Tin; im:-. omaua, Tuesday,- skitkmhkk Hie Bees Hon e Ma gaziine Pae fr "- ' 1 ' ,' .1 Lavender and Dreams By JANG HrLKAN. This is my grandmother's old chest. Where live the things she loved the bent. And If I lift the lid I'll know The world she lived In long ago. First comes the scent of lavender, A dear unspoken breath of her. And then & tiny broken fsn. And here the- picture of a man. . My grandmother, did she coquet ' While stepping through the minuet? Here Is a letter tracing faint, And slipper buckles carved and quaint, And here the yellow of old lace That one time framed a girlish face. O, grandmother of long ago. The soul of you must surely know That soul of me supremely blessed That knows the things you loved the best. An O.casional By DOROTHY D1X. I have received a letter from a dis tressed and perplexed husband who arks mr adTlce about how tl cure hts wife of her on weakness.' He says that she' Is a good woman. really true ant loyal and fond of him. that aba's a devoted mother, and a fru gal and industrious housekeeper. But she has one fault that Is grlev- ami lit tils iwi fih la fond of admira tion. She likes to be complimented and have pretty speeches made about her, and her hur band has watcheu with stern disap probation how her face brightens up when some man be gins "jollying" her. So he wants to know what to do about it. The. answer to that question is dead easy, Mr. Husband. Supply the wife with all the admiration she craves. Instead of leaving- other men to do it And make the home brand of flattery so strong and full of ginger and snap that any com pliments she may receive on the outside will seem as weak and tasteless as del icatessen dishes do by the sMe of the goodies that mother cooks. . There are men and women with natures . so Intricate and cranky that their wives and husbands are not to be blamed for never finding the keys to them and be ing able to manage them. But a man or a woman whose predominant charac teristic! is the love of admiration is so simple that there is no excuse for tluir ' wives and husbands not being able to work them. The wife who lets some slick-tongued woman take her husband away from her by means of flattery gets exactly what . r""" , . J"" floe desk and asaue John of Mary's love She had the Inside track1. She knew that j or to Mary that John is falth- her husband simply purred under any.ful and oevoUd hand that rubbed the fur the right way Th- WAy io bs ,ura ,ny on,, with him. and that he beamed and gurgled' ,ova u to wJt unt h , ,ure of ,t with delight when anyone told him how he te8 you pj big snd brave and handsome he was, and nnv.nt,D- -,.,, - -omen from d. yet. knowing this, she felt It her wifely duty to continually remind him of his faults instead of expatiating on his vir tues, and so left the other woman a chance to get In her deadly work. Equally the man who has a wife who loves admiration, and who1 is so dense snd stingy and tight-lipped that he re fuses to even pay her a compliment is himself to blams If she packs her trunk and hikes off to lieno with some mora appreciative man. or if she becomes one of those near-faithful wives who are the rulnaUon of the happiness of sny women who remain outwardly respect-( able, but who indulge In cheap flirtations, Of course, men who crave admiration and appreciation, even If It is only lip service, can always go out Into the world and find It-or buy it. The average mar- lad woman is not clrcumstsnced so she can do this. She has to depend upon what she can get from her husband, and this is generally nil. 1 know of nothing else In the world that- la at once so tragic and so pathetlo aa the gnawing hunger for some word of praise, some token of gratitude, some sign that their husbands even think of them otherwise than aa a domestic con- venlence. that most wives suffer, snd which their husbands are either too dull to perceive or too e flah to make the effort to appease. For it Is literally the truth that after the loneymoon wanes nine women out of tn never get a com- pltment out of their husbands until It is carved on their tombstone. The lack of ad ra ration and apprecia tion Is the main .hlng that makes mar riage a failure to most women. It Isn't poverty. Let a man tell his wife that ln his eyes she grows more beautiful every day and she will wear a $10 suit and feel Itke a queen ln it. It Isn't hard 1 work. Let a man still show sn Interest in holding his wife's hand and She'll con sider It a privilege to work it to the bone for him. It Isn't the monotony of domes tic life. Let a man compliment his wife's cooking snd she'U think housework the most thrilling occupation' on earth. It isn't anything that a man does, or leaves undone, except handing out a few com pliments that makes marriage heaven or the other place to a woman. Nor