Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 25, 1916, Page 8

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s i i | | | ? I | | ; i [ 8 I'HE i Health Hints -:- Fashions -- Woman’s Work -- Household Topics A Recipe for Beauty | By FORTUNE FREE. “You don't know how often I look | at that photograph of yours each | day! It is awfully good, and 1 was delighted to have it. It is as like you as a photogrgaph can be—but how unlike you at the same time! What is a photograph to the real person?” | 1 read that in a letter the other day. Let me hasten to say that the hotograph was not one of myself t was that of a decidedly pretty young woman. She had shown me that likeness before she sent it off | and had asked me what I thought of it, and when 1 declared it excellent, | had told me that, for her part, she really did not care for it Did you ever know a girl who was satisfied with her photograph? But there was the recipient of it con- firming my opinion. She thought I ought to see what he said) but she had doubled the paper up very care- fully so that I could see no more. | No doubt the writer of that letter went on to tell her of the most im- portant affairs that were to be kept a profound secret “He's written a lot of nonsense after that,” she informed me, with a laugh and eyes that sparkled so that 1 quite clearly understood that that nonsense was really very dear to her ~nonsense she will keep very care- | fully and read ever so many times | ( to herself ecach day, though she | knows it all by heart—every word of it He was quite right when he said that the photograph was not like the real person. It did not do justice to her prettiness. She was pretty when | it was taken, but as I looked at her I realized that that ‘young gentle- | man, when he comes back, mfl have a surprise. She has grown prettier —quite perceptibly more beautiful— since he has been away The old Marquis Dauville heard some ladies at the court of the Em- | press Eugene one day discussing. the | disappearance of one of the most | beautiful ladies who had shone at| the court. What had become of her? | The most accepted conclusion was that she had disappeared in conse- | quence of fading attractions. | “You are quite wrong, ladies,” de- clared the marquis. “She disappeared | in consequence of sad family misfor- tunes which have actually obliged her to work in order to maintain her aged father. She is mére beautiful than ever—infinitely more so. You ladies who are ever trying fresh recipes for the preservation and the increasing of your beauty, might take a wrinkle from her, It is simple and costs—ah! yes, it does cost something " The ladies pricked up their ears. The marquis was an authority on female beauty, He was implored, if he knew tlie secret, to tell it to them, The cost would not matter, “I am not quite sure of that" he remarked with a smile. “The price she has paid for her beauty has been | seven hours’ hard work a day for some months and sorrows, that have made her find her soul. It peeps out in her face, She always was beauti- ful. You should see her now that her face is illuminated by the heroic soul she has discovered. il “‘\ ;*\;«ij !f‘ifl Syl ™ A 4 4 i} 4 Vl‘ Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfazx. Tefi Her. Dear Miss Fairfax: My girl frisnd and chum has & friend who has bsen calling on her for almost & year. She loves him dearly. At nes recently, while ha and 1 were dancing, he asked me if ha could enll. T told him I didn’t think it would be fair to my girl friend, and he told me that he had never proposed marriage to her. 1 told him 1o call me up at & later date and 1 would let him know then whether he could call. Wil you pleass advise me what o do? A F Be honest with your girl friend and tell her that the young man you met through her has asked to call, Since she is not engaged to him she can hardly expect that he will have no girl friends other than herself, and if you are loyal enough to tell her of his request she will have no cause to eriticise you or feel hurt, And if she is a fine girl, she will appreciate the situation and be gracious about it. | would not want one of my girls to| fail in loyalty to another or let a man suppose that she values her girl friends lightly. You will find that honesty is the only way to deal with | the situation, | The First Peace Party The first “Peace party” in the United States was formed to oppose the war of 1812 by a combination of federalists and democratic-republi. cans, mostly in New England QUALITY ERE is a dangerous fashion! 1 who love dogs, who have had H merry days of comradeship with them, who have found, since I can remember, their friendship a thing to take joy in, who have never feared one or known in them anything but gentleness and loyalty, who believe in caring rightly for the ones [ own and making my neighbor care for his (you who fear dog-bits and never dream that an animal drinks as plants and humans do, remember that a man oes mad for a drink) understand that women Who are really fond of fin[(! afe so because they have a good heart for anything that lives from a flawer and a baby to even a faulty man! It is rather a bromide to say over and over what is so much trumpeted abroad-—“she’d much better have a child where that little dog sits!” Anyway, I shouldn't say it if I thought that—for how can you dare to-know just why she hasn’t a little child there—and when you see a woman reach for any live thing with gentle fingers and kind eyes you can know it takes a long tape to measure the bigness of her heart Let me tell you. A beautiful woman I know with a warm-gold colored head of hair, big hazel eyes, generous lips, and a big heart, lives in a big house with her hushand and two little woolly dogs. Some of her friends shrug shoulders when she gives glimpses of the great care and affection she gives these two little pups who look to me as if they would break-—since I like a big dog best——but they are the ones who do not know her well, Because she is so kind and lavish of care on these two small things that happen to be one of her house is just the reason she would be lavish of affection with any creature that lived in it She rescues fallen baby birds. She labors with drivers who work lame horses. She feeds her neighbors' cats when they fail to remem ber that the animals they own must eat