Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Talk, but Don Be o Bore . ‘mentary principles to be mind. you own paste look duller. “It never rains out it Yevery dog should have his ! Get the Round Package HORLICK'S TED M tion. taing skin wm. " P H ealth Hints - ’t think man.and woman are each de- To talk well is an art almost as neglected as that of listening to the hli of others. There are several ele- borne in If you quote a brilliant or clever re- " mark of another person’s, always tell ' who said it. Do not wear stolen jewels of conversation. They will but make Res - easily stops skin-troubles Doctors have prescribed Resinol for over twenty years in the treat- el rpronginy ; y skin diseases. ‘They use it regularly because they know that it usually gives nstamt reliefand soon clears away the erup- know, too, hing harmful or to the moat delicate skin. ONDERFUL SHOE SALE| ~ At Kilpatrick’s Saturday 6 and $7 dhoes at .. Kilpatrick’s b Starts 8:30 A. % Biflie Burke ZLORIA’ pendent on the other,” is the style of conversation that will cause people to flee your presence as they would the stagnant pool. - Avoid all references to your own peculiarities of taste, manner or thought. f When you are in conversation with one person do not let your thoughts or gaze wander to some more inter- esting person or group. There is far too much of that form of rudeness. It is the habit that marks the social climber; a fear lest he or | she may not be getting the best of 1 |everything. Ask For and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Made from clean, rich milk with the ex- tract of select malted grain, malted in our Needs no nor addition of milk, Nw&:d“m'&h.dn.m ui:a-hnd‘i:?knlly In- mhu-:l.-t alecp. Ahhluuhubluht-#hfin-. Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price Take a Paokage Home pou day;" inol slls Resino! Oloment osinal Boan. Pral ree, wrte 10 gt oK. Rasinel, Buimors Me it con- ANOTHER PAGE Reference is Made to the $3.95 per Pair 11 sell on same basis. This is a paid advertisement. olafht them very cheap— ial avith F, ld, Jr. By opecial arvangement Zing fold, The Most Elaborate of All ROMANCE " Supported by HENRY KOLKER A Motion Picture Novel by Mr. & Mra. " RUPERT HUGHES AY..at the Muse Theatre THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, - Fashions -- Woman'’s Work -:- Household Topics “Jenny Kissed Me!”’ : ingand selling in motion ¢¢ TENNY kissed me when we met, Jumping from the chair she sat in. Time, you thief; who loves to get Sweets into your list, put that in. JUNE 17, 1916. By Nell Brinkley Copy! i T L X T T i =7 right, 1916, International News Service. “Say I'm weary, say I'm sad; Say that health and wealth have missed me; Say I'm growing old, but add— Jenny kissed me!” =0ld Song~Leigh Hunt. When Your Best Girl's Pa Sy No-—--Wait - The young -man whose hopes have been blighted by a stern parent's re- fusal to accept him as a son-in-law is apt to say things uncomplimentary about fathers in general, He declares that it is absurd for a father to have control of his daughter once she is grown up, - There he is wrong. If it were not for fathers having control of their daughters many rash young people wou’d rush into marriage and misery. The stern father, the enemy of the oung lover, is one of the pillars up- fiulding the temple of happiness. But for him hundreds of foolish young eople would be unhappily coupled or life. When papa says, “No," the young The Big Parade was -an inspiring sight, but my! how foot sore and weary you were when you passed Sixteenth and Jackson. Your boy walks (or runs) farther than you walked last Wednes- day, every day of his life, That's . why he needs LEEL HOD HOES The); are comfortable and they will outwear two Flil‘a of ordinary shoes or Boys. . Boys 1 to 6%, $2.50. Little Gents 9 to 13%, $2.25. g PARCEL POST PAID DREXEL SHOE CO0. 1419 FARNAM, Advertising is the pen- dulum that keeps buy- niuslin to prevent the man should “swallow his disappoint- ment, and let time prove the strength of his love. Papa has control, for so | many years only. When she is of age ! a girl can marry without the consent of her parents if she so wishes, al- though it is neither wise nor sesirable to do so. Some fathers are unreasonable. They wish a son-in-law to be a pat- tern of all the virtues. Sometimes they want him rich. They have their whims, have fathers. They are easily put out and readily take dislikes to young men—sometimes because the young men have Eareuts they object to; sometimes because a man is not their ideal. They are as fanciful as girls themselves. Then the young man, with his head This is an excellent dish for lunch- eon, or it may be served in place of an entree. Asparagus should be dressed as soon as possible after it is cut, although it may be kept for a day or two by putting the stalks in cold water; yet, to be good, like ev- ery other vegetable, it cannot be cooked too fresh. Scrape the white K." of the stems, beginning from the cad, and throw them into cold water; then tie them into bundles, keeping the heads all one way, and cut the stalks evenly that they may all be the same’ length; wn& in a piece of ‘heads from be- Airéngen Vindighott By CONSTANCE CLARKE, full of crazy notions, his heart full of love for his adorable one and her father’s angry words ringing in his ears, makes up his mind to run off and get married. He easily persuades his fiancee, ahd they do it partly to please themselves and gartly to out~ wit the stern parent, which generally means repentance. The sensible thing to do is to wait. 1f the lady is 18, let the man wait till she is 21. Then if both consider that the parents’ reasons for object- ing to the engagement are absurd they may marry on their own respon- sibility.: When two persons cam wait three years for each other there is reason to believe that the union will not be an unhappy one. ing broken and fut them into boil- ing water, with a little salt; keep them bailing gently until tender, with the saucepan uncovered. When the as- paragus is done, dish it around a toasted loaf which should be dipped into the water the asparagus is cooked in. Garnish with green pepper rings and serve. Vinaigrette Sauce—Put three tablespoons of olive oil in a bowl with a tablespoonful of white vinegar, a saltspoonful of pe; per, a dust of paprika pepper and a pinch of salt. ix well together and serve in a sauce boat. .