I S t 'I f " !l t THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, APRIL' 5, 1919. ID Whaa fortuna meant to man mott good, Sha loaka upon them with thraataalnc.aya. Shakaspaar Blama whtra you mutt, ba candid whara you caa And ba aacb critic tha good naturad man. Goldsmith. mm X 1 - Matron Brings Glowing Report of Canada Mrs. E.N. Secord Visited In Canada Instead, of Sunny South as Usual. Tourists have flocked to the sea side resorts this yaar just as they do every year, but we wonder just why southern climes attracted when 1 the season was even mild in Canada, the land of ice and snow. -'Mrs. E. N. Secord, who has been visiting in Canada for the last six months, brings glowing accounts of the beau tiful winter months. There has been no snow, which ' most unusual, and Lake Erie, which is generally frozen from shore to shore to the depth of two feet, has not had even the thin nest coating of ice. - , While in Canada Mrs. Secord vis ited her childhood home, for the first time in .nearly 50 years. She was the guest of several New York friends, spending several weeks in the east. Mrs. Secord will make her home with Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Secord for the present. For Mrs. Squier. - Mrs. Waite Squier will be honor guest at a luncheon given by the board of directors of the Fine Arts society, Saturday, at the Fontenelle. Mrs. Squier is the retiring president of the organization and will leave within a few days for Chicago to make her home. A basket of daffo dils will be used as a cente-piece and the guests will include mem bers of the executive board. Pre-Nuptial Affair. Miss Sadie Blumenthal enter tained girl friends, at a trousseau party Thursday evening at her Jiome. Miss Blumenthal's marriage to Max Davis will take place Sun day afternoon at the home of her " parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bluin . enthal. Forty girls were present. s Food Sale. - Delectable litfme-niadf dainties 1 will be on sale Saturday at the "Owl" drug store. The sale will be conducted by the women of the First Central Congregational church and doughnuts, breads, salads, Cape Cod baked beans and cake will lie ready for purchase. Lecture at Sacred Heart. Rev. Edward S. Gareshe, F. J., will speak at the Sacred Heart academy Saturday at 4 p. in. The lecture will be given under the auspices of the Sacred Heart alumnae and the topir wille "Cathplics and Social Work." Informal Entertaining. Miss Amalie Volman was honor gtiest at a surprise party at her , home Wednesday. Mrs. J. W. .Van 'Camp entertained five guests at luncheon at the Black stone Fric'ay. - ' Senator and Mrs. Bushee Celebrate SfiilliWi Personals Mrs. Edward Simon is ill at the Birchmont hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Klein have re turned from a winter in California and are at the Morris apartments. Miss Irroa Gross week in Lincoln. is spending the Miss" Clara Thomas and Miss Margaret Thomas have gone to Elk horn to spend the week-end . with Mr. and Mrs. Allen P. Ely. Mr. and Mrs. William Tracy Burns left Thursday evening for the cast. Fine Arts Lecture. Thomas Woods Stevens, mural decorator, head of the dramatic arts of Carnegie institute and director of one of the most complete "little theaters" in America, spoke before the Omaha Society of Fine Arts Friday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock in the ball room of the Fontenelle. His subject was "The Army in France at Play." Mr. Stevens is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Learned at the Blackstone. Gov. and Mrs. McKelvie Their Quests at the 25th Anniversary Dinner. Senator and Mrs. B. K. Bushee of Kimball, Neb., entertained at dinner at. the Fontenelle Friday evening, the occasion being their 25th wedding anniversary. ! Senator Bushee is one of the re publican leaders in the state and is now in his fourth session in the senate. The couple were married at Sidney, Neb., in 1894. Mrs. Bushee was formerly Miss Ruth Cunning ham, a membe of one of the pioneer families of Cheyenne