Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 18, 1919, Page 11, Image 11

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    Cottvereationa, dull and dry. ,
Embelllihed with H. Mid. and So aald I. Cewpar.
I am constant aa the northern star,
01 who, true-fixed and reetlng quality
Thara la aa (allow In tha flrmamtnt. Shtkttpwira
. TTTHAT has most impressed
W you in the Briti,h Ile"
' ' some one asked Miss
Edith Aykroyd when she was
abroad in Y. W. C A. war work.
""We Americans work so much
harder and faster than you do, men
and women."
"Having see your soldier boys
and women war workers in action,
i can readily believe that,'' returned
her questioner.
"But, isn't it so," interjected a
little woman, "that you spend more
time making a living, while we
spend more time living."
Miss Aykroyd is now executive
:ield secretary for the north central
field, Y. W. C. A., with headquarters
at Minneapolis. She is in Omaha
for a few days and spoke Monday
before the Omaha Woman's club.
Home Economics.
The home economics department
of the Omaha Woman's club will
have a party Thursday at the Y. W.
C. A., beginning at 10:30 a. m. Each
member will bring sandwiches for
one. Additional refreshments will
be served.
War Council Lectures.
Miss Esse Hathaway, who is in
Omaha in the interest of the war
council lectures, Y. W. C. A., says
the staff of four gave 32 lectures
last week. The schedule for Thurs
day afternoon, December 18, in
cludes a meeting at the City mis
sion at 2:30; mothers' meeting with
Mrs. Sullivan, 3319 Franklin street,
at 3 o'clock; Central High school
girls at the Y. W. C A. at 3:30.
J. F. W. Club.
The J. F. W. club will meet on
Thursday, December 18, at 1 o'clock
at the home of Mrs. N. H. Seiler,
228 Capitol avenue.
P. E. O. Sisterhood.
Chapter E of the P. E. O. sister
hood will give a box luncheon at 1
o'clock at the home of Mrs. George
B. Eddy, 517 South Twenty-fifth
Shoe Market
"The Gift Store''
Those who are seeking practical gifts this year gifts which
embody intrinsic vajue and which are sure to be appreciated, will
find here an unlimited selection. We suggest
Ladies Comfort Slipper
Exquisitely made of fine leathers
and turned by skilled artisans into gift
Uppers that will delight milady's heart.
$2.45 to $2.95
Ladies' Silk Hosiery
Our new Hosiery Department is com
plete with the newest assortments of
quality hose, economically priced at,
from
$1.95 to $2.95
Ladies' Spats
Ivery woman can use a pair of beautiful new spats
stylaa permit her to wear them with her low shoes.
r $3.00 to $4.00
-for this season's
Ladies' Beaver Brown, African Brown
Patent Vamp Shoes in both' lace and
button styles, also black kid, black
suede vamps, with cloth tops. Spe
cial, per pair
$9.95
-Ladies Military Walking Boots
in brown, Russia calf, gray,
brown, brown and black, etc. Spe
cial, at, from
$6.95 to $9.95
NO DISCOUNTSNO DELIVERIESNO CHARGES
SHOE MARKET
Hotel Conant Bldg. 220 South 16th Street.
avenue, Thursday, December 18. She
will be assisted by Mrs. W. A.
Shropshire.
Smith College Club. -Dr.
Clara Greenough of the Smith
Unit, will speak to the Smith Col
lege club at 2:30 p. m., Friday, eighth
floor Blackstone hotel. Her sub
ject will be: "Our Men in France
and Their British Wives in Eng
land." All interested are invited.
w.cTt. u.
Douglas County W. C T. U. will
meet Friday at the Y. W. C A. at
2:30 p. m. Mrs. George W. Covell,
returned delegate from the national
W. C. T. U. at St.Louis will report.
This is the postponed meeting orig
inally scheduled for last week.
Liberty Chapter, O. E. S.
