THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY. "APRIL 26, 1917. 10 War't Effect on Woman't Attire. Tlfe clothes of the times" are quite as fascinating to female humanity as ever before. Never was there such a variety of novelties in women s wearing apparel as is seen today. Not long ago we mentioned in this col umn red, white and blue hats, pa triotic ties and such fads. Now the red, white and blue has been intro duced into the coloring of parasols. ' A beautiful georgette crepe blouse, which was or. display in Omaha re cently, had red, white and blue flags embroidered with tiny beads on its s delicate fabric. A young woman of good repute ap peared on the streets the other day with shoes of white, hose of red and suit of blue, an intensely patriotic combination, but one which, with all due respect to our national colors, did not appeal to us. Almost every paper nowadays contains a prediction of trousers tor women, especially motor drivers en listed in the National League for Women Service. Very attractive suits with trousers like reduced Turkish bloomers e now making their ap pearance in this city. One store calls them ''feminalls." A deaconess friend of ours, when making her rounds the other day came upon "-joung woman in overalls, real, sure enough ones, going about her busi ness as if in perfect comfort ,, Over alls for young gardeners are tonsid tred the thing in our best families. The urgent call for gardens has treated an increased supply of dainty arden accessories which seem fitted only lor party frocks. Yesterday we saw among the new arrivals in 6ne " expensive shop I et which will soon be the possession of some Omaha so ciety maid. It was an apron of pale pink silk with hand-embroidered pockets and a little poke-bonnet of the same silk to tie under the chin. Lynch-O'Connor Wedding. ' At 9 o'clock this morning at St. Peter's Catholic church the Rev. - Father McCarthy united in marriage Miss Mary O'Connor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. 'J. O'Connor, and Mr. John A. Lynch, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lynch. Palms and -pink and white roses were used in the x decoration of thl church. ' Miss Nettie Bushman was maid' of honor, and Mr, Michael Hanna was best man. " A wedding breakfast for the bridal party and relatives at the home of the bride's parents followed the cere mony. . Pink and white spring flow ers, sweat peas, roses and carnations were ' used throughout the rooms. Out-of-town feuesta were Mr. and "ir. II. J, McCarty of Des Moines, r.til Mrs. Mary Byron of Bur A i . ' - - !. : v -I Mm. I.yncft left this after- V ' .. i an . eastern ie"Jtlitig trip. I lie at home alter June 1 at 8.-a,r.imer.ti . lo-vtii cut is maile of ttte mar- r'.v s 6.' Mr. Daniel J. Foley and Miss A:ics L. Clark, which took place Tuesilav morning at 8 o'clock at St. Cecelia's pro-cathedral. The 'atten dants were Mr, Thomas D. Foley and Miss Agnes L. Clark.- The ceremony was pcrlormed by Father Gately. The bride wore a traveling suit of dark blue silk faille, with hat of gray and orchid and corsage bouquet of pink sweet peas. After a short south ern trip the newly married couple will be at home . in Omaha. , Creche Benefit Card Party, ' VLittle children at home must te fed this summer," said Miss'Arabell Kimball today, 'when she announcrd the annual card party for the benefit of the Creche on May 22. "Later we !i!an to do something for the ' war bailies', but just now we have to see t!iat the dozens of little people who are drpendent upon the Creche for their support are fed. Surely it is not asking too much that each family in Omaha who can afford it give $2 to the Creche." Tickets as usual will be a dollar each. : The ball room of the Fon tenelle has been secured for the party,; thus Insuring plenty of room for large attendance. Following the plan of many charity organiza tions, the tickets are to be mailed out to all, former patrons of Creche card parties. Scheduled (or the Future. ' The Creighton Mixers' club an nounces its annual May dance, which will be held at Keep's academy Tues day evening. May I. This will be the last, dance before the final examina tions and will also be a farewell to a number of the students who are plan ning to. leave for the reserve officers' training camp. .In honor of Miss Grace Coppock, a missionary in China, whose work there ,is supported by the University of Nebraska Young Women's Chris tian association, there wilt be a re ception Saturday morning in the Young Women's Christian association parlors for women who are alumnae of the university.'' Miss Coppock is a state university graduate. 