Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 03, 1920, Page 11, Image 11
11 ill PriMfe feaart, uJ HMtr bkw tliv T Bar cavaras, pur aaa 4a. Thamas Balky Crow old along with mo, ' Th. bot U yet to b. ' Th Utt of IK (or which th first ni mad. Browninf. THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1920. Yellow Mustard For Rheumatism A good hot mustard piaster poultice ) pretty sure m ovvcomt moil rneumauo pains and even sciatic and gout, fbut lt'a a mussy Affair and gener ally blisters. Heat is abso lutely necessary tf you want perma nent relief. Begy'a 3lustarine, niai-. of true yeirWi taiustard with pain relieving Ingredients added la Just as hot, la cbEr, cleaner and mora effective than the old-fashioned poultice or plaster and cannot blister. ' Besides rheumatic .pains and swellings Hegy's Mustarlne is speedily effective' for lumbago, backache, neuritis,, pleurisy, bronchitis, aore throat, ;hest colds and all aches and pains because heat eases pain 30 and 60 rp"ts at druggists or by mail, 8. C. W.'lls Co., jeRoy, N. T. Lice Want Ads Ara Best Business Booster. V It A - MR. GROCER: We Have .Created a Demand for Anchor Nut Margarin T Have You OLEOMARGARINE thc ocwooo mjntn Distributed by Fairmont Creamery Co, At all grocers Army Goods For Sale To Auto Show Visitors Wt have many items of in terest for the motorist. A visit to US will be a Profit to You. Raincoats. Officers high grade Moleskin water-proof coats. A real snap, at, onlr $32.50 Officers Leatherette Coats. In black or natural color. Special, at only, J 0 gQ Raincoats. Cashmere craven neted water-proof coates. Priced from gQ : $17.50 Shirts. Brand new O. wool serge shirts. A wonder ful shirt at, only, 0 Blankets. U. S. Marine all wool blankets. . . IJQ Heavy Army Blankets. A dandy auto robe at, 0TdJ $6.50 Haraess. Brand new double set, solid stock throughout Regular $150.00. While they last only $75.00 Better grades up to, J 25 Tents. U. S. Army Regula tion Tents', 16x16.3 foot walk Pyramid Shape, extra heavy duck canvas, . $150.00 value, fctonly $35.00 To Out-of-Town Buyers: Orders shipped same day as received. Include postage in remittance. Nebraska Army & Navy Supply Co. 1619 Howard, Omaha, Neb. EYES of members of the General Federation of Women's clubs, are- turned toward Des Moines, where the next biennial meetinp- will be held in June, 1920. Nebraska will send a large delega tion to this neighboring state which even now has definite plans for the gathering. The Des Moines Regis ter of recent date describes the out look as follows: ;'Mrs. Littleberry J. Haley, Birr mingham, Ala., chairman of the program committee, says: "The Des Moines convention will be epochal in the history of the general fed eration. t The program will em phasize its great opportunity and purpose to turn all of its influence to the settlement of the questions growing out of the great war as they bear upon our individual and national life. This is a day of many dangerous 'isms' and the Des Moines xonvcntidn will stress sane, healthfut and progressive ideas that will lead to a better understanding of woman's responsibility and op portunity in these momentous times." "Preparations are being made to entertain a minimum of 5,000 guests by the local biennial board, of which Mrs. Gardner Cowles is the chairman. Mrs. Homer A. Miller, the Iowa member of .the board of directors of the G. F. W. C, is chairman of the biennial con vention committee, and Mrs. Fred- e T 1 A Supply? 9.M caeww3viu - Ewt& fill: ' erick W. YYeitz is chairman of pub licity. "Club women from all over Iowa are acting upon committees to make the convention a history-making oc casion. Parent-Teachers' Association. The Parent-Teachers' association, Henry W. Yates school, will meet Wednesday at 3 o'clock at the school house. Rev. Titus Lowe will speak on "New Citizenship." Community singing will be led by Burton II. Twitchell. Music Department . The music department, Omaha Woman's club, will meet Wednes day at 2 p. m. in the Y. W. C A. for chorus rehearsal. Program ar rangements will be completed for open day on March 15. Mrs. W. E. Shafer, leader. , ( Dundee Woman's. Dundee Woman's club will meet Wednesday, March 3, at 2:30 p. m., with Mrs. A. L. Green, 4904 Under wood street. The book for study ii "Secret City" by Hugh JWalpole. Leader, Mrs. Jv T. Dodds, assisted by Mrs. Roger H J. O. Yeiser. lolman and Mrs. Community Service. Wednesday, March 3 Dinner at Community House at 6:15 p. m. for Wamm club. Aesthetic and folk dancing at 8 p. m. for Girls' Com munity Service league. Basket ball at Armv and Navy lub from 8 to 9:30 for' Y. M. H. A. team. For Tender Feet. If the feet are tender and swell a nightly bath of warm water with a little salt or soda in it will give relief. After, washing, the feet should be thoroughly dried, care being taken to dry spaces between the toes. Omaha Woman's Club. A called meeting of the Omaha Woman's club will be held Wednes day, March 3, at 2:30 p. m., at Hotel Fontenelle, to hear Dr. Charles Barker of Detroit on "a Mother's Responsibility to Her Daughter." The meeting will be under the auspices of the health department of the club and by courtesy of the