Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 24, 1918, SOCIETY, Image 19

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Cfldelaide Ivenncrly
a ' trmti Truro J
Ella Plni.chmnit.'
m ASS'T EDITOR.
THE OMAHA SUNDAY EEE: FEBRUARY 24, 1918.
'
Monday
Omaha Woman's club, political
and social science department,
Metropolitan club, 2:30 p. m.
Vassar club, lecture by Miss Helen
Fraser, Fontenelle, 4 p. m., for
Duryea war relief.
Begabmis club, Y. V. C. A., 6:15
p .ni.
All Saints' Red Cross auxiliary,
parish house, 9 a. m.
Tuesday
Omaha Woman's club, public
speaking department, 10 a. m.;
current topics, 2 p. m., and psy
chology, 4 p. m.
South Omaha Woman's club, lit
erature department, Mrs. Wil
liam Berry, hostess, 2:30 p. m.
P. E. O. Sisterhood, Chapter B. T.,
Mrs. K. R. Ogden, hostess, 2
p. m.
Custer Woman's Relief corps, Me
morial hall, 2 p. m.
Wednesday
Omaha Woman's club, Red Cross
auxiliary, Baird building, 9 a. m.;
art department, 10 a. m.
Omaha Woman's Press club, Cham
ber of Commerce, 12:45 p. m.
Women's Missionary federation,
Y. W. C. A., 2 p. m.
W. C. T. U., Omaha union, Mrs.
William Pfeiffer, hostess, 2 p. m..
W. C. T. U., Frances Willard un
ion, Y. W. C. A., 2 p. m.
Trinity Parish aid, parish house,
10 a. m.
St. Paul church Lenten study cir
cle, Mrs. Charles Merle, hostess,
2:30 p. m.
Thursday-
National League for Woman's
Service, all-day state conference,
court house and Fontenelle, 10
a. m.
Omaha Woman's club, music de
partment, 2:15 p. m.
B'nai B'rith Women's auxiliary,
Miss De Lone s studio, Lyric
building. 8 p. m.
Benson Woman's club, city hall,
2:30 p. m.; Methodist Foreign
Missionary society, Mrs. William
Burford, hostess, 2 p. m.
J. F. W. club, Mrs. Charles Hub
bard, hostess, 1 p. m.
Friday
Daughters of 1812, Nebraska chap
ter, Mrs. J. C. Weeth, hostess,
2:30 p. m.
Welsh-American association, Ja
cobs' hall, 8 p. m.
Equal Franchise society, lecture by
Prof. F. M. Fling, court house,
8:15 p. m.
Garfield Circle, G. A. R., Memorial
hall, 8 p. m.
LINCOLN WOMEN on the state
board of the National League
for Woman's Service and dele
gates from other branches in the
state will attend the conference
Thursday at which Miss Grace Par
ker and Mrs. Coffin Van Rensselaer
of New York and Miss Maude Wet
more of Rhode Island will be in at
tendance. Mrs. J. Langworthy Tay
lor, state chairman; Mrs. Frank
Quick, Mrs. J. T. Lee, Miss Louise
Pound, Mrs. H. M. Bushnell, Mrs. O.
M. Stonebreaker and Mrs. C. F. Ladd
are among the Lincoln .. delegation,
several of whom will speak. Mrs.
Harry Jones of Seward will also ap
pear on the convention program, as
v ell as the following Omaha women:
Mesdames William Archibald Smith,
Arthur Crittenden Smith, E. M. Sy
fert. Milton Barlow and L. J. Healey.
The morning session beginning at
'.0 o'clock in the court house will be
attended by officers, delegates and di
vision chairmen. Miss Parker, Mrs.
lames T. Lee, secretary, and Mrs. O.
M. Stonebreaker, recorder, wilt give
reports.
Mrs. Coffin Van Rensselaer, Mrs.
Ladd, Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Syfert are
scheduled to speak at the luncheon at
the Fontenelle at 1 o'clock and all
three national officers and local heads
of divisions in five-minute talks at the
3 o'clock session in the hotel, at which
Mrs. Taylor will preside.
Omaha Woman's Club.
"Women in Business," will be dis
cussed in the poltical and social sci
ence department meeting of the
Omaha Woman's club Monday at
2 30 o'clock, in Metropolitan club
house. Mrs. L. M. Lord is in charge
of the program which includes a talk
on "Opportunities for Women m Busi
ness Along Independent Lines," by
iliss Katherine Worley; "Training of
'omen and Girls for Business, by
Miss Ionce C. Duffy; and "Problems
of Untrained Women Workers, by
Mrs. Marie Leff-Caldwell.
