Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 19, 1915, Page 13, Image 13

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    THK HKK: OMAHA. SATURDAY, UTNH 1M.
T
i
Hie Bees Home Magazine Pae
THe Goddess
The Most Imposing Motion Picture Serial and
Story Ever Created. : : : : : :
Read It Here See It at the Moviea
"Way" of Picking a Mate :
In This "KUht-O" ritory
thf Htcnnfg-Aphor and
liookkocper IHmrna a
Hunch.
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(Copyright, 1915, Star Company.)
FIFTH EPISODE; i
' ', "Tou'rs so good to me," said Celcgtla,
autdl sho smiled very aweotly, and In the
midst -of the smile yawrled and ahowed
all her beautiful white teeth,- and a mo
ment, later, laying; lier head, on a cool
allk cushion, she fetl sound asleep.
So sleeping he looked more beautiful
than a maiden of thla earth, perhaps
ahe dreamed that she was back In
heaven, for about hor mouth , there
seemed a kind of oelesttal expression.
"My God I My God I" exclaimed Mrs.
Baxter, ain't she beautiful? And to think
that she hat to be food for swine."
A strong; emotion seised Mrs. Baxter.
It waa fear, pity and remorse.
She wished almost that she had never
seen Celestia. Hut not quite, for Mrs.
Baxter was a vry practical woman.
"No use crying over spilled milk," she
murmured. "And now to chnge her Into
traveling dres."
She left the room hurriedly and came
back with all that waa . necessary to
change Celestia from a Greek goddess to
an American gtrL ' But' her hands would
hake, and it took her some time to find
how Celetia'a dress) waa fastened, and
, . . A. . f.. . .
, : Longer w uuuu in iwuemngs. one naa
' no sooner succeeded than she drew back
' sharply with a kind of muffled groan, j
L"Then she looked again.
V. Suspended from Celestia' s neck by a
. narrow ribbon, was the smallest, oldest,
oddest little rag doll In the world.
I do sot know what silent chords In the
wicked old woman's heart wero touched
by the sight of that doll. I only know
that ahe gave a kind of a howl of grief,
and then she began to say in a kind of
hurried sing-song! "Must hurry nuat
hurry must hurry."
She found the strength to half carry,
half drag Celestia down the front stairs
- and to half life, half tumble her into a
huge trunk that almost blocked the front
hall. , Before she closed and locked the
trunk, she flung into it the ten one-hun-dred-dollar
bills. And then she tried to
compose herself against Bweetser's ar
rtval. --' -
He waa punctual to the minute. Mrs.
Baxter opened the front door harself.
Beyond Sweetser, drawn up at the curb,
she could see the express wagon and the
trusted porters that he had brought with
lUm.
"Everything all rlghtT' he whispered.
Mra Baxter closed the 'door.
"Sweetier." she said, "she's gons."
When I went back with the orangeade
he waa gone. Phe must have smelt a
rat. Sweetser. She must have seen your
eyes in the peacock's tail, foe, I had
-verythlng ready; here's the trunk malt
ing for her.
Sweetser looked at the trunk. He
could think of nothing better to do.
."Well, then." he said, "how about the
iiLuuanu ,
Mrs. Baxter simply laughed In his face.
"How about the gas company you got
rie to put up a thousand for?" she ssld.
"Tou give me my thousand snd I'll give
you yours."
"Tou go to hell," said Sweetier, furi
ously. And he tore open the frant door
and marched down th fiont steps.
Mrs. Baxter locked the front door and
chained it and then ah sat down on the
trunk containing Celestia and had a
luxurious fit of hysterics.
Celestia woke neither sick nor dated,
t'Ut cool-minded and rested, in a broad.
'OOl bad. It was Mrs. Baxter's entrance
n tiptoe that had waked her. Mrs.
-naxier earned a tray upon which was
an orange, coffee and rolls.
"You've bad a long sleep, dearie How
no yon feel?"
.''Vary well and ha;.py, thank you."
