ee Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Pag Discussing Her Tactless Ex- n yQ ing French Beauties to Those Qut Picked for Him by Three - jj Kings and Pointing Out LJjSllS How Absurd It Is to Think J One Woman Any Different from Another G ABY DESLYS, the brilliant French beauty, for whom Mnuel of Portugal loll hit throne, has heretofore scrupulously quiet about the little ex-King. Mnuel cent tactless conduct in alienating the Ciar by nubbing the beau tiea of hit famous Russian ballet and provoking the King of Eng land, the King of Creece and the Kaiier by refining to marry WHY, thoy ask me, Is my former King Mnnuol so tactless: After losing a throno for a woman, why now has ho destroyed his chanceB of get ting back that throno by pursuing certain beauties of Paris Instoad of quietly marrying ono of the titled ladles as two kings and nn emperor desired him? And why did ho allenato the friendship of tho Czar by snub bing the darlings of RusBla tho royal ballot and enst lng his affeotlon at the feet of still anothor French boauty? Ahl I will tell you. You men will not billovo mo my sisters will bo so angry tor tho tolling, but I will tell. 1 will break my sllenco Just a little about my former Manuol. Uften I have been offered much money to wrlto ot him, but always I havo said Non, I must wait for twelvo yoars, or perhaps ton, until I can got what you Americans call tho proper perspective. But now 1 will tell a llttlo Just because you will not bo llovo, you mon. . It Is this: Manuel Is tactlossv throws aside his chancos of climbing back uponihls throno bocauso ho is a man. Thnt is all thoro Is to It. Ho has not loarned tho lesson I tried to teach him. Ho still thinks that ono woman Is dltforent from all othorsl Pouf, poor Manuol 1 No woman is dlfforont from another, Manuel. And no man is dlfforont from anothor, my sisters. Tho first Is tho losson that no man will loam or bellovo; tho second, llko tho first, Is whal all women know. Do not bo angry with mo, my 'sisters, for telling this no man will bellovo me. You are still qulto safo. ii right, 11)13, the princesses each in turn picked out for him, thus destroying hi chance of regaining hii throne, hai led Gaby to break her tilence. Next week Gaby Deslys, who n the star of rhe Winter Garden, in New York, will supplement this article with another applying the new Goipcl of. Efficiency to "the profession of womanhood,"' in which she will tell women how to make them selves 100 per cent afficient. kept re By GABY DESLYS it is your iupung mat says: mo cotonoi s tauy ana Julio lo Grado aro sisters undor thoir skin. Wise Kip ling In words. But does ho practlco what ho writes? I do not bollovo. listen If Manuel Is to bo my theme I must recount a bit of him. When ho lost his throno tho world said: "Chorchez la fommo." Thoy pointed to' mo. Poor llttlo king It was not I; it was ho himself who lost himself his throno. And, being a man, it was not his fault It w.as, indeed, what your Jacques Itoao would call a "framo up." Somo dny I shall toll all of that. But tho world thought It was I and my pearls "cherchoz la by the Star Company. Great Britain Rights Reserved. leninio'-- zip-p! Tho throno slides. So much for that. But Ene- land would havo helped him rogaln his throne. Thero aro unmarried princesses In England whom tlm Klntr desired Manuel to wed ono of them at least. Ho was elvon an apartmont In Kensington Pal ace. And lo, he flies to German by way of Paris. Tho ICalsnr hna flvn iinltilnmiMm. " uuitt.uiuauiig nieoes and cousins that mni ho mrioH - - - w UM.k.U orr. Manuol has been drawing an allowanco from the Oorman Governmont, and It would do a most oxcollont thing for him to repay this debt and approach his empty Portugal throno by way of tho Kaiser's nleco or cousin. Tho -louse of Hohonzollern awaits expectantly. And Manuel flies to Greece by wny of Paris! Tho King of Greece, although not so powerful as tho others, .can do much. Ho, too, liaB ladles of title on his hands. Ho offorB. And Manuol Hies to St. fetors burg by way of Paris! Xhe Czar shows him his ballet those so beau tiful ladles who havo played so great a part In tho history of Russia. And what does Manuel do? Ho looks upon them with lack lustre eyes and can only bo charmed out of his melancholy by a dancer from Paris! And thus Is tho Czar alienated, Russia Is alienated, they cartoon my 1 former Manuol even. And ho departs for Paris! Voila! I touch upon those facts historical-? only bocauso It is what Is happening In larger or smaller way everywhere. I hold up