flip BEE; OMAHA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1919. ' 17 Saow m where' the womai woa without Tho kols ml en li wild aha believe. Hair, auch a wonder ef Ills and floee, Freshne and fragrant flood of it, tool Gold, did I say T Nay gold mora droaa. APPLY POSLAM STOP All WORRY OVER SICK SKIN Discourage at one th progress of any (kin disorder by spreading Poslara gently over it. If you are dUtreaaed by eetema at other itching trouble remember that Poa lam supplies at once a toothing, eoollng Ir.Xlucnce t: aKtrravated akin, that it atop th" fkry itching, that it exerta concen trated healing power, working quickly and energetically to rid your akin of ita evil tradition. Moreover, Poalam will not, can not, injure and it take only a little to pr-ive its bemflta. Sold everywhere. For free aample write o Emergency Laboratories, 24S Weat 47th Jt., New York City. fosl-m Ponp is a daily treat to tender il:in. Contains Fosltm Ane You Going To Move? Do You Want Storage ? If so, j'ou will find that we are very well equipped to ' fill your needs. A trial will con vince you. It has thou sands. OMAHA VAN & STORAGE CO. Phone Douglas 4163 806 South 16th St. Sophie Braslau V5C Music is no purer than one's mind, claims Miss Braslau, and un less the singer gives out to her hearers just what she feels, then she fails to reach the highest plane of her art. She believes that Sophie Braslau. au singers should be musicians. Before becoming a singer Miss Braslau was a pianist For several years she acted as an accompanist to one of her friends. She confesses that she studied voice for the love of it, and was sur prised when she asked to go on the concert stage. Her success led to an engagement with the Metropoli tan Opera company, and today she is ranked as one of America's lead ing opera and concert artists. Her rise has not been like the rocket that is suddenly shot into the air to soon go out, but it has been a steady growth that ripens as time passes. The charm and personality of the woman is shown in her art in song. Study, and hard study, is her motto of success, and it is the love of those things refined and pure and holy that is bound to win her a place in the glowing sun of eternal fame and good will. She is never discouraged in doing those things that are right and just. By keeping busy she finds no time for "taedium vitae." Every day she gets pleas ure in doing something for some one and full justice to her friends has always been her motto. Buy Cook Stoves at HARPER'S Flatiron Bid;., 17th and Howard. DOM A Musical Hallowe'en Tea. Advance agents of Hallowe'en are among us. A happy corps of them, pupils of Mrs. Ray J. Abbott, were in evidence Wednesday at the tea given by the musical depart ment of the Woman's club. They wore yellow caps adorned with black cats and served individual pumpkin pies, doughnuts and cider to more than 200 women. The cider was made Wednesday morning at the F. J. Farrington farm on west Dodge. The program of music and dances was much appreciated by the audience which filled the Y. W. C A. auditorium. Mrs. W. E. Shafer, department leader, says the Busi ness Women's class gives great promise for the year. Thirty girls are already enrolled. The next musical tea will be given November 19 under the direction of Miss Edith Miller. The subject of the program will be Spanish music and dances. Danish Widows' Club. The Danish Widows' club of Omaha has purchased the residence of Mrs. Josephine Hanna, 1049 Park avenue. It will be remodeled and used temporarily as a home for elderly or needy Danish women. The club plans to build a perma nent home at a later date. Luncheon for Players. Mrs. Charles G. McDonald, chap erone of the French group in Katcha-Koo which is to be pre sented at Brandeis theater, October 24 and 25, will entertain at lunch eon at the Athletic club Saturday following the rehearsal. Members of the group who will attend are Betty Paxton, Marcel Folda, Eliza beth