9 ITh e Bees Horn e Maaz I n e P a Women Too Prone to Overlook Faults in Fight for Equality "Between Seasons!" By Nell Brinkley No, Women Don't Dress to 4 'Please the Men" Copyright. IMS, Intern! News Borle. Br KLLA WHEELKR WlliOOX. Ity A CAN' DID WOMAN'. Tin: iikk: omaha. fmiuy, may js, vmo. st 1 ) fx - r hi ' Copyright. 1515, Star Company. Roe Cecil O'Neill, artist, poet and cumpowr (as well e very beautiful woman), has coma forth In a strong In dictment against man and his treatment vf women. Hie- says: "Woman lias yot to learn that who Is far greater than man. For cen turies she has borne the greatest Insult of the world, hut she Is now to be emancl l.ti'd." Hhe declares that man has al ways shackled wmnn, first with chains, then with necklets, then later t li e y shackled her with words. Mis O'Neill rays: "Man taught woman IF K that chastity was woman's greatest virtue. Even now only one thins, can 'ruin' a woman. That word hould he non-existent, for it represents false ideals. He taught her that prudence and obedience and all the gentler at tributes were fine and womanly. Thla was convenient for the husband and it was convenient for the father before the hus band. And women have believed the silly thing." Then Miss O'Neill proceeds and says: If the world were only shock proof to everything but uKllnese we would have been far more advanced than we are now. Things should be considered for their Intrinsic virtue and practicability. Morol shocks are absurd. I have a thrilling hope that women are going to do something glorious In the arts-" She sav: "I am always indignant when women am denied creative power in art. It is stupid to expect free things from a race of slaves. "Man has damned as intuition woman s greatest virtue, knowledge. What she knows man must figure out lalorlously through logic Men have been the spe cialists, women have done all the rest. Women, have been the carpenters, the doctors, the nurses, the cooks, the dip lomats, the cduestors. Just think what the will do now when she gains her freedom. s . The great trouble W'lth woman is that she does hot do well any one oi no things which she has attempted to do In any of these lines In past centuries. Motherhood has been a complete failure, else today the world would not be, sunk In wareWMothers have given then child ren .h-gone. toy pistols and tdy soldiers as rkyttilr.K. . ... ? Mother hivo mstllled Into their t-ITld-ron i&t the Ideal that they war to make the beet possible use of the time In school that qliy might become noble men. and nobte women, but.tbat they might sur pass thoir fellow students. Always this idea of competition and struggling: for supremacy ha. been the slogan breathing through the words of mothers, who urged their children toward attainment. Mothers havo not taught their children thw have - allowed them to misuse and maltreat dogs and cats as, playthings, and If the cat scratches., or , the dog bites in retaliation the children ( i.rtnu.tina in the causes receive- jiw .... .. . - ... that lead to this result, but are permitted to believe the animal vicious and deserv ing of further abuse or death 3" a pun ishment. Not one child in one thousand umi ben taught by Us mother to he sym-j rathelc, kind and friendly to the unfor-; lunate classes and to show a special con- i.i,tion tn noor children when they are. encountered In school or in play. The spirit of universal motherhood Is almost j an unknown quantity in the hearts of mothers. It Is the, she-wolf Instinct .ot fighting for and protecting her own. not the divine- sth-lt of motherhood which would protect and help all children. Mother have not sucree.sl as cooks; thev'have not properly fed their children or-'their men folk or themselves; .thsy have not applied themselves to a study of whit means nutritious food, well pre ler.d. and Inexpensively provided. The hestVooKa.tn the world have always been men. Women have rot included order in their icllglius Ideals yet. Arder is heaven's first law. The vast preponderance of untidy, disorderly and badly managed horn Is appalling. There Is no possible rxriti .for a woman who allows her hus l.HnJ ai'kl her children to enter a disor derly atiri chaotic, home. The most beau tiful occupation in life, the most interest ing and uplifting is the creating of a hom where neatness, order, system, comfort and beauty make themselves apparent to even the casual eye. r-i... un ten disorderly and uncom- furtaolr. homes to one disorderly business office. If women wsnt the worm to oe .hock proof, as Mis O'Neill says, to everything but ugliness, why do they not Ugin to illustrate their Ideas Tn their homes? Ancient Greece carried out Miss O'Neill'' beauty theory in this respect, but we have yet to learn that it lifted tlie stains ot woman to a high altitude. The writer of this article believes woman should have equsl franchise. Bhe i-elicves in woman's freedom from flnan i lal dependence upon man; she believes In liberty and usefulness for