The public speaking department
meets Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock.
The fourth chapter of Mark will
he the Bible lesson of the current
topics department Tuesday at 2
o'clock. "Things Manufactured m
Omaha" will be the first topic in the
study of Nebraska which the depart
ment will take up. Those who will
take part in the discussion are Mes
dames G. W. Fields, W. E. Purviance,
F. H. Wrav, August Specht, Frederic
Bacon and J. W. Lawrence.
Dr. D. E. Jenkins will continue his
tests on sensations when the psy
chology department meets Tuesday
at 4 o'clock.
Mrs. J. B. Adams will lead the pro
gram for the art department Wed
nesday morning at" 10 o'clock. Do
menichino and Caracci, founder of the
electic school at Bologna and their
works will be studied.
The Harmonique Trio of Lincoln
will give the program for the music
department Thursday at 2:15 p. m.
in the club rooms. Mrs. Ray J. Ab
bott will have charge of the meeting.
The members of the trio are: Mrs.
Lucy Miller Morzer, violinist; Miss
Lillian Eiche, cellist; Mrs. Marie La
Rue Moore, soloist. The accompan
ists will be Mrs. E. A. Weathers and
Mrs. Grace Hancock Snell. A recep
tion for the visitors from Lincoln
will follow the program.
What to Do With Wheat Substitutes.
The government order that house
wives must buy substitute cereals
equal in amount pound for pound with
wheat flour has caused something of
panic among the home-makers. To
case the patriotic but perplexed
housewives, the woman's committee
ot" the Nebraska Cruncil of Defense
has' issued a chart showing what sub
stitutes may be bought with wheat
and in what proportions these may be
used in the usual bakings of yeast
bread, quick breads and pastries. The
directions were compiled by Miss
Julia Vance, conservation chairman,
Betrothed
i
V ft. fe jn "5. N - 1
Kalhryn inn lawless
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Lawless
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Kathryn Ann, to Mr. Jack
H. Thede of Wichita, Kan. The wed
ding will take place in June.
Mr. Thede is spending the week
end in Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. Lawless
will entertain at a family dinner in
honor of their daughter and her fiance.
and have been tested by university
experts.
The' substitutes which the house
wife may buy with wheat flour are
cornmeal. Corn starch, corn flour,
hominy, feterita flour meals, hominy
grits, corn grits, barley flour, oatmeal,
sweet potato flour, rolled oats, buck
wheat flour, potato flour, soy bean
flour, rice flour and rice.
A suggested list of cereals to buy
with 24 pounds of white flour is:
eight pounds oatmeal, two pounds
barley flour, two pounds barley pearl,
six pounds cornmeal, four pounds
hominy, two pounds corn flour, rye
flour is not a substitute for wheat
but can be purchased separately with
out purchasing pound for pound meas
ure of other cereals.
Proportions to use in wheat bread
are: One-half wheat to one-half rye,
or no wheat to one rye, two-third
wheat to one-half oatmeal or rolled
oats, barley flour, cottonseed flour,
cornmeal (uncooked), buckwheat,
three-quarter wheat to one-quarter
potatoes or potato flour, sweet po
tatoes, rice, feterita squash or pump
kin, four-fifths wheat to one-fifth corn
flour.
Proportions to use in pastry are:
No wheat to one rye, two-thirds wheat
to one-third corn flour, potato flour or
cornstarch, jhe-half wheat to one
half cornstarch.
Proportions to use in quick breads
(muffins, griddle cakes and biscuits)
are: No wheat to one buckwheat,
rye, oat flour or cornmeal, one-third
wheat to two-thirds cornmeal, one
half wheat to one-half oatmear or
rolled oats, two-thirds wheat to one-
third rice (steamed) or soy pean hour
(made of soy beans ground;.
Food Platform for Producers.
To stimulate production of all food
that can be utilized without urging
indiscriminate production of perish
ables or artcles not purchasable on
the general market until there is so
lution in sight of some of the pres
ent problems of labor, market and
transportation is the aim of the food
production department of the wom
an's committee, Nebraska Council for
Defense.
With the endorsement of G. W.
Wattles, state food administrator, C.
W. Pugsley, head of the extension de
partment of the University of Ne
braska, and George Coupland, chair
man of the Nebraska Council for De
fense, the following platform is is
sued by the woman's committee food
production chairman, Mrs. F. M. De
weese of Dawson:
All families produce to their full ability
such food us is purchasable on the general
markot. This includes general crops and
stock, poultry, some of the dairy products,
honey and some garden products, such as
dried beans, etc.
All families supply as nearly as possible
their own table and try to provide them
selves with a supply of vegetables for a
y9ar an they can use, resh, canned, dried
or stored.
