Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 24, 1916, Page 10

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10 'THF Health Hints - - Fashions - BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, - Woman’s Work - MAY 1916. 24 ~'2y - Household _Z’opws AR T O VN uumll‘umpn\mun“u | ML 98 TN TLH L NOIEHILEREEO T IME T kind, a cheery, himself he forgives after the first big, absinthe eyes he despises and forgives. Neglect he struggles against and it is Love's one great grief, He—tend®® Love-—is a gentle fellow, a a forgiving rogue. Even his people’s offenses against round tears. Jealousy of the Love’s Dearest Ememy--“Time” vassals fine brain and heart on hating ling-away sands he crouches and glowérs, the hot tears in his | smiling the while wly fal -0)- forgets. Coldness he takes and hides in Copyright, T'ime! Before t his bosom to warm it, He counts the world his kingdom and all peoples his And he has but one enemy on whom he wastes good hours and a T'hat is International News Servicc By Nell Brinkley WL . wwmwy&m‘ | W‘g\n’ \«‘ig 1916, -0~ T ,AJ‘“‘ N7 . He on i hates and shaken by chest His small per who robs him, w butterfl and his two fists clinched stares, He sits lost in an orgie of loathing giant passion. His dearest enemy is Time the life of the golden-and-black bee and the crumpled one of his lovers in the world alone, lonely! if he can, | wrathful eyes he hour-glass with and leaves WEDDING AND GRADUATION PRESENTS ON CREDIT June, the month of weddings and graduations, will soon be here. If you have been thinking of buy- ing a Diamond, Watch, Wrist Watch or other Jewelry, for per- sonal wear or for a wedding, birth- day or anniversary gift, this is r opportunity to save money. OIAMOND WATCHES ON CREDIT Dear Miss Fairfax | love. 1 am earning | and could have a good futu depends if I win her, as I much Don’t he such a weakli clare that your | pends on whether or not | girl place in the world your ‘ would not do it. You boy, not old enough to for a worthy manhood self to be | truly fired with a desire f hood and you will be we I'girl's love ‘and respect When a Man Stops Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 278—Diamond R1in 14k wolld gold, 1 Perfoction mounting $1 8 Week, 1168—~Bracelet can be dotached, so Watch can be worn as a pendant o A regular gold filied, small nize, full 16| led Nicke white or gold » | 'l 1! @ 20 ™ A 7 ‘ o i | When a man suddenly [ #tr1 1t in lkely to be for Either becauss she him-—in which cass | thing to do ls—nothing! Or wun- elreumatance ha \\\\\‘\\”/‘/'l/ caliing Plense Dally Until 8 p. m. Saf ll“ or write for Catal old - !u n“n “d“l":l‘l aal #1 & Month. o Ko rl Drop inch woild chain, | reasons | Intarest on “going straight” & gentleman fifteen years my senior Aftar being exceedingly attentiva to me for the few weeks I knew him he ceased | advise me what to d. BE stops calling on & Reform for Your Own Sake. T am 19 and deeply in A comfortahle walary ire, but it all | love her very AMBITION ng as to de- de you win this If your own self-respect does not make you desire to work up 10 a | ducers spend thousands upon thousands love for her are only a marry, but Prove your or fine man yrthy of any Calling. 20 and admire ATRICE F one of thess | has ceased to the dignified bacause soma | |18 background is wrought out, background {s just as important in real to cause mis Adwvice to Lovelorn Gmcc l)arling Bu Beatrice Fairfaz. Talks to Gzrls By GRACE DARLING. ‘The third great lesson the stage teaches 8 is the value of a background that You know of dollars to take to some particular place whers they may have a tropical acene, or u,nm- old enough to~ay a foundation | traii, or the crowded eity street, to give ! with the story of thelr woes if you de- picted surrounded by them altting honestly ambitious and | (hey gre filming moving plcture pro companies of actors up empire furniture and a grand plano Three-fourths of the success of every play depends upon the skill with which and the the mountain Do You Know That the Why I Never Married le Woman Wlm Never Had a Chanee to Wed nt Why do Among the curiosities of of the Sahara Is a queer scrubby o b attrac: region. Yet there are always yellow with fine sand, called tive. inte rl.mm. .vr 'rHH": women in the world than New the “coughing bean.” In