Rotary club. Other clubs of, Omaha are-co-operating in this meeting and will send delegates. Mrs. Isaac Douglas has charge of the reserva tion of seats. The program will consist of a cor net solo "Honeysuckle Polka," by Miss Daisy Whisman; piano solo, "Hungarian Rhapsody," by Master Frank McDaniel, and Dr. Barker's talk, "A Mother's Responsibility to Her Daughter." The hostesses will be Mesdr.mes O. S. Goodrich, J. W. Welch, Isaac Douglas, Bert C. Fow ler, C. B. Cocn and Louis Leppke. South Side W. C. T. U. The South Side W. C. T. U. meet ing for Thursday evening has been postponed. The regular afternoon meeting will be held at" the home of Mrs. William Berry, 3820 South Twenty-sixth street. Ifi? New" ; Kissel Gusl lot OF hL Tlie: Aristottafsiof Molordbiir In keeping with Kissel tradition of unrestricted originality, the new Kissel custom-built dosed models are decidedly exclusive developments of mechanical engineering and body craftsmanship. See them during the week of March 1 to 6. Space B, Annex OMAHA AUTOMOBILE SHOW This premier cxliibilionjncfu Jeslig) KISSEL SPEEDSTER KISSEL SEDAN KISSEL COUPE Designed and constructed at theTGissel factories mounted on the Kissel custom-built chassis and propelled by the .new . Kissel custom-built motor C. J. DUTT0N AUTOMOTIVE CO. 2056-58 Farnam Street OMAHA Mrs. Hempel Re-elected President of the Woman's Club. ' Mrs. Ella A. Hempel was unani mously re-elected president of the Umaha Woman s club at the annual election held Monday afternoon in the Y. W. C. A. auditorium. On an informal ballot, she received 103 of the 105 votes cast. The other officers chosen were Mrs. Harriet MacMurphy, first vice president; Miss Katherine Worley, second vice president; Mrs. John W. Gill, cor responding secretary; Mrs. W. H. Hatteroth, recording secretary; Mrs. James Craddock, treasurer. These offices will be installed on April 26 at the annual meeting of the club. Their active duties will begin with the opening meeting of the club in October, 1920. Committee chairmen elected were: Auditing, Mrs. E. E. Stanfield; con stitution, Mrs. H. J. Bailey; cour tesies, Mrs. John O. Yeiser; house and home, Mrs. Burt Fowler; li brary committee to serve for two years, Mrs. A. L. Fernald and Dr. Adda Ralston; membership commit tee to serve for three years, Mes dames W. A. Baldwin, R. E. Crane, F. W. Smylie, C. H. Long and R. L. Frantz. ' Musical Program. Tht mtisif! dfnar(minf nt li Omaha Woman's club is planning a concert to be given late in April for tne beneiit ot the club and the Y. W. C A. who will co-operate in the musical. Local artists and the chorus which has been in training during the year under direction of Henry Cox, will give numbers. Mrs. W. M. Shafer is the department leader. . Rockford College. The Rockford College association will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Henrietta Medlar, 3327 Harney street. Budf x Federation Notes The Tuesday club of West Point gave a home talent play recently for the benefits of civic improvements. Standing room was in demand at the auditorium where it was given and the large audience was highly en tertained by the production. Miss Jane L. Finder of Grand Island spoke before a meeting of the Wood River Woman's club at a re cent meeting on the "Economy Campaign in Nebraska." The Herman Woman's club has made arrangements to sponsor a se ries of four entertainments musi- cales, lectures and plays to be givin next season, beginning early in October. The Harvard Woman's 'club gave an "Americanization Tea" at the school house, February 6, which was a success both financially and socially. Guests were met at the door by Uncle Sam and ' tiss Colum bia. A fine program representing Russia, Italy and Sweeden was given under the direction of Mr3. L. A. Sherburn. After the program Mrs. A. J. Jenson, president of the club, announced that the proceeds would be used to purchase needed accessories for school playgrounds. At the tap of the drum the guests joined in a grand march to the re freshment booths, dropping their nickles and dimes in the horn of Elenty at the door as they passed, lecorations of halls and refresh ment booths were characteristic of the countries represented. The club women were in costume. The Madison Woman's club met Thursday afternoon, February 26, with Mrs. Foster. At the preced ing meeting, Miss Harriet Long gave an interesting account of her ex perience in held library work among the soldiers from the time she began on the Mexican border until she left France and Germany to return to the United States. A secretary of education, with a seat in the president's cabinet, and an annual appropriation of $100,000, 000 to promote education in the United states, is the proposed ad vanced legislation in the cause of education that has received the en dorsement of the General Federa tion of Women's Clubs, the National Education association and the women of both the republican and democratic national committees. od n i WEDNESDAY AND CONTINUING TILL ALL ARE SOLD a: 1 Self Don't Miss This Opportunity to Cat theH.C.of L. These are mighty good shoes good leathers every pair from our regular stocks but there are few of a kind, and