Society Friends of Music Plan Splendid Concert The ballroom of the Fontenelle on April S will be the scene of one of the first big post lenten affairs, when ihe Friends of Music give their first public concert of tlie season. Miss Corrin Paulson, pianist, is to be soloist with a largo local symphony orchestra conducted by Robert Cuscaden, and composed of most of the landing musicians of the city. Among those who are Interested in the society and this concert are the Mesdames A. V. Kinsler, who Is pres ident, C. W. Axtell, Walter Silver, Howard Kennedy and Jack Webster. High School Teacher Is to Wed. Miss Bess Bozelle will give a tea at her home this afternoon for Miss Mable Cowden, who announced her engagement last week. Miss Cowden, who is n teacher in the Central Higli school, will wed Robert E. Riegel, Ph. D., of the Ijlstory department of Dartmouth college, Hanover, N. H. They plan to he married in June at Miss Cowden's home In Monmouth, 111., and will live In Hanover. The George Hamiltons to Visit at Faster. Word has come that Mr. and Mrs. Georgo Hamilton of Washington, D. will be Easter visitors at the C, W. Hanfilton home. Mrs. Hamilton, who was formerly Miss Marion Hamilton, will be a widely feted guest. For Mrs. Robinson. Mrs. Milton Petersen entertained five tables at bridge Saturday after noon honoring Strs. Edward Robin son. jr., of San Antonio, Tex., who was formerly Mies Mercedes Jensen, and for Miss Mary Louise Robinson of Austin, Tex. On Thursday Miss De Weenta Conrad will give an aft ernoon bridge and other hostesses of the week will he: Mrs. John Hajii ghen. Miss Dorothy Judson and Mrs. H. F. Walker, who postponed their affairs the past week because of the weather. 5 Dinner at the Brandeis. Air. and Mrs. George Brandeis en tertained at a St. Patricks day din ner last evening at the Brandeis res taurants, when their guests were the -Messrs, and Alesdames Frank Judson. J. E. Davidson. J. F. Dailey, W. AV. Head and Mr. Edward Moore. Mrs. Hull in Paris. Dr. Charles A. Hull has received a cable from Mrs. Hull, telling of her safe arrival in Paris after a rather stormy ocean voyage across. Mrs. Hull Is w ith Mrs. Baldrlge. They are Jiving in the beautiful home of Coun tess Teulle. Mrs. Crandall Honored. With the convalescfnce of Charles P. Weller after a five week's illness Mrs. Weller will give a family cele bration at her home in honor of Mrs. Ralph Crandall of Denver, who will return to her home after a three week's visit. MIsm Grossman Weds. The marriage of Miss Ella Gross man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Grossman, of 3101 Lincoln boule%nrd, to Mr. Leslie Heeger of Sioux City. Ja., will take place at the home of the bride, Sunday evening at 6 o’clock. After April 5, Mr. and Ml%. Hefeger will bo at homo at the Sioux apart ments, Sioux City, la. For Brlde-to-Be. The office einployeH of Dold Packing company gave a supper in their pri vate dining room in honor of Miss Katherine Blind, who is to he mar ried the later part of April. Places were laid for 42 guests. The table was decorated In a pink and rose eolor scheme. Miss Blind was presented with a set of dishes. Matinee Party. The Misses Frances Fodrea and Kelda Heinz entertained at a St. Patricks day party at the Orpheum Saturday afternoon for the seniors of Mount St. Marys. Ten guests were present. "Big Sisters" Meet. Owing to the storm, the Big Sist tars postponed their meeting until Monday night. March ]fl, at 6:15 at the M. C. A. Trl Delta Puncheon. The Trl Delta eorority will meet for luncheon at 1 o'clock Saturday, March 24, at the University club. St. Patrick’s Party. Miss Martha Eckman bad 12 guests at her home Saturday evening. Young Members of Army Social Set b/ W Jj/isses , v/ri/arsan?-/ Among the charming additions to Omaha social life which the army set affords, are the Misses Winifred and Margaret Rogers, daughters of Major and Mrs. T. Rogers of Fort CroolC. The family came here Cast July from Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio. Tex. They call Baltimore. Md., home, but like loyal citizens of I Uncle Sam, they go where the colors call. Miss Winifred visited in Balti more last November and December : and was extensively entertained by I former school friends In St. Mary i High school. The Misses Rogers art) quite athletic being skillful equia triennes, good tennis players and ac complished in water sports. A third daughter in the Rogers family is Mrs. Ulius Amoss, wife of a T. M. C. A. secretary in Greece. -——,-—■ Guest at l ea ! TtfissAntia. 