Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 05, 1921, Page 16, Image 16

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THE 1IKK: OMAHA. SATURDAY. MARCH S. 1921.
i - Lja
Society
WHAT wonlil American "kiddies" do if there were but one doll to
every 125 children? An impossible situation so it seems, for here
in our own country nearly every little girl has af lest one, if not
several dollies of all apes and sizes. Dolls with yellow hair, dolls with
blue eyes, dolls that "no to slti-p," walking dolls, talking dolls, and a
lozen other varieties crowd the shops and are carried home daily by
fond parents to a waiting Mary Jane, or Betty Ann.
Away over in Sidon, Syria, however, tlietf is only one dull for 1'5
children. Miss Josephine II use, formerly a Nebraska girl, an Alpha Phi,
is located there in charge of an orphanage tor Syrian waifs. Under her
direction care is taken of 250 children. In this orphanage Hrc only two
dolls, but they are Very tnuch loved, those two. No provision of any
Kind is made tor toys tor tiie little
.Miss ttuse lias written Unialia tneixJs and as a result Omaha alumnae ,
members of Kappa Kappa Gamma are now busily engaged in making dolls
and uavlv colored scranhooks for these Svrian children. As soon as the:
work is completed 'the boxes packed with picture books and dollies will! Mrs. D. P. B. Marshall of Shori
ba shipped to the waiting youngsters far across the sea. I dan. Wvo.. who is the guest of Mrs.
Miss Kdith Morris, daughter ftf
Mrs. It. I. Morris, became the bride :
of Forest Hamilton Thursday eve-'
nincr at .mi attt-.i-tiw lining linir '
Kdgar Morris of Laramie, Wvo..
iddest brother cf the bride, gave 'her
m inarrtairc the Kcv. . W.
Howard jicrforii'ed the ceremony be
fore a bank of pink roses, palms and
ferns.
Mrs. Howard Wood played the
wedding march and Otto Lambert
.-nig. He was accompanied by
Mrs. Joy Stuphen. "
Miss Helen Morris, the brides
maid, sister of the bride, wore
;tl-icot sal in. The gown had a
bodice and panniers of gold lace.
She carried a hmujiict of lavender
t, weetpeas.
The bride v as downed in ivory
satin, combine.! with princess lace,
an heirloom in the Morris family
The tulle veil fell from a. wreath
of sweetpeas a':d the bridal bouquet
was of white roses and a shower of
white sweetpea:-.
Clair Hamilton of La Junta. Colo.,
brother of the g'-ot -in, was best man.
John and Chitulc. Morris, hroilu-'-s
of the bride, were ushers.
Mrs. Otto' Lambert and XI Us Kl
lon -Hensman assisted at the recep
tion which followed the ceremony.
The bride's traveling suit was of
..taupe broadcloth with hnt to. match.
Following a bort honeymoon
.trip the couple will be at home alter
March
IS at
!7 Crown
dint
avenue.
Eurklund-Wiig.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter iig-annonucc
'the marriage of their daughter, Myr
tle, and Elmer C. Burklund of Suth
erland, Neb., which took place Feb
ruary 27 at their home.
Out-of-town guests included Mr.
and Mrs. C. V. Burklund, Misses
Julia and Esther Burklund and II.
' vw:. ,i.,... :i.
'Sutherland. Neb.; Noble Larson t,f
v.i,. n, .,,,,4 irc r v r ,ii ;c i
and daughter. Ardith.'and Yon," lack. a President of the I'nitcd States Is
V York, and Mrs. A. X. Davis of ! Made." . . '. .
Norfolk . At a meeting of the civics depart -Mr.
and Mrs. Burklund will reside i went Monday evening Mrs. F. P.
M Sutherland. ! Van Wickle read a paper on ' Voca-
; tional Education."
For Miss Bienstock.
The Women's auxiliary to L O. B.
; B. held a party at its club rooms on
Wednesday evening. March 2. in
honor of Flora Bienstock. second
prize winner in the Jewish Popular
ity Contest. Mrs. Kantian gave three
"readings. Miss Mollie Oland sang.