Is this quite ss foolish aa it sounds. A woman's home is her world. Her bus band Is her audience, and It's a dreary thing to go on year after year doing your level beat giving yourself body and soul, without ever getting one ripple of applause, or even knowing whether your sfforts are even perceived or not. No actor can play bis best to a cold house. No clerk gives his best servtoe to an employer who never oommenda Even a horse will pull his load better for a word of encouragement or praise. But most married women have to live their married lives without getting a single glad hand from their husbands, and It's pitiful to hear them beg for a word of praise. I've heard of a woman say as she tried te corkscrew- a compli ment out cf her husband. "Hot tlo 1 Word of Praise looitr- And without glancing up from his paper, he would reply. "Oh, well enough." Or she would say. "Mow do you like this dress?" And' he would answer that of all the darn fool fashions he ever saw. It was the limit. And fall ing other means, she would ask how he liked a certain dish at dinner, and ha would grunt as ha gobbled It down, that It had a little - too much salt or sugar. Never a word of praise or appreciation. The strange thtng about this withhold ing of a little flattery from their wives is that men, for the most part, do admire their wives. Their own egotism makes them think that the women they picked ' out are the headllners of their sex, but they would die rather than tell them so. ! To know that her husband still thought ; that she was pretty, to know that .he thought her a second edition of Holomon. to knew that he blessed her in his heart for all her years of loyaJt and devotion, would make the average woman su premely happy, and pay her for every sacrifice she has ever made. But her husband will never say it to her. The cure for a discontented wife, and for a flirtatious wife. Is flattery ad lib applied by the husband. It Is a remedy that never falls. How to Keep Your True Love By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Every day dosens of letters come to me asking for same Infallible teat where by some uncertain youth or girl may make sure of the love of his or her be loved. Symptoms and actions are related to me galore and "what she means by this" or "what he Intends by that" axe marshalled before my critical Judgment. But so long as human nature Is human nature nnA nlunn Is nn nf It m mtmnrMt charmctorteth!Bi B0 0ne c.n sit at an of- clftrinc her a,ctlon but h,r preference must show itself and she sacrifices all the Joys for the supreme one of being with her beloved snd trying to make him happy. The illusisn of youth often makes us mistake fancy or Infatuation for real love. The great danger of life Ilea not In knowing whether or not your beloved loves you. but In being sure whether or not you really love your beloved! There Is nothing In all the world to whlch ..make bast, Blowly.. w M directly homw-;appHctDla M to lovs affairs. It only youlh woui,i rtop to weigh and analyse j th gttraction It feels for other youth , ln8tead of yielding to the supreme urge of emotion uist has no real basisl : t John know, guboonsctoualy that Mary. eye, re blue and tender and Mary-, mouth Is sweet and red. And John out Mary ;conglomera- tlon o( hls a reams and aspirations and desires and ambitions. J An1 jry knows thst John Is tall and ; strong and handsome, and so she listens j wlth ner beart ln her ayes. And, fancy, j mg; that they understand one another an(j ar madly In love, they plunge Into an engagement or Into matrimony Itself, , p0or Johnl Poor Mary! They knew DO single true test for true love, The most efficient test for love that I t gnow ia two-fold. Ask yourself not "Can : 1 uVs with this man or woman." but -gii I face life without hlmr The ln- dividual with whom you want to share your dreams may be very dear to you, but more honestly dear Is the one Into whose dreams you want to fit yourself. Not In a willingness weakly to sub merge yourself, but In a supreme desire for co-operation snd understanding He the honesty of a big love. The lover whose life you complete and who com pletes yours mentally and spiritually ss well as emotionally Is your true love. The one you would defend against the world la your true love. But the final great teat of love Is this: Does your love mean to you life's great immortality? Do you want It to bring to you as a result of ths perfect partnership of your two lives little children who shall be like the one for whom you careT Are you willing to aend down to posterity the traits snd characteristics of your be loved T Do they seem to you fine enough and splendid enough to go on down through the generations as a result of your will to Immortalise them and your lovet Children mean Immortality and the