THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: APRIL 20, ,1919. National Baby Week April 21 to 26 famous babies of films honor Hone of number 'i Vee Mary Pickford Rupp En tertained by Fourteen of Baby Stars of t Movies. . 4 . Y 1 ' r 10 D s JkVy out ia tunny California 14 of i Filmland's most famous babies have had a party. They held a royal eefebration a few days ago in hon or 9of the third birthday anniversary fjiwee Mary Pickford Rupp at the Los Angeles home of the baby's favorite aunt, Mary Pickford. - The children were all sons and daughters of the men and women who are the brightest lights in the film constellation, and whose in come tax returns will enrich Uncle Sam considerably. Wmong the guests were Bryant ashburn jr., Marjorie Florence Dej Haven and Carter De Haven jr.; Dick Ince. Billie Ince and Tom Ince jr. jacK Muinau, jr.; wanna jouise Wpljelt; "Snookie" Rosson, Irving Cummings, jr., Billy Reid, son of Wallie Reed; Julie Cruze, daughter olfjames Cruze and his wife, Mar guerite Snow, and George Baban, jr. Baby Mary, who is the daughter of Lottie Pickford Rupp, was show ered with gifts, including toys, clothes and jewelry. Her maternal ?;rkndmother, Mrs. Charlotte Pick on!, presented her with one large ana perfect pearl, which is to be part of one of the finest necklaces ml the country when Baby Mary I grjpws up, as Mrs. Pickford intends to5 give her grandchild one pearl at each birthday. And Aunt Mary presented her with a complete pearl necklace of wondrous beauty. .But the present that little Mary seemed to like the best was an automo bile coaster with a horn that honks land lights that light, which goes to Shw that little Mary Pickford sh i loves the playthings of the ur ch n despite her acting relatives. S?ys U. S. Practically Han French Railroads ! During Last War Year Th American methods aoolied tot the operation of the railroads of France, was a revelation to the peo - ,ple of that country, and besides handling men, supplies, equipment and munitions for the armv. we han dled 90 per cent of the business of the French," said Ernest Stenger, iust returned from Europe, where ie spent a year or more in charge of United States railroad traffic. Mr. Stenger, who ranks as a colonel, prior to going to France 'was general manager ol the St. Jo seph & Grand Island road, one of the auxiliaries of the Union Pacific. He was loaned to the government during the period of the war". f Working under me I hadsome thing like 7,000 men, and our busi ness was to keep everything moving toward the front," said Mr. Stenger. "It was some task, but by applying American methods we accomplished ' what we started to do. "The idea seems toliave been that we were running the railroads of France, and in a measure we were, for we were responsible for the transportation of everything from tie coast and interior to the front j"We had" a large quantity of our own-equipment, and thus, with our ofvn men, we got along fine and made a good showing. !"Of course the roads of France e badly run down and the equip ment is pretty well worn out, due to the fact that during the progress of the war it was difficult to obtain men to do the work. iThe' German equipment, consist ing of 5,000 locomotives and 150,000 freight cars, turned over to the French government aiuLat once put i4 service, has relieved the situation, so that now the roads are back in fairly good condition." Roumanians Move j Into Territory Given I v by Peace Council fBucharest, April 18. The Rou manian government announces that at the request of inhabitants of Transylvania, who have complained of ill-treatment at the hands of the ' Hungarians, Roumanian troops in Transylvania have been ordered to advance. The troops, it is said, will occupy territory alloted to Roumania by the supreme war council i Telegraphers In New York . 1 4 May Join Telephone Girls jJJoston. April iv. a request on behalf of Boston telegraphers was sent & J. Konenkamp, international president of the Commercial Tele graphers ' Union of America last nifeht by W. E. Conry, member of the executive board of a local union fifr sanction ol a strike of opera te employed by the Western Un icta and Postal Telegraph companies in New England. The request was stat after a conference with the committee in charge of the strike of telephone employes. i : : Distribute Art Posters r Designed by Omaha Girls -- 'Miss Elizabeth Chamberlain, fed eral home demonstration agent, is distributing 15 beautiful posters, de- . signed by Campfire Girls for he rj::llh CaHnre Methods !..iV- And