Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 15, 1921, Page 16, Image 16

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16
TUB tffcK: OMAHA. SATURDAY. OCTOBISK 15,
Etiquette in the
Home
dj LORETTO C LYNCH.
Some people imagine they ran save
their good manners for oemiont,
forgetting that good breeding call
for good manncri at part of one';
daily life.
, A boy from a family who- nevei
recognised the need for good man
ner! within the home was sent
away shout year aso by a devorrd
godmother to a military school. 11c
returned recently upon bii first vacation.
So reipectfully did he anic when
mother and iter entered the din
ing room that the cnatlrai, un-havcn
father and older brother did not
have the courage to laugh at him.''
The habit of taking IS minute be
fore each meal to make hiimelf pa
tentable bad become part of the boy.
And juMt about now the others have
caught the npirit. Perhaps in a
couple of weeks from now they will
wear their coats and soft collars as
a mark of renprct to the faithful
little mother producer of the family
meals.
And when you go to vikit in the
other woman s home do you re
member to write the "Brtad and
Butter Letter" after you leave? This
may-take the form of a few hand
written lines genuinely thanking the
hostess for her hospitality. N'o mat
ter what walk of life a truest oc
cupies it is expected that thia letter
come.
1 don't blame a hosted who told
a pale-white lie over the phone
when she said there was no one
at her house to receive a certa n
young man. Mr. Youns Man spent
three weeks at this womati's home
last summer. When the time ar-(
rived for him to depart, he care-
fully folded h's bathine suit and
casually remarked "Well, so Ion?
after all thcr' ain't nothin . like
the citv." . ,'.
He lacked the courtesy to write
the hostesshe made no effort ta
give a little treat in the way of a
couple of theater tickets to the two
ladies who had entertained him so
hospitably he was just a thought
less, tll-hrcd young man - and he
wanted the world to know it
Sometimes, of course, it is the hos
tess who displays bad manners. A
rather well-to-do young matron in
vited a young woman to take din
ner with her at her country estate.
The guest was a bit dusty from
travel and straightway went to clean
up a bit. After 10 minutes of toilet
making, the guest hastened to the
dining room only to see the hostess
presiding at the table with her hair
done in curl papers and the rest of
the family eating voraciously. The
guest- had not even leen apprised of
the fact that dinner was "served."
Vet, I honestly believe that these
'-'l-t d'd not intend to offend.. They
were just ignorant of the simple
laws of etiquette.
Recently-- I saw two women al
most come to blows concerning the
adoption of a little Polish emigrant
boy. Each wanted him. He was'not
good-looking, ffis clothes Wire shab
oy. cut ms rcscecttui manners
made him a joy to be near and good
looking children were passed-bv,
while both women' wanted this well
mannered Jittle 5-year-old. ' - v
Autumn.
Sing a song of autumn, ' -Tramping
through the fields,
Drinking in the odors
That September yields. !
Ribbons of witchhazel. .'. .
'Neath the woodland trees;.
Perfume the wild grape
Wafted on the breeze. '
Corn-shocks rustling softly, 1
Pumpkins big and round, ;
Flocks of noisy blackbirds
Swirling" to the ground. '
Distant hills are hazy, ,
Oaks and maples red; .:
Sing a song of autumn
Ere the birds are fled.
Tut.
More Truth Than Poetry
By JAMES J. MONTAGUE
HOPELESS
When informed by a learned cugeniit,'
That In going jn quest of a wife,
The lady to court was the sinewy sort,
Who had nerer been sick m her life " ,
I made a proposal to Molly, ',
A maiden whose health is all right
Made of muscle and grit and so physically tit
She could give Mr. Dcmpscy a fight.
Then along came another eugenitt
Who advised me to pick out a Jane
Who, though lacking in grace and not much as tu face,
Would be the-e with a three-decker brain.
And so I proposed to Priscilla,
Who may be a trifle antique,..
Qut w ho took five degrees with the greatest of esc
And who thinks both in Sanscrit and Creek, t
.,'
Still aiftther jfugenist apprised me .
