II 4- 10 A THE EEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1921. Half of College : Women Old Mauls, Declares Savant Other Xpteretti and Realiza tion ot Marriage) Responsi- 2. . liilitiei Are to Blamf , He Says. Marriage "of Children India's Greatest Evil, . C Says Future High Priest Student at Columbia Seeks Education on System Of the West. B7 MARGERY RE. New York, Dec. 3. Marriage vowi at 10 yean of age. Little lisp Berkeley, Cal, Dec. 3. A verba! bombshell breaking the peaceful ways of public interest and carrying ing girls and bashful boys exchange i,M... rf;.rt...!nn.1 nnnnrt mittlpi in words that bind them together In a ... . , . . t.-.f of matrimony which they can tti wake has been launched by Prof. not undcrs,and. Samuel J. Holmes, head of tbe tool- Ten, 11, 12, 1J these are the yeara ogy department -of of California, who ask "Why do SO per tent .of college women become oici niaiusr '"Why. on the other hand, do dev. oteei of higher education seldom divorce? "Are the present world evil di rectly due to higher education? "Is the 'new' woman a traitor to the race? the I'nivcrsity of brides in India whose parents V , I still subscribe to the old idea 'of cniia marriage. This is one of the greatest evils existing in India today. Yet it had its origin in a desire only to pro tect women. The observer is led to believe from reports that such an institution must have had its begin nings in those dark days when men sought to shut away women from racer ..... . the world and place them in a safe Is .gnorance of biology directly if dubifau. pogityon But one of the younger eencration of old India, who holds to many ancient ideals though he is most pro gressive, explains the strange cus tom. ., " Jal Curcstii Pavry, son of a high priest of the Parsees, now ar student at Columbia, discusses this problem of his country and declares it one of the greatest evils that burden India today. Student Tells of Conditions. "Women were held in creat cs- k . u- r 1 1 t y . . n.tui uy me lununcis vi uruasier. the Parsees of old. These people, from whom the modern Parsees are descended, flourished in Persia in the seventh century, I he invasion of the Mohamme dans caused a number of converts They choose and, weakening the strength-of our deliberation, prophet s followers, made the posi responsible for our racial problem, looming more sinister with each day?" ' Professor Holmes answers all of ihese and more in the affirmative. "Fifty per cent of college women remain unmarried, said the zool ogy professor emphatically. "Oh, I know I am going to be doubted, because college girls are getting prettier each year, but that has no fearing on the matrimonial statis tics. , Cautious Choosers. Prof. Holmes' theories have the background of figures to support him. College, he says, invites the cream of the race, children of the successful. Knowledge makes them aware of the full extent of matri monial responsiblity. only after careful if fjfr " ' ' Meanwhile many of them cneace in tion. of our women a dangerous one. lucrative occupations which tend to ;"Parents shielded their daughters is the scrit, though Hindustania common language. Ihe idea that these 30 native vernaculars keep the people apart is wrong. All are able to speak this one common language. "But ' castes do keep peopl alienated from each other. And the Hindus have so many castes. The I Parsees and the Mohammedans have their homes. The liberties and "one- . ine Branmin caste , among of woman immediately divert the mind" from things matri monial. position . A lifclonff student of biology and changed evolutionary development, Prof. "But parents who got tired of this Holmes has " studied ' the" subject responsibility, found a way to shift with a dispassionate and judicial it. . , . mind. He is vitaily interested in "Marrying off very young girls be. woman's status, the, rise of indus- came another measure of safeguard, tfiaiism, and tnc question or me Persecution ot the rarsees con effects of alcohol, because of the tinued bv the erearer number of lights they throw wlien interpreted Mohammedans and when these first Xr TrSil rn,?i,i with caution and without prejudice Pilgrims of Persia went into IndiV?""5 upon the progress of the race. ; they v continued, to protect , their ?. t - ' Marriage a lottery, ne says, women. ' - : among: the women of higher educa- "The child marriage-' wivi'cAn tion, and the families are becoming comitant evil' of the invasion of Per- smaller and smaller. In many cases, s;a ar)(j the bitter persecution that higher education is responsible or followed. the loss of a certain feminine charm, rt is 'one of India's greatest social a misioriune mai arouses a uccy- ev,s today, seated instinctive recoil in the op' it should be wiped out and we posite aex.'