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THE BEEt OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913. H rhc 35ee'8 np Uafa z. i r p)a Eavorite Recipes of Lady Constance Stewart Richardson How to Acquire a Beautiful Figure Through Danoing A Newport Style Fully Described by Olivette Favorite Actresses v I: w This is Figure 3, m described fa Lady Richardson's article. Practice in thin will cause tho body to assumo tho graceful linos Tho Nowport craio In bathing suits is for tho , wilt skirt gnrtucnt, In walking normally. and if you see- HT-tm' , i ii iiiiii i ... ji Stuffed I'otntocs, Djr BLANCHE RING, Select biff, firm, unspotted .potatoes; wash and brush then thoroughly bo no add of Quid Erin will ding and Interfere with Uib Joy of the earnest potato eater, who partakes of meal and "kln alike. Bake them until they are mealy, and Within about five minutes of. absolute' donenosi, . Remove from ihe oven, cut off the topa and stir lnt6 tho crumbled inside -which you hare mashed in a bowl with a allver fork butter pepper, salt and finely mJsteed bain. Return a generouB filling .to each nhell.- Break, oyer the top of each an entire oggyelk and white); over this gratfr cheese, and return to $ie. oven until the savory smell of the molted, and browned cheeae makes H Impossible to longer postpone meai. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX "I am encaged to be. married to a gen tleman tome yearn my senior." writes Lillian May, "and a short time ago ha Invited me to meet his relatives, who live aome .distance from my home. On the trolley car a gentleman gavo me a seat, while my fiance stood before mo talking. It was near the entrance, of the car door, and the conductor, coming along, said: 'Move u? front, there,' to my escort, -who paid no attention, hut continued his con versation with me. The conductor, re turning, apd seeing his command un obeyed, gave my friend a shove with his arm, saying. 'Didn't I tell you to move upr at which my escort, burning with wrath, proceeded, with well-directed blows, to beat the conductor. In an In stant the car was In a panic, and X alone cat calm, thinking, 'That Is the man I am to marry,' . ''Some days later, as I "was considering whether or not to break the engagement on this Account. 1 brought the matter to the attention of a friend, who dlayuted with me, saying that such a man Is manly and to be admired, and would pro tect me through life. I hold that such a man Is uncouth and low and common, and I would like to know whether you would advise breaking the engagement?" The best husband I ever knew was a man Who, on ono occasion, sot Into a serlpus fight In a crowd because some one ahoved him, This Is not told with the At You FAT? I Was ONCE. I Reduced MYSELF. I hi Jt. UaeomfortaWe, lsUt Old, Felt MlMrabU. 8offrl with nheumatlim, Atthtai, NurU1- When I wrtl or walkad. I pur4 UK a J'orpalie. I took verjr a4rrtl4 rodloln J could nI- I 8trrI. BweaUd. EwrtU!. Doc toral an ehaacwl cllmaU but I ruld r dl jt.tlon, alt Ilk an Invalid but taadlljr gtlB.d Itht Ttttr w oot a ilnile plan or drug tint 1 Marl at that 1 did ot trr- I filled to reduce mr welsh. I droped eecletr. s I did sot or to be the butt ot ll the Joke- it emberraalns to hT ar (rleade Ull me I u ftttlng Btout, mm aa one Knew it better tha mreell. SOMETHING HAD TO BE DONE I basin to etudr the mum ot FaT. When dlecorered the cauM t tiund the remedr. in rreaek Metttod tare aa ntht. I Improved on that. RorooTod the obJactlooat teaturei. added pare nlauaat oaee, and ihea t tried tar PUn nrieli tor wet. It worked like ratilc. I could hare SCREAMED WITH JOY at the ed ot the nnt week when the eeale told inn I had loat tea Doundi br tar dDPle. ay. Ifraliu, Prualets Method. It waa a pleaaure then 19 eaau.su eotll I regataed mjr normal Ml( la alt. I teel flfttta year jrouaser. I look lit tees year reuaitr. Ur Double Chin bat en- their uappar4. I can walk er work sow. caa climb a mountain, I am bormal lo alt. can weigh uat what I want to welfti. I am Mi. ter ot tat own bear now. 1 did not trT. but eat all I wahted to. I did not ir.ki BVut Batba. I did Sot Orvi. I d no Eteetrloltr. or aun- rul exerciM, but I round in Bloiple. Hen Com sua Sana WAY ot reduelna tny weiaht and I an- wlld It. I ha4 trUd It oa othra. Mr Doctor says I am a prlot picture ot health now. . I am. no loasrr aiiiug, a0 wow m mvyti niior wo man. Kow i an coin to halp othara to b happr- I bi written a book on tht an bluet. It rou are (at. I want you to bat It. It will tell you all about my llannleaa, Dru-! M!ho4, To all wb d m their name and addra I mall It ritEK. aa, Uo( u the prtaeat lupply lartt. It will aai you May. Save you from Harmtul Sruci, Sat you rrom Starratloa Dltta, tlaratul Eicrclaaa, poialbly YOVIt UKK, It la your tor the aaklni without a panay. Just aen'd your name 'and a4draa, A I'stal Card will do and I'll be Ud te and It to that yu tau Quickly lara haw to rcduc yourrelt and b aa happy at ) w, Writ today u thia adiertlacmuit may not appear aialn In thl paper. UAtTIK U1EU UU Han lay, Daarar. Colo. f" A Pugilistic Protector Mamaroneck Stylo, tirao, Intention of proving that the puglllstlo man, the one who carries a chip on his shoulder. Is the one with