N ' That beauty, one's aim ought to be.
"They needn t know books if they've just got the looks;
Pick out a peach while you're picking," said he, .
So I asked for the hand of Patricia.
A damsel whose azure-eyed glance, .
If v.w own it should meet when she passed on the street,
Would throw you straight into a trance.
And now I'm distressed to discover
That the kiud of a spouse one should find
If the race is to be what eugenists foresee
Should have all of these features combined.
I've got three fiancees already
And my braVs in the deuce of a whiil.
The wife that I need seems elusive indeed.
For there never was any such girl! ,
DANGEROUS . .
There arc altogether too manv h'or parties in congress just now.
. . CAGY ,
The ex-crown prince says it would only make trouble if he went back
to Germany. And he knows for whom. t; '
. .CURIOUS
Food prices of tea rise above the average but never fall below it.
(Copyritht. 1931. 1)7 The Bll Syndlctt. Inc.)
Common Sense
Things You'll' Love
To Make
By J. J- MONDY. ,
Yourself And the Kids.
Vnu fathers who have young sons.
if you want the lads to be chummy
with you, you have got to treat the
bovs like real pals. - "
if you are cross, bossy and arbi
trary with them they are going to
prefer other company.
Even at the best you can do, they
will want to get out in the world of
society their own age, therefore, the
heet wav to interest them in your
self and make them forget the differ
ence in age' is to? get acquainted.
Take the boys into your con
fidence intimately.
If you go for a hike, find put
where the boys want to go. - -'
Give . that little growing man a
i-hanee to increase his ideas of the
world by using some of his ideas in ;
regards to your walks togctner or
on his vacation.
No use to pump in things in which
he has absolutely no interest.
Find out what your boy does like,
and then lead him along to take, in
some of the things you like, and get
together that way, not by ordering
him to take what you select for him
or get nothing.
Copyright, 1921. International Feature
Service, Inc. , '
Parents' Problems
Should little children be allowed
to talk "baby talk;" or should an
effort be made to teach them to use
ftppy-Tr'immedHat
i
This poppy-trimmed hat is most
attractive for the fall. The hat it
self is of black velvet The poppies
are cut from bright red patent leath
er ot good quality oilcloth. The
- lines on the petals are long loops of
black embroidery silk; the stamens in
the center, yellow and black French
dots. With straw-colored em
broidery silk or worsted make the
wheat-shaped forms between ths
poppies. A poppy-trimmed hat is
easily and inexpensively male and
is as fascinating a chapcau as one
can want for fall wear. .
Copyright. 1SI1. Public Ledger Company
Jewel, Flower, Color
Symbols for Today
Bailey the Dentist
Established 1883
Painless Extraction of Tcath
Dr. P. W. Bailey .
Dr. Bertram Willamson - ..
Make Dentistry Easy ler You '
703 City Nat. Uk, 18th and Harney
A NEW YORK OPINION ON
Salvation
Nell:
"The heart throb has been
retained in the filming. Miss
Starke's expressions of sorrow
and fear and humiliation rank '
high in the season's personal
accomplishments of, this kind
on the screen."
New York World
That's Urge No. 1
To Sea It at the
RIALTO
STARTS SUNDAY
the correct words,: pronouncing them
correctly?
A persistent use by a child of un
intelligent talk should be looked
into. . It may come from one of
many causes. There may be a men
tat twist, and ii this seems evident
the child requires the attention of
an expert. There may be difficulty
of enunciation due to some physical
defect, which can be' corrected.
Again, the child may live in a world
ot his own for which he has .in
vented a language not understand
able to adults. This is interesting
and amusing, but the parent should
not let it go too far.
Some of the new veils are sold
with celluloid rings to hold them in
place.
Romance in Origin
Of Superstitions
By H. I. KINO.
Tbt Wren.
It is an omen of good luck to have
a wren build in net near the house.
