The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Pa - J- ft 3& . IT 1 ,it ' I i : s-i - Tr- f I mil IS! f.-il 1 .f rr t t il 8 By Helen Astor. (Mrs Vincent Astor.) THIRTEEN years ago Miss Mary Morton, daughter of Vice-President Levi P. Morton,' established Holiday Farm, at Rhinecliffe-on-the-Hud-on, in New York. The home grew out of a need which Ml Morton recognized ' that a child who had been ill might itlll be a victim of the Alness If dis charged too soon from a hospital A child that had been 111 may have be come reasonably well, but yet foe weak- too weak to withstand the onslaughts that conditions of crowded tenement lite make upon the physical constitution. patient should never be discharged from a hospital until completely recovered and provided with a fund of resistance against the environment that menaces health. But this desideratum cannot be reached by overcrowded city Institutions. Those who are no longer acutely ill must give way to those who are suffering more than themselves. Those who in favorable conditions will recover must give way to those who must have care or die. Therefore those in the lesser state of need must make way for the greater. It is upon tils proposition that Holiday Farm, Home for Convalescent Children, was built. Last year Mr. Vincent Astor, desiring to erect a memorial for his father, Colonel John Jacob Astor, who was lost in the Titanic disaster, conceived the idea of building a new home for the in stitution and ot enlarging Its scope. The home was erected at a cost of about 1100,000. Holiday Farm Is eighty-five miles from New York. Far enough to escape the noises, the tainted air and the feverish momentum of city life, yet within three hours from the home of the patient by train, or less, if, as sometimes happens, the automobile of one of the owners of country homes near Rhlnebeck is offered for the return of the little one. The.weak point ot convalescent homes, as of hospitals, Is that the patients must too soon give 'place to others. The dis tinguishing characteristic of 'Holiday Farm what makes it unique is that the little ones who have been ill remain until they are well, no matter how long that is. It they ere quite well after a fortnight, very well. If their recovery requires two months, three, four, six, :hey remain unmolested until the cure is beyond question and they possess a fund f reserve vitality. Boys are admitted from the ages of four to nine. Girls from tour to fifteen. When the girls have recovered their health an effort is made to find a home for them in the neighborhood which has given them health. On the domestic staff of many homes within a radius of twenty miles from Rhlnebeck are young women whose names are on the registration books of Holiday Farm. But it the children must return to their homes, those who are actively In terested in "the Home for Convalescents have arranged that they shall do so with memories of simple, pleasant and health ful living. The terraced lawns slope to a brook which runs through the farm. The grounds are shaded by tall, old trees. Twelve swings, gliding settees and sand box, an out-of-door glass-Inclosed playhouse beneath a tree whose branches sweep the ground are there tor their amusement For the play spirit Is encouraged for .the building of health. The old bouse which originally sheltered the institution provided for twenty little Invalids. The larger new one, erected on the site of the old, has a capacity of fifty. ; Most convalescent homes close in Oc- : . tober. Holiday Farm is always open. Pale little chlldien learn there the de lights of coasting and sleighing. A laNSy flu ft fi r' ilk hx J st ; i imm sS;K.i: yw mm mat- m- Mrs. Vincent Astor Tells of Health and Hap piness Brought to Invalid Children ofthePoor Holiday J arrit House, Built by Vin cent Astor as a Memorial to His Father. ers went from the New York Mission and from Saint Bartholomew's: The Charity Organisation, the Union Settle ment, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine contributed. Twenty-two of the patients came from miscellaneous sources. Many incidents that strike the human chord occur at Holiday Farm. For in stance, thither went little Catherine, aged seven, ill-nourished, under-sized, ex hausted. Turning a grave and prema turely aged face upon her questioner, she said: "My mother had rheumatism. I did all the housework for the family until I broke down. Then a visiting nurse sent me here." Little Catherine stayed at the home until she had rested. Reports of her said she bad gained four pounds a week after receiving this im petus toward new vitality. One little stranger in our land went to the farm after an operation for appendi citis. To a small American who was making the Journey from New York to the home with her the little foreigner, hugging a moth-eaten muff to her thin breast, boasted: "Our family are rich." Said the American child: "How much money have yout" , To which the little stranger replied: "My mother's got a Job scrubbing for -eight dollars a week." "That's nothing,'' said the American. A Group of the Small Convalescents at Holiday Farm. "My father gets, nine dollars a week .when he works." - . Holiday Farm cares for such children as these: On Christmas forty-four sat down to a turkey, dinner. Of these only ten would have had any Christmas joy at home. Interested in the home and making annual as well as special and occasional contributions to it are Miss Mary R. Cal ender, Mrs. Henry O. Chapman, Mrs. W. i B. Dlnsmore, Miss Dlnsmore, Mr. A G, Gallatin, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Astor, Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Huntington, Mrs. Garrett Kip, Mr. Ogden