When you've bad yo-ir treakfaat you'll
Mrs. Baxter, looking at the beautiful
have to go away. I can't keep you here;
It wouldn't be right. It wouldn't be safe."
Celestta's great eyes aiked questions to
which.- Mrs. Baji.tcc.pave no direct answer.
". "I'vaidone all I .can for you," she said.
"I'm very sorry I can't do any more." :
It did not take Celestia long to eat her
breakfast and mako her exceedingly
simple toilette. But during these processes
she thought and thought, untll.thlnga be
came clear to her, and she knew that sbe
had been In grave (aril.
Mrs. Baxter burst Into sudden tears at
Cclostla'a departure.
"I may never seo you again. But I'll
never forget you oh, I've been a wicked
woman; but I'll try not to be wicked any
more and it's you that done it."
And she thrust the hills which (sweetser
had given her .Into Celestta's hands.
"I came from Heaven to help you,"
said Celestia simply. "Good-by and Ood
bless you."
Her eyes bright v stars she went out
into the early sunshine, and walked
slowly In an easterly direction, her head
high and the band of Jewels gleaming
Lrlghtly across her brow.
By the time she had passed under the
first lines of elevated tracks a crowd
Some New
By ELLA WHEELEK WILCOX.
Copyright, Wit. -Star Company.
Among the many privileges which the
present era accord to woman Is that of
"developing the beat within her," to
use bar own favorite phraseology.
It was the gen-
erally accepted idea
In olden times that
sm"' nvt
woman must
keep to her limited
domain of wife or
spinster, dapendent
f.
iipon husband or
relatives for home
and occupation, no
matter what wealth
of talent in other
i : ;, '
4 '
directions cried for
utterance In her
soul.
The girt who
utlllsud her talents
outside of the
domestic sphere
waa regarded as "stro.ig minded ' and
masculine, If not worse; and the mar
ried woman who dared write, sing, act or
reclta declsssed herself.
That was one extreme. We now seem
to have reached the other.
There Is an Idea prevalent today that
it Is the duty of every woman to K-ek to
"express" an Indefinable something
within her which shall establish her in
dividuality.
To made "the most of hersolf" is
(-very woman's ideal. It Is an excellent
one. but in pursuing it she needs to be
very certain that lier conception of
"most" would not be estimated as "least"
In the eyes of wt adorn.
In America this desire for individuality
is so prevalent that domestic obligations
are frequently put aside as c-skily as
household furniture Is stored,' while the
wife and mother sets firth in search. of
"her best self."
In olden times, when a woman .for
feited hoqws and Ita duties for a career,
other wives and mothers turned their
backs upon her.
But the sex Is broadening In sympathy
and Indulgence, and its charity is cov
ering: a multitude of suu.
A woman who has dlvoroed twa ' or
three husbands and shifted her maternal
Trl
Celestia, determines to aid her
"had collected about her. They did not
show her any disrespect at first, perhaps
aeeeuse ahe had suei a royal look of
lfufflclenoy. But as the crowl In
creased, persons in' it v outskirts who
Could not see her well, began to make
thcrnaelves unpleasant- And thla example
began to be followed by those who were
nearer to her." She was not angry or
frightened, ' but progress became more
and more difficult, and ahe lookod this
way and that for a way of escape.
"The door of a mean little house stood
wide open. Furniture was being carried
out of the house, and there was a middle
aged woman who kept dabbing lifer eye
with her apron. ,
. Celestia made a dart for tha open door,
the crowd now hooting and threatening,
reached It, closed It behind her, and was
alone in a narrow hallway with the
woman who wept, ' '
"What is the trouble?" she ; asked
gently. ' , '
. The woman's eyes widened with wonder
as she looked upon her chance visitor,
"My husband Is aluk with a broken
arm. We can't pay the rent and the
landlord Is 'throwing ua out into the
street"
"Ob, , but he mustn't do that." said
Ideas Dangerous
obligations upon other shoulders and)
purses, in order that she may. bs free
and untrammeled in her pursuit of her
ideal, meets with a great deal of con
sideration at the hands of her sis tor
women today,
"She had to pass though Just' those
experiences," they say, "In order to
evolve." ,
"What does a husband or a child or
two count in the great scheme of self
development?" says another. "A woman
must do what Is for her own highest
good, no matter what sacrifices -ire made
in the prooesa"
A somewhat conservative lady spoke
with regret of a friend who had devas
tated two homes.
