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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1916)
k-.ji.sa.Ai tf". "i THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1916. (Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Woman's Work -.- Household Topics Fashions for the Fall j Extremely narrow belti of leather land kid, with buckled fastening!, ire la? doming smart accessory of dress, j ; pose-crowned hats are of velvet; others of plush, the velvet hats having I narrow brims, but the plush hats are i bj-imless. I New neckwear novelties include big cape collar effects, which are obtain iile in all-white batiste or organdie, ; finished with a fluted ruffle, or in white, with blue or rose color for the Iplairings. Sometimes there are bands uj the color set on as a finish; again irjcrely machine hemstitchingi indi J it 10n Russian lines will many of au tumn dresses be modeled and so we may look for fur as the principal trimming, with embroidery as a good second, when the two features are not combined. Big pockets on skirts or the skirt section of the boluses of walking dresses and high collars will likewise be featured. Watch for the skirts of numerous gores, seven or more. These old fa vorites seem to be creeping in un awares. These skirt should be wel come, for the type gives the desired width at the hem without bulk at the waiafc and hips, now a problem with women of generous proportions or those who dislike to conceal the pleas ing hip lines of the figure. New pocketbooks are of white kid, painted by hand with designs of wild roses, pansies and other flowers. These .are of the flat-envelope type or the poach shape, with a lower sec tion of moire silk gathered to the carved top of leather, which Is adorned with the delicately' colored blossoms. Belts to match may be also had., i ' !,'.-' Walking dresses Is the name by which smart frocks for street wear will be known this autumn. For shop- i ping and general runabout use, worn witn small iurs, mese ureases win sound a keynote of smartness and prove as practical as have those thy we accepted this spring and summer. Combinations of serge and taffeta, serge and satin and full wool fabric dresses will be the vogue. New blouses from Paris are of silk jersey, one most attractive model be ins embroidered in delicate coral silk. This blouse closes in the front, has a turned-down collar and small revers, wrist-length sleeves attached to drop shoulder armhotes and a gathered peplum bordered with the embroidery i . ii i ti - in a uainiy norm p.ticiu, nine , an embroidered motif on the left breast, the Dosition usually reserved for a pocket, and on the lower edge of the sleeves. Colors that harmonise well with furs of alt descriptions are those selected by Paris as best for smart clothes. This will popularise shades of taupe and castor, blue, green and all dark colors. A most attractive walking dress is of taupe cloth, hav ing a collar of taupe-colored fur and funnel-shaped pockets on each side of the full gathered skirt, which is attached to the high Waist line of the simple bodice. Wrist-length sleeves and wide revers are features of this bodice. Do You Know That Twelve million' pounds of apples from Australia have recently reacnea London? In the United States in 1913 fif teen persons out of every 100,000 commuted auiciucr , There are 764 telephones In Bang' kok, about 259,000 in London and 556,000 in New York? iniiiiiiiiiiuniiiuiuiHUHHiiuiuiiiuiiHiiUHiiiuiiiiiiunnnmirai 62 1 Residents , of Nebraska Taking Care of the Little Ones ffiJS. : ! ' 1 1 J '. ) i! m 4 1 TIMES SQUARE registered at Hotel Astor during the past year. 1 000 Rooms. 700 with Bath. A cuisine which has nude the Astor New York's leading Banqueting place. SbigbftMit,iaW bam, fs.00 to f) Double . . )4oss 4.0 Single Raooa, wish bath, ) &.M Dtublt . 