11 4' A S A JL ' JL A. W JL 1 Knitted Automobile Coat Dottie Dialogues Tooting the Horns of the Elec tion Night Dilemma. THE PEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER P. 1010. O a ! 1 V " . VV-V' -'iT ' ; uf'"' n ft- ...... " i -'.;..''' 5 ' mi -:.V.' j -v. 5 .. . r. Every woman who keeps pace with the fashions now has knitted motor togs In country wear, and thena garments come In lovely color effects ralHlns, prunes and plums, as well as deep, alch green, a de lightful stone blue and several pale buff and mustard tints. In light tobacco brown Is this smart coat, Treatment That Will and Sleep to If you are not In a place which is quiet through the day, sleeping Is almost hope less. If you are at home the other folk must have Impressed upon them the neces sity for keeping the house noiseless. I am violently opposed to taking any sedatives, for I think rest may be secured frequently by having a little nourishing food In the rtomach and by getting the nervea quiet before going to bed. If you take a meal when you finish your work In the morning It muct contain no stimulants, for they excite the nerves. Instead of either tea or coffee, hot milk or hot water should be drank, t'ocoa. not chocolate, is excellent. Much food as Is eaten before retiring mirot he nourishing, but not difficult to digest, for should the Organs he made to work hard they will prevent a person from sleeping. A meal of eggs, milk toast, a cereal and fruit. If you like, will be sufficient and not difficult to digest. Fish would be good, but I think meats should not be taken. K warm bath Is frequently aoothtng to the nurves and so will aid in inducing lee p. Before trying to sleep the bed should be wanned with hot watsr bags if necessary, for a person who Is tired cannot sleep If chilled, and warmth lUelf la relaxing. The room to be slept In must be dark ened, but there must be plenty of air. For. nothing will make a person more restless than clone atmosphere. There Is no ob jection to a cold room if there are covers nough on the bed to keep the sle.per warm. It Is a wise act to place a cup of milk by "Has ehfl quarrelled with her husband, then?" -"Oh. dear, no They've only fccea divorced.1; v. . IT 1 ' ' , i : which has a short belt across -the back to shape It to the figure. The knitted scarf matches the coat in color And Is be comingly shaped, with big, youthful ros ettes over the ears also made from light brown worsted. Tan leather gloves complete a smart out- of-town motoring rig. Bring Rest Sufferers of Insomnia the bedside and to sip it slowly if wake ful, because if the stomach is empty sleep becomes Impossible, for blood goes to the head and thus excites the nerves. Some persons find It quleta their nervea to read before going to bed. If this Is done an exciting book must not be chosen Or the Imagination Is stimulated In a way to cause wakefulness. MARGARET MIXTER. r Some Recipes J Green Tomato Chow Chow Chop fine one-half bushel green tomatoes, one-half doxen green peppers and one dnsen onlona. Sprinkle with a pint of salt and let stand over night. In the morning drain, coyer with good cider vinegar, cook slowty one hour, then drain and pack In jars. Take twq pounds sug-ir. two tablespoonfuls cin namon, one tablespoanful each allspice, cloves and pepper, one-half cupful ground mustard and one pint grated horseradish with vinegar enough to mix well. When boiling hot. pour over the pickle In the jars and cover tightly. This will keep for years. 'India Kelish Chop fine one-half peck green tomatoes, six large onions, six tweet green peppers and one dosen large pickles. Lot drain several hours, then add one-half cupful salt, one-half tahlespoonf ul black pepper, one tablespoonful whole cloves, tli'ee table.poonfuls mixed mustard, two tablespoonful celery seed, and a half pound of brown sugar. Pour over this mix ture a quart of boiling vlnerar and can In Jelly glaxsea or Jars as desired. Iloealllll Allow ta a gallon of siloed green tomatoes one pint grated horse radish, eleven ounces brown sugar, two tablespooiiFfuls each fine salt and ground mustard, put the tomatoes In a lsrje stone crock. tprluMe the Jalt over them and let stand over night with a alight press on top. The tomatoes may be chopped Instead of sliced tf preferred. In the morning add to the tomatoes the other Ingredients and set In a warm place, the compound form ing Its own vinegar. This w ill take several weeks. , Bet In a cool place. The vessel containing the pickle must have a cloth and weight 011 top to keep the pickle under the liquor. EMMA PADDOCK TtLFuRD. folate Paragraphs. Do you do the amount of work you get pay for doing? A fable Is an open-faced lie with a moral attachment lon t try to raise a disturbance unless you would lower yourself. Now Is the period ct time between awhile axo and after awhile. Itt-gular dlBhonesty Is easier to manage than Irregular honesty. After a woman haa made another man of bar buabaad la she another man's wlfeT i i- i w UA.il i nw a a !l-U-!!a ii l"W" i'i 7W3 ftHARpN ND GET AM INTEIJLVltW WITH HH.'