THE BEE: 03IAHA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1G, 1J13. A Smart Dinner Gown Described by Olivette Beautv in the Kitchen Miss Heme Wouldn't Talk About Beauty, but Told All She Knew of Cooking Her Hobby -4 iins very fashionable dinner gown is made of snturno red silk cashmere. Over a foundation of silk cashmere there is draped a tunic of black tulle hung over a short flounce. Two othor flounces, the first crossing the tunic and the second edging it, nre trimmed with narrow' bands of skunk fur. The bodice, which is small, is made of whito silk muslin, trimmed with rich incrustations of em broidery and beads. A band of skunk fur makes the strap which crosses the shouldor over the kimono sleeve, which is finished at the hem with throe nurrow flounces of the sanio ma terial. A largo bow, in the stylo called the "mousuie," trims the back. It is finished with a deep fringe of beads. The skirt ends in a short pointesd train -OILVETTE. "I'm n temperamental cook." By MAUDE MILLKIt. "Cooking la the. lode star of my ex igence," Bays dainty Miss Chryatil' Heme, Wild Is "playing" In the sensational melodrama, "At Day," at the Thirty ninth Street theater. "I'd sooner be iv good cook than a great beauty any tlmo. one Keta ao much more satisfaction out of It". ... It Isn't very often that a girl of today 'will confess to a thing like that, particu larly a girl who has every claim to tho beauty she affects to despise. But If you can Imagine the combination of .a very pretty girl and a good coqk.Jn tho bar-' gain too can be almost sure that Miss Heme gets more than her share of xul-' miration. ' ' "I am a tempernmental cook," asserts this lady of many attractions, proudly. "I think probably that statement will surprise you, but I know absolutely noth ing about the technique of cooking. I thing It la a very good thing, too, because a temperamental cook performs when she fools Inclined for It, Just llko some one will play or sing for tho fun of the thing. And cooking Is so very much more exciting than either pf those. "I say that I know nothing noout the technique of cooking. I'm afraid that Is hardly- tme, because I do know enough to feel Intuitively that what I cook Is sure to bo a success, J have never had a failure, but I never make pie or coke. Tftey are too heavy for my temperament. "And now you would llko somo ad ding at your work." vlco for tho girl of today who would like to bo a good cook? Of courso, thero Is no denying tho fact that cooking by technique Is by fnr tho safer way. One cun learn very quickly In a good do mestlo science school. Hut tho temper amental cook has n much better tlmo of It any day. Just go down In the kitchen or out to tho kitchen. Just which ever way you hnppon to bo situated, nnd experiment. Don't use expetislvu In gredients until you nro quite euro of yourself. "After a whllo you will unconsciously think up dainty little concoctions that cannot possibly bo found In any cook book. They will tasto heavenly, and you will be lauded to the skies, right over the head of your patient, more serious- "Don't uo axponslvo Ingredient." minded sister who Is afraid to boll a potato without a recipe. Theso little special dishes require just tho right framo of mind, and by nnd by you will adopt your cooking temperament us soon as you get Into your kitchen parapher nalia. Lot your kitchen clothes be as attractive as possible, too. "Thero Is nothing llko being prepared for -work, but there is no reason why you shouldn't look quite as attractive In the kitchen as you do In the parlor. You will find, too, that after you have mas tered the essontlals of temperamental cooking everything will bo plain sailing, and you will bo Just as cool and matter pf fact about your work as If you had nothing at all on your mind. "Thero will bo no worry Mnos on your forehead, and sudden frantic rushing for tho cook book to see It you havtm't omitted something from tho recipe. "For tho temperamental cook a lot de pends upon her cooking environment Tho kitchen should bo made as attrac tive aa possible, and each dish should bo neatly put aside for washing as soon ns It has been used. Tho temperamental cook would never havo any success jf she trlod to work In a messy kitchen. "Oh, girls, you may not all be bom conks, but there's no reason In the world why you can't cook, and cook well. As a last Injunction havo plenty of fresh air In tho room and sing at your work. Fut your whole heart Into It If you're going to bo a temperamental cook. And, oh, It's really worth whllo that way." Ella Wheeler Wilcox ON Telling the Truth Wsvsr Lis; Tbsre Za Always Soma Way to Avoid It But Tell ths Truth With Toot and Kindness BBBBsf fSBBBBSSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBH WiBBBBBBB&Sv lMklsi$JH By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. Copyright, 1913, by Tho Star Company. "Suppose a person had been arrested and was on trial for a crime which that person had not committed. Suppose that person was In grave danger of convic tion on circumstantial evidence. "N o W suppose that a friend of the person on trial was called as a witness, and sup pose, that questions were put to that friend which, If answered truth fully, would be evidence against his friend on trial. Would that friend be Justified before God In telling lied In answer to those questions, In order to .' protect h 1 s friend on trial T "My friend says yes says ho wouldn't be a true friend unless ho did lie. I say no. I say he should tell the truth n,nd trust to God for Justice. 