7 8 IT, ' THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: OCTOBER 31, 1920. k Trend Toward v ' Harding Is ; Evident t Tluf there is a tremendous tren towards Harding among women voters ii indicated in the results of the straw votes that have been taken in offices, women's clubs and other women s organizations. In all de partments oi the Omaha Y. W. C. 'A., including the cafeteria, Harding has been in the lead J-I Mrs. C. E. Hall is strongly against the league of nations as at present drawn up. She says she earnestly hopes women will not lose their heads and fail to see the dangers it Holds. Mrs. ,HaII visited the ppen ' mg ot the republican tea rfm in , Minneapolis and describes thelnique features of it. " I t Mrs. ueorge l hatcher uuerifeay. honorary president central of the 1). A. R., says: VThc troubje with tnc people opposed to the slogan 'America first,' is that they really arc lor America last. We need more loyalty to America in this country, and no; one should be ashamed to confess that he or she is for Amer ica first, last and all the time. have been traveling all over the country, however, speaking for the republicans, and all signs point to an overwhelming republican victory. The people are heartily sick of the mismanagement, inefficiency and . hypocrisy of -the democrats. As to the league of nations, it is dead beyond power of resurrection. The only women who will not vote the republican ticket are the women who tliinl? the league will keep this coun try out of another' war. We had heller get out of this one first. believe that ' iii the hour of trial America will always be on hand, and we need no broken-down league, that even Europeans laugh at. to remind us. ot our-duty to humanity. Mrs. 'C If. Aull, sister of Mrs. Gucriisay; was among the women who visited Harding's "front porch" last summer. . She is one of the few women -' recently appointed on the advisory committee of the republican Varly. Mrs. Aull listened to a series of lectures this last summer at Lake Uiatitautm, given by Dr, Gibbon, on the le.a(i bf nations, which she Considers- the finest discussions she has, heard or read on tho isubject. Mrs. Aull was in the front porch au dience of 12.000 women who heard , Senator Harding 'say: v "I pledge myself today to support with all that is in me whatever prac- tical policy . of social welfare and so- cial justice can be brought forward hji the combined wisdom of 'all Americans'. Nothing can concern America, arid . nothing can concern me as an American, more deeply than the health, the happiness and ilie enlightenment of every fellow American." ; t Luncheon to Be Feature of ' Bazar' The alumnae 6f Duchesne college and cotvvenL.TM the sacreu Mean .u i will hold its' batar for one day only, iifat day being Thursday, November 18, from 10 a. m. until 9 p.- m. The affair will be held at the convent. Thirty-sixth And Burt strefts, A feature of tje bazar is to Tbe the luncheon which will be served from 12 o'clock on. Attractive convent girlslin the little French cac and aprons will serve the dainty 'lunch con at a plate. Mrs. J. M. Har ding . and Mrs. Lawrence Brinker will have charge of the luncheon. Reservation may be made with Miss Marion Hamilton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hamilton. Among those who h'ave,already made reser vations are Mesdames C. W. Ham ilton, J. M. Harding, F. ,A. Nash, , Lawrence Brinker, M. R. Murphy, . P. T. McGrath, T. J. O'Brien, Ed ward Leary, Bert Leary, George Laier and the Misses Ellen Greigh ton, Cecilia Nachtigall, Eva Dow and Alice Powers. , ' Proceeds of the bazar will go to ihe building , fund of the new col "lege wing which is now under way. The Duchesne college is the only ' Catholic t university for young women in .Omaha. It Helps to Better Understandings Published by; Arrangement 'With Life By Charles Dana Gibson Copyright. Life Pub.' Co, That pleasant moment when it turns out that his father is an old flame of your mother's Happ FindYourOwn iness in t i . h cure . - r " ' .- -By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. 1 On whom do you count .for 'your success? For your happiness? For your placein the world? Have you an idea that .friend ship or , favoritism will - see you through to' achievement? ' Do you look at the- men who have arrived and the women who are making themselves vital to. the wojrld. and say: '" ' ' , A. " '"' "Well, if I had the, friends they have I'd amoimt to something, too.