Our Women and Children Conducted by Lucille Skaggs Edwards. -- i HOME TIES Thanksgiving Day is the home coming for thousands. They go back to the old home if for only a day, and if not, the cheerful letter must be sent that the dear ones may know they are not forgotten. Home ties should never be broken. Time and distance should not be al lowed to efface from memory the scenes and experiences of childhood. It is a great disadvantage to have been brought up in a half dozen dif ferent homes. Where there has been but one it is comparatively easy to cherish its good influence. It is a distinct advantage to have had but one father and one mother, for as these increase in number the influ ences of the home are weakened. They are steady and strong in the race of life who can look back to a homestead that has continued for generations in the family. Leaving home should be done thoughtfully and not too soon. When we have gone we should not break the chords of affection and interest that bind us to the ones left there. Home does not cease to help and bless us when we have gone out from the old roof. Self interest, as well as gratitude demands that we keep in close communication with our home and we thereby bring joy and comfort to those who have done so much for us.—L. S. E. keep your weekly score of miles. Keep chickens, make a garden, wheel the baby or play golf or any other game, but take two hours outdoor exercise every day. Gymnasium work is good for those who like it and can afford it, but avoid heavy athletics. Don’t try to be a ‘strong man.’ The cham pion athlete often dies young. Be a moderate, persistent, daily exponent of exercise. You may not bum the family carriage, as Benjamin. Frank lin suggested, but at least as he ad vised, walk, walk, walk.” I^KiTGhen ^CGupboardI HONEY TASTIES. BUTTER HONEY CAKE—Rub to gether a cupful and a half of honey and half a cupful of but ter, add the unbeaten yolks of three eggs and bent thoroughly. Add five cupfuls of flour sifted with two tea spoonfuls of ground cinnamon and half a teaspoonful of salt and a tea spoonful and a half of soda dissolved in a tablespoonful of orange flower water. Beat the mixture thoroughly and add the well beaten whites of three eggs. Bake in shallow tins and cover with frosting as follows: Orange Frosting For Honey Cake.— Mix grated rind of an orange, a tea spoonful of lemon juice, a tablespoon ful of orange juice and an egg yolk together and allow the mixture to stand for an hour. Strain and add confectioner’s sugar until the frosting Is sufficiently thick to be spread on the cake. Honey Sponge Cake.—Mix one-half cupful of sugar and one-half cup ful of honey and boil until the sirup will spin a thread when dropped from a spoon. Pour the sirup over the yolks of four eggs which have been beaten until light. Beat the mixture until cold, then add a cupful of sifted flour and cut and fold the beaten whites of the eggs into the mixture. Bake for forty or fifty minutes in a pan lined with buttered paper in a slow oven. Honey Bran Cookies.—Mix half a cupful of sugar, a quarter teaspoonful of cinnamon, a quarter teaspoon ful of ginger and half a teaspoonful of soda, with three cupfuls of bran, half a cup ful of honey, half a cupful of milk and half a cupful of melted butter. Drop from a spoon on a buttered pan and bake fifteen minutes. Salad Dressing.—Four egg yolks, two tablespoonfuls of vinegar or lemon juice, two tablespoon fills of butter, two tablespoonfuls of honey, a tea spoonful of mustard, a teasooonful of salt, paprika to taste and a cupful of cream. Ilent the cream in a double boiler. Beat the eggs and add to them all the other ingredients but the cream. Pour the cream slowly over the mixture, beating constantly. Pour it into the double boiler and cook until it thick ens or mix all the ingredients but the cream and cook in n double boiler until the mixture thickens. As the dressing is needed combine this mixture with whipped cream. This dressing is par ticularly suitable for fruit salads. Baked Honey Custard.