Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 24, 1917, Page 6, Image 6

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    s
SEE : OMAHA. SATURDAY, . NOVEMBER 24, 'l917. .
I
i
Nam.
Dinner Hour
OMAHA RESPONDS
TO THE BEE'S PLAN
TO DINETHE BOYS
. Many Large Affairs Arranged
For Soldiers For Thanksgiv
ing Day; Plenty of Eats
and Amusement,
i
Twenty-five soldiers will bless
Mr. and Mrs. W. li. Burke and the
party of friends who are planning a
. festive Thanksgiving day for them,
perhaps the largest and most unique
affair to be held in Omaha that day.
The Burkes thought The Bee's plan
for entertaininar soldiers in lefcal
homes on Thanksgiving day such a
good one that they invited a number
of couples who belong to the same
club and several more inends to join
v them in giving a large party for the
soldiers at their home, 110 Daven
port street.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Schmittroth who
have a son, Vincent, in the Omaha
ambulance corps at Fort Tiaylor, Ky.;
Frank Tyrell, who belongs to the
Seventh regiment, and Mrs. Tyrell;
Mr. and Mrs. George Baier, Mr. and
Mrs. M Keiser, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
vr -j vf, t?,ii, tu;ii.-.
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Nelson, Mr. and front is a desolate, blackened waste, a
Mrs. D. G. Robb, Mr. and Mrs. Wil- type , of what the hot breath of war
liamSchneckenberger.Mr.aridMrs.J." has done. No American is better fit
J. Sexton, Mr. and Mrs. F. C Smith ted to picture the priceless treasures
and Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Van Horn lost at Kheims, Noyon, Arras, Laon,
will assist in entertaining the twen- St. Quentin, Verdun and many other
ty-five soldier boys. They Save al- French towns than ir. Edwards, who
ready invited six and have called on knew and loved them all. He has il-
The Bee to bid the remaining guests, lustrated his text with 32 plates in
Call for Soldiers iiuh twiur ana monotone, irom araw-
' A..tr.ut.. ,;ii tu. w. ,n8 rnadc just before the war. The
Automobiles will call for the boys book is Bx inches jn js hand.
gomely printed and bound and put
, dinner ? supper, with plenty of up in &corilted box. '
(Fill in this blank and send it to The Bee.)
Thanksgiving Dinners for the Soldiers
To The Omaha Bee: '
In accordance with your plan of securing-Thanksgiving day en
tertainment for the soldiers stationed at the two Omaha military
posts, you are hereby authorized to extend a dinner" invitation to
.soldiers on behalf tf '
Address. ....................................
In co-operation with the officers in charge, The Bee will issue the invitations for you with request
that the guest communicate his acceptance direct to his host. If you wish to invite a particular soldier,
please so note. v
Fiction.
VANISHED HALLS AA'D CATHEDRALS
OF FRANCE. By OiorKe Wharton Ed
wardi. The Penn Publishing company,
A fifteenth century monk carved on
the porch on his church in Picardv
"Ye know not in what hour the de
spoiler cometh. Today the porch
is a ruin and the smiling valley in
noon.
Twenty-five or more soldiers will
be entertained at 1 hanksgiving , din
. ner through the efforts of Mrs. Arthur
Lockwood, who has had charge of
placing the men lor, Sunday dinners
through the Calvary Baptist church.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac W, Carpenter wilt
have five; H. J. Bailey, four;
Lnc Nelson and Mrs. S. V. Iul!a-
way, three each, and G. W.
Noble, George Haney, Walter
Loomis, George Green, D. D. Hall
; and Miss Ida Blackmore, two each,
Louis Ahko, Chinese restaurant
keeper, asked The Bee to invite six
. soldiers for him. Mr. and Mrs. George
M. Durkee. whose son, Lieutenant
Raymond Durkee, is at the balloon
school, will entertain six men.;
Mrs. G L. Roberts, 5601 North
Thirtieth street, a motherly little
person, called at The Bee office to
. extend an invitation to "six of the
THE DEVIL'S OWN. ' By Randall ParrUh.
