Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 3, 1916, Page 8

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L THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1916 s Health Hints - Fashions --- Woman's Work - Household Topics A Ballade of Chance / By WILLIAM F. KIRK, Your vision now is growing clear As water in a bubbling spring Another gwiftly-sliding year Has left its throne and taken wing Into the drab past, fluttering As bats flit through a cavern gray, Leaving behind a mocking thing ‘The chance you had and threw away Women and War From the May Number of Harper’s Bazar : : : Pin Money Frocks -o- By ELLA WHEELER WILCOOX. Copyright, 1915, Star Co. ‘We women teach our little sons how wrong And bow ignoble blows are; school and church Support our precepts, and Inoculate The growing minds with thoughts of love and peace “Let dogs delight to bark and bite,” we gay But human be'ngs with immortal souls Must rise above the methods of the brute, And walk with reason and with self-control Perhaps it was a comrade dear Who had a world of love to bring Do you recall the thoughtless sneer That hurt bim like a hornet’s sting” Do you recall the tannting fling And then-—dear God! you men, you wise, strong men, Our self-announced superiors in brain, Our peers in judgment, you go forth to war! You leap at one another, mutilate & 9 And starve and kil your fellow-men, and afk ! That sent him from your side one day The world’s applause for such herolc deeds | | Why does its memory ever cling You hoast and strut; and if no song is sung, | , The chance you had and threw Away 4 40 laudatory eplc writ in blood, Péthiow two hrown eyes, arpetend oless Telling how many widows you have made, i % i Arowidx ‘solMises . LAIROMITE, Why ‘thorn‘ perforce, you say our bards are dea SeAFak the iaknoas aL's toar And inspiration sleeps to wake no more Mo Ao b= Piti pufiagesh o 4nd we, the women, we whose lives you are | Are twin ghosts now, so languishing What can we do but sit In silent homes, | fiey: thit) ‘voii with their sombre piey And wait and suffer? Not for us the blare | Thelr owner thought you aere & king! Of trumpets end the bugles’ call to arms | s harice you bhad And tHrew sws For us no waving banners, no supreme | A Triumphant hour of conquest, Ours the slow | l{ 0y Dread torture of uncertainty, each day 0O Prince of Darkness, if lhrukl.nn;. The hootless battle with the same despalr | Befora thy throne my shrinking ¢ And when at best your victories reach our cars | | fpare me thig memory maddening : There reaches with them, to our pitylng hearts, rbe chance 1 had and threw away e The thought of countless homes made desolate, And other women woeping for their dead (v' l V / > W p [1 ) o ion 7irl Workers oman Has O men, wise men, superior heings, say, 7 “ Ju there no substitute for war fn this u/h() WTH II(’T LS])]I,(’T@"' Great ago and era? If you answer "'No, | ] \ Then let up rear our children to he wolves, |()ut Th(f H()me ' And teach thewm from the eradle how to kill Ny JANE WLEAN. By M JOUN A, LOGAN, Why 1 ¥ omen waste our t vorde? ‘ Why shou A“H" women wa l’u our time and word arah was not & bit geod-looking. 1167 | wie are there not the same helpful 2 " y o ! square, compotant face was really Wer|,upiosihatic women today as thers were Y (‘] 'l]’ despair, Bhe longed 1o be beantiful, and | o decade ago our CUhad H when sha logt her position she drend I8 the inatinet of woman no longer 4 1 ') I00king for n new ene becaise she WAS|.s the magnet, holding her to the home I’l ]/eSlghf #0 plain, Khe had been 0ut of & position | _to children, to her hushand? for soma time now. | Bomo who have atudied the conse A mub'eet that every mather sherld But I'm going to keep on trying | quences of the amalgamation of native Barah aald to her test friend, Anne Bilen | and forefen races do not want for an know someiting ahout ia ths procer (n Reflley. Anne had a pertly pretly