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2 THE EF [——— e —— — — e Health Hinls -- erfect 4! "hy Siu(flr (V,'irrl.s' e Iy e e Y ROTE LN CT 4 Assuranceis — Fail Where the | We Were Not Too Proud to Fight o ||Points Are 7 st o . Jrawn for The e Dy y et & Wosn i i ' II h()H/ II e 71//0th/l I I e I/I/ere R?;ghé . Hal Cfl_{;;n(l;ll, Sh(:tl/::;A PATTERSON. OMAHA ESDAY MAY 30, 1916 - Woman's Work -:- Household TOpwb T By FORTUNE FREE By MADGE ARTHUR Tieuat 16 was Tany- Wellet:-who: on ' one " pte T S e R R e e —————" ¥ouc hair.is alowing & gAYy eirdak {00 'k ouser motta for & man 16| oceasion gave thi fages s S . = ]~‘rr. ,.‘~‘| there To be ,:,,,,',, fr'ahn:;. take v i i 118 irrey | f / / 7 7 /// 7 I you can pull them out in your few reckon him as a success, but a good wick” fame amivel I o7 W 7 | I 7 leisure moments on Sunday. The many people might sneer ot| bevar of vidder But it § it 1l / % 7 muscles of your face are growing | the idea. He live r fittle " flaccid They have a tendency to slip E house. His it to make er of the eldest daughter she fights hard | averag ned to pa 7 ooner than you used to and you sus ! ‘robably the fact that a widow's I didn't. The only way of knowledge of men and mat off human fife with the still huge rate ckerbocker of infant mortality due to crowded John fit those & ) heed to old Tony's warning. This with ¢ L\;, patching and .‘,,‘mw “ icie0n: Decatish teldeiw :\‘br o pect sometimes that you cannot do ki u}m‘d:rh‘ how healt work || vhat since the Pickwickian day you used to do. And so you mope H their toes gh socks, gather n or maybe theiz wiles and fascinatior and lengthen your face still more and 1 terious 1 their knee not (9 "me b e pii talk in a flat, spiritless voice about i through saying their prayers—tear [Mave D growing old B L o won miibd iy, Being on wi Whatever the reason, the fact re S Eispeu RIS dO SRl ie v will o O ied | mains that widows frequently. win You are old. For. the forties i m e asked |y e achia ¢ L and this age of illumination are late mid g ushands re spinsters fail, and me the da en I looked ir ksardina in aiRelsl vatisnn there I ummer, the fifties merely early au § She was engaged on a pair of b aoipiii b/ Lios o tumn of life I'he medical men are . ‘ A RIOWING jon on the part of y ; Ei i e He Touh )8 % the®sterner sex to share their home discovering that the average age is ! most ms I: : ha i) bawar GA(L (adiad et Rnod ag lengthening out to sixty years. [t two inches since he had these at by st bl s bl used to be forty-five, Remember that i 1 am to do with them I don’t know that average is secured by lumping 1 occurred to me 10 saw seiras fof et 4 saventass and unsanitary living i the large cit } of inches off his legs. That was im-|GYS] her, single sisters lag a . great i The poor, d 1 infa h ) desl to do with this rather surpri je The poor, doomed infants cut possible, of course. g ing state of kffair Much 'misrriad greatly into the average length of My friend John, the father of the happiness is often frittered be life I'hat is his only might, poor other John whose legs will grow at | P 00® 0 O B eband R short-lived little one. 5o we may cor such a rate, is @ mission worker, He is | get 1o understand the vagaries of op sider that it the average life is length always swilir he, his wife;.is al- [D00ite sexes, “And this” ss the cele ened fifteen years, we may all of u ways radiant. I don't know a happier | brated Marl Ay i i benefit hy that extensfon ] home. I remarked to him one even- | {ist where {dow. com fi g And if we believe we have fifteen ing“as we sat together that he must |fiay served her apprenticeship and has more year life, we have an equal ] have a hard life with lots of trouble. | paried with her illusions, so that the reason fe i€ g that we have fif Heay he said. “But what a lot | ynan she condescends to marry has a teen more of life’s prime, that season ] of goodness there is in the world | fair spart of full enjoyment, enriched and mel Things go dishearteningly at times Undoubtedly men are attracted to lowed by understanding, that should I admit But how many things g0 ward women who understand them. | be the most glorious part of life welll Trust. That's my motto. Do |and no one knows thi that v Y Stop worrying about those gray your best and stick to Providence.” | the widow herself. What