county. The dinner party was an elab orate affair, the guests coming from Lincoln early in the evening and re turning on the midnight train. They were entertained at the Brandeis theater following the dinner. They incUided Governor and Mrs. Mc Kelvie, Speaker of the House and Mrs. Dalby, Attorney General and J Mrs. C A. Davis, Railway Commis sioner and Mrs. H. G. Taylor, Rep resentative and Mrs. J. A. Rodman, Representative and Mrs. J. A. Ax tell, Senator and Mrs. W. V. Hoag- land, Senator and Mrs. R. F. Neal,0 OSenator and Mrs. C. Petrue Peter son, Senator Charles L. Saunders, Senator John F. Cordeal, Miss Ber nice Bushee, Mr. and Mrs. VVT L. Bates, Mrs. Harriet Hoagland, Miss Katherine Reynolds, Miss Beysie Cunningham of Kimball, Mrs. D. G. Mathers of Kimball, Mrs. Flora Lilly of Kimball and Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Gramlich of Walthill, Neb. Apricot Bread Pudding. Two cups dried bread crumbs, one-quarter teaspoon salt, one egg, one tablespoon melted shortening, one and one-half cups fruit, cooked and sweetened, but with the juice drained off, two cups milk. Scald the milk and add the crumbs. Let stand until the crumbs are soft; beat the egg, add to the milk and crumbs, then" the salt and fruit; pour it into an oiled baking dish; se the dish in a pan of water and cook in a moderate oven until firm. The third biennial convention of the International Federation of Catholic Alumnae, which was post poned last year because oi, the in fluenza epidemic, will be held in St. Louis at the end of May. EAT ....wc inc. Dtai BREAD SKINNER BAKING COMPANY DOUGLAS -1662 VI 'ft TftAOE MAK BREAKFAST , Stewed Peaches Poached Eggs Toast Coffee LUNCHEON ' Meat Cakes, Baked 'Bread Butter Chili Sauce Grape Jam Tea DINNER Baked Hash Escalloped Celerv -Bread Butter Spiced Cherries Fruit Salad Chocolate Cookies After fer Batty is Bern Think Now About tha Time to Corns Afterward. When you hold in your arms your tiny new infant, be sure that you can feel that before its arrival you did all in your power to give to it a happy pre-natal in fluence. Scientists say that the thoughts and feelings of tht expectant mother greatly affect the health and disposition of the future infant. For over half a century thousands of women who have used the time-honored remedy. Mother's Friend, say that they entirely escaped nausea, nervousness and that peculiar distressing feeling so usual where nature is unaided. They -thus pre served a wonderfully bright and happy disposition, which reflects so markedly upon the unborn child. By the regular use of Mother's Friend the muscles are made and kept soft and elastic to readily yield to nature's demand for expansion without the usual wrench ing strain. The nerves are not drawn upon, and as a consequence the expectant mother is calm and serene and-the nights are not disturbed with nervous twitchings, and the crisis is one of joy and happiness. Write the Brsdfield Regulator Company, Dept. K. Lamar Building. Atlanta, Georgia, for their Motherhood Book, of value to every woman, and get a bottle of Mother's Friend from your druggist and begin a treatment that will bring real results. Adv. 1613 AND FAR NAM ST. m 1 Omaha J F. &M. Boot Shop announce the arrival' of the Famous Garside hand-made Shoes for the real connois seur in Artistic Footwear. A most cordial invitation is extended to everij one to inspect these clever models. We are showing them in Oxfords, Colonials and Pumps 4 Reasonably Priced at $12.50 and $13 F. & M. Boot Shop Farnam at loth We feature "Style Shoes of Quality" for a little less money than elsewhere. E The Irish are still kicking because they can't get home rule, but sup posing they had prohibition staring them in the face. ' i Victory Loan Mrs. Charles Chapmani major for Benson, in the Victory Loan drive, and her assistant, Mrs. H. B. Wright, entertained the captains of the ward at luncheon' today noon at the Athletic club. Mrs. L. -M. Lor'd, chairman of the speakers' committee, addressed the meeting. The guests included: Mesrtamea Mesdamea K. H. Tuldell.v L. H. Winter, W. W. Ward, L.