THK HKK: OMAHA, TCTKSPAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1!1G. ood Things for the Table Offerings of the Market Household Hints The "Skyscraper" Hat Grows Still Taller in the Latest Paris Models Republished by Special Arrangement with Harper's Bazar. r coi del Women with Doctor Habit9 Are Burden to Families Br ELI. A WHEELER WILCOX. Copyright, 191. Star Company. In ptt of the fact that 111 health la unfashionable today, there are hundreds of women to be found who regard their silments with fond reverence and who anticipate the coming of tha "doctor" s tha event of tha day or week, "these women hs" nothing tha matter with them but their unoccupied or per verted minds and their craving for dis traction. They are found in all clnsies and lo ralltles. bu; flourish In comfort and opulence, rather than In poverty, for poverty as a rule enforces labor, and labor loaves no time for Imagination or hys teria. Once let a woman acquire the "doctor habit1' and she Is as difficult to cure as, an opium victim, and aa hopeless to reason with. She resents being told she looks well ?nd times drags heavily when she has no occasion to send a hurry call for the doc tor. But a slight cold, m little fatigue, over eating, or a late cup of coffee or tea and consequent wakefulness will open the way for this hurry call; and afie dons her most becoming negligee frown, sits bol stered up In bed and with eaeer, ex pectant eyes, watches the door for the entrance of the one human be'ng who Is not bored and wearied with her do n riptlon of her symptoms-t he doctor. How sympathetic he Is. and how sweet such symnahty is to heriAnd he tells her hnt she knew was true, but what her old-hearted family would not believe, tiint she Is a very sick woman, and needs a nurso and afterward a change of air and freedom from nil car. Dear, good doctorl How bleak the world would be without him and his kind! Meantime the husband who Is working twelve, hours a day In order to keep his business up to the standard where he can pay employes for working eight, comes home with his head in a whirl, longing for a quiet evening of domestic happl-ti-ss. and finds the house all excitement. Madams has had "a bad attack." and the doctor and the nurse are both with i her. he husband realises what this means Keeks of loneliness and. expense and dis comfort; dining alone, coming home to desolation and gloom but he knows how useless it is to utter one protest. He will only seem heartless and precipitate an other attack of hysteria. So he puts on his moBt serious expres sion of concern and visits the Invalid and hears all about the complicated symptoms, and is duly sympathetic and tells the doctor to spare no pains or ex pense In his efforts to save madame's life and the curtain goes down again on the little farce he has been accustomed to Bartlctpate In year after year at in tervals. This Is no overdrawn picture. It Is an absolute portrait of hundreds of idle, purposeless, selfish, hysterical women in the world. , Sometimes the spectators' pity for tho husband is lessened by the consciousness that ha has in a measure been instru mental in , bringing about these Condi tions. He has allowed business to absorb his whole time and energy, and he has had no leisure to give to his wife. Bhe has pined for distraction, for entertainment, and, not being rich in resources, she has turned to tha contemplation of her phys ical sensations until she has become a monomaniac upon the subject. To be ill and have the household upset about her condition Is her only diversion. But with the world st woman's feet today, and every possible opportunity for self-Improvement within her grasp, what a pity that she should waste one rtv nf this beautiful life in thinking of V hvtt AlmnrAirm which her own mind caused and can heal. A half hour given each- day to sys tematic deep breathing, and a cutting down of her food supply to a few simple, nutritious dishes, right exercise and laths, and right thoughts, and nature would bring harmony, without drugs or doctors or nurses. But how useless to preach these truths to the hysterical vic tims of doctor dissipation. Then the pleasure of talking about the illness afterward to callers is such a natinfactlon! In country places one finds the same type of woman. Bhe Is frequently single ami past her first youth, and the doc tor's vlplts aro a solace to her lonely hours. While we can sympathise with her situation, yet we must think she would be better off were she to be thrown out upon the world and forced to for get her ailments In an active battle for enUtcnce as a "bachelor girl." Work a purpose cheerfulness a desire to make hspplncss for others these are