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'HE 1 FRIDAY, APRIL s 1916, ] 4 ' , . . . . 4 ? . . ? 1 Grace Darling's Talks to Seen by Early Explorers : i imugmain -« g y ,7/ p * the Imagination @ :: No. 12—Playing Your Role By GARRET P, SERVISS, By GRACE HAREING, A# 1 wan going through tho Alhambra Bitia aeeing, etk gt RuBpeRal O 1E palace at Granada my gulde pointed ou Eonch yob Ciddla 5o TRLGAY Jour T ouh an iron-ralled balcony, like a huge cage, i b e Bl e o A projecting over one of the courts, and thyself,” was a wise man—espec sald | he was deniing out advice tc women | “There i a tradition that that is where It you will notice you will see that n the strange animals brought from | tors W actresses are most succesaful | America by Columbus were kept in the when they stick to the parts for which time of Ferdinand and Isabella, Soms their talents design them, You couldn’t way it was a prison for the insane queen ¥ {lmagine Sarah Bernhardt making you Joanna, mother of the Bmperor Charles laugh in May Irwin parts or May Irwin V, but | think it was made for the ani eurdling your blood aw La Toscn ! mals, not only thoss brought by Colum | Maude Adams will go down to fame as bus, but those sent later from M xieo | Babby and Peter Pan, not as L'Aiglon and Teru | Charlle Chaplin gets a fortuns for the It would not he surprising If my guide's way his funny legs behave, but he would opinlon were right, for the wild animals Wt get brewd and butter money If he of America scem (o have made a sensa moved about the wtago With the elegant tion In Spain only wecond to that pro "'I""‘ of John Drew duced by ity red-skinned men and women h»n should teach you, girl 14. stud Vory sktiaovdinaty platurés ot ih¥ new our own personality and to decide wha world animals were published In Euro 5 most attractive In it and to develop - | an will bo seen on thin page, where som ioae that, instend of valnly trylng to be some lillions of ABINE (ke Tx hEIoRsSCoralen. & i of them wre reproduced from an artlels . ) g that Is entiroly forelgn to your na sewives know this is the ik ¥ by Mr, Charles 1t, Kastman of the Ame | | seum of Natura wto ihe [ ~=they realize the cost of a | For instance, nothing In the world s FORN ToNosut of. RUTITSL Sinery Big pame npd.olher An B fail That" b el el 4 ¥rom, and before, the anclent days meswes fr (he e ® Dake-day Ilailure, hat '” . l:‘”’ P ‘”;H“v" b |‘ ‘I \‘ i | when King Solomon had apes and pea- | Bartholomew Anglious, 1404, they stick to Calumet, AR g A g g iy 1 cocks brought to Wim In the ships of z ; jous _bare as ) acity when 1y I8 artifl ') | Tarshish, corlous animals always | 6nd repUlos, Among these nothing at on the safe side —avoid dis |etul, Yet beghuse mwome girl who has 2 excited great Interest, and menageries | tracted so much attention from the Hpan bintments — use Calumet next bake. J [dulcksiiver in her veins und a bubbling '] have everywhere heen popular fards as the rattlosnakes, which arg called be sure of uniform results—learn Jf | fountain of laughter in her heart i ad @ | Upon the discovery of the western con. | “#erpents with ‘eastansta” A gront deal of Calumet s the most economical | mired for her galety, you will see other g tnent, explorars and conquerors de- |#kiIl and knowledge was shown by the puy and to use, 1t's pore in the irle who are serious minded and soher f voted much attention to the birds, beasts | A#tecs in housing and caring for all these pure in the baking, Order now! in all thelr thovghts '“try to steal the j |and reptiles that they met, some of | animal ol } [ Yivastotis ona's comady business,” as they B |which awoke thelr mstonishment, and | The Spaniards naturelly cxaggerated wards Ly S e [ gave- rise to descriptions and storles |#ome of the things they wew and heard YRR [ W6S hor iden of Weihs vivesieuh I o / |in which imagination had full play and misunderstood others, The hum lip 10 Pound |‘1 7 klggle perpetually, and scream, and suy | There was nothing more surprising | ming Vieds, In particular, astonished and - | rude things, and be loud and nolsy, and | that Cortez found in Montezuma's capi- | Celighted them und they womohow Kot - the result fs that she disgusts Instead of tal city than that ‘magnificent aviary in | hold of the logend which Herrera telutes | enchanta charge of 0 attendants, which was | as follows Yot that very girl, If ahe had only [ filled with birds of the most brilants| ““There are wome birds In the country | playea her own role, and developed her | plumage collected from all parts of Mex of the wize of butterflics, with long beaks own charms 1o the higheut degieo—if he | lco, and the adjoining lands, One bulld- | brilliant plumage, much esteemed for the | hd wlwuys been just n living pleture of fng was devoted to the birds of prey, | curlous works made of them. (This re » w calm, Algnificd, Intelligent youns wome of which came from the snowy | fers to the tamous Astec fenther work,) | woman, with no fllghtiness or nonwens |« ndew, and no Jews than B0 turkeys | Like the bees, thoy live on flowers, and | oy oqppy dow ey ol flies eyt sy were sncrificed dully to satisfy the ap- | the dew which wettles on them, and when | to everybody, and irresistible to mayy petites of those voraclous rulers of the | the rainy sewson Is over, and the dry | their historians and fllustrators, many of mon who admire that type of girl and ulr weather set In, they fasten themselves | the representations of Amerioan animals who can’t abide the vivaclous sost { The managerie of wild animals ad-|to the trees by thelr beaks and soon dle, | that Jong interested the people of ¥uro, £0) the matus war. Sdusde Peiss Jintis | Jotning the aviary contuined represonta- | But in the followink year when the new | bore aufficient resemblance to the orig tiny, vest-pocket Venus sort of & gir) is tives of ull the species found in Mexico | rains arrive they come to life agafn,” | Inals to he easily recognized, while in R et it 1u) SRR and Central America and was especially | Notwithstanding the mistakes and ex- [ #0me cases conslderable accuracy Wwas or elimbs up In o tree or does some other | remarkable for it collection of werpents | agKerations of the- early explorers and | Attained wort of gymnastics, and which she can ‘ - - — only get away with by reason of her di | . Y . « wize, 0l oo g omer R B Linimutive ‘aize, you wil o0 big_women ‘ Why I Never Married Common Mistakes trying the same stunts. They think they < e are belng cute, but they are grotesque | I’ y i i ‘AI t [fl d ‘} l, 9 They don’'t look like playful kittens; they 1 fha ()ver Carefully Chaperuun«d Girl ](!”v’s' )OU 00 avues look ke performing elephants. \ U . T LU M. N Girls, you can safely say that no ons Her bt()r?/ | 8y WOODS BEYORINAO: M R who welghn over 100 pounds should ever ‘ Why do s0 many women who are até|ots to a play, had to buy three, and pay 7 , Y | “Man cannot live by bread alone,” still sit In A hammock in public, or chew tractfve, intelligent, full of human affec- | for mamma's supper afterward [ #5 SANROL 1R VY NI MION | tion and tendernexs- the sort of wom i | tews by carboyhdrates and cornmenl gum, or tylk baby talk, or try to be cun who were designed by nature to make Mnk | wan asked twico to the | . ning. After that welght dignity should ideal wives and mothers—never marry? theater before It was rumored ubout | Kven the Staff of Life can make only ¢ # ¢ ol " | "1n It because they were bent on celi- | that you 4 P o 3 . of life dibta ot b Increase with every pound and year, Ks | bacy? Or is it because men were too 'v:‘:mnvwv:v.:l .Im:. wl.y, took ‘vn to | the walls of 1ife's sandwich and must | peclally with tho years, becavse, whil | #tupid (o know w woed thing when they | [ ol bt ol ""‘"""“”':”“{” apread with butter, filled with meat and a saphisticated, worldly wise, middl | saw It, and so passed them over? Or s " i ere were no altrulstic | . L g iy aged woman Ix fascinating, there is noth [ It the’ fait “of ‘socal _conditions that | youths about who wanted to pay out | well loaded with jam, to make the sacred ] never gave them thelr matrimonial | their good money for the s valanced o o 4-year-o o re- ing #o ludicrous as fair, fat and 40 acting | ehance? thelr good money for the presence of a | Yalanced ration, The 4-year-old who r up ke 14 and casting herselt for the It is one of life's great puzzles, and in | fat old lady who was a spoil sport vised and expanded the closing lines of an attempt to solve It Dorothy Dix has | “As for golng walking, or skating, or| " er=""Give Ingenue fole, g i S el g e B R Bl e B Ja kating, of | hiu evening prayer—"Give us thin day our Oneo upon a time 1 was at a summer \CawvmioTED. XU S pp—— | why they never married i et '“’I‘v’,"l'"": 'I’”“:' ""l'|“' | duily bread-an’ put plenty uy butter on —— — T — By DOROTHY DIX, ! A Morit A Mo 4 TS g : ; . ; . o| 1, brought h sology strictly up 1o 7 g I One of the Latest Photographs of Miss Darling. hear of such a thing. I always had t brought his theology strictly up ~~~~~ [be w0 chaperoned that 1 becamo n nuls- | date, “Bread and—'" something olse ™ resort at which there was a demure Jittlc == | “The reason I am an old maid," mnm""":"'“ lM":| ":" 1 ,;‘l‘"‘l" “""':'I‘““y "l""f’l*“:< comes as naturally to our tongues as girl, & quiet, mousey lttle thing, who . the fourth woman, “is because I was too |7/ Of 4ll the little partles and good| . ¢ 00, o " | l \ d . i e e r “Ham and of the short o N c R ED' more brilllant and steiking looking girls | ~ “Doubtless the duenna business works [ PPERHE 19 T8 0 :""I o clocted bY| s are fond of boasting, and pardon at the place ‘bt(l l() out satisfactorily In Burope, where mar-| ™Y TGRY TOF WILACERO0C, e | DLy, that wo have rationalized our idens . e ‘wad be e o riage 18 & famil 1 finanelal | b bt B DAL, AavaRaLIne y e Sompiete Teus mow Bestes cutfit you should weer sems Jewslzy. o] | On° 44y she was bomouning her fat rlag y and tinancial atfair and o0 S 0 Ton the world, | Of dlet and put food problems upon a matter what you wish in Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry we have it at Money | 10 ¢ wnd I owuid to hor You can't Ny €. F, THWING, LL. D, arranged on that basis by the parents of | .. g oiting her go about wherever her | PUrely sclentitic basts, with accuracy and Saving Prices and Basy Terms. Your Credit Is Good With Us. [compote with these girls on thelr own (- il kg wweet will lends her with any man with | Precislon in placo of guesswork and rule ground. Don't try it. Be different. Play i Ao & ut in America, whers marriage 18 & | p 000 oo happens to g acquainted, Far| ©f thumb. “Chis is as it should be and a Bty avn 1016, ¥on abe tih awsatly o .}‘ ‘I.m o :r;hln lh;wv\“ mumllll,\.‘ strictly personal experiment, the chap-|g.on (t Tt s 4 mother's business to| ETeAt Improvement over our hit-or-miss - 2 very age of man has Its pec oron theory sastre mestio type. Put on the frilliest drews | HAOIY WEO GO AR HAA ok ‘:’-‘r Dllgh .m“,r‘ Is a disastrous fallure that|protect her daughters, and to keep a | Methods in the days of ignorance. But {you've got, and get out a fancy sewing L iptation of youth is, | blights the matrimonial prospects of | waiontul and wary eye upon them, but | every new region opened up offers us In the case of men, appetite; In the cass | every girl to wh 0 | [outfit and camp on a shady corner of |V 100 et s n“w’i sovirih 4 “”w 0 whom it Is consclentiously | yhe can use some subtlety and discre- fresh chances of losing our way, and | the veranda and darn stocking g "‘._m- onrlr Imlrnlmrn FANSEn "lull '” 1 tion in doing it. She needn't always each advance of knowledge brings with m‘ 1'1?'?,!27‘4"::"‘: I ane took my advice.” and when the g mww\l‘” vl M”Nv‘”‘_;” b bkl ‘h‘ “( v’ln nnll. of the free we demand |y evidence, and always hanging on a| It new vossibilities of mistakes Siatinum: looks 11ko | other girls would come In hot and sun- | | L Tanhiktbin Naiondn insisiatty ',' soclal Intercourse between the sexes | girl's neck, so that mo man can get| Ever since we realized that the human IR o sone burnt and dishevelea from Rolf or ten- | | ¥ \ g6 esy y reedom for young men and women to|gpeech with her without mother's hear- | body was an engine, driven by the fuel gorti! three o fout e <t or [ nin, thera was siways s little Mias: Do. |'0; collswe-bred ‘men The ege man | get acquainted with each other; freedom | ing !t hovelled Into its stomach-furnade in t mos w8 much; band i plch ¢ A who ha Joped, In his four acad for love and love-makin & i N ARG amaen nace in the of ring fs 1k | ‘luste mesticity sitting cool and i and wnking without any Parents can rest assured that young | form of food e 6 Dati g g 938 | ‘\m:l“ |,4‘0m“‘ 2ra H aninty ana unrurtied, darning away on |1CA™ ® ViRorou body of large and hard | watchful eye spying upon it, or any la- | men don't como (o the house to 806 | engerly x.," ‘:s i :‘” g ”\J\n |‘,‘,,, 1eavy - q . s nuscle [} ullarly ope 0 the ( ge! i be ey 4 | eage a ) 10 QU on, * i I $3.80 & Month. o 1 fine dla | the most absurdly small stockin 1. Boton pen o the danger | tening ear eavesdropping for soft | them, and no young man wants to drag | the cheapest form of S e ey monds, set in plati L RN AR A R TG physical stalent y | #peechen. Put the bars up againat this|around a girl's family when he takes her [he burned efficiently and safely in the Dlamond Rin i, “took Wk a Bl S B e and How. nise. it If he fail to continue his exercise In | free companionship between a girl and|out. Furthermore, no young man is com- | human engine Ry, i g A e wions b U 10 ba t iy B rowin playing under. Varlous| young men, and you'll shut out every!ing to a house where he lan't made ) g,.op REBIE o8 Antton son Lt I'm 278—A wonderful stone times as . 