I TJII; BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1016. Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Woman's Work -:- Household Topics The Cook and the Home , "The wife who cannot took or uperln end the housekeeping," say Mils Clem nt, a New York culinary expert, "lake ter husband pay envelope on' false pre tense. Mhe doe not know her business. When A couple marry, the girl expects her husband to hand her over most of hi ealary, and hp, lu turn, expect that her management of that money will make It go a far a possible. It Is hi business to earn the money. It I her to pend It. Purely one part ia a Important ai the other. Correct feeding I becoming a aclmce and ws are awakening to the fact that it is a Important to combine food properly for the adult as It Is for the. baby. No woman need think that she is too Intelligent to bother with cooking. Cooking In a (science well as an ait, trnd one can go on learning forever. The bride who has a grind foundation of culinary knowledge, and tnkr an Interest in cooking will find no end of possibili ties to it, Illght in her own kitchen she ran join the great movement to reduce the high cost 'if living, Foe can use up every crap of left-over material. It Is the clever cook alone who can make 'left-over food tssly and never waste anything. The smaller the Income the more Intelligence It takes on the part of the hrldo to manage her share of the domestic partnership, and the more site need to study and plan her dully bills of fare. A rnnn conns home after a hard day's work and iees the same old tlilnKs served, sometimes purchased from a, pastry shop Jiust before dinner. If he ) easy going he says nothing, tint after n while he urowa grouchy. There sre more grouches caused by bud rooking than by bad luck." l f rW im ttt"1 turn "Any tlmg you want tal foodies va Calumet Baking owderl My mother uses It lie'g tiled til other! ih' learned her leuon now trig tick to Calumet. "Unequalled for mating tender, tvholeiome. light bak ing. Wonderful leavening and ratting qualities uniform result. Mother tart Calumet if tbt most OFonofnlr! to bar roat see seaiieal to tts. Try It st one, Received Hi, ht Awards Vni Ct few S, tttp In hi""4 fin Engaged! -o- -o- Honors Are Not with Responsibilities -o- -o- By Nell Brinkley Copyright, WIS, Intern ! News Service. 'spy tM- W HKN you at latst piihh oppn a gardpn-gstp. hftwppn who) bara yon hnvo ppprcd for many an en tranced hour, you cannot turn gnd fleo at (ho first advpnlurp! For Id In hours you must havo Irarnci looked at, tho mysteries framed hetween the iron ficrolla, bits of blue tky wlih rreamy hihhhcs of rloiid floating over a bluer nky than that that bends over you ou,t In the dusty road, watched tho faery-tops of trees wave golden and green, breathed In utranRO wents that ar sweet and stupefying, followed the little (wIMlnjt paths that Journey away from the gato Into flowery regions, with eyes that, explored nd were baffled at the first turn vhere tho path looks over-ihoulder and beckon on, saw tho remote playing of rainbow drops leaping high in thfl sun, Jet of gems, and fancied th gold and t.llver fish that glanced In tho sun In a pool beneath; beard faint music from over the armies of lily-bed lanrea, and at last you-sbako tho gate 'til it rings In the still air. The garden Incloned It la not your garden but there Is no padlock! If ono wan bravo enough one could open it ami go Into this world of still sunhhlne and guarded ground. And whnn, at laaf, you swing It back nnd slip within with your heart behind your teeth and your