Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 26, 1918, Page 13, Image 13

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THE BEE: OMAHA. SATURDAY. JANUARY 26, 1918.
-la-
Adelaide Kennerty
Ella Fleishmatv
ASS'T BDITOR-
V
By MELLIFICIAJan. 25
WT -tt T.. T
A Sammy, doi..g his bit in France,
when asked what he wanted for
Christmas replied, "Letters." Not
candy or cigarets or sweaters or any
of the usual things, but just letters.
Writing home to his mother, he said
that the boys just live for mail time
and no matter if they be enveloped
in 10 sweaters and fed on "chicken
king," life is a dreary, waste if there
are no fat envelopes from far away
home in the mail bags.
A soldier in the same company
overseas has been subjected to a
great deal pf "kidding" from his com
panions as his Christmas mail from
home brought a box of soap. Not
one or two bars, but a whole boxl
Needless to say, the soap was from
the chap's mother, as she remembered
in days gone by his aversion to the
said article and far be it from her to
let him march in to Berlin with a
dirty neck. We haven't heard whether
it was 99J4 per cent pure or Little
Fairy, but we have no doubt the soap
has had its effect.
The news that Lieutenant Allen
A Tukey received 10 Christmas boxes
caused an-Omaha girl to say:
"From 10 different girls, I suppose.'
One never can tell. These dashing
young lieutenants, especially when
they are on duty "over there," have a
great attraction and there is no doubt
that many a pretty pair of hands have
packed goodies in Christmassy look
ing boxes for these lucky gentlemen.
Mrs. Lewis Honor Guest.
Mrs. Virgil Lewis of St. Louis will
be honor guest at a luncheon given
by th Omaha Woman's Press club in
the palm room of the Fontenelle,
Wednesday. Mrs. Lewis is a most
charming addition to the army set, as
Mr, Lewis is a flying cadet at Fort
(wiaha. Mrs. Lewis wears the deco
rations bestowed on her by both the
French and Russian governments at
Dinard, France, .. for her wonderful
work as a war nurse in different hos
pitals in these war devastated coun
tries. Musical Tea.
Mrs. Douglas Welpton entertained
at a musical tea at her home this aft
ernoon for her pupils. Aside from a
musical program a feature of the aft
ernoon was a musical spelling bee.
The guests chose sides and were
asked musical questions. Original
rhymes written by the different young
women were also read. Mrs. Beulah
Dale Turner of New York was honor
guest at the affair.
Luncheon and Cards.
Mrs. A. G. Lundgren entertained
at luncheon, followed by cards, at her
home Thursday in honor of Mrs.
Helga Lynn of Minden, Neb., who. is
a visitor in the city. Green and
white was used as a color scheme for
the table.
Prizes were won by Mrs. Hanson,
Mrs. Nelson, -.Mrs. Carmony, Mrs.
Dorland, Mrs. Bullock and Mrs. Lil
jegren. Family Movie Programs.
Vivian Martin in "Sunset trail" will
be shown at the Suburban theater
Friday night for the special family
program under the auspices of the
better films committee of the Wom
an's club. Harold Lockwood in
"Paradise Garden" will be shown at
the Lothrop, Billie Burke in "Arms
and the Girl" at the Hamilton, Elsie
Ferguson in "Barbary Sheep" at the
Apollo, Jack Pickford in "The Girl at
Home" at the Besse, Emily Stevens
- in "Fleeting Memory" at the Rohlff
and Alma Henlon in "One Law for
p jth" at the Grand. -
Box Parties.
Dr. W. O. Bridges will entertain at
a box party at the benefiit perform
ance to be given at the Brandeis Sat
urday evening:- :Mrs.'J)avid.St(jne!will
be with her mother'and- farher.Mrv
and Mrs. George A. Hoagland, in their
box that evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Waited Page will entertain a line
party of. 10 guests. ,
Officers. Entertain. . .
A nurnber of Fort Omaha officers
entertained at a box party at the Or
pheum Thursday evening, followed by
v supper at" the Fontenelle.
About Sergeant Bowen.
Sergeant Jack Bowen of the. for
estry reserve is believed to be on his
way to France. Sergeant Bowen is
a noncommissioned officer in the
largest regiment in the army, as it has
enrolled-7,000 men. Prior to his en
listment Sergeant Bowen was en
gaged in, forestry work in South Da
kota. ' He is the son of Mrs. William
R. Bowen of this city and was a pop
ular' member of the younger set dur
ing his school -days, as he graduated
from -the CentriL' High school and
also the Nebraska university.
Players Have Relatives in War.
Miss Anne Hamilton, the leading
woman of the Brandeis Players, who
will take the1-title role in the play
let, "When Jenny Comes Marching
Home," has an especial interest in
the performance, as her brother, Mr.