ace, anewer of he* cifidran‘s si fit. Mecent inves's with enk piouth that always sm'led | They are frank with their opinfons that prettil e worked |n a cloak and|the disposition of women In this coun gatlons ehov that widespread (gnoranee prevalls on this matter, zo mportant Lo e ehild’'s foture eaccers In I « The Improper axerciee of t o ays | | (he growing yeara of n child, e'thor vy reusen of bad Joht r excensve Ight the {tae of Improper mateifils, prolorgs lose work, or of any work at nll during | onditions of bud health, will aeroint fer | CREDIT Lot cyeatraln, a(unt, short IS CO0D [ #ight, and oven mental fatlgus of a el WITH US our order,” says an Englisy dotor v o has made a rpecisl rtudy of thi b sult establinim nt and had no trouble at | try to b veritable helpmates, as the all in getting on formerly were, is being lost You're too reliable, Barah,” she told | Cltizens from forelgn countries have not friend Men don't 1ike rellable | hrought with them to this free Jand the t them mmart first and | pame unity of purposs between husband ife that exists in almost all coun A small sum, weeklyor monthly, makes joy the owner f a splendid lamopd or othe rticle of hig) de jewelr afterwnrd Whieh was not a bad and phy coming from the ! tries I'pa of Anne Filen Rellley, who took men | 1 ds not pretend to say whether this | A% she found them and thanked her stars |{s true or not, but it seems to be the that she Sarah visited all tha employment bu-' investigated the matter that it is and’that | reaus. Ehe pressed her well-worn blue | the women of today are not interested | merge sult painstakingly and combed her |in the success of thelr husbandw and the S ¥ ~.‘ s the on. As prett onsensys of opinfon of those who have pont | shining Liown halr as neatly as ghe | male members of their familios ’-‘nrl:‘“wm‘ oty ol iy eould. Bhe viore her crispest white shirt- | One frequently hears that when hus " ?h:':,:'r:.f,\:nulrl’:""'l“"v‘l:l';; "'h.'.:“"v-:n'lj valet and had her shoer shined by the bands and fathers are over-indulgent r &1 o b bootblack on the corner, The slanting |with thelr wives and dayghters, the A every purt of the immature body, ‘At | glass fn the shop windows showed her | women become selfish and vnreasonable an infant’s cyes are exposcd fo ver. | 8 neat, steady girl, with nothing remark-|and ars not disposed 1o share in the ef bright light the growth of the cya will be | able ab her, but with a steady-going | forts to accumulate wealth or practice arpsted; It n school ehild's eyes are aver L air of dependabllity that was a real the economies and self-denial which per worked, any slight defects that would | nuset sons of NHmited means whould exercise ‘ otherwise paes away will he in‘reassd But, oh, for one spark of the attraction| This certainly cannot be said of al y illustrations of that belonged to her more fortunate sis- | Women, as we have ma ters, thought Farah, as on the second | the achicvements of women in the inter Monday morning she went up, up, up in|®stn of thelr husbands’, fathers’ and and perhaps made permanent } entirely 4:‘-'»4 Hewing In early lifa han s dangers ! o4 No ehfld should make the acquaintan:e eled niekal movement: §| of the ordinary sewing needie befare the 4 ean be adjusted to B | age of T years, for ita use ix certaln to | the elevator of one of the skyscrapers|brothers’ success There in another phase of the question to apply for a vacant position. e 10 1355 be traught with evil to the ayes and per She had 1o reason th hope for suce 1t has been claimed that American L A e haps to the general health of the ehi'd e S S R i ]1!'1.:., she paw the Jong lins of | Woinen ]-umnln.u-fl«‘;!; toe yv;‘;;:\l ;mfl:)\u;‘ inelaton ot ] : ’ : po g girls before her, her hear still | husbands and eccupy indus position s . R e rntien, fov. . dsmimition ot TAKE slaited erri bainte_and embroidered | A NAVY blue taffeta frock has s Roman $100; Toton. Sah