A. C. M$Clur ft Co. 11.40.
, The tale concerns chiefly a diaboli-
cal 'plot by Joe Kirby (The Devil's
Own) to first ruin at poker Judge
Beaucaire, a Missouri olanter. anil
then set possession of his daughter.
This comes to the knowledge of Lieu
tenant Knox, who happens to be on
the boat where the ptot is weaved.
He is powerless to prevent the rob
bery and the death of the judge,
which follows, but he takes the cause
of the girl as his own and in a scries
of exciting adventures defeats the
scheme of the villainous gambler. The
time is at the outbreak of the Black
Hawk war. which forms oart of the
background of the story.
THB SAFETT CURTAIN, and Other
Stories. By Ethel M. Dell. a. P. Put
nam's Bona. 11.60. .
Striking and forceful as have been
youngest and lonesomest soldier boys f" J" !. .i J u . . " ,
infim-k" V nave possessed as much strength and
chairs for horses. They act as ushers
to their-parents, their dollies and
imaginary, auditors. The children
hemselves do some of the preaching.
At the conclusion the children take
the imaginary ride back to their
home. In addition to thii there are
many Old Testament scenes which
are enacted. Each of the fifty-two
sermons has a number of illustrations
and the full color page pictures make
the book exceedingly attractive.
X THOUSAND HEALTH QUESTIONS ANS
Jack
, writes
two soldiers whoJiave no friends. or
. family, during the war. "I wantxto
write to them and try to do all I can
- for them while they are in service."
I He encloses train directions, in case
the boys will be permitted to go that
, far for Thanksgiving dinner.'
Further invitations to the soldiers
have been received as follows:
Scrnt. W J. Ruill,.4IJme p. Johnson...,!
ilrs. D, 3. Morris., ,4 John Van Wl.. I
Ho. 1. Ti4nnlcllff..3lMra. Kate leader..!
Ir. Lee W. Kdwerlf.lao. J. McDonald. ,.l
V. H. Davtca...v....8IW. S. Merrlam .1
Sirs. A. u Branaon,.llJohn Reardon , 1
K. 8. Tucker........:! , , '
fVRnW nf rw TJtv ' T c"ann inesc. rrom tne moment
The Bee he would like to adopt ZtJL'Z .uPS fr? th
burning stage into the protection of
! a stranger's outstretched arms, to the
time when the latter stands a bul
wark between her and a remorseless
pursuer bent on again enslaving her,
love is the safety curtain that shuts
odt the perils that threaten to over-
wrfclm. Not less interesting are the
other four long stories of the volume.
WITH THB CHILDREN ON SUNDAYS. By
'"" mail, fne vir ruDiishlnr; Co.
f 1.K0. ( , ,
' In this book the author !ntmrtnria
the idea of "Playing Church." The
little ones c'rive to church, with
WERED. By J. Ik KellOKK. Good Health
Publlahlng Co. '
FoK forty years, the writer of this
volume has each week stood before
an audience pf invalids at the Battle
Creek sanitarium to open a popular
question box. Out of the 70.000 or
80,000 questions something more than
a thousand have been selected, which,
with their answers, constitute this
volume. The range of topics consid
ered is sufficiently large to cover in a
fairly comp-ehensive wav the whnl
subject of practical hygiene as related
to the homeland individual.
A PRINCESS OF MARS. Bw Rrtr mM
Borrougha. A. C. McClurf & Co. $1.15.
AiT absorbing tale of adventure and
romance 43,000,000 miles from earth.
It is hardly too much to say it is the
boldest piece of imatrinative fiction in
this generation. John Carter, Ameri
can, goes to sleep in a mysterious
cave in the Arizona desert and wakes
up on the planet Mars. There he
meets with a succession of weird and
astounding adventures, which follow
e3ch other so rapidly as to make it
impossible to stop reading until the
story is finished. '
SECRET BRED. By F. Tennyaon Jeaae.