Liberty Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, will hold a special
meeting Thursday afternoon at 2:00
p. m. There will be a regular meet
ing, Friday evening, December 18.
Receotion for oast matrons and
patrons has been postponed until
the January meeting.
Rosae Crucis.
The Ancient and Mystical Order
Rosae Crucis will hold an open
meeting Thursday night, December
18. at 8 o'clock, Dannebrog hall,
2553 Leavenworth street
Bridge Party.
Mrs. M. Shirley entertained infor
mally at bridge at her home, Tues
day afternoon. Three tables were
set for the game.
Personals
Mrs. Z. T. Lindsey left Satur
day evening for New York, where
she will join her sister. Miss Ethel
Evans. They will spend the win
ter in Porto Rico.
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Rippey an
nounce the birth of a son, John R.,
jr., at the Stewart hospital Monday.
For Mrs. Bethell.
Mrs. Sam Burns entertained
luncheon at her home, followed by
bridge, Wednesday, in honor of
Mrs. William Bethell of Redlands,
Cal., who is a guest of Mrs. George
Prinz. Covers were placed for 10
and Ward roses formed the center
piece. ,
Laundering Quilts.
An easy way to wash your bed
quilts or comfortables is in this man
ner: First take a small scrub brush
and a pail of suds and scrub well the
most soiled parts.
Place the article to be cleaned
over a table to do this. Second,
place article on clothesline and pro
ceed with the rinsing, which is done
with the garden hose. Let the full
force of water soak the quilt or com
fortable well.
This may need be done several
times, but the result is a good, clean
comfortable without the pulling
apart of the interlining. Do this on
a good windy day.
THIS CUP FREE
This Jiffy Measuring Cup is free to users of Jiffy-Jell. Just send
us the end labels from two Jiffy-Jell packages- the labels naming
the flavor and we will mail the cup.
This aluminum cup holds exactly one-half pint Fill twice with
boiling water to dissolve one package Jiffy-Jell. It also holds ex
actly one cup, as called for in many recipes. Ordinary cups so vary
in size that many recipes are spoiled. So this exact cup, with mark
ings showing fractions of a cup, is essential in every home.
Crashed Fruit Desserts
Delightful Dainties at Trifling Cost
Free Dessert Molds
These Individual Des
sert Molds come in as
sorted styles, six to the
set The six will serve a
full package of Jiffy-JeDL
We send the full set for
5 end labels. The molds
axe aluminum, and the
set is worth 60c
We make these offers to
show more women what Jiffy
Jell means to them.
Jiffy-Jell differs vastly from
' other quick gelatine desserts.
Each package contains a bottle
of condensed fruit juice.
We crush the fruit, condense
the juice, and bring you real
fruit in abundance m these
Jiffy-Jell desserts.
That's the important point
Flavor is mere taste, and often
artificial. The fruit itself is rich
in earthy salts. Everybody
' needs it every dayt
For a Few Cents
Fresh fruit and canned fruit
are expensive. Here are rich
fruit dainties which are not
And they are rich in fruit
Half a pineapple, for instance,
is used to flavor one Jiffy-Jell
dessert Then almost a whole
lemon is used to acidulate the
mixture.
Yet a package of Jiffy-Jell
serves six people in mold form,
Real-Fruit Desserts
10 Flavors in Vials Z"Z.
Mint Raspberry Cherry
Loganberry Strawberry Lime
Pineapple Orange Lemon Ceffea
and twelve if you whip the jell
all for a few cents.
It is also quick. Simply add
boiling water, as directed on
package, then the fruit-juice
flavor from the vial, and let cool.
Millions are using these
quick, economical fruit des
serts, and no home now should
miss them.
Try These Flavors
Try Loganberry and Pine
apple for desserts. Try Lime
fruit flavor. It makes a tart,
green salad jelL Mix in your
salad before cooling. Or mix
in meat scraps and make an
appetizing meat loaf.
