( )1 THE BEE: OMAIIA, MONDAY, JUNE 24, 1912. 11 SO The ec. MM az,irp p)a Jte Henpecko the Monk-"She" Lets Him Go Out This Time Copyright, 1912, National Kewa Asa'n.' iiwTWIi Hi mi isw' U m irfiiiftili' Drawn for The Bee by Gus Mager ne boys sew TO GO TO OUfc r i 1 I I a.m. i i i VIII m. NO ED ' f M NOT XOU AND ME. ALL that we fcluxus DO AT Ot SMOCEfc. IS 1MK ABOUT I WCHJIDN't THINK. Of" oouta A man Has to usten to too LMUCH SCANDAL HS NaOH&ORS I AftOOT I A NO, OLD CHAf YOU JUST TELL THE BOYS I'M NOT COMtMO - I DON'T QVfcE TO MCA.TL WHAT MR&SMlTU r J . i HfcNfcX. i IVANT tOU ID 00 "ID THAT SMOKER. t UANT TO SEC TOU GO OUT AND Eruny XOUfcScJLF UJM OTHER HEN itW5 we HOUSE K3ET- Ano have a cood Tiwe 5 WJQTJ en. r COJ THAT SCANDAL STUFF l06KED UKE A CHAR.M EH? SHE NSVCft. UOULD HAVE LET ME Go vF we Hadn't uorkcd this UTTLE JOB TD MAKE. HE THINK SHfc'D HEAR AU THE OOS&tt tvHN Married Life the Third Year Warren Has an Opportunity to Go to London with All Ex penses Paid. - By MABEL HERBERT tJRNER. If 1 'I "Lunched with Griffen today, had a" Warren paused, frowning at the black spot in the baked potato he had just broken open. "What's the matter with these potatoes, anyway? They've been like this fop the past month." ' "It's so hard to get good pptatoes now. Try this one it looks better," and Helen, broke open another. "Tell ma about Mr. Grif fen, dear. Did you have a nice lunch eon?" "T h e luncheon was all right, but he's blue as the devil. Don't think he can close that 'deal" Helen looked up in dismay. Then It was going to fall through, after all, an with It War- -ren's chances of an Interest In the com pany. Mr. Grlffen's vigorous and -domln- atina: personality ' had inspired HOien, with so much confidence that she could not quite connect him with failure. "Oh, It won't cut much ice with him. He's worth a couple of million at least- has all the plants he can- look after in tthe west. But since he's on here for that mirrase he don't like to sea the thing passed up." ' ' "And, dear, I had hoped it might mean so much to you. You know what he said the night he dined here." . Warren shrugged his shoulders. "That's , what we get for building air castles. You never can tell how these things are com ing out." "Listen, dear isn't that the 'phone?" "That door shouldn't , be closed. Can't hear a thing back here," as he rose and opened the hall door, through which came a loud Insistent ring. Helen wondered who it could be that would talk so long, for it was almost fifteen minutes before Warren returned to 'the table "That was Griffen," as he took up his napkin. "He wants us to come down there right after dinner. 'Wants te talk over some new plans he figured out this afternoon. He's not the man to give in easy." "But, Warren, do you mean for me to go? Can't you talk things over better alone?"" "You can talk to Mrs. Griff en. Now hurry and get ready. He wants- us to come right down." , . Helen dressed as quickly as she could and they took the subway to the hotel, the huge fashionable hostelry where the Griffons were stopping. When they were ushered up to Mr. Grlffen's suite on the twelfth floor, Helen was even more impressed with the lavish appointments than she had been on her first call. It was evident that Mr. Griff en was much preoccupied. He greeted them briefly and immediately plunged into an earnest discussion wtth Warren, while Mrs. Griff en took Helen into an adjoin ing room and showed her some exquisite pieces of Italian needlework which she had bought' for presents to take back home. Now and then Helen could hear snatches of conversation from , the next room. And when Mrs. Griff en went to the phone to order up some ice water, Mr. Grif fen's voice came to her quite distinct. "I'm through with these men I won't stand for their proposition. They want it all. I don't wonder these New York bankers can spend the money they do if they make such terms as they're of fering me. Now see here. Curtis, there are some people in London who know this property. Do you want to run over and see what you ean do? This is Tuesday. Can you leave Saturday? If I can't put this over in the next month, I shall simply let the whole matter rest for a year or so until I can finance it myself, gut what do you say to trying out London now?" Helen listened breathlessly for Warren's answer, but as be was sitting further from the door she could hear his voice but not what he said. Yes, I know this is a quick decision." Mr. Gti.f fen's voice was sharp and jn j cisfve.