mm- i Te ee) jne aazlre - p)a t f ; They Certainly Have Some I, ' - -.no oct;n wur .-A-Alb( WWEH RUO POR. 700YCMtS tfhT 1U,1 l.nia . .... a . I ivnMs . s; vcrn poor., x I ? ! MUST S6U. ir For. - I I TBRAMv Ella "Wheelef Wilcox on Married Flirts Men Have No Excuse for Such Action, for Their Attentions Can Bring Nothing Good to Anybody Concerned. d'op.vrlsht. 1913. by the Star Company.) A question has arisen for animated I discussion between a man and his wife- j ...... . ,H' n hr man contend, that there Is no proof . or dieioyHiiy on mo pa' t or a nusuann I who admires the upposilc sex to such an extent that he hid u I per; in harmless flirtations with them, and cen bestows a arp.R now and then. Ife loves, his ulfe no less for ' such dttle diversions. The wife thinks no man could really love his wife who ron ducted himself In" this manner. She Is confident rile could not flirt with other men and Indulge In familial I ti" apd slIM care for her husband. Tlje hu.band. of course, argues that 1 man's ' nature Is different from that of woman, and what would he disloyal and j undignified In her would be quite harm less on his part. This Is very old-fashioned reasoning nnrl rmlta mil of rintf. Kill, ntltllnc the merely marital question aside (of what is right or unright In the matter), an other question must obtrude Itself upon the mind of any man with common sense M hat is his Influence upon the woma i with whom ho indulges in these passing fill tatlons. Who are thse women? If a single woman or girl penults h iiirrfl man to be familiar and to pay hf- attentions and to enrcs her, surely she must lose her standing among all dc 'eiit. people. -'he cannot retain the respect of single men: for nothing so quickly tarnishes the 1 reputation of a slrl as to have her name j' linked with that of a married man. It does not matter how Innocent she j ma be of all wrongdoing: the world : ha a right to question her modesty, her ( good sense and her moral nature If she , allows a. married man to compromise her ' I.-, his attentions. !-'he must lack good taste and a kind hr.irt. fur otherwise alio would not do w bat is turtltss and what will give pain to Mime other woman the man a wife, if the woman with whom this married Uoi. Juan fllita Is another man" wife,, the situation is jut so murh worse, for thii tharc "arc four pf ople to be. consld e.ed Instead of three. The wfs who penults another man to tarnish her good name by his attentions ln.Ks all tho qualities which make 'JP veet. wholesome: and noble womanhood i There Is ulways a time when she must know that the man Is patting the "boun dan Una between honest friendship and the attitude which leads to the core spondent. Sh must know, tor, that a jnun who iaing her loverllUe attentions Is try ing to test her good sense and her, self, .le.poct, .or ejee ho In a weak man. bent i amneinriit and distraction without ' jughl -ot the consequences. Tticirforc it "seems difficult for the mar- iltd man who has tried to convince , Ills wife that hi flirtations arc harmless to buns forth one argument to substantiate liM asseitions. i'her If still another type ot woman he may lm flirting with-thut 1 tho w ,mau of the half-wurld. whose business ,t to ensnare mn jjut he would hardlv argue with a good. Pro wl lliat Mu attentions to men n woman were harmle-. such masculine arguments nr- as . mpty as they arc selfish. The married nan who canles on flirtations with other wmien harms these women, harms Ms wife and harms himself. There U nothing Jn It but weaknehs, ,e f.lndulgencc vanity and the folly that le -ds to every phase of crime. The habit of sex conquest Is like that of strong drink or the use of drugs. And ofttlmes is the result, or cause, of one of Vr. habits. scx attraction Is a powerful and beau tiful emotion, given to men and women for the greatest and best uses. , The appetite for sustenance t Is a natural right to partake or. food and 10 sustain th body. But this does not m . -T-nnTiJ uevour all the xooj I 'cee ,'M UVJCKV ! AT UAVr f IT BR.FAt aV HG-SR.T To I f it BKK e-v HEAY '"'' I ffESjl .') im aocm'a'sn.WpooctvjR.k UeaTHrsu& lYHM MCft lp To su. thmucit hm. " MIVIOHII ' I '""l ' ... ICuJC ?AKILW PteWPR. EUG fe a nccu D.Ar our. " - - - iliJBHHI fife. "feTT. womsmnun r fBs?