"Don't think of her In that way," said
another. "She Is a woman of talent,
and I feol she hss a message to give to
the world yet. Che Is struggling toward
the light through all this xperienoe."
The liberality of Judgment ' is more
commendable than the casting of stones.
There Is an elastic - tendency to this
modern philosophy , which enables the
woman of lawless impulses to hide bar
.......... ......i.- n.nbn.ltl.. . II.;
, . : .
shelter. ' ' '.
The liberal thought of the day regard
ing Ionian Is full of hope for the erring
and remorseful soul; but It. is., top, when I
tarried to an extreme, full of danger for
the weak and unstable, 013d it la an ex
cuse for the selfish.
"The best" within a oman was never
developed, save through doing with
her might the nearest duties first.
Of course, there may be a diversity of
opinions regarding those dutlea, but one's
o n conscience and common aense sholld
be the guide.
It is not a duty to sacrifice life and
strength to the service of a brutal, aclflsh
and vicious husband, who has broken
every vow ha took at the altar, yet In
sists that his wife shall live up to the
letter of hers. ...
In such a cass it is a woman's nearest
duty to vet as fsr from tlie man as
possible, and not lay her future upon
the same pyre which has consumed her
past.
But the woman who allows her ambi
tion and her vanity to lead her to aao
rtfloe a good husband's happiness merely
r
uitit ii riinf fit Ti" " - ;
to escape.
Celestia. She was still holding the bills
which Mrs. Baxter had given her.
"Where is, your husband?", ' .
Almost in a state of coma Mrs. Doug
las, for that waa the woman's name, led
the way into a room from which every
thing had Seen taken but one chair. In
this sat a ' middle-aged, patient looking,
blue-eyed man, his right arm in a sling.
At his side stood a pretty girl of about
the same age as Celestia. I
"See," said Celestia, "hero la lots of
money..'. A good woman gave it to me.
And, please, will you help me for a little
while, because I have no place to go, and
you look like good people." j
Douglas had never seen so much money
at one .time. ,
"Who . are you, m'mT' he asked. '
"Where are you from?" i
Ills eyes were blinking rapidly with awe
and wonder.
"I am Celestia. I have come from
heaven to help you." He looked Into her
eyes on his knees before 'her,
r "Before Ood;" lie said, "I believe you.
Then as suddenly as he had knelt hs
ruse and hurried from tha room, grop
ing wtth his left hand as if he was blind.
The young-girl followed him..'
(To lie Continued Monday.)
to Women
because she fools she can shine on the
heights of art with a more effulgent
light alone (or with another man) vio
lates a principle which disturbs the har
mony of society. When she relinquishes
hor children for any aim 'or ambition,
however exalted, no matter what her at
tainments may be, she has but repeated
Ksau'a Larval u of old.
"Lock what she has achieved!" was
said of one woman who had acquired
fume and gold. "She had to fling away
the trammels and ties In order to be
come )ust what she is."
But on a good man's life, and on the
Uvea of innocent children, rested a
shadow which. In some lights, semed to
be a stain.
There waa a man who aucceeded In an
aim a petty ambition from our stand
point, but no smaller than tha founding
of an empire or the wlnnlrgj of Immortal
fume must seem in God's eyes.
This man wanted tho road to the near
est village, three miles distent, to run
through his property, becsuse It would
bring htm an amount of money which
eemed like a fortune in his small eyes.
Th. m.ii . ' ,.,lvrii.l a. .. - -.11 kill- .
