11 " Tha heart row richer than Ita la la poor. Cold bleeeea want with larger aympathtoe, Lova entere gl.dlie.t at tha humble door. And makaa cot a palaea with Hia ayoe. LowalL Behind the cloud the eiarlifht lurki, Through ehewere tht aunlituM fall. For God, who loveth all hla work. Ha. laft Hi bop with U I Whlttiar. THE BEE: OMAHA. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9. 1919. i 'i SOCIETY Who Could Miss Those Eyes ? Victory Loan Captains and Lieutenants Are Busy with Plans. Mr. J. H. Beveridge, superin tendent of public instruction, sent today to all school teachers a bul letin enlisting them in the work of In this campaign the principals! .!, crhnnl will he the rantair) of that school and she will select her lieutenants from among her teachers. In this way the schools are to make their own drive. Letters to all school principals were mailed today, filled .with in formation concerning the loan, and with a request that the schools take up the loan in an educational way, that is to explain to the pupils the meaning and the necessity of the loan as the country's need; the whys and wherefores of it and to keep the children informed intelligently on the reason of the drives. Patriotic songs are to be sung, ad dresses will be given during the campaign, and essays written on the loan. Lieutenants. All lieutenants for the work of the Victory loan are completing their plans this week. They all show a great deal of enthusiasm and are going into the work with vim and determination to complete their sales early in the drive. . , They will conduct a preliminary "house to house" canvass next week to engage bonds for the woman's committee. Each captain will have a meeting of her lieutenants this week and early next week, give them supplies and explain the details of the cam paign. Miss Margaret Gaebler, a captain of the Seventh ward, held a meeting of her lieutenants Sunday evening at her home. Those present were: Misses Marie Mallory, Margaret , Penfield, Florence Penfield. 1 Notes. Miss Emilv 'Keller and Miss Eleanor Austin are in charge of supplies at headquarters in the Ma sonic Temple. Mr. J: T. Boucher spoke in the in terests of the Victory loan at the Belvidere school Monday evening. A community meeting was held Monday night in Benson. Mr. Frank Sheehan was the speaker. - There was a meeting of the D. A. Rv Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 at the Fontcnelle, held in the interests of the Victory loan. Mrs. Grant Wil liams was the speaker. Lunch for Captains. Mr. L. F. Easterlv, captain of (he Fifth precinct of the Ninth ward for the Victory loan, will en tertain her lieutenant at her home on Wednesday afternoon at a "gct- gether tea." Mrs. L. M. Lord of the speakers committee and Mrs. Charles Rose water will be present. Her guests will be: Mrs. A. B. Wangle. Mrs. Harold M. Rose, Mrs. , . At : Harris, ana - ahss hhzbdcui bitnigan. Lipsy-Brick Wedding. Miss Molly Brick and Mr. Jack "Lipsey were united in marriage '.Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock, Rabbi Taxon officiating. Owing to llu recent death of the bride's moth er the wedding was a quiet affair, only relative, being present. A re ception was given Sunday evening , at the Lipsey residence by Mr. J. Brick in honor of the young couple. 1 A Surprise Party. A surprise party was given for Miss Mary Golden at her home Sunday evening by Miss Irene Craven. The evening was spent m riaicing and games. Those present were: , - Mleepe MI.sp. Irene Craven. Edith Evan. Jlary Flnneian, Vera Andenon. r.ertrude Mon, Mary Golden. Boollle Burkbert, Mee.re.- Maura. nicherd Gebbart. Neal Flnnegan. vtnee Burknart. Clair Adame. Albert Mlnar. Albert Bother. Lao rtnnetan, Officers Danee. " Officer, at Fort Crook gave a dance Saturday at the new officers . club house for Majoc and Mrs. Crockett, who will leave soon tor Garden City. Captain Howell will succeed Major Crockett as executive officer at Fort Crook. The officer! and ladles presented Major and Mrs. Crockett with a silver plate. Kensington Club. Vesta chapter, Kensington club, will meet at the home of Mrs. Wil liam T. Stringmeyer, 845 Park ave nue, Thursday at 2 p. m. The meetinga have been changed to the second Thursday of the month, with the discontinuance of the Red Crosa work. v - - Dundee Woman's Club. The Dundee Woman's club will meet with