Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 17, 1916, Page 6

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6 if OMAHA FOLKS ARE | f1 WRITING FOR MOVIES Habit is Growing and Many Are [ Trying Their Hands at Some | Scenarios. i SOME HAVE 'EM PRODUCED Bg MELLIFICIA—August 16. Frgm the time when you write| stories in school about the folks of “} “youg bunch” to the time when you are grown up you and everybody like | to tajge a try once in a while at writ-| ing.] "\\'ri(inx, like everything else, runsflin channels. If all the people arc |Mriting short stories you are pre: apt to write a few short stor- ics.’ 0; or if your friends are writing | poclty, vou take a chance at fame by writhg poetry. Just now hundreds | of People have the craze. | Conftests, offers and movies all over | the |land are inducing “fans” to con-| tribute to the stock of moving pic- | ture sceneries. / ‘ Omaha people are in the business, too; some openly, others surepti-| tiously, are constructing movie scen- | arios, “Dick” Stewart, who, with the collaboration of Miss Lynn Curtis of New York, formerly of Omaha, wrote the society play, “One Summer in Omaha,” is an acknowledged au- thor. Others who are known to be| engaged, or to have engaged, in this fascinating work are Miss Margaret| McShane, Mrs. Will Crary, Mrs. A.| F. Tyler, Miss Margaret Riley and Miss Helene Bixby. Mr. Stewart is not the only man who has ventured | into the field. Mr. Albert E. May is a movie author and Mr. Jack Baldwin | has been reported an aspirant to| movie honors. \ —_ | Breakfasts for Visitors. Miss Louise Bailey entertained cigitteen young women a* breakfast | at her home for Miss Helen Masten | of Kansas City and Miss Ruth Pur-| Lcell of Hampton, Ia. The guests were | seated at small tables d=corated with baskets ~f coreopsis and golden glow. | Miss Marian l{ones gave a breakfast at her home this morning for Miss Mildred Olney of Minneapolis, who is visiting her grandparents, Mr, and ‘Mrs. Charles W. Bragg, and for Miss Winifred Brande of Pierce, Neb,, who is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Frank Frahm. Those present were: Minnon— Misses— Mfidred Omey of Dora Wiese, Mian i eapolis, Loufss Wiese, Mary E. Hamliton, Dorothy Twitord, m ‘White, Dorothy Jones, Brande of Nelso! ey Taetie, At Hi Hollow Club. Mr, John W. Parrish, who has just . returned from a vacation trip among ! the Minnesota lakes, entertained a of his friends at a fish supper e club last evenin’. ’ rther reservations for the lunche | tom have been made by i J. A flnore for seven guests,|) rs. thg ‘White for a party of| and by Mrs. George B. Darr for ests, e gpy Hollow women's swim- and bowling club met this mora- s Country Club, Mrs, Frederick Wing of Chi- who is the guest of her parents, and Mrs. G. P. Moorhead, M: ohn W. Madden will enter- | at .nne& h“' the Cou:tnrr b:.lnb Nen Mddon of Nutiey, - Mesurs. — Redick, Himer Cope. . and Mrs. Norris Brown will this evening, Covers will be laid . mes— " Misses— Florence Russell. I8 Lmr. Mrs. W. S. Poppleton had a party of five at luncheon today. i il Dr. R. S. Anglin and Mr. and Mrs. il €. G. Powell each will have dinner rties of four this evening. i Dance for Miss Madden. iss Sadie Hayden entertained at er-dance at the Joseph Hayden dence last evening for Miss Nan " Madden of Nutley, )! J., who is the 3 t of Mrs. John W. Madden. jhteen guests were present. Minix Wedding. Miss Kathryn Minix and Mr. Ches- A. Mount of Kansas City were ied on Monday at the North gbyterian church by the Rev. M, {gbec. After the service Mrs. inix, mother of the bride, who tiud( here from Madison, Wis., a dinner in their honor at the e hotel. The couple left today a1t their trip and will be at home after " Detober 1" at 3726 Wayne avenue 3 sas City, Mo. Those present a ceremony were: . and Mesdames— Mount, John Viseard, 3 lund, i Mm Minix. - ean Roy Mintx, J. B, Mount. the Field Club. Reservations for this evening’s din- dance have been made by R. H. mberlen and by Dr. J. Fy Anson Cha fo jeymo Club. m rs. John Bekins entertained at a . golf luncheon today. The tables were decorated with garden flow- o prizes were awarded in the golf contest, a set of sherbet sse d a fancy vase. The guests o from 3 f:o 5 I il enjoy a fancy “:Miss Louise Watkins uncle, Mr, W. W. Minneapolis Wednudn\r‘ spend some time at the ho a dinner party at the Country |and stop? in Wisconsin and Chicago before returning to her home. Adah Kensington Meetin, gabardine or in pique, the white skirt, with real pockets and at- had for a very moderate sum. tached belt, may will be in charge o; the dancing and pretty favors will be presented. Notes of Interest. M Emma C. {ohnnon will.lenvc next week for a visit in Denver. Miss Rose Newman of Chicago is the guest of Miss Louise Schon- bc;rt. Ethel C. Somers of Bound Brook, New Jersey, who has spent month at the home of her Long, leaves for night _to me of Mr. Mrs. J. P. Seymour, and will Adah Kensington, O. 