Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 15, 1918, SOCIETY SECTION, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PART TWO
SOCIETY SECTION
PAGES 1 TO 8 "...
' VOL. XL VIII NO.
14.
OMfflA
TODAY
OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBEB 15, 1918.
PART TWO
SOCIETY SECTION
PAGES 1 TO 8 :
SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS
It
;s
3&U BUJalflN BABIES
FLOWER DdH SfJLE SEPTEMBER 21
i :(
i'r''tfi','"'''ifiM :-
3?OS5
3owle
rX
aw.
V
1) '1
' ? r f
if
4!
Y
k ' Mr, -yl,, .vri , J
Glizapeth JUavts
A W FT yv n J
wMn.M (LPmaJhia
Mrs. Frank W. Judson is Commandant of Military
Machine Formed on Ward and Precinct Plan
to "Go Over the Top" in Next Drive
A RADICAL change in the manner of handling the fourth Liberty loan I
campaign has been made by the women's committee, Mrs. Frank V P''
Judson, chairman. f n n n. f
" " v ' 4.
Irene
0
Julia. Cavete 9?io7.
wVr. eJm. 7 " r7
... were vuno oizeu or cscctz"
vaiion, Jfe? CParents xour
- Ve zzt Oma JdsL .
Jacclj tut
FM3rthi LI Ibartw I
4
- ..... '
ium5 01 prominent umana women wiu sell sprigs of blue forget-me-nots, favorite?
. iwww ui xuicauein, yueen 01 Belgium, on tne streets ot Umaha Saturday for the ben
efit of babes of this war-stricken land.
Omaha has a deeper realization of the need to support this fund because there is num
bered in its citizenship Mr. and Mrs. Gus Caveye of 5209 P street, South Side, whose baby
daughter, Julia, died of starvation in their native land, subsequent to the Hun invasion.
1 ee came to 0maha eiht years ago to make a home for his wife and little Julia in
the new land. When he had saved enough to send for his wife she set out, leaving the little
girl with the grandmother in Courtrai. Upon the declaration of war the panic-stricken par
ents immediately forwarded $100 to bring the child to this country, but it was in vain.
Letters and letters came telling that the food supply was low, and often little Julia
craved a crust of bread. Last week rami a nnstnl imm a n0; in a nn.m.n
. T j J K " v-"""' " vjtmmii ynouii camp
telling that little Julia was dead.
lhe gnef-stncken mother will A rv Trior fprira anA An lna nftvinof 4-n. lnin i 4-V. j
flowers for this urgent benefit Saturday. "Will I help on Belgian Baby day?" she repeated, the
question asked bv Miss Mav Mahnnev -whn 4a nrnmntinfr tVin 1n.ol 001 . if.:. -
Leon Osterreith, chief of the Belgian military mission in Washington, D. C. "God. no one
will do more than I,", with fervor.
m A little sister, Alice, born in this country, and who therefore never knew her older sis
ter, is the youngest helper in the sale.
Mrs. Ross Towie, Miss Irene McKnight, Miss Elizabeth Davis and Miss Mabel Jacobson
who will have charge of the sale in thp Tlni
" - - - u,.ui6 wic wiiiuiijj nic cimiusiaswc
'
The block system of canvassing will be used exclusively Ther will
be no other committees in order to avoid duplication of effort.
A simplified, military organization is now being perfected to thoroughly
canvass tne city ana suburbs.
Mrs. Judson has appointed a major for each ward. Each major has
secured captain for every precinct in her ward. Captains in turn have
appointed lieutenants, one for each block, who will do the actual house-to-
nouse canvassing.
The block system of canvassing will be used exclusively. There will
successfully in Kansas City and St Paul, where the organizations are now
permanent institutions for all war work.
Preliminary work of the campaign is already in progress.. Lieutenants
are obtaining names and addresses of th residents of their blocks, number of
persons in each family, including household servants, where there are any.
Headquarters of the women's committee will be located in the Masonic
temple. '
The executive committee includes Mrs. Judson, commanding colonel;
Mrs. W. J. Hynes, lieutenant colonel, and Mrs.W. A. C. Johnson, secretary.
Majors of wards have been named as follows: Miss Lillian Paul, First;
Mrs. C. W. Axtell, Second; Mrs. Joseph Duffy, Third; Miss Ella J. Brown,
Fourth and Fifth; Mrs. Frank Bandle, Sixth; Mrs. J. W. Koutsky, Seventh;
Mrs. W. G. Nicholson, Eighth; Mrs. Charles Rosewater, Ninth; Mrs. W. J.
Hynes, Tenth; Dr. Jennie Callfas, Eleventh; Mrs. W. T. Graham, Twelfth;
Mrs. W. A. Yoder, Florence ; Mrs. J. T Pickard, Benson.