Mrs. J. W. Marshall, 4910 Cass street, Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. C. L Hubbard, as leader, will speak on the "City of Comrades." Red Crosa. The United Information bureau, with Mrs. A. B. Currie aa chair man, has in the last four weeks civen information to 480 soldiers. - Seventy-two of these men have 1 been sent to the employment agen cies co-operating with the bureau; 185 directed to the home service sec tion and the balance given miscel laneous information or sent to the clubs and organizations co operating. They are also given help in secur ing places to live. Lost Discharge paper of Roscoe Stack. Flease return to home serv ice section in court house or tele phone Tyler 2721. Lost Discharge paper of Walter ' J. Milloy. Please return to home service section in court house or tel ephone Tvler 2721. The home service section of the Red Cross is desirous of obtaining addresses of the following: Alexan der Morris, Ethel Bowler, Mary Reck, Joseph J. Bland, Ed C. Gerin, Carl Y. Anderson and Walter Weins. Please telephone Tyler 2'i or call at the Red Cross head juartera in the court house. Pity the poor movie star who at-Omentarily, while the negro assumed tempts anonymity 1 If there is any body who doesn't recognize immedi ately the flashing eyes of Dorothy Gish let him be marked as a man who. does not know much about the screen. "If such there be, go mark him well." In a recent picture Miss Gish was taking the role of a slavey. The studio bootblack was watching the scene. "Good Lawd!" he finally burst out. "Nobody in de world never blacked no shoes thataway." Whereupon the director retired mo- Mrs. Bailey Re-Elected Head of Social Science Dept. of 0. W. C. The meeting of the political and social science department of the Omaha Woman's club for election of officers at the Y. W. C. A., on Monday resulted in the re-election cf Mrs. H. J. Bailey as leader and the following other officers: Mrs. D. G. Craighead, first assistant; Mrs. J. W. Gill, second assistant; Mrs. L. M. Beard, third assistant, and Mrs. W. H. Warwick, secretary and treasj urer. Art Department. The Art Department of the Omaha Woman's club will meet at the Y. W. C. A. on Thursday at 10 a. m. for special business. Miss Luttie Stearns will address the club on "How Art Won the War." Miss Stearns visited Hoboken, both saw and studied the camou flaged boats and ingenious uses of art during the war. Viener-Lieberman Marriage. Mr. Herman Lieberman of Cleve land, O., formerly of this city, an nounces the marriage of his daugh ter, , Pauline, to Jacob Viener. The marriage,-which took place at St. Joseph, Mo., Monday, April 7. was a surprise to their many friends, as lae wedding was to have taken place next month. A number of pre-nup- tial aftairs were given in honor of the young couple. Mr. and Mrs. Viener will make their future home in Nebraska City. Card Party. Omaha lodge, No. 14, Degree of Honor, will give a card party Thursday evening at Crounse hall, Sixteenth and Capitol avenue. There will be a business meeting in addition. charge of the situation. Within five minutes Dorothy had mastered the 1919 way of shining shoes, and now, she says triumphantly, she has something to fall back upon if she fails in the "movies." Her most re cent film is "Peppy Polly." Selfishness a Curable ' Disease? The Wise Hen Scratches for Herself and Doesn't Wait for Miracles. By Beatrice Fairfax. A letter signed "A Wife" has come in my morning's mail; in it the writer asks for suggestions in regard to dealing with her husband, whose selfishness as described by her seems incurable. Eleventh hour recoveries from this disease have always seemed like doubtful "cures" to me. Judg ing from the homely barnyard par able that a rooster who spends his life in scratching worms exclusive ly for himself, is not likely to re form when old; age overtakes him. And the wise hen who has scratched for herself from the be ginning will continue to devote her energies to this pursuit taking care to save the results for her old age rather than look for a miracle to take place after the rooster has lost much of his hustling energy. When a woman slaves for a man to the extent my correspondent de scribes, and he is still dissatisfied, his case begins to assume some of the aspects of a disease. It recalls Oliver Wendell Holmes's assertion that every disease