... 1-w , 83 THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE! DECEMBER 21, 1919. What art KaphasT MaaWaaa bat ta shadow at mathsr's low (Im4 la ptmuHt utlins forvvar? T. W. HlflOB.' Wi aaa but dimly through that mists and vapor. Amid ths oai-tnly damps What aaama to us but aad luaaral tapara May ba beavan'a distant lampa. H. W. Laaffsllov. : u i, CLUBDOM Music Department Chorus rehearsals of the music de partment, Omaha Woman's club, will begin work on December 31. The postponed December program will be given on Wednesday, Janu ary 7, under the direction of Mrs. B. M. Anderson. Nelle Atkinson Kelly will sing a soprano solo. Miss Gretchen Myers Coen, contralto, will also sing. There will be a violin solo by Mary. Wells Jolley and a piano solo by Karl C Robertson of Kansas City. Amnnv th r1anrr will K ATi.cc Nadine Adams, Virginia Holiday ! ence in our land today. A61H for and Virginia Wilcox from Miss censorship was defeated in the last Conner studio anH M!m Flain Nebraska legislature The Massa- Massachusetts legislature this week. Ths Chicago division of the Illi nois State Teachers' association passed resolutions recently declar ing a minimum salary of $1,200 a year for teachers too low and urging adopting of a $1,800 minimum. All over the country teachers are leaving the profession to take more remunerative employment. How are we going to attract the best ma terial into the work? Censorship of Picture. Moving picture men boast they will elect the next president of the United States. Whether, that state ment is extravagant or not, it is conceded by the general public that motion pictures wield a great miiu- Prominent Club Women Will Come to Omaha In January. and Phyllis Leek'a and Zarad Alex ander from Amy Woodruff's stu dio. A quartet composed of Mrs. Kelly, Amanda Tebbins, Lorena , Leeka and Mrs. B, M. Anderson will sing. Christmas carols will close the program. k Teachers' Salaries. Basing their demand on economic necessity and the public good, the teachers of Boston are carrying their campaign for a flat increase of ?600 in talary to the floor of the chusetts legislature in its' next ses sion will consider a censorship bill whichji seems to- have approval from ail quarters, including members of he industry itself, the State Grange fend the state committee on motion pictures. Maine Centennial. Maine will celebrate her centen nial in 1920. She is already at work on fitting events for the occasion, including a pageant, "The Romance of Maine," speaking programs, mu sic, and fireworks. Df. K. Church S. Williaraion. Happiness and health demand that you possess good teeth Your physician will affirm this state ment. ' And it is your duty to select a dentist who takes a personal interest in your dental welfare. ' , We boast modestly of thorough knowl edge of our profession, and assure you that . every service we perform will be done ex pertly and carefully. ' Drs.Church-Haller-Williamson! 500 Paxton Block, 16th and Farnam SU. . Tylar 1816. Thousand of other have) gotten rid of theirs with . out dieting or exercising often at the rate of over a pound a day and without payment until reduction v hat taken place; I am a licensed practising physician and personally select the treatment for each tndivid- . ual case, thus enabling me to choose remedies that will pro duce not only a loss of weight harmlessly, but which will also relieve you of air the trouble some symptoms of overstout- -Ii ess such as shortness of breath, palpitation, indigestion, rheumatism, gout, asthma, kid ney trouble and various other afflictions which often accom pany overstoujness. My treatment wffl relieve that depressed, tired, sleepy feeling, giving you , renewed enertry and vigor, a result of the loss of your superfluous fat Ton ,are not rerraired to' change in the slightest from your regular mode of living. There Is no dieting or exerciv ' ing. It Is simple, easy and pleasant to take. . If yon are overstout 9o not postpone but sit down right now and send for my r trial treatment and mv plan whereby I am to be paid only afUr re duction ka taktn pae$ If yon . so desire. T v DKR. NEWMAN UcmnJPhyidma StafNmYmrk ... Fifth A VMM, Hew Tark. IT. Dek A-SKO