I thi: r.i:K: omaiia, Tuesday, fkhtutary 15, ipig. Woman's Work Fashions -:- Health Hints -:- Household Topics I Mirage! Hands Across the Continent By Nell Brinkley Copyright. 1M. Internl News Pervlee. 1 1 i i) v. Tested Recipes TEBTFD RKC'IPFS. EKCAMjOPF.D POIIM AMP MACARONM. One can corn, tiro ciipfula ennked macs -rnnl, nne-quarter cupful fine rrirknr rruinha. one cupful milk, one egg, ona tahleepnonful nutter, salt, pnprtka. Put tn hundred bnklnn fllnh a Uyr of tho rookt murnronl. uprinkla with alt nd puprlka, thrn put a layr of corn on top of t tilt. Fill the dlah. al ternating the macaroni and corn, the top Inyer holnn macaroni. Put the crumb on top. riot with email piece of butter and then pour over all the mil, to which the beaten eg haa been added. Pake In a moderate oven about half an hour. All meaaurcmenta are level, unleaa othcrwlee ape1fld. WINTEIl 8AIAP. Two head lettuce, two onion, two cold cooked beet, twelve olive, French dievelnf, hred lettuce Very fine and arrange on alad plate. Chop' onion and cut beets In half-Inch cube. Ml and pile on let tuce. Oamlh with allcea oMv and erve with French drelng. TKCAN a'AKF.. One-half cupfut butter or threa-alrhtha cupful manufactured eaa. hortenlng. three one and one-half ciipfula augar. two and one-half ciipfula flour, one and one-half teaepoonfula baking milk. owder. ona cupful pecan The grtra. old, fray Atlantic, with hi now-main ed . aea-horsea riding high and faat. hla gray hair glittering with tea, la vlalonlnf hla Inamorata,- the South Pacific ea. where ehr flei ' blua and dreaming up into the aky, ahtmmerlng In the gun, around the land of southern California) The gray god, hard gripped in the frozen strife ha love,, longa with a aoft heart while he glowerg for tha blua maid who spreads her lustrous silk and lace beyond tha sand and rocks of tha lovely coast 2,000 miles away. , -Here tha wind erles and cuts; tha great flakes float out of a battleship-gray sky; there are no leaves In the woods the branches rattle In their casing of Ice like mournful bones; the sea Is great and terrible; horses struggle In sweat and anxiety with the glassy streets; the lone open motors still out look like empty houses with the windows blown out and a few blua ghosts Indwelling; little kids are cutting flowery twirls on tha coun try ponds and the girls, all Russian, In furs and barbaric color. ' are milling round and round the , rinks; tha real wlnter-glrl In the hills of the Atlantic states, up to the eyes In "comforts," mlt tened and booted. Is plowing about on aktls and snowshoes and goln "um-um-buster" down tha hills like little chaps. But out there! Where the silken blue sea rolls In under the moonlight with each far wave allvto with ' the' fire of phospbons. Ilk the gleam of a metal shield, and the girls In thin frocks ara dancing out onto the sea-aide walks from tha ballroom and in agalnl A-h-hl No wonder the Bea of California is the 8ea I V The Girl Cynic: A Little Story of the Present By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. There was once a girl who trusted rV'erybody. She had bullded tha struc ture of her Ufa on tha basis of an old quotation a proverb from the German: "As one shouts into the forest, so echo returns to you." She met the world on a basis of trust ing good fellowship and tha world seldom failed her. Clerks in shops rewarded amiability with Interest; waiters in hotels showed an Intelligent desire to please. Mien who found that she was always on time for engagementa seldom kept her waiting to he called for; , old people to whom she gave kindly courtesy spoke well of her; hostesses who discovered toat she was punctilious about keeping engagements invited her to all their most interesting parties. Luclle gave the world tha square deal of trust snd honesty and the world warded her prlsea In most of Its games. Then she met a man of whoae weak good looks any psychologist might have told her a few very unpleasant truths. he, however, was not a psychologist. So she followed numerous of her slaters before her and fell very much In love with George. George plumed himself on conquest, 