Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 10, 1911, Page 11, Image 13
4 V j 0 , " Tim BEE: OMAAITA I!AV, XOVEMHKK 10, 1011. u ti SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT I XAiNT TO THAnh BOTM VOL) P0V.S I SAnN THE 0Ci BOiS TOOAV AIP METHW FOR- 10,000 'RON MEN tfAME a (0MirvnCN- DO SOU A.. ." .- 1 Too Good to Last By DOROTHY' DIX. A young man in Chlcaso, where divorce 1b said to be easy, has sought to forestall domestic trouble by fllln with the county recorder a guarantee to be a moiiel hus band. This ante-nuptiHl contract, duly signed and witnessed by a notary, promises. "My wife may do as she pleases. Sho is free to go and come when she likes, to go with whom she chooses, and I will rot be Jealous. I will not ko etinnlnu Tor a fellow because he admires her beauty, and because she smiles when he peaks to her. ' "I will not Interfere with any of her plans. "I will be kind and good to her. T will give 'her all of my earnings, and it will be her privilege to do with my Income as he likes, so long as sho feeds me well. vv hen we have a surplus and it goes t the bank, J agree not to hold the key. "THERE IS NO FUN IN MANAGING 1 agree to come home at the proper hour each night, or give her a valid excuse. "And I further agree that I will let er get a divorce if I fall to behave as a ind, loving, gentle, conuiderata husband 1 to her," When the guarantee had been placed on record tho couple sought a minister and were married. This ease is a curious and interesting phase of the dumestlc question, for it Indicates that one man, at least, has undertaken to solve the problem of mak ing matrimony a grand, sweet song by putting the soft pedul on himself, so to peak. Of course. It is no new thing for a man to promise anything and everything .to the lady he is wooing. It is a time when the lover, lets go all hold upon veracity and qualifies for' membership In the Ananias club. There Isn't a married woman who doesn't recall how her husband before she was married swore to her that sho was the only woman In the world and that his love would never grow coldor or loss Impassioned than at that minute, and that he spent whole evenings assur ing her that her slightest wish should be his law, that he could sit up and holu lier hand forever, and that he asked nothing of fate but tho priviliege of toll ing to surround her with every luxury. All of which hat n't prevented him from arriving at the place where hta kisses are perfunctory pecks on the cheek, when he growls over the cooking, and when ihe asks for tho price of a new hat he snapa out, "Oreat Biott, Mary, do you think I've got nothing belter tj do thin to clave from morning to night to pay milliner's bills?" Perhaps It was observing that pie crust ha nuthing. in puir.t of t.rlttle cess, on the piomlses a man makes a woman before marriage that ti diutd l'ie astute Chicago ludy to make hur pree- i I "Notary I xC-SrXv Al "IIS Ol" AUAN TEEiJ TO iJU A FOU LETTtN(j-j ft m I'LL iC fve ' COULP &T tug h-ale pectlve bridegroom put his vows into the shape of a legal document, but, a a matter of fact, this affidavit will b no more effective or blndlnj; than have been nil the other lovers' oaths. In tho first place, it promises too much. It Is not in the power of weait humnnity to be the pin feathered do mestic angel this man agrees to be. and if he could, no woman on ;arth would be lonar suffering enough to be able 10 endura it. A brute of a husband Is bad enough, goodness knows, but heaven preserve a woman from the awful fate of being married to a masculine donrmat, that tfoesn't even resent being trodden upon and kicked about. A mean husband at leust furnishes a woman with some in terest, but of the too good husband, she dies of surfeit or boredom. The Chicago man must know little, A MAN WHO NEVER KICKS." Indeed, ' of women if he believes he is going to retain his wife's love and In sure himself a tranquil married life by tho program he had mapped out. To begin with, he asserts that his wife may do as sho pleases, that she can come and go as she likes, and with whom she chooses, and that he will not be Jealous. That, no doubt, sounded noble, and strong, and self-abnegating to him as he promised