Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 17, 1916, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TIIF, BKK: OMAHA, FRIDAY, MAKCII 17, IHIO.
Health Hints -:-
Fashions -:- Woman's Work -:- Household Topics
;"Awjully Busy!"
B?y Nell Brinkley
In Of J, Family Cough
Copyright. Intern'l News Service,
i Remedy, IIome-Made
Easily Prepared riwti Terr
Little, bat la Prompt, Sara
end Effective
1 : : , SZfiZh .
jlvw w xwfmsss Asjwmwmrv A.fMms. .iJiwi-cuj'u
"That's as how you look -at It People say u to one another
ao'maiy timed a day I Over "tha telephone. In a busting bast, tha
loan, offers U as a reason why he hasn't "dropped round" In so long
a;wulle been mighty bosyi"
yf. c . The girl deep In exams scrawls- on, monograrnmed paper to the
?' drl across the continent, "I haven't written In so long, Janey but
'J Ir been so busy!"
r-i'r Two slim creatures who hye little else to do saye talk psychol-
i ogy and charity baxars. and fly from a dinner to a theater and on
i: to a danoe, kiss each other fondly while the traffic snarls and moan,
J. . "My dear -fm frightfully busy!"
The little person who beats a typewriter all day long, or the
pleasant, sp-many-tlmes-pretty girl who spreads everything she has
' from behind the counter for your pleasure, looks sadly at the un
mended Mouses, and stockings with little: ladders of dropped
. . , sutcnes .going down tnem, ana says,
The man who rolls your ashcans from the cellar door these cold
VV mornings enunciates with his board
IT he Love
fdf Beauty
l. BrBEATBICI
BBATHICB rATJUTAX.
Xhar Is only one form of extravaranoa
'Which Is uttarly lnexoviaahia and that is
W-asta.
''Wh yoa buy aotnethtnjr 70a do not
veed mrly.Acau you want It. don't
"candemn yooreelf utterly. Perhaps your
't aztravaranea .was caused by a longlng
)?iae beauty, and In aatlafylna tt you may
t'feava cultivated aomethinc artlaUo and
Jorely ovan if Impractical. In your n
tura So you avoided wasta. . .
Racently a young friend of mine saw
; and admired a beautiful little viae . of
blown arlaaa. I cum Into her tawdrv Utile
f room on day and saw on her desk this
exaulslta tuo with a single red roaa In
Kit Sua aeked me STiltlly.- "Waan't I
wickedly extravagant to buy that? It coat
ma $2. and twice a week I Just have to
spend M cents on a rose to go in tt. Well,
I get op half aa hour earlier every morn
ing and walk to work., and that makes
tip for my little plurre." -Now,
aa a matter of fact. I think tt
, would have been far more extravagant
it little Jessie had stifled her Impulse
"r beauty!, Undoubtedly It Is good for
f'fcer to get a brisk walk each day In the
bracing air. That la good for her body
and I think her soul and spirit feaat high
on the rose tn'lU lovely glass vase.
The average working girl allows herself
each week a Uttle money for pleasure.
Perhaps -It goes in dance hall, perhaps
It buys a box of candy, perhapa It pur
thaace a bit of tinsel Jewelry. But does
It do her any actual good does it give
her any deep and lasting satlefactlonT
ijn, other words Is It getting her any
F. where?. ...
can actually Imagine that Jeaata's
' vaae with lovely red rose Is going to
perform a Uttle miracle of uplift upon
f all her life. I think she works harder and
better for her morning walk to the office.
, 1 think the longing for clean, sweet,
wholesome beauty, as personified in that
rose, Is going to make Jeaafe care leas
e-V
and leas for tinsel aad more and more
or what U fine and worth having.
I think ahe Is going to work toward a
toal of honest succeaa. I think she is
Agoing to gravitate toward her desire for
' this bit of nature, and who won't laugh
at her and wonder why ahe doesn't save
toer M cents a week toward a pair of
lancing pumps Instead.
The rose means an aspiration toward
Hre, toward the soil from which we
ffii come and the cleanneas of the coun-
t:The: girl Who goes off on a Sunday
t-ekrurfion into the country shares this
4 Ave of the beautiful. The girl who spends
ynJaer ntooay in cheap, realaurants or cora
' mon rabareta Is stifling the same fine
last' net.
v.
-.-' -
ll j wasn't so busy! '
- like lips,- "Terrible busy!"
