Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 13, 1918, Page 12, Image 12

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    Adelaide Kennerty
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The .
"War
'Spirit
Springtime
Gladness for You
x. For you women who
are knitting and sew-
. ing and toiling for the
. greatest need the world
barknown, we've opened wide
the gates to Fashion's newest
fads and frolics. : t . . '
Stits, Blouses, Dresses, Coats,
. and Skirls1
At Half the Unsual Profit.
$25.00 Suits and Coats,
at .....$19.75
130.00 Suits and Coats,
at $24.75
$35.00 Suits and Coats,
' at $27.75
HO.OO Suits and Coats,
at $29175 ,
J45.00 Suits and Coats,
In a
Busy
Store
at W.., $3175
50.00 Suits and Coats,
at. .......$37.75
55.00 Suits and Coats,
at ...............$39.75
$65.00 Suits and Coats,
at $49.50
175.00 Suits and Coats,
at $57.50
You do your part by paying
qshvand carrying your own
packages if you will
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Uk. V.m1--
lflj 2.FARNAM STREET
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3ee Want Ads Are Business Boosters For Business
Military Honors to Be
Won in Y. W.C.A.
Membership Drive
A military training: camp was
opened at the Young Women's Chris
tian association Monday. Theleview
and awarding of commissions will be
made March 16. Miss Etta Pickering
has been named commander-in-chief
"and Miss Grace Shearer, major gen
eral. '
Four companies have been formed,
Mrs. Frank Field will be in command
of Company Y; Mrs. C. J. Hubbard
Company . W: Miss Stella Wilcox,
Company C; Miss Annie Johnson,
Company A.
All companies will try to come tip
to war strength of 100 members. All
will enlist as privates and will win
commissions by getting members in
the drive for 1,000 new members.
Following are the requirements for
commissions: First-class private, 10
credits: corporal. 15: sergeant. 25
second lieutenant. 35: first lieutenant,
50: captain, 60: major, 70; lieutenarit
colonel, a; coionei, ou; ongaaier gea
era!, 90; general. 100.
Credits may be earned as follows
One regular member, three credits;
one1 sustaining member, 10; one life
member? 50; one gym class, three; one
French class, two; one first aid, three;
one story telling, two; one lite studies,
two; one Bible class, two; one domes-
tic science, three; one girl s depart
tnent, two.
A Victory 'Menu '
ThU menu was prepared by
the home economy department
of Cornell university in co-operation
with the New York State
Food commission: ,
RREAKFA8T.
Cornmev mush, with figs and milk.
Tout. Poached egg'
Coffee. -,
1XXCH OB CPPE.
Fruit salad. Feaunt butter muffins.
Cocoa.
' DINNER. v
Finnan haddla baked In milk.
Baked potatoes. Peas, home canned.
Wheat-saving bread.
Apple dumpling wUh rye cruet.
' Fish caught nearby will usual
ly be the cheapest, but often the
fish market receives a large sup
ply of one kind, so it may be
more economical to ask the
prices of various kind, before
ordering. Dried or salted fish,
such as finnan haddie, cod and
mackerel are, of course, cheaper,
but they require more time to
freshen and prepare than do
fresh fish.
tifebtt Victrola "CLUB'' Idea
M With Its Trifling 25c Initial Payment Has
sAttracted All Omaha !
5
the Vlctor-Victrola, Style 4-A, selling 'at $20, Is true
vyictor'! In every respect. ; ?.,v .
you start with a mere 25c," and the largest payment you
need ever make is only $1.50. .
no delay you don't have to "win it" you BUY it tA
zoo aown ana take it home AT ONCE. , -::i ,
but remember, the " Club" has a time limit. Better be
here soon for the "Club" and its club privileges lasts
oniy .we lengin oz this week.
A jl mo H Tl'
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Cor. 15th and Harney Sts., Omaha
The "Club" Plan Alio Holds Good at Mlckela Council Bluffs
,., ) establishment, 334 Broadway. ,
7J1 "Wi
For soups,vsaUds and luncheon
On TDheatless Datjs tnj ;
- 11
HSMMSMHMMHnSSMIHHMMaMnilMMHiM
1
CLSurishine Odts Crackers conform
requirements of the U. S. Food Administration.
(H Their flauorq goodness trill appeal to upu and, in ad-
dition, tneq are higWg nourishing. t ' t
CI Combining the three features of Qouernraent Approv
al, Appetizing Qoodness and Highlq nourishing Elemenls, Sun
shine Oatsa Crackers merit a permanent place on uour table
Ask uour Qrocer " :;' : r ; '' '
IopsE-yiLE9 Qiscurr Qmpany
takers o Sunshine Biscuits .. r nrache i avei IOC Ctios
) OMAHA
to tL
For Work and Play
A ' t I.
