"Pie (ee' Three of Dame Fashion's Latest The dainty gown Illustrated on the left tandtslde of the picture Is made of white llnenwltlt broad bands qf embroidery; tjl rough thin can bo se'eri the pink silk if the foundation. The embroidered bands Why She Kept Her "Girl" By ADA PATTERSON The' servant problem has been solved. Its solution has been found by a white hal'red, browneyed, soft-voiced woman who lives In an unfashionable block tn New York. The neighbors say she Is "mighty feeble," which Is their wuy of expressing the fact that she had not the gift of ro bust health. She' Is not rich. The city flat in which she lives Is a long way from Fifth avenue and Instead of twenty-four serv ants of a famous Fifth avenue home she keeps one. But the famous Fifth xvenue home has -trouble" w i t h servants. Tho white-haired woman has kept her "hired girl" for twenty years. Thcro is a reason for everything nd you may be sure there Is a good reason for this. She wasn't quite sure of the reason herself, but it peeped out )f the story she told me of their twlc cn.years together, "I took a fancy to Lena when my hus band brought her home from the employ ment agency," she said. "She didn't speak a word of English and I didn't peak any German, but there was somu thing that -.cqUnted more than words. While my husband and I were talking sh,e went over to that corner by the win dow where you see the cat asleep and she picked up some knitting I had laid down ind begin t6 knit. She told me when we began to understand each other that her mother had said to her before she went aut to service 'Don't wait for your missus to tell you what to do. Do It without being told. She's always been that way ind it's a great comfort.' "The missus never fussed at roe." but n the maid who has been called Into the room for the conference. "If I didn't dust the piano right she didn't come tter me and make a path with her FRECKLES Oon't Hide Them With a Yell Remove I Th.M with othin. rrMOTintion. i Theu with tits Othlne PrtsorlpUon. This prescription for the removal of freaktea was written by a prominent physician and is usually so successful in removing freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that It Is sold by The Beaton Drug Oo., also any of Sher man & McConnell Drug Co.'s stores un ier ah 'absolute guarantee to refund the uoney If It falls. Don't Jildft your freckles under a veil; Tet an ouno of othlne and remove them- ISven tho first few applleations should show a wonderful lmDrovment. nm. r he lighter freckles vanishing entirely. ' Be sure to ask the drugs st for the '.oublc strength othlne; It Is this that ts ! oid on tliu money -back guarantee. j are carried out on the bodice, which has lorn; sleeves; the partt-colored belt 13 novel. Black Cliantllly lace drapes the evening gown in the center, the long lines being very graceful. The gown Is made of pink charmeuse, the drapery of the bodice being of pink nlnon. The right finger through the dust. "I though 'Maybe next time sho will do better,' " and if tho second time wasn't better I was sure tho third time would be," returned the mistress. "I don'i bo Jievo In talking much. There' too much talking in the world and most of it is a pretty poor quality. But Lena's always been kind and thoughtful to. me. I suffur a great deal from headaches and she's as anxious when I have one of my head aches as my 'husband' and son are." "But when tho missus goes out for a walk of a street car ride sho often takes me," persisted the maid. "And she don't give me the leavln's. I get as good, meals as the family, and I have as good a place to sleep as they have themselves.' "But Lena never Insisted on having Ijer regular Sunday or her Thursday evening off. If It suited us. to ask her to stay in then and take another time shti did. And she never complained about com pany." "Sure I didn't kick," said the maid. "If tho family ' enjpyed having company I wanted them to have it. It's that way If you're Interested In yoUr family." The maid vanished because her ear had caught the ominous sound of something boiling over In the kitchen. "She a good girl." The mistress' eyes followed that squat, sturdy figure. "I like her next to my own family, There Is was, the solution of the prob Jem that has worn some women otit of their homes and Into hotels. If not Into their graves. She had kept her maid for Souge, Powder and Burlesque of Sex J . By REV. T. A. IHCKKV, Rector of St. Brendan's Church, Brooklyn Every young woman should scorn those compact, extravagant styles of dress which are calculated to Incite the evil and attract- the vicious. Rouge and cot metlct, which detract rather than add to her beauty, she should carefully avoid, Gentility and modesty those womanly traits which manly men most admire rhould characterise her ways. She should be well dressed. The world admires the modest woman prettily and becomingly gowned, but recoils at her sister who burlesques her sex hy the ndop- J,m,n A, " demnatlon they receive. "We wish to see the young woman so attired as to reflect the dearest and most wholesome of her charms modesty and to continue to hold the admiration ot clean-minded men, the only kind the Christian girl should wish to know. Does the girl who adopt extravagant prevailing gowns ever stop to ask who conceives them? Doe she over aH whether those persons are actuated by mere mercenary motivosT It Is welt to ponder over these ques- tlons. Any parent cherishing the utuw of hls daughter should bear In mind thia ,a nere is a moral vuiue m-moat-siv B w" a real t,l'rni. 