feet on tho path that travels always Just ahead and nods and beckons' "advnnturo" at every bend, you rannot turn roward at the flrat dim glade nnd the flnst wight who titeps Into tho path In his lltllo red mat. When a girl nods with stolen etarnhlne In her eyes nnd haya, "I lovo you, too!" and you give her her little ring and announco solemnly, "Now we're engaged!'' onc iDBldfl the garden at whose gato you have hungejed, and on enchanted ground, you must tako the frlghtg and the wights that come wli.li tite quest! You may even havo to go bonnet-nhopplng! And, though you truly feel like crying, "Little woman of my heart, your face looks good tp m in any, so It Is not red and yellow!" that offering will never save you If you fall askep. Crowns have rough edges sometimes even the ruby wjiosc glow he delights In torments the klng'a head where It preRses; rose have thorns that nip, nnd If you aspire to the garden of a maid's heart you wjll have to know that queer adventures will bop out at you from any kink In that labyrinth. Even fishing one bonnet from cltys-full, along with an untiring sweetheart, will b a reguest tucked away behind her kiss! NELL BRINKLEY. Safemifc Infanta Invalid HORLICECS we omotHAi MALTED MILK Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. For infants, invaliosstulgrowing rhildmt. Pur nutrition, upbuilding tbt whole body. Invigorate nursing mother t4 the aged. More nutritioua than tea, coifee, etc. Instantly prepared. Require no cooking. Substitute. Cott YOU Sam Price Timely Advice to Those Who Arc Contemplating Matrimony H K WflXtl world would he lessened In lio eiml! de- Don't Neglect Ugly Duckling T do n"t give enough thnuajht to th' choosing of our life partner". fWore likuiK. tay a hou, a man loo tree If every msn and woman knew his or her remi'remrnta before miy risce -know land of cour.e got), (lie par'iciilar k at It I tetnpeiami nt. li.irn'-t, r, bshit. pu- . Hi' The Sunday Bee is the only Omaha newspaper that gives its reader four big pctfea of colored comics. jL JJ Jj il U (J0L1 R SIMON PURE L from rverv ttandpninl, and is theirfore stile to judtje whether it will be Jlkely to puit hint. Yet he mill tike a wife before I n has decided on, or eien thought about, the kind of one be prefers, lie does not j trouble binieelf afwit the. subject- beforn 1 nisniare, I nf'rtomt!'lv. hovteer, ihcrf : Is the rlek thnt he will do so- t(ter m.ir ! rtnse Uul a stitr'i In tMMe itifs nine Th .tmoi.tit of doiw 'tic ( n 1 , ; r i'l '' In the 9 be if tbe wiiitei) a r'lrm'i ASe lieur too much about the ii'irsettou of nppoxlte M trrtnee nf'd symon'nv not lontrailb'tion. Tin kiml of woman t man ountit to nia'rv tU pen.ls on the kin I of man. Therefore .1 num coiitemplatltig m:ttil mony should f,rt f nil clns.nfv blinteif Ms hollh IMlkn U, It s III II I I It fcilt-h. th nsi an t i wheilirr he w tni in , 1 bih fton'o'tttwr hliiief or lh husla-td cf a t-l'ib fr.-ijih mrr, wtie h r tuivtutlily There Is, In nearly every, family, one ugly duckling, and In the generality of canes It Is a daughter who seem to he held ba' K or kept don n, as it were, 8he Is not alwsys the plainest of the hroid;, yet there Is Invariably one who Is the Cinderella, lit every family one who t.i either not thought so much of as the rest or who Is kept in the background for various motives. It Is. as a rule, the one whet l ntoiher a girl, the who Is everything In that home circle, the one that cannot be done with out, ho Is" modt useful to all at home. Father wants her, mother need her, tbe hlldren long for her to room IHi them, join In their gitnes. and she Is likewise. epeiied to be In the kitchen to super Intend and help whert there Is company, or in the duatiiif room to enlerlnln b-r brothers fihniK or play propriety her nlt-r and Ihrlr seetliesrl I There at many girls "ho spend tieir i for him. he'?,er I'e wtti.t art oinanien i. f"f hi .! 