it, and he pictured, his wife throwing fits., of Joy over it. But will she? Nay, nay, Edward; she won't. About the second time she taken & squint at tbat proviso in the antenuptial contract It won't look like' a gorgeous compliment It will appear a deadly insult to her. She will begin to think that her hus band must esteem Ijer a very poor thing if he doesn't think her worth taking care of. Also that he wouldn't be willing for her to go with other men unless he be lieved her so unattractive that no other man would take a second look at her. Sort of grandmother business, you know. Then the Jealousy paragraph will begin to soak in on her, and she will perceive that the only reason that a man can promise nevtsr to be Jealous of his wife Is because his love Is of such a milk and watery brand that st hasn't enough sub stance In It to even curdle. Oh, no son, you can't make a hit with your wife by giving her the right to flirt around with other men. Ner does a man make a winning with l is wife by letting her do exactly as MJDlil, HCiilAND.'' she pleases. There's no fun In managing a man who never kicks, nor rears, nor I'l.lts, nur buck Juim. but who comes up like a broken-spirited o!d plow horse, an! Clicks bis head unclrr the yoke. Neither docs a man clinch domestic hnpplntss by turning over every cent he earns to his wife and letting her become the family tanner. The hand that holds tbe purse rules tbe rooaL and there Isn't i Git I'LL ? C-C- J- misa and Orer ne i Phase Stop, Mr. Cop rws TEAC-HtTR Hip ixe BOOB ON A SifB merTalviN him. HH 4. AST leajon in rut chaowfer. &rat tETlFKWW 00 SOU HOT" US AiiCCO AV M HOVPEO THE BOOB AamTKP AT TH& VNHCEL A, VAprVNEHT A,M( THEN vA'O NiEETX.-y THE(1E& ome rniN(j to like to kcn BEroA-e. vuj DCPAtPr and its TXlS. IT A E3TA-o P-A, HT I S DlRTV VOULO VOU CALL IT A VWE TDM, UT DEMH HA-1 SOT Ak ;rctJ NOV . THA.T HMDOOCjH IN "BMcEV-V - PONT HAVE TO GT UPTtLL O.A.KA.HA. UA I Where's an old woman to go when tbe years Leave her alone with ber sighs and her tears, Gray-haired and pcnnlleea, fettle and slow Where'a an old woman to go? a woman living that ran help fueling a sort of contempt for the man that Khe Is shrewd rnough to work Into abdicating his (Vrune and taking a second place In the family elicits. The Riddle lj II. E. II. "-,.-,-'!" wyi; in-iiitiiiM sail ii nii'u.tia. i i i n. ijiihhmiihiiiis in, mil , mwi'i.u iiisisma 1 v I 1 - ---- 00M0ffi The JudgelVat Nominated Alf Right, AlFRight I I I OM ' - -HERE H come i OuT J - mm'mm " MOTHERS (MOT PABCXD &P-AfMUfvA ifcNT rxE CAT TO TOWN AM- TmG. wAw f 0 M-Are&A Nimr?ie mollkt . BsuiScr lnh a LBrrET..rr jaio. pont i-ETTwE cat go Anamw FiON THE. rtOuiE UMLBJJ -yOW PuT OuTTETt On HEX PE.ET' in M AM LOia HCavwAV OQMT F-ccd nea cRociterriN nor. vmiRE A(U REAEMJtT. rAv cHl LO . vOu AAAM inlj N Or 0EAS, fCiO OAT5 Ar-0 CON G-LO(mEJIAT(0h BT vO CAmT 6ULL PftOCi-S - MOR&AH IF IHAVC 1 THEH I FECP Tte HORSE Hitch h up Arc tah OT TH6 MOgMinfr ILOOTC AT? r OACfc-iipT-.o AjMtS, CLKAHMi WpTrti TMSN I HITLH Lip ACrAlM AM) PKLlNIEHTHS J-UNCH gOl-'TS. TlUL. 2. Bm THSH 15LSEPTIU- I. AMDOlUtlU hot 8 ACAD Till 6-4m. TMEH I nf.H IN TWE CASH AN0 CHARGeT PWTT THR Pt- Je What's an old woman to do when her kin Fall to remember that hands, worn and thin, Cured for thun, slaved for them, all the yeara through What'a an old woman to do? No, No man can oeure his domestic happiness, or the love of his wife, by , . iuakl,g . vassal of hlmsolf to ber and fii milling Lr to heupeck him. Utuemh (vnLll- VNKAT IT JUOcrE. ) (nominate. V. NOW KR- Give, l 4 AN earpvll. f 0C MEVNi v Shoot "1 By Tad 'mm DADDVi BEST &IRL- TAB. 3 x BM fJiL-CV HAOORpEpEP KOUiE. PainTEX A BEAVJTtFL'U GfJEETA THE fAiNTGli HAD Been 7I5 VQ PM5 AH0 B& STAlj-in (r OH TW&'jrjB TOOK A WALK OVfTH TO t-O0 TMtTMiM oNiTH-' Tl-E.veRV Ft f-T TK( ti Or Kfi. Jaw was A fUMCH Of- UEXiV.KJM(j ON THE KOfifH SlPE. VNAMM6 up CLOJr2- H6 REAO.TiAD. 