2T Q-oss 'C Mrs. Charles G. McDonald will en tertain informally at tea this after noon at 4 O'clock complimentary to Miss Anna Robs of Council Bluffs, who will conduct a European tour next summer. The guests will In clude members of Miss Ross' party. Among those who will accompany Miss Ross are Mrs, McDonald and her daughter, Charlotte; Mrs. Charles R. Sherman nnd daughter, Dorothy; Mrs. S. V. Fullaway and son. Wil bur; Miss Hazel Long of Council Bluffs, Miss Delia Hudson of Long Beach. Cal., granddaughter of Mrs. Nannie Hudson of Omaha, and Miss M. Palmer of Sioux City. The party will sail from Montreal June 7? Benefit Card Party. Many useful nnd beautiful prizes have been donated for the benefit card party to be given in the Brnndefi crill on Monday afternoon for the Masonic Home for Children. Mrs. Robert Thorpe, Mrs. Russell Walsh anrl Mrs. C. K. Smith will have charge of tho tables. One hundred tables will ho placed for the game. Reser vations may l>« made with Mrs Ben F. Marti and Mrs. Byron S. Peterson. i hiirch Dinner. The Ladies' auxiliary of Parkvale Freshyterlan church. Thirty second nnd Martha streets, will serve dinner Thursday at the church from 5.30 till 7 p. m. Could You Please 3200 People Every Week? That’s our task and, judging from our growing bus! ness, we think we succeed quite well. The above figures represent the families we serve now and we are enlarging our plant to double capacity t* battej ; serve you. HELP US In our efforts. Just say to &rt*rr>r, me as a regular call and return my laundry Friday or Saturday.'’ By doing this we can give you more at tention and serve you better. HArney 0784 Personals Miss Ruth Miller arrives Friday from the University of Nebraska for her spring vacation. Miss Harriet Binder arrives March . d from Monticello seminary to visit • r parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Hinder. Mrs. P. A. McMillan and Mr. and Mrs D. G. McMillan left on Friday for (Mongo, where Mr. !’. A Mc Millan will Join them later. Mr. and Mrs. S. Arthur Johnson announce the birth of a daughter, Ueverly Ruth, at' the Clarkson his pital, March 13. . Gould Dietz, well known Omaha clubman and treasurer of C\ N. Dietz Dumber company, will leave for Paris, France, where he will visit with his sister. Mrs. Lcnora Dietz Nelson, and Miss Irene Cole, daugh ter of David Cole, who is now llv in in Paris. Mr Dietz experts to leave Omaha the latter part of April and wiU be gone five or six weeks. Chamber of Commerce Women Meet. The Bank Group of the Business and Professional Women's Division of the Chamber «f Commerce, will have charge of the program next Wedn< -day night at their regular hi monthly dinner at the Chamber of Commerce. .Miss Eleanor Lambrecht te chair man of the group. Mr. KVed Thomas will h" the principal speaker of the evening The various tanks having representatives In the Women s Di vision have contributed to the pro gram of the evening' in various ways. The First National hank will furnish a cabaret act and the Peters Trust flank, the V. P National and the Omaha National bank will give prises for various feature events during the evening St. Patricks decorations will ho carried out. O. E. 8. Kensington. On ai count of the storm Liberty Kensington was postpnnrd to March 29. It will meet at (he Masonic temple. w Violinist Mr* Lillian Gould Faber will give a violin group at the general meet ing of the Omaha Woman * club Mon day afternoon In the Burgeae Nash auditorium. Eastern Star Reception. Maplo Leaf rhapter. Order of tha Eastern Star, will give a reception i on Wednesday evening. March 21, at S o'clock at the University club in honor of all past matrons and pas' patrons of the chapter An Interest log program ts being arranged Mrs Jesse W Hazlrtt is ihe present worthy matron of Maplo Leaf chapter and Mr. Walter C. Price is worthy patron. St. Mlhlel Post. The Ladles' auxiliary to st Mihiel post No. 217 will give a S'. Patrick s box lunch supper Tuesday evening. March 20. at the Swedish auditorium. All eligible members are cspe-jally Invited. The auxiliary is made tip of wives, mother*, sisters and daugh ters of men who have seen service on foreign soil. Leftover frttlt juice* from preserv ing «r« excellent for making colored lrlng. Natate plant that t b« foot r«at on h»l, hall and outatdtarc* CM&MtJoa 4* n-.