Under present conditions of labor, market
and transportation all families produce what
they feel assured will find a market, either
through the regular channels or by ar
rangement with all hotels, boarding houses,
families who are not so situated that they
can supply themselves.
"Get-together" meetings should b held
tn every locality to urge increased produc
tion, Investigate local labor and market con
ditions and further definite arrangements
between producers and consumers.
Benson Clubs.
Benson Woman's club will meet in
the city hall Thursday afternoon, with
a program of summaries of western,
eastern and southern campaigns, read
by Mrs. W. A. Wilcox and Mrs. J.
Calvert. Current events by Mrs. Wal
ter Snell, and Mrs. N. H. Tyson will
give a paper on "prospects for Peace."
Mrs. F. B. Oliver acts as leader.
The Methodist Foreign Mission
ary society will give a tea Thursday
from 2 to 5 o'clock at the home of
Mrs. William Burford. Mrs. Snyder
will give a monologue.
The Red Cross auxiliary, assisted
by Irvington, completed and turned
in on Friday eight sweaters and nine
pairs of socks. They are meeting all
day Fridays to complete 50 hospital
shirts. The work is done in the city
hall.
Campfire Girls Make War Chest.
Prairie Campfire Girls at Gothen
burg, Neb., gave a program in the
Methodist church Sunday evening, at
which time 32 Bibles and New Testa
ments that are to be sent to Persh
ing's men in France; also a war chest
containing wearing apparel for Bel
gian orphan children were dedicated.
The girls under the leadership of
Mrs. W. T- Birkofer made the gar
ments. At this service a service flag, con
taining 19 stars, was also dedicated.
J. H. Kelly, on the partof the offi
ciary of the church, made the presen
tation' address. Rev. Mr. Atack, pas
tor of the church, delivered a patriotic
address.
Church Societies.
The Women's Missionary federa
tion of Omaha will hold its annual
meeting Wednesday at 2 p. m. in the
Young Women's Christian ?ssocia
tion auditorium. Mrs. J. W. Gill, presi-
dent, announces the following pro
gram: Devotionals led by Mrs. W.
P. Harford; business period; duet,
Mrs. Shackleford Nelson and Mrs.
Arthur Melchior, and an address by
the Rev. G. A. Hulbert of Central
Congregational church.
St. Paul's Episcopal church will
begin the second of a Lenten series
of Bible study classes Wednesday at
2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs.
Charles Merle, 3415 California street.
Mrs. Sarah Totter will lead the pro
gram. Trinity Parish aid will meet at the
First I'reshvterian church Tuesday
morning at 10 o'clock and Wednesday
morning at 10 o'clock at the Trinity
Parish house.
Sew for Children.
Sermo club members will meet at
the Child Saving institute Tuesday
at 12 o'clock to spend the rest of the
day sewing for the children.
Theosophical Lecture.
John T. Eklund will lecture on
"Dreams and Premonitions," before
the Omaha Theosophical society, Sun
day at 8:15 o'clock in the society's
rooms, 315 McCague building.
Patriotic Organizations.
Nebraska chapter, Daughters of
1812, will be entertained at a ken
sington Friday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. Joseph u wcetn, m win
street.
George A. Custer Relief corps will
meet Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. in Memor
ial hall. The corps' will also work
Tuesday morning in the Baird build
:irr mnl-inor snrcriral dressings.
General Henry W. Lawton auxil
iary, Spanish War Veterans, will be
entertained by the Jay Burns bakery
Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock.
The members will be accompanied by
their husbands.
Garfield circle No. 11, Grand Army
of the Republic, will meet Friday at
8 o'clock in Memorial halL Garfield
Circle's Sewing club meets all day
Wednesday in the Young Men's Chris
tian association to do war relief work.
Mrs. Mary Decker will entertain
George Crook Woman's Relief Corps
at a kensincrton. Thursday afternoon
at her home, 3127 Vinton street.
U. S. Grant Woman s Relief corps
mill tinlrl u I'pnsinctnn Tnesdav at
2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. W.
W. Cole, 216 Park avenue.
Old People's Home.
Dr. J. W. Wilson, pastor of the
North Presbyterian church, will con
duct communion services at the Old
Peoples' home, Fontenelle boulevard,
Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
B'nai B'rith Auxiliary.
Mrs. W. S. Caldwell (Mrs
Left), head resident of the South
Side Social Settlement, will address
the B'nai B'rith Women's auxiliary
Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in Miss
De Lonc's studio, Lyric building.
J. F. W. Club Luncheon.
Mrs. Charles Hubbard will be host
ess for the J. F. W. club Thursday at
1 o'clock.