to live. Hr eyes are wide for any misery in all the animal world and she is brave enough to speak and act Now, look at the saund heart of her, the true mother heart. She works without dream of pay, and gives without a thought both money and precious time—for she keeps a big house, a perfect home—to a child nursery that would be a forlorn affair but for her and a group of women like her. She turns and looks at every child that passes her on the street-—even if he's lost under a layer of grime. She has TRADE MARK Package Foods Don't Be a Slave to Cooking Jiikat Foods, prepared in sanitary kitchens by culinary experts, spare you kitchen labor and pro- vide wnusual lusuries for your table. They include many forma of meat — Whaole Tongue, Veal Loal, Luncheon Peol, Boned Chicken, Potted Mesta for satd. wiches, and other food apecialtion to serve hot or old’ The Armour process re. 1aing the natural favors perfectly For lunch, late supper, plnios or alternoon tea, have M at hand, 2 Aonouuaeuuw Budate Mgr Wilkinees A and § L LU A JEE . A Jonsn Omaba OMAHA, Food Must More than Fuel - A Dangerous Fashion -o- THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1916. Dog and Girl Portraits -0~ not any of her own. She adopted a little blue-eyed mite; and gave it back from the pity of her big heart when its mother begged it un- der rllanged‘ fortunes. ‘And the big tears swam in her eyes when she remembers it. 4 1f you see a picture of a woman with a white pey dog beside her would you dare to say that old trie phase that is not new: “Better a little child—anybody's little child in the picture?” Give me the woman who loves animals, who picks up a flower thrown away on a dirty street with its tender bloom in the dirt, who grives over all bl lwarmly as the fussed-up baby in frills and rosebuds. over qu ain and otting out of life, who likes the little grubby, homely child just as She is a good And these things go together. Now to laugh. It's a dangerous fashion just the same! Tt is all iite all right, and the effect of the portrait is charming, if you are a beautiful girl, one of the lucky born, to have your picture taken with Be and fighting disease. This is the | reason why we are so fond of it and | it is so expensive; that is to say, we | lare willing to pay such a high price By Woods Hutchinson, M. D, for it. Regrettable as it is from the The trouble is that many diet-re- | point of view of economy, it must be formers take a short-sighted, or, | frankly confessed that all attempts rather, one-sided, view of the ques tion, good food, a good ration, must be a good pounds have to be burnt in the body every day to substitute some other repair and disease-fighting foodstuffs for meat in our diet have proved practically a failure The technical name for meat is protein, and the reason why it is so “What is a good food?” fuel, because about three in order to give “steam” for the daily work. But that is only valuable nd indispensable for one side of its utility, although a growth .\mf repair purposes is that most important one our bodies themselves are made of | Most reform and money-saving “meat,” or protein. We may call diets look at the problem only from ourselves “dough-faces” or “pud a coal, or gasoline, point of view, dingheads” or “milksops but ne while a good food ild be at least amount of ingenuity can build any three other things besides 1| par our bodies out of starch. And “gas"—a good repairer, a good lubri- | if it could we should be in danger of cant and a rust preventer or disease | melting away when it rained. Only protector. Our food to bwld up | meat or protein, which includes fish |our body in the begint make re- game, eggs and milk, can be used for pairs and extensions to it later, lubri wir building stuff, or 1o make repair cate, cool and balance 1t | last, but Many attempts have heen made t not least, keep up a » { reserve substitute what are known as vegeta ammunition, constantly on hand, to bl r such as the glute fight disease with wheat bread, beans There is only food for meat, but none of which will do nf | . and upon w Rglut eat be kept in he s of alue § i sary, and that » a Further tha . " a pairing a 1 { : ATpOse \ P two of these bills at a Alting | serve a ' & as CLLG LR AL ATV TRV TL TR LU DR R LU A DR TR L RRR R L 1) 621 Residents of Nebraska registered at Hotel Astor during the past year, ;| 700 with Bath, A cusine which has made the Astor New York's leading Banqueting place. e Ronane, withons badh, 3w §) a0 HOTEL ASIOR 1000 Rooms [ Naid o LT ) Sogle Roows, sh e, yaw b Dosbie 'm0 Y8 TIMES SQUAR SQUARE Parkor, Boddoosms and bath, Bioos w biqoe At Broadway, 4ath 10 gath Semesn—ihe conior of Now York s socal and business acnviies. I close provmity 1o all rlway werminals. 2 MR ORI R Copyright, 1918, International News Service [ and put all togeth . 1f he is homely thosg who see say If you happen to look like this, then you are all right.-----But if plain, your dog is l_i}cely to be more beautiful than you vour pet dog—-be he a plain pup, one of the terror-striking ugly aris- tocrats, or a handsome thoroughbred “Tsn't she lovely—what a con- trast!” If he is handsome they say, “What a beautiful dog and girl!” But if you are just one of those neutral-looking girls who are bones- out-at-elbows and blank of expression, who haven't even that life in the eyes that some plain girls have, don't have your picture taken with your dog! Unless it's colorless, too. If he is homely—there's air of you! And people will say, My goodness!"” Tf he-is a beau- tiful dog—the thing is a tragedy. For there are dog faces that would be the whole picture beside some humans. Beauty of eye, luxury of hair, beauty of line and expression, grace and intelligence—your dog would be ‘the picture entire! Go carefully and—can you risk it? —NE BRINKLEY. By CONSTANCE CLARKE. whe When 1 F oA place e . 0 and « . L the N s | required her of v s aver the feuit the foll ob valad ) \o i salad dresaing w. M el meary D wapel ard A see an attractive when o ] siraine tasen with & Nitile salad glanses row samed Chicken Pattie Cut ) all wieees equal + whipped cream 4 narasching eher | grapeivait, plinsople and orang o “ 5 hawl ad them & Hidde sugsr, prinkle over Appetizing FruitSalad witha New Dressing Clrmee el raaned Cliahan atibnd —~—— —

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