Manuel tho y pa. The type of what? Of man, of course. Man who thinks bocauso one woman has black eyes and anothor blu'o that tho women them selves aro different, man who thinks that a mill imeter difference In the size of an eyo makes women of tcomuii. I tell you, because you will not believe It, that there Is no such thing as women thoro Is only woman I Man man 1b Just an explorer. The few ex ploro lands the many exploro women. The lands aro they not, after all, the same? The same earth horo snow and Ice perhaps; there palms and desert; hero mountains there plains, But all tho samo earth. So It is ot woman. Man is tho great romanticist, tho great sentimental ist. Ho thinks things aro different,- and so he continually seeks the new. He may think ha llnds It but he doesn't Thero is nothing dif ferent; thero Is nothtng new. But you will not oven bellevo Solomon and you will not believe me and so I am frank. Manuol Is an explorer. Manuel Is a man. Therefore all rrten are explorers. Manuel aeets over tjomethlng (new. He says: "Hero I will And brighter eye, f more sprightly wit; hero Is the road to Heart's Desire." Ho finds not. So of all men. I krjow the syllogism Is faulty in theory. In practice It Is perfect. All men crave change. They may deny It; they may have to curb tho desire but there It Is. And that Is why so many meu go about al ways looking as though they had something to hide. It Is woman's art to make them think that they secure change- But they do not really se cure It. Listen I will, tell you a great secret that goes . tar back to tho time when women began to learn to make men think them different. Oh, so far back millions of years! First, there was little chance for any charm. Llfo was too hard and cruel. A woman was then JUBt a woman, and men were too simple to cherish illusions. He who cherished Illusions fell by the club of an enemy whllo lying dreaming. Then came tho tlmo when women banded to gether and formed what Is called the mother rule. And-durljrig that time man was too glad to bo picked by ono woman or other as her mate to fall under any Illusions. I do not think that even at that time women had the illusion that men were different. One man was stronger perhaps, ono mora comely, one more amusing but basically woman knew all men to be the same. And then man rose and conquered woman. Aud woman to regain her place created the great illusion for .him. She made him believe that thero was not' Just woman but women She had to. She had become a serf, where tret of ore she had ruled. She was in what you "There is no such thing as women there is only woman. When man first conquered woman she created this great illusion for him that one wo man is more desirable than another! and man, the great sentimentalist, believes it Pouf!" Says Gaby say competition supremo with her sisters. Woman has ruled, does rule, will rule. And this was how sho did It. She made man believe that each woman was different that ono was more desirable 'than tho other. La, la poor, romantic man! She blinded him and she encouraged him to explore. It is this that has mado the world bo wondorful a placo for us. Man's blindness brings light to many women Woman believes nothing that a man tells her and' little that ho writes. Men, on the contrary, bollovo nearly all a woman says and all that sho writes. This Is the reason woman saves letters of love that a man writes, and has persuaded man that It is honorable to destroy those writ ten him by woman. Sho prepares herself- for tho tlmo she knows will come when man will cravo change, more exploration, and will stamp himself for what sho has always known him a liar. If this were not so, moro men would bring breach of promise suits. If woman were truthful there would never havo been a novel written nor a play put on tho stage. All novels, all plays, all life and Iovo are founded on tho deception of woman. And we are so simply because It was necessary to hold man and keep htm held. Tho really natural woman Is never attractive' to man. Tho abso lutely truthful woman would never get a hits band never does. For every thousand men who bolleve that other men aro deceived you will And only a tenth of a man who believes he him self is deceived! Is it not so? You know it. And why Is It so? Because woman is the most efficient of creatures. ' In this art of deception woman has spent un told ages. Fashion started a million years ago, when one woman wore her wolf skin looped over a shoulder instead of tied around her waist. Why did sho do it? To appear different. To