j . o . ' : Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Woman's Work -Household Topics Good Cold Foods ' During the warm weather the average individual has little or no ap petite. The very sight of food, espe cially if it be hot food, nfakes one actually ill. Cold dishes are the only solution of the difficult problem of what to eat in summer time, but these cold dishes must be nourishing and substantial if they are to be of any ' value. Below are given several ex cellent summer recipes from the cook book of a housekeeped noted for her good things to eat Tomato Jellied Boullion. Take two cupfulls of strong stock, such as you use in boullion, but it must not have wine in it. Add to this half a can of tomatoes. Heat to boiling, strain and ' add one table spoonful of granulated gelatine soaked in a little cold water. Pour into ctlps, cool and set on ice to harden. When ready to serve break up the jelly with a spoon, pue in pretty uuuniun up3, and send to table with cheese straws or thin toasted crackers. Jellied Fowl. Take a small chicken and cut It up as for fricassee. Put it in a sauce pan over the fire and pour on enough water to cover it. Stew slowly till the meat is well cooked. Remove and cut the meat neatly from the bones. ti . . . i. .. ...... .. in tit mnn a ncium uic wuwiinu , - - little salt, a halt bay leaf, one slice onion, a pincn oi summer eavury ,mu Don again wun uic uuhcs m n. liquid is reduced to one cupful. Now line a china mould with a little chop ped parsley and some slices of hard boiled egg. Arrange the pieces of chicken in the mould. Take the stock from the fire, strain it, and add one and a half even teaspoonfuls of dis solved granulated gelatine. Place the mould under a heavy weight. Put in the ice box until firm. This is very nice for lunch or tea in summer. ' ISI3-I0IS HOWARD ST. Will Save You Money Theife! A Reason Get Our Every Day Low Price Before You Buy. ; They Are Always The Right Prices. In comparing prices also consider values and quality. Come tomorrow and inspect the values just now appearing in our Dining Room Furni ture section. The Buf fet here shown is con structed of selected quarter sawed oak, finished golden or fumed. It is full 48 in ches in length and 23 inches in depth. This is only one example of the many big values now, to be had among a large lot of new pat terns in Buffets just placed on the floor. V, $14.25 Suite, 3 Pieces $36.30 l jf, I ami A nifty little suite idea is here pictured. The table is 6-foot extension, 42-inch top :. . . ... ... .$7.95 The chair is strongly built, is box seat and leather , upholstered, each ................ . . . . $1.85 The Buffet is 50 inches in length, in golden or fumed oak . . . . . .'. .'. .$17J25 The foundation of good health for your children b laid when they learn the thrice daily use of uriyon's PERFECT Tooth Powder fraaaf aa if Darter mf Dmlml 3rgry Send 2c stamp today for (nemo trial pack age ef either Dr. Lyoo'g Perfect Toeta Powder or Dental Craaaa. . ' . L W. LYON It SONS, lac. 5TT w. rust, n. t. ctty ' JisT t 111 For Tennis and Canoe jp THE girt who goes a-camping will be delighted with this "woodcraft suit," which will stand the most strenuous of tramps, and affords a comfort no other woods costume approximates. The bloom ers and blouse of khaki, trimmed with brown linen. T5ECAUSE the "coat blouse" of this suit does not "pull up" at the waist-line, the suit is excellent for tennis, golf, rowing, or any sport which requires freedom. White, blue or khaki-colored galatea. ASK FOR tad GET HORLICK'S THB OMGnCAI, MALTED MILK fo'i wuft'trat dm TUB lam Drira iiniiiiipiiiiiainiiiiiiii W Hfinmfinca? llIMIIIHiaIllHINIMNII One of 10 All-Steel Trains, HI r 5 Y V W Orwr Shortest Route Between Chicago and New York No Exelo Brnnti of SpaW Noettaiy to Maintain SehoduU I rV mfcalrn ceaaah Ud TWUt Age evcallea YTtL KOWLAND. Tmdtu fMn Aol MJ2SCllN.II.J B.nkBli., , faaaal'lagllill 1003. OMAHA, fttg. r Films Developed FREE When Print are Ordered PRINTS, 3c to 5c 24-HOUR SERVICE We are experts in this line and guarantee to give you the highest quality of work in the city, regardless of prices that you pay elsewhere. Why not let us have your next roll as a trial? Mail orders filled promptly. THE PHOTO CRAFT SHOP "Film Specialists" 416 Bee BIdg. Proper Thing to Do When She Says: "Ask Papa" Perhaps there's no more awful mo ment in a man's career than when he has to face another man and ask him for his daughter. It ought, of course, to be a time of unmixed joy, for darling Jane has just promised to be his; but that promise is not valid without the sign manual of papa's consent, and that consent has yet to be obtained. Talk of a visit' to