TUB BEK: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4. 1922. Ft ' ..I Jk . t , y.st -r. (w J1 J If $ V T i' "ViS 41 J Society THE Omaha Walking dub will liold an Indoor carnival Thurday even iiHi; at the .Strehluw apartment under the direction of Mu Oiive lraer, t which'all the ntembrrt of the club are inviu'4 with the bint, 'it woit ciHt you anything to gt in, but you'll nred your itatkeibooks to atay in." There are to be aide how, grab bags, fortune telling, dancinn diiU all ort of atunw, the object being to raise the last of the money to jiay for the club boiue in Fontenelle park, which i proving such a boon thu winter to the hiker and their friend. For, beside the regular Satur day hikei to the aback, it it open on Sunday and a host and hostes, re ceive any guctt who happen along. "Endurance Hike Nn. 1" was held Mondav. with 17 member of th club comii in strong at the finish at Uluir after their 20-mile ramble along ' hour for a light lunch wa the only stdp allowed. A .ecotirj endurance hike under the leadership of I.yman William is announced for January IS. The club will take a train to Missouri Valley il1'18 moru'". walViua back to Council UlulTs, a distance of 2; mile. The member on the hike yesterday were: l.vman Williams, Leslie Wtllianu, William We.it. Nell Baldwin, Harriet Mueller, Harry Habcr atrogh, Richard Wholes, Frances Zadak, Charles Nagy, Fred Young, K. M. Kennedy, Charles Gadwav, Ed Geiser, P. M. Hummer, Nell Dully, Olive J rarer and L. N. llannon'. The walks committer; is: Leo Dozell, Kell Duffy, Olive Frazer, Leslie William and Charles Guhvay. .rr r- CM Vnf Banquet. Eugene C. Epjley w.-.s host Mon day night at thenr-t annual banquet of the Missouri Valley Thi i'si Alumni, givenin the t'alm room or the FonteneM Twenty members were present and each gave a onc minute talk. Guy Beckett read an improptit poeim composed by himself and Herbert .French in honor of the host. There! was a cabaret perfor mance, sinking, and Donald Shep hard playcj tin banjo. A. C. Totter was toas.4iiia.stcr. It is planned to make tKiis banquet an annual afTir. Rex iflenrv of Fremont was an out' of-tflJwa fiucst. My Marriage Problems Adult tiairUHHi't Mow f haa et "REVELATIONS Of A WIFE" tCmmmt XII a "ihwimii rnw ma laa.. For Miss Longley. Mis Margaret Rix was hostess at a tea Monday aflcrhoon coniplimcnt ry to her house guest, Miss Munroc Longley of Waterloo, la. Personals Listen, World! Sidney Cullingham returned Sun day to Lafayette where he is in his senior year. Miss Roberta Trimble left Monday evening for Milwaukee where she at tends Downer seminary. Mrs. Bob Gallagher and Miss Florence McCafTerty of O'Ncil, Neb., are visiting Mrs. Edward Johusou. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Foster left Tues day morning for southern California. where they will spend several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Connealey an nounce the birth of a daughter, Mary Jacqueline, December 27, at Stewart hospital. Temple McFayden, who has been spending the past two weeks at Colo rado Springs, returned to Omaha Tuesday. Miss Clara Hilmer left Monday , evening for Pittsburgh. She has been with her mother, Mrs. Marie Hilmer for 10 days. Mark Burke, jr., of Columbus. Neb., spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. F.' T. Walker, en route to CJuincy, 111., where he attends school, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Thatcher ot Kansas City, Mo., who have been spending the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Epsten left Monday even ting for their home. j Mrs. John Halbert is spending a' month with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor White. The Book club will meet with Mrs. White and Mrs Halbert a week from Thursday. Miss Charlotte Acer, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. Beecher Howell for the holidays, left Sunday evening for Chicago where she at tends the University of Chicago. Miss Mary Killian left Monday for Clarke, Neb., where she will resume teaching. Various affairs were given in honor of this young woman dur ing her holiday stay in Omaha. Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Johnson an nounce the birth of a daughter, Doro thy Susan, January 2 at the Metho dist hospital. Mrs. Johnson was formerly Miss Mabel E. Cadcr of Lincoln. By ELSIE ROBINSON. It's nearly winter in California. That is, the calendar says it' nearly winter, but you'd never find it out by asking the landscape. The violet beds are in bloom all around the houses in the country, banking each little home in with a wall of budding fragrance.. I remember the coming of the winter in New England. We banked the houses there, too, but not with violets. When the first numbing of the frost began at night we would trathcr in the fallen leaves and heao them high around the bouse to keep! the basement warm. Dead leaves and withered corn stalks, dry grass, the empty shells of summer's growth and beautywe would rake them up and pile them close around our homes. It made for cozy wintering. But, some how, I prefer the violets. Banking your house with violets, or banking it with dead leaves somehow that reminds me of the way folks prepare to meet their winters. The Strings Request Madge Mads of Lillian, That Dicky w concealing! ome thing important from me, something concerning affair at home, I wa Mire, not from hi insistence that we ftart home at o early a morning hour for we both like s early a Mart a possible when we are taking a long motor trip but from hi general uneasy demeanor. He is a most transparent person, is my I'eter Fan, and I could sec very plainly that he was worried. There was no use taxing him with my belief, however. Except upon the occasion when his temper or thoughtlessness gets the better of him, he is chivalrous to a fault. It is his firm conviction that hi womenkind should be shielded from unpleasantness, and he was patiently working overtime upon hi present task. But while Dicky is chivalrously protecting to me, he also, in the year since we were married, has confided his troubles and joys to tne very freely, and I knew that he was on nettles at having to keep what ever knowledge he possessed to him self. Dicky hurried away from the bun galow as soon as he had jsued his ultimatum about starting the next morning at seven, and I looked around me with dismayed eyes. He bad been packing hi belong ngs in hi own fashion, and the result weri before tne in a suitcase and a bag Handing open in the middle of the floor. They were open because no one on earth could have closed them without forcing them into section?. And articles of Dicky's wearing ap parel and hi souvenir were Mrcwn upon every article of furni'.ure in the rooms, while I found one of his shoe and a perfectly good hat un der the bed. Lillian Is Relieved. I knew what Dicky's leaving tin bungalow meant permission for ine to repack hi things. It is a farce repeated every time we make a jour ney. He resent fiercely at first any attempt of mine to sec to hi be longings, but after a session with them, he clear out and leaves the field to me. Of course, that puts me in the position where if anything is lost or damaged he can blame uiy packing, but that affords him such a satisfactory outlet if things go wrong that 1 am glad to ex change it for his absence from the scene. There were several things to be seen to, however, before 1 finished packing, and of those the most im portant was telling Lillian of tha plan. I hurried out. crossed to her bungalow, and told her the news. I knew how anxious she was to set avay fruui the present tme motional atmosphere with which Robert avrin' jealously was en veloping her, so 1 was not surprised at the look ot relief which swept her face, nor at the vigor with whicli lie began to move around he' rooms, characteristically beginning to work evert bctorc i baa miihci my errand. Madgs Packs. "I with you'd do something for me," I said, smiling, "but I warn you it's something that' downright dishonorable." "Short of murdering our host'n 'entire family and setting fire to the house afterward, I am at your serv ice," she retorted. ."What particu lar brand of second-story work do you desire?" "Nothing so strenuous. I simply want you to gain my husband's con fidence, and then bring mo yot.r knowledge." Lillian regarded me for a second with suddenly narrowed eyes, a t she realized that there was some thing very real behind my jestinjr. But her speech carried on my con ceit. "I'll turn his soul inside out and show you the lining," she promised carelessly, but there was an iutent- ncss in her eyes which told me she was waiting to hear my real mean ing. "Something's wrong at home," I said. ' "I know it from the way Dicky's acting high and lofty pur pose of shielding tender wife from the truth. I've seen him do it before. And he's also dying to tell somebody the trouble, so I prophesy he'll weep on your shoulder in another hour or two. Please encourage the babbling, and then let me know what it's all BANKIN6 OOft HCflftTX ' WITH VIOCETJ Tyler Belt returned today from Rochester, Minn., where he and Mrs. Belt and Miss Dorothy Belt