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Next to Army. French Women's
Spirit Helps Most in Victory
"To work ilone. that is the hardest
things." Under the leather suit of a
"munitionctte" she wore the black of
aTwidow's mourning. A perfect fury
for work, her task is one of the hard-est-r-to
run the "mill" which turns out
its hundreds of shells every day. In
her leather uit with goggles in her
helmet, she seems a figure from some
Dantesn dream, fighting with fire
where men 10 paces away flinch for
their eyesig'ii in the glare.
"Next to cur soldiers, it is ta the
French women that we ow victory,"
savs Millerand in the Revue Bleue.
"Women have reoiaced men not only
in the manufacture of war material
but in all departments of the larger
industrial life. Her ettort permits
France to li behind the lines while
men are battling at the front. In tlx
metal trades the woman laborer to
day heats and charges the furnaces,
works the hydraulic presses, dis
charges trucks and wagons, and'welds
brass. In addition she takes upon her
self less heavy bat more delicate la
bors, cutting metal pens, making
chains and accessories for bicycles,
and small w;;K.es of the coppersmith's
trade.
She works not onlyv tn metal, but
m stone. Beside tne woman niacK-
smith standi the woman mason, who
assists in constructing the stocks for
ships; the woman who molds bricks,
who watches the ovens, who make.
molds and crucibles, porcelain and
faience. There are factories where
she makes r-;'ass. Industries of pre
cision invite her. One can see her at
Nancy and Lyons making files and
compasses, at raris electric lamps.
At Home In Sawmills.
"The divers industries of wood
working used to be reserved to men.
.Today womer. are at home in saw
mills. One sees them now near Paris
constructing the Adrian barracks for
the ministry cf war. The same is ue
of other industries, into which they
had not ventured before '1914. Lack
of men has forced the employment of
women in the manufacture of drugs,
chemicals and asphyxiating gas. In
the leather industries they manipulate
the green skins, wash them, remove
the hair, color them, and tan the
leather, mak? varnished leather, and 1 Paris.
conduct the various! processes of glove
making." 1
In the food industries, quite, out
side of bakeries, which deserve con- x
sideration by themselves, they con
duct the dairies, the manufacture of
conserves, biscuits, prepared foods
doing the hardest kind of labor as
well as the most delicate. ; ' -
In the manufacture of sugar, wo
men are employed.' as strainers, juice
and syrup filterers, . diffusers, knife
sharpeners, truck - movers," washing
machinetenders, etc., and for the first
time they are reported as working in
starch and glucose factories. Wine
making is dependent, in a great-measure
upon old men, women and young
persons, women are employed m
lead pencil making, in gas works, as
far as possible, and particularly . in
coke drawing.
In Metal TradesA - '
According to the .October 1917, re
port of the United States Bureau of .
Labor Statistics, an, increasing num
ber of women are employed in the
metal trades, where their work has
proved satisfactory even in the heav
ier tasks. In certain French cities 14
to 30 per cent of all employes in these
trades are women. . In the manufac
ture of poreclain products in 33 estab
lishments nearly half are women.
In some degree it was, easier for
women to take iheir places in French
industry than in the professions..' In
spite of Mme. Curie and other noted
professional women, Francehas never
wclcopied thern among its physicians,
lawyers or scientists. The first time
that a woman has spoken from the
tribunal of the Academy of Medicine
was last year, when Dr. Bonet-Henry
described the -happy results (of a new
method of dressing burns with a mix
ture of gutta-percha and paraffin.
At the same period two dressmak
ers left their familiar ateliers for the
Strang and hazardous pursuit' of chim
ney cleaning. They wercbrave gtfls
of 17 and 18 years, who, because of
scant returns from their needles, be
came "chimney doctors." In place of
the three francs a day -earned. by v
dressmaking they are now earning
12 by doctoring the chimneya.of
Advice to the Lovelorn
... By GERTRUDE BERESFORD.
T HAVE no time to dss for dinnerl" Many women of leisure "up to
to their eyes, in war work realize now what their business sisters
have been facing so long. How to look" well dressed 'for work and
appear fresh and trim for dinner is indeed a problem, of which the one-piece
dress of serge or jersey cloth furnishes the best solution. The novel ad
justable collar and cuffs of this frock of dark blue jersey cloth are a happy
thought of the designer. 1 ne collar extends m long ends, which reverse and
button at the waist line. This collar may be putty-colored jersey or white
pique. A polkadot tie of blue and tan, or white and blue, complete a dress
which will lift the wearer above the commonplace in an assembly ot
women bent on useful work and make her decidedly ornamental later in
restaurant or at her own table.
