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. Luncheon during the summer months is something more of a prob- lem than in the winter. In cold weather we find it very easy to use the leftovers, which are of little or no trouble to keep at that season, but in summer we need that quality of | il freshness in our food to protect us| nst that indifferent and “too hot eat” attitude that we are so liable | to fall into. With most of us we are like)y to go to extremes in the mat- | ted a glass of milk and a cracker one day and the next a day a lunch close- 3 resembling a dinner. Instead we suld plan to serve luncheons that are both nourishing and appetizing. Be sure that they contain some green, HOTELS AND RESORTS. SUMMER GARDEN and Outdoor Terrace Cool and Refreshing Place to Dine Write for Resersation To-dey ) FRED STERRY. Managing Director At The Junction On Main and Delaware ot Ninth Kansas City, Mo. BAyXold, Wisconsin - Cool and comfortable. Immunity f: Tever And Tespiratory troubles, Fishe in Lak i trout streams or hh:. rite for information. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGE! t. Mary’s School KNOXVILLE, ILLINOIS. g sty SO for Econom- \Pool, Dancing, Fencing, from twenty states and coun- EMMA PEASE HOWARD, Principal KEARNEY, NEBRASKA. | AIM: To provide thorough ITs TYi EO0RSEs. B ‘husbandry. | ATHLETICS: Football, baseball, 3 calisthenics. ' CATALOGUE: 9 to 18, Charges: 36 mcres of land. pool. Separate lowe: College graduates wi College preparatory ; “EFFICIENCY 1S THE ING AND DAY BCHOO! rove tlc‘ most beautiful o mqullr Courses offered E':l'n"" hree distinct courses respectively to the degrees High Behoot work prepare the Lan serval 1 irses given are those of Music, Economics and the of Music offers courses In Plano, 0 A canlltrrlnl. History of Muslc, Music Forma an ensemble work. Household t-n«r :.l... organf advantages for -n;ull ealth Hints -: - Luncheon Menus | serve some cold Q:verage. Several | |l THE KEARNEY MILITARY ACADEMY terms consistent Two miles from Kearney, in the Platte Valley. manual training; mechanical drawing; agriculture and animal Address Harry Roberts Drummond, Headmaster. ORETTOCOLLEG WEBSTER GROVES, 8T, LOUIS, MO. of A B. student for Collej seasonable luncheon menus, with re- | cipes used, follow. Rice With Cheese. Lettuce Salad. Iced Coffee. Graham Wafers. Rice With Cheese. One-half cupful rice, one-half table- spoonful salt, one and a half table- spoonfuls butter, one-quarter pond milk cheese (grated), milk, two cup- fuls bread cdumbs and speck paprika. Wash rice carefully throngh several waters. Cook in boiling salted water until tender. Turn into strainer, drain and let cold water run through it to remove stickiness. Butter a baking dish and place a layer of the cooked rice in it, dot with butter; sprinkle grated cheese over top, then season with paprika. Repeat until all rice and cheese have been used. Add enough milk to half fill the baking dish. Cover with breadcrumbs and brown in a moderate oven. Serve hot and garnish with sprig of parsley. Lettuce Salad. Remove outer wilted leaves, then remove leaves from stalk. Wash in several waters, then let stand in cold water until crisp\ When ready for use dry between towels. Serve with French dressing. Baked Corn Pudding. | Beet Salad. Celery. Sliced Peaches. Tyo cupfuls corn, one-half cupful milk, one egg, one cup breadcrumbs, one tablespoonful butter, one tea- | spoonful salt and speck paprika. Use fresh corn. Butter a baking dish. Mix egg, milk and seasoning to- gether, then pour on corn which has been chopped fine. Pour into baking dish, cover with breadcrumbs and bake until brown in a slow oven. Beet Salad. Wash beets sarefully and remove green tops to within two or three inches of beet. Do not cut off root else they will lose their color in cook- ing. Cook slowly in boiling water | until tender; when done remove skin | and cut into *one-fourth inch slices crosswise. Place three or four slices | on crisp lettuce leaves and a ribbon of fresh green pepper to garnish. Serve with French dressing. Carrots With Peas, Carrots with Peas Graham Muffins Sliced Pineapple One bunch carrots, two cupfuls peas, three tablespoonfuls butter, two cupfuls milk, two tablespoonfuls flour, half teaspoonful salt, speck pepper. Wash and scrape carrots, cut into one-eighth inch slices. Cook carrots and peas separately in boiling salted water until tender, draim and then mix together. Make a sauce of remaining ingredients, Melt butter and remove from fire, stir in flour and season- ings until smooth, then milk. Re- turn to fire and boil for three min- utes, Pour over peas and carrots and serve hot, Graham Muifins. One cupful graham flour, one cupful white flour, one-eighth cupful sugar, four teaspoonfuls baking powder, one teaspoonful salt, one cupful milk, one egg, three tablespoonfuls butter. Mix gnd sift all dry ingredients, then cut the butter until in fine bits. Beat egg slightly and add milk to it. Add liquid to dry ingredients, beat well together, Turn into greased gem | pans and bake from twenty-five to| thirty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Rolls, Tea Oatmeal Cookies. Half cupful butter or lard, one cup- ful sugar, two eggs, half cupful milk, two taspoonfuls baking powder, one cupful oatmeal, two cupfuls flour, one-eighth teaspoonful salt, one tea- spoonful cinnamon, one cupful raisins (seedless). 