'l-. S, will hold a meetini hursday afternoon at the home of Mr: s, P. ], Farrell, 4116 South Twenty-third ~street. Mrs, Jewett will assist as hostess. Mator Picnl 3. party o‘f young people gave a sixty-mile motor party Tuesday even- ms. After driving half the distance a des irable spot was selected and a weiner roast was held. Those in at- tendance were: Missos— Minges-— Helen Harte. Helen Pheifter. . Qeorge Drake Bob Heath, Adwice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax Don't Be Mercenary. I am 18 and love & my senlor, Who earns He is very ambitious. And wre of the best. Kindly 111 shouldfpreak our acquaint- MAY B. A girl as )'mmtp as you ought to have an attitude of triendship rather than | love toward a boy who interests. you, You can well afford to v of years before marryin interest in this young boy asts it will be a fine thing on which to base mar- | riage some day in the future. Don't be 86 mercenary as to put him out of your life just because he has not a great deal of money. You Anawered Yourself, Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 am 20, and know & young man who ry tond of me, There is a gentleman about 46, who lives near and gives me roses and candy and rides In one of his two big touring cars | and owns a house with two aervants and 1s alone. He says he loves me. My other friend is in New York and will in about six years hive a good posi- Do you think I would be happy with this elderly genstleman? In five years he will be just twive my age. You will not be happy with any man unless you love him—and it is falrly evi- @ent that you do not love this older man, for if yeu did you would not be worrylng over the 'discrepancy in your Ages and offering yourself consoling re- minders of his wealth and the worldly things can offer you. You can hardly | be connidering matrimony serfously With ba in a pos & time, to marry you for so /long the other i so very much {your sentor, ¢ THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1916. Practical, Smart, Yet Inexpensive WHITE voile waist, frilled with white organdy ruffles, edged with rose, blue or black, is pretty and serviceable, too. In For Breakfast. squal 1 omelet; baking powder biscuits, cotfee. Cereal, grape marmalade, buttered tonst, doughnuts, | Corn chowde eREs on toast, coffee hashed brown potatoes, oatmeal muffins, coffee. 6. t Baked apples, coreal, salt codfish hash, egg muffing, Sauted to! | cottee Melons, cereal, savory cake, coffee. rol For Luncheon. 1 Baked stuffed tomatoes, OVELTY is combined with practicality, and a reasonable price, too, in this coat of autosoie—transparent oil silk. It.is just right for sailing or motoring, or to slip on when it showers. In purple, rose, champagne, porcelain blue, dark green or Nile green. Menus for succotash, dressed lettucs, grape frappe, sponge cakes Baked poars, Spanish Escalloped oysters shredded cabbage, clover leat biscuits, sultana sticks, Russian Hollenden halibut, paprika potato cubes, stuffed onions, Joplin tomato salad, wafer crackers, raisin puff. 3 Jullenne soup, pan-brolled lamb chops, baked potatoes, Templeton tomatoes, compote of rice, 4. coftee. wafer cri 3 cheese, crab apple jelly. Cereal with sliced peaches, tea. Cheese fondue, graham 3 — Ox Joints en casserole, dinner rolls, cucumber cups, peach shortcake, whipped Melons, cereal, waffles sandwiches, cinnamon with maple up, coffee. | toast, cocoa with whipped Grapes, bacon curls, cream. 