t Woman's Rights in a Country Where Women Do AIL the Business (Copyright, mo, by Frank O. Jarpentrr) OMAIIA, SUNDAY MORNING. APRIL 24, 1910. m m 1 spondcnce to The Bpc.)-C'om4 jYjl I with me to the bazar and have h iook at me gins. v e Bre ln th old capital of liiirmn, walk 1 ii V through Immense building filled with Malls, in which hundreds of laughing women are sitting upon platforms with goods piled around them. Here is One felling silks. She has the most delimit pinks, blues, yellows ami greens, all striped with some other gay color. They are In tended for skirts, and will he wrapped tight around the person and fastened with a knot at the waist. See, a girl hus come up and Is making a purchase. The fair merchant takes a cigar as big as my wrist out of her mouth and Ih.vh It aside while she measures the goods with a yardstick. A half dosen girls aro sitting on their heels nearby watching the sale. Their barks arc turned, and I observe their silk skirts glued to their plump bodies. The Burmese maid wears neither corset nor bustle. The skirt falls straight to the feet, Inclosing the legs so that thev look like double pies wrapped In silk. The upper pint of the body is clad In Jacket and shawl. Now look nt the ears of those girls. They arc shaped like beautiful shells, except at the lobes, which are elongated and plugged with cylinders of gold, silver or amber. They aro bare-headed and thc.lr long black locks are dono up In a knot on tho crown. Every girl wears two or more bracelets, and a diamond ring sparkles tin the hand of the merchant as she measures the cloth. Women Ilo the Business. Now turn about and look through the bazars. There are thousands of women buy Ing and selling, and hundreds of peddlers moving about with trays on their heads. Here comes one with fresh fruits. She has a bowl of coemuiuts and bananas and crlen out her wares as she goes. Behind her Is a flower peddler, and further on aro mald eim with vegetables, fish, fruit and all sorts of things. A fish woman is soiling a trout from which she has chopped off the head. The fish bleeds as she handles it. She has plugs In her ears and her Hps are wrapped around a mighty cigar at which she puffs aa silo weighs out the fish. We go to the street of the tailors. Here girls are Bewlng on machines worked by hand. They will make you a dress while you wait. We stop before a pretty silk seller and a buy a yellow striped skirt to send homo. The girl sits on her feet, her llttlo brown toes peeping out of the pink, skirt which Is wraped tightly about her. She looks Innocent and 1 feel safe In mak ing tho purchase at her own price. She offers me a whiff from her cigar as I handle the goods and upon my 'refusing gives it to her sister and then comes down to business. She pulls out one piece of bright silk after another awl explains tho good points of each, laughing and chatting the while, ln the end 1 find that I have ; paid three times what I should, but the girl I ws so charming it was worth twice the ; money, ' ' Belle of the Itazars. This girl whs one of the belles of the ', bazar, and typical of the fair maidens ' of Burma. She was as straight as a post j and as plump as a partridge, and her rich j Burmese drees was well fitted to show all her beauties. Tho women hero are clad ln j two garments, Ono of these is a Jacket of 1 silk, cotton or gauze, which reaches to tne hips, and another baa a bright silken skirt l which is wrapped around the waist and i' Calls to the feet. 1 This skirt is square; it la about five feet In width and is fastened by a half hitch f tvith tn opening down at the front. The aktrt Is so tight that when tho girl walks rapidly she shows her bare legs to the knee, but by throwing out the heels and going) pigeon-toed tho folds ara prevented from parting to an Immodest degree. In lower Burma many of tho skirts are now sewn together at the front on account of the comments which foreigners have made about thi costume. The drosses are of different lengths, and the richer women often have skirts which trail upon the ground. The colors are those of the rainbow, the most delicate hues being UBed. My fair merchant wore a Jacket of gauze, and her skirt reached as high as the armpits. The jacket was so thin that the brown skin could be seen through the meshus, exposing the neck, shoulders and arms. She had a beautiful face. Her eyes were large, soft and brown, with eyelids just a trifle oblique and hlgh archlng, delicate brows. Her hair, which was gloesy black, was rolled up In a pyra mid on the crown, and fastened there with a bright golden comb. She wore a neck lace of pearls, to which were hung pen dants of amber, and a double string of pearls fell as low as her waist. She had saven gold bracelets on eaU of her wrists, a diamond ring on her finger and diamond plugs ln her