Chiropractic Adjustments Scientifically applied bring cures though others failed, because it re mores the cause, through both ways, 'f . v Consult ' v Dr. Benj. Israel, D. C N. D. Chiropractor. Baahauui Blk, 16th and Doaglas '. I '. Street. I tXfioe, Deng. 7S Hern NO. 1 BABY- ERDMAN mi' ' ii .r a o rt Heyn Modi NO. 4 BABE ANDERSON Taking Care of the Baby "Dont's for Mothers. The Board of Health has pre pared the following hints for mothers: Don't kiss the baby on the mouth or allow your friends to do so. Don't give soothing syrups to the cross baby. Don't give "patent" cough mix tures for a cough. Don't fail to secure the best milk you can afford to buy. Don't allow flies to rest on baby's bottle or nipple. Don't fail to wash bottleand nip ple before feeding the baby. .Don't fail, after feeding babyto wash bottle and nipple. Don't let the bottle stand about, off the ice. Don't fail to keep the baby's food, when prepared, on the ice. Don't fail to feed baby at regular periods, day and night. Don't let the baby use a "pacifier." Constant sucking of a dummy teat causes deformities and interferes with baby's growth.. Don't neglect the daily care of baby's mouth wash out with boric acid after each feeding. Don't excite the baby especially before sleeping time or after eating. Don't rock the baby to sleep. Don't let the baby sleep in the sun with light shining into its eyes. W A r-y WW U I It mjf I t vVv UfL ; ii ess Dr. McKenny Says: "Don't let the kiddies cry with toothache when it is so easy to relieve them with my scientific methods9 Sound Teeth Make Healthy Children We make a specialty of treating children's teeth. Bring your boy or girl in today and have us care fully examine their teeth. . ' Our Prices Bespeak Real Economy Best Silver dt Best 22K .::.$i Filling Gold Crown Plates $8, $10.and $15 McKENNEY Dentists 14th and Farnam Sts., 1324 Farnam. Doug. 2872. Stndlo Skoglund rboto. NO. 2 BABE MILLER - ' Don't overdress the baby, and in summer avoid wool near skin. Don't pick up .very young babies without supporting the back. Don't neglect to bathe the baby daily. In summer frequent wet dips help. Don't fail to clean all folds of skin and powder well. Don't let a wet bib or wet cap string chafe baby's neck. Don't keep baby in the house; fresh air is necessary for growth. Don't permit flies to bother baby when sleeping; use a net. Don't fail to screen in the win dows, particularly in the nursery, against flies and insects. Don't forget that babies nursed by their mother's milk and given plenty of fresh air have three times the ad vantage over others in escaping di arrhoea, pneumonia and children's infections. Don't expect a quiet, composed, healthy baby unless you do your part thoroughly and constantly. Don't forget that a mother who thinks her milk is not right or suffi cient for her baby may secure medi cal advice on how to improve it in both - quality and quantity she should consult her private physician or go to the Department of Health. WITHOUT'17 $5 Heaviest Bridge Work. Per Tooth . . . . $5 NO. i m mm a t 4 xwa - s.A ?...V .... :vihi i Blnehmrt Btelfena Studio Miss Troy Bitterly Attacks Officials of Scotland Yard Halifax, April 19. Miss Lillian Scott Troy, of San Francisco, re cently deported from England, ar? rived last night on the steamer Car mania, on her way to New York. Miss Troy, whose alleged friend ship for Baron Lewis Von Horst, formerly of San Francisco and in terned by the British government in August, 1914, is understood to have been one of the causes for her de portation, was bitter in her denunci ation of British officials. She de clared that she had been persecuted by the English police. She said she was convinced that the authorities first turned their at tention to her because in 1912, while a dock strike was in progress in London, she fed a thousand strikers' children weekly at her own expense in a plant which she owned in the east end. She was made an honor ary member of the dockers' union. Apartments Ransacked. In 1914, Miss Troy said, she dis covered that she was being followed by detectives. She complained at Scotlana yard and said she was lock ed in a room with a detective for to arjuw Green's Pharmacy Was anticipated, and line of the beat et FOft BABY Olive Cas tile Soap, cake .. .12c Bo c a b elli Castile, large bar, for .. .$1.69 C o 1 g a te's big bath I5c Doz ..