Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 23, 1917, Page 8, Image 8

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. TUESDAY. JANUARY 23. 1917.
Personal Gossip : Society Notes : Woman's Work : Household Topics
S. Richard Fuller at his initial lec
ture in Omaha at the home of Mr.
and Mri. Louis C. Nash on behalf of
the destitute gentlewomen of France
predicted that the American people
who hare already given generously
to the war sufferers of other coun
tries will be asked for unparalleled
donations.
Certainly the tide of asking seems
to be increasing now. for after one
cause has been well begun another
arises to which we are asked to give
our supporp. "The cry is. 'Still they
come. But we. as a nation, are do
ing comparatively little for the suffer
ing, statistics show. France an
Enarland. of course, are straining al
their resources and such small coun
tries as Tasmania. Australia and New
..Zealand have all outdistanced Amcri
f in their giving.
Members ot theT'ranco-Belgian relief
society were almost forced to regret
tneir promise not to charge admission
tor the lecture of Lieutenant r'ech
loff at the Blackstone Saturday and
especially that thry had agreed not
to ask any contribution. Many peo
ple, however, sought an opportunity
to contribute to the cause and Father
l.loyd B. Holsapple held the hat for
those charitably inclined. The ball
room was packed and those who
could not obtain seats stood for an
hour in any points of vantage. .'
Miss Carrie Millard, vice president
of the War Kelief society, who is in
charge of the work during the ab
sence of the president. Mrs. John Mc
Shane, is enthusiastic in her efforts
to secure endowed Omaha beds in the
American Ambulance hospital in
Pari.' The society itself has raised
cnouch to provide one bed, the
Omaha club raised more than enough
for another and contributions .are
steadily coming in to Ezra Millard at
the umana national rani, wnicn win
co towards establishing a City of
Omaha bed in the hospital. Contri
hution are never too small, Miss
Millard k ists, and people have been
responding generously.
, The society is further sponsoring
a collection for starving .Belgian citn
dren. This ia entirely apart from the
other funds and is the latest move
ment of the Franco-Belgian War Re
lief society. '
Boxes for Powys Lecture.
' Box holders for the Powys lecture
this afternoon are the same aa those
of last week and the parties will be
largely the same. Mrs. William
Archibald Smith reserved a box for
the use of the officers of Major Isaac
Sadler chapter. Daughters of the
American Revolution, who are:
Mtdama Maadafnta
Marl SUnfleld, J. P Wlr,
limutl K. Hanford,
I'arolrn Barkalaw. Ruth Uanaon, '
Ida 11. Crowell, Cafala Roys.
' Mrs. Chirle Elgutter had the aame
party as last week, including:
MwdaiBM ataaderaee
Alaaandar Pollack, Fredarlok Roxnatoek,
Horewt Arastele, - William Haarta.
Minna Jacobf, ; , i SatV"J
Hrdvlg Roataiutock, Roaa Orkle. '
Mrs. Charles T. Kountze and Mrs.
Frajik T. Hamilton asked few
friends informally to fill their boxes.
toi Partiea for New Play.
yi Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Quintal will
hat a family party for their three
tons, Gerald, John and Thomas, jr.,
at (the new play written by Sister
Mary Angela, which will be presented
at the Krug for the first time this
evening. Miss Watt will be included
in the party.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hoffman will
have ; in their box Mr, and Mrs.
Thomas Coleman, Mr. and Mrs. John
E. O'Brien and Mr. M. M. Hoffman
of Dubuque, la.
Other box holders for the evening,
tome of whom will entertain several
ffursts. are Mayor and Msrs. Oahlman,
thief of Police Dunn, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Garvey, Mr. and Mrs. David,
Cole and Pr, and Mrs. Jack liwyer. ,
Further Lectures Abandoned. . '
Mrs. Anthony Merrill will not give
any more lectures in Omaha this year,
it was decided at tha last lecture of
her series Saturday morning at the
Blackstone. Requests of the women
were urgent that the lectures should
be continued, but it was decided that
so manv of the class of 1MJ would he
out; of the city that it would not be I
feasible to continue the series. Mrs. i "The mother-in-law is not as black
Merrill returned Saturday evening tolas she is paintrd," remarked Mrs. .
Chicago. . .-. - ;T. Ohaus of the family rehabilitation
i ' ' department of the Welfare board.
