Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 01, 1915, Page 9, Image 9

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    THK RhK: OMAHA. I'M DAY. OCmniK 1, lHo.
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'4
The. Bees Motne Masfazitfie Pa
H 9
Business Woman
a Good Wife .
Man's First Artistry in Clay
Unique Figures Modelled by a Phidias of the Paleolithic Age
How to Bathe
For Real Beauty
i
1 1
ill
pres- '
a, 3
we should have t 4
iirs if there were no nimble-I I II I'
len weaving silk and cotton! W II J
putting up peas and beans I I III
p. Kvery man would have II 11 J .
salary of a bank president In I I
Hy DO BOTH V D1X.
The assertion la freyuently made that
women hav killed the matrimonial goose
that laid the golden egg by going Into
gainful occupation, t'nthlnktng people
claim that when women compete with
men In business they lower wage, and
thua make It Impossible for men to earn
enough to marry on, and that If every
female could b e
shooed back out
of factory, atore
and office Into her
o w n home there
would be a P er
petual peal of wed
ding bolls ti p o n
the air.
Thla ia rank non
sense. To h e ( I il
with, wages were
never so high hs
at present. 1'art of
t h e altlludinous
cost of living In liccauFc labor ia o dear,
and heaven knows that we should have to
heaven knows what
par for thl
fingered women
Hnd wool, or
In the cannerl
to get the
order to support a family If the woman
working outside of the home was elimi
nate If he got more he would have to (spend
more, so the matter l as broad as l( la
long even on that basis. The real fallacy
of the contention, that women's competi
tion with men In business keeps men
from marrying proves Itself, however, by
the fact that It la only woman's ability
to support herself that leavea man free
to marry in Just the cases where this
problem alters.
The poor young .man who says that
w:oinen lower .wages and becuuae of that
lt cannot mukr. enough to. marry on does
uot stop to think that if Women were
not permitted to enaafce in pursuits by
which they can earn money he would
not only not be able to marry, but would
bo an burdened by a houseful of de
pendent female relatives that he woulc
not have a penny to, spend upon himself.
The -opening up of "the commercial
world to women Ixas meant tho. financial
emancipation of .mun. just as much as it
has of w o m e n.
I'p to the pre
e n t s e nera
there hag been
more pitiful fig
ure than that of
the ii o n Mini S.
brother In an im
pecunious f:ini!ly.
The poor1 fellow
was driven to
death, lolling JUe
a sla e to support
a , houseful
women who took his every dollar away i tlon with men In
was all he rould do to stagger along
under the burdens already laid upon him.
Me rould tint follow any ambition or for
tune that lured him, because he was
bound like a martyr on the family Taieel.
Look at the old bachelors you know,
griasled, lonely, homeless, wifeless, child
less, tleless old men, ending their soil
tary Uvea In clubs or boarding houses,
and you will find out that nine-tenths
of them are men who are victims of the
social system that kept women in the
home and out of the working world.
They were forced to sacrifice love and
romance to the family butcher bill.
I know an old southern gentleman who
has often told me that at the end of
the civil war he was the only man of
his blood left alive, and
that there were thir
teen helpless women
dependent on him for
telr live'thood. He
was engiU'eii to Ik- 1
in-Tried at ' the time, j
nit, marriage beingout (
of the Uesllon he of- 1
fared to set his lady j
love free. She refused !
snd waited for him
thirty-five years, until
enough of his herpleaa
women folk had died
off to enable them to
venture upon setting
up another home.
It was a tragedy of weary and watch,
rul waiting that cottld not happen now.
because every one of the women who
was able-bodied would decline to be de
pendent, and hustle out and get a Job
and support herself.
. nrothcr has ceased to be orrered up as
a sacrificial gnt on the family altar.
Instead of alttlng .round and waiting for
brother to feed and clothe them and
take care of mother and father, the
KlHs roll up their sleeves and go to work
and not only earn their own bread and
butter and cake, but contribute far more
toward keeping up the house than
brother does.
This not only makee the girls self
respecting and Independent members of
society, l.stead of forcing-, them to be
family free to live thelr own Uvea, to
h,rK "Ub""h h ot their own,
which they could not do If they had a
ot of dependent women relatives hang
ing on thalr neck, like old ladles of the
Every eelf.sjp-
porting girl make.