-M. Strong, Misses Misses Edna Reap, Mary McNamara. Messrs Messrs Bert Rang, T. A. Drejer. The captains of the Fourth ward in the Victory Loan drive were the guests of their major, Mrs. Joseph Duffy, at luncheon Friday, at the Athletic club. Mrs. L. M. Lord spoke for the drive, following the luncheon. Covers were placed for: Mesdaines ' Mesdamcs M. M. Grofftth, L. A. Simons Ada Wilson, Q. T. Kulp. Etta Marr, J. C. Small, Mrs. O. M. Smith, major for the Eighth ward in the Victory Loan drive, entertained her captain at luncheon 'today at the Athletic club. Mrs. Grant Williams of the speak ers' committee addressed the ladies. Tfiose present were: Mesdames: W. H. Hat'teroth, captain of the First precinct'; A. M. Longwell, Sec ond; C. X. Thompson, Third; Don Lee, Fourth; J. Paul Scanlon, Fifth; John Battin, Sixth; F. E. Rudolph, Seventh; L. W. Perry, Eighth; A. E. Wickstrom, Nmth; and Victor Reynolds, Tenth. Ruth Law, the celebrated Amer ican aviatrice, - is now in Japan, teaching the subects of the Mikado the art of flying. Red Cross Red Cross. The Omaha chapter of the Amer ican Red Cross, home service sec tion, is in receipt of valuable infor mation for Mrs. Minna Finkeit, Omaha, address unknown. Also, in formation regarding Mrs. Helene Gaidies. Will anyone who can give the address of these persons tele phone Tyler 2721, or call at the Red Cross office, civilian relief depart ment, first floor of the court house, Seventeenth street entrance. ine American Red Cross at Washington has arranged for imme diate shipment to its Siberian com mission of 389,696 yards of bathrob ing and 29.740 blankets, the whole valued at $520,810. Recent commu nications, from the Red Cross mis sion in Siberia have emphasized the need of warm clothing and cloth material in that country. Shakespeare's Spook (Lines written after learning that Ella Wheeler Wilcox Is a spiritualist.) For years I've written poetry And now I know what's wrong with me. I'm guided by a ghost. I might have been a man of mcana And salted safely in my jeana A million "bones" almost. But when I madly atart to work The spook of Shakespeare makes me shirk And write a rhyme about It. Why must I be controlled? Gee whla!, Like Ella Wheeler Wilcox Is, I'd rather do without It. Let Ella Wheeler ba controlled, She sells her poetry for gold. And so' It will not harm her. But I declara upon my soul I'd rather far my spook control Had been a darned good farmer. Albert L. Andarton. 1621 Farnam Street BiiiiHiiifliuiwinftiiKinhiiKiin ' A Liberal Credit Service Awaits You Her A service that makes it possible for you to select your entire wardrobe at once. Make a reasonable payment down and the balance we arrange in convenient payments. No red tape. This credit is cheerfully extended to out-of-town customers. liiBimawiiMuA!! WRITE FOR OUR BIG STYLE BOOKLET IT'S FREE 1 I I am l 1 sill Mi miuib BfcX. .Xal sx asaVaAiaW It TTl M I w wmfM MWuw DZ 11 lillll lliliM K ttl JtriTtW Hi1 TTl MtTIW ITT Tl M 1 W T II ft Mill if J&mhmSaSr JitiiThTniliy ff Tm ffl 1 Tflm nvr 1417 DOUGLAS STREET 1 i I i p I I i l "Come down to Beddeo's with me" I want you to see the hosts of wonderfully styled garments they have assembled for our choosing. It is a surprise for every visitor to this store'. No matter what your apparel needs might be, this great Credit Apparel .Store is splendidly prepared to care for them. Clever New Tailored Suits ' ' Whatever 'type of suit a woman prefers, whether it be extremely conservative, plain tailored model, cut on severely simple lines, the elaborate "custom suit" or the "be twixt and between" suit for g e n e r a 1 wear, she will be sure to find a desir able, wholly satis factory model at BeddeoV Particularly Emphasized Here Are the Suits Featured at $2412 $34Z5 $4975 a! ... . . r 06 B3 Ik 03 CO Women's New Styles for 1919 Berg's Women's Shop 1621 Farnam Street to- Magnificent styles and qual ities, sparkling with all the newness and witchery of the L A loremost counuiers. Spring