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S S S THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1916, The Cook and the Home The wife who cannot cook or superin- end the housekeeping,” Mhse ant, a New York culinary expert says Clem “takes her husband’s pay envelope on: false pre tenses. She does not know her business When a couple marry, the girl expects her husband to hand her over most of his walary, and he, in turn, expects that her management of that money will make it 80 a8 far as possible. It is his busines 10 earn the money. It is hers to spend it. Burely one part is as important as the other. Correct feeding is becoming a sclence and we are awakening to the fact that it is as important to combine food properly for the adult baby. No woman need think that as it is for the #he I8 too intelligent to bother with cooking Cooking is a sclence as well us an art, and one can go on learning forever, The brids who has a gbod foundation of gulinary knowledge and tukes an Interest in cooking will find no end of possibill ties to it can joln the great movement to reduce Right in her own kitchen she the high cost of living. She can use up levery scrap of left-over material. 1t Is ithe clever cook alone who can make Heft-over food tasty and never waste lanything. The smaller the Income the more intelligonce It takes on the part of the bride to manage her share of the idomestie partnership, and the more she needs to study and plan her dally bills of fare. A man comes homo after a thard day's work und sces the {things served, sometime same old purchased from in pastry shop Just bofore dinner. 1f he W8 easy-going he says nothing, bt after in while he grows grouchy, There are more grouches caused by bad cooking than by bad luck.” po— Try It at once. Highest Awards New Coub Busk Froe= &ee Blip in Prund Con o -0 HEN you at last push open a garden-gate between W whose bars you have peered for many an en tranced hour, you cannot turn and flee at the first adventure! For idle hours you looked at the mysteries framed hetween the {ron serolls, bits of blue sky with creamy masses of cloud floating over—a bluer sky than that that bends over you oyt in the dusty road, watched golden and green, breathed In strange scents that are sweet and stupefying, followed the little twisting paths that journey away from the gate Into flowery regions, with eyes that explored and were baffled at the first turn where the path jooks over-shoulder and beckous on, saw the remote playing of rainbow drops leaping must have learned the faery-tops of trees wave Infants «ad Invalids imely Advice to Those Who Honors Are Not with Responsibillties | high in the sun, a fet of gems, and fancled the gold and | silver fish that glanced in the sun in a pool beneath; | heard faint musie from over the armies of lily-bed lances, | @nd at last you.shake the gate 'til it rings in the still air. | The garden inclosed—It is not your garden-——but there | s no padiock! If one was brave enough one could open ‘ it and go into this world of still sunshine and guarded ground. And when, at last, you swing it back and slip | within with your heart hehind your teeth and your feet | on the path that travels always just ahead and nods and | beckons “adventure’ at every bend, you ecannot | coward at the first dim glade and the first steps into the path in his little red coat | When a girl nods with stolen star-shine in her oyes | “1 love you announce turn wight who and you give her her little “Now and says too! ring and solemnly we're engaged!” By Nell Brinkley Copyright, 1216, Intern’l News Service, £ W~ S — SR ¥ Nt I unce inside the garden at whose gate you have hungered, and on enchanted ground, you must take the frights and | the wights that come with e quest! You may even have to go bhonnet-shopping! And, though you truly feel Jike crying, “Little woman of my heart, your face looks good tp me in any, so it is not red and yellow!” that offering will never gave you if you fall aslgep. Crowns have rough edges sometimes even the ruby whose glow he delights in torments the king's head where it presses; roses have thorns that nip, and if you aspire to the garden of a mald's heart you | will have to know that queer adventures will hop out at | you from any kink in that labyrinth. Kven fishing one | bonnet from citys-full, along with an untiring sweetheart, | will be a request tucked away behind her kis | NELL BRI} (KLBY, ' Don’t ;Vegleczf U glybzibklinj tion” an their | ree it aver “.‘ ‘,.M ;\' man knew ¥ v % ‘[v‘lh‘}n‘l & : v w'“ ane | OUIA encourage ti olr children to remain THE ORIGINAL We do not give snough the {hs[OF her requirements hefore marria WpE; de b a5 children, not make them old beyond " s ) s lwhow ténd of odis 5t ¥ nat ‘aiways the, plainsat of, the. b their year A Cindetells in every fam Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form, |1*INE. #aY a hours, 4 man “ T 1o Dartitilar slaxtid amaes vndl For infants, invali rowing children. | from cver tandpoint, u therelors | rshe w 1ina b ought "'“’: of-as the rest | . All the children of a household Pure nutrition, upbuilding the wholebody. ' 1116 1 judge whether 1t will be Jikel | We he Y b ' ’ pt in the background for | .00 chare and share alike; the plain Invigorates nursing mothers asd the aged. S i Y e ) ‘eanosls Lasid 3 WIS TiREea. hould not be kept in the background | More nutritious than tea, coffee, etc. - i ake a wife before I . An & rulg, the one who other ecauge she 1s plain. No one should be | Instantly prepared. Requires nocooking. | 1# has decided on, or even thought about, | 10t comtradi t wan 1 | gIrl, she who I8 everything in that home {déred the “ugly duckling’ providing Sabetitutes Cost YOU Same Price | the kind of one he prefers. He does not | ™A OUKRL to marry depends on the I, the 4nethas CARMSY h4-Bole. With aro—they should not be made to | ™ : AR TR G > o i o g g A g e \. w‘\ g v”.