-' Do you? : ' . ' - - Let me quote you a fable by our old friend Aesop. "A lark, whc had young ones, in a field of corn which was almost ripe, was afraid Test the reapers should come before her young brood were fledged. Every day, therefore, when she flew : away to look for food, she charged them to take notice of what they heard ir. her absence, and to tell her of it when she returned. One da when she was gone they heard the master of the field say to his son that the corn seemed ripe enough to cut, and tell him to go early tomorrow and desire their friends and neighbors to come and help to reap it. . - When the old lark came home the little ones fell quivering and chirping around her, and tojd her what had happened, begging her to remove them as fast as she could. The mother bade them to be easy, i "for," said she. "if he depends on his friends and neighbors,1 J am sure the corn: will not be reaped tomor row;" Next day she went away again and lefe'the same orders as before. The" owner came and waited. The sun grew hot, but nothing was done, lor not a soul came. His Line of Reasoning. : You see,, he said to his son, "these friends of ours are not to be depended upon, so-run off at once to your uncles androusins, and say I wish them to come betimes to morrow and help us reap." This the Young Ones, in a great frigh reported, to. thair mother. "Do not be frightened, children," said she, "kindred and relations are not al ways very forward in helping one another; but keep your ears' open and let me know what you hear to morrow." v ;The owner came next day, and. finding his relatives as backward as his neighbors, said to his son: "Now, George, listen to me. Get a couple of good sickles ready against tomorrow morning, for it seems we mut reap the corn by ourselves." The Young Ones told this to their mother. ; "Their, ray dears," said she, "it is time for us to go, indeed, for when a man undertakes to do his business himself, it is not so likely that he will be disappointed." She removed her Young Ones im mediately and the corn was reaped the nevt day by the old man and his son. Y c Wise old Lark!' Or wise old Aesop. It doesn't matter which you admire, so only you" do admire the fable in which the gospel of success modern or ancient is so clearly illustrated, i For what the , farmer found out and ' what , -the old Lark seems ' to ' have known is that the motto for getting things done is, . Do it yourslt. ; That's one of the lessons of life which some of us are so loath to learn. There is no one on whom any of us may count save only him self. This isn't cruel or cold, or heart-breaking. It's just the way things are the Only way of work ing out existence. Think how mixed up and tangled life would be if each person were doing someone else's work. After a time no one would really know what was his duty and what his achievement.' ' ' Maeterlinck once wrote,' "None but Myself shall I meet on the high way of fate." J Mjodern : young business talks sneeringlv.'about '"passing the buck."i And young modernity knows that in passing along responsibility and side-stepping actions no one really strengthens himself or his position or his power to achieve. . The Only Way. ' "Do it yourself" holds all the phi losophy1 of success. For what , ' you can't do no one can do for you, in such fashion that it becomes really yours, i And what you won't try to . . ...... it. ao remains always unattamaDie,- "Do it yourself", means -"sharpen your faculties." It means get the habit of trying. It means , grown through effort. And it means make sure of getting things done. - For as long as you count on friends and neighbors who are sel- fishly or otherwise absorbed in af fairs of their own. vou have little or no. chance of Seeing things worked out. And you have plenty of chance of being hurt and disappointed You may even , get to doubting that hu man beings possess such qualities, as reliability and loyalty. You may find yourself suffering from a series of hurts and disap pointments. You may grow to be bitter and unhappy. But when you "do it yourself" you are too busy with your trying to be hurt or dis appointed or bitter. You learn, to take your own measure and you get into the way of success and achievement. In