To Keep Skin Healthy, Youthful, Wrlrikleless Now that tha social season ia here, be especially careful to keep your akin in fine condition. Ton know how con spicuous complexion defects appear un der tha bright light of the drawing or ball room. Also' how -very evident are some makeups when similarly illuminat ed. You can discard cosmetes entirely, using process which gives far better results, and which leaves no trace on the skin. At night smear on a thin coat of ordinary mercolized wax, washing it off next morning. This gradually ab sorbs the devitalized particles of surface skin; just as gradually the more youth ful skin beneath comes forth,providing a complexion as clear, smooth and deli cately, tinted as a young girl's. Get an ounce of mercoliied wax at your drug gist's and try this remarkable treatment. Remember, too, that wrinkles, even the finer lines, are not easily concealed in a brilliantly lighted room. You can quickly obliterate these hateful marks by bathing your face in a solution of powdered sax olite, one ounce, dissolved in witch haxel, one-half pint. And your face- won't look sticky, as after using pastes. . GELS! GIRLS! PuniyandPerfume Your Skin With cuncuRA Bee Wa'nt-Ads Produce Results. TALCUM The most fascinatingly fragrant and healthful of all powder per fumes. Antiseptic, prophylactic, deodorizing, fragrant and refresh ing, it is an ideal face, skin, baby and dusting powder. Convenient and econqrnical, it takes the place of other perfumes for the person, A few grains sufficient One of the indispensable Cubcura loi let Trio for keeping the skin clear, sweet and healthy. 9oat Ofatment and Talcum 25c everywhere. SMnniaaacntreeDrmau. Adaress Dost-eard KZaicawLaaiatatariaa,Oaa,a. A - , .i Tins JoSXAH E- C0"WVE3. One of the foremost women in America is Mrs. Cowles of Los Angeles, president of the General Federation of Women's clubs. As such, she heads an organization of 2,000,000 united, progressive women. Mrs. Cowles will arrive in Omaha January 5 to attend and preside 'at the general federation board meet ing which will be held here during the early part of that week. Omaha is glad to have been chosen as the hostess city for this gathering which will bring women from every state in the union. It will be distinctly a working session, but the federated clubs of Omaha and the Nebraska state board may have a social op portunity for meeting the national workers. Mrs. M. D, Cameron of Omaha gave the invitation which brings the board meeting to this city. Mrs. Thomas G. Winter of Minnesota and Miss Oeorgia Bacon of Massachusetts, candidates -.for election to the general federation presidency at the biennial meeting to be held in Des Moines next Tune will be in Omaha for the January assembly. ' Calendar SUNDAY. Theosophical Society. 'The New Religion" is the sub ject of a lecture to be delivered by W. H. Lynchard of Council Bluffs, la., Sunday evening at 8:15 o clock in the rooms of the Omaha Theoso phical society, 201 and 202 Kennedy building, Nineteenth and Douglas streets. . Catholic i Research Club. The regular monthly meeting and program of the Catholic Re search club for bunday, December 21, will be postponed. The research library will be open Sunday after noon from 3 to 5 o'clock. MONDAY. Bishop Vincent Circle. Bishoo Vincent Chautauqua circle will meet at 7:15 Monday evening at the public library. The lesson will be chapters 19 and 20 in "America Among the Nations;" Avis Roberts, leader. W. O. R. T. H. Club. W: O. R. T. H. club will meet Monday evening- at the Social Set tlement house. Americanization Party. . There will be a party for Ameri canization folks at the Social Set tlement house Monday evening, De cember 22. U. S. Grant Women. The U. S. Grant Woman's Relief corps will hold an apron sale on the first floor of the court house from 10 a. m. to 5 p. m. Monday, December 22. TUESDAY. ' Spanish Club. ' The Spanish club will have a Christmas part with a tree at their regular meeting Tuesday evening in room 302, Patterson block. Christ mas songs will be sung in Spanish. Each member will bring-a-Christmas gift. There will be a "Pinata." WEDNESDAY. H. E. L. P. Club. H. E. L. P. club will .meet Wed nesday