- BT fe, l" PSr , fflnTOHl on a liotel nifnu. or rob our neighbors' larders, and cull It harmlena nmusernent. , T',"c ar," Kr?1 "'!d wonderful thlmw Ilfo to do and think nbout: and ono of lh(j Krviil,Bt lim, nl08t beiuult, Hnn nlo,t wonderful is to bo a olouli. wholesome and honest wlfo or husband: to keep the home the center of happy, moral life; to protect it from eVcry shadow of evil, and to contiol the Impulses (which come to every human bclnff at times) for Indulg ing In weakness or folly by the will, which Is like a rudder to the ship. The married man who has been arguing with his wife is showing himself to boa very common type of selfish, weak man. I.ct him til" Jielnsc uncommon' and living a life that will benefit the world and help all women who know him to respect him. ' Daily : Fashions rMS JTBVK Kt VltMM Ily IjA HACOXTEUSE. Evening wrap of satin, mote-gray with "motifs" of "vulour Frappl." Without arm hole with the iame width In the upper part and the lower one, It Is caught up at the bottom by a band of black ostrich feat hern finished' by a silk fringe with small nllli. balls. Two broad revers trim the front. The neck and sleovos aro bordeied with u band of ostrich feathers. - , rr- Not a Singer lord Macaulay, passing one day thiough th Seven Dials, bought " handful of ballads from noma street folkB who were bawling out their contents to a gapbiK audience. Proceeding on his way hoim he was aftJiilslHMl to find himself fol lowrd by half u -xore of urchins, their Inlets beaming with expectation,' "Now then, my lads, what Is It?" said he. , "On. that's a good 'un," teplied one of the boys, "after wVvi name all this way." "But what ar ou waiting for?" said the historian, aatuuishfd at the Ind' familiarity "batting fui' Vh mi. I m i k..inj io Wmrnm Rugs in Turkey rvrurk xk-. p i ,K'eS8rr .mbwhw "S -- ! What Do You Think of It? For "Whom Do "Women Dress? Asks Gaby Deslys By GABV UESIA'S. Oh, oh, oh! the letters I have received answering my last article with Its ques tion addressed mainly to my own sex For whose benefit do you wear your pretty frocks? Kor men or for women? I had no Idea I should put my head Into a regular hornet's nest of indignant argument, or that Irate husbands would take the opportunity of airing their troiibles by writing to me. nut the worst of It Is that some of my Correspondents seem to think that I nud other artists of tho stage are responsible for their wives' extravagant dress. Now- Isn't that absurd? DrcBS. is the advertisement of the good actress, It" Is the entire career of the others. nut 1 assure you that the elothei that I wear In every day life or If I were playing a part In n modern domestic drama like the life led by the wjf of "Dlsgnster," for Instance, who has not a single drop of Galllo blood In her veins, for 1 can assuro you that no French woman neglects her appearance at home to the extpnt which she Is described as doing. Here Is his letter and I cannot help but feel sotry for him: 'Pe&r. Afadanr, Dq women dress to please men.?' Emphatically hot. The American woman spends her husband's hard earned Income on clothes, hats and the hundred and one other things : that are called accessories In order that j she may Impress. her women friends or j Inspire envy In the casual w'aman who i passes her In the street. This Is proved tiy the fact that a woman wears her best ' clothes when she goes out of her home ( nrtrt t.n-,a nl.1 " -1 1 1 . . for use when she Is with her husband and family. "I provide my wife with everything that she can wear. She has good clothes, but she only puts them on when sho goes out and I get ftie benefit of old wrappers In the morning and shapeless Rnpmla nf .. .).....- , .... "v utcssvn tuai nave ! seen their best days In the evening, un j lejs we go out somewhere. "Berore wo were married she dressed to please me. .Now she dresses to pUssc others, pot other men. but other women. Hy her clothes sho shows all her friends she has not picked a matrimonial lemon and this edd to her Imnortnnce lit her woman's world. But It's rough on the man who foots the bills, DISGUSTED." Tha,t certainly Is a difficult situation and one that no outside person can ad- I vise on. As I have said, no FVench woman woum i careless enough to let her hus band notice that she no longer dresbes en tliely to please him. She would have too much vanity to let any man sec her when I she was not looking ner best. If sho wore her good frocks only when she wept out the average French, hus band would become suspicious, but of .hat I rr Dorothy Dix By DOROTHY" IMX. It is one of the tragedies of Ilf ttiat ''J many are never ablo to collect the dl i dendt qn their virtues, They are every thing that Is noble and good but some un fortunate peculiarity of manner perament of char acter prevents thum from ever recel Ing the. Just re ward of their good ijeeds. Thep heap bene fits upon us, and wo hats them for tie favors we re ceive at their hands, They sacrifice themselves for us, and we would gladly see them j consumed In the .fires of their own altars. j The family circle i offers the most 2aF continuous and piteous Illustration of this unappreciated