1 say tho friend should stand by the person on trial and do all ho can for- that person, no matter how matters go with that person. I say that a person who deliberately lies In a case like this Is putting that friend before God, In that ho Is trying to have that person by his ownvpuny strongth, without trusting to God for Justice. 1 say that the person- would still be a true friend to the person 6n trial it he refused to answer questions, or answered them truthfully, even If his answers went against, hi friend on trial. My friend says that he wouldn't be a true friend unless he did all In his power by telling lies or any thing else In order to he'p that friend. "What do you say?" It seems to be the delight of many people to Imagine situations which make lies commendable. Such situations as the one suggested in this letter rarely occur. The friend could refuse absolutely to give testimony and prove his devotion to his comrade by going; to Jail In con tempt of court. 1 The. writer of this artlolo has an In tense admiration for truthfulness and on equally Intense abhorrence of lies. Little fibs and the white lies seem on a par with petty lareeny. There are people who claim they stoal to save those they love from hunger1. But there Is always some other way open. Were a huma,n being to go from door to door, saying. "One I love is dying from starvation or Jack of care; give mo food and money far God's sake!" there la no street In any land on earth where all doors would be c'.osed and 'assistance refused. Yet men have broken Into houses and robbed the Inmates and killed their fel low tbelngs hei put at bay, claiming their actions were forced by actual need. It is Indeed a terrible thing to be forced to beg. But theft Is a more Ignoble art than begging. There Is always a way to avoid, theft. There Is always some way to avoid a He, even when speaking, the truth is to seemingly .harm a friend. It is far more courageous to say: "I know my friend la Innocent: an I re fuse to Btato facts which might seem to Incriminate him. Therefore I declare my self guilty of contempt of court'." Beautiful as Is the truth, silence should sometimes take the' place of the .spoken truth. Peoplo who nre brutally frank on every possible occasion and who tell every thing they think, however unpleasant It may bo, often prldo themselves upon their truthfulness. Truthfulness loses half Its -.charm when coupled with vu'garlly and' lack of tnct and kindliness. Tills earth would be worse than our conception of the lower regions, if each of us on all occasions spoke truthfully every thought In his mind. Silence and tact are necessary to save, us from giving and receiving hurts. A very sweet woman who Is popular In her own town was much troubled by fond mothers who Insisted upon show ing her their babies and demanding her opinion of their beauty. Finally, when all her tact and all her principles were triod to the utmost by being asked while gazing at an espe cially ugly baby girl: "Did you ever see a prettier baby?" the woman replied: "She Is Just as pretty as she can be." The mother was satisfied and the woman had spoken the truth, for she said It was Impossible for that baby to look otherwise than she did; so she spoke the truth. . Surely this particular wording of a dubious compliment was better than to say: "She is the ugliest baby I ever saw." Another tactful woman who was asked by the wife what she thought of a mu sician who was the feature of a con cert replied hurriedly: "I think he has the -most beautiful hair I ever saw,' This relieved her of saying what she thought of his music. Later, to the musician himself, the womanmade criticisms which were help, ful to him while gllvng him more or less pain. But these same criticisms given to the' wife would have done no good; Absolutely truthful people "are very rare. It Is one of the greatest If not the greatest of the virtues, and It Is the most difficult to find In Its unalloyed purity In human nature. Imaginative people are almost always guilty of exaggerations In relating facts, and after telling a story with Its em bellishments a few times they believe they are telling It correctly. People with an over-supply of the .sens of humor seldom tell the truth when re lating Incidents and happenings. Very vain people are prone to tell things which reflect more glory and honor on themselves than Is their due. Timid children with an Inordinate love of approbation are sometimes made liars by stern parents who believe In corporal punishment, or who are. severe In repri mands for small offenses. Such children, unless their natures are balanced by a great sense of Justice, will He themselves out of misdemeanors and lay the blame on others. This Is a particularly' cowrdly'iuid-'selflsh phase . erenco for truthfulness. Teach them to of lyfng, bi( ItyJa -Jo-be;, met with almost every day in smeonoj . It Is rare to find -a -grownup culprit who, when caught In wrongdoing, will say: "It Is my own fault. There Is no one else to blame."'