Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 1, 1915, Page 9

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e Bees Home Ma B ey O ~ s YN g2 Just about now they’re made of bathing togs. Caps for THE BEE: bright color flaring away from the face—and wired of OMAHA, T ESDAY, JUNE 1, 1915. Copyrght, 1915, Intern’) vw‘ ‘{‘ SO0 RY 3% - b\ -~ ‘4 3 3 trim and sleek and shiny with a seam running from =\ (P & & :4(‘\/ gazine Dage puffy crown rising out of it. There are no gathers——the crown {s shaped in the cutting of it There's—oh, there is the butterfly cap! one puzzling thing. Down in the far southwest where the Pacific is as blue as the water your mother rinsed her snowy clothes in, with a feel of warm velvet in it that. course. There's a plain strip of black satin gathered to fit the face and bound and piped in a gay color, and lined round buttons knobbing along It, buttons to match auy And {t's only dreams through flesh and blood, we've had. our bathing- cap question puzzled over and solved long ago. 1 make my own bathing with her hands and head doing team-worl There's a scoop hat. Tere are some ideas. know with hair like live copper wears one all in black. There's the Dutch-cap version with the wings of somo caps—and #o can any girl A girl | bright on its inner side. with the same, so that when it is gathered together 'at the top and tied with a narrow ribbon it flares into a pompon There’s a stocking-cap of heavy satin with a tassel on the end and a band of something barbaric-hued around the face. strip of elastic on the inner edge to keep it tight—or even hook it at the nape of the neck as I did mine. Theére’s an “air-man’s” cap—and I like it—close and You might have a broad button. another gay cap beneath. There’s a cap like those of | 1 or amber, or white. color note you strike in your suit, blue grass, or green, It has a plece that runs down like ear-muffs and ties under the chin with cords ended with a There’'s a pirate cap—tied on to show a strip of white sort that the peasants of Normandy wear with a the center of the brows to the nape of the neck and a row of 1 | broad band of varied material running all ‘round and a ! the wings. the to play on the beach in and look your darlingest up undesr Really, truly butterflies can't ever fight the strong old sea; they are so much gold-dust—q tiny pineh of beauty and dream-—and piff! would 'be my butterfly cap. And then some day some mermaid will slip up out of the green bolling suds, and show you the cap she wears of ‘ghells and porpoise hide!-—NELL BRINKLEY. They are gone. And so he asked, referring, of course, to Prof. e atate of great mental perplexity, and at| “Oh, yes, and French and Itallan and Read It Here—See It at the Movies. Ve the same time thera was &, no{:x and | Spanish and German and American snd “Net #0 long as I have known: romanticaguality to the episode that he | all the others.” Lesson to, the Young Man in Love || bttt 1, 25" 571 o . “can o et e s TN s o o d 4 you both before, You can't ever have| ~1f Only.' he thought, “T might play | “Of course. What good ceuldl I do on — e e — been in heaven and I've never been on |®Found With her for the rest of the day | earth if I couldn't talk to people?* By ADA PATTERSON. Jfe. It a woman thinks she is a slight earth.” and then turn her over to her proper| ‘‘Just what good are you going to do?" A New York girl sdys she never knew | TIgure In her husband's life she will efther “If you were sesing him for the firat | S mg e bt botany Topems “Fmgoing to il BNNE'ES B hetes ahe was In love untll the obpect.of her | brood In misery about or i, it aha bave PPl it g Sy By o L oy N waton| Aok 0 footish, aad ey arw o #e'sl bty i e Sttt et ot g S bl e o g he tHed to set atarted was soon Inter &y onyamime redson that 'm B0t |petore Tommy could prevent, Celestin| ‘That's a splendid ides,” waid Tommy, Eile: Mateus. tromey for someone to whom she will be “every-| vapted, thet By, sibign Jook BE. his| ‘VANd Feure nobenit:h AT D e B e e ol feeling. that {t Wad Bagt o’ husior her. Nas dQlafigured her thing." companion, the mevessity of helpthg her| “He," sald she, simply, i bad ena % #oUd Pavement, and gone down in abovel « ther what?? probably for life, she SEEROS. & bosiin 00 SOy Fowae DY I EARLE "WILLIAMS ||| sest some rougn place, or by some naive | ugly. You are good and beautirals *. |G K0 0000 w’;’:‘ e LT e ':" o 1 ith the love, In this act of the em youth. Tommy Barclay stion or otheér which she would ask| As Tomm: ided ner through the happy :1:;;: 523?."