Mills, Mrs. Will iam Church Osborn, Mrs. James Roose- " taw HY. m. 1,1 V Ular of the ? -Of? Mrs. Vincent Astor, a Pillar Convalescent Home, There Is a kindergarten within doors. If the little invalid's stay Is long, his or her education need not be neglected. The rooms are large, and air and light have freer access to them than in most institutions of the kind. There are per fect heating and ventilation, which are valuable aids to sound and rapid con valescence. Out-of-door sleeping porches are further aids. Children go to Holiday Farm through the channels ot New York City hospitals. All the nations of Europe and China and Syria are represented. Many children go who are fighting the weakness 'following operations for appendicitis. Others are slowly recovering from typhoid and other fevers. Preventive work Is some times done, for children have been spared the operations and the fevers by the healthful surroundings and nourishing food given in time. Every effort Is made to give the chil dren the benefit of the latest discoveries ot science and the best methods of care of the sick. The matron. Miss Ada C. : Lynch, paid visits to convalescent homes to study their problems and their means of solving them. She made a study of expenditures, learning that Holiday Farm had eliminated waste to the point of being run a little more economically than the average similar institution. ' Its expenditures are about 112,000 a year, or 45 cents a day, for each child. Rules are reduced to the minimum, because they sometimes hamper the full usefulness of convalescent work. . ' Last year S8S children were cared for ' J lK i ff'il , '"lLA'4M- 0ne of the uKht and Air Flooded Dormitories. velt, Miss Ruth V. Twombley, Mrs. IB, Aldrlch, Mrs. G. B. Alexander, Mr. Will iam L. Allen, Mr. A. T. Asher, Mr. Henry O. Barbey, Mrs. George D. Beattys, Miss . Sadie Bellonl, Mrs. B. J, Berwlnd, Miss B. C. Brooks, Mr. William Kelly Brown, Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, Mrs. H. T. Cham- -bers, Mrs. J. J. Chapman, Miss Allla Cramer, Miss Julia D. DawsAn, Mr. Wal ter Decker, Mr. David Dows, Mrs. Tracy. Dows, Master Olln Dows, Mrs. H. K. Dunham, Mr. Charles Ferris, Mr. Henry Grube, Mr. Frank Herrick, Mrs. F. D. Fitch, Mrs. Gerald L. Hoyt, Mr. R. P.' Huntington, Mrs. Mary Adams Johns ton, Miss Elisabeth Lynch, Mr. C. E. Mc carty, Mr. A. C. McCurdy, Mr. Marshall, Mrs. Douglass Merritt, Miss Ethel D. Mer ritt, Dr. George N. Miller, Mr. Peyton F. Miller, Mrs. W. Starr Miller. Mrs. L. A. Mitchell, Miss Montgomery, Mrs. L. P. Morton, Mrs. Thomas Newbold, Mr. 8. H. Olin, Mrs. Wlllard D. Straight, Mrs. Za brlskle, Mr. Franklin Olmsted, Miss Julia Olmsted, Mr. Henry Farrlsb, Jr., Mrs. Frederick Pruyn, Mr. A. M. Quick, Miss Mary O. Radcllffe, Mr. F. Rlckert, Mrs. Archibald Rogers, Mrs. John 8. Rogers, Mrs. 'H. Ruge, Mrs. David Rumsey, Mrs. M. V. B. Schsyver, Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. R. B. Buckley, Mr. A. Lee Wager, Mr. William F. Wey, Mr. Eugene Wells,-Mrs. William Woodward. Among the gifts to the invalids from other children were a playhouse and a copy of "Little Folks," by Miss Alice Astor; a Punch and Judy show with Ice cream, vegetables "from their own gar den," a barrel of pears, a barrel ot apples, . a doll, a sack and twelve pairs of stock ings, six pairs of shoes and a radioptleon. The officers of the Holiday Farm Asso ciation are: President, Mr. Vincent As tor; vice-president, Miss Ruth Morgan; secretary, Mrs. R. p.v Huntington; treas urer, Mrs. Tracy Dows. The executive committee is composed of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Astor, Mrs. Tracy Dows, Miss Elsa Howard, Mr. R. P. Huntington, Rer. F. K. Little, Miss Elizabeth Lynch, Miss Ruth Morgan, Miss Ethel Merritt, Miss Julia Olmsted, Miss Margaret Buckley, Mrs. William Woodward. A Little Patient Growing Well Without Being Hurried. - i at the farm. Of these SOS returned well. Twenty-nine were Improved. Forty-two are still in the home. Nine did not Im prove. . , The small patients go from Roosevelt Hospital, from Harlem, Gouvernenr, Belle vue, the Presbyterian, St. Luke's and New York hospitals. The Bureau of Child Hygiene sent some patients. OtU- Copyrlght, 1016, by the Star Company. How You Can Make Your Clothes Waterproof A FRENCH scientist has lately discovered an effective method ot making garments absolutely waterproof. The process Is simple, durable and Inexpensive, and does not Injure the appearance of the cloths. It consists ot a very slight Impregnation of the fiber of the cloth with wool-fat. This Is dissolved and diluted in a neutral, anhydrous and vola tile liquid. Take live or ten parts ot Adeps lanae, procurable at almost any drug store, liquefy it In a little chloroform and dilute with ninety to ninety-five parts of gasoline. Immerse In this the entire garment, squeezing or stirring it for a' few minutes, then wringing out and drying In the air. To make bags, leggings, articles of coarse cloth or canvas Great Britain Rights Reserve waterproof smear them thoroughly with a mixture of talo with fifty per cent vaseline. i , ' 1 Red vaseline Is best, since it costs less and gives an attrae, tlve khaki color. The paste Is applied much like shoe blacking and Is then rubbed In vigorously with a brush to make sure ol ' an Intimate contact. Shoes, also, should, be waterproofed, especially for the win ter and wet spring months. Any ot the reliable brands of waterproofing oils -on the market will be found satisfactory,; provided they are applied often enough after every trip In the rain or snow. The old-fashioned method of rubbing ht tallow is still efficient, though not so convenient to use as tie com mercial brands.