THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1916. Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Woman's Work Household Topics Flashes of Summer Fashions A new white bed ford cord ha a wool buck. Dressy little wrap are frequently made cf taffeta. The latent In taffeta hat la the on trimmed with straw flowers. 6oma of the newest straw hata hava Velvet crowns. Fashion brings the ribbed stocking this season. A wreath of pinked ribbon ruching la new feature In millinery. Tha nviit Interesting feature of a wash aklrt la usually lt pocket. Tha new neckwear shows quaint capea f (Ilk and pleated mslln. A fleherwlfe leev s rather short and tha cuff Is turned back . Washable beachcloth will be mora or lees used for summer suits. The pockets of sports skirts ar of extraordinary oddity and Interest. A new wrinkle Is to emphasis tha long cams of a bodice by cording. It will surely ba a season of ruffles. They ar pinked and they sra fluted, while aome are Just plain ruffles. Many of the new topcoats are finished t the neck with a wide scarf that ties gracefully into a large, soft bow. This sesson ther Is a riot of trim mings; buttons, buckles, small artificial flower, beads, ribbon bows and tassels. Tha kimono shoulder Is being used mora and more; sometimes the sleeve Is tiot set in until the unbroken Una reaches almost to the elbow. An attractive touch to a checked suit is a collar of plain contrasting color. Tor Instance, a black and whit check suit might hava a collar of roa or blu taf feta. One of th new veil fsahlons is l ha frill really a loose floating veil attached to tha crown of the hat. It should ba worn by a woman with a well-polsed head. "Just What I Want!" "Give me rake made with Calomel I know whst I'm getting I know It's pure, wholesome, noudihlog, tempting and tatty, "It's all In Calumet's won derful leartnlng and tailing power Its ibioluts purity. I'm Calumet (or uniform etulti and economy." Rclrd Hit beat Am rib Km Cm! ti Tt I-Silt I tomUCm k INKING poWSi 1: n:- ,q v An Ideal Honeymoon Aboard the good ship "Fancy" on the Sea of Dreams Girl Workers Who Win Out By JKSK M'l.Rt. liar real name was Masai Murphy, but sh hd changed It to Hella North. Phe had the good ns not to adopt tun queer a nom de plum, but the reuul nltes of tha stag seemed to demand nothing mere symphonlous than her own nam Pelt North was not ashamed of h name of Murphy, aha had teen happi est hn sh had lived at horn and she vaguely rmmhrd a kind hrt1 xl 9 "Tell your mother that Star Stockinet means not only clean ham, but tWit ham." Thc Star Ham te smoked in thin Stockinet Covering, vhh h i vui4 iut a As you Uco it, fvvrr iho cut rnsl wuh hi fitt .ttwi th Ut g'K a.I ts a -a t aa i I -, a v t x vj&r v. .f ry mma i"' mm mother and a father who used to coma honi tired out at night and sit down to a hasty meal In his shirt sleeves. Thar had been other children, too, and Hell had had to work hard, for In those days there hadn't been much money. Finally sh had saved up enough to com to New York. Uk many another girl sh had wanted tn see th sight and her father's small farm had appeals I to hr only a shelter froni bal weather Sol much if a shelter at that, for sh had alej.i with tw of h young r children, The luxury of a slngla bed had beett unknown In th Murphy family. VaaM was Irish n, quick at r- f t S t lt ti, j , -i 4Mh la 4t,t 0 f t V,w4 Htt ! SW m t- ift -" t 4tM.M Wat Kept out. i ilm m),., htmm fck ttmn ,! 