Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BEE: OMATIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1915. EXERCISE THE BEST GUIDE IN WOMAN’S QUEST FOR BEAUTY-Ziegfeld girls tell how to gain physical charm. Two poses of Sybil Carman illustrating exercises for the feet, which she prescribes as conducive to correct carriage. The Heavens in Deviled Mother<in-Law, An Intimate * ——— e . Recipe for Consumption in the Home E picurean Episodes September By DOROTHY DIX. caver |®ood form. Deviled mother-in-law, like by a little careful study. Then ripe watermelon, should only be par- [u( out your hammer and knock these By WILLIAM F. RIGGE, 8, J. | RBAAER A AR OO TR Among the most popular hors d'couvres | taken of in tho privacy of the home cir- |until they are beaten into a jelly. Of i - ' 4 AA . . te deviled motherdnclaw. Indeed, &b |cle. Good tasts demands this {course you can do this much more ther- B he S &t O B 1. the suR crosee T e |though this dish is highly Indigestible | Also, it 18 to be observed that one of [oughly if your mother-in-law Is always ( » & ' ¢ ) X the equator at the autumnal equinox, and nters Libra. Day and night are then cqual al] over the earth, and sunrise and sunset cccur everywhere at 6 o'clock ex- actly, according to sundial time. The da:'s length on the lst is thirteen hours six minutes; on the 15th, twelve hours twenty-nine minutes; on the 23d, twelve hours eight minutes—the addi- tional elght minutes are granted us on account of refraction—and on the th cleven hours forty-nine minutes, a loss of ome hour seventeen minutes during the month, The standard times of the rising, meri- dlan passage or southing, and setting of the sun and mocn at Omaha for this month are given in the following table: SUN MO« 'Rise.{noon. |Sat.| Rise. |South 10.50 1141 | Midn, 7 1238 834 £ 181215'6 61911214 0.6 2012.14'6.09' The dot reried between the hours and | ninutes indicates P. M times. The times not so marked are A. M. The sun is fast the whole month on sundial time, the exact amount in minutes being found by subtracting from twenty-four the minutes given after in the ‘noon” column. Jupiter is in opposition ‘o the sun on the 17th, and rises on that day when the sun sets, so that it will soon be viaible at convenient hours of the night. Mars rises ¢n the 15th at 12:37 a. m. and Sat- urn at 12.28 a. m. Venus is in conjunc- tion with the sun on the 12th and will soon be visitle ngaln in the evening. Mercury {s farthest from the sun on the Zith, snG ought then be found readily in the evening twilight. On the 10th there ts & conjunction be- tween Mars and Saturn, Mars belng one degrec und eight minutes north of Saturn. The moon is in last quarter on the Isf at $:57 a. m., new on the 9th at 4:52 a. m., in first quarter on the 16th at 1:21 a. m., and full on the 23 at 3:3 a. m. It is in conjunction with Mars on the 3d, Sat urn on the 4th and Jupiter on the 22d. CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY OBSERVA- TORY, Omaha, Neb, : In-gh—oots society 18 a 12 fringe of tangled The afflictions of our nelghbor always cem trivial, fussy man is not necessarily a individual, Might as well sleep on as rise early and «it around with folded hands. One idea in a brainy head is worth a thousand idle dreams. Bad luck is sometimes a blessing in disguise—but not often, Some people are economical even in the atter of gratitude. \RS. WILLIAWS’ LONG SICKNESE Yields To Lydia E. Pir’ ham’s Vegetable Compound. Elkhart, Ind.*—*‘I suffered for four- teen years from organic inflammation, i i female weakness, my sides were in- creased by walking ;.| feelings, was de- pressed in spirits and became thin and £ ; pale with dull, heavy - eyes, I hadsixdoc- tors from whom I received only tempo- rary relief. I decided to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial and also the Sanative Wash. Ihave now used the remedies for four months and cannot express my thanks for what they have done for me. ““If these lines will be of any benefit you have my permission to publish them.”” — Mrs. SADIE WILLIAMS, 456 James Street, Eikhart, Indiana. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, made from native rootsand herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills we know of, and of voluntary testimonials on file in the Pinkham lsboratory at Lymn, Mass., seem to prove this fact. If you have the slightest doubt Dle Compaund wil help you srite e Compoun te toLydin E,Pinkham MedicineCo. (co lential) Lynn, Mass., for ad- r'::i !:l' “:nwen:l“llal T Y & WO and ‘ud rn strict mnfldanu.m er women long ago discovered that brains, not their make-up box, were the of lasting youthful charm. looks nowadays are based fundamentally on good health, not cosmetics. The color of the eyes, the shape of the nose and skin, are Individua! problems for every But the big outstanding, universal need women today face in their quest for beauty is bodily grace. And exercise is the solution, It may require u little exercise to find time to exercise, but could a few minutes ! night and morning be better spent? The Bee will print a serles of articles suggesting simple, but effective exer- !cises, written by members of the re- | markable cast of the Ziegfeld “Follies.’ | These young women have achieved their unusual grace and charm by practicing the exercises they Wiu here describe, In the first article, printed today, Miss Sybil Carman tells how to care for and exerc se. the feet, whose condit.on is the fundamental factor in correct carriage. secret Good women ; S SYBIL. CARMAN, i v No woman is pretty if her feet huri | Tired, aching feet may be a minor phy- sical ill, but they gurely aro a major beauty detractor. Personally | have found that exercise in my own room did more to keep my feet strong and supple than any other one thing. The exercises I have shown today aro self-explanatory. Their object is to de- velop the muscles of the legs. This is bound to be beneficial to the feet. As a rule, your feet get too little attention, outslde of the ordinary “walks of life.” “Watch your step,”” for the modern woman, might well be translated _into “Watch your feet," Be good to your feet. It pays in the nd. Bathe them at night when they are tred, 'n a I'tt'e tepld water with a pinch of borax in it. Massage them frequently. Have as many pair of shoes as you ca afford and change your shoes every da rest your feet and do much towards pr venting corns, One exercise that will strengthen you feet is very simple and yet does much make the foot muscles supple, Curl yo toes over the edge of the bath tub an Alternate low heels with high. This will 0ld them In piace as tightly as you can Then scrub with a stiff brush to start the clrculat'on. Work your toes a little as you do this and you will feel the muscles up the back of your leg getting the exercise they need Atter all, this problem of making your | feet stronger really works out in two tefinite waye. Tt enables you to walk and to stand better. BEvery woman needs to | walk more and faster. And by that I do not mean walking for ! hours between hargain countera! Even house work. strenuous as it is, is not the Kind of walkng a womun needs. Every woman should get out of doors. throw back their shoulders, swing her arms ?nd take a real walk just as briskly as she can every day, if possible, Sauniering s hard on a person, but brisk walking is one it the best exercises in the world and certaln to disagree | who partakes of it. it pactrically forms with every one the staple dlet of most familes, where |t is not only served at the beginning of a meal, hut also at the end land frequently through the mid dle. There are fifty seven different va retles of deviled mother - tn - law, ench houschold having Its own of hed rec'pe, and each a little more actd and vin- exary and full of pep than the other. Not only in this the case, but men and women vie with each other in concocting the savory relish until it is hard to say whether the hushand or the wife Is the greatest artist in its manufacture. Hence it is not at all un- common to sce two deviled mothers-in- law served up at the samo table at the sama time. Strictly speaking, deviled mother-in- law is a family dish, especlally when it is particularly high seasoned, but oc- castonally It 1s passed around to guests and acquaintance. This, however, s not By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX The young Women who get thelr names unpleasantly assoclated with married ad- { mirers can be divided into three classes —the spoiled girl, who is oversentimental, {conceited and growing: the ut- terly selfish and vain girl, and the airl of deep emo- tions who has never known love. I met once of the first typu recently in the heart of the _Ereat metropolis. She was a beauty, only child and motherless, anl possessed of wealth jand position, She had filled n natu- rally romantic mind French novels, and she was utterly epolled by adulation. She loved to talk of herse)f, and she confessed that she had, at the age of 2, grown quite blase with the monoton- ous