1 11. t rtoin or a ui io imii fof 1 ;hit kit. ben It l ell. it . Int l.- t 1 tnoi:i a ml.il.in' ..f.o.. 1 ,Ki.aj ; I -M . ( s In f ,c the . 1 !.. ,e Hi ll 1 1 , i f-- o--' t I t" '.. u f , and her ambitions lie In the same direc tion, an theirs. If mothers and fathers were wise they would encourage their children to remain as children, not make them old beyond their year. A t'lndcrella In every fam ily Is a thing to be deplored; there should be no particular rlatery amongst broth ers. All the children of a household should ahar" and shsre alike; the plain one should not be kept In the background because she Is plain. No one should be considered th "uly duckling ' providing j they arethcy should not he made to I feel or realle this. In fact, any conn- i tei balancing good quality or talent should j lie fo,tred, brought forward, to mak up j 10 such a child. Favoritism among children should j never be hou n. for it la tht oversight I rtf huV.nl. IM KhKII a mnUin,. I,n,. lies, preiiTiina one enui to anoiner. wbii h ofieu rankles It children nilnd and in Inter the mum of leloiis- and j ii-enoit In fanilllr I tiften rnniigit the early treatment ef i eaf Lard 1 1 til .!t.r. ltl.iH I,., II, n 0IB,uP u)l,...lA.. I 1 ,lt i 1 In conllliutt tiruugrry, niw. 'their emllet tesra b e lieer known a lr.,,1,.1 l,r,v ,,ti,th IJiethoo.) l 1l1 . ! otirt of tlieaii eltllttrFii hi' Hi lirnf . . .1. 1 ..,..1 r,rtm inir rriii - ' i cir 1:1011, i"i noi.... ,. ... , ! ther hive been 11. d lo imi) th b"iden J 'of t'; he ,-ri-, lr.-b nd Wert ; ',f ijoor f tete h been pi a '"d tit-nn i i it' u- , t ii lih h 1 t" f i 1 ' ' ' j tl, .1 'f reason thev e. ot hv ! ...H y nt' llr l l'h " I t"'i'-. Hhi lf poisit, SUI l,ii", Il ! l-a.l t,e. lo t lit" I"" tt.o I I ll" II" .tl. ho t iln to: ' ir ! h Jk far 4 ' fv rj Ml 1 ?J.S Simon Pure" Leaf Lard is always ordered by the discriminating: woman for cake, pastry nnd biscuits, 01 vvrtl its (vr Ufp frj in. She knows that nothing equal Mnvn lr tur iiSur fenirtf. Kprrierice has taught lr that rl 1 itn-s-tly friJ m ' .S.m.vn t ('(.' K l. I I S" t, il I XrnoDUCTs' i i 1. ti 10. ! I t- t I. Il" i i t 1 b 11 t 4 I, Il f. I l ..f 14 . M r .il hi t l-i.o , I.. t t 0 m 1 ' l no, Ml 1 t to H It Is . . , ,. t tfil e no'' lo'l' . Hll . m;.iio.. hi t .,. l.t be ll-t I. thai tvo,i I I I lis in ' hii'l'i-' !' I I' I K. Ml I- il I " I I ' I f 1 4w ,m I. Us! :(: 11,1,1 , ,., tl lilt .. 1 . 1 1 .ti.. . I t o-l.ir ,,H a,i lili'ri "it , h it Mi -ii . V. ft I' "il I . 1 t .e. It t 1 tut ... I ' i it It l .. v t til. !':' ., I.-,.. il IhU i 1 t .ti.'., p.de I ,!, . I Ho- ''I t " IO i t ' ' I" ,,4 I H .' I , 0 1 1 !..,. u I ' ' ' 1, t,n, t. w mSiiwo-4 i It,, S H ' I .miiet the milliter oiie, lo e,irt titrt ; 111 0 h front the t'liiderelU of the family. , Mie ,hoil I Ih. i thirth (i.r In at ll t li He, 1,1 l' m llii 1 o,. hsi a it ,1r!re j .ml l 'e lit t'eir 'strtr, i I o I are lliry (n her lot Ht ti them thai they .ho.,-! I to . re '.,itir ti- fact etti i I ll-eie fei.ir lloit ,h ,"01 ,. p,.pt am Ii tt Id il r ' l. sit e -lob n ft I" ' . O'tlt j Mini hf till t pi hi, h.. ) .(! . I lo !,( . her to.ilh and rt I h I .:ihi.. b;t a g!ri. ,.. Biro.l.leit j i t . I . t. tnu !'", think I'll! ef i 'f l I lllng tliel ' ,.,- ,.oo ,to;n, t -,ng re t,t H,lgt IU, I l Ml I ij.hmio.t ii h.T !' nt mm, i- t ti, I 1 i'. .1 e t b v r.H. . v , ,;, , 1 . ; 1 , , r !