. THf Rf.S ONLY ONE HOPE Of E.VE.R OME,R I tJOHMC tOCKAClfE: THE "Bl3 GETTING N AUDIENCE. UITK vOHN N VAUSLAn... 7 f tMU-IONAtRE ' IT HOftLE3S THftIS Ct J5lN PftZZ tvE NtVtJ? TRIED If) rrsrf s-au-ss,BuT 1 iys Vi n.ftct a sta3 5?f VsRtflT dope (ir?v J V ' NOTICE. ( -w X TF (nijsp) (iir) Q&smsr') OOO WNT THE 5T6Hy" " TiNE,TlME. . k (0 n.'x un.tH' well x V kelp cm' J r-v Grxat SCcm-mAT's WAS 3C.M or TOO EOT V WEI-L,HR.S sons. ItfTEHVItWlS-arn MONE-ST 'PRtMTS', Afv(D c-,( TJRV,EW V I GoW TO MAKE J j V ii II v57 Decorate Historic Vessel Rounding v Out 105 Years of Active Service After 106 years of faithful service, some of which were spent for the United States as a privateer In the war of 1812, the little schooner Polly has been deoorated with a bronje tablet which haa been placed on Its deck house and which ws unveiled by the National Society of United States Daugh ters of 1812, at New Tork. The Polly, built In Amesbury, Mass, In 1806, two years before the first steamer, served In the war of 1811 under Jedldlah Upton, master, with a crew of about sixty men, armed with eighteen carronadea. It made a number of successful cruUes, sail ing from Salem, lta home port, and attack ing British merchantmen wherever It could find them. It captured In all eleven primes, and was then In turn captured by the British frigate Pheobe, fourteen guna. Captain HUUard, toward the cloaa of the war. It ran alongside the frigate In a dense fog, and before It could make off was under the guna of the great ship. Captain Upton haa no recourse but to surrender, which he did, throwing over hi guns, however, before tns British prize crew boarded him. Captain Upton and some of his crew were taken aboard the Phoebe, and were kept prisoners for seven months, until the end of the war. The English prise crew placed upon the Folly, themselves victims of the press gang, ao the story goes, frat ernise with the remainder of the Tankee crew, and hauling down the British flag turned American prlvateersmen, but the Polly without Its guns could do nothing, o they returned to Salem. Christmas day, 1811, It Is said. Captain Illlllard at a dinner returned to Captain Upton his sword and made him a present f a huge meerschaum pipe, whloh la today In the possession of Captain Joseph H. Weldon, the present owner and skipper of the famous old vessel. Captln Weldon, the present owner, la a bronxed eld sea dog, years old, who haa followed the sea ever since he was JJ Items of Margaret A. Graham, 19 years old, a "reeler" In one of the eastern cotton mills, threw a base ball i2 feet six Inches the other day. Standing alx feet three and three-fourths Inches and tipping the scales at 18 pounds, Miss Graham, besides hav ing Dearly a score of world's records to her credit, has likewise been pronounced such a marvel of physical strength as has given her the honor of being declared the strongest woman In the world. She has smashed all the world's record In skating for women from one mile to ten. her world's record time for a half mile In this sport being 1:40. In spite of her stature she haa made the 100-yard dash la 0:11 (in skirts) and one of her aquatio feats Is a 100-foot swim In twenty-three seconds. Mrs. Martin W. Littleton, wife of the democ ratio candidate for congress on Long Island, haa been electioneering In an auto mobile, accompanied by her yeung son. Mra Littleton haa a large quantity of cam paign literature In her auto and distributes it She visits banks and office buildings and leaves circuirre and pamphlets. Mrs. Pearce Bailey raises two new points In answer to the old argument that women eught not to veto because they do not fight She says: "The Christian religion, embodying the idea that brute force was evil and directly contrary to Its tenets, conquered half the world. When Napoleon benaiaxt the smallest tnaa la his army, :.t.. I -5 , i ' ' ,' 4 . s. II ...... . I! t rl . 7-t- t 'V', 'v; , J f j AX- ' j y i iA . years old. He haa retired from regular service and used the Polly as a cruiser, taking a cargo now and then. The Polly Is rated at forty-five tons, is sixty-one feet long, nineteen feet bain and seven feet draught It Is a two-masted schooner and in the olden days carried a square yard on lta foremast It has sailed every navigable water on the globe, ac- Interest for the Vomen Folk was removed, what was the brute force of that army worth? It was the great dom inating idea of the fathers of this republic that won the American revolution, not the barefooted Infantry and the deserting gen erate. To realise this one has only to read the letters of Washington." Hostesses at dinner must put guests of honor at the right of themselves and the hosts, even If the usual sitting places are changed to suit the occasion. When a mar ried woman