the dentist, even to the benevolent gentleman who ad vances us money at a murderous rate of interest either is a more pleasant HEADACHES Thooiende ol men and women suffer from headaches every day, other thonudl halt headaches every week or every month, tad etui others bare headaches occaitosallr. but Dot as nfularlntervale. The beet Doctor li often unable to find the eaura ol many ol thee headaches, and In moat other oaeea, knowing; the eauae, as does not know what will removal!, so u to live a permanent cure. All he can do la to prescribe the usual pain relievers, which five temporary relief, but the headache returne aa saual, and treatment la again necessary. II you slider from heedechee, no matter what their nature, take tall-kamnla tablets, and the results will be aatlf factory In the highest decree, lou oaa obtain them at all drussiats In any quantity, loo taoith, Xx worth or mora. Ask lor h-lt Tablets. SICK-HEADACHES Slek-headsche. the most miserable ol all alck neeeea, loeee Its terrors when A-K Tablets are taken. When yon leel an attack eomlns on take two tableta, and In many caaea, the attack wis be warded OS. During an attack take one A-K Tablet every two hours. The rest and comfort which foUow, oss be obtained In no other way. CmmIm A-K TaMsts tea Ma K man At mil afrwawts. i j I r, II : n C J iESUneti . To Keep Your Baby Perfectly Well This Summer 1. Keen the babv cool. Sy 2. Keep him outdoors as mucn as posstDie. 3. Give him plenty of boiled water. gaajsn . vuiistua yuur uunw a .Via fira ailtfn lllnM .? S. MaVa hia food liarht. Don't give htm raw cow's milk with its heavy, indi-' eestible curd and its germs of sum mer complaint, that kills more babies than any other cause in the world. Nun vour babv it you can. If you can't. ftv him the (bod that's as safa from gtrma and aa light aa mother'! milkitaoU v NestlesFood Not a MUk Modiliar) Don't abock your baby's stomach by chancing him from your breast milk to raw cow's milk. In Nsstlfa he will leel no change. Sand fna coupon for FKB8 TWal PaekaH fiaifcarfiita'a andaaook stoat oabrae br apocfaiiata. 0 (A Complete Food Nasttfs ll tafe free from . dangen of raw caw's milk. , In NeatUa yon get milk tram : healthy cows, puriAed fraa from gtrma the call needs are modified, v the baby naeda are added. Ra due ad to powder it comae to yen in an alr-nght can. No hand has ; touched it no germ can reach It , h is a complete food so yon add only water and boil one minute and yon know that you are giving : your baby the food his little body i needs. call in comparison with this particu lar business, ! Don't go into the awful presence looking like a whipped hound. Re member that you are presenting your-j self as a would-be relation of the man you are interviewing, and he is not likely to yearn after a son-in-law who fills him with contempt. After all, even if you are asking a favor, it is one most men have to beg some time in their lives.' You have not lost your own respect, nor that of anyone else, because you want to get married to Ihe girl of your choice. Don't, on the other hand, fall into the error of being over bold. That is fatal and calculated to do you harm with any proud papa. He natu rally thinks his girl rather superior to the general run and is prepared for a certain becoming sense of that fact on the part of any young man who comes to claim her and carry her off. Don't let him think you are too sure of being accepted as a son-in-law, or a mere natural perversity may incline him to prove to you how entirely you are mistaken. The shorter and the more to the point you make your request the bet ter for both parties. You will save yourself those agonies of beating about the bush which a young lover thinks the correct thing, and you will incline your hearer more favor ably toward you. On the other hand, you will spare your future father-in-law consider able, weariness of spirit; and by a di rect attack upon the battery spike his guns, so to speak, before he can get them into range. There is scope for a certain amount of tact in choosing that interview. Don't attack papa when he is wait ing for his dinner and is" cross and hungry, or when his last speculation on 'change has turned out a failure, and he is smarting under his losses. Take him in "his softer moods, if It can be done. Perhaps, darling Jane can help you by a hint when those are to be found. Girl Workers Who Win Out The Salet Woman and Her Proqrm By JANE M'LEAN. Ray sold silk stockings for the Gotham Manufacturing company. Her qualifications for a traveling sales woman were an amazing confidence in her own powers of discretion, a ready tongue and a seeming amount of what is generally termed sang froid, but is in ordinary terms just bluff. Ray was tall and not too slen der. She had quiet brown eyes that were steady and dependable, and a rather stylish manner of dressing. As Ray often said to her friends: "It's really not what I wear, but the way I wear my clothes.