THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAYJULY 27, 1916. Health, Hints -:- Fashions -.- Woman's Work -:- Household Topics Getting Too Fat? Try This Reduco People who don't grow too fat ire lite fcrttnute exception. But if you find the fct iccumulattrif or already cumberioffle, you will be wise to follow thii lugecftion, which h endorsed by thousands of people who know. Ask your druggist (or if you pre fer write to the Marraola Co., 864 Wood- ward Ave., Detroit, Mich.) for a large case of Mannola Prescription Tablets. 75c U the price the world over. By doing this yon will be eafe front harmful draft and be able to reduce two, three or four pounds a wed; without dieting or exercise. i n 8 p Car Wear Jmmhmn Blvd. S Success of M A comfortable, home-like hotel in the business cen ter of the city offer ing every convenience nd every service. The best food is served in the New Kaiierhof Restaurant at moderate prices. 4S0 Rooms $1.60 up With Bath $2.00 up 32323i3s32 Tested Recipes (All measurements are level unles otherwise specified.) Escalloped Chicken. Divide a fowl into joints and boil till the meat leaves the bone. Sepa rate meat from bones and chop the meat in small pieces. Thicken the water in which ' the chicken was cooked with flour and season to taste with butter and salt. Fill a baking dish with alternate layers of bread crumbs and chicken, slices of cooked Kotatoes and a few slices of onion, aving crumbs on top. Four the gravy over the. top, add a few small bits of butter, and bake until nicely browned. There should be enough gravy thor oughly to moisten the mixture in the dish. Serve with a garnish of parsley. Cucumber Sauce. One-quarter teaspoonful beef ex tract, two large cucumbers, one-quarter teaspoonful celery salt, one pint stiffly whipped cream, dash of pap rika, dash of white pepper, one-quarter teaspoonful sugar. Pare cucumbers and cover them with slightly salted water for one hour. Grate them and add seasonings. Then fold the cream (whipped solid) into the mixture. Serve with fish. Peach Relish. Stone free-stone peaches and fill the cavities with a mixture of chopped cabbage, green tomatoes, grated horseradish and a little mustard. Put the halves together with a string or with toothpicks. Pack in sterilized fruit jars and cover with a boiling syrup made of two pounds of brown sugar to one quart of vinegar. This is very nice with cold meats. Brussels Sprouts Salad. Dress cold cooked Brussels sprouts with French dressing to which a little tabasco sauce has been added. Pile on lettuce leaves and sprinkle with chopped chives. 9MMIUI Cake. Three tfla.poonfuli baking- powd.r, on. and on. half cupful, .ugar, on. eupful .wet milk, two tableapoonfuli butt.r, on. taeepoonful Union .strict and thr.. .age. Bake in layer tins. The whites of six eggs may be used, if a white cake is preferred, instead of the three whole eggs. Put together as follows ruling. Botl.d trotting-, thro, bananas, rind and julc. or on. lemon. Put common boiled frosting be tween each layer and place over the frosting bananas cut in thin slices, the slices joining each other closely. Sprinkle each layer with a little lemnn juice and grated peel, and stir a little of the grated peel into the frosting used over the top of the cake. Mothers Magazine. These Are the Signs of Good Health Has Your Baby All of Them? -j .Ha be good appetite a clear pink Skin bright,-' wid. - open eyee alert,' ' springy rausclas a contented little face? Doe be gain each week in weight doei he sleep quietly with eyas and month tightly closed t . . If hs hasn't one and all of these things , look out. Something ia wrong with Dim. Ana una times in ten tint some thing fa Us food. Your baby cant (row may and strong If be doesn't have the right food. Mors your baby, if 70a can, M yon can't, "an him co NesflfsFt5oa (A Cetoplete Food Net Milk Modifier) Don't give him taw cow milk. Cow's milk" needa a calfe four stomachs to digest it. "Cow's milk, as ordinarily marketed ia unfit for human consumption," aayi the U. 8. Government f Bat there b something in cow's milk that is good for your baby, If that something la modified and purified so that It is aa light, as satisfying and aa pure as mother'e milk its It That ia what is don for you in Nettle's Food. , It comes to you reduced to a pow der in an air-tight can. Von add . only water boil one minute and it I ready with just the right amount of fan, proteids, and carbohydrate that will make healthy baby. 1 Semf Htm coupon Sr a FJCSff TWef aoaaga of 13 rbedmg. and a Soak aeeer aeorae by aaeeuiiafe. "We're Engaged" By mil BrMief 7 7 Copyright, 1916, International Newa Vervlee, KrTWINKLE, twinkle,., little, star, i- How I wonder what you are! Up above the world so high, Like a diamond in the sky!" NESTLiVS FOOD COMPANY 104 Wo.lw.rteB.iUtM. Now York : Pleeae .end ne FKKI year Seek and trial package, Name, ...... , , ... Address........ Cltr if t a p You arrive Chicago in the new Passenger Terminal The Great Lakes and Atlantic Coast Region hat innumerable attractions to offer the vacationist , LOW FARES IN EFFECT Juno I to Sopt. 30 via the Chicago a North Western RV. to Chicago1 and choice oi routes therefrom to all important points east Round Trip from Omaha Detroit, Mich., S3S.10 Boston, Matt. ' $54.60 to 69.10 New York, N. V. . 65.80 to 69.10 Niagara Falls, N. Y. 42.45 to 44.45 Toronto, Ont 40.10 to 44.45 Montreal, Quo. 45.20 to 55.65 Atlantic. City, N. I. 67.30 Portland, Me. 62.90 to 69.10 Buffalo, N. Y. ; 42.45 to 44.45 Return Until 60 days, sot to exceed October II, 1910. Favorable stop-over privileges. Direct connections with hat trains on all Chicago & North Western Ry JOHN M ELLEN, O A. T 1401-1403 Farnera Street, Omaha, Neb. ITeLOoaclaeffe Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax Must Choose for Herself. Dear Mum Fairfax: A dear frlnd of mlnfl la Kelvins attention, from a man thr.. y.ars h.r ..ntor. 8h. I. al.o going out at the earn. tlm. with anolhor young man. The first can gW. h.r averythlng, whtl. tho oth.r hn. nothing .xc.pt that .h. care, for him. Th. first I. quiet and respectable, from very fin. popl and ha. a vary good bualnee., but la rather backward. The on. .h. favor. I. an ordinary worklngman of good appaerance. Sh. teem, to be moceJ particular about th. way th.y drew than anything .I... DAISY. The girl you picture does not seem to me to be very admirable or worth the serious consideration of a fine man. I am a little inclined to be sorry for the man who gets her as a wife. She ought to give up her false ideals as to what it worth while. Her rea sons for caring for the second man do not seem to be worthy evidently it is merely a case of emotional ap peal, which is one of the things re quired for a happy marriage, but by no means the only one. If she were a fine enough girl she would prob ably respond to the quiet, hard-working man who comes from good stock. As it is, she seems to like the "sport," who spends his salary on clothes. She had better go into her own motives seriously and then try to make s sane, weii-oaiancea choice. Why This Indoelaloaf ' Dear Mlu Fairfax: I am IS, and met man four y.ar. my a.nlor who la of good caliber and haa a lucrative bualn...; he haa tak.a m. about froqu.ntly. About w.ek ago he told ma that h. lovod me and a.k.d m. to marry him. I have known him two month. How can 1 prov. that he love m.T I told him that h. had not knowo m. long .nouga to conjtdar mar riage. H. la going on a bualneaa trip of about four month..- l love him. and my people think highly of him. FANNIE. You haven't any problem, and your common sense ought to tell you so. Since you love the man, your people approve of him and he has declared his feelings for you honorably and openly, you no more reason to want to put him to any test than he has to take the same attitude toward you. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S ' TUB 0RIGHUL MALTED MILK Kiit't ntat'tra no" WB 7 area BrVe. HOTEL and COTTAGES WHITE MTS., M. H M APLE WOOD , MAPLEVYOOD, N. H. , High Altitude, free free. Hay Fever. MAPLEWOOD INN ' Oppa.lt. Hotel Capacity 14. ' Tor. Superior IS-Hole OeU Coarse SOW yard. Beet Radiating Cuter la Mis. Boakia Of llee. 11 SO Broadway, New York. Ala Maalevoe. N. H. Pretty Girl vs. the Clever One By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. "Jack Smith doesn't, care what a girl has in her head, provided she has a pretty face - outside it," said my young friend Mary to me, petulantly. "He and the men in his set like to be Seen out with pretty girls and however much they like a clever one, they won t invite her to any of their club dances unless she is a good looker, too." My feminine impulse was to feel in dignant at Jack and Lis low standard at just that juncture. And then I re membered a few simple biological facts. i ' Nature meant the masculine half of creation to furnish the race with power and strength and the fighting qualities. And in its scheme oi things the feminine, was intended to stand for sweetness and beauty and dependence arid the home-making qaulities. Modern society has made this clear demarcation impossible. Woman goes out into the world and