Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 02, 1918, SOCIETY SECTION, Image 14

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    " ' '' ' ' '" ' .... - , .- i. ii -,-. i .iiiiiiliUllPTmL'IBWWHITHHJI'IIIW! '''"
'Conducted by. Ella Fleishmans
Women in
Wartime
Army Officer Safe in France
" Bemis Park Auxiliary
Completes First Year's
Red . Cross Work
Bemis Park Red Cross auxiliary,
one of the largest and most flourish
ing units in the city, has just com
pleted its first year of war Service
under the leadership of Mrs. Palmel
Findley. The auxiliary, which start
ed with 45 members, now numbers
112.
1 Mrs. F. J. Birss very kindly gave
the use of her home on Lincoln boul
i evard for the year. For the coming
season, however, the women will
meet at the Swedish Lutheran church
on Lafayette avenue.
Until January the work consisted
of the making of surgical shirts and
knitting, the latter being in charge of
Mrs. H. ,W. Henderson Then a
class in surgical dressings was
formed, with Mrs. M. D. Hussie as
leader.
The report of the year's work is as
follows: . 737 surgical shirts for the
Red Cross chapter, 345 surgical shirts
for Nebraska base hospital, 20 outing
flannel shirts, 281 surgical dressings,
207 cotton pads, 51 split irrigation
pads, 51 ' triangular bandages, 268
oakum pads, 25 scultetus bandages,
37 sweaters, 103 pairs socks, 4 muf
flers and 24 wristlets '. ' "
Officers for the -coming year are:
Mrs. G. W. Noble, chairman; Mrs. J.
H. Skidmore, vice chairman; Mn. J.
; . W. Hazlett, treasurer; Mrs. T. A.
Knudson, secretary; Mm. M. D. Hus
sie, chairman surgical dressings class.
Women's Clubs Raise ' .
Large Sums for
Red Cross Fund
Mrs, C. W. Axtell, chairman of the
, I woman's club division for the sec
ond Red Cross fund drive, reports a
8. total of $14,871.48 subscribed through
the clubs. Amounts contributed were
as follows:
Bohemian alliance ,...,...1 46J.60
, V . -, . . . c -. 7 . .. . mn
i ,.onvoi ,r ............ jna.SU
Suffrage club t.176.00
Happy Hollow , 1,174 IS
:ieft club .......... 471. o
Prettieet Mil .... 60.00
Prettiest Mil Golf club,. i. 44.60
Womsn'i club I14.7B
, Jewish lAillei' society l.SIS.oO
W. W. club J1.00
Rockford College club 11. On
Vesear Colleye club &.00
Wellesley College club , 45.00
Smith Collect club - o.OO
Orpheus club 100.00
Lieut, and Jt?ts.J.3r
l t
0 " 'jL.
V
3'
saw . ??
ax
ytf M A.
u i
This is a charming family group separated by tthe grim war lord. It
includes Lieutenant and Mrs. J. F. Loosbrock and their daughter Helen.
Mrs. Loosbrock had word last week of the safe arrival in France of tier
husband, who is a graduate of Creighton Medical college class of 1911.
Until he entered the service, the lieutenant practiced medicine in Des Moines,
, Mrs. Loosbrock and Helen are making their home with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. McGowan, in Omaha until the officer return.
V
i ARMY NOTE
Captain Malcolm Baldrige of Camp
Dodge spent last week-end in Omaha.
Porter Durkee, formerly of Omaha,
has been made an ensign in the navy
and will enter a -special course of
training at Anrlapoli's.
Maurice Brogan of Fort Omaha
is spendingseveral days in Chicago
with his cousin, Lieutenant Edward
Perley.
Lieutenant Arthur Scribner of
Camp Dodge spent last Thursday
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.lA. V.