Remarriage and
Its Consequences
By LOTJISB RKIXOEB.B.
There seem at the moment to be aa
epldemie of remarriages.
Tou can hardly pick up a paper or meet
a friend without discovering that soma
gay widower or widow-ess Is prepared
to don the motley, of -matrimony again
and adventure afresh Into those Elyslan.
Celds commonly associated by the mar
ried and the cynical with nightmare.
I don't' know whether an earnest desire
to help the nation is at the bottom of
this remarrying erase, or whether It Isn't
merely eelflshnees.
1 For, after all. If it Isn't aalriah . mam.
twice when so many people haven't the
cnancs to marry at all, I don't know
what Is.
Although 1, for one, don't pretend to
nnderstand the sudden eruption of seo
ond loves, rve always understood that
marriage was like the wedding cake that
preoedea It frightfully Indigestible and
not half so fruity aa it looks.
I've had aulta a lot r it f
'lately cake. I mean, not metrimonv
and although, according to time-honored
tradition, I've placed each bit beneath
my pillow to ensure a dream portrait of
my future husband, I've dreamt of a dif
ferent man each time.
Bo I suppose I'm enlnr to Mmmit Ki
amy.. It's too much to hope every, hue-
Dana win conveniently die at the rate
of one a year and leave me the neceaaary
to buy a freah trouaseau.
Tor I expect the marrying hebtt grows
on one. really. One husband la a prepa
ration for a doaen. Once you've itved
with one man. If the devil himself popped
down the chimney to share your break
fast of bacon or grape nuts, you'd prob
ably find him a pleasant change from
wtdowedneea.
There are women, of course, who seem
to. prefer euddllng Pomeranians to any
husband, but I think this preference
arises solely from the fac that they
haven't been asked to change the
estate, and anyway, they must euddle
something.
If I were a first husband now, or a
first wife, I think I Should look very
dubiously upon all my club acquaintances
or dearest friends. Somewhere here, I
should feel Inclined to say to myself,
"Standa No. I." for with the remarry
ing habit so fashionable, nobody could
really expert to be mourned for longer
than It takes to get the house refurn
ished. WVU, I suppose Cupid knows bis wsy
about, but I should think he was either
n'xing for trouble or anxious to use up
his stork
.. The artist who scratches away in black and white, and Is looked -upon
enviously by the ashcan man, groans while he (r she) "gets
out" a drawing while all the rest of the world Is asleep, "I can't get
time to write to my own father I'm so busy!"
The man who labors at night seems never to come out even,
and is "so busy." The lawyer who can yet get away for a tiny game
of golf when he feels as dry as dust with the welghtiness of his
calling Is all that "too busy" to do thus and so!
The big man with five telephones circling him 'round, who dab
bles in this and that, lectures, fills a good big niche of his own 1n
the world and shows a great army under him how to fill
theirs Is "too busy" to remember not to go on to a dinner in his
"duster!" And the little man under him, who has but one thing
to do, and is told when and how to do that, is yet "too busy to eat!"
Aren't we funny? I reckon you think that no one Is Just quite
ao busy as you! It's a notion we hare.
The lovely person without ever a weight on her heart or mind,
with Plenty opening wide its hand to her at a whisper, singing "tra-
Chlorine in Peace and War
By WOODS niTCHIMOft, M D.
Men are not the only things that lead a
double life. All our Insect friends, for
instance, lead triple existences, each
stage of which is completely hidden from
the other.
That fellow creature of the chorua girl,
the lobster, passes through a dosen dif
ferent moults before he reaches the Great
White Way, while that distant poor rela
tion of ours, the angle worm, can be out
with the scissors into as many sections
as he Is Inches Ions and grow a new
head and tall on each one.
But the most astounding masquerading,
in the most different anu contradictory
of guises upon the world stage. Is that
of those Innocent and passionless crea
tures the chemical elements. In one
guise a deadly poison. In the other a llfe
glvlng food; in one sort of company a
soggy mush. In another a dangerous high
explosive.
' One great primitive element nitrogen,
plays the leading role In guano at one
end of Its repertoire and gunpowder at
the other, and can paas Itself off as
loaves or as lyddite with equal facility.
Another element, hydrogen, one of the
big four carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitro
genwhich make and control life and all
Its prooessee. la the cause of all the wet
ness In the world through Its two-to-one
combination with oxygen to form water.