3 Cream butter and add sugar to it gradually. When all sugar has been creamed in with the butter add the well-beaten eggs. Mix all dry in- gredients and mix with raisins, which have been thoroughly washed. Add milk and dry ingredients alternately to the first mixture. Drop from a spoon onto a greased baking sheet and bake until brown and crisp in a slow oven. This quantity will make three dozen. Three-fourths teaspoon- ful of baking soda and one-half, cup- ful of sour milk or buttermilk may\be used in place of the milk and baking powder, | SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES, e e bmesssaoricigctiocsn - TWENTY-FIFTH YEAR. mental, moral and physical training at the with efclent work. For boys from $350.00. Four bulldi Gymnasium, swimming r school building. rience. w and business methods; ith business ex) commercial basketball, ~ track, temnis, swimm'ng, TEST OF EDUCATION.” THE BEE: OMAHA, - Fashions -- Woman's Work -:- Household 1'opics “Horrors!”’ ON'T swim too far out, land-maid who dares the biggest top- pling bréaker that foams in a green mountain! For climbing its side one day, hand over lift a triumphant wet head to look over into the green valley below, | meaning for all the world to ride down*irfto it as you have done before —and stare straight into the weird face of a mermald coming up the Her ears will be periwinkle shells, her eyebrows scalp other side. \ hand to the sunny tip-top, you may WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1916. By Nell Brinkley Copyright, 1916, International News Bervice, fins, her hands webbed, her eyes the unwinking, jade-green jewels of a fish's, her hair wet and green and shore as fast as your Australian crawl will take you, you pant out your tale in the sand and faint in the end! fish-maiden will be as frightened as you, and will tefi the tale in an oyster-shell palace that night with sea-weedy. And you, coming in to But remember also that the poor the big salt tears swimming down. NELL BRINKLEY. Thus F_’;zr Shalt Th;znt Go, 54 other BY ADA PATTERSON. A mother earns many rights. Earns them, not by the gift of life, for that is unsought by the child, unconsid- ered, too often, by the parent, but by tender, thoughtful, wise guardianship of the little one before its power of reason is mature enough to take her place. That mother who has done her best is entitled to the child's love, respect and thoughtfulness. But there is a limit to even a mother's rights. A young woman has set up a stone that marked the boundary line, in an eastern city. It is an interesting story. I com- | mend it particujarly to those who be- lieve that we are living in a practical age in a practical country and that romance is dead. The girl had a boy friend. There FOR YOUNG LADI AND GIRLS, In suburb of St. Louls, "ulldln. absolutely most modern sanitary tm- llances, Well furnished d Ideal, lc And the Pre- Department, 8 and B. L. Four years of o Courses leadin, thess partment fits the student Art, Oral .IPJ,N.'BII‘ th Comme! Coursé. The Con- Violin, Harp, Pips Organ, Volos, id Analysls, Preparatory For a Clearer Skin JAP ROSE The weaderful “Sunday Merning Bath™ SOAP is wonderfully pure, - The lather absorbs that “dirty” feeling andinstills a delight- ful freshness, Unexcelled for Shampoo, Bath and General Toilet Use. Best For Your Oily Skin 8. Kirk mmmwulmis& &Co, i Bee Want Ads produce best had been an open friendship and comradeship between them, and a shy | bit of underlying sentiment of a| | closer, sweeter sort was budding. | | The rude hand of interference crushed | the bud. Came an elderly wooer nearly three times her age, and of wealth apd po-| sition that dazzled her mother. Like grains of dust they got into the fa- ther's eyes and disturbed his usuall clear vision. But the mother too command of the situation. ~She made the wooing of the elderly suitor easy. Joyously she tossed the girl, less than 19, into his arms. Proudly she ex- ulted in her mother-in-law-ship. In a few years the girl became a widow. After a seemly time of mourn- ing she seemed to reinherit her girl- | hood. She went about to the simple places that had known her when wealth and position had not burdened her. In one of these places she met her boyhood friend. | This time frankness took the place | of the former -shyness. He wasted | lost precious hours by subtleties and no time in preliminaries, Once he had | | his happiness had gone with them. | He brushed away all formalities with ! ;thc three words that are so