tvm Si I i Personal yf January 8, 1917. Lovers of the French language, lit erature and art, to the number of forty, gave a proposed Omaha branch of I'Allianre Francaise an enthusias tic start Saturday, afternoon when they met at the public library. Charles W. Martin, who has traveled exten sively in Kurope and speaks French fluently; Mrs. Charles A. Hull and Miss Eva Mahoney, who received her French training abroad, were named as a committee to outline further plans of organization and to arrange for the coming of Monsieur Louis de la Marre for a lecture on January 24. Another meeting will be held Thurs day evening at the Blackstone. Madame August Mothe Borglum, herself a French woman, whose sym pathies are always the first enlisted in matters of French interest, is de lighted with the enthusiasm with which the news organization hai been received. Madame Bornlum has given tip a French class which she has led on Thursday evenings for fifteen years, in order to devote the time to Franco-Belgian relief work. 'French study must give way to relief work in war times.' said she. Already future programs for I'AI liance Francais have been projected. Dr. Felix Despecher has some inter esting slides of the district of the Marne, where so much fighting has been going on, and Mr. Martin's pic tures, taken during his travels, will also be shown. The opening reception at the First National bank Saturday kept a num ber of French enthusiasts from at tending the meeting, bnt all tent word they wished to be included in the membership of the new circle. Madame Barbara Chatelaine, Mrs. Howard Baldrige, Mrs. E. W. Nash, Mri. Edgar H. Scott, Mrs. McArthur, Miss Landit, Mill Ella Phelps, Mr. C W. Lyman and Mr. A. S. Borglnm were a tew present. For Mr. Nicholson. Mrs. Osgood T. Eastman enter tamed the membert ot tne original Monday Bridge club at her home to day. The guest of honor wai Mrs. Meredith Nicholson of Indianapolis, who is a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Kountze. This evening Judge and Mrs. W. A. Redick are entertaining Mrs. Nichol son at the Orpheum. The party will include: , ifaaara. and Meada Ward Burteoa, C. T. Koantae, Joseph Barker, J. B. Bummere, J. DaForreat Richards Mr. Bea Warren. Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Summers will entertain at dinner tomorrow evening with theater party afterwards for twelve guests. Box Parties for New Play. Additional reservations' which have been made for Sister Mary Angela's play at the Krug are by the following Meaara. and afeaaamaa- Oaersa Brandela, J. HeKnlfht. J. J. Hantrntlan, LebranA Da Chrlauan, Clinton Millar, H. C. Suraner, C. 1. Hmythe. . ft- R. Tecum, Mlae Keith Tobltt. Pleasure Past Miss Gladys Dreibui entertained On Wednesday afternoon at her home in honor of Miss Esther Connolly, who returned from St. Mary-of-the Woods, Ind., to spend the holidays here. Present were: Kathar Caanelljr, Ttava Oroot, Oledra Crook. Marsere! Walah, Marsaeiite Monrmatti Oenavteve Rhine, Freneee Mahoner. Beeale fnnlta. Oermde Rylen, Anna Andreaaon, Rath CaaaMr, Haaal Johnaen. Helen Welah, Liielle Mehrman, Eetker Rjrlen, Willow O'Brien. Fraternity Dinner. The Omaha alumni chapter of the Sigma Nu fraternity will give New Year's dinner and smoker on next Friday evening, January 12, at the Loyal hotel. This is the first of a series of dinner! to be given during the coming year. There are about forty members of the fraternity in Omaha and Council Bluffs who are expected to be present. Plans are be ing made for tne annual banquet to be given next spring, which will bring together members from this division of the fraternity, which comprises the states of Nebraska, Iowa and Minne sota. Theater Parties. 1 Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Brogan are hav ing with them in their box at the ' theater this evening Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hamilton, Miss Daisy Doane and Mrs. W. E. Martin. The party will have supper at the Fontenelle. Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Waggener will have as their guests in their box Mr. and Mrs, Paul Gallagher. Progressive Dinner Party. ; Planned for the latter part of the week is a progressive dinner and bridge party to be given at the homes of the following young women: Mes dames Albert Busch, Clarence Sib bernsen and William Schnorr, and the Misses Alice Carter, Alice Du Val and Marjorie Howland. Monday Bridge Club. Miss Irene McKnight entertained the Monday Bridge club at her home today in place of Miss Olga Storz. Mr. Robert Storz has been confined to his home with grippe for the last week, and so Miss McKnight acted as hostess today in place of Miss Storz.. Past Festivities. ' Mrs. Arthur Jensen entertained the Les Amies Whist club at her home Saturday afternoon. Prizes were won by Mrs. Eugene Atkins and Mrs. H. M. Barr. The next meeting will be in two weeks at the home of Mrs. F. J, Murphy. i Announcement of Meeting. The regular meeting of the Omaha Women's Christian Temperance union will be at the Young Men's Christian association Wednesday at 2: 30. Sorority Meeting. Miss Irene Johnson will entertain the members of the Alpha Phi soror- itv'tomorrow afternoon. Social Gossip. Willard B. Millard, jr.. has re turned to the Tom school at Port Gossip : Society Notes : Woman's Work Chicago Women Must Pay for Their Powder Chicago, IU., Jan. 8. No longer is it possible for a woman down town for the day to dash into one of Chicago's larger hotels and re new her complexion at the expense of the management. Maids will charge her after this 10 cents for the use of powder, toilet water, hair pins, heretofore furnished free, it was announced today. One Michi gan avenue hostelry padlocked its towels and above the rack placed a sign saying that within one month 416 towels disappeared. Deposit. Md.. after having spent the Christmas vacation with relatives in Omaha and Chicago. Mrs. W. 1. Coad is planning to go to St. Paul the end of the month to visit Mr. and Mrs. Park Leonard. Mrs. Kalk of Washington, D. C, will arrive soon to visit her sister, Mrs. T. r. Kennedy. Personal Mention. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Fallon and Miss Margaret spent the holidays at a house party at the home of Dr. and Mrs. J. M. dross in Waverly, la. Mr. Fallon spent only a day or two with the party, but Mrs. Fallon and Miss Margaret returned Saturday, tuuests from St. Paul, Kansas City and Dubuque were gathered for the week. ' Miss Catherine Dwinnell of Min neapolis, who will be remembered as the charming guest of the Misses Elizabeth and Menie Davis, was a member of Miss Delphine Gillette's wedding party Thursday, when she married Jesse Gilbert Burton of New Orleans. The wedding was one of the beautiful social events of the week in the northern city. Miss Mary Norris is confined to her home by the grip. On the Calendar. Miss Adelaide Vance will entertain .Friday afternoon at a bridge party, and on Saturday afternoon at an in formal kensington. Mrs. Thomas Hevward of Pitts burgh, Pa., who is 'the guest of her ! parents, Mr. and Mrs. K. n. ouscn, is the inspiration for several affairs this week. Miss Marjorie Howland will entertain informally at bridge Wednesday afternoon, and Thursday afternon the Misses Beatrice and Irene Coad will give a bridge party in honor of Mrs. Heyward and Miss Clara Hayden. Mri. W. H. Guild will entertain tomorrow afternoon at a tea in honor of Mrs. T. D. Braden of Denver, Colo., who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. John Guild, during the holidays. Mrs. Braden leaves Satur day for her home. The Winter Dancing club, com posed of the Happy Hollow bache lors, will give a dance tomorrow evening at Hart hall. Women's Activities Mlaaiaavrpt's women' elabe are ralains a rand to help lUmp oat illiteracy In that State. The women of Arjetralia hare atartad a national movement to Beware social, parlia mentary and other reforma in which women are particularly tntereatod. One of the dletinaaiahed Danshtera of the Amerieaaa Revolution IWinf at Carliale, Pa., la Mra. Annie Martin, who is a rreat sranddanihter of Mollie Pitcher, the hero ine ot the Revolution, Lucretla Switier, a l!-yr.-old sjirl, la now a aopnomore in the Wichita, Kan, hiah aehool, and in the ordinary couraa ahe will complete her atudiee and be ready (or irad uation before her fifteenth year. The farm women of Colorado plan to or-a-aniae themaelvee darlna the aeaaiona of the Farmera' Consreae thla month, ao that they can set the larreet benefit from the work of the State Airicultural Collese. Probably the i most experienced woman penoloflat In America ia Mra. Olobe B. Chamber, who haa been employed In pri aon work In Han Dleso, Gal., for men than 'It yeara and now holda a poaltten aa de puty sheriff. Ralains hone for pleasure and profit ia the occupation of Mia Josie Fuller, seven teen, youngest and best all-round feminine pork producer in the Imperial Valley of Cal ifornia. She haa a herd of fifty porkera and has eAtablUhed a record by developins them for the market at a coat of S 11 centa a pound. The women'a orsaniaatlons of Boiae, Idaho, are plannina; to celebrate the twen tieth annieeraary of their suffrage by