T, BASS. Ak, ¢ ‘,‘HM.., h they should relinguish on account ! Yound-in"this’ ofie. feets no eh'18 oan b | ecru banding for the dress, white satin with striped vest, an organdie guimpe and a Wer heart that many of the girls were |Of the duties that devolve upon them a persuaded to do what we know ns séewing biue buttong and huttonholeg for the vest, and | neck line that i# plain and smart looking, as pretty. The girl just before her in the | Wives and mothers, That there s some at anything like a sufe distance from n.r] three shades of bine messaline ribbon for the belt, the drawing shows . line -A;w,» theer 1‘11“‘? y‘u her wrists |ihing radically wrong there 18 no di and when she spoke dimples came 1 | puting went in her smooth cheeks It our women would ceass to eccup ' which take them from thefr oyes, In Iater years, when ehildren are a! ! 1 Bhe_wa# kind to SBarah and once Sarah | positions thought of dropping out, but somehow, | homes and their families and devote their tion, she stayed Wiy long a5 what they might earn af | pomey generaity Taiks in a dmtoct that | Second Old: Maid Tells How Her Family Spoiled Her Dreams|4vindled down to a fow. Finaily there an much Ba Sl 88 O O nel? mont of us don't understand were only three of them left and then | we lowed to practice needlework, there are o g cortain rules that must be put In force I Sh The work should never be done by artl n- 00ts ficinl lght, If the natural ght fail, then (that lesson should be postponed. The s = Dismend Mo 4=Men's DLia i Mk wolid|mond Ring. 8 prong “per: |tooth moun ting, »® individuality, we would be apt to call it | connection. 1 had parents and grand- | 00 hin little weakneages, and you blast light of the window must fall upon (h ny DOROTHY DI Now, # young girl’s faney is the most | the girl ahead of Sarah went in the pri- | homes e ¢ It In always safer for & man with 1ey I8 the mos! ; 2 :‘fl ‘:I-ml side of the child and of the i :‘:Hu' M-;«”-' f .‘l “, A l “ ensitive and delicate thing on earth, It | vate office, her ruffies flying and her '\ A iral consequaence u;m Aomerm | or % ory e 4 J 1 . " o portan ot lost on e girl 1ffairs are wholly neglected and much gl Rl e By Lot the periods of aswing be short, with | Of course, the high trolley car steps ada| ~T0e reason T am wn vty ¥ ‘n‘ lv,”»”‘ '-‘)‘ Hrm;ul ':' u‘n.m'-hm |'|q|‘y”m ”r; 4|f “v‘”x xmu'w‘ }'nd .\ oy \r‘r\ l{h \1-\uvv\”:v':-‘\llnh" ‘ follows, Tt 15 not su e u 4 o j ; bbb S e ) upon themmelves a o slightest | ahead of he > ust been di n in | t | intervals of other work in batwesn. Never | to the attractiveness of the modern short ond woman, “is because 1 had too | 0 0 "L AN Fidleulous In a girl's | missed prising that earning money creotes a THE NATIONAL |‘-| a child count stitches. And last, If a | skirt much family eves, show up all of his little peculiari Sarah waited nervously, while the min- | epirit of Independence in the “:"'”v ‘.‘. CREDIT JEWELERS J | ch'1d be found to excal in the fins saw If some othar fellow would ¢ lay our I was the only gir! In a larze fami tiew and eccentricities, turn the spot light | utes ticked themselves away. The fnner the bast-intentioned women and qulte 400 5, 10th S¢., Ing, let her eyes be examined, lest shs Aoor opened and the other girl ca out. | frequently dulis the interest which they - T BROS & CO. 433 ear Warmy be_shortalkhted @tocs g . e e D o aman: | Ghe wore An airof ‘dejection and Sarah | should hava ‘at all times in their home ez - A L S S L T o a— Parents and innumerable elderly married | o ") o rose dublously | and thefr loved ones v e e e - uncles and aunts and coustng, ull of | L I fat As 1| She hardly knew how she stumbled into | Men. as a rule, are naturally selfia they hud a perfect right to meddie {n all | three different ime to whom 1. swas |fully Into the eyes of the little man who | househo y A . strongly mttracted. men with whom 1 |#WuUng in an office chair and looked at ear