other words, you get things done. , Maria-Luisa has been conferred up on Mme. Joffre by the Spam'sh gov ernment. "Not a Tag Day," Says Memorial Chairman Although the League' of Women Voters' sentinels will stand at legal distance from the poles on Novem ber 2, it will' not ' be in any sense a "tag day," according to Mrs. R. S. Hyde, publicity chairman, but imply an opportunity for those. who Dancing Was First A Religious Exercise The dance originated as a rcliguJnV", exercise, says Louis H. Chalif of New York. St. Basil recommended its use on earth because, ' he ex plained, it is what the angels do in heayen. fIn the ancient Hebrew and mediaeval Spanish churches, dancing . was a religious rite. There are sur vivals' of these early religious ex ercises in a choir boy performance which is still given annually, in the cathedral of Seville and in ritual n,, gyrations in front of the cathedral 1 of Nola, near Naples, every June 26. lj What is more, savs Mr. Chalir. the , time is coming when dancing will again be under the direct patronage and control of both church and state. We already have the begin nings of this in the municipal danct hall, the playgrounds and public gymnasiums with their group folk dances, and in social centers, set tlements and church societies with -their supervised social dancing. Or ganized agencies of moral uplift are awakening to the fact that danc ing is as natural to the human spe cies as frisking is to the young Iamb and that condemnation merely adds to it the zest of adventure. They are beginning to see, too, that potentially it is not only the most beneficial of public recreations. Be cause they are becoming aware that it is too vital a form of self-ex pression to he done away with they are making concerted efforts these days to bring it under their in fluence and cafe. t Religion has every reason to be come reconciled to her own daugh ter, Terpsichore, Mr. Chalif declaresSH' for it is when young. Terpsichore goes out of the church to dance that she learns bad manners. If she and young Apollo stayed and danced in the parish house or tinder the syna gogue root both they and their church would be . much better off spiritually, he says.' t i ' ihe pianola and phonograph are potential influences for the uplift v of the dance, Mr. Chalif notes, in that they make possible dancing in the home. Fighting, he contends, is the psychic base of all games of contest and of military drill. Dancing leads only toward the higher life of love. art and urbanity, while fortifying the bodily health better, perhaps. than any of them. For dancing is a vigorous sort of exercise which straightens heart and lungs and im proves circulation and digestion without overstraining i any one member or organ. Draper Smith will each deposit $50 the tree will offering boxes lor the Dr. Anna Howard Shaw memor ial on election day. Small contri butions will bf just as welcome, ac cording to the committer, who pre fer that the Anna Shaw memorial come from many, small amounts lather than a less number of large ones. : ; ' " ; . Mrs. Charles : T. "Hubbard, local sit wish, to Express their gratitude to this steadfast woman .who struggled I chairman, has received sunolies of . rt. . Li .f .i.. it,ii. t.: -fi r en t : j t .1. a 1 ' 1 - . , n - . . . ine oracr oi.ine iNODie names 01 ui ju .yi-ais iur iui-cus iuai nave c-1 uanncrs ana iners ior sentinels on r x , 1 r 1 r . , , 1 . . r . i . i . CH IROPRACTIC Heart Secrets of a Fortune Teller A Case of Feminine Finance. I'll tell you about a little frenzied finance family episode I was invited to meddle in today. . . A woman nearin' the 40-mile stone, and drcssecflike sweet 24, walks into the. studio and asks for a reading. I ask her, to state her reasons for callin', ' which she starts in to do after heavin 4he saddest of sighs. It seems her husband's business career was causin' her much worry. At least that was the impression, if not the exact words, that she handed me. He had written a couple of handbooks on the tactics of sales manship before he .had reached the ; ripe age of 25" and at the time of her marriage she thought she had land ed a walking - Alexander Hamilton Institute of Efficiency! But. it seems, business hadn't picked up. In fact, durin' the eight years of their married life it had enjoyed a steady drop, and friend husband hadn't pulled down