George H. Doran company. Ii.se,
The book has beauty, humor, color.
grandeur, a wealth of characters and
a most original and striking situation.
The theme is the passion for posses
sion, for ownership, whether it be of
lands or things or other lives. The
subject is not so' much the lift of
the Characters of the story as it is
human life itself- the whole pageant
of human emotion.
A TREASURY OF WAR POETRY. By
George Herbert Clarke. Houghton Mifflin
Co. 11.55.
Among the numerous collections of
war poetry, this of about 130 poems
stands out for its completeness and
distinction, and from the fact that it
contains important poems by import;
ant authors which have not been ac
cessible to other anthologies, includ
ing the best recent works of Kipling,
uaiswuimy, Aiascnen, nenry van
ijyke, Altred Noyes, Alan Seeger,
ttuperi crooke, vachel Lindsay, Jose
phine .Preston Peabody. Robert
eriuges, and many others.
TOTE-ROAD. AND TRAIL. By Douglas" Mai
loch. Bobba-jJcrrli: Co. 11.25.
Mr. Malloch is the laureate of the
lumDer camps, ot the men who, strike
out beyond the pale of civilization
ana tace the erementa strife w th na
ture. He sings of the open, of hard"
work, ot cold, ot exposure, of bravery
and sacrifice, of rough living and
rough loving. Tote-Road and Trail
is a book for all who love the open
road and believe in the philosophy of
suusnine.
--L.
luuiw.w uke AT BRITAIN. By Robert
bhackleton. The Fenn Publishing com
pany. $2.50.
This is the record of an actual trln
uiauc oy inoior in line ann. .srntinnrf
and Wales. Mr. Shackleton has the
keenest possible eye for beautv. for
quaint interest and for the things of
practical use to travelers. Whether
you intend to travel by steam or by
gasoline or to make a stay-at-home
journey, mis reaaaDie Beok will be in
valuable.
atAAUKAQORA. Poems. By John Cowper
y. Arnold onaw, ruDUshers. $1.25.
That strange gift of creative imagi
nation which has wor for John Cow
per Powys his unique position as nov
elist, critic and lecturer, becomes in
Mandragora more exalted and -more
ecstatic, -carrviner us irreict;h!w
; the realm of pure poetry. Here au
thentically is revealed John. Cowper
l owys the pjet. .
Atn-T .B CITX B" en Oaa
trellSeely. A. C. McClurg & Co. $1.35.
A most realistic story and study of
boy life. The pranks, escapades, phys
ical encounters, battles on the play
ground, home life of John Fletcher
and his chums are set forth in a way
that has not been matched since Mark
Twain wrote his immortal books of
boy life. ,
MY HOME IN THE FIELD OF MERCY.
, By Frances Wilson Huard: George H.
Doran company. $1,35. .
t This is the story of the glorious' re
habilitation of the home in the field of
honor into a home of mercy and suc
cor for the wounded French.
THE WONDER WOMAN. By Ma Van
Norman Long. Tha Penn Publishing
, company. $1.15. .
little house by the lonely lake and
everything is changed for Davtd and
Joey and Wanza. ,
MisceRanebus. .
CASTAWAY ISLAND. By Perry Newberry.
The Penn Publishing .company. $1.76.
A tropical storm swept over Ecua
dor one day and blew Robert Trevlin
out into the Pacific. That might have
beefi the end of his story if Jeffers
Mimson, a soldier of fortune, had not
been at his side. Together they
found a way to cheat the sea and
landed on one of the Galaoaeos isl
ands. There, under the equator, they
found such colorful adventure as falls
to the lot of few men. The story is
a rich mine of information about prim
itive tropical life. ,
AMONG CS MORTALS. By "F. P. A." and
W. E. Hill. Houghton, Mifflin company.
$1.00. v ...
The book ib very largely Mr. Hill's
work and consists of his drawines
which have been so successful in the
New York Tribune and -elsewhere.
With richly humorous insieht and re
markable artistic expression, he has
depicted the humors of the apartment
house, the foot ball game, the college
prom, the afternoon tea, etc. From
these he has selected a group of his
best arrd most representative works
and Franklin P. Adams has provided
characteristic comment.
