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Health Hi Some Spring Housecleaning Sug [ estion S REF ( MAHA of Wedded /1/’_,’/‘ S 0t (he. e 1Y IRENE WESTON Keeper. The sun in sl S seuma: § k out all the shabb It is an old saying that great re places arpets and rugs, ‘solled or | it spring from seemingly insignifi broken ces in the wall paper, and faded pi n the upholstery, whils the | €Nt causes, and so the newly mar curtaine refuse to drape in their cus- | ried, while avoiding such barrier reefs tomary soft folds and just hang Umply |as ill-temper, jealousy and the like -v‘d)v in the searching ‘h' would do well to look out for, and he 1 et 1s an excellent place bagin. Mend and have freshiy laun. | Steer clear of the many small rocks dered a1l that is available. Thus you | which they are pretty sure to en may see just what is lacking and what | counter Ay ‘e, ‘Supp at the least possible trange as it may be to say so « rom the spring white sales | mmer draperies may be sorted and | it i3 well known that comparatively | leaned washed 8o as to be ready to | few in the early days of wedded) put up when the house cleaning s done. | fife scem at home with one another Linen elip ¢ ‘ furniture may |~ i ; for the furniture may | rpo 1o ce is often new, the furniture | he g eady to place on when the : | time come and the surroundings are newer, but Cellars and all {laings may ba | palpably the newest of all are the 1 4 | eaned, limed and whitewashed, for help | coyple who have just been married. | 18 easier to get [ ter people y than after people | yig is one reason why in some cases | get busy with . Gardens 4 nd lawn ay be rak or and freeq |1t 18 painful to visit one's friends who from the winter's trash. and burned over | have taken the plunge until, perhaps befors things begin to grow, then the | 5ix months have elapsed. As one | mall amount of trash that collects from | Cannot stay away so long wtihout of week to week may he easily disposed of, | fending them, one goes and suffers The attic, also & spring problem, may | One is more than anxious to tell be attacked, and od and | them not to do this, and another is cleaned it will be ready ve thae | burning to beg them to do the other, winter clothes in trunks and boxes, The | but a word dare not be uttered winter book shelves may claim their I'here are a thousand daily joys| share of attention. Magazines and books | for which thanks might be given if can be looked over and sent on to some | only their realization could be at charity, where they can continue their | tained, but many let them pass by usefulness; horrowed hooks hunted up | They vaguely recognize them as hns\ and returned, musie mended, plotures | of happiness, which, if duly woven| framed reframed. Window shades | into the woof of life, would brighten and kitchen utensils may be replenished better now than Just a regarding the ter cloth doing 1t not hang mediatoly ot the busy season | A short time ago a friend called| word or two may be helpful |to see a married woman of a few putting away of the win- | monghs' standing, and was, natur es, especially to thoss who are |ally, received wtih pleasure she perhapx, for the first time. Do | however, mentioned Edwin as “tea furs out in the sun; but, im- |ing” at his mother's, and asked her y after their usefulness for the | visitor to partake the cheering cup | season s over careful) lay them ating them, away wh of the moths Other winter clothing should be thor- oughly brushed, pockets of all coats |it every day for tea,” she responded emptied; spots wiped off with ammonia |in the most cheerful manner ! water, and then the garments should “Why not keep it for Sundays, be carefi birthdays "and Christmas?” was the owner did Diamond other article of high grade jew- 1156—Bracelet can be entirely detached, 50 wateh can be worn as a pendant as » regular watch. Fine gold filled, & size. Full 16-Ruby jeweled nickel moun w $1 a2 Wesl yo o Terms: k spAke and brush them; do them up in newspaper and in trunk or cedar chest For if they are hung In the sun, insects fact ia a forerunner hich u the plen- or rist Watch at $1.50 a_Month. 