a few of the antidotes to the "doctor habit." What Women Are Doing The first savings bank was Instituted i? a woman, Prlscllla Wakefield, who in augursted a hank scheme for the en couragement of thrift among children of Tottenham toward tho end of the eight eenth century. Mrs. Vincent Astor has offered prises, amounting to K.iW, for a national hous ing competition, the object of which Is to make the English language, American cltixenahip and American Ideals stand ards of living In every community. Mrs. Thomss A. Edison, the wife of the famous inventor, in denouncing the present fashions. declares American women have no originality, but follow the leaders of fashion blindly whether the style of dress la becoming or not. The Montclair (N. J.) co-operative kitchen, it is announced, has in a year la.ied the experimental stage. A perfect delivery service, the chairman ol the eiecutlve committee says. Is maintained for housekeepers who wish meals sent to their houses ready to serve. Mrs. Maude Murray Miller, member of the board of moving picture censors In Ohio, still holds her place, although ths governor has done his best to have an other woman appointed la her place. It has been decided that she Is not under the civil service commission, through which the governor wished to have her Miss Phtlaletha Mlchelaon is the only woman attorney In California who spe rlallses In criminal law. Hlnoe her gradu ation. In 11S. Mias Mlchelson has served as a juvenile court commissioner In Los Angeles for four years and for three years and was a special lecturer at the University of Southern California and a director of this Oeorga Junior Republic. . . ...LI'.-- If . ''Sr IP 1! 'V i in . . ! 1 t ill m Reasons Why Nearly All Women Long for Love One of the most Important questions frequently asked by women is whether love Is an absolute necessity on their part. Most certainly it is, for the world Is a cold, cheerless place for the un happy woman who has never known what true love really Is. It la only after true love comes to the fore that a female really lives; before Its appearance she merely exists; after love's tender beams Btrlke her life path she Is transformed, and not she alone; everything to her takes on a more beautiful appearanoe the most sordid things of life become brighter. Therefore, love ought to play a most Important part In the lives of women; In fact. It should be the chief end of their existence. They have found occu pations that our grandmothers would have thought masculine. Scientific studies, the professions of medicine, lec turing on special subjects, gardening and clerical work, teaching, trained nursing all these have had a hand in relegating love to a back seat. In these days a large number of women aim rather at distinction; ambi tion spurs them on; they are not con tent to settle down and lead a peaceful. If uneventful, married life. They clamor for excitement; they want amusement; they refuse to be tied down to a round of domestic duties In a word, many have revolted against ths old and homely, and, be It said, correct rule which ordained that matrimony, following on love, was the be all and end all of life so far as woman was concerned. Do women benefit by the change? Pup. pose a woman I gains fame, with perhaps fortune thrown In, Is that enough? Will she bo thoroughly satisfied? She will to tha outsider who cannot read the secrets of her heart, but deep down there is a consciousness that something Is wanting. The natural instinct has been thwarted snd the woman knows It. Instinct, in truth, clamors for something withheld. After all, what Is fame to a genuine woman? Will the praise of a multitude fill a woman's heart with Joy as much as an infant lisping its first simple words? Emphatically not Martin Farquhar Tup per says: "A child in a house Is a well spring of pleasure," but many a mother might add it I also a well-spring of worry. But would she bo without It? Not for worlds. She is happier far than she knows. The young mother with her children about her is apt to let small worries cloud over the happiest time of her life. But when she looks back at it, when tha young ones have all grown up and gone from her, she wonders at herself for having Ignored home Joys. Is there a living woman of, say, S6 to JO years of age who has never loved. If only secretly? If there Is she is to be pitied. There are thousands upon thou sands who hare loved and lost, but their case is not so bad as that of the woman who has never known what love' means. It might be argued that the latter does not know what she has missed, but It Is not so. True, she may not accurately under stand just exactly what love means, but there Is a