merit, for It seems to be the lot ot those who do the moat for their husbands or wives or children or parents to get tho leait love and thanks for It, The family doormat Is always trodden upon. The family martyr Invariably seta more kicks than Imlos. The -most adored wives and the rpoit worshiped husbands are not those who aid the models of domesticity. TJie black sheep son and daughter still nave the fatted calf slain in tin ir lionui . while not evon a brcado.1 . al Chun goes to th devoted children have also eu l h mf. uud toll.d to, there la never a question In this land ot women's clubs, women' luncheons and women's teas, where men are never seen It Is an entirely new situation and ono which cannot bo measured by foreign standards of propriety. Hero Is another letter and a hit at me "Dear Madam Women, as it rule, want anything that they see another woman wearing. When actresses like yourself come from Paris, tho land of beautiful clothes, and parade In gorgeous costumes, It makes the feminlno port of the audi enco wonder how to buy them thlngH like that. They want to satisfy their own van Ity first and then got all the admlriitlor they can from both men and women. All this adds to the cost of high living, and almost every girl wants to dress above her station In life. "I think that the stage Is to blame. Women don't dress for their own pleas ure and to gratify their own vanity. "HUSBAND AND FAT1IKU." "Do you know, I think that this man, who evidently has a very expensive fam ily on his hands, Is light. Women gen erally dress to please themselves. But still, If It were that alone, would they wear tight shoes, tight corsets? Would they make themselves absolutely uncom fortable? No. probably not, for no one ever heard of a woman who did not slip Say It lb iwit jMlfillfrli fit- kindness; nc miiM al the money to lift the mortgage that has been put on the old home to pay the prodigals out of trouble. This vagary of hunfan nature seems strange, but the explanation la really very simple. It is that It Is not enough to put people In our debt for kindness. We must know how to collect the debt And duty Is a bad collector. In order 13 leotlve the reward of th"lr efforts the virtuous must appeal to something In ui (-xtept our sense of. obligation. To b loved one must be lovable, and ula. merit and attraction do not always walk hand In hand. Do you not know some woman whose devotion to her husband Is so absolute that it actually pitiful? She never bin a thought that doa. npt .venter in him. fhe burns licref to a cinder over tho kltMien stove cooking the dlslien he llkns to cat. She slnves and saves ID help him along. She would cheerfully be cut In I'ttle pieces If it would do him uny spod. you would say that no man Could lie grateful enough for such unselfish, affec tion, ar.d that a husband should hc Hown n his knee's before sucli wife returning thanks to heaven for hli 'blessing. In his soul the husband probably also feels that he should value h)s treasure as It de serves, but for tho life of him he can't. He knows Just how wonderful and film such affection as his wife' is In tho ab stract, but all that he can remember s how she nags him about little things, how foolishly jealous she Is, how she op presses him with her domestic tyranny. So the woman loans alt the reward of her devotion Just because she doesn't know how to collect her debt of love from her husband, And do we not know Just the sai.ie tvp of husband" lhe man who n.'n'cr loik' Drawn "Women generally dress to please them selves, but still. If it were that alone. would they wear tight shoes and tight corsets?" off all these fashionable toilueuts the moment, she can shut herself up In her own room. So you can sen we have not yet solved the question, For whom do women Indulge in the latest fashions? To pleiiso themselves, their husbands, 01 to excite the envy of other women? lit to put. people In our debt for m Icnrn how to collect that debt. at another woman thin h! wife, who tolls like a dray horre to give her every luxury, who Is a model husband so far ns performing his conjugal duty is concerned, but who Is cross and yiirly or grouch v and silent at home, nnd who never show his wlfo any tenderness 01 affection. Of course, when mi many other men arn chasing around after pulchrltuillunus, peaches about twenty years younger and forty pounds lighter than their wlvon, woman should be thankful enough to Iiiiwj a husband who Is true to her, no matter what his Usosltloii. Somehow, however, she can't remember his virtues when he Is knocking everything she does or sitting by In a frozen silence, and so the nun get neither thanks nor love for his sacrifices, Hd loses nut because he