'NVITEO TO TAicS A TftlP TO fHE NOftTX P0L6 AnO PFl5D wov-d Txe h i Qa Lao ? TWEAA HI U-S BOVS . SEP N0TMH Gee A HfNPPv TOD071LL GOV A Whut's an old woman's reward for a life Given to others as MOTHER and WIFE, Leaving her faltering, furrowed and scored What's an old woman's reward? the vei.eer of chllljitithm woman is still u" l',!li,ve at heurt us her euve mother was, ui.il she still worship in lite stretiKtll , m am, (vr, u,t man w0 is strung euuth to master her. By Tad mm Daysoy Mayme Ily I ItANt'KS When a woman bristles with her wrongs, she shows it by addressing the one mnn who makes up her audlenco as If he were two men, or a host. This Is so unfailingly true that 14'samlcr John Appleton knows the nature of what Is coming the moment tayey Mayme says: "Vou men." Hefore she has said another word, anticipation, born of painful expe rience, has made him look like a to mato vine the morning after the first frost. "Vou men,'' she said, and I,yaiuler John began to feel the cold creeping Into his veins, "talk of the emanela tlon of women as if it will be secured the moment we have gained the glorious privilege of voting for a dog-catcher. J tell you, It will not he, We are not slaves to mnnl We are slaves to his demand that we become beautiful In his eyes." A feeble protest from Lysander John, who felt that as the vole representative of his sex he should be defiant. "You have led us to believe that a woman should be beautiful or apologise for the room she taken up on the earth, and you have worshipped so steadfastly at the shrine of a fair skin or a pretty dimple, that we are wasting our live trying to make of ourselves something which we are not. "We deny ourselves every pleasure that leaves a freckle In Its wake; we tlx our ideals on a certain weight, and starve or sot food that tastes Ilk ashes till we attain It; we are so greased with cold cream at night that our faces slip oft the pillow, and we are burned worse than the Christian martyrs of old, for thoy never knew the tortures of the curl ing Iron. We train harder than a foot ball or boat racing crew; we have Mara thons of endurance to put flesh on and take flesh off, with this difference be tween us and the college athletes: We are working for a prise that Won't tost as long as the colors of their pennant In the first rain the admiration of man. "We don't let ourselves think because you men prefer a woman with a face f The Home Ily THOMAS We are all born with a hundlcap of one kind or another. Many of those who have most to toll their fellow-men are mor handicapped than anybody elso. It I comparatively easy for a thinker to write what he wants to say and get It before others, for most of us can read, or w think we can. But many a great thinker cannot give out hi thoughts in words. He has to find some other way of expressing him self. Iluuue titer are great men who tell us what they think of life and Its prob lems, In sound, .or palnl, or marble, or soil. And if we want to be acqualntod with the thoughts of these men we must loam to understand music, painting, sculpturo and farming. All these activi ties sro methods by which men tell what they think, Just as the article In this paper tell what writers think. II. t One day we read that' Mr. Morgan, or some, other man ' of means, has bought a painting snd paid $100,000 for It, Perhaps w think how fin It must be to own such a painting, or how fine It is to have tlOO.OuO to spend for sucli a thing. Certainly the average humble home is short of fin painting. And the average humble cltlxen makes up his mind that art Is for th rich alone and he Is de nied It. There are two things to be said In reply to this. Th first is this: Nearly all of us can visit a gallery som time or other and fill the head (and memory) as full of pictures as we wish. And the second Is this: A reproduction of piactically every great painting and uf all famous buildings and statues U to be bought by anybody for the average ptlea of 1 cent In the coin of our realm. Vou can thus lecure for a sum so trlfilng that it is not worth mentioning a print of any painting by Raphael, Item biundt, Van tyck, and all the rest of the noble company. With a few pins you can affix a faw of them to the wall of your room and be In good company. When you feel like a change, you can construct a new gallery fr 10 cents, or even a nickel." The same pins will serve again, so there Is no ex pense for frames or picture cord. Of course, thee are not originals. But you can hav th satisfaction of knowing that the works of th great artltts In th gullorles could no mor be purchased by Mr. Moifan than by yourself, liallerles rarely, 'If ever, part with such works, ami If a rich man wants to see them he must ltlier pay his fare to the gallery or be contotit with a leororturtjcn. And e CewrttM. 