attentions of adoring swains, and | that she found nothing so Interesting i now as the admiration of married men. {741 suppose I like them because they are unattainable,” she said nonchalantly, ‘and T confess the nearest sentiment I cver felt to love was inspired by a mar- ried man. His unhappy domestic life first i Copyright, 1915, by Star Company. on pvathy and jeopardizing happiness. Noth- ing will so effectually drive away desir- able suitors from a young girl as the accepted attentions of a married man.” The most hopeless coquette is the heart. ‘ess gir] with an abnormal love of con- quest and excitement, who finds with married men the adventure and reckless a girl is seldomi morally viclous in the i generally accepted use of that term; she and selfish. ture it affords her. Having no deep emotiong of her own to more amused than terrified, out of dan- ger's reach as soon as it menaces her. | She enjoys the tragedy of the situa- tion and has complete control of her- self. She has a crue| element in her na. {ture and enjoys the power to cause pain. She prides herself on being able to make | wives jealous, | People twvally accuse the girl flirt of Leing far more depraved that she is. Hers is the depravity of mind without the corresponding depravity of body, But the public is slow to believe this. She | loses her good name without having !committed sin and without having In-| {spired a great lovs, Her most pers's- | tent pursuers forget her quick!¥, or think {of her without regret | 1s superficlal fn her emotions, cold, vain | own dreams and hopes slip farther and farther back into the past with her first youth, Such a girl 18 llable to be superior to her early admirers, and as she reaches ripe womanhood she finds mental com- 'radeship in married men only. Then comes | the dangerous association with Some man " |element necessary to her happiness. Such | whose domestic lifo is a disappointment, and who discovers in her what he misses at home, It may be her pastor, it may be her but as a streak of lightning sets fire to She has no idea of go'ng wrong, but dry bulldings, his glance and touch in-| loves to play about the risk of danger. fluence her ripened and craving emo- fide serious marriage troubies to their tions. i# attracted by men strong in tneir emo- tions and of no mean mental endow- !ments; men who have grown beyond |thelr wives and who have perhaps lived through years of brain solitude and heart hunger Lefore they met this girl. | We speak of a young woman of 25 or as old enouzh to be sensible and well behaved, but, in fact, that ls the very time of life when It fs most difficult for an unanchored girl to be prudent and reasonable. From 14 to 17 a healthy Vig- orous girl Is In danger of imprudence r Itolly trcm ignorance of her emotions; from 2 to 8 she is in danger from the knowledge of them. The blind and eruel judgment of Christian communities on this subject Is | The third and most to be pitied tye | nconsistent with the spirit of Christ, or drew mie te him; he said he felt I had ©f 8Irl whose name is marred by asso-: with sclentific enlightenment of the pres- such a eymps first. Poor fellow! he ig nearly crazy about me¢ now: he falrly adores the ground 1 waik on." “My dear girl, nothing is #o uncertain as the !mpression a conquettish young woman makes on a married man,” I re- plied. “Quite likely he in telling his wife that he pitles the fool who marries you He may flatter you and pay soa com- pliments galore, and sigh over you just to sec how much you know of human nature, but he is not respecting you, that is certain “He may feel the charm of your beauty, but he would not defend your good name If he heard it assailed; if he is suffi- clently lacking in principle to lead you to receive his compromising attentions, he is lacking the honor to defend you from the tongue of gossip.™ “ITe would defend me because he is in love with me” she urged. “Did you never hear of an unhappily married man really fecling the love of a lifetime for some one he met afterward?’ “Once in a while that oceurs,” T re- plied. “But you are scarcely the typu of girl to ‘nspire such a passion. A man would amuse himself with you, and try to lead you om, but he would not lose his head over you. Your position and wealth and beauty would flatter his mase culine pride, and he would enjoy think- ing he had power to lure you over econ- vention's barriers; but he would feel a secret contempt for you, all the same. “You are a spolled, sentimental girl, { whose imagination has got the better of Ir,--r judgment. You are wastng sym l deep emotions who has passed her twenty-fifth birthday without having loved or married. With more than ordi- nary mind, with a high ideal of manhood, | with strong emotions and ntense long- {ing for love, she sees her girlhood's com- panions mated one by one while her | htic nature from the very clation with a married man s the girl of 'ent day In other matters, When I heard a girl in that period of lite who has wrecked her future and lost her good name through some great act of folly, 1 am moved with the deep- est pity end sorrow. She ia like the un- gathered dead-ripe fruit that bursts in the sun and falls Into the dust below. i Tllus By JANE ions . M'LEAN, They will not go the while you, clinging to them, Hold them against your breast; Out of a world of gray and sodden sorrows, Tear wet, they bring you rest, They will not go, they Touching your world linger in the byways, with song, L] Strewing your path ahead with glowing roses Lest it seem long. They will not go, for often in the twillght They will surprise you there, Soothing your fevered brow with small, cool fingers, Calming your deep despair. They will not go till you shall push them from you Seeking a meaning plain; Then banished they will Leaving you pain. slip away forever By Virginia Terhune Van De Water. (Copyright, 1915, Star Company.) A book -entitled “How to Be Happy Though Married,” was written over u quarter-century ago. KEither it did not contain infallible rules for marital feiicity, or it was not universally read by hus- bands or wives. For such are stll oft:n discontented with their lot. May it not be time for somebody to {wr.ite a volume on “How to SBeem Happy | She likes her freedom and ;family pnysician, it may be the husband | Though Married?' For we do get very the opportunity of conquest and adven-'of some old schoolmate whom she visits;'tired of hearing people alr their conjugal | | m.sery. Perhaps women are more prone to con- | bosom friends than are men. When a control, she tempts and arouses those of | She is capable of fecling and inspiring Man really compia.ns in sad and bitter men, scarcely consclous of her evil in-!a great passion: and, unl'ke either of the eArnest of the wife he has chosen, he is fluence; she flics, laughing, mocking, and types already descr'bed, she attracts and 8bout ready to leave her. For where actual unhappiness exists, a man tells lttie untii he is ready to mct. 1 wisn 1 could say as much for his wife, | But there Is someth.ng to which men— and good men, too—must plead .uluy.l | That is the stup.d habit of speaking in fun as if matr.mony were slavery and bondage. They find &n unhowy joy i this kind of jest. How often one hears a husband say w.th a laugh, “When | was & uuppy vachewr,” or “When a .nan marries his trouble begins!” He does not mesn what his words Imp.y. He wouwd tell you in the next breath that he loves his wife, that she Is the finest [ Ltle girl in all the world, that he coulu not live without her. Then why—oh, Why— perpetrate the unseemly and banal jokes about being buliled and bossed by same “lLtle girl?” These jokes are, | say the least, in wretched taste. | Why should matrimony entitle one to Jests that are actually offensive? Imag- ine anyone's smiling at the son who jokea about hLis bondage to his mother; fancy smuling at the daughter who sa.d she was a siave to her father's whims! Yet we | grin—or try to—when we hear & hus- band remark: | “Yes, L1l accept your invitation If my wife will let me, But, you know, a mar- ried man Is as one under authority. 1 hardly dare call my soul my own!' And these speeches are made In the presence of the wife, who tries—poor soul! ~to laugh with the rest of the listeners and to look as if she were amused. to | It the man were speakiug the truth, he 1f, as he will declare In self-jusutication, he is | ought to be ashamed of himself “only In fun," he would do weil to culti- vate u more just sense of humor, | 1s there any | members speak as slighting.y of it as do those who are partners In matrimony? | Two men In business together do not alr this | cthier partnership whose | the pecul'arities of this plate Is that while | [we all have an insatlable appetite for | | deviled mother-in-law of our own make wo do not in the least care for that pre- | pared by our friends, and very little of it | satintes us and palls upon our palate To obtain a mother-in-law for deviling [1t 18 never necessary to either buy it or to o out and hunt for one yourself |1t 1s