While In another case the same two
Identical actors, supported by the famous
star, oalctnm, produce the hot teat fire
and moat brilliant Illumination known
the oxy-hydrogen blowpipe, or familiar
limelight. Whatever may be the fortune
of others, these two actors are always
In the limelight
1 In recent years our attention -has been
Particularly attracted to another Jekytf-and-Hyde
among the elements the wide
spread and Important element, chlorine.
This subs tan oe. In various combinations,
was first discovered la see. watsr, and
as It goes everywhere where eea water
goes, which means over three-fourths of,
the surface of the whole globe, while
moat of the rooks of the other or dry
land, one-fourth, have been laid down
under sea water. It la tolerably ublqul
toua, or In the vernacular "numerous."
As ws originally grew up and lived for
millions of years In sea water we have
never yet been able to get oompletely
soaked out and "freshened up" yet, and
chlorine In a considerable amount stiU Is
found In our bodies, particularly la the
fluids.
We srs all old salts, whether we follow
the sea for a living or not. Whether this
is simply a bad old deep see or sub
msrlns habit which we rennot at once
shake off. like the atavisms to shark
and sea serpent ' form" of the past few
months, or whether chlorine has become
a vital necessity would be hard to eay.
Certainly Its oomblnatlon with sodium,
chloride of sodium, the common salt of
our table aad our pickling vata, has be
come a neoesslty of life. There Is still
some mystery about It, because while
common salt. Is found In practically every
living animal tissue and most vegetable
It does not enter Into Intimate combina
tion with the life-stuff, or protoplasm,
but only seems to serve with water as
a salt watsr bath or warm Inland aea In
which It can swim and feed and carry
out Its activities. It seems to serve as a
kind of battery fluid for our life elec
trical processes, and the moment the
supply of salt Is cut off our health suf
fers at once.
With all our long, long dry land and
air breathing habits we are still a walk
ing aquarium, traveling marine menage
ries, miniature oceans on legs, skin
locked seaa, living leather bottles of
warm sea water In human shape. The
moment our supply of either water or
salt runs short we begin to founder.
Although tble action of sea-salting our
Internal bath water may sound rather
vague and trivial, especially aa our cells
do not sat or burn salt, or take It Into
their structure In any way, yet It Is
really of very great and fundamental
Importance.
For the simple reason that we are
coming more and more to the conclusion
that the real motive forces of life are
electrical, or closely allied thereto, and
as one great chemical physiologist has
vividly expressed it: "It Is the electro
lytee that put life Into the protoplasm
Olfe-atufr)."
That Is to say, those subetanoea which
are capable of carrying electrical charges
backward and forward between the dif
ferent parts of the body. And of these
the moat Important and active are hydro
gen, sodium and chlorina, all three of
common salt, or sodium chloride.
In-Shoot8 .
The woman who marriee before she la
old enough to know better often raise
thunder when she begins to know better.
In the matter of Christmas trees and
Sunday school ptoalre the small boy plays
no favorites.
The grass widow la usually equipped
with a lot of unnecessary Information.
The wise guy does most of his drinking
when the other fellow treats.
Moat of ue would be willing to give
woman the vote If we were sure that she
would not Insist on joining sll the lolgej
When a men refuses to knock your
enemies he Is no ft lend.
la-la," who can have a whole afternoon to "dress" for a party it
she choosos, and idle moments like fairy people ringing her 'round,
each with a Uttle Joy to offer will tell you, while she pats her last
curl In place and dashes for her cloak, that she's "awfully busy!"
The little mother with a heart as big as a Benefit auditorium
it has to be stops brushing the last of her baby's feathery hair Into
imaginary place, and while he rolls in her lap and chuckles and
pulls and makes bubbles and kicks her elbows, she ties the bonnet
pn one little person, tucks in the hair of another, sees that they all
have a handkerchief, wipes the last breakfast crumbs off Billy and
wraps up his ears, hears the tall one spell her lesson, and promising
to finish a new frock "for in the morning," sends one brigade to
school. First lap phlsyn seconds! And that nKht the Uttle mother
apologises, "I would have done thus and so but I've been awfully
busy!" '
There Is truth!
Are you awfully busy or do you Just think you are?
BY NELL BRINKLEY.
Facts About
The Grand Duchess George of Russia
since the outbreak of the war has knitted
thirty-five pairs of socks and twenty
pairs of mittens for the Russian army.