-y (..; J t '... ,i j.f should marry now as they do in your ' Independence Not Blessing. " ' wesr, from a standpoint of suitabili- , "Present day. women who, sacn-, My, mutual liking, and at a more ma f ice motherhood tblac3rcof ate jthose ture age," ; . i t ' uoon whom the oblia-ation of moth- Young Mr. " Pavry has chosen erhood should .rest ,with the greatest Columbia university as a place to weight. I have my doubts if the prepare, for his future problems. Only growing independence of women is 21, he got his "A. B." at' Bombay an unmixed plessing. , , university, but left India to take his The BerkelJ, savant attributes race master's .. and , doctor's degrees in suicide largely to higher education America. He : too. patterning after his with its attendant development of father, will ..become a high priest of mentality and to inordinate social the Parsees, who are followers of the ambition. . Trophct Zoroaster. '. "Xhis latter danger, ne said, in a Other Troubles! of India, me past years connnea to a :ew, the 'Hindus holds sway over many depressed peoples and they consti. tute a great menace td Indian poli- tical institutions. 1 hey have no sym. pathy for their own people and do not regard them as equals, hence they cannot do much real good. "I want to break down caste. "Up until lately the Hindus and the Mohammedans were united; but blcs and ,the mas r, they nave been thrown apart. 1 "The Parsee should he organized there are so many existing abuses of the priesthood there. I want to study system and organization in America you people are masters of it. is .today becoming a general malady. The feminine public is eaten with a'xlesire for social progress; and, of . course, there is no barrier to this so fatal as the large family Avith its responsibilities and expense.''.. Shark Fishing Once Good in East River . - .- v Kew York, Dec. 3. The waters of the East river off Catherine Slip, in the shadow of the , Brooklyn bridge, where only germs are to be found now, were productive shark i fishing grounds a century ago. ac cording to the local historians. Nowadays a shark that dares run very far beyond Sandy. Hook . is. a j the rarity. J hey seldom get past the outlying beaches down in the lower bay. . . ' But in the early years of the nine teenth ccntury.it was different-.' There were no steamers, with their thrash ing propellers, or chugging ijiotor boats to frighten off the wary fish, and they followed the fishing smacks up to the shores of Monhat tan island. Once they got to Cathe rine Slip, where the biggest fish market in town was located, . they were loath to leave, for there .they found the choices tidbhsV floating with the tide---the dead figh' thrown overboard by the market scavengers. ' As a result, shark-fishing was good. . . .!- ' tollypops Better Than ' i ' Spankings for Bad Boys ' Chicago, Dec. 3. Instead of giv ing him a "warming" when he insists upon going swimming against your wishes, give your son a lollvpop or something else todelight hirru. That is the true course to lobedience and will make a better boy of your son in the long run. . 'So advises. Mrs. Marietta Johnson, a mother, who has-been speaking on children at Chicago. Mrs. Johnson declares that she practices what she pretches and that the results of her experiments have proven the truth of .her contentions. ; Youths Hike and Ride 1,200 Miles to College in Week Columbia. Mo., Dec. . .3. The railroad strike would not have- made any difference to Joe Block arid James Brody, both of New York, anyway. The lure of the road pro vided them- transportation from their home to this fcity. where they ' entered the University of Missouri. The trip was made in eight days, the youths accepting rides from automo biles along the route.