f 14 TIIK BKE: OMAHA, SATUTiDAY, MAY 13, 1916. Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Woman's FForA: -:- Household Topics Girls Call Her "Mother" After teaching nine 1811 In the same lunday school room in the Sixteenth Baptist church In Sixteenth street, near Eighth avenue, New York. Mr. Mile E. Jenklna. M years old, known to the l.M pupils ahe haa taught to be "home bodies" and (rood wivea nod mothers as "Mother" and "Grandma,' Mid yesterday at her re ception that she believed the world was jetting better every day. "I feel better than I ever d'd before, wore happy "d more satisfied, because I hare no worries or 'arcs." sh said, and then added that she would feel even better If the doctor had not caused her to oeaee drinking coffee and tea because of the effect upon her heart after the (trip "1 d'i iiusH my tea, although 1 can eat anything rise but corned beef." She believes Unit "young folks" are cleaner and more moral than they were fifty yearn ngo In HM) a girl afraid to sro out on the Ktreet alone. "I did go, thoimh. but 1 took my bulldog with me," she observed. Even a child ran go to moat theatera now, she said, but moat women would not go In Hhe laughed at the ques- tion of women's dress today, and aald, "Well, some of them were pretty bad in '0. too." She sees fewer drunkards on the sireets now, and liellcvea that there. Is much leas vice and crime in proportion to the popu lation than there was sixty years ago New York Times. The Sense of Proportion By f HAHI.r.g K. THWIff. WALK-OVER FANCY KID BOOTS LACE OR BUTTON In black, Ivory, bronze, brown, bine, light and dark gray, two-tone combination greys, bronze and champagne) combination, and all other popular color combination, In either button or lace and In all Sl ACS. RPKnALLY Pni(T.I) ion RATI KDAY AM) MONIIAV. Values up to $10.00, at 95 I f-Q &DVER Phoenix or Onyx Hosiery to Match Any of Our Shoes At One Dollar a Pair Mall Orders Sent Prepaid When Accom panied by Post Office Money Order VJALEl-OUER BOOT SHOP 317 South Sixteenth Street. President Western Reserve I'nlverslty. The sense of proportion Is the appre ciation of what 1 worth while. It rep resents regarding great things as great, and small thing as small It Is a Judgment made a part of character. The sense of proportion is to be ap plied to several Elements In American I life, 'me field of application relates t' , the relationship of labor and of lelauic Leisure without labor is Idloness; labor! without leisure Is drudgery. Roth rue bad. Work with sow leisure Is con- ' tentment, self-approbation, usefulness l.elsuie wlih work la recreation, happi ness, i est fulness The proportion 1 l" lie maintained. The same sense of proportion I to b als'i applied to wealth and to compr tern), The slruggl for weslth is nm su much a struggle for money as ll Is a struggle for power. Many gie,.l men do not car for wealth, some lov fame, others love, power. The mare desire for material accumu lation la lessening. The miser sems to have passed out of life snd llleratur, but the community is becoming keenly sensitive to the power of money. It cost most men too inuoh, It cost many men friendships, larg apprecia tions, noblo relationship and bisadth if living. It costs soma msn home. With a competency mora men should be contsnt. Knough should b enough Th trouble ) that to near! all of enough mean a lltti more than wa v got! The great prlnolpla of neither too ranch or too llttl hould prvll. Thi tamperat gone of poasasslon, half-way between the arctic of limitation and the tropical ot undue luaurlane, rswsseaa the proper sphere. Thl lame of proportion I farther to be applied to what may be called th sphsr of aelf-cultur and of publlu duty. On ow to on self certain duties, one owes to th publio certain duties. These two ssts of duties ar to he fairly adjusted. If one live for on' Mil only, h live for a vary Unworthy objsct. If on live for th oommunlty only, he soon ha no lif which U worth offering to th oommunlty, On la to live for on' sslf hi order to mek that life rich, strong, broad, great; and this life thus mad I to b given to th great common life of all. Tha Ufa greatest In Itaolf should be made, greatest out of II self. k 4 M A National Institution i rr.S, '.'i r ' fV ''."I'V.PUT i r l av. I 1 1 t For 30 years Coca-Cola has been put to the test. Daily for 30 years it has passed the lips of Americans in all walks of life has borne the test of repetition without los ing its zest. It has proved its wholesome ness and deliciousness. Time has made its credit secure. You can prove to your self in one glass of Coca-Cola what 30 years have built into its reputation. TVmaivl tr erulr hi 1 ill rama- nickname. (iwtiut, gtilwdtuUtm, Tim Coca-Cola ca ATLANTA, t. V. I I t .1 . 