Paffenrath, Ann Young, Elean or Brown, Margaret Clark, Frances Hendrickson and Charlotte McDonald. f ' ) 4 For After Effects of the "FLU" and Other Weakening Diseases If you are weak, dizzy, tired and nervous from the "after effects" of enervating diseases, the tonic, strength renewing REOLO Treatment will restore your strength revitalize the exhausted blood, eliminate the toxic poisons tone up the heart and nervous sy stem and give re newed vigor, vitality, strength and energy. Pain, hgadftrjvi, hadsTsbrhes, servousness, dizzi pcaa, anaemia, dyspepsia. hUHouaaess, con gestion. constipujj. etc, are bat Nature's warning signals that the blood is foil of deadly germs or that die cells of some part of your body an starving for their natural food just at a plant droops and dies for lack of water. Any tissue of the body deprived ol oxygen dies at once. The life of each in dividual cell is brief and without oxygen no new cells can be built; neither can they without the necessary cell salts. The cells are not fed. They feed them selves but do not feed blindly upon every substance that comes their way. They know how to choose the particles they wish to absorb. Nothing foreign to their constituent parts can be forced upon them except to produce injury or death E OLD r v Restores Vigor and Vitality JrmtTMaaa the toxic poisons, rapidly increases the ted blood ce!l--tevitalaes trie blood with lifogrrmg oxygen and restores strength and energy. It tones up the heart action and nervous sntem-rsnniulatea the digestion, and assimilation renews the exhausted cells. REOLO makes the weakness and dizziness that are so rreqisentry the after ejects of the "Fru" and other as shadows vanish before the son shine. REOLO absorbs the orgen from the air in the red blood cells and Oxygen is the the kings and iroeMngthe rich. 4a frlaMflfnlll ttfatk it into the blood rapidly cixidaing of enxgiobin m the blood, sendt I blood that Br - pointed wfek Aa D A. L Ruisini L fr rKe Astz&otion of "REOUT iliiecx frosndhsl certified byDfc A-L Ream and.pontrrefc P9 gladly refund your money. Large box of KLOLu, llWtanletsJ pnoaJiXU oi tevHslrrmg ncthroush the entire bodr astieem of sierWwl3 Don't DelaylOrder REOLO Today Sherman & McConnell Drug Co. Miss Gladys Peters of the Omaha Junior league, under whose direc tion sewing and mending will be done this season for the Visiting Nurses' association aad for the Child Saving institute. This help ful group of the league will also teach sewing to children of the City Mission. N. F. W. C. Convention Notes. The 25th state convention, Ne braska Federation of Women's Clubs, which meets at Fairbury, Oc tober 21-24, is the chief subject of interest among federated club wo men, ihe state organ, lhe Bulle tin, is financing the printing of the programs which will be distributed at the convention. Miss Lora Conaway of York, state chairman of music, will lead the singing. Mrs. LeRoy Davis, circulation chairman for The Bulle tin, will receive subscriptions to the General Federation magazine and will also have the Citizenship booklets for distribution. ' Charter clubs and new clubs are to be especially honored during the entire convention, and especially at the supper party Tuesday evening. New clubs enrolled during the last year and their memberships, are: - Elm wood Woman' 64 Dawsor-a3oMn Rod Study, 10 Dawaon Ncmeha Study , 10 Palmyra Mottier'a Dlitrlct No, S 0 Emerson Mother' , 10 Hooper Woman' 18 Wayna Woman' (1 Adams Woman' It Aahland North Aahland Woman'.... T Alexandria Woman' ,..? 28 Beatrice Art and Crafts 17 Blue Sprinitt B. C. B. C... 35 Blue Sprints A Better Community.,., 14 Broken Bow Brownlnf 21 Crete Woman' lit Deshler Woman's ,, 46 Oilier Woman's 88 Hebron Woman's ,t 111 Steele City Woman's 14 Fairfield Clover Club S7 Harvard Woman's 88 Grand Island Woman's ..100 Ansley Woman's Farm Kensington.. 