evening tor a party at the Social Settlement house. Settlement Matinee. Mrs. Irving Brandeis will give a matinee for the children of the So cial . Settlement house Wednesday afternoon, December 24. She will send out a motion picture for enter tainment, providing also candy and cake for 300 children. Women Bank Clerks Bank managers in England have expressed themselves as being satis fied with the services of women, particularly in certain kinds of work. But the men's guides wish condi tions to reyert to prewar times when women were not employed as bank clerks. They are demanding a statement as to the position of women, length of service and limit of positions which members of the gentler sex may occupy. Australian Woman Aviator. A Red Cross nurse was Miss Mc Maugh in France, attached to the Australian imperial force. I After a month's successful training she i, passed her tests and has received ' the Royal Aero Club's pilot certifi j cate. She is the first Australian ' woman to take the certificate. Arnold Bennett's new drama, "Sa cred and Profane Love," is being produced in London. - - ''Monsieur Beaucaire," founded on Booth Tarkington's story, was pre sented at the New Amsterdam the ater, New York, December 10. Maeterlinck's "Interieur" has been admitted to the reportory of the jComedie Ftancaise. t. If Love Awaits At Journey ?3 End There Is "Use" By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. "Climber, scallns the mountain hlfh Under the dawn or tha sunset (low, pilgrims patiently plodding by, " Over the paths of the plain below; Rider, farlnt or swift or slow. Whatsoever the way you wend, Happy your heart If you can but know Love awaits at the Journey's and." CLINTON 8COLLARD. If you're an aimless waster who l goes meandering through life with no special desire to get anywhere or : be anything or do anything either, ! for that matter, this isn't for you. ! Don't read it If you're a lazy parasite who thinks life owes you a living and a good one at that and you wouldn't dream of exerting yourself for the prizes which you feel ought to be coming to you as your heritage from fate, please turn to another column. I'm not going to say one thing that is of interest to vou. But if you're an earnest soul who wants some of life's prizes and pro poses to work hard to win them, we have matters to talk over. If you're a worker and a doer, if you know ambition's spur, if you have vivid longings and desires, this is for you whether you agree or disagree. Even if you get fighting mad,, I hope you'll read to the end. Differ with me all you like, but at least give heed to what I say for it, isn't merely my opinion and the ory I express, jt is the proven se cret in life. And sages and philos ophers, preachers and doctors have all found the truth of it in the end. Life is bigger than any of its parts. Nature is inexorable and goes on with the'system life worked through the ages. " Ambition is a wonderful thing. Work is splendid. But both of them are means to an end and not an end in themselves. A career is a tempting thing. But the man or woman who dedicates himself or herself to it finds it pret; ty cold company and pretty cheer less comfort when age comes on. We all like companionship. We all crave tht sound of human voices. Before tha motion pictures and tha telephone came to bring companionship and relaxation close, the percentage of madness among folks !n rural communities was alarming. Soma went insane from sheer loneliness. ', , It's human nature to go mad from loneliness. And work won't fill a day or a life. The girl who comes home to a dark hall bedroerm . at night and turns up her light to illuminate her own dreary four walls, is never as happy as the girl who has a family to go home to even if that' family is utterly uncongenial. There's a morbidness likely to come along as seasoning -to living alone. For liv ing alone is outside nature's scheme. Nor money, nor fame, nor hard work, nor ambition, nor traveling nor arnvine can make uo for the companionship happy humans share on the journey. lo work hard, to struggle to achieve, and yet never o think it is the whole of life that's sanity. To believe in the joys of labor and yet to keep a dream of the per fect mate the future holds that's idealism. 