SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT fl sslOi- HERE I AW IW A If l 1 ffil II 1 I riffl Morses rmue- (wmw ob irtj fl J 1 J l1, 1 Km,njRB The Liberties Bj DOUOTHY DIX. A man asks this question: i one's tooth brush, and It's hard to Dii vnn thlnlr that n litmhnml nml wlfft ' ltimcHnn thi. Innk fir flnllnnev nnil tnstf have a right to open each other's let-1 ' ' ...111.,... I. !.,.. .. ..1. ...t I .. An Bn ' tcrs without being asked to do so'' I certainly do not, A man has no more right to open his wife's letters than "ho has the letters of any other woman 'nor has n wlfo any more rl.jht to ' tamper with her husband's mall than alio would with that of tho most perfect stronger. Wo mvo a right to BQmo decency and privacy of life, ovefr thoilghlmar lied. 'fo have a husband r a w'lfd who would open your letters, and read them before you had a chance at them jourself, would bo disgusting nnd re volting to any person or refinement. A .letter Is as purely a personal thing a? -solved onca for all by Calumet. For daily use irr millions cf kitchens has proved that Calumet is highest not only in quality but in leavening powers well un failing in results pure to the extreme and wonderfully economical in use. Ask your grocer. And try Calumet next bake day. RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS Warld'i Put .Mctio. III. rl Jen. FranM. V.rch. It. 1 11V us Pi v7 of Matrimony that would lead a hunhand or a wife to . .. J .. I .. . 1 I a PCI UJI lb JUIIll UIU1II1 IU C1W1CI vnc. Of courso there are circumstanced In which a husband or wife .may. properly object to their eprouse's correspondence- A nrah may not, for Instance, approve of his wlfo receiving letters from other men A wlfo may bo Insanely jealous of the vIolet-Rcented pink missives that hor hus band gets from other women, but even then the remedy Is not tho high-handed and tyrannical one of opening tho other'? letters, Tho affinity, however, does not figure In tho ordinary family circle, and the average husband and wife receive no letters from a more exciting source than Sister Susan or grandma, pr Cousri Jane, or some old friend. Why any human being except the one to whom they ar addressed, want to read the unexciting chronicles set down In this epistles, pa-sses comprehension. Novertheless, "It Is the Ill-bred habit of. many husbands and wives to open each other's" letter and read tho con fidences that wero never meant for their eyes. It Is sort of listening at, the keyhole-that does not endear the, Paul -I'ry or tho Polly Pry to his or her wife oi husband. It Is" not that the wife or "husband hns any guilty secret that Is hidden In the Jotter, butno'woman or man ofreiiM-e-'flnefhent fe'lis' all o'f lilsor'her family and "friends' affairs' oven to his' wife or Husband. John, Snlth, fine and honor1 able, and devoted to his" wlfo, shrinks from laying before her eyes the sorrowful story his sister has written hhn about a wayward boy who has been caught rob bing a cash drawer. Alary Smith, as loyal a wlfo as ever lived, cannot bear that her husband should read her mothei's letter . In which she sobs out the pitiful tale of how Mary's father has spent tho rent money on liquor, and how they nro to pay the grocery man, she doesn't know. Generally speaking most husbands and most wives are jealous of each other's families, and prone to criticism of them. The, family letters furnish material for criminations,, and lead to recriminations and to domestic spats. For that reason alone, if for no other, husbandB and wives have no business meddling with each other's mall. Over and beyond the letter Itself, though, the objection each other's letters Is the deadly affront It offers to one's Individuality. The mere act of tho tear ing open of the envelope rlvnts on one the fetters of a slave. ' It Is the out ward and visible sign of subjection, and any man or any woman would have to have the soul of a mouse not to feel tho hot blood of rebellion and righteous anger surge up In her or him against It. The opening of your letter brings home to you as nothing else can the fact that you have not left one lota of freedom, not one vestlgo of personal liberty, not one scintilla of privacy. Homebody else has asserted the right to see .ords writ ten for you alone; to hear confidences Intended for only your own breast! to keep you under espionage as If you were a child, and you would be more than human if you did not resent It, anl hate the domestic