heavenly | welcome from the right man, “I love | you."” | They prepared for their marriage! | as happily as, and more precipitately | than, they would have done five years | | before. Life was a chorus o jo{. | bells for them. But ‘discord befell. Her mother made it. | “Give up that honored name? For-, feit your right to those millions that are yours if you don’t marry again? | Are you crazy?" she gasped chokingly. I won't permit it." The girl that had been, the widow {and mother who was did not allow herself to be stampeded at 23, as she had been at 19. “I am of age, mother,” she an- | swered. “I have every right to make my own choice of a husband. You have none to make it for me. You I never had, but I did not know. Now, | by the light of experience, I see that {no woman has the right to say to |another! ‘This is the man you shall take to your arms and your heart. Him you shall marry and bear chil- dren.’ Some girls might have hated you for what you did. I do not, but 1 am resolved that you shall never repeat it.” | She married the love of her girl- |hood. The interval of five years is lin part forgotten. But the mother | will not forget, nor should other | mothers forget, the boundary line be- | tween filial obedience and individual sacredness. The young remarried widow set up the boundary stone. On it is engraved: Things Worth Knowing Combs will soon warp and break if{ olive oil, thoroughly mixed, and al-| washed with water, They should be cleaned with a good stiff, dry tooth- brush or nailbrush. Washing soda should not be used on china, as it will take off the gilt. Try clear hot water, but not hot enough to crack the china. To cure catarrhal troubles in a slow but sure way: Keep the feet exceedingly clean and sprinkle a tea- spoonful of refined sulphur in each shoe three times a week. When beating white of egg for sponge cake, when it becomes dry and light test its stiffness by turning; soft. NN N\ N N Chocolate Cream Pie By CONSTANCE CLARKE, To make good pastry requires prac- tice and care, good flour and the best shortening thoroughly chilled; it should be touched as lightly as possi- ble, made with cool hands, and in a cool place. Puff paste requires a brisk oven, but not too hot. French puff paste used fof this pie is made as follows: Take equal quantities of flour and butter—one-half pound of each; put the flour on the paste board, work lightly into it half a cup of but- ter, and then make a hole in the cen- ter. Into this well put the yolk of an egg, a little salt, then make it into “====|“To Mothers: Thou shalt not trespass results, | on these grounds.” N a paste with cold water; knead up the paste quickly and lightly and roll it | the dish containing it upside down. 1f | it is beaten to the proper point not a particle will become detached. | When the Animals Speak By GARRETT P. SERVISS. There were, in a_great zoological park, two herds of elephants, one of the Indian, or Asiatic, and the other of the African species. In the eyes of the ordinary visitors to the park thoy were all ‘simply elephants —huge, lumbering animals, weighing tons, all having curling trur}ks, enor- mous legs and feet, queer little eyes, big flappy ears, while some were pro- vided with wonderful pointed ivers tusks that codld pin a tiger to the ground almost as easily as a cat could hold a mouse. % Hardly anybody noticed any dif- erence between the members of the herds, except that, of course, they varied in size, according to age, and the better informed ob- servers could tell at a glance the males from the females. But, upon the whole, as I have said, they were all merely elephants to the onlooker, just as if the case were reversed and the animals had the upper hand in intelligence, the members of two herds of the curi- ous two-legged creatures called men, kept in a zoological park for the amusement of elephants would scem to their proboscidian visitors to be all alike, simply men, al- though, in reality, they might be- long to different races which hated and despised one another. But one day a visitor to the park containing the two herds of ele- phants happened to be gifted with that power possessed only by such persons as the farmer men- tioned in the beginning of the “Ara- bian Nights"—the power of under- standing the speech of animals—and he heard something which greatly interested as well as surprised him, The first thing that awakened his curiosity was an elephantine laugh. (Because you have never heard an elephant laugh is no reason for as- suming that those big animals never do, or can, laugh.) This particular laugh was also of the kind that we call “contemptuous.” -It was some- thing like the titter that ill-bred human creatures give utterance to when they see other human crea- tures whose manners and appear- ance are unlike their own. Two Indian elephants, females, were standing close together in a shady spot, looking at a group of Africans on the other side of a bar- rier, enjoying