Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 05, 1916, Page 12, Image 12

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    laMta iimte - Fashwns - WottMs work-:- tiousenoia zopw
ft flOTEL PURITAN I
J Cotmnonwsal th AvcZVoaton
U-Sr Than i( nHva
r ' v Boston House
If . WTbcPurttiinlsonof tht moot
lJhoBMlIke boUb In the world.
I - fimd hrnffLm eiiook
Worth Knowing
When running dates, fin or raisins
through a food chopper add a
few drops of lemon juice to prevent
the fruit from clogging the chopper.
Line all lunch boxes with oiled
paper and the food will rot only re
tain its freshness, but not' taste of
.I.- 1....- in !,i,-l it i ularerl. '
The energy used iu our bodicsfor
the work- of circulation, respiration,
digestion and keeping up the tem
perature is equal in one day to rais
ing ifiW tons one foot high.
G
CONVENIENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS GLADLY ARRANGED
IS
rAVTMll ' B1 Bargains. W
I . aaa: Them.
Sensational Bargain in a
wardrobe
chiffonier:
ONLY
$11.98
$1.50 Cash, $1.50 a Month
THIS MASSIVE CHIFFOKOBE is made of selected
hard wood, richly grained in imitation quarter sawed
oak finished golden. . , The large wardrobe section
Is fitted with patented sliding nickel coat hangers,
also trouser hangers attached to door. Conven
iently arranged collar and tie compartment; six
large, roomy drawers all fitted with wood pulls;
suitable for lady or gentleman. . Special for Satur-
; day only, at this, low price., '
j I ' $1.00 Xasfc. 1
U $1.00 a Month.. V
A Very
Special
DRESSER
Value-
$8.25
. A GREAT BAR
GAIN IN A
LARGE SIZE
COLONIAL
DRESSER
itrongly ton
ttructed and well
finished in imita
.ion quarter oak;
arge size French
bevel plate mir
or; two large
ind two small
drawers: an ex
ceptional value,
it the low price.
r Elegant ;
Upholstered
Rocker
$5.45
V.rr artlstleallr
designed , frama;
ant and back tip
Bolstered In guar
anteed imitation
leather: ataal
aprtnt eouatnictlon
below aaat: back
artistically tutted i
large aii. ana vtrr
eomfortablai tor
Saturday only, at
thla low prior ,
TO. IK.
tw m Mtm it a Havx sal j
' ' '. "' ' Month, c , . '
, , 3-PIECE MISSION SET
R IMARE ABLE
OFFERING IN A
THREE -PIECE
SOLID OAK LI
BRARY SUITE
Chair r and rocker
upholstered In guar
anteed Spanish imi
tation leather; li
brary table fitted
with atationery drawer
and magaatne shelf; a
cnmpleta room full tf
furnitura for only .
MASSIVE TWO-INCH CONTINUOUS POST
BED OUTFIT Bod elegantly enameled in
guaranteed Veraia Martin; tan heavy one
Ineh fillers! all ataal sanitary springe with
woven wire top aupporcea in uw eontor:
cotton top finer mattreea
with durabla tieklng. Thla
-big combination at. only
$13.73
MnjarTV.ini.rtr TPlfl r APATITY ftRPftltT
KBATOK, mado of ftro wooa; inpie wail
eon.truct.on ; roomy provision eompartmtnt
two rmovKbi wir
helvM; a gmt ice
eonomiaer at. only,
iBiun vumyiriinviu
$13.85
-U .c-L!.. . as $1108
'
. t I nwuani
1 JIT
The Spirit of the Dance . ?lJ.,.Slhl
BEAUTY in her eyes and smile, she typifies the
Spirit of the Dance. Like an elfin figure high
,. on a mountain top where the end of the rain
bow strikes, she whirls along in a wild dance that
threatens to draw the imagination into a dancing
whirlpool. She breathes of lovely places where there
is much strange lightning of an odd wirte-like purple
that hypnotizes you into seeing fairyland for long
after wherever you look. NELL BRINKLEY.
