im BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY 28, IP13. i J Fashions of the Moment A Charming Summer Gown Described by Olivette. The Face in the Mountain Microbes Beauty Secrets of Beautiful Women Stolla Barro Tells of tho Value of Voice Culture 4 By GARRETT IN 8ERVI88. By OLIVETTE. Here" 1b a little summer costume that may be truly called a "confec tion," though we generally prefer not to use that gastronomic term fn the description of even the dreams of the sartorial realm. White or Bhell pink Is the foundation of heavy "grade china or Bhantung silk. There is an eight-inch silt over the left ankle, and all about the hem tiny pink wild roses are sot at' equal intervals. ( Tho oversklrt is of wide shadow lace falling to the knees at the front and lengthening some eight Inches under the caught-ln drapery at the back. A garland of the roses peeks from linler this, and another surmounts tho wide girdle and rises to meet the square-cut vest of filmy white chiffon. Both waist and , -puff Bleeves are of the -lace, and another garland of the dear little wild roses nestles underthe sleeve at the-olbow. . The hat Is a great round' white Neapolitan. covered with frill after frill afwhite accordion-plaited' mallne, with a monster pink rose crushing in all he filminess at the left. Dainty white slippers and. silk stockings, and a filmy parasol with a -wl'de border of chiffon printed In-great pink roses, complete an absolutely Ideal summer costume. j MVEfcjnEAI'ER COT DOWN MEAT BILL DOWN You can cut down your meat bill two-thirds and get more nutritious food by eating Faust Macaroni. A 10c package of Faust Macaroni, con tains as much nutrition as 4, lbs. of beef ask your doctor. FauBt Macaroni is extremely rich In gluten, the bone, muscle and flesh builder. It is made frbm Durum Wheat, the high protein cereal. Delicious, too. You can serve Faust Macaroni a hundred different wayB to delight the palate. Write Xor free recipe book showing how. In air-tight, moisture-proof pack ages, 6 and 10 cents. maull nos. j- -St, Louhi, Mo. TWENTIETH CENTUIIK I'AItMUU THE BEST FARM PFRIOOIOAU f I Time's Changes I By-MINNA IRVING. I chanced to meet old father Time, . 'It does not matter where; He wore a leather coat and cap, And had a Jaunty air. A pair of goggles hid his eyes. His boots were furred Inside; I vlewM the change with jnuch amaze, "Where Is your scythe?" I cried. XN ' I "It cannot be that you at last No longer mean to mow Unhappy mortals like the grass, Before you as you go?" The scythe," the ancient spirit sighed, "Is slow and out of date, I use an aeroplane Instead To do the work of fate." v WINIFRED BLACK It Is sad today, tho great face up there on top of the mountain. Have you ever seen such a facoT Who carved It, I wonder? Ages and ages ago did the wild waters know what It was they wrought when thoy rushed over the great boulders and eang and surged and cut the face In the great rocks? There It Is, day and night, the great calm face, lying with Its eyes up to tho sky, and the clouds sail above and the winds sing below and still the great face lies there for all to Bee. There wero great doings In ' the valley once. Some one found a pocket full of gold there In tho canyon by the rushing waters and the whole place swarmed with men and women followed, and the quiet night was raucous with wild songs. Gold, gold that's what they all wanted gold. What did thoy care for the peace of th valley or. the calm of tho great mountain? Qold, that was what they were after. Btraritre' the fever that burns us when wo hear the very name. Tho other day I drove high abovo tim ber line. It was a sight to take tho breath away. While we stood gazing the driver spoke! "There." ho said, pointing with his whip. "There that's Simpson's Dream; that hole down there. Simpson took $10,- COO In twenty-four hours out of that hole." And every one of us turned our eager eyes from the glory of tho sky and the splendor of the spreading earth and and looked earnestly, eagerly, with a vivid Interest at a ulrty hole In tho grodnd be cause Simpson, whoever he might be, took $10,000 worth of gold out of It once years and yenrs ago. How the gods must laugh at our strango Infatuatlonst , Poor Simpson he had hla day of de lirium. What did It profit him? Ho died drunk and raving after ho had spent his il 0,000, and tho wife' of his youth was ashamed to lay a flower on his dishonored grave and the boy sho named for Simpson would rather you didn't ask about him If you pleaso. Now, .If he had only watched the face there on the hills the great, calm face, and had drawn strength and peace from thatt-how much better off he would havo been. "Come," the mountains call, "come, little, tired, anxious, worried, eager, quarreling children. Come, you are thirsty; I