Tim BKKi OMAHA, MONDAY, At'GT'ST 18, 1913. Pavorite Recipes of Favorite Actresses The Care of the Hair as Told by Evelyn Carlton In B Flat Beauty J 10 age "Except the kettle boiling be, Filling the teapot spoils the tea." And nftor I had treated ray follow workers under the Shubert bnnner In "The Five Frankfurters" to my Idea of Iced tea during our first warm spring days, they wore ready to subscribe to that quotation or any olhor tea-lcre I wanted to claim as my own! See how you llko It, fellow readers of Tho Dee. Steop ono and one-half teaspoonsful of good green tea In one pint of boiling water;, strain this ovor the'juico and rind of three lomons, which have been siloed and left standing, in one cup of granulated sugar. When cool, strain and odd one quart of good sherry. Serve over crtccd Ice in small punch glasses. Truly, this Is n most delicious summer drink. Habits the Master By ELBKRT HUBBARD Industry li Intelligent action, motion, movement And now science tetU ua that thought alto Is a physical action, a move, ment, a vibration of the cells of the brain, Wandering, dreamy thought Is merely bad habit, or. mora properly, lack of a good habit, for It leads nowhere. To carry brloka hack and forth from one side of the atreet to the other la not In dustry, because It lacks Intelligent purpose. To think and make no headway Is simply to carry bricks back and forth. To play the devlTn tattoo on a chain monkey with 4he forks and spoons at table; adjust .jour necktie forty times a minute; strike -your mustache or hitch ypur trousers these things are not Industry. Gents do these thlnrs. but gentlemen never. And the difference between the gent and tho gentleman Is. tho dlfferenco be tween the man and the master man. Tho master man Is simply .a man who la mas ter of one person-hlmself. When you have mastered yourself, you are then fit to take charge of other people. The master man Is a person who has evolved Intelligent Industry, concentra tion., self-confidence until these things become the habit of his life. Industry In Its highest sense means conscious, useful and Intelligent effort. Carried to a certain point, industry Is healthful stimulation It means active circulation, good digestion, sound nWn. The sensible men wilt ascertain his limi tations and not carry his Industry to' tho point or exnaustion. Before he Is tired out, he will turji his attention to some thing else. The ability to concontrate re quires the ability to relax. In order to wora you must Know how to play.- Men who carry great burdens and responsibil ities are always those who are able at times to lay down the burden and be a enim with the children. They can lauirh. And there Is no medicine equal to the merry laugh. is me intermittent current that makes the telephone .possible; the man of power U, the man who changes his work-he docs one thing at a time, but ne floes not do the thing all. the time. To cultivate concentration practice re laxatlon. Ue down on the. floor for three mlrn : . on your 'back, breathe mow arb you feeding your children? Aro you giving them nourishing uvu iuuu luui win develop tDGlr muscles, bones and flesh food that to cuoiij ui$?i9a ana cueapi Ever thought a&out Snas-hotti Faust Spaghetti! Do you know that a 10c packaga of Faust Spaghetti contains r.a much nutrition a u. of beef? Your doctor will tell you It does. And Faust Spaghetti costs nnA. tenth the price of meat. Doesn't that solve a big Item in the high cost of living? You probaly haven't served Fin.t Spaghetti as often as you should be-, cause you don't know how many dlf ferent ways it can be cooked write for free recipe book today and you'll be surprised at the big variety of pisues you can iuae jrom mis nu l trltious food. In 6c and 10c packages. f MAVLIj iinos. "S - St. Louis. Mo. sasssiB a j ji JJ deeply, lie still and turn your mind In- thinking of nothing.' To concentrato on Your work you must enjoy your work. And to enjoy your work you must diop It at certain hours. Ha lasts longest and soars highest who cultivates the habit of Just being a boy for an hour a day. Take a vacation every day If you want to do good work. Are you In the treadmill? Well, the only way you can get out Is by evolving mastership. We are controlled by our habits. At first we manage them, but later they manage us. Habits