Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 10, 1916, Page 8

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| S bacy” O R Health Hints -: Why 1 .\'(‘7'_!;_ Married | The Weman Who Did Not ' Dare Propose, Tells Her Story Why do o many women who are at tractive, Intelligent, full of human affec tion and tender Who were des, Jonl wives and 18 It becsune they in It beeas tupld to know n W L and w0 Duas 8¢ the failt of socinl Bave them thelr matr by naturs to mothers -never marry? wers bent on ralf were 1o on the Milempt to Anked 5 nun Why they ne wolve i1, Dorothy of eharming old maid married By DOROTHY DIX, that 1| am an old mald I8 heenuss cupton woman and convention debmr o pleking out her mate, 1f | had heen per mitted to pop the question | khould now e & nice old grandmother, knitting pink Dahy wockn instond of n lomely old apin Bor Leying to (1 In her Nfe with a wiearions Interest In ‘o “Of coune 1 had plont Marry. Fvery ean marry It she will tak #ot bt aw i Mdron wny, | wan eholey I knew exactly the kind of » man | wanted for o husband, and if | govldn't get him | preferied to do with out one B0 1 am an old mal who proposed 1o e | A i, wnd the have the cournge I think my cuse i2 n vory There nre wany women ke myself who Bave o bigh ldeal of Ahould mean. To Yeul mating, » n wormnn from ohances 1 woman who len't a freak what she can hecaune (he men wouldn't have s wanied, 1 didn't o propose Lo mysel commen one what marriage heart and aoul They sre Ineapsb marrying for » Bome, or s support, or for the privilegs of writing “Mra" before thelr names “These women would be gnd enoug to ma I (he vight man eame nlong But when he dossn't they refuse to com promize on a wnkeshift, They would Eathor be old maids than make a 1mocker of marsiage. They would yather do wit out love than to take n lower love “Now, the maddaning thing 1o those of un who belang to this class of old malds in that we do not ko throush 1ife soarehing for an Impowsiblc of n| man without ever finding lim, The trag edy les In the faot that we generslly do find him, but convention doesn't allow up Lo grab him and run off home with Bim and lve happy ever after “On e contrary, we have to stand helplensly by, feebly trying to wigwng 10 him the gind news that we think that he dn i1, wnd he sees on making signs and pannon at him, but dossn't know the fem Inine code-book well enougli to under- | Mtand what our sienals mean. Or per haps Lo is wo biind that he passes by | without aver notieing us at alf | “You may ssy that if a man were in | love with a woman he wouldn't wait | for her to pick him out, He would do | the pleking himaelf, Not at all. Only men of great Initiative ever think of things for themselves, Bverything else is muggestod, 1o them. Yot look how en thusiastic they become over schemes that are attractively presented to them! And they always end up by thinking (hey | originated the jdea. “The same thing would hold good In maLrimony, Besides, many a man who is really in love with a woman does not ank her to murry him because he thinks that whe ls above him In social station, or accustomed to more luxuries than he can give her, “In my own case, the one man that | have met that 1 could have loved and Wou'd have bean glad to have married | wWas 0 poor chap, enrning a small salary and with a widowed mother and a house full of little brothers and sisters depend ent on him | He was a frafl, Adelicate fellow, with A small talent for business, but with the most beautiful soul and the most bril flant mind T have ever met “Thers wasn't a taste, or thought, or Mden that we didn't have In common, and 1 look back now upon my comradeship with Bim as the most beautiful epinode of my life, 1 know that he was as much Arawn to me as T wan drawn to him. | BuL he would not sk me to marry him Because he had nothing to offer a woman | but grinding poverty, And I could 1o Wim, 'I've got money, and and health, and I'll tove you, and mother | you. and take your hurdens off your $houlders, and you'll get well and. he bappy ever after | “No, 1 couldn’t say that, because 1 was | young and foollah, and bound down by tradition d 1 let him go away from me ‘ and die, That's why I'm an old ma Advice to Lovelohzi . Wedding Superstitions By Beatrice Fairfax l Daai Miss Fairfax: Have Just boug heautifu oK Breni suit whi 1 ex ted to be married In. When mvers my friends saw same they mad tlamatio o g of wear Won ' ANRK, a8 we oy it the matte MHave alwa 0 Aol (hat Kreen was my ldoky ool DORIE 1 baive taken o sand » any i Snd e flomly agals pary . A cannol o ol haw | ona who is . . Some 1o o gours. Just stop 1o 1 " Sibla that the coler of et the Rappiness of PO Are & foull . Moman whe expe Plaess 18 har L foe U Ay be naried e and yon . Ul uEe Bt don't be 1ha Be Andependent Paar Mise Falrfas . . WA & yeimg e for e \ ARRed e Wol ba g . 