1 Plana for May Fete. Besides the dancing on the green at the May fete May 2 at 4 o'clock in the Joslyn gardens by Miss Portia Swett and her former pupils, Mrs. Hazel Smith Eldridge will sing wood land tongs attired as a Grecian maiden. There will be no ticket sale in advance for the fete, which is given for the benefit of the Unitarian church building fund. Tickets will be sold at the entrance to the gardens, both at ! Thirty-ninth and at Fortieth streets. Mrs. Draper Smith has charge of the tickets and Mrs. Robert Leav ens of the candy sale. A bevy of young girls will assist Mrs. Leavens. Arthur L. Palmer, Justin V. Re fregier, William de Winter, Alan Mc Donald, Daniel Cary arid David W. Starr will take charge at the gates. About the Luncheon Tablet. Mrs, M. M. Murray and Mrs. F. R. Robinson entertained , thirty-two guests at bridge luncheon at the Ulackstone. The guests were seated at one large table decorated with sweet peas. Members of the English literature class which has met with Mist Kate McHugh for the last -two years were entertained at luncheon at the Black stone by Mrs. A. H. Fetters. This p?rty will be probably the last social affair giirrn by the members this year because of their desire to conserve I GIVES UP SENIOR JOYS FOR WAR RELIEF WORK. DOROTHY DAHLMAN. Monticello commencement festivi ties, in which Miss Dorothy Dahl man, daughter of the mayor and Mrs. Dahlman, and Miss Florence Rahm, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Rahm, would have participated, will he aban doned this year, by vote of the stu dent body. All the money which would have been expended in these social functions will go towards a fund to endow an ambulance for war relief work. This is the spirit being shown at many of the eastern schools. during the war. The lesson in lit erature followed the luncheon. Mrs. Moshier C. Colpetzer enter tained at luncheon at her home, hon oring Miss Mary Burkley, whose marriage to Mr. Lawrence Brinker is an event of.next week. Sweetheart roses and bridal novelties marked the places for twelve guests. Mrs. J. H. Beaton had as her lunch-( eon guests informally at the Black stone in honor of Mrs. Frank Wilkint of Detroit Mesdames George Seahury, W. L. Vaughan, V. R. Gould, Tom Allen and Miss Alice Troxell and Miss Gertrude Branch. . Mrs. William C. Schopp gave a bridge luncheon for forty guests, complimentary to Miss Anna Welch, whose wcddiig to Mr. Joseph Mullin takes place Saturday. Pink and white, carried out in tweet peas and roses, with bridal arrangements, marked the luncheon. The guests were seated at one large table 'and several smaller ones. In Clubdom, Rockford college alumnae will meet at the home of Miss Alice Redg wick next Wednesday at '2 o'clock. Selling papers- and magazines is a plan fpr raising money for war relief work which) U. S. Grant Woman'a Re lief corps is considering. The corps begins its work of making hospital supplies in the Baird building May 1. At a meeting held at the home of KlrsH. S. Wilcox, Tuesday, talks waregiven by the president, Mrs. J. N. Taliaferro, and Mrs. ,Abbie A. Adams, past national president. A dinner ring with three diamonds mounted in filagree platinum was pre sented Mrs. E. M. Syfcrt, retiring president of . the Ofnalia Woman's club, by the members, at the club's twenty-fourth birthday party Tues day at the Blackstone hotel. Mrs. Mary I. Cfeigh, first vice president, made the presentation speech. To Honor Visitors. Mt. and Mrt. John Madden gave an Orpheum party followed by sup per at the Fontenelle Monday eve ning for Mrs.fClara McGrew and Miss Jean Pellegrini of Montgomery, Ala., old friends of Mr. J. A. Cavers, whb have been his house guests since Fri day. They left last evening for the east. The evening of their arrival Mr. Cavers gave an Orpheum party in their honor. Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. James Love Paxton gave a dinner-dance for them at the Omaha club? Many informal functions are being given in ' honor uf Mrs. Llewellyn Jones of- Taconra, Wash., who is visit ing her mother, ' Mrs. Robert Doh erty. In her honor Mrs. Martha Hcth entertained Monday. Tuesday afternoon Mrs. Selwyn Doherty had six guests at the Orpheum. today she is having eight guests at an informal tea and Thursday Mrs. Philip Potter is entertaining for Mrs. Jofies. Mr. and Mrs. (1 Louis Meyer, Mr. and Mrs. Windsor Megeath, Miss Helen Clark, Herbert and Robert Connell and Harry Koch made up the party entertained at the theater last evening by Miss Mary Megeath, com plimentary to Miss Phyllis Luman of Salt Lake City. Supper at the Fon tenelle followed. Miss Mayion Towle's luncheon for Miss Luman, who is vis iting her sister, Mrs. Meyer, will be given next week. Social Gossip. Mrs. E. C. Morgan of St. Joseph. Mo., arrived Monday for a three weeks' visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Wilson. Mr. Mor gan wilt come up to spend this week end in Qtnaha. - Miss Amy Burgess,' maid of honor at the Slabaugh-Aikin wedding, plans to remain in Omaha as the guest of Miss Gladys Goodman until Friday, wtien she' will 'return to her home in Winona, lit, Mrs. Robert