young are like lion's cubs so fluffy and funnyl Have a care what kind of habits you are evolving soon you will be In their power, and they may eat you up. It Is hoblt that chains s to the treadmill and makes us sub ject to the will of others. And It Is habit that gives mastership of yourself and others. Industry Is a habit. Men who go to bed any old time and get up when they reel like It are never Industrious worse. they are never healthy. Muldoon says that the man who has to get up nt six clock In the morning never has In somnia. If you have to get up at 6 you'll go to bed at 10. and this moans you'll get the habit of going to sleep. If you acquire the habit of studying1 nd reading good books from 7;30 to 9:3) six evenings a week you'll soon find it a delightful habit. I know a great writer in England who writes every morning from i o'clock to 31. and ho writes at no other time. He haa acquired the habit. At 8 o'clock his brains begin to fire up. and he finds It easy and pleasurable-necessary to concentrato on his work. The habit of self-confidence Is a result of the habits of Industry and concentra tion.. And, I hope I've made It clear that concentration Is the result of pleasurable, useful effort, or Industry, Also I hope I've made It clear that for Industry to be of the first quality the person must at times rolax and find rest In change through play be a child-run, frolic, dig In the garden, saw wood- relax. When you have reached a point where your work gives you a great, quiet Joy, and through this Joy and Interest you concentrate, then cornea self-confidence, You are now well out on the road to mastership. Robert Louis Stevenson said. . "t know what pleasure Is, tnr 1 have dono good work." The recipe for self-confidence Is: Do god work. "Courage," says Emerson, comes frtmi having done the thl:sr be fore." A man who does good work does not have to talk, apologise or explain his work speaks. And even though thrre be no one to appreciate It, the man feels In It a great, quiet joy. He relaxea, smiles, rests, fully Intent on taking up his labors tomorrow and doing better than over. The highest reward that Hod gives us for doing good work Is the ability to do better work. Jlest means rust. So we get the formula. Acquire physi cal and mental Industry by doing certain things at certain hours, ceasing the effort before It becomes wearisome. In mental work keep In touch with people who are a little beyond you. The joy and satisfaction of successful effort overcoming obstacles, getting les sons, mastering details which We once thought difficult evolves Into a habit. and gives concentration. Industry jnd concentration and self-eontldcnce aoell mastership. - Sit from the man we get the mnter man- What lies beyond I do not know Perhaps when I become a mister I shall know-one stage at a time Is enough, if there Isn t time In this life, perhaps there will be hereafter . The Toacher of Hinging The Head (wklsperlng) - "put some ginger in it," it you f ; Ella Wheeler Wilcox By KLIiA WHEELER WILCOX Copyrlgh, WIS, by Star Company. 'The unfitness of mothers of depend ent children, -complained of by 'organ ised charity,' Is In my onlnlon all caused by poverty. Tivi mother's pension law re cently enacted by the legislatures of eighteen states. wll, to a great ex tent, mako the un fit mother fit. be cause the pension removes the cause of her unfitness, which Is her pov erty. "It is the com mon observation that the very fine and Very fit mother becomes compara tively unfit to take care of her children after a few years of hopeless struggle with poverty "The mistake of organised charity 1? their allowing good mothers of de pendent chlldten to bp made unfit by the poison of ' I'oycrty. the poison of hope lessness, the poison of overwork In try ing to earn the living for their children at hard work and give proper care to their children at the same time. "Organized charity contends that a mothor should have her children taken away from her because poverty has made her temporarily unfit. "The real friends of the poor, the ad vocates at the, mothers' pensions, believe that the mother should have the cause of her unfitness removed upd not her children. 