Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 17, 1920, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
THE BEE : OMAH Av, ' SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1920.
Is taa muI ( H.
Ahaksayaaia.
Ths M
of toimr ace tka Joys toaaarraw.
-Babaaak.
a Knn mt
(
) , in bulk and only in our sealed original
A ' cans with the familiar Butter-Nut 1 Abel
-ST "Bulk Coffee means any coffee without
teSP14"" i 1 4 1 1 m ;n4;kr in nnon Kitic Whom ."llP foffofi
n 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' I ' B ' " i 3 loses its fragrance and strength and
1 - :-f jfl i'lU takes on dlmpness arid weight ,
1 Butfer-Nut Brandy
l.c x-f ' 'ii irade marked
I; Delicious I
MR. GROCER: ,
We Have Created a Demand for
Anchor Nut Margarine
1
nchor
OLEOMARGARINE
A
Supply?
Distributed by ;
Fairmont Creamery Co,
AT ALL GROCERS
Hi
clubdom
Mrs. Catt Sends Letter
of Thanks to Equal
Franchise Society.
The Equal Franchise society o!
Omaha recently tent $1,000 to the
National Suffrage association and in
acknowldgment Mrs. Charles E. Jo
hannes, president, has received the
following letter from Mrs. Carrie
Chapman Catt:'
"My Dear Mrs. Johannes: Your
letter "received this morning made
the'National American Woman Suf
frage associaction glad indeed. So
generous a contribution in support
of the hard work we are doing
makes our burdens lighter and our
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiviiiiliiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiitiiiiniit
" Orange j
Pudding"
S , 8
? A rich, delicious combina-
tion of fruit and cream. :
Ia -
i An ideal dessert for your
Sunday dinner. j , 1
i
! The I
Auk Yonr
Jiiwtr For
Mfg - Itf OiiihOm MhIiI Mamrwil (,
The picture that open your eyes!
i II i
Starts Sunday at the Sun.
Try a Bee Want Ad to boost your
business. .
ICECREAM 1
Special Fori
Sunday
I Your druggist can I
r supply you 1
!
Creamery Co. j
'.JI!l!tlllMIUI!illltlllilMII1ll:!lltllllllll!llMll!!
Three
Hundred
Years
'Sl HO JVl:'
' - Hams-Bacon
hope more certain that we shall pull
through by February 1.
"I wish L could make you under
stand how really grateful we are.
We are an unpaid group of women
who are putting our best efforts and
most of our own monev into the
struggle. We do appreciate every
penny wnicn comes to us irom tne
splendid workers of the country."We
are conscientious about its expendi
ture and try to make every dollar
go as far as it possibly can be made
to stretch.
"Will you kindly convey to the
Equal Franchise society a cordial
and urgent invitation to send a large
delegation to the last suffrage con
vention, which will be held in Chi
cago February 12 to 18. We will
send you all formal invitations later
with An announcement of the Ten
tative program. VTe wish to make
that convention the gladdest and
happiest one ever heW. . We wish
to put in it all the joy of our grati
tude and yet to plan constructively
for the best use of women's votes
afterwards. I am most cordially and
gratefully yours,
"CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT,
, "President"
The local society desires to send
a large delegation to the national
convention, to be held in Chicago
February 12 to" 18. Mrs. Edward E.
Undeland, secretary, already has
some names of members who will at
tend from here Suffragists are
hopeful that 36 states will have rati
fied the federal amendment before
the Chicago convention. Twenty
six states, with Oregon and Indiana
the most recent, are now in the col
umn of assent.
D. A. R. Chapter.
- There will be a board meeting 6f
the Major Isaac Sadler chapter of
the D. A. R. Saturday at 2:30 p. m.
at the home of Mrs. William Archi
bald 'Smith, 102 South Thirty-fifth
street
Work of the Finnish Women.
Helsingsfors, Finland, as a strang
er in that town reports his impres
fions, is a city of women doing the
work that used to be done by men.
fie is astorished by the number of
women in practically every kind of
occupation. On the trains the por
ters in the sleeping cars are women;,
in the fields and factories women are
busy at heavy manual labor; in the
banks there are apparently about 10
times as many women employed as
men, and i.i one of the biggest finan
cial institutions in the city positions
of great resgpnsbility are hekl by
vomen. Compared with other coun
tries wher the spectacle of women
in what formerly were exclusively
masculine , employments- became
common during the war, Fjnland in
general and Helsingfors in particu
lar, carry the proportion of women
much further, for the man-power of
Finland was so greatly depleted that
a large proportion of the remaining
male population is now needed for
military serice. In the Finnish for
eign office, :or example, women were
holding positions which, says the
correspondent, "would be entirely
beyond the aspirations of their sis
ters in the State department at
Washingtot or th? British foreign
office." No other country, it seems
: sale to say show's so widr and gen
eral an adaptation oi women to tne
carrying on of every kind of work,
and although the change is said to
have come about rapidly, the women
seem remarkably at ease in their new
employments.
Lamb a la Venison.