She was accompanied by Miss Lil
lian Levey.
Travellers' Aid Sbeaker.
Irving Johnson, general secretary
of the Traveller; Aid associationvof
the United States, will speak in Oma
ha at a number of meetings next
A
i
I ; "iTI pULMUUUyUUU Lit f tM EH I1U UU UH MmMy j
' tan ACROSS . CyTf
U-J r Ancr
Coats and Dolmans
More than 200 new Spring
purchase of Coats we have
unusually important savings.
ones
He will appear on the pro-
Sm of. the oman ch,,)- political
.'"' soc,a' science department, Mon-
rl '' "C Will probably speak Wed-
!n,,i(l;i.v noon before the Rotary club i
i l that evening at the First Congre- I
K""iai rmirru,
i ne travellers .m work in uma
lia is in charge of the V. W. C. A.
Banquet.
Swift's Get-Together club will hold ;
j it annual banquet Friday evening, j
March 4, at tile Omaha Athletic club. ! Among the Omahans who- will at
' Hon. V. F. Gurlev will be the speak-(tend the Alpha Phi banquet in Lin
er of the evening" and George H. coin Saturday are Mrs. Gerald Heck,
! Winn will officiate as toasunaster. Mrs. William. Loclce. Mrs. Elmer
The following are the officers of the Battin and Mrs. Myrle Rohrboug'h.
! organization: S. T. Tool, president:! A, . , , , . ,
w o - , rr ti.. , , i :.' Mrs. K. C. Howe and daughter.
!v. M. Finch and L. branstad, vice ... . ,, , ,
t presidents
and W. R
L. E.
livers
Wilson, treasurer.
secretory.
Junior League.
At the regular meeting of the
Junior league, held Thursday morn-j Mrs. John E. Patrick, who visited
ing at the Blackstone. it was decided I her aunt, Mrs. J. J. Brown, in Oma- j
to give $50 to the Girls' Community i ha recently, has returned here froip ;
Service league. 1 her home near Sheridan on account !
Tin1 date for the Junior Lca.r.ielof illness. She is much improved!
FYdlies has been changed from May I since her arrival in Omaha. Her j
14 to 7. The affair will be held at j husband accompanied her.
the Gavetv theater and will be fol-; j
lowed bv a supper-dance at the Ath- I Mrs. William G. Lre has returned ,
letic club. i from Lincoln, where she attended the j
The next general conference of the j initiation ceremonies of the K appal
league will be held in Atlanta, Ga., i Kappa Gamma sorority, of which hefj
in either February or March in 1922. 1 daughter. Miss Mary, is a member.
Federated Club Notes
.
The home economics department
oi" the York Woman s duo met tor i
Monuay. renruary o.
Mesdames C. F. Gilbert. Earl Youst.
i'. M. Host. VV-. (i. Liggett. Koneit ;
Ciale and G. L. Wagner were the
hostesses. ' j
Miss Clara Foley, a public schouj
nurse, spoke on her work, and Mrs
E. E. W elch read a paper on How
s. I
E. E. Welch read a paper on ' How :
Mrs. E. E. Welch was hostess for
the literature department Tuesday
afternoon at her home. Miss Editli
Haggard read a paper on "The
South American Country, Peru, and
the Incas" and Mrs. E. A. Wells
gave the story of Rebekah's life as
revealed in the scriptures.
A woman's club was recently or
ganized at C'nadilla and the follow
ing officers elected: President, Mrs.
William Crownover: vice president,
Mrs. Don Stilwell: secretary, Mrs.
Etta Greenburg, and treasurer, Mrs!
Ed Russell. The club has a mem
bership of twenty,
A Special Purchase of
NG DRESSES.
In a Mighty Sale Saturday
All Are Stylish Dresses Original $20 Jo
, $25 Models and Made by a Manufacturer
Who Produces Only FINE Dresses--and
We Promise Our Customers Extraordi
nary Savings Tomorrow When We Place
These Dresses on Sale at
$
-1
Satim,
Tricolettes,
Crepe
Taffetas,
Etc.