elect ing a woman to the eity council next Spring. The suffrage amendment wae pased in Idaho 20 yeara ago thla paat election, and the women voted for the flrat time at tne city electiona ni the following Spring. Among the noted acientiata who attended the recent New York congrea of the Amer ican Association for the Advancement of Science waa Mma. Lenor Solonka, of Mun ich, Germany, who has spent the greater part of ber life In gathering together the bones of the pithecanthropus, or ape man, mora popularly known as the "missing link.'' Mra. Annie Oraeney. of Concord, N. H., ia aaid to be the only woman in the United Statea holding a poaition aa deputy United Statea marahal and performing all the du ties of that oftice. In the cane of Mra. Craeney these duties have included the watching for smugglers along the Canadian border, the ferreting out of counterfeiter, and the capture of army deserters In the lumbering Found Health in Cardui. Mrs. Anna Hileman. of Hfmryntta, Oklahoma, says that she suffered ror eight years with headache, backache, nervousness and other complaints caused from womanly troubles and that she had been to many places seek ing health but was not benellted until she took Cardui. At one time she was confined to her bed for three months. She further savs: "Could sea after I had taken the secoml tattle it was doing me good. . . Today I am a sell woman and I know that rardv.l. . . has cured me, and I would advise jvery suffering woman to take tt." All druggists sell Cardui (pronounced ard.you-eve)-The Woman's Tunic Try it If you need a medicinal tonle Jf this kind. Get a bo:;o today. g. THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, JANUARY Timely Fashion pM k r ' , The Oriental influence is extensively featured in the newest hats of the season. Both large and small hats reflect a tendency in this direction. A huge sailor is shown in gold-colored Milan straw with facing of figured Georgette crepe, the crown ornamented with a huge beaded ornament in colors, in tones similar to those used in the fig ured material? Matrimonial Fables By DOROTHY DIX. Once upon a time a Handsome Youth met a Beauteous Maid, where upon Cupid got busy with a lot of that old Heart Thrpb Stuff. They spent a long, lovely summer wandering beside the Murmuring Sea Hand in Hand and asking each other: "Oose Ducky Daddle is Oo?" and "Is Oo Pufficktly Awfully Sure that if your Birdykins should die Oo would never Smile again?" and other Sentimental Dope of the same well known and justly Celebrated Kind. At last, however, they were Mar ried, and when they had returned home from their Bridal Tour and had combed the rice out of their Hair, the Man desired to Settle Down to the real Business of Life. "I am Fed on this Googly Goo Menu," he said to himself, "and I crave plain Roast Beef Medium for a change. Therefore, although 1 Love my Wife better than ever and consider that I drew the Blue Ribbon Prize in the Matrimonial Lottery, I shall put the Soft Pedal on the Soft Talk. "Furthermore, I shall go forth and spend my Time hustling for the Al mighty Dollar instead of holding her Hand, for I apprehend that the Acid Test of a Husband's Affection is what he Does for his Wife and not what he Says to her." With that the Man bestowed a lit tle Peck on his Wife's Cheek instead of spending an hour and a half tak ing a Lingering Farewell of her, and he Fared Forth to his Office, where I he worked like a Slave in order that J he might be able to Purchase for her Glad Raiment, and a Iwelve Cylin der Automobile. But when he returned home in the evening, instead of being met with a glad, sweet smile, he found his wife in Tears. "Why these Weeps?" cried the Husband in Alarm. "Alas," sobbed the Wife, "I weep because you no longer Love me, for you only Kissed me once when we were to be Parted a Whole Day. Also, Last Evening you looked at some Horrid Papers you had Brought Home with you instead of Holding my Hand and telling me that I was the Only Woman you have Ever Loved." "But, my dear," remonstrated the Man, "I Desire to Roost upon the Top Rung of the Ladder in my Pro fession, and 1 cannot do that unless I keep Hustling. It would be Charming to do nothing but hold your Lily White Hand in mine and tell you that you have got Venus backed off of the Map, but if I put in my Time in this Pleasing Manner 1 should soon find myself in the Down and Out Club, and you would have to take in Boarders to Support me." "Boo-hoo," sobbed the Wife, "I Perceive that you no longer C-c-c-are for me, and 1 am going back Home to Mo-o-o-ther to D-d-ie of a Bro-o-oken Hea-a-art." "Poor