TMK HKK: OMAHA, TIESIWY. FKHKl ANY 1. Pn. 7 age Jeffs Bump of Caution is Highly Developed Drawn for The Bee by "Bud" Fisher ' SVCK OP WEARING rH6E "TURKISH CLOTHE TRkey or. no TUfcxe y AND UP IM (Vy r I'M an AreC ANO PROUD OP IT AND I'M GONNA ' VMCftR fAV AMftRICAN THAT'S & ! 1 WHAT'S THIS? AGGN6RN- MM.'SA.CR.e Of AU.U fOR.EOfrt.S fN TURXeN Council asks port r WONOfiR. WJH6K.G. t Cr QoV A COUPLE. OP PL J I ' T" 1 Dorothy Dix's Article on The Home and Mother of Today Domestic Misery is Due to Old Adam and Eve Causes and Not to the Woman's Rights Movement. Pulse of the Box Office is Actor's Best Indicator, Says Florence Nash -.jj mMl Hy DOHOTHV 1)1X. Congressman Stanley E. Bowie, of rin clnnltl, who defeated Nicholas Long worth, ex-Piesldent Itoosevelt's son-ln law, for congress, has bcin expressing himself on the woman question t th't tunc: "I am the apostle of the old man, inero man, tryan nlcal man. Of the old old man who brings home the lent, who eats out of a kettle at noon, and fills It with kindling to carry homo at Dlaht. Of the old man va wrestles with the payment of the Insurance and struggles with the first, second oi chattel niort-. gage. Of the old duffer who created a condition of refuge where woman an J her private fortune nro Immune even from Its creditors who have furnished her with the food she eats and the Pari clothes she wears. "Oh, yes, the homo Is great, and women are great and our homes were greater In former days the days of our mothers, when there was no clamor for the ballot The home today Is not so great as It was in former days. The deplorable state if our homes Is the doleful, sociological fact of the feverish question of the hour, the craze for suffrage." The "apostle of the old man" seems to be also the apostle of ttio dodo, for the man who eats out of his bucket at noon, and brines It home full of kindling, Is about as extinct as the mythological bird. Also, It may bo remarked In passing, that the halcyon state of affairs, from ;t feminine standpoint, where men "created a condition of refuge where a woman and her private fortune were Immune from even the creditors who had furnished her with food and Paris clothes,' and eke from her husband, does not exist, as every woman will testify who has a llttbi money of her own. The one Interesting thing, however, in Congressman Bowdlo's diatribe on women is his assertion that our homes were, .. Happy, Laughing Child Shortly If Cross, Feverish, Bilious and Sick Let "Syrup of Figs" Glenn Its Little Wusto Clogged Bowels. No matter what alls your child, a gen tle, through laxative physic should always be the first treatment given. If your chljd Isn't feeling well; rest ing nicely; eating regularly and acting naturally It Is a sure sign that It's little stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels are filled with foul, constipated waste matter and need a gentle, through oleunslng at once. When oroES, Irritable, feverish, stom ach sour, breath bad or you little one has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, sntfi throat, full of cold, tongue coated; give a tea spoonful of Syrup of Figs and in a few hours all the clogged up waste, undiges ted food and sour bile will gently move on and out of Its little bowels without nausea, griping or weakness, and you will surely have :v well, happy and smil ing child again shortly. With Syrup of Figs you are not drug ging your children, being composed en tirely of luscious figs, senna and aroma tics It cannot be harmful, betddes they dearly love Its delicious fig taste, Mothers should always keep Syrup of Figs handy. It is the only stomach, liver and bowel cleanser und regulator r.Ki-dcd-a lltte given today will save a ok child tomorrow. Pull directions for children of all age a: ul for grown-ups plainly printed on the , Hc'iaze st your druggists for the full name, yrup of Kl!i and Ellstr ot Senna", ireparcd by tho California Flisrup Co. ThiH Is tin' df !' -ous t'neln;?, genuine old reliable. l'.ifuso anything vise offered. Advertisement. greater In former duys. tho days of our mothers, and that the deplorable state of the home at present Is the result of tho orazo for suffrage. The answer to this assertion is that there's nothing the matter with tho homo of today, nor the mothers of to day. The peoplo who talk about how superior things were in the times of our giundparents belong to the has-been class who are forever telling us how much better the tallow candles and the stage cohc'Ii were than electric lights and the automobile are. Our grandmothers and our