XX The (jee'g Jrrp Mala z i rp f)a f e I Should Worry By WEX JONES It uflod to bo Jolly to chattor with Polly On fashion and frivol and froth of tho day; But. now It's. Bheer folly talking to Polly, For alio puts "I should worry" Wall thatho'll aay. "I should worry Hko an onion" ' (Horo sho hyighs, aho feels so tickled), ' . "J should worry Hko an onion And discover that I'm pickled. I should worry Hko a saw" (How that "worry" gets me riled!) "I should worry Hko a saw Till my teeth havo all been filed." ' You hear all the flappers, tongues going Hko clappors, Dandy about this ridiculous phrase: Pr.ue, Polly and Lizzie will Jabber you dizzy, Twisting It round In its different ways: "I should worry soven days s And become a Httlo weak." "I should worry," "I should worry," Every tlmo they speak. "I should worry like a fish And get tho hook." ' "I should worry Hko a gumdrop And go north with old Doc Cook." "I should worry," "I should worry" .Phrase that sots mo In a flurry, Phrase that sets my goat a-Bcurry Oh, woll I should worry. r Conceited Women They Mis3 Much of the Happiness on Earth and i Bring Unpleasantness to Those Around Them. By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX Copyright, 1913, by American-Journal-Examlncr. MISTAKES. God sent us here to make mistakes, To strive, to fall, to re-begin, To taste tho tempting fruit of sin, And find what bitter food It makes. To miss the path, to go astray. To wander blindly In tho night: But, searching, praying for the light, Until at last we find the way. And looking back along tho past, We know wo needed all tho strain Of fear and doubt and strife and pain To, make us value peace at last. Who falls, finds later triumph sweet: ,Who stumbles once, walks then with care. And knows tho place to cry "Beware" To other unaccustomed feet. Through strife the slumbering soul We learn on error's .troubled route The truth we could- not -prize without The sorrow 'of 'our sad mistakes. The conceited -girl or woman is ,tlro come as a, companion, but the morbidly discontented woman is far worse. Per haps you'havo met her, with her eternal complaint of the Injustice of fate toward her. She feels that she is,' born for better things Jhan have befallen her; her family does not understand her; her friends mis judge herj the pub lic 'slights her. If she Is married she finds herself superior to her husband and to her associates. Sho is eternally long ing for what she has not, and when she gets It is dissatisfied. Tho sorrowful side of life alone appeals pathles of her children like a leech and snapped their young .lives of Joy. Tho husband grew discouraged and In different under the continual strain, and what might havo been a happy home was a desolate one, and its memory Is a night mare to the children today. Understand yourself and your divine possibilities and you will cease to think you are misunderstood. it is not possiDio to misunderstand a beautiful, sunny day. All nature rejoices in its loveliness. Give, love, cheerfulness, kindness and good will to all humanity and you need not long worry about being misunderstood. Give the best you have to each object. purpose and individual and you will eventually receive tho best from humanity1. to her. This she believes is due. to her "artis tic riature." rho injustice of fortune and the unkindness of society are topics dear to her heart. She finds her only rapture in misery. If she is religiously inclined, she looks toward heaven with more grim satisfac tion lri tho thought that it will strip fame, favors and fortune from the un worthy than because It will give her the benefits she feels .she deserves. Sh does not dream that she is losing fears of heaven here upon earth by her own -mental attitude. ; ! We build our heavens thought by thought. If iyou are dwelling upon the dark phases of your destiny and upon the un gracious acts of fate, you are shaping more of the same experience for your self here and in realms beyond. You aro making happiness' for yourself Impossible upon any plane. In your own self lies Destiny. I have known a woman to keep her entire family despondent for years by her continual assertions that she was out of her sphere, misunderstood and unappreciated. The minds of sensltlvo children accepted these statements and grieved oyer the "poor mother's" sad life until their own youth was embittered. The morbid mother seized upon the sym- Today's Beauty Recipes By Mme. D'Mllle. "Women may want the vote, but tho detlra for masculine prerogatives does not extend to the wearing of whiskers. Su perfluous hair on face or forearms always will bs abhorred by women. To remove wild hairs, make & paste with powdered delatone and water, cover the hairs with this paste for two minutes, wash the skin and the' hairs will be gone. "Tho use of powder tends to clog and enlarge the pores of the skin, causing blaokheads. It Is much better to use a lotion Instead of powder. Dissolve an original package of mayatone in a halt pint of witch hazel and apply In the morning. It will hold all day and will not look 'mussy" if you perspire. Mayatone prevents sunburn, tan and freckles. "You can restore life and strength to faded and falling hair by correct sham pooing. Dandruff causes most hair trou bles, and Mother's Bhampoo directly at tacks tho dandruff parasite. Get a pack age of 'Mother's Shampoo (only 35c at your druggist's), use It Just once and your hair -will be bright, clean, wavy, beauti fully lustrous and easy to arrange." Advertisement. Social Graft By BEATRICE FAIRFAX "Seek not to purch&so friends with gifts, for when thou ceasth to give such friends will cense to be friends." The great financier who spends many anxious hours In courting his resources, which appear Inadequate to meet his greater liabilities, has his counterpart in every girl you know. If her purse Is flat, and1 kept In that pitiful condition by necessities; or If it Is corpulent because of the generosity of a wealthy father, has no bearing on the number of times Its owner sees bank ruptcy staring her in the face, A bankruptcy Is brought on less often by purchases for herself, and which either she needs or thinks she needs, than by purchases for her friends. She Is a vlc tlmo of the gift habit, the greatest of all social grafts. There