stand out from the others, and so to appear more de Blrable. And this Is all ot fashion to help woman to seem not woman but women. Listen you have seen card conjurors. Yes. They have a pack of cards and they riffle them before you and thoy say, "Pick a card." You pick a card i you think of your own will. And then the conjuror, without seeing it, tells you tho name ot the card. Is It not wonderful? you ex claim. .No, It is not wonderful. He does that which woman has done for centuries. That card you took out he put out just a little bit more than the others. He mado it seem different. Unconsciously man's deslro for the different said to him, "Tako that card." He takes It. He thinks he has taken It of his own will. It has been forced upon him by the conjuror. This Is all thero Is to women. Ah, women aro the mas ter conjurors. And all this you will not believe. Will not be lieve when I tell you that for untold centuries woman has spent the greatest part of her llfo upon this art of seeming different. She has pa tiently bred tho deslro and the illusion In tho bodies of untold generations of men children! Sho has bred the art ot it Into the bodies ot untold generations of girl children. She ar ranges her hair in so many ways; sho decorates her face; she studies, learns all for this. Why Is a woman so angry when sho tinds another woman wearing a dress juet like hers? Thero is .nothing that makes her so angry! But no man ever challenges another to a duel because Eat Lime and Ward Off Flat Feet iLAT-FOOT Is one of tho most common of. diseases among those who aro compelled to be on their feet a great deal. Police men, letter-carriers, bookkeepers, who stand at tnelr desks, barbers and others who perform their dally duties without ever once getting a chance to rest, suffer greatly from this ailment, which involves a breaking down ot the arch of the toot. Flat-foot has been attributed to the hardness of city pavements, to poorly made shoes and to faulty habltB in walking; but recent research seems to Indicate that the-blame has been mis placed, and that the matter Is really one of diet. At any rate, it seems that flat-toot may bo largely prevented and may possibly be cured by the ad dition ot llme-contalnlng foods to the usual diet. Human bones are constructed largely of lime. To build up the bones forming the arch of tho foot a .certain amount of llme-contalnlng foods Is necessary, and this amount should be In creased as one grows older, because of the ln ho finds htm wearing exactly the same kind ot suit Tho woman, the primitive to tho higher, resents looking the same as another, and even if she does not know why she resents it, sho is no less angry. But men, knowing that he is man and not men knowing, too, although not consciously, that woman knows all men are just the same, wears the samo unltorni without a question. How pathetic are his efforts now and then tossnatch a leaf from woman and to try to appear different. And how ashamed ho looks when he succeeds- Is It not plain to you? No, nor over will be. Tho habit Is too strong women aro too strong. So much for now. Next week I shall tell you how woman came to make herself so much more powerful than man, how she learned to create the great Illusion I have described, and how she can make herself and why she ought to make herself 100 per cent efficient in her profession ot womanhood. I will call It the "New Gospel of Efficiency as Applied to Being a Woman." It will be interesting and frank and truth ful Ah, yes, all of that I promise you. creased, weight of the body with age. As ono grows older and heavier the strain on tho arch of the foot Is correspondingly increased, and it is necessary, in order to meet this ad ditional strain, that the bones forming the arch of the foot should not only grow heavier but should be knit more closely together. Most ot the foods found on the modern Amer lean table are devoid of the lime which the bony system requires. Bread is made from brauless flour, cereals are often prepared In such a way that much ot their lime contents are lost, and other articles of diet are similarly deprived of their bone-Btrengthentng value. . For this reason, If one would protect himself against flat-foot, it is recommended that a glass of lime water be taken at least once or twice a week. Taken with milk, lime water is not at all unpalatable, and, indeed, makes milk the more digostlble for those who And it otherwise bard to take. Lime water may not cure flat-foot, but it is believed to be instrumental in warding It off. t