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THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY,- AUGUST 26, 1916. 4 x g SR EAC R LRI 59 JRORITY GIRLS ' VISITING NURSES - ~ GETEARLY START ~ PLAN FOR TAG DAY Rivalry Stirs as School Days Society Matrons Will Sell the - Approach and Pre-Term Red Tags for the Cause of | Rushing Parties Are Held, Charity. | | DELTA GAMMAS AT WORK STATIONS ARE ALLOTTED 't By MELLIFICIA—August 25, chool days ate fast approaching ® and the stir of rivalry is already in the air. Today, yes, this afternoon, & rushing party -was given at the hame of Miss Martha Noble by the * {8 Delta Gamma sorority. Eight young wgmen who are planning to attend the colleges of our fair land were the guests o? honor, On”them. was di- rected the fire of the combined charm of the thirty-odd members of the aha sisterhood of Delta Gamma. ome guests from Lincoln, a center day to be held Wednesday, Septem- ber 6. These women ili be dressed in whiteand will bear Red Cross bands on their .sleeves. Last year tag day yielded $3430,\and it is ex- ected that this year the amount will e _increased. . The list of stations and the women who will be in charge is announced as follows: r classmen, or when, having sed the rank of a first-year stu- ént, you had a hand in bulldozing the innocent new persons into joining " hands with you fraternally? Local Delta Gamma members are: ‘ompany Block—Mrs. W, F. Rhoades, Mrs. Rlair. | Nash Riock—Mrs, Charles Metz, fonal Bank Bullding—Mrs. Her- and l‘nlv"lll} Club Block-— Mra. Arthur Metz. Fontenelle and Telephone Bulldings—M Bacon. Thomas Kllpatrick & Co., eadquarters—Mrs, Bxchange Unfon Pacific Phillp Potter, Benton Drug Company Block—Mrs. T. R. | Ward, | Bouth ha Py Exchang rs. C. Paxton Hotel Bl Mrs. G. J. Ingwerxe | Woodmen of the World Bullding—Mrs, J. W. Towle. Rome Hotel Block Bullding—Mrs. Clara Thirty-elghth and Wheeler, Miss Mildred Grain Exchan Mrs. Twenty-fourth Banders. ‘Twenty-ninth Street and Park Avenue— Mra. T. H. Tracy. Dundee—Mrs. C. E. Niswonger, Mrs. Will Hoagland. 8 Burlington and Union Stations—Miss Ger- trude Ernst, Miss Stella Holmquist riy-elghth Street—Mra. John L. ng House Live Stock Scarr. Frank Norton, Louls Korsmeyer, Misses— and Thoma: Farnam—Mrs, Dan Dally News Nona Bridge, Ruth Gould, sel Howard, . | Mary Watkins, Caro; Howard, W ke Country Club. : i lndlfirs. John Bekins and family I Sunday for an overland trip to ss Park. They stop en routc at iadia, Cheyenne and other places. Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Cotbs and fam- ily leave Sunday Tvemn ft():r a :eek‘ll ' #isit at Minneapolis. Mr. Combs wi Nag?:nll Jewele(s' con- ir, and Mrs. E. Bednar have ed into South Side for the winter. “%u Kate Worle{ has joined her other and wife of Lincoln and is nd 1 eks at Greeley, camp- } 7 CorA - ¢ uel Matirgon left Wednes- fl:‘y morninfi with friends for an auto Me- y-fourth and Cuming<-Mrs. W. R, Ada Paxton & Gallagher—Mrs. Ben Gallagher. Fortleth and Cuming--Miss Helen John- m. Market— ‘Wheeler and nuraes. end with Mr. and Mrs, G. W. Hervey. He is on his way to the coast and will stop in_Omaha only long enough to occupy his former pulpit. rs. W. H. Ostenberg and daugh- ter, Miss Kathryn, returned Wednes- day from an extended eastern trip. tA the Field Club. Mrs. Ernest Sweet entertained a party of ten at the matinee ddnce this afternoon. Mrs. A. F. Mullen had three luncheon guests, Reservations for Saturday evening have been made by C. D. Brawn for four iguests; O. S. Goodrich will have a party of Mr. and Mrs, Roland M. Jones will entertain nine and Mr. P‘lu! E. Walsh will be host to a party of six, In and Out of the Bee Hive. ‘Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Heyden and children have returned from a vaca- through Colorado. r. and Mrs. E. A. Rose spent Sun- at Herman, Neb. he M. E. Smith Co. and em- oyés will enjoy a dinner-dance at he club house on Saturday e emsr(n)s. tescrvations are made for t 500, Tsabel Shukert entertained’ at sington at her homfi this after- finfl:n est, Miss Helen Kirby Momence, Ill. Decorations through- the house were purple and white, , Rockford college colors. Those int were: Dy c:u ‘:’.