Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 9, 1916, Page 10

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R a—— 10 = Health Hints -- Fashions -: THE BEE: Do You Know That -6 peed, and is driven by two 150-hor 6 ~ » power petrol engines, each connected = to an air propeller ailant trumpet willy with fury, | is similarly expressed m a shrill| bra md or by a roar from the Vig B PORGD, % lung pleasure by a continued low (“ or caking through the trunk or an S8 | almost insudible purring sound from sy = the throat Preparedness for Vacation ~Involves the possession of enough Nemo Corsets to keep you shapely, stylish and comfortable through out the season, FRECKLES Now is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots Buy Nemos Now fior 000y iks lluhiost: ‘nise, and avoid the advanced prices fos)ing M 8 VNP SEPCUINGS. NS NS that high cost and scarcity of Prensnipiope RO ) dacliod materialecompel us to announce Susraniasd &o Feimove: theve homaly, spets for the near future, ML o DIAGE /95 7 SLAMAre G OMblS trangth—from mny drugglst and apply itile of It might and morning und you hould soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disabpesr, while the lighter onew have vanished entirely. It is weldom that more than an ounce Is neaded to com Kin and galn a beaut kth | of DIAMONDS ON CREDIT A small sum, weekly or month- ly, makes you the owner of a splen did Diamond or other article of high grade jew. elry YOUR CREDIT IS coon WiITH LS 278 Wik boljd gold, ud Ring, Loftis “Perfeckion mounting 1 8 Week, A Ny, 40 SELF-REDUCING There are tens of thousands of women who wouldn’t think of leaving town without their beloved Nemo Self-Reducing Corset No, 403, They know that their vacation will not be corset-happy if they do, For average full figures—$4.00, No, 402 is similar but for short full figures. No, 408 is for the tall, stately figure of the same type—8$4.00. Self-Reducing—$3.00 up Nemo Wonderlift—$5 up 113314 Valliere fine solid gold, wenuine onyx conter, pear] pen- dant, f1ne Dia mand, complate pithis. e9g 769-—Men's Ring, Fiat Belcher, half engraved, 14k wolid gold, ke amand" . A8 ittt $4.50 & Month. $1.50 & Month. | daily until 8 p. m. Saturdays till 930 Call'c] writa. for ivetrated chtaion | | No. 003. Phone Douglas 1444 and our walosman will call. All Figures—All Stores OF I I Zi':'u'r"fz'w':f&: | iy s 4005, 10h 8¢, Omehe | | Moo Hiylo ic-Faskion lasticute, Now Tork BROS&CO. 1658 (owr’ Marmey ‘Streed || @ ; | €SINnol1 stops itching and burning If you are suffering with eczema, ringworm, rash or other tormenting skin-ery n, try Res- inol Ointment and Resinol Sdap. You will be sur prised how quickly the itching and burning stop and the skin becomes clear and healthy again Resinal Ointment and Rea have been prescribed by physicians (or ver twenly years, Sold by & . \ats, for free trial aise of each write 10 Dept. 1R, Resinol, Baltimore, Md Resinod Shaving Stick makes dady shaving easy foo tender faced wien, | tle or the daffodil studded feids. Reduced Fare to Manawa ! Almost as gay and colorful as the country itself is this pictur esque Sports Hat. The crown and upper brim are covered with chaille, its pattern a splashing riot of chartreuse, orange, green and blue Life’s Picture | BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX, Do you find life a rather dull af- | which you have to seek dis- | nothing m!rrrsnnu' ever happens’ Look about you and | see what a very foolish piece of snap | judgment that i Things are hap- | pening all the time; opportunities are | presenting (hemselves, events are| fairly clamoring for your attention. “He only travels who does nbt travel in order to arrive,” said Goethe There is a deep philosophy ih that T'oo many of us are so intent on the goal that we do not observe the in- teresting path we covertin order to reach that goal A girl friend ¢f mind landed in| Cherbourg a few years ago and spent | a day there starting for Paris, Cher- bourg is a quaint old town, with a gloriously beautiful barbor and won- derful color in the very brick soil and the worn cobble stones and the shells on the seashore I'he girl saw none of this. She did not observe the remnants of old Norman architecture past which the train whirled her on her way to Paris. she did not see the sleek, black ulv.. n a daze she passed through Normandy with its traces of ancient invasion and old-world civilizatoin and its nat- ural beauty. She wanted to get to Paris. She was traveling in order to arrivel And now very regretfully she looks back on a journey whose beauty she missed Life is not dull to anyone who has an observing eye An invalid, | doomed forever to a wheel chair, may fair in traction because } 4 You M Ny.;)‘// Diet OMAHA, FRIDAY, JUNE 1916. 