Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 08, 1918, Page 11, Image 11

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    THE Bfc)E: OMAHA. MUDAK MARCH 8, 1918.
3
Adelaide Kennerly
Ella Fleishman.
A R"T r.niTOB.
" - -
OS
,, .:, 1
in Anita, la., after spending "i fevf"
days with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Rushl
ton. , -:
Porto iRican women resident Sit'
New York City ..have formed a aux
iliary of the American Red Cross. ' --
'TT " ' 1 I - - i y 1 'T
THIS BEAUTIFUL
COLUMBIA
GRAFONOLA
By MELLIFICIA-Mch. 7.
5
Young Officers Have Thrilling Re
turn Trip.
It might be well for young officers
on a furlough to have an alarm clock
attachment on their wrist watches
which would emit a loud peal at train
time, for when the girls are pretty and
the lights are solt, such dull things as
drill and the, military orders are apt
to be forgotten. - t
Two officers were invited to a
house party in Lincoln last week.
They are stationed at Fort Crook and
it was indeed a treat to be ' invited
to spend the week-end at the lovely
home in Lincoln, especially since a
number of Omaha girls had been in
vited, too. The young men planned
to leave Lincoln on the midnight train,
for they had to report for duty at the
fort at 6 a. m. What was their con
sternation to find,, on arriving at the
station, that the midnight train had
been taken off by government orders
and there was only a freight which
would leave Lincoln at 3 in the morn
ing. The train did not stop in South'
i Side, so the soldiers would have to
leap from the train. Were they
daunted? Not a bit. Orders are orders,
and they would have to reach the fort
at 6 if they had to walk.
Hurrying across the street to a
little hotel, they tumbled into bed
with their clothes on, and slept, more
or less, until 3. They caught the
train and two tired, heavy-eyed young
men stumbled into Fort Crook at a
few minutes before 6. One of them
had to take command of his company
at once and if his orders were a little
mixed that morning it is no wonder.
We might even divulge their names
if you will keep the secret for we are
told on good authority that the two
week-enders were Lieutenant Paul
Cooley and Lieutenant Bruce Clark.
. McHugh-Goodrich Wedding.
An out-of-town wedding of great
interest to Omahans will be that of
Mice Rmir Marcuerite Goodrich
and Lieutenant William Douglas Mc
Hugh, son of Judge and Mrs. W. D.
McHugh, which will take place Sat
urday in Buffalo, N. Y.
The ceremony, will be quietly sol
emnized in the chapel of the First
Presbyterian church at 5 in the aft
ernoon. There will be no bridal at
tendants and following the wedding
supper will be served at the home of
the bride's parents for the members
of the immediate families.
The young couple will leave imme
diately for Deming. N. M., where they
will stay until Lieutenant McHugh
is ordered abroad. The bride will
then return to Buffalo to make her
home with her parents. .
Miss Goodrich is a charming girl
and well known in Omaha, as she
visited Judge and Mrs. W. D. Mc
Hugh last summer.
The, wedding date comes as a sur
prise to the friends of the young cou
" nle.i as Lieutenant McHugh was
granted a short furlough and hurried
east. He spent Wednesday in Omaha
visiting his sister, Mrs. C. J. Baird.
Judge and Mrs. McHugh have been
at Coronado Beach for some time, but
left several days ago for, Buffalo to
attend the wedding.
. . J
Engagement Announcea. ,
Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Fullaway are
telling their friends of the engage
ment of their son, Mr. S. V. Fullaway,
jr., to Miss Norma Ethel Warmoth
of Spokane, Wash. . No definite dite
" has been set for the wedding.
MisS Warmoth is an intimate friend
of Miss Ethel Fullaway and Miss
Fullaway was a guest at the War
moth home last summer
Mr. Fullaway is well known tn
Omaha, having graduated from the
Central High school and the state
university. He is now a forester in
the governmental service and is sta
tioned at Missoula, Mont.
Bridge Luncheon.
Mrs., J. L. Welsh entertained at
luncheon at the Blackstone today.
The afternoon was spent in playing
bridge and the guests included:
Mesdamei. Mesdame.
O. M. Smith. S. T. Mason, ,
H. K. Bchafer, li. A. Dermody,
Willi Crosby, P. W. Mikesell.
Robert Parks, .
To Join Ambulance Corps.
Harry Riley, 5103 Nicholas street,
and Edwin Gray, 4316 Erskine street,
leave tonight for Camp Taylor, Louis
ville, Ky., to join the Omaha ambu
lance company there.