‘:’F tion spent at the Minnesota lakes. Lage, Mideieiis rs. W, L. Sucha returned to her line Mets, Dora Sam, home in lflntings today after a three a man, /Barah Bowrs, weeks' illness at Nicholas Senn hos- Florence Htlall"dl. pital, Honrfotta Me Beulah Byrd, A e r Vfi’illilm L. Shearer and family will return Sunday, August 27, from Society matrons have volunteered | to work for the Visiting Nurse asso- | ciation of Omaha on their annual tag | 4 Headquarters, U 3 | sorority life, added force 1o the | mumi—tisn Atioe Buchunan, M. Nes ™™™ | ck. The hostess lndbhe_r l"l(:'n Slisotors Luther ~ Kountze, Mrs. ted themselves to the business of | P4Tion AHlerd: uring the hearts of their guests|posawatar, and Bee Bullding—Mrs. Victor their beloved fl:trganlllutmn. Brandels Bulldings—Mrs, Arthur Wood- n¢ the thought of a rush make min ™ R “thrill with the feeling of times |y 7aYGin, A%, Shermen;McConnell Corner, en you were a simple freshman,| o National Bank Corner and Build- ared by the ywiles of attentive Edwards, Mrs. Ralph " | bod | By GARRETT P. SERVISS. Enthusiastic naturalists sometimes itry to persuade us that spiders are really admirable creatures, which should not excite any abliorrence, but it takes a good deal of practice, and considerahle resolution, to enable any- to put a finger upon a spider. There is something in the struc- ture ‘and attitude of these eight~ legged multiple-eyed hair-furred, quick-darting beasts which sends shivers through the nerves. “\They look like little demons, and only our great superiority of size en- ables us to stand our ground in the presence of a spider. Imagine a spider as big as an elephant! The creature photographed on this page belongs to the most nerve- racking branch of the spider race, the “wandering spiders.” The other branch comprises the “sedentary spiders,” which build webs for traps and they are mare amusing than terri- frying as long as they stay close around their dens. But this fellow in the picture is a “wolf spider,” a name which does not half express the horror of his looks and ways. e lives on the ground, is swift of foot, and can’ spring on his prey with the eye- This “Wolf Spider” Was Caught in Ontario by a Naturalist. defying swiftness of lighting. and merciless. of varying size. With six of them the two others are ‘for looking be- hind and upward. The two propec- tions on the front of his head are The | word "has a soft sound, but the thing is armed with claws and sharp bris- | | glass, which at they don't recognize their own ugly faces. euphemistically called - “pans.” tles, to pierce and hold victims. There is a pair of mandibles, or jaws, which have been compared tg and | whose points are as sharp as nee- dles, and each has a groove carry- murder- concealed by ice tongs, for their .shape, ing a_poison duct. These ous implements are long hairs when not in use. Th e specimen that we aré looking upon was' caught on a sandy beach of the Ottawa river in Ontario, but it was not a man who- captured it, but a sand wasp, who had treated it to a dose of its own medicine, paralyzing it with a poisoned sting, and while the captor was dragging it off to serve as food for young wasps, an entomo- logist came along and took possession of the unlucky “biter bit,” which was not dead, though incapable of motion. The wolf - SELENTEE By WOODS HUTCHINSON, M. D. Why, if opium gives so little posi- tive pleasure, does any sane human being ever %evelap_an appetite for morphine or become the victim of the opium - habit? The swer i8 two- fold—first, and most indirect, that ex- ceedingly few such persons ever do form the habit. The vast majority of opium habitues are either perman- ently unbalanced from inborn mental defect or else were temporarily so their vacation trip in northern Wis- dding-Announcement, - | consin. \ Mr. Henry G, Kroeker of Beatrice | "My, and Mrs. G. W. Megeath have d Miss Grace Edna Morris, daugh- | gone to San Francisco to join their of Rev. J. W. Morris of South glulllte)', Mary, who has been there were married Thursday evening | for two’ weeks. They sail September o'clock at * Grace Methodist | 6 for Honolulu, 2 h, The young couple will make | * Migs Irene Dyball, who has been home .at Beatrice, where Mr.| yigiting with relatives in Ely, Nev., roeker is a merchant. for the last two months, is expected Mrs. Georgie Williams and Mr. |y Omaha next week to prepare for car Pendleton Taylor were united | gchool again. jage at noon Thursday in| Miss Catharine Lacy, who has been uncit Bluffs, After 4 wéddlni trip | in New York, stopping at the Hotel Kirby, Wyo,, they will be at home | Knickerbocker, for the last two it the bride's resigence, 1819 Leaven- | weeks, will spend a few days in At- h street. lagtic City before returning to Omaha. for Bride. 