broken slses Bat we are de termined to give or customers the savings they of fer. lw- tec For Women Voters NcbrMka women ar to rot this year. Thalr vote way k daoUv. Quit d. waily, tbey are eonranted with maa mw qimUon, both aa to th praewlur ot votlm and th antra Involved. Th Be, under thl hoadlna, will aa. wer oath day nuch ojuostlont as It read. m may auk. The quenUonn need ant b rcliulTDtr b women, although ipeelal at. tontlon will be paid the wnmen'a problem Addreit 'Th Woman Voter," In lie. How many members are there in the constitutional convention? t , , MRS. D. H. . One hundred. The state constitu tion provides that there shall be as many members in a constitutional convention as there are members in the house of representatives. There are, also under constitutional pro vision, 100 members in the house of representatives, and therefore that number in the convention now in session. ' Literature Department The literature department of the Omaha Woman's club will meet Wednesday, March 3, at 10 a. m., at the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. IL D. Cam eron, leader, will present the pageant, "Wayfarer," by Dr. Crothers. Applied Psychology. Members of the applied psychol ogy class under Harriet Luella Mc Collum will meet Wednesday eve ning, March 3, to hear a report of the constitution committee, consist ing of Mrs. A. Holtman, G. A. Way and Dr. V. E. Levine. Temple Israel. The regular monthly meeting of the Sisterhood of Temple Israel will he held at the home of Mrs. Sol Bergman, 325 South Thirty seventh street, on Wednesday, March 3, at 2:30. George Crook Relief Corps. ' Mrs. Margaret Barry, 2624 De catur street, will give a kensington for the members of the George Crook Relief corps Thursday after noon at 2 o'clock. A. C. A. Book Review. The Book Review section of the A. C.A. will meet Wednesday, March 3 at 4 o'clock, with Mrs. L. S. Overpeck. Miss Esther Thomas will give the autobiography and ed ucation of Henry Adams. 'Clan Gordon Auxiliary. The Ladies' auxiliary to Clan Gor don will meet with Mrs. T. K. Fin- leyson, 2516 James street, Wednes day at p. m, One-third of the 6.000 women physicians in the United States reg istered for war relief work. have accumulated several hundred pairs of odds and ends which we find necessary to dispose of for the reason that we can not obtain any more of these shoes of the same color and price, nor can we fit feet satisfactorily with broken lines. We have been offered $1.50 to $2 per pair for the entire lot by a firm who make it their business to again sell .these shoes at a big profit. We refused the offer and are determined to give our customers the savings .they offer. We offer the entire assort ment at One Dollar a Pair as long as they last. BE HERE EARLY NO CHARGES NO EXCHANGES W. S. STRYKER 117 North Sixteenth Street The Fiftieth Anniversary, Just fifty years ago this winter Dr. Pierce gave to the world hif famous "Favorite Prescription" for the distressing weaknesses and complaints of women. For many years he had been in the active practice of medicine and his called his "Golden Medical Dkf-j cdvery," which he had prescribed many years for the stomach, lives) and blood. Both these medicines met with instant success, and during the1 past half century have sold in greater quantities than any other; proprietary medicines. Neither of Dr. Pierce's medicines contains alcohol and both are herbal extracts of native medicinal plants For the past fifty years forty-eight million bottles have been used by the American public, and they are today the standard tonics for men and women. They are now put up in tablet as well as liquid form, and sold by every druggist in the land. A trial package can be obtained by sending 10 cents to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel in puffalo, N. Y. Write Dr. Pierce's if you want free confidential medical advice, or a free booklet on any chronic disease. Shave With Cuticura Soap The New Way Without Mug $ specialty was the diseases of women. Later he desired to give this to the public, and ho received a trade-mark prote tion from the United States patent office for this medicine' which is an herbal, "tempes ance " prescription with all th ingredients printed on the bottle wrapper. In his every day prao tice in the early days he also used( a tonio and alterative far the blood, which was so univer sally beneficial that he deter- mined to place this medicine mv the drug stores of the United States, where it could be readOyj procured by the public This be) why? A man at sixty years oi age b either a failure or a success, BEECHAM-'S PILLS have been made for sixty years and havo the largest sale of any medicine in the world! Millions use BEECHAM'S PILLS 10c,2S A year ago our ox ford sale at one dollar a pair made us hundreds of friends and customers because they were not bought for sale purposes but were all regular lines taken, from our stock, the same as those on sale Wednesday. vsw Anybody caa sell I , fl shoes but few fit I y (jj them. Our pelioy I W ukA tBS '! I "Foot Comfort Service" 3 The Douglas Shoe Store. Inc. 1 13 M PI 8 L jr! if MIIIIMIIIHIIIIUIIIIIHMIIlllllllll j: I.! 1 v J 1