Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 13, 1916, Page 14

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14 THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1916. Health Hints -:- Fashions -- Woman's Work -:- Household Topics ‘s The Sense : What Has a Wife / Love’s Rosary -o- By Nell Brinkley |a Rigyt to Expect Girls Call Her ** Mother” After teaching since 1861 in the same Sunday echool room in the Sixteent fifty years ago. In 1550 a girl was afraid Baptist church in Sixteenth street, near Forsomnsr mRvn PP e o R P Eighth avenue, New York, Mrs. Miles E, | 10 #0 out on the street alone. "I did go By CHARLES F. THWING s i y g Of H()r Husba nd-) Jenkins, 84 years old, known to the 1 th b i\ took my bulldog with me, S ) | | pupils she haa taught to be “home hodies” "‘ bservec ; President Western Reserve ['niveraity. | By DOROTHY DIX. and good wives and mothers as “Mother en a child can go to most theaters| e and “Grandma.’ said yesterday at her re-| now, she said, but most women would| The sense of broportion is v Rt S o ception that she believed the world was | not go in 150, She laughed at the ques clation of what i& worth while. It rep husband shall have finlshed sowing his gotting better every day tion of women's dress today, and sald, |resents regarding great things as great “1 feel better than I ever did before, | “Well, some of them were pretty bad | ong yall things as small 1Tt A wild oats before he marries. Unless a | more happy and more satisfied, because | '#, too judgient made a part of character | man has made up his mind that he ia : vorries cares,” she sald, | She sees fower drunkards on the streets | JU¢ it m a part of ERRRRE. e Worries or €4 yus ael he 8¢ £ Uramobtion 16 to. e &5 tired of running with the boys and pre | and then added that she would feel even | now, and helieves that there Is much less e Kense o g 1 ! i sements in America fors the lady he has asked to be his better if the doctor had not caused her| vice and crime in proportion to the popu- plied to several ‘elements wife to any other woman in the world he does a most dishonorable thing t to ceame drinking coffee and tea because lation thar ns sixty years ago fe. One field of application relates of the effect upon her heart after the New York Times ¢ lelsure the relationship of labor ar o, Possibly In the olden days, when n man really did a woman a favor ! ng her from belng an old maid was some excuse for the man wh y s e - Leisure without labor is idleness; la without lelsure is Adrudgery. Both n bad, Work with some lelsure is con - tentment, self-approbation, usefulness Leln with work {s recreation, happi- | also apy wealth and 1o compe- ton The strukgle for wenlth s no o %0 much & struggle for money as it | e Many rea I« n struggle for power narried o girl and put her down In i home or a boarding house, and lef: } ness, restfulnesss. The proportion is 1 her lonely while he went off to amuse /‘ himself with hix boon eompanions, Ne w. The unmarriel rtable as she | be maintained, such excise prevails omf thank you, and t need to get mar ried for mn occupation or a mupport ey Furthermore, she wouldn't if she had the faintest iden that a man was marry The same sense of proportion I8 to s voman s ver ¢ men do not care for wealth; some love ing her to leave her, and Just to et | = fame: others love power . | somebody to keep u comfortable place # The mers dusire for malerial seoumu for him to come home to when every Iation s leasening. The miser seems to have passed out of life and literature but the community s becoming keenly sensitive to the power of money where else shuts 1p. Therefore, If A man in going to spend his eveninga At his lub, or playing poker, or has an In urable propensity for taking blondes out to dinner and supper and automobile rid ing, in plain justice he should stay singla Ihere I no compulsory marriage law in black, ivory, bronze, brown, blue, light and dark gray, two-tone combination greys, bronze and :‘m‘ pnp:ln';-";m:.m'hl::am-.r It coats most men too much, It costs 4 ips, lurgs apprecia ] i} J many men friendsh 'n:lu:‘h" R ol 9 tions, noble relationships and breadth »f 4 Y | living. 1t costs some men home A wife has a right to expeot that her SPECIALLY PRICED FOR £ | With a competenoy more men should husband will make her ]le‘v"muKflF nr SATURDAY AND MONDAY, 4 be content. Knough should be enouxi (riend, and give her some of his con The trouble Is that to nearly all of s panionship, If & man fs of the opinio Values up to $10.00, at 2 / ALOMN ok & ks, ske, e RATY that hin wife has not the Intellgace T %0 0 great p | understand his mighty masculine inte much or too Jittls should prevail. Ths| temperate zone of possession, half-way between the arctic of limitation and the | tropical of undue luxuriance, repre the proper sphere This sense of proportion is further to lect, or see the point of his wit, he should not have married her. He should ha pleked out somebody fn his own class and at least have given her an oppo tunity of marrying some man on he be applied to what may be called the own plane. Then she might have had » sphere of &elf-culture and of publio little companionship. ) ( 1t, however, he thinks she {an't a fc One owes to one's melf certain | Phoenix or Onyx Mall Orders Sent Qittas. Om ‘owss to the pudlio certain | Hoslery to Match Any | | Prepaid When Accom- duties. These w0 sea of duties are to of Our Shoes panied by Post Office U ke Aeab £ e il ool Be At One Dollar a Pair Money Order |lives for a very unworthy obfsct. It one lives for the community only, he #oon has no life which i worth offering to the community - One Ix to live for one's self in order to | make that )ife rich, strong, broad, sreat; | and this