GmWorkers Who Win Out : &!""
HIGH BACK FtBU. REED
ROCKER, md of xccllcnt ma
terial and finished In tna natural;
has full roll saat; broad arms, and
uitabls for Indoor or outdoor us;
vrr strongly constructed and
specially priced
for Saturday, ,
at
$2.69
A Massive Value in .
an Automatic Bed
DAVENPORT
THIS ELEGANT . SOLID OAK
AUTOMATIC BED DAVENPORT is
upholstered in guaranteed imitation
leather; has full steel spring con
struction; maaaive frame finished in
golden; a very new and pleasing de
sign and a genuine
hanrafn at . . . .
. r.
$18.89
ir : TertM, $2.00 Caah, $.00 a Month, falty ' 4
i:-r Home '
Outfitters
: Attention '
fjm ?.. Reoaas
CMmi, CoaapUtelrY
:rM- FurnUbad
$S.OO a Mrattu "
J11VA3MLV111 HI Hi J
1414-16-ltt liougias .'StreelL
Bungalow or
Apartment
" Outfit. .
Rooms
FurnHhod v
ComplaU 1
! $69
$4.00 a Month.
By JANS M'LEAN. " ; , . .
The factory was a grim, smoke
stained place with windows that look
ed out on a narrow dirty" street.
There was a constant buzz of machin
ery whirring, and clashing ana tne(
new girls always found that hardest
of all to get used to. The work itself
wasn't hard. "',
It meant simply the turning of a
lever, the pulling of a handle, minute
after minute, hour after hour, day
after day, week after week, until the
thing became a habit and the habit a
monotony almost impossible to face
with a brave heart.
When Bertha came to work in the
factory, she was given her own spe
cial' piece of work to do. If Bertha
had had an education she would have
realized that the feeling she had at
h hixrinninff of her day's work was
akin to hopelessness, but she did not
stop to think about it ana so sne ac
cepted her lot far more philosophical
ly than many of those do who have
easy . tasks ;nd hours of light and
.iin.hitl. . .. r."' ' r'.
She arrived at trie factory at 8
o'clock.. She worked six days in the
week and received $5 a week for her
labor. She was the daughter of a
wMnw who had two other children
in aimnnrt. and from the time she had
first walked she had dreamed of the
day when she could bring home ner
own money to ner motner. ,
. All dav lona- Bertha sat near a din
bv window with a dirty black wall for
her- outlooK ana aia me worn re
quired of her. She developed slowly
into a regular little machine herself
and her work became proportionately
easy. No one cared whether . tne
work was made interesting, no one
cared whether Bertha liked doing it
or not. As long as she did her part
toward the great whole she was left
in peace and her thoughts were her
own to do as she liked with.
One day the manager walked down
the grim room with a sweet faced
woman at his side. Bertha was busy
singing away, her round, stolid lit
tle, face turned toward the ray of
light that the window threw acrcjss
her work. .
She1 was too absorbed with her
own thoughts to look at the lady,
but her hands mechanically kept up
.u.:. i t: ' i u.. .u:n i;..
men uua, iuuiiiic aim lie, oiiiiii
tle voice sane out the crude melody L
.f . , . t. , , , i ii r
oi a song mat sne naa ncaru on mv
street. Suddenly she was conscious
of the fact that some one was speak
ing to her, some one was saying
above the noise and the clamor:
"Do you sing at your work like
this every day? Today it is raining,
and you are singing about the sun,"
Bertha A srrinned. "Sure,' she re
sponded, not at all shyly. "It sort of
shuts out the noise.
The manager scowled under his
heavy eyebrows, but the worsari spoke
again. '
Are you happy at your woricr ,
"Sure, I'm hapny. i don't think
about my work; I'm too busy."