Take a lepof lamb, make Seep
slits in'tbe meat, into which insert
strips oKsalt pork that have previ
ously been rolled in pepper and
cloves; bake two hours, or according
to the size of the roast, basting fre
quently. Take from the oven and
about an hour befpre serving spread
currant jelly over it, return to the
oven and let it brown.
In certain parts of India no girl
can marry unless her father has
been pacified by a gift of rice and a
few rupees.
X-
Three hundred vears aco there landed
at Plymouth, Massachusetts, a little
band of Puritans, known in, history as
The Pilgrims
They were
A select few
-Determined to be underlings to none
Clean in mind and body . t
Definite in their, object and with a strong
fidelity of purpose.
and to their influence we owe the best
of our heritage.
. PURITAN Hams and Bacon are founded tn
Puritan principles, fortified with, our complete
' confidence of their sterling worth. (
SHOOK WITH
NERVOUSNESS
A Lady Was Flat On Her Back
With Terrible Spells, But Her
Husband Got Cardui,
And Now She Is
Grateful.
THE CUDAHY PACKING COMPANY
F. W. CONRON, Manag r
Phona Douglas 2401
1321 Jones Sy Omaha. Nab.
If your ikr deon't
htndlt Puritan, ttkphor
Puritan Hama and Bacon arc smoked daily la our Omaha
Plant, insuring fresh, brightly smoked moats at all times.
McKinney, Texas--Mrs. Mary
Stephenson, of this place states:
"About a year and a half ago I was
down in bed for six weeks, not able
to sit up. I was flat on my back
and had terrible spells ., . . Why,
it looked like I would die. At times
I didn't know anything. I would get
nervous, I couldn't bear anyone to
talk to me, I would Just Jerk and
shook with nervousness . .
across toy back was so sore and
ached me all the time. I would
have a dizzy feeling. My limbs
ached me and I would get numb
and feel so weak ... I said to
my husband I knew Cardui was good
and I believed I had best try it.
He got me a bottle of Cardui, and
when I had only taken one-half bot
tle of Cardui I felt stronger I
took a half a dozen bottles alto
gether, then In two weeks after I
began taking I was up, in three I
was doing my work. I praise Cardui
for I believe it saved my life and I
am gratef uL" ' ' r
v- v
For over 40 years Cardui has
been helping weak, sick women back
to health and strength. Try it
Books and
Authors v
Books and Authors.
A wise critic once said that the
best way to discover a book's qual
ity is to "test it with a hatpin." If
the point, stuck in at random, strikes
an arresting passage, ont which
apart from the context stands out
strikingly, the book possesses real
fiber.
"This book is not only the best
novel done by Miss Cather herself,
but also one of the best that any
American has ever done." Thus
writes a critic of Willa Sibert
Cather's new book, "My Antonia."
Miss Cather is a Nebraskan and a
graduate of the University of Ne
braska. . - ,
Moving picture producers are beg
ging the publishers for advance
proofs of new novelsand it is not
uncommon for motion" picture rights
to be sold before' a book is off the
presses. "Little Miss By-The-Day,"
Lucille Van Slyke's charming
romance, has been accepted for pro
duction by the Famous Players
Lasky corporation, y
Edna Ferrer's first book, "Dawn
O'Hara," was rescued from the
wastebasket by her mother, who,
on reading it, insisted that it be
sent to a publisher. This was done,
and the hitherto newspaper woman
was launched on a successful career
as a novelist.
The sales on the- book, . The
Young Visitors," by Daisy Ashford,
are well on the way to the 200,000
mark, and there is no let-up in the
demand. This delightful story is
only 105 pages long, yet it has re
ceived press notices that would fill
four average sized newspapers.
' If you had to name the most de
lightful old maid in fiction, who
woujd she be? The readers of L. M.
Montgomery's famous "Anne" stor
ies believe she is Miss Cprnelia, who,
in "Rainbow Valley," assumesya new
role of foster mother and adopts an
orphan.- This "Mary-creature," as
Miss Cornelia persists in calling the
little waif up to the time of her de
cision to adopt her, would be a prob
lem to a more efficient person than
Miss Cornelia. She is a child who
prayed to the devil on the r;asoning
that God is good and it is the devil
who needs placatingl
.. ' i
Owen Wister, the American novel
ist, is the grandson of the famous
actress, Frances Anne Kemble But
ler, better known as "Fanny Kem
ble;1 David Belasco began his famous
career as a playwright and producer
by carrying a spear in a production
of "Hamlet"
Gertrude Atherton was born on
Rincon Hill, San Francisco, Cal.
Cornelia, the girl who would
rather be sorry than safe, is twin
sister to Emmy Lou and Rebecca of
Sunnybrook Farm. She appears in
the book of that name by Lucy
Fitch Perkins..
On the wooded hills that over
look the Hudson river, nearly op
posite Poughkeepsie, N. Y., John
Burroughs has built himself a pic
turesque retreat, a rustic house,
.which he has named "Slabsides"
The cabin is a well-built, two-story
structure, its uneuphonious but fit
ting name having been given it be
cause its outer walls are formed of
bark-covered slabs. "My friends fre
quently complain," said Mr. Bur
roughs, "because I have not given
my house a prettier name; but this
name just expresses the place, and
the place just meets the want that
I felt for something simple, homely,
secludedr-something with the bark
on."