great crown of your love. Marriage without them Is 'selfish. If marriage means to you the shirking of life's great est responsibility If It brings to you no longing for little baby faces, you do not know true love. Infatuation may be for the day. Fancy may be for emotional outlet and even atfeotlon may yearn but for the comfort of home and refuge from loaeiuieas, but love la so sure of Itself and of its per manent admiration and adoration that it longs for Immortality. Learn How to Relax to Be Graceful, Says Ziegfield Girl Miss Sybtl Carman illus trates her acofompojiying' ar ticle by two poses of relaxa tion which she finds bene ficial in her daily exercise. inn T. ' HI - J 1 M snoes. , I Hi I t 1 1 would sdd one other caution to the siaiiai HiM",",- M 'U'n'i' ,WValff'W''imirwwinifWtoSEr H f ' i -: -i S woman seeking the beauty of feminine i t nn "- m 1 mm ' mni i.n p. mi ..n,,. M ' -.1 gracefulnesa Learn how to relax. Do , 1 I t a " - . . a " H not be afraid to let yourself go. Relaxa- I M 1 Xsx-'"- ' Qr - y i - -v . v :w . - x , v . t 1 . I M ff J r 4 f ' r v IB I tt ha aaas' aavs4,asxwWelatossaiwiiii ti . is .M,M,a. .. . ft ff v,-.,( V'1r-- t-f---..A.stAla . -j , ,tm , , t m Ml m ftM mfsjiH uri grurrr ITTl sj ll 1 isfl , .,. , ,1'! H o3BlfcWalBSWm I f ; ' I " '- - , 1 - ) , : , Sorrow One Vanity Common to Humanity 1 By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. (Copyright, 1S15. Bur Company.) There Is a certain universal vanity In all human beings the vanity of sorrow. ! Ask any one of your acquaintances If he has had trouble In life, and, almost nan. ths reply will be to the effect that his sorrows and u., until been un usual; that be has bad his share, which will mean that be leeis he has more than his share. In country places, In large cities, ln villages, It 1 the same. mi to be a part of human con ' sclousness this be lief that each one of vs has been 11 f-r a spe m J cial dispensation of sorrow j Only a small percentage of human I beings place the true estimate on the j value of trouble, or know that it has its lace, aa machinery, in the spiritual gymnasium, and that by our ability to use It we may develop character-the purpose, aim and end of existence. Only one Individual do I recall hav j Ing met In all my experience who made 1 no claim of sorrow. It was a woman who had counted at least four decades on the dial of life, and she told me she had never known a disappointment or a sorrow; since her -birth she had Indulged all her wishes; she had never lost a near relative or friend, and had never known a grief worthy of the name. A shallow woman she seem1 to me ss I studied her one who enjoyed her morning coffee and her dinner at night; who was pleased with a new guwn and brooch, and who felt no strong affec tions and was Incapable of deep emotion. Perhaps she had passed through experi ences which might have meant sorrow to others without feeling them, and. hav ing missed sorrow, so, ton, st.e must have ifilsred great Joy. Today Miss Aybftl Carman, charm ing momlMT of the Zlegfleld Midnight Frollo ceat, flnixhes her article on the way to gain grace through strength ening the feet. The simple exercises that Miss Carman has Nltiitrated take only a few minutes each day, and will prove Invaluable assets to the woman seriously Intent on gain ing a lithe and graceful figure. By KYBEL CARMAN. Yesterday I spoke' of strengthening the feet. Today's exercises simply carry on this Idea. I am a firm believer In the truth of the statement that prelty feet do much toward making pretty women Awkward feet make a women so clumsy. That It why strong, supple feet and ankles mean mora to a woman's grace fulness than many people suppose. Thick ankles see unnecessary If a woman will bath and massage her feet frequently and learn how to wear sensible heels on her shoes. . I would add one other caution to the woman seeking the beauty of feminine gracefulness. Isui how to relax. to not be afraid to let yourself go. Relaxa tion will help you to stand and walk well. Surely swe was no personage to hold as sn ideal, snd those who believe they could have attained large successes of great heights, if they had not known sorrow, would have found In her refuta tion of their theories. The mortal must feel In order to develop. He must know the strong emotions of life; he must use hts mental qualities In thinking he was out of trouble; he must be anxious at times ln order to learn patience; he must pass through the .win ter of sorrow in order to .enjoy the springtime of Joy. In visiting tropical countries It has al ways seemed that; ths natives who dwell there miss a great Joy In having an eternal summer. There are no emotions sweeter than those which are produced by the sudden dswnlng of the spring in sky snd trees, snd ln bearing the first