- This waist was $2, but I wear it over a pink slip and get away with it as though it cost $5 " When Ray went to the Gotham Manufacturing company and asked for a position, she was anything but sure of success. She had had no ex perience, but she wanted to sell silk stockings and she had made up her mind that she could. She had been asked if she had experience and had ""But l"can sell things," she had added. , , "How do you know you can? the man had asked, wheeling around and regarding her 9teadily. . "Because I have made up my mind to do it," she had replied. For a long moment Ray's brown eyes had looked into the rather quiz zical eyes of the chief buyer. "Very well," he said finally, 111 take a chance." And Ray had been given her first commission. "Get ahead of the Iron Heel and Toe " the buyer had admonished, and your name is made. They have a very slick salesman on the route now, and we want the trade ourselves. And so Ray ha J set out to get the trade of the smaller western towns for the Gotham Manufacturing company. As first she had no success at all. Each place she had visited reported the trade already given over to the Iron Heel and Toe, and Ray, who had started out so confidently, was almost ready to report failure. She finally decided to skip her next town and to proceed first to one of the larger cities. Here she began her campaign. Her wardrobe possessed one very handsome costume, which she donned, with a soft-plumed hat. Then she took a taxi .and set out for the largest de partment store in the place. It took only a small amount of initiative to approach the buyer of Camden Brothers and ask if she could not interest him in Gotham hos iery. - "The smart people wear nothing else in New York," she explained. n,i . 1 .1. T IT1 anrl Tn. vvc nave me jiwi .... madam; they are recommended as the De5t- ... T t, arMri and at last Wlfh til Villi Oliv aiguvu a pleasant smile she said goodby, promising to can again. "You may change your mind as well as your brand of stockings," she laughed. ... When she left the store She thought hard. Then a brilliant idea struck her. It worked out like this: The next morning Camden Bros, re ceived a telephone call from Mrs. Lef fingwell Gordon, the social arbiter of the city, for a dozen pair of silk stock ings of the particular brand made by the Gotham Manufacturing company. Anrl lator rhpv received another call and then still another. When Ray called the next morning she was received with more attention. rmn Urn. nrtr rtnlv rtrnVrerl. hilt complimented her business sense. Kay smnea, our saia nouung. De fore she left she wrote a nice note of thanks to Mts. Gordon and the other ladies who had helped her. She felt that she was now on the road to success. MESTLtS food company, 104 Waatwavthaida, Haw Tarn "' Plata aend SM FRBB year beak aad trial package. , . ;; Mama..... Adaiete.. t eat iiihiiiitttiHtNintiMi Gttf. tWaW)alt Fat Thai Shows Soon Disappears Prominent fat that comes and stays whert It it not needed is a burden; a hindrance to activity, a curb upon pleasure. You can take oil the fat where it shows by taking after each meal and at bedtime, one Mar mola Prescription Tablet. These little tab lets are as effective and harmless as the famous prescription from which they take their name. Buy and try case today. Your druggist sells them at 75 cents or if you prefer you may write direct to the Msrmola Co., 864 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich. You can thus say good bye to diet ing, exercise aad iat, WHITE MTS. N. H. MAPLE WOOD V MAPLEWOOD. N. H. Hit! Altttvd. rne beta Hay Faver. MAPLEWOOD INN ' Optical ta HataL Capacity 14a. Saaarlar la-Hate (Ml Cewae 0040 yard. Matarlats Baal Raaiatla, Caatar at Mia. Baaaka, Oflka, 11 SO Braadway, Near Vara, Alaa Maaleweaa. N. H.' Conversational Diplomacy "Wbo la your favorite oomposer?" "Wagner," replied Mr. Cumrox. "Tou muat be a atudent ot muetc!" "No. I mention Wagner for the aaka ot relieving myeelf ot conventional .train. It tbe other man doean't like Wagner be won't want to hoar mo ear another word." And It he doea7" He'll want to do all the talking him- aelt." Waahlngton Star. Uselessness of Worrying By LILLIAN BELL. It brings the question of where con tinual worry will drive one rather close to home when the only reason her friends can give for the recent suicide of a well-known actress is that she worried herself iatto a fit of temporary