ears. She was, I judge, about 15 years of age, but girls mature here at 13, and she was a woman grown. liar Flugi and Womsnhoud, All tho girls here wear ear plugs. They oannot enter society without them. As a maiden approaches the age of coming out, which Is usually at 12 or 13, her ears ur bored, and the ceremony is as Important to 9mr as the first long dress is to her Amer ican sister. TUo ceremony Is formal, and t must be dona when the stars are propi tious. The family cosults the fortune taller for this occasion, and a big feast is prepared. All the relatives and friends attend In their best clothes to witness' the piercing. - This Is done by a professional earborer, who uses needles of pure gold for tha rich and silver ones for tiie poor, i When tha exact moment haa arrived the 1 cirl is laid down upon a mat ln the back j of the room and hr relatives hold her J there while the ear-borer thrusts the , golden needle through the lobe and twists i It around Into a ring. This he leaves in ' tha ear. The other ear is treated like- wise. While this Is going on the bauds play, and after It there Is a feast. It takes the ear some time to heal. When it is quit well tha process of enlarging the hols begins. Tha needle is pulled back and forth lint 11 the aore heals. It Is theu taken out and a little cylinder of finely rolled gold Is pressed ln. This is gradually ' opened from week, to week, stretching the hole larger and larger, the cylinder beliig kept In until it grows to tha proper six. , Such people as cannot afford gold or sil ver! put stems of elephant grass in their ears, inserting stem after stem, until at , lust tha hola In the lobe will contain a bunch as big around as your thumb. After , the ears are well halad the plugs or hol- j low pipes ara insert!. Soma of tha women stretch their aar holes until they grow to an Inconceivable sUa. I have seen peasant girls with aar holes so large that a napkin ring; could ba thrust through one, and it Is not un common to sea a Burmese maid with a big cigar thrust through on ear. There was not a merchant In tha baxar at Manda- . lay who could not have used her eara for cigarette holders, and but few who had eat- plugs less than the size of thrlr fin ger tips. paklng of tobaoco, all Burmese wauiaa A . ". ' l V: .A-;' . I : A hv, . t$ ' ,11 l.tl i ,v :. . . i. .f m ' .'$V; V"'w lr-r SSil ;V h VU t -' A : -;A i j aJa'; v;; AAv m i 4hafll 'A sCv v M V'WlfcSiL smoke, and a girl learns to puff at a cigar long before her ears are bored. Children lire taught the habit as soon as they are able to walk, and I see 4-year-old boys puffing clgaroltes. Tho average cigar used by the women looks much like a long far of popcorn with the husk on. It Is made of other leaves In connection with tobacco; it is loosely rolled and is often tiea with a string. All the girls are adept In making cheroots, and at a party ono girl may roll for t lie crowd, the big cigars being paAed about from one guat to another, euch taking a whiff, ln courting, I doubt not, the girl makes the cigar and the two take love smokes in turn l.ove and Marrlaar. And this brings me to marriage in Burma. The customs here are different from those of Japan, China, Korea or the other coun tries I have visited during this trip around the world. The Japanese girl has a hus band picked out by a matchmaker, the Korean takes one at the dictation of her parents, while the Chinese maiden Is often sold, and, if married, becomes the slave of ;her mother-in-law. The Siamese girl is nominally the property of the king, and the Malayan la shut up ln a Mohammedan harem, as are the millions of women of India, Egypt and Turkey. The Burmese girl goes about as she pleases, and marries whom she will. During her childhood sha associates with the boys, and after mar riage she is looked upon as a comrade and often rules the household. She Is the bus iness man of the establishment. She usu ally makes the money, and always carries the purse. Marriage Oremony Kasy. The Burmese marry early and one Is an old maid if not married before she is out of 'the teens. During the courtship the young man brings presents of oranges or candy; he writes verses in praise of his lady's beautiful ear plugs, and she ln re Sunny Scenes aioKtnlej'a Dying; Prayer, N the afternoon of his last day on earth, writes James Creel man in his "On the Great High way," tho president began to realize that his life was slipping away, and that the efforts of science could not save him. He asked Dr. Uixey to bring the surgeons ln. One by one the surgeons entered and approached the bedside. When they were gathered about him the president opened his tyes and said: "It Is useless, gentlemen; I think we ought to have prayer." The dying man crossed his hands on his breast and half closed his eyes. There was a beautiful smile on his