4WM, . M, W IMS Ua4PnlUW ' -t, H ' 'g TRODUCTS ltty Attttuf St t'v"t --w Th Natowval !M'-W -o- VSwsjZ """ " &a- " . . paxteo. Her brain worked overtime be neath th Titian hair that curled tightly over her head. Her small savings had vanished all too quickly and jobs In New York were not plentiful. Besides Maggt had not been trained for any of th po sitions open to girls In New York. And so sh finally landed on the atsg. Her lrleh wit, combined with her piquant fac and her crown of curly red hlr had quickly obtained her a position In one of th season's musical comedy successes, ller work ss not hard, after tha tlret deadly weeks of rehearsal when I Ml had lived In the theater with an i occasional llt to th comer bakery for milk and roll, or ft cup of strong coffe 1' it after th show was put on, l.er 11m rmtslda of the theater was her own From the tint nben sh had deneed h. for th manager for th first tint, sh had determined ,l mak herself worthy soma day of a pla eutsld 1hs chorus, M(le r brlhd br s ret tt a .'tt, but trS'ir. tl rl.'sety and at.'h. sat ud If si hal onlv V n .1 th b eg hawt f I Ihm ru')t h dan tr r pi rn oMalu a p'in 1M In a New York pre.l.i.i'.ut, ah o--t b t m . re sit ; I tn he her wih Hat i was ! tn b fl" and hiHv In h iglutao atul s Simp y walle t tl ,, hat lee t to thiiim al a ie .!. !!. . or It ioy '. J a. !.! ef tH fatalist J - ine4 l 1 -0- By belief that If you want a thing hard nough, you ran sursly hava It. Any way, Bella had her cham-e. Her quick ness to sea and understand things had attracted th attention of tha manager mora than once. He wag a veteran In the business and knew that Rellvwss, as he put It. "a good little kid." It wasn't a great rhsnc that cam to Belle unexpectedly, but It waa a chance to walk out on th stage end say three sentence and to sing a song that use 1- 1 I wm 1CC:XERY U BKOHE A U0BIE SCOWS Old Vegetables Made New x cos stas a: clarkc. !Mg f l III ni it..-i. , 'I -,.it,.,.' eat)) -l .'( i ,.1 g l y'it. - .' I -tig g; taii.. uit n ii a tHt 4. tfci-. n t, 4.t,l e t tl' tl ... ' - . I ' 1 1 it iMi i at - ' m! t ), i-l il.it t " a s. H . r. i ,. am t " t ' ' t 1 1 i Nell Brinkley iGflrcn a bachelor girl, "If I could but take only Love bimmlf. along on tny honeymoon, tben Burn I'd marry. For ltd Love himself alone who hag my heart, whose company 1 would adore. The glint of hi golden curls la tn my eyes, not the sun of any real man's face. If I could but take Love alone along unti leave the man at home, I'd mHrry." NfcLL BRINKLEY. what Is popularly known as a hit. Bella accepted the part calmly, hadn't she al ways had faith. And she did It well, very well, so well Indwed, that she was noticed in that tangle of beauty and charm and music and light And Hella was happy. One stepping stone always led to another. She wss young and strong snd could wait. Some day she could return to the little farm In the country and tell the other Mur phvs she bad mad good. Ma i'.-,, a m ; --t S muiiil in t " r l -' a . i i a i i i if . i-1 a .,,. I : v .4,1, ' -. ti'i . 4 i . , t . . m-i A i .( t a-, t k i. , ' tt, . , I tu t tt ! 4 it '-4 I 4 14' -' i v . i .i' ii I . Why I Never A Married The Woman with Too Much Money Tells Her Story. Why do so many women who are at tractive, Intelligent, full of human affec tion and tenderness the sort of woman who were d Mtnmd by nature to make Ideal wives and mothers never marry? Is It because thev were bent on celi bacy? Or Is It because rami were too stupid to know a good thing when they saw It, and so passed them over? Or la It the fault of social conditions that never gave thera their matrimonial chance,? It is on of life's great puzzles, and In an atwmpt to solve It. Porothy Pix ha asked a number nf charming old maids why they never married. By DOIIOTHY D1X. "The reason I am an old maid," ald the sixth woman, "is because I we too rli-h. 1 had money enough to buy everything else In the world accept th one thing that I wanted most of all, and that was the sort of a wedding ring that I desired. "I wanted it to be mada of the pur gold of disinterested love, and sot with the Jewel of a real, genuine man, and I didn't want to buy It. I wanted it to coma aa a gift, and It was never of" fered me. "Did you ever think that no women In the world have such poor chance to meke good marriage as rh h glrlaT Of course, they have chance to marry by the dosen, th