Looking for work? Turn to the
Help Wanted Columns,1 now. You
will find hundreds of positions listed
there. ' -. ;" "
wnfMiimimmiiiHijniimiimmw
.. .... i
Our immense assortment
of high grade quality
home furnishings makes
it easy for you to select
the needed articles for the
home and at prices less
than you had expected to
pay and as usual you
1 make your own terms
by Emanuel
Sweden ho rg
. at a nominal price 5 c
, Any or all of the following four volume
will be tent, prepaid, to any addresa or
receipt of 5 cents per boot
"Heaven and Hell" "632 page
"Divin Providence" 629 "
"The Four Doctrines" 635 "
"Divine Love and Wiedom" 618 "
Each book it printed in larqe type on
good paper, and it well bound in ttiff
paper cover; the price of be in no wag
indicates' the quality of paper, printinf
f 10 0 " ' j
. o 1
High Grade
Dressers
In a very large range of pat
terns to select from in the Gold
en and Fumed Oak and in the
Mahogany, Walnut, Bii'd'sey
Maple and Old Ivory finishes.
Large values, at
$10.75, $14.95, $19.50,
$26.50 and Up
kind binding, which are high grade in
every respect.
The" Mind That Think arid The
Heart That Feel of Orthodox or
Agnostic are equally touched and
stirred by Swedtnborg's religious and
ethical teachings, which are based upon
a wonderfully profound interpre
tation of
f.
THE HOLY BIBLE
I David Dale, the "fixing man," and
Joey, his adopted son, live by the
towering mountains in a tittle cabin,
and to them across the woodsy solif
tudes comes Wanza in her peddler's
cart, Wanza, lover of all living things.
Then , the Wonder Woman opens' heV
They will help you peraonallvlo a
rational understanding of the Word of
God to a clearer conception of the
spiritual s ignitication ot creation; of
the toys of heaven and the miseries of
hell; of the process of dying and the
life of the real man: and of what the
final judgment consists.
This Society la Incorporated and largely
endowed for the purpose of printing -and
distributing Swedenborgs Wrltinga. and
the offer is made In pursuance of that object
The nominal price or c per volume Is
named to Insure that the applicants for
the books snow sufficient interest to warrant
ending them. , av
, AJJreu all orders to Room ,
The American Swedenborg
Printing & Publishing Society
Room 145, 3 West 29th St, New York
Up to $10
SKIRTS
in Sale Sitorday .
1508-1S10
Douglas St.
1508-1510
Douglas St.
Up to 600
BLOUSES
in Sale Saturday
SOT
As a Grand Finale to Our
K : . j .......Tvioui; uaica, itc vncr ror oailiraav
never - to - be fororbttftn
$Q85
Two
9,
s
rn a
JAW
U be ml. f -
event
Saturday, the last day of our Anniversary
Sale, points the way to the 'greatest A p.
parel savings of the year. We're de
termined to , end this aale with even,
; Bretter crowds, greater enthusiasm, more
active buying than enjoyed on the open. -Ins
day. We're offering greater values,
an equally broad assortments, which
can t help but prove a magnet to Omaha
choppers. . y
Come Saturday, expecting the most ttart.
ling apparel values ever offered by any
Omaha store Wn November. Come pre.
pared to get your full share of the extraor
dinary offerings.
Because oi the ei
(rune low prices, Be
exrhangea
fond
towed.
$19.50 $25 $29.50 & $35.00
Coats, Suits, Dresses
SATURDAY'S A - a a
ANNIVERSARY I S.00
PRICE
SUITS at
$jgoo
Clever styles of Burella
Cloth. Pnnliwe , ti,a
cloth, Velours, shown In
Kreen, navy, brown,
burgundy. All Bize3
black,
to U.
valued iii
mm hU
li.
i ar jrr
Large Fireside Rockers
Big, comfortable, roomy rock
ers, upholstered in moroccoline,
genuine Spanish leather, tapes-'
tries. Priced, at
$12.50, $17.50,
$27.50, $32.50
Stewart Phonographs
Made "entirely of metal;
patented tone-arm and
spring motor. Plays any
'make of record. C Aft
.Our low price.. ,'uu
Terms:
50c Cash, 25c Weekly
Quality Home Outfits
m
Three Rooms
Furnished
Complete..,.