Scribner, and left Friday for Camp
Jackson, Columbia, S. C, where he
had been recently ordered.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bostwick
have received word of the safe arrival
in France of their son, Paul
Lieutenant Joseph Millard, who
has been at Camp Pike, Little Rock,
Ark., ii spending a few days with
Mr. and Mrs., Barton Millard.,
Thirteen officers were transferred
Thursday from Fort Crook to Fort
Sheridan, Khere they will become in
structors in the next officers' training
camp. '
Mr. and Mrs. George M. Durkee
entertained at a delightful dancing
party at their home Monday evening,
for their son Stanley, who was home
from Camp Taylor. About 10 couples
were present. ,
Lieutenant , Louis Sweet of Camp
Grant is spending a 10-day leave
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
Sweet.
Fred Ochsenbein left Wednesday
for Berkeley, Cal., to enter the avia
tion officers' training school.
Mrs. Frank A. Grant "and Misses
Marian, Helen and Dorothy Grant
expect to join Colonel Grant in two
or three weeks in Montreal, Can.,
where he was recently ordered.
Mrs. Victor Caldwell is in New
York With Lhrutenant Jabin Cald
well, who expects to sail very soon.
Mrs. I. Sibbernsen is in New York
to see Lieutenant Albert Sibbernsen
before he sails. j
Raymond Gould left Saturday
evening for Louisville, Ky., where he
will enlist in the Omaha Ambulance
company at Camp Taylor.
Sam Reynolds left Wednesday tc
enter training at the ground school
in Berkeley, Cal.
Lieutenant Edmund Booth, sta
tioned at Camp Dodge, has been or
dered to Dartmouth to take his de
gree. .
G K. Gartner, son of Mr. and Mrs
C. G. Gartner, has enlisted in the
navy as first-class yeoman and is
now stationed at the Great Lakes
naval training station.
,.t.. ........
Omaha Ptorjr Tellura
flout h Bid Story Tcllars ,,
"Wyrha Story Tellera , ,
J. F. W. club ...
Royal Naifhbora
W. C. T. V. .......
Mociat Settlamant
. IX T. A.
Hrrmo . ...,,.,,...i
Brottlnh Rlten
Pauehtcra ot till
1. K. O.
4 . Womani' Relief corpa
Trattt eWl, Mothers' club ,.
61. on
41.00
' lid
1S.0S
K7.4D
- St.HA
J7.30
111.00
10.00
160.00
1.00
125.75
12.40
lo. eo
Country club 1,401.00
.......... ......
titymour l.ska club , , ,
Comus club,
lpr or Honor
Dearroa of Honor (Bohnmlan) ....
tundes Woman's club .........
llaccabrea
T, W.' C. A. C
Hustnexs, Woman's club
u. a. K
M Kluma
donations to clubs
470.15
ss.oo
lfi.60
409. SO
121.30
2S.00
13.60
1I4.S0
176.75
10.00
1S.O0
...1,007.60
Total
.ftU.l7l.43
Keep jyduriLiberty Bonds
The government expects you to do
more than buy Liberty bonds; it ex.
pects you to keep them, is the point
emphasiied by W. F Bigelow, editor
of Good Housekeeping, The opinion
is widely' held that,1 having purchased
the bonds, one in free to do' as one
pleases with them. , Which is true,
but is not the whole truth; for we are
buying Liberty bonds orimarilv as a
duty; and we are doing less than our
duty when we subscribe for bonds and
then pass them on at a discount.
The treasury officials have done
all in their power to discourage the
commercial use of the bonds, and
while tome financial experts disagreed
with them, it is nevertheless good cit
izenship as well as good business to
hold on to the bonds, we have and
' to keep on buying more and more of
them. We, will never find anything
safer as a security; we will find few
things that bring a better return in
dollars and cents. and nothina that
equals them in making war service,
; universal.
Only one or two in a hundred of
us can 'offer oqr. lives to our coun
try; we can all serve her in an equal
ly necessary way by buying bonds.
"Equally necessary" yes, but pitifully
mall by comparison, tWougli we load
ourselves with all the bonds we can
carry. For we still, have our homes,
our loved ones, our incomes, our
future; thev have offered their all, and
of many of them all will be taken. If
you have bought one bond, buy an
other; if five, buy ten. The loan must
go "over the top" a mighty success;
into the safe-keeping places of 20,000,
000, free men and women should go
these pledges of a free land which has
. committed itself to the righting of a
great wrong, to the noblest enterprise
ever undertaken by a nation.