Family Dinner. . I She strengthened her observation
Mr. and Mrs. Konald Paterson will
entertain at a family dinner this even
ingi when the guests will be as fol
lows: Messrs. and Mesdames George
Squires, Kenneth - I'aterson, Mrs.
George Paterson and Mr. Judson
Squires. The table decorations will
he in poinsettias and ferns imbedded
in a small log and the evening will
be spent in playing bridge.,;,, i , ' .:.
Y. W. C. A. Annual Keeling.
Master Joseph Harding will give
violin selections, accompanied by Miss
, Martha Gaines, at the annual banquet
of the Young Women's Christian .as
sociation this evening. Yearly rc-
', ports and election of officers will fol
low. - About 150 reservations have
been made. ., ., ....
. Prenuptial Tea.
Miss Charlotte Bedwcll entertained
informally at tea this afternoon for
Miss Ruth Lindley and Miss Marie
'. Hodge, when the guests included a
few intimate Theta friends. The host
ess was assisted by her sister, Mrs.
Eugene Holland of Lincoln.
Whist Club Entertained.
Mrs. F. J. Murphy' entertained the
f es Amies Whist club at her home on
Saturday afternoon. The prizes were
won by Mesdames J. M. Gerhard and
F. Jj. Murphy. The next meeting will
he in two weeks at the home of Miss
Mary Rasmussen.
Graduate Honored. " : , ;
Miss Mildred Shields entertained
the midwinter graduates of the Park
Mhool Saturday evening, when
thirty-four guests were present. The
home was decorated in white and ma
roon, the school colors. The evening
wast devoted to games and music.
Dinner Cancelled!
Owing to the illness of Mrs. George'
Ci. Sharpe. the dinner which she had
planned for her daughter, Mrs. John
JcnteUlle
Sjogren of Hrrniosa, S. D., will be
postponed unlil later. Mrs. Sharpe's
Illness IS inouglll 10 lie umy a orvrrc ;
attack of the grippe, but no affairs !
will be given for Mrs. Sjogren until
her mother is better. ,
Luncheon for Visitor.
Miss Marie Kilry will entertain at I
a luncheon at thr Blackstone Thurs
day in honor of Mrs. Milton Du Rell ,
of Minneapolis.
Monday Bridge Club.
Miss Olga Sliirz entertained the
members of her Monday h-tdge club
It her home today. Two tables wr't I
t for the game. '
Dut-of-Town Visitors.
Miss Helen Ingucrscu is expecting j
Miss Bessie Leavilt of Chicago In-;
norrow for a few days' visit.
Events to Come. ;
L'inosant Dancing club will hold its I
next dance on next Thursday evening
at Scottish Rite' cathedral.
Personal Mention.
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Liggett of
Omaha arc guests of the Elms ho
tel. Excelsior Springs. Mo.
Mrs. Mary J. Brown of Lincoln is
a guest at the home. of her daughter,
Mrs. H, O. Hitchcock, l.ill South
Twenty-eighth street. Several infor
mal affairs have been given in her
honor,
Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Ingwersen are
in California spending the month.
Mrs. William Herdman returned
home Sunday evening from a visit
in Savannah, Mo.
A number of residents of this city
are now in Los Angeles, Cal. Among
those registered at the Hotel Clark
in that city "are: Mr. and Mrs. A. H.
Vanscoy, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Signal,
K. E. Utterback, Mrs. H. E. Mc
Avoy, W. J. Moring. Ed Johnston,
F. W. Smith, J. H. Laughren. Mrs.
H. D. Neely, Mrs. W. H. Butts and
T. J. Collins.
1 Mrs Florence Basler-Palmer has re
turned from Ames, la., where she
sang at a sacred concert in the col
lege there Sunday. Mr. Palmer ac
companied her. .
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Riley ar
rived last night from Dallas, Tex.,
for a two weeks' visit with relatives
before going to Chattanooga, Tenn.,
where they will make tljeir home, I
Mrs. Milton Du Rell of Minneapolis
is the guest of Miss Marie Riley.