This, with the exception that it is
also considered in some sections bad
lurk to kill a wren, appears to be the
only survival In this country of the
mystic character which pertains to
the wren in Europe and has so long
attached to it there that trotessor
I'razer considers the ceremonies at
tending the wren superstition to have
"come down from a very primitive
paganism."
The ancient Greeks and Romans,
the modern Italians, Spaniards,
French, Danes, Swedes, English and
Welsh, regard the killing oi a wren
as sure to bring disaster to the
slayer. But notwithstanding such be
lief the annual custom of "hunting
the wren" was to comparatively re
cent times universal throughout Eu
rope and exists in a modified form
in many sections today, as. for in
stance, in the Isle of Man, where, on
M. Mephen s day, a wren is annu
ally killed and buried after its body
has been taken around the village and
srown to the inhabitants.
The ceremony of killinir the wren
differed slightly in different countries,
but was everywhere rather elaborate.
This annual slaying of an animal con
sidered sacred and not to be killed at
other times is a custom found among
many peoples still living in a primi
tive state, and was once conunon to
primitive man. Frazcr says, "The-
worshipful animal is' killed with es
pecial solemnity once a year and. be
fore or after death is carried from
door to door, that each of his wor
shippers may receive a portion of th
divine virtue that is supposed to
emanate from the dead or dying god.
Religiout processions of this sort
must have had a great pure in tbt
ritual of European peoples in prehis
toric times if we may judge from the
numerous traces of them which have
lurvlved in folk-lore."
CopyrlfM. 1111. by Th WcClurt
Nrapapr Mmdicat.
Where It Stated
Up to the time of Elisabeth, stairs
were constructed on tut aptral elan
and special towers or "rasas were
built to contain them. The straight
stairs, or "flights', of atalra, were
introduced in the latter part el Eli
Economical-
Easy to prepare
Richest in Flavor"
MACARONI
, It does not cost more to phone
your want ads to The Bee, the
charge rates are' the same as cash.
"Visiting Hands"
Unsecured by washing dishes
YOU can now go out in company with
hands that show no trace of houttworL
Keep them out of harsh soap suds bynajnt;
Linn. This remarkable powder deans jmr
greasy dishes quickly and keeps your hted
smooth, white, and comfortable. Its secret is
told by the lemon fragrance. Linn also softens
water. Let your hands show what t relief it
brings. Our guarantee gives your money back
unless you are pleased. For your hand's sake
try this new discovery today. Thousands are
now using it
O. W. ELDRIDGE BROKERAGE CO., Distributing Affals
1318 Frnmm Strut. Ttlbn$ DmUt 1JI ,
10c and25c
In Blue Packages
f Your GrorVrS
O H.lrUarnMC.
By MILDRED MARSHALL.
The ruby and the diamond are
the rich combination made by to
day's talismanic and natal stones.
It is believed that those who wear a
ruby will be possessed by the inex
tinguishable flame of ambition. It
is also a gem which -preserves the
bodily and mental health of its
wearer. '
By use of the diamond it is be
lieved that social ambitions can be
achieved. Ancient superstition has it
that the diamond possesses the
power to lift its wearer out of ob
scurity to a place in the sun.
Light blue is the color assigned to
this day. Since it is a hue belong
ing to Venus, wearing it is a good
augury for lovers. -
The gardenia is today's lucky
flower, but it should never be worn
by a blonde.
(Cprriht. ISSl. 'Whcir Syndicate, Ine.)
Many of the new fur wraps show
a combination of brown trimming
on black fur, kolinsky, sable and
dyed squirrel being the most popu
lar, -, " ' ...
For Thick Heavy Hair
Use Ccticura ,
Tmatmsnt: Touch spots oi dandruff
and itchmg with Cotkora Ointment on
the end of the tngcr. Neat momina;
shampoo with Cnticura Soap and hot
water. Rime with tepid water. When
joa hare made your scalp ikia dean,
awest and healthy then wig your bait
become soft and thick.