These are really stunning Dresses and we sin
cerely adYise our regular customers who can
possibly use a Dress to take advantage of this
unusual opportunity tomorrow they are the
BEST, DRESSES of the season at the price. .x
New Spring Suits
-especially for this-event, we have selected from-our
showing of. the new Spring Suits, some 50, that are
marked to sell from $35.00 to $50.00 and place them on
Sale. at the extremely low price of
Materials of French
Serge, Wool Serge,
Checked Velours and
Tricotines.
in sill and "service"
linings.
Sale of Spring ,
models, comprising the greatest singlj
ever made, in a great sale tomorrow at
Saturday
Personals
A son was born at Stewart hospi
tal to" Mr. and Mrs. David Mann.
Mrs. Carl R. Gray wilt arrive in
Omaha Monday from a visit in Los
Angeles.
j A son was born to Mr. and Mrs.
A. A. Muse Thursday at tlje Stewart
I hospital.
i Mrs. Victor Caldwell, sr.. who has
: been in California several weeks, will
i arrive home about April 1.
! Ttwc V ;if 1urtiii lli will tn
to Lincoln Saturday to attend the
annual banquet of Achoth sorority,
C. M. Wilheim, leaves Saturday (or
here home
. .
Mrs. Max Hostetler of Sheltoil,
Neb., historian for the Daughters of
1812, has spent, the pat week here
as the guest of Mrs. l: C
son.
V inter-'
) Mr. and Mrs. William A. Fraser
I and two sons, William A., jr., and
; George Duncan, will sail 'July lo on
j the '"Oropesa" for a . tour of the Eu-
ronean continent.
i York about April 1, w hen Miss Ho ve
plans to continue her study of music i
with Harold Bauer during April and i
May. !
. JITS, c re is a luemnei in tne wiiihmm '
J Alumnae' chapter of Kappa Kappa j
: Gamma. Miss Marguerite Fallon, j
' another Omaha student at the Uni- i
versitv or Nebraska, lias also been i
initjatod imo Kaopa Kappa Gamma.!
: ;
. ,
iWOmen VOICTS
Committee Is
'Active ,
At a meeting of the women vot
er's nonpartisan committee Thurs
day afternoon af the home of Mrs.
T. P. Reynolds'the committee en
dorsed the movement that is being
made to lower the price of ruiik, and
appointed the following committee
to investigate the situation: Mes
damcs Grace Smith, Albert Curry,
W. Warner, loseph Lochray, Chris
i Amenda and John Haxthousand.
j The committee weit on record
j to support the Smith bread bill and
, will send copies ot" the resolution to
all Douglas county senators.
Community kitchens was also dis
cussed and will be taken up again
at, the next meeting.
Mrs. Mary Corrnack spoke on
"Amendments to the City Charter,"
and Miss Gladys Shamp gave a talk
i on Women in industry.
ACROSS
FROM
HAY DEN
New
A 95
4r
s25
7
1 IA V fti -" li.
q p n q D"n d n rt pf'ijid m
National Worker
Gives Views., On
Americanization
A. Amy Spalding, national field
worker, in the Americanization de
partment, W. C. T. U., is in Omaha.
She has given the following state
ment of ideas to The Bee:
Of all problems before the minds
of the American people today that
of Americanization should rightfully
hold a very large place. This is
necessarily so because it involves the
niaintainiinee ot the standards of our
home Hie and the moral status of
our future citizenship.
A nation cannot experience the Mi
ll it x of a large percentage of people
whose standards of sanitation, hone
life and education are somewhat Ul
terior, without suffering very ma
terially. Neither can that nation w ho
felt ils responsibility several years
ago in lighting for the peace and
democracy of all nations of the
world, forget its responsibility to the
representatives of those same na
tions who live within our borders.
And again, the individuals of such
a democracy anm.t shift their per
sonal responsibility to such indivi
dual neighbors, bc.-ause they are the
units of a goernjnent "of the people,
by the people and for the people."