*nd«th»! towl «n Eggs a la King. 5 tablespoonful* butter. I- 4 pound sliced mushrooms J-! shreddfd preen pepper. 2 tablesponnfuls flour. 1 teaspoonful lemon juice II- 2 cup rich milk. 2 beaten epp yolks. 1-4 cup cream. X hard cooked eggs, sliced; melt the j butter; in It cook the mushrooms and green pepper until softened a little; add the flour and salt and mix; add the cream and stir through the mix ture: add the allced eggs and stir care fully until hot; then add the lcmdn juice. (Copyright. 1»:3.) Will Not Sour. Sponges will stay gweet if they are always squeezed dry after the final rinsing and then hung where the air can circulate through them. Women in Industry That farm labor Is the occupation In which more women are engaged than any other except dopiestic serv ice is revealed in facts culled from the 1920 census and recently issued by the women's bureau. Department of Labor. Other Interesting findings published in the pamphlet entitled “The Occu pational Progress of Women." are: A decrease of 344,297 amonfc women engaged in domestic and personal service in the last 10 years. An increase of 832,192, or 140.4 per cent among women In clerical occu pations. An increase of 282,807 or 38.5 per cent among women in professional service and “a healthy increase in proprietary, official and supervisory occupations.” The number of women engaged in trade increased 42.7 per cent from 1910 to 1920, and in many occupations, mainly those of * proprietary nature enormous increases are shown. “These and other conditions re vealed indicate tremendous upheav als In the traditions of women's em ployment and that more and more in dustrial opportunities are being of fered to women,” the report says. “The occupational field for women is broadening rather than concentrating on a few long established occupa tions. “Changing times and changing con ditions are evidenced also by the In creases and decreases In occupation which are unimportant numerically. The country loses nothing by the fact that there are fewer midwives, fewer wymen bartenders and saloonkeepers, fewer bath house kepers and attend ants, and fewer dance hall and skat ing rink keepers. Nor is the country always the gainer «when women branch out into new and untried oc cupations; for instance, 323 women reported their occupations as long shoremen and stevedores in 1920, an compared with 44 in 1910; 1,495 said they were coal mine operatives and 163 gave their occupations as labor ers on roads and street building and repairing. Increase of Policewomen. “On the other hand, policewomen number 236 in 1920 and street car onn ductors 253. In neither of these oc cupations was a single women re turned In 1910..'' During tbe past f«*w years, every time a woman invaded an occupation hallowed for generations as a pursuit for men only attention was called to ihe fact by the woman s coworkere. When a woman dropped out of do mestic service or gave up dressmak ing to work in a munition factory or became a street car conductor, the en tire community heard of her new em ployment. 'but no one mentally sub tracted her from the ranks of those m her former occupation, and so the impression gained ground that vast numbers of women were taking up gainful occupations for the first time According to statistics, however, there were only a half-million more women employed In gainful occupy tions In 1920 than in 1910, but If the increase In population is taken into consideration, the proportion of all women 10 years of age and over gain fully occupied decreased from 23 4 pet cent In 1910 to 21.1 per cent in 1920 Decrease in Personal Service. Tremendous decrease among worn* turned as employed In agrlcultui GIRLIE. NgStt 'YHERZBEROS Fifth Floor Commencing Monday, —an Important Sale