BmkiSMarrwSTU Uhel
SjeBJ l.eliiMio.5oaaiw
Omaha's Leading Cash Markets i
For Quality Meats and Provisions Quick Service Lowest Prices 1
Mail and Express Orders Filled From This List
212 No. 16th St. 2408 Cuming St 4903 So. 24th St.
Extra Special Q T( IX
for Saturday V J3 j
Sugar Cured 0 j) U 0 L (L
suvrnea 11 1 yy
I Hams
y or whole
22c
Small Lean,
Pork Shoulder
for roasting
124c 11c 124c
0)
6)
, Choice
Leaf Lard
Special at
Choicest Cut
Beef Chuck
Roast
Choicest Cut
Sirloin .
V-v Steak
20c
Choice Lean.
Pork Loin J
Roast' f
17c
Choicest Cut
' Round .
Steak
20c
Fancy Young
I, . Spring . .-.
' Chickens
24c
BEEF CUTS
Prime Beef Rib Roast . 17c
Choicest Chuck Roast. 12c
Choicest Rib Boiling Beef
for I... 8c
Choice Hamburger Steak
for j...l5c
Choice Corned Beef . . 12c
VEAL CUTS
Choice Shoulder Roast . 14c
Choice Veal Chops . . . .20c
Choice Veal Stew .' . . . 12c
Choice Veal Legs.' or -
whole, for roasting 20c
Choice Veal Loin, for
roasting .. . i... . . . . ,20c
BUTTERINE
Swift's Gem Nut. ... . .23c
Cudahy's Rex Nut ..... 23c
Fancy Creamery Butter 45c
PURE LARD
Cudahy's Puritan Lard -5-lb.
pails ......... 85c
10-lb. pails.. ....$1.70
Pure Lard, per lb. .,. . .14c
CHEESE
Fancy Cream Cheese. .25c
Fancy Brick Cheese ... 25c
Large Dill Pickles, doz . 25c
j New Sauerkraut 8c
SMOKED MEAT DEPT.
Fancy Breakfast Bacon, : .
or whole sides. . . ..24c
Very Choice Sugar Cured
Regular Hams . .... 23c
Choice Sugar Cured Strip
Bacon . . . .... V . .1 .18c
Choice Sugar Cured Brisket
Bacon . . . . . . . . . . . . 18c
Cudahy's Puritan Skinned
Hams, per lb .... . . 28c
Cudahy's'Puritan Breakfast
Bacon, or whole sides,
f or , . . . . . 36iC
Armour's Breakfast Bacon,
; Star Brarid, or whole,
f or . . . . .,. .36c
PORK PRODUCTS
Choice Boston Butts . . .19c
Choice Spareribs .... 12c
Choice Pqrk Tenderloin
for .40c
Fresh Neck Bones, 4 lbs. 25c
Fresh Pig Feet, 4 lbs . . . 25c
Fresh Pig Tails .......lie
Fresh Pig Ears, 4 lbs . . 25c
Fresh Pig Snouts, 3 lbs. 25c
Fresh Made Pork Sausage
for . . ;. . 20c
Choice Pickled Pig Feet,
3 lbs. ........ .....25c
Choice Fresh Pig Hearts,: .
4 lbs. .....:25c
Choice Salt Pork . . . . . 18c
CANNED GOODSiDEPT.
Fanby Sweet Coii,ilJ cans,
.'..".for . . .:. . i'-j . .35c
Fancy Early June Peas, x ,
3 c&ns 40c
Fancy Tomatoes, 3 cans 356
Fancy Sardines, 5 cans 25c
Fancy Pork and Beans,
3 cans' T. :. .". . . . , .3Sc
Fancy Pink Salmon, 1-lb.
talis :.15c
Fancy Red Salmon, 1-Ib.'
tails . . . . . ; ; . . . . j . 25c
Fancy Lima Beans, 2 lbs.
for .-. . . . . ... . ... 20s
Swift's Classic Soap, ;
10 bai : . 53i
White Naptha Laundry
Soap, 3 1-lb. bars . . . 25c
60 1-lb.bars '. ; . .K25
SAUSAGE AND
COOKED MEATS
Choice Frankfurts... ...18c
Choice Wienies . . . ..... 18c
Choice Polish Sausacr. lCc
Choice Garlic Sausae . ICe
Fresh Liver Sausage... . 15c
Fresh Bologna Sausac 15c
Choice Minced Ham. i .22c
Choice Pressed Ham . . . 22c
Fancy Summer Sausage
for ;. ..22c
Fancy Lima Beans, 2 lbs.