Suits Modestly Priced at $25.00, $35.00, $b2:50, 1 $49.50, $69.50 ; Russian Blouse and Box Coat model, tailored and aeml-tailored, finished with button! and braid and many vest effects. v All of Fashion 's Newest Fabrics Spring Dolmans, Capes, and Straight Line Coats Serges, Tricotines, Gaberdines, Velours and Bo livias in all the popular shades ( ' $25.00 to $75.00 Spring Dresses Materials most favored are Serges, Jerseys, Taf fetas and Georgette, exquisitely trimmed in braid, beads or embroidery. Handsome new colorings $25.00, $29.50, $35.00, $45.00 and Up 1621 Farnam Street &3 OB to 90 I 1 i i 1 I i E t ! I I a Unusual Showing of New unning Capes and Dolmans $.18.50. $24.75, $29.75 up to $69.75" a x St X X Ns. Ns, Rtv A 1 VXC" $29-75 ,.V.X XV, X X A- XX. X we X T, . X NX 1 ' NX V. X xa x X x X t Dresses Saturday $18-50 $24-75 Elegantly tailored from men's wear serge, wool velour, silvertones and silver-tipped Bolivia s that are entirely new in Capes and in Cape lines. So graceful are the new "Wraps that their popularity has has been phenomenal. , Recent big shipments have brought our Dress stocks to a size that never before has been equaled. Tl field for choosing is simply wonderful, and the character of Garments featured bespeak of real style individuality. GEORGETTE CREPE DE CHINES TAFFETAS CREPE METEOR SERGES TRICOTINE JERSEYS ETC. Models for every sort of wear business, street, afternoon, and party. Beautiful creations that will win vour admiration with the first sicrlit. Come in Saturday, and we ll surprise you with the extraor dinary values are' offer ing. s a turd ay pecials EATON'S ETTERC ARGAINS jCtrfa ijpeciais DRUGS and SUNDRIES 30c Putman Dry Cleaner. 192 25c De Witt's Cold Tablets 19t 25c Beecham's Pills 172 25c Nature's Remedy Tablets, v for 162 $1.00 Nuxated Iron .....89 35c Castoria for ....I.. 246 50c Orazin Tooth Paste. .342 50c 3-P Capsules 29tf 50c Hay's Hair Health. .292 $1.40 2-qt. Wellington Hot Water Bottles, at 98 25c Nail Files 126 Woodbury's Sk;n Lotion. 392 50c Listerine, at ....... 38 60c Lavoris, at. ...... .4S6 30c Woodbury's Facial Soap, bar 232 25c'Harfina Soap .16J 25c Herpicide Soap 166 $3.75 Horlick's Hospital size Malted Milk"". $2.98 150 Sterno Heat 106 $2.00 American Alarm Clocks at $1.39 1 pound Epsom Salts .... 10 1 pound Powdered Borax. 156 1 pint Disinfectant, DeMar's, at ....25 1 pint Muriatic Acid....20t 4 ozs. Glycerine and Bay Rum for 256 1 pint Household Ammonia s for ..10 Pure Glycerine, per lb.. . .50 4 ozs. Carbolic Acid, with bot tle 256 4 ozs. Glycerine and Rosewater, with bottle . 20 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS ' 10 to 50-watt Mazda Lamps for ...'..., 35 60-watt Mazda Lamps. . . .40 We carry a complete stock of all lamps' up t 500-watt. PHQTO DVARTMENT Film Developed Frc. When prints are ordered. Prints, 2ix31i 3c each Prints, 3x3 4c each Prints, 3 x4 -.5c each Prints, 3'4x5 6c each All our prints are' made on Cyko paper, plain or glossyv CANDY DEPARTMENT. $1.00 Huyler's Old-Fashioned Chocolate Creams, 4.. 79 60c Yankee Peanut Candy, per pound 40 80c Chocolate Covered Marsh mallows, per pound. . . .50 We are agents for Johnston's, Huyler's and AUegretti Choco MERITOL Hair Tonic t You can have beautiful hair if you keep the scalp clean and healthy. Neglect results in baldness. We recommend Meritol Hair Tonic, sold only by us, on a guarantee, to be a reliable preparation for keeping the scplp and hair in a healthy condition. Let us explain its merits to you. 60c Bottlet, at 50 ' False Teeth Held Firmly in Place Prevent. Sore Gums Promotea Mouth Hygi- BrinsaHealthaad Comfort 60c size, at. .49 Johnston's chocolates are in comparable because of their de liciousness and genuine purity. We cannot begin to tell you here how good they are. You must see and taste fot yourself. Our cases are kept filled with Johnston's fresh confections. Ask the clerk. In boxes, up from .15 n BEATON DRUG CO. ' , 15th and Farnam Streets. Mail Orders Receive Our Most Careful Attention. X1 H liWBtiHiflaKI 1, i