Th Quitter
4 .
. Wbta yeu'ra lost In tha wild, and you'r
srartd as a child,
f And Daath looks you banc to tha sya.
And you r sort M a boll. It's according to
Hoyla '
Ta cock your ravelrtr and die.
But thai Code of a Man says: "Fight all
jron can "
And MU-dlsssoIutlon if bamd
In hunrr and wot, oh. It's aasy to blow.
It's tha bail ssrvsd (or breakfast that's
, bard.
Totfra ilck of tha fa ma! Wall, bow that's
a shame, ,
Tou're yoane and you'rs brave and you're
bright , , .
Tou'ts had raw deal. I know, but don't
squeal.
Buck up, do your damndest and tight
IV$ the plunging away that wilt win yoa
. the day, ,, -,.
So dea't be piker, eld pert!
lust drew on your grit; It's as easy to
ult
It's tha keeplng-your-chln-up that's hard.
Tr aasy ta err that yeu'ra baa ten, and
die: : -
Ifa eay' ta erawtlsb and crawl:
Sat ta tight and to fight wh hope'a aut
' mt eight
.. Whf, thafa tha beat fame of them all!
And though, you come out of each gruelling
" beat . ,
i At broken and beaten and ecarred,
Just bare ana mora tryIt's dead, easy to
die- , r , .
It's the keeping oa living that's hard. '
e-BOBEBT W. USBVIC&
Earl Curzon Pays Tribute
To Chaplains
The following tribute,, was paid to
chaplains in a speech delivered by
Earl Curzon of Kendlesion: "May I
say a word about the chaplains of
every church and denomination, 2,200
of whom are serving with the armies
in the field, giving consolations of re
ligion to the living and performing
the last rites of the church over the
dead? How gallant and perilous their
service has been may be shown by
the fact that over 70 have been killed,
many wounded, and many others have
died of "disease, two have won the
Victoria Cross, 130 have been deco
rated and many more hav been men
tioned in dispatches."
' i i i
Recognize Only Red Cross Uniforms.
The only uniforms vjorn by women
war workers which arl officially rec
ognized by the United States are
those of the Red Cross and Y. W. C.
A. in service abroad; munitions work
ers, telephone and radio operators,
yeowomen, employes of the shipping
board and the food administration,
women s motor corps of New York,
Girl scouts, and students in the Na
tional Service school at Washington.
Whyettes?
"Officerette."
"Conductorette."
"Farmerette."
"Motorcyclette."
Whyettes? '
Or, if we must have them, let's have,
too, the stokerette, the longshoreman-
ette and the gunnerette.
Living down the diminutive is one
of woman s war problems.
It's all very well to be an "ette"
when one leads a doll s house exist
ence of drills and fluffs and gay re
frains. .
But out as 'dose to the firing line
as women have to move today, being
an( ette is about as satisfying as
being a war nurse without military
rank. brom the ' Woman Citizen.
0-
Burgess-Wash Compmy.
-aVCRYBODYS STORE"
New
Victrola
Records
Do not fail to come in immediately and have these
played for you. They comprise some wonderfully beau
tiful selections. ;
70117 VThe Laddies Who Fought and Won"
This song Is ona of Harry Lauder's own and ta sunt by him in his In
imitable , style. It created tremendous enthusiasm when sung by him at
concerts In bis Red Cross drive from ona end of the country to tha other.
' 18467 TWhat Are You Going to Do to Help the
" "Keep Your Head Down Fritzie Boy."
Two popular up-to-the-minute soldier sonfe with a melody and anap
that will make It a bif seller. Every owner of a Victrola should have ona of
these records.
45151-
"Laf ayette We Hear You Calling."
"Freedom for All Forever." ,
', A beautiful melody to these aonys which is appealing-., They express
the spirit thst must have animated General Pershing when he landed in
France with his soldiers. , . v
64773 "God Be Witl. Our Boyt Tonight"
Sunt by John McCormsck with sueh a sincerity that it thrills its hesrere.