7 On Wednesday evenin; iven for M¥|. J. McKenna, for- perly Miss Azella ‘Nagle, who was rried l::t Wednesda; mnmm&n Cecilia’s by Father Gaitley. Fi s within the last three weeks present. Mrs, McKenna'ig well among the younger set at Berchman's academy, where s tended. k Advice to Lovelor By Beatrice Fairfax Be Tacttul—Not Prond! Dear Miss Falrfax: 1 am about to be married to & young man who llves out of a shower , they have never noticed me. coming to our wedding, as I know from my flance. I am to live with them after our marriage, but do not know whether I am welcome or not. Was it my mother's place to annnounce our engagement In my flance's home town or was it his mother's place? Sincg we did not announce the engagement Is 1t my mother's e to announce the marriage in both tow) E. A. 8ince your fiance’ Ing to his wedding and so stting the seal of approval on It, T am Inclined to think that they' have blundered through lack of knowledge, rather than through Intent, You GAN save your own happiness by a sweet, tacttul attitude toward them when they come to the wedding. I'm inclined-to think rs. W. Baird and Mrs. W. J.|inat they Imagined you should have written iller each had nine guests at lunch- |, tem and mada anl tho first advances. today. Give them the benefit of the doubt and re- g member that thelr age entitles them to respect and kindness from you, who are young and have all lite befors you. 'The parents of the bride always make the wed- ding and engagement announcements. This 1s & world old custom. A very gracious thing for you to do would Be to write his parents & little note. telling them you look forward to meeting them at the time of your wed- ding and that you hope they will feel they are gaining a loving daughter. If you are fine egough to take a gracious attitude to- ward these old people, you will deserve all the good fortune I wish Yyou. Don't Make the. Advarices. Dear Miss Falrfax: I am deeply in love Gossip. : Roma Williams, who has been visi ‘Miss Mary Mitchell in Coun- “¢il Blwifs for several days, is now the ‘guest of Miss Geraldiné Johnson of ha, The two were schoolmates Ferry Hall, Lake Forrest. Miss hnson will entertain at luncheon for Williams Saturday. Hollow Club, undred married people en- he dinner dance at lpry_' Hol- y club last evening. The affair was success. is. F. H. Cole, chairman of civil ce reform for the General Feder- ‘of Women's club, returned early the week from New York, where ‘she has been since the biennial con- werition. Mrs. Cole spent the summer rch work‘and visited a brother, ¢ , at Asbury Pai s well nds at Flushing, L. nd Jer~ ty Heights. t some time with rs. Cole former a club . women, Elinbzfll' Sears, who_is now n from wearing and long-continued agony and distress when they fell under its spell. It is only during sick- ness and physical discomfort, usually during sévere and incessant pain, that opium has any chance of getting hold upon the average human being’s affec- tions. And, as a'rule, his interest in it ceabes absolutely and finally just as soon as pain or distress, which made its deadening power necessary, subsides and disappears. Many a time in the days of my early practice, when opium was out only sure relief from agonizing pain, can I recall hearing the victim of a street accident, with a broken “and mangled leg, or a patient suffering from the throbbing agony of a deep abscess, or one just recovering from the tortures of renal colic or gall stones, ask: “Doctor, do I have to take any more of that dopy stuff to make me sleep at night? It puts me to sletfi. but I feel so mean and or- nery when I wake up in the morning, Don't you think I could get along without it tonight}” This is the reafon why, although rmbably almost every person in the Inited States who has reached middle life, has, with or without knowing it, taken opium or opiates in some form for the relief of pain, from one to a dozen times, the total number of morphine or opium users, according to - | the most careful and competent esti- mates, is only about two in the thou: sand. These estimates (which are and<ean be nothing but estimates, as no actual records have ever yet been kept), give the appalling total of from 1?0,000 to 200,000 opium users in the United States, the former figure being that of an expert of the United States cen- sus bureau, the latter of the United States public health service. Every means possible should be adopted to reduced this huge army of misfortune and wretchedness, but it will do us no harm for once: to look at the situation from the opposite point of view and contemplate