-: "But that's the way I do busl- ness-jiuick decisions. Take it or leave lii "Bui, &W, they wouldn't look at It That's the principle I've always worked on. Now I'll make you" But here Mrs. Grif fen came in with some pieces . of Oriental embroidery, which Helen was forced to look at and admire, while straining every nerve to catch the conversation from within. Then the' bellboy came up with the tee water. Evidently Mr. Grif fen heard the clinking ice, for he called out: ."Got some ice water' there, mother? Let's have some in here." As Mrs. Griffen took the pitcher in, he added heartily, ."You and Mrs. Curtis had better come In here. We're talking of sending her husband to Europe guess she'll be interested in that. Jove!" as he gulped down a glass of Ice water, "this high seasoned hotel food keeps me thirsty all the time." Helen needed no urging, and she slip ped into a big tapestried chair beside Warren. He did not glance up when she entered; he was frowning steadily before him, intent on the proposition so sud denly offered. "Now, I've had some correspondence with two or three of these, London con cerns," lighting a fresh cigar and push ing the box toward Warren. "I hadn't thought seriously of taking the thing up over there this year. But I believe now I will. If you, want to go over, I'll pay your expenses. If you fail you'll be out only your time. If you put things through-welt, it will be worth your while. Now, what do you say?" Even Warren, who was usually pretty direct and decisive in business matters, was not quite prepared for the swift, high-handed methods of this vigorous westerner. It was too serious a thing and Involved too much for him to give an Immediate answer. well, take till tomorrow then," agreed Mr. Griffen, as h saw Warren's hesitation. "Think it over and let me know then. But if you go I would want you to go Saturday. I'm anxious to get back home and want the thing under way before I start or I'll drop it altogether. Talk it over with your wife here," turn ing to Helen. "She;, may have something to say. What do you think, Mrs. Cur tis?" "Oh, I know so little about it," mur mured Helen, plainly disconcerted. Then with a tremulous. li.ttle laugh, "And Lon don seems so dreadfully far away." . "But -you would go,' too, wouldn't you?' interrupted Mrs. . Griffen. Then, turning to her husband: "Why. John, you wouldn't send Mr.' Curtis without his wife." It was plain that Mr. Griffen had not Intended to include Helen, and for a mo ment he hesitated. But in the few weeks that Mrs. Griffen had been in New York, She had grown very fond of Helen and was grateful for being taken about the eity in which she felt so bewildered. And now as her eyes met her husband's, they Must have held an unusual appeal, for be said laughingly. "All right, Mrs. Curtis is Included, and I'm sure the trip will be more successful if she's along. Now you talk It over to night and let me know in the morning." Later, when they left the hotel, they rode almost half the way home before either of them spoke. ' Helen was almost afraid to venture any question or com ment, tor she knew by Warren's frown ing eyes that he was thinking Intently and did not wish to be questioned. But at . last she could bear the silence no longer. "Oh, do you think we could go?" in almost an awed tone. "Don't know. Can't settle, a thing like that in a moment. That's Grlffen's way of doing business but it's not mine. He's all right, he's square and all that, but I'm not sure that I want to leave my affairs here and go off on an uncertainty. It would mean all of six- weeks. I'd have at least a month there. That's a good long time. To Helen, whose brain had been in a whirl at the mere thought of a trip abroad. Warren's hesitation had a sub duing effect. It seemed such a wonder ful opportunity a month in London with all expenses paid. To most women that phrase "all ex penses paid," seems a magical on. Tbey never consider the time or the business lost in other ways. They consider only that there will be "no expenses;" For a woman invariably overlooks the bigger things for the smaller and more obvious ones. ""But, Warren, if you do decide to go do you think I could really go, too?" "If you go I'll' pay your expenses. I'll not let any other man do that not even Griffen. You're not an object of charity.".- ..'"...-:-.-.;.,'.. The Making of a Pretty Girl Ih Charm of a Mxuioal Voice. ; By MARGARET TH1TBBARD AVER. 'The imost (beautiful girl 1 ever isaw ws ia young .American girt of (German de scent. Every ;artist in town .wanted -.ti" ipaint Iher, but ,they and the Test (Of ihi community -would ihave ibeen iperfecjy (satisfied its he lhad never .spoken :a twoxI for tthe imlnute ;st)e topened iher unautt :her charm iand ibeauty .vanished ias iif lb jiiaglc. :he literally .had the voice I a peacock. If you have ever 'heard a peanut :" n, or what ever you call thai molss it makes, take the first opportunity yoa (. 