When we realize that in America .?S
per cent of our 110,(100,0(10 popula
tion are of foreign stock and only
54 per cent of native parentage, and
10 per cent cannot speak the English
language, we realize that we have
a problem before us which is going
to require the co-operation ,and
.&'l!II!!f:l:';"l
rJJU
SAVE
m
this for qNE WEEK
AD
POl
U
D
S
Basko Baking' Powder,
.1 lb., at....
My Wife's Salad
Dressing, at.
Baker's Cocoa, y2 Id....
Basko Cocoa, V2 lb
Snider 's Catsup, large
OUR FAMOUS
BASKO
FOR ONE WEEK
ONLY
SPECIAL OFFER: '
To Get Every Housewife to Try This We Will Sell at
This Price; Our Regular Price Was 30c. This Is
the Coffee They Are All Talking About.
REMEMBER DAY
R
E
E
Free
ONE
. "Buy All Your
10c nn
l52f
IOc
Strictly
53M
Ralston Wheat Food 26c
Chum Salmon, tall. . . : .12'jc
Underwood's Sardines 14c
Plain ami Mnntnnt
Horse Radish, 2 bottles. . 25c
Live Better
'Combined effort of every organiza-
tion and individual for its solution.
I There are many methods of attack
in such a situation, but the writter
would like to cite the precedent cs
l tablished by Detroit, the first city
j in the United Slates to combine
under the Chamber of Commerce all
agencies for Americanization work,
i In 1914 the Boy Scouts gave out
j in over a hundred churches 30.00!)
hand bills, printed in ; seven lan
guages, advert'smg the opportunities
! offered by evening schools and li
' braries.
Six hundred window cards were
i placed in the store window s by
school children.
j Flight hundred maps showing eve-
ning schools w ere posted in promi
: nent - places.
Thirty large copipanics' statements
. urging education.
One hundred and seventy-live Ut
ters to lactone asking tor co
operation. A mass liiee'oi.s; of 9,(HI(l foreign
born men who immediately took on'
their first papers.
Publicity, the foreign pes.-. ';is
also used.
In 1917 a federation of all the
women's organisations was formed
under the direction of the Chamber
Of Commerce? to co-operate with the
schools. A certain amount of ter
ritory was assigned to each organiza
tion and they did follow up work
for the schools ai.d home teaching.
Also a federation of all the
protectant churches was organized,
and the territory of the foreign dis
tricts in Detroit was divided propor
tionately aniong these churches for
the purpose of home missionary
work. Til us every district of for
eign born people in Detroit was mo-
ATOES
j uivh rn. COOKERS
POTATOES
ENOUGH SAID
f
m B C
4
29?
23?
26c
White House Evaporated
Milk, tall can
Del Monte Seedless
Raisins, at
Wilson's Nut Margarine . . .
Cash Habit Sweet Potatoes,
No. 3, at
A WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9,
CAKE
SOAP
With Every 50c Purchase
DAY ONLY
Groceries Here and Get Some Soap" '
n n n fresh
If III 13 KM-.wr
COUNTRY Of
MILK
At Last It HAS Come
It Pays You to Be Your Own Milkman
f resh.EGGS 35c doz.
Matches, Headlight 5c
Ivory Soap, small 8 c
Peanut Butter, bulk l&c
Greening Apples, lb 5'2c
riii for
vided for, holh educationally and
spiritually, and it is to be hoped that
many more of our cities in the I'uited
States wilt launch a similar pro
gram. .
The W. C. T, V. is launching a
campaign along that important phae
of,4he work, emphasized by (our na
tional superintendent of education)
Mr. Claxton, when he said: "No
matter what is done by education,
legislation, or any other means,
Americanization will never be ac
complished until the mothers of our
homes are reached." Unless the for
eign born parent is reached, the chil
dren hecomfc Americanized in a
superficial way. They become
ashamed of tkeir homes and parents,
become the dictators in the homes,
and thus, losing respect for the au
thority of the home, they will not
respect the laws of our nation..
