I a. td. Hie Bees Home Maaziitiie Page "What Are the Little iVJe Brinkley Says: God gave them the little maidg faces of all shapes and colon; and God gave them, too, a brain behind It to know how to coif the hair around It! There never wai a head of crinkly, curly hair that U vat not meant to be loose and free to garnish the face that it went with. Don't plaster your curia too tight If you are bo chosen aa to have them. Maybe you are the type of the Norse woman, with a white column of a neck that the good blood runs through WKjr T Married a Second Time By DOROTHY DIX "I married a second time," said th Contented Looking Man, "for the beat and happiest reason in the world be cause I (ell wildly, madly, passionately, r n m antlcally in love with a woman with a love such aa no boy U capable of experiencing. "I was one of the Innumerable ' vic tims of early mar riage. When I waa nothing but an Im mature, undevel oped boy my fancy waa caught by a pretty, little pink and white and (old girl. with rosy cheeks and baby blue eras, and yel low curia. "We had the same tasts In loe mftp cream soda, and oar steps matched In daneins, and from these great and unmistakable evidences of naataal sympathy, we decided that wa ware created for each other, and had been myaurteusly brought together by aa All Wiae Providence. Tt la ene of the greatest blessinss of poverty that most boys haven't enough money to marry their first sweetheart, and by the time tbey have aoeumulated the wherewithal to go to housekeeping on they have recovered completely from their attack of caU love. a so they are saved from wrecking their Uvea on the rocks of a youthful marriage. "Unhappily for me, X. waa aa orphan and had oome Into a large fortune on my twenty-first birthday, so there was nothing to stand la the way of my In dulging In any kind of fatal folly to which I felt Inclined, and before I was tt I bad done my best to ruin my life THE 6nderbmHotel THIRTY FOURTH STREET AT PARK AVENUE The most conveniently situated hold in Neio VorJfc At the ThMy-thbJ Street Subway WALTON H. MARSHALL sfeaajsr my Tke Men Who Really Fell in Love at Middle Age Tells His Story. by making an utterly unsuitable mar riage. "Understand me, I am saying nothing agalnat my little child wife Ood rest her soul In whatever Heaven she in habits. She was aa ahe was made, a good, dear, sweet little doll baby, a little girl who stayed sixteen to the end of the chapter, whoso Interests In the world were bound by her own little circle, and whose aspirations never reached higher than pink candle shades or a nsw hat. "She never grew up, and I did grow up. ' That was our cruel mlafortunate. She stayed Just where she waa when wa war married, and I went on atudy lng, reading, learning from books and men, getting the bigger and the broad er outlook on life a million new Intereata developing for me every hour of tha day. "I tried to take my wife with me. I would talk to her of my hopes, and plans, and aspirations, but she did not understand and would complain that the thing that I waa ambttloua to do would take ma away from home, and that we were so comfortable aa wo were. "Not two years after we were mar ried I faced the ghastly fact that I had made tha most teriiNe of all mistakes, that I waa bound for life to a woman with whom I had not one single thought In common, a woman who could no mora be a companion to me than eould the Dresden statuette upon the mantelpiece. Worss still, I knew with deadly cer tainty that my boyish fancy for her had flickered out, and In the light of my manhood a knowledge I realised that I had never really loved her at alL I had only Imagined I had. "I went through years of this hide ous mockery of keeping up the pretense of sentiment and happy home and hus band, and all tha balance of tha dom eatle drama, and then my child wife died Just as the gold In her hair waa turning to aahea. "I waa left a middle-aged man who had drunk deeply of a bitter cup. I was aadly wise in matters of sentiment, and cynically auspicious of the vagaries of the human heart, and If you had told me that I should ever marry again I should hava laughed you to acorn. I had tried It 'Never again. Baaldaa, I should have said, I am too old for romance. That belongs to boyhood, to sweet one-and-twenty, not tha cautious forties." "And then the one woman came along, and I went down before her Ilka ripe grain before the alekle. X was tha man, mature, knowing ail that I needed, all that I wanted, my tastea formed, my Ideals crystallised, and when I found the woman who embodied my every desire. I knew that there could be no mlatakea, no disappointments, no disillusioning. "And I found out that a