have been spending several days. Mrs. Belt and Miss Belt will return later in the week. Miss Virginia Upham left the last of the week for Los Angeles to rejoin her mother and continue her work at Denishawn where she is studying dancing. Miss Upham spent Christ mas with her father, Lynn Upham, "who lives at the Athletic club, and a special dispensation from the house , committee allowed Miss Upham to stay at the club with her father, an unusual privilege. Winter comes to all of us, the winter of our lives. Soon or later spring and summer depart. Soon or later the fires of autumn fail, the days grow gray, the chill descends upon our dreaimng. We cannot escape it but we meet it so differently. Some of us, most of us, I fear, try to shut out the winter bitterness by walling ourselves in with the memor ies and prejudices of our past years,' the dead leaves of our once vigorous growth, the withered stalks of our dreams. Closer and closer we gather our dead accumulations about us, guarding our hearts against the stress and change of the passing seasons. . . But others of us bank our hearts with violets 1 Let the-wind howl, let the ' walls shake, let the changing year upset the ordered warmth and comfort -of our rooms, as it surely will. What do we care if we have ringed our spirits with youn growth,, with budding dreams, with ever-rooting hope? Banked in with violets that is the best, I think. Copyright by George Matthew Adams. Woman's Club Chorus. There will be a double rehearsal of the Omaha Woman's club chorus Wednesday, 1 p. m., at the Y. W. C. A., followed by a business meet ing. The program scheduled for Jan uary 11 will be given January 18 under direction of Mrs. De Emmett Bradshaw. It is being arranged from compositions of American women composers. For Mrs. Bohling. Mr. and Mrs. Moshier Colpetzer will entertain at dinner Saturday evening complimentary to Mrs. Henry Bohling of St. Louis, who is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Davis. Luncheon. Miss Murphy entertained eight guests at luncheon Tuesday at the Burgess-Nasb tea room in honor of Miss Gertrude Kinsler, Problems That Perplex Answered by . BEATRICE FAIRFAX. A Widow's Problems. Dear Miss Fairfax: Your advice i seems to be very sensible and as you are a broad-minded woman, you may be able to help me. I have been used to a good home, but I am now left a widow with a child to raise, and absolutely no means; no relative even able to help me get into any kind of business. I would like to rent a little house with one or two lots in some small town, or a few acres In the country and raise chickens, but how couid this be accomplished without some cash? Do you think on shares like the farmers rent land? I, of course, could take a housekeeping position, fcut very few who employ a person for that. I hear, have good homes, and may not be of good character. I wasn't raised In the country, al though I like it, and could hunt an other lady to go in with me. Miss Fairfax. I was pretty well raised, am refined, but have no school education, as you can see by this letter. That 1s why I am in the above stated situation. I will feel very thankful to you for any suggestion. I am past 30 years, so feel that I can undertake whatever you would advise, and thanks for tame. A RESPECTABLE WOMAN. . I am publishing: your letter just as you have written it to me. hop ing someone may make a suggestion about a house and small lots which you can rent under come arrange ment. I think you are mistaken In what you sr y about a housekeeping posi tion. I think there are a great scaar lovely homes where you could get work which would provide a home for yourself and child. If you get into a home which proved unsat isfactory you would not need to stay. A very little Investigation before hand, however, and a willingness on your part to make good would pro vide you with a good home I am sure. You would be more independ ent raising chickens, although there might be uncertainty and anxiety about the outcome of your "venture. Since you are so young, I hope you will take up something with a future in it. If you have good sense and good health, you ought to be able to accomplish a great deal in life. Your child should be an incentive and not a hardship. Write me again in a few weeks. I would like to be of more help to you. If you are Jn Omaha come in to see me. How to Go About It. Dear Miss Fairfax: I was at one time quite friendly with a young girl whom I do love, and for some reason we severed friendship. I still think of this girl, for I see her every day and I