woman; but does nut believe woman has proven hcrM-lf to be man's suerlor nor that the removal of all moral restrictions the euxnee of all moral shocks would help to produce a gieater race. Tuerr nas been altogether too much talk of that kind during the last ten years. There have been too many women parading through the world, talking about tre necessity for woman to "develop herself along the lines of least resist ance, and to ''express her own Individual ity." no matter if it necessitated her flinging to the winds all domestic, social and moral obligations. But the world and the raee Is never to be bettered by the type of woman who displays her Idesls alth a perpetual cigarette and an annual divorce. Woman will never do anything glorious In art until she illustrates In her own life be art of iflorioua aomanhood. Sis will never show herself man's superior by adopting Ins vices and hl licenses and rlllinj them "liberty'" and emancipation Trout "mural shocks." Ntll Erinkley Say: :- rx May . la a woolly Iamb that Inhabits the changeable place on the teeter-board. , between Summer anA Winter! He wabbles gently towards one end nd Winter 'goes up and we get a spit of cold rain. in. the face that; makes our back dream it has snow down it, and the birds fluff up their mufflers round their necks and say, "Sweet-babee- ' in a plaintive call that Read It Here See nrTBOsvcnra ' EARLE WILLIAMS aa Tosaaor Bacalay ANITA STEWART as The Ce4dss .Written, by ' Gouverneur Morria COa f the Ksst VotabU rig. ores la" Asaettoaa Ussratare) Dramatised Into a Photo-Play by CXAMX.M W. OOXnAS. Author oX "The Perils) ef raoUaa "Tae Bxpiotta of Stelae" (Copyright, 115, by Star Company.) Copyright. 1915. by The Star Co, All For- etgn Minn La ueserveo. STNOPMS'toFrPREVIOl'a CHAPTER. After the tragla death of John Ames bury, his prostrated wife, one of Amer ica's greatest beauties, dies. At her death Prof. Btllliter, an agent of the In terests, kidnaps the beautiful 1-year-old beby girl and brings her up in a Pr. dise where she sees no man,"' but thinks she Is taught by angels, who instruct her for her mission to reform the world. At the age of IA she Is suddenly thrust Into the world, where asewls of the Interests are ready to find her. By an accident the hero sees hsr first and hides with her In the Adlrondacks. SECOND INSTALLMENT.' And so she sat staring Into space. And for the first time In her life she found that ambition la stronger than the mere wish to exist and have a good time. Suddenly, with an excited laugh, she caught up a great piece of gorgeous an cient church embroidery that lay across the back of a sofa, and dropped It skill fully so that It hung from her shoulders to her feet like some royal robe; still laughing she dsrted to one of those glass topped tables In which things curious and rare are often kept From this she took a golden crown that she had been taken from the grave of some old Egyptian queen two gold snakes, their heads .and tails twisted together. And she put thla upon her head and went and stood In front of a long mirror. Then she began to play-act to look very haughty and dignified or very gracious and .conde scending, to extend her hand and to be kissed by imaginary courtiers; she was half in earnest, half laughing. Xhe heard a soft footstep; there was no time to biscard the crown and the robe. Blushing crimson, and feeling very ridiculous, she turned and saw one of the footmen. His wooden face showed no surprise at her etc en trio costume; he did not even appear to see it He carried a small sil very tray on which was a white card. "Who Is It BentadgeT" "Mr. Barclay, madam." Her impulse was to run to the great hall stair and call down to Tommy. But he hesitated. Then her eye roved once more, and she caught a glimpse of her self in the long mirror. i i i i . r "Tell him." she said, "that I am notjtut at home." Tommy, sure of his welcome, had been told that Miss Blackstone was at home, snd had leisurely followed the footman upatairs to the door of the little sitting room. , When he heard her says coolly, even coldly. "Tell him that I am not at horns." he felt as If he had been struck between the eyes. And then anger seised him. For she had promised thst she would be sends you back to Chrlso- It at the Movies. at home . on that particular afternoon, and now here she was s saying that-she wasn't Of course there was nothing that ha could do but turn and go. And, of course, he did' these things. f .."When he was in the opea air he drew a long breath.. .' "I'll get out of this damned elty," he ; said, "and if she happens to want me 'for anything she'll find that I'm the one that's not at home." 1 Like many other rich men, Barclay owned a hunting preserve In the Adlor- dacks. and seldom went near it- But the .'five granite, mountains surrounded by ; dense forests thickly sprinkled with lakes jwaa one of Tommy's favorite stamping grounds, it wasn t so mucn mat ne en Joyed killing animal er seeing how many fish he