THK ItKK: OMAHA. AVKDNKSDAY DKCKMHKH W 1011. THE JUDGE HAS HIS OWN IDEAS ON GREAT WOMEN 0-Wtftl. 11 1. NUomJ .ancuttoe. Bv Tad MM BUT THIS IS tMTEfr&iTIHt. Xte .?0 (VfiEATEST VNOMEH- i . I mv tM THE U I leXOW. ALECK TWAHO-ER -DE--N MBUE AASTvwO UST OF- UiTEJ TO THiE Of LIST 0E ' IDAVON CLAUJEN.ANNiEr OAKLEY- ELFANOR. SCARi. X VNSLL MiTENI DEAR ANOTne'ft. m ST- SSEHOtJ vouite thesb. eve", MRS CHR.U cot-UK. BUS, AIRS NOArt,SA6V &Ar.f OuKEM OF" tParuCt imV MIS SHunAV - - J i r ' 1 h I I - II OAKLEY-ELEANOR. 1 1 1 Vl"ltr r relfc4 IXlTJ r4tT I ( I " T ' .Ia J I "--2-- I fM-tlVM06K.'.l ) figgTKT t-P " I I f The Parable of the Two Women I n WW" '""'l; 1 f Fables of the Wise Damo " : I . -J o. . ' . ..i m I i-.'rW irWT V? By ADA PATIUIISOX. Two girls wore talking their last year at school, during one of those hair-brushing confidences that correspond most nearly to the head emptying which men indulge In when their feet are on their desks. When men place their feet high enough and have a few free moments, all the senne and nonsense tit them eems to pour out of their wide-open mouths. The girls talk of . the future and of that which nil are reeking happiness.' Bald the girl with the brown: "How stupid of you to tall? pt career. The :only career for a woman Is marriage. My mother says so. and I am sure she Is right. I Intend to marry as sotm as I can, to have a home and children. I am satisfied to become an old-fashioned ' woman! Better be old fashioned than a freak." With that candor of school day Eden before the serpent of self-consciousness in the guise of sensitiveness invades, the gray-eyed girl answered: "What rotf I waa nearly engaged once. e was a co-ed In the same school with me, but he didn't have coed ideas. The moment I said 'I'll see,' and he thought f aid 'Yes,' he grabbed my shouldera with a cave man grip and said, 'You are mine. I drew back and looked at him. and all my sentimental Ideas vanished. , 'How silly,'' I said. 'You know as well as I do that nobody Is anybody's. You talk as though I were a sheep or a rocking cnair. I hate the Idea of belonging to anyohe.' Vel. there wasn't any engagement, and there never will be for me. I intend to belong to myself. Everyone has a work. I shall find mine, and do it as well as I can without any human hindrances." The girls piet again. It,, was near the end of their earth school. The brown eyes of one had faded to the dull shade of the late Autumn leaf. The gray eyes of the other were the color of the sea In a December twilight, the hair of each had grown whlteJ 'The hands of both were large veined and fluttered unsteadily ' among the folds of their black gowns, as they pat and talked In the firelighf',; look ing past each other at the vanished I years. "We chose different ways," snjd she of the gray eyes. "Yes," answered the of the brown. r 1 "And you," pursued the gray-eyed girl, grown old In body, but with the power ; and sest of analysis stll) strong in her, , "were you satisfied to be an old-fash-; loned woman, as you said?" They looked at each other, a reminiscent : smile on their wrinkled faces, "At first I did, but then" "Hut then?' "I began to learn how Insecure Is the happiness of one who looks o any other human being fpr It- I began my married life as a hero worshipper, and when 1 t found I was married to a creature who had an uncertain temper and who was fussy about his food and who doled out his money for the household expenses as though It hurt Mm, I felt as children do who have Just discovered that there Is no Santa Claus. Romance pasned and toler-1 ance lingered. Often It seemed that that would pass, too. Three children came to us. Two died, and when I saw the coffins lowered Into the grave I asked why they had been given only to be taken. The joy of motherhood was no compensation for the pain of loss. Our third child defied bis parents and has gone out Into the world to find success In his own way. Perhaps he" will find It; perhaps he won't. It may be that only shame and failure wait for him at the end of the road. Sometimes I lie awake all night wonder ing where he Is and having terrible visions of that shame and failure and death." The gray-eyed girl, growp old, nodded. "Yes," she answered, "that Is hard. But let me show you the other side of the shield. I set out to be self-sufficient. While I. was young, ambition to succeed as a painted of portraits closed the gates of my heart to any other guest. Because I was always busy there was no lack In my life. The time came when there were knockings, even though faint, on the door of my heart. Ambition remained the only guest. 