- " .mi- a.u-1
valleys,
. .
i ue selectmen planned to have tha road
wo sruuna iTiese nuis, over level meadowa
Hut the man was strong willed, persist
ent, scheming.' He succeeded snd glories
In his s'iccevs. -Thai
was years ago. Today thousands
of. horsxs become knec-avrung and lame
and apsvincd, score, of vehicles break
11 ; down, wheelmen meet with socMenta. an-t
tha' nerves of summer residents and
touriata become unstrung because of
these hills and valleys, whuch must be
traveled to reach town, the trolleys or
tho train.
Was thU suuueas worth to the man
the price humanity has to vay for It?
It Is our 'privilege to give up personal
comfort and personal happiness, if we!
choose to do so, in order to aonompilsh
a certala purpose.
There Is no success In any line; of art
whloh can re pay a woman for the knowl
edge that her child suffers at .the men
tion of her nam.
I,et u be lenient in our Judgment of
such women, but let us not put them
uwn a plnnlcle as beings to be wor
shiped aud emulated
ny DonoTiir iix.
' Our of :h (hinm that 1 hvo hkm-t
tret br to tioii mit." Mid the lkvoW
Kio,rr. "Ii the hunch that women murrV
on."
"Nobody know
why they, t h t m -solvrn.
marrkHl the
I n d 1 v 1 U'l sin thy
dlii." r P II rd the
Stenographer. "Hn,
then fould they
j sues the . rlrtille of
j anybody rlee'e wed-
dlm nM what
BVxrlflr inatrlmonlHl
rrtyatery have you
got In mind?"
"I refer." replied
the Pookkeener. "to
the t y I c in that
women une In pick
ing a rminiMK mute,
ljiet nlnht t went to
a weddtntr whera the
bride waa one of
i i
I those little pIcoih ot
Dresden china brlo-a-brac and tlie bride
! Krooin waa a bin fi ling- thnt von winihl
know at a slance would "tniisli all her
j Ide&la and trample (ill over her Oelinca
every time he moved.
"What did ah- tin up with hlni for In
etAn of romo lonu-hnhixl Awrora In her
own rlaaa. who'd hae been anliject to
tha name brand of thrllle anil ehuddern
that ahe throwa? What made her aee her
a'ftnlty In a rny that looked Ilk a prlxe
fltrhtnr tnatead of Algernon, the poet?
"And that lan't all. Every day you run
acmaa womrn who are ao awell In their
dreaa thejr look like a dnlly hint from
Paria, yet they hn.vo married men wh
have to be chloroformed before you can
Kt them Into a rlean collar.
ft. ..a-.. V
X 3 e. PJLyx ifV. I
i''"-V1.t
'-tvU-.,vCi;'w"t
OFFERS TOE JUNE BRIDE A WONDERFUL BO'IEFURNISIIING OPPORTUNITY
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FOR TOMORROW IK A OHN
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OAK CHINA CUJrJJfiT. Extra
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inches - wide and 71 lnehes
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earvea caaw reoc ,
Finished go Men'
and a nig bar
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Our Low
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Ol'R IM PROVED
rWR - AhrtKM
(IEH LAWN
SWING. Hlands t
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II a
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mi
1 know college rtrla who have irone ' Tlrrauae," nnxwered the Ptenog
out of their way to pick out huabanda rapher, "If ahe did ahe would mlaa all
who never real anything but the market the fun of making hliu lo ltt thlnra he
report, and the sporting paae In thv 4 doesn't want to do. and never expected
nrMapti. "nil wlirnte pronunciation j to do, and give up doing all the thing.
gave their w Ivoa the fantoda every t!m he doenn -ant to do, and haa been In
i thi y oM-n their mmitha.
Alao I have observed that when a
demure, ploua Utile saint hunts, up a
aouJmate, ahe eapouaea a rounder every
time lnatead of the fire eacape that you
would thlrk ah would he Jtiat due to
wed. And what I want to know la whj
thla is thua."
"1h. when a woman marrlra. ahe mar
rlea to gratify her leading paaalon." re
turned the Stenographer, "that's the an
wr." "And what'a her leading paaalonT' In
quired tfia Bookkeeper.