insanity. What kind of worry? you ask. Vaguely come the answers. Possible failure of a starring tour. Worry over money matters. Worry over this and that. Yet, if you say, Had any one of these disasters actually oc curred?" you hear the hesitating "No, but then she was so nervoui and she worried so!" , A man who was dying left this message for his family: "My sons, I have spent much of my life worrying over troubles which never happened I" I have often wondered if these sons were clever enough to understand what a marvelously comprehensive legacy and life policy were contained in that one sentence. Even a fool can often give good advice, but only a wise man is ever guided by it. Distinguished foreigners often make observations in regard to our national characteristics, which are so painfully true that we resent them. One re cently said that as a nation we all look worried. , ' Well, we do. The first lines to come to a woman's face are not the dreaded crow's feet. They are lines " of worry in (he forehead. Of course, at first, these smooth out when she smiles. But soon they become fur rows. If you don't believe this, put the light as high as you can and sit un der it. A ceiling light throws all thj lines in the human face into promi nence. (N. B. Beauties please take notice. Avoid sitting beneath a light if you care to retain the look of youth.) The deepest lines thus brought out will be in the forehead. Next comes one from the nose to the lip. Now most lines come either from ill health or discontent. Foreigners delight in saying that we are a race of dyspeptics. From that it is an easy jump to land on our poor cooks. But I don't admit this. We may have poor cooks. In fact, I have eaten a lot of their stuff. We also admit dyspepsia as our national ail ment, along with the eagle as our national emblem, the Stars and Stripes as our flag, and Uncle Sam as our coat-of-arms the Yankee rampart. Then, along with this, we say that we worry because we have dyspepsia. I don't believe it. "We have dyspepsia because we worry. Who could digest even a Mellon's food tablet with the ordinary conver sation we get at the table? People wilU relate the horrors of a railway accident with the soup; those of an automobile disaster with the fish; work up to the servant question with the roast, and discuss the president's message with the dessert all topics calculated to upset your digestion and bring a scowl to your brow. Then, along comes a would-be re former, who suggests a remedy by saying, "Let's organize a 'Don't Worry club.'" 1 ' Fiddle-de-dee I What woman ever stopped worrying because her hus band said: "Don't worry, dear." The negative note never rouses. Discon tent needs something positive. For example, to start your mind in a new groove, I would suggest the formation of a club to promote the saying of diverting things. A club to dispense laughter. An hour set apart wherein everything said must needs be your best attempt at being funny. Of course, in some people this would drive you to tears. But there are others who know how to make people laugh. And, oh, the bliss of meeting them now and then along life's way I If you once make up your mind that worry not only destroys your health but robs you of your good looks, and if you determine to-say at least one thing to make each person you meet laugh you will have solved not only the problem of your nervous and dyspeptic ailments, but you will have started to stem the tide of opin ion that Americans are a race who love to worry. aaaaam tomri iKciff aictb sm Crown Roast of Lamb of French chops cut in one piece, separate a the ribs without detaching them; roll the piece into a crown shape, leaving the space in the center, skewer up or tie with a string to keep the meat in good shape; place it m a baking pan with three tablespoonfuls of but ter, one sliced carrot, one or two onion, a little celery, and a bunch of herbs, v place the pan on the stove and aet the contents fry ten minutes; then add a cup of brown stock and put the pan in the oven to roast, dur ing which time add some more stock as that in the pan reduces, and take By CONSTANCE CLARKE. care that the meat is kept basted well during the . cooking. When cocked, take up the meat and put it on a hot flat dish, fill the center with cooked green peas; serve with this salad: Cut turnips and potatoes into rounds with a small vegetable cutter, put each separately in cold water with a little salt, bring to the boil, then strain and rinse in cold water, and put in boiling water to cook till tender. Strain, and when cold season with olive oil, white tarragon vinegar; cut tomatoes in smalt squares and season, then use. Tomorrow Hamburegr Loaf iff