little thing," said the Man to himselif, "she surely has got a Bad Attack, but doubtless this Hectic Fever of Affection will wear itself out soon, and we can Settle Down and Talk Together like Rational Hu man Beings. So he put aside the Work he had planned to do at Home, and spent a Long and Boring Evening Hold ing his Wife's Hand and Re-hashing all the Fool Love Talk of his Courting Days, while he inwardly Wondered that she did not Notice that it Lacked Pep and Ginger and was Warmed up for the Occasion.. Nor did the Husband escape with ASK r0S and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheep stibetltatae aoat YOU same pries, Hint By La Raconteuxe i merely Handing Out large Chunks of Sentimental Guff to his Wife when he was at Home. In order to hear his Dear Voice she called him up a dozen times a day over the Telephone and Surprised him with little Visits at his Office. At last this got upon the Man's Nerves so that he began to Dread to go Home because he knew he would I have to turn on the Sloppy Record as soon as he got there, and he cahie to Hate his Wife because she Inter fered with his Career. "People pity the Husband whose Wife has Ceased to Love him," he said as he communed with his own Soul, "but, believe me. those who have any Tears to shed should Bestow them upon the Husband whose Wife loves him Too much." Moral: This fable teaches that while a Woman can make a Whole Meal off of Chocolate Eclaire, a Man only Rel ishes a Small Bite of Sweet for Des sert. Advice to the Lovelorn By Beatriet Fairfax. Marry Him! Dear Mlaa Fairfax: 1 am IS and engaged to aji American of Ftalian parentage. He la tt and earna $36 per week. He haa a aterllng charaotar, neither drtnka nor smokes, and hta people are very refined. I have known him for ten yeara or more and 1 have never found a Haw In his pereonaUtr. But 1 have many friends who deplore the tact that I am going to marry an Italian, and they urge me to break our engagement. I love him devotedly. What shall I do? My mother la dead. My father ra eattened with the marriage. KDITH D. There aaema to be every reason In the world why you should marry your lover and none at all against the marriage. Tour friend are buaybodlea who offer Intrusive advlco on a aabjeot that they have no right to dlacuaa. Tour lover la the son of a splen did race. He ia not freeb from a foreign country where Ideaa and cuatoma differ widely from thoae of your land. Again and again I aay that with race prejudice I have no aympathy; but In your caae even a narrow-minded person haa ao right to aee cauee for aueatlon. Taw Wedding Preceeaton. Dear Mies Fairfax: I am about to be married and have selected my beat mao and uehere, but am In donbt ae to who ahould buy the flowera. Am a young man ot moderate means. Aleo, will you please state what 1 the order of the wedding procession? A. B. C. The bridegroom presents the bride with' her bouquet. He Is generally supposed to give the brideamaids their flowera and the bouquet of the maid of honor must come from him If he cares to conform to the cuatom of aoclety. Bridegroom and beat man wait at the altar with the mln later. The wedding proceaalon begins with pages. If there are any. and proceeds In the order named: Ushers, brtdeamalda In twoa. the maid of honor and then the bride on the arm of her father. If there are any little flower glrla It Is prettiest to have them, come ahead of the bride, etrew Ing her path with flowera but aome peo ple prefer to have them head the pro ceaalon. 7Vce 1.117 m 9, 1917. Mothers of Boys and Girls By ADA PATTERSON. He bi defied you, has he? He has wrinkled up his little snub and freckled nose, perhaps clenched his tiny hands and declared household war in the family. You have a Hun in the household! On the face of it it is discouraging. But beneath the surface show of things there is hope. How can I say that? 1 would not say it if I saw the red and angry little face, heard the impertinent words hurled forth by a rebellious mouth. Yes. I could, for I have seen what manner of men these boys become. I I know a man. a big one. big of soul, 1 big in body and in attainment, who, nodding merrily at his tiny mother. I complained that she had spanker! mm j , so hard and so often that his memory I of his childhood was one series of I slipper-raised blisters. The quaint lit tle woman who had administered the punishment always answered": "A bad boy you were, that deserved more lickings than you got, if I'd. only had the time to give them to you " Rebellion in the family. A Hun in the household? Yea. verily. But the bad boy grew into