with assurance and satis- faction the 98,800,000 eitizens - who have never become addicted to oium, although grobably two-thirds of them have used it at-some time for the temporary relief of pain. Perhaps, before going further, a few: words of explanation might be help- ful. Opium is the dried and “cured” juice collected from nicks cut in the with & young man, a very good friend of h T do not know whether m s Tt d. Would you think It proper for mie to tell him of my 1 have cofiversations with brother have a taik with him? - “Film Fan,” and Mrs. Mc- ! ‘will be remembered in s | Rose Strawn, widow — ard ohnson will attend at Tekamah nes X Care l:llu a few You will be making a very g L mistake if either you or your brother tries to force this situation, What you will probably succeed in doing | will be to estrange this friend of your brother's and to lose the interest he now shows in you. Why not wait until he develops enough regard for i::_lo show it rather than thrust your' lings upon him? B green head of the poppy; as the northern poppy ' juice :lmin enough in morphine, ar tar soap in appearance and consist- ency. In the begi g and, indeed, up to about fifty y a drug, either rolled into the form of pills, er dried and guund. up with other substances like Number of Opium Users tract. It is still used in pill or pow- der form in the orient and the tropics, and small pieces of the gum roasted or cooked in a particular way over a lamp are burned in the bowl of a tiny pipe in the famous and classic ‘:ogium joints” or opium dens. or some fortunate reason the smoking of opium has never appealed much to northern and western races. In spite of the reckléss and whole- sale use which has been made of the opium joint in recent fiction, on account of its superb dramatic pos- sibilities, as a matter of fact only a very small per cent of our army of opium eaters in this country are addicted to “hitting the pipe.” The opium joints that exist in the United States are maintained almost exclu- sively by and for oriental and other tropical races, who have formed the habit in their native country, and their white patrons are both few in numbers and of a class which could very easily be spared without either loss or regret by the community. Curiously enough, baleful and hor- rible and degrading as are the sur-|| roundings and, atmosphere of these || opium_ joints, smoking appears to be one of the mildest and most slowly fatal of the various forms of opium using. The doses used are so ex-| tremely small that it seems almost impossible that theg can produce any serious nfrcotic effect. Its habitues live for years and years—much to the discomfort of their friends and relatives. Indeed, it seems to require a special natural gift to become a smoker of opium, and those who have studied the habit most carefully are inclined to suspect that the reason why this form of narcotization does ||| not appeal much to the white opium user 1s that it'doesn’t seem to,‘get him anywhere,” and.is too slow and feeble in producing the effects which An opium joint, like Bos- ||| ton, ap})ears to be not a place but a mind! Certainly to smoke the relief of any pain ||| of a rather mild toothache would be little better than he desires. state of opium for above the level a farce. lin holes in the sand a foot to a He is a stalker, silent, pcrsislcntifoot and a half deep, at whaose bot- toms they lie tor_Fid while the cold weather he sees ahead and to right and left: | their habits the hunting, or jumping | sprders, which are to be seen almost everywhere in summer stalking flies on wall; fences and porch railings. There is at least one record of a hunting spider sta'ked its own image in a looking He has eight eyes | ociety Notes : Personal Gossip : Woman’s Work : Househo ["A Merciless Eight-Eyed Terror A Wolf Spider Photographed After Being Subdued by a Sand Wasp. / By JANE M'LEAN. The steamer was large and the duties were many. There were ever |80 many staterooms to oversee— | countless trays to be carried, and nu- ymerous errands to run. It seems that there was no rest at all for Christine’'s weary feet and no one lon the boat seemed to considet her at all. It was ' Stewardess, will you /| come here, please?” or “l rang for |you, where have you been?” untii Christine had a tired, choked feeling {in her throat. The reason she had taken the posi [tion in the first place was because |she needed a sea trip and there had | been no money. \ | “It doesn't matter how you .go," |the doctor had declared, ‘just