..'":...; Not the lesson you facetiously dlecov- aud v frara. tlzas to Hme. 4 Aeorde YW ard pia camping ground of e R : heaven, of courss, and be bappy. teo.” She sald she was ered, “to make & girl love you shoot||| ANITA STEWART He could not make ner out at all to his night, he kept on saying to| . v0Y; it'a—it's—ahe cried. “"Are you unhappy now?™ willing to marry her her,” but convince her by lawful means | a8 The Goddess | satistaction. At one moment she scemed But there's got to be a show. | “Yew" sald Tommy, "it's wet water.| “No, not unhappy, but If 1 were back would-be murderer. that she looms large in your life, that| » perfectly sane, at the next completely |down soon. What am I 1o do about her#: | YU appeared to think it was a hoard|in heaven I wouldn't be sll wet and Her reason for this she will be the largest figure in it so YO, . |mad. The only things of which he felt| He almost wished he had not taken | WAlk. But never mind, yowll soon dry|muddy and hungry and thirsty, would 1" curious stand is in- long as you live. Gouverneur Morris |certain were that she was beautiful and |her away from Stilliter, but had instead (0t Don't they have water In heaven™| “Of course you wouldn't, you poor Rl 1 ave b — DEN—— ‘ (Ome of the Most Notable Pig- |||gooa and that she was euffering from |stayed with them, dogged their footsteps | ‘‘Of course, but not black and still like| child,” said Tommy, “but soon we'll be thought any more of ures in American Literature) that. In heaven it's all alive with rain- . ! /some form of amnesia by which her|from place to place, until he wus sure -y at my camp, and then I'll huatle around ¥red than any of, Heavens, 1n June ||| Dramatizea intos Photo-Play by || powers of memory had besn undermined. |that the girl was in no real danger from | POws In It. and make you comfortable. Wy boy iviends. CEARLES W. GODDARD. “How long have you known that man?" Indeed, he was In a| ‘“They speak English in heaven? e e g ey she seid, ‘“uath' he By WILLIAM F. RIGGE. | dl0 this. I knew he had been attentive, but I thought, when This young man was no handsomer, no cleverer, no more magnetic; no hetter after the deed than before. But his deed copMiced the §iRl of what she had |minutes fn the coiumn “Xoon” are lets| Now les beat It” he said, and e i h it § doubted.” or. what she hadn't give than 24, the sun Is as much fast of SUB" | purried her along the trall. *“Well just 2 H ——Ser ain ter, | Servi breakfast — Serv: unc. ve 1t Tor supper thought—that she cut a large figure ln1,’,,_:','&',',”,,,'.',’,‘,,‘:::.',."',{::""’ o8 Gredlel make a sate offing and then we'll de- | e it for kfast e it for t for sup bis lite. Venus is morning star, rising on the 'cide how and where to go next. You' Every who has Joved has woman At{16th at 3:% w m. Jupiter Is in quadra- |not exactly dressed for roughing it. That sume moment had a sickening sense of | ture with the sun on the 19th, rising then , white thing wouldn't keep a fire warm ° . . * ) 1 being & small item in & man's life. There [at 17:47 a. m. Mars is yet too near the | Hope you're warmly dressed underneath.” Heat the Biscuit in oven to restore crispness ; cover with strawberries or may be no genulne rcason for this idea|sun in the morning sky and too faint to Underneath,” sald Celestia, panting 2 a " . 4 of shers. He may have answered her[he woll seen, although it rises on the i5th ‘and without grammar, ‘“there s only other fresh fruit; pour over them milk or cream ; swceten to suit the taste, sharply because his head ached. He may Lot have heard her twice repeated ques- tion because he was deep in his news- There i8 nothing of special interest transpiring this month in the heavens. and minutes Algnifies p..m. t'mes. The times not so marked are clocks keep standard time, minutes fast of local time, ‘whenever the m. As our at 244 a. m. Saturn Is in conjunction with the sun on the 28th The moon is n the last quarter on the which {s M1 | You won't starve-not at your size.’ Tommy laughed like turned (o Celestia. a schoolboy, and me,' To rescue the girl who ealled héerselt | | Celestia from Prof. Btilliter had been the | A dish for the Summer days Serve it as a dessert for dinner Your grocer sells the biscuit and the berries {On the 204 at 6:80 a. . the sun reaches | =TGR CAE STy Star Company.) CRRETE GLRD EERTR € GRS ¢ GRS CIUTIET. IR I thought about him |1ts farthost north, ana enters the sisn | phit et Sl B W ::”:ll. that he was just like the other| o oorcor” 1t 4s then at ”m‘h'“mm; Cepyrigl ‘sign Rixhts Reserved. b eolstice and begins to go south. Tha “T would soon have forgotten him. Be- | o™ irets ot ot ine year, 15 hours| fYmoPsis of Previous Chapter. fore a girl ls 2 new faces bring new|..q § minutes. If the nearest minute b.;‘r‘y“;‘_"‘;w‘."