Four Rooms
Furnished
Complete. . . .
r r j
Granitew.'re
Granite t?
Cups. . JC
14-quart dish
K28c
T u r key
Roasters
Made of a heavy grade of
?raniteware a n d ' large
anough to roast a turkey.
Our low
price V.
Dining Room Tables
You will be surprised at the
largeness of the assortment and
the smallness of the prices.
jSany in the Golden and Fumed
Oak, ; in the massive Colonial
designs. Many others are Pe
riod reproductions. Priced, at
$10.95, $14.75,
$19.50, $27.50
Our Inexpensive Loca
tion, Our Thoroughly
Organized W or king
Forces and Our Con
solidated Buying Pow
er, Enable Us to Make
You the Lower Prices.
, COATS at
$1500"
Practical Styled Coats
nugh collars, novelty belt i
effects, fur. plush and '
fabric fur trimmed; all de
sirable colors. Styles for
miss or matron.
3Mfrvtrrr-n,n '
DRESSES at
$goo
Serges, Silks and Satins,
introducing doiens of new
style Ideas. Navy, sand,
Burgundy, green, black:,
Plum, brown, etc.;' broad
assortments.
$35 $39.50
$45
Coats.-
Suits, Dresses
SATURDAY'S d0 4 7C
ANNIVERSARY H rial 5
PRICE .
- Attend tils aale In
-, the - forenoon x l(
poasible. 8etHhma
are better, so la the
st Ice.
, SUITS at
$247S
Rich Broadcloths, Gabardines;-
Serges, Velours In
navy, black, green, Bur
gundy, dper, plum; wide
range of clever styles. Val
ues most extraordinary.
COATS at
$2475
Pom Poms, Kerseys,
Brdadcloths, V'eldurs;
every new style creation;
every color that's in favor.
It's your coat-buyinff op
portunity. -
DRESSES at
2475
Rich Satins, Georgettes,
Silks and Men's Wear
Serge. Strikingly attrac
tive models; all colors,
assortments extremely,
broad. .
STOVES
It is easy to select the Heat,
er or" Range that suits" you
best from our immense stock
of guaranteed stoves.
"Heaters and Hotblasts in
a" large range of styles and
patterns ;
$4.75. $8.95 $17.50
and Up.
iteel Range (Absolutely
guaranteed in every respect
and splendid bakers. Heavy
nickel trimmings. Priced, at
$29.50, $37.50,
$49,50, $54.50
T.
A Steel Rang Placed in
Your Hom cn 30 Days'
Fraa Trial.
Columbia Graf onolas
A complete
line of the va
rious styles and
patterns to se
lect from
Priced from
$18.00 $i85
"UR CHRISTMAS
GRAFONOLA CLUB
ihousands of
Columbia
Double Disc
Records to
select from.
$1.00 a Week
Puts a
Columbia .
Grafonola
in Your
Home.
14
Mite
Jf" t " . " - ' . ...
- .MwwMMwywwMW (Mllw...r
a-rmay tvenmg, November 30.
Christmas Money for Our
r,..i. i r- : 1
vuiwuui ana visitors.
TWENTY GRAND PRire
First Grand Prize, $20.00 in
TkT.i 11
iexc mree prize winners 5
"U1 c;wve $iu.uu each in gold
ixext iour prize winners will!
receive $5.00 each in c-nH
Next twelve
ii k winners
will receive $2.50 each in gold.
V in GOLD
Vs i m& i
s ' - - - - mvr00Vftw
IMmQlTmrrma m
I The People's Store. . Opposite Hotel Rome P
aniiiimiira
B
S
- A