mothers were good women and good mothers, and did the bost they could for their homes and children according to the lights they had, but they didn't know the first thing I about housekeeping, nor chlld-re arlng, ac j cording to modern standards. Nor did they put in h tithe of the thought or in telligence on the proposition of making a homo or bringing up their children that , their granddaughters do. Wo are forever heurlng about how tho ! women of the past devoted themselves to i thetr children, and how the women of today neglect theirs. Hut did you ever go to some old country churchyard and look at the lines of little graves In every family plot? You will see four five six, sometimes more of these heartbreak ing little mounds, showing how the bibles died through their mothers' lack of cure of them. You will not see anything like that In a modern cemetery, and the ita son for It Is the unceasing care, the bter illzatlon of the milk, the work and watchfulness that the mothei of today gives to her babies, and that enables her to rear even a delicate child. The mothers of tho past felt that' they had done their full duty by their children If they fed them and clothed them, and kissed them, when they were good, nnd spanked them when they wcro bad. The mother of the present belongs to Mothers' clubs, and Child Study clubs, and brings every particle of Intelligence she has got to beur on doing the best she can for her offspring. Instead of neglecting her duties as a mother, she overdoes It. As for the housekeeping, not one of us but would be horrified at our grand mothers' slipshod way of doing things, at her lack of knowledge of food values and sanitation, and her wasteful ex travaganco In throwing things away. Grandma's housekeeping would bank rupt any man of today, and give him chronic dyspepsia to boot. Taking things by and large, homes were never us well managed, nor children so Intelligently and conscientiously cared for as they aro today, und Its about time to stop talking about the terrible condi tions of domestic life, for there isn't a word of truth In It People liko this Hip Van Winkle con grcssman seem to hold It against the modern woman that she no longer spirit and weaves, but buys ready made cloth from the factory. With equal Just'ir tin " might criticise the farmer because he no longer plows with a crooked st.ek. but uses a highly Ingenious machine run by electricity. And anyway. It was men who Invented the loom, and the spinning Jenny, and started the canning factory. Blame them. If you want to blame any body for woman forsaking her ancient Industries. Nor aro women responsible for the high cost of living. It was Mister Armour and Mister Swift, and not Mrs. who or ganized tho Beef tni!t. nnd It was men politicians and not suffragists who made It possible to do so. The contention that the "deplorable state of our homes Is due to the doleful sociological fact of the craze for suf frage" la too laughable to be seriously discussed. Domestic misery there is In plenty, but It comes from the old Adam and Bvo causes, not from tho new woman's rights movement. Indeed, the ratio of divorce Is particu larly low in the countries and states' where women have the franchise, which shows that the right to vote has no moro effect on a woman's affections than It has on a man's, and that love arid not politics rules the hearthstone.' Tho women of Ohio came very near to j getting the right to vote last fall. They I will vote before Congrrstinaii Bowdle's i term of office Is up. It will be Interesting to notice whether he will then hold such ' rahU views upon the decadence of the ! home and tbi 'doleful sociological sub. J Jtct of woman suffrage Hy MAIUSAKKT UUIiUAUl) AV12K. "The thing that has helped me the most In my stage success Is that I have a father and a mother to turn to, und a homo to gOj buck to. and I can always wire home for money if 1 should need It." Miss Florence Nash sprung this sur prising theory of her quick und 'tri umphant advancement In her profession, and the remark Is typical of the girl. Miss Nash, who plays the cleverest little blackmailer In Bayard Velller's play "Within the Law," Is a sincere and earnest young girl, with big, wide open eyes, n wide open mind to match, and a humorous curving mouth. Her perfect absence of pose marks her ns of the new generation of actroesses who take their work seriously nnd without frills. She never mentions that much-abused word "temperament" once, for which many thanks, though I'm sure she has It, and magnetism to burn. Dressed In a slmplo