- It Is a great -thing to teach children from the start, a largo respect', and rovj be exact In their statements nnd to tako prldo In having their word reliable. : And with this teaching Impress upon thorn tho necessity to bo sometimes silent when the Bpoken word would do ablo to agree moro harm than good. j whetlier this mys- They also servo tho God of Justice, l terlous creature Mysteries of Science and Nature Whether tho Pithecanthropus of Java ns n Jinn or a Monkoy, or a Being Intermediate Between Them IJy OAUIU3TT 1 BKHVIBS. Tho problem of tho famous ape-man of Java, the ' "pithecanthropus croctus," Is again under discussion by tho paleon tologists (students of ancient life), unl they still are un- who know how to koep still. Resents Roman Sculptor's Slur rr- V 'Daintiest Feet in World Are American ; Women's,'! Says Artist -.J primitive human being or only an extraordinary spe cimen of tho ape trlbo who hap pened to be born with a big head, A French writer has put tho actual situation among tho learned men in a few words! 'Tor somo tho pithecanthropus Is a man; for others ho Is n monkey; for others still ho Is un animal Intermediary between man nnd monkey," The avorago reader may suy to him self that ho doesn't caro what tho pithe canthropus was. Bother the pithecan thropus! . But that would be a very un intelligent nttltude to assumo. We have JffCfi "Xono So Blind As Ifo Who Will Not Hoc," "An American woman, cither matron or maid, win stands ankle ciecp In tho snow and keeps her handy in miiff Is as beautiful as any wjn.uu the world over, but when the snow melts and she withdraws one of her huje .hands, the' ruins the picture," Is tho wi; Pr.'. 1' 12. Triebel, sculptor and academ'cian of the Itoyal Academy of Rome, now v!m"rK In the United States, views ilia appearance of the American woman of today. That this statement does, not mrtt with the approval or Indorsement of the artists of New York was Geiu.roUaUi! tp'lay when James Montgqmury l'lagg, the famous Illustrator of gjrl rlcluim ga lore, was seen In his working quarters In one of the big studio butUllnxs In st Blxty-sevenh street He laughed heartily when his attention was called to the professor's statement "Why the professor must be one of those 'who see not,' for It he really were the least observant ho could not fall to note that American maids and matrons have ! tho best looking hands and feet In thp i world. It Is a fact that cannot be over looked. "I go about New York and see more lovely women In a day than I'd see in a month abroad,' he continued "The French women, with their pronouncedly large feet, encased In drab colored spatula shaped' shoes, and the Kngllsh women, who are noted the world over for their pedal generosity, can they compare with the twinkling feet of the well shod Amer ican girl?' Absurd!" Mr. Flagg. who has so dexterously caught tho eternally feminine In his drawings,- dilated on the Importance of un usually fine hands and feet for the pur pose pf Illustration. "It Is the exception, not the rule, to find an American girl possessing angular hunds or largo feet," he continued with chivalrous conviction, "You . know, the Hngllsh womun ul ways speaks of her American counsln as having 'neat foet,' but besides having small ftet und hands, the American girl Is better shod and gloved than the European woman! "It Is a well-known fact that Americans art) recognized abroad as much ly tho smallness and trlmness of their feet as by their wonderful 'chlo' In dressing." "Then your advice to the professor would bo a vUlt to an eye-specialist?" was queried. "Oh, no' was the rejoinder, "Just a visit to Not York and a stroll down Fifth avenue any gladsome day would change the professor's viewpoint forever" i mm gibbons, and superior to Its congeners not only In stature, but also In slsa of skull, In which it npproaohed tho lower limit for man. There may ,4iav bean a group of these overgrown gibbons developed In Java, thinks, Prof. Boule, and they may havo teon drlvon Into extinction by virtue of tho very fact that they were not phys ically developed In accord with their en vironment. Prof. Boulo himself admits that thero aro rcsomblances to the human typo In Saladin, The Magnanimous By KKV. TnOMAS B. OREGOBY. Saladin, the Illustrious Mohammedan sultan, died 720 years ago, December 6, 1193. Seven centuries Is a long time for a man's name to live, but thero are yet no signs that Bala- illn'n name la ner- arrived nt a period of Intellectual de-1 iing from the tho pithecanthropus, and that Us skull seoms to havo been Intermediate In form botweon that of tho monkey And that of man, but ha denies that such resem blances and correspondences necessarily prove a roal ancestral relationship. But oven If this vlow of tho Paris an- thropologlst be admitted as probably correct It hardly at all diminishes tho Interest of tho pithecanthropus, because It only reveals In that creature a being which certainly made a start toward human evolution, though It may never havo fairly entered upon tho path. It serves to show how difficult was tho work of developing man out of a lower nnlmal typo. Nature had, apparently, to try again and again, with that patience and that contempt of expense which sho always exhibits, and at last she suc ceeded. So. whether the plthcanthropus was a primitive man, carrying locked up In him' all the wonderful possibilities of evolu tion which that stnto of being would Im ply, or whether ho was only an aspiring apo who could not make good his hold