1 worked tremendously and my work was successful. When I heard the postman ring I looked eagerly at my let ters, but only to see which contained checks.' I had' passed from the first age of w'oman when she looks for lo;e letters to the second when she looks only for checks. " I went on with my portrait painting, and as I painted faces and fig ures I knew I was also painting the hearts and ' souls of my sisters. It was a fas cinating pursuit. But one day as I sat alone after a long sitting and glanced with weary eyes at a portrait I had Just finished J wished that there was some heart 1 knew thoroughly and to which I possessed the absolute key. I was tired of guessing the secrets of the hearts hid den behind the masks of those faces. 1 wanted one of my own," in which there was no mystery, one which I could read as a printed page. At I realized this there was an ache in my own heart. For the first time in Ufa I was lonely. I got up and walked to my mirror. I laughed at the grim, tired woman it re flected. The awakening to the need of loving companionship had come, but too late."' "Bit we can never be sure that It will be loving companionship." The face of the' browM-eyed woman "hardened:" The gray eyes looked at her with steady In quiry. - . .. . I . "Then you are not satisfied that mar riage is the only career for a woman?" she quoted. The other woman shook her head. "And you?" she asked. "Does the thought of belonging to anyone still re volt you? Are J oil glad that you have walked the path of succets without human hindrances?" "In these latter years' my arms have ached for them." confesed the woman with the sea-ln-December eyes. They looked at each other across the fire that was dying Into ashes. "And there are but the two roads." "There is no other way." IT PKiVAV AFTSTPmO0N H WC. S Ch OO L ft 0 0 1 AH TH 6 TTACHart CAU-STO OpON MA.&BTI- wiiuUft TOttetlTW WMe:uHejiitsci A m0menT TEACHerj pETSlc MADE HETt &0vy amp Pi pro . AND ONCe SME AOTO Mg (f poftA, i-OOICO THROW frH MOUTH . H CHH TrtA-V, WHAT QOOLO PpRoTHV ? it -N IK THE KTr OF A PAPS- MOW &9.K IT JOFT- I tGNT KNOW I'M. ON TH& T AT t " fV lri fM A il ( a.' THffATBUfA rVA RAuWN 6r FlBTC(--V. MlPNKrHT MIKC an PftovNUn terv irvtret totk. A Slant at a jkinin 6- opoTptr m rnfc pa-hx fTM0ANfft MquRpuay, HAOeTNB'A.'i' TMEV V. Pery CAnT" KiCKorne tmino- it-was a G-ASJTl SH- If WO AN PkfrAi N AMO WHliPfiSUTP. : F 80HIC IS Ms (IT S HV DEHtC THBUi A KINO AKOtlMO THE. WO ON' R.UM tr AfilTiiC AHOTO pf FHafu, COfVIVftALP. AMD TOUCH TMtC p.HOTTJ V?-T6H ittM e fieri tfT elsv at;.!-. PSAvM eFB SKA'S Ai. X UN WPS FOfc AlriHIte, y TKK AUN01-C HUT TOW MOWEt-AMO Aro lAS PAwiS VWTB TIP IN TMS tAjr ffAME- tow piticfio op ma zi 4- p,LU anO A Ml OH TV HEAVE SCnT'IT Oon TH au-bw For A smK HAS THKM seXT TO fH HACK PICKET) OUT A BALL amp JTTlOOe T0tH FOUU LNfi. TUiT A J VNAS FlfrOHllSfr ON HOVl roicn.t.TWs: ?inj ?ntt, titHEfi yU.ST.VNHATi THAT VNIMTTEN, UPON TMC AU.Ay JTDPPSP Arto p-ep - IftQEFlUTEfliH ISTCfHOeK. IS fWATXELTVF ? DH VNrVHT SHE" THE r POUOTHV DLV. Once uion a time there were a man and wis wife who had been married so many years that the silver plating tiad worn off of their wedding presents (n patches until Is showed the Iron ware underneath, and who had ex- !AW iOME MAM AHP PAGrArAS AN D THEW VNHBN TWltfrJ il-AltKNUf A BfT I FUTAWAy THt PHorbi An iNCXtfTHSM IN Twe THE Of PitC lTEtTWWs( M ( Gee A HrPPV 7 TO DO TILL Sherlocko