- Stops were made in Philadelphia. Cumberland, M4; Wheeling, W. Va., and Day ton, O. Gossip of Houston Woman . Stopped by Court Order Houston, Tcjt., Dec. 3. A "neighborhood gossip" injunction restraining a woman from making "afly remarks" about a woman and thire children, wto bvg next door, '"But besides this social evil there are other drawbacks to the people of India today," Mr. Pavry said.. "There is the British government's lack of interest in our educational-problem. "On v 6 uer tent of our peoDle are educated. - This-, constitutes one of India s great grievances , against England. "Upon us is put the stigma of be ing an agricultural nation. ; In an cient India there were great schools and universities. One hundred years ago, after, the, industrial revolution, Eurdpe progressed to' a great extent commercially. India, on the other hand, failed to double her industries. She was not encouraged under Brit ish rule to do so. "There was little or no machinery in Europe at that time; they got richest - and : finest quality of goods front' my country, which al- wavs had had Jier own arts and architecture. "India was the warehouse of the east.. "At the present time there are some mills in Bombay. , ihere are geld, silver and iron mines. And if India were to go ahead, unhampered, she could develop enormous re sources. During the war one of our iron .mines, the Tata company, helped considerably by sending rails into Mesopotamia and tgypt. 'Tlie boycott on; English goods is no joke. It is a serious situation. Denies Women Against Boycott. Regarding' the boycott against British goods in India, and the ru mor that women are upsetting the boycott by refusing to wear native products, Mr. Pavry emphatically denied its possibility. "Women of India stand by their I ... U , V. IV.IBJ ,11V dllll J'lUll J A their partners. Our problems are vital right now. But I believe in so cial, not political, uplift in India, I would like to see established schools where our own vernaculars could be used and retained. All these I , tongues have their roots in San Unique Application Lands $12 a Week Job in England London, Dec. ' 3. A derby cm ployer advertised a vacancy on his staff at $12 a -week.' - He received 300 applications, among which was Vine enclosed in an. ordinary envelope which had a border marked iti red in. L( Printed across the t'j'V the words: "As this envelop Jrsstrfri(iiie and stands out lrom trie rest, so does my application."- - ,s,;i i , 4 He got the job. . Fashion Decrees No More Bare Backs or Shoulders London, Dec. 3. According to Lucille's London branch, which held its autumn fashion parade, there are to be no more bare backs, bare arms or bare shoulders. The ex panses of neck and shoulders hither to revealed in past seasons are to be covered by gossamer lace. : ADVERTISEMENT Use Pyramid For Pilos Tho Relief from Pain and DUtreis by Vnnm Pyramid Pil Suppesitorie Induces You to Tell tho Good ,.. New to Others. ' Send for Free Trial Perhaps you are struggling- -wth the pain and distress of itching-, bleeding, protruding piles or hem- Society Burglar Is Expelled From Sing Sing Prison Failure hi Promise to Reform Results in Sending Crook To Less Popular Penitentiary. Ossmmg, N. Y.. Dec. 3.-VValter White, a "burglar of high society," known in crookdom as Silk Hat Harry White, has just been put out of Sing Sing prison for breaking his pledge to reform. Over his protest White was hustled off to Auburn prison. When White was released on pro nation a few months ago from Sing Sing he told the state board that, al though a life-long burglar, he had a conscientious scruple against rob bing the dead. He said that one night he entered a dark room in a fash ionable residence. As he was grop ing around in darkness he touched some silver he thought was' resting on a bureau. He was unable to lift it. so he focused his flashlight on the silver. He was horrified to find him self confronted by a corpse. The silver was the plate on the casket. He fled in dismay. When he finished telling how that harrowing experience persuaded him to "go straight he was asked if h! stole the casket plate. He explained he could have taken it, but his conscience would never let him "rob the dead' - White was returned to Sing Sing