this Chicago visitor on her yearly visits. Lunch eons, card parties and matinee parties have been given for Mrs. Longworth almost every day of her stay. Girl Obtains Order for One Million Smokes Miss Martha Welsh, known as the most successful cigar saleswoman in the country, has just put through a deal with Uncle Sam for 1,000,000 cigars. From time to time Miss Welsh is commissioned by manufacturers to go after certain big orders where the regular salesmen have fallen down. She formerly wasa newspaper wo man in New York. ewest Easter Footwear ' ! ' Also a in Four Colors FREE! Tbi will be the most important and the most eagerly awaited WAR MAP ever published in the history of the world, be cause it wiH record the results of the greatest battle in the history of the world. " ;Both This New War Song Book and This New War Map Will Be Included FREE With Your Big Super-Sunday Chicago Examiner To-Morrow! Miss Lois Robbing will spend the Easter vacation with a school friend in Boston. Misy Ruth McCoy, who is a student at Smith, will not be home for Easter, but will visit friends in Erie Pa. Mr. A. L. Reed has returned from Excelsior Springs, where he has been recuperating from an attack of rheu matisms Mrs. David Gross is at Nicholas Senn hospital for a six weeks' rest cure. Mrs. E. L. Robertson and daughter. Miss Anne, are now in Los Angeles and have taken an apartment for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. John - Kuhn and daughter, Miss Marion, who spent the winter in Los Angeles, visited in Santa Barbara last week. A daughter was born Wednesday to Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schoe?sel in Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Schoessel was formerly Miss Helen King of Omaha. Lieutenant Neil L. Criss of the army medical corps has been ordered to immediate duty at Camp Kelly, San Antonio, Tex. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Cornish, who have been the guests of Mrs. Anna Cornish Metcalf for the last week, will leave for New York Sunday eve ning. Captain and Mrs. T. M. Patton will leave next week for Fort Des Moines, where Dr. Patton will join the Ne braska base hospital unit. Mrs. Pat ton will remain in Des Moines -until Captain Patton is ordered abroad. Mrs. Edwin Bannister arrived home this morning. Captain and Mrs. Ban nister spent several days in New York, Mrs. Bannister going for a short visit to Smith college. She was accompanied home by Miss Eleanor McGilton and Miss Florence Russell, who came as far as Chicago, where she will spend a few days. Captain Bannister is now stationed at Camp Merritt, in New Jersey, and expects an' order daily that will take him to France. Mrs. Bannister will remain with her parents, Mr. an4 Mrs. Charles R. Sherman, until his return. Lady Furness, wife of the great English financier and shipbuilder, is serving behind the lines in France as a Red Cross nurse. Arizona has a woman live stock inspector in the person of Mrs. Okla Noonan. The advance of Spring 'hrings forth an extra "ordinary display of Feminine Footwear, de signed to keep pace with the ever-changing whims of Dame Fashion A galaxy of brilliant style creations and de signs, in all the popular combinations and colors awaitsyou Here. Come and look them over. New War Map College Red Cross. The Red Cross auxiliary of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae will mett from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. on Saturday at the Red Cross rooms in the Masonic temple. Liberty Loan Meeting. All workers of the women's Lib erty loan committee are urged to at tend an important meeting Monday at 4 o'clock in the Chamber of Com merce, when State Chairman T. C. Byrne and Franklin Mann, head of the bond solicitors, will give instruc tions on the parade and in the bond campaign. Miss Kathleen Burke of the Scottish Women's hospitals will address the women. Membership Campaign. One thousand new members of the Visiting Nurse association is the rec ord of the past month's membership campaign under the able direction of Mrs. W. E. Rhoades. But the goal set was for 5,000 members, so Mrs. Rhoades and her committee are hop ing the numbers of new members will increase. Central Congregational church sent in 30 and North Presbyterian church, 35 new members. At Social Settlement. The Story Tellers' league of the South Side High school will give a program at the Social Settlement Sat urday afternoon. A feature of the program will be a harp solo by little Miss Irma Clow, the youngest harpist in the city. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Byron Clow of the South Side. ' Where Luxury Foods Save the Staples Hotel men are now dealing with the problem of banquets in an entire ly new way. There is a disposition on the part of the public to eliminate banquets of organizatins which gather regularly each year, or oftener, in the belief that food saving is thereby furthered, and the public now maintains a critical attitude toward such affairs, assuming that they are wasteful. The cry of . extravagance is being raised against the best class of hotels despite the progress that they made in fodti saving during the past i five months. This same criti cism has been in evidence in EnRland, and the Hotel World publishes some information brought out re cently in the annual report of a big London hotel company. Careful analysis of the food served during 1917 showed that 51 per cent comprised commodities which did not, and never have, and probably never will affect ihe general public. These articles were quail, grouse, partridge, pheasant, smoked salmon, live trout, lobsters, oysters, crayfish, asparagus and so forth. Guests who pay for such foods in high-class ho tels are really saving meats and other staples needed for the fighting force and the munitions worker. To stop the use of such foods