'HENRY K1SIU" Mothers' pensions iww- extend from roast to coast, une can ow travel irotn the Atlantic ocean to the Pacific ocean going through mothers' .pension states only, starting on the coast of New Jersey and going through Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois. Iowa, Nebraska, Colo rado, Utah. Nevada to the coast of Call. fornla. ' otner mothers pension states aro Washington. Oregon, Idaho, South Da kota, Minnesota. Massachusetts. New Hampshire eighteen in all. Three ottles that have local mothers' pension laws are Kansas City, St Louis and Milwaukee. Meantime the stutcment of Mr. Nell that the unfit mothers are caused by poverty Is open to doubt. Some of the most unfit mothers to be found on earth are women of wealth. Two little girls on hoard a large ocean liner were the daughters of a New York banker, and their mother was un edu cated woman, and their father was n man of parts; yet there were neer seen on arth more Insufrurably disagreeable children than these. They were Ill-man- nered. impertinent, unkind and ungia- I clous. The ch.of steward In the dining I salon was obliged to rebuke them for Now, children, give us "Little Drops of Careful, sir, careful. Remember this la must. On Uufit Mothers Poverty Does Not Make Them So, as Many Are Rich Criticism Committees Should Be Es tablished Everywhere. : : : : : their Impertinence and their annoying treatment of other passengerjs. Tile children 'she had should have ,beeiy taken away from such parents and placed under wise and worthy Instructors. A woman who has been reared with ex cellent opportunities for culture, Is the mother of four ohlldren. There la no financial strain upon the family, yep the children have never been taught any of the gracious and loVely traits which help to build a worthy character and a "pleas ing personality. ( Iwoud, harsh vdlces, flat contradictions. Continual quarrelling, and tho most dis agreeable qualities distinguish this family. Such parents ore certainly unfit to bring up families. fund for the erection of a large scientific insltutlon. such as Dr. Elmer Gates has always longed to see estab lished, would be a benefit to the" world, an Institution whero the brain cells of vulgar and disorderly children, as wall as the perverted and viciously Inclined, could be developed Into constructive qualities. Every school and church In the land ought to have 'a "criticism committee," . - The Holy RomanEmpire lly KEV. THOMAS II. GREGORY. One hundred and. seven years ogqr August U. lS06-Krancls the Second, re signing the Imperial dignity, retired to his hereditary dominions under the title t "Emporor of Austria." And what was the "Imperial dig nity" that Francis that day resigned? It was none other th a n the civil headship of the ancient and once august Institution known in history as the "Holy Roman Umpire." a c o m b i n a tton of church .and state. culminating In emperor and pope as tho divinely appointed representatives of God on earth. The arrangement began In the year 960. with the crowning in St. Peter'a of Otto I, by Johu XII, and ended 88 years later, with the resignation of Francis. Hut why did P"ranois voluntarily re sign Nso venerable and Illustrious an honor? The auswsr la not far to seek. On the 17th of July of that same year USOti). there had been signed at Paris tho "Act of tho Confederation of the Ilhlne " Sixteen tlerrr.su states with drew from the body and repudiated the Water," and put some spirit in it. a temperance school. Sajr- such as existed Jn the Oneida community. To this committee every person who had a complaint to make of the manner and conduct of another member of the community went, and the committee called on the offending' person with the complaint, and tho' whole subject was calmly and thoroughly investigated. And reproof was administered where It bolonged,. and It it was proven that any personal or selfish or jealous feeling prompted the complaint, he was the one reproved and publicly placed under ban, and made to see bow unworthy was his action. Unselfishness was the religious key jidte of the society, and had It let sex problema alone It would have been one of the greatest factors for bettering tho world which ever existed In America. If our schools and colleges and churches could adopt this excellent Idea of tho Oneida community and established tho "criticism committee" and then carry Dr. Elmer Gates' dream of a brain building Institution Into