The prince of Wales occupies a lower
military rank than any other royalty serv
ing In the war. He has repeatedly refussd
to' accept promotion.
Sir John French had made up his mind
to leave the service Just before the out
break of the Doer war In 18M, when he
was offered a command.
Rufford Abbey, the residence of Lord
Havlle, waa once described by the late
King Edward VII. aa tha most comfort
able home In England.
Andrew Fisher, the new high eommls-
Yy r 7 1 n () j i
I W J-l 4-1 CI i-l ti
WA iramxv i
wMMmm. am
7T MMWa ee n tir
the Famous
sloner for Australia, began life ss a pit
hand In a coal mine In Scotland.
The dinner given by Lord Farquhar in
July, 1914, was ths last private social
funotlon attended by the king and quean
of England
Prince Leopold of Prussia, who la mar
ried to a slstsr of the German empress,
Is the wealthiest of German royalties.
One of Admiral Beatty's favorite recre
ations la that of writing letters to soma
very Intimate friend. ,
Badminton is amor.g the favorite rec
reations of M. Basonoff. Russian minister
for - foreign affairs.
Edmund Oosse can write with both
hands.
C " .'-3
0
7
In the Stoclrinet Covering
Jm txrfturvi Armmmrfimtmri. fat. mfpM fir.
The spicy richness
Armour's mild Star cure
intensified by smoking in
Stockinet Covering Armour's
way in retaining ine ncn
natural juices and improv
ing the flavor. The Oval
Label identities It
Armour's best
Buy the ham
whole and remove
Stockinet vourself. If vour
sr - mf
dealer cannot supply yoa, phons
as nis name.
AttMoim A company
RoM. Boosts, ftCf-r., lath aad Joaae ate. Bong. 1045
W. I. Wtlklusoa, Mgr., SSta aaa Q ta. Tel. So. 1T0
There's an Armour Oval Label store near you.
By making ihifl pint of old-time cough
rrup At home ynu nnt only save about
12. a compered with the ready-made
kind, but you mill also have a much mora
JTompt and positive remedy In every war.
t overcome the ntml coughs, throat and
rbeet colds in 24 hour relieves even
w hooping rough quickly and is excellent,
too. (or bronchitis, bronchial asthma.
hoarseness and spasmodic croup.
Oct fr.-m anv dniir store 2 ounrca of
rincx (oO cents worth), nonr it Into a
pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain
granulated supsr svrun. Full direction
with Pines. Keeps perfectly aud tastes
(rood.
Voit can foci thin take hold of a eongn
or rold in a way that means business. It
?uickly loosens the dry. hoarse, or pain
ul cough and heals the inflamed mem
branes. It also has a remarkable effect
in overcoming the peritent loose couch
by stopping the formstion of phlegm in
the throat and bronchial tubes.
The effect of fine on the membranes It
known by almost every one. I'inex is a
most valuable concentrated compound of
genuine Norway pine extract combined
with gun Urol and other natural healing
pine elements.
J here are manr worthless imitations
of this famous mixture. To avoid dis
appointment, ask your dmpgist for 2H
ounces of Pinex," and do not accept any
thing else.
A gusrsnietr of absolute satisfaction,
or money promptly refunded, goes with
this preparation. The I'inex Co, it
Wayne, lnd.
i .Vie"- . jor-.
"Any time yoa want re
goodies tits Calumet Baking
l'owdsrl My mother ates It
he's tried all others the'i
learned her lesson now the
sticks to Calumtt
"Unequalled for making
tender, wholesome, light bak
ing. Wonderful leavening
snd raiting qualities uniform
uta Mother says calumet
1 ami amaonkal ta Sin mmm tarn-
imI sm. Try k si saea.
lUeeived Hlaheat Awards
Htm Cut 4
i
3 (n
I CrtCAK-Ue-A.CCUa
Lit Li cv3
3
THEHAM
WHAXAM
of
is
the
as
Try TTiesej
StarBecea
"SiaMarareMLMf Lars
Dseaears Fans Seessge
Arawer's Crass Joke
Cleeeriieea Better
CleaeaU Oieeaariarbe '
Stiver Caara OteaauraarSM
Aad ens 1M Foe.
the
' 1
V 1
Ji rssu
1 bttx
i 1 mm
the be I , uuf
InlftesTslTrarsieTB
rteaacU saw Be Oval Label n
I
1 1 it