TI1K TIKE: OMAHA. WKT)XKST)AV. CHTOTIKR 20. 1015. 1 llae Bees Hoiie Magazine Page """" " impugn ii m i .1 i , iIMWI,Mii n , , "," - Tr if ! IT ' alrr .1 The Sixth Commandment Fifty-Fifty" with Spronne Grafting WItm nod Selfish neea of Hatbands Causes of DIsmMt. i I i t I "I Know a Girl There! No. 3 Montreal wo By NELL BRINKLEY Copyright, D1S, Intnrm'l News pervloe. By DOROTHY DLX. 1 "WW 3 cvN ...v - J i . !.r'.jf..v-iv vv m is the sixth commandment of matrimony: - Thau shalt apllt thy pleasures and thy Shekels "fifty-fifty with the partner of On of tha great trouble of matri mony la that few ouplea ever have tba honesty and fairness to make a fair divide ' of lta reaponalblUtlea and burden and p rese ll rea ftnd perquis ites. Sometimes It la tba husband who "welchee" on his end of the bar gain. Sometimes It la tha wife who docks out from under her end of It. Sometimes you sea a husband who thinks ha haa a right to ba a little tin od In his house, while his wife should ba contented to ba an adoring slave. Sometimes it Is tha wife who feats that she la entitled to all tha domestlo sweets, while her husband is left only tha hitter; but seldom do you see a nil and woman working together and split ting "firty-flrty" In domestic life. And when you do sea this, you behold an In spiring spectacle of connubial bliss. There are women who look upon matri mony aa graft, and at husbands aa easy things that they work for their indi vidual profit. These are the ladles that wa see resplendent In the latest creations from Paris. While their hllhaful. A . - AW - .. . wBui ui wn iamy at me Mama ana hats of last year's vintage. These are the ladies who roll about In limousines whll4 their husbands hang on to trape In tha atreet oars, and who go to Bar Harbor In summer and Palm Beach in the winter, while their husbands toll on through heat and cold with never a vacation in their hard-worked lives. These women and their name la Mrs. Legion do not make an even divide of matrimony. They are grafters who grab everything desirable that la In sight. They shunt the whole family burden on to their nusband's poor shoulders Instead of bearing tbelr share. Tou often hear a woman hypocritically bemoaning the fact that her husband will wear hand-me-down clothes, or that he won't ever go oft on trips with her, or that ha doesn't keep up with the new books and new plays, when the truth la that she worka tha poor fellow so hard to pay for her finery and luxuries that she doesn't leave him any time or strength or money for himself. He'd like to b well dressed and to amuse himself if she'd only split "fifty-fifty" with him. instead of leaving him only a Jitney out of a dollar. It la not always tha woman, however, who la the family monopolist. Quite as often It la the man who holds to the cheerful theory that the husband, being tha lead of tha house, is entitled to all tha prerogatives thereof. These are the men who think that when they marry they have conferred such an inestimable favor on a woman that sha should never expect anything mora to be done for her. They are strong for tha contention that woman's place is in tha home, and that aha should ask no livelier amusement than taking care of tha children and meeting her husband with a glad, sweet smile. These are the man who look about twenty years younger than their wives, and who are turned out by the beat tailors, while their wives make their own clothes and look it. These are tha men who always hava plenty of money to belong to fashion able eluba, and to play golf, and to open win In restaurants for chorus girls, but who dole out car far to their wives by tha nickel, and raise ructions over the also of tha bills on tha first of the month, and begrudge tha baby certified milk. Now, no really happy horn was ever founded on selfishness, and no egotist was ever a successful home builder. No man over loved a woman well enough to enjoy being "worked" by her. No woman waa aver self-abnegating enough to enjoy being offered up as a daily sacrifice to her husband. Patient Orlselda ia a my thical character. Bha never existed in real life. Tha only way that any real happlneea In married life la ever achieved la ' for tha husband and wife to make aa equal divide of everything, and this Is just as much true of work, and cares, and re sponsibilities, as It la of Joys and pleas ures. No woman ever feels herself a real wife to her husband until ha lata her In on tha ground floor of his struggles and his ambitions. No woman ever feels that aha Is a real helpmeet to her hus band until she has acutually helped through some crisis. It isn't enough for a real woman to be a, (how window by which her husband advertises his prosperity by hanging fine clothes and Jewelry upon her. She wants to be something mora to him to enter his real life-end If men only under stood this, and talked to their wives about their business, and their hopes and plana, fewer men would hare to complain of woman's extravagance. Woman would be satisfied with very little If they knew that their