fights, and so inevitably cultivates powers and re sistances that approach the mascu line. She needs them for modern so cial conditions. . But when man admires mere cling ing dependent feminine beauty he is only expressing a world-old instinct, and it is stilly for women to get righteously indignant about or to try to combat nature. There is a sim pler way to meet the situation. It is by compromise and not an inglori' ous compromise at all. . The pretty, girl cannot be clever unless she has the actual equipment of brain. But the clever girl ought to be clever enough to contrive a cer tain amount of prettiness. Oh, yes, she can 1 Unless a woman is handicapped by a squint or a hair lip, or a broken nose, or some definite physical deformity, she can manage to have a little of the beauty that is her feminine heritage. Almost no woman . need have a hideous complexion if she regulates her diet and uses plenty of soap and water. No woman need be fat and ungainly if ihi can look a potato or a chocolate "sundae" in the face and deny it then arid there. No woman need have dull and star- ingeyes if she will regulate properly the light by which she reads, her out put ot tears, her exercise, and a few other precautionary measures. -. No woman need be a frump and dowdy if she brings s little thought to bear on the purchase of her clothes. Recently 1 attended a meeting at which there were present some forty brilliant and successful women. Four of them were pleasing to the eye. The other thirty-six had reacted so strongly from the extravagances of ths present style' that with shiny noses, unkempt hair,' hat "perched high on unbecoming and hard pom padours or sliding back off low and untidy chignons, they all managed to look like caricatures. Half of those women might easily have been pleasant to look upon if their respect for their mental make up had not been so great that they had put down any attention to their physical selves as actual "make-up." . 1 he clever girl is too likely to react from the merely physical. She des pises the charms nature gave her and bewails the fact that those charms appeal. Why riot be honest with our selves? We all love beauty. A won derful sunset, a perfect flower, a beautiful child, a glorious painting, an exquisite .song all these things appeal to the senses, and none of us are ashamed to acknowledge the ap peal. The clever girl who ignores her physical assets shows a lack of men tal balance. No man worth know ing is going actually to prefer' a stupid little beauty to a clever, sane, attractive looking woman. Perhaps the pretty girls whom Mary despises are companionable and sympathetic, if not brilliant. Charm and beauty are always at tainable in some degree and they are worth striving for. Good Habits By JOHN ANDERSON JAYNE. One of the best habits that a young man can form is that of saving a cer tain par; f nis earnings regularly. From the very first, when he has made arrangements with father and mother in the home, or with his landlady, as to what he shall pay into the house for his keep, he should make it the rule of his life to put something, be it ever so little, away from his weekly or monthly wages. It's a fine thing to be able to wear a necKtie tnat is artistic in its coloring, a vest tl it is beautiful in its construction, or a suit that is nobby and a hat that is up to date. But better than all these is the consciousness of a hank account, however small it may be, and the feel ing of satisfaction that comes trom the knowledse that if he is taken ill he will not altogether be dependent upon his fraternal society, his family, his friends or the cold charity of the world. It is a certain and sure fact that not every one in this world can be ncn. Neither does every one want to De rich, but every man can, if he will, form such a habit of thrift that when trouble overtakes him. as it must overtake all, he will be able to ward off much of its unpleasantness. It is a truth that goes without disputation, many of the bitter things that come to us alone: with out troubles are caused by the knowledge of the truth that had it not been tor extravagance in the past trouble of today would have been of less moment and more easy to bear. It s a good thing tor a man to nave friends upon whom he can depend in moments of adversity. "A friend in need is a friend indeed," is true. But the best friend that a young man can have when the storm strikes his me is a bank account that nas grown irom small to large amounts, saved from his salary by the habit of thrift that he has formed. Money saving is reflex