4 ' 1. I.VI 'I , IT' 'SCI l. :vu tu, -jii.ii . kVu n k Y ZST"ZZ " -TT jll I I mm mwr- I U It 1 Hi V i - - Ti ki Love's Rosary -o- By Nell Brinkley t'opyright, 1916, Intern't News Service 1 0W. ' No man who sport gonvenirg of little heart gffair, hl ch8tg of letter, pale-blue and gray, gweetly perfumed with the haunting odors of fgded ladies" hand clinging till about them, the tiny glde drawer of his dfak filled with piteous odds and ends, a little blue bow creased and faded; the tiny white fan with Ivory sticks and tarnished butterflies In white and gold patiently spread upon It; a white glove with a curve of a girl's fingers still plain upon It; one thick, soft lock of hair still live and glittering, deep gold and curling about his fingers when he tskes It In his curious palm; a babyish locket with a smiling face veiled In dark, soft hair looking out of the blackened frame; a ring or two, dumb and felling no tali's; a wrixt-rlbhon of narrow vrlvoj dreaming of the smooth fin gers tht Imigened It and gave It away In an ar dent breath, and a dry little knot of mignonette In a bit of tissue paper - no man who boasts of keepsakes and carries cmintl"a faces about hi, beurt can match with Fim himself iht- vatn' SATURDAY SALE (V tU VUTIFt't. NEW KID-SUMMER HATS . . I 4 - , 1 win.-' - i " $9:15 THE LA-RUE HAT SHOP III! I H i i a t'i' s a ri Kros th trifler. Kros the egotist, Eroa tha I.ady-Klller! Kor about, his small person when he dolls himself up he wears a chain of amber beads, and within each bead a girl's face crystal lized imprisoned there. I.ov'a Rosary! And do you know he has known so many glrla (you'd never be ahle to count up to the num ber!, for be lovea U glrla Dan does plain and small and splendid and gay, and aad and wallflowery, and beautiful and sweet and all the girls tn the world Is a heap, let me tell yon like star dust they ar where was IT so many girls that the Rosary he wears would reach around the world and back again to the land where l.ove hangs out. And. swung on the end, this vain person carries an Image of himself in gold with diamond eyes and rubles for Hps: Talk about chaps who boast of love-tokens! There Is no man who can count In his treasure chest a trinket like this' And there la nu man. no matter how swollen the imp of roncolt Is in his heart, who ha so mighty a thing about him as )n VanUy' Woo' -NKI.l. H KINKl.K V, What Has a Wife a Rigyt to Expect of Her Husband? Br uonoriiv nix. 01 Shoes That Have Stepped Into r f r II7.I Uiiicii ravor nun Smart Dressers 'i' T I . mm NiitMi is more (is'ifylni t a oin than ( baia f.iolwear hi-h, wbil.i ! ' I 'i art, rat eol t sit l ,'!mi. g."d Usi ir lrnfess Hi I-.. i iVUfot Ml I tn I tsi iltti. ailled rloMlr liiir ..-.l i'le suimneif shiiwln( ,)t t! . ri.it t,ire. ss. Inet'U lie iii l"pl b le iro.l if l' : rt Ik it till It h' ! Will o s'i in awl f'-f it.'f th.t ht fitt ! t. "i.t f t.w t ri I ".! ti-t f 7SH0BCQ ( JUTS A. DOUC.LWA. To Get In or Out ot Ruilneu, to Buy or Sell ndvantageouilys ui THE DEC VVant-Ad Cotumru. A wife hss a right to expect that her hushanil shall have finished sowing his wild oat before he manic, t'nles a man has made up his mind that h Is Ureil of running with the hoys and pre fers the lady he ha askd to ha his vlfe to any other woman In tha worM he doe. a most dishonorable thing t' irmri y. f'osslhly In the olden ilays, when a men really did s woman a favor li keeping her from being an old maid, Iherc nn some excuse for th man wh msrrlfil s alrl anil put her down In n home or a boarding house, and left her lonely while he went off to amuse himself with his boon companion. No such es'iise prevails now. Tha unmarrle! woman Is verv comfortable as aha h, lliank yon, anil doesn't neej to get mat r led for an occupation or a anpport. Fnrlhirmore, she wouldn't If she ha l th faintest Idea that a man was marry log her to lese her, Mbd just to get somebody to keep a coinforiabl pla'-e for til in to come home to when every where, elite ahnls up. Therefore, If a man Is going to spend his evenlnas at his i Inb, or playing poker, or has an In- in si lil propensity for taking blonde out to dinner and supper and automobile rid -lug. In plain Justice he should stsy slnnls. There I no compulsory marriage law. A wife has a right to expent that her husband will make h.r his comrade an I friend, and give her some of hi com panlntishlp. If a man Is of the oplnlo'i that his wlf has not fh Intelligence ' i understand his mighty maaculltia ,nicl lect, or see th point of hi wit, he should not have married her. Ma should tint t picked out somebody In hi own risen, and at least hsve given her an oppor tunity of marrying orn man on h.r own plan. Then sha might have had little companionship. ff, however, ha thinks she Isn't a fo ii, and very few men do think that of their wives, then It I up to blm to mak' some effort at trying to ha chums with her, and It would surprls most husbsnds nearly to death If they would only find out what awfully good fsllows (h"lr wives ran be Th sversge American business man at home makes a clam em abolutal loquacious, lie rush 'through his breakfaaf. at lightning speed, generally with th newspaper In front of him, give his wife a dab on th cheek by way of a kiss, and banga th front door behind him. Me comes home late to dinner, eats If In silence that la often only broken to scold at fha children or crltlrls the rooking. Then, with clgnr and paper, he settles himself for th. evening and only grunts a monosyllable reply when his wife tide to talk to him Kor conversation and general oompanlon ship she might Juat as well have a stuffed Teddv bear for a husband. That Isn't the kind of a happy even Ing at horn that th girl who married him dreamed of having, and tha wonder of It I that more women who hus bsnds never talk to them, and never try to entertain them, and never evince th slightest Interest In them, don't hunt up soma other man who will mak him elfSgreabl. A wife has a right to txpe.et thet her husband will reapect her personal lib erty a ahe does hi. "Uberty" In niarrlag does not mean "llcena" any more than It doea ny where else. It simply mean that a wife should hav Just as much right to free dom of thought and act within th pr crlbed bounds of propriety a a husband has. Matrimony la bound to b a rle of concessions, but because a woman Is married is no reason why she should b forced to sacrifice her own personal ity, and become a weak echo of her husband. Provided ah doea not exceed her allowance ahe should have the priv ilege of spending her money as ahe likes, and so long a kIic does not run the thing Into the ground and Interfere with her husband's romfnit she should hsve tha right to Join whatever rluba she pleaaea, or pass her leisure In the man ner most agreeable to herself, A husband soon baa-Ins to hat the wife who pollrea his every move, and a wlf. entertains pretty much the same feellns toward the husband to whom she has t'i go for permission for everything slit doea, aa If she were a child. The tyrant on the hearthstone Is never loved, no matter what the ee. A woman has a right to espert thai her husband will do his share toaid making a happy home. Ti'a a hlir Job, making a happy honip. it's more than any one prm can do, and especially It a more than anv woman can do alone w.imnii has a rmlu to eipcct her husband to help her nmke a happy homa The old rrlpe for the eonst ruction of tdeal famllv lift- nlwats tell the wlf to go ab.ml will. ,, gun. Wret emlla. and to keep all of her lllll worries out of eight That's good ss far a. n goes, but It doesn t go far i . il.. f. r no woman can make a happi hoi.,.-, urn though she srin. like a i heehoe .t If the man pf he hmi, is mulv hii.I i.uihv or sweat let ar ciiid I' ." Line I lm- nr If ( on in in. i '.Mi.- ,1 ,,i,i, ai.emt f.r all tb aci .iii'iUte neri ... ,. worre r- th ti lu1 H I l i lip In Iht. I-..,. i. . eff..M . ', ii,,k'i,, L i,,) hp. as It it ihc ia ...) i ,r j,,,, ft,, t a rei. Lr;n. ,!, h inr i..,m.. uk ir, rod f r ll , t.,,.t , ft(i, 1 ertf I ,, n f ) u SM ef lh i lil., ,,f ,.,( ,ht,f Tit. the m.t "f a h ... thai s b rsM .. .st.ri .! h ... ., , t ,, ',1 h. I Household lltlps i in t . i t- ,,t u i 'h.r k. ., ,, . i'.iivw f i " l ' f " e It l . i , , , ; e.l a . - t'i . t- I f '. U Or. .1 . I If . t K f. t l l . - .... t II 1 1 fti wi.h-. . ' ,if !! ;-ti:t . ( , n.'.'S'c ti a a I . t t, r t 4 t f ' . - ' . - i. m ... ' 4 "t , 'i I I i o . i , t ..- f al.i j- i. ., m 4..t . i-iif a 1 j ! ! ;! I'gSl ; r-s a ; a r.a T-a wtl (? .i'.'f la t.t'at V i j h al la la lt mi ! a '"en pari t sml r",; ! Is I ul as tnU esas ...me ael 4 7'