11 13 immeasurably immodest to ina-e THE BEE: Jne faa z. i re hand model shows a chic little glace coatee, hlgh-walst'cd, with a full basque, and finished, with a bow and long .ends of velvet ribbon. A lace collar and cuffs make a pretty finish, Carried out in hydrangea, blue, over a skirt of btue and white, this Is a most effective costume. for 20 Years M twenty years because she "liked her" and by thq same token the maid had re mained with her, The maid liked htr. The solution of the servant problem Is the ditty of Mary and her lamb applied to labor In the household. They liked eaph other and for that rea son Lena "was worrrlcd" when Mrs. Jay had a headache and Mrs. Jay did what no other mistress . In the neighborhood did, took her mold put for a walk or a street car ride. They liked each other, and Lena didn't care when the family had company, and Mrs. Jay gave Lena a diamond ring from which her own finger- had per manently shrunken. They liked each other, so neither "spoke a cross word to the other In twenty years." They I"""1 aach other and Lena has no expectation of ever leaving Mrs. Jay and Mrs. Jay gave a party for Lena on the apnlverslnary of her coming to her and picking up the dropped Knitting twenty yea,rs ago. "It's a good deal like marriage," I suggested, and Mrs. Jay nodded her gentle whl(e head. "It Is," she said. And perhaps that Is the solution of the happiness in the marriage problem, too," to like each other, and with that excel lent start, to be "reasonable and con siderate." Reasonableness and considera tion with the liking at the beginning, would bring more' couples to a celebration of their china wedd.lng and make th patronage of the divorce courts slender. one's self conspicuous by the face-smearing process. But "A. ltjtlH powder now and then Is relished V the best of them." It Is In Its utility that It should be relished. It banishes a gloss that is un attractive. But this coating of one's com plexion so that nature's charms are con cealed Is silly and marring. It Is not modest. It is -a girl's duty to herself and to so ciety to keep herself aa p1eaahg in ap pearance a possible. There are many girls who paint and mean no wrong. They are good girls. They see no harm In it-and then it Is st;.'llh, you know; and mother and father thoughtless mother and father do not discourage her. I want to tell the girls' this: It may not be sin, but It may be the occasion for sin. Don't play with lire. I want to tell the parents this; There, would b no social evil, so-called, If ftmlnlne modesty wert more carefully treasured. A final word to girls and parents.. Young women of today don't seem to differentiate between consplcUousntss and attractiveness. The girl whose natt ural complexion Is disguised by a coating of powder or paint and who Is attired In one of these disgracefully siigfestve gowns of today, may l'e conspicuous. She tan n-er be attractive OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY Every Drawn for The Bee by Hal Coffman. .' ' . ' ' ! 1 I" 1 I 'J 1 1 " 1 ' Looking Pretty By WINIFRED BLACK "Dear me," raid he prettiest girl, "I do wish Miss Marie Corelll would learn to sing a new fong. She's been doing that old 'What am I going to do to make you love "me?" for bo long. I'm a bit tired Of It, and I should think the men would be tired of it, too," "Well," said the cleverest girl, "the song Is well enough, pnly she doesn't ting It right. That's the old faahloned. version. We don't use quite the same words nowadays. Ours runs more like this." Th clervertst girl threw herself back in the swinging chair, assumed a Questioning and. It mutt be confessed, a rather nagglsh ex pression of countenance, and chanted satirically: "What are you going to do to make me love you?" "That's the right refrain Just now. It's the one I'm going to sing anyhow, ahd all the girls In my class," and she threw the very clever magaslne with Hiss Corelll' latest article en the "Greatest thng In the world and how to get it" Into the ftrn-and wouldn't hear of picking It up again, When are these clever people who write things for magazines going td wake up7" she said. "We don't need articles on how to catch a husband thuse days, or how to keep him when we've got hlm-not a bit In the world. The thing we need Is. 'Hpw to take an Interest In matrimony as a profession when there are sq many other Interesting ihlngs to do.' "My moth'tr would have had an awful time If she hadn't married fancy living with Uncle xjIcW all your life and being a maiden sister. But It's Different with me. "If I mt'st just the right man. I'll marry mayb but I'll think awhile be fore I do It. I'm going to get a rather good salary In my line of work. I can do a lot of good in the world, and oh, what a lot of fun I'm going to have. I'll have to bo awfully in love with a man to give all that up just to be Mrs. Some body I love being myself it's so Inter 18, 1913. Man's a Boss-Somewhere esting. I'm afraid I should hate awfully Just to be somebody's wife without oyun my own naine to go by." And tho prettiest girl Joined right n with the cleverest girl and the things they said the average everyday man would have horrified Miss Corelll to the verge of madness It she had heard them. They would horrify me, tqo only I know It's just their heads talklr.ir now. Some dsy their hearts will bvg'.n to speak, and then we shall hear a different side of the story. But, all the same, I read Miss Corps's article on the greatest thing In the world and how to keep t, and I really did wish she hadn't gone back to the ancient