the hot sunshine, and occasionally spreading out their huge ears like sails on each side of their heads. “Did you ever see anything tq heat that!” said the one that uttered ;he laugh. “Taking a sun bath! The idea! What can they be made of, anyway? They must have hides made of iron, like the mahout's prod. I wouldn't stand out in the sun for worlds! No respectable elephant would do such a thing in India. I should think it would kill them.” “Oh don't you worry; it won't kill them. They're too homely to be “hurt, and they’re used to it in Africa. Besides, look at their com- plexions, and their great vulgar ears. They might use them for um- brellas, like the people whose busi- ness it is to bring us peanuts. Isn’t it amazing what absurd creatures nature will sometimes make? 1 de- clare, I could shelter my baby un- der one of those ears. One ought to be enough for a whole family.” “And then their big, unmanageable tusks,” returned the first speaker, “how ridiculous they look. I'm sure they're too long and crooked to fight tigers with. They could only wave them about in the air and a tiger would jump between them and be on their necks in a minute. | “Did you ever see one of our braves kill a tiger? Well, I did, once, and it makes me tremble yet! The striped | To make a tough steak tender rub | it on both sides with vinegar and | low it to stand for two hours before | cooking. | Pork tendefloins roasted in the | oven are improved by a sprinkling “of powdered sage with the salt and peppey. The meat should be browned | first™in a quick oven, and after it is sprinkled it should be basted every quarter of an hour until it is done. | Some persons cook sweet potatoes in | the pan with the tenderloin. The po- | tatoes are boiled half tender and then | are put into the pan with the meat | and basted with it until they are ) psssseeseed I N SN AW beast sprang for his head, while I cowered behind him in a thicket, and the growl of the leaper froze my {blood. ~ But those short, straight, | sharp tusks received him, and in an in- | stant he was sprawling on the ground with my defender’s feet upon him, and the tusks driven through his body.” “But, don’t you see,” said the oth- er, “that with those Africans both sexes have tusks? How can there be any gallantry among them? All have to fight alike—if they do any fighting at all except among themselves.” “I'guess they do fight for their lives sometimes,” replied the first. “I over- heard our keeper one day telling about ,lhc way the rhinoceroses fight with the horns on their noses, and he said that, though they would run away if they could, yet when they did fight, these rhinoceroses were harder than tifgers for an elephant to kill. But of course he was talking about those ridiculous Africans.” “There's another thing,” said the second speaker. “Do you notice that the left tusk of all the older ones among those creatures over there is shorter than the right? That's an- other mark of ugliness.” “It's more than that,” responded the first. “It shows what low gabi(s they have. 1 found this out also from the keeper. Would you believe it— they're root diggers? Yes, their taste is as low as that! They dig their food out of the ground, and they have to work so hard that they shorten one of their tusks. No wonder both sexes are armed with tusks. But tusks! No, it is a disgrace to the name to call them that; they are only diggers. A real tusks is a tiger killer! Tsn't it a pity that such beasts should look like us in any way?" But, unknown to these scornful children of proud India, one of the African elephants, on the other side of the park, was at the same time say- out. Line a pie pan with the paste, and bake in a quick oven. When cold fill this pie crust shell with the choco- late custard. Chocolate Custard—Bring two cupfuls of milk to the boil in a double boiler; then take from the fire and add a half cup of sugar, yolks of two eggs which have been beaten together to a cream, two squares of chocolate —melted; replace on the stove and stir until smooth and creamy, add one-fourth cup of cornstarch dissolved in a little milk, stir all the time; add one tablespoonful of vanila and pou into the baked pie crust shell; when cold cover with a thick layer of whipped cream. ing to a companion: “Those pigmy-eared Asiatics over there are not only barbarians, but contemptibie slaves. They let one of these little two-legged insects that wait on us ride on their heads and beat them about with a stick and car- ry children about in a box on their backs! Wouldn't I like to see them try such tricks on a king of the Con- go? Why should a creature bearing the form of an elephant kneel to any- thing?"” Household Sdggestions Do not throw away the vineuar left cver trom pickies; It 1s better than ordinary vinegar for saiad dressing. Don't slam the oven door after cakes have once started to rise. A rush of cool air will cause them to sink and make the mixture Deavy,