9, Sports Clothes for the Summer Girl These Unique and Smart Designs Reproduced by Special Permission of Gogd Housekeeping Magazine '’ A costume of imported French linen with a sweater-like goat to match the stripes between the plaits on the skirt. In rose, blue, lavender with white It is not the quantity of food, hut g the kinds of food caten that fatten By ADA PATTERSON This should be remembered when dieting to reduce flesh. “Semi-starva Humah beings differ many re tion" as a means of reducing is not|spects, but upon one point they agree only weakening, bhut positively dan gerous. The following diet list for the reduction of flesh 1s governed by common sense in They grant the power of personality Not one of them is proof against the peace be still person FOODS PERMITTED The peace be still person is not Clams, oysters, lobsters that one who frowningly says “Hush” Soups without flour or fat thick-| when you are in the full flood of ening your eloquence. Nor that cruder in Lean meats (ham, pork and liver | dividual who makes the request, “Shut excepted) yqur mouth,” nor who raucously ut Fish—Fresh, salt or smoked of | ters the command “Close your trap.” any kind, but cooked without fat or|Such mandates are apt to be disre butter | garded and to further provoke Eggs in any style oratory it was desired to suspend Chicken, duck, turkey, game Vegetables—Squash, stringbeans, | title I have twice used in the forego- carrots, tomatoes, turnips, cabbage,|ing paragraphs, It was at high noon peas, onions, asparagus, cauliflower,|of a busy, troubled, harassed day, the celery, salads, watercress, pickles of | kind of a day that brings wrinkles to all kinds, ' the face and writes them upon the Gluten bread heart. I met, but did not see, her Water, coffece and tea (except with | Nervously shaking the hook of the still find life splendid and beautiful | meals) in any quantity. Milk \'(rv‘ltlv-phul\l' I said: “I will try once if he has eyes to see, and a mind to | sparingly and liquors very modcrately. | more to get Miss X.” A voice, low interest itself. Not in action, not| FOODS FORBIDDEN and full, soothingly answered: “I am even in papticipation in events lies All foods containing sugar, such |39 sorry but she halsnl come in yet joy. It resides rather in the ability | 0" capes ice cream, preserved fruits, You have had such a trying time to observe and to react on observa - reaching her, haven't you Iyt 1Bm, ots That w Il, but the speech tion All fatty substances, butter, cream bt ws W btk dhm_apeach Just in seeing the world about | oravies oils, sardines, et wrought magic . an N I'I\ 4 you and its needs lies enjoyment, and White bread, potatoes. and all pucker in my brow oppe the oportunity, too, The man who in:|giarch foods. oatmeal. rice jumping pulses, Gone the petulan vented erasers for the ends of pens| “The foods permitted may be and |20 IHU‘) y\ a network of cir. cils saw a need and reacted to it and | ¢hould be indulged in freely, Whep Sumstance. yecause of the powe made a fortune, The greater inven- | . required weight is reached, the of ,,ul\.‘:mn\ conveyed by a voice tions came in the same way. Joy and rigidity of the diet may be relaxed, | hind v.“x voice AI\.u a )u“ul of ’\m utility both demand that you notice, | 4l the increase in weight a g y and.» “hw‘ u\\.v]x.\ ‘1\:\,:I,NH; that you observe. There is nothing | that strict adherence again be ob. || had met a peace be stil person, - boresome in the motion picture reel | corved for a time. It is well, howeve he was « Hlllxlnvv L and the of life! for those Tnelined to obesity to ex. | mightiest person in my. many-sided clude potatoes white bread, bi all time In-Shoots mehow it alway L 4 b the other fellow got that | ¥ to the clouc The man elec t ffice “ large majority is apt to lose respect for his constituent ‘ er a ma cash fare between Oma be 5 Cents. be 5 Cents. The sale of e o s e Effective June 9th, 1916, the Manawa will be 10 Cents, and the cash fare from any point in Council Bluffs to Manawa will trip tickets will be discon & Council Buffs Street Railway ha and round- A Little Blossom To Delight the Home When It Is Ksown that In the nes future the home I8 to be Llessed with erpand maturally oul wadue siale S eoves from Ihe Brves Uee ) s tlnu'd Saemn whieh o 1o " . apoasitle foe . o A . Laint A — [ i e Wb teasen o wmh A meening oy Voo s svelded Al prospective fathers il e o IRl Whe sapectant math W opiind Witk 4 beltle of “Melbery - Yriond are shagle et 1t 8 ane Y « b ihe sapeiant |4 . . \ s dosply ol A0 | | avh aplendid tetied 14 4 et - o . whyeioal Fotbormath b thy e o e | ViawE with & Babr Dont ful e gk o betle of iy . Foinom Wby and Vhen wetie Beadiell Reg _ ‘ \ . whaber 0% 00 Lamar Bhie. Atiaals, b i b Y ' for o piotly Bl bk helmbal of inhana e A shotanh mothers I W o delighth - the | Almost big as parasol thi hat of white peanit straw It decorated with gay colored unshade or pinl Th,évPea,(:e Be Stll Person day. Humblest she sat for (many hours at a baffling switchboard, [ working hard all day for a poor sti pend Mighty because she had the | power of self-control and of under | standing and had conveyed them to |another ['he peace be still person is one whom everybody seeks. He is one | who has the power of quelling the in | ward tumult of ‘other souls | “How do you maintain your poise throughout a hard day?” one asks such a man or woman and we are | pfoperly rebuked by the impersonal |answer: “There is an attribute called | self-control.” Jut self-control is not enough. | There are those who have self-con- hecause no powerful impulses to control. It |is easy to build a wall around a muddy street pool. No one