could catch as that once In a while he liked to be alone, and to keep alive i;d comfortable by his own exer tions. ." The preserve was real wilderness. One dirt road led from the railroad station at four corners to the main camp at the head of the biggest lake, but otherwise at the head of the biggest Iske, but other wise the region boasted only a few nar row trails. And you had to make your way from one landmark to another aa best you could. And either you had to take plenty of condensed food In tins or trust to your skill with rod and rifle to keop you from going hungry. Tommy would leave the train at Four Corners, hire a team, and ret himself put down somewhere along the road leading to the main camp. He would then choose a direction almost at random, walk until He was tired, build a low lean-to shelter, have supper or not, according to luck, make a workmanlike fire to keep his feet warm, curl up In his blanket and pass a luxurious night Waking at daylight bruised, sore, cold and for some reason known only to those who love the woods. lerfectly happy and contented. his kit on these trips consisted of a blankot, a frying pan. a kettle, a change of underclothes, a very light twenty-two caliber rifle, a four-ounce fly rod, a com pass, a pipe, tobacco and a few other odds and ends, suoh as matches and ssJt and a pair of field glasses, and an Ox lord book of verse. One night a few days after Mary Black- stone hsd ' treated him so cavalierly, Tommy camped on high ground by the headwaters of a brook. Just bk of his shelter of balsam boughs a knob of granite stood up clear above the surrounding forest. Tommy always called It the hi'b, because It was almost the exert center of the great ring, traced roughly by the fire mountains, and afforded glorious views of them and of the low country, lakes, forest and swamp that Intervened. It was Tommy's favorite camping ground. He would sit for hours on top of the hub, his legs hanging over Into space gaslng and dreaming. On the particular night In question he climbed the hub after a fine supper of ana ruinea grouse, filled a pipe and watched the day fade and the stars j come out. What he enjoyed moat wag the sense of solitude; civilisation, of course, was within reasonable reach In any direction, but Tommy did not feel j as If it wss. He felt as If there wasn't 'another human being within hundreds of miles. There were men at the main ramp, only fifteen miles away, but lie protested that there weren't, slid that l e wss in ths heart of a vast unexplored inaV and we wish it Wasn't foolish-looking to put on furs again. And then May ambles toward the other end and Summer, laughing, little Summer, with her butterflies and .her wipsy, parasol, and her bare-neck-and-arms, with the soft air blowing on them, up she goes! And we shut our eyes and go off camping! And we begin to count how many white socks we hare, and wonder where our fishing tackl country which no other white man had ever visited. Presently the moon began to rise, and that always made. Tommy, mournful, and sentimental. If heVhmd been a dog he would have thrown - back 'his head anJ howled. Being a young man be sighed, and began to Imagine that he and she (a romantic edition of Mary Blackstone with better manners and; less worldll ness), bad come to this wilderness to escape from the outside world and to make their home.. What fun It would be. How he would work to make her happy and comfortable. How easy It would be for them to get along forever without anybody else to bother them.' . Just then his head fell forward on his breast, and ' he . dreamed that he smelt boiling cauliflower.'. It .was a smell to which he wss particularly sensitive, and which he particularly hated. 1 He waked with an angry start.' and the smell per sisted. His offended nostrils quivered as the nostril of a wild animal quiver at the the Ufe-giving, muscle-building "meat" of the wheat. It is ready-cooked, ready-to-eat. Close the bake-oven for awhile . and serve Shredded Wheat in many dainty, delicious combinations with ripe, luscious berries and all sorts of fruits and green vegetables. Two biscuits, with milk or cream, or fresh fruits, make a complete, nourishing meal. The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls. N. Y. is. and where our pet slouch-hat la wadded away. And ail the Summer doings begin to march out In a row and crook their fingers at you! 1 Just now it's between seasons! One day the mirage ot Summer shimmers before our spellbound eyes and the next we are standing with first our heels and then our toes to the grate-fire, and the cross but pretty Wlnter-glrl tn up! May ii a woolly lamb. And lambs are mighty whimsy. smell of man. He was angry and disgusted.