will glvo you to drink. You are hungry, there is plenty to eat here and to Bpare. Sea how light tho trees feathqr Into a canopy for your sleeping room .Peace, Joy, health, faith, trust, love all these I have for you here." And we laugh bitterly and turn away TuTU let the hole In the ground speak "gold, gold, gold for the digging sorrow, greed, care work without ceasing, the forgetfulness of one we once loved age- before the time for age bitterness while the brow is smooth, distrust, envy all this I offer you," and" how we run to answer poor blind fools that we are. What do you think of-us face there on the mountain? How sad you look. Here comes one who laughs a girl with a let ter from her sweetheart crackling In her bosom "The face smiles," says the girl, "see how the face smiles." And here comes one in angerone he trusted has betrayed him. "The face is cruel," says the man In anget-"lt sneers at me and my sorrow." And to me, who mourn for what never can be mine again the face looks mourn ful and full of sadness can It be that you never change at all face there on the mountain, and that It Is we who are sad and angry or gay- and we see our selves reflected In your look? It I make my world myself It shall be a happy one trust me for that, oh, face of calm content. Come; the sun shines, the winds sing, the waters rush by, who shall bring sad ness to my heart or to your brow, oh. faco otcalm delight? My world Is my own. I'll make It what I will a happy-one. By Hints to Social Climbers Howi From oT.ndon Punch. The name "microbe" Is ono that gener ally Inspires terror because of all tho wonderful discoveries that have fJeen made concerning the fearful death-dealing powers that many microbes possers. nut, In a most interesestlng a r -tide In Hearst's Mngaxlno for July, Sir William Ram sny has just pointed out hqw microbes may be( and arc. engaged as allies of mnnt cither by chang ing their malig nant natuto, or by Retting them to wur upon other mlnuto foes with which we cannot ouroelves dtrcctly fight. In somo cases the services which mi crobes are able to render In the battle against disease might be compared to that of fleets of small armed boats sent out from, n squadron of battleships to en ter the shallow and hidden creeks and coves on nn enomy's coast, and attack th foe In positions unnpproachablo to" the heavy vcescls. Our trained microbe allies may race through our blood and penetrate the most recrrt regions of our bodies, cither de stroying the enemies already lurking there, or laying wasto the territory against their advance by depriving It of the means of subsistence upon which tho Invaders must depend. And nil this may be dono without harm to the tlasUcs or the functions of tho bods'. Such beneficent microbes are like scouts and guerltRs, and where they havo skirmished the enemy is found to be so disorganized and broken up that It can be swept out of existence. A dramattc-exampio of the way In which the discovery was made that microbes can. as Professor Ramsay says, bo "har nessed" for useful work. Is afforded by Pasteur's experience with "chlckon chol" era." He had been Inoculating healthy chickens with microbes taken from fowls Infected with the disease, In order to slwly its method of development. The vacation perlert came along, and Pasteur went away, leaving somo of the culturos of microbes In his laboratory. When he returned ho resumed his experiments with the microbes that had been left over, nnd which seemed, as far as appearances went,' to be a virulent as ever. ' But, to his astonishment, when ho In oculated them Into healthy chickens, tho latter went nbout their galllnacoous (hen like) affairs with their usual zest and good appetite, and did not dovelop disease of any kind, Here was an opportunity for genius, and Pasteur wan a genius. Instantly he set-to -work to find out the reason for the Immunity of tho chickens from so deadly an enemy. First he In oculntcd them over again with microbes taken fresh from fowls thnt had. tho cholera. But the chickens remained as. lively and healthy as ever. Then he found out that If the microbes wero exposed for a long' time to the air, at a certain tem perature, they lost their virulence, they could no longer communicate disease, but ' thev could, like scavengers, remove from Here they hre; First nnd most Important, the blood of chickens Into which they i keep up. ICoep up and ahead of what weru Introduced tho elements upon which you are doing if events and happenings; the (disease-breeding microbes subsisted. iJusf cultivate a habit of feeling light and Thus Pasteur, led by a happy accident, j buoyant and not weighted down or Im had learned how to "harness" Ihe ml- Peded by life. crobes of chicken cholera and mako them Next, be pleasant. Friends are