countenance. The surgeons bowed their heads. Tears streamed from the eyes of the white clad nurses on either side of the bed. The yel low radiance of the sun shone softly In the room. "Our Father, which art in Heaven," said the president in a clear, steady voice. The Jips of the surgeons moved. "Hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done " The sobbing of a nurse disturbed the still air. The president opened his eyes and closed them again. "Thy will be done ln earth as it is ln Heaven." A long sigh. The sands of life were run- ning swiftly. The sunlight died out, the raindrops dashed against the windows. "Give us tills day our dally bread; and forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver US from evil." Another silence. The surgeons looked at the dying face and the friendly lips. "For Thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory, forever, Amen." "Amen," whispered the surgeons. Uulllvcr and the Pickpocket. The most conspicuous opponent of Sen ator Aldrieh la the tariff struggle, relates the National Magazine, was Jonathan P. Dolliver of Iowa, but despite that senator'. wit. eloquence, ana undisputed talent ha found himself outnumbered ln tha votes which carried the bill through to a bril liant finish. Senator Dolliver la a born orator and seldom writes an address, pre- ferring to deliver It straight from tha shoulder In massive periods. Ha mora closely approaches tha giant stature of Webster ln this respect than any man now on tbe floor of the senate. Tha Iowa boys always remember Jonathan P. Dolliver as a popular speaker, though ha Insists that bis speeches "ara written out la the agony in turn gives him cigars ar,rf, perhaps, a tur ban or shawl knit by herself. The marriage is little more than a festi val at tho house of the girl. Here the young couple eat rice together, join hands and say they intend to live as man and wife. They are supposed to bill and coo. feeding one another as birds do; and they drink tea with their parents and parents-in-law. The groom makes the girl a pres ent consisting of a silken skirt or piece of Jewelry, and he is supposed to furnish the wedding breakfast. After marriage the two go Into seclusion for a honeymoon of sevh days, and they .then take up their home in the house of the bride. It Is pre sumptuous for them to set up their own establishment immediately after marriage, as the man is supposed to work a certain time for his wife. I understand that thereare many love matches ln Burma, and that where par ents object the young people elope and go off to themselves. There are few mar riages for money. The marriage is a civil ceremony and it has nothing to do with religion. It is a social and business partnership rather than a moral contract, and many mar riages are entered into without any cere mony at all. Among some people the wedding la kept secret for a time, for the young people do not like to be stared at nor have stones thrown on their house roofs, as is sometimes the custom. A girl does not change her name when she mar ries, and there is nothing about her to show whether she Is married or not. She wears no marriage ring, and she still, as I have said, keeps her own property. She can act for herself ln a business way and she frequently acts for her husband. She can sign deeds, lend or borrow money and make any kind of arrangements as to buy ing or selling. With all this the women do not mix ln public affairs. They make no fuss about their rights, and the Burmese suffragette is and Memorable Events in of toll, under the - heat and g.aro of the gas Jet." The son of a Methodist minister. Sen ator Dolliver entered early upon a political career; he had the old-fashioned way of using ancedotes to lilustrate his points, which was then ' considered effective, though he may have changed his style with the times. He is one of the orators who frankly admit that they "like to talk," a taste he thinks he may have in herited from his father and grandfather the latter a Massachusetts seafaring man, whose cargo of cotton during the war of 1S12 waa confiscated by General Jackson; if he had his grandson's eloquence it is prob able that he made some remarks that would have been worthy of preservation. When preaching on a large circuit in Vir ginia, and often riding LU0 miles ln a week, Mr. Dolllver's father met the lady who be came his wife, and that is the reason that the senator hails from West Virginia, and was educated at the State university there. After his graduation, at the age of 17, the young man decided to migrate to Illi nois. He tells thus of this first western visit: "Standing ln the railway station of Col umbus, O., a policeman tapped me on the shoulder, and with a warning glance said: " 'Vou have Just been talking, my boy, with oue of the most dangerous plck Duckets in