$1.50 Castoria, Fletch er's .......24c Woodbury's Fa cial Soap. . .21c Johnson's Baby Powder .. . .17c Our high grade Baby Rubber Goods will secure Baby's health. Our goods make Good Babies; Djer Kiss Tal cum . . ...37c Fountain Syringa Guaranteed red rubber, large mouth, rapid flow, full ca pacity; value $2.00, special $1.29 Free Book, "Our Baby' Dayt." Please ak for one. Babcock's Gory lopsis ..... .17c Colgate's T a 1 cum, all oders, EFFICIENT SERVICE Pure Bocabelli Castile Soap Fine Sponges Olive Oil Feed Baby Ice Cream At Our Sanitary Soda Fountain Idta ana Howard. v Skoglund Photo. 3 GWENDOLINE "BABE" LONDER I - vwsh'vrsi Bloebart Bteffens Stndlo three hours, but that he did not question her. She asserted that on returning to her apartments she found they had been thoroughly ran sacked by detectives who, she added, fotind nothing. "This treatment," she exclaimed, "was due to a horrible attempted blackmail scheme aimed at Lady Hiram Maxim, myself and a well known prisoner of war. They got nothing out of us, but I was foolish and went crying about the thing." She did not disclose the name of the prisoner of war. "During the last four years," she continued, "I have been always hunt ed by agents of Scotland yard. Large business interests kept me in England and I have lost heavily. Several times the American consul intervened to save me, but the em bassy remained apathetic. Hidden Away from Friends. "I have been ill for the last four months and was only strong enough to return to my theater a few we"eks ago. I was arrested on April 9 and taken to Scotland yard. I was not allowed to communicate with my solicitor or to get any of my belong ings. eeK. we have In stock a full BABY NECESSITIES. FOR BAB R u b b e r Sheet ing, extra strong, usual widths Rubber Sponges, soft and durable. Bulb Sy ringe with hard or soft tube. Baby Toilet Sets, 75c to $1.75 Nipples for large or narrow mouthed bottles. Horlick's Malted Milk, $1.00 size, 75c Listerine, $1.00 size ... 75c Woo d war.d's Pure Sugar Stick (box) ......15c ONLY THE BEST QUALITY Squibb's Pure. Talcum Powder Endorsed By All Physician Castor Oil Sugar or Milk Cameraa and Supplies. Ex. pert Finishing For Baby's Pictures. Deaalaa S46. lit Easily Digested, Nourishing dWhol an When nurse or doctor says your baby is old enough to eat soft food, then is the time to begin feeding Iten's Graham Crackers. The crackers should be first moistened with milk or water, either warm or cool. Later, when the teeth begin to come, baby may have a crack er to nibble on. Then, when baby is old enough, the Graham Crackers may be fed after breaking in a bowl of milk or cream or half-and-half. AUTHORITIES AGREE. Every authority on child feeding says provide plenty of cereal foods. A government bulletin says of them: "When eaten, aa is usually the case, with milk or cream, they are an important addition to the diet. The ill effects sometimes noted may usually be avoided if ex cessive amounts of sugar are not added." V We have known of few cases, in deed, where children did not find Iten's Graham Crackers wholly agreeable and in such cases, the trouble is nearly always caused as the government bulletin states by an excessive amount ol sugar added by mother or nurse. , Iten's Graham Crackers are slightly sweetened by both granulat ed sugar and sugar cane molasses, but there is no added flavoring. The fine, nut-like flavor of the wheat would be minimized by the addition of flavoring matter, so we use none in Iten's Graham Crack ers. These splendid biscuits are as "near to nature" as we can make them. PREPARATION FOR FEEDING. The preparation of Iten's Graham Crackers for feeding children de pends upon so many factors principally the age and the condi tion of the child's digsstive appar atus that, no hard and fast rules can be laid down. Until the child has sufficient teeth to break up the crackers into small bits, they should be served soft. The softening is done by moistening the crackers in whatever litraid is agreeable to the baby's stomach such as milk or water. Oftentimes a thin gruel is made of crumbled Graham Crack ers and milk, boiled to the proper consistency. Those who are experienced in baby feeding can easily work out the proper combinations, but in the case! of a sickly child it is always best i to have the doctor's advice on feeding. ' WHAT MOTHERS SAY. Here are brief extracts from let ters we have received from moth ers: Mrs. T., O'Neill, Neb. "I, raised my baby on Iten's Graham Crack ers soaked in half milk and half water. He had a very weak stom ach and Iten's Graham Crackers were the only food he could retain on his stomach." , Mrs. H., Sterling, Colo "When our baby girl was five months old, . Your grocer can supply Crackers