CnnA riVt in rJiarcr of the unit
here, says that he wants three more
men for positions with that military
organization.
Wedding Announced.
J Loren V. Graves of Williamsburg,
Kan., and Miss Ella'E. Cragin of
Omaha; were united in marriage by
Rev. B. R. Vanderlippe at the Young
Men's Christian accosiation Wednes
day afternoon. Miss Honora Cragin
and Harvey R. Hay were the attend
ants. Cooking Club Meets.
Mrs. W. S. Poppleton entertained
the Original Cooking club at luncheon
at her home today. All the members
of the club were j resent except Mrs.
Joseph Barker, who is in Camornia.
Mrs. A. S. Pinto announces a mass
meeting of alt Masonic women in the
city Friday at .2:30 o'clock in the new
Masonic temple to organize a 'Red
Cross surgical dressings unit.
Noted Serbian Woman
- Lectures for War
Fund in Omaha
- Mrs. St. Clair Stobart, a major in
the Serbian army and known to all
the Serbs as "the lady of the black
horse," will speak in the Fontenelle
Thursday, March 14, at 8 p. m.
The speaker has a ldng lirs of mili
tary achievements. She is the first
woman in the world to command a
flying field hospital. She established
the woman's, convoy corps and the
first women's hospital unit in the Bal
kans. She was made prisoner by the
Germans and condemned to death in
1914. .
j- She led her hospital unit in the
great 800-mile retreat through Serbia,
' Montenegro and Albania in 1915. v
Mrs. Stobart will give an illustrated
lecture on her experiences. The pro
ceeds will go to the Serbian Red
HEADS CHAPTEE B. T. OF
P. E. 0. SISTERHOOD
J
Red Cross Metes
The fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth
grades of a number of schools in the
city are making surgical dressings in
50-minute periods.
The chairman of the gauze cutting
committee for the different days will
bti Monday, Mrs. Raymond Over
meyer; Tuesday, Mrs. Sam Mattson;
Wednesday, Mrs. Lloyd Fercut;
Thursday, Mrs. J. C. Wrath; Friday,
Miss Margaret' Smith, and Saturday,
Mrs. R. L. Massy.
The hostess committee at the head
quarters are Mrs. Julius Lyon, Mrs.
H. B. Robinson, Miss Louise White,
Miss Regina Conrell and Miss Mar
garet Grace Foore.
One of the newest functions of the
American Red Cross is to give to
relatives and friends of American sol
diers details of casualties at the front
The anxiety which naturally fol
lows every battle when official reports
simply state that such and such sol
diers were wounded or "missing" will
be relieved in a large measure by this
service. The bureau established in
Paris by the Red Cross will supple
ment 'government information with
fuller details such as relatives crave..
Investigators from the Paris office
will be stationed at base hospitals in
France. When ' a soldier is killed,
wounded or missing these investi
gators will , send full particulars
promptly: to headquarters and.from
there it will be sent to America. Com
rades of the men who fall in battle
will be questioned for last details
about their fate. , .--
Along with this service the Ameri
can Red Cross has perfected "plans
for sending food to American soldiers
in German prison camps. Every week
three 10-pound packages ot tooa win
be sent from Switzerland to each
American soldier in Germany.
' For the re-educatioa of crippled
and mutilated French soldiers, a 500
acre farm, near Tours, in France, has
been obtained by the American Red
Cross. Here the use of farm ma
chinery and care of animals will be
taught. Clare Arnett, former profes-
SOr OI ammai nusuanuiy at mc muu
tana State Agricultural college, will
be the director of the farm, and M.
Marchand, a French farmer who has
been held a prisoner by the Germans
for 37 months, will be chief of agri
culture. Another work done for the maimed
poilu by the-Red Cross is the in
stallation, of model electrical training
work shops at the National Profes
sional Jnstitute for War Cripples, at
St. Maurice. Other plans for train
ing him in skilled work are being de
veloped. '
The mutilated soldier must and
should re-enter industry on a basis
of competition with able-bodied work
men. Cripples who have lost an arm
or leg and at first seem hopelessly
disabled, can be taught many pro
cesses of industry, such as running
lathes, operating motor tractors, con
trolling drills and other skilled opera
tions. . The professions which offer
the greatest appeal are industrial
draughting and design making for
sugical instruments, tools of preci
sion, watchmaking, etc.
The American Red Cross also wilj
establish in the United States similar
schools to teach new trades to crip
pled American soldiers.