the United States.' " -One of the most danceroua DickDocketa in the United States has been talking to a country boy who has not a red cent to his name,' was my reply." Krllrrment of Buffalo Bill. Buffalo Bill's withdrawal from the arena, say the New York Times, will mark the passing of the most picturesque personality ln public life hunters of wildbeeste and digdlg not excepted. It's doubtful if any other man save Ueorge Washington has en Joyed in such degree the universal adora tion of American youngsters and the nation-wide admiration of American grown ups. Even today affection for Abraham Lincoln. Uivsses S. Grant and Robert K. j,ee hll, Beaional limitations; that for colonel Cody knows no boundaries. To tha youth of tha land he has been from hia earliest fame, and always will be, the dar ing, tha dashing, the debonair Buffalo Bill, Intrepid pursuer of the hearth-rocking bUof relentless and alway.1 triumphant ri,kln. breaker of bronchos, monarch of cowboys, king of horsemen and prince of scouts. Aadrcw Jokuaun'a Kdaratloa. In Harper's Magazine ara published soma personal recollections of Andi-ew Johnson yet unborn. Such girls as I have seen are modest and lady-like. They are self-respecting, but not Independent nor forward. Woman's Itlttht" In Burma. The rights of a woman after her mar- riage are well protected. The women are the chief workers and money-makers, and a woman can hold property distinct from her husband. She manages her own mrfney, and has an equal light with her husband in all that they make together during their married life. She has a right to her own earnings, and if divorced she takes back all the money she has brought Into the family and half of what has been accumulated Blnce the wedding. As to divorces, these are not difficult of obtainment on either side of the family. Any discontented husband or wife may go before the elders and claim a separation, and It is seldom refused. There are also special grounds for di vorce. If the husband is idle or lazy tha wife can claim a separation. If he is unable to support her, If he Is always ailing, or becomes a cripple after his marriage, sha can demand that the marriage tie bo broken and the same Is true if he Ill-treats her in any way. On the other hand, the husband has, also, plenty of grounds for divorce. If his wife docs not love him, if she visits places to which he objects, and If she persistently disobeys him, he may claim his freedom. The same is also true if she gives him no boys. Notwithstanding all this divorces aro not much more common than in the United States. They are hardly respectable, and the man who enters a monastery to get lid of a wife is called a runaway, while a di vorced woman Is said to be always anxious to marry again. Indeed, marriage is con sidered the best state for woman, one of tfielr proverbs being as follows: "Monk are beautiful when they are lean,, four-footed animals when they are fat, men which give a new and most interesting ac count of this uniquely remarkable man, who rose in a few years from a tailor's bench to the presidency. His pride in hav ing been a tailor and his free admission of illiteracy are particularly inteiesing. "About a year before the civil war Judge Fespper, who had been a blacksmith before he became a lawyer, sent Johnson a set of fire-irons, which he had irflide himself, says the writer of the recollections, and the gov ernor presently sent tho judge a coat which be had, made for him. When he told my mother of the incident, she said: " 'Did you really make the coat, gov ernor?' " 'I put some stitches ln it,' he said; 'Pep per shouldn't get ahead of mo with the people. When I was a tailor 1 was a good one.' "He refused an Invitation once to dine with A. V. Brown, a leader of the democra'ic party In Tennessee and afterward Buchan an's postmaster general, although all of the guests were to bo fellow democrats, and let them know that on that day he hod dined with his washer woman, off bacon and cabbage. "He made no secret of his unlettered youth, and once brought my mother a mag azine containing a sketch of his life, ln which it was stated that his wife, Flora McCardlo, had taught him to read after they were married, when he was twenty one years of age. He said the statement was Inaccurate but substantially true; that when they were married his wife brought her school books to their new home, and his study of them aided his educution ma terially. After ho rose to prominence his admirers used to point out that he had mode few mistakes in grammar and that his English was pure, but he never learned to divide his words correctly in writing, and sometimes made ludicrous mistakes In quotations. Once in a public speech he spoke of the Lays of Ancient Koine as hav ing been translated in Macauley; and in another speech he quoted: " 'And