All Danger to Boys Didn't Disappear When Roar of Guns Ceased, Says Mother In Beautiful Letter to Her Soldier Boy, She Points Out That Now Is Time He Must Be Careful. It Is a Letter All Mothers Should Read. Here is a letter a wonderful let ter from mother to her soldier boy in France. And The Bee wants every mother in Omaha to read it and when she has the spirit of it write to her own boy across the ocean. If ahe hasn't a boy of her own "over there" then she can write to some Other mother's boy. There was never a time when the boyi were so greatly in need of let ters from home as now. When the battle was on the soldier had little time or opportunity to let his mind wander to things unwholesome he as too busy with what was then rue graveset problem of the hour, winning the war. But now it is different and the ' homesick, resources," said Mr. Fosdick. "It Is above all a morale problem, and it must be faced as such, with the full co-operation of families and friends here in this country, if it is to be solved successfully. Every one who has a son, a brother or a sweet heart over there must help. . ! 'While the war was on our boys were fully occupied; they were still filled with the spirit of adventure, looking forward rather than back. Now. however, the fighting is at an end. They are going to remain, most of them, many months doing work which will be neither exciting nor particularly interesting. They will get lonesome, bored and terribly Main Lounge on Second Floor woman who wrote this beautitu! letter is not the only one who real izes that the real danger to our boys is greater today than when the the battle was ragitiR. Then there was only the dancer of being killed. Now but read this mother's let ter. She tells it more beautifully than we can. Then read the appeal from Raymond li. Fosdick, chair man of the ("oinnti-sim on train ing camp activities. wlhi wants the overseas forces to be bound to home "The $170,000,000 raised in he re cent united war work drive is to be used precisely to bridge over this period by providing recreation and amusement. But no amount of mere money expended in such a way will be enough. What these boys really want is not diversion, but human interest and sympathy. These things expressed in letters from home will warm their he. s and create a home atmosphere around them, even while they are with thai strongest tie of all love. absent from the family circle. Her Soldier Boy. "Son of Mine: "They're sending vou home to me aflast. Through all these months of wi,tiog and longing I've been wear- "Such letter may be a verv neces sary sheet anchor to windward in the case of some boys. The thought of some one waiting for them, counting on them, will, more than itife a?. star vf or you and holding my ! anything else, make them hold back headMgh -'and thinking wonderful j and think twice before plunging in flfoufehts about you. I've watched you through ocean mists and dream ed anxious dreams. Yes. and cried a little, too, but not when people could see. "And now you're coming home. Oh, it seems too good to be true. I've just read your letters again. , They 9ay so much more than you ' ever thought when you were writ ing them. Just happenings that's all most-.of the things you wrote about were to you. But to me they said yftu were facing the biggest thing In life, facing it bravely, as I should want my son to face it. You . were offering your body and your soul for a thing bigger than you or me or America. "Don't think me silly or senti mental because I say these things. ust remember that while you were fdina through that fire and terror had to sit here and smile. I had to try to be as brave as you, so that' you shouldn't be ashamed of me. when I wrote to you I tried to write cheerful, encouraging letters, be cause I did not want you to go into battle feeling that I was holding you back from the big sacrifice. It's jgjnjy now, when the fighting is over, that 1 can let down a little and be just your mother, just the woman HtfhOloves you better than anything else in the world and is so glad to 4fi$jy you're coming back to her that" she doesn't care who sees her cry.- ' Fight Not Over. "Perhaps for some of the boys jwho. have stood with you so finely through these trials the fighting is got 'yet all over. The fighting. I Wie'an is that between a man and himself, and for many of them this JiU be the hardest battle of all. Dur ing the long days and evenings of Aching before they can start for flbme thoughts will creep into their nvfids which will be hard to resist, admire will be times after all these T.' .t- -r . . .1.. I Bionins oi acuon wncu mc uniting ;orichange and for the companion iiiip of women may lead them into associations which will spoil their $ftiiecOming and cause them shame and humiliation and even perhaps e them unfit to receive the love at' awaits them here. . f"You, dearest boy, are just as AbOnian'as your comrades, and feel ings like these