19 Atkinson Country Woman's 23 Chappell Woman' 29 Valentine Sural Profresalv Woman's IS Whitman Woman's 31 Hebron Avalon Woman' Club 18 Lovelorn BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Missionary Society. The Women's Missionary society of the Lowe Avenue Presbyterian church will give a luncheon Friday, October 17, at the home of Mrs. A. O. Peterson, 3313 Cuming street. Mrs. Arthur Wells is in charge of the afternoon program. Musical Club. Miss Eugenie Whitmore will be hostess for the Amateur Musical club Friday afternoon, October 17, at 3:30. New members will be voted on. Community Service. Ladies of the Episcopal church will meet Friday at the Girls' Com munity house for their regular all day meeting. Dance at Fort Crook Friday evening by the Wamm and H. E. L. P. clubs. Mrs. Cameron Speaks. Mrs. M. D. Cameron, general fed eration director from Nebraska, spoke before the Woman's club, Railway Mail Service, Wednesday afternoon on the subject, "Thrift." New Clubs, N. F. W. C. The Nebraska Federation of Women's clubs has been very zeal- NOTICE. AU club notices for the Sunday paper must be in the office by 5 p. m. Friday. Mail them to the club editor or call either Tyler 1000 or 3479. Undecided Girl. Dear Mlsa Fairfax, Omaha Bee: I am a girl, 20 year old. For three years I hava gone with a young man whom I cared for very much. Two of these years he apent In the army and has Just recently returned. While he was In the -army I ac cepted an engagement ring. In the last four or five months a change came over me towards Mm, and what has caused this change I can not tell, but always thought that when I once saw him again It would all come back to me again. While this young man was in the army I went with different fellows to social gatherings, one being a traveling man. whom I was with a great deal. He learned to care for me and In a way I have learned to car for him also. He would marry me right away if I did not have a ring, but he is waiting for me to decide. My ratner mtteriy ooiecta to this travel ing man, but thinks lots of the other young man. I have been with this young man a great deal since his return and his reelings are still the same for me. but 1 cannot feel the same towards him. Can you tell me why and what shall I do? My mother objected to me accepting the engagement ring while he was in the army. She aays it should have been accepted before he left or after he returned. Is she rignt? Hoping to see the answer to this In print as soon as possible, as I am very unnappy in this way. An undecided girl. B. B. No one else can decide for you which man you love. It would be wrong to marry for any other rea son, and it Is also wrong to kp two men dangling. If you don't know which one you love, it la s pretty good Indication that you ear ous to secure 25 new clubs into membership this year, for presenta tion at the silver jubilee convention 'to be held in Fairbury, October 21-2S. That goal has been reached and passed. The most recent ad dition of clubs to the federation in cludes Alexandria Woman's club of 28 members, Mrs. Mabel Witten berger, president, and the Broken Bow Browning club of 21 members, Mrs. F. J. Bahr, president. The total of new clubs has now reached 28. Train School Mothers. Mrs. J, Konvalin and Mrs. A. Mal colm will be hostesses for the Train School Mothers' club Friday after noon at the home of the latter. Members will meet at Train school house at 1 o'clock. for neither. Tour father and moth er ar good adviser. Counsel vlth them. - More Trouble Front Villa. Dear Miss Fairfax, Omaha Bee: I have com to you for a Mttl advice on th pronunciation of some words; they are Villa and monsieur. A friend of mine pronounces Villa as it Is spelled and I pronounce It "Vea." Which is right? Th other one I pronounced "mesnre," 1 it not? Hoping to s this In print and thanking you in advance for th same, I remain, KENNETH BUSH. . "Villa" pronounced as It is spelled 1 th Anglicized way of saying the word. If th Spanish pronunciation is used it would sound something Ilk "Veel-yah"aa