sounds of the returned birds. To gase always upon summer' skies, summer foliage and to hear ever the songs cf birds oan never repay for the loss of that peculiar happiness which comes In early spring days. And so the heart that has never knownJ anyming uui yieasiirKDie sensations musi lack the keen Joys which come to those who have experienced lack and loaa of blessings, and to whom they are re storedas life always restores In some measure that which It takes from us- But the real value of sorrow snd trial lies In the strengthening of courage, the Increaae of faith, the growth of character and the development of the higher at tributes of the mind. Unless we are more sympathetic, mora tolerant more patient and kinder after each trouble, we have missed a great op portunity which life has offered us. and we must suffer again and again until ws recognize the hand of love beneath the glove of patn until we experience the resurrection. Pausing a moment, ere the day was done, Vv'blie yet the ear lb. was sclutlUaut with light. I backward gianeJ. I Vora valley, plain awl height. At Intervals hr 111 v lift path hud run, I'.oae uriiM uu rem and nalloU upun each on ' ii There must be a certain freedom and lurk of stiffness apparent in every move a woman makes if she would be thought truly graceful. It In Imports nt, too, to learn to sit well. This means straight shoulders and a high chest. Kelax, but train your muscles so that they do not sag. Forget yourself and learn to be natural. No truly graceful woman was ever self-conscious. 80 many women do not know how to stand when they appear In publlo. They are conspicuous at a social function, oftentimes, simply because they rail at tention by conscious awkwardness to their ungraceful hands and feet. Why not stand as though you took a real pride In yourenlfT You are an In dividual with a character unlike any one else In the world. Why not Man I as though you really amounted to some thing? Stand so that a line dropped from the center of your head would fall between the arches of your feet Distri bute your weight evenly on both feat And, above all, do not allow yourself to get lop-sided. Was my Aend self. And yet thst grue- some sight Lent sudden splendor to the falling night, Htiowing the conquests thst my soul had won. Up to the rising stars I looked snd cried: " and then with just a few weeks more of Sanatogen" On the road to health at last! And yet how impatient you are to be up and going. But it is now, when the ays tem is trying to rebuild its etore of energy, that you will be most grateful for the reconstructive help of Sanatogen. Sanatogen, you must know, is a natural food-tonic, combining purest albumen with organic phosphorus thus conveying to the wasted system the vital elements to build up blood and tissues, and it is so remarkably easy of digestion that the most delicate young and old can take it with nothing but beneficial- effects. It reewsksns ths appetlts, assists digestion, ami as a physician la "Ths Practitioner, a leading medical journal, says, "It seems to possess a wonderful effect in Increasing ths nutri tive valus of other food material. When ws tell you that Sanatogen is used by ths medical profession all over ths world aa sn alii to convalescsncs and as sn upbuildsr of strength snd vitality, that mors than 21,000 physicians hsvs written offers commending it, you will understand thst our confidence in recom mending it to you is firm snd s'noere. Won't you give Banatogsn ths oppor tunity to help bring back you or some one thst is near and dear to you to health end strength f Sanatogen is sold by good druggists very whera in eisee from $1.00 up Crmnd Prise, International Congrwm of Mmdtctnm, ixxiJon, 19IJ. o ,s v, , siifih i sVc sv -. .ws mrmV'Kk n o vis. rc 11 w.wrntf. . Ill H :. - : 'iir " st " t . tor Elbrt Hubbrd'9 near ooo- "Health in ths Making." Written in his attractive manner and filled erhh bii shrewd philosophy, together with capital sdvics on Sanatogen, health snd. contentment. ) U FREE. Tsar this off ss a ismaider to address THE BAUER CHEMICAL COMPANY, ' 27 J, Irving Pises, New Yorf. A Lost Paradise Ry KRETT I. 8KKV18S. The legend of an original Paradise on this earth, from which man got himself excluded by his own greediness, turns up in a new and extremely charming form In the stories collected by Dr, W. C. Fwrabee, of the t'nlvcratty of Penn sylvania, among the Wal-WaJ Indians, whom he found dwelling In the T u m a e-H u m a o range of moun tains, on tha border between Bretll and the Uulanaa, and so remote from civilisation that they knew nothing of white men. Dr. rarahee be lieves that these Indians are the descendants of the Caiibs and Arowaks whom the Spaniards encountered along the roast 400 years ago. They are ex ceedingly simple In their ways and