tyrant on your hearthstone. The thing that makes matrimony a failure oftener than anything else Is just this lack of decencies and reserves of life between husbands and wives. It is because married people so seldom are generous enough to extend to each other any liberty of action that marriage be comes a bondage that we are ready to break at any price. Tho one thing that militates more against domestic happiness than anything elBe Is the knowledge that a woman has that she hu( got to give any account of everything she does, of every cent that she spends, and of every place that she goes to her husband, and that ahe has got to submit to his critical approval her dress, her opinions, her friends, her poli tics, and her religion. That's what makes her envious of the bachelor woman, and dream of careers. Nor would there be many sidestepping husbands If a woman had enough sense to Bay to the man he married; "See, here, John, I didn't apply for the Job of Jailer when I became your wife. "X don't want to Interfere with all the things you enjoy doing. Nor am I going to hold a stop watch on you and see that you get home on the minute. Nobody can be happy who Isn't free, and I pre- sent you your liberty on a silver salver, sure that you won't make a bad use of It." That's the secret of how to be happy i though married. It's to respect each oth- er's right, and not to enforce one's own rights, and chief among the rights' that ( matrimony doesn't give Is to open a iiuiband's or wife's letteis That's n iplfcr uf Impertinent and vuh,a, luuowt, to -which no one should n ibn,it. TIIK BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER. 20, 1912. MARY, THe STOCKING SUG3 'CrlRL WS .BEING DflWi-CD OUT BY THe FLOORWALKER "what do you MEflryHecPiEi? Y &ELHMG THAT MIDOCT BOCKS TWO FBtTT J-ONG-.MARY THREW HIM fl HnUGHTY LOOK, GflZeD m HI6 "BALD HEAD AND TITTER E.D, "SAY, IP fl RICH OLD LBDy PfllNTEX. WOULD. HEI "HffR RESTORER?' AW-TAKE A LOT ! ThKE TWO LEYS SEE, THERE ARE AND SHOE TREES IN SHOE STORES, AND WtJincE TREES IN OllirJcV Aim i4AM TREES IH HAMBURQ- II ' N "Only Brainless Women Are Flirts". The Winsome Woman Necjd Not a Be Silly Coquette MILS. RKSNA CAKV SHKPKIIiLD. lly MA IKJAFUCT JIUUHAHD AVER. The gentle art of flirting has been con demned In no uncertain terms In tho lat est book by I.c Daron II, Ilriggs, president of Radcllffe college. "Ho d?es not call It flirting; being the dean of a college and a literary man, besides ho uses more words to describe It. According to Mr. Ilriggs, flirting is "the deliberate, systematic and indiscriminate use of personal fascination, the use of power for the pleasure of exercising It and for no good end." Furthermore, says this writer, 'the power to fascinate men, consciously used to glvo zest to life, be comes almost despicable; at the very least, It tends to make a girl useless and leads her to making men useless; at tho worst. It breaks homes and happiness," This wvere arraignment of tho flirt was to put before Mrs. Itena Cary Bhef field, artist and author, whom I found Et her studio at No. ISO Madison avenue, 'In the midst of a charming exhibit of 1 (hlldien h poitrslts. i Whlk we diseased III.- rtluc of flirt I.... tin- ll..Mrt unit li.isl lluliioi-eiit-. I luui.i.i. b,il fu.cit itv'td i' vd lii ull tuclr The Judge Grabs a Hay pile in a Strange Hotel Copyright. 1913. National News Ass'n. ra-RA-rtfl-tfA TflMBO-MITAH JVHH30H, f) fUNNY THING OCCUREDLne' rtlOHT I MTERi. OC UTOOTELt U5pl?0VT IT. TflMSO-.De BAND PLAYItl' ft CONCERT IN DB PM4K N' one or db MvicmN .ct ho HORN DOWMTO'flMWUTB N' fl rtlLLOVt IN DB CROWD ORRJBBBD IT AN' OTflKTCD OFP wir rr AcopcojLi.flWErHiM fHD8ROOQHT MM TO DC HIOHT COURT CHRHOCD Wir STOflllN' HCCLfUMED HE Wfl6CWt.yA0ii.o'vrtrf His occupation N7Wwv oe Homii. HffCAID Hff WAS A BfLL RtjfryCR AN' WAS ONLY firTCflUN' A OAS& YUH HEUE, UlTTUe OAK. TREES M OAKLWW PLWTl AMD I artlsilo perfection, gazed down at us nom tnc walls, ami I was glad that Mrs. Hheffleld condemned flirting almost as se erely us the worthy dean. Nothing less would have been possible under those eyes. "We read a great deal about flirting nowadays." said Mrs. Sheffield, "but, as a master of fact, It Is only the very young or the very brainless woman who flirts, and neither Is typical of the modern woman as we know ahe exists." Mrs. Sheffield lives In the Suffrage building, right over the Kuffrage asso elation, und while she Is young and at tractive looking and full of vivacity, tho foundation of her edifice, the great suf frage cause, and her own work give her a different and higher outlook upon life. "Innocent flirting Is Instinctive In the young. One would hardly have It other wise. Even the most carefully brought up young girl has to discover her own power of attraction and find out what It Is all about, and It Is the privilege of the very youiig. To flirt l Inherent In the jo .th of all race'. 