Try Mint flavor. It makes
a restful mint jell to serve with
meats or as a side dish.
Try them -now. Then send
us the end labels which men
tion the flavor, and get the
Jiffy Cop and any of our molds.
See the coupon. Cut
it out so you won't
forget
I Hi
Other Free Molds
The labels called for are the end labels the one on
each package which mentions the flavor. Send the coupon
with the labels called for and check the molds you want.
...Tiffy Measuring-Cap (2 ...Pint Dessert Mold (5
labels). labels).
...Set of Six Individual ,;.Pint Salad Mold (S
Molds, as pictured (5 labels).
labels).
Jiffy Dessert Co, .
Waukesha, Wis.
MAIL
THIS
I enclose .... labels as called for.
Send die molds I check at side.
sis
Strange: Story Afloat
1 T
Mrs Alma, Stesut
Mrs. Alma Vetsera-Hayne-An-drews-Steane,
whose tragic death
several days ago, after the Victory
ball in London, on her return from
a honeymoon, has shocked English
society. She was twice married and
divorced in America. Her son,
bearing the name of his reputed
granfather, Prince Rudolph of Aus
tria, was born in Morristown, N. J.
The post-mortem is said to have dis
closed a case of poisoning strikingly
similar to that pf "Billy" Carlton,
who was found dead after, the first
Victory ball in London a year ago.
Mrs. Steane claimed descent from
the Austrian Imperial family. She
claimed she was the natural daugh
ter of the dead Crown Prince
Rudolph, son of Emperor Francis
Joseph, and of Marie Vetsera, the
baroness whom Prince Rudolph
loved but could not marry. The
story of their tragic deaths in the
hunting lodge at Meyerling in 1889,
where both committed suicide be
cause their love was thwarted and
the prince was tied to a wife whom
he could not cherish, is known to
the world. In 1911 the Austrian
government issued an official pro
nouncement stating that no child
was born of the infatuation of the
crown prince and the baroness.
Famous Women
Helen of Troy.
"The face that launched a thou
sand ships and burned the topless
towers of Ilium." Thus sang Chri
topher Marlowe, the poet (1587) of
Helen of Troy. Probably it is the
most exalted compliment ever paid
to" woman's beauty. ' For this is the
history of Helen, and the "gleaming
melancholy" of the achievement of
her charms. In the oldest chroni
cles of Greece she is entered as the
daughter of Zeus himself by Loda,
whom he wooed (and won) under
the guise of a swan. No wonder
that Helen was the ivory perfect-
ncse! She .became the bride of
Menelaus, king of Sparta. At the
famous contest for supremacy on
Mount Ida among three goddesses,
Venus, Minerva and June, Paris
son of Priam, king of Troy, being
the judge, Venus promised him the
fairest woman in the world; Miner
va promised wisdom and Juno world
dominion. Paris gave the prize to
Venus. The woman won. Paris
visited Sparta and swept Helen from
the arms of Menelaus. He bore her
to Troy, and Greece arose as one
man to recover just one woman.
The tragedy of the Trojan War
sung by Homer in the "Iliad" (1000
B. C.) was occasioned by a woman.
Yet Marlowe puts on the lips of
Helen's royal suitor , the words,
"Sweet Helen, make me immortal
by a kiss!"
The Mermaid.
She was a "famous woman," be
cause she was a "famous ' inn that
served men. That was enough
for the Mermaid. She was named
after an enchanting lady of the
vasty deep, who is a woman to her
girdle, and a fish to her feet Her
figure was on the signboard of the
famous inn, in Friday street Lon
don. Pass with hasty glance the bar
in front the parlor behind the
blackened roof and nnlisriert taHUa
tap-room on the left low doorways,
winding passages and you come to
the inn parlor. This is the Mermaid!