44.es Jjo Padss, Biaieias tad bath, Jit-t ulifc ; At Broadway, 44th M 45th Strata the center of New York's social and bwUMN aenvmat, is cut pcoxuaitjr to til railway terminal. ' mmtnmmmttmnpmmvmmnummimxmm Try a Colorado Vacation! Cool -Convenient Economical Only 917.50 for Round Trip TickeU on tali daily to Sept 3a With long return limit "Rocky Mountain Limited" ' and other fast trains on convenient schedules daily. Automatic Block Signal Finest Modern All-Steel Equipment Superb Dining Car Service ja jr, Ticket, reservations and llttratort on request I ,,1, I J. S. McNlly, D. P. A. JJ 14th and Fam.m St.. W. O. W. Bldg. Care of the ; . Finger Nails v U.nu kia.u wnrlriNtf atrt ..fill she is desirous of earing for her nails, is unable to devote much time to this ILitMi-an funMinn mil mm lilf. to know a simple method which would occupy only a tew minutes oauy. , Anyone will find the following method simple to understand and re quiring a few minutes only to per- lorm ana aimougn, 01 course, you ;1 iiH(fMr4 ! cn4 UZ-25Q Kilee of Beautiful Scenery - Chore line, Islands, Rivers and Bays ; eteftle.l,iiten.ltIk , ' . r la BaMh er laargha hf Porte M Wat 12 Days' Cruise, 7S-3rG00 Mile Trip 73 Leki Trlpt That Have No Equal t .iTtjjri iMMti ti.njr-n tt TftMN et, a4 a.tm at. oskm m. . WASH W.OR -Woot WORK WiTrt 7T -Ihc noose w KILL tVCRV FLY f foo PossBLY CArf AMD 5C?tN " Thi widows maur The CHILDREN WflSrt THtlR f)C5. )Nt HANDS oFftlN ZiLWrtYS WASH stoUR. OWN HANDS WITH SOAP feBFOR. fpepAreiNO "Tfte. CHILDREN'S Foot KtCPERS WHO l&Mt Their. Jooo ncovere.d bo NdT K4SS TooR CMlLbREN CM ' TrIB. OUTH 1 ; OR WT THtM FLAY v WITW poo on. . '..;.'. 1 CATS ttoN'T Le,ve. AHi roor uMCDeReo WHtRe IT KEtP. TUB CHILDREN'S HOStS CUAK ESPECIALLY "BABIES lis E.vtift.YTHme- Here, In pictorial fornv re tne rules which should be followed in caring tor the children during the epidemic of infantile paralysis. iThey are the preventive measures recommended by the health department of the Rockefeller Institute. ' HOTELS AND BESOBTBJ. WHITE MTS. J. H. IV1APLEWOOD MqE? . MAPLEWOOD, N. H. . Hla a Altitude Fret tro Bat Ferea, MAPLEWOOD INN Opaolta UoteL Oapaclts- 1st. Trm. atmU. Sivwter 1S-HM OaM Cmhm tOSO rrt UotoriiU' Btat tUdlUnc OraUr la UU. SMkiMi flM, US BrMdww, Km Kara, tin KwWihkI, N. H. cannot expect to obtain the same re sults as when your naila are submit ted to a professional manicurist, yet after a few weeks you need never be ashamed of them again. Soak the fingers In warm, soapy water, so as to soften the naila and the surround ing cuticle.. Then dry them on a soft towel and, taking an orange wood stick, deftly insert this under the nails to extract any colored matter. Next trim the nail with a pair of curved scissora and then, with the rough side of tht file or emery board sold for this purpose, finally bevelling it with the iiner side. Now for tht cuticle; this must be loosened with a cuticle knife, which should be blunt-shaped, or the orange wood stick may be used for the same purpose. Care should be taken not to bruise the nail during these pro cesses, or little opaque spots of white will appear. Now dip the fingers in a toilet cream, wiping off with a soft towel or tissue paper. Then take some polishing powder and, sprinkling on the nail, briskly apply tht polish ing pad. When finished, see that none of the powder remains on the nails. And never use a knife or any sharp metal instrument In cleaning your naila. They only scratch little fis sures into the, nail substance, in which lodge particles of dirt and dust that art very difficult to remove, and keep the nails discolored and gray looking. When the Baby Has Fever in Summer Take off hit clothe. . 8ponge him all over with cool water every three hours. Put wet cloths on his head. ' Call the doctor. Lighten his food at once. If you're nura- If you aren't nursing; Beware of the Languid Girl Happily, the languid girl type ia dis appearing happily for the other sex. This type of girl is languid either by temperament or design. If it is the former, there's some excuse for her; of the latter, none. And it is generally the latter. , She's invariably pretty, be It noted, for it would be dangerous for a plain girl to assume such airs. The languid girl maintains an atti tude of studied indifference upon all occasions. Everything is "such a bore." She moves dreamily from place to place; she answers most questions in monosyllables; she re clines frequently, and her poses are carefully considered. Men she makes into slaves. They must play the undignified roles of beasts of burden, and carry on all the conversation as well. Do they sub mit? Yes,- provided that she's suffi ciently pretty; but even then they are apt to get a little tired. The languid girl is dying out as a type. By a curious irony, the times that created her have, to a certain extent, made her impossible. These are strenuous days, and to men the hours are precious. They cannot afford, if they want to make monev. to waste time lavishly, and the languid girl is a terrible waster in this respect, she expects, nav. demands unremitting attention from her admirers. There is to be no raoid love making to her. the languid girl's attitude is, dis passionately judged an uncomfortable trait. It may be graceful, and it is perhaps picturesque, but it does not, somehow, answer to this terribly matter-of-fact old world. Brightness, companionship and sympathy are the greaf keynotes of earthly happiness. And hvnnrt all nrice is woman's sym pathy. Not so much sentimental sympathy, if the term may be used, but the intelligent, brave sympathy that upholds a man in stress and trial and tinges dark clouds with unspeak able sweetness. 