Marie
Business Woman's Council.
The regular meeting of the Busi
ness Woman's club has been post
poned for two weeks on account of
the automobile show. The next meet
ing will be held in the Auditorium
Tuesday, March 12, between 11:30 and
1:30. A luncheon will be served, fol
lowed by prayer.
W. C. T. U. Meetings.
The Frances Willard Women's
Christian Temperance union will meet
Wednesday at 2 o'clock in the Young
Women's Christian assembly room.
Mrs. C. W. Hayes and Dr. A. B.
Somers will give talks.
Omaha Women's Christian Tem
perance union will meet Wednesday
at 2 o'clock with Mrs. William Pfeif
fer, 1121 Park avenue. A patriotic
red letter day program will be
given. ,
P. E. O. Sisterhoods.
Mrs. Frank C. Patton will entertain
Chapter B. P., P. E. O. sisterhood, at
her home, 24 1 3 Bristol street', Tues
day at 2 o'clock. Following the busi
ness meeting and study period there
will be a social hour.
Welsh-American Association.
The Welsh-American association
will celebrate St. David's day Friday
with a social entertainment in Jacob's
hall. Seventeenth and Dodge streets,
at 8 p. m. Welsh people or those of
Welsh descent are invited. Refresh
ments will be served.
"C.C.C" Headed by
Mrs, Winkelman Puts
Ban on Refreshments
South Omaha Woman's Club.
Mrs. William Berry will be host
ess for the literature department of
the South Omaha Woman's club
Tuesday afternoon, when a program
on Scotland will be given under the
leadership of Mrs. C. L. Talbot. Mrs.
George McGuinty, Mrs. E. L. De
Lanney, Mrs. D. S. Clark and Mrs.
J. W. Koutsky will assist.
T. W. C. A. Note.
Sunday afternoon at S:30 o'clock there
will be a mass meeting in the auditorium of
the Young Women's Christian association.
Miss Eva Ryerson Ludgat of New York
City will speak on "The Test of Klre" and
will tell of her experiences In England dur
ing the war.
The Business Women's club will meet
Tuesday evening at 6:15 for supper. "I.es
Miserables" will be reviewed by Miss Etta
Pickering. The leader for the program Is
Miss Eva Norton.
The business Womsn'l auxiliary ta the
Red Cross meets every Thursday evening
at 7 o'clock tdmake surgical dressings.
Ilyn FhotOv
A pledge neither to serve nor. par
take of refreshments at afternoon af
fairs was taken by members of the
Central Conservation council, headed
by Mrs. R. E. Winkelman, at the
council's second meeting Friday in the
Young Women's Christian association.
"We hope this leaven will work all
through the city," said Miss Nellie
Farnsworth, federal food administra
tion agent, who organized the coun
cil, composed of representatives from
each school district in the city.
A square block campaign is the next
thing planned by the council. One
woman who will live, preach and teach
conservation to all the housewives in
her square block will be enlisted by
the school district chairmen. Meet
ings will be held in schoolhouses and
principals will co-operate.
The first meeting of the kind was
held in Saunders school Thursday,
Miss Mary Reed, the principal, ex
tending the invitation, and 47 women
attended. The women decided to hold
a school of instruction, to meet each
Thursday, with Miss Farnsworth as
director. Miss Farnsworth's lectures
will be the same she is giving Satur
day afternoons at Miss lone Duffy's
school. War breads and cereals, em
phasizing the comparative value of
the rcady-to-eat breaktast toods and
the home-cooked variety, were dis
cussed Saturday.
The women made an interesting tel
ephone chain in behalf of the conser
vation meetings Monday at 12:30 and
at 3 o'clock in the Young Women's
Christian association, when Mrs.
Beecher of Birmingham, Ala., will
speak. Each promised to telephone 10
women about the meeting and to bring
at least one woman with her. Miss
Esther" Stamats will preside at the
noon meeting and Mrs. C. A. Lotz in
the afternoon.
Founder of National
Women's Prayer
Battalion in Omaha
Rev. Eva Ryerson Ludgate, foun
der of the National Women's Frayer
battalion, will be the principal
speaker at a mass meeting to be held
at the Young Women's Christian as
sociation auditorium Sunday after
noon. Her subjecfwill be "The Test
of Fire." Rev. Ludgate will tell of
her experiences in England, where
she was inspired to organize the
prayer battalion. During the early
days of the war wounded soldiers
were sent into London, 20,000 a day,
and Rev. Ludgate realized that if the
war should strike America the Amer
ican women would need something
to sustain them.