Imagine she thinks of me. . wouldn't go to her and question her in fact. I wouldn't speak to her first at all, and I wondtr if you know of some other way to go about it. REPENTANT. That is not being1 a regular man at all! Why not be a good sport and go straight up to her and talk it out. Being stubborn is not getting I you anywhere with her. Maybe you will lose her entirely if you go on I that way. She may be just waiting for a word, front you. I HAIR S milDIV BEACTT U trough! to f'lhi , Starting Wednesday, January 4th, Freling & Steinle Launch Their Greatest Sale A January oggage Clearance that offers Unequaled Values Involving the world famous Hartmann wardrobe trunks, ladies' handbags, fitted suit' cases, traveling bags, Boston bags ' and steamer trunks at exactly Ml Off of the already low price. In some instances reductions are greater. N. ; . EVER before in the history of our business have we offered greater values throughout the' entire store. The phenomenal discounts conclusively prove our supe riority of selling standardized merchandise at the low est possible price. - '.v - The Reductions on Hartmann Wardrobe Trunks Will Average From 20 to 30 choose as follows $ 47.50 Hartmann Wardrobe Trunks now. , .$40 00 $ 62.00 Hartmann Wardrobe Trunks now. . .$50.00 $ 85.00 Hartmann Wardrobe Trunks now. . .$67.50 - $105.00 Hartmann Wardrobe Trunks now. . .$80.00 $115.00 Hartmann Wardrobe Trunks now. . .$92 00 EXTRA SPECIAL Full size closed top Evansville Wardrobe Trunk, was $37.50, "ow ; $25.00 Murphy Wardrobe Trunks Radically Reduced in Price From 20 to 25 choose as follows $42.00 Murphy Wardrobe Trunk now $32 00 $65.00 Murphy Wardrobe Trunk now. . . . . .$50!00 $70.00 Murphy Wardrobe Trunk now $5500 AND OTHERS A Wonderful Array of Traveling Bags at Greatly Reduced Prices And you have the positive assurance that your selec tion will be made from renowned traveling bag manu facturers, such as Boyles, J3elber and others. choose as follows $ 5.00 Traveling Bag now $ 4.00 $10.00 Traveling Bag now $ $.00 $15.00 Traveling Bag now $12.00 $20.00 Traveling Bag now ...$16.00 rEi.iN(j1TW4u Fitted Suit Cases and Ladies' Hand Bags at 20 off The entire stock is for your se lection and the conservative purchaser of quality leather goods will marvel at these ex ceptional values.: Every article is priced for quick clearance and our sin cere advice is to come early when the assortment is best. FRELING & STEINLE) SPECIAL NOTE TO ALL PURCHASERS . Our usual guarantee prevails during thi3 clearance sale, and we posi tively assure you that no "job lots" were purchased to make these drastic reductions possible. Our carefully selected stock of America's foremost luggage manufac turers is our offering. FRELING & STEINLE t 1803 Farnam Street Here 15 Year Mail order filled at above prices, aaauriag- satisfaction. about of couru' ' 1 a'UleJ con- tciriitiuu!)", "if it's anything you can tc!l me." She iickt4 up a tiny pair of m broidery tcior held them sluft melodramatically, "amson' Ux.W diall be MicarcdT' (lie declared orutoricallv, and I went luik to my packing with the security that ii the knowledge Dicky had wa anything I ought to know I would in all prouahilily be in pott&essiun of it before 1 slept. I attacked the packing mcthodi cally, hrt leaving out every article of clothing which Junior, Dicky and 1 would wear on tne homeward trip, and the toilet articles we would re quire the next morning. Then, with a sigh of tlunkiulnrsj for the fore thought which had made me arrange the parcel-post package, I suc ceeded in Retting all my things and Junior's into my own suitcases and ngs even leaving a space in one of them for any overflow of Dicky's. A stout linen bag for the soiled clothing, another for the nmcrllany which the U minute triit. 1 lett Open, ready for the liiul winding-up of thing the nest morning, And then with a long breath I attacked the problem of Dicky' packing. (Continued Tomorrow.) ADYKBTIMKMKNT. THE "MOTHER OF MEDICINE" hs, the (Jucen, and afterwards the Goddes. wa called the "Mother of Medicine," lit ancient Egypt, cen turies before Christ, women wcrg skilled in medicine. They knew the great value of medicinal plants, Hippocrates, the "Father of Medi cine, 'many centuries later, knew less of the merit of vegetable drug than did the women of ancient times, Lydia E, 1'inkham, nearly fifty yearn ago, gave to women her Veg etable Compound, now known every where as Lydia 12. l'inkham's Vege table Compound. Thii in a woman's medicine for woman's ailments, pre pared from medicinal plant. COUGHS AND COLDS often