lfe thus made Is to be 'Ivcn: 317 South Sixteenth Street. and very few men do think that of thelr wives, then it 1 up to him to mal wome efforts at trying to be chums wit her, and it would surprise most hushands nearly to death If they would only find out what awfully good fellows thel wives can be. The average American husiness man at home makes a clam seem abaolutaly loquacious, He rushes ‘through his breukfast at lightning speed, generall with the newspaper in front of him gives his wife a dab on the cheek h A way of a kiss, and bangs the front doos behind him. He comes home late to Ainner, eats it in silence that s of only broken to scold at the children critician the ecooking. Then, with cigar and paper. he settles himeelf for (i evening and only grunts a monosyliah! reply when his wife tries to talk to him ¥or conversation and general companion ) ( ship she might just as well have stuffed Teddy bear for a husband That 1an't the kind of a happy sver ing at home that the girl who married him dreamed of having, and the wonde of it is that more women whose hus bands never talk to them, And never \"f try to entertain them, and never evines the slightest Interest in them, don't hunt up some other man who will make him relfSngrecable A wite has a right to expect that her husband will respect her personal 1ih erty as she does his. IAberty” in marriage doss not mear “liconse’ any more than it does any where else. It simply means that a wife sHould have just as much right to free dom of thought and act within the pre scribed bounds of propriety as a husband haxr, Matrimony Is bound to be & merfes of concessions, but because & woman Is married Is no reason why she should be forced to sacrifice her own personal ity, and become /Y . - n weak echo of her husband. Provided she does not exceed | No man who sports souvenirs of little heart Eros the trifler. KEros the egotist. FEros the her allowance she should have the priv to the great common Iife of all Tha| lifo greatest in ftself should be madg | | greatest out of Itwelf. | |im!umuuuannnn_mnnmmlunmi : A National Institution For 30 years Coca-Colahas been put affairs, his chests of letters, pale-blue and gray Lady-Killer! For about his small person when flege of spending her money as she likes - | saweetly perfumed with the haunting odors of he dolls himselt up he wears a chain of amber- and so 1ong- &8 he does not run the to the test. Daily for : o UE 0o atCK. (hafn, Of ARDSS Binkriaio (s sroiid Bk Iniertese wib faded ladies’ hands clinging still about them, beads, and within each bead a girl's face crys i Ruahaiily nodhald” Al SMALIA: Rk 30 ars it has assed the tiny side drawer of his desk filled with lized—imprisoned there, Love's Rosary! And the right to join whatever clubs she ye p | piteous odds and ends, a little blue bow creased. do you know-—-he has known so many girls pleases, or pass her lelsure in the man | and faded; the tiny white fan with ivory sticks (you'd never be able to count up to the num ner most agreeable to herself. the lips of Americans | A husband soon begins to hate the wife | snd tarnished butterflies in white and gold ber), for he loves all girls—Dan does——plain who polices his every move, and a wif in all walks of llfe_'_ patiently spread upon it; a white glove with & | and small and splendid and gay, and sad and entertains pretty much.the same. feelin curve of a girl's fingers still plain upon it; one wallflowery, and beautiful and sweet—and all toward the husband '«., whom she has t . . ¢ e . g0 for permission for everything has bome the test Of thick, soft lock of hair still live and glittering, the girls in the world {s a heap, let me tell You L i Ml deep gold and curling about his fingers when he like star dust they are-——where was 1780 on the hearthatone 18 never loved. mo repetition without los- takea 1t fn his curious palm; a babylsh locket many girls that the Rosary he wears would matter what the sex with a smiling face veiled in dark, soft hair veach around the world and back again to the LA woman has o right o expact. tha 1n8 its zest. It has looking out of the blackened frame; a ring or land where Love hangs out. And, swung on L ilainie e { = two, dumb and telling no tales: a wrist-ribbon the end, this vain person carries an image of SRGnE 4 Taass et d \ proved its wholesome- of nasrow valve: dreawming of the smooth fin-' | himself In gold with dlamond eyes and rubles ey ke tdern S5 gors that loosened it and gave it away in an ar for Hpa! it : more than any wom an do alone ness and deliciousness. pocaprnbegoosg o ity fadbod S Al ahis e N TRl - [ e ki 8t ol o . . in a bit of tissue paper—no man who hoasts of There {8 no man who can count in his treasure. The old recipea for the construetion of Time has made its it plapaitusioiilooms tan Lt ditom Yindla ey Lotiapl oty T eslma 1on{INg Mol aaien ” 't cure heart can mateh with Eros hin e vain no matter how Awo the tmp of coneeft is in bagricee . eve x‘ ‘r '4‘.'.,.‘., as Dan Vanlity Voo! ~NELL BRINKLEY foean t . woman & happy howme, even though wh wrine like » . 1 ' e man ’ Y ou can prove to your- self in one glass of i Coca-Cola what 30 Have Stepped Into i years havc; built into o _ . Quick Favor With ‘ S o t its reputation. ‘ : ! : | o ’t . Smart Dressers : ot | 4R || SATURDAYSALE | | Z720E | oot i Mt B e ww. > } Demand the genuine b & OF BEAUTIFUL NEW b eyl ‘ _< | HATS wawery wovss Ml Household Helps THE COCA-COLA CO, 5 ATLANTA, GA e . arde $6.10 i SH THE LA-RUE R xamax())ogegg llA1‘ SHOP Ees (Y InTE NS weiay » N A Tarsan To Get In or Out of Business, to ln‘u Sell ‘ \bruan lgh . A ."."um.l , use THE i sl --:-.n;u; ‘.y":.:.‘.. Want-Ad Columns. So0 Shint Sueeriie i

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