tho makings ot the beat husband In htm. I tell It, rather, for tho purpose ot assuring Lillian May that this little Incident Is not a keynote to his charaoter, and that If she con demns her lover, and fives him up be cause ot this unfortunate display of temper, she may ea through lite unwed, or select for her companion a man so un like htr present fiance that his answer to a knockdown blow will be to brush off his clothes and beg the pardon ot the one who floored him. The display of temper was unfprtunate and Ill-advised, but it does not prove that the man is "uncouth, low and com mon." There Is some justification for his behavior, and every man who has been addressed by a street car employe as If he were or.o of a number of dumb cattle, being prodded and driven Into a pen. will be quick to see it. The conductor's intentions were within his rights. His manner wasn't. This man resented t. We all resent such treatment every. hour ot the day, but re raate silent. It Js part of the price we pay tor the prlvllfgo of living In a largo city where we are crowded and pushed and shoved till alt dignity and Indtvldu allty are crowded and shoved out of us, "As a man thlnketh. so he Is," and this makes a pugilist of every man, and the longing occasionally to be one, of every woman, for every self-respeetlror man and woman, with a backbone and a regard for his or her rights, As well as for the right of others, occasionally longs to take a punch at somw one whose manner Is Insulting, or who digs with sharp elbow, or Jabs with an umbrella. Self-respect has saved the skin of many an offender, and, Unfortunately, his skin is saved so often by those who refuse to be mixed up In a brawl that he gTows more and more offensive, and does not know when he has passed the dividing line between hip rights and the rights of others until some qulck-tem pered Individual like XJUlan May's lover shows him. We are all so many children with our text books before Us. The conductor needs to learn that a gracious manner will do more thap one that is offensive! and that firmness is not the twin of rude ness. The quick-tempered lover has neglected the lesson on self-control. The blow Is poor argument The man who pushes his way through life with his fists never gets veery far with his brains. And even Lillian May, a shy, dignified little maid, with a commendable shrink Ing from publicity, Is among those who, having left their school days behind them, are taking In the painful school ot experience a post-graduate course. She is too quick to condemn; too harsh to a man whose saving grace Is his tore for her) she Is too uncharitable. She has yet to learn that the way to make a man better Is to think he Is better than he Is. No man was ever mads honest by being called a tblef, To tell this man he Is 'low, uncouth, and common" will loss Ulllan May a lover, and make him what she describes him. I hope she will tell him that she doesn't like his display ot temper, Ha needs a reprimand, but he Is not guilty of a crime. It the messenger of love has a sauey, Independent manner, and is quick to take offense, and resent It, It should be re membered In his favor that the Impetuous heart Is often the warmest Quick to fight for himself, he would be quicker to protect the woman he loves. There Is a dividing line between ruffian Ism and chivalry, snd time, which so soon cools the blood, will teach him. HnlyijH amis. By XiADV CONSTANCE STEWART RICHARDSON. Copyright, 1913, by International News Service. Rave you ever stopped to consider how you sit downT Aome women who have a grncerui carriage, who have oven mas tered the art of standing gracefully, relax slump Into an awkward heap of arms. legs and steeping shoulders when they sit. in order to guard against thjs great awk waraness in posture when ready to ln dulge In conversation or any ot the con ventional social Intercourse for which one Inevitably sits, I would suggest thai we learn so to control our arm, leg and waist muscles that they Inevitably fall Into long, curving lines of gracefulness instead of tangling and witherln Into awkward abandon and ungainly posture, My muscles are so trained that X no longer have to hold them firmly in nosl. tlon, but they fall naturally into sweep Ing continuous lines, which are the true beauty pf natural pose and posture. Consider figure J, The left foot Is dalnt. Iiy placed forward, the right foot Is (li Character, Not Riches, Brings Happiness No Poverty of the Purse Oan Ever Make "Sou Poor While and Kindness in Your Heart. By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX (Copyright 1B, by Htar Company.) The great need of the world Is to havt all classes come Into an Intimate under standing pf one another. The more we can do to refute that old statement that " o n e . h a 1 f the world does not know how the other half lives' the better for the race. "Happy aa a queen" Is a phrase often used. nut those who know the Intimate lives ot queens and kings know how far from happy they are. 8tudy their por traits and it will reveal much ot the melancholy, the discontent, the selfishness or the dissat isfaction which pervades their minds and marks their features. King George ot England is doubtless one ot the