McClelland - and daughter, Myra, have gone to Cali fornia for a stay of a few weeks. Upon their return they will take the Clement Chase home at 201 South Thirty-second street. Mr. and Mrs. John Davis of Pilger. MAM RON THl RICHEST CMK NRUM. WHEAT COOKSIHIZ MlnUTIS. COOK BOOK FREE SKIMMER HF6.C0. OMAHA. U.S.A. MACARONI Neb., are spending a few days in Omaha at the Fontenelle. Judge and Mrs. D. W. Glasscock ot Mission. Tex., and Mr. T. M. Taylor of Houston are guests at the John H. Shary home until Tuesday, when Mr. and Mrs. Shary accompany their guests back tu Texas. Miss Agnes Undeland, who with her sister. Mitt Jean Undeland, has been teaching music in Gillette, Wyo., for the last year, returned luesday for a three weeks' visit with her par ents, Mr, and Mrs. A. L. Undeland. Wedding Announcement. The marriage of Miss Agnes Nel son and Mr. A. A. Oelsligle of Tilden, Neb., was solemnized at 6 o'clock this morning at St. John's church, Father Ryan officiating. A wedding breakfast at the home of Mrs. E. A. Mickel followed. Miss May Mickel and Mr. P. E. Clarkin were the only attendants. . The bride was married in her go- away suit of pearl gray. After a short wedding trip the young people will be at home in Tilden. Mental Housekeeping By BEATRICE, FAIRFAX. Now that spring is here mot of us are about ready to take down the lace curtains and pack away our furs in moth balls. All the things which clutter up a house in the winter are going to be brushed and laid away so that summer's heat will find our places as open and airy as possible. I wish we could all settle down to clearing our minds of the "junk" which has accumulated there and that we might leave them as neatly swept and garnished and open to air and "unshine as our houses-are soon to bel The averaVe mind issomething like a badly regulated novelty shop which has grown down at the heels tfirough dust and dirt and years of mismanagement, It is full of things which its owner doesn't want and wouldn't know how to get if he did. If I could attend to the spring housecleaning of the average mind, the very first 'things I should take down would be the thick and dusty lace curtains of tradition. Tradition is all very well if you take a small piece of it and look at it with an amused knowledge that it is a fairy tale woven around yesterday. But if vou let it net between you and the fact that the world is ad vancing and progressing and step ping up on yesterday to reach to day, it simply shuts off from your own vision all the sunshine and fresh air of new thought. After I had taken down the blind ing curtains of tradition I should at once put away in camphor all the draperies of sorrow. Sorrow has been called "the mere rust of the soul;" but I think that it is far more like the, stifling plush drapery and portieres with w hich people make their houses musty and airless, and dusty and dead. Activity and thought will cleanse and brighten your mental processes as soon as you get your mind out of the heavy swathjngs of sorrow. nh.. i .1.! ; I I 4 lie next iniug in niy nuusci idli ng would be to punch up all the pillows and cushioned upholsteries of habit and lay them away for the summer. Then I should enter the closets in which hung my garments of memory and regret. I should shake them out thoroughly and put them away. I Now with tradition and sorrow and habit and memories and regrets neatly laid away in camphor or if I could get the courage to do it sold to the old clothes man! I should consider it about time to clean the house I have so thoroughly cleared. First, up would go the windows and in would come a stream of the sunshine and fresh air of honesty and sincerity. Then for the soap and water and scrubbing brushes of open-mindedncss and plain truth ap plied with rough courage and plenty of it. By that time I think the mind I was lrbusccleaning would be a pretty habitable placet After all, when you clear out the stupid, outworn notipns which you have - mechanically been accepting without reasoning about them or ex amining them, and when you open your mind to honest facts and big realities, and rctuse to squirm away from a contemplation of yourself, as yon are, you have put your House of Thoughts in very good order. But you have to keep it open. J he min ute you shut it against facts and take the stupid, old "if it's good enough for my grandmother it's good enough down the blinding curtains of tra for me" attitude, you are pulling down the blinding curtains of tradi tion. - An open mind cannot heln receiv ing healthy and vivid impressions. And it reacts to- them sanely and well. How is anyone toxget anywhere it he rouses to see life as it is and to examine things as they are? I I STAR" What Am" ! . Wlth Stow coving I f'!'t-!rFMrvf nfFmnVhTl c"'fal h0"-"-' ' 1 ' e i V rlilil m?l "odns. Youll know them by I ' I 7 Vt-m.. n.. ..FFFrVI ""' OvalUb.Uh.fcmoo.o.0,nty. iW I'ir'lStlluWi mr,0'P'no 'n fcod productt. llwrr-J''. 