white frock, and sitting straight up In he;- chair no lounging for her In the morning MIsb Nash looked the natural, wholesome, clever girl Bhe Is, and it was with dif ficulty that I renlled that this young person knew a good deal of stage life, partly from experience (for she has been on the stage since she was four teen), but mostly from association with her family, all well-known In the .lie utrlcal world. "Leaving out all sentimental reasons, the girl who goos on tho Htago Bhould always have her family's consent, be cause stage work Is so exceedingly pre carious, and for the first few years at least a girl must have a home to g) back to. Then she should have money onough to keep her for tho first year, Just us she would If sho wcro studying In Europe, for during that time she is lenrnlng her trade, or beginning lo any how." were some of Miss Nash's Ideals anent the stage struck girl. "How about the natural born actress? Does sho not succeed at once, Juit walk on and do the thing right?" I Inquired. "I've been in the company with many of tho best representatives of the natural school of acting Frank Mclntyre. for Instance, and K. If. Dobson and others and I'vo noticed that there Is more tech nique In their work than In uny other kind, but Ihelr work Is so skilfully cov ored over that every one thinks It is merely nature. "After all. to my mind, acting Isn't an art; It's a profession Into which art enters very greatly, of course." "Then you would look upon it as a more or less commercial proposition, Miss Nash?" "Why not? After all. It's the so-called commercial actor who gives the public what it wanti, and who succeeds bo cause he Is constantly working and studying to find out what that public does want, and he has tho pulse ot tho box office to go by. "Did you ever realize how hard It Is fur a person who Is on the stage to do nny studying? There Is no great school where I, for Instance, who have been associated with modern plays mostly, could go and study Shakespeare In a. c.ass under some eminent exponent of the classic drama. If I take up fencing It Is real fencing, not stage, fencing, I learn, which is entirely different. "I have a scheme, and my sister and I aro going to carry it out In the spring, I hope. We want to give a scries of plays In which the players shall play the parts they want to play, often nn entirely different lln from what they are generally associated with. For In stance, Miss Zelda Iears, who Is known ns a comedy star, would play Mrs. Alompln in Ibsen's 'Ghost' She could do It. People would come to laugh, but they would stay to applaud. "Many other well known actresses and actors are interested In the Idea. I sup pose we shall lose money at It, but wo will learn a lot and bo able to play parts that seem to be entirely out of our line." She was full of enthusiasm. "How would you educate the audiences to the change?" "Oh. the audiences. I wonder If they realize their effect on the players. An audience can put a damper on an entire performance, espoclally In musical comedy and vaudeville. After the first number the singers will come back and say. 'It's a hard audience.' That's enough. From then on the actora work to thra'v out the audience, and half their efforts go for noth'ug They work against tre mendous odds und they can't give a good performance. "I went to a matinee at the opera the jollier da and heard Caiuso. The man 1 Do We Sleep Too Much as Well as Eat Too Much? UAItltlCTT 1'. HKIIVIKS HAYS; "Thomas A. KiIIhiiii Tlilnkw We Do, mill (lie (J rent Inventor. Wlio l)icr Nut Sleep Over Two llour a Dny for Weeks) nt a Time, llns Acriunnltituil Sonio KxceeilliiKly InterestliiK Kvlilenoo on the Subject." -.JJ y OA1UIKTT l. SHItVIHtf. Hut little and sleep IltlU' that Is Kdiimn'H prrtcrlptltin for the attainment of long life IU talks about It very entertainingly in Hciirst s Magazine for February, giv ing his reosoiis und his proofs, derived from the experiences of his own fatuih I do not repeat them hurc, but It must be ead that u limn whose grandfather lived to the age of 104, und then died, not from uny dlseaso at all. but Blmply because lie felt thut he had had enough of life. und because "the celts of hla body were uuxluus to get uway. ' whose father lived and died "the satuo way." and who, himself, at the ago of 67, has Just "waged u forty-day cam paign for the perfection of the photp graph, during which tin nover slept more than two hours u day," Is certainly Justi fied In thinking that ho had discovered a .secret worth making known to the world Thn doctors have long been telling us that wi eat too much there are very few who take the opposite view but as to sleep they !iavn prenprally gratlflqd our own propensities by assuring us that eight hours out of every twnty-four ara not too much. Mr. Kd!non stoutly combats this, and ho backs up Ills assertion thnt. wo sleep about twice too long, by additional ex amples from his own family, who. It sarins, have coma around to his opinion, F1X5HI3NCE NASH IN WITHIN THE LAW." was with kept saying, 'Isn't thut leiiutl ful?" 