so “hal you get out to sea with pienty jof ralt air.” When ways,and means had been discussed, the idea of being a stew- |ardess had occurred to Christine’s | old father. Aside from the)fact that [ Christine was recovering siege of fever, the girl was ordinar- ‘harm to become healthily tired, | that she slept well at night. Chr {tine had a knack of caring for sic | people. | Her blond hair was smooth, and i she wore it curled in a braid about | her well shaped head. Her eyes | were dark and calm, and her clothes | were immaculate. From the time !that she had set sail, she had been | popular with the most cantankerous | passengers and, in spite of their en- |croachments on her time, they liked the girl and meant well by her if a would compensate for her running at everyone's beck and call, On board the Arcadia a famous physician was travelligg with his wife, who was not“at all well and required the services of the stew- ardess almgst constantly. Christine had never been known to disregard her summons. The doctor soon grew to notice the girl’s peculiar daintiness, the knack she seemed to have in the sickroom, lasts. hey resefuble in which industriously least shows that from a! He ) u \pusltmn with me?” the great man lily strong, and it would do her no|asked, smiling across at his wife, who generous tip at the end of the voyage | ld Topics Girl Workers Who Win Out The Stewdardess Finds that Willing Hands and a Pleasant Smile Pay Well her strong personality, the calm that one felt at the touch of her white hands. There was no doubt about iit she was a definite person, a woman who would count in the world by | reason of her marked characteristics. | Gradually the doctor developed a | friendly interest in her, which the girl lat first ignored and finally shyly re- !sponded to. He asked her questions labout her life. and discovered the | reason for her position, | “And what- are you going to do lafterward?” he inquired. “You are | perfectly well now and a splendid | physical specimen as far as I can lisees | i shall go back to my work in the office,” the girl responded. “I am i doing clerical work.” “Do you like the work ol the steamer?’ ‘Yes, | do,” the girl responded. "‘ll's hard, but satisfymng.’ I like to ~ make people comfortable—perhaps T might keep on with the work, I don't | know.” ‘How would you like to take a lay with her pale face aglinst a pil- low scarcely whiter, and smiled back at him. * ‘What kind of a position?” asked | the girl, smiling herself at the kindly |interest evident in both faces. | “Did you ever happen to hear | about me?” the doctor went on. “My name is Everitt.” | “Not the great nerve specialist?” I'the girl said incredulously. _ | “The very same, I'm_afraid,” smil- |ing at her surprise. “I have watched . you carefully on this trip and you iare a woman in a thousand. You are | capable, efficient and with a definite | personality. I need a woman like |you to take charge of som? of my work in special cases. I feel that T can trust you. Do you think you would like 1t?” “T don't know why you are so good to me,” the girl said simply. “But { should like it, above all things. And I'll try so hard to maké good.” The great doctor nodded his head sagely. He had known ma\t before. — spiders pass the winter < Corsets, Gowns, etC..........c.... “venient picking. Sale starts at TEN. Do You Know That It is officially stated that the “Red 0SS which began activities early in the war with eight dogs, has now 2,500 in the field. The |{fi lives of at least 8,000 wounded men || have, it is said, been saved by these/ il Cross Dog league,” dogs. Alasmeer, Holland, is noted for its strawberries and' clipped box-trees. This local industry, which has been | |fi t unknown eluwhere,z&ls een carried on for as the village brought. to a perfection at least 0 years, records show. It is understood that the lll’le,!; o} usually | "loof” of Annam, the French colony grown in the sub-tropics or tropics,|in eastern Asia. It is a flat, round is not|piece. worth $275. The next size in (i It is a|this unweildy coin is\the Japanese rown, sticky substance, sore-| “obang,’ which weighs more than [l | thing like very dirty beeswax or black | two and a half ounces, and is about | i gold coin in circulation is the equal to $50. It has been noticed that the com- bout | ago, the crude | mon peanut grows in a peculiar way gum opium itself was used directly as | that is distinctly originlr nt sends up its shoote, with the L it on the end of a somewhat stiff r < over's