entertains at dinner she puts at her right the husband of the woman whom they so wish to honor, andthe wife must be at the right of the host To place the guests of honor in any other position is to deprive them entirely of the distinc tion Intended. With a round table the matter of seat In guests becomes simple, for there is no head and no foot and the desired posi tion arranges Itself without change. Fre quently the hostess does not have a seat directly opposite to the host, but in a drcto this is not conspicuous. With an oval or square table and eight guests the arrangement becomes compli cated. Three persons on a side means that the hostess must abandon hex usual place or she will have two womeu together and two men, thajt which nothing could show greater Ignorance. There is nothing fur the hosteas then to do but to change her position, leaving her husband in that which he always occupies. The woiuaa uut of honor tbea goes at : i v - .':. ' : t Mil; .1 d' ii ' cording to Its owner, and haa gone around the world twice. It made several trips around the Horn In 1819,. carrying gold seekers. ' The president of the United fetates Daughters of 1812 Is Mrs. William Gerry Plade, and the chairman of the committee In charge of placing the tablet la Mrs. Thomas J. Vivian. his right, and, If possible, the husband is put at the right of the hostess on the side of the table. When all the guests are married couples even the husband of the honored guest cannot be at the hostess' tight though she has abandoned her regu lar seat There la no way of arrar.glng four couples with three persons at a side, so that a husband and wife will not be side by side, If the guest of honor's husband goes at the hostess' right He, therefore, must be placed as best suits the hostess for congeniality of the table, and the fact that the woman giving the dinner has moved har own seat and cannot have on her right the husband of the woman on the right of her husband prevents any slight and In the honor paid to the woman guest her husband is sup posed to be Included. Only at most formal dinners do the host and men guosts give their arms to women to lead them to the dining room. Hostesses who wish to follow that custom are en tirely at liberty to do so, but It Is supposed to add a greater touch of formality. ROSANNA 8CHUYLE1L Mrs. Harrietts M. Johnston Wood and Miss Amy Wren are preparing to Introduce in the New York legislature bills to do away with some of the remaining Injus tices In the laws relating to married womeu s property, etc. The Key to the buuauoo Uee Want Ada. HY WALTER A. SINCLAIR. ''What is the singular of returns?" asked Dottle as we sat in the election night din, frlvollnx awnv a week's hv. "Poet friend of mine snvs they're all sin gular," I answered. "For Instance, a re jected manuscript with a slip announclnp the editor retirrts." "The Contributing Editor rrfiretsT" she queried. "He wouldn't admit be rrsretted any thing. " I argued. At this point a tinhorn sport blew a solo In our ears. "That was the horn a'plenty," she re marked, making appropriate retort to this playful effort by smearing a total rtraniter In the eyes with a handful of confetti in tended for the squawk expert. . "I 11 take an esg with that paper hash," announced the total stranger. "You'd get an e- if I could reach one," I replied acrimoniously. Cutely he tickled us with a feather tickler. "Here's where every one hits the feath ersIt being after bedtime," she observed, philosophically. "You mean Bedlam," I retorted, grouch Uy. "Don't look sheepish, though." she ad monished. "If you don't like them why didn't you bring along a horn to shoo them awayT" she asked. "A 'shoo' horn would have been a good idea," I agreed. A thirst a Cent was vociferously ordering the waiter to take back four bottles to the hangar and bring his own private brand. "There go some of the returns now," 1 enlightened as the waiter weaved his tor tuous way away weightily. ''Ah! observe the advantages of a higher education." she cried as a squad of col lege persons lock-stepped into the place, exuding tbelr quaint college cries and gtv-, Ing every one el so what Is technically known as "the elbow." Presently they en countered a set of totally uneducated wait ers who conducted them vigorously to the Porte cochere. "Did you see that waiter tip that big fel low out?" she asked. "Reversing the usual process In tipping," I made answer. "What are the latest bulletins?" she asked, and as I opened my mouth to reply she vigorously swung a rattle, which drowned my voice. "You are like the rent of the women Daughters of V. -4 ".: V I Miss Abbe Carter Good low, who comes of a famous old Kentucky family, was born In Versailles, In the lue Grass state, and la a daughter of John K. Carter and Mary L. Carter. The family of Goodloe has an honorable record In American history. A recent distinguished member Is Colonel Green C. Goodloe, a veteran