"The mania fur reforming things." re
aiKinded the Stenographer, "when a
woman falla li love wltS a man ahe lan't
attracted by hla virtue, but by hla fault.
"She doean't say to herself, 'how nobis
and upright he la, and what a peaceful
and ha pry life I ahall have If I marry
Ihl perfect creature.' Oh,
lio. she ex-
'What awful
c laim to her beating heart.
neckties he wears. what horrid taste an Individual huahand. It's a great gran.
'ie baa In drean,' 'How ho amella of high- and they got lots tl fun out of It wltb
b.ill and tobacco, and what a picnic I out really Interfering with men's habits "
ll! have In reforming him." And chort- "If women are so keen on reform, why
ling with glee, she grabs her victim, ami don't they reform some of their own
niahca him to the altar." , rices V asked the Bookkeeper.
Its the ssme spirit that makes a;' "Reform." replied the Wenographer,
woman rip up her Parts dreaa, or an Im- "constats In prevoiiting other psoplf from
ported hat that she's paid VO for as soon doing the things you don't enjoy dolus:
a ahe gi'ts It home. Just for the pleasure
of sltertng It even If she ruins It?"
"Maybe you're on." any the Book
keeper, "hut why doesn't a woman marry
the kind of a husband ahe wants In the
first place. Instead of trying to cut him
over by her own patteraT"
top table
uw
US a
t'-' i'sssiiis U' j Mi j mwlT . This
A OWE AT BABOAIH TX A 1-INCH OONTWroOUfc
ohMf li'ii tfcku ui m aTiriaf. HmI m aaswlM la tn
wimiUr v.rnli Martin finish. Has tea heavy
AU anale lroa spring with wovea wire
supported in tha center. Mattress has
soft cotton top. and durable ticking.
Complete combination specially prtoad
for omorrow at only
AMAaTajssiMMs)aSMM990J
$9.99
05S,?5'V?TV7Tk
1
,522 A MONTH
at tats low prtoe.
SU
KTTBA I.ARQE B1ZK MAFUD TORCHr-ROCRETB-
Has double rattan seat aDd-
hack, heavy posts, and very strong It aon
i runted. Tats rockmr is squally sellable for
Indoor or outdoor usavVery
roomy aad eacar-dlaafry oosnlort
able. Oar low prtoe
only
FREE!
In adalttow te tke aasasrea
shown la tale Trttiiiirl
give away aa
kaaSaswrly W
set with every
i)
M-lirn POaTH gwiwo HeavyJA AA
slat n-. tavewwwaxaUr UK
Hsle wk aeia- -efcs mm Jl)
steiy Im af mrmm a D
Mated a laee Slastar I
onkut of ttOJf e
V. ever. Caah er asedM.
TO
II It D
Uli
! the habit of doing. 1
"I'm not explaining the why of thi.
but It'a a fact that the very flrat aymp-
; torn of tah-lerneaa a woman feels toward
a man la when ahe begins to think how
ahe would have his hair cut If ahe waa
1 married to him, and fnnka him wear an-
other atyle of collar.
"If there was a perfect man, he would
live and die a hai helnr. for no woman
would have him. He wouldn't Interect
her at all."
"It mtiat be, pretty lonesome for th
women who don't marry, aad have nn
body to reform," suggested the Book
keeper. 'It tiasd to be before women elected
themselves to the ofllcc of public guar
dian to the untveme." responded th"
Ktenogravher.
"Now the aplnaters who have no leglti-
mate prey take out thole propensity fur
reformlni: thing on the world. Instead of
yourself. That' a why we women have
organlaod. an U-d linking, . antl-ewrarln
and anti-amok Itur leagueetbut no antl
gaddlng or antt-brldge-playlns; societies,
or Christian Women's Temperance Talk
ing unions."
'Rlght-o!" exclaimed the Bookkeeper
ELEGANT . c -PIECE
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Het eanetts ef largw else 4t-lneh '
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supported by fowr colonial turned
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$19.75
tends to Six feet.
. A rare bargain
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1414-16-18 DOUGLAS ST.
1