Among the Red Cross workers who
ire working at state instruction dtad
uarters are Mrs. G. W. Jones, C!en
vood, la.; Mrs. C. B. Shnae, Minne
apolis, Minn.; Mrs. C. T. G.-it7ka,
Talmage, Neb.; Miss Carrie Ne.son,
St. Paul, Neb ; Miss Ella Jensen. Boe
lus; Mrs. C J. Miller, Ord, NebS
By BEATRICE
Wonderful Farente.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 18. and bvm-
ge S2S per week, and am studying at night
am popular, tut my friends are dropping
off because my parents strongly oppose rav
going to "cheap" parties where there are all
tne latest' fads, and alsot against my go
ing out too often, as theylsy if I intend
to grow I mast not weaken myself by Tun
ing around all night. They also oppose
my going out with any girl unknown to
them, and whose people they do not know,
as they say that there are just as many
pitfalls for mn and boys as there are for
girls, but to show me that they are not
holly against my associating with girls.
actually say that that helps. xThey make
little theater parties every now and then
and Invite some family that has a daugh
ter. Till now I .refused all Invitations for
everything. -But my friends only sneer at
ma and call ma alow, whereas some call me
Just the right sort and stick to me even
though I seldom go anywhera. ' Do you
think I ought to give up these frlnds and
follow my parents' advice, or do you think
a little "sport" now and then would not
hurt, no matter what the crpjvd? :
, . PUZZLED.
It seems to me that your parents are
sane, friendly, "chummy" folks, and that a
boy should thank his lucky stars that he
belonga to such splendid, reasonable people.
The friends who are dropping off are prob
ably youthful .'wasters," who would hinder
rather than aid you In growth and progress
Indeed, you cannot spend your vitality In
racing around In a breathless (and prob
ably fruitless) search for gayety at night
FAIRFAX.
and then expect the next day's work to p
done n any but a hazy and slipshod fash
ion. None of us in yeqth have learned to
Judge and estimate rightly that queer
thing, human nature, to when you take
your relaxation In the . company of girls
your parents kr.ow you are reasonably sure
of being put In touch with young friends
who will be worth your having. Pleas don't
think It clever or manly or smart or worldly
to go out for what you yourself call a little
"cheap sport." Trust mother and father
they show so much Interest .and friendly
understanding that you cannot go far
astray If you follow them. If there were
more parents of the caliber yours possess
or the wisdom they show ray dally mall
would .lessen to bout nothing T .
Be Polite Always.
v Dear Miss Fairfax: Tell, me, pleas, tt
It is correct for a young lady, upon return
ing from a theater, dinner or dance, after a
pleasant evening, to thank the young man
who has escorted her? I have always con
sidered it correct to shoxr'appreciatlon, but
a friend says It Is not at all necessary, aa
the man should feel honored that ah ha
allowed him to take her.. F. M. Jl.
Ton are right j your friend la wrong. It
Is always correct to be , polity it costs
nothing. In your case, the man would have
every right to put you down as lacking la
ordinary civility If you did not thank him
for the pleasant evening. : j .
si
life IFireseinid Price
A QUARTER of a century ago a steer was just a steer
narrow-backed, lean and slab-sided running largely to
hoofs and llorns. The dressed beef yield was as low in qtian
lity as it was inferior in quality.
YOU would scorn such coarse, tough meat today.
But If livestock conditions were now as they
were then, this would be the only kind of beef you
could get'
And not only that, but you would be paying a great
deal more for it I
- Meeting Present Day Needs
FOR the amount of meat per head furnished by
these low grade cattle would not begin to sup
ply present-day needs.
- Though present prices, caused by an abnormal war-'
demand, seem high, they would shrink into insig
nificance compared with what they would have be
come, had not Armour and Company long ago begun
the work that has been responsible to a considerable
degree for the raising of the broad-backed, high
grade beef steers of today. .
By establishing receiving and killing plants close to
the sources of supply, by developing and operating
a chain of refrigerators on wheels, by perfecting a
rystem of over ,400 branch-house distributing sta
tions, Armour has provided selling outlets and cer
tain markets for the producer for twelve months in
the year.
It has become profitable for the livestock grower to
grade up his cattle standards 1 - ( v
These beef-producing cattle furnish more meat and
a larger proportion of better quality meat at prac
tically the same feeding cost as that of the scrub
cattle of former years.
' i' " ' '. ..
Hfelps Growers and Users
THIS has resulted in better returns for the grower,
while heavier yield and improved quality in
turn has held down prices to consumers.
It is in such fundamental ways as this that Armour,
and Company are rendering a broad, economic serv
ice to the American public.
And because Armour service directly relates to the
prices you pay for meat, when you specify Armour
meats and other food products for your table you
are making it possible to extend this service still
farther.
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CHICAGO
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