! It possible for her
brother to marry,
and . she present.
some other girl with
ta. potential husband,
i rid so any man
. atijlUfle himself
when he says that It
' ! I women's compett-
froin him, and, like the daughters of the
horse leech.i continually cried "More,
more!"
He could net: think of marrying,' for
there was burely enough bread to go
around. He rduld not dream of estab
lishing a home of hia own, because It
business that la re
sponsible for men
not getting mar
ried. He wilt have to hunt up a better rea
son than that. That theory doesn't hold
water, and cut. no wedding cake.
:- ..
n
t .?'"
v
B i . -J VI -rwi.
in mi i iiiimiiwiMniiiiinrii
-e- . I
H MX. rAVAIJKIU.
i
The dally bath,
bath twice a day,
-. - J
After Mas Begousn la "L.'Anthrorolog1." '
Repreflentatlonn In clay of mala and female
bison, found In the Tuc d'Audoubert cave, near
Salnt-Glrons (Ariege), France. The figures
are each about two feet long and are the only
UAHIIETT P. BKnVIHS.
known examples of clay-modeling dating from
palecollthlc time. Except for the cracks due
to drying of the clay, the broken tail of the cow
and the horns of the bull, the figures are In a
perfect state of preservation.
I do not think that there are : many
things In this world better worth looking
at by a thoughtful person than two clay
models, or statuettes, mad by a 'pre
historic sculptor, in a cavern on the
Trench side of the Pyrenees, which Is
locally called the Tu. d'Audoubert. These
models represent two bisons, a male and
a female. They are about two feet In
length, and were found attached to the
wall of the cavern In its innermost recesa.
They are In profound darkness there
(can only be seen by artificial light), far
from the outer world of sunshine, in an
underground place so difficult of access
that only courageous and determined ex
plorer will crawl, face downward,
through the wet, sticky approaches. In
which a fat man might get fastened like
a tight cork.
When found by their original 11cot
erer, Count Begouen, the entrance to the
natural gallery in which they lie had be
come so obstructed by huge white pillar
of stalagmite (limestone formed by depo
sition from slowly dripping water) that
he had to break a way through.
The fact alone startles the mind with
a sens of the extreme antiquity of those
clay figures. It takes many centuries for
great trees to grow, but the oldest and
mightiest tree is a new-born baby la
comparison with stone.
You can observe the age-long process
I of making limestone In many caverns,
whei-e water Is still dripping down. Vo'l
t ear In the gloom and stillness a mils'
cal tinkle, like the stroke of a littlo
silver bell. It la a Orop of water fnllln,;
upon a stalagmite, wheh has ben :ullt
up by similar drops. In that drop thei,
Is an almost infinitesimal quantity of
carbonate of lime. The urop dries i.p and
the carbonate of lime is deposited, atldlnx
an invisible layer to the stone. The drop
must fall In slow succession, else they
would run away and not evaporate on the
spot, and no stalagmlllc pillar would be
built up.
Can you imagine anything slower than
that work of rock bu.ldlng? We have no
certain measure of Its slowness, but,
nevertheless, there does happen to he
at least one, very Interesting, example
which gives us a clue. In Kentis cavern,
England, you may read on top of a
dome-shaped mass of stalagmite theau
words: "Robert Hedges of Ireland, Feb
20, 1688." The drops of water that formed
that rock have not ceased to fall since
the inscription .was made by a visitor,
227 years ago, and how thick do yoO sup
pose the film .of transparent limestone
covering the Inscription has become In
that stretch of time? One-twentieth of
an- Inch,
At that rat It Would require t.MO years
ti .make a layer onc-inr-h thick, and
6I.4S0 years to make a layer hue-foot
thick t But the stagalmltcs that blocked
the way to the corner gallery In the Turn
, Militarism and What It Means to America
By CHARLES H. PARKHIRST.
There are some thinga of which we be
come persuaded by the course of event
that wo might never have learned in the
school, nor even perhaps in the church.
and which wo cer
luinly should never
have reasoned out
by our own think
ing. There are cer-
v. -y '-e
,rv v ;-
mm
mm
tain ideas which we
resent so long ns
t h e. y f are ideas
only, but which we
can say nothing
agalust us soon as
they become con
crete facts and
stand visible before
our own eye.