Omaha Walking Club Will
j Have an All-Day Out-
ing Sunday.
! The Omaha Walking club will hold
I an all-day outing Sunday, starting at
1 9 a. in., from Pearl and Broadway
streets, Council Bluffs. Members will
take Harrison street car line at this
'point, leaving the car at the north
!east end of the line.
! The walk will be north to Timber
I Lake in Crescent township. Lunch
j will be prepared at the lake at 1 p.
j m. This will be an exploration trip.
the walk being new to the club. Ly
man Williams will be leader. j
.
Made Art Editor.
' James Williamson, a student at
, Vale, was recently appointed art ed-
'itor tor the Yale Record tor I9JJ.
SHOP
WITH
THIS
AD
12c
29c
29c-
23r
1921
F
R
E
E
IOc
IOc
mi
For Less jjg
For the past six months we have
been pulling hard at the strings of
high prices, to bring them down
This Ad Tells a Story
of How We Succeeded
Note These
Reductions
in Bed Room
Furniture
This Suite in Genuine
Mahogany ,
li'm'ttlrr 1'n'M'Ut
Full Size Bt-d.... $47.60 $24.CO
Large Dresser (J2.50 32.50
3-Mirror Uressins i
Tallin n? llli HA
Vanity Dresser... 70.UO 37.25
A Splendid Line
to Choose From All Greatly Reduced in Price
Dining Furniture Prices
Brought Down!!
This Suite in Solid Oak Hand Rub Finish
Family Size Extension Table
Quartern Oak, Plank Top Buffet.,
Full Slip Seat Dining Chairs
Quartered Oak China Cabinet
Columbia
Records
5
C
While the Supply Lasts
m
Your Choice of 130 Numbers
of Standard Retired Records.
Get Yours at Bowen's
Saturday
Bowen's ' ! Bowen's i
Guaranteed j Guaranteed ,
Carpet , Elpctrjc Irons ;
Sweeper . . . .
$1.95 ! $3.95
Big Values in-
Drapery Department
Specials for Saturday Selling
Ready to Hang Cretonne and Madras
Overdrapes, With Valance and
Trimmed With Edging to Match
Blue or Kose Madras Drapes at per pair'
Blue Figured Cretonne Drapes, at per pair
Rose Stripe Cretonne Drapes, at per pair ,
Assorted Patterns Cretonne Drapes, at per pair...
Assorted Patterns Cretonne Drapes, at per pair...
SPECIAL VALUES IN
Odd pairs of Lace Curtains. Sonic very i'iue Im
ported qualities, but slightly soiled: only one pair
of cadi pattern at less tlian Half Price.
TABLE SCARFS
Silk Damask Tapestry. limeade aud Velum- Scarfs fur
Library and Davenport Tables, Pui'fets and Dressers.
All $3.50 Scurfs. 1tix3u' Special, eaeli ....$1.88
All $4.2.") Scarfs. Kix4.1 Special, each 2.98
All $5.50 Scarfs. 16x72 Special, each 3".98
OM AH AS VALU
Howard St., Between
BESERQ1
Monrv bach without qtttln If
HUNT'S Salv falls In the trial
mrnt nf ITCH. EC2EMA. RING.
WORM. TITTER or olher llrhln.
akin rfnrAi. Try a 7S-crnt
at our rlak.
5
LBfTfl
f T 1
iit'-Jfiiak
J-'ormer
Trice
$35.00
. 57.50
. 9.00
. 55.00
Present
Trice
$17.50
29.00
4.25
27.00
Bowen's Brooms
33 cents
Large j Large Genuine
Aluminum Aluminum
pel.coiat0r. ' ! Tea Kettle,
$1.25 j $2.25
.$1.95
. 2.45
. 2.65
. 2.95
. 3.45
STORE"
15th and 16th
Guticura Soap
Clears the Skin
and Keeps it Clear
.11
hi
(
1
(j
1
a a a a,n nnnoaBB bu;
Mi rim an A McConnrll ini t.