+ (Tuesday—Boiled Lobster.). What Women Do Better; or the Girl and the Gavel By ADA PATTERSON. Fifteen thousand New York women have taught New York something it ought to know. All of America should know it. They have shown how to run a big conventicn without noise. Under the canopy of alternate stripes of blue bunting, one stripe dark, the other light blue, women from every state in the union had gathered. The big meeting might have - become a Niagara of noise. What do you think made the biennial convention of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs a thing of order |and quiet? In and out of the aisles and near the doors tiptoed pretty girls. Their eyes were bright, Their forms were light and trim. They wore simple, becoming frocks. They smiled. They carried large white placards. On the placards was printed in black letters, “Silence.” The girl, the smile and the | placard were effectual. | Had the convention been one of | men the presiding officer would have |used a gavel. A gavel looks like a baby croquet mallet or like a hammer | with two businessiends. It is a bully made of wood. Men use it at their | conventions to keep order. They suc- | ceed, more or less, because the gavel | makes more noise than does the hu- | man voice, it quells a riot by making |a riot of its own. It is like giving a | medicine to create one disease that will cure another, A man who presides at a conven- tion brings the gavel down on the table as though he wished it were on the head of the man who is making | the trouble. It expresses his temper. It hurls unkind words in wooden lan- | guage at'the head of the offender. It | 1s the cave man’s club in modern form. It is swearing de-profanized. The un- ruly man who has been ordered in this | rude way to be quiet is sullen. He watches for another chance to get | even, to say rude things. Faced by a | pretty girl, in a pretty frock, holding | before him ]?c word “Silence” he | would grin, He would sink into his seat, and there he would stay. Most men think they can’t do any- thing well without noise. The more noise the better the work is their | opinion. Men are the human copies | of that symbol of noise the Bull of | Bashan. "They talk, they shout, they | bellow and waste their force. A man { has only a limited amount of vitality. | So much energy given out in loud | tones, so much energy lost from work. | . Who does the most work of all the daily workers in a great city? The little woman who sews. All day she sits quietly and stitches. If she talked | she would do less sewing. The moth- er who wants to finish a dress for her daughter's graduation tells the chil- dren they must not disturb her. She works all day without a word, and finishes the gown. The man who is working in the streets talks, jokes, argues, quarrels, and wonders” why the work has lagged. If he loses his job he curses his luck. Any pale little woman in the tenements knows more about conserving time and energy than any broad-shouldered, red-blood- ed workman in the city, The big convention taught us that women are of more orderly habit than men. A reminder is enough to bring them out of chaos. One day when a subject of general interest was, discussed and all the women wanted to speak the same minute Mrs. Pennybacker raised her hand. Mrs.. Anna J. H. Pennybacker, the president of the convention, is a lit- tle woman. She is five feet two inch- es tall and slender as a girl, The hand she ‘raised was a tiny one. It looked like the flonting white petal of a flower as she raised it above the crowd. But the tumult ceased, as, long ago, the waves ceased dash- ing when they were bidden “Peace be still.” { Yet I had seen a distinguished law- yer of the west try to quiet an as. sembly of men by raising both hands. His efforts were as successful as the flapping of a scarecrow’s rags in the wind, which they resembled. The crowd had its way. At one of the meetings of the bi- ennial convention it X was growin, late. l'hgusands_ of women gre"\’z restless. Some of them wanted to go home. Some wanted to g0 to another | part of the building to see friends. | A living stream flowed through the |aisles. Twice, politely, Mrs. William | Grant Brown, the chairman of the loc'al bl;nma{l board, asked that the |ushers do their duty. | continued. o Ts et Then arose the tall green gown and said: your. place at the head | Let no one pass, |stand near the do W h}_'"cou]dn'! you have done that be- i fore?" Instantly the aisles were emp- itied. The next speakers were heard to the end with patience, What would have happened had a man been chairman of that meeting? He would thave roared for the sergeant-at-arms, That worthy would have arrested the first man who moved, There would | have been an ugly scene. Men are experts at making life ugly— ' A boy's natural element seems to be noise. He makes a bedlam of his home. When he grows up he helps to make of his city a Tower of Babel, One of woman's many arts is to put- the soft pedal on the uproar of ex- istence made by men, brunette in the “Ushers, take of the aisles. The ushers who or will .close it. d In the h she says, “Hush!” and for a 1?3}: time, at least, quiet reigns. In the cirg._wh}i‘ch is but a w and in the nation, which is - tended home, she will hoaldmz;e ::C placard of “Silence,” and men , will gr¥hand§censehtheir clamor, e Seventh regiment rmory, where discipline is king, lelr:ed an- other lesson. It gained further dis. ider household, ;flnerl\c The girl is greater than the B In-Shoots A knock is a boost for th ing only. i In ine cases out of ten it j s better ::"keep that honest opinion to your- The girl who pi i :lhould 'uu “<'>noe pt;?'tg:rl'd"e‘ryhl’n:.:- ons. The devil always finds the .volun- teer church choir a 9 oo pretty good re- -— — - ’ )