1 You have to work to deserve you? ideal. And you have to keep your heart clean to hold it and crys tal pure to mirror it. You have to long for love and believe in it and deserve it and then surely it awaits at the journey's end. Life in little towns is often de void of opportunities. Life in cities is often hideously lonely with that loneliness in the midst of a crowd which country folk can't know. They're mercifully spared that. But for the people who long for the bright goal of love and try to keep worthy of it and travel toward it with determination and faith for them, unfailingly, love awaits at the journey's end. It doesn't always come just in the guise we expected. Sometimes we can hardly recognize it. It may not seem to be what we want. But the heart that has kept itself pure and the mind that has retained its alert ness and the eyes that are search. Winter Apples Apples arc the very best fruit to keep in the house during the winter. For eating, for jelly, for desserts a barrel of apples in the cellar gives one a sweet sense of security when sudden guests appear. Following are a few favorite recipes that are sure to please: Nutted Apples. Pare nd core sound, tart apples. Boil until almost tender. Remove to a buttered plate and fill the cavities with cqcoanut. Stick blanched al monds about each apple. Bake, j uaouiig vvitii ay tup mauc or sugar, water ana lemon juice, top the cavities with currant jelly when serving., Apple Chutney. He'f pound brown sugar, one-half pound salt, quarter pound of onions, two ounces garlic, 25 to 30 good sized sour unripe apples (more, if small ones are used), four ounces powdered ginger, two ounces of - Vanity I is a Spendthrift Love of Display Is . Responsible for the ; "Fifty-Cent Dollar" ing for the ideal, will recognize it finally as the great prize. Mortals, while through the world miy go, Hope may succor and faith efrlend; Tet happy your hearts if you can but know Love awalta at the Journey's na. dried chillies, four ounces mustard teed, four ounces dates, ons quart vinegar Peel, core and slice the ap ples, put into a pan with the vinegar and sugar, and boil till the apples are soft. Wash the mustard seed with the vinegar, and dry in a cool oven. Stone and chop with dates. Peel and slice the garlic, onions, chillies and ginger in a mortar or basin. When the apples are cold add all the other prepared ingredients and mix well. Put into bottles, cover with bladder or paper over with paste, and tie down. Apple Whip. Bake four or five apples and press them through a sieve. Sweeten the pulp; the amount of sugar depends upon the tartness of the apples. Fold in the beaten whites of two eggs. Serve with whipped cream. Apple Pudding. " Tart apples, one-quarter teaspoon ful of salt, three teaspoon fuls of cold water, one and one-half cupfuls of pastry flour, three tea spoonfuls of baking powder, three teaspoonfuls of butter, one egg, three-quarters cupful of milk. Butter a shallow baking dish; into it slice apples to come to the top: add cold water. Make the dough and spread it over the apples. Bake in a quick oven for about 25 min utes. Invert the dish so as to have the apples on the top. ' Serve hot with maple syrup. Apple and Cheese Betty. Arrange alternate layers of sliced apples and bread crumbs in an oiled baking dish. Sprinkle each layer of apples with brown sugar and cin namon or finely grated full-cream cheese, leaving crumbs for the top layer. Place the dish in a pan of water to bake, as it burns easily. Serve with sweetened cream. Pleated blouses of net, over satin camisoles in matching colors, are now shown in the shops which deal in smart clothes. Groups of inch tucks are the only trimming of a white organdie for a small girl. Edith Louise Wagoner Teacher of Piano Will accept. In addition to private pupils, a limited number of new pupils to begin CLASS LESSONS during the first week in January. Class work is suitable for children from S years of age on, and covers rudiments of music, rhythm, ear train ing, ete. TUITION NOMINAL. Residence Studio, 222 V, Park Ave, Phone Harney 5965. You cannot make ends meet by "setting yourself back" to buy a "front." A big man, one who has studied human nature profitably for many years, divides the buying public into three classes The VERY poor those who realize they ARE very poor and always buy the cheapest things they can find. , The i MIDDLE classes people who want to AfPEAR RICH and buy things that "look like they cost more," paying dearly for "front." The RICH people who can afford to pay any price ALWAYS DEMAND THEIR MONEY 'S WORTH. They look for VALUE and get it. t There's a lesson whicli, if learned and profited by, will do much to bring down prices in all lines. It 's the clerk, who wears silk shirts and $2p hats, and the woman who spends the family allowance on her back, who are responsible for high prices. The rich man is content with a linen shirt and modest clothes that is why he is a rich man. ' . . ' In Dentistry the same conditions exist. The very poor make no secret of the xact that they go to the "cheapest" dentist because they HAVE TO. J The middle classes, as a rule, are willing to pay double or treble to gratify their vanit,y, and go to the high priced "exclusive" dentists, who profit 'y their conceit; .whereas, the man whose check is good for whatever he wants gets down to "brass tacks" and selects the dentist whom he knows is competent to do his work well, do it promptly and do it at proper prices.. ' - Next time you require the services of a dentist visit this office you'll be surprised to find many of your friends are regular patrons, and you 11 be surprised again to see what exceptionally good work can be done for little money in a well regulated dental establishment. " Painless Withers Dental Go. 423-428 Securities Bldg. 16th and Farnam Streets OMAHA, NEB. Office Hours 8:30 A. M. to 6 P. M.; Sundays, 9 to 1 J PileS"Fistua--CuredWith- out the Use of the Knife No Chlorof orrrr, No Ether. Examination free to all DOCTOR F. M. HAHN 401 Paxton Block. Hours i 9 A. M. to 5 P. M., Daily. Evenings, 7 to 8 P. M. Sundays, 11 A. M. to 1 P. M. Only Assembled here for vour in spection are hundreds of ap propriate and useful Christmas gifts and our wide range of prices will provide a suitable present for just about the amount you want to spend. Leatner gifts will last a lifetime Wardrobe Trunks We show the incomparable Hartmann, the most useful, most beautiful and strongest wardrobe trunk ever manufac tured. They are priced at from $50 to $200 Traveling, Bag We show a complete line of auit casea and bags, in a great Variety of sizes and styles. They are made of Seal, Wal rus, Mountain Goat, Cowhide, also fabiicoid and are priced from $7.50 to $75 Portfolio Cases Wanted so much by salesmen, lawyers and clergymen; a great va riety of leathers and sizes. They are priced from $3.75 to $19.50" Purses and Card Cases Something that every one will appreciate. We carry a large assortment in all leathers and styles for both men and women the price range is from 50c to $10 Traveling Sets An ideal Christmas gift, made of black peb ble leather with fancy moire silk or leather lin ing, and fitted with Parisian Ivory or Ebony. Prices range from $5 to $35 Leather Collar Bags, Manicure Sets, Leather Photograph Frames, Jewel Cases, Tie Cases, Cigar and Cigarette Cases, Folding Clothes Hangers, Glove and Handkerchief Cases, and Many Other Useful and- Appropriate Xmas Gifts FRELING W STEINLE . 1803 FARNAM STREET Great Reduction Sale Every Pair of Men's and Women's ' Shoes Reduced in Price We have reduced the price of every shoe in our house for this sale. We advise everyone to take advantage of this opportunity. Everyone knows the quality ii Walk-Over Shoes, so we have only to announce a reduction to crowd our store. Come early. Ladies' Shoes In Three Lots 400 pairs of Women's Shoes, now on dl QC sale at pL,OD 400 pairs of Women's Shoes, odd lots, fl A OP values to $12.50 P4.0J 500 pairs Women's Shoes for street or QJ dress; very special ; . . . . j. . p J.OJ ' Until Christmas Store Open t Evenings Until 9:00. . HOSIERY $3.00 and $3.50 dQ CH Ladies' Silk Hose Ps&.OU $3 Ladies' Silk Hose Qf during sale P1 OU Black, White, Brown or Navy. hat-fa traoc MMm-Rca7tta.PAr.crr. BOOT SHOP 317 So. 16th Street is i. I! -