tenacious, are a drain upon the vital forces. scorrs emulsion strengthens the whole system and helps drive out the pre disposing cause. Sol Bowaa, BtootafWld, N. X ALSO MAKERS OF ItKlOIDS (Tablets er Granules) for iMninrcTinM L - ! ! ! ..J Pee Want Ads Produce Kesulti. Buy. I Rita I Store It Are Cash li Car-Lot Q . Henry K a rich Siyi: "Buy. Rite Stores Deal Accord ing to Hoyle."' LISTEN FOLKS It's all over now, fall In line. Sta rt the New Year right and shop at the Buy-Rite Store in your neighborhood for better, cleaner foods at Buy-Rite prices. Watch the ads every Tuesday for week end specials. . . SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. BUY-RITE FRUIT DEPARTMENT 1 carload of large Jumbo Dr. philips Brand Grapefruit, 3 for 33tf; 6 lor ....-63$ (These are thln sisinned, Juicy and squlrtlesu). 1 carload of extra fancy Jonathan Apples, all de sirable sizes; per box $3.75 Per dozen 35 1 carload of thin-skinned, Juicy Sunklst Navel Oranges, just arrived; we will offer this car by the peck, per peck , SSt Per half peck ....-45$ New crop large Hicltory Nuts; special, 4 pounds for only ., 25 Large Jumbo Cocoanuts, each 9; 3 for JJ5f Uenuine Ked River fiarly Ohio Potatoes. Spten did table stock,' bushel $1.60 " BUY-RITE PILLAR8 ' 1,000 bags of Little Hatchet Flour, every sack guaranteed, 48 lbs ., $1.70 1,000 bags of Red StaT Flour, best short patent flour milled, 4S lbs $2.25 (These are Buy-Rite exclusive brands; every sack guaranteed, or money refunded). Clover Blossom Buy-Rite Creamery Butter, lb- AZt Nishna Valley Buy-Rite Creamery Butter, lb. . .43 Buy-Rite Brand Coffee, 3 pounds for 950 Fontenelle Brand Uinger Ale, case of 24 large bottles, per case ... $2.25 (A charge ot $1.00 is made for ease and bottles, which we credit on return of same). Budweiser, Good old BUD, per case of 24 bot tles, only $2.90 (A charge of ?1.5Q is made for case and bottles, which we credit on return of same). M. J. B. OFFEE Just received, 5,000 lbs. of M. J. B. Coffee, the vacuum packed, ever iresh coffee, per lb... 500 3,000 lbs. of Circle B vacuum packed Coffee, lb..40J (The last word in coffee). SOAPS AND CLEANSERS. Toilikleen, 3 large cans for 430 Solvene, 2 large cans for 25 Linn's Cleaner, 3 large packages 580 Large cans of Victoria Cleanser. 6 cans for.... 250 Electric Spark Soap, new large bars, 10 for.. 490 White Lily Soap Chips, the kind that floats, 6 pounds for 950 P. & G. White Naptha Soap, 10 large bars for. .580 BUY-RITE SPECIALS Fresh Chocolate Hydros, per lb. 450 Pure Fruit Preserves, per jar.. 300 3 jars for 850 Large Jumbo Prunes, splendid flavor, 2 pounds for 390 Cream of Rye, new large package, each 180 CAN'T BE BEAT 5-pound pails of Pure Idaho Strained Honey. -950 No. IVt cans Extra Fancy White Cherries, in heavy syrup, can 390 g cans for 750 Imported Belgium French Style Peas, 6 cans. .930 tjuart cans of Pure Sugar House Molasses, can 350 2 cans for ..............650 quart cans of Pure Country Sorghum, per can 350 2 cans for R50 Quart cans of Old Fashioned Molasses, can... 280 2 cans for 530 Quart cans'of Extra Fancy Large Ripe Olives; Special 430 Curtis Brand Ripe Olives, small cans,.? for.... 330 E. KARSCH CO., Vinton unU Elm St. iRMAND PETERSEN, S!!08 Sherman Ave, HANNEGAN & CO, SStii Are. and Leavenworth F. B. BOGATZ, . Hst and 8 Sta. Sootll Side ERNEST BUFFETT, Tne Grocct ot Uunilee OSCAR E. NELSON, Mill and L Sts. South Sid FRANK KUSKA, 13th and Garfield THORN & SNYGG, Walnut Hill Grocer fortieth iu Hamilton "tGEO. I. ROSS, 21th and Amea JEFCEN BROS., 25th and Cumins J. D. CREW & SON, Thirty-third and Arbor GILES BROTHERS, lenon WILKE & MITCHELL, fortieth and Farnam LYNAM & BRENNAN, 16th and Dorcaa 1ou can use them an winter in o Golf, tennis, fishing, riding you will find them all, and many other delightful sports, in full swing in Florida. And you will find a sunny, hospitable climate that makes life outdoors a keen pleasure. Your train to your Florida is the fast, all-steel, on-time Seminok JCimitea FROM CHICAGO daily 8:15 P.M. FROM ST. LOUIS daily 10:30 P.M. Reaches Jacksonville, second morning, 7:45, making all Florida connections at Union Station. Observation, compartment and draw-ing-room sleeping cars, coaches and dining cars. Also through sleeping cars to Savannah, Ga. Steamship connections from Florida ports for Havana. -" Ticiets mJ imfn rmaHnm t 1 Tickets mni information at Cfrr Tkirt Office. 1416 Dodo StPfaoBC. Dousb 16S4 C rU-rdock, Dtririca Piarara Aaent. ITImot. Central Railroad 3 1 1 Cut National Bank Pldc. lack aa4 Hirao Street. Pbou Jacfcaoo 0264 Oauha,feaw li