cjoexn't know how to collect tho dlvldclidi on his good q'ualitles. Then, how many cases do we know of pa rents who make pirfeot martyrs of themselves for their children and who get tin return In appreciation or affoctlon. It' I the custom to blnipe the ch.lld.reu. but the 1 fault Is not so often theirs as that of the fathers and mothers, who do not know how to collect the reward of their devo tion. I think now of a father who Is liter ally, killing himself by Inches In ord-r to give his children the advantages that he did not have In Ills own youth. He is not n rich man, nnd to bend his boys to college ami to give his gifts pretty clothes that tliey may be a well drejwd as their companions means a dally and houily effort and self-denla on bin part that Is nothing short of heroic. He works almost yeaselessly, with none of the breaks and rests In his toll that he needs lie stays at homo w'hlle M.i family goes forth to enjoy them for The Bee by Shall We Burn South trial Progress Exhausts Present Supply? Captain Honltl Anmntlhrn Sn) Ant met It Continent Uji arcnteat Coal I0misI(h on Knrtli, but .to Uct. nt Thrm In nn UntlcrtnklnR SccinliiRlr SurpnsMiiK Human Ability. Ily MAKKKTT J. HKIIVISS. Captain Itoald, Amundsen asserts that the Antarctic continent contains the greatest coal deposits known on enrth. With that In mind, consider this other fact Foi tuans ear scientific men have been repeating the warning that mod ern Industrial pro- gross Is making so greai hii ninmu upon the coal mines that within a period of two or three centuries there will not bo enough coal left to supply more than a small frac tion of the demand. Tutting these two statements togother, and supposing, them both to he accurate. It Is evident that our not very remote descendants will have to do one of two things! Hither they must discover some other source of heat and power than coul or they must conquer the Antarctic con- selves, He has always the shabbiest clothes In the household. The only thing that could repay this man for all that ho does and sacrifices for his children would be their Under standing of It and their love and rever ence for him. hut his chlldren-as he sees himself with bltterness-really cure nothing for him. They never make him their confident. They never even sit down nnd talk to him. They rarely even approach him of their own accord unles they come to nsk for money. The father thinks the fault Is entirely the children's, but It Isn't. It Is his. Ho has nnvrr taken the trouble to got ic qualnted with his ohlldren. He hai never been a pal with one of them. He has scarcely evn spoken to ono except to criticise him or her, and tho result In that the children are afraid of him; thc.v are constrained with him; they look for no sympathy from him. All that ho has done for his children goes for nothing, so far as he Is concerned, because he hasn't known how to collect the dividends on his paternal affections. It's. a. great art to know how to collect tho debt of love and It's worth learning. Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Call nt Her Home. Dta, .Miss Fairfax: I had betni going with a girl for two years when she sud denly left me for reason I do not know. I love her ver; much and would llkn to keep company with her longer. I wroto her and asked her to meet me, but she will not. Till rr.e what to db, for I do not think I can stand It any longer, ai I love her very trtuch. , J. W. U 1 am slad she did not meet vou. It looks so much bet'er 'or ft boy to osll at his sweetheart's home. .Make a ce.'lapd ak her what Is the matter. That, at least. Will pnLan end to' the suspense which Is proving so Intoler able. Who Was to lllnme. Dear MUs Fairfax: 1 am 21 years old and deeply In love with a young man two years my senior. I was. engaged tp him, but there has been a misunderstand? In. I still love him and can't forget. lllCAItTHIlOKICN. If you were to blame, writo him ex pressing your regrets. You would owo lilm that much If you were only friends and no enagagement existed. If he Is in the wrong, make some little frltndly overture, 'showing that yoq cherish no resentment, nnd I am sure ho will make the advances your heart longs for. Ilnrr a Little I'ultli. Dear Mies Fairfax; ! am 18 years of age and have been keeping company with a young man for a long time. I am deeply In love with hlni and I know he cares a great deal for me. Now where he lives ho gets to meet many pretty hIiIh and I am In doubt whether he takes any of these girls home. How eau I find out what he does after leaving this place? My girl friend goes with his fellow friend and she Is In the same predica ment. ATRl.'K ItHADKH. Make no effort to find out. Vou are jnot engaged arid