enough commission . within , the last six months to pajta respectable income lax.' . " ' - ' - - ...JV" ' "I presume, madam," I says, "that you are ambitious for your husband's success?" - 5 "I ami" she agrees, most emphatic, ' I've always . urged him on to the high salary goal." "Beautifur sentiment!" I applaud. "You probably sit up nights search in' out ideas for promotin' quick .sales?" '- - , "No. I don't bother with that 'sort of thing, but I do a bit of night planning on keeping up appearances. .Nothing 4 as important as clothes when it comes lo putting up a bold front. You can't afford to get seedy if you ever hope to succeed! - S you re forced to tax your brain something awful, I 'says, planning the family wardrobe? . "I am!". she explains, very com placent;'Tve walked the streets for miles, locating the stores with the convenient credit i systems, and 1 don't believe-, thete's a. family in town that' gets as MUCH for as LITTLE DOWN." . "And 'your' husband,' I venture;' does he approve of the little credit system you've mapped" out for the family.' ' . "Not entirely," she admits,' "m fact, when we were first married, he had a very .foolish objection to charging the smalfcst articles. But Fve at last brought him around to my way of doing things." "A woman generally does!", I says, expressin my private opinion publicly. ' "And now you've decided to consult the occult in order to dis cover why your husband's not a fi nancial success. Is that the idea? "It is," she answers. I want to learn the truth!" . ,; , "Madam." I says very determined, if it's thesTRUTH you want you're going to get it, but the sources won't be altogether odcult! It wouldn't take an astronomer to see that your husband was born under that famous sign of the zodiac, known as -THE GOAT, sljghtlv influenced by the sign of THE FISH!" , "Please explain," she requests po litetv. ; ........ "Well," I says, "he's Iwalkin' around in his wakin hours with a piano, a floor lamp, a period dining room suit, and probably an over stuffed lounge tied to his back like a sinker. Furthermore he's got to look pleasant over a nifty lookin' automobile, remembering all the vhile that he doesn't even own the steerin', gear." ; I stopfor breath, but I don't give her a chance to break in. .' "You wonder why he's notdeadin' the sellm crew and bringm home the b'acdri" in the shape of over-size orders? Well, there's a reason: : '"When, he walks up to a' pros pect; and starts the speil for a big sale, he happens to recall the fact that his socks are not paid for; moreover, he gets a mental flash remindin' him that his wife's new hat will be out of style before pay ments are half made, and that the eggs for breakfast will be on the month-after-next bill. .Then he be gins to wonder if-the gentleman he's holdift' by the lapel has a hunch that three duns have been presented for the silk shirt he's sportin' and sud denly the sale's all off! Get me?" "It seems to int," says the lady, very chilly, ! "that this interview is nothing short of insulting.'' "Not at all. madam," I saysj "just one of my little thrift talks. I hope you'll think it over!". "What are your charges for a con sultation?" she inquired, regardin' me like I'm a worm of the earth. , "Five dollars, .madam," I says, smilin' up my sleeve. "A dollar down, the rest in 90 days," and I see her brightening countenance that my-credit system has made a hit with her anvwav. Next ' Week-"! Cheat the Law and Win a Friend." tCobJTljb. 1920, by Thomtuon Feature Service.) Dr. Frank F. Burhorn Graduate of the Palmer School of Chiropractic ' Licensed in Nebraska ' SUITE 414-20-23-26 SECURITIES BLDG. i 'W Corner 16th and Farnim Sta. Complete X-Ray Laboratory Twelve Private Adjusting Rooms Office Hours 9 A .M. to 8 P. M. House Calls Made Day or Night PHONE DOUGLAS 5347 W "What You Want to Know" Question No. 3 What can you do for my lame back? . Chiropractically, I always look for the cause. Stiff back, lame back, sore back or backache may be caused by overwork, , but frequently it as a symptom of some deeper-seated trouble. In fact, tender ness in the back is linked with many differ ent diseases. . v HEN we speak of ."lame back" we most gen erally think of the common form known as lumbago or muscular rheumatism. TVT O matter what your, ailment may be, you are " entitled to your own opinion. It it your