550 B e & R kit t that \\y| trong m xAI'l r welcome, and things are not rendered | pocogsary certain staple mr:n \l’lm t ';»HILI"“"r"r'l'."I“I'.'.;I;‘l"":"'l'."‘" and much 4y e i o g weak, and th that were large be That is why a chaperon is a first aid 'pleasant and agreeable AIGEA. taat: Thii{kas Sating usie n 14k solid golt a’t $5 & Month, ) U b to old maidenhood, and why the dragon| 'These wre thinga for mothers to re \ CRER, potatoes, sugar in 14k solid gold, cased in Keene 7 N " a & ete.~hut perhaps our lking for these ha Rantetma wlralrine Bex ; | | physical organization is sub-| never has any need to use her claws, | flect upon, for it just a8 much 8| pe0 que simply t ly training ) TERMS—Only o ¢ that gi ptured the cateh | Jected to specinl perils hecause of 18| The one and perfoct way to {wolate a|mother's business to help a &l get iy S0 TR T AP SRR A & of the season. And did 1t beeau great and abnormal development girl from all masculine attentfon Is to Kood husband s it ix to keep her from | | ““.}“‘ ATEG ANl : 2 Week, he played h wn role 2| vil of staler belougs also to| have a duenna always on duty, Mother's | MArrying a bad one - e which s just as g € have pleased N np- | t t und the imagination. The | skirts perpetually in the parior will scare' '‘A# for the chaperoning business, ral 4 \ e PERENG Tl 95 M1apin ng 1 or gotting him beat a f t Ister, the visiona of | young men away as effectually as a|" &Ir! With good principles, and see that And much less expensive than these old nis ¢ ining hi £ weore highe rPORe the wtmosphere of | smallpox flag would she assoclates with decent young mon, | */ndbys and favorit Open Daly T B P, M Saturdays Till 9:30 R R ' \ 1 ' ¢ yonder-mindednoss Now, when 1 was a girl T was as at-|#nd gou don’t h to wateh her, At A ““ e \' \ gt Aehes i Call or write for Ilustrated Catalog nondd @ nt f fading away in the Lght | tractive as any of my girl friends who | 1049t not In America . ; Y B S No. 903, Phone Doug. 1444 and sale b 1 married and settied themaelves well in find It hard to forgive my moth e Swarad - Atfirmal ity dd 50 nt by 3 3 14 The | life cause she chaperoned me out of Foods are e f timated P 1‘ oFTls THE NATIONAL Jd, R " I i At nat T wlanda a buitad and I was no great. beauty whose charm: ppiness fn 1ife t ‘ : ‘w ‘v rles t CREDIT JEWELERS do_instoad : ¢ ‘ . ft one's | Were so supernal that they would lead ntaln per pound: Hers are many pe ehal i f ) . ; my . " the dally | men to take any risk dare any dif X food ornme | $1.40 a Month, BROS & CO. 1 4095, 10ASL, Omahe 30,60 & Month - . - re any dirg ~ . | wclous, a good dancer, companionable, ) ha it Phede s : » . fon, egne Ax . and with the eharm that eenne e~ By Bealrice Fairfax wr wnd w o6 y earted ¢ ment everything and . ’ t ‘ seva sl Tell Your Sister . ath Mare m people were maor Dea Fa y t t £ 1 i fwell off that 1 had leve oy tw " . f water ¢ | | ) < land & beautiful home. When I oam - Ry A 1 N has b s frow ) ot na ' flirta telephoy \ i ARG & w i ] AN agerl ing At 2 ! nE peaple, and \ A % at E i . Wi | . ! . ) y |t N Look for This Sign on A fean , " . Your Deader's Window . | b g . ) | ” . . . ' " ham (s v smoked in the g Stockinet Covering slbure. o s This heepe in all the reh : Sty Nu Chobeven Nesdod Juices and all the fine Raver T And | was oa . . ¥ 3 a ry These: aivd Arras Star Ham reaches you in the Stock- o 29 ours X ‘ Inet Covering, cloan and sweet. As you use it | s ke " & 4%y N 4 L - el a4 o “hile ™ s Anl ave the Bockinet Covering p ARMOUR .;(u-“'fl Moy Lo bt teots what remaing, The last [w nwbven haim . . . slice will be s moist and [ L] ol . 5 rch-Ravored an the first o Boit Suder, e [WRRTLVRY Te——— . . - m‘ Buy Armout's Sear Bacow W v-- “aer ot TR o 100 Al Fondy . M . a Ovel The Novusa Uoeasimat A 008 § B8 TN . - . p