- And his feelings for the people who hsd not only invaded, bis solitude, but bad brpughia .ceullflpwer, more than one possibly, into the northern woods, were not fit to print' HIS only satisfac tion was that In the morning he would hunt them down and tell them what he thought of them.' r .But he had a bad night, and when at last he did get to sleep he slept so heavily that daybreak didn't wake him. By the time he had washed and break fasted, it was 7:80. Which Is a Shocking hour In the woods. , . , He cllmtied to the top of the bub. Field glasses lit hand he began to searoh the whole landscape far. and near for traces of human beings. But the woods were so dense that It was like looking for a needle In a haystack. When he hoped (to see, and what he did presently see, was smoke, a pale amethystine column ef It rising near the base of one of the moun tains. To find the fire, or the remains, of It from which that smoke was rising The Closed Season the Eake-Ovee We have built a two-miWon dollar bakery with which to supply you with a perfect whole wheat bread. Make our bake-oven your bake oven during the Summer months by serving .kredctect WHieaft would not be very difficult He took Its bearings very carefully. It was directly between him nd the smallest ot three barren cliffs which forced the first up thrust ef the mountain, and aa he Judged about half a mils this side of the cliff. At the base of that cliff waa a rattle snake den, and Tommy waa In the habit of giving It a pretty wide berth, for the snakes sometimes wandsred long dir ts ncss from their favorite ledges In search . of food and water, and a good woodsman like Tommy preferred that they should do their hunting In. Peace. "Just like a man who would bring caul I flower Into the woods to csmp In snake country,'.' he thought; "wonder If I can pink one up With these glosses." He focused bis glasses en tlte base of the cliff and amused himself tor some either the distance waa too great or there was none In evidence, and he was about to give up when suddenly a man walked casually Into the field of his visionand out of It I (To lie Conlnued Tomorrow.) Fsahlon Is a fearful and a wontterfuk thing! As "the lnd blowsth where It llsieth," so Madame la Mode drives her blind vic tims before her. all heedless of what depths of ugliness she forces them through, only Intent on turning everyone Irto a more or less caricatured llkrnees of her sister. Then, having achieved her end. she Im mediately rushes to the opposite ex tremewhereupon her staves cast aside all the fripperies they have so hardly ac quired, twist their fslr locks Into some freshly outrageous style, change even the shape of their gracious forms at her be hestand the hearts of dressmakers, milliners snd corsetleres rejoice greatly. One of the most curious things regard ing a new fashion Is that It Is almost si ways originated by some fair one whose social position would certainly give her ne power In this direction. There Is food purely for Irenlo laugh ter In the sight of the great ones of the eurth meekly transforming themselves Into frights merely that a footllrht fa vorite chanced te look charming In some weird costume, specially d (Signed to draw attention to her own good points. There are some women so well dowered by nature that no monstrosity of fashlee can conceal their rood looks but such peerless perfection belongs te few In deed, and thousands of might-be pretty girls conceal their prettlness by the wear ing of clothes that do not suit them. Instead of taking to their hearts the ex ample of the lovely and gracious woman who for many years has formed a charm ing object lesson for her feminine sub Jects In the art ef dress. Fashion should be adapted net slav ishly followed. Extremes are always ugly, snd surely nothing In the world could persuade a woman to wear a color unbecoming to herself merely that It Is "fashionable" once she frees herself suf ficiently from the thrall of her tyrant to enable her to gase seetngly Into her mirror. 1 That women dress to excite the en vious admiration ot. ether women and not that ef man, is surely conclusively proven by the fact that they so frequently wear garments and adopt styles that are ugly In themselves. Man's eye for beauty and sense of fit ness Is Infinitely stronger then that ef woman. - i ' He may not know that a dress or hat has survived from last season but he will know In an Instant If It la becoming to Its wearer, and fittingly went at the moment : '.-. '. The overdressed woman Is a horrifying spectacle to any man yet It Is an ad mitted fact that women tn these days rabitualty overdress, and for msrntiur and business wear don garments that would better befit full dress occasions. In-Shoots. When rogues fall out lawyers begin te cut melons. Auld acquaintance with a large wad Is seldom forgot. The man who Intends to pay Is never so anxious te borrow. Sometimes the . searchlight seems te spatter the subject with mod. When a small man gets on a htge perch he looks smaller than ever. ' ' for fk c t ! i j : ! :( ; t i '' I 1 ;l. i: ! 1 i i i . i i ! ' I :- ! ' ' V 1 ! ; i . !! i ' I i i i 1 I t I -i i I i I i : j . i r i i i I ! j : i j i t I ; Hi ! ) t i. i t 5 i i I I i, i I !' r t i . It, i f j i j i