the Blonk TJie Oase of the Imprudent Intruder. Copyrlfht, 111, Ntionl Nwt AanocUt Ion. tv,. i.t' UTTLE BOBBIE'S PA By WIUM I'. K1HK. I got a feerce letter the other day from a knocker, aed Pa, he had red one of my artlkles In wlch I sed that I hail picked sum of the gratest poets that ewer lived & sum of the other gratest men. I had Bums In the list, aid Pa, : this knocker sent ine a printed slip wlch was cut from a artlkel rote by a grate rlter who sad this Burns was a obscure Scotch poet wich left nothing behind him but debts & broken harts." I think it is a shaim for anybody to say that about Burns, sed Ma. wl.s'i my old acotcn aaa cuu nave ssen mo roun that role them words beefoar he ote them. I am sure he wud newer have inte them. Well, sed I'a, I wlh ray old Scotch dud cud have s;en him after he rote the lines. He wud newer have livtd to rite any other lines. If Burns was obscure, sed Fa, so was Shakespecr. Pa, I asked him, what d'es ob-scure mean? It means, sad Pa, sumthing dull & un herd of, like a I'p-State Tammany poll tishun. Maybe Burns left nothing behind him but debts A broken harts, sed Pa. but I doant be-leeva It. He mite have pwed a fw grocers, etc.. sed Pa, but there Is a hit of peepul in the world wlch have done that, the same as a lot of grocers has died A left a lot of over charges. & as far as the broken harts he left beehiinl, ed Pa. thare is a lot of grate & good men today wlch ha left more broken harta beehlnd them every flhcal year Bursa ewer left bcsuluA. I know a man nalmed Ttoektfeiler. sed I'a. wlch left a few broken harts beehlnd hiin wen he left Minnesota & the ore dlstrlck. The kind of broken liarU wlch Bohbia Burns left beehlnd him, Pa sed, Is the kind of harts thiit wa.i made to he Lroken. fc that brpJl; themselves. Well, red Ma, doant git so excited about it that you are Mabel to bust a blood vosxel. Burns Is ded & gone, & i client want you to go the tame vva Wife, sod Ta, & he was very -r . he sed It, ha was the soberest I have saw hint for sumtime. wife, I wish I cud go the same way Bobble IMrns went. I wish I cud die as he died after having lived as he lived &. I wish I cud have left to the uurld a lot of lines like O Wad sum power the Ulftle Ciie us To see oursels as Others see I'a. Why. sed Pa. Bobble Bums left some thing buehlnd him that all the Carnegay libraries in the wurld contain. Bobbie Hums wasent a vary good man himself, according to the way our grate men nalm good men & deeflne good men. Hobble wasent good to himself, he dlodent live to a gaod old age playing golf & going to church but the Hevven that these care ful good men will newer reech will be full of the sunshine that Bobble Burns made. & Hobble will be thare. ft ha wont be ob-scure In that Hevven. sed Pa. bless Bobble Burns sed I'a. What we want is less Wulrd Makers & Wurld Jdakera. A moie men like Hubble Burns. M f U Scotch H ilbL ; . " . "V W CtJn ri it l pipe-hwd pLTrV MS THAT ONE TAtrt. A ' ( aV Mantelpiece m r. m tcac(o i J AY a that HDpu-.ttEKvo; I i',srs L PtOU CAHfT NNOIOC ANT OF TOUR S CJiC FATU.ei '"" ' s "Q: " r J As to Perfumes Qreeks of anti'iuity anointed themselves with a perfumed substance thrice a day, u that the delicious odor niight never cease. The custom was carried to such an extreme that Bolun enacted ft law forbidding the Athenians to use scented mixtures. In England a tate for perfumes ap pears to have been prevalent in Shakes peare's day. During the lifvluue of leau Swift the stores of perfumers were th resorts of loungers. IIh wrote: "Firs Issued from perfumers' shops a crowd o faHlilonahlo fops." Matrimony would suuu be a i't urt If we could begin at tho end lllldi ic liavenin.il. hatistr( al of tho pleasure and ex citement of family spats. Consequently whenever thy were left by their lone some they found themselves In ft conversational dead lock. This was not be- causo they naa reused to love each Other, lor, ill re allty, they we a devoted couple. It waa merely a case of Moo' much John son," and of JuiV Ing gotten a