Home years ago,
while siK'h u thing
as a bievcle was
still the rarest of
curiosities, two men
stood together de
bating the possibility of such a machine.
. ,n n . i . ..
- vi mem nau seen and ridden one. (battle. 1 cer-
Thn nthr . l . ... . I. . .
- .v.,.m n win existence lamiy don t agree
and operation of such a thine was Dre-nvlth ih. ..
..,ded by tho very nature of mechanical The only difference
sword, will have to be reconverted back
Into swords; in other words, that we as
a nation are, living In a world where
Christianity i. so much more a fashion
of word, than It is a fact of life that a
state of militant preparedness ia our only
security, and that If w want to keep
our Americanism in Its spirit and Insti
tutions It is simple prudence to be In
condition to fight in its defense.
This doe not mean militarism in th
technical sense of the word any more
than putting. up a fence around our lot
means militarism, or locking our doors
at night or keeping a watch-dog. It Is
simply national equipment in the Inter
ests of self-preservation, which is the
first law of nature.
It la obligatory upon us, according as
w respect the legacy bequeathed to us
by the founders of the nation, to encircle
our coastline with' a ring of submarines,
and to enlist a considerable army organ
ised after the manner in vogue in Switz
erland. Had the like of this existed In
Belgium a year ago this August t..e
The Naughtiest Age
' i
By ADA PATTERSON.
I had it remarked to mo Ut other day
by an elderly person with a sevre coun
tenance, that modern girlhood was far,
far naughtier than it used to be. I im
mediately accepted
bility of a universal language and the
process by wl.lch the one original lan
guage. If there ever was suoa a thing,
became broken up into that diversity of
speech now existing.
The Bible story doubtless has under
lying It In historic fact, incdenta ot tne
, kind recorded in the early chapters of
appreciation disappears with age, tout be- I nesls find so many echoes In universal
d'Auiloubert rave where tha ancient
stone age sculptor modeled and left his
-lay-bisons wer several feet in height.
Probably they were started a long time
before the cave men began to live In the
cavern. Hut they 'must have grown a
foot or two In order to obstruct tit place
as they did.
Ho we get, as a possible measure of
the lime elapsed since thut rude artist
ceased from his labor. W.OO or lOO.OuO
year! I3ven if it lie only 1D,000 or JO.!)
yeirs, It belittles the antiquity of Kgypt,
Chaldea, Clreece, Bums.
There Is another test of the vast age
of those clay figures twhlch by the way, I
look as frh as if made yesterday), and
that is the fact that uneniimcrntcd thou
sands of years have passed since the
bison censed to Inhabit the region of the
ryrcnee. Now, It la virtually certain
that the prehistoric artist represented
In their drawings and sculptures only
animals which were familiarly known to
them. Mingled with pictures of bisons
made by other men who were doubtless
contemporary with this particular artist
there are figures of a number of animals
that have king been extinct in Europe.
His special claim to distinction resides
In the fact that his work is the only
known examplo of modeling In clay that
has up to th present time ever been
found In th haunts of paleolithic man.
The clay that ' he . worked over In his
hands ud rejected Is to bo seen thers
today. He left lumps of It which he had
kneuded and thrown aside. The spot
where he got the kind of clay that suited
him, and scraped together, has been
found In another near part of the cavern.
Ills footmarks have boon traced to
gether with what may have been trial
aketchea of his masten k-cea. If the Oreek
Phidias had left uch relics, the artistic
world would go crasy over them. But
this stone age Phidias seems to hav
been, for his time, a more original gen
ius than he who adorned the Parthenon.
There la another wni-M t,.r ih..,,v.t i
... woru, wa snail oe warranted In - r-ror. Ueorge MacCurdy'a suggestion that
putting out confidence in treaties' and j the hidden chamber in the Tus d'Audou
dlplomaoy and in replacing the instru-jbrrt cave was, with its unique figures, a
menu of war by the Implements of peaco. j paleollthlo shrine,' where tha rude fore
The Bible story of the confusion of lan-1 fathers of our race made votive offerings
guages at Babel is of Interest at a time ' l unknown higher power.
when thers is being considered th posai
course of event during the last twelve
months would have been ' essentially
changed.