boy's love la as water unto wine compared to a man's love; that a boy's passion Is the shadow of a flame to the conflagration of a man's; that a boy's romance is pale and colorless to the pomp and aplendor of the romance with which tha mature man crowns his love. "A boy's level A child's fan ay t I tea you It is this love of the middle-aged man that strikss the fire out of men's souls. By tha grace of Ood tola came to me, and that la why I married a aeev ond time. TJIF, BEE: Girls Made Of?" $3 ' L " '" Sf' In a generous tide, with gray eyes and straight, flaxen hair. Try not curling it, and sweep it round your bead, and see how It will shine In plain gold bands. Maybe you are wearing your black hair dull and flat, with a face that is not well-modeled enough for plain, smooth hair. Try it feathered around your face and knotted high. A merry, dark, characterless but pretty and Impish little face needs a softening mist and the snap of curls. And ah-h-h! Maybe you're the boy-girl with the slender face, tanned golden, the big hazel eyes that make It eloquent, the curved lips, the firm, slender chin, the full throat and hair pure amber. I The Mystery of Stonehenge It Is Not Known Who Erected the Strange Monument of Stones "SO wMJmwk A View of the Ruins at GARRETT P. 8ERVIS9. The remarkable ruins of dtonehange. England's most impressive manument of antiquity, which were sold at auction the other day for fK.OOO, are Interesting, hot so muoh for themselves alone aa for what they represent. Similar monuments exist In various) parts of Europe, North Africa, tha Mediterranean Islands, and western and southern Asia. They all appear to belong to an early period of human . development, which might be called the megullthlo, or "big stone" age, with aa much propriety as we speak of tha "old atone," the "new stone," tha "copper," tha "bronse" and tha "iron ages." The term "megallthlo monuments' la applied to all of these strange objects, and soma aitohaalogtata are disposed to believe that there was a mogallthlo peo ple, or raoa, which spread widely over the old world at some undated epoch of the remote past, and whose chief charae- tertetlo waa tha habit of erecting rough structures composed of huge stones, In cluding some blocks of so great also and weight that wa cannot but wonder how they were handled and poised without the aid of modern machinery. At Btonehenxe for Instance tha re are great stones more than twenty feet In length firmly set up on end and crowned at the top with cross blocks ths largest of which probably weigh as much as seventeen tons. English history Is not old enough to tell us who lifted those stones. These monuments vary In form and arrangement. At Btonehrags there la a great double circle with an "altar stone" near the center. Sometimes there Is only an upright stone or several up rights, unconnected. Hometlmes a broad, flat stone la supported on uprights llks a table. . Sometimes the structure is man ifestly a tomb or sepulcher, and at other times a dwelling place. Occasionally It takes the place of a rude fortification, or a fortified habitation. In most caaes there are indications that a religious pur- poae was served by the monument. Often, aa at Stonehenge, the arrange ment of the various parte of the monu ment suggests that astronomical obser vations were employed by the builders la planning their work, and that the structure afterward served as a kind of observatory for watching tha movements OMAHA. MONDAY, OCTOUKtt 18, 1015 f i Stonehenge, showing the Massive Task of the Builders. of certain heavenly bodies, and particu larly for fixing tha dates for the sun's arrival at critical points In Its apparent annual circuit of tha heavens, such aa the equinoctial and solstitial polnta which determine the division of tha sea sons. Ths msgallthlc monuments in different parte of the world were certainly not all built at the same time. Stonehenge be longs to a rather lata period In mega Advice to Lovelorn BKantxoa tatjutax- lie Mast Tell Her. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am engaged to a young man for the last two years and ex pect to be msrrled soon. We were to be married last year, but I was sick. W have been having a number of dis putes pver my fiance writing to a former sweetheart. Letst winter she became very sick and her alster wrote and told Mm, and now they have been writing ever since. He has not told her he was en- faged and he will not write and tell her. Is says hs cares for her only In a friendly way and hs worships me when I am with htm. He says X shouldn't worry about her. I gavs up wrKIng to my boy friends for nlm and think he should do likewise. NEWARK U1RU Tour fiance owes It to both of you, aa well as to tha girl with whom ha la cor responding, to tell her of his engagement. It la really most unfair of all to bar for him to be writing to her without her realising that he Is on the ave of mar riage. Only a cad will take such ohanoes with a woman's happiness. Do Ton Know That England and Swsdsn are said to be the two healthiest countries in Burepe. Farseee lay their dead on da k ham as, or "towers of silence," where tha vul tures clean the bones, which In a month are removed and deposited In deep wells containing the dust of many generations. To cure hlooougiha, fill a glass with water, draw a deep breath throv.gh the mouth, take a mouthful of water, held the glass before you above your head, raise your eya so that they can see tha bottom of the glass without throwing your hsad back, awallaw tha water and then breathe out slowly through tha Copyright, IMf, Intern! News Service. know such a girl. And she wears her hair drawn back in careless locks like a young knight's or Peter Pan's own bobbed noggin! Maybe your face is the three-cornered, piquant one, with the eyes set high, the mouth small like a bud, the eyebrows cleanly arched. Why, then of course you are of the lucky crew who can part their hair straight in a line from the crown of their head to above their nose and make two smooth-drawn curtains of it. There's a girl with a nodesrript face, just a blonde, merry, American face that has its "pretty days," but can boast no special beauty, unless It's the beauty of a whole llthlo building. But they af seem to mark an Intermediate atep In human advance between tha neolithic, or "later stone" age, and the age Of tha metals. Stonehenge may have been erected In tha "bronse" age, while other megallthlo monuments date from the close of the neolithic But It Is to be remembered that these "ages" were not simultaneous In different part of tha earth. They were stagea of culture, and of advance, not keeping exact atep with each other In different localities, so that In one part of the world people might still ha in the "stone" age while In another part they had progressed to the age of "bronse," or of "Iron." Even to day there are places where savage tribes have hardly got out of the "atone" sge. But the impulse to build megallthlo monuments, or structures composed of huge blocks, arranged In a characteris tic manner, seems to hava spread In a very remarkable way from oontlnent to ooutlnont, and tha builders may fairly be regarded aa tha first real architects, capable of erecting permanent works. Whether It waa the gradual spreading ef tha raee whloh first acquired this skill that carried tha megailthlc style Into such widely separated lands, or whether ths fams of their works, and the dealra to lml late them, caused other peoples to learn and practice ths new art Is a question that cannot be definitely an swered. But Mr. Peat In his book on "Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders," says that ths most probable theory of tha origin of tha rasgallthlo monument la that this style of building was brought to tha various countries where we find It by a single raoa In an Immense migra tion, or series of migrations, and ha ad duces the authority of Dr. Dunoan Mao kenila In support of this view. Such monuments as Stonehenge, then, may be looked upon aa examples of what man was eventually able to do In the way of building after ha had emerged from tha state of low mentality which kept him confined for shelter to natural cavema In the rocks, and temporary coverings ef Interwoven branohea. The, akin-clad man who first set a few flat stones on edge and placed another on top for a roof was ths father of architec ture, and originated that great art whose mightiest triumph waa, at one time, the huge stone circle at Stonehenge. some red mouth and a head of sunny hair, who can look stunnnlng with the hair made most of piled high above her face In ripples. And perhaps If you are beloved of the gods you have the "sculptor's face" the face of broad, brow, broad cheek-bones, broad chin; the face of surfaces and planes, the purely-turned face that does not need any hair at alt so sweetly Is It modeled. Brush your, hair back, so all the world can see the whole of your face it doesn't matter what you do with It! But if you Insist here is the perfect face for the "bobbed" effect! Little Love Exists Small Towns in By KLLA WHEELHR WILCOX. (Copyright, 1915, Star Company.) It la a strange fact that In small towns so little affection or love exists among the Inhabitants. One would think It sure to be found In the the quiet country hamlets, where tha few people are de pendent upon one