The manager passed on, and the
lady, interested, questioned Bertha
again. The story came out. all the
dreams about the country, the pigs
and the chickens and milking the
enws.
' "Do you think you'd like the country?"
Do I think I'd like it?" And Ber
tha regarded the stranger supercili
ously. Sav. are vou kiddinK mef
Again the woman smiled. "Im go
ing to send you away tor two weeks,
child, where you can see all the green
grass you want to and where there
will be a brook to wade in." And
then Bertha's face did change, -from
doubt to awe. "Saturday .I'll come
for you," the woman went on. -"I'll
speak to the manager; it will be alt
right." And with a smile, she passed
down the lonK room.
Bertha looked around at the other
girls dazedly.
"That's what you get for singing,"
siW Maggie Flynn. "Gee, you're the
lucky kid 1" '
lomrir ikche ak:zii scsm'
GirhWhoAre
Dangerous
By DOROTHY DIX. I
To each man his own fear of some
particular type of girl, for, in order
that there might be bachelors in the
world to fill in at dinner parties and
act as godfathers to other people's
WrlHipa. and all wise providence has
ordained that the woman who is as
fatal as angina pectoris to one man
doesn't even raise a flutter of the
pulse in another.
But all girls are dangerous girls ta
.nm mini an A that's whv men allV
over the country are humming and
singing these lines from that popular
song success, "You're a Dangerous
Girl." . ...
And, brothers, that's a particularly
good and appropriate song! for this
season of the year. No wonder you
are haying it played "by request" by '
the orchestras on roof gardens, and
that you are plunk-plunking it out on L.
banjos as you loll on the cushions
of canoes "on moonlight nights, and If
that you whistle, and hum, and roacr".
it at the top ot your voices along me
shady pathways of mountain resorts,
for the Summer Girl is a Dangerous
Girl. wherever you find her, and you
need all the help 'you can get from
music, or anything else, to resist her
enchantment.
Here sne. comes, brother. Its 11
o'clock at night in a make-believe
grape arbor aop of a hotel where
everything is as high as the prices,
and everything is artificial from the
grapevines to the winds that flutter
the table cloths. - Enter the siren.
Gold in her hair. Painted snowon
her brow. Painted' roses on her
cheeks and mouth. Look of the hunt
ress in her eyes. Laughter that is
like the cracking of thorns on her
lips. The foolish hae- branded her
as a dangerous girl, but she's dan
gerous only to men who are in their
first or second childhood. You can
shrug your shoulders as the cynical
orchestra strikes up the first notes of
You re a Dangerous oiri.
X Then there's the domestic gin.
brother. Mot a dh snowy, juu uuy.
No man would ever stop to stare
after her in the street. She doesn t
Irnnw whether a cocktail is a new
kind of canned goods or war ammu
nition, but she can make the best
angel food you ever tasted in youi
life, and whenou go to see her oifs
Sunday night, she always asks you to
stay to supper, and the things she
does with a chafing, dish.
Of course you have no intention
of getting married for ever and ever
so long, and the very reason that
you fall into the way of coming to
see the domestic uiri so uircu
because you teel so sale witn ner.
Nevertheless, wnen aunuay mgui a
supper is over, and when filled with
chicken a la king, and peace ana
tenderness, you return to the par-
ilor, rush to the victrola, put on tne
N'Darigerous Girl" record, and play I
it with a loud needle. . 1
And there's the feirl who works m
the office at the desk next to yours.
Nice little thing. Trim and neat in
her trig little tailor made' suits
and her mannish little flat heeled
boots. ' Complete, , too. . Draws .,
down very nearly as good a pay envelope-
as you do. And the best of
good (fellows. Reason you,, like her
n mtirh ia because sheisn't al-
fways expecting you to pay her com
pliments, or maKe love to ner.. ju
can talk to her as sensibly as you
could, to another man, only er
with a something different you
couldnlt say to another man, if you
art what I mean.