When men learn to love each other as
much In fact as they hav been professing
Let inn direct the hitli of the body
and the completion will take care of
Itself.
In some Instances the
is not, as persons ad
vanced In aome di
rections and pitiably
behind In others toll
us, a luxury. It Is a
necessity. It does
not, ss some Ignor
antly assume, de
stroy the oils of the
skin. It cause thm
to circulate more
freely through the
medium of the skin.
My akin happen
to be exceedingly
thin and sensitive,
amioylnirty so. It If
were on- of the harder, more durable
sort, with n tendency to a coarsening and
roughening. 1 should try this much more
drastic method of removing scarf skin.
If I wer strong enough and my phy
slclan vouched for the fact that I were.
I would try the dally cold plunse or the
shower. This I would tak In th morn
ing, remaining in the Icy tub or under
the chilling shower not mor than one
minute.
Then I should hav a risk mb-down.
not with th soft linen towsl or ches-
cloth, but with a big course Turkish
towel. For thl purpose I Ilk best th
big towels that swath th body com
pletely, which on may wrap around her
self, and wrapped in them, sit upon a
bathing stool and dry herself with Im
munity from chill.
I'nless I were to dress at once I should
briskly nib th . body with alcohol to
render lea th possibility of taking cold.
Hut If my room wer sunny I would pre
fer to run about the room half a dosen
times, or a rehearsal of dancing step
for five minutes or Jumping the rope.
One of th greatest authorities on hy
giene In your country ha advocated
exercise he called It a sun bath directly
after the bath.
But thl would by no means suffice for
my bathing. For everyone except an
Kngllshman knows that tha cold bath
does not cleanse. It merely exhilarates.
FVr keeping th skin
clean there should
be the warm bath.
You observe that I
did not say tho hot
bath, for It Is my
opinion that the hot
bath enervates. For
cleansing the water
should ho from 90
to OR degree Fah
renheit. A good soap
should he plenti
fully used. White
castlle, the soaps made from spermacettl
and good glycerine soaps I believe to be
the best. Tha soap need not be used di
rectly upon the skin. Much better Is It
that for ten minutes or quarter of an
hour befor taking your night bath 4 a
cake of soap or a quantity of It shsved
be thrown Into the water, so that the
water become a milky color, or that
hither rise to the top of th water.
No one should remain In th bath more
than twenty minutes, and this time should
Include th rinsing off ot the soapy water
hy a shower or spray of cooler, perhaps
fifteen degrees cooler, not cold, water. A
cold shower at night when thl cleans
ing bath la taken, would be over-stlmu-lattv.
and tend, as doe strong eoffe
to certain person, to keep them awake.
Between tho two extremes of gentl and
drastic bathing lie many Intermediaries
known as beauty
hatha Thera ia, for
sample, that atmple
and efficacious
starch bath, taken
by women whose
skins ar tormented
and rilflgur4 by
pimples.
To an ordinary
bath tub half filled
with water add one
pound of pur
starch. It It dis
solve In water at 90 U 86 degrees Fahren
heit. To thiei many French wameti
choose to add one win glass of toilet
ammonia for its whitening effect.
The oatmeal hag is an old nd edmtr
ablo remedy for rough or stained skin.
The best is mad In this way:
Oatmeal ... 1 pound
Pulverised orris root ..H pound
fttlr well together and sew Into a large
square bag. Toss th bag Into th tub
and let It remain In th warm water for
flftten minutes. It will give th water
that delightful milky aspect so pleasant
to the luxurious bather. Bran may be
manipulated In th mini way with aqual
good results.
For whitening and softening tho akin
a bath powder may be mad at home
from these Ingredient:
Btcarbonat of soda 4 oaa.
Cram of tartar 5 oss.
Ml arch I oss.
Oil of lemon 1 dram
till of bergs mot 10 drop.
It another scent la preferred to berga-
mot It ran be sub
stituted, tor In
stance, oil of rose
geranium In half
that quantity.
For a person not
strong enough to en
dure the cehl bath,
this tonic In tepid
wator is r c o m
mouded by many
F. u r o p physi
cians:
Aromatic
1 pint
Tincture of benxoin I wineglass.