4. DIAMONDS WATCHES ON CREDIT A small sum, weekly or month- ly, mak: IS coop WITH US and offer 41 fancy ova gold diamond, 4 real pearls $1 a Month | it as no jewels ever could with her. She did so, and was given bread and butter and bride cake And then ensued the following con versation. Looking at the bride cake, the visitor said “Not eaten it all, yet?” “Oh, no, not eaten yet! We have next suggestion, and the reply was “What's the use of letting it get dry or buying other cakes, when we have this in the house?” Certainly that was one way of looking at it, but the friend of the newly wedded one understood why Edwin had gone to his mother's for tea In another case a friend had over 200 presents when she married They pretty near filled the drawing room in her little villa—in fact, a| very large table, half the size of the room, groaned under them; others| were on chairs, the sofa and even the | floor. They were in view for several weeks and they may be there yet, It was nearly as depressing to live in that room as it would be to camp out under a bazar stall. The presents | and things continually in evidence emphasize the situaton, and prevent them feeling at home. If newly mar- ried people want to settle down quickly they should use the backing cases for firewood and to try to for get they are married. ~ What causes the most friction be- | tween the married ecouple is, perhaps, the indifferent cooking. A thoroughly domesticated wife is a jewel, and she can turn herself out as bewitching | as anybody. It is well known, how ever, that a vast number of men hate twice cooked meat, but the careful wife decrees that her husband should frequently dine upon stews and hashes. It sometimes happens that these dished are watery, greasy, flab- by, and everything but appetizing This would be avoided if only she | had taken a course of instruction be- | | fore she had been married or a few | pence had been expended on a cook or The sun attains tion north on the nis =:- F_ashimas N THF WEDNESDAY oman’s | 1916 Household To p 168 OT you,” said Love with an eye to the aviary netting, and peer ing at the grim dark eagle with his golden eye cold with pride, “not you, though you have flown into the blue flare of lightning, have soared against the sun with your eye undimmed with its splendor, have built your home on the corries's crest, where the wind lives, have screamed with fierce laughter at the humble aeroplane that aspired below you, and even though the Maker of birds and the man who tells about you in big books dubs you so, you The Heavens i June BY WILLIAM F. RIGGE its highest posi 215t at 12:24 p. m ery book. She would then have been | It is then at the summer solstice, and able to have turned out delicious en-|enters the sign of Cancer, and as tries, capital sauces, and truly | tronomical summer begins. That day lovely afternoon tea cakes, The best|is the longest in the year, fifteen thing to be done is to banish every hours, four minutes. If the minutes S bit of white ribbon, silver decora-|only are considered, the days from 5.1 tions and orange blossoms the 18th to the 29th are equally long It is good to teach young people to| The variation in the length of the appreciate the infinite, every day ¢ pleasures that surround them; and hour th another secret of happiness in dafly Ihe diy does not exceed a quarter of an month is three minutes whole fast on life is the appreciation of the friend- | local time on the Ist, on time on the ship and affection which some are | !4th, and four minutes slow on the inclined to uphold, but lightly until |30th. On standard time it is from threatened with their loss. To awak r\'um\ one tQ twenty-seven minutes to a full sense of its value is to learn | 8!OW. to appreciate it as ever had be 1 ¥ DON before : . HI:-\n JUNE. [Rise. South| Set Many " Id the idea | WA T I T i lans characterist Fa m t : . : W [ In e daughters of the well-to-do mid REHEERTIER RS 4 $3.80 & Month $1.65 4 Week clsises t T ‘ H ipen dally until & p. m. Saturdays U0 empty \ art . . . 9:30. Call er write for (lustrated catalog ! W i 003, Phone Douglas 1444 and our to be e to do nothing This is a HH " ’ H saleaman will call grand itake in more ways than g s : THE NATIONAL e, ople are never happy, | 14 54 ¥od R OFTI CREDIT JEWELERS 1 frequent t lives bring a| 84 & 4 b s p- 409 5. 10th 51, Omeha & " i ) ! BROSE COL 1148 vaar Marnen Strve0s | 11 g ‘ ‘ \ ) ‘i ‘ FAUST SPAGHETTI = | ¥ The National R oo Health Food $o . ¥ ol 008 Evervhody everywhera likes Fanst i 2 : Spaghetti. And it is perfectly naturs \ ause there are few foods wh an be 3 od any tasty dishes and appe H [ [ 4 e dry aut ) » worth meat Fauw . rum wheat rieh ten 3 A d tisowe builder. ITnaist on ’ AL your grocer's Write for free recipe book s MAULL BROS.. 8¢ Louis, U. 8. A 4 . ‘ . S . ) L — L —_" L —— 1 s r— dn—— 1 ——— the " sy Thorotgh School Work and Healthful Recroation vidual Shattuck S"’lmmer Schoo Lastrustion For Mpesial Eniormaiion Addy 8 - — — I and Camp B TO AveUET | s I Oollege Praparatory aelaiea Buhiecty i ARATTUCR SOMO0L —— Brammay Geade and Farthanit, Min — — 0 Sura— —" | Secrets of Neat Dressing By A PARIS CORRESPONDENT. “The little more and how much it is; the little less and what worlds away"” applies well to dressing, and