Lieutenant Austin Adamson of the
San Diego aviation corps was a visitor I
in umana .Saturday and Sunday, the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Mai.
chien. He left for Fort Leavenworth
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. Loaf O'Bread
Smites the County
Treasury a Blow
If you entertain any notions that
the H. C. of L. specter doesn't loom
up aa startling, as ever just take a
slant at the six months' bread con
tract awarded by the county com
missioners. l he county board has closed a con
tract with the U. P. Baking company
to furnish bread for' the next six
months at 4i rents a pound. At the
beginning of 191ft a years contract
was made providing for the staff of
lite at Yt cents a pound. And the
bakers claim they won't wax rich on
the contract at that. About $'50
worth of bread is eaten each month
in the county institutions,
The Contract was made for the
'shorter period in the belief that Aour
prices will drop by fall,
With drug prices fluctuating and
soaring most of the time "way out
of sight" for some kinds, the county
fathers decided to reject all bids and
buy what is needed on the open mar
ket, Nearly $8,000 worth of drugs are
purchased each year for use in the
county hospital, detention home and
other institutions.
Extra! Mrs. Ohaus
Praises Species
Of Mother-in-Law
by relating a case she attended last
week. The health of a husband im
paired the atabilitv of his heime. His
mother provided means to have him
placed in favorable surroundings for
six months and then took the wife
and five children to her own home.
"The next time anybody knocks the
mother-in-law I will havrfa few words
to say," added Mrs. Ohaus. .
Lonesome? Then Come and
Dance With Lonesomeites
Lonesome persons in town 'who
wish to meet other lonesome persons
may do so by attending the lonesome
party which Miss Evelyn McCaffrev
is giving at the Metropolitan club
house the evening of February 2. The
I affair will be a card and dancing partv
which any one who considers hinisclt
lonesome mav attend. Miss McCaf
frey hopes to be able to form a club J
wnicn an me lonesome young men
and women may join and lose their
loneliness.
Pupils at Long School
Are Being yaccinated
The health department is vaccinat
ing all pupils at Long school on ac
count of a case of smallpox at this
seat of learning. Last week the chil
dren at Druid Hill school were in-
noculated when one of their number
was placed under quarantine for
smallpox.
"Notwithstanding these two cases
at public schools, the city is com
paratively free of smallpox." stated
Health Commissioner Connell. -
ASK FOR and GET ,
HORLICK'S
THE ORIGINAL
MALTED MILK
Chaap UubaUtulaa Mat YOU Has ariaa,
Timely Fashion
I o gV
By LA RACONTEUSE.
Lovely blouse fashioned in tan Georgette crepe with sailor collar,
pointed cuffs and insert medallions of navy blue taffeta. Bonnaz embroid
ery in navy blue outlines the medallions, the collar and cuffs affording a
smart Contrasts. Like many bf the waists this season, it is fashioned so
that it will harmonize with a suit, thus making it part of a three-piece
costume.
Matrimonial Fables
The Husband Who Neier Complained
By DOROTHY DIX.
Once upon a time there was a Wife
whose Husband never complained of
her Faults, or told her that her Ex
travagance was Ruining him, or Re
galed Company with Funny Stories
about the Bad Bargains she had
made.
This filled all the Women of her
Acquaintance with Envy and Won
der. "We do not understand how Mrs.
Blinks has got her Husband so Hyp
notized that he does not even seem
to Perceive her Weaknesses," they
said to one another, as they Fore
gathered at Afternoon Bridges, "for
she is no Better than the Balance of
us. We do not Observe that she
makes a Burnt Offering of herself on
the Kitchen Stove, nor have we Ever
Missed her in the Bargain Rush
where we Fight with each other over
Things that we do not want when we
get them Home.
"Neither does she let her Duty as
a Wife and Mother interfere with
her Belonging to Clubs, going to
Matinees and Tea Dances, and we
Opine that she has Bought just as
mucn smuggled l.ace at a Dollar a
Yard from a Shipwrecked Sailor as
she could have got for 10 cents a
yard in Sixth avenue as the balance
of us.
"Vet while our Husbands continu
ally Lambast our Follies, Her Hus
band hands her as many Compli
ments as if he were not Married to
her."
At last, unable to Endure their
Curiosity Any Longer, they went to
Mrs. Blinks and thus addressed her:
"Tell us, we' pray thee," they said,
"how you have Put this Thing Over
and Induced your Husband to put
the Soft Pedal on Your Faults while
he Blows a Trumpet about your Vir
tues." "When I was about to be Married,"
replied Mrs. Blinks, "I went to a
Soothsayer and asked her the Secret
of how to be Happy though a Wife.
