KOHHaWa-lW The Omaha Sunday Bee I WdSbprsno MIAGA2 PA6E Overcome by Pity at Seeing Her Childhood Sweetheart Lying with Severed Right Arm in a British Military Hospital, the Prima Donna Falls on Her Knees Beside the Little Cot and Sobs Out Her Proposal LOVE EPIGRAMS BY MAGGIE TEYTE. yHAT wemin wants is stoedy lovo. Whan woman U lovad by two man It la Uta ana who make the noil aliow who wins bar. Person who bare great gtfte must choose between lore aad caraar. I should choose my caraar. My husband preferred Ioto to a caraar. Because ho neglected hla caraar for mo ho lost my respect Every woman liko attantion. I proposod to Liautanant Rohartson. I eaidi "You're got to." That man who losaa a woman's r as pact loaaa har love. My first marrlaga was tba old-fashioned kind tko marriaga of dependence. My next marriaga shall bo ono of Indapandanca. 1 I bellave In marriagai but I do aot believe In baing too much marriad. It la battar for ovary woman to marry. It gives har anchorage, and human nature needa anchorage. By Maggie Teyte. YES. ! attall marry again. It will probably be in Mar. when I return 'to England. My fiance Is Lieutenant Seymour Robertson, of tba EngUih One Hundred and Seventeenth Regl ment I will tell the story of zny.ro'" manee becanae It may help tome other woman to find her way to the new marriage without under going the friction of the old mar riage aa I did. . I believe that I would bar eome tlme married Lieutenant Robert eon, bat I would not have married . him ao aoon had It not been for the war. ne lost ma ten arm. n was snot away at Tprea. He waa Invalided home. I met him at a private boa- Pital. I secured a divorce from my first buiband, Monsieur Flummon, be cause I cherished my Independence. When I nw my first sweetheart lying In the hospital cot maimed and, oh, ao feeble, I felt within me all the old childish lova Increase Immeasurably. We had been child lovera at Wolverhampton, in Staffordshire. I Promise to Marry a Wreck of War. A great flood of love and pity overwhelmed me. I fell on my knees beside his cot sobbing. "I will marry you," I said. "What me. a wreck of war, maimed and useless!" be said, bit terly. "I will not allow it." "You've got to." I cried; "Tou've got to marry me." And we are going to be married. But let me go back to that child hood in the Midlands, what is called "The Black Country," and tell you my romance from Its be ginning. Only I cannot commence at the actual beginning, for it seems that I have always known Seymour Robertson. He is seven years older than I and has a clearer memory of "The Teyte Baby" than I have of "The big Bobertson Boy," for his memories began earlier than mine. But we did talk of what we were going to be when we grew up. I cannot remember when be had not determined to be a lawyer. And It was my intention to become a singer ever since my brother broke down in the middle of a solo. He had a heavy cold and we were all anxious about him. I sat close to the platform, eagerly listening. When bis voice wobbled, then stopped, 1 took up the strain and sang it to the end. No one no ticed whence the voice came. They stared at the boy standing there, red and mute, listened to the child ish soprano and wondered. That day 1 resolved to become a public singer. I went to a Convent school, then father took ma to the Royal Col lege of Musio in London. Sir Hu bert Parry, director of the college, refused to teach me. He eald I waa too young. That waa the rea son i went to ran. Jean am Resske forgave my youth. He taught me. I continued my studies In Paris. I sang at the Opera Comlque. I created a part in the pew opera, Circe. Had I been ac cepted aa a atudent in tanden my life would have flown in a differ- 4 .'I .Hi. ,. "V- ay- l -- , i 1 v Vr-? - 1 A Striking Photograph of Miss Teyte at the Time She Disobeyed Her Hus band and Came to America. ent channel. I wonld have .met Seymour pegging away at bla law. There would JhaverTbeen 'a better understanding between us. But I carved my success In Paris. . And I tuet Eugene Plummon. There I stop to ask myself the question: "WftyT" And I answer: "Because wben a woman Is loved by two men it Is the man who makes the most show who wins her." I believed that Seymour Robert son loved me, but he wss self-contained, deep In hie studies and in establishing his practice of the law, I waa In Paris. Mons. Plummon waa In Paris. I saw bim every day. Every woman likes attention. I married him. My marriage waa only tolerably happy from tba first, and it became leas successful until It degenerated Into a failure. There were two res eons for the unhappy outcome. First, let me remind you, that in some essential respects women are alike. They admire the man who achieves a high place in the world. That is one of the common points ! H'. A 1.. ... , y v-h - ' " , ,'J. 1 . '. V. It ' .f 11 ' f -w- . "sJs. ' '4. 1- ff .v -' i between the Colonel's Lady and the O'Orady peraon between whom Kip ling discovered ao much likeness. If a man cannot attain a high place in the world, at least ho should con vince the woman nearest to his life that ha Is doing hla best to develop his talents. All persona of great glfta may have to decide between love and a career. X would not hesitate a moment. X ebonld choose a career. But my huaband chose love. Instead of attending to the big business of a man's life making a place for himself ho devoted his time and thoughts to me. For this I soon ceased to respect my hus band. When a woman's respect for a man goea her love follows. That la one reason for the failure of my marriage to Mons. Plummon. Another was bis disposition to meddle in my career. I wanted to be let alone. I do not mean liter ally alone, for every normal human being enjoye companionship. But I did not want dictation. No woman wants some one el- ' wars it her elbow saying: "Do CoDvrla-M. 11. mm J mm: w " v .wit , j . -'...7 s ' - T7 -'SI V ! ii, :t I ;i; ' ' - - T" i I II- V , 7i 15 .