Mrs. Joseph Barker is chairman of supplies; Mrs. Martin Harris, chair
man of publicity; Mrs. L. M. Lord, chairman of speakers and meetings; Mrs.
WHIiam Archibald Smith, chairman of Liberty bank, and Mrs. O. T. Eastman,
chairman of sifting.
An advisory board will include Mrs. E. M. Fairfield, retiring chairman
of the woman's committee, and Mesdames George Joslyn, J. L. Kennedy,
Luther Drake, Warren Blackwell, T. P. Reynolds, O. T. Eastman, Gurdon
Wattles, E. W. Nash, M. D. Cameron, Charles Elgutter and H. G. Streight.
f On Friday and Saturday, September 20 and 21, the Danish Sister
? society of Omaha, South Side and Benson, will hold a carnival and a
bazar in the Municipal Auditorium, the entire proceeds of which will 5
he given to Omaha chapter of the Refi Cross.
ther,Many donations have been received from various business houses,
has gone'tol'i??8 with the many beautiful Pes of fancy needlework X
eruit 5,000 AmeriJifiP&ttibute1 by the Danish women, will be on exhibi- ?
lease men for military serv " . ,
Gunther will seek to enlis featwe will be a drill given by a team t
girls. Saturday night there will be a group $
n,4 ; nvrrall. handling pick ari5tume
Robert Walstrnm loft Toct rU fnr
Camp Pike, Ark., where he will enter
the officers' training' school. Mrs.
Walstrom will make her home with
her parents for the duration of the
war.
and nnratins machinery. Miss
' Edna Terrill and her sister are regu
. Itrly employed in the silica minjs,in
' VHckma county, Oregon.
than
will I
Lt. Theodore Maenner left Tuesday
for Arcadia, Cal.. where he will be
stationed.
Lt. John Hanighen as been promot
ed to first lieutenant and has been
I Mated Leader of Girls'
$ Welfare Work to Sjpeek J
I in Omaha Sept 24
Miss Margaret Slattery, beloved
leader of girls' welfare 'wnrt
speak at the Omaha Auditorium on
the evening of September 24, under
the ausnices nf th Wr rm..:.
Service. Miss Slatterv w II taiw tn
the eirls of Omaha vrir
whom is invited, and her subject will
be the patriotic club work.
Miss blattery used to be a school
teacher in Fitchburc. Mas Pncerl
of a wonderful magnetic personality
and a heart full of the love of her
kind. Miss Slatterv A
crowds. She is so popular as a lec
turer that her time is engaged two
years ahead, and Omaha was for
tunate enough to secure her only
through the fact that she is a per
sonal friend of Miss Frances Range
of the War Camp Community
Service.
The American girl and the war are
the subjects to be discussed at the
meeting Every 'girl, whether she is a
mere child or so old she has forgotten
the count of her birthdays, is invited
to hear this sweet-faced woman with
the musical voice and possessed of the
love of every girl and woman who
has ever met her or heard her speak
made staff officer with the title nf en,
gineer of coast artillery at Fort Mor
gan, Ala., where he is stationed.
Lt. R. B. Howell and Mrs. Howell
are at New London, Conn.
Lt. Clarke Matthews, who was sta
tioned at Fort Omaha, is now at Ar
cadia, Cal.
Lt. Edgar Ferguson is now at Camp
Morrison, Va.
Harold Thomas and Fred Koenig
left Thursday for St. Paul, where they
will enter the ground aviation school.
L.t. Richard Walton of Fort Omaha
has returned from a 10-day leave at
his home in Kansas City.
Lt. Dwight Evans of Fort Worth,
iex is spending several days here.
Lt. Virgil Lewis of Fort Omaha,
has been sent to Mulberry Island, Va.
Le Mars M. Shearer, who is with
an ambulance corps, has arrived safe
ly overseas.
Fort Crook has been reopened and
Major Crockett of Fort Omaha is in
charge at present.
Lt. Ben B. Wood, who has been sta
tioned at Camp John Wise, San An-
THE' RIGHT SPIRIT
tonio, Tex., has been transferred to
camp Morrison, Va. Mrs. Wood is
living at the Warwick hotel at New'
port News, Va., to be near her hus
band. Brandon Howell, who took the
ground course at Berkeley, Cal., is now
at Dallas, Tex., where about 1,500 men
from all over the United States who
have finished their ground courses are
stationed.
Cleary Hanighen has returned to
Harvard and is with the Harvard
student military unit.
. The very prosperous-looking
gentleman stopped and permit-
ted the very pretty girl to fasten X,
a flnurer in Viio KiifrtnnVinle Then c
; . -' - ... in. vmvs.....w.v. A iii.il j
X he handed her a quarter. V
"You have fed a Belgian baby,"
was uic izyiy.