best men, one of the most kindly and unselfish kings who ever sat upon a throne. But he does not look like a really happy man; he looks like a man conscious of his great obligations, troubled about many thing", and under a continual ner. vous tension to keep his duties to the nation performed. Queen Mary has the same serious expression, and one who reads an account of their doings for a single month wonders how two not over robust human beings ean endure the con st ant mental and physical strain to which they are subjected ESSlMaTSssVP aBiBbsV ikilsslHHB Figure No. most at right angles to It, takes nature's utt decurve. the tnitep Tho body swayit ellglttiy toward the right heel, with the arm sinking In u graccfu.1 parallel to the hlght foot Rise nnd fall on the toes, ohanglns from foot tq toot for the for ward position, and wnen right toot Is tor ward and right arm parallel to tho left foot have the left arm Itited above the head and twisting forwarc at tho elbow with the first pendant aoevo the head. Sway from foot to foot tils ou arts sure of the exercise. Then practise sinking Into a sitting posture while noldlng arms and legs In tho positions shown In this picture. Practise this exercise faithfully, and soon you will be able to sit without lolling or feeling an ungainly self-consciousness ot arms and legs with which you know not what to do. Of course, you, will not sit with ono arm "draped" above your head, but you will Warn to have flowing movement from this picture, and your arms will then tall Into natural lines of grace. Figure 1 will help you acquire a grace ful walk. With arms swaying gracofuliy at the sides, much as the tlght-ropt walker uses his balance pole, move for. ward with bent knees and out-patntlng toes. Cross the legs In front ot one anr other, keeping the hnees close all through the exorcise, Throw the head up and walk on the balls ot the feet. This ex. erclse more nearly approaches dancing than walking, and yet through the prae tlse ot this exaggerated walking-step, the body wilt come to assume graceful lines In walking normally. To walk well and to arrange yourself When we look upon the outside ot pal aces and homes of millionaires, when we see the occupants whining by In motor cars, or when we resd of their smart functions, and Jewels and fine linen, we imagine they live the life pf fairy princes and princesses. Dut whon we come to know the Intimate facts of their lives we realise that hap. Plness Is not a matter of position, or place, or honors, or rank nor pf money, It Is a matter of disposition, of charac ter and oo habit, of thought. Discontented young working women often indulge In bitter reeontnient toward the people ot wealth and leisure. I wish these young tollers might study the faces and hear the conversation of hundreds of women In fashionable homes and at fashionable resorts. Restlessness, ennui, dlesetlsfaotlon and Ingratitude distort many a lovely face and render beautiful costumes but a mookery. I do not mean to say that this Is true of all women of wealth. What I mean to say Is Just this: As many people In the humble walks of life, tolling for their dally bread, find enjoy ment as in the ranks of wealth and fashion. It Is a matter of character and disposi tion, not of money. One who travels to any extent Is sure to arrive at this con clusion, There Is, Indeed, greater dissatisfac tion to be read in the faces of women in a hotel dining room at a seashore or mountain resort than In the faces ot women who emerge from shops and fac tories at 6 o'clock in any of our large cities. Tet the majority of these tollers re gard the woman who can travel and This lg Figure 8, Tills shows a Ntep that will help to acquire ft pretty back. Many women nro Rttrae. tlve aa long as thoy face you, but tia Ilnofl of tholr backs arc gracelesa and heavy, 8. with graceful tinself.consolousnsis when sitting are twu real social acquirements and are a vast stop In the general direc tion ot graae, The two movements I have given you are dancing steps, and yet they can be made to servo a definite pur poso toward the attainment ot bodily grace, without which nil the beauty of form of a Venus would fall short of at tractlveness ot a vital sort, Figure 3 shows a step that wlU help you tp acquire a pretty back. Bo many women are attmotlvn as long as they face you, but the lines of the back are graceless and heavy. Do not fat) Into this category, but teaoh yourself this little dance step, for it win make your nacK graceruv ana pretty, EHand firmly on the right foot nnd point the lifted, right toes well to the back, taking care to kep the Una of the leg Irom Knee to too, Italee the arms to just below shoulder height and twist the head until you are loklng across the finger tips ot the right hand. Mow all this while the baok has been slowly and gently Inclining back. ward, When the back muscles feel tense slflft the weight to the other foot and go through the movement again. Five times on Cach toot will ba found suffi ciently oftn ta practise, thU exercise un til the Unused back muscles, have ac customed themselves to tho unusual ten sion. Will not even those who have never seen excuse for the danoe, conoede that It t can teach you to