7 i llrfFli AKM"hcoMpA ! Charm of Black and White The charm of black and white is carefully illustrated in this little frock, which stands half way between tepa rate waist and skirt and the one-piece "little dress" of the winter. The blouse is of white taffeta, boldly collared in black. The btack twists into a broad surplice, which edges the belt and asserts itself again as pipings on the cuffs and the facing for the sash. The black taf feta skirt is an emphasized peg top, with a tendency to climb up over the skirt in wide cartridge plcirS. The hat is an enormous cloche of leghorn, which widens at the sides and has a deep binding and flaring loop of velvet. . - Parks Has Hauled Over 2,400 Loads ot Rubbish Commissioner Parks of the Street Maintenance' department reports that revised figures for Monday show a total of 1,206 loads of refuse hauled on the first day of the city-wide clean up. On Tuesday 1,263 loads were moved. The work has not been fin ished. For Good Printing at LowPrices CALL "TYLER 14" Printed Itaotneor. Card! tt.SS Printed Enrelopee, 3xtt. .SS.tS Printed Letter lleute, 8 Villi 3.j Printed Envelope Encloeurai tl-oO Bill Berate, Statement! and Other Print ins at KeaeonftMe Plieee. Sample and 'Prices of All Kindt of Printed Mattel bent Free Loon Keqneet. ROSE PRINTERY 1SI1H FARNAM, ROSE BLILDLNn. AJtForGtf The Original Nouriihinf DelicJoua Diftatibla Safe Milk lor Infante, Invalids and Cn-owJne Children. Tot Orifioil Food-Trlna For All Afee. y 11 seQ TODAY'S BEAUTY. HINT It is not necessary to shampoo your hair so frequently if it h en tirely and properly cleansed each time by the use of a really good shampoo. The easiest to use and quickest dry ing shampoo that we can recommend to our readers is one that brings out all the natural beauty of the hair and may be enjoyed at very little expense, by dissolving a teasponful of can throx, which can be obtained from any druggist, in a cup of hot water. This makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, enough so it is easy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. This when rubbed into the scalp ,and onto every strand of hair, chemi cally dissolve all impurities. It is very soothing land cooling in its ac tion, as well as beneficial to both scalp and hair. After rinsing out the lather so created, you will find the scalp is fresh, clean jand free from dandruff, while the hair dried quickly and even- I ly, developing a bright (luster and a I soft ftuffiiiess that makes it seem very i heavy. Advertisement. Rich Milk, Malted Crraln Krtract In Pnwdan utatttutM Con YOU tin Price, . delicate stomach to the dangers that raw cows' milk ao often carries. Thousands of mothers are finding the right way every day. They are bringing up their babies on WesflesF6d3 (A Complete Milk Food Not a Milk Modifier) NestleVs is milk from healthy cows, purified the tough, heavy curds are modified other baby needs are added. Reduced to a powder, it comes in an air-tight can no germ can reach it. To prepare, you add only fresh water and boil one minute. It is a com plete food containing all the nourishment needed to build a happy, healthy baby. Nurse your baby if you can if you can't i keep him sale on Nestle s Food. 1 1 r-Bel I All Wheat j 1 lj y tee is no-1 RytoEat HUOSAi HaiilAiavK. - III four growing cMdren and inval ids, than a dish of KriimMes with milk or cream . "H Look for the SlVj sigtiature Canadian KALEIDOSCOPE of tunny tiles ard rivers of ice, pic turesque Indian and up-to-date American, Totem pole 1 and gold mines, dog teams and luxurious trains reached by delightful Canadian Pacific steamers passingthrongh island-dotted Inside passage and ''wltered fjords of the British Columbia Coast to the Land of tho Midnight Sun. On your way to and from the Coast take in to; panoramic route of the Canadian Pacific Raifwsy "ThM World'! Neatest Highway" nd do the Canadian Pacific Rockies. N aide-trips necessary. Enjoy the comforts of the great hotels it Banff, Lake Louise, Field and Glacier. For full information phone, call or writ for Tour No. S-4. TKOS. J. WALL, jjjj or soasult your local agent f Hi 3o. 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There is a way to give your baby all the sood-in cows' milk without subiectinK hia Nestle's is building healthier, happier babies all over the world. Send fhe coupon for a FFEB Trial Package of 12 nredintfe and a ooofc about beSiea, by epecjahere. NESTLE'5-FOOD COMPANY , Woolworth Building, New York Please eend me FREE your book and trial peckaEe. Name , I Addrei.... i City I Pacific H3tfc.es Oen. Ant PeesV Dept. Louise With it magnificent harbor and fine new i Canadian Pacific Hotel. A city of motor drives UTwurpoUMtl. Frodtf icnitj trees, oreio trip- tmonc the Hands of iiKDnt4ia jirt wmterwsja. Golf. -Port for Alaska Trow Pacific TravmL 1 Mil i