1 ' 8 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1916. Health Hints Fashions -:- Woman's Work -:- Household Topics " - 5 Ice Coffee in Glasses More Smart Gowns at Practical Prices By CONSTANCE CLARKE. Ice coffee in glasses is a refreshing summer drink, suitable for a dessert ice or for porch or tennis parties, and i made as follows: Take four large tablespoonsful of freshly ground coffee, put it into a dry coffee pot and pour over it two cups of boiling. water; allow the pot to stand in .a pan containing boiling water while the coffee is drawing; then pour off and mix with it half a cup of sugar and one cup of cream; when cold put it into the freezer and freeze it into a semi-frozen state; then pile it up in tall glasses and garnish the top with whipped cream. Serve with any sweet wafers. Tuesday Fish in Scallop Shells. 70U eat some too, Grandpa.1 I love it. S Y 8o doei Grandma everyone does and Ice Cream with its bountiful nourishment and delicious taste is good for all; ; ; v v Toil should eat a plate of Ice Cream ;; every day if it's All Ice Creams The Special Ice Cream for Tomorrow, Sunday, will be , CHERRNITT Hundreds of good dealer ready to aupply. .... !' : '..-.,: t .... , , , ... . . Copyrttht 111. S. a. a, be. ! EXCEPTIONAL, indeed, for the price is this frock of white dotted Swiss, with the simplicity of design sel- dom found in ready-made clothes. The fluting) are white batiste and the waist is lined with white net A SHIRT-WAIST dress of pure linen for her who de mands many summer dresses and so must have them cheap in price, but sturdy in material. Blue, rose, tan or white, with colored collar and cuffs. PARTICULARLY charming for the woman of faultlesi taste is this gown of white Georgette crepe. Wide set-on flounces form the original trimmings. The belt is white taffeta. . The Love That Lasts By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. ' "Why do so many marriages go on the rocks?" said my friend, the doc tor. And then he answered his own question very wisely. "Because they are not based on anything more last ing than love; and love is generally a beautiful dream." Everybody knows that a sunset is beautiful but nobody expects it to last forever. We all gasp at the ex quisite beauty of a rainbow but we know it will fade. So as I listened to the doctor I thought of the transi tory nature of most beauty and ad justed iryielf to his viewpoint , "Love ia- for most- people of cob web "illusion." It is a desperate at traction formed of a desire for kisses and caresses and thrills. But no sub- A Carload of Enamelware on Special Safe Tomorrow at the UNION OUTFITTING COMPANY 16th and Jackson Streets Onyx Turquoise Blue Gray An Immense purchase, bought at an extra heavy discount Just previous to the big advance In the price of metals, enable us te put the entire shipment on Speolal Sal for this on day enly at price that art positively I than wholesale. Com to this big sal expecting te find extraordinary value and you will not b disap pointed, and, a alway, YOU MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS. Note These Extremely ; Low Prices The Turquoise Blue and Onyx are triple coated. Tha Cray ware la double coated. . -J Platea 5c ' Ten-Qt Water aT:..32c I Savory Meat sr7t34C Cereal Cook- ?. 29c Thl big nam elwsr Ml for thl on day only. Teakettles,., ,31c Taka advantage of thl opportunity and supply your present a well a your future need new. ., Fourteen -Qt Dish Pang,. 8ventn-Qt Dish Pan 24o 31o Come early, while the assortments are at their bet ; -, i . Our Inexpensive loca tion, combined with our immense buying power enables us to make the lower prices. Enamel On Quart Dipper lOe Waah ' BaainttOa iHMIOl CapwS EHght-Qt . Berlin Plenty of extra to wait on you. Three-Qt Oaffea Pot ,1 7 at f C 3 , Just aero th treet from the. Hotel Rome. stantlal dinner erer was made of des sert alone. And no real love consists of an emotional froth. Marriages go to smash all about us and all the time, and when they do everybody ex claims, "but that started out as a love match I" "Well, of course it did," went on the doctor, smiling tolerantly. "But it didn't start as anything else. A marriage that lasts has to be 'based on congenialty. And that' the only kind of marriage that ever will last. I remember a line I had read some where which went like this: "I some time think true friendship consists more in liking the same things than in liking each other." Well, true love has to consist in liking each other and respecting each other, too. It must build on a basis of enjoying many things in common and accepting and tolerating the points of difference. A husband and wife may have the jolliest time in the world playing golf together of a Saturday and yet differ entirely in their tastes in music. If she likes grand opera and he pre fers' burlesque shows, and they are sane enough to smile at each other and permit each other to gratify their widely divergent tastes, they can get a tremendous lot of fun out of their mutual toleration and appreciation of their points of difference. Good chums and comrades have a wonderful time in sharing certain amusements and in listening to.an ac count of those they cannot share or in just smiling serenely and accept ing the fact that a wise providence has varied the human species infinitely. No one has a right to demand that everybody else conform to his own standards. Emotion might be ex travagant enough to do that. Sane love based on a friendly understanding and a quiet mutuality of respect won't do that. Yielding to a physical attraction or an emotional stimulation and imagin ing that either one constitutes real love, is just about the same as .it would be to imagine that you can spend all your life driving forty miles an hour in an automobile because you like the exhilaration of occasional speeding! Physical attraction and emotional stimulation fit in beautifully in a love affair where there is liking and ad miration, too. But they are fairly cer tain to wear out after a while, and the thing that last is the basic com radeship which made it a safe and sane thing for two people to unite their lives. Mother Often to Blame For Children's Neglect By DOROTHY DIX. Lou Out Prices on Low Cui Footwear ' FOR WOMEN AND MEN Fry's Clean-Up Sale Extra special! Late arrivals of Laird A Schober'i Ladies' $8.00 ' Ivory, White and Gray (Ching '3?itf";..