The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Page "And here was Mr. Carnegie jut This To Virginia, Quttn O Venue by Carnegie Crowned, More Fair Than She of Sea Foam Wrought, I Hail Thee, and I Kiss the Ground, Which Has Thy Slightest Footprint Caught, fHEN, man?, many years see. a Grecian gentleman Darned Paris held a private beauty contest with Venus, Minerva and Juno In the ring and picked out Venus, right sissy there was trouble. Trouble for Helen, the moit beautiful woman In the world whom Venus gave Paris for plotting her ai the winner, trouble tor her bukband, trouble for Paris, trouble for Troy that got Into a tea years' war on account of It, trouble for everybody. And ever since every besuty con test hasn't been anything bet trouble. Tet here comes Mr. Andrew Celt negle, who ought to know better. He can't Judge Ooddeitea as Parts did, because either there area any nowadays or else they're all ta skirts. So the Man Who Made Steel Famous, there being s slump ta libraries or peace or trust Investi gations, and his voice having beea Irrltatlngly Inactive for at least a day or two, picked a photograph out of his library drawer and turn ing a bland face to the world said. Just casually, sort of: "Here's the prettiest girl la the world! Her name Is Virginia Leo a see Uves to Pittsburg!" Of course, Mr. Carnegie did not realise that this Is sn abnormally np-tothe-second world; thst every, thing Is on the hair trigger; that we have beauty nostrums, tonics, wines, stockings, petticoats, tooth powders, corsets, fslse hslr, shoes, hair brushes and a thouisnd other things whose manufacturers are ell eager to psy good money to stamp them with a name that has unique advertising value. Therefore, how could he know whst would tollow when te said Juit that: "Here's the prettiest girt la the world, ete." Now It Miss Virginia Lee had been a different kind of a girl, what Mr. Carnegie had ssld of her would have been a mllltoa dollar advertise ment. She could bsve gone Into . vaudeville at 11,000 a performance! end we would have had Virgin!" Lee corsets and Virginia Lee puffs. Virginia Lee cocktails end Virginia Lee face powder. Virginia Lee this, that and everything. But Miss Lee wasst that kind of a girl. She didn't have stage am bitions end she never thought of eapltallilng herself Into beauty ad vertising. She was simply a mod est, retiring business girl with a horror ot notoriety and an earnest desire to do her stenography sad typewriting In a clean-cut way, eara her money and save It or spend it quietly ss she pleased. And so Instead ot getting the ad vantage et that million dollar ad. here Is little Mlaa Lee peatwed halt to death, forced te give up her posi tion and her plana for earning a modest living, all her quiet way et life upset and her health seriously sffected by the glare of all the world'e earchMghia so suddenly turned upon her I It yon dont think this Is a painful eiperlenoe for a girl ot this kind, ust see what Miss Lee had to go up against The sight Mr. Carnegie did the Paris trick. Miss Lee slum bered peacefully as usual. Eves when she awoke, unlike Byron, she did not know she was famous It waa rather early la the morning, too, because she hsd to eat her breakfast and get down te her type writing machine ta the office of the Losghbridge Engineering Company at nine sharp. Her grandmother, looking over the morning paper, suddenly exclaimed: "Why. Virginia. Juat look at this! Mr. Carnegie says 'You're the pree tlst girl in the world'!" "My goodness. Grandma! It can't be me; He some ether "Virginia.' Mr. Carnegie aerer saw me la all hla life" "No. It mease yen," said Orandma. "Here's our address 830 Jsuncey Street" "But Mr. Csrnegfe'e never sees me." protested Virginia. "Beside. . nobody has ever aald before thst I wss even pretty." "But Mr. Carnegie's seen your photograph," said Orandma. grow ing more and more excited. "Toor father gave him one down la Hot Springs, He thanked Mr. Carnegie ; Maa x x -i 1 wrc zlwl.' n like Paris of old, presenting Is the Kind of Poetry of Beauts, .... i ' ..:-.;-v f - V4 X "is 1 i ..'. sw -y Y Gaby Deslys A New Pho togrsph Whom Mr. Car negie's Old Partner Mr. Charles M. Schwab One Said Waa the Prettiest Girl in Europe. Illustrat ing the Difference in Tastes. for the opportunities you hsd en Joyed ss a student in the Margaret Morrison Technical School, and gave him your photograph and Mr. Carnegie wrote across the back of the photograph. 'Bonnie Virginia Lee, a prise for some lucky man,' and he signed It 'Andrew Carnegie.'" "Oh, Grandma, even If It Is true, why should they put It is the pa per r said Miss Virginia ead with rosy cheeks, but furrowed brow, re turned to breskfsst Orsndma reminded her that every thing Mr. Carnegie says etoeyt got la ALL the papers. And then shs 7 ' a. i t : ..... v.-, ' -- ' ' - 'J . .'Vt;J r; J' , V-""V- ' ft "-" ; J ' ' ' J-f'" .nf t ? w?"' I " i CopyrlSht, mi br the eternal beauty priie and making trouble.' Miss Lee Has to Read Thine Eyes of Blue, Thy Bonny Face, Arc Graven in the Heart I've Lost; For, by Thy Form of Matchless Grace, I Swear I'm Thine at Any Cost I 1 i s '' ' I ' v "-J?:-1 4 1 X , "" "te-" "Poor Miss Lee! .