may come to you ifip. r don't tsk you to crush them. Tliey '"are natural, and they only prove tha war has failed to dry up ' Jhe';weltSp'ring of your emotions. I ask you only to recognize them when they come and to control them with the fine ' strength you have : gained while fighting for the ideals and principles, of America. Just re member that many joyous years of IMeware aTiead of you and that the risk of spoiling them and the love that will fill them is too tremendous to run for a short hour of seeming pleasure. "Somebody Cared." "Many of the boys who will come home with you have no mothers to write to them. Some of them may think that no one cares what they do. But somebody does care. America cares. And the girls they will marry some day care. And, oh, the difference it make in their lives if they will just remember that there Is always somebody, always! Help them to remember. Help them to come home clean and fine. Don't let them spoil everything now. They have been so splendid. Tyotl think this letter will help ftem give it to them. If they have no mothers let me be their mother un til the have come back and taken the high places that await them herel Tell them to write to me. How I should treasure their letters! And, of course, you will write to me. Just say that you understand that you know why I have written this letter. Then I can wait months you W etaoin shrdl shrdlu u u duu yes, even years knowing that you will come home to me as fine and clean as you were when I sent you away to camp so long ago. "MOTHER." Keep the Boys' Thoughts Centered Around Home Washington, Dec. 14. (Special). , Just before leaving for France to superintend the. demobilization ac tivities of those organizations which recently took part in the united war work campaign, Raymond B. Fosdick, chairman of the commis sion on training camp activities, was interviewed with regard o the present situation of our overseas forces. ' ' :i; i "The problem presented by the gradual demobilization of more than 2,000,000 men 3,000 miles front home i one which will tax all our social to situations which might mean harm and unhappiness for them." Club Linen, Napery and Silver Bear New Athletic Monogram Table appointments in the Omaha Athletic club were selected with care and judgment. The linens and napery of choice damask are mark ed with the initials "O. A. C." in white. The silver is unmistakably the silver of this new clubhouse and no other, for besides the monogram "O. A. C", it bears on the back the complete name of the club. One of the distinctly new table appointments, and one in which Monsieur Chevalier takes especial pride are the individual silver cream bottles, miniatures of the regula tion cream bottle, which the milk man puts on the back doorstep. Simple China Patterns. Plates of varying sizes, cups and saucers are in a French blue and pink design while those for the grill are of a different pattern than the main dining room. Here a simple white with blue band is the design. Glassware is fragile and dainty and monogrammed with the letters "O. A. C." ii'-'W smsa,wSS-wBl( TO GIVE GLAD HAND AT NEW ATHLETIC CLUB. E. L. PARKER. E. L. Parker succeeded R. E. Ma gill as manager of the Omaha Ath letic club when Magill entered the service. Parker is the man who will welcome members to the Omaha Athletic club and look after details of the house management. Splendid Settings for Most Exclusive Bouquets at New Club Setting is adequate for the most exclusive and imposing social func tions, banquets or dinners, in the magnificent old blue and ivory din ing room on the third floor of the new Atheltic club, which vies with the most beautiful dining rooms in the country in beauty of design and richness of furnishing. Stenciling has been eliminated from the old blue and gold striped silk walls. Bronze velour hangings with embroidered lambrequins and trimmed with heavy silk fringe and tassels draped over lace window panels; Henple white tables and chairs of solid mahogany with old blue tapestry seats contribute to the satisfaction of this room. A balcony or mezzanine floor, overlooking the dining room, where tables are placed also for dinner and which will be open- each afternoon for tea add to the attractiveness of the whole. Ferns and other greens will be placed along the railing of the mezzanine floor. Four attractively furnished private dining rooms complete the front section of the third floor. The kitchen occupies the rear. Jewish Correspondence Bureau Issues Warning Amsterdam. The Jewish corre spondence bureau at The Hague has issued a warning against the Turkish grand rabbi, Ihaim Nahun and his deputy, Nissin Nazliah, who have arrived at The Hague from Con stantinople on their way to America and Paris, with the intention, the bureau says, of creating a sentiment favorable to Turkey, particularly in America, and of playing off the in terests of the entente powers in the east, one against