It Is becoming snore popular that his famous selection of "Keep the Home
Firee Burnint." , '.. - -. ,
18460 i"Whatll We Do With Him Boys?"
"Any Old Place the Gang Goes."
Two sonts thst show the real American spirit. They are full of pep and
are sunt with the force that ia irresistible.
18461 "Three Wonderful Letters From Home."
V "Daddy Mine." .
Songs that describe the lovln words sent by mother, wife end baby to ,
the soldiers in France. They tell the story delightfully and express ths pleas
ure that tha soldiers reeieve from a word from home. ,
-18462 "I'm Sorry I Made You Cry."
"One Day in June."
A plaintive son with a slow, dreamy, hsuntint sweetness ' that
4 makes it extremely appealing t
' s
H ZD otrri tt -ctr pat r.BC U
n
18457 i
"Ostriche Walk."
"At the Jazz Band Ball."
j e m.v. uauu wis.
For those who like Jats Bsnd musle these seleetiont are the kind that
mt 4nerely invite you, but almost force yon to dance.
18458r-
"I Hate to Lose You."
"For the Two of Us."
. tr??ly popular selections that are having a tremendous sale. Do pot
fail to ask for them.
18453-1"A Little Bit of Sunshine." ;
A bright, catchy selection that appeals to alL Co ot fall to hev it.
we know you will like it. J
S5672 Gems From "Oh,! Lady! Lady!"
Gems From "Going Up."
.i These eompriso selections from tha latest musical comedies now beint
plsyed in New York, where they both met with Instant and enormous success.
35639 "For-Get-Me-Not."
"Felicia Waltz.".
W0l I".? 53? you",'.: upTnd walt' f klnd th' ',
Burgess-Nash Co. Victor Section Fourth Floor
THE NEW PRIZE-WINNING FOOD PRODUCT
Saves Wheat s Saves Bread
You do not have to buy a substitute when
you purchase Kornrpni from your grocer
MAY 23, 1918
SKINNER MANUFACTURING COMPANY
' Omaha, Nebraska.
Gentlemen: .
I consider your new product, SKINNER'S KORNRONI, not only a great benefit to the
public in the matter of conserving wheat products, but I actually believe it is one of thelbest
products for the table that has ever been put on the market, because it can be combined
with many left-over meats, etc., and many palatable "and tasty dishes prepared therefrom.
. First and second prizes were won by SKINNER'S KORNRONI in a recent World-Herald
Food Conservation Contest, KORNRONI being used as a substitute.
: - '. ?.WtW truly. (L.
HERE IS THE PRIZE-WINNING RECIPE:
World-Herald Food Expert.
Kornroni
Saves Wheat
Saves Bread
Kornroni Escalloped Eggs
Cook a package of Kornroni in
fast bollinr water for five to eight
minutes. Make a cream sauce of
one pint milk, two tablespoons corn
oil, two tablespoons corn flour; add
two tablespoons chopped green pep
per, two tablespoons chopped pi
mento, one tablespoon chopped
.onion, ona. tablespoon any kind of
pickle chopped, one-qarter teaspoon
salt and red pepper each.' Slice four
hard boiled eggs; oil baking dish
with corn oil, place eggs and Korn
roni in layers in dish, pour cream
sauce over mixture; sprinkle "war
bread" crumbs with a little corn oil
on tojp. Put in oven and bake until
brown. Serve four people..
Kornroni
Saves Wheat
Saves Bread
it..
rl
SKINNER'S KORNRONI can be used in all recipes the same as Skinner's Macaroni and
Spaghetti. Sample package mailed postage paid, to any housewife on receipt of 10c in stamps
NOT SKINNER'S'KORNRONI is manufactured exclusively by the Skinner Manufacturing
Company. The process and trade name are protected by U. S. Patent Number 108929.
-n 71 ' PS ..."F . IT r a."' M ' w essassBBsssai . mt,tmm,mmH . KijASjSJVl UjJ Ptt
i 33 S7 Sjl S&1 ? IP MADE ONLY BY v ! H DM lOsTI M I GUARANTIES AB50U1TE IhfSTjJt t' h
i"tii is ii iSsVtWijxi
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