recently for getting into more thievery. Like all professional criminals, White preferred Sing' Mng to any other prison because life there is more thrilling and it,is most convenient to receive callers from New York. In his raids on society he wore a tall .hat to assist him in his work. Care of Babies New Course in Chicago Schools Students Will Practice on Real Youngsters, Left By Moth ers Who Have to Work. are to' be : are of babies. I J, squirming, I --J-.! I Rattlesnake Killed in Trap Set to Catch Rat Reading. Pa., Dec. 3 Amandus Creitz of Steinsville, northwest of Kutztown, cot the surprise of his life when he set a powerful steel trap to catch what he thought was a rat of. unusual size and appetite, judg ing by the amount of food that was disappearing nightly from his cellar. The next morning a rattlesnake with 11 rattles was found in the trap, crushed to death . by the heavy spring, bince then nothing has been missed from the cellar. By EARL L. SHAUB. Chicago, Dec. 3. -Girls of Chicago High schools are to taught how to take care They will have real cooing youngsters to practice upon instead of learning baby culture out of dry, unanimated books. The kiddies will be left at the school each morning by mothers who work. The course will start to-morrow. 'In carrying on the nursery work, said Miss Ptona h. Good man, head teacher, "we will con tinue the regular educational fea. tures. Besides instruction in bath. ing, dressing and feeding the babies, the girls will be taught the funda mentals' of kindergarten work, "We are not trying to make nurse maids of the girls, but we feel that knowledge in scientific care of babies will go far toward making them mothers' helper.i. "This training will enable them to give scientific care to their own little brothers and sisters and many parents 'will learn much from them. Our girls are all enthusiastic over the work." The course will be started first in one school and extended to others as classes are formed. Two hun dred and fifty girls already have signed up for the class. The work will be under the direc tion of Dr. Mildred Young, head of the homecraft department. "Every baby will have a crib and will be given a thorough physical examination," she said. . "This course will not only help girls who prefer home work to office duties, but it will be a benefit to future generations and give the community healthier children." Husband, 83, in Insane Fit, , Scalps Wife With Chair Frceport, 111., Dec. 3. Robert J. Lone, 83, in a fit of insanity, arose from bed and attacked his aged wife with a chair, literally scalping her with blows. He turned on his grand daughter, Lois. Young, injuring her before she escaped. His wife's con dition is critical. . , - 11.JI r,TV M - coirSPAixnf SB Cm. 1601 A JAOCSKI SK Delivers Any Article of Furniture GO THRO store . O THROUGH the cntiVo -select any ar ticle of furniture you want and ONE Dollar de livers it to your home. Take your time to pay the bal ance. If you have never dealt here before, now is the time to open an account. Everything in , the store is marked at the new LOW prices in plain figures. . Select Any of These Gift Articles Pay Only $1.00 Down Smoking Cabinets, Smoking Standi, Sewing Cabinets, Set of Dishes, Cedar Cheti, Vacuum Cleaners, Sewing Machines, Fern Stands, Hoosier Kitchen Cabinets. Floor Lamps, Table Lamps, Piano Benches, Writing Desks, Card Tables, Bookcases, etc IP 14 if il' I . I jEZZjj l Tall ChiffonierBuilt of golden finished oak with wide top, square ' French plate mirror, at tf-a n ne Library Table A Colo nial design in beautiful mahogany finish, has wide top, fcrM Cfl Massive Duofold of solid fumed oak, upholstered in , imitation leather, fTiw"'0 $46.50 Brass Bed-continuous and lin. fillers . . -Satin finish 2-in. posts $21.95 : : : R . . - ' ' : a 1 U only " Firesioe Rockers Well "Royal Eas" Chairs in ; S I hOU- I Y 7 I built solid mahogany solid oak, comfortably11 Jacobean 0 m 1 1 1 I UU 1 V. r 1 . ... . 11 u i t j u-u it Queen Anne period; gray finish; I rencl) plate I In V I With cane seat, back, upholstered ; push button Ia top1. bi' . . ' r,v $16.75 $23.50 $47.50 .