tastes, snd physically very handsome representa tives of tha human sperlos, almost good enough In that regard, according to Dr. Ferabee'e description, to InhaMt a new Garden of Bden. They have no jewelry and no metala and wear no mora clothes than neces sary. But they do made cloaks, aprons, "There Is no death; for, each now dlty reborn. I wake to larger life, to toy more great Bo many times have I been crucified, B often seen the resurrection mom, I go triumphant, though new Calvaries wait." AfWssM Oftw Srtm t bs (if tod writer, slstost "Nothing thst I hs tstso lor rears bs gisa u seek a senes el vigor ss banstogsn." Jim Cm m lassie's fM- ei MssMsa. Dr. Ferchoua. writes: "Mr daughter, who was vet y nervous and aaismic. h it been msllr benefited br lbs orolorifed use oi Sanstnteo. Her appetite iwiroi. hr weight in' creased and ths color ol her skis becaste b-alihur" Sk. - t - 'g . ' - " aa sstw v viirarai'ataisiA,iui';'; heAddrsasee, etc, of home-woven cloth. Intertwined with the blight-colored feath ars of gotfraoua tnscaw blrda, which ax rite the admiration of the civilised visitor by their novelty and beauty. The women are desrribed as resembling statues of polished bronae of magnificent propor tions, while the men are well mads and IntrlllKnnt looklna. If. as Dr. rarabee thinks, these Wat Wat Indians, with the surrounding tribes, who resemble them In manners and appeatunce, represent a union of the remains of the ancient Carlos and Arowaks, then the peaneaNe eharaoter of the latter, who, before the oomlng of the Spaniards, had been sadly harassed by the war-like Carina, has prevailed In the blending. There ere no wars among then now. They live on vegetabiea. fruit and game; grind ceeaevs with roughly hewed granite holders and obtain fire with sparks from str'oken stones. Pprlng Is their mating tlms, aa with birds, snd then they put en their bril liant garments, gleaming with the moat exquisite hues of scarlet, yellow and blue, and dance the "masheka," or "pea nut vlna dance." An Imitation of this dance was long sso produced In Brasll, being picked up from the Indian tribes and carried down the Amason, and this wss the origin of tha "Ma-slxe," a danoe which came to America through Parts. Tn the place where It was Invented this dance Is a rite of tha mating season, as symbolical as tha bsochlo da noes of the ancient Greeks. Those great mystery stories of unl- ersal humanity, ths legends of a para dise and a deluge, have been found again by Dr. Farabee in this almost Inacces sible part of the world. The paradise story, as told by the Wal-Wals U In some respects more pleasing than the Hebrew aocount used by Milton In his "Paradise Lost." In the beginning. It ssys. the god Duwld, having mads men and women, continued to feed them with his own hands, bringing them every dsy . abundance of fruit and vegetables. In their idleness, the men and women found nothing more Interesting to da than to watch tha other animals. Thus they discovered that thess animals want off somewhere every morning and re turned st night. Led by curiosity, they followed, snd found a great tree which shed every day from Its bran ah as both fruits and vegetables, on which ths ani mals fed. "Here," they said, 'Is whera Duwld geta our food. Henceforth - let us corns and help ourselves. Then we shall not hsvs to thank him for It" Accordingly, they told Duwld that he need not take ths trouble to bring them food any longer, for they had found out where to get It for themselves, "Very well," said the god. "but here after you will have to work for It To morrow the tree shall be cut down, but, to save. you from starvation, I will give, you a hint. Break off branohss bearing ' each kind of fruit and plant them in the ground. Wster and tend them carefully -and they will flourish and Continue to bear abundantly as long ss you continue to labor." They began to obey Duwid's Instruc tions, but, becoming wearied left off be-' fore they had taken from the tree more than a email number of ths Infinite va riety of fruits that It bora. Fortunately they got the cassava, but they have to work hard, not only to raise It but to fit It for eating. Ths snormous stump of the great tree, they say, still exists In the midst of thslr country, In ths form of a hugs steep-sided rock, rising high above the root of the forest The Wal-Wals are described as a very childlike race, but this legend of theirs -Is full of sdult wisdom snd a keen knowl edgs of human nature. It depicts the consequence of Idleness snd too indul. gent paternalism far more pointedly than ths story in Genesis does, while alto gether avoiding ths unnecessary Inven tion of ths serpent as a tempter. The absence of vlndictlveness tn ths god Duwtd's sentence Is also a notsble feature, 1 'is ' s -. - - - - y" Yi, : 1 ' 1 y