Evaporated Milk, 3 tall
cans .35c
Eitra Special
for Saturday
Sugar Cured
SUMttaicl
aMth's rtifn A ftaircaje, then,
bjmms strictly tfes iacloinrc of ipU
ni italr, aot the suir itself. Tits
word comes from the Saxon aitiiha,
to anount; hence itrthen, tiaycri,
tairs. . .
tJeafftfht, 1(11.. WhMlar tralleata, Im.
Bt Want Ads. Get Rriulia.
Spinning th Wb of Fate.
braw larga web sa sraaf sasf
toik, then writ (onuses ta tlx
different sections. Let ' cat h nest
Din a ton between tha finiert. Wbea
it stops, his fats stands rtycalw
Hits arc being wont to mates (ht
hosiery. i
.Dorveni Valuc-Cking Slort JL VJJll1R)
. EOWEN'S
Value-Giving Store
Astonishing Values
For Saturday Buyers $
Rockers ! Rockers!
An .Offering of 100 High Grade
Easy Rockers
at Sensationally Low Prices
Quartered Oak, goldea finish Rocker
Large and eaay, beautiful golden Oak
Vary comfortable, quartered oak. fine grade upholstering..
Mission design, full guar, oak, with genuine Spanish leather
t m.es
Get Your Supply of Rockers Now
Never Before in Our Merchandising
History have we offered such High Gradd
Library Tables
at Such Low Prices
.This popular design Colonial
Table Is of genuine quartered
oak throughout, has large 26x
42 top, roomy drawer this
table an Ornament in any home
for.
$17.95
0. Clnally Priced at M1.60
,.Thls beautiful genuine quar
, tered oak table, hand pollshsd
plank top ttxit. with large
dore-tall drawer for
$18.95
Originally Sold fer ftl.M
Guarantee Glass Bake Ware
Will not break in the hottest oven
I
Pie Plates, 496
Owterd Oapi, lto
eat ptii, ct
Dining Chairs
in odd lots at less than cost price
Think of It, American walnut
and mahogany Chairs, In Period
styles, with genuine leather
seats, that formerly sold for
from $12.60 to $15.00 each, we
now offer In lots of from one
to four j -
for $4.65
Taborettes Magazine Racks
S Fumed Oak; J8 in. high, 10
Inch top. Just the thing for the
fern or plants
39c
In Fumed Oak; stands 28 in.
high, has 8 convenient shelves,
for 95c
Cedar Chests
14-In. Colonial Chest . $11.85
It-Is. Brass Trimmed
Chest .....,.......$14.75
4-in. Full Brass Trim- .
med Handsome Col
onial Chest .-.-...-$28.05
41-ln. Genuine Walnut
red eedar lined, Hope
Chest $30.00
Drapery Department Specials
Filet Curtain Net in ; white,
cream or ecru in neat all-over
effects, per yard -37
'50-Inch Imported
Madras in ';
Beautiful color effecta; designs
suitable for any room, per
yard W.79
White Bed Spreads
A. lot of 101 Taney Bed Spreads;
regular liO value, for fl.Ti
Brass Extension Rods
slse. Adjustable Rods from 80
to 54 inches. Complete with fix
tures, for, each .......
Use
Bowcn's
Ouarantced
z ' $n.50
sC Howard 8t, Bet lSth and 11th. . aMld Bp
wen
Oaaranteed
Heating
Stoves
"Howard St., Between J5th and l6Qr"n' '
11)
I