-. . i r 1 I this" or "Don't do that" It Is ridiculous In this stage ot the de velopment of women to promise to obey. It is a form of perjury, for every Intelligent woman well knows that she haa no Intention of render ing obedience to her husband. She will discuss family matters with bim. She wilt follow bis sugges tions, provided she thinks them as good aa or better than bers. That is all. Mr. Plummon let hla own career take care, In great measure, of Itself, and meddled with mine. In vain I warned him that be must not interfere with my plane. He ob jected to my going to America. I insisted. I came. He divorced me with my entire consent. I did not defend the suit. Wnat he said waa true. I wished to lead an inde pendent life And ao I shall, despite my be trothal to Lieutenant Robertson. He respects another's individuality. He la willing that 1 shall be fmm home on my concert tours. He knows that he will take the same place in my life that my adopted daughter does. One mutt feel hen bv th Star Compaii). Great tiiltaln i V i L A - N.. , J Lieutenant Seymour Robert eon, to Whom the Prima ' Donna Proposed. she is far away that there la some place that la bers. that there Is eome one who belonge to her. An anchorage! That Is right An anchorage! ' After my marriage to Mr. Flum mon I lived for the most part In Parts. I did not meet my former playmate of "The Black Country" until a year ago last Summer, he met my husband and ma. It was very formal. He was most digni fied. And yet I knew that he still cared. A woman always knows. It was on the eve of the war. He volunteered. He wae wounded at Ypres while I was in this country. A friend cabled me about bis Injury and eald he waa being Invalided home. Wben I sailed from America last Spring I intended to join the work ers in the field in France. I volun teered as a vlsltress, one of those women who goes from one supply store to another and who sees that the necessarlea are furnished. That post not being open to me, I sang all Bummer at the hospitals I made up a party of four and we visited the hospitals to cheer the lucky ones bravo fellows who, though they had lost one leg or two legs, one arm or both, counted them selves "lucky" merely to bo alive. Often I aang ten or twelve numbera. The boya liked the ballade. Their weak volcea joined the choruses. I. with other friends, called on Lieutenant Itobertaon In his hos pital. From that first meeting there waa a reuuderatandlng. I took my singers to the hospital and sang there. Often I called without them My divorce waa assured, and the love affair of years before. Inter rupted by my going to Paris, waa renewed. I had to propose to htm, as I have told. I knew ho loved me and I saw that he did not Intend to aak me to share what be thought wae a poor remnant of a life. So I did. I aald to bim. "You've got to." Ours will be what I call an Inde pendent marriage. He will not in terfere with my career nor I with hla. But when the tour la over and Rights Itaarrved ; , l 1 place that is bers. that there Is S ' Mc CUja I fllss Teyte as Cherublno In Marriage of Figaro." his cases are finished, there will be common ground for meeting. We will have a home and we will have each other My wish to be alone will be fulfilled. Alonenesa 1 the artist's right. It Is more it is the woman'a right My stand is the revolt of womanhood. We ask that the form of our life shall be How Wall Paper Affects the Air We Breathe SURPRISING aa It may aeem, the condition of the walls, whether covered with paper or whitewashed, has an Important effect on a room's ventilation. This waa proved by some recent Interesting experiments with two rooms. Tba walls of one room were covered with a light paper which had become somewhat aolled by the lapse of time. Those of the other were whitewashed. The results of the experiments showed that the proportion of car bonlo acid remaining in the air was appreciably lees in the room with the whitewashed walla. Taking Into consideration not only this, but the amount ot humidity and all the other factors, the ventilation of the whitewashed room was found to be 17 per cent better than that of the one with paper on the walls. Other parallel experiments were made to ascertain the effect of different methods of ventilation. One pair of experiments shows the effect of opening wide and closing the door once every half hour dur ing a seven-hour period. The ven tilation waa m proved about 10 LI X "The let alone. Tba form of our life la the work wo have elected to do. I expect to marry when I return to England In May. My fiance la still tn the private hospital, but thank Heaven, be la gaining fast We will show the world that the new marriage, the Independent mar rlage, will be a auccess. per cent by thla periodical opening of the door. Other sets of tests compared the effect of taking the air eupply to the gaa stove from the corridor with taking It from the room Itself. The supply of air to the gaa stove from the room Itself Improved the ventilation by about 20 per cool In other testa the effect of open, ing the window flap while the vaa stove took its air supply from the room Itself was tried, with the re sult that It waa found that the ven tilation was thus Increased by T4 per cent Finally, a series of tests waa made in which the vent pipe In the celling wss opened. This waa most effective, the ventilation be ing Increased two and one-half to two and three-quarter times, and in one case even five times. Ob viously, this increased ventilation must affect the humidity of, and proportion of carbonlo acid In. the room. Scientists believe, however, thai these testa with the opea Went pipe have not much practical ala nlQcance, aa there la usually Bf provision for celling ventilation lrf UTLU