another. "Ihaim," the bureau says, "is an opponent of Jewish national and Zionist aspirations.. The Jewish people views its liberation from the Turkish yoke and a British pro tectorate as the only way to attain an independent Jewish state." America Entered War to Make Future Wars Actual Impossibility Christiana. Norwegian leaders in science, politics and business have formed a society for the purpose of enrolling Norway in a league of nations built upon a democratic basis. Professor F. Nansen, the famous Artie explorer and scientist, has been elected president of the society. In his introductory ad dress, Professor Nansen said: "The dream of a fraternity of na tions has suddenly come within sight. It is the goal of which one of the world's greatest statesmen, President Woodrow Wilson, is aim ing. The reason why America is. now able to make this Utopian dream a reality is because the na tion is young and healthy. America went into the war only to make future wars impossible. It will achieve that end." British Grand Flet Celebrates When News of Peace Is Received London (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) A vast chorus of siren whistles from a thousand fight ing ships split the air when the Brit ish grand fleet received the news of I the signing of the armistice. First the 30-mile line of vessels sprang into light. Then, suddenly, the great fleet of battleships, cruisers, torpedo destroyers, mine-layers and patrols united in one huge, synchronized diapson that startled the hearers for a radius of 100 miles. The tre mendous sound re-echoed amongst the hills on both shores, awesome in its intensity. A hundred searchlights, which, for four years, had resolutely watched the skies, or peered steadfastly along dark waters for enemy craft, mer rily criss-crossed about the sky. Flares were lit, star shells fired and here and there some of the greater ships were fortunate in a fireworks display. For 60 minutes the fleet threw off all reserve and let itself go. At 9 o'clock the sirens suddenly silenced, the lights snapped out and the grand fleet was again waiting and watch ing and ready, and scarcely had the last sounds died away than from the admirals' ships there were, winking at the mastheads, the orders for fur ther duty. Just Around the Corner from the Cluh F0NTENELLE GARAGE Service in its fullest sense Phone Douglas 3722 GOGflPAOT HIGHEST GRADE LABELS STATIONERY COLOR WORK OMAHA BRAND ICECREAM is sold by most druggists and confectioners in Omaha. It is served at the leading clubs, cafes and restaurants. Wherever quality is the first consideration there you will find BRAND ICE CREAM Demand This Brand There's a Difference MANUFACTURED BY The Fairmont Creamery Co. Spacious Quarters Make Athletic Club Guests Comfortable Sleeping quarters in the new club house, from the fifth floor up, are spacious, the furnishings well chosen and with an eye to man's comfort, which make them particularly home-like. The furniture is of ma hogany and maple, built on simple lines, the special feature being the old fashioned chest of drawers with a separate mirror, instead of the conventional dresser or chiffonier. Each room is furnished with ma hogany desk and waste paper basket to match; clothes closets, tapestry chairs and cretonne hangings carry ing out a gray and rose color scheme, and grip stands. The choice rooms have the complete bathroom with built-in tubs and fine sanitary fixtures, the others lack the tub. Separate baths are installed in each corridor. Well-chosen pictures are being hung in each room, all of which are furnished alike, with the variation of different color schemes on sepa rate floors. There are sixty sleeping rooms. Three Check Stands. There are three check-stands in the new clubhouse, one for ladies, one for men, and one in connection with the grill, also for. men. THE BEST REFRIGERATION was none too good for the New Athletic Club That's why a YORKl,,plInt;erating was selected after carefully comparing its merits with those of other makes. "YORK" machines embody every modern im provement tending to safe and economical operation and have the unqualified endorsement of thousands of satisfied custo mers. The product of the largest manufactur ing concern of the kind in the country and the top seller of all makes. Sizes and styles to meet every need. "Buy 'em in Omaha" YORK-ALLAN ICE MACHINE COMPANY 1213-15-17 Jackson St., OMAHA NEB. n . is ft flit m f i3 ff i 1 0J1II AH .A. J jjj ' S II COMPANY g I 1 1 I 1 I it"" 'l FUr !.! V lt '1 J W ' I ' ' - 't f 1 -let rvftJ1- r Nearly twenty years in the and PAN business in Omaha During that time we have furnished the Glass for most of the large buildings in Omaha and vicinity. We Give Service Whether the Job is Large or Small phone us DOUGLAS 791 for prices on Glass, Paints, etc. Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company (Formerly Midland Glass & Paint Co.) Frank W. Judion, District Manager 11th and Howard