$22.50 j a : i orrhoids. If so. ask any drugrist for a 60 cent box of Pyramid Pile Suppositories. Take no substitute. Relief chould come so quickly jou will wonder why anyone should con tinue to suffer the pain ot xuch a distressing condition. For a free trial packag-e, send name and ad dress to Pyramid Drug- 'o., CIS Pyr amid Bid?., Marshall, Mich. GET RID OF YOUR FAT Thousands of others have gotten rid of theirs WITHOUT DIETING OR EXERCISING often at the rate of over a pound a day and WITHOUT PAYMENT until reduction has taken place. I am a licensed practising physician and per sonally select the treatment for each individual case, thus enabling me to choose remedies that will produce not only a loss of weight harmlessly, but which will also relieve you of all the troublesome symptoms of overstoutness such as shortness of breath, palpitation, indigestion, rheumatism, gout, asthma, kidney trouble and various other afflic tions which often accompany overstoutness. My treatment will relieve that depressed, tired, sleepy feeling, giving yon renewed energy and vigor, a result of the loss of your superfluous fat. You are not required to change in the slightest from your regular mode of living. There is no dieting or exercising. It is simple, easy and pleas ant to take. " If you are overstout do not postpone, but sit down right now and send for my FREE TRIAL TREATMENT and my plan whereby I am to be PAID ONLY AFTER REDUCTION HAS TAKEN PLACE, if you so desire. DR. R. NEWMAN, Lie ' Pby.icUa State of New York t 28S Fifth Areaue, New York. N. Y. Desk H-330. , r will put this Victrola in your home on Christ mas morning, if you wish. And it will meant the merriest Christmas youve ever had. This is Victrola 100 price $150. It is the most popular Vivtrola model of all. But of course we have many others from which to choose, priced at $25, $50, $75, $100 and up all sold on the easy payment plan. Call in and see the complete line. We'll gladly play any music you wish and explain in detail our plan of easy payments. . 45-lb. All Cotton Mat tress With roll edge, deep tufts, covered with a good grade of ticking at only . .$5.65 Living Room Suite Comprising: a long Daven port, cozy Chnir and Rocker upholstered in a very fine quality blue velour with loose cushions of Marshall spring construction, tfjl 7Q CA In ni nnlv " Genuine Leather Wing Rocker Full spring seat and back, has wide arms; this salo $29.50 ospc (fo. 1513-15 Douglas Street The Pioneer Victrola Store Packed in 25. 50, 100 and 150-lb. Wood Boxes. New Crop, Graded Jumbo Pecans, running about 85 to 90 to the pound. We quote 29c per lb., f. o. b. San Antonio. Express shipments only. Texas Pecan Shellhg Co.. 426 So. Laredo St., San Antonio, Texas PECANS ; . : MgSpv Thousands of 25 to 50 Hundreds upon hun dreds of Toys, Boks and Games at lower prices than Our Low Rent Location and immense Buying Power, due to our purchasing of Toys in carload lots, means lower prices. Every Toy Is NEW Because the greatly reduced prices in sure a complete clearance each season. Jolly old Santa Claus is here to greet the girls and boys. Your Credit Is Good rwv sn Fistula-Pay When Cured A mild intern of trwtmrat that cam Pfl. FUtnla aa4 stker Rectal Disc. ia a short tine, without a ttrtn tanrieal op-nitiAfi- K Chloroform, fcth.r or other ceflcrm) anesthetic vveti 4 m ffuaraatMd ia verr ea. accepted for trmUnent, and no money is to be paid anti) tend. Write for book oa Rectal Diiea.ee, with lames and testimonial ef more thaa l.SSS .rem meat peopl whs have been permanent cured. M. E. R. TARJtT Seutertam. rtra Trust BM. (Bee Bide.) Omae. Keb. ERE E ! for a Limited Time, a Beautiful $25.00 Floor Lamp Think of pr?ntini? the family TWO beautiful and de?irabl gifts on Christ mas Eve instead of one it U pos&iMe if you join our " " Sensational Savings in This Dec STOVE SALE 27.50 Heaters $17,501 69.50 Cast Iron 57.50 Heaters $37.50 Ranges, Monday, spe 59.50 Heaters $39.50 , i;; 37.60 Cast Iron Cook 97.50 Ranges $69.50 Stoves, Mon.. .$17,951 8.50 Laundry. $4-95 $1.00 Delivers Any Stove $1.00 Xmas Club There to .'war a shortage of "Fathe Phonosrrsnhs at Christmss time, so, instead cf sraitinc until ti beicht ef the Christmas Sh..ppin Season, srhen jroo. sn.r not be a'e to secure the partieirlar style and fini.h yoo wifh. join the DOLLAR -PATItfc CLUB and have a rear 'round for all the family. ' - eft I tasajsaej - ! j