women. Man overlooks alto Y my affairs and help me aelect a hus. * |N»v '~ . ‘} " with whom her keenly. She was conscfous that he ‘ gother the fact that they are worn out A 4 ould ha allen in‘love 1€ 1 had been | B0 oTUE TN over, her low-heeled | by the dafly grind of filling any position Iat wlone, and either one of them would ; e 2 el an 50 fB ’ They considered it even thelr AUty | have made me a §00d husband with |Shoes that had just been polished, her | wage sarnare oocRie | throu 10, preeent 10, ma, gratultous orificisms of | whom 1’ should: have 1ived ‘s full ‘and {08t but shabby suit, her pisin little | that the o g TR | avery young man who came to the hotse |happy life hat and her u‘\u"fl 18 brown halr i the woman's wage Nv i v & and It never occurred to the poor dear Each of thess men asked ma to marr You Took iike work.” he said finally} pense o i"‘ Ssgresths ot oA that my tastes and ideals In husbands | him, and to each I satd ‘o’ hecause my | With Ar pt-réliet. I yau think you'd 6 ERRE SRS T RS A sege might be different from theirs and. that, | family had- blighted my romance in its | 1% the Job at $15, T'll take you on. You earners SENA-S Fetifg 3 SN0- DS “ - Anyway, 1 was tha one whe was going | bud an begin this morming Mis manner | of husbands of freedom of responsibilit d six cans of e e o W e . | it o, S5t bt S S, and not they summer Tesort whither 1 had gona with | *¥On smile. She had actually landed » gl ienghgromyde g e el . 3 ” Their intentions were benevelant, but & friend. He was all’ that was charm. | 10b because she was plain.. What would | matte o Tor Foud osngiin they 4 parately set ¢ heat me it eal manhood and strength underneath h roe ) "’ o e ¥ f husband and homw hildren and | his happy -go-lucky way, as thers may he , husbands an Athers Don't just say “‘evaporated milk" - say the _normal joy the granite rock under the flower-decked A(/l‘)l't' to melorn 1 inslat . “w, F i Grandmotner wa Astormined that it " . ¥ » A Order Cottage Milk by name, if you want T L 1 B IO | ARt eten hait A tey (A them o 1 ‘ " i oo the milk without the pronounced cooked B L s qaoac [ el KRGS BN . NEMRRGR. OF 1 T Yoo Mie n Risk [ . : in t taste. Cmmfe Milk is simply fresh, pure, rich cow's milk hunters and filled with suspielons | qaciared his amusing slank | H ear Miss Wairfax: Kindly sd with most of the moisture removed by evaporation. You t overy § Nh Wh. GAIE. AReRE . Lamae o Y chether It 18 proper ta continue a friend i ) Iflle the plase as [ y an who didn't be " 2 nded that . ' . 8 enia ' S iy hee and of theolog: and A ' wa . L - for § ' s - wen the ol The | drean " xejulst ser » " " M ’ g .l sUbLe percept . # ot ’ N A g 3 Unels Jooh leoked slesmil P sl b ' b abeut A r ’ A Tt's always the same- rich, delicious, pure and clean. You'll know satia P.in the pees Aarkly prog N A ha \ " C - vy B faction in milk when you try your first can of Cottage Milk. You -~ A Mand v an W 18k arder " can't help but notice its superiority —for Cottage Milk has tw o N 't da N ave he " 1 A the food value of bottled milk § . ue 0 ten and » hrars AR Instly ther e R \ N . onl all v s Use it in coffer, on hreaktast foods, just as you would use « ream. ’ : . ; - N -~ . dilute it and use a you would use milk, either for cooking of v NEPUSTR VN e, et | - ’ . | for drinking \ toi Inehn and tallors . . v . 'l | Your grocer has Cottage Milk and ! @ but Pauits had A 9 hattle, o Wl . : . 2 he recommends if, \ : - s rosligauites b e . > ' b W any apecial int n e Y . ¢ . The Dancing o § seekion table, B With eherbes of gles | LU A S o RN S Publls plaees. morme are narried » . j il wpen M with thelr liitle soalpels e ey R ossy g e ) 1a & wieng 1 They tere WimL Hmb from b and gy S g sl 3 Lo e 4 ale they made fun of the ’ . Pbofi o hiaas o : T prote . it | aelt winh e auih i hie gestires Ther | N : N e el a8 § s e It asiead of o . Y : { b oy

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