"'My Child,' the Wise One replied,
'in every Family there is a Hammer
Thrower. Brat your Husband to the
Job. Keep him so Busy Defending
his own Faults that he will never
have Time to Observe your Weak
nesses. Farewell.'
"1 laid these Sagacious Words to
Heart, and they have worked like a
C harm. When I Fall for French Con
fections and Imported Millinery I do
not wait for the Bill to come in and
to have my Tender Feelings Lacerated
by my Husband's Remarks thereon.
"On the contrary, I begin Dis
coursing about the Wicked Wastcful
nes of a Man spending so much
Money on Cigars, and Figure out that
if he would give up Smoking in a
Few Years we could Buy a Large
Block of Buildings in the Heart of
the City. This puts me in the Piker
Class as a Spender and keeps my
Husband from having the Nerve to
say a Word about the Cost of a Few
Kags of Clothes as compared with
tne Money ne Burns up in lobacco.
'Nor do I, as so many Foolish
Wives do, make my Husband punch
tne i ime Llock when he comes
of an Evening: I am Glad when he
stays out late Occasionally, for then
wnen i nave j arried too long at a
Bridge Party, or Tea Dance, before
he can begin to Remind me that I
should be at Home seeing to Dinner,
instead of Gadding Around, I merely
Remark that at Least I did not stav
out until Three g. m. and that makes
it seem Advisable to him to Change
the Topic of Conversation.
"I also spend Much Breath Dis
coursing ahout the Cost -of Golf and
how Much Time it takes a Man awav
from Business, and the Dangerous Ac-
a -i. g
-Kit. ror ana wr Im
Skinners
THE HIGHEST QUALITY
EGG NOODLES
36 A Bedpt Book Fnt
SKINNER MFG. CO. OMAHA. USA I
lM6UTMACMI0KI(CtCVIUtlllWj
Hint By La Racmteuse
quaintances a Man makes
the
Links, and it requires so much Argu
ment and Time on my Husband's
Part to explain to me that a Little
Amusement is Necessary to Ease the
strenuous Strain of Modern Life, and
that a Tired Business Man needs the
Fresh Air and Exercise, that he has
no Leisure to find Fault with me
( and like to go to Afternoon Cabarets.
There is no Way to make a Man
Blind to his Wife's Weaknesses that
is so Effective as Keeping his own
Faults so Closely before his" Eyes that
ne cannot see her blemishes. 1 have
pursued this Policy and it has Re
sulted in Great I'eace for me.
Xfnral' This fak). IpsrhB LA
vantage of not Marrying a' Perfect
Man.
Bad Tempered
Women
.. By MADGE ARTHUR.
It is said that a bad-tempered wom
an can cause more actual unpleasant
ness for the rest of humanity than
all the other disagreeable features one
finds in life, and the unlucky posses
sor of an' uncontrolled temper can
easily drive to ruin or to other women
the men whose misfortune it is to
move in her orbit.
Men are very mortal beings; they
are also very selfish, and they have
a tremendous fondness for having
their physical and mental comfort un
disturbed. The average bachelor prizes perma
nent peace and content above the
happiness of possessing a beautiful,
attractive creature for a wife, and he
knows that a bad-tempered woman
and peace do not go together.
He admires a spirited woman, but
he knows that a corresponding strong
will goes along with strong character,
and he expects her to exercise it.
The assertion from a woman that
she has a bad temper and is proud
of it has kept more than one worthy
man from asking her to share his
fortune as his wife.
The. woman who can control her
self under the most trying circum
stances is the woman who holds l)c
strongest power over mart.
No matter how beautiful and clever
and fascinating the bad-tempered
woman may be, or how lengthy her
bank account, her power is infinitesi
mal compared with that of her amia
ble sister.
And amiability is not only power,
it is mental progression and health
and happiness and long life to one's
self 'and to one s friends and family
E1MUS
noMPENcn.
17 Black Dtgrtet2 Copying
ftr every parpou
BEE WANT-ADS
lc per word.
Best results,
Lowest rates.
rrr t
U m
-ar eajaavioon
; s valvar yt sjy leavening errengtn tins jrj
Mrncuar 1 R$ ""'"a" qualities absolute 5Q
fiend rv purity great economy of JfJ
J I i CALUMET S
yUsaft, g BAKING POWDER
Legend
By GARRETT P. SERVISS.