would merely throw a certain part of the population back upon staple articles. It is perhaps well to explain that in England oysters, asparagus and lob sters are comparatively expensive luxuries, not generally known to working class people, as in this coun try, even in canned form. ' Dress Hints Callot is featuring acacia red veiled with black tulle. Bronze laces are newer than silver or gold weaves. Dancing frocks show old-timey overjackets of taffetas.,. Half-inch satin ribbons in two tones trim negligee robes, A French robe js of black satin with fitted basque and every seam corded. Exclusive French Shop Opened by the House of Menagh Do you want to be whisked from prosaic Farnam street into an exclu sive little French rose and;ray shop? -Then just walk on your toes and fol low your nose straight through tnt House of Menagh and enter the low doorway in the rear of the store. You will be entranced before you cn-te-for cunning little windows twii;! !e at you with pretty flower bo:;es lull of trailing vines and flowers under each one. , The first impression of the liule salon is a mist of rose and gray for the- walls are a soft shade and the warm tints are brought out in the cheery cretonne curtains and the rosy shades on the lamps. But aside from the artistic points in this charming little shop there is another alluring side. Here milady can shop in quiet and in the easiest way possible. Full length mirrorsvurtained off with rose velvet are ideal fitting booths and a bright drop light in each one win en able her to see the colors just as in day light. Comfortable wicker chairs are placed around the room where you can rest, a convenient telephone stands near by so that you can make appointments with your friends and the whole thing has Such a restful look that it will be a great pleasure to shop in this little cozy, cretonned nook. Deaf Boys Will Give A Pantomime Play -For the Red Crosi Something really unique in Red Cross benefits will be staged by the Clifton Hill Red Cross auxiliary, Fri day night, April 5, in the auditorium of the School for the Deaf. A play in pantomime, "For Free dom's Cause," written and presented by deaf boys, students at the school, will be the feature of the evening. Mrs. Ota Blankenship, a teacher at the school, is coaching the members ir their parts. Jhe High School cadet band and a singing quintet from Fort Crook will contribute to the program. Little Margaret Shotwell will appear in a fancy dance. Vy Harrington's whist ling solos will conclude the enter tainment. Mrs. O. W. Hendee is chairman of the auxiliary. Conservation Recipes Given by Mrs. Masters Mrs. Joseph G. Masters, wife of the principal Si Central High school, is attaining prominence in her own way among food conservationists of the city. Mrs. Masters, who is one of the block chairmen of, the Cen tral Conservation council, has wop local fame by the excellence of her recipes, some of which are here given : BREAD RECIPES. Whole Wheat Bread. 2 e. scalded milk (or solved In c. water). lukewarm water. 1-J c. molasses. 4 2-3 c. whole wheat 1 t. salt. flour. 1 yeast cake dls- Add sweetening and salt to milk: cool, and when lukewarm add dissolved yeast cake and flour; beat well, cover and let rise to double Its bulk. Again heat and turn Into greased, bread pans, having pans one-half full; let rise, and bake. Whole wheat bread should not quite double its bulk during last rising. This mixture mat be baked In gem pans. . Oatmeal Bread. S 0. scalded milk. IT. salt. 1 c corn Byrup. 1 T. Crisco. 8 c. rolled oats, cake compressetf Flour. yeast. Scald the oata with the hot milk, when warm add corn, syrup and yeast and pro ceed as for wheat bread. Rice Bread. 1H 0. scalded mlltt. 2 c. rice flour. Vi c. corn syrup. 2 c. wheat flour. V4 cake compressed! t. salt. yeast. H4 c. rice flour. 1 T. Crisco. IVi c. wheat flour. To acalded milk add corn syrup ano. Crisco. When lukewarm add yeast. When yeast Is dissolved add two cups rice flour and two cups wheat flour. Beat well. Let rise. Add other ingredients and knead well. Let rise. Make Into loaves or rolls. Let rise and bake. , Barley Ginger Cookies. 1 e. molasses. 1 t. salt. y, e. shortening. 1 2-3 c. barley flour. 2 t. ginger. 2 t. soda. t. cinnamon. 2 t. warm milk. Heat molasses to boning point.. Add re maining tngredlants, dissolving the soda In the milk before adding it. Chill the dough, roll out )and bake. Cinnamon Cake. 1 e. corn syrup. T. fat. y, cup milk. XV, c. flour. 2Vi t. baking powder. 1 egg. Pinch salt. Bake In a thin cake, dot with bits of butter. Sprinkle with two teaspoonfuls cin namon and one teaspoonful sugar, mixed. Serve hot. JULIUS OJIKIN'S GREATESTNipCHASE More Than 800 Beautiful Easter Blouses, Actually Worth to $10.00, Offered in a Great One-Day Sale Saturday, at $5.00. This is truly an Easter surprise ten the women of Omaha an opportun ity too big to be gauged by ordinary merchandise events. Very fortunate purchases secured us several hundred strikingly" beautiful , Blouses at a startling concession in price. These being augmented by many hundreds of better Blouses from our' regular stock. Beautiful beaded and embroid ered creations, dozens of new and novel collar effects. Georgette Crepe, Crepe de Chine and Pussy Willow Taffetas are the most favored ma terials. Amongst the hosts of new spring colors shown are cherry, American Beauty, peach, coral, beige, sand, grey white, flesh, sky, tur quoise, black, navy, Nile maize, etc When' such values are afforded surely no Omaha woman need deny herself a new Easter Blouse.' These Blouses when sold at regu. lar prices would prove unusual val ues indeed, but for tomorrow, ith the regular price in many instances cut in half, they are without doubt the most important Blouse Value in ajl Omaha. Come early Saturday. The ad vantage is all yours. JULIUS OUKIN, 1508-10 Douglas St