'ntroduced Luclle to friends as i haracterlm as himself and threw her over without compunction at the end of a t -3i-i K.uclle waa startled, but her faith In human nature came up undamaged when Cyril one of George's friends, prooeeded to console her by kindly devotion that Luted two months. Cyril's defection came In due time, and then William of fered hla services as physician to woundfd pride. Three montha later Luclle found her velf in possession of .what she dmcd a troken heart. As a matter of fact she 1 ad a badly aprained attitude toward human nature. Having Buffered because ff hev faith in three weaklings, she fr ncied that she at last knew life for the cruel and relentless producer of misery it was. And Luclle became a cynic. At Si she had mastered such watchwords as: "You might as well do the other fellow and no him first." "No man la ever on the level with a woman:" "Th world l a cruel and relentless plsce and it doesn't appreciate honesty." Now, l.uclle was short to servants, peremptory to clerks. Indifferent to old folks and careless about her engage ments. And as she shouted Into tha forest, so the echo came back to her. And )ut then, when she knew with exactly what cynicism to laugh at pro testations of love, a real man emu into .r life. When ha told her he loved lt Luclle replied: "Of course you do to day." And whoa ho assured her that had never cared so much for any woman as of her, Luclle was ready with flippant "That's whst they all ear." ihe didn't mean to let any man make her suffer again! She waa too v.lse for that. And the real mag wooed a merry oung cynlo for three months and for gave broken engagements and over looked forgotten appointments and tried to keep , his Ideal- or the girl he loved alive In spite of her best efforts to de stroy it And tha girl neither believed tha man nor gava him any reason to be lieve in her. So. ana day Lucile discovered that she had been deserted again and she smiled cynically and assured herself that the world waa Indeed a poor place. Moral When you yearn a clever aphor ism like "As you shout Into the woods echo returns to you." It is a rood Idea to test It out thoroughly. Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax. Way Not Help Hlaat Dear Miss Falrfas: T have known a young man for the last three years. Oc casionally he areta up in a temper and eaya things which he afterward mgreta. but which make me feel badly. He says he loves me and wants to marry me. Now, do you think we would be happy if his bad temper still continues? JANE M. If you yourself have control over your temper and can be alwaya sweet and amiable In spite of any hurts which your friend's lack of control of his temper (muses you you will probably be able to cure him of this fault. He will be much happier if he succeeds In "conquering hla temper, but the . fact that ha has ona does not make- him Impossible as a hus band and lover. But It will take tact and patience on your part to help him. Ar you sura you have those? Vsi Are Too Eaactlaa. Dear Miss Fairfax: A brother of mine died some weeks ago, which naturally prevented me from going out. While 1 waa with several friends they Suggested going to a danoe. They did not even ex press regret for my Inability to come, but left me. Now do you really think they did right? I think they are selfish. A. B. C. There is enough mourning and unhap plness In the world without anyone's desiring to add to It. It was vsry self ish of you to feel that your friends should raorlfloe their pleasure becauve you could not Join In it. Are you sura you would have bean as ideally considers te as you feel they should have been had the positions been reversed? o a1aLr o r r rt- ti o iviiaJion: ' Mote! History Every room in the Fort Dearborn Hotel, Chicago, is now 1.50 per day. EVERY ROOM Pimm SH50 NO HIGHER 500 rooms, all with private bath or private toilet FORT DEARBORN HOTEL CHICAGO La Salle Street at Van Buren Dirsctioa of Hotel Shersaas) Coapaay of Naw York's Lova! Wa here, In our fur and wool, straighten up at our play or work and, through the flying snow, sea a mirage all gold and blue. Hera we