always wished upon you, and what- ever kind you get you are sure to think that it Is the very worst that cver hap- pened, and you wovld have preferred any other known varlety, Oceastonally a man undertakes to make a confectin of his mother-in-law by stowing it down In a syrup of sweet {words and loving attentions and sugary {compliments. This ls never done unleas the mother-In-law belongs to the species known as the rich widow, which is simply buleing with money | | The results in such cases are sald to | Ibe m0 highly satisfactory that the men who cook up mother-in-law in this way are enabled to knock off all other work, and to ride In automobiles, and drink vintage wine, and Hve on lobster, New. hurg and planked steaks, and only mother-in-law as & sweetener, Bo far as is known, women have no knack at preparing any variety of sweet- ened mother-in-law, and never try thelr hands at anything but deviling it As & matter of fact, men seldom attempt it efther, for it seems to be the con- sensus of opinion that to do anything but pickle a mother-in-law is as un- natural as it ls to make soun out of butterrallk, or to put sugar on fish, or pepper on strawberries. Some people e mmit these gastronomic crimes, but | they show a queer and exotic taste. To devil a mother-in-law man stvle, | take a mother-in-law that you have un- | consclously acquired by marriare, ana give it the once over to see where the tender spots are. It is sure to have a fow sensitive places that you can dis- use handy about the house, but with per- sistence you can turn a neat job even | when you can give it absent treatment Which serves every purpose Having carefully prepared mother-in law, make a sauce as follows: Take a ton of criticiam, the more ncid the better A barrel of ridicule, a bushel of assorted prejudices, and an unlimited amount of determination not to be bossed by the wife's mother. Dissolve all of these in plenty of temper, and steep the mother- In-law In it untll it becomes sour enough to wat your teeth on edge. Serve this dish with a garnish of sneers und jeers and cold looks and frozen faces. Deviled mother-in-law a la femme Is prepared much in the way. Women, however, always begin making this d'sh by separating the mother-in-law from the son it adores. This breaks its heart and makes it easy to pickle. Having thus prepared the mother-in-law for the pickling process, the housewife submerges it In a sauce the basis of which is jealousy, but to which have been added equal parts of temper, nerves, stinginess and malice. Add no salt to this mixture, as the tears of the mother-in-law make it sufficlently briny. Let the mother-in‘law soak in this mixture until it acquires the desired peppery flavor. Deviled mother-in-law {» highly recom- mended as a hot weather dish, as it is guaranteed to send the temperature of ,any table about which it is freely passed down to zero. bonne same Do You Know That The whale ylelds on an average 2,000 gallons of ofl. Lullington church, Sussex, is the small- est In England. It is just sixteen feet square. After the revolution, the French started & new calendar, beginning with the year 1. The thirteenth century version of the proverb, “Out of sight, out of mind,” was “Fer from eye, fer from hearte."” 1 “To the fact,” was his honest reply, “that members of that cult speak nothing but good of it. They do not call attention to its faults. If you mention only the virtues of any Institution to which you belong you go a great way towards mak- ing it a success.’ One reason that unhappy wedded couples are so b'tter {s because there is mingled with the disappointment the painful recollection and realization that they have themselves to blame for the blunder they have made. In this en- lightenad day people are not pushed un- jwilllngly into matrimony by cruel parents. The woman chosen does not \have to say “yes" unless she wants to. 8o each knows that mutual unhappiness and dislllusionment are reflect'ons upon {his or her powers of discernment and Judgment. Therefore the hurt rankles more than it would otherwise. Stlll the very consciousness that one has made his own lot ought to make him {100 proud to call attention to it. even in seeming jJest. I heard a slangy young man volce his sentiment crudeiy: “If," he sa'd, “a chap has drawn a lemon when he tried for an orange, he should hav the nerve to smile and pretend that he likes lemons, and that acld frult agrees with his system. Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRIOE FAIRFAX—— Do You Love Himt Dear Miss Falrfax: [ am 19 and am quite fond of a young man of 2. W have been keeplig company for abou six months and he tells me he is not i @ position to marry for at least one an one-hall or two year. He iniends t g0 away for awhile and try his luck, a! of which time, if he makes K0od, we are to be married. My parents ob to my writlng, saying that If he s not make good, | will be losing or chances in the meaniime, althou., 1 don’t see how I can, if 1 do not becom engaged to him. TROUBLED. If you love him, agree to wait. If you don’t love him, don't. This will settlc the whole thi g. As for your lost ch 1ces, my dear, & girl In love with & man never thinks of what that love may be costing her in the loss of another man's atten tions, To Have Wavy F. air Like Nature s Own Tere's a brand new recipe, of unques- tloncu merit, that 1 adv s¢ you 0 make Lo Of, unless you wre one of the few {In pubilc thelr grievances agalnst each |ossessirs of natursly wavy hair. « Ivs other and the r dissust with the com- ‘ery simple, fur all you need to uo s to ~ a1d, ‘ apply w i.te Lyu.d silmer.ne at night— ination. If they did, thelr busniess LHED M GiLS Lut.d stiuecine i hlght— would not prosper, and people would morning you will find \his has dr.ed in | know that it did not. i 4he sweetest curls and wa.es imaginable. : ey wil Le just like Nature s own, hav- | The thought occura to one: If married ' i, 7 ¥re ot ince to the eifect prouuced | people were aa careful to conceal their b, 'y hot iron, w.ich is %o obviously ar- mutual differences and were as eager to |make the world beliove In the success of | thelr enterprise as are the members of a | business concern, might not marriage be less of a fallure than it 1s at present? | “To what do you attribute the prosperity |of a certain ethical eult?™ u clersyman “ wes asked, tificlal ‘Loe application is really beneficial to the hair and gives it that lively lustre so much des As It is 80 easy o o lain a few ou of the liquid siimerne from your drugg st—sufficient to keep the hair curly for many weeks—there's no reason |no' for putting up with either that flraight contrary hair or with the curl- |ing ron nuisance—Mar'e “Demargst in | Plisrim Magnsine.--Advertisement, Yawning is due to a deficlency in the alr supply to the lungs, and s nature's method of rectifying the deficlency. Coffee contains water, sugar, fat, casehin, gum, woody matter, oil, mineral matter and caffeine—a drug composed of hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen and water, bo You Know The le.l Food Value of Spaib_ehit When you talk of buyi ten cents or one dollar's worth of any dstuff, what do you mean by “worth’™? The oniy ‘meas- un; g; genuine ;leoflh ::!l(hc urchase of gatables must nutrition. But do u keep nulrlu:m in mind when you buy {‘k’m famhy rrovlllunln? Lot us see, Meat Is probably your biggest item. Yet no less an authority than Dr. Hutchison, the dietitlun, says that meat is a dear food. Why? Because we y far too much for the amount of nutrition that v.e secure. Meat contains 76 per cent water— think of that when sirloin Is chalked up at %o & Ib.—three-quarters water! Now, take Faust Spaghettl, made from Durum wheat, a rich, glutinous ceroal. Of spaghett! and its allied grodllch. the #ame authority says that they contain cnly 10 per cent water, and these foods nie absorbed almost in their ent.rety—zo 1o make Llood, muscle and tissue. Faust Bpaghettl costs 10c \a large package— nearly all worth, MAULL BROS. St. Louls, U, 8, A, DIAMONDS ON CREDIT Every one who {s awake to h's apportunity will invest his money ia a genylne Dimond —whi . all robabil ty, lower than 1t you wish to int you ean a1 %o and pay only §2.50 ‘you wish the monthly paym-nt is only o invest $50 5. A $70 Dismond costs but $7.50 a month, or a $100 beauty is easy at $10 & month, By this ‘easy plan of payment you can buy NOW. while rrices are down, and get the benefit of all future sdvances. Do not hesi- tate to open an account. Rich men testi’y to the fact thit they never made a dodar il they msked for credit. ~ Ladies' Dia- Ring, ol d L ftin 65! m gold .. | | | | 1133-La Vallle: fine solid go'd, genuine oY X|wo 1086 — cen ter, |uu'l Links, lulklcl-olrd'. pen ant, N® Roman finish, amond: ecom- g o M0 0 plete with §1§ [ monas ... 90 $1.50 & M-uth. o & Month, | ™ Nz 1104 — Velcher Ring, 14k solld gold, larke, snarkling Diamond’ special “‘ ‘. o .. { $6.95 a Month «hs Flat $6.50 » (pen v aily iill 8 p.m., Sa"daystill 9:30 Dovsien 1 wad st el [OF TS i | BROSBCQ. R340 & i me. |