- I 10, , f I, no 1 1 ' , i , . o I.vf it s h ' t I 1, , -i, M I W .J H I f r ' , hi ,.o (t, ,,,U.g a l ,-itHH -. ,,' ti! t.i ) ti gu 4 ',li'' k ik ,1 . t. I f . iit 1 .",.,. ar, t l,.n it 'I tl M-l" I . i,i. 1 1 it 1 hot t t. , te .. .to, oti S'l o.,J' ,( ,1 ' I I t I i ,.. r. . hi 1 Claim that Chivalry is Dead is False By DOROTHY DII. Every now and then ome Ancient Mariner or Ancient Marines rise up and ascend to the Wailing Tlace and beats upon hi or her breast and crle out that there Is no more -gallantry among men and that chivalry I dead. These prophet of woo banc their mel ancholy prognostication upon tho fsct that men are not 11s glib at paying women flowery compliment a they used to be nor o upple about Jumping to piclj up a handkerchief when a lady drop It and that when a tired man got g eat in a aubway he'a mighty apt to let a husky, able-bodied woman at.an4. Therefore, the people who obaerve these small fry phenomena affirm that chiv alry i dead and If they happen to be antl-suffraglst they go a tcp farther nd assert that they know who killed Cock Itoliln. H a the women them selves and they did It by going Into buslnc and wanting right. It alway make me mad, through and through, to hear anybody claim that chivalry 1 dead. On the contrary, I aisert that for the first time in tha his tory of humanity chivalry ha been born Into the world and that the modem, com monplace, twced-sulted buslnes msn could glv 8lr Launcelot and Blr Gala had and all other rattling tin psn Knight of the Table Ilound point orr a rel chivalry o big and fine that they never even dreamed of It, much lc prac ticed It. Talk about your chivalry of the pt. when it wasn t afe for a woman to put her foot outside of her own door with out somebody going along to protect her! Talk about your chivalry of the past, when women were nothing but slave to their men folk! Talk about your chivalry of the past when a father left all of hi money to hi sons, when a husband didn't hesi tate to stria hi wife of every rent she posscs.ie on her wedding day, and when brother thought It alt right to tako everything nd leave the sister nothing! Talk about your chivalry of the paf.'when women wer denied n education, nd a right to exercise the talent that nature had given them, when they were prevented from even going out Into the world and making on honest living! Rut the chivalry of today make It afe for a woman to go lone from onn end of the world to another because every man 1 her protector, The chiv alry of today secure a woman' own property to her. The chivalry, of today give her a chance to follow any occu pation she desires, and lo make Just n" good In It a msn could. The chivalry of today In ome placea-and It oon will everywhere even give woman an equal right with men In government. And believe me, . brethren nd sisters, ph-king up handkerchief, and even aub way ets, are a mighty poor ubtltute for property law and the right to mk an honest living. Another way and a very Interesting one and a most Important one In which the new chivalry of men I expressing itself Ig the masculine attitude toward woman and the marriage proposition. In the old "gallant day," which o mny people mourn, a vnnn considered that he hs4 a perfect right to love and ride away. If he enjoyed a woman's fociety lie hd no hesitation in monop olism much of It he cared to. even If he knew that hi attention were with out Intention, and that he was never going to let hi