of Girls’ Easter Hats Four Attractive Groups Hats for the little tot of 2 to 6 years, as well as for the miss of 7 to 14 yeurs. Hundreds of Hats foi your choosing. • $ ^95 — $^95 — $y^95 All silk and silk and braid combinations, fancy braids, all those bright new color ing*. It ring the girls in this week for their new Master Hat*. forestry and animal husbandry l» reported. On the whole, the great change seems to have been a decrease among women working in or for the home and in personal service occupa tions, in teaching and in nursing, all of which have been women employing occupations for many decades, but have not before reached such nu rnerical importance. The most striking increase shown for women in any industrial group was that for operatives in automobile factories, among whom there was an Increase of 1,408 per cent. Reviewing of the reasons for the decrease in the number of women in domestic and personal service, the re port says: "Some persons have reached the conclusion that the ‘secret lies in the perfecting of the machine,’ in other words, that fewer servar.ta are need ed because of the widespread adoption of mechanical household devices. But is the extensive use of these devices the cause or the effect of a shortage of servants? Would so many families have Invested in vacuum cleaners, in electric laundry appliances, in iceless refrigerators, none of which Is inex pensive, If servants were to be had as in former days? Probably In many instances the machine In the home has displaced the servant, while In other cases It merely took the place already abandoned by the servant." Fashions of the Moment. Small clusters of artificial fruit* are used for trimming evening frocks. Deauville handkerchiefs are used by many for neck scarf to wear un der coats. They are in the picture at the moment. A huge loop and a long end are placed lust a little to the left of the middle front on some of the new eve ning frocks. Lovely straw hats of poke shape show trimming of straw flowers or silk ones. A Home on $20 a Week _ # "I am enclosing a clipping from i newspaper published In one of * middle western states In which you will note. It is the consensus of opinion that a young couple may mar ry with *100 capital and an assured Income of *20 a week,” writes Con stant Header. Of course, I read the discussion more than several times and was astonished to find the statement that a very, very large proportion of the married couples—many with chil dren—were living on this sum ar.d one real estate agent gave a caso where a man was well into his third year of payments on a home whose Income was not more than *10 a week. Constant Reader wants my opinion. She is discouraged because she can not do what others say they are do ing But—as I read. I noted that the wife In most every case, was adding to the income usually by raising vegetables, fruits, keeping a cow ar-d chickens and selling the excess pro duce. So there Is nothing to become dis couraged about. Where the cash in come is *20 and the wife adds to it by going into the farming or ary other business, surely no one could deduce the conclusion that that fam ily is actually living on *20 a week. Since the problem of financing mar riage and a home is growing most acute in our day and age, and sinco I know that many families live and live well on much lees than otbe farallies, won't some of my reader* who are solving the problem write : n and let us pass on the solution to the ^ many young folks who are eager.g looking forward to the making of * home. If only they can find the wsv to make ends meet. ’ Coats - Wraps - Capes , Newest Spring Styles for Immediate Wear I I Announcing the latest for the new * season, now beginning. Coats. Wraps and Capes that you can pick up and wear » immediately. Adorable designs and charming fabrics. The models are 1 t highly individual and the prices interesting to our thrifty friends and 1 friends-to-be. i i t t < < 1 i t i i i 4 Have you visited our store as yet? < We have been ready now for several 1 days for your visit. This is a fairy- , land for the woman who loves » beautiful garments. t » ”.4 Store of Individual Shops * » f 6th and Farnam Phone AT lan tic 170S j 1