Community Kitchens
England is turning to communal
kitchens as a means of conserving
food. Six of these kitchens have al
ready been established under Lord
Rhondda and have been fairly suc
cessful. Nearly 50,000 meals have
been served the last eight months in
two kitchens maintained in West
Ham, near London. The average
charge has been 10 cents per meal
to consumers, although nourishing
meals are sold for as little as 2 cents.
A communal kitchen. with capacity
for 1,000 meals daily, opened recently
in North Woolwich Road, represents
an investment of only $1,500 and gives
great economies in fuel and labor, as
well . as furnishing properly cooked
foods with full nutritive value and the
avoidance of waste.
Perfection is what the whoie world is seek
ing and one's proximity to it determines
one's worth in the mind of the world.
By ADELAIDE KENNERLY.,
PERFECTION? ,.. . -
The whole world wants perfection! Why not?
Is a shoddy thing worth considering except with a view to improve
ment? Is a half done piece of work as praiseworthy as one finished in every
detail?.
Nothing ever is good enough unless it is the result of the best there
is in you; unless it has called forth your thought, your energy and your
labor. Without the combination of all of these there is something lacking.
Why does the teacher sometimes seem to show partiality to those in
her classes who progress more rapidly than others? It brings green to
the eyes of the children who never bask in the sunshine of teacher's
smiles. t .
Recognition.
'Those who progress do their best to succeed. Effort is recognized
and concentration is appreciated. Ambition and a desire to be a winner
enhances the attractiveness of any child.
Teachers, business heads and leaders in every walk of life stub their
toes against these human stumbling blocks who neither try nor care to
be winners in Life's games.
Stones of indifference weight down the heads of half the people in the
'vorld.
Indolence is the bar to any kind of progress.
The Way.
Perfection? - ,
Why, you win it through untiring efforts. Strive for it, think about it
forget that anyone else in the world has more ability than you have.
Cast the little green devils from you and make a desperate effort for per
fection in some one thing. Hard work makes it easy.
Perfection is what the whole universe is seeking and one's proximity
to it determines one's worth in the mind of the world.
Show Pennell War
Lithographs for
Relief Fund
The War Relief society is bringing
to Omaha 100 of Joseph Pennell's fa
mous war lithographs. Fifty of these
were ordered by the English govern
ment and 50 by our own administra
tion. They represent 'various phases
ot tngnsn ana American war prepa
ration and have aroused much com'
ment and interest both here and
abroad.
The exhibit will be held in the Kee
line building at Harney and Seven
teenth streets, on the ground floor,
and will continued lor two weeks, be
ginning Monday. The hours are 10
to 6.
mxe
Iht.
MAKERS
Cleveland NewYork
YOUT
and who isn't young thee days! is
the keynote of the Coats and Suits soon
to be shown exclusively by. the Smartest
Style Store in townfeaturing the slender
silhouette fascinating and correct. Above
is the Label by which you may identify
these unusual garments it is the style
mark of TheH. Black Company, Makers,
noteworthy for the tailoring of Youthful
Coats and Suits for women of all ages.
The Store That Sells Wooltex will be
announced in your ;
Newspapers Next Monday
- The
"War
Spirit
In a
Busy
Store.
The "War" Spirit and Garments Beautiful
Means that you may get "right, up close" to manufacturing
cost la buying your spring clothes ; , i
It means broad avenues opened up leading straight from
scores of the beet style makers directly to your wardrobe.
It mean "Service"
and "Values" on a cash
basis come see.
" Newest Spring
Suits t
25.00 SUITS,
during the war
$19.75
130.00 SUITS, .
during the war
$24.75
135.00 SUITS,
during the war
. $27.75
J40.00 SUITS,
during the war
$29.75
f 45.00 SUITS,
during the war
$34.75
SSO.OO SUITS,
during the war
$39.75
New Fashions Paraded Daily
AT WClCOMC.ARfN
Mm
, IL
I.8J2 FARNAM.STREEX
Woman's Clubs
Social Settlement Election.
Mrs. A. W. Bowman was re-elected
president of the Social Settlement as
sociation at a board meeting held
Wednesday. Mrs. J. H. Dumont and
Mrs. F. A. Cressey are the vice presi
dent: Mrs. L. M. Lord and Mrs. J.
B. Porter, secretaries; Mrs. A. F.
Jonas, ireasurer; Mrs. E. H. Scott,
membership chairman, and Mrs. J. J.
McMullen, house committee chair
man. P. E. O. Election.
At a meeting of Chapter B. K.. P.