The war cotnesery close home to
Rev. Ludgate, as seven men from her
family are jn the service. One
brother is in a hospital in France,
three uncles and two cousins have
been fighting for the last two years,
and her father is a Young Men's
Christian association secretary at
Camp Cody.
President Wilson has given his
sanction to the movement and nu
merous prominent men and women
of all denominations are interested.
Carrie lacobs Bonds, Mrs. Finley J.
Shepherd, Mrs. William Borden, Mrs.
Henry P. Crowell, are a few of the
well known women interested in it.
Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman, Dr. John
Timothy, Dr. Ozora Davis are a few
of the men.
Rev. A. F. Ernst, Dr. Colby and
Dr. G. A. Hulbert will also give
talks at the mass meeting Sunday.
White of egg for an invalid may
be mixed with lemon, orange or grape
juice.
Housewives should remember that
plenty of sleep .'j as essential as oil
to an engine.
Flounder is a handy fish that may
pe broiled, baked, chowdered, fried
or casseroled.
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Removes such growths just as effi
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and iiixlrr arms.
PROVEN SWAMP-ROOT .
AIDS WEAK KIDNEYS
The symptoms of kidney and blad
der troubles arc often very distressing
and leave the system in a run-down
condition. The kidneys seem to suf
fer most, as almost every victim com
plains of lame back and urinary
troubles which should not be neglect
ed, as these danger signals often lead
to more dangerous kidney troubles.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, which so
many people say soon heals and
strengthens the kidneys, is a splendid
kidney, liver and bladder medicine,
and, being an herbal compound, has.
a gentle healing effect on the kidneys,
which is almost immediately noticed
in most cases by those who use it.
A trial will convince anyone who
may be in need of it Better get a
bottle from your nearest drug store
and start treatment at once.
However, if you wish first to test
this great preparation send ten cents
to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N.
Y., for a sample bottle. When writing
bo sure and mention The, Omaha
Sunday Bee. Advertisement.
Our fidelity to details hs don much
to win for us a brilliant reputation. As
publie servants we have always striven
to pleas and we have succeeded. W ar
equipped in a manner that makes for dig
nity and efficiency. W hav corres
pondents in every city and attend to
shipping funerals in a careful, commend
able manner.
N. P. SWANSON
Funeral Parlor, (Established 1888)
17th and Cuming Sts. Tel. Douglas 1060.
DwBvmFBaiUI
SanatoriiW
This Institution is the only one
in the central west with separate
buildings Bituated in their own
ample grounds, yet entirely dis
tinct, and rendering it possible to
classify cases. The one building
being fitted for and devoted to
the treatment of non-contagious
and non-mental diseases, no others
being admitted; the other Rest
Cottage being designed for and
devoted to the exclusive treat
ment of select mental cases re
quiring for a time watchful care
and special nursing.
BEST WAY TO WASH THE HAIR
We find you can bring out the
beauty of your hair to its very best
advantage by washing it with Can
throx. It makes a very simple, in
expensive shampoo, which cleanses
the hair and scak thoroughly of all
the dandruff, dirt and excess oil,
leaving a wonderfully clean, whole
some feeling. After its use you will
find that the hair dries quickly and
evenly, is never streaked in appear
ance and is always bright, soft and
fluffv: so fluffy, in fact, that it looks
more abundant than it is, and so soft
that arranging it becomes a pleasure.
Just use a teaspoonful of Canthrox,
which you can get from any good
druggist, dissolve it in a cup of hot
water; this makes a full cup of sham
poo liquid, enough so it is easy to
apply it to all the hair, instead of
just the top of the head. Advertisement.
An Inside Bath
Makes You Look
and Feel Fresh
Says a glass of hot water with
phosphate before breakfast
keeps Illness away.
Thysicians the world over recom
mend the inside bath, claiming this is
of vastly more importance than out
side cleanliness, because the skin
pores do not absorb impurities into
the blood, causing ill health, while the
pores in the ten yards of bowels do.
Men and women are urged to drink
each morning, before breakfast a
glass of hot water with a teaspoonful
of limestone phosphate in it, as a
harmless means of helping to wash
from the stomach, liver, kidneys ana
bowels the previous day's indigestible
material, poisons, sour bile and tox
ins; thus cleansing, sweetening and
purifying the entire alimentary canal
before putting more food into the
stomach.
Those who wake up with bad
breath, coated tongue, nasty taste or
have a dull, aching head, sallow com
plexion, acid stomach; others who are
subject to bilious attacks or constipa
tion, should obtain a quarter pound! of
limestone phosphate at the drug store,'
This will rrs&. verv lirrlft hnt is snffi-"
side bathing. Adv.
:$'::.!"i'-C'.
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