“r'_‘l‘; d“;:,’“ e Seip Jee thoughts and interests. But when Fred 4ione in considered, the four following | ca's greatest beauties, dies. At her death followed me through the subway and|gays are equally as long. The earliost | Prof. Stilliter, an agent of the interests, shot iné, ‘and then shot himself, I realized | gunrise, 413, occiirs from the 10th to the l:lnddn“?:!;;x: n:ue;ua:-;;.-pmg‘ggn&h.:: that this was different. ‘He must 10Ve s1st, and the latest sunset, 7:89, from the | ghe sees no man, but thinks she is taught | me a great deal to do this’ I thought|ssen to July L by angels, who instruct her, for. her mis; | " 2 2 - . " 3 - | sfon.to reform the world. At the age of | just before 1 fainted.’ " The standard times of the msiog, meri-| LOWCO TOE TIE WENEE into the world | Nl b ul Shawbemes on 1 hope the story of this girl and her dian passage on southing, and settng of | where agents of the interests are ready | , strange reason for loving will ‘not meet | the sun and moon at Omaha for this 4u_n;|;ul nd to ‘tmla v ] s H 4 5 n. Ll e one to feel the loss of the o | the eyel 0¢ Tpany, ':‘“""" JPIRE. W68 maath. Wre Amesbury girl most after she had been | For thé stofy established a dangerous T MOON. | spirited away by the interests was : The young man, beset by Rises. | BOuLY. | Tommy. Io a few daya however, he provh: found himself living amia luxurious ‘sur- | !} &, JHvcun 3¢ fotlow 4. 1,"" | b roundings as the adopted son of Mr. Bar. | may say: e sent her flowers. ve dn| 449 da Ame in its flight brings manhood | n made. googoo eyes at her, I've copled PTARS to Tommy and great expectations to Bar. ’ ay, who has planned to_have Tommy | verass from bioks' ot poems -and ' sent 'f:‘ ‘;‘g' 8 | thariy into weaith. But Tommy's lack them to her as ‘originals, I've bought | { | of ‘interest in Barciay's business affairs new suite and got fussy about hats and 13 14| 221),.6 | changes matters. Barclay meets with | ties for her sake, and I've talked a lot| ¢ 16| s8] 3381 7/| Suctess In beekking up the match he had < 1 g 206| 910| 438 | Feally planned. Turned down by the giri | of mush, She seenis as Insenelble as an 38| 954| 527/ 9 | Tommy goes to the Adirondacks to forget | oyster. SupposesT shpot her'™ 3®i04 .30 10! the affair. While there he meets by accl- | Better not try it youhg man. ' Your ( { {777 dent Celostia, im may be better than thut of the love-| i%in ‘: 2.1 g razed New York youth. Instead of send- | b THIRD, KEISODE. ing her flowers fram another ward in 608 208 952l 14 r - ! Stilliter stood .as if in_the midst of e v Tn 253 1054 .16 the hospital, as );. aid, you mlt:r":e ’ " black night, groping with his hands, un‘ @ = pianting’ thort ‘sl Her-grave, Br,, Whet i 815 064 .16 | he dash his face against a tree, Msten- | ) more probable, sending orders for them | 922 1.2 .17 | ing and cursing fhaudible curses through “ from a penitentiary, where you may be |18 0% 5313 | nig st teeth y 0! v 19 1 I} n 4 (] avalting the, (mal paasily o perving & ig 12.48 o Why in hell,” he thought, “aia 1 take | i life sentence 3 : the trouble to bring an extra pair and | = & 4 Look deeper into the meaning Of thii o .;' i{‘fi then leave them in the tent? girl's words, deeper than she herseif has S 9361 5% % | Then fear overcame him, and he began locked, and you will find truth it were 25,45 11019 | 167 ..M |to shout for help. well for you to know. Women love love. | 708(11.35( 248..8| 1y was Tommy who answered the ap In this there 1s a rather unusual mar- { 8.0 Mpdn| 347126 | veal riage, a wedding we seldom see. Ruason | 908 (1288 | 447 97| “Ldsten,” called Tommy, “and don't | mates with instinet. Instinctively a wo- 9421 18] 616 .8 make such . noise. If you cam find | man lovgs to be loved, and her nmn,;’.m ;g:: :{:' ;:; i |the place where Celestia was sitting you'll | tells her that that is a firm foundation - — find your glasses. If not, I'll come back upon which to build her wedded life The dot or perfod between the hours in a day or two and find them for you. l aper. He may have refused to take|4th at 10:3 a. m., new on the 12tk at 14:57 | work of instants and impulse. But what Ler 1o the theater because he was tired |p. m., ir first quarter on the th at 8:% | to do next was not to be decided without or was worried about affairs down town. |®. m., full on the 3th at 10:37 p. m. it | plenty of reflection. Reflection did pot Whatever it was she felt because of it a|i8 in conjunction with Jupiter on ‘m,!(.....\., easily to Tommy, however, ¢apes This le the danger point of married | @nd Saturn on the 1ith any train of logical thoukht upop which | 1 T

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