realization, the children of tho Idle rich might stand as good a chance of becoming agreeable and useful citizens as do the children of the poor today. laws of the empire. A few days after the act had been signed there appeared at llegonaburg a French envoy, who cpolly Informed the Diet that his master had become protector of the confedera tion, and that he no longer recognized the existence of the empire. And who. pray, was that "Master." who no tpnger recognized the existence of the Holy Homan Empire the solemn creature of the divinely-guided Otto and John? It was.none otljer than the little sallow-faced, black-eyed adventurer from i Corsica, known to fame as Napoleon J Honaparte. It was Napoleon wio had I ordered the confederation, of tho Rhine, and It was Napoleon's note to his envoy at Ragensburg that caused Francis to step down and out. There Is a dash of humor In Francis' resignation. He finds It "Impossible In the altered state ,of things to fulfil the obligations Imposed, etc.," and so descends from the imperial throne ere he Is directly commanded to do so by the "Man of Destiny." It Is all very romantic the uncere monious pulling down of the Holy Roman Empire, with its degrees and hierarchies. Its royalties and sanctities, by the little white, dimpled hand of the "Charity student of Otienne." It was necessary to the ace -.pllshment of Napoleon's poli tical plans that the institution which had awed the world for 1.000 years should come to an end. and a few lines from his pn scrawled diagonally across a single sheet of note paper sent the venerable affair Into nothlnfiifftv '.aSSlsiiflsSS f 'itSHBSBBBBBBBBBBBLsVsHPSk SBLBLlLLLsBBBBBBi MISS EVELYN CARIiTON Uy LILIAN LAUFERTY. "If I had $1,000,," began Evelyn Carleton, "I know exactly what I would do" Whereupon tho mind of the beauty editor, attuned unto lotions and garmente of rare texture, and "cures" and all the adjuncts of beauty which Is so seldom beauty unadorned began to vision Jewels rare, and creations from Parisian artists. Rut Kvel.vn Carlton went on seriously, "I would adopt all the poor, dear, little kid dles I could find, and I would take 'em all out In the country and let them kick up their heels In tho longA cool grasa, and pick posies and get dirty and clean again, and grow up with some "of God'a sun shine In their little hearts." Ahem! "The Follies of 1913" were be ing exploited down on the stage of the New Amsterdam theater. In a dressing room on the third floor tho beautiful girl who thrills you with loveliness when she sits In a gold armored figure on the gold horse of Jeanne d'Arc was telling me of an ideal that is greater to her than all loveliness. Do you wonder that Eve lyn Carleton Is a beautiful girl? Most woman who are normal, and sweet and sane and womanly with thd, full heritage of the Maker meant them to be are at tractive with the swectr.tes of expression and the charm of the eternal feminity that the Germans call "Die owlge welbllche." "But since you supposedly have not The Price He Paid By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX (Copyright, 1913, by Amerlcan-Joumal-Bxamlner.) I said I would have my fllnh. And do what a young man row: And I didn't believe a thtnK That the parsons have to so. I didn't believe In a God That gives us blood like fire. Then flings us Into hell because We answer the call of desire. And I said; "Religion Is rot, And the laws of the world are nil; 3Tor the bad mail is he who Is caught ' And cannot foot his bill. And there Is no place called hell; And heaven is only a truth, When a man has hla way with a maid, In the fresh keen hour of youth. ' "And money can buy us grace. If It rings on the plate of the cnurch: And money can neatly erase Each sign of a sinful smirch.'' IFor I saw men everywhere, , Hotfooting the road of vice; And women and preachers smiled on them As long as they paid the price, i So I had my Joy of life: I went tho pace of the town; And then I took me a wife, And started to settle down. I had gold enough and to spare For all of the simple Joys That belong with a house and home And a brood of girls and boys. I married a girl with health And virtue and spotleia fame. I gave in exchange my wealth And a proud old family name. And I gave her the love of a heart Grown sated and sick of slnl My deal with the devil was all cleaned up. And the last bill handed In. She was going to bring me a child, And when In labor she crtea. With love and fear I was wild But now I wish she had died. For the eon she bore me was blind And crippled and weak and sorel And his mother was left a wreck. It was so she settled my score. I said I must have my fling. And they knsw the path I would go; Yet no one told me a thing Of what I needed to know. Folks talk too much of a soul From heavenly Joys debarred And not enough of the babes unborn. J3y the sins at their fathers scarred. "I shampoo my hair' fort nightly. 