priv ilege to think a you choose, but don't condemn Chiropractic without a hearing. TT HE science has demonstrated its ability to de- liver the goods, and all I ask is an opportunity to prove' its efficiency, then you will, as an open minded man, make your own decisions AM not submitting any wordy claims, but I'm offering to submit concrete proof I want to do this, not to advertise chiropractic particularly, but to help you get well. ' i ' ' CONSULTATION it absolutely free office ad justments are twelve for ten dollars or thirty for twenty-five dollars. If we can't help you we will not accept your case. day. Mrs. H. C. ' Sumney 'and Mrs. election day. They may be obtained at 23 Patterson block. Mrs. Sum ne is state chairman. , IIIIIIMIllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllillllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli:- IMMEDIATE INSTALLMENT LOWEST PRICES 5 THE VACUUM FURNACE Right now we can give you prompt, skillful service 5 at a price no one in Omaha can beat. The Vacuum is one of the heaviest furnaces on the market - built to last a lifetime OVER 900 IN USE IN s . OMAHA absolutely guaranteed to give satisfac- s tion. Enjoy solid comfort and real economy this 5 Winter. Call, write or phone for "information. 2 VERY LIBERAL TERMS IF YOU WISH. Vacuum Furnacd Sales Cor fm liJll 1 OMAHA liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii? 1 . ' YouVcel fine in a tew moments. Your cold in head or catarrh will be gone. Your clogged nostrils will open. The air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe free ly. No more dullness, headache; no hawking, snuffling, mucous dis charges or dryness; no Struggling for breath at night. : ' Tell your druggist you want a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm. Apply a little of this fragrant, anti septic cream in your nostrils, let it riiMipfrnti ihmncrh vrv air ftnssape A 1 1 .1 . . . . . .l-. mi-- L' : i .. t - . U 1 . . . - ' . : mm, 7,inii ui inaumiii lull mm rn, rniun ."u mira . ,.- l1p,,l. cnnthc atlfl hpal the Kectai Diseases in a .hort t me. without a acvere sureical on- I !e ,lea,a' SOOine ana ncai II1C . ration. No Chloroform. Ether or other general anesthetic ud. j swollen, inflamed mucous . mtlll A CUjr' juar,nteaa' ,n every rate accepted for treatment, and no money is to be paid until ' trane, and relief COmeS instantly, rured. Write fori book on Rectal Diseases, with names and testimonials of more than I i. : :.., ...i, ... i.i .j t trrh .sufferer needs. Don't , stay :.tu(Ted-UD and miserable. Pifei ADVERTISEMENT PUT CREAM IN NOSE AND STOP CATARRH Tells How To Open Clogged Nos trils and End Head-Colds. 1.000 prominent 'people vho have been permanently cured. DR. E. R. TARRY Sanatorium, Peter Trust BIdf. (Bee Bldf.) Omaha, Nab. Get Your Share of These Furniture Values Standing on our floor, waiting for your Inspection, are mrndreds of Furniture values. In this stock you will f hid everything you de sire to furnish the home, all pieces priced under today's market Make up your mnd to drop In tomorrow and Inspect It for yourself. Beautiful 3 Piece Duo-Fold Sets Makes a spare Bed Room out of your Living Room. d A CA Special Price , P laStaOU FREE As a special inducement we will give a beautiful full-size Floor Lamp free with each set purchased duringtthis stock reducing sale. Three Pieces in Various Patterns and Coverings Period Dining Boom Suites Adda charm te your home. We tiava just the pattern you Vrant In Walnut or other aelect wood, priced at $265 To See This Suite Is to Want It. There is no room In the house where beautiful furni ture is more desrable than in the Bed Room. Come in and inspect this set Priced at v . ; ' "- $198 Overstuffed , Bockers A few left from broken sets, f $27.50 Cane and Mahogany Living Boom Suites S-Piece Sets $165.00 Rugs High or Medium Grade at Greatly Beduced Prices. Stoves and Ranges The cooler weather is here to stay. Get in on tnese un usual Stove values. ..Heating Stoves v $12.50 Up . Ranges, N$24.60 Special Demonstration This Week of Brunswick Phonographs and Raeerda. Cora In and hare onr Lady Demonstrator explain the splendid feature, of the Brunewlok. Also a cetnalete stock of Columbia. this your Phonograph and Record Headquarters. , CORNER 149 AND DODGE STREETS USE BEE WANT ADS THEY BRING RESULTS I) 0 K 1 . (iBSa.siBMgiJHisejjrtKiMw!'-