in its influ ence. It not alone gives a man cour age in time of trouble, but it also j weaves into his character habits of thoughtfulness, forehandedness, sta bility and strength, without which no man can go through life successfully. Doubtless, it is a good thing, or rather a pleasant thing, for a young man to be able to dress in the way that a cultivated taste may demand. But there is a better thing than that, to be able to know that when hard times come he can still continue to dress neatly and tastefully without feeling any loss of confidence that comes through unkemptness in dress and consciousness of the fact that he is not keeping up to his former standards. No man ever regrets having formed the habit of saving, though many regret that they never did form the habit. "If I only had," is the sad wail that is heard trom many lips, while the words, "I am glad that I did," are rarely heard in this day of extravagence, outside show and exal tation of the things that are the tasn ion for the hour and soon pass away. It s going to take a strong char acter to form the habit ot saving money from a small income, yet it can be done. There are so many allurements and attractions for a young man nowadays that it will take all of his strength of purpose to live to the motto, 1 am going to save now, so that in the years to come I shall have something to show for my industry. And men can save money on a small salary if they will. It is ad mitted, of course, that there are times when man with a family, children and sickness must go in debt, must for the time live beyond his means. But the fact that he has formed the habit of thrift will tide him over many a hard place, and give others confi dence in his ability to get out of debt if once he has been compelled to go into it. Among the many good thingw that may be said ot a young man there is none better than to say to him: "He is a man of sobriety, in dustry and thrift. These things make more readily tor success than one may imagine. But greater than the money that a voungeman can save is the char acter that he is establishing. "Miser liness, stinginess, greed are to be ab horred, but prudence and carefulness in expenditure are graces which cul tivated make of a man a power in the community and give to him a character which commends itself to all. ... . cXElff I BKCME AK:5tE SffiMl Moulded Rice with' Cherries. By CONSTANCE CLARKE. Canned fruits are inexpensive and are useful in a variety of desserts and many of them are fresh in taste as well as appearance; canned white cherries with a mold of rice makes a delicious hot or cold sweet. - Put two cups of rice into cold wa ter and bring it to a boil, then strain it and rinse it in, cold water and re turn it to the stewpan. Put with it half s cup of granulated sugar, half a split vanilla pod, the finely cut peel of one lemon, three tablespoonfuls of butter and two cups of milk; bring it to s boiL Then simmer gently until all the grain are tender, adding a little more milk during the cooking, if need ed. When cooked, remove the lemon peel and pod, turn out the rice In a bowl and when it is a little cool mix it with three well beaten yolks of eggs and a teaspoonful of vanilla essence. Mix well and fill up a ring mold that has been well buttered; bake in a quick oven about thirty minutes, and when cooked turn out and fill up the center with white cherries. Serve with whipped cream. jr (Tomorrow Dainty Sandwiches.) Marvelour Story of the Palisades By GARRETT P. SERVISS. "What makes the tops of the Pal lisades along the Hudson so level? How manv millions of people must have looked across from the trains of the New York Central and been struck bv the remarkable levelness, as if a giant scraper had gone over I F. W. C." The Palisades are one of the won ders of the world, a fact that is not sufficiently appreciated by the mil lions of people who dwell within a few miles of them, and do not need to take a railroad journey in order to see the spectacle of nature s powers which they present. Perhaps it may serve to stimulate interest in our wonderful Palisades if the fact is mentioned that the moon has something similar to them, at least in appearance. Near the western border of the great lunar plain called the Mare Nubium there is a straight, lofty, smooth-topped rock wall, as unique in the scenery of the moon as the Palisades of the Hudson are in that of the earth. It faces the east, just as the Palisades do, and, I have no doubt, it would present to an ob server looking at it from the plain an appearance strikingly like the