widow, for I " o “"h hairs and making them g and of By “sticking to Providence” he |instance, ever objects’ 1o king % * z I\ b ‘ “‘\; greater number, 1 beg of you. If it [ | meant, Never lose your faith that|She kn a man loves his cigar or s A\ b ,“ ion to have a silver crown i there is an ordering of affairs in this |a pipe of tobacco, Therefore she t o\ A\ think it due, remember ] world which is bound to make them | makes a study of a man in order to of soft gray hair about turn out well, providing one only | gain a knowledge of his likes and dis is guaranteed to give dis does one's best likes and never neglects an opportu to your appearance, I well There is a vast amount of distrust | nity of catering to his whims A remember 4 relative of mine who wa 4 in the world. It is often consider- | widow has the happy knack of being a plain, rather forbidding man, of the ed quite the smart thing to trust no- | more anxious to please than to be | general coloring of a thunder cloud body. “I trust nobody” is the motto | pleased, and as every man has a weal | until time turncd his black hair and of many who imagine they are re-|ness for a little adulation she inyar beard to silver. Then his dark eye b markably shrewd folk. They are mis-|iably succeeds in her object | oftened with nature’s toning down taken in their estimate of themselve She is wise enough, too, not to ar of his ¢ cheme His feature Distrust often robs the suspicious |gue with the man whom she would that had been hawk-like in his hard#® one of a large amount of useful as-|like to be something more than a outh seemed to round. And thos sistance |friend, or, if she does, she contrive who had disputed an to whether he A one-time celebrated detective |[to convey in a fascinating manner had been forbidding or only plair told me that one day he was keeping |the impregsion that she is convinced agreed that was handsome, In an eye upon a man whom he recog-|he is right. She is aware that argu vigorate your scalp by massaging. it nized as one of the cleverest pick-|ments are the crypt of friendship and by ecating nourishing food, by exer pockets in London, hovering in the | the everlasting doom of love. She cise in the open air and, most of all neighborhood of one of the great|knows that when a man leaves his by not worrying abour gray hairs railway stations. He might be going | office or workshop he is desirous of I'he flaccid facial muscles? 1 know by train, of course, but it was decid- | leaving there all worries and perplexi A business woman who is determined edly doubtful ties, with the result that she docs | not to allow what she terms an ava As he was apparently absorbed in N0t try to force her opinions on him | lanche of her features to happen. She examining a timetable pasted ,,n,,,,,‘ It is often said that widows angle, sho me the simple apparatus—a of the walls, his other eye seembed to | OF Tun after men; but in five cases quadruple fold of soft old muslin be hovering around in intense inter-| Ut of six the accusation is an unjust two hes wide and which she fas est in the people standing about, 1f | 9n¢ the real truth being that their | tens about her face at night as we there was one person more than an- | POPUlarity causes men to really run used to do by day wnen we had the other that he might mark as a vic- [After them instead of vice versa.” As a toothache tim, the detective told himself, it [ule a Widow is so sympathetic and | “It stands to reason that if you was & portly gentleman with wide | 878¢ious to all her male friends tiec up the facial muscles for eight expanse of gold watchchain across | $£€ming to so thoroughly understand hours a day it will help to counteract his chest. Approaching the h;d.fk,dw”"'r fancies that they instinctively the slipping of the otner sixteen,” she one, the detective informed him that | *°€k her society ays. And before 1 go to bed 1 en he might do well to look after that | She may, or may not, care to enter Y courage the muscles to stay in place watch and-chain carefully. The port- ;l" bonds of wedlock once more, hut A W1 by running a piece of ice gently over ly gentleman flushed red with in- )"“'”R grown accustomed to a hu v - b them as lodg as [ can stand it. But SGiisd Tnpottance J,"\“,'.I,“ .u:m‘.l.;.