a big man, and the big man grew a bigger and bigger figure in his community, until there j was proffered him the honor which had Deen his mother s. lite dream. "The boys want to nominate mc for United States senator. Ha!" he said one night. The clicking of her busy needles cease. She looked at him through moist eyes. Her lips opened, closed. "First time I ever knew you to be without words. You're not sick, are you?" he asked with affected light ness. "Hush, son! You know this honor for you is what I've lived for for years. I " He patted her narrow shoulder with his broad hand. He stroked her white hair with his clumsy brown fingers. They said not a word, those two, but the silence that fell between them was an eloquent oration on am bition fulfilled and happiness com plete. The man was elected. The night of his election the little mother died. She died without knowing that the honor that had been offered him by a few had been made his By the many. She didn't know the number of votes he received, the handsome majority he rolled up. Her bad boy had be come a good man, honored of his fellows. The man's heart nearly broke at her coffin side. I think she must have known that, too, for her smile had grown sweeter as they hid her away beneath the brown November loam. The boy who had been saucy and dis obedient was a man, humbled and crushed before her. And so, discouraged mother, if you are of the ninety-nine among one hun dred, will it be with you. That anger reddened face will soften with the years. The swelling little heart will empty itself of indignation and fill itself with understanding. Years bring knowledge and knowledge brings due appraisement of the worthy mother. But don't lose your temper because he has lost his. Don't raise your voice to him. Those rage-filled tones will reverberate endless echoes down the years. He will remember them with humiliation. He will hide from the world, deep in his own heart, that his mother sometimes acted as though she hated him. Give him patience, tolerance, long abiding affection to remember, for memories of yon; and presently you will live in his heart with a halo about your head, in his mind. Your life will be an inspiration, your mem ory a benediction, to him.- He will quote your words, as I have heard hundreds of the men, great in the world's councils recall the words of their mothers. He will say, as they have said, with the simplicity of a little child, "What I am my mother made me." "All that I am I owe to my mother." Take heart, mothers of boys and girls. Some time they will know, ; some time understand, rruit ripens slowly. So does character. . As forand Grt Skinner5 THE HIGHEST QUALITY EGG NOODLES J6 flp Rrdpe Book Frte SKINNER MFG. CO. OMAHA, USA lAIOttT rUCMOMI fAOOav in AMUICA i Tropical flowers and fruits, sunshine, balmy climate, sportive seas, broad ocean beaches, good motor roads, dancing, splen did golf courses, excellent hotels these are the South s offerings when Winter it blus tering and storming. Florida and the Gulf Coast resorts are bat a abort journey away and the trip can be made at reasonable cost via the CHICAGO Milwaukee & St Paul RAILWAY Thnt fast trains leave Omaha daily, making direct connections in Chicago with trains for the South. eeelaff reenaetiee el Femem Street. Omaha : Household Topics SCHOOLS REOPEN FOR WINTER WORK Army of Teachers and Pupils Return Prepare Plans for Graduation. NURSES BUSY AT CENTRAL Twenty-five thousand school chil dren and 1,000 public school teachers returned to ehir class rooms Monday morning, after a vacation of two weeks, during which they recovered from the effects of the holidays. Pupils at Central High school were examined by school nurses on account of several cases of scarlet fever hav ing been reported during the last three weeks. No morning session was held at Comenius school, the dismissal being to allow the teachers to attend the funeral of Mary Elizabeth Thompson, primary grade teacher who died last Friday. Graduation Date. The first half of the school year will be concluded on Friday, January 26. On the evening of January 24 110 midyear graduates of three public high schools will receive certificates at the Auditorium, where a joint com mencement will be held. Dr. W. A. Jessup, president of the University of Iowa, will address the graduates on "Personality." On Monday, January 29, 500 eighth grade pupils will enter the high schools. Court Order Will Keep Husband from Getting Children Mary E. Kinney, a bookkeeper in an Omaha grocery store, scored a point in her fight for her three minor children when Judge