on a higher lovel of existence, wo must read about him and the controversies ho excites with equal Interest. vclopment when what Is called pre history has us great (If not greater) Importance for us as history Itself. If the pithecanthropus really belongs In our ancestral line he Is as Interesting a flgiiro as tho rcmoto past contains. Wo seo him, with his big bushy head, his crooked legs, his bent back, his long arms, away back there closo to tho point where the paths divided which led in one direction to the cities of men and the wonders of the mind, and In the othor direction to the troplcul forests and the haunts of climbing creatures to whom nature gave, as In mockery, human masks hiding only brute brains. Ho standi there the most ancient, the most distant, of the creatures which felt the linpulao of awakening humanity. He Is almost at the bottom of the long hill. IIo is striking Into tho narrow path which leads continually upward. Around him arc othor beings to whom the same op portunity came, who were led to the beginning of the same ttralght, mounting way, but who turned aside, leaving him to pursue alone his pilgrimage. It Is a curious and significant fast that after the discovery of tho remains of the pithecanthropus In 1S an anthropolo gist undertook to reconstruct, upon an atomical principles, the missing Jaw (for nothing of the head was found oxcpt tho top of tho skull and a few scattered troth), and several years later thero was discovered at Mauer, In Germany, a human Jaw precisely corresponding with that which the anthropologist had at tributed to tho pithecanthropus. To which roust bo added the (act that tho best authorities assign to "th man of Mauer" an antiquity corresponding with that which has generally been as signed to the pithecanthropus. At tlin batno tlmo there are authorities who deny to tho pithecanthropus a plaro In th lino of human rirsrent Among these Is Prof Boule of Paris, win thinks It probable that tho pltrnvarthrcpus was a specie of giant monkey, al'Ul to tho memory of thu raco Buladln, though a "pagan," and, from tho viewpoint of his Christian contem poraries, nn "In fidel dog," was one of tho greatest and most magnanimous of tho children of men. By tho strength of his own genius and will power he made for him self a thron, upon which he sat with all becoming dignity and honor for many years, governing, as a rule, with wisdom and mercy. Brave as a lion, he was tho very soul of honor and generosity; and in toleration mm mmm I ERUPTION ON ANKLE GREAT SUFFERING Klngsvllle, Mo. "My trouble began eighteen years ago. Nearly half of the time there were running sores around my ankle: sometimes it would be two years at a time before they wore healed. There were many nights I did not sleep because of tho great and charity in the fundamental elements' ""flering. The sore were deep running of true manhood and the graces of a one and so soro that I cod not bear for Many Nights Did Not Sleep, Burned All the Time, Wore Bandage Night and Day. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Now Well, gentlomon, stood head and shoulder abovo most of the monarch of his time. Wlioro Is the Imagination that has not been enthused over and over again with the stories of his mighty tilts with the mailed crusaders; and where Is the heart anything to touch them. They would bum all the time and sting like a lpt of bees were confined around tny ankle. I could not bear to scratch it. It v4 always so sensitive- to the touch. I could not let my clothes touch It. Tho sldn was very red. I made what I called a cap out of white felt, blotting paper thnt has not been touched with the way! and soft white dqth to hold It In shape. Thl no treaten incnara tne uon iiearteu, ( I wore night and day. wno lay in ine royal tent ourmng up 1 with fever how he sent Into his camp the , camels laden with snow to assuage the fiery disease that was consuming htm. I 'The Infidel dog" did not believe, with old Jack Falstaff, that honor was a "mero scutcheon." On the contrary, ho believed that It was the greatest thing In tho world, that it made the man, and that without It a man was no better than an empty shell. It was against those who had no sense of honor, and- no regard i for their plighted word, that Saladin un- i sheathed the sword of his most terrible wratn. Such was thu great Mohammedan states man nnd wurrlor. and therefore It la that his name lives -and will ever live while j heroism and good faith aro admired among men. J " I trlod many remedies for most of the eighteen years with no effect. Last summer when my ankle had been sore for pver a year and niuch wotm than ever before I sent for some Cuticura Soap and Ointment. It would itch and burn, besides a great hurting that J think tongue could never explain. The very first time I used Outlcura Soap and'Olntment I gained relief; they relieved the pain right then. It was three months from the time I commenced using Outlcura Soap and Ointment until the sores were entirely healed. I have not been troubled since." (Signed) Mrs. Charles E. Brooke. Oct. 22, 1012. Cuticura Soap 23c, and Outlcura Ointment 60c. are sold everywhere. Liberal sample of each mailed freo, with 32-p, Skin Book. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T.Boston. s9"Men wlio shave and shampoo with Cu ticura Soap will find it best for iVia and Jk