1011, Nttlcnil Xrwt lnwdtlla f DQ&. CATCHER o and Her Folks L. (iAIWSIDK. that looks like the map of an undiscov ered country, and , thinking makes the lines that show tho country is Inhabited; we go through life denying ourselves that w may become beautiful and win your admiration, and what do you man give up to win ours?" Lysander John thought and ' thought. and scratched his head, but couldn't re call a sacrifice, "Vou enjoy what you like best In life without any thought of your hair or your skin, and you come to tin with unsliaved hair on your face and no hair on your head, and a red tip on your nose, and a form that would make a straight front corset shriek with despair, and demanrt that we admire you. And to my dying humiliation I confess that we (In. "You like a new little pink baby, with out a feature that Is good, a complexion that Is all ona color, and no shape to you, and we look at you and get down on our knees. We don't say, 'Vou need train ing down.' or 'Vou weigh too little.' or 'Your color Is bad.' We Just look at you and admire you, and begin to bait our hooka. "With our figures made good by self denial and our complexions mad pleasing In your eye by mor de nials, put a bait on the hook, w throw In the line, hoping with so much effort and self-sacrlflc to catch a whale, and some of us don't catch anything, and most of us catch minnows. And those of you who are minnows, which means nearly all of you, spend th rest of your lives In making us bellev you are whale. "What good will the ballot do woman so long as she will refuse to' go to th poll In a hut sun for fear of spoiling her onmplexton, and In that way lose the ad miration of the Very man whose neck th ballot puts under her foot? "Until we are freed from the .burden of caring what you men think of our looks, we will not be free," raid Daysey Mayme. I "And It doesn't appear to me," said Lysander John to himself In a very low whisper, "that you will ever be free." Art Gallery J TAl'l'IiJU. you can get reproductions for about 89 tents a hundred. For a cent a shopgirl can hang a Raphael In her room snd feast ner eyes on something worth while If she has that kind' of eyes. If nut, no on will pre vent her spending the cent for a con of Ice cream. For a cent a boy who wants to ac quaint himself with a great building, say the Greek 1'arthenoti, can buy a picture of that noble ruin and pin It on the wall of his room. Or he can spend the cent for gum and go about horn giving a fairly good Imitation of a cow chewing Us cud. ; . ,.".',"" Nearly all great pictures are owned by nutlons which will never part with tlicm. Ho the rich cannot buy them. Nearly all great pictures hav been photographed, and the prints can be bought by any one. This Includes th" poor. Ice cream cones and gutn are arallabl to all, rich and poor. But we never heard of Mr. Morgan or any one els lay'.ng In a hundred thousand dollars' worth of either. The moral to this Is: You can study and enjoy the art of great men if you want lo. And the question of this Is: Do you want to? r An Autumn Query J Ily I'EKCV BUAW. What makes the college youth give up Th cigarette, the flowing cup? What makes him early seek th cot That usuully know him not? Why does ho train his hair to grow Till ringlets on his shoulders flow? What makes him don the padded clothe And shout strong numbers through his noss? What makes him lausb st legs a-twlet. At ankle sprain and broken wust? What makes hlni weep when led away To think he's useless for the fray? What makes staid old spectators yell And carry on hke ? Very well What wipes out hats and voices, too, And leaves In an ecstatic stew? What makes the girl who would not go Across the street In wind or snow $!t chilled out doors with tense delight And wave a fag with all her might? Tiav let u end this long suspend. Your suffering must be Intense. This mania that rhymes Willi Pall fs known to science as Foot EaJL 1