1 lead In Uie paper Ibis uiprnlng that -NCV?5f LftUOH nt fl OOV WITH A PXJO H09E vou DonV Know wmit r-y TlRrt UP" THBY WffC CLOSING- UPTHK- poRrA9 rpp THe la&t EDITION. fLL Wfl& HUSTLE MO coNroaioH. THe makc-. i op man rourr a littlc smcc DOWN IN THE CORNER NffAR THff PIHK;P1LL9 AD A NO HC WANTex? 60METHIN0 TO PILL IT UJ. TYro TIM ORAO0SD , HIS &TICK, WENT OVER TO THE CA6J? P.HOIN A FCVV MINUTE'S BCTUffNED WITH THI9, "IF THE BASEBALL. WRfTCR, vyRoTE THe oov of the ARTICLE ABOUTTWO BULL CrPlMEb WOULD THE AH YEA, BARk i'mihf Ronn WOOD pOTYER THW POTTHEj VOO KNOW THEES tt4 I ME. a professor In Philadelphia said that the morals of tho girl who spends her In come on finery wcra hotter than those of the one who was content with cheaper things In order that sho might save. "Probably the professor was misquoted In some wuys, as undoubtedly the state ment Is extromo. Hut womun dress for men, und they use the possibilities of dross as a mean of personal fascina tion. I don't nee that there Is anything wrong In that, because If woman In to ,havo a lasting Influonce shn must nmko an Impression, generally first an Impres sion on tlio eye, and If she wants to hold that Influenco she will have to con tinue to make' the same attractlvo Im pression. H Is every woman's duty to look as well as sho can, for the prusunt day woman can't afford to look anything but hnr best. A 130 hat Is an Inspiration If you can glvo thirty people a dollar's worth of pleasure In .looking at It. "People confuse flirtations, or, as Pres ident HrlggH says, 'the systomatla hii'I Indiscriminate use of personH.1 fascina tion,' with charm. The one Is shallow, and charm is deep; just as love Is purpose, tul, und flirting Is purpoeleK8, Flirting alms for the moment and not for the years. "I.lttle fault can be found In the art less coquetry of very young girls, who are awakening to a power which they do not rightly understand. It Is the older women who make the trouble. "Many mature women go around think ing themselves the orchids' and gardenias of the world's flower gurden, while they the only stupid cabbage rospx, using evury power of physical attraction In their pos session, but the very lack of subtlety In their methods condemns them. "The women who really hold one, who rharm und fascinate, are tho women who feel deeply and give forth son. essence of the Inner spirit. "One should not confuse the flirta tious Instincts of the girl awakening to womanhood and what Pean Brlggs very rightly describes as the power to fas cinate men. consciously used to give ztst to life, which constitutes the pastime of illrtatlon as It Is known to the experi enced woman. "To her, as Maarten Maartens de scribes It, "flirting Is almost an exart a solence as mathematics,' nnd she can foresee the outcome of her work. "Hut women who flirt have become more brazen, and It is this very quality that la proving tln armor which makesj them bulletproof for real love. "Despite the hue and cry to the con trary, there Is just as much real. Old fashioned love as there ever was, and the one thing that Is completely new about flirting I the attitude of tho mod ern womun to those of hor own sex who transgress In this way when they are old enough to know better. "A, woman who goes Intp the dungercus game of flirting, wide-eyed and seeing, loses her honors at tho court-martial of her fellow-women, for women who flirt are like colors that fade and. run, and have not tho lasting qualities that liioldt the beauty of the real Iratirr which the modern women arc eaUug Into the p.