\h.., e r:uu\. the X g , 2 | [ m;ln v} intended to usurp the pulpit “Look here, my man!” he exclaim d of other men. She enters , of the beautious Lina Cavalieri and ed, "you may 'il‘yd detective or you "‘I".‘,']”” pleasures as far as she po A éanMé? i preach pulchritude. 1 am coming to may not be, but 1'd like you to know ;rlrn f;n and endeavors at all times a ' ( what lies upon my heart to tell you Shat 1 af & o whe tan look »||‘1‘u e them feel as comfortable Don't think because of the symy after himself, 1 don't require any-| ¢ I’” home" in her presence as they ‘ toms | have described that you are »ody to look ater me.” ¢ .‘\\(v}:n d in that of men companions growing old, that ime best part of \ “He didn't trust 6" sald 15s de "\hn\:’ ): Y||<I\’ll‘ a widow invariably G SO EO o > p 8 N " life is gone, that soon you will be of ective to me, “so I left him to his | :",’"I.'“ ; "" be of an economical : T — = s o~ e o e S T e R S no more use to anyone. This is the fate. You should have seen him five | mer marriage eneriner il |Cutting the T2 a9 e A nrvg panactipaits ot yourslifeil us ol e, aaenod have teen him five | mer marrage experience. ‘She knows| O ULLINY Mive Great Worries o omen [i"Vou Soursel make it Gor - Ther had gone, and he had collared a per- | ¢fsge) d H‘;. 'n”ui;\m\ mH‘w‘,u ‘v‘};; most : " . s are ten v\441~1‘ |ur|m~: years, perhaps fectly innocent person standing next ollar only contains cents, I ¥ N ' | 1 more, of work and enjoyment of the to him when 1,: ,|,;‘,,,\,”:4|;HE ;i_“ A]’.“‘ no one can make it go further 46 "’”'I e Not half the horre that wome it me; her wn avalanche of | of friends and picture “'H'w{ in the | zest of life in you, if you yourself de / If one wants to be safe in this world | "o She | D suppose are going to happen to them |Bricl sweeping her into an carl dst of strangers without the sup- | termine that it will be so } one must learn to distrust, the wrong equently, if anything were| DO not let _“""“" cut lemor ever do happe Vet it the na- | tomt ! t and delight of those now dear The physical si of decay that people and trust the right.” "rv convince a man of al'® Waste; w W ARTHICAC &\ hiiva atitle O e ar y 108 you notice may persist, not itness to be his wife it would ) nd ¢ for [ I a ‘ H This is the f tear=-a dread of [You change. ye Al bl 1 ractical and sensible jview e tal. Rub|look out for 1 A her 1t of childre "1\'*“' and H‘ ; "’ 1y m‘ ; It/ But what matters most is the spirit T g L : g ik fate may neve In « : : %, : B P tle f. o “l et ’-]Hl‘ 1 & ‘”,‘”y' true that a widow o Are ) that w urt R i iy : g 1at we live ¢ spint . If you 1a to a man. He Id wate e | nebulous, so vague L ng be t like. The last situation ated i [SRE tiae 20t Youth and . L . : r n : : f s 3 1 fulness ou will yourself aid their »y marrying h que fig A A ! y e ab f the whole fiye, but it one woman. | nassing N Bldaingd n: olfe o e @ e s thele + tear that haunts | Wher are called hys oo tac Of course, to some m | 1 1 e tera or IWN. and are v ymmonplace ag A foal uith commonpla ught that another man had verware fi with lemon | o0 . the man will fear the .| a disea deal with. | j, ces in your life d first th 1 cgmmon . - - = . - 1 i r point in your life ns wo | e 4 high sot AR e e, (el L ) marriage ¢ \ ' g T the d ar wary 14 the reputation of betng provert 1 thod both time and la 9, v " p point 1 Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. ' I whe as satisf 7 t dangerous if are guided | { i Forinfants, invalids and growing children. e kO g d P4 X by the lamp of reas Drive ) R Purenutrition, upbuilding thewholebody, | .. .0 *'7 ) ! . A e 5 % wly, but drive ahead Do the wor More nourishing than tea, coffee, ote L knowledae i e e o b - ot g g that of g L g t not af thoug Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price | me nd their cresture com. | dirt, but - : A — —— Eat'a litle less and eat with loy STAR HAM “Tell your mother that Star Stockinet means not only clean ham, but best ham." “T'he - A Dainty Confection—Pastry Potatoes . . : By CONSTANCE CLARKE Star Ham is smoked in this Stockinet Covering, which has kept in all the meaty fuices and Havor sound and sweet as & | | | As you slice it | :"""“-"*";""“ ol P cover the eut end Frnle with the Biockinet: th [ 49 b e Ol Lare st alice will be an - Pobe e ot e \ " \ Posanins ARMOUR i toMpany Reb Badane W . . § Phone B i Dnana. M Wb WHBAR, h and O T e LN