5. Bradley toast, coffeo ; | Jelly, nut wafers, Russian | Tomato soup, crisp crackers, 5 slt codfish balls, cucumber salad, Boston brown bread, buttered toms partiets, tea. Mock consomme, veal cutlets, brown gravy, tried i | 1 chipped beef, spider corn | Vegetable salads, finger potato balls, shell beans; gingerbread, tea. For ll)lmr. Roast ‘ribs of beef, Franconi potatoes, creamed cauli- § flower, tomato salad, emergency muffine, caraway | Artichoke soup, Maryland seed cookles, cheese chicken, mashed potatoes, |—Ladies Home Companion. nd if your. | This method of baking fish will be found quite easy, rendering the fish very palatable. oot | Cleanse and wash the fish in cold water, then drain it and dry thorough- |1y with clean cloth; put in the stuf- fing, sew up the opening with a truss- |ing needle and lard the sides of the {fish with lardons.of fat salt pork; trim these evenly with a pair of scis- sors, Larding is easily done and much improves the flavor of fish or meat, The larding needle—which can be bought for 5 cents at any hardware store—holding a lardon is pressed through the surface of the meat $0 as to appear ornamental; the tcord through the tail and middle of the body—tie the cord firmly. It is | better to have the fish in an upright e Weak Fish Larded By CONSTANCE CLARKE. position in order Dredge the fish with salt and pepper and lay it on slices of larding pork in a large, flat baking pan: baste fre- quently with the gravy Garnish with cut lem- Will Take | All Excess Fat Do you know that there is a simple, harm- less effective remedy for overiatness that may be used safely and secretly by any man or woma who is losing the slimness nd it is none other than the of the nmow_ famous Marmola known as Marmola Prescrip- tion Tablets, You can well expect a reduc- tion of from two to four pounds a week stitches . should be taken at regular intervals, Draw the fish: into the| either of thess sultors—stnee one will not [shape of the letter “S” by running a | cription Tablets are sold by all druggists at 76c for a large case, or if can order direct trom the 864 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich. Ginger Sherbet Four cupfuls water, one cupful sugar, one-third cupful lemon juice, quarter pound Canton ginger, half cupful orange juice. Chop ginger into very small bits and boil for fifteen minutes sugar and water. Add fruit juices, cocl and strain, Freeze in usual man- ner. | ter with you with SALE Many Exceptional Bargains in New and Slghtly Used Upright Planos to Select From. The Jitney Plan does <10 A0 Then pay $1.00 per week or $5.00 per month thereafter watil Plano is paid for. Call Today and Make Your Selection. A. HOSPE CO. THE HIGHEST QUALITY MACARONI 36 Ayge Recipe Book Free SEL M 5 HAIAUs A B e e Society Notes : Personal Gossip : Woman's Work : Household Topics ol e e B SR M S AL R de it o B Only for a Time By FORTUNE FREE. | | .Sir Andrew C.lark, the famot{s .phy- l by laying ghosts—or, perhaps, | sician, had a patient who was afflicted | should say, presumed gfi with a complaint that Sir Andrew in- 1 took to the ghost-laying line “by formed him would only need a little | time to put right. | midable as it presents itself to our imagination. Mark Twain knew a man who lived I osts. He persuasion of his wife,” declared | Mark Twain. The fact was, not' being particular- The information did not cheer him ‘ ly happy with that lady he hit upon | individuals who look back at all the | afflictions of the past and forward to all the possible afflictions of the fu- ture. He had, he declared, been be- ing “put right’ ever since he could remember and then he understood that such an illness as he had pre- | disposed one for a perfect host of other inflictions. If Sir Andrew Clark “pullled him through” on this ion, was it likely he would suc- | ceed on the other future ones? The great physician at last got an- gry. “I can cure you of what is the mat- he said, “but ifsyou are not content with one complaint at a time, but are determined to comph- ! | cate it with a dozen you haven't got I no skill will save you. Think it over and let me knew tomorrow when I call what you have made up your | mind to. Good day, sir.” The patient, having the state of af- fairs put to him as plainly as that, re- solved to be content with one com- plaint at a time and leave the others till they actually assailed him. There is a terrible dissipation of energy in | meeting imaginary troubles half way. | Persons of a pessimistic disposition {are ever popping off on such excur- | sions—and the meeting does not come | off after all. They feel sure then that trouble must have decided on com- {ing by the other road. They have | | missed it. It's nowhere about. They | must have mistaken the day. Trouble | will come tomorrow. “Concentration on the present wor- ry is half the battle—half the victory,” declared Roosevelt. “You need all your forces directed to one end. Don't fet them be scattered. Mass your energy and you will win.” 