George Watkins, jr., of the Seventh
company, Fifth regiment, United
States marines, is now doing his bit
in France.
Mr. Sydney Riggs, who takes the
jjfcrt of the older brother, has four
brothers in the service of Uncle Sam,
two of whom are now in France. Both
Miss Hamilton and Mr. Riggs have
put their best efforts into producing
the playlet, and it is certain that a
war play comes close to both of them.
Gauze Cutting Machine.
The gauze-cutting machine ordered
by Omaha Red Cross chapter has ar
rived. Gould Dietz, Mrs. O... C. Redick
and Mrs. Walter Silver tried out the
labor-saving device at the Baird build
ing Thursday evening. They cut 200
sheets of gauze in one hour.
The machine will greatly facilitate
lie output of surgical dressings, the
v omen believe.
Gould Dietz has in mind to or
aniae a class of men to meet eve
;.ijifs in the Baird building and do the
sauze cutting. Also to cut the heavy
paper linings for the packing boxes.
"It's great exercise," he asseverates.
An executive meeting of Omaha
chapter was held at the Commercial
dub at noon.
GIRL DENIES SHE IS TO WED
PERSHING
1 :-OSIi l
lK:"v:;:'jk CHI :s
l':''V'':-?f' ll !
MI5S- ANITA SUTTON".
Cabled reports from Paris say that
Miss Anita Patton of California is
engaged to marry General Pershing,
commander of the American forces in
France. Miss Patton denies the re
port. "We have been asked in regard to
these reports before," she said.
"There is absolutely nothing to it."
: Lieutenant Patton, a brother of the
young woman, is one of the American
commander's staff.
Mrs. R. E. Buchtel and small sons,
Gerald and Jack, will leave Tuesday
for El Paso, Tex., wherie they will
be the guests of Lieutenant and Mrs.
John L. Sullivan.
Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Goodrich left
Thursday evening for Chicago to
spend a few days. They will prob
ably remain over for the automobile
show.
Mrs. William Locke and her infant
daughter, who are at Birchmont hos
pital, expect to come home Sunday.
Mrs. Beulah Dale Turner of New
York, who is visiting in the city for a
few days, has been asked to sing at
the Brick Presbyterian church in
New York, February 1. This church,
located on Fifth avenue, recently cele
brated its one hundred and fiftieth an
niversary. Mrs. Dale was asked to
sing on that occasion, but was en
gaged in war relief work at the time.
Miss Belle Dewey left Thursday for
Los Angeles, to be gone for a month
or two.
Style Tips
New headdresses follow Russian
lines.
Little hats have big ears composed
of straw.
Jersey in silk and wool is featured
by Rodier.
Slipover jackets are still exploited
by Lanvin.
Dahlias knitted of wool decorate
chap -jrux of crepe.
Sailors of duvet de laine are faced
with punta straw or lisere.
, -Bangkoks. promise to be as good
this .summer1 as last for wear at the
country club.
Patriotic Patricia" will select a
spring suit of silk and conserve the
wool.
Semi-tailored blouses of satin . or
Georgette are in the best of style.
Pockets no longer form ornamental
designs, but are hidden away in seams.
A new domino check is attracting
attention at the fabric counter.
Much iet is beinir used by the high
priestesses off hatdom.
: Athletic uiidies, maae or couoh
batiste, are patterned after garments
worn by men.
Lingerie frocks are composed of
fine handkerchief lineu in pastel
shades. , '
Hercules braid comes again into the
dresslight and puts soutache in the
shade.
Silk jerseys show motifs in high re
lief worked in flat and raised stitches.
Wnoff.lonirtVi rnat nf hlaelc Satin
jiwill be worn with white frocks this
coming summer.
Festive frocks of net are trimmed
with silk filet. Nets in all' the pastel
shades are fashionable. Palm Beach
is in a regular rainbow glow of these
delicate tints and colorings.
Hooverizing
Beef drippings can be used in gin
ger cake.
Always save sour cream for cheese
or cooking.
Honey and baked apples served to
gether are delicious.
Every man should know at least a
little about cooking.
Onion soup is a savjry dish to serve
on a cold night
Salmon can be used instead of cod
fish in potato cakes.
Add a sprig ot mint to new potatoes
while boiling them.
Fried filet of fish is excellent served
with cabbage salad.
When washing dishes leave the
saucepan till after the plates.
Save all the boxes that come to the
house with groceries in them.
Cut pickles into tiny bits and add
to potato salad to give relish.
Parker House rolls can be made
with a little cornmeal in them.
Eggs scrambled with lemon make
an appetizing, luncheon dish.
Mix the fruit with sugar and butter
for a fruit cake and it will not settle.
Cleanliness is a matter of tremen
dous importance in everything that
pertains to food.