haven't the right to question tils movements. If you want to win him, a better way would be to find some consolation !: the wKlety of other frltnds, i "Bud" Fisher Polar Goal When Indus tiiieut and make Its vast stores of coal available for their use. Now. on the face of things, It would nppear that the Industrial conquest of that continent would bo an undertaking surpassing human ahlllty. it lies almost wholly within the Antarctic circle, whire. for six mouths at a stretch, unending night prevails; It Is entirely surrounded by vast fields of floating Ice, nnd edged with gigantic Ice Imrrlers which rise Into precipices hundreds of feet. In height, It swells up from Its frosen sea bordcts like, a vast dome, having the loftiest mean elevation of any land on the globe, and buried under a deposit of Ice thousands of feet In depth. liven to reach Its borders, men must toko their lives n their hands; lind what It means to mar It over Iti wind-swept surface. Intersected with crevnsscs. Interrupted- by mountain chains, and subjected (on account of th elevation) to a very low temperature even during the six months thnt the sun shine contlnunlly upon Its Jillndlng, landscapes the stories of the experience or Cnptn'n Ainundson and Mctitonant Shiickletoti sufficiently Indicate. Hut the coal deposits that have been found on the Antartlc continent He near Its borders, where tho rock can, In spot , be uncovered. Danger must be faced and hardship encountered In order merely to rciib them; to work them nmld the con dltlons there prevailing, and to cnry their products over the stormy and Ice choked sea which separates thorn from the. Inhabited lands of the globe, wobld demand tho exercise of n degree of skill, cotirago nnd endurance ot tho very high est kind.. Nobody has yet asserted that It chii bo done; some regard It as Impossible-, but Captain Amundsen, Inspired by tlmt unconquerable resolution which car tied him to the pole, says that he "hopes" that these Incalculable riches of the great southern continent may eventually be renilTcd avallnble for the uses of man kind. It Is only n hope; but many" of .our greatest achievements have begun with nothing better to rest upon. There Is another aspect of this ques tion which may have some bearing upon the future availability of the treasures ot the Antartlc. thoiiEh not within any mensurable distance of time. How .and when were tho coal beds deposited around the south polcj?. Captain Amundsen expresses the opin ion that they were formed untold thous ands of years ago (nnd one should rather sav millions of years), when a tropical cllnnte prevailed in tho far south, At first glance this would seem to be evi dent, for we know that coal Is formed from vegetation, and there Is now no vegetation on the Antartlc continent, But recent Investigation shows that the cli mate need not have been tropical, or even "sub-troplcnl." In order that coal producing plants might flourish In those latitudes. It has been proved that coal is i ven now In process of formation In Alaska and Labrador, and It baa also been shown that many of the carboni ferous plants I. e.. those from which our con' wns formed-lndlente, by their strue ture. that they were adapted to live In a cold rather than a tropical c 1,1 mate. .This- being so. It Is clear that the coal of the Antarctic continent may lime been formed from plants which grew under conditions of ellmnto pot vc'- different from those that now prevail 'n Alaska. Anyhow. It absolves us from the necessity of assuming that the South pole once glowed wtli tropical hent, nlthoug't wo are still forced to believe that the temperature, nt least around the borders of the Antarctic continent, was formerly much higher than It Is at present Bi.t the change may be assumed to have ben far less thnn would he Implied by the existence of n truly tropical climate. Then, the story of the rooks tells ns that In the past changes or climate hnse occurred In recurring periods, or cyder The pieclse caucus of thero nre not known, hut we seem to bo warranted 'n supposing that similar changes man' uc clir In tho future. It Is within the rans of posstbllltv, thou, that nt some time no doubt Immensely remote the Ice ba: rlers of the Antarctic continent may be so far removed by change of climate that vegetation can again flourish on Its bor ders, and In that ease It might become easy to delve among Its ancient riches. But, long before that time, mankind will probably have passed beyond 'ht coal age, and, If our more Immediate descendants are forced to avail thrm selves of Antarctic coal, they will huf to depend upon themselves to get It and not upon nu alteration of riimato to place It within thulr easy rem-h. 4