1,1 f to the 300 or to some gardei, v.'iiti-tf tiieie arc peacocks and Ifctesi to tills beautiful girl making an unspeak ably ugly noise. After you hear the pea- y& r l; ill N h ) r t ? q SI 3 ! r vm y: 1 v M N, J THE GIRL WHO CONTINUALLY GIG GLE8. cock scream, you will know why the dove with its gentle and beautiful voice, is the emblem of all that is sweet and lovely, while the peacock is just an orna mental monster. The greatest charm a pretty girl can have is a low and musical voice. No matter how pretty you are, you can't afford to neglect this especial charm, and no matter how homely you are, you will never lack attention if you have an agreeable Voles. There Is no reason why every girl should not cultivate a good speaking voice, and there is absolutely no ex cuse for the ugly, nasal squeak per petrated by soma of our girls and called speech. ' "The voice is the man himself," said a celebrated poet, and we're all judged at once by our voices and our speech. More and more attention Is being paid to voice culture In the public school. and every girl whose attention is called to the necessity of training herself to speak well will find some one who can help her by example and instruction. The most common fault we have is speaking with a nasal twang, or speak- that way." "Well, I would." Helen turned away her face to hide her tremulous disappointment. Then she could not go. Dit Warren really believe It would seem like charity for Mr. Griffen to pay her expenses? Or was this attitude only a pretext? Did he simply not want her to go? Recalled. "Remember, George, dear, you prom ised, if your man were nominated, to give me 1100 for-a summer gown?" "Oh-dld I say that?" , "Yes you did say just that!" "Ah,' yes,-I remember now! But, my dear, that was before I became a dls- ninla of th recall." Judfa, ing through the nose, as it is called. It Is wrong to say that one talks through the nose, when one makes this ugly sound, because as a matter of fact, one doesn't talk through the nose; one is pinching the nose, so that the sound is partly cut off from it. People speak this way from a kind of habitual lazi ness and no one has to continue In this bad habit. One of the simplest exercises for cul tivating a goqd voice Is to find out first on what tones of the musical scale you generally talk. Then take a very deep breath and make the vowel sounds a, e, 1 , o, u, on these tones of the speak ing voice. By taking a deep breath, you will be forced to place your speak ing tone right. People who speak with a nasal twang don't breathe deeply, and don't have a good pressure of air, as a sort of bellows under theit speech. Take some simple little poem that you know, and repeat it, breathing deeply before each word; exaggerate the words Slightly, making them softer and lower and rounder in tone and quality, than you habitually do. You will find in a short time that your voice will become more musical, lower and sweeter in qual ity, than you habitually would do. You will find in a short time that your voice will become mors musical, lower and sweeter in quality. A great many girls have ugly voices because they are really too lazy to open their mouths when they talk, and to enunciate carefully with their lip. Beau tiful enunciation makes a good shaped pair of lips, and to pronounce words care fully and distinctly will Improve the shape of the mouth, besides placing you at once among the class of people who care for good English well spoken and well enunciated. Every one of us uses more slang than we ought to, and young girls especially are very slipshod in their choice of Eng lish. Now while you're quite young you will think it doesn't matter, but later on It will be almost Impossible for you to break yourself of the habit of using slangy expressions, and as we are so often judged by the way we talk, under certain conditions you are likely to make a vety bad Impression. The manager of a big store the other day was telling me that In engaging em ployes, he always took the gldls who spoke nicely, and who had pretty voices, and gave them the best positions.