days of superstition about men and, the way to make a man stay In love with his wife. It was all right for people who believe in the dark ot the moon Idea and who wouldn't sit thirteen at a table for any thing, to say and to believe when they say It, that no man could love a woman unless she looked pretty all the time, but In this day and time, Miss Corelll, really now, why don't you look around you7 Who's the man the most outrageously In love with lili own wife that you know? Is she the prettiest woman of your ac quaintance? I don't believe It. She Isn't of mine. A pretty woman Is the thing for a short conquest, but for a long race give me tho average looking woman every day In the week. Why? Well, she's apt to be more Interesting for one thing; and then, sis ters, men are really not all such blither ing idiots as some would have us believe really they are not. I know men who love their wives because their wives are good women and true friend and Jolly comrades arid good fellows and gentle sweethearts honestly I do and I've been acquslnted with several mn who stayed In. love with their wives after they had seen said wives with their hair twisted around a comb and mouth full of hair pins such was the Incredible folly of thj creatures. Tut, tut, Miss Corelll I What an odd lot of men you must know, really! Are they all such absolute dunces as you try to make us think? I don't believe It i' can't believe It. How M. earth have they ever accom plished all they have In the world If they are sUch absolutely blind, unreason ing creatures as you say they are? "Iook pretty every minute or you'll All the lose him." flood gracious! Whatevor would becomo of the world If all tho married women In It Screed with you? What would happen to the babies? Who'd run downstairs In a heavy dress ing gown and make husband a mustard plaster when something he'd eaten hail gone wrong with him? And tlen there'u husband what would he think ot us If we should turn around and say tho same sort of thing to him? A woman did say It in Chicago the other day a very clever and well-known woman she was, top. She declared that she left htr perfectly good young hus band because she hated tho way he looked with his collar off, shaving. And the world re-echoed with gusty laughter of the godsl I wonder why? Just as I was finishing Miss Corettl'a article the prettiest girl was saying: "I wonder if it never strikes these peo ple who are so busy telling us how to keep a husband that nine out of ten of the divorce suits are brought by women and not by men at all. To Judge by statistics It Is the men who need the advice on how to keep a wife." And I kept wondering what ehe'd say when she fell In love really and truly :n love and whether .she wouldn't pity every one who wasn't In the same state, and whether the wouldn't be right to pity thrm, And tho cleverest girl-why she's the very one who'll be crasy about some one some day, and not such a very clever some one, either, and perhaps not such a Advice to Lovelorn By BKATWOK I'AIUKAX Don't Try. Tr MIm Fairfax: I nm a bov It vrin f of age. As I was walkhvt on tte street tne omer nay i saw a Bin wnom i naan i seen before, but I loved her very rnuch the moment I saw her. What I want to know Is how to get friends with that girl. ALBERT. Love at sight !s such a pretty drxni It Is a pity to spoil It by getting acquainted. You are It years ojd-the age to be de voted to making a man of yourself. Bend your energies In that direction, and let love alone for a few years. Under no circumstances should you attempt to form an acquaintance with a girl you happen to meet on the street. Time very good ome one. Poor, earnest, hon est, deeo. hearted clnvvrmt clrinml mho'li never really llvo till she Is, Still, alt tho way oacK to tno cottage I kept humming. And, do you know, the words that I hummed were those odious ones tha cleverest girl had chanted so defiantly "What are you going to do to make ma love your' I wonder If they do mean something, Just now, those words? And I wonder If what they mean la something sane and wholesome and well balanced and just and reasonable and good for the future Of the Whole race Of humanltv In Hnm. grt at, noble, far-rwaching way, or If they aro just a sudden outrbeak of silly vanity and overweening self-esteem, brought about by tho sudden change In the mysterious tide that has for so many centuries controlled tho destiny of the mothers of men? Riso up, Mr. Plain, Every Day, Ordi nary Man. with the plain, every day. ordinary wife, and tell us what you think about It-hopuatly and truly. CURED ITCHING HUMOR ON FACE Very Embarrassing. Could Not Sleep, Ufled Iteslnol Well In a Week. Pittsburgh. Pa., May 3, 1SIJ-I had a ringworm on the side of my face. It be gin like a cold bllster-a small red mark. Each day It became larger until It waa a round ring about the size of a quarter. It burned and Itched me terribly, and was very sore. It waa also swollen and caused me a great deal of discomfort as I could not sleep at night It waa very embarrassing and I didn't want any of my friends to see me. I used several rem edies such as and some kind of a,, powder, but they did no goad. I us,ed Restnol Soap and Restnol Ointment for one week and cured It." (Blgnod) Eleanore D. Shekels, 303 North Sheridan Ave. Iteslnol Hoap and Ointment are speedily effective for ecsema and other itching, burning eruptions, pimples, dandruff, burns, old sores and plies. Prescribed by doctors for eighteen years. Sold by alt druggists. For free samples write to Dec-t 6-R, Reslnol, Baltimore, Md,