battlemented front of New Jersey seen from the eastern shore of the Hudson. Another interesting fact is that both of these phenomena, though situated in two different worlds, a quarter of a million miles apart, may have had a similar origin. The Pal isades attain a height of 550 feet; the rock wall of the Mare Nubium is, according to some estimates, of about the same height, but accord ing to others twice as high. The Palisades are about fifteen miles in length, while their lunar analogue is sixty miles long. In one respect they widely differ; the Pal isades have behind them a deep val ley, while the wall on the moon is backed by a long, gradual slope. About the details of the formation of the lunar wall we know nothing, but the history of the Palisades has been 'plainly written in geological language. The material of which they consist was thrust up in a molten state during what is known as the Triassic Period, which is the first division of Mesozoic Time, following immediately after the close of Pal aeozoic Time, whose most important period was the Carboniferous Age, during which the principal coal beds were laid down. Thus we see that the hard trap rock of the Palisades, though hoary with age, is younger (possibly hy millions of years) than the brittle coal which snaps and glows in our grates and furnaces, and sometimes preserves the grain and veining of the wood and leaves out of which it was created. If you will visit the top of the Pal isades, carrying a bit of anthracite in your pocket, and will place the coal on the summit of one of the huge, gray, basaltic columns, which seem to rise out of the very centre of the earth and to be as ancient as the globe itself, you will be amazed by the thought .that the coal is the pat-, riarch and the rock the infant 1 . . But I have not yet told you why the top of the Palisades is so level. The manner of their formation offers the explanation. At or before the beginning of the Triassic Period a large body of shallow water lay nearly parallel with the (then more distant) coast of the Atlantic, from what is now the upper end of the Palisade range, through New Jersey and southeastern Pennsylvania, down into the heart of Virginia. It oc cupied' a valley, or a series of valleys, formed SJ)y the crumpling up of the Appalachian Mountains. As ages passed deposits of sand and gravel were formed by the water, and a slow subsidence of the crust of the globe beneath took place, while the deposit above increased to thou sands of feet in thickness. The final result was a fracturing of the deep seated strata that formed the bottom and sides of the original trough, and molten rock was thrust up by the strain through the fissures. The upwelling lava pushed aside the red sandstone, into which the deposits laid down by the water had been changed, and left the marks of its heat on all sides. But as it rose it cooled into hard dikes and crystal lized into huge columnar columns, and the greatest of these formations became the Palisades. The top of the wall-like mass thus formed was nearly level because the lava pushed its way through a long fissure, between the tilted strata of sandstone, which was probably sev eral hundred feet broad, when pried open, and the upheaving force was nearly uniform from one end to the other. Ft was like a semi-liquid wave. It broke down precipitously on the side toward which it moved in fol lowing the slope of the inclined fis sure, because it is the nature of cool-, ing basalt, or trap rock, to form in to columns standing at right angles to the direction of flow, .and the front of the mass would, consequently, have a nearly vertical face. In the great glacial age the top of the Pal isades was planed over by the ice, but this only smoothed out relatively small irregularities. ' The main features of the architec ture of the Palisades were determined as soon as they cooled. If we were as imaginative as the ancient Greeks we would probably say that the Pal isades were upheaved by a giant trying to break up out of his prison in th: earth. InShoots Revenge is sweet until you taste it. In most cases it is better to keep that honest opinion a profound secret . And there is always room for the sprinter who keeps ahead of the pro cession. When a man is as liberal with his wife as he is with a strange hotel waiter, marriage is seldom a failure- When a man starts out to beat the other fellow's game he will find plenty who are anxious to give him a chance. A becoming hat will often do more toward making a girl's face attractive than a double application of kalso mine. .