- "A girt with a pretty voice can charm the most Irate customer, and soothe the angry shopper. But If you put a girl with an ugly voice behind the counter, no mat ter how good her disposition is, that voice Is a first-class business asset," said this man, and long before him the poet said, " 'Twas an excellent thing In a woman." I love the girl who giggles when she Is young, and I must say the grown woman giggler Is usually a bore, and the giggle loses its musio when the girl gets out of her teens. A charming laugh, enough, but not too much of it. Is part of the attraction of the pretty girl. But there are very few women who laugh musically. . I remember listening to a class of girls learning to laugh. It was a terrible crdeal. Some of them cackled, some of them guffawed, only one or two suc ceeded In producing a laugh that was joyous and musical. Listen to yourself laughing; keep your ear keen to your own defects, and find out whether your laugh Is musical or ugly. You can correct an ugly laugh without making youvself affected and eelf-cor.scioug. Don't laugh all the time, but when you do laugh, laugh heartily and with an open throat like a child. The child's laughter la beautiful and perfect. It is only when we try to laugh at things that aren't funny, and when we become self conscious, that our laughter loses tie natural joyous quulUy which it had whn we were children, and another charm vanishes. Little Tilings that Count j By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. I do believe the common man's task is hardest. The hero has the hero's In spiration that lifts him to his labor. All great duties are easier than the little ones, though they cost far more blood and agony.-Phllllps Brooks.- The story is told that at a great revival a little serving maid arose to her feet and confessed Christ She wanted to be a better girt, she said, and at subsequent meetings site testified that she was better; that she knew it and felt it. "How do you know you are better than you were?" asked the great leader of the service, expecting a far different answer than the one he got. The little maid hesitated. Then she looked down at the floor and In a voice that was scarcely audible, she said, not without some pride: "I sweep under the mats!" The great leader was a student of the human heart. He didn't belittle her proof that nor soul had been saved. He recognised in her awakening desire to do well all the tittle common deeds of life, an ambition greater than some far greater personages have ever, known. Do you sweep under the mats?' The question Is not asked In Its literal sense, for there are many women and girls who have tasks to perform which do not In clude acquaintance wtlh a broom handle. But there are mats la every walk of life and they must be swept under If we do our duty to ourselves and to those above us. The girls who read this all have some work to perform. I am truly sorry,'; for them If they haven't, for it is the great est Incentive recreation knows, and the greatest comfort sorrow can call to its, relief. ' Every work, no matter If It be trivial or onerous, if It be trifling or Important, should be don well. Doing It well means there should be no neglect where neglect might not be apparent. The task becomes one of dignity it it Is well done. It dignifies and honors the laborer. An important task that is slighted does him dishonor. It I a proof that some' one put a trust in him which he has never de served. No, one, to go back to the broom which figured in the little maid's testimony, every climbed to greater tasks by doing tndirferent and careless sweeping of the steps as he climbed. . It is the little task well done that makes greater tasks possible. And it is with the greater tasks there come greater responsibilities and greater rewards. Even in the matter of attire, girl should remember what this little maid said. It Isn't enough to have pretty clothes, a good appearance on the outside. There must be neatness underneath. if this little .maid had polished the floor carefully, not lifting the, matt, but working around them, and a care less step had revealed the dust under neath, the sight would not be more shocking than one seen on the streets every oay. A srlrl appears with her dress, her hat, her gloves, her shoes, in perfect order and neatness. A wind blows her dress and reveals a frayed skirt underneath. Or there hangs below that perfectly kept dress skirt a binding of her petticoat. She was thinking only of outward sho when she dressed. She forgot one thins; that is more Important, and that Is neat ness all the way through. 