"What is the attitude of science re-
Igardlug Atlantis? It do not mean
j simply the submerged continent,
which is, 1 believe, generally conced
ed, but the Atlantis of Plato and Don
nelly, the seat and cenlcr of a high
civilization. C. C. M., Williainsport,
i Pa." s
It is like the attitude of science re
1 garding any other tradition which has
I no verifiable facts to support it. To
I concede the former existence of a
habitable country in the midst of the
Atlantic ocean demands no-extraor-'
dinary or unjustifiable credulity, be
cause it has been demonstrated not
only that broad regions of ihc earth's
surface now submerged were once dry
I'land. but also that on the bottom of
the Atlantic lie graphic fcanircs of
what may fairly be called a sunken
continents, J he exact position and
outlines of this lost land are matters
still under discussion, but its existence
can hardly be disputed.
However, when we pass from this
general admission of the former exist
ence of an Atlantic continent to the
particulars of Plato's legend of At
lantis we encounter something not ac
cordant with scientific knowledge.
Plato pictures Atlantis as a land bril
liant with a civilization and art sur
passing even those of Greece.
He tells of splendid cities, of wise
laws, of admirable social and political
institutions, of great mechanical
achievements, and other things utter
ly inconsistent with the physical and
mental characteristics of the human
race as archaeology has revealed that
race to us during its earliest known
existence upon the earth
Plato's Atlantis was a kind of so
phisticated Eden, but science has
been unable to find any indications
of a period in man's history when he
was particularly suited to inhabit any
kind of Eden except a savage one.
The tremendous catastrophe which
the ancient legend :ays caused the
sudden disappearance of Atlantis
must have occurred ages before the
chain of recorded history began to be
linked up. Every fact gathered by
science concerning early man consis
tently and persistently testifies that
the farther we go back the lower was
his condition, the more bcastlike his
form and the more animal-like his in
telligence. How, then, is it possible for science
to accept the Platonic legend of At
lantis, as the home of men superior
even to the Greeks of the golden age
of Athens? In view of all that
science knows at present about this
subject it would be. more reasonable
to affirm that the inhabitants of At
lantis lived in caves, or in trees, and
possessed virtually no arts and but a
low degree of intelligence.
If, on the contrary, they were what
Plato pictured them, whence did they
derive they civilization? This is a
question that lies outside the fence
of science, in the wild, flowery mead
ows of legend, where the butterflies
of the imagination dazzle the eyes
and confuse the reason with a maze
of scintillant fancies,
An.d yet it is from just such un
cultivated wastes that (he future
fields of science, must be redeemed,
and some time we may get a trust
worthy light on this very question,
which now seems so insolvable. The
suggestions of the imagination
should never be thrown aside un
tested. It has been suggested, for instance,
that the legend of Atlantis, whic.li
Plato says he did, not invent (and,
indeed, we know he did not), was1 an
original form of the story of the
flood, and that the Eden which the
ancient scripture writers had dimly
Detore tneir minds was situated on
the island, or continent, of Atlantis.
With the submergence of Atlantis
in consequence of a great earth
throe, the race that had once inhabit
ed Paradise disappeared, except a
few survivors, who reached the
1 W7
SS "Thi Is the X
W v:j i r t Rx
55 DO - OQ I
finish I DUO "Hf-.i. .11 l j. OCX I
kJK ttjuiiici mcuaii uianas, faSJ
Qr she know which is best KfS I
Qr Anew how to get good, J&Q I
7 wholesome bakings everr r9S) I
nr bike-day how to aire rSfy I
V Baking Powder money fQQ I
jVj avoid bakt-diT sorrows. 1 VOd I
i K "She likes the wonderful OG 1 m
i Qc Powder you now use is best. JsX
Br Try Calumet once Sod
1 JSi out what reo baking are, " Kgl
, X KaeawaalHltWAwarfa Kj
' UC tiMCk Both Fret JVJ
! Sa Slip im Pnnd Can Qg
of Atlantis
I shores of Europe, ,as Europe then
Whether these supposed survivors
encountered an autochthonous race
of men in Europe, still in a savage
state, with whom they mingled, or
whether tlicy found themselves
alone in a new world, they introduced
i the seeds of change. It is a singu
i lar fact, worth recalling here, that,
, as far as we know, the earliest scats
i of human occupation- in Europe were
in Spain and southern trance, the
nearest land to the supposed site of
the lost Atlantis.-
Indistinctly we are able to trace
the coming of a new and superior
rare aiming the valleys and the Pyre
ncss ami of southwestern France,
and some of the specimens of art
and handiwork left by this race arc
of surprising excellence, although
thry do not indicate civilization in
our sense, liut the facial types and
the size and shape of the skulls show
an almost startling resemblance to
those of today.