And the men si'ttinc tVr? R
Jonson, Fletcher, Beaumont, Carew,
uonne, and Shakespeare. Shake
speare is roaring over his dog's
nose, and Ben Johnson over his
canary. Oh, listen to the wit com
bats between Shakespeare and Ben
Jonson. Mermaid, dear "famous
woman," why were you net a twin?"
Noah's Wife.
There must be some foundation
for the perpetually recurring story
in the mediaeval mystery plays of
Noah's wife. Noah's name means
"rest." Noah's wife's makeup was
restless. Her name was Naamah.
Naamah was a daughter of Enoch,
"who walked with God," says Holy
Writ; but Naamah walked about
with her temper and nearly upset
the ark itself with the "kick" she
made at its uprearing. She fought
Noah with doughty fists all the way
through and when the great man
had completed his work she said
she would not go in with the ani
mals The animals behaved better
and went timidly into the ark. At
last Naamah consented to carry in
the lyre bird. When they were
afloat Naamah declared she was as
blue as the sea. The lions became
outraged at this carrying on and at
tacked Noah to attack Naamah.
Pretty woman with the melodious
name, you have come all the way
down history from 2448 B. C. to
November 19, 1919, A. D., as the
peacock of temper. When a man
builds his house (ark) his trouble
begins
How Christmas
Carol Revived
in Detroit
In November, 1916, a small com
mittee of the musical people got to
gether and mapped out a plan which
comprised the formation of a Christ
mas carol organization with officers,
including one representative of each
of the denominations of the city, in
order to make the organization
strictly nonsectarian.
A meeting was held and officers
elected, and then a campaign by mail
was used to acquaint all the minis
ters and Sunday school superin
tendents in the city with the aims
and object of the new organization,
and to solicit their active co-operation.
It was rather late not more than
four or five weeks before Christmas
but a start was made. Twenty
five groups, with about 250 carolers,
sang in a few neighborhoods. They
raised about $287 to help neglected
and destitute children of the city.
This was considered very good
for a start, but the echo of the sing
ing had hardly died away when plans
were laid to extend greatly in 1917
this picturesque and ancient custom.
The newspapers gave liberal space
and helped the cause wonderfully
On the following Christmas Eve,
4,000 people, including many adult
groups sang carols in all of Detroit's
residential districts and collected
over $3,000 for the city's needy chil
dren. By 1918 the number of carol
ers had increased to 10,000, turning
Detroits twilight streets into "200
miles of song," making truly an in
spiring and beautiful sight.
Though the revival of Christmas
Carol singing is comparatively re
cent in this country it has already
reached many cities, including both
large centers of population and
smaller towns, and has everywhere
aroused great enthusiasm. Caroling
groups have been organized in the
following cities, among others, and
in nearly all cases provision made
for repeating the event annually:
New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh,
Detroit, Minneapolis, Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Indianapolis, Scranton.
Jersey City, Denver, Syracuse, Nash
ville, Lowell, Evansville, Boston,
Flint, Bangor, Nyack, Newburyport.
Facts About Potatoes.
When potatoes become old in
April and up to June it is wise to
pare them early in the morning
and let them soak in water for sev
eral hours in order to restore the
moisture they have lost. The same
treatment will help those that are
frostbitten. The new potatoes that
we get in July and August are not
ripe and are undigestible as any
green fruit would be so never give
them to children or invalids.
Still the Same Cry.
Mr. Flatbush Do you remember
when you were a saleslady in a de
partment store?"
Mrs. Flatbush Why. yes, per
fectly. "And when you used to yell,
'Cash! Cash!'?"
"Very well, indeed."
"Well, do you know, I hoped
you'd get over that after we got
married'jYonkers Statesman.