as easy work for health and life Instead of for to acquire as enemies, and a pleasant disease and death. They became his greeting to the poopla you meet won't guerillas, with which he waged successful , war Upon an enemy of the domestic fowl that had hitherto defied attack. Ater that It was found that many other allow. And to do that you must cultl mlcrobes, some of them deadly enemies , vnte your Imagination, Do you know, I to human life, like the terrible germ of , can always see myself walking out of spinal meningitis, could be subdued nnd trained In a similar way, and thus the great science of Inoculation against dls- ease had Us birth. Professor Ramsay shows that microbes can be employed not only In combating disease, but in aldlngman In a hundred other ways. For Instance, the prepara tlon of tea, the curing of tobacco and the manufacture of butter and cheese aro all processes conducted through the in tervention of our microbe friends, which are falling more and more under our con- trol and guidance. Bclonce Is teaching j them new duties. "New bacteria," says Professor Ram say, (bacteria, aro microbes), "are being discovered, or old bacteria are being given unaccustomed food, from which they evolve useful products. The conversion Dlno ut a Miiart restaurant juid forget your table By LILIAN LAUFKRTY. "When I began making vocal culture a serious study a few years ago six, to be accurate." said Btella Barre In tho most delightfully musical of voloes, is wo sipped cooling Ices after the matinee. "No ono except my teaoher and myself believed I had a voice to train. Wo did bellove, though we worked hard to prove U -and now wo havo a fow followers, haven't we?" If you havo heard Stella Barre'a top note and a tew others blow It at tlu performances of "All Aboard" vou vlll nsreo that she has triumphantly prov.'il thn existence of her voice. And a volc Is, as we havo bo en told, "an oxolleut thing in woman." bo It low and sweet, or bo. It high and sweet; but heaven forefend that any one of u havo tho high-pitched nasal voice, or tho -Kinky, breathy croak that are an unfortunate tradition as the possessions of tnq Ameri can woman. "No amount of study la too hard," said, tho charming singer, "If It gives you at last tho goal of your dreams. But you have to work with your brain as well as your body, And tho thing I would warn girls most earnestly against Is ovcr-fatlguo. It Is so easy to think, 'Oh, I will Just keep at this a bit longer,' and to use up so much energy nnd strength that you infringe on your reserve store Now I reolly practise all afternoon long but only about fifteen mlnutos at a time. I work a bit, and then I go off to some thing quite different, and then back to work. In this way, I probably put In three or four hours' work with loss fatigue than two hours of steady applica tion and over-strain would give. "Tou read so many romances 'of how the fair telephone girl wins a millionaire husband by saying 'Hollo!' very sweetly to his listening oar. Thero Is somethlnu In every tale fairy or otherwise you hear, and whether a girl has aslnglng voice or not, a few singing lessons will vastly Improve her speaking voice and perhaps help to discover another prima donna. "For the girl who cannot afford sing lng lessons, I would suggest doop breath ing at an open window morning nnd night, or whenover she has a chanco to try It during the day. Then fill tho lungs and hold tho breath hack of the voice while spoaklng a fow words, gradu ally Increasing tho number until you have breath control' and all the while keeping the volco as deep, clear and low as pos- Jilhl " "But .you don't think that voice nlnmi in surnclent beauty for woman, do you?" I askod, for every lino of Miss narro's cool coral-colored linen drsss and whlto hat bespoke a careful attention to tho mysteries of true becomlngness In dross, with beauty and good tasto duly com mingled and those mysteries become Just Plain everyday facts In the clover hands nnd brain of tho woman who knows how to dress. "Inm sure that you reco'gnlzo the Importanco of dress and manner In the field of womanly charm." "Yes," said Miss Barre, with tho pleas lng attention , that sh always gives to your part of the conversation. "I bollevo In dress and manner as adjuncts to beauty, and I have Just four Ilttlo pet theories for I tho first aids to bcautv. harm them or you. "Of course I believe in dressing as well, and as becomingly as your means will the frontMoor and down the street in a dresa Just about the time I am having my first fitting. I picture rftvself In clothes, and as I don't like freak pic- tures, I don't get freak clothes. I make sure that my hats form a background of starch, a cheap commodity In tho form of malzo or potatoes, Into two chemical substances, named