The practically world-wide prev
alence of legends of a flood that
almos! destroyed mankind, the equal
ly widespread traditions of former
superior races, the stories heard by
early American explorers of the mys
terious visits by white men and wise
men, coming 110 one knew from
whence; these may all be connected
with the Atlantis legend, and some
time may assume such a form and
consistency that science will be able
to handle them.
ROCK ISLAND
To Chicago
Arrive La Salle Station on the Loop any
part of the city quickly reached by elevated
trains. Most convenient location in Chicago.
"Chicago Day Express" at 6:00 a. m.
"Chicago-Colorado Express" at 3:55 p. m.
"Chicago-Nebraska Limited" at 6:08 p. m.
"Rocky Mountain Limited" at 2:00 a. m.
Connections at Englewood Union Station
(63rd Street) with limited trains for all Eastern
territory.
A atomatic Block Signals
Finett Modern All-Steel Equipment
Superior Dining Car Service
1" ' "I
The3Vshinto
ft
,ni vided.
drawing room
I vcuo uiimig scivite uuuuus iur lis good
cooking experienced train crews and attend
ants, who take especial care of ladies and
children traveling alone.
This train, like all Baltimore & Ohio through trains,
goes via Washington. Liberal stop-over privileges en
able you to visit the interesting points enroute.
Four all-steel trains daily from
Chicago to the east
The Pittsburgh-Washington-New York Express
The Washington Specisl . , ...
The Washington-New York Limited . , ,
The Washington-New York Night Express .
All trains leave Grand Central Station, Fifth Avenue and Harrison
Street, Chicago. c Q ELR1CK, Traveling Paaaenger Asent,
tU Woodman of the World Bids., Omaha, Nob.
Phone Douglaa 967.
Baltimore & Ohio
"Our Passengers Art Our Cnests"
Could Hardly Walk f
Prom Berger, Missouri, word comes from Mrs. Lizzie Groeber. 1 1
She says: "I had always been a very healthy woman until my sev- U
rath child was born. When my baby was six weeks old. . . I could
hardly walk. . . I suffered. . . dizziness in my bead when I would paa
stand on my feet just as If I would faint away. . . I used Cahdui, Q
CAannsFiTic and Black-Dkavoht and. . . have never had any symp
loms of( it again. . . 1 certainly will praise OAitm;i. . . for I surely
think it saved my life." There are thousands of weak, worn-out woman In
this country who could be helped like .Mrs. Groeber, with Casoui. Why
don't you try It for your case?
at ssaaaa aaasssaa, TTSED 40 tears
I jffPg fJ The Woman's Tonic
CAIlS-rOU-IVC AT ALL DRUG STORES S-JT
The Truth
About Milk
Prof. Philip B. Hawk of the Jef
ferson Medical College, Philadelphia,
Pa., writing on the above subject in
The Ladies
Home Journal
Says:
"Raw Cow's Milk Is tha Worst
Ponible Kind of Milk a Baby Can Be
Fed. Pasteurization Makes a More
Desirable Food."
Prof. Hawk then goes on to ex
plain that Pasteurized Milk forms
softer curds in the stomach and that
these curds are easily digested.
Order only Pasteurized Milk from
Alamito
The "Milk-White" Dairy
DOUGLAS 409.
Tickets, reservations and information at
Rock Island Travel Bureau, 1323 Farnam
Street, or at Union Station.
J. S. McHALLT
Diviaioa Passenger Afeat
Faoae Douglas 428
de luxe train
to Washington
and New York
Whether on business
or pleasure, take this
solidall-steel train from
Chicago to the East.
It leaves Grand Cen
tral Station every
morning at 10:45
o'clock. The utmost
convenience and pleas
ure in traveling is pro-
Pullman comoartment.
and observation sleeping1
: r r j
. 8:25 a.m.
10:45 a-m.
5:45 p.m.
, 10:00 p.m.