sur feit of each other's society. At length! however, each began to perceive mai it waa Rough on Rats or Reno for him, or her! unless there was a break a.way. or soma variety was introduced Into ther rtallv menu. Hut although the husband was so tired nf his wife, lt'aave him "the fantods Just to look at' her. ha' never even suspected that she waa a trifle weary of gaslng unon his lioWe Und ' niahty form, and al though tho wife had gotten to me piece that she felt as if she must hurl the coffee pot at lier husband'a" head If she had to' llstch Oho' TnoTa time to ins hestnutty anecdotes, it never aawneo ..... ).nCT ...t.v. upon her tnai ne was n" they .didn't hand out Carnegie hero medals the men who had been marriou m- teetT years, Instead of unworthily bestow- II g fhB'n upon mere pmv, one nothing but save irves. Therefore the situation was rraugui Ith complications. "I opine,'! said the husband to him self, "that my wife is a complete com pendium of all that a female should n. put because you like a wholesome health food for breakfast Is no sign nai you want to gorge yourself on It from soup to nuts. I should not care to ive on cavar nd olives and tabasco sauce, put now, ml tien I pine for them for a relish, nd tliat V0' tr domesticity. "I apprehend that I Bnan enu in padded cell unlesa I can get a, etiapge rom the dea level of family life. It ss gotten on my nerves untlj I feel as If was faithful Fdo left 0,lt on "trlng by a fat woman. As a model of what a husband should be I apprehepd that mine is tne real goods that Is all wool and a yu' J wldn," reflected the wire, "and I wouio no taae hint bade o the mat"imoiilai liarCaln counter and exchange him (or anything hey've got in stock, but this thing of undiluted domestclty and monotonous marriage has gotten me woosy, onq I am In that state or mind in wni-it a woman smashes the crockery, or runs off "with' the chauffeur Just for the fun of hearing the crash." Now as neither the husband nor wife was on to It that tho other was bored stiff, and as they were noble and con sclentlous creatures, they began to frame up con games for getting away tnat tney could pfft across on each other. I fear," said the wlfo os she com muned with her own sou, "that f am wicked apd selfish woman to leave my poor devoted husband, who )h dependent on my society for his only happiness, but there's got to be a get away for muh to save my life, and here goes.' Thereupon she went t" her husband and turning on the tremolo stop, she thus addressed him: Alas," she said, "it wrings my heart to tlllk of leaving yuu for even ft few brief weeks, or 1 um ulways miserable away from your aw, uui our precious little Johnny Is looking, pale, and as It Is mothers place to sun-trice iierseir ror her children, I feel that It Is my sacred duty to take him to Florida for the wn ter." At these words the husband secretly threw a fit of delight, hut being a gen lleman iu dissembled his Joy ant) drew a long face. "What ou say Is true," he replied "Parents must not consider thi-niHt-lvcj when their children s good Is fit stake and while the house w he sad gut) deno late without your presence In t, and shall pine for your society, t fuel that It Is' oily ' right that we should make this sacrifice for the health of our child, and I trust that you will not let the thought of my loneliness iurry you back. After havng handed each other this soft talk the woman Mew herself for a lot of swell rags, and hiked off for Palm Beach, where she shunted little Johnnie off on a side track, and pro ci-tdd to make thlgs hum The man also was obs-irved, as he re turned from seeing his wife off on th trail-, to wear his green velour lid on tl 1 bids of Ills hcal. and Voiiia tilths look n ills eye, ana in tne sunscqueni pro ceedings he established ft new record for swift action in looping the loop. II sat up In little games until the cows came home; he was a good Samaritan who led hungry chorua girls and the bottlea he opened raised the high' water mark. In tho cafes. . Nor