philandering take him 10 far the altar. It was nothing to him that he let a girl waste her youth and beauty on him or that he. who never Intended to ask her to marry him, kept away other men who would have been gtart to nave mir rled her or that he let her fill her heart so full with love for him that there would never be room In It for affection for somo honest man. That was the way the chivalrous man of the past looked at the tender subject snd alt of u know a dozen women who were the victims of this selfish and heart ies cruelty. How differently the msif of today regard the matter Is a,ttegie,t hv hundreds of letters that come to nie from girls to whom this new rhlvalrv is so unejpertcd and novel that they nrn bewildered by It. .In these lettsrs a alrl will write tint, she doe.n't know what to think of th conduct of s certsln man -that she knot.t t llkea her and enioys her society, t i i thst he hss frankly told lier that h i rtoes not wsnt to marry her or for ni reason that h cannot marry snd that she must not let him keep her from nii.i rvltta somebody else If she wants to. One man told a girl that he wou t never marry anybody because there wis Insanity in hi family. Another to. i girl that he Was too poor lo marry ard that she must not think of waiting I o hint because II would be years snd es t before he i-ould hope lo support a wlt.t In rie. ent comfort and thai be waul I neter marry " woman snd drag ho' down to poverty Mill another man t!d ttrl thst In could never marry Ion ss bis motis vrd beisuse be t-ouM never irate her -she had mad" te most heroic ,. rtCo( fur hint In his hlhlho-t, Ion tKt sht a f eeinil'ti" n. ill i.rreaha , .tl. ol I on thtt It nu!. h 10,1 1 1 Mm, for ! tu ns wnnisit !,, lo,,- nit he . I ,rH of I' 'e Mini l'ie th,, i, I,, liked, tv erl. I i l .i pot l oo o it of I f tlool,r.l and l.t lilSIII- mm. Inn-, fitrt iftai.!v ti.d ! while the , f lor V'O i.i slot it ' on. .... f IV. I ' ! ' ' e it - Jo ; - ft i .... if tr'is t'ntrt ol ef te.l ilH,lrt, I ,f lfi-i ittet, pr... led the gir's slii ( t'ie,ii,-it, ... , thole k 'IH 'lf-it r i s m t,t (some , When a tosit hti i. i ') th, ( a ntltlt k won t l''t ''t .! h sweet. ' sit f'.,,,ii f lr v'li'h en l""t whert h know a t i , nn n, v , e. i t. i o i' "it f t K an I w I it . . i i mtm vin'e,, i, - . a , , i . , , II, t t A I,, f IM , , 11 of tl Hi, I I i .! , f . t , , , t. ( i, j I 41, t I f f ' I- , iki'tii) .t- I I' K . VI i A Tut.-1 I I -ll Ml'g ' ,' -I :(., 'Hit t hlit.e.it l'.,t w v.l,.. ' ).. , o.f of (4 iS ('''' tittt tt I ' ,,'!.!(, J. Whan t'l t ! ,! I ti ! i-r IM 'ii(J l-at ! i.'-nog im 1,1. s 'i t'1"!'" i ' '" i!.aft;V-is t.u I t,t u ' I. , in a 11 1 11 , t t- a.. I kA 1 m ) i .! t at t IWinkf ttK'lutf.y alt t-l Itt.t, tefii.i'iy airH t. ei 4 . Iit t , 1 a 1 . th ). wot e-(4i h 1 t 'f .,t,ltt , -1.- 1. ,. I t'. ,,' 4 i' hi 1 !! . !'. ,t l k WIS ti, a te iit hEi i .. . .. ... .... n -Shoots i v,i.,.'. r It t I . "' ..'..I ...o ; .l-t -t 1 ! fur Iaei ' I'M , v.,,,swa i Ho t h t 11 ft Wi Ui t. in l Tht 0rmrt Jmp ir I a t 'i i f i . , a ' .i h , i i . t w 01.4 t I t -t l.t e It it t i- ,1 .- " ft I ' ' ,,,4 thl-, H"t I k ,w, ef ,.iK t ' . I h t t.,, titM m fl i. i'"..-,..ka gtp, I,., tllt, 4 .4 i I s - A m t ,. .... t 1 ' ' I t M i,tt. t its t . 4 a,, nf Vl,o. 4tit Mil, 1 11 . r- t . Vi I, w. lt Ill I ',- "t a . , ,! t- s il ' , ii t a r ; tt. ,..,..( a t 4, , , , . . ,,t t.t, -a in ' ft ' "t t tt ,( ,M. rt.ihl. siwl'l ' ',. h, I.. i i it nrrrMiltlilft ,1,1,1 i hr I iiin s i, tWeUiilH ft t i ., t, i, v 1 -t t-e,i ,ti4 J. f 4 4'''' t' J. ...