11 i ' 1 fa him. cut down the nurslnea. him, put him on the food nearest to mother's milk. Nesil&Fooa (A CompUt Food Not Milk Modifier) Tht nott ddiettt baby can digMt it It it aa aaft at mothar'i , mUkitaalf. v ,.:'.(.,..: ' Don't liv Urn eow'a tntlk. Raw, cow's milk It usually tht eanat ' of tuBuntr faver and rammer diet. rhM. And twnmtr diarrhea uka mora babiat from loving arms tbaa ny other cauat. . . . . - NotM I. tit. milk f liMtthr wwa In iImb dntrlM. Th. part, to hM.y -Sw T.ur bby modifies thoMthlni. ' vur fc.br d4i th.t ... not I. nVl Willi .r. ddd. ft.dnoat to . powdw, PBcktd In .IMlsht .a, no t"m .r tk n.i. esn ftt no.r it. To. odd only frMh w.l.f, Bnd .now that yo. or. Bivtne your baby haalth and otrontth la Mh bettl. Nwtld. Pood. NwtM'. wilt not well or wnr, ...a. yo. odd only watr, boll ... mlnuM acid It I. raady. It tt t -plat. food. Whtft mi. owthM Mad ttMthv. aavan 7. art .fofta aaa it today. A. tha Batter B.blaa" anov.ra.nt arovn, H Im trmrt th. an .( NMtld'a. W M. Mlrpaat hr. MSB TMof laaa. mil faWiruf . and . boo akoaa haaMfrrMoiaalofa :, , tnsrits rooo company - . SO W..W tWMkoi, Nov Yatfc Vloaa. omt m. FlUta ywr fcMh ate trUlpaabaM. ,. , , Ham..,,...,........; City., Ik V' lr i t i ll .-r-a.i , " 'I " - d! 1 JT ww.idiUiHimiii .,-1ka, j i T ' Orange Griddle Cakes With Syrup By CONSTANCE CLARKE. Everyone loves this kind of griddle cakes. To make four or five pancakes, take ont whole raw egg, one ounce of fine flour, four of five drops of vanilla essence and three large teaspoonaful of milk. , Mix the flour, egg and fla voring together till tht whole pre sents a smooth appearance, then add tht milk by degrees until the whole is thoroughly mixed into a batter. Cut the rind of an orange into small Jiiecet and boil one-half cup of water or minutes. Squeese out all the or ange juice. Pour Juice and peel into the batter. Mike an omelet or fry ing pan hot and brush the bottom over with warm fat; pour about one and a half tablespoonsful of the bit ter into the pan and turn it about till the batter spreads over the bottom and fry over a brisk fire on both sides till the pancake is a pretty golden brown. The pancakes can be made in rapid succession when the psn is hot. As each pancake is done, turn it onto a hot baking tin and dredge it over with sugar and keep it on a tin at tht mouth of the oven till ready to serve and serve hot with maple syrup. . . Tomorrow Stuffed Spanish Onions. The Art oj Housekeeping is Becoming a Science By GARRETT P. SERVISS. The reign of the good housekeeper is only just beginning. Every month sees some, new invention that helps to diminish the slavery of housework. Housekeeping has for ages been an art, and, as with all arts, its practi tioners range in their abilities from mediocrity through fair talent up to positive genius. Now housekeeping is becoming a science, and science has this advan tage over art that it tends to equal ize abilities by bringing results through mechanical and automatic methods which anybody can employ. For a plain male citizen, who knows little about the secrets of the kitchen, it is a wonderful revelation to read the articles in Good Housekeeping Magazine and to look at the devices there shown which relate to this fast growing science. Almost, everything about a house can now be done with half the expenditure of labor and time formerly required. Td be without this knowledge and these inventions is not merely to be behind the times, but it is to live harder, less well and more expensively than there is any necessity for. The kitchen is the stomach of the house, and upon the way in which it performs its functions the welfare of the whole establishment depends. My attention has just been called to a model French kitchen. All the world has long looked up to France as the ideal home of