powder, | stalk, and then before it ripens the or dissolved in alcohol and water, to |stem bends form a tincture (laudanum) or ex-|pushes the fruit underground. P over and { J - il do it surely the season. The little carefully 'Soon We'll Be S “All Among the Barley” for the month of September will be | - here and Fall rapidly approaching We have entered on the Summer finals — PROFIT IS NO OBJECT — AFTER SATURDAY KILPATRICK’S will say no more about - Summer ready-to-wear _ But on SATURDAY will offer*such a dollar’s worth as must cause amaze- ment, and should clean out quickly every article SO Surhmer Dresses, Children’s Dresses, 1 Summer Coats, Juniors’ Dresses, Summer Suits, Children’s Coats,j dollar, and purse some Table will be piled high for con- Your LOSS if you missit. GAIN IF YOU COME. We made recently a wonderful ‘Blouse purchase—a sort of End-the- Summer Clearance—bought really at our own price. We are going to sell them Saturday. Note values, then sale prices and you can decide at once whether it is worth your while to attend. : $6.50. The other morning we woke up feeling chilly and YOUR long heated spell was broken. SALE. And we ourselves were amazed at the response and number of sales. told you WHY we were offering the furs at a reduction and now we want to warn all who ~did -not advantage themselves-that the sale more. and eclat of Alaska seal and are much lower in price. can wear furs comfortably. NOW, then, is a good: time to buy. In many instances you will effect a saving of 30 per cent. At any rate ask you. You'll get thé truth—we countenance nothifig else in this store. Hudson Seals, from $98.00 up. Fur Pieces ad.infinitum. For mode- rate priced fur, ask for NAROBIA. Muffs and scarfs of Mink. Muffs and s¢arfs of Marten. Muffs and scarfs of Fox. Muffs and scarfs of Lynx. Muffs and scarfs of Raccoon. Muffs and scarfs of Fitch. Muffs and. scarfs of Mole. By the way, we are already showing Autumn Garments and Fall Fabrics. .You have read of the six weeks’ strike of New York .garment makers, the advance in wool, dye shortage, pos- sibility of traffic stoppage—all these things spell wisdom of early buying. WE DID IT, and are glad of it. You shoul d profit by it \ If there ever was a season when Time’s forelock should be caught, if it ever paid to be an early bird—this is Lauder. Doris.” Whatever 'Store opens at 8:30, Dollar Sale will start at 10. last time this season on Saturday night. Isn’t it a shame, It is to laugh. Carry in your hand a Hand a dollar to the clerk for each article. ! 98¢ for Blouses of Voile; white, col- ors and combinations. worth up to $2.00. $1.69—Splendid stylish garments, very many of them worth up to $3. I $1.98 for Blouses of Linen, Sheer P Voiles, Crepes; $3.50 should be the ‘ selling price. $3.95 for Silk Blouses, Nets, Laces, ‘ Georgettes; worth away up to l | “we grabbed for the bed clothes, only to find in our half-awakened condition that we had only a sheet for cover- ing. The chilliness continued and we diQn’t sleep again until we foun_d some extra covering—wiser than a friend who dozed on and shivered till getting-up-time. Evidence conclusive, warning to be heeded that warm wave had passed us and Now in the very height of torridity we had a FUR HUDSON SEAL COATS will be tremendously popular; They possess the style ‘We are showing the New Dresses, New Suits, New Coats, goods of wool, silk and cotton—almost a maximum autumn stock. That’s how we show our faith in preparedness. A friend of ours who attended one of our recent sales was moved to rhyme and parody With due apologies to Harry, we sug- gest trying it to the tune of “A Wee Doch and It's a good and wholesome custom IIf That has stood the test of time, It In this grand and glorious clime— i In fair and storm I It's aye the usual thing, ‘\m - Just before they say good nicht, il To read the ads and. sing: il “In the mornin’ we must waken! | Oh, won’t you call us, ma? | For early we must hasten If To Kilpatrick's sale and a.” o | The bargains are a waitin’; « | We can fill our but and ben. 5 Hi We'll be up betimes by mornin’ licht, i For Kilpatrick's sale ye k Store closes at 6 p. m.., in this great ana Wf should still be clinging to village customs? Talk about the slogan, “Grow Wit! inging garments PRICED. in your more — And Help Yourself They are We continues just one week . { 'Twon’t be long until you \ | our saleswomen to show ‘ and in yard } | I | folks foregather, i weather, en. I robably for the {ill e city, that we I Growing Omaha”— I AR TR, -