did he neglect his duty as a hus band. The last thing, every afternoon, ihat he' did tiefore leaving his office wat to dictate an affectionate letter to his wife, telling her how sad he wo without l.er, and how he was counting the long hcura until her return, but that ' the thought t'iat she waa wel and happy and Dear Johnnie Improving, cheered him In the lonely city. And on the way this veracious missive crossed one from the wife In which she related how dreary even a gay winter hotel was without lier darling hubby, and how nothing but the thought of a mother's duty to her child Kept per nailed to her cross. And as neither husband nor wife for a moment suspected that each, was pelng trunjf 'by Jhe other, al went well, and when their vacation was over they were both glad to return to their happy" home once more. ' Moral: This fable teaches that It Is a merciful dispensation of Providence that h,usband and wives are riot mind reader. THE MANICURE LADY J A lot of them newspaper men is vain . rersons, tin t tney ueorger- asucu tna Manicure Lady. " ' , I always found them all right," said the Head Barber. "For follows that has a lot to be vain about. I think they are kind of modest. Why?" ' "Oh. nothing much," said th Mani cure Lady, "only ike morgan was in ere the other day to hay bis nails did, and It seems he has Just won a big silver loving cup for playing the least worqt golf of any newspaper man ' In the league. Honest to goodness, Ueorge, the was that boy went on and ' aved when he was describing the all- ver cup Would nave mane your neart thump. I don't know much about golf, ex- . ept that Wilfred told me it waa some- . thing like educated shlnncy, but it must bo some gamo when it can keep bright hoys like Mister Dorgan inter ested enough t win silver cup. Ike told me all about how he cania lo win ' the prim. He said he had two or three tough men to peat out, but he said, he I was a good money player, mcanlpg that . he never lost hi nerves or 'his heart when the playing got hard and close: lie told me that he was Tad brother." ; What difference dues t make whose i brother he Js," nked the Head. Bathe, a ong as he can wn silver, cups? "1 don't suppose It makes any differ ence," replied the Manicure Lady, "only I guess he wonted mo to know that he came from a Illustrious famiy;" Jle told me that it was (lis brother that made up them'daffydllls, like 'If a Chines Oow ager loves to chow the rag, wba would Wane lui?' "There's no uso tajUIng, George, brains . is brains, and I'm glad to hear that Tad's brother won that cup. Most young . brothers is up against it when they i.uva fumoii!! nlilnr til-others, like the case of Bob Dalley. All the manager used to say 'Why, yes, to he sure. I know; Bob. . II is Peter Dalley' brother." " "Now I know something," said the lHttd Barber. "Now I know w hy it Is that your brother Wilfred never gofc no rial fame. He w the younger brother of the cleverest girl that 1 have ever met." I wouldn't u so far as to say that." confeaeed the Manicure Lady, with all due' humility. "I know that Wilfred gets kind of Jealous sometimes when he hears ' about my popularity and my success, put I don't think that ie cares a lot after all. Just so I have enough of them ducats In my pocketbook so I can make lilm fi l that It ain't going to be such' a long and hard winter uftjr all. 'That's one thing I gotta admit about WJlfred." He never begrudges one of his reiauvra " J j . , d a mm .w knows that they can cash enough of the success ti declare him in on the kale fifty-fifty.'' "You're getting too slangy for me to talk to you," declared tho Head Barber. " 'peclaro him n on the kale, Tifty flfty." That's a fine line of talt for a young ludy to spread out. Just between you and I. if I was a girl, I' would taka belter care of my Kngllsh." "Well, George," snipped the Manicure l-idy, "I mux be a JUHe slangy, put I pave never sank so low as to say 'Be tween you and I.' If I didn't know enough to say 'Between me and you," I woulda t talk at all." !