Public school teachers of Philadel
phia' will receive increased salary
and a continuance of the bonu
granted them during the war. ;
Easy to Make This
Pine Cough Remedy ; J
XfcamauWb of famlUee itw by Ms
prompt results. InexpetMiTe, . -
and htn about St. ,
You know that pine is used
nearly all prescriptions and remedit'
for coughs. The reason is that pin,,
contains several peculiar element ths
have a remarkable effect in soothW
, and healing the membranes of it
throat and chest.' , . j
Pine couch syrups are combination)
of pine and syrup. The "syrup" pa
is usually plain sugar syrup.. - f
To make the best pine coueh remed
that money can buy, put 2Va ounce
of Finex in a pint bottle, sua fill w
with home-made sugar syrupi Or yd,
can use claritied molasses,, honey, tf,
corn syrup, instead of sugar syrur
fjitner way, you mane a iuii pint mo
than you can buy ready-made for thw
times the money. It is pure, goc
and vprv nleasant children like it.
You can feel this take hold of !
cough cr cold in a way that meat
hiiairiPK Tha much mv hn dr.
hoarse and tight, or may be persist
en My loose iroin me lurmauim r
Shlegm. The cause is the same li
amcd membranes and this Pinex SB
Svnin combination will stoD it-i
usually in 24 hours or less. Spiendi'
too, for bronchial asthma, hoarsenes
or any ordinary throat ailment.
Pinex is a highly concentrated eon
pound of genuine Norway pine )
tract, and is famous the world ovr
for its prompt effect upon coughs. .. 8
Beware of substitutes. Ask yot
druggist for "2y2 ounces of Pine
with directions, and don't accept an;
thing else. Guaranteed to give abs
lute satisfaction or money retunae'
The Pinex Co., Ft Waynev Ind.
always appropriate
And
Appreciated
wm
awBH
"The Gift of Good Taste"
You will find Balduffs Egyptian Chocolates
at most shopp where good candies are sold
J 1 : - I,
WIETOILE aid
r
TRAM MARK
(D)H
RODUCTS.
Use Vegetole when making
baking powder biscuits
2 cnpfuls sifted flour.
4 Maspoonfals baking powdar.
1 taaspoonful salt.
2 UbUspoonfuIs Vegetole.
?4 to 1 cupful milk or Vi milk
and Vj water.
Method: Mil and sift th dry IngradlMita. add
vef etola, chop mlxtura until of a mealr coiuist
ency. Add milk gradually until a sort, aponfy
douf h la formed. Turn onto a floured beard, toea
with a knife until whale eurfece le floured, pat
lightly withe rolling pin until one-halt inch thick.
Cut out and bake Immediately on a greaaed etieet
lr a oulck oven, about twelve minutes.
Vmfctf Oil for
mayonnaise dressing
1 taaspoonful each mustard, salt
nd sugar.
Few grains cayenne pepper.
Yolks 2 eggs. ,
2 ttblespoonfuls each vinegar
and lemon juice.
Vi cap masr ou.
Method: Mi x dry Ingredient, add egg yolk c, and
when well mixed add oil gradually, drop by drop
at first. Stir conttanUy. Ae the mixture thick
ene, thin with vinegar or lemon Juice. Add oil
and acid alternately until aU Is used, beating
constantly. All the Ingredients should be kept
cold while waking this dressing. A good method
to follow Is to place bowl In which tha dressing
Is bains; mixed in pan of chopped Ice.
For additional recipes write De
partment of Food Economics
Armour and Company, Chicago.
Vegetole is popular with housewives because it mixes up rapidly,
easily and evenly makes delicious, flaky and economical pastry.
Vegetole adds no flavor of its own, but rather intensifies the natural flavor of foods. Foods
shortened with this pure, white vegetable product are easily digested because it melts at
a temperature lower than body temperature. It is therefore wholesome and economical.
Wttidatl Oil is equally esteemed by particular cooks because it makes foods more palatable
and tasty. This pure vegetable oil, of clear, amber color an all-American product is
delicious in salads, dressings, sauces and gravies and is an excellent deep frying medium.
ARMOUR A'COMPANY
r
Douglas 1055. , OMAHA, NEB. Manage.