toboggan In macklnaw. There you ara wading tho blue water In naming sun under the sun and warm kyl -NELL BRINKLEY. one-half cupful meat. Cream butter and augnr together, add the beaten eggs and then the flour lfted with th hnklng powder. Then and the milk and the meat nut broken In piece. Hake In a, loaf pan lined with battered paper In a moderate oven. PEA-FOAM CANDT. Three cupful eugnr, one-half cupful com yrup, two-third cupful water, one half teaspoonful lt. one cupful cropped nut, one teaspoonful vanilla, two egg white. Boll sugar, water and ayrup until It forma fi aoft ball In cold water. Pour lowly over the white of the eggs, beaten until atjff with. tha. salt. Continue to beat until nearly stiff enough to hold Its form, add the nut and flavoring and turn Into buttered tins. When cold cut m squares. . . SALMON SALAD. . . . On cn salmon, one doaen. eweet pickles one ean peaa, two stslks celery. mayonnaise, lettuce. rick over aalmon. removing bones and akin. Put peas In a colander and let cold water run over them; then drain. Cut celery In small pieces and sllca pickle. Mix all --nl pour mayonnaise over the rj.!e Line sslad bowl with lettuce leaves and heap salad In It. Garnish with nllvea. JT'NKET ICK CBICAM WITH PEACHK8 Four cupful lukewarm milk, one eup- fill heavy cream, one and a half cupful sugar, one-eighth teaspoonful salt, one and a half Junket taDieu, one taoie apoonful vanilla, one tRspoonful al mond extrart, srern coloring, one can peaches, one tableapoonful cold water. Mix first four ingredient and add the Junket tablets dissolved tn cold water. Turn into a pudding dlah and let stand until set. Add flavoring and coloring, freese, mold and serve garnished with halves of peaches, filling cavities with halves of blanched almond. Turn peaches into a sauce-pan. add one-third eup sugar and cook slowly until ayrup Is thick. ' Cool before ' garnishing ice cream. Mothers' Magaxlna. Oft A , - -f I ! i n 3fi la OalWhfc aW Vaf aMraMt AaaaaatprV stiaastusa," 1 " ' ! PRODUCTS ! r! in- its il ! ' v. V? J - j mix. . it IT! " " S r k 9 4 -Z'am-mmrl c is TU Ovml UM mUm Ummtifitu . -. , AraMaraftasMs Oi nit h laiganw flali li awww 'slM,,,", L J J The Best Lard is Leaf ' T v-. TI a. T r w a J-eEUU, nilU UH3 ca( JvCcU l-MTH .Simon Pure" in pails of fi ilzes. Government Inspected and Armour Guaranteed under the Oval Label Cheapest in the endthree parts of "Simon Pure" go aa far as four of ordinary lard and everything you cook with it is perfect If your dealer hasn't it. phone us his name. Writ na tor-Pastry Wrink W by Fannlo Msrritt F armor fr as sUtMOUBCOMFAKY SoM, BnAats, Kgr lath amd Joaaa Bts., Song Us XOftg. nasaSaai I I 5 : jiy LJ b 7T TT' TT rrmi r HE Public Plants the Dead Ones Most Awfully Deep Lives there a man with sou go dead who nerer to himself baa mid: "My trado of lata Is getting bad. I'll try another clever ad." If auch ihern be go plant him daep. Let no new trada dis turb his gleep, but Jet the grass grow "round his door and no strange feet tread on his floor. To sxll mora goods would give him pain. He'd rather sleep than business gain. We'll beat a path across the way where ad vertising baa full play. Doad ones do not advertise They couldn't advertise and remain dead. People do not resist the power the pull of advertising's appeal. They do not want to. ' They appre ciate your invitation to come to your stora- and if yon repeat your InTlutioa day after daj thev are as sore to come aa the aeaaona. If your bnalnesa 1a dead ranrrect It now with Judldoaa. eoaUnnous gudvrrtlauxe. Kvrtt fiajr to arvo DiwrihaJdsi aiT Oina&a are extandtnc uraira ItoTitariuttB 'U the pubiio te oomt) a nd pjutirtHaX tn tire "Ueuelita oi thnlr arsrfwal rr njaronbjaidirtiig. lanrchanta do this becTita thus' kroBw it wTTJ iirtne thmii busi-neur- mry e mt jtd wrtttn -'Just firr today," lint Irx toiHtiraw. Ui &jr aJmr and next nann'lv. They vmi trade awrsry day. every month, every yessr. 'Onntrnwiaa advrtlhbig brtnTs conlinaauB ti-afl'. Tine la tin reason wliy their advra-cianHints jltb tssmJaxuaanlj ga-pflu-ting in THE OMAHA BEE "Mere Continuous Advertising Will Pay" - -