nearly as English spelling, can glv It to you. The "I" has a long "" sound and the double "1" has th "ly" sound, with th "1" less distinct than In English. The French word "mon sieur" is pronounced "m'syu." During the middle ages and in the renaissance period brides wore crimson to the, exclusion of all other colors. Th First Church of Christ, Scientist, Announces Free Lecture ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE By VIRGIL O. 8TRICKLER, C. 8. B. of New York. At th Church Edifice, St Mary's Avenue and 24th St. Saturday, Oct. 18, at 8 p. m. Sunday, Oct. 19, at 3 p. m. The Public Is Cordially invited. Buy FRESH MEAT at HARPER'S Flatiron Bldg., 17th and Howard. iS. ii5 without Aire I VN WHATETEB 1 m m Hosiery With Better Weat and Appearance HAVE you seen the new hosiery, about which all Omaha's well-dressed, discriminating women are talking? If not, we recommend that ' you SEE it and TRY it, SOON. Next time you are shopping, ask your dealer to show yon VICTO PUREST OF SIL M H KNITTED in fines: gauge mesh, ef th purest silk it k possible to brly only port color used in dyeing, without mt pa tide of metal used to add imita tion lnstre or weight Knitted, too, oyer natural form models, m stead of being strotohed to fit. Re inforced at topi, heels and toes ith strong; fine Sea Island cotton. rO wonder it has better as pearanoe and gma far Ion. er wear. No f aloe lnstre is need ed, nor any "fake" weight, Formed right in the knitting, to fit the natural shape of the limbfl the fit ia snug and neat but with' plenty of elasticity to take np the muscular action without strain the fabrie. These thing mean the desired eleganee of appcaranea, PUTS splendid wearing qntfties. Ia two stylo cf really remarkabb qasty: 16th and Doffe 24th and Farnam 49th and Dodge OMAHA. NEB. 16th and Harney 10th and Farnam 1 L Miss At Your Dealer's nun- CUBA NT GOODS 00 BIBllBowaals Talae-Olrbis StoreJSJE ! 1" Excellent Values In Stoves Ar ta b had at th Greater Bowen' Store. Every store on our floor 1 a . Typical Bowen Value-CiiTlng-Prices and you can rest assured that you will receive dollar for dol lar Talus, In fact regular old-time fcrtea prevail on ail our stoves. Bowcn Combination ' Range of Quality This Bowen Combination Rang Is ef guaranteed construction la a stove that will serve your vary purpose throughout the year. Four f gas ana tour coal, ana is ucksi trlmmed with wnite porcelain tack, at fl35.e Four Gaa and Four Coal Nickel trimmed and plain splasher back. An excellent guaranteed Bowen Value IliO.OO S-Hola Steal Kange Guaranteed Construction, 18-lnch oven, high warming closet, nickel trimmed, g Value $08.60 6-IIole Cast Iron Kmnge WbJt Porcelain Door, high warming closet, 18-lnch oven. Valua at.SM.00 j, Added Bowen i Values Gaa range, six plate, plain ala Tated 18-lnch oven, and broiler. An absolutely guanurtead rust proof body. An excellent siata for 815.00 3i i' Other gaa stores of practically every dealgs; and requirement. All Typical Bowen Values. Rang ing In prices from to 8165. Gaa Plate ar used to a great adrantage In the laundry or mail apartment 13.75, (4.50 and 88.00. I Bowen Value-Giving l - Heaters .rrP-M 'sks'Sl jjsj ;'ai Xart Eoensmy Hot Blast IT Fun nickel trimmed, sixteen-lnoh fin bowl. Will keep fire forty-eight wiui. as exceptional value. .aoMiv Sort Coal Beater 18-Inch fire bowL rmi nickel top. A real Talne..fL50 OH H warns Nickel finished and if plain. Just th thing to take off 1 the chill these cool mornings. vum, wi-oo- N - Baeebnnmra w have a num ber of baseburnara that were held over last year on account of the then anthracite coal short age. These are now offered at exceptionally low price, rang. tBS from (40.00 to (95.00 and up. Additional Values EloeMo lions Real time and labor savers. A guaranteed elec tric iron $3M 1m Cream Freesers Two-quart atae. Very appropriate for ice and ether frosea dishes. A real Talue oe EH2 3 i "i1 -I Th want column eontalt portanitjei fox everybody