in stock, he can get A postal card request to Iten Biscuit Co., Omaha, Neb., will bring an interesting leaf, let showing "Thirty Ways of Serving f ten's Graham Crackers." ITEN BISCUIT OMAHA. esome for Baby we had to take away her mother's milk and all the other foods we could get did not agree with her. She became the shadow of a skele ton and for a time we feared we would lose 4ier. One day we chanced to give her an Iten's Graham Cracker and she seemed to relish it so much that we continued to feed her these crackers. The result is we have one of the fattest, healthiest, stoutest babies in Sterl ing today. She weighs twenty-five pounds, and we believe that Iten's Graham Crackers did it" Mrs. S., Oklahoma City, Okla. "My daughter Ruth has never been sick in her life. I attribute this to the fact that since being weaned her only solid food has been Iten's Graham Crackers. She has cut all her teeth but one and is unusually heavy for her age, weighing about 30 pounds when 20 months old. Last summer was 1 unusually hot and naturally hard on babies, but our baby came through without any trouble at all. I suppose all mothers know that Graham Crack ers are good for their babies, but Iten's are unusually good and I would not use any other kind and always have a supply on hand. Ruth eats about a quarter pound each day." WHAT A "PRIZE" BABY EATS. A 17 months old "prize" baby, who scores close to the 100-point mark, eats these foods at regular intervals each day: Breakfast One poached egg and eight ounces of certified milk. Dinner One baked apple, three Iten's Graham Crackers, a small dish of prune pulp, eight ounces of certified milk. Supper Small bowl of broth, six ounces of certified milk, three Iten's Graham Crackers. As you may note, the only solid food eaten by this 100-point baby is Iten's Graham Crackers. FOOD VALUE OF ITEN'S GRA HAM CRACKERS. When you buy Iten's Graham Crackers you 'are getting a concen trated practically-all-wheat food,N with very little moisture in it, as it is ouraim during the baking process to eliminate every bit of moisture possible. The food value, as demon strated by analysis, is 1969 calories to the pound. There are 60 crack ers on the average to the pound. Iten's Graham Crackers are made from a blend of Graham' flour and you. If he does not happen to them for you quickly. -Baked and Guaranteed by- CO. SNOW WHITE BAKERIES Food wheat flour. Experience taught us years ago we have been . In this business twenty-seven years that a cracker made wholly of Graham flour is not palatable to many peo ple. Experiments conducted dur ing a long period finally developed our Graham Cracker of today a pure and healthful food product, high in nutritive value, easily di gested and economical in cost. In the preparation of Iten'i Graham Crackers only the best grade ingredients are used. These are carefully selected and thorough ly tested before using. These in gredients graham flour and soft winter wheat flour, with the purest of shortening, sugar cane molasses and granulated sugar are blended just right by our own perfected methods, mixed thoroughly by arms of steel and then baked in great white tile ovens over coke fires at 500 degrees of heat. After being cooled sufficiently in filtered air, the crackers are then carefully inspected and packed while still warm, within fifteen minutes after leaving the ovens. The packing is done under the same strictly sanitary conditions that prevail throughout the Iten Snow White Bakeries. BEST FOR FAMILY USE. The best package for family usa is the returnable can. When these cans are kept tightly closed, the contents will keep fresh, crisp and palatable for an indefinitely long period of time. When exposed, however, crackers readily absorb the moisture and thus lose their freshness and crisp ness. They may also absorb odors, and thus become unpalatable. The best way to keep crackers ii in a tightly closed container of tin or other metal. Crackers should never be put in a bread box or cake box with other goods, but should always be kept in a separate container. If the crackers should become softened by exposure to moisture, the crispness may be re stored by a slight totsting in a medium oven. Just leave the oven door open and be careful not to scorch them. 1 The painstaking care exercised in preparation, baking and packing of Iten's Graham Crackers results in the production of the best , graham crackers baked anywhere in the world today, which reach your home in perfectly palatable condi tion. , have genuine Iten Graham . V. S. fat Olflsy