culinary art, and it is evident that she does not intend to be left behind in the mod ern transformation of this art into a science. The kitchen has also been called "the theater of the French house wife," and this theater is becoming really a fascinating place with its dis- filay of electrical ranges, scientific amps, automatic grinders, mills and churns. Pasteur filters, coffee mak ers, ice-cream freezers, devices for easily getting rid of waste substances, porcelain sinks as white and clean as Alpine snow, scouring machines, filters, convenient cupboards and all lothe glittering array of nickel, silver, copper, aluminum, bronze and gran ite ware utensils that fill the room , with bright reflections. One of the great charms of a French kitchen is that the mistress is frequently to be seen there, not merely as a visitor, but as a helper and director. She inspires, her ser vants by her presence, and by her ad vice. She does not pretend to live in another world than theirs. They know that she understands their business as well- as they do them selves, and even better. She can take their place if necessary. This is as true of the rich as of the rela tively poor. The economy of the French people has long been world-famous, and no where is it more brilliantly, displayed than ti the kitchen. A French family, as has often been said, could live, and live well, upon the waste of many American families. And the exer cise of this economythis art of get ting all the good out of things fas cinates those who practise.it. It has the charm of all applied knowledge. They not only get all that is good they make the good better. I know many a little country inn in France where, for three or four francs, wine included (a franc is worth 20 cents), one can have a really better meal than can be had in New York for two or three dollars. And yet meats, and similar things, cost about as much in France as they do here. The secret lies in economi cal management and good cooking. It it no wonder . that a first-rate French cook can command in New York a salary of $5,000, or even more. And if he, or she, retains on this side of the Atlantic the economical skill learned at home, more than half the , salary is saved to the employer. One thing to be noticed in the French kitchen is that there ia usually no false ecenomy in the choice of ap paratus. Everything is of the best, or at least good ana substantial. The kitcheu, in its way, is as well furnished as the parlor. You may be sure that this spells ecenomy in the end, for if it did not it would not be found in France. I have often been surprised on en tering a house in France, which, in America, might be taken as the abode of people in very humble circum stances, to find a far larger and better stocked kitchen than many rather pre tentious houses possess here, accom panied by a culinary skill in its mis tress which would earn her a large salary on this side of the ocean. No doubt we shall learn this eco nomical wisdom in good time and the sooner, the better. Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax H. Ia '. WwkUnt. Door Ulaa Falrfai: For tlin. yo.ro I b.v. lor.d and baen lovad by a youni man. Wa aaporatad bocauia ha rapoatadly told mo of dlfforont ilrla In lovo with him. Whan, rldlnv In era ha .dmlta an Intaroat 1. a.ary ftrl ha waa, at the aama tlma aoylnc thot II I wera to marry him ha would al wayo lovo ma. I hava triad to ahow him hla arror, and ho only ropaata that ho ean not'halp It. . a A. T. A man wno glories In hit fickleness and his interfst in every woman ht sees is not the sort to make a hus band who is worthy of respect and trust. Your separation is a fortunate thing, for no man who boasts of hit conquests to his fiancee is going to cha ge. his nature and give hit wife unswerving devotion. For the sake of your own peace of mind give up all thought of marrying this weakling. Yon Should Bo Chaporonod. Daar Ulaa Palrfay: Will you pl.aoa UU ma If It ia propar for . olub eonalatlnt ot boy. and clrla of from IT to IS t. to out on a whola day, outing without . chap aron? SECRET ART. Tt would b. far battor for tha youna peopla to hava . ehaparon with thorn. Why not tako .loot tha mothar and fathar of on. of you, or .van two oldar couploa, la ordar that thay may b. company for Mh other. If It 1. not oonvanlont for any af y.ur parent, to to, aurely Mm. f yon moat havo an aunt or an older eiater wh will b. ottly too tl.d to t. with you.