to judge by the way a Frer womar dresses, it means, as a rule, more fir ish and less trimming T'he gift of selection in clothes seems to be born with tk men of Paris, and when new fashions come with new seasons they gather them with a critical eye for what is most becoming If pockets appear, as they have dur ing the last two seasons, they are used as trimming very sparingl f bows of ribbon come into the scheme, thosc which have no reason f CeXIStINE are firr uppressed iperfluous ornaments are a ch the abhorrence of i . ) ! Alwa et dy i having what Englis A are never King! A great eye warm and soft, down there ‘a ways,’ And he can go there and fetch the! there, though the west couple pacing along there arm in arm I am gratified to see, is the glint of gold and dew And they will tell he knows NELL BRINKLEY T'o take dress alone to see how many walk straight naturally is an exception It is pleasant | dress well-set-up heels, hang straight and look as if they had been pressed the day before A hat that does not sit on the head French pec By Nell Brin kley bird stands on one leg with a smiling black and he knows where the garden beyond the moon lies and mites of babies sleep in lily-pad YOU do not know the way blood-brother, And the little and ‘on her litttle left hand wind is your they know that you that he is the King of The Birds! much more to please themselves than others They trust their own taste as intui tively as some people trust their own judgment in more serious matters The result is that as we see it, and at the present moment, at any *ate, it is about with skirts that ple do not talk very much about their | neat appropriate, and charming dress; they take it for granted, and | From the toe of the well-made boot only think about it when they want|to the topmost line of the well-worn something new or something altered. | hat, the French woman of the mo- [hey take it for granted that they | ment is, in homely phrase, “neat as a must dress their ~i best and they pin.” A New Cake—Queen Cocoanut Cream By ( ONSTANCE CLARKE [““Just Nerves”’ By DR. ROBERT WATSON. | ettty The public is generally cautious in vielding sympathy to 1 vhose complaint happens to be “just nerves ases have oc time and | fortable T T But it doe t d be incredu ) alwa A nervous broken leg. and Tore Al eult 4 repa foteover. there is 4 refinement of torture ir many nervous condi tiohs wh ; upon an al tog ffe t from the 4 of the ne to the te organ of ¢ et have arr out of tune and hars} twitching nerves which cause sleep lessness. What 1e best cure? R M. has had neutritis latel which he understands is an affection of the nerve What permanent cure there Dorothy, the second writer, is hard | o abrupt 1 a Could you give me any advice [ have been suff from neure thenia for over two years. haps in my case it would be mention how 1 feel. [ am not par ticularly nervous of anything, but get ve prostrate and weak and peculia feelings come over me of faintne and sometime hen walking, I not feel steady on my feet, 1 might mention my age is twenty-sever The third communication come from a nrere male I should be grateful if you would | advise me as | have been ailing thi two year vith nerves The first two vea AR I wa tting dowr having tea when ymething came over e like f 1 were to faint, 1| vas home from work six months, [ then too nervous to be alone, I don’t fancy tha et the right bene fit from my fe [ ought. 1 fegel after I have been without food for a couple of hours done up After | get the meal feel better, but then I get that full up feeling and palpi tation of the heart { wind, 1 am too shy to pass people on the road nd very excited. | am twenty-six years of age Dorothy has the diagnosis correct ly. All three writers have probabl neurasthenia, otherwise nervous dc bility, nervous ‘breakdo and “that tired feeling.” wi, And the unfortunate feature of all three letters is absence of detail of the work and homelife of the suf ferers. No clue to what proveked the conditions is furnished, nor an hints likely to enable one to plan a successful treatment The writer cach cxpect, what R. M. demand “the best permanent cure T'heir minds are fixed on a magic drug which will instantly, for alway secure “heaven's best treasures, peac and health.” One may at once disilfusion the There is le in that wa If a drug ecrr br the de red relief could only b t temporary te dative effect ug the distressed system, so impres ing the mind a create confidence and banish the wor g, pe spirit, which blocks ey other tempt at treatment What tk ced to believe hat all the® nervou tem requires tc effect it health is re lief fro wha r have drive into { spel ¢ and q I t ASC e and a ¢ ) 1 Aduvice to Lovelorn