SALADS
une aisn tnat tempts tne appetite
when others fail is a 'crisp cold salad.
While the man of the house may
call it effeminate and disparage it
from the "real man's" point of view
as being dainty and lacking in nutri
ment, he probably has in mind a
combination of fruits and vegetables,
and has entirely overlooked the pos
sibilities of a salad that combines
vegetables and meats. Once such a
tempting dish has been set before
him, his prejudice will instantly van
ish. '
In these days of excellent canned
meats (such as are advertised in
this paper), such a variety can be
kept on hand that a different salad
equally delectable and nutritious,
may be served from day; to day.
If a light flavor of onion or "garlic
is desired, the salad bowl may be
rubbed with a slice of onion or a
clove or garlic. .
Beef Salftd
Cut in dice three rather large cold
boiled potatoes and put in a bowl.
Add the contents of a can of beet
loaf cut into small pieces, and mari
nate with a French dressing. Put
on ice, and when ready to serve add
one tablespoon of pickled beets, one
teaspoon of chives, and a table
spoon of parsley, alt chopped fine.
Serve on lettuce leaves with a little
grated hard boiled egg on each por
tion. . -
v
N Oyster Soup.
An excellent cream soup with
oysters is made by heatingjtfie quart
of oysters in their liquor, with
enough cold water added to make
a quart of broth. When the boiling
point is reached rub the oysters
through a sieve until fine, pour the
liquor over the K pulp and set aside
where it will keep-warm. Blend two
ounces of butter with two of flour
and stir until it bubbles briskly. Add
nne nuart of hoNmilk gradually and
Jwhen smooth add the oysters and
liquor. Season with salt and pepper
to taste.
Broiled Kidneys on Toast
. First boil them 10 minutes in soup
stock, drain and slice them. Then
put the slices alternately with the
thin slices of bacon on skewers and
cap each skewer end with a mush
room. Broil them until the bacon
is brown and crisp and then slip the
pieces on thin slices of toast Make
a thickened gravy with some of the
stock in which the kidneys were
4 cooked and pour it over the toast
DEVELOP MUSICAL TASTE.
The savins, "there ia no account
ing for tastes," contains rather more
lalsehood than truth. Taste is very
largely accounted for by habit. The
child whose musical experience ia
limited to trashy songs and accom
panied by an ill-tuned instrument
cannot e expected to appreciate
fine music artistically .rendered.
Children, even more than adults,
love the familiar. Let us see to it
that they are familiar with the best.
This does not mean that children
should be bored by listening to
music which they are too undevel
oped to enjoy. Let the younger ones
sing the beautiful songs that have
stood the test of years. Let them
feel the thrill of such dramatic, pic
torial pieces as the "Erl King,"
"The Two Grenadiers," or "In the
Hall of the Mountain King." Let
them hear the simple, exquisite mel
odies of the old, classic composers,
Bach, Mozart, Gluck.
In selecting music, remember that
just as the child's body and mind
develop through the various stages
through which the human race has
passed, so his musical taste will also
tread in the footsteps of the race.
Children are especially fond of the
tones of the xylophone, flute, harp
and violin, these instruments being
direct descendants of the first mu
sical instruments invented by oof
remote ancestors. Excellent phono
graph recbrds of these instrumental
can be obtained. Young children
like simple melodies, strong rhythm
plenty of dramatic color and action
TJey enjoy the old dances, minuter
gavottes, the lullabies and the spirit
ed marchei of various nations. t
As children develop they will m- .,
derstand and enjoy the more com
plex and suptle music of a more
advanced age. Let them hear really
fine music, let them listen to some
great orchestra; but, do not fail to
give them in their own home the
works of the ; masters, that these
may have in later years. the dear
familiarity of long-loved friends. No
parent, if it is at all possible, can
afford to miss the joy of playing tO
his children, but the playerpiario
and phonograph, while they will .not
replace hand playing, are most pow
erful aids in cultivating musical taste
in children. Music and Childhood.
A Clearance of
Dire
to
l2 oft
r Many of these Dresses are models that have only
lately appeared in the leading fashion magazines, but
the time to part with them has arrived.
Dresses Worth to $49.00 at $29.50
Dresses Worth to $60.00 at $31.50
Dresses Worth to $65.00 at $37.50
Dresses Worth to $70.00 at $39.50 . r
Dresses Worth to $87.00 at $49.50
Dresses Worth to $149.00 at $82.50
All Coats
Have Low Clearance Prices
You will see no later styles in Coats this season
than the ones that enter this sale Saturday. The lead
ing fabrics and colors find representation. v
To $42.50 Coats, $25.00
To $32.50 Coats, $19.50
To $60.00 Coats, $34.50
To $87.50 Coats, $52.50
To $110 Coats, $64.50
To $150 Coats, $85.00
items
While They Last
39c
No need to tell you these ferns are unusual
values. They are large, healthy, growing plants
that will thrive and add a touch of springtime
beauty to your home. Only ONE to a customer.
OUTPITTIKQ
COMPANY
S. B. COR. 16th 4. JACKSON STS.