yearning for something, a feel ing which she cannot define. There Is a blank 1n her Ufe. She knows she Is In completeundeveloped, In fact. The sweet characteristics, the finer side of Her nature, the true amotions all these are stunted. It requires love to bring them to maturity, and except they reach maturity the woman may almost be said to have lived In vain. What do?s love conjure up to the aver age girl? Bhe should Just think of the day when she will fall In love and be loved, and she, In fancy,, sees a home of her own, a husband who treasures her, and very likely children who adore her. And what Is the result? Her life Is made brighter by the thoughts; she Is spurred on; she is always looking forward to a certain happy time the very thought of love, in fact, is necessary for her, so what of the reality? There are women who scoff and sneer at love outwardly, but little heed Is paid to them. Any one possessing common sense knows that they are merely cloak ing their inward feelings; they try to deceive themselves, and that Is the short and the long of It. It might be asked, following on what has been written above, la love a neces sity for man? Very many do not think It is; at any rate, not so much mm it Is to a woman. The latter Is created for the very purpose of loving and being loved more or less; to her love Is life. The woman who never loves, or never has love offered her, may be called one of life's most 'decided failures, for If a woman's life Is to be a success love is necessary. On the other hand, man Is a creature created for work. His business and a hundred and one other things take up his attention and love with him. there fore, Is not a matter of vital Importance. !! BWBBSBlBa. . ' 1 . . . . I i 4 w I M -tui... 1. - :i!:1;:!:''M!''Vi,,iI1;,!:!::!;;!: ;r i;ijt.:i ,iv Itt : i. :fxv i r i , sr,- iNJ . ii, .1. ! , ; .(in, r;!'i: I PsMMassWWssw ii I.j3LmsWs1sssB The first model Is a hat of tulle fle crln, with black velvet bow, giving a peculiar Moyen age effect. Its neighbor Is the opposite ex treme in modernity, a blue sailor trimmed with blue velvet and pom pon. The third la of "skyscraper" height, of beige-colored straw, draped with wide ribbon. The model below, a flaring "skyscraper," is of black straw with crown of black velvet The lower, upstanding effect, nevt to the light. Is a smart black straw, with ribbon cockade. The "skyscraper" on the right end Is a mixed straw and velvet com bination. ' The sky seems to be the limit for bats this spring. The new models drifting over from Paris are getting higher and higher in elevation, as well as price, Unlees somebody calls a halt the in teriors of our leading hotels and restaurants may hare to undergo some sort of reconstruction to admit the fashionable woman. As for the subway trains and Fifth avenue buses, a millinery congestion of extensive proportions may be confidently expected. Yet the new hats are charming, cays Harper's Batar. Many of the sailors are in bright colors, with the underpart of the brim In black. Pur is often combined with straw, which makes it possible to don the straw hat much earlier than usual. Besides the high hats there are, of course, large hats and small bats and some quite flat, the choice being regulated altogether by tha shape of the face. Georgette, of Paris, is making some little flat bats that strongly re semble second empire stylea. At Marcelle Demay's straw and taf fetas are combined with good effect, and many shapes are built on eighteenth century lines, with brims lifted In the back. Lewis of Paris has sent over six of his smartest models to Harper's Bazar, and striking indeed they are. There is a black straw toque with a tall and effective crown of black velvet, which makes an Immediate appeal as something quite out of the ordinary. Be comlngness Is achieved by a little bow sewed in front Mixed straw and velvet are combined to make a very chic turban. A cluster of cherries tucked under the crown drapery gives a touch of color and brings out the red woven Into the straw. Very attractive Is a black straw with a dashing little cockade of ribbon sewed in front The brim turned up from the face gives the height so necessary this sea son in turbans and toques. An aeroplsne Is strongly suggested In a creation of tulle de crln. Tht only bit of trimming is a wired black bow on a tight-fitting cap. A beige-colored straw hat recalls fashions of the early eighties. Wide ribbon Is draped in folds over the crown and forms a large rosette in the back. Navy blue velvet and a fluffy pompon are used to trim a high-crowned blue sailor. This model Is suitable for early spring and is unusually becoming. Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax Make Owe Effort. Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been going about wtih a youug man for the but six months. I have not heard front htm for two weks. Should I write? C. If. T. There la no reason why yon should not make an effort to discover what causes your friend's silence. He may be ill. In which case your friendly Interest is only fitting. He may, on the other hand, mean to break off the affair and In that case it is Just as well for you to know at once and not to waste amotion on him. A Mereesary Mate a. near Miss Fairfax: I am 11 and la love with a wealthy man nearly eu. 1 am not sure whether my parents would care to have a man of such age call on me. I. I.. H What you are in love with la undoubtedly the idea of making a mercenary match I sincerely hope that your parents would, object to having this man. who Is prob ably older than your father, call on you. Ton really are not In love, but are prob ably Just lnfaturated with your own foollfth and romantic Ideas about this situation. 4f iM :-li:iiUii':'riR In-Shoots The human submarine generally oper ates In muck instead of water. And It is easy to be philosophical when the other guy has the toothache. It is well to love your neighbor, If he Is provided with a generous wad. When a man has no conscientious ycruples fesr of tue law will help some. Might aa well skate on thin financial Ice aa to freeze to death waiting on the bank. It la ss hard for an arMv man to be come a loafer as it Is for a laiy cuss to go to work. It Is difficult for any old slob to re frain from acting foolish when a pretty woman comes along. Tha snaa who cannot please his wife should at least keep on friendly terms with the poodle dog. There is no mistaking the intentions of the knocker, no matter what the results of his efforts may be. It Is better not to tell important secrets to married men. The modern wife Is a mighty persusslve creature. . :,x v-i'-' ' :;...,'!' 1 Ribbon frills on gloves are very new and will go well with close cuffed frocks. Msny of the new blouses are made with the collars and frills bound with white silk braid. Phort brocade coats of bright colors with a point In the back and two In the front, weighted by heavy silken tassels, are being made to wear with the first light spring dresses. In separate waists the season's fore cast permits the oonOnuance of the vogue for colored waists. This has con rami, h I Vi-.-1.:1.'..1.i M'iH:. VrtV.i. ' , MS' Ski eii Every room in the Fort Dearborn Hotel, Chicago, is now 31.50 per day. EVERY ROOM v I i fTYfvTrrnT'iTrnTTit'TiT'J I Touches of Spring cerned Itself largely with waists of chif fon, Georgette crepe and orepe de chene, but the summer waists will be made of colored linens, hntlstes, chamhrays, voiles and cotton crepes. Blanket stitch Is not only first In favor aa a finish for sport suits, where It makes a perfect trimming for the close woven soft materials which do not hem well, but It Is being used on linen and gabardine wash dresses. IVone In con trasting colors, it brightens up the sim plest dress. A gray foulard donble oversklrt tops HIMI(IDmiI0Q In the Stockinet An victmirv Arwumr futfttr. Pml. Kfflitd The spicy richness Armour's mild Star cure intensified by smoking in the Stockinet Covering Armour's way of retaining the rich natural juices and improv ing the flavor. The Oval Label identifies it as Armour's best Buy the ham whole and remove Stockinet yourself. If your dealer cannot supply you, phone us his name. A0MOUR,O.COWrAfTtr Btobt. Staflata, Mgr.. 13th sad Jones sns. Dong. 10"S V. U. Wilkinson. Mgr., gets and Q Bta. TsL Bo. 1T40 Thr's nn Armour Oviil IhIcI sum- nenr jou. iviiaiosi: 'otel History Sfl50 NO HIGHER 500 rooms, all with private bath or private toilet FORT DEARBORN HOTEL CHICAGO La Salle Street at Van Burcn Direction ol Hotel Sherman Company !r:'i:'v'-'!,!l.:iti'!" Color a skirt of dark blue taffetas in a new costume designed by Jenny. Each gray overdrapery Is rut In deep Van fyke points and bound with navy-blue taf fetaa. The onat accompanying this cos tume la of the blue taffetas, with short empire back, from which depend deep, pointed pepluma, plaited to. form postil ion coat skirts. The sleeves are nar row and tight-fitting to the waist, where they are finished with a deep cuff Of the taffetas, which flares out over the hand and is frilled with hemstitched gray chiffon. O THEHAM WHATAM Covering ftr, Tke lest si all ArsMar Pre4acUUrft0valLaM of is Trmouts PRODUCTS,! Try These: Star Bates "SMrWLf Lara Deveaseire Fans Saasage Ansew'tCrspeMtsj CWverkleeai Batter CUaosle Oleesurg arfas Sirrsr Caws OlesasarganW arwua the I mm 1M ttuJSJ Pm. per day i at II I Ik Asi km i m a-