another for enjoy ment. But Instead we find Jealousy otitlrtlam and in difference In such places. In the average country hamlet one needs to be 111 or an objsot of charity to bring out tha tendsrness In ths hearts of no. i V. ' -V - :vrS..jl neighbors. Let It be known that sickness cr poverty has visited a household, and the tongue or gossip Is silenced and t.. Indifferent -or dtsasreeable air gives pwee to solicitous klndnese-whlls the trouble lastst But! wa cannot all In this world be Invalids ; or beggars; yet wa all love aympathy and companionship and appreciation. Many women In the country love to play Lady Bountiful merely for the grati fication of being regarded by those deemed on a lower plan. But a greater nature finds pleasure In showing affec tionate interest In an euU on whom It can bestow nothing bin rrlendshlp. Think every dsy, how large the world Is compared to your own town, yet do not despise your town In consequence. Respect Is aa part of the Great Consoli dated Company of Human Beings, and make It aa Interesting place as pos sible by your own mental, moral and social qualities. Do not let your minds narrow down to tha limits of your town; do not let your Ideas become dwarfed, your ambitions Stunted, your' outlook Umltsd. There Is no need of It In this day and age of low-priced literature and free libraries. You can keep In meual touch with tha whole world If you wish to do It. There la no need of confining your In formation to the social column of your oountry paper. Read tha magaxinea and weeklies and book reviews when you cannot obtain the books. Think of yourself as an Important factor in the world not merely of your town or churoh. Try and be broad and large In your outlook. Tbe moment you find yourself dwell ing on thoughts of neighborhood gossip and pstty scandals, turn your back on your Isaser self and search for your real self the noble, great-hearted being you were deatlned to be. Read history and mediate upon tha Uvea of great men and women. When you are about to paaa Mary Jones by without speaking to her be cause you beard some one had suspected her of questionable conduct, atop and think of Joan of Arc, Mme. Roland, Father Damlen, Nathan Hale, Abraham Llnooln or a hundred other colossal fig- 1 urea you can call to mind. They will scar away all p-tty prejudices and make you ashamed of yourself. Think of our fllgriin fathers and mothera and all the wonderful strength I of character it requlrea to live their By Nell Brinkley Jealousy, Criticism mi In differettct in Such Places Advises Against Narrowness Uvea In those dangerous and difficult tlmea. It will make your own cares and troubles seem trivial. Avoid Judging humanity from th standards set up In your town. Ba lib era, and remember that climate and. environment hava much vo do with peo, pie's ideas of behavior. Try and cultU. vate a loving Interest in your aenociatea Study, think, read, work and love. Sympathise with your neighbors' alms ambitions, ' erforts, hopes 'and trial,! Cheer them all you can, and never allow a thought of Jealousy or nvy to antea your mind If some one seems to you ta be succeeding better thk.i you or yours Do not permit yourself to be small and. petty because you live in a amali town, Be so Urge of soul that you will dignify the town In tha mind of any one who knows It Is your place of residence. HOW WOI'EfJ AVOID OPERATIONS Ly Taking Lydia E. Pink ham'a Vegetable Compound. Cleveland. Ohio "My left si da pained ma so for several years that I expectoa to nave to undergo an opera tion, but tbe first bottla I took of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cora pour 1 relieved meoC the pains la my side and ) continued Its I became) and fre from pains. I bad asked several doe tore If there was anything I eould take to help me and they said then was nothing that they knew of. I am thankful for such a good medicine and will always give It the highest praise." Mrs. C. II. Giurmo, 1663 Constant EL, Cleveland, Ohio. Hanover, Fa. "I suffered from fe male trouble and the pains were so bad at times that I could not sit down. Tha doctor advised a sever operation but my husband got me Lydia E. Pin ham's Vegetable Compound and I experienced great relief in a short time. Now I feel like a new person and caa do t bard day'a work and not mind It. What joy and happiness It is to ba well once more. X am always ready and willing to speak; good word for the Compound." Mrs. Ada Wilt, 803 Walnut SC. Hanover, Pa. If there are gar eompUeatleat yo& lo not nadrrstaad write t LveUa EJ Pinkham Medicine Co. (roBftdeatUl) Ljaa,Mass. Your letter will be epa?i. read and aaswerrd by a woman tuidj held la strict coB-lUeacc 3