save the doughty little men of Holland have fenced out the sea. Self-control when there are big emotions, giant instincts, tremendous impulses to master, is a gift greater than those of the gods But self-control alone does not make its possessor a power among his fellows. It may only render him negative so far as they are concerned There must be sympathy. Not mere matter of the surfaces of his life, but the kind that has its roots deep in plus sympathy and his being "oise sincerity, place man in the brother hood of the strong He is of the peace be still order Of such was the Master Teacher who bade the waves of the sea be till and whom they obey And ever since the brothers and sisters f the order have been quelling the tempests in others, Let us jojn it Crab lMc;t “in Shells By CONSTANCE CLARKE, _ - Woman’s Work - Household Topics Woman’s ‘ Love Endures Man’s Fades Away By DOROTHY DIX. ’ A girls' debating society asks me to decide this question for 1t: "Which loves the more, man o womani" I'hat's easy. Woman, heaven help he Its onl yman that can lnve the unlovable, and be faithiul to the faithle and kiss the bauc that beats her Men hae me inte and riore bagkbone A roan may make as great a mistake in love as a wo man, He may cenver his affections on just as unworthy an obiect, bu hen he finds out tnat s dos h feet of clay he docsn’t go on idioti lly voorshipping it On tile contrar he prompty gets up off ais ka and burns never another griva of n cense at that shr But a woman ki Hiat NEr god is a litile tin god that she ha % 1o keep oa gilding and furbishing up to make pr i) 1 1o her OWn cye he way know jyst how hollow and empty it 15 and yet b virture of some divine imbeeility of her own nature she can g) on i g her yoor makeshift divinnty I'hi wh ren Al Marries a woman who 1 10 be a drunkard, or worsc, he very sensibly asts her off, His loyve has been slain hy her weaknesses and sins, byt wil lions of wome ho are married | drunkards “tand by then 1) the end Their love is great coough ) go vdown into the gutter uwud bear up the poor ‘derclict in their arn Man's love is seldom great enougl to forgive a woman whd wven stun bles along the straight and narrow way, but if all the wives who have forgiven erring husbauds could be i [ sembled it would make a fhultitude [ whose number even & patient adding I machine could not count A wife's heart, a wif ner wife's dignity and se of witehood are just as much hurt by the ko cdge that her husband s unfaithiful to her as a man’s heart and dignn Land honor are hurt by the knowled that his wife s uptrue to him it is the woman whose affection is made of such enduring stutf that she can wrap it around the man she lov o that it conceals his wmoral deformi ties from the world, and half hides them even from herself A man's love is a chiffon cloah woven of the fine and 1k threads of romance and pretty vi tues, “and it blows nw a thousand tatters under the first breath of sea dal. Outside of the walls of ever prison and reformatory are lines of patient women waiting to talke back the men who have served our their sentences, but no men wait at the doors of reformatories for women to take back erring wives and daugh ters A curious example of the differen. e between the endurance of a man's love and a woman's 1s furnished by a murder case now before the pubiic One of the figures in this case is pretty woman was admittedly the companion of the murderer, and it has beey a nine days' wonder that this woman's husband should have ‘;,mfrnrd his faith in her, and elung |to her, and declared that he loved {her well enough to forgive her even if she had done wrong | If, however, a woman had been | thus loyal to her husband under sim- ’|],|r circumstances, no one would ‘ha\'f remarked it. She would have |done only what we expect a woman's ' who I met such a one as deserves the trol that seems admirable, but have |love to be great enough to do, | The commonest proof that woman's ['n\r is greater than man's is to be | found in the pathetic fact that prac | tically every middle aged woman 1) | haunted by the dread specter of los ing her husband's love. As soon as a | woman begins to be fat, and middle aged, and grizzle-headed, she begins to worry for fear her husband will find her less attractive than he did when she was young, and lithe, and beautiful That is the reason that middle aged women starve themselves to death trying to get thin, and spend fortunes on masseurs and hair dyes and com- plexion specialists. It “isn't vanity, Gracious, no, Their idea of heaven s getting off their straight fronts, and washing their faces clean, and eating a square meal, and being as homely and comfortable as their time of Jife demands. The only reason they are going through the tortures they ¢ dure is to try to hold their husbanc interests and affections Do you ever see a middle man dieting, or exercising, or | fying himself in order to fascir middle aged wife 2 fat 1YW wed, ba ent a re ing tha y y ha there is why he uld cease t Only women know that men's love t and frag | Y Advice to /l,ul',/()/'n ) Oy Dealr fa M Talk te Mim Pranki \ "\ vl ' . Wh 1M aie sy I . R | \ ) 5

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