"Nonsense," said the other
adding a $5 bill to his contribu
tion, "this will do it better."
Lt. Burdette
aviation service.
overseas.
Franz H. Paustran
commission of second
Fort Worth, Tex.
Kirkendall of the
has arrived safely
T3 TLT1 TTt jl V o it n 1
urrjfli rn rnw iiflirairT s tis - iw?rjiLr
on the "JTofe" Once More
t
received the
lieutenant at
Train Women for War Work.
Mrs. F. H. Cole, chairman of
scholarship trustees, Nebraska Feder
ation of Women's Clubs, announces
the United States employment bureau
will co-operate with the scholarship
trustees in training students'for gov
ernment positions. Teaching is now
considered war work by request of
President Wilson.
No government permission has yet
been given to train women for radio
service, according to local tederal em
ployes. Patriotic Organiiations.
The first meeting of the year for
the DauRhters of 1812 will be held
Thursday at the home of Mrs. C. E.
Adams. Mrs. G. B. Darr will give a
reading.
Mrs. James Chadwick will be host
ess for the meeting of Dundee Wo
man's Patriotic club Monday after
noon at her home. 116 South Fortv-
ninth street.
U. S. Grant Woman's Relief Corns
will hold its retrular meeting Tues.
day at 2:30 p. m. in Memorial hall.
A fcLL, well, so you ve re
' turned from your vacation 1"
Dr. (J. S. Hoffman, that incorrigible
ink-ester. preeteH flahhv Tletavls
J . o - .... j - ' .
'And where did you pass your leave
ot absence.' he inquired.
And Gabby told him, innocently
enough.
"So you didn't go to Colorado!
Now, isn t that strange," mused the
danner little dor.tnr "Mnt nf fh
girls go to Colorado because there is
a aianitou tman or twoj there!
WRITING letters to soldiers is a
most popular form of war
work among Omaha' girls,' and the
soldiers at the front appreciate re
ceiving them. One girl says she
writes to two lieutenants, six orivates
and a cook. She is democratic in the
distribution of her favors atid says
she ought to be, since this is a war
to make the world safe for democ
racy. "If I had time I would write
to the whole company," she declares.
QJPELL it just like the salad
J dressing," said Miss Florence
Durkce, the, new secretary of religi
ous work at the Young Women's
Christian association, when Gabby
asked how to spell her name. "I at
tended a conference one time," Miss
Durkee continued, "at which Miss
Mabel Salmon of Omaha was also
present. She and I and two other
girls, Miss Lemon and Miss Lettis,
were often together, and the crowd
called us The Salad."
uate you would not talk the way you
do." It being a fact that the truth
hurts worst, the prospects of the sr
rival of the dove of peace in that lo
cality are now farther away than
T JNIQUE indeed is the wartime en-
gagment ring that a well-known
young business woman is wearing.
She is helping to keep Omaha's bank
clearings correctly, while "he" is sta
tioned at Camp Dodge.
.. nn which is worn on the
little finger, resembles a signet ring,
except that where the monogram
generally appears is a heart-shaped
design edged with white to show off
to greater advantage the single Blue
service star.' .
But here is the hest nart it tUm rr.',l .
in question considers you an intimate
inena, sne will touch a tiny sprine
and up will fly the heart-shaped cover,
disclosing a wee photograph of "The
Man.
'i y.
I
N one of the finest Omaha resi
dence districts there is in prog
ress a real neighborhood row. Mrs.
Brown is the camouflage name of one
woman. Near her lives the mother
of Arthur Jones (also a camouflage
name). The Brown boys and Arthur
recently had a' quarrel and Mrs.
Brown appeared on the scene and
took a rather violent verbal part in
the difficulty. When she had iute
finished her harangue, 10-year-old Ar
thur exclaimed: "Really Mrs. Brown,
I believe if you were a college grad-
' C. A. ACTIVITIRS
The business girls' Red Cross sur
gical dressings class holds its second
meeting Thursday evening at 7
o'clock.
Sunday S o'clock vespers will be
resumed today. Miss Etta Pickering,
general secretary; Mrs. J. M. Aikin,
vice president, and Miss Florence
Durkee, religious secretary, will lead
the services. A fellowship hour will
Many Centers, an industrial girls'
club, meets for suooer at the
ciation building Monday night at 6:15
for an important business session. :
Saturday evening the club will hold
a "penny fair" in the gymnasium, pro
ceeds to go to the relief of Belgian
children.
(.follow.
The club wa organued in 1907.
This year the studies will embrace ;
history, music, literature art anA tUm
J - I . - . mi
present day conditions of our allies,
V
Q
"VI
spr -wow,
1
n
J
I