Add a pinch of borax to the rinsing
water of handkerchiefs, if you would
have them a little stiff,
OLILOQUY OF m
MODERN EVE
There are always eggs to scramble and
your success or failure, fame or fortune,
depends on how you "scramble the eggs "
By ADELAIDE KENNERLY
HOW do you scramble your eggs?
Not the eggs in the frying pan alone, but the
eggs in life.
The HOW of everything is the all important word
in the world's progress today, commercially, spiritually
and intellectually.
We go through life wishing for the opportunity of
others wishing so loudly that we are unable to hear op
portunity's tapping, rapping at our door.
A great portion of humanity goes about its work
with indifference. It "gets by." Its fire is but a flick
ering little flame under a lukewarm pan of ambiiton into
which the eggs (opportunities) of life are listlessly
scrambled.
Cook and Critic.
The cook in the kitchen may justly feel proud if she
is an expert at scrambling the eggs. It is as honorable
to be an expert cook as an expert critic.
The mechanic who knows all the little ins and outs
of his job has a great deal to his credit. Thomas Edi
son, remember, is an expert mechanic who knows better
than anyone else how to "scramble his eggs."
Salespeople need not feel at all humbled by the
clerking position. Great buyers, foreign buyers, have
been salespeople salespeople who were in earnest
about "scrambling their egg3."
So It Goes Through Life.
The eggs are the material with which everybody is
working and the scrambling is the manner in which the
material is moulded into finished products.
No matter to what station in life you belong, no
matter in what position you find yourself, there are al
ways "eggs to scramble," and your success or failure,
ascent or descent, fame or fortune, depends on how you
"scramble the eggs."
white, red, or blue according to their
rank.
A really big business is carried on
in this warehouse a remarkable busi
ness institution, where every woman
from "boss" censor to humblest voir
unteer who gives a few hours service
a day, works without ay.
Red Cross Workers 111.
Mrs. F. W. Carmichael and Mrs.
Frank Ellick, indefatigable workers
at the Red Cross public shop, are ill
at their homes with the prevalent
grippe. Mrs. R. B. Zachary, assistant
to Mrs. Silver in the Baird building
shop, is also home ill.
Two More Red Cross Rooms.
Two more rooms in the Baird build
ing may be taken over for Red Cross
work, according to Mrs. Walter Sil
ver, chairman of the surgical dressings
department. Negotiations for the in
creased space, which is greatly need
ed, are under way.
$227 Red Cross Rooster.
Talk about the high cost of living 1
A rooster brought $227 at Wahoo,
Neb., Thursday.
It was at an auction sale for the
benefit of the Red Cross, staged by
F. J. Kirchman of that place.
"If a rooster costs $227, what would
a whole flock of chickens costs?" L.
W. Trester would like to know.
Red Cross Warehouse
h Managed and 'Manned?
Entirely by the Women
A warehouse, planned, managed,
and "manned" by women that is the
new state inspection warehouse of the
Red Cross in the Haubens building,
Twelfth and Farnam streets.
The whole fourth floor has been
given over to this work under the di
rection of Mrs. Howard H. Baldrigc
Here all surgical dressings, knitted
articles, hospital garments and sup
plies of all kinds made in Nebraska
are shipped. They are received, in
spected and censored, repacked ac
cording to directions from national
headquarters and shipped direct to
France.
That one is in a warehouse seems
impossible. At any rate, it s different
than any other business institution
of its kind. You think you are in a
suite of shops, the walls and wood
works all finished in white, sanitary
and cleanly in appearance as any
hospital walls, the bins which line
the walls, filled with garments for
the comfort or to fill needs of our
soldiers.
The arrangement of rooms is most
business-like. The front office is for
the head of the "concern," Mrs. Bald
rigc. Then there is a compartment
for the surgical dressings censor, Mrs.
W. J. Mettlen; another fv the hos
pital supplies censor, Mrs. J. J. Mc
Mullen; and another for Mrs. Harvey
Newbranch, the knitting censor,
where each one of these women work
with their corps of volunteer assist
ants. Mrs. E. A. Pegau, receiver and
packer, has several rooms assigned
to her supervision. A man or two
wanders about here among the boxes
piled ceiling high, loading in a box
of supplies or taking it out.
All the women are attired in aprons,
white or green, and most of them
wear the becoming Red Cross veils,
Takes Chance in Trenches.
"What made Miss Oldgirl decide to
become a war nurse?
"Well, she has been a candidate for
matrimony for a good many years and
someDody tola ner mat tne men in tne
trenches are desperate enough for
anything." Richmond Times-Democrat.
Women are to be employed as
breaker hands, headtenders. weighers
and runners in the anthracite mines of
Pennsylvania.
Some of the most active real estate
brokers in New York City today are
women.