A delicious bath used by our grand-
mnllun anil that Is m m.t rlcsrlmla for
their granddaughters, is made by boiling
for three hours two pounds of bnui.
Strain the bran througn a sieve, to tne
remaining liquor add soma scent of your
choice, let Us say ten drops of bergamot,
five of rose geranium, or five of oil of
lavender.
vinegar. K J
Advice to Lovelorn
By Beatrice
FeJHu
appose Yoa Propose f
Pear Miss Fairfax: I am 21 and am
deeply In lov with a girl of 18, with
whom I have kept company for almost
a year. Last Bunday evening sho asked
mo if I knew it was almost a year that
I had been keeping company with her.
I said, yes, Hhe an Id that at the end of
the year she rould tell whether I loved
her or not. Now, how can aha tell? Ar
there any presents to be given?
ANXIOUS.
One may only guess what I In her
mind, but It I my opinion h has de
cided it la time for you to propose It
you lov her. Buppos you offer to make
a gift of yourself ?
I No Gm.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am II and dearly
In love with a man five year my senior.
He Is going on a week-end trip shortly
and has Invited mi to accompany hint,
la It proper for me to go unchaperoneil?
We are not engaged. HONKY.
Io not go on a week-end with this or
any other young man unless you ar
properly chaperoned. Tou would subject
yourself to criticism that might do you
Irrephoachabls harm.
... ........ mry were aiscuse r. it n
cyclist went by on his wheel. Demon -
Urated fact, are the most Incorrigible
of argument.
One of the thiiiK taught u by the war
in Europe, and that never could have
een otherwise taught us so thoroughly
and convincingly, is that tho human race
is not nearly as far advanced as we had
supposed it to be; that our civilisation,
so far from being Christian, is to a con
siderable extent a venee:-.
Men had been talking so amicably and
with such apparent conviction aliout the
brotherhood of man that we had come to
feel that everybody Inside of Christen
dom, along with a good many outside,
felt himself to le actually a brother to
everybody else, and that divisions among
nations were rather a geograf hlcal dis
tinction than an thing more serious and
essential. The result of a j ear's wr
has rather rudely shaken us out of that
agreeatte and encouraging deluaii.fi.
Christian civilization is already J VQ
year. old. but Is sn Infant still and only
spproxlmatlng to the stage of self-consciousness.
Th shock that shakes us out
of thla delusion Impels us also to a con
viction that aome of us havs been
hitherto very slow snd reluctant to en
tertain namely, that the situation thus
disclosed to us Is ons to which the doc
trine of turning the other cheek Is not
Vogether applicable.
rT If any whom i
, - vCTM Kicusiomea
tthertj to regard as hum... ... -i
.Jl. disguise. ,i anjr whom we hv
,o look upon aa brothers are
such onIyby virtue of the mask which
ihey wear, "then .-, of the prunlna
hooks intu whl. h we had convened our j
I can see between
the maiden of today
und her of the last
generation is that
the former gets
more opportunity,
though 1 will al
low shs has a
slightly better capao
ity for, using it
I own I prefer th
word "naughtiness"
to "w I c kedneas."
There ia a delicate
lr of frilly refine-
fP
r
f'V
cause of the attractiveness of youth from
a man's point of view, ths opportunities
of naughtiness from a girl's are neres
ssrlly Inclined to b on th wan after
she reaches her prima.
For, after all, we are moat of us what
opportunity makes us. Complete respect
ability is often, though I wouldn't aav
J always, th result of lack ot assistance
in tne other direction, is it not?
j Naturally, ths most dangerous combl
i nation (I had vry nearly written "nlc
' est." Instead of "dangerous," but Just re
j membered In time). 1 that of youth and
beauty, plus experience.
Th Proereas of civilisation, and the In
creased tendencies for freedom, lead me
to believe that in a few years' time the
I first two will hav thoroughly mastered
in mira. Even If they haven't. It won't
be for want of trying, as far as) I aan
"Ase-T
ment about the first that is entirely lack
ing In ths second. That Is w hy we In
variably ua the former when w ar
referring to ourselves, and th latter when
when dealing with someon else.
Do You Know That
Mushrooms hav been known to force
their wsy up through asphalt footpath.
fins Isirar 1 - - - s a . .
The accuniulatk.li of experience ae- isesses aa area eoual to about . .
quli-ed between the time of leaving school England.
ana caching what ths world considers
a oeigian one set hlmaeir the Usk of
walking round th world backward.
He d'd not accomplish it
the prime of life should certainly stand
one In good stead. Besides, hav you
ever met man of 40 who will allow
for a minute that he is getting on the
shelf?
I have met. In ths course of my vari
gated life, girls of T who. so far as gen
eral knowledge went, could be depended
on to score a "possible" every time. B'lt
this, like humanity In a German soldier,
Is somewhat rare.
If I had to maks a general age mark for
women kind. I ahould say that the period
round about B was ths naughtiest sl
lowing a few year, on elthr side. Tou
see, the perfect appreciation of naughti
ness is. In a girl, bound to depend I rail
on youth.
1 don't for a motnvnt linatfiiie t.;
In Australia ths birds hav no song
and ths flowers har no soent, thoujh
th lava of svery tree ar full of odor.
On Inch of rain ooming down on a
slngl acre of Und would rill mora than
barrels of forty-five gallons each.
Kings In th sarllest days wr merely
the "father of famllle." and th word
is derived from th aaiu sou res as "kin."
A Frent-h scientist one spent fort:'
' .e years and about XVi.onO In attempt-
produce a blue r.e by artificial
literature that It would be agalnat reason '
to deny to them a certain kind of his-!
torlo reality. Thl does not rqulre t:s
to put upon them exactly the Interprets-
tlon given by tha Blbl. writer or cJlUrs. !
Becaus certain events occurred four :
snd flvs thousand years ago and men- j
tion la made of them In scripture, doe j
not Impose upon us tha obli irutlnn Ia at-
cord to them any more of a m.rui-jio.is
character than la to bs attributed to sim
ilar events occurring in our own day.
We shall rtcuginxe God as being an
operatlvs factor in such oocurrenr.es aa
what Is known aa ths confusion st Babel,
and yet without supposing that He was
mor sn Influence then than He Is now,
so that by observing the way In which
any language spoken within recent limes
becomes split up into derivative dialects
w shall be able to conclude what the
process was fifty centuries or more ago.
An examplu In olnt would be the Latin,
which at the time of Christ' coming
waa the language of Italy. That smme
language, very much Varied from the j
original, U now in use in Italy under the j
nam of Italian; In Francs under the
name of French; in (Spain under th nam
of Spanish. They all ar fundamentally
corruption of th I.atln, and they hav
com to differ from on another because
of tho distance from one another of th
countries whers they ar used.
If th several people mieaklmr them
wiey wouia nav continued or if there
had been close and constant communica
tion hot ween them they would have con
tinued to speak the same tongue. It was
their living apart that mads them speak
differently, not their speaking differently
that niade them draw apart
Applying this to tha matter r th.
fuslon at Babel, w can. then, suppose
thst th Mbls wrlt.rs put th cart befor
th hora. snd that tha historic fsct
was not that the BaU-lltes scattered over
th face of th earth, because they com
menced apeaklng different Isy.guaKea but
11,1 "'' commenced speaking different !
Iamruag.-s became thev im.l u , !
4' mMxC
DOES vour cooking make the
family hungry for more?
Do your left-overs taste as good
as when the food was first served ?
Can you vary your menus so that
no one complains of monotony?
If you can't answer these ques
tions satisfactorily, it's probably
the fault of the seasoning.
TONE
SPICES
give a surprising zest to the
ordinary dishes. They preserve
their original pungency and are
guaranteed for purity. Any
cooking is better cooking with
their use. Sold by your grocer
at 10 cents a package.
Allspice, Cloves, Pepper, Pa-
nrilfil C i n rrfr Pinnimnn TJnr
Q ' f megs,Mace,CelerySalt,Picklin2
s -- ' C: Kf.
itiutuiu, kjat, a uuiu jf -
Seasoning and others.
TONE BROTHERS, Dea Moines
Established 1871
.. BUmdmn ot $ A Famous OIJ CaUsa CWrVw
Ucretl o.er the faer ,f tit e.nh