E. O. sisterhood, held at the home of
Mrs. Joseph Weeth Wednesday aft
ernoon the following officers were
elected for the coining year: Presi
dent, Mrs. John Turner Buchanan;
vice president, Mrs. William K. Mat
thews; recording secretary, Miss Ger
trude Weeth; corresponding secre
tary, Mrs. C. A. Medders; chaplain,
Miss Agnes Livesey; guard. Mrs. Ben
jamin Harrison, and jounulist, Mrs.
Joseph Weeth.
Dundee Patriotic Club. .
Mrs. H. B. Whitehouse will be
hostess for the Dundee Woman's Pa
triotic club Friday at" 1:30 o'clock,
when the time will be spent finishing
the large consignment of darning
work from Fort Omaha.
Extension Society.
The Extension society will meet
Friday at 2:30 o'clock. at the home of
Mrs. Tom McGrath.
Personals
Dress economy booms millinery.
The woman with the made-over gown
wantsi an extra hat. Do you blame
her? ,
A doren tea tables, cozily placed,
will form an added attraction to
visitors.
, Mr. Myron Learned is in, the east
on business. ,
Dr. C. H. Newell and Dr. F. N.
Hahn have gone to New York for 10
days.
Lieutenant Bert P. Meyer of Kelly
Field arrived in Omaha Sunday to
spend the week with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Taul Meyer. Lieutenant
Meyer expects to return V to Kelly
Field the first part of the week.
Captain Emmette .Buchanan, who
has been visiung friends amrrelatives
in. the city, leaves this evening for
Macon. Ga. Captain Buchanan has
been at Fort Snelling for some time.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beaton
moved Wednesday and their new ad
dress is 1111 South Thirty-fifth ave
nue. The Beatons are nlanninsr tn
build in Dundee some time in the
spring.
Miss Helene Bixby has returned
from a few days' visit with Mrs.
George H. Holden in Lincoln.
Mrs. .0. "V. Kring has returned
from Fort Leavenworth, Kan., where
she was called by the serious acci
dent to her brother, Floyd S. Jones,
who has recently joined the signal
corps and is stationed there.
Mr. E. W; Chapman and Mr. and
Mrs. P. C. Hyson, are stopping at the
Elm hotel at Excelsior Springs this
week.
Miss Elizabeth Wright of Fairmont,
Neb., is visiting her aunt, Mri. J. II.
Rushton.
Mrs. Charles Wilson and small
daughter have returned to their home
ONLY 18
On Eaay Terms'
A phonograph of wonder
ful tone quality although
it is small in size. Come in
and hear this or any of the
other models we carry.
Priced, $30. $45. $55,
$85 wd up, to $385.
February Records How on Silt
Schnoller S Mueller
rk PIANO CO. dT3
THE GRAFONOLA ,STORE
a
pratg".
And Fashion Review
begins here on
A
T
SB
.i
o
.B'
Fashion's latest ; edicts will be
described . briefly , in Sunday's 7
papers. . ; V
Gowns, Suits, Coats,
Blouses, Corsets, Shoes,
Millinery arid Accessories
will find representation in '.
this style review. -'
test
Elkhorn Milk
Sounds good.
Reminds you
of healthy cows
-pure milk
sanitary cans.
Everything
that is good
and sweet and
who lesome.
Just say to your
MILK,
please
! , When Buying AdvsrfJced Goods
Say Yoj Read of Them in Tht Ece
Exempt
from
Suu
County
and
City
Tarn
Share
1
A.k
for
One Dollar Down
or any amount up., to 15,000 may be invested at
any time in the ' 1
Oj PREFERRED
fo0 GUARANTEED
v SHARES OF
HOME BUILDERS (Inc.)
Assets Nearly $900,000.00 -
An "old, prosperous company
These are high jrrade securities.
Mail order olicitd.
HOME BUILDERS (Inc.) ;!
American Security Co., Fiscal Ageat
17th and Douglas, Omaha '
FRESH FISH Fresh Fish For Friday-FRESH FISH
Money Saving Specials at The New fublie Market The Cash State. ...
No Oelivorie Under $3.00 Order. ...
Frh Whit FUh, per pound .15c " ,
Fr..h H.rring, per pound ..................10c . '
Strictlr Freeh E. per dozen. ................... .38.
No. 1 Country Butter, per pound .43ft -
Fancy Leaf Lettuce, S for....,, , .8c . ..
... ::. Large Navel Oranfe, tech.. ........................ .4 . -
THE PUBLIC MARKET
310-312 South 18th Streirt. Phone Deuflae S7t3.
4.'
.;!
r.fX
..!?
:;
.-.a7.
s-.ir.
Cross fund.