'Don't wear false linlr. "At night and in morning, loosen yonr scalp." a million dollars," said I, "won't you please tell me how you make life and yourself as attractive as possible 7 All the little means to tho great end of feminine humanity beauty." "Oh, but I am not a beauty," said Miss Carleton with misguided enthusiasm. Excuse me. Miss Evelyn, for remarking It here In open meeting and In such wise that you have no chance to talk back "You are a beauty." On with the conversation of the even It g. Said Miss Carleton: "I have rather nice hair no credit to me, It runs in my family. It's long and thick, you see. I shampoo It at least fortnightly, and seme times once a week. About a sham pooIf you cannot get some one who Is an expert at the art, wash your own hair. Buy a bottle of liquid green soap and shake some of the liquid Into tho masses of your hair, rubbing away till you get a foamy white lather. Then wash 'and wash and wash some more until your final rinsing water Is clear as Croton water ever can be. Just don't leave a bit of soap In your hair If you mean to have It pretty and fluffy and tract able. Don't wear false hair, don't Jam your head full of combs and hairpins, don't burn your hair off In search of a curl that the first damp hour will steal from you. Shampoo It as I have told you, brush it faithfully, nnd often open It to the benefits of sun and wind as often as you can. All growing things like sun and nir as well as those little kiddles of my million-dollar dream, you know. At night and In the morning loosen your scalp by giving It a rotary massage with your finger-tips; this will stimulate the flow of blood to the scalp veins and blood vessels and feed the roots of the hair. For a tonic my mother used to recommend breaking a few quinine cap sules Into bay mm and applying this on ulternatc nights, "Tonic should always be applied from a bottle with a shaker top, or dropped1 into the partings of the hair from a medicine' dropper. The Idea is to get It into the skin from which the hair Is deriving Its nourishment and not to get5 the hair oily or greasy and so ready to attract a coating of dust. To sum It all UP. keep your hair and scalp clean. stimulate tho flow of blood to the soalp, and feed the roots of the hair, and I am sure the results will Justify you for 'tak ing pains.' "All I con add to my 'beauty Inter view' Is to go back to my beginning again and recommend that grown-ups try my droam-for-chlldren living out In the golden sunshine. It Is good for hair ana figure and disposition." v Whereto bo It added that outdoors I surely offers you some of the health andi beauty with which It has so generously! dowered Evelyn Carleton. Next time, you shampoo your hair, dry It out In thel golden sunllght-and when you behold, with Joy the vital glowing mass Into which the sun has transmuted your locks,, Just register a vow to try a little sun-.) shine tonlo on your nature. YOUR TORTURED SKIN WlTHJESINOL tortured and disfigured by itching burning, raw or scaly skin humors. Inst nut n llttln nt that nii,i.. i I - ' ' ------- " nvvwiug, septic Reslnol Ointment on the sores buu iuo nuiraiuB siops rigut tueroll Healing begins that very minute, and' your skin gets well so quickly youl feel ashamed of the money you threw) uwuy on useless, tedious treatments. Wharevnr druira o snlii o- - --.v., juu Willi hn lust n liro nf f I n ,1 1 n r-i Olntmont as court-plaster or a tooth-j brush. This is hprnnec rlnn. 1 i UUIIUIB UUVU prescribed it so regularly for the last eighteen vpnrs Mm ova... .i i.M , v u.o.s UIUKt)U knows tin rniint boon it ,l I n iCm r,al free' Dept- 8"p' "eslnoll Iuoiuiuuio, am, wors wonaera ion sunburn, ! PA J H Bbbbm BaH O MMastSsMsSassaSBaaaBSMaiasaa I