is curable, if taken in time. And when someone asked him how soon should the treatment begin, he laid: "Sometimes about 200 years be fore the patient is born." Perhaps this man was hopeless before he married the wife who cooked, washed, ironed, sewed and took boarders yet failed to meet his standards of wifely efficiency. Perhaps his mother had done her indulgent worst for him from early boyhood, as some mothers glory in doing. They begin to instill a sense of sex superiority into their sons be fore the poor little creatures are able to hold up their heads or have a single tooth to their credit. They are entreated to be "a little -'man" and not "cry like a little girl." Though every mother who has had both kinds, knows there is no sex in the infant "boo hoo." The Wrong Tack. Later she insists that Johnnie take his castor oil "like a little man," that he properly despise dolls in the same manner. But a drum, toy cannon, hammer or lit tle soldiers are to be venerated anything that will help him re.-.iize he is a member of the noisy sex. The most humiliating punish ment known to maternal discipline is to put a sister's dress or apron on him when he has achieved the acme of naughtiness. In the mean time mamma waits on him hand and foot, and if there are little sisters in the family, she sees to it that they properly abase themselves be fore the young household kaiser. Sex superiority is ingrained with every breath he draws, and it is comparatively easy for a small child to realize when he belongs to a gov erning class. ' Later he identifies mamma with the despised sex and is contemptu ous of her wishes and opinions. But then, poor dear mamma has no one to blame when she is tyrannized over by her son but herselt". It is the wife who all unconsciously accepts another woman's spoiled darling as a husband, to whom the sympathy belongs. Such a wife might as well make up her mind from the begin ning that selfishness is a thirsty soil, capable of absorbing all the water she has the strength and patience to carry. Sometimes by devoting all her energies to reconstruction a wile succeeds in making over the jorry product of a spoiled son, bu! after all, one is attempted to ask, is the game worth the candle? Misdirected Energy, The amount of energy that a woman may expend in turning an utterly selfish man into a normal human being might frequently be put to other and better uses- When she has finished with him, he is but ending the chapter where he should have begun it. And it is apt to be rather a dull uninteresting chapter after all. No one is any richer for having read it, and the time might have been more profitably spent doing some thing else. I believe "A Wife" must have realized this when she wrote: "Twenty months ago I was told if I did not get out and hustle I would get nothing more from him, and as the few things I possessed were mostly the 'hand-me-downs' from my family, and they were about worn out, I got out and hustled. "I started out at $1,200 per annum and am now making $1,700. In that time I have bought all the extras for the house, have clothed myself, have helped to pay my personal debts, and, last but not least, 1 have saved $800. "During the past twenty months I have not had a penny from ray husband. You tell me I am not wasting my time when I am doing housework. If it were appreciated I should love it, but, as matters stand, I get more out of life in the 'business world.' Why? Because drudgery is not making an old woman of me. I do not have to hu miliate myself by accepting a small pittance from a man who is selfish. I meet men and women with .whom I can talk and forget my troubles. In fact, the last 20 months l.ave giv en me back 10 years of my youth." This woman has answered her own question when she says thrft work has given her back 10 years of her youth. Work and interest in her case have proved to be not only the solution of her life riddle, but twin blessings as well. "The job," with its comfortable salary, which enables her to kei'p her self-respect, is the friendly float ing spar to which she may cling in the shipwreck of her domestic aspi rations. And doubtless she and her. hus band will be better friends now that there is no longer any necessity fo humiliating wrangles over money. Her "job" has entitled her to a spe cial consideration that her penniless condition failed