of the civil war, who was at one time paymaster of the Marine corps, and left active service In February, of W09, retiring with the rank of brigadier general. He was born In Caste Union, Ky., and graduated from West Point in 163. Ha Joined the Fourth Ken tucy cavalry at Wantrace, and during his service of the civil war he took part In ten cavalry battles and skirmishes. Miss Goodloe graduated from Welleatey college In 1898. During her undergraduate days site wrote for the college paper, and also completed hei delightful book, en titled "College Girls," which was published by the Scribner and made an Immediate popular success. Its sincerity, lta truth to life and Its quick humor were recognized by a wide public. Since that time Miss Goodloe has made her home In Louisville, ydevotlng herself to the writing of fiction and occasionally traveling. After the success of "College Girls," which was Issued during 1S96, Miss Goodloe did not Immediately make further bid for favor as a writer. It was not until 1903 that her second work was published. This was "Calvert of Btrathore," a novel which showed a marked Increase of power and a surer command of the novelist's tech- GENERAL PROSPERITY. "ThJngi are booming in the old town. Had to move the chair factory." "Why?" landing room onlv 1 v5kS a here who didn't come to hear flgrures, hut to display them." I accused coldly when the riot riled down. "Speaking of generous figures. that woman has a plurality Isn't that it?" she commented. "An overwhelming majority, Yd call It. Almost unanimous," I murmured. "But the calf with her hasn't attained any majority," she criticised. "Let's start out" I suggested, "and see the lantern slides." "I expect to see a lnndsllde." she de murred. "Anyway, why should one wish to see a lantern slide when there are so many Inhabitants eliding?" "Maybe some cut-up will throw sawdust In our eyes," I promised. "Make some noise," she cried, starting the rattle. "Somebody Is trying to an nounce a bulletin. The Idea! Who let him in? Why why?" "Nothing but whytn tonight, eh?" I In quired, dryly extra dryly. "I wonder If the taxi chauffeurs have all night licenses?" she murmured. "Let's volplane to the lower levels and see what the common people are doing." I Implored, signaling for our check. "Why the sad countenance?" she Inter rogated. "Did your candidate lose?" "No, Kdld." aid I. parting with the hard earned. Just then the tin squawk blared. "Ah! between the horns of the dilemma. Give me two." "And you'll be the goat, eh?" she com prehended. (Copyright 1910, by the N. Y. Herald Co ) Famous Hen V .. . '., : . , ,. j ,. . . . i, ' nlque. "At the Foot of the Rockies" followed in 1905. After an Interval of five years Miss Goodloe's latest work, "The Star Gazers," was published during the present autumn. This is the love story of a most attractive and winning American girl who travels In Mexico. The picture of fashionable Mexican life Is lively and Intereatlng. and her meeUng with President Diaz and her dinners and dances In the City of Mexico, and her visits to the great country estates, are enlivened by amusing and witty talk and clever people of all kinds and condi tions. The story is a delightful one, and the sketches of Merlcan life as novel as they uie vividly interesting. r Daily Health Hint. J riay makes the boy a man, sports In the open alt1 keep the man from becoming old, keep his muscles springy, his head clear, his eye bright, his arteries elastlo and his judgment and temper sound, so says Dr. Woods Hutchinson in the No vember Outing. Particular. This one Is told on a Louisville butcher. We shall call him Bill, because that Is not his name. "v A customer had gone Into his shop to purchase a beef roast. Now, It seems that Hill used to have a most annoying habit (to the patrons) of bearing down with a heavy hand upon the scales. This high coat tit living thing and all that were bad enough in all conscience, thought sotne of his patrons, but one of them finally broke Bill of this Uick and now lie gives full weight every time. As was stated, the customer was buying a beef roast and Bill slyly was helping out the work of the scales with one pudgy fist when before a shop full of people the buyer said' "Take your hand off that scale, Bill; I'm buying beef, not pork." Since then no one haa had to chide Bill for a similar act Louisville Times. For the llaaackecper. Cheesecloth makes a serviceable and san itary dishcloth Its absorbent qualities and the fact that It is so easily kept white and clear make it especially desirable. A yard of cheesecloth with a few drops of parlffin oil makes a most excellent dust rag. , & h 'A r Fate of the Pad Crauk. There was a foot ball plaer V ho padded ears and riofe Then stitched af padded layer Where shoulder blades arose Pads wrapped and pads suspended KnclrcleU ill in iiiey tell. And when a season ended lie reached the faudvtl cell. -T. E. M.