-.t jtcrn of IIP Drawn for r The Futurist Society liy HIjIjA AVUKIO There Is a new movement on foot called the Futurist society. Its followers nro futurists. They resolve to Irt the dead pnt bury Its dead; to give no thought to whnt hai been, hut to devote themselves, With nil their energies, Uv the present tlmo In order to create such a future nn never existed In any past, IVrhapi these people carry their Idea a little too far: at leust, to milt the Individual of loin permcnt and the lovor of art. For It has been said (I do not know how truly) that they will haVo nothing to do with old net, literature or sculpture believing toq much time, thought, money and enthusiasm are spent upon tho deiul creators nnd not enough given to tho aid and encouragement of new geniuses, To glvo up nil tho study of history would he to Home of us tho keenest do. privation, and It would roll travel of ttr most subtle pleasure. And to give up contemplation of old works of art would be almost1 crucifixion. Vet tho futurist lilea Is a great one Ip tho main; 'and It must shovo the world along and lift the race at the snmn tlmo lo a higher plnne, Kach individual should became a fut urist In regard to hln own life. lie should put hln pust 'behind him und forget his own achievements, whether for good or evil, If you havo accomplished something of which you feel proud, obliterate It front your thoughts, nnd begin each day as if yriu had yet to start life anew, If you havo made mistakes, forget them, and on tho clean whlto page of today write your first sentanco of tho story of a wise, good, successful future. There are possibilities In you of which you have never dreamed. You can ho and do nnd have more than you have ever lioped or Imagined. Now You Can Have Plenty of Cranberries Every time you want them. any time in the year. And they're the finest, reddest,, ripest, most deliciously flavored cranberries you ever ate. Simply ask your grocer for MAKEPEACE Evaporated Cranberries They come n a clean, scaled package, every berry is good, no waste hand assorted and sterilized before being evaporated. Simply soak in water and they're ready for pie, pudding, sauce or jelly Thanksgiving or Fourth of July. They make an especially delicious jelly to serve with meats, fowl, bread to use like any other jelly or pcrserve. Makepeace Evaporated Cranberries are the finest of Cape Cod Cranberries, picked at their ripest and best. That's why they have such a rich, delightful flavor, far more tempting than berries sold in bulk. Aik your grocer today for Makepeace G vsporsted Cranberries. CooVIng receipt! Inilde the pickife juit follow direction, then if ou don't say they arc belter than any cranberries you ever bought limply Ulto them back to the dealer and he will cheerfully refund your money. Comparison U the real tut. You be the judf e. In the unlikely event of your dealer not having Makepeace Evap orated Cranberries, tell him to get them for you from hit jobber. A. D. Makepeace Co., Warehara (on Cape Cod), Mass. Campbell & West, Distributors, Omaha 11 The Bee bv Tad j IjKK WILCOX. No ono of U5 (since Christ) hass even guessed our Immense possibilities to! achieve. It does not mutter whnt your ngo or your physical condition. If you have your menial powers clear enough to read these words and comprehend them, nnd. If you hnvn tho physlcnt 'power to tnkol deep breaths, then thoro lies nt( lminenso hope for you to build yourself a good.l strong bodj' and carvo out a now future. Hegln. every' morning nnd sny this llttloj "Montram," silently first, and afterward,! whisper It audibly: "Tho God-given Almighty power Is movi Ing within me to glvo health, success and, happiness. I shnll bo shown tho way to! help bring about all those conditions. Love, light and kindness wait upon mo. I shnll bo shown tho way." Tou can sny thin many times beforol you rise from your bed, nnd you will at Riven new strength at each repetition, You can oloso your eyeH nnd rcpeat the words sllenly In crowded street cars, und you can whisper them softly as you walk tho city thoroughfares. Ho f.urely us you do this, faithfully andi persistently, a change will come oVrr your life,' good will grow better and evil will glvo plnco to good. Your health will Improve nnd your' fortunes will ho bettered. Always It must be said with a rev erent spirit, und wth no feeling of lov-i ity. And bo willing to wait for results. And ho persistent nnd uso will power to form the hnhlt of concentration suf-i flclently strong to enublo you to bo reg ular In this tnunlnl and spiritual prnci tlce. Pcrhups you will sny It takes time,, nnd you cannot spare It. Yet think how much time you give dally to worry, de-l hpomloncy and regret. Bhut them nil nwny from your tnlnd, Ho a futurist. And crento for yourself! iv new, body, .a now, tnlnd and a ,now l.lfo. It has 'been dono by other?., It can bo' doho by you. The self-made man Is unablo to sea where ho could havo made any Im- fcirovomont on his work.