to insure her, and on such a foundation it is so easy to build up happiness and the graces of life. Apricot Sauce. One cup apricot juice, one cup water, speck salt, one-quarter cup sugar; boil all together and add two tablespoons q cornstarch mixed with a little cold water. Cook to re move the raw taste of the starch. Danny O'Shane By HELEN I.ANYON Danny O'Shane waa a farmln' lad Brought by my dad from a hlrln" (air: The one luck-ahlllln' was all he had, No shoe to hla foot,, no bat to bla hair. But he'd etna HI" a bird In tha fare o' 'dawn, And he'd alng at hla work In tha alow. In' moon. And he'd alng when tha yellow duelc vii drawn Over the light of the rlaln' moon. When Danny O'Shane had milked the cowe An' "tabled the aaa In the wee aaa- byre, He would coma alngln' up to tha home With a creel o' peat to mend tha fire. Danny O'Shane, when the nlghta waa warm. An' the young atara cllmbln" over tha hill. Would gather tha lada from field an' farm An' King to them In tha evenln' still. An' I'd creop to the door Ilka a secret thtntr. An' lifting the in ten without a nolee, Would eland at the crack to bear him Hlllg, A he eat among the farmln' boya. KOSMEO CREAM Beautifies the Skin This dainty toilet cerate cleanses the pores removes blackheads, tan, freckles, pimples, redness, roughness and skin blemishes. At All Toilet Counttrt Gervaise Graham IS W. IllnoU St CUeas For Sale by Sherman tk McConnall Drug Co. 47 Rue Blanche, Paris YOU in the United States may find it difficult to pronounce the name of ray BAUME ANALGESIQUE BNGUE I think, however.that when you prove to yourselves the unique effectiveness of the original French Baume you will not mind remem bering its name and thus avoiding its "easier to pro nounce" imitations., For relieving pain or for checking colds, this Baume has for over a quarter of a century proven itself without ' a peer. jfjfl ' Ph ii r Clam Paris Thos. Leeming & Co. Amtriu At: Nib Trk M fl ..71 EVERYBODYS STORE' Tuesday, April 8, 1919- -STORE NEWS FOR WEDNESDAY- -Phone Douglas 2100 Personals Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Auson have sold their home at 5010 Chicago street and have moved to the Ell wood apartments. Miss Ruth Bailey and Miss Cora Bailey, who have been visiting their aunt, Mrs. George Joslyn, returned to their home in Montreal. Mrs. Charles Offutt and Miss Vir ginia sailed from Panama Saturday for the atate. Kfra. Warren RftBfrs of New York accompanied them. Mrs. J. N. Baldwin and her moth er, Mrs. H. H. Holcomb. are in New York City, where they will spend the summer. Dick Stewart, ir., is spending his spring vacation here with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Stewart, at the Blackstone. Miss Zita Kavanaugh has returned from a visit with relatives in Iowa. Dr. and Mrs. J. the Blackstone. A. Potts are at Mrs. Ben Wood is giving a lunch eon today at her home, 3860 Harney street, for Miss Louise Dinning. She will be hostess to 12 guests. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Larrabee of New York announce the birth of a son, Allan Douglas. Mrs. Clement Chase, who has been visiting her brother in Los Angeles, will return to Omaha the last of this month. Mrs. Victor Caldwell, now in Hollywood, will accompany her. Dr. F. S. Owen has returned from Santa Barbara, Calif., and brings word that Mrs. Owen and Mrs. Amos Thomas will be back in Oma ha about May 1. Mrs. Owen is fast recovering from the combined ef fect of a broken collar bone, due to a fall, and the influenza. Wednesday In Plenty of Time For Easter Comes This Special Offering of AIL ORED S $25.00 UIT Which Represents Beyond Doubt the Supreme Value of the Entire Season YUEV'E always been proud of the suits we offered at $25.00 because they rep v v resent the greatest possible value specialization can produce. This offering for Wednesday is superior in value to any other like event this season, owing to several manufacturers who are putting their factories in shape for the fall season. The materials, the styles and the colorings embrace the very newest ideas brought out for the Easter season and embody all those little touches of differentness so pronounced in Burgess-Nash ready-to-wear. Braid and button trimmed or plain tailored, semi-fitted, belted and box styles, with long roll collars. Burgata-Naah Co. Second Fleer "1 III i f ' v i ill (I 7T