8he didn't "sweep under the mats," to quote the little serving maid. A, ' Better a dress not so expensive and a little money left to buy neat looking skirts underneath. Better good, strong lisle hose that will wear than silk hose that may be In good condition In the morning and that may have holes In the heels by night. Better an Inexpensive glove that can be replaced when worn out than a costly glove with holes In the fingers, 1 Better common buttons and every one on, than expensive ones that can't well be replaced when one drops off. Better a hat that will stand the storms than a costly one that goes to pieces In the first shower, and that must be worn the . rest of the season because It cost so much the wearer can't afford another. Better always neatness than a style too costly to maintain In perfect order. In dress as in work, the Importance of little details, the value of order and neatness, even where order and neatness may make no showing, must never be overlooked. Remember the little maid who swept under the mats; she was neat whore neat ness was not apparent to the casual glance, and there la no greater proof of faithfulness, order or ability. f , . " The Manicure Lady I ; "l see this Graham girl has sued Mister Stokes for 1100,000," said the Manicure Lady.. "Gee, George, there is a smart lit tle girl, don't you think?" t "Yes, I think," replied the Head Bar ber, "and I think that the old cove she Is suing Is a pretty smart sort himself. I wonder bow much of that hundred thou sand she I really going to collect." "I suppose you think she won't get no damages at all," said the Manicure Lady, "it's funny how callous men U when it Isn't one of their own sect that Is Inter ested." "You mean 'sex not 'sect,' corrected the Head Barber. " 'Sect,' means a Meth odist." "You are mighty part this morning, ain't you?" snorted the Manicure Lady. "If you don't stop that measly habit of yours, George, setting me right when I ain't wrong, I am going to stop talking to you and talk to some of them stupid customers that Is all the time coming in to have their nails did. I like to talk to a bright follow like you, but bright fel lows is sometimes kind of offensive on ac count of them being so bright." "I beg your pardon, klddo," said the flattered Head Barber. "I didn't mean to give you no offense. What were you going to say about the new law suit?" "Oh, I was just thinking that she ought to get a little dough out of that big hotel man, enough to start a tittle boarding house or a millinery store, or something like that. Lots of girts have risen to wealth, George, from a small bank roll. I had a chorus girl friend out west that sued a gent for $10,000, and with the $700 that she finally got she started a dressmaking shop and changed her name from Llszle Murray to 'Elsie.' She put that single name on her plate glass door. In gilt letters, and after she learned broken English Instead of good English the money came rolling In. "Every woman that she called 'Madam,' with the accent strong on the last syllable, forgot that she was the same as being swore at and ordered three or four fancy French gowns, with , flounces on the front and enough hooks on the back to make her husband wish, he was single again. That's what I sup pose this shooting show girl will do if she manages to jimmy a little dough out of Mister Stokes. Girls has to get along- v somehow, you know, and when they ' ain't married to no sturdy oaks, or Jokes, , . or anybody, they have to use their wits a little. It's a harsh world, George, for ' girls that haven't got a family." "It's a harsh world for the families a lot of times, too," said the Head Barber', "Why don't you go and shoot a man yourself? Pick out some rich New York ' hotel keeper and nick his kneecap a lit.': tie. That will, get your name In the pa-'; pers, snd your picture. If you don't hap-.-v pen to miss his kneecap and blow out his brains Instead, you will get a swell offer In vaudeville and have your name ; In big type at a Forty-second street theater." ' - $ "That sounds pretty good." admitted the Manicure Lwiy. "I kiiow a rich" ' hotel keeper around there that I would., just as soon shoot as net." . 'Zi f Pointed Paragraphs J" Divorce Is the correction of a miss-take. , The man who never failed Is unable to -appreciate success. The best some people can do is to ex- press somebody else's opinion. T Any man looking for a light job should apply at the gas works. . If a man has anything he can't give A away he proceeds to raffle It off. . ; A woman's dressmaker may be respond , slble for the figure she cuts in society. -" If a man gives you a square deal In horse trade you can trust him anywhere. ' If some people were to accept your of fer of a penny for their thoughts, you would probably get the short end of the '-deal.-Chlcago New. .