1t is excellent advice, but we poor ries in the face because we fear the face will be too, ugly for us. We can imagine that face. It is the most hor- rible face in the world. We shudder as we think of it. If we really looked human creatures are apt to shirk that | concentration. We don't look wor-| on it we would find it nothing so for- at all. He was one of those joyous | the idea when a house was for sale, ! tenanted according to popular repute by a frightful ghost to buy .it as a bargain. His wife would never oc- | cupy the house, and he was p'replr:d‘ | in pursuit of peace and happiness, to take the house with the ghost to liv- | ing anywhere else with his wife. His boldness in facing this spectre | got him a reputation. Then the story | spread of how he had actually met the ghost and the apparition had been utterly worsted in the encounter. So people sought him to come and lay | ghosts on their premises, and he did quite a profitable business. Having made a fortune he retired and, being no longer dependent upon ghosts for a living, he now and again spoke very contemptuously of “the whole breed” in confidence to Mark Twain. In a time of emergency one needs mporary expedients”"—what will ffice for the occasion. “It's only for a time.” I find a good number of | people who want to make a perma- nent job of dealing with a difficulty that will necessarily, in time, remove itself. They are like a man with whom Archibald” Forbes once found him- self in a boat in the middle of an Irish |lake. The hoat was an old dilapi- dated craft and suddenly developed a startling hole in the bottom, through which the water poured in such fash- ion as extinguished all hope of their ever reaching the bank unless “some- thing was done.” Forbes' companion thereupon pro- ceeded to explain all that was needed to make the boat perfect. If he only had some proper wood there, a ham- mer, nails and everything would be right. But the boat was sinking. Forbes took off his coat and stuffed it into the hole. It was all that was needed to save them. They had time to reach the bank. In the temporary trouble one wants to “sce oncself through it” It is probably as much as one can do. Ur- gency forbids one striving to combat it in the most perfect ang permanent fashion posible. It is hard, perhaps, to reconcile oneself to a makeshift. But it may be all that is possible at the time. ——————e - CO U TR HT T B T HE SRS 621 Residents of Nebraska Double S Parlor, Bedroom and bath, $10.00 % §14.00 At Broadway, 44th to 45th Streets—the center of New York's social close proximity to all railway terminals. registeredat Hotel Astor Dy during the past year, 1000 Rooms.s700 with Bath, A cuisine which has made the Astor New York’s leading Banqueting place. Single Rooms, without bath, §2.00 to §3.00 . . 3000 4.00 Single with beth, 3.00to 6.08 400t Y00 W F | TR R R T T — A good habit cannot be formed too early—start the children on Dr.lyo PERFECT Send 2c stamp for generous sampl e of either Dr. Lyon's Porfoct Dental Cream or Tooth Powder. 1. W. Lyon & Sous, Inc,577 W.27th S, N. Y. City is to give him Nestlé’s s safe, because you add only water and it is ready. ‘Where one mother used Nestlé's seven years ago five use it today, As the “Better Babies” movement Nestlé's. Nestlé's is the milk of healthy cows in clean dairies. The parta too heavy for your baby are modi- fled—those things your baby needs that are not in cow's milk are added. Reduced to a powder, packed in air-tight cans, no germ or sickness can get near it. You well this summer. One is to nurse him yourself. Your milk can’t sour or spoil or carry germs. The second way Nestles Food (A Complete Food—Not a Milk Modifier) grows, 80 also grows the use of The Baby Food That’s Always Safe There's sickness for your baby in old milk — there’s trouble for you in sour milk, Summer complaint comes nearlyalwaysfromrawcow’s milk —and summer com- plaint carries off more ba- bies than any other cause. There are only two ways to keep your baby safe and add only fresh water, and you may know that you are giving your baby health and strength in each bottle of Nestlé’s Food. Send the coupon for a FREE Trial Package of 12 feedings and a book about babies by specialiste. NESTLE'S FOOD COMPANY 204 Woolwerth Building, New York Please send me FREE your book and trial package. Name.. Address..... EEETTPTTRI I Piitiesssersisene Gty 1 tisenssasnsstimsmisssasiorsassese

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