miserable little male para sites who think that It's easier to put up with a rich wife than It U to work for a living. "And they can marry In their own wealthy set soma rloh fool, who ba lived abroad long enough to get an Idea about keeping fortunes together and bulldlnn up a moneyed arlstociacy In this coun try. And that's about llie limit of their matrimonial opportunity. "Now It must be an unpleasant thin to a man to suspicion that he is being married for hi money, and that his bride Is thinking more about his pocket book than ebout his heart, but custom lis Inured men to the dependent woman, and, moreover, men have a moro robust I vanity In matters of the affection thai; women have. "A msn seldom doubts his shlllty to charm sny women he desires, while a tonmii Is olweys a ouhtlng Thonm slna, continually riemnndlng to he told that h msn still loves her. "Therefor, the fortune hunting mnn is not only n creature of peculiar le- pulslveness to the rl'h woman, but orn ho I continually seeking to avoid. I' Is only when rich women pet very old or so hungry for love that they shut their eyes and refuse to see whether whnt I; offered to them is black bread or calve, that tfley cease to look with sunplelcti upon the motive of every pour man who comes near them, "Of course, the rleh woman's fear of being married for her money is s. two. edged sword, which cuts both wsys, It defends her from the horde of contempt ible men who are willing to marry to be supported, but it also drives away from her Iho worth-while men among whom he might find her real mate. "H makes the young man who has self respect and character and energy and ability and who would no more marrv a woman for her money than he would default with a trust fund In his keeping fight shy of an heiress as he would of :i ca as of smallpox "Th girl herself may attract him, for rich girls are imt as pretty and charmtn.r and human snd lovable as poor girl", but her money stands as a barrier be tween her end the world of young men who are doing things the young men who have brain and brawn end who ar fighting their way to the front by sheer strength of their own ability. "This Is the kind of a man a rich girl would like to marry. But. ha never eta a ehance. She never even meets lilru He Is not hopping around ballrooms or afternoon "tealng" or Idling around golf link. He is at work. "It's only the little hlpper snttpper Idler, the wasters and spenders that form the men of her world aun.ng whom she has to marry. Ana tnese wortn wmie young men, who are making something of themselv and are going to be the hlg men of t i morrmw, don't want to marry rlrh girls They are as sensitive of their honor a a woman is of hers, and they writhe t th very thought that thev would !! thenuelvee In marriage or that they si dependent upon their wives or owe their success to being bolwtered up by a wife's bankroll. "They are lust ss afraid of being rallel fortune-hunters ss the rich girl Is. ef being soiiEht by a fortune hunter, and that's why rich girls so often marry men that poor girls wouldn't look at. Th rhh girl has not the poor girl's chan.t st a husband "And as for tllMed Willie, whose father has bequeathed him everything on e,rli but bra'na and mornls, why sh.iuld 1 rli'h girl marrv hliu,' Th" p.ior mislit marry hint foe the aak ef tha H' els. the flue i-lothea, the tonn a, I fOuntrv housm he ean g! e her T''- rn h girl hs al nf the- of br on eb doe,n't nnt any more "And sh h n so mu-tt ef th keletoc In th rinse's cf her wealth I friends, th lonely and dr'.1 win. I th boredom ef roup! that have no I'.. 1 terest lit ccuuiton eS'-i-pt th aMrlt tr v I . the. a. r.dls that rvn hlce Krblnl their hand t "The rii h H l.n tStt kt ; break tin ier (laoion t, ao l , l'H( Ml 111 I- ' ., II , fi r id ttt . I'.i' (I l,t,l'r.,,Wiit hi fit I t ' .t h.f-r t li -w. it (i-'lot t i'iii r h.. 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