Buy Another
-CENTRAL
War Saving Stamp
UALVES
U ALUED
by the standard of
superior construc
tion, style and fin
ished detail of our
I B: I "a" I
y, Eg
'ivi. - f,1
BUFFETS
The Buffet illustrated is made of quartered oak, fumed
finish; is 50 inches in length, has large linen drawer at
base. THE VALUE, $21.00
Other Buffets, golden or fumed oak, $13.75, $18.75, $18.75
TABLES
42 inch top round Dining Table, fumed oak
$9.75, $12.75, $14.50.
45 and 48 inch tops, $16.50, $17.75, $21.50, up.
We open every day during the week
at 9 o'clock and close at 5, except Sat
urday, when we are open until 6 P. M.
WE SAVE YOU MONEY-THERE ARE REASONS
'EDS
HOWARD STREET BET. 15TH AND 16TH.
"Something' Old
and Something
New"
Jitney Dancers Will
Trip to Tunes of Fort
Crook Regimental Band
To give both a military atmosphere
and good music the Fort Crook regi
mental band will play for the jitney
dancers at the White Elephant sale
to be held in the Auditorium January
30-31. According to statements made
by the manager of the dancing pavil
ion, Omaha's young and old will en
joy this feature of the sale.
A booth which promises to be a
honey Jar for the children is the one
presided over by Mrs. Luther
Kountze, Mrs. Louis Clarke and Mrs.
James L. Paxton. It is the toy booth
and great quantities have already been
donated to these busy women.
News comes of a five-passenger new
Ford car which has been given to this i
sale, but the donor refuses to let "iti"
name be known for the present.
Honest?
Rabbi is plural for rabbit.
Buttress is a butler's wife.
A gulf is a dent in a continent
Poise is the way a Dutchman says
boys.
Prohibition means a very dry state
to be in.
Equinox is wild animal that Hs
in the Arctic.
Chivalry was in the days, of the
glacial period.
Etiquette teaches us how to be
polite without trying to remembtr
to be. V:
By GERTRUDE BERESFORD.
NEXT to life and love, a woman
clings to blue serge and fou
lard I Ask any woman of any
age, you know. This frock, while
possessing no strikingly novel char
acteristic, is yet ever new, because al
ways good style. Combined with
white broadcloth is fashion's latest
method of presenting foulard. A sur
prise waist blouse above a tunic,
which falls over a narrow border of
white broadcloth, mounted on a thin
foundation. A wide collar and cuffs
of white cloth are the only trimming
needed on this very simple waist.
Georgette crepe is another good fab
ric for this type of gown. In this
frock and a wide brim hat no woman
could fail to look well gowned and
well groomed.
Of Interest to Women.
Six counties of Kansas have women
county clerks.
The University of Pennsylvania has
1,623 women students this year.
Tlir "flr.1 wiftri ufntlipn than mpn in.
the student body of the University; of
Washington'.' ;
Mrs. J. W. Gale of Calgary is the
first woman to be elected tj the board
of aldermen of any city of Canada.
Miss Frank J. Emperor teceives a
salary of $1,500 a year as committee
clerk of the Denver city council.
New York women are organizing
a movement to give active aid in the
great task of reconstructing the war
devasted regions of France.
1621 FarNaM St.
A Monstrous Saturday Sale of
COAT
That You Can't Afford to Miss
Entire Stock of Women's Winter Coats
Thrown Out at Unheard of Reductions
FOUR BIG SALE GROUPS
$j)95
$14-
$2495
And they're worth double the price.
All the stylish materials.
All the popular colors.
All sizes from 16 to 44. . -
A Wonderful Sale of
BLOUSES'
We have gone through oar entire walst stock and ,
we picked out all waists that were slightly soiled
or mussed from handling. They ranged in price,
originally, from $5.75 to $9.50, and we offer the
entire lot Saturday at one price
V
$3.95
Georgette Crepe de Chine Satin.
None charged or delivered at this price. ;
a
' : . Women's Shop. " '
1 TOW j 1 1621 FARNAM ST.
1
mem
There is No Waste in
lteti$eU Package Foods
Most of the huAd Package Poods are cooked, ready to serve. Every ounce it
food. They represent doubly wise baying today; for there art no lart-overa. There's nothing to
be discarded or thrown away. And there is neither shrinkage in cooking nor fuel expense.
Cooked by Armour's scientific process, the original natural flavors are retained,
the rich juices conserved. Ail Armour Package Meat Products, sold under the quality guarantee
of the Oval Label, are packed under the purity protection of Government Inspection.
The W Package Food Line includes: . .
Sandwich Dainties Loaf Meals Mine Meat Peanut Barter Eraporated Mi!1c
Pork and Beans Tongues Vegetables Chili Sauce Oyster Cocktail Saves)
Luncheon Beef Sliced Bacon Fruits Rice Soups Fish Ketchup Etc
And all are uniform in quality. Wherever you see the Oval Label, you may
know you are getting Armour's best Ask your dealer for any or all of these package foods. .
223
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