acetone and butyl alco hol, is likely to have far-reaching results. for the latter can easily be transformed Into India rubber, and the former la largely used in the manufacture of cer tain kinds of high explosives." Mistaken people who would Interfere with such work on purely sentimental grounds aro capable of doing much harm to tho best Interests of humanity. to Attract Notice manner Statucquo for my faco. although if I had a short neck I would bo careful not to moke It appear still shorter by wearing hats that would cut It off In the course of their down-droop in back. And I study thu line of my throat. A. neck is pretty gen erally bocomlng except to the woman with an oxoeedlngiy long, narrow face. Square neck for her, and a round line rr- Why Women Keep If you have ever taken much notice In church of those of the congregation who nod drowsily or even go to sleep, you will have found that It Is the men who dp this and not the women. If s doubtful if one woman to a thousand go to sleep in church and people have long held an en tirely wrong impression of this. It has been said that the men are a bit J more stupid, that theydo.notpay enough attention to tne sermon or qojnot compre hend It sufficiently to retain their Interest and hence get sleepy. It haa also" been said that women are brighter, quicker to understand and have more self control and so do not lose Interest and close their eyes In slumber whllo the minister la preaching. But all this la quite wrong. A German professor has been making a study of this and he declares that men fall asleep In church because; they do pay more atten tion to tho sermon than do the women. Further, he declares the average woman doei net begin to grasp tho purport of tho sermon, that sho Is far slower, of understanding than man. J The man will watch the minister every minute, he will concentrate all his mind upor the proacher and what he Is saying, he will catch hla every gesture and every motion of hli lips and listen to every .word until finally be drops oft to sleep simply because ha had watched so stead ily, gazed so Intently that he has actually hypnotized himself. It the woman docs not grasp the mean ing of the sormoij so readily, If her men tality Is not quits so keen and quick, one would think she would fall asleep. But tho fact remains that she has plenty to Interest her. A man cannot look about the church and be Interested in John Jones' cravat or Wllam Smith's vest, or Sam White's cuff buttons. He doesn't care anything about them, but a woman will rlt quietly In church; she will hear what the minister Is saying without glv-, In? much thought to it, but she will bo' for eighteen years for Itching, burning Interested In everything every other ' skin troubles, sunburn, pimples, black woman Is wearing, from the feathers and heads, dandruff, ulcers, boils, stubborn ribbons and buckles and flowers of their! sores, and piles. Trial free; Dipt 9.-R, hats to tho dresses and laces and Jewelry Realnolr Baltimore, Md Stella Barro. that outs off the throat should be gen erally taboo. "It's a science, Isn't It?" laughed Mlsa Barre. "Why, I bellove taste In dress has as many branches and ramifications as the study of singing. But they are both worth while, aren't they?" And we all agree, don't we, little sis ters? Awake in Church and furs and wraps and laces and frills, and thero la enough to keep her Just mod erately entertained am wld awake. And so, according to this German pro fessor, tho wife should not blame her hot. band for being dull and stupid and falling asleep; she should know It was becauso ho waa listening too Intently to tha ser mon and thinking too deeply on It until he fairly worked himself Into what ap peared a sleep, but was In reality a aort or liypnotto daze. CURED TERRIBLE HUMOR ON FAC C,d. ykGoSta 8treet Without Veil. Tells What Realnol Did For Her Philadelphia, Pa.-"In December, lia, my face became sore. I tried everything that was recommended, and my face got worse Instead of better, 1 spent over H00 and got no benefit The face and noso wero very rod and the eruption had the appearance of small bolls, which itched me terribly. I cannot tell you how terribly my face looked all I can say is, it was dreadful, and I suffered beyond description. "I have not gone on the street any time Blnce 1908 withouta veil, until now. Jut four months ago a friend persuaded me to give Reslnol a trial. I have used thr cakes of lteslnol Soap and less than a Jar of lteslnol Ointment, and' my face is perfectly free from any eruption, and my skin Is as ;clear and clean as any child's. It lb about four weeks since the lan pimple disappeared." (Signed) Mrs. M, J. Bateman, 4258 viola St., Dec. 6, 1911. Practically every druggist sells Rcelnol Ointment and Reslnol Soap. Prescribad 1