'Then, why don't you applaud and 1st him know you think so?' said I. 'for he hadn t thought to do that, and even Caruso needs tho encouragement, of ap plause "The worst fault one can find with tin audiences, however, is that they will come In late and Insist on talking. A whole theater party comes In after th? curtain is up, settles itself with much laughter and bustle. They call for pro grams, and then they find that they huv missed a good deal of the piece, and tlu actors hear bits of conversation like this: " 'What's It about?' " 'Why, no. I thought It was 8:30!' rA " Nu. 1 haven't seen it, but Belle sulil it was very good!' " 'Who Is she?' " 'So sorry I dropped my opera glasses!' " "What did sho say!' " '1 didn't hear that. Why don't th"?y talk louder?' etc., etc. "It's not very easy to go on with 111" play when this happens many times, ' concluded thin serious young artist, with u merry face. "Audiences aro much later in getting Jn their seats than they used to be, und often half of thn first act cannot be heard for the laughter und chatter. I wish they would remember that their conduct Ij half of the show." Advice to the Lovelorn Uy I113ATHICI5 KAIHPAX. ADVICE Uy WILLIAM J KIHK. I suppoBQ our old friend Adam wno tho only man on earth Who never had advice. Who never, In hla sadder moods, or In his hours of mirth, Was glvon good advice. When ho chawed that raw old apwlo and tho world began to hum, When he hoofed it from the Garden and tho outlook looked glum, Vice was launched upon the planet, but advice was yet to come Vice's neighbor, good advice. Now our deep sea friend, old Noah, when he tinkered with Ills ark, Waa given good advice. A lot of wlso ones said, "Howuro of sailing in tho dark!" It seemed like good udvlco. Out Noah heard tho good ndvico and finished up Ills boat, And aver to Mount Ararat he took a little float; He heard them out with patience, but ho didn't glvo a groat For all their good ndvico. Advice comes ofton from the heart from somo good friend and true, Who hates to glvo advico; Some friend who gently chides because ho thinks a lot of you, And hands you real advice. But after all is done and said, and wjien his song 1b sung, No matter how you love him or how silvery Is IiIb tongue. You'll elinply smile and walk away- and keep ou gutting stung. What good Is good advice? I Ills liuve I Coollnir. Dear MIsh Fairfax: I have been going with a gentleman for the last four months who Is one year my senior. He has my photo and will not return it. How cuu I Ktt the same returned? I have written him several letters and have not re ceived nn answer to one of them. Is 't for the reason he does not care for me, or what Is the cause? IIBArtT nitniCKN Unlesi you hnvo the' assistance of a father or a brother you cannot enforco your demand for your photograph. I am sorry you gava It to him, hut since you have done, so, waste no time in regrets. lct both hi m und the mutter drop. You inly strengthen his conviction that you care for him by writing him. The Are Illullt. Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 am a country girl who ts staying in thu city during the winter to go to school. I met during the first part of the year a young man who love me und whom 1 love, but when I wrote to my parents of our engagement they nimle Inquiries as to Ills habits und found out OnU ho smoked a great many cigarettes. Now, my folks aro verv much opposed to cigarettes und have for bidden m to have anything more tn da with htm ELAINE. A man who smokes a great many clgurnttes may have some good qualities, but the odds are all aguliuit it. Obey your parents; they are right nnd are now satisfied nnd thriving on four or five hourn' sleep per day Of course, no man cun set rules on such a subject that all others may safely follow Very much depends upon ti makeup of the Individual, and It Is sig nificant that persons of great mentnl activity usually sleep less that those whose bruins nrp not o rich, or sn well developed. Napoleon nnd Frederick tie Oreat got alnng with threo or four hours