the stern Joy that warriors feel In foemen worthy of their steel, as Shakespeare says!' " Chamberlain's Bank Fallare. , Senator Chamberlain of Oregon, who re cently made Ms first extended speech ln congress on conservation, has reminded an old friend of Chamberlain's own experi ments In conservation. "When Chamberlain was running fur tha senate," said this friend to a Washington Times reporter, "the opposition went over his recoid with a 'lne-tooth comb to find something Injurious to him. One day one V f ' r A when they are learned and women wnen they are married." llasy Housekeeping. Tho Burmese wifo has fewer housekeep ing troubles than her American sister. If she belong to the well-to-do classes she has servants, and if not, sho has but little hard work. Tho ordinary house is built of wood or bamboo raised upon posts about eight feet apart. It has a veranda in front, with steps leading to the rooms overhead. The floors are of thin planking or bamboo canes, and the roof Is of thatch or leaves. The whole Is simple to an extreme. Tho i i 1 1 i iv, n fti ill m-'i H - '-i ? Zrrk-. . .A ..A'.. ' .A-J Lives of Prominent People of the strikers rushed ln and announced that he had it. "Chamberlain was president of a bank when he was a young man; it busted and was a horrible wreck." "Dig it up quick," announced" the cam paign manager. The story was looked up and was true. The pank had failed and there were al most no ussets. They were Just ready to put out the story when an old friend of Chamberlain's came along and advised against It. Won't do you any good," he insisted. "Take my word for it." But the campaign managers had to do something, and so the story of the busted bank was given cut and gut due publicity in all the" anti-Chamberlain papers. Next day the Chamberlain" committee gave out a statement signed by all the directors and a lot of depositors of the bank. It said: "It is true that Mr. Chamberlain was president of the bank when It failed. At that time he was a man of some property. He had never been actively connected with the bank management and when he learned that It was closed and hopelessly insolvent he turned over his entire property and personally paid all depositors." Whereupon the anti-Chamberlain people started hunting for""Ti new roorback, and when election day came the man whose bank had filled Inglorlously was tri umphantly elected benator. Beaten by Ills Stories. Think of a man being defeated for con gress because somebody swiped all his best Jukes! A visitor from Minnesota ln Washington the other day told a little crowd at his hotel that Adam Bede missed re-election In the Kighth Minnesota district the last time fur just .that reason. It seems, according to the visitor's story, that a fellow by tho name of Barker, who Is a sort of boss of the Kighth Minnesota district, , cares not at all for Adam Bude. Now, as everybody knows, Bede was re gal ded as one of the chief wits of con gress. He always had more stones to tell than any seven other men engaged In the national legislation. He would si nd his crowd home In a good humor and they would vote fur lit id. Well, Barker thought and thought how to defeat Bede. One day at S o'clock an Idea came. He made a deal with one C. H. Miller to oppose Bede and tha fight wqs on. Beda started to make a few speeches In a remote corner of his district, and Barker sent a stenographer down with In T j, v -y a. sr-.A'- rzfjn i MMmmmesaaamamBunEsmr CLASS I2T RITIITTETJC " nuxina has no rurnlture ln our sense or tha word. The people sleep upon mats and rest their heads on bamboo pillows. There is little sweeping to do, and tho most of tha cooking Is on fires out of doors. Tho cook ing utanslls usually consist of two or thren earthen pots, ln addition to which are sorno Jars for water and several cocoanut ladle Most of the people use neither knives nor forks. The staple food of the Burmese is rloe. which la boiled or steamed, and eaten with fish paste and peppers. Nothing is drank with the meals, and aften thean only water. But few of the Burmese eat meat, for it structions (o take down all Bede's funny Btoiies. Then when the fight grew warmer Barker billed his friend Miller ju.st about one day ahead of Bede in each town. When Bede arrived and began to tell ills jokes the crowd would act bored, for they had heard the samb stories the night before. Bede dug up some new ones, but Barker had arranged that they should Do wired ahead of Miller. After about a week of this Bede became a fallen idol. They refused to vote for a man who appeared to be trailing along about one block In the rear of the Joke parade. Today Miller occupies Bode's scut In tho house of representatives. Pastor's Puzzle Made Plain. The pastor of a Went Philadelphia church Was very much surprised and pleased last Sunday night when in the