—Beat five eggs sufficiently to unite the yolks and whites, but not enough to make them foamy. Add four cupfuls scalded milk, one-half cupful honey, one-eighth tea spoonful powdered cinnamon and one quarter tablesiKJonful salt. Bake in cups or in a large pan set in water in a moderate oven. Honey Ice Crenm.—Mix a quart thin cream with three-quarters cupful deli cately flavored honey; freeze. - PETITION These are the gifts I ask of thee, Spirit serene: Strength for the daily task, Courage to face the road, Good cheer to help me bear the trav eler’s load; And for the hours of rest that come between, An inward joy in all things heard and seen. i These are the sins I fain Would have thee take away: Malice and cold disdain, Hot anger, sullen hate, Scorn of the lowly, envy of the great, And discontent that casts a shadow gray On all the brightness of the common day. —Henry Van Dyke. EXERCISE AND HEALTH One way to keep healthy and live long is to play golf, says a bulletin is sued by the United States public Health Service. If you cannot be on the links two hours a day, then you must wheel a baby carriage or make a garden to keep your physique from j degenerating. The bulletin says: The death rate after the age of forty is increasing in spite of the more sanitary modes of living and greater protection against communi cable disease. The expectation of life after forty is less than it was thirty years ago. This is due largely to in creased prevalence of the diseases of * degeneration. The muscles, arteries and other organs of those who as i result of sedentary occupation or in dolence take too little exercise degen erate. Heart disease, kidney disease and other ills follow. “Take exercise. Take daily exercise. Have a hobbby that gets you out of doors. Walk to your business, to your dressmaker's, walk for the sake of walking. Join a walking club and SHIPP’S I °P‘ieal Wa‘ch{ and Shop Highest Quality Lowest Prices 518 S. 16th St., Opp. Rome Hotel i ARE YOU SATISFIED * * with your Dry Cleaner? If not, try the ROYAL DRY CLEANERS i BEST WORK AND SERVICE NONE BETTER Call Us First PHONE DOUGLAS 1811 24th St., 1 block north of Cuming Street HOLSUM i AND KLEEN MAID Why Buy Inferior When The Best COSTS NO MORE? JAY BURNS BAKING CO. Buy a Sweet-Toned Schmoller & Mueller Piano or Piano Player at Factory to Home Price, saving the middle man’s profit, which means $75 to $100 Our Schmoller & Mueller Pianos are noted for their fine tone and durability, in fact, are guaranteed for 25 years. We have several different styles to select from. A visit of inspec tion does not obligate a purchase. TERMS, $5.00 PER MONTH; 3 YEARS TIME TO PAY. Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co. 1311-13 Famam St., Omaha, Neb. WOVEN BONE CORSETS MADE TO ORDER ' MRS. LULU THOMPSON 3407 Boyd St. Colfax 1642 SHOES MADE LIKE NEW with our rapid shoe repair meth ods, one-fifth the cost. Sold un called-for shoes. We have a se lection; all sizes, all prices. FRIEDMAN BROS. 211 South 14th St. Omaha. 4.. «-.-«-—.-».4 Now’s the Time TO PLANT BULBS i i Tulip Hyacinth Narcissus Crocus Lily 11 ii For Winter and Spring Bloom Stewart’s Seed Store 119 North 16th Street (Opposite Post Office) | * —tf vN wondeiTful' bargains in Ladies’ Coals AT BONOFFS N. Y. SAMPLE STORE 206 North 16th Street. i Including plush coats, wool velour and broadcloth. The very newest styles. Over 500 beautiful coats on sale at a saving of ONE-THIRD off. Every fall suit, velvets, ga berdines or broadcloths, at ONE HALF off. Fine selection of furs at ONE-THIRD off. COME EARLY 1 Holiday Time Is Here! i i We can always count on great business before Christmas. We made preparations this year earlier than usual, because of scarcity of desirable goods and ad vancing prices. RESULT:—An extensive stock, splendidly assorted—at moderate prices. i Thomas Kilpatrick & Co. PLEATING BUTTONS HEMSTITCHING EMBROIDERING BRAIDING and BEADING BUTTONHOLES 11 11 i Ideal Button & Pleating Co Douglas 1936 OMAHA, NEB. 107-109-111 S. 16th St. i i i