seep a day. nnd Edison, It appears, averages ovrn less. Hut In all these cas -s the sleep Is iir perfoct ns It Is brief. There nro no dreams, no rcstlrssness, while It lasts. It Is tho pure rsspnrn ot nbsolutn rest. Probably those mysterious readjustment that go on among the molecules of tho brain and tho budy during sleep are inado nioro rapidly and more thoroughly' In "profound slumber than when the real Is broken. It follows Hint everybody ought to try to ncqulre tho ability to sleep quickly nnd soundly. The greut obstacle to prompt arrival of sleep Is the habit of keeping the mind actlvp after thn head touches the pillow. Say your prayers be fore you He down and not uftor. Edison avers that ho cannot think after he guts to bed. He has tried It out of curiosity, but has brain won't work. Tho moment he lies down he falls asleep. And then comes tho correlative and very Important fact that tho Instant hi Is awako ho Is all awake. "My eyes are as light ns feathers tho moment I open them." Think what he galnts by that; nnd then think what tho world at large would gain If people In general could ncqulre tho same control over sleep. Four hours Ij half a lejful day'H work. Supposing thoso four hours ho saved for work, us they ought to be, and not lor plensure, tin dolly product of human energies could be. Increased to per ccni. Perhaps science may some day come to our aid n this matter. It may discover tho real mechanism of sleep, and by aiding nature In her restorative process, enable everybody to get along with four hours of sleep or les. it would be an Im mense boon, Uy constant oiling an en gine can be made to run unceasslngly without damage to Its parts. Bleep seems to bo a kind of natural pauso for oiling the body, but Is It Impossible to suppose that the duration of this pause inay bi so greatlly cut down by Increasing the efficiency of tho molecular oiling that half the time now lost may be saved? Anyhow. Edison's molecules appear to have got Into a condition of almost per petual oiling, either through heredity or through the exercise of will power You cannot expect to acquire this fac ulty at once, for no doubt it demands a great deal of effort and resolution at first Hut you might mnke nn experiment nnd cut off a little sleep at a time, remem bering nlways that tho most Important thing Is to leat n bow to fall asleep the moment you lie down. Don't cultlvato sleep; tuke It only when you absolutely teed It NapoUon could take a nap In the saddle that made him twice as terrible to the enemy the Instant ho awoke. There Is something almost convincing about Ellison's saying that "sleep Is dim of our pleasures, and the human tendency Is always to overplay a pleasure about M per cent." THE SECRET OF LONG LIFE. Do not sen the iprlags of life by neglect oi the human mechanism, by sltawfaM the eoumuUtion of poison In the system. An imitation ol Nature's method oi reitorinf waste of tissue and impoverishment of the blood cad nervous strength i to take an Iterative glyoerio extract (without alcohol) of Golden Seal and Oregon (rape root, Bloodroot, Stone and Mandrake root with Cherrybark. Over 40 years ago Dr. Pierce gave to the publie Ibis remedy, which he called Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical Discovery. He found it would help tho blood in taking up the proper ele ment! from food, help the liver into activity, thereby throwing out the poison from the blood and vitalizing the whole system as well as allaying and toothing a cougb.i No one ever take cold unless oonstipated, or exhausted, and having what we call ml-nutrtt Ion, which It attended witn impoverished blood and exhaustion of nerve force. The " Discovery" 1 an all round tonio whtoh reitore tone to the blood, nerve and heart by imitating Nature's method of restoring waste of tUtue, and feeding the nerve, heart and lungs on rieh red blood. Ifx. Doxn. 1 I auffrd from psln under my rlsht thonkUr blade also Vry MYtre cough," wrltos Uas. W. Dork, of Mow Brooklsnd. 8. C. to Dr. li. V. rUrcs. Buffalo, N. V. Had four different doctor toi none did ma any good. Bom ssid I had consumption, others saU I would bar to hTa an operation. I wti bedridden, unable to tt up for tix months and was nothing; but a lire skelaton. You advlwd ma to talta DrJ Pltrce's Qoldaa Mod leal plaeovary and Dr. Plerca'l Ptaasant P11W Whan I had taka una bottlo of tha 'Ptaeoverr' I eoald sit up for ' nour a i a time, ana wean i naa uun ura ooiua i coon aa rg. oaoiins ana una w ui cuiHim. lunsiuunnaHiunuajiau than la good health, Hy weUat U Ouw 187 pouaosv