course of tho service a crowd of iHrrsons fully forty strong entered and seated, themselves in the rear pews. The service continued with the clergyman congratulating himself on his unusually large congregation, when suddenly the Jour opened and a inun stuck in his head. "Here she comes," he announced ln a loud whisper. Instantly the late comers arose en masse and rushed to the door. Tho pastor was ho perplexed at the strange occurrence that after service he spoke to one of the vestry who hud been standing by tho door. "'Don't you know what happened?" asked .the vestryman, laughingly. "No," answered the clergy man, "but I would like to." "Why, a car broke down right In front of the church. Everybody got out after a few minutes, and, seeing a chance to sit down,' they all came in h.'io leaving ono man on watch. "Philadelphia Telegraph. Making Father Give Proof. A Washington scientist is tho father of several boys, to whom the greutest freedom Is accordl-d. He was recently engaged in some computation, being at the time near the window of his home, when he heard a shrill cry of "Dad, dad!'' from his young est born, who was playing with neighbors' children outside. "What a trial my children are!" mur mured the distinguished man, as he thrust his head out of tha window. "Well, Har rington," he asked, "what Is It?" Whereupon tha lad, who was standing In tha center of a group of youngsters, re plied: ,- "Willie Johnson wouldn't believe you hadn't a hair on your head. That's all, dad." Uppencott'a. is contrary to the '-..ddhlst religion to consume anything that has life, tho chief exception bedng fish, which la eaten fresh, dried and also when rotted by burying It In the sand. A favorite dish is a fish curry with rice. The family usually alt ajund the rice dish each having a little bowl for curry and a larger one for rice. Everyone helps liiiiise.lf taking from the rice platter as much as he can squee&o in his hands. He conveys the food to his mouth In bin hands. At tho close of tho meal everyone Is expected to wash his own dLshes and each goes to the water Jar to rinse out his mouth. The meals are more like picnics than anything else. Eiluralloii of Women. Until the British came to Burma onlj the fewest of tho women could read and V lite. There aro not many who can do so xiow. Tho government has established schools for girls in the large towns, but in the villages they seldom exist, and tho monks cannot teach tho girls as they do the hoys. According to the laws of tho Bud dhist religion, every boy must go into a monastery. Ho uswilly does ho at the ai;e of 8 or it years, and, hu tlnre learns to read and write. There are very few nunneries in tho country, and tho girls have nowhe l else to go. Their mothers are ignorant anJ therefore it Is the exception to find a uu tlve girl outside the cities who Is able lu read. The British officials are trying lo remedy this, and there aro now something like 70,000 girls in tho government schools, al though only ono of every cloven girls of school age is being educated, and only about 1,000 are In tho secondary and high schools. During my stay lu Burma I have visited many of these. 1 find the little ones quite as bright as our American children. They study diligently and recite well. I remember a class in arithmetic which I heard In Rangoon. It was composed of eleven Bur mese girls of about 10 years of ago. They performed sums in addition and subtrac tion at the command of their teacher, and recited the multiplication table In Burmese for my edification. How ;lrls Are Anmrd. During my stay in the schools I 'as told the names of a number of the pupils und the teacher referred to a queer custom the Burmese havu in selecting names for their children. A girl Is named about two weeks after birth, and that at a meeting of tho relations and friends. The name Is chosen by mh according to the day" of tha week upon which the child wbh burn, cer tain consonants being used for each week day and the vowels going for Burmese Sun- ' days, or first day of the week. The little one's name must begin with a letter be longing to the day on which she was bortk There urn thus Sunday girls. Monday gii-1 Tuesday girls, and Wednesday, Thursday, Friday ami Saturday girls, or whutever the Burmese days of II week bi-o called. All the little Mis-i Wednesdays have names beginning with It or V, the Fridays with Th and It. while the Miss Saturdays ara T's, D's and N"s. Tho names are often poetic, a girl may be culled Miss Per fume, Miss Perfection or Miss Uku-What-There-Is-Xot. At the moment of a child's birth the astrologers nolo Its horoscope and, pick out the stars which are to go with it ( through life. At the ban. a time birth burnt before Buddha, und c sume days candles made of red or yellow wax ara similar candles ara lighted at tha shrines . 4 9