‘ 'm\ w‘u.lu.m shovld B Sundey Beadasheonld | 0L il s ek tier s Dt iont o g e s awias | o doetared;-eougni.forvard, o maks p Omaha newspaper that| s ahould. e xpécted 1o be in the kitahen to probrres L g gives its readers four big| .. . .. \ hin e Ao iy \ wn, for It {8 thi ralght . " 1 s K " ; \ reatiment of - 2 - ; ‘ " 3 " S Lok for Simon Pure” Leaf Lard is always . : rmour's . ordered by the discriminating woman for cake, pastry and biscuits, as well as for deep frying. y . bine She knows that nothing x> ] - equals “Simon Pure" for Experience has taught . her that food properly QUALITY - . fried n "Simon Pure” . ‘ . . Leal Lard s perfocily . . . N N . v digestible, . Loak for Sign on . ' . . .. Being absolutely all Vear Daoiee's Windos 2 ’ . s load bard, carciully selec L R 2 ’ o ol and tendered & pen ] w Nottia, these paria will sque ! - l ' . l ut of erdinery lank " - A The German Empire l ARMOUN 1 COMPANY ' J ?‘N Badate, Mar., L o | 't Aher el ArtAn [ - DU L e . A . “ » New ey and Rentushy Health Hints -:- Fashions -- Woman’s Work -:- Household Topics Claim that Chivalry is Dead 18 False By DOROTHY DIX. Every now and thén some Anclent Marlner or Anclent Mariness rises up and ascends to the Wailing Place and beats t and cries out that antry among men ipon his or her bre there Is no more -$4 and that chivalry s dead, These prophets of woe hase ancholy prognostications upon the fact that men are glib at paying women flowery compliments as they used to be nor so supple about jumping to | plck up a handkerchief when a lady drops it and that when a tired man gets 4 seat in a subway he's mighty apt to let a husky, able-bodled woman stand Therefore, the people who observe these small fry phenomoens affirm that chiv thetr mel not as | alry is dead and if they happen to be anti-suffragists they go a step farther and assert that they know who killed Cock Robin, 1t was the women them elves and they did it by going into business and wanting rights It always makes me mad, through and through, to hear anybody claim that chivalry is dead. On the contrary, 1 | assert that for the first time in the his- tory of humanity chivalry has been born | into the world and that the modern, com monplace, tweed-suited business man could give Sir Launcelot and Bir Gala had and all other rattling tin pan | Knights of the Table Round points off a real chivalry so big and fine that they never even dreamed of it, much less prac teed it Talk about your chivalry of the pas when it wasn't safe for a woman to put with her foot outside of her own door out somebody going along to protect her! Talk about your chivalry of the | pust, when women were nothing but men folks! chivalry of the past slaves to thelr Talk about your when a father left all of his money to his sons, when a husband didn’t hesl tate to strip his wife of every cent she possesséd. on her wedding day, and when brothers thought it all right to take overything and leave the slster nothing! Talk about your chivalry of the past when women were denled an education, and a right to exercise the talents that nature had given them when they were prevented from even going out Into the world and making an honest 1iving! But the chlvalry of today makes it safe for n woman to go alone from one | end of the world to another because every man s her protector, The chl alry of today secures A woman's own property-to her. The chivalry,of-today glves her a chance to follow any occu pation she desires, and to make just gootl in it as a man cowd, The chiva of today in some places—and It soon will everywhere—even glves woman an equal right with men in government And belleve me, brethren and slsters picking up handkerchiefs, and even sub | way seats, are a mighty poor substituts tor property laws and the right to make an honest living Another way and a very interesting one and a most important one in which the new chivairy of men is expressing itself | 18 the masculine attitude toward woman | and the marriage proposition | In the old “gallant days’” which so | many people mourn, a man considered | that he had a perfect right to love and [ride away, If he enjoyed a woman's | soctety he had no hesitation in monop | ol1zing as much of it as he cared to, eve | 1f he knew that his attentions were with | out intention, and that he was | going to let his philandering take him so far as the altar 1t was nothing to him that he let a girl waste her youth and beauty on hin 1’" that he, who never intended to aal her to marry him, kept away other men | who would nave been glad to have mar tled her or that he let her fill her hear full with for him that there | would never be m in it for affectior tor | That wa of the past looked at the never %0 love some honest man the way the chivalrous mar and all of us know a dozen women wi | were the victims of this selfish and hea | less cruelty How differently the mad of today 4 hundreds of lefters that thi the matter is attest to w regards trom girls to whom new chiva is 80 unexpected and novel that they ar bewlldered by it In these latters a girl will 1 conduct of A certain man—-that she k that has frankly told he 't reason that t she must not let ¥ rying somebedy One man told | insanity in his fami Anotl &irl that he was too poor to ma " that she must not t . him becatse It wonld \ il a | tha 1 ’ she had 1 s i : ' . \ 7 K ! | T | -~ 5