- ..f. fjfCfi ? v " tet. Miss Amertcn-Examiner. Great Britain Reginald Veter Jontl, P. 0. Qtneroi Delivery, Uno York. 1 1 tP ,?,? - K -VS '.V-.i r -"a, i 4 A 4 f A. 4 ittiii Rights Referred. What happened to the II .e-vi' V V ' -V, 1 Miss Virginia Lee, the Little Pittsburg Stenographer Whom Mr. Carnegie Has Made Unhappy by Calling Her the "The Prettiest Girl in the World." exclaimed after a glance through the window: "Why. what are all those people doing out In front ot our house?" Just then the bell rang and Grand ma admitted one of them reporter for one of the l'lttaburn evening papers! He was epoketman for the rest ot the crowd all reporters, Including two with cam eras. They must have photographs of and Interviews with the girl Mr. lirnegln tald was the most beau tiful in the world." Being SooU-h snd therefore "canny" Miss Virginia had dla sppeared. By the beck way she reached her car and fled to her em ployers' office. And there she ran the gauntlet of more reporters, more photographers. "Go away," she said, "do go away! It's sll a mistake or a JoKe. I don't know Mr. Carnegie. He might think I'm s pretty girl but, oh. plesse don't say anything In the newspapers!" "Click-click," went the cameras In snswer. Once In the office, seated at her machine, she worked furiously, ears deaf, eyes blind to everything else. It waa a terrible day telephone calls from sll sorts of people with sll sorts of offers, sll sorts of schemes to make her fortune. Every minute there was a messenger with a telegram. Her mall was larger than the firm's. She waa pursued to her doorstep In the evening. The next day waa worse yet Reporters snd photographers hsd arrived from other cities. It waa next to impos sible to elude them. And In the office her personal mail began to pile up enormously. A New York artist wrote, offering her $5,000 to pose for him. Photographers offered her large sums tor the exclusive right to print snd sell br pictures; manufac 'Prizetfeaimr MnCarne&eRcked With the Limelight Turned on Her by the Old Steel King, Miss Virginia Lee, "The turers of various srtlclea wanted the use of her esme snd photogrsph for sdvsrtlstng purposes, offering generous pay; dressmakers wanted the privilege ot making fashionable gowna for her, for nothing except the advertisement Mo&t pressing of sll were the offers to go on the stage legitimate, vaudeville and moving picture. And each night when she resched home, humiliated, tired out, nearly desperate, there were more letters containing offers of marriage. Be ins young and full ot lively spirits, Virginia at first was much amused by these. Some contained poetry like that given above. Some of the letters mentioned, or hinted, marriage In connection with more or less elaborate appeals for a chance to make her beauty return dividends 1n cash. Here Is one of them out of thousands. My Dear Miss Lee: Nothing in this world Is ever accomplished without co-operation. There is no better co-operation than that of a man and a woman who really know what they want snd have the means snd intelligence to get It. I am a young man of excep tional brains. Ton are a girl of ex ceptional beauty Mr. Carnegie says. Let us Join our fortunes! With my brains and your beauty nothing In the world can stand before us. Of course, we should have to be married. But that would only be to satisfy the conventions and to make our partnership effective I have long bad In mind a career whereby sn Intelligent man of brains, linked with aa Intelligent woman ot beauty could, within live years, be millionaire snd st the top of the social ladder. If Helen ot Troy hsd been properly managed by a man of brains, Troy, instead ot falling, would have been the metropolis of its time. If Anthony had only been Ancient Troy was besieged ten years because of an original beauty con Lee was besieged by 10,000 press agents, managers, etc" Prettiest Girl in the t World9 Has Had Nothing but Trouble, More Trouble and Still More Trouble a man of brains, Instead of one ot emotions, he could with Cleopatra have made Egypt the centre of the world for at least one hundred years longer and so It goes. We have the combination of the beautiful woman and the man without brains, or the man with brains and the ugly woman. Does this letter arouse your curiosity? Does It set a new thought going in your mind? It so, write to me, letting me know when and where I may see you, Then we can go over the detail Awaiting your answer, and aA dress me General Delivery, Jersey City Post Office, I am. Sincerely yours, C. D. Bennett. Only for a few days did these letters afford poor Miss Virginia any amusement. Before a week had passed by, her employers could read In her harrasned look how unfortu nate for her the whole episode was. Finally she had to leave them. "Virginia has not had a happy moment since the Interview with Mr. Carnegie, and her picture ap peared In print," said her grand mother. "She has suffered greatly; It has been most humiliating to her." For herself. Miss Lee says: "I thank Mr. Carnegie for his flattering compliment, but I ens sure that had he known how em barrassing it would prove to me, he would have kept his opinion to himself. "I shall not consider any of the proposals made to me by wife hunters and others I Intend to work for my living If I'm only si lowed to." And Andrew Carnegie, the un lucky Paris, who bestowed this ex ceedingly bitter Golden Apple on this Irretrievably modest and re tiring young working girl, he, too. Is overwhelmed with Inquiries In fact, compelled to say: "I certainly regret having been so Indiscreet The matter has gone quite far enough. The least said about It. the best for all concerned." And there you are. Mr. Charles Schwab, one of Mr. Carnegie's old partners, once said that Gaby Deslys was the prettiest girl in the world. Here's her newest picture together with Miss Lee's Just to show how tastes differ. But Miss Lee Isn't the kind of girl Gsby Is And so It's all been a very great tragedy to her Indeed. It Just shows how very dangerous these beauty contests sre snyway. V