Sears of the dis trict court issued an order restrain ing the husband, John F. Kinney of Minneapolis, from interfering with the children or taking any steps to obtain possession of them. The hearing was set for January 12. The wife and mother filed suit for divorce last week, following the ac tion of the husband in obtaining a writ of habeas corpus in county court ordering Mrs. Kinney to appear be fore Judge Crawford with the three children. The husband alleges he was granted custody in a divorce decree obtained in Minneapolis last year. The wife in her petition for divorce here charged that the divorce was obtained by fraud. Spineless as Burbank's Cactus - is what the human body would become without mineral salts. Without the iron stored in salad vegetables we could not breathe. But to be pleasing to eye and palate and acceptable to the stomach, salads must be properly dressed, without taste or odor. SAMTAY 100 Pure Butterof-Nuts for akii?SJiqi1emri&lOTng leaves salads with the delicate piquancy peculiar to themselves, adds to their nutritive value and makes them more readily digested. If your stomach rebels against the taste of" even the best oil or your pocket-book rebels against its price, you'll welcome Sawtay better for salads than the best oils at a less price than the cheapest. SAWTAY STUFFED TOMATO SALAD Ramon s (hide sties from the sum end of 6 tomatoes. Remove inaide of tomatoes, ano. let stand inverted 'j hour. Cut one lulk of celery into cubes and mix serterouetr with Sewtar Salad Dreanng. Stuff tacneroe. with this nwxture, sanuib with ponkv, chill and serve oa a bad of cnp terrace. 111 SAWTAY SALAD DRESSING 1 V2 Mblapootiful flout, Yl tavblasapooniul Mat. d-ah caraiM, i M ubtMpMnful i(sar, t ttsaaipoonrtil nwtatl t tsfjr,, iYj ubjav m spoonful mtid Scwuy, A cup sulk, 2 uibimpuoutuS viivttar. R Mm dry inmitmu thtwsigW-. Add o hiim, tlif hdy, uv4 Bjl tha milk. Cook err bcsia wtw "awo. numu ttiKktn. R- m move from hi dd the vinccar drop by drop, ixntn and cool. M 9 $en4 r0 ' stomp f'r "Fnm Seup to Nuts1' M B K A Big Bftk tf Ntte Rtcipes and R emeus. J I IK. SAUTE PRODUCTS CORPORATION A I I IV Wooiwocth Tower, New York jfM V, tablesooonful rVair. Yl tabWapoonful aiaar, t laaapimnrnl rnaetard. t ass, in spoonfuls meked aewtay, - cup Mix dry inareoients tnoroiujhjy. FOR SURE RESULTS Use Bee Want-Ads CLEARING HOUSE FOR WOMEN'S WOES When Trouble Brews in Omaha Homes Mrs. Ohaus is Offi cial "Miss Fix-It." PUNY QUARRELS MOSTLY Domestic jars repaired while you wait Apply at the Welfare board, city hall. Last week the family re habilitation department was set in motion, with Mrs. R. M. Ohaus m charge. This woman's work is to diagnose domestic maladies and then apply a remedy. It has been sug gested that her title should be, "Doc tor of domestic disabilities." Mrs. Ohaus reported two sucess ful treatments last week. The first case was of a husband and wife who were well on the way to conjugal chaos. The Welfare board specialist walked into the home and examined the patients. She probed around and located the impediment, which was an aunt of the husband. This aunt had been very near and dear to the man before his marriage and after he had taken unto himself a wife the aunt insisted that the wife should, give heed to certain tried and true principles of housekeeping. The wife resented the attentions of the aunt and even threatened to dissolve marital partnership unless the aunt "kept her place." The husband did nut have the heart to curb the en thusiasm of the aunt. Mrs. Ohaus talked to the aunt and the outcome was that a readjustment was effected and the dove of peace now hovers over this home. The Peace Party. "It only needs a third parry in most cases to straighten out these domes tic affairs," explained Mrs. Ohaus. Another case involved a husband and wife with grown children. The husband insisted that the Sunday dinner should be served to suit his time and inclination, rather than ac cording to the wishes of the children. The wife had been inclined to yield to the children in this matter. Inasmuch as the husband and father in this instance was a worthy head of his home and family, and the Sunday dinner demands of the chil dren being more whimsical than prac tical, Mrs. Ohaus succeeded in con vincing the wife and children that the bread-winner of the home had prior rights in the matter at issue. All is happiness in this home, the Welfare board reports. "Most domestic disagreements arise out of trivial affairs, anyway," stated Mrs. Ohaus. ill rableepoaurul ask. dsah can auut, a laraaapoo&fuu vineser. Ada eaa nearer, sl,a.nay,