the long dry tendern e a| England women, and they make ideal troplcal heats this welrd plant's pores . syt gl e by (i thav knateo, ShREnRlIY become choked with dust, and it would | o 1" 1t Deuinc, Ehey, Ferd Ben oo atupid to | gra ateful to the men who rescue them dis of suffocation were it not for a : PRHIBE. Whan "';: paw it and | from the impending doom of spin | powerful gas which accumulates inside .t ave them | sterhood tha verhung them that |and, when it gains sufficient pressure B, wm‘w Gl ® ‘l'i'r'\ gO ”\N,"fi:‘.,‘;“. v;mhl\s{ little tin %! explodes with & sound like a human | LmPt o th;(nlv\‘-l Dix Wiz ssskad | g0 of their hgsbipdr. o cough Pryer maHen in a little New England village that By DOROTHY DIX. s was an Adamless Ede It was a | the proper backsround to some drama| In olden times ivy bushes used to be| ] apan old maid,” said the eighth | charming place, full of culture and hung over the doors of taverns as sign-| woman “because | never had an op-| money and everything desirable ex The background puts in the punch— | boards, because the plant was sacred 10 porqunity to marry Cupid never | cept men gets the atmosphers of the story over| Bacchus, the god of wine knocked at my door. He never even| “There positively wasn't a single to the audience, When you want to | came down my street | unmarried male in the whole town make people cry over a starving family | Every Bulgar has a stake in the coun- | .o ofien aid that every woman |over 18 or under 80—nothing but you must glve them a background of | try. Even if he is only a peasant hei .00 oL CWilling to | callow school boys or grandpas | bare attic, with a pallet on the floor, | owns & small farm; a landlord Is to him | oy "ype kind of a man she ccould| “There was no opportunity for and the snow drifting in through the | an unknown being get. This is not true If women | business or a profession in the vil roof. You could never touch anyone | would only tell the truth, plenty of [lage and the result was that every The third finger on the left hand, on them would have to admit that they | young man who had any intellig e m"‘:m.:—' r|"dn“:ddhvm :Ilw’; are even as | am, and that no man,|or energy, or ambition went away to are worn, is anatomically the wea good, bad or indifferent, ever made |seek his fortune just as soon as he the ten fove to them or popped the question |was out of college. And he never | came back until he brought with him wife or a breezy west with three sturdy chil to them “And are homelier, The ants of South America are won derfully industrious. They have been known to construct a tunnel thres miles this does not mean that we |a stylish city |er less charming and less | helpmate ~Mon's Ring, carv uwh\n! wmu "t not a vietim of | lifa as It is on the stage, because the | g ¢ """"':' S il hank f,'f\]l‘ nd. exta ' GG : ”’?',-\um. pour friend (hat you |upon us are the things that we visualise simply the result of the force of cir [that village to marry, because there s e ; miss him and hova it ‘ts woms misunder | g s particularly trus as regards| Workmen in Japan wear on thelr caps cumstances and local’ conditions AR ho uan (or Rek o miErve. Tha T axs which in keepink him away the attitude men ards women. | an inscription stating their business and For one reason or another we|,, narried were the ones | Vory few men ever take the trouble to|their employer's name were isolated from masculine society [ who were § enough to have to study a woman or try to understand — We were cut off from any chance « their own livings, and who fol | her, They fust take her as they see| Lacs was known In Venice at an early | catching a husband. We lacked op-|jowed the men out into the world to her and rate her as good or bad, At-| parind, and was not unknown to the |portunity. Of what avail to have the | ool their fortun The young la tractive or unattractive, according to the | Greeks and the Romana best bait and the spirit of an angler es with rich fathers, such as I, were pleture she makes to them. And thie if you have to fish in waters in which | .t off even from this ¢ pportunity Ldepends largely npon her background It has heen proved that a hriek h there are no fish | et our mqthers did nothing to | Tt's because thelr backgrounds mean 80 | well constructed, will utlast one