She isn't dangerous. Oh, dear no.
Vnn'H no more think of falling
Invp with her than vou would with
your little brother. It's friendship
vou feel for her. Nothing bu.
friendshiD that makes you want
kill that fool of a Smith who s
taken to hanging around her desk,
and makes you so f'gety you
can't settle to your work until you
see ' her sleek head bending over
her ledger of a morning.
' tOf course you're not falling in love
with her, oh, dear, no, but just as a
precautionary measureyou'd bet
ter hire a hurdy gurdy to play
"You're a Dangerous Girl," under
tfe office window three or four
times during the course of the day.
Then there's the girl who's just
girl, and looks as harmless as a
kitten. She wears white, fluffy
thinss. and she looks up at you as
if you had hune the m6on and made
a good job of it, and she's so little.
and clinging, ana neipiess, tnat a
man begins to pet her as instinct
ively as he would a child.
And, ot course, you can t help see
ing that you've made an impression
on her tender little heart, and then
you begin to think that all things
considered, you'd better be getting
out of the radius of those big, blue
eyes,, and you tell her youve come
to say good-bye, and she begins to
weep, and .
in i
th y
lip jT
T
Beautify the Complexion
W TEN DATS
Nadinola CREAM
yTht Uncqtialed BuutUkr
VSZ3 AVD EXDORSgD
p ET T.IOCSANDS
Guaranteed to remon
tia, frechlo, pimples,
liver spots, etc. Extra nw
, cases about twenty days
ftlda pores and tissues of ' Impurities
Leaves the skin clear, soft, healthy
Two sties, 50c. and $1.00. By tailel
counters or maiU
ttimui roiurr commnt. rana, n
Sold br landing tauat ovnntara' In maha.
I , .!
fVS ' ;' n: "
r
2rV u 1
"aW vMtow.At " aa
Virginia Corn Pudding
1 By. CONSTANCE CLARKE,
This recipe 'or green' corn pudding,
by an old southern 'Aunmmy," is de
licious and is easily prepared. s
Remove the husks from ten Or
twelve' ears of sweet corn, put the
corn into a stewpan containing boil
ing water that is seasoned with salt
and pepper and a tablespoon ful of
butter; just bring to the boil, then
I take up and drain on a sieve. Put
two cups of milk into a bowl, add
half a cup of butter, a little salt and
white pepper, four whole eggs the
whites and yolks beaten separately
and the corn cut from the cob. Put
this into a pudding dish, add the
stiffly beatemwhitcs of eggs, place it
in a moderate oven and bake till a
light brown color. Serve hot for a
dinner vegetable or luncheon dish.
Come on, brothera, Join In tha chorua.
Now, all together:
"C'aua you're the sweetest girl In tha
world.
You're wonderful. Just marvelous.
But you're' a nog-gone dan-gcr-ous Girl!
r
Tips on
Summer Fashions
Gabardine grows in favor and use,
wearing as well as serge.
Some of the new veils are edged
with jet spangles, irregularly worked.
,: The nose veil is very smart, and
may be seen all winter.
f Colored linens are much used for
children's wash dresses.
The cartridge pleat is retained in
the new French costumes.
Black net robes for evening are
bordered with colored silk. 1
Broad bands of fur will be seen on
the tunics of fall dresses. j j
Gold brocaded silk makes the pret- '
tiest of evening slippers... ii . I
Castor and gray are the1 best colors
after black for shoes.
' Broad-brimmed high-crowned hats j
are in straw ot two colors. , pl
Mexican colored wool embroidery y
is much liked by Frenchwomen, j. j
.The vogue for gray shoes has in- 1
creased the demand for gray glovj3. J
' Coatees of white serge are made "cfl
u. . ;n, ..or..... ,t
wwi" wv.wi ,iojF iBULid iiieSbCS.
' The modified circt-lar skirr with belt
is in high favor fur tailored suns.