sit wall, to walk gracefully and to have a strong, healthy and pretty back there js some good In the art of TerpnlchoreT You Haye Love, Sympathy f wear fine garments as favored by the gooa. Ma woman Is favored by the gods un less she has cultivated cheerfulness, so precision, kindness and good, will and sets forth each day determined to be happy and to make happiness for others, Many a working girl eould teaoh her wealthles sister how to enjoy life, tn. no noma or poverty dia i ever see unhapplness so marked on the faces of an entire family as on one I saw at hotel not many moons ago. The mother's eyes were full of Jeal ousy and III temper the father's face was defiant and bitter with disappoint mentj the son was a dissipated wreck of manhood, the daughter a restless, irrita ble, fault-finding child of misfortune, Yet there were millions pf dollars being spent yearly for the "enjoyment1 of this family, There was no love, nor harmony, no good will, no gratitude to Qod or man In the hearts of these people. Setter a crust of bread and a cup of milk after a day ot hard labor, and love n the Household and hope in the heart than such splendid misery. The poverty of the heart Is the worst poverty on earth. lUmember that as you toll and pray for wealth. If you can keep your heart rich with lovt, sympathy and kindness, hope, and faith, then whatever you acquire ot worldly wealth will Increase your op portunities tor enjoyment. Uut wealth alone can never give you enjoyment or happiness, and no poverty ot tne purse can make you poor whll you have these qualities. A good disposition Is the only thing worth coveting, and that can be ac quired. BsslsBak2lHWiAw3li bbbbbbbbBsMbbBRsKsSbiSbK j goiuo excuse for UiQ split skirt of tho liobblo type, wbero tho ci.t cornea at tho nnkio in order to enable tho wenrtr to walk, pei haps you can also figure out n cttt in a knco-longtii skirt thnt tho wearor may swim. Hero wo plcturo tho prottloat cxninpjo of tho ner fagliion freak w haro soon. Illnck mohair' forme tho bloomers that are bautloil in nt tho knee and fastened nt tho sldQ with round whit buttons. Tiie siuno material is used for tho one-plcco top garment, which la cnught around the waist in a fashion borrowed from the bathrobe. For this belt; and. bow nnd -for tho trimming at the suit horculcs braid two inches wide is used, and to outllao nock, sleeves and aklrfc cut high at tho sides a half-inch braid is used. Hands of thia narrow braid hold tho two kproa-llke parts of the skirt together and strap tho sleeves, which are cut 1b a bishop's mitre lino to match Me skirt, Tho home dress maker may copy this suit for about two dollars. For The Oavalier By ItHV. TII.0MA8. 11, QRBGOItY. Two hundred and fifty-one years ago, August 2J. IW. the Cavalier Parliament of Charles Seoond forced 2,000 rectors and vicars, constituting about a fifth of the Itnullih eltriY, to ' leave their parishes as non-conformists. The evUted clergy men, thus reducud to dire poverty and distress, were t& most learned and active of their or der. They stood at the head of the London clergy, as the London clergy stood In general repute at the head of their class throughout ISngland. This outrageous business was followed by the law by which any person above the age of 1 who was present at uny religious service r.ot according to the Prayer Hook was to bt Imprisoned three months for th6 first offense, six for the second, and to be transported for the third. It was a sola time for the Cavaliers! Things were coming their wayl The ac cursed Puritans were at last down and out for good and for all. Hut the trouble with the Puritan, is he will not remain down ana put. lie is the toughest human proposition on earth, or that ever was on earth. Tou cannot an nihilate him. Crush htm today and he will rise up tomorrow stronger and more defiant than ever, He has the most virile brain, the most powerful will, the most unoonquerlng Individuality of any man on the planet. Hence it came about that in turning out the Puritans the Cavaliers in the end got the worst of the bargain. As Oreen pt't ttt 'The persecution soon blended the nonconformists into one, and late bathing Oayg Parliament the church for tho first time in Its his tory found Iteqlt confronted with an organised body of disentra without Its pale. Tho impossibility of crushing such ' a body as this wrested from English '.' statesmen the first legal recognition of ' freedom of worship In the toleration act, their rapid growth In later times has by JJ degrees strlppod the church ot almost all the exclusive privileges which It enjoyed as a religious body, and now threatens A what remains of Its official connection v with the state." He laughs best who laughs last, and the prosent day laughter of the Puritan . is heard round the world. Conqueror j and mastor. It is a laugh that Is backed by the strongest possible argument, the argument ot deeds and of possession. The men Inheriting the language and -ideas of the Puritan hold all the grand ' strategic points on the planet, and by ,, their political genius they practically rule the world-very much to the world'g advantage. STOP THAT rt ACHING TOOTH, INSTANTLY, INSIST UPON sfZGmi BJe DENT'S ALL DRUGGISTS vIS