bullt In many parts of the country|help us Tt never took us about much to them that T always advise girls | of granite, women far outnumbver the men. In nts of men. They seemed The Reason for a Telephone Company’s Depreciation Reserve Patch up a suit of clothes how you will, it will gradually' wear out and have to be replaced by a new one. Just so it is with the telephone property. Some parts of it wear out quicker than others, but repair it again and again as we do, finally it wears out. In addition to the wearing out of the property a good many of the parts are year by year becoming obsolete and out-of -date and are replaced by something better. Each year we set aside out of the money we take in from the sale of telephone service an amount which we estimate represents the wearing out of our telephone proverty durin¢ that period. This money is invested back in the plant, and thus tempor arily employed as additional capital on which no dividends or interest charges are paid. Through our policy of setting de a depreciation reserve to provide for the rebuilding or replacement of the property, present telephone users pay for the wearing out of the plant instead of passing the debt on to the next generation Lack of vecognition of this principle has caused many fail. ures in private industries and is & frequent mistake in the pub. . lie institutions. Our policy of setting aside a depreciation reserve is now genevally accepted as the fairest way to provide for the ve. building or replacement of the equipment when it wears out to stay at home If they possibly ean, The New England, for instance, there are that some sort of a miracle background of home gives a girl a re There is no doubt that the modern | 1,000,000 mo females than males. | be p in our behalf spectability in the eyes of men that noth- | Lol agtate agent could have re You don't ha be a statistician to |and that the I would raise up ing else can claimed the Garden of Eden on the | figure out w there is always a|eligible husbands from nowhere for Of course, many girls have very dis-|iown lot plan | bumper crop old maids in that| benefit, as He fed the hungry agreeabls homes. They have tryrannical . i itude with five loaves and two and nagging fathers and mothera and - ‘ hatef brothers and sisters, and the was forthcoming idea of getting away from it all and set 1 maids, f t'ng Iittle flat of thelr own with a er who helps her al girl chum |8 very alluring \f f nat But fust as the hackground of a he f g - glves & gir ertain background of rents | y wpoctak #o the background of a gir ¢ t wa as " flat throws about her an atme p e some. it have freo and easy Dohemianism A g and money t v 1 everyona look her a et t! self the ' » oritically and en \ " ¢ wh was st har with less defe: . A A s the 1 ot gence and 0 r X tthng o they did J ¥ t J A mAr ed a " i n tered { attra Salmon Steak with Cucumber Garnish, o “ . ' 8 2% By CONSTANCE CLARKE, thoug iy 9 LL fsh should be used as soon fah. When the fish s cooked dfah N a8 posalble after 1t (s caught. | 1t on & bot dish, garniah with polato . . In fread Bah the oy mould always | balls and Mttle heaps of cucumber . be bright and minent, the body | garnish arcund (1, strain thegrarvy . S and the gills & bright red color | from the pan through & halr sleve, N Soale the fish and cul some slloes | mix with 16 o teaspooutul of Bnely about one and & hall luches thiok, | chopped parsley and pour this over o ‘ and wipe thom parfectly dey. Allow | the Bab foar tablespoontuls of Builer aud the Cueumber Qartad—Pasl and ol o R stralned juloe of one lemon 10 sach | the eucumber tnto aliees, Lar (hom v . . . pound of fab, Fub the Dottom of (e | n cold waler with & plach of sl ‘ . wowpan wall with bulter and ey | and beag 1ot bolly Wee kil and < " i the Beh, straining (he lemon Julos | let the cuoumbar peok Wil tender . . pne ' } . - g n- I and seasoning It Witk salt | then strmin It from thh waler, mip - sad pepper. Lar & buttered nl.-l\ Wt 1 s plece of batier and o Iwe N ——— over the ah, and then put the cover | drope of sirained lamen Julos, sprime N . o8 Uhe pan and let 1t cook, uucuc’ Wi with & liitle chopped parsiay and : : M Cveall minuies for sach pound of s A s (To-morrow—Fruit Salad) . ' plaes w . ’ A .

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