8 man. and el ol M ¥ Wk ¥ and b 1 o 14 i Meady » aw . \ N Bt s | osald b " LT e u!l that ln.:.mua- prnalh hin L - &-fl:'w‘h Bl e petect ol b bl bor AR 18 el e man deaty ‘a" *:Il'll § post advh . ANNIOw 1 wauld advies pon b W b B0 Bn Witk Lhis young wan ® Patoe ARl teward you bas been s ) Man AP anieal and 1 ren e i .- Brads wih i sen wi y -l I e Mars warth whils sl sanod Sie Prendat | a on blossom more suugly black pearl for choice because darkness is familiar beauty and matches better that same brown finger I'he ruddy, gray-eyed man of the Occident tinted hair with Its subtle gleam now and then of an undertoning of Norse-flax, and Iay his blond finger on the siare at the rarer allen gem, hix fingers and his favor reach with con tent for the hue of milk and gold Jewel I8 only a curio, velvet, The palls. pukied e Sdveitlaern wpeifie aay " . ey " W S e y wouli thing that Arub it of fluee what M AR et cAn Worship of the Powder Puff " Fashions -- Woman’s Work --- Household Topics By Nell Brinkley Copyright, 1916, APRIL 10, 1916, MONDAY, THE BEE: OMAHA, BLACK AND WHITE a POGOUICT v Bne shown the open case with t iwo lustrous globes lylug But “The Colonel's Lady and Judy O'Grady are sisters under their will unwind an arm from his bornous, tuck his jasmine *Kin und under the colors, the milky sheen and the dark gloss, the pearl In a pearl, with the same shimmer, the same satin skin, the same behind the ear and lay a tawny finger on (he grain, the same subsiance, the same this and that, that set {t apart from though he eye the white The Pearl pear! harder sther preclous stones, under one name Across the world of water and blowing sand and busy cities and neutral will rumple hi wide forests the hunds of the viack aud white pearl reach one to the other One's beauty les in all the tones and hues that make for dark the full, soft eye, the black the flesh that shows dusk kohl-ed eyelids, the white, because, though he | noss the bronzey skin, the blue-black hair bar of penciled brows, the amber shadows This to him is heauty I'he alien Hight hues of a dress, the against the turoat that shows dark velvet under the light shine of silver and gold colns \Dressing both shia P ch for the alleg " Wy WOOUDS METCHINSON, M, neoratancy ) aole \ ut 1\ " "y " pule AN awkward situstion it has od, 1his wpring tornul huina 4 r T eaning They are an outward . ) Py f ¢ handbag, lghi LY Knack il | eyt I irrepros " N t . g r how dars the o toape nis . \ o y here 1o nlways & s s dressing belng U | atlon Drokes " : ) putte ' ‘ : " . Household Hints - s o M ’ 4 . ol . ([ e avd » Vou . . LY Ak » ’ . . ® vimsdag | > losh of \ lmeat any Mind of fel, haw - o wall Vywa \ . . e § and e the lw . " ' . 5 ) N \ s Mulie A drsarior 1h een of |4 . \ el Aok ol T he grenter and (he . Mo A against & background of color and shadow the pulest in all the garden; into the making go amber halr, blondness of skin Intern’l News Hervice The beauty of the other is all In falrness, in being the snowdrop the spray of blossom that is til the petals of a bride-rose wake and worry, the limpid blue its so diffe o-white wis earpation of lips and cheeks of white velvet and hairline of faintest gold that the white pear] (s 50 nltra falr because it lles against the dusk of To the Arab with his jasmine flower hehind Lis ear the beauty of his cholee v magnified and deepened because {ts offers a snowy tofl Why Take Tonics: ness of eye, the faintest of shadows under blond lashes and brows, the first primroses under snowdrift throat Be honest and admit NELL BRINKLEY al axert " [ reell plent f " " neo and A 1 ¥ Jown A ( | rivalled tonio A 1 at hed | powertu ' K \ food residents of Nebraska vegistered at Mol Astor during the past year w'e 3 Poos honbde olo §yom | () L3 LE ’ TIMES SQUAR) AL Bessdus, 44th 19 43th Sisgete e = Yok s el and [T e poan LT EL RO TR T T DR TR ) § i L { L.

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