$4.75 v Choice of ten high grade make or Lamer .6u ratent and Kid .rumps, om with straps, now at. . . . $2.85 Yur caelee mi ail osr LaaMaa Suede Piuape ajntj Oxfria, ta Taa, Gray ?-. stVfl Af V.1UM Laird 4 Schober'i Ladies' $6.50 Hand Made Delta Pumps in Pat ent and Dull welt 7C and turn sole IV O Your choice of nine other lines of Ladies' fine Kid, Patent and Dull Pumps and Oxfords, values ..;..$2.45; Wright & Peters' regular ladies' $5 Pumps, in patent, kid and dull leathers, with Louis Cuban heels. Clearance ttQ Price... ipO.fU Bargains In M e n's 0 xf o r d s MacDonald's & Kiley' $.B0 tan Russia and gun metal (i mg - oxford for men, now Z for.. i " Howard 6 Foster's Men's $6.00 Tan Russia Calf and t a j p Gun Metal Oxfords, Mai J : Clearance Sale price. , v Ten line of Men's tn nH $4 Oxfords, tan and .QJ gun metal, now at. . , . w EXTRA SPEC1AI JM of Mn'i S.00 mmi 4.0O Tn mc4 Black oxfa brkm lint.) Mall an Urn 1msi your choice. $1.95 FRY SHOE CO. I get a great many pathetic letters frorn old women complaining bitterly that their children neglect them, and that they are unwelcome inmates in their sons' or daughters' homes. , Certainly nothing could be more tragical than the fate of the mother who sees the children that she has borne in agony, for 'whom she has toiled and sacrificed and slaved, turn from her without even an impulse of gratitude, and fail her when she needs their love and cherishing in her helpless age even as they needed her love and cherishing in their helpless infancy. Nor is there any spectacle so re voltingly hideous as that of prosper ous as that of prosperous men and women who repay a mother's devo tion with thanklessness, who be grudge a few. dollars to her who has given her heart's blood to them, who ruthlessly kick down the patient, bent shoulders on which they have climed to a higher social position, and who have no room in their full lives for the one who bestowed life upon them. The old mother whom nobody wants is a very common figure, and one whom we may all pity, yet she has brought her troubles upon her self, and her case is worth consider ing by every other mother lest the same thing befall her. - In the first place, every woman's children treat her just as she teaches them to treat her. This sounds like a cruel and brutal thing to say, but it is true. Every mother in the world writes her own price tag, and her children take her at her own valua tion. If a woman makes a doormat of herself her children will use her as a doormat and walk -over her without one thought of compunction. They will think that that is what she is there for. But if she makes of her self a fine and precious vessel they will admire and revere her as they would any other valuable possession, and handle her delicately and ten derly. The mother who permits her 3-year-old baby boy to speak to her impudently is deliberately raising up a son who will swear at her when tie is grown. The mother who slaves and drudges around the house while her children loll about in idleness is, going to have to take in boarders to support them when they grow up into loaefrs. ... The mother who goes ragged and shabby that her children may have silly finery, who never exacts any service from them, who lets them de ride her opinion, is bringing up sons and daughters who will despise her and have contempt for her and neg lect her when they start foth on their own careers. : She is bringing the curse down on her own head and she deserves what she gets, because she had her children when their mind and characters were plastic, and she might have instilled into them respect for her and chivalry toward her and a sense of their duty to the mother who bore them. There are other mothers who are shrined like saints in the hearts of their children, mothers to whom their children can never show enough ten derness and affection. It's all a mat ter of teaching, of adopting the right attitude toward one's children. It lies with every woman, when her children are babies, to decide how I they shall treat her when they are grown up. It is the mother's own fault if her children neglect her. It is also the mother's own fault, to a large degree, if she is an unwelcome in stead of a cherished guest in her children's household. There is many an old woman who is a good woman and a mother who has made heroic sacrifices for her children but who is so dis agreeable to live with that it would take more than mortal pa tience to stand her. There is the meddling old wo man, for instance, who can never go into any household without dis arranging its whole machinery and trying to run it her way. If she goes to her son's house she criticises the way daughter-in-law uses her best china every day, the way the children are being brought up, the size of the bills. the number ot card parties daughter-in-law goes to, the price of her dresses. If she goes to her daughter's house she nags her son-in-law to . death because he drinks beer, and , smokes, and belongs to a club, and plays golf on Sunday. In any house she enters peace packs up its dress suit case and flees for parts un known. And there is the querulous and complaining old lady who is a liv ing edition of the Lamentations of Jeremiah, who is always weeping and mourning and complaining all over the place, and is so sensitive and has her feeling spread around her so far that you have to walk on eggs to keep from hurting her. And there's the argumentative old woman who can never let any sub ject pass without disagreeing with everybody on earth, and the tyran nical old woman who wants to force everybody to do her way and think her thoughts, and the narrow and provincial old lady who is certain that the way she did in some obscure vil lage fifty years ago is the way life ought to be run in the city today. And there are also fifty other varieties of disagreeable and cantankerous old ladies who are home wreckers. Generally speaking, whenever an old woman is not a welcome guest under any roof it is her own faut, for all of us know, plenty of sweet, wise, gentle forebearing, broad minded old ladies whose children worship them, whose in-laws adore them, and whom we all welcome with open arms. The moral of all of which Is that we are mighty apt to get what is coming to -us, and that it behnnvra every woman in her youth to begin to make herself the sort of a wo man that everybody will want around them when she is old.