husbands were giving them a square deal. It's the suspicion that they are being cheated of their share of tha profits of tha domestic partnership that makes the silent part ner so often throw the firm into bank ruptcy, ad tha woman who realises that It s up to her to give her husband a fair run for his money, that her part Is to make comfortable home, to be thrifty and cheerful and contented, has grappled her husband to her with hooks of steel. She can laugh at sirens and map her fingers at aga, for ahe haa built her house of happiness upon the eternal rocks. To make matrimony a success, forget not tha slat commandment, which says: Thou shalt apllt thy pleasures and thy shekels fifty-five" with tha partner of thy bosom. Why We Quarreled No. 5 The Man's Side The Man Who Liked an Occasional Drink Telia His Story. By VIIUUNIA TKRHTXB VAN DH WATER. (Copyright, WIS, by tho Star Company) Persons knowing that my wife and I have quarrelled ahont my drinking might think that I am a drunkard. On the contrary, I am fairly temperate. I am not a total abstainer, though Susan's father la. Htj ahe asked me before our marriage If I drank, I would have told her tha truth. But sha never asked ma. When wa had been married for some months sha amelled liquor on my breath one evening and made a great fuss aver It I acknowledge that I had had one glass of whisky. "There la no harm In that," 1 affirmed. "But there la," sha declared. "Drink ruins mora homes than any other vice In the world." It la not ft vtoa. I Insisted, "unless ona carries It too far. And when I am tired or depressed X feel tha need of a stimulant of some kind." "Then Why not take a cup of tea, or coffee V aha argued. I oouM not help laughing aa I visual ised myself taking such a bracer as this. Then, as I saw that my wife was really unhappy, I tried to soothe her. "Dear Susan," I pleaded, "do ba rea sonable. I hava never been drunk alnoe my stfly freahman year ia oollega and then only one." "I tell you It ta wicked habit and a annsefoas ona, sha reiterated, and in her declaration I recognised her father's teaching. "It makes me mlaerabk to think of It. It leads to sorrow and dis grace." I appreciated that aha wis absolutely unreasonable on this subject, so I tried, without lying to hsr, to maks her think that I would hereafter let drink alone, In rny soul I determined to do aa I had always dona. I certainly had enough self- control not to go too far. Ignorance la bllm. and ir a wife is foolish about a matter It is wise and right for a husband to avoid worrying her. For a while Buran watched ma eloaely, and aha often sniffed tha air about me suspiciously as If to make sure that It did not smell of liquor, I waa very careful that It should not. I confined my Advice to Lovelorn :By BSATBioa Taxrai lava-eat m Visit from Ulna. Dear Miss Fairfax i I am a widow and have a brother-in-law who Is a widower and lives in another part of the state. We correspond and he now and then aends me money. Sometimes I think his letters are tender and affectionate. Would you please tell me how I could find out his real feelings toward met I could love him, for he Is a fins man and I am quite alone In tho world. ., ANXIOUS Why not suggest to your brother-in-law that it would bo a pleasant Idea for him to pay New Tork visit T Well Rid ( Sack friendship. Pear Miss Fairfax i I am a young lady Of 11 and deeply In love with a young man four years my senior. I am em- f toyed In an office and I met htm there, ie took me out one evening and we had a good time. When he took me home he wanted to kiss me good-night, but I re fused. Kver since that I have not en him again. ESTEIXJ3 W. Tou were quite right to refuse to kiss a mere acquaintance. Such privileges belong only to declared lovers. A man who takes you out and then insists on ths payment of a kiss Is not worth re gretting when your refusal to comply makes him lose Interest In you. rna drink a day to tha noon hour when I out at luncheon. By tha time I reached home In tha evening thera wag no odor on my breath. I do not conskler that this was wicked deceit. Had I ohjeotcd to Susan's taking tea cream soda, had I scolded her when ever she did take it, I would surely hava expected her to keep silent with regard to her frequent visits to tha soda fountain. A year passed before tha final catas trophe occurred. My wife had gone Up town to spent the day with her slater. At: noon It began to storm, snd at 4 o'clock' Susan telephoned to my office that If tha rain continued I must not be worried if ahe did not return until morning. "If It holds up enough for me to come). Ithout getting very wet, I v. Ill adhere I to my original plan and ba hark at din-. I ner time," she said. "But If It storms! heavily, I am afraid that slater will in- sit on my stsylng where I am." "I understand." I said, "and while Pi ahall miss you, of course. I do not wan la, you to risk catching cold." Tha rain waa falling faster and mora persistently at o'clock. This convinced mo that my wife would not return to-, night. So when a friend Invited ma tea dine with him at hla club, I accepted. Sj telephoned to the maid at my house that. I would not ba In to dinner, and that! her mistress would stay over night with I her sister, I had no umbrella and waa so wet by tha time my friend and I reached tha club that I Immediately took a glass ofl' whisky. My friend ordered more drinks with) ths dinner. I suppose that aa I waa tired, and my stomach waa very empty, I waa more susceptible than usual to the effects of the stlmulsnt. For the first time in meny years I felt that my brain waa clouded and befogged. I was secretly glad that my host went as far as my home with me. I waa still more glnd. as I let myself in the house ssslHted by my companion In Inserting the latchkey Into tha hole Intended for It that Susan waa absent. Imagine my horror when she met me at tha door of our bod room, "Oh, my dear," aha began, "I'm so' glad" Then at sight of me, she stopped short, her face turning deathly white. I at tempted to laugh and kiss her. but sha struck at me, beside herself with anger and disgust. "Tou'ra drunk!" aha exclaimed shrilly. I tried to explain, but It waa usolesx. I knsw ths. my tongue wss thick and my words were not aa convincing aa I wished to make them. Tha next morning we "had It out." Susan told ma that ahe had helped' me Into bed last night that sha did this as a duty, because she waa my wife. She also remarked, shudderlngly, that I wss loathsomely sick. Then she added that she would never trust me again never. - "Tou hava been drinking right along ever since we were merrled," she ac cusrd. "I know, because a man my sister knows mentioned to her thst he takes what ha calls his datly 'nip' with you every noon." . . I could not deny this, and did not try to. "But there's no harm In It." I added. "No harm!" she repeated, her eyes wide and angry. "There Is harm enough In It for me to determine that I will not live with you any longer. No," aa I tried to plesd with her, "until you prom ise me, swearing It on the Bible, that you 'Will never touch another drop of liquor, I will not stsy under your roof." Sha thinks aha la right, yet t am sura that if sha really loved ma sha could never hava reached this decision. "Oh, I do know ft girl there. A Canadian American girl ft gay, graceful creature and 1 wish I could see her now. The girl of snow and the glelghbelli, with the cheeks as hard and scarlet as apples, with the brilliant, liquid eyes of ft French father and Ms black hair with the coppery lights. Seems to me now, when I think, that always she was laughing with a glimmer of fine white teeth and ft tightening of the soft, red lips, and a deeponlng of the dimple In her slanting cheek. White and black and red she la. Like Snow White In the Olen with the Seven Little Men. The red of the scarlet maple leaf that grows on her mountainsides, the black of starlit night skies, the white of the snow that froths around her skli and powders in a glitter her furs and toque. Last I saw her she stopped in a laughing trek up a steep slope deep In snow, her moccasins layered In white, her winged toboggan on her back, snow dia monds on her lashes, a drift of snowflakes dim ming her glory of black and scarlet, one cold little band bare, the scarlet of her trappings of tweater and mittens matching the blood in her cheeks, the black of her furs the hair that sprayed across her face; and, standing under the black and silver birch and a show-blanketed fir, she waved a debonair good-by. Snow-white and rose-red and still-water black the Monteral girl. NELL BRINK LET. Tragedy of Loneliness But Girls and Mien Must Meet in Conventional Ways to Insure Respectful Friendship. : : By BEATRICE! FAIRFAX. I am twenty-five, good-looking, nice appearance, athletic build, good dresser, fairly eduoated. I am not so very welt acquainted here. I have lots of oppor tunities to flirt, but I lack ths nerve to be too forward, although I am not bashful in any way. 1 sure am lonesome, lonesome In this big city, and I certainly would llks to maks the acquaintance of soma nice young ladies, but don't know how. In response to this letter, which ap neref In Tha Bee lass than a fortnight ago, I hava received no leaa than a hun dred Utters from girls who are lonely, too. . My sympathy U great for each of the tonely Individuals who seeks congenial companionship and who Is sufficiently attracted by a printed letter to ask for advlo. I know that in every large city thera are dosena of girls and man who want to knsw pleasant young folk of tha opposite sexand who jump at every straw that offers tnem tr.e opportunity. And It la ona of tha trageaiea or urs ia a city that thia grasping at straws won't do. Friendships between men and women If they are to flourish and count for anything worth while in life must ba based on mutual faith and trust. Mutual faith and trust do not come through meeting people Irregularly. Suspicion Is one of ths tragic charactertsUce of hu man nature. And when men and girls meat without ths formality of proper In troduction of responsible Individuals who more or less vouch for them to each other they are all too likely to wonder and doubt. Loneliness Is a bitter tragedy and the most tragio thing about It is that ons who wants to help csnnot do so ' and thst each of you must work out your problem for yourself. Girls and men must meet each other according to the laws of society. Otherwise they are all too likely to hava this suspicion. Well, if she met ma through a flirta tion, probably, she meets other men the same way. I guess she Isn't a girt that demands that highest respect," or: "Kince he got acquainted with me without an Introduction I guess he meets a lot of girls that way and I guess he's a felloa who hasn't much else to do and who doesn't think any too much of women either." Lives in a big city are sadly circum scribed. Getting Into a circle of congenial friends, meeting an Individual to whom one can talk freely and with whom one can ba one's absolute self, are not easy things to do. Church, social clubs and friends of one's own sex offer tha most natural way of making acquaintance In the opposite sex. It does not pay to take desperate chances or to gamble on the attractive appearanoo of a stranger In order to end loneliness. Loneliness does not stop because you know people. "I am never so lonely ss when I sm with other poople," Is biterly true when those other people are not oon genlal and of your own sort. The one great consolation about tha tragedy of loneliness Is that It la m no way final. It may alwaya ba overcome. Perhaps tomorrow the sad litis girt who goes from her hall bedroom to work and comes drearily back to her hall bedroom from work may quite simply and natur ally moet some one through tha knowing of whom her whole life's course may be chsnged. A girl I know went obligingly to look for an apartment for a relative who waa coming to her town. With her waa a girl friend who waited In ths lobby for her. When the home hunter came back from her unrewarded search ahe found her girl friend deep In conversation with a man who happened to live in that bulld-Ina- Though ha was a family connection of this girl's they took no Interest In ona another. The girl who chapced to ba In troduced to him cams to be a very good friend of his, and through him she be came a menibCt of a thoroughly congenial circle of charming men and woman. To any lonely girl Just such a pleasant ex perience may come any day. Who of us knows what waits "Just around the comerTT Who of us wants to risk because of unpleasant present con ditions the chance fully tq enjoy happy experiences when they do corns T Loneli ness must never tempt, us Into Indiscre tion or danger. Life has to ba lived ac cording to Its rules and friendships must corns naturally, honestly and with digni fied beginnings " and then with just a few weeks more of Sanatogen On th road to health at last I And yet how Impatient . you art to bo up and going. But it ia now, when tha sys tem ia trying to rebuild its store of energy, that you will be most grateful for the reconstructive help of Sanatogen. j Sanatogen, you must know, la a natural food-tonic, combining purest albumen with organic phosphorus thus convevinz to the wasted system the vital elements to build up blood and tissues, and it is so remarkably easy of digestion that the most delicateyoung and old can take it with nothing but beneficial effects. It raawakans tha appetite, assists digestion, and as a physician In "Tha Practitioner." a leading medical Journal, says, "It seems to possess a wondarful affect in increasing tha nutri tive value of other food material. " Whan we tall you that Sanatogen la need by tha medical profession all over tha world aa an aid to convalescence and as an apbulldar of strength and vitality, that mora than 21,000 physicians have wrffen efrers commending it, you will understand that our confidsncs In recom mending it to you la firm and s'nosre. Won't you give 8anatogsn tha oppor tunity to help bring back voir or eome one that ia near and dear to you to health and strength r Saaategea b sold by good druggists evarywbar Ore1 Prise, htmrmttonl t on rs of Hudicina, 9 i i Isksa lor years bss Weo 7TV ii SLe-- 4 f '"! sad;: yM'mmtLl p.rk,JLu.. fjJ ?M.r -YJr yfJ wi .Dr. Ferghana, writes: M WV.hJS SyJy ' Km "Mr dsusuter. who wss Vrr ' - vsnraervoussBdanerDic. rr f F , u'l lit '7 H Ssnstosa. Hsr sppstite wll'i M" I Wvii-''" rf "wX ieiproosd. her nwisbl in- U J . i I l e Aj? tfs .-. 4 fW: crssssd snd tbe color , Jy J I ,' , i 5av el her skia becsose I' vy h A rT XT - Eayl healthier." iWS i, - ,r sa1 1 'Mmm "1 tor Elbmri HuLbrd't now boo "Health In tha Making." Written In bis attractive manner and fined I with his shrewd philosophy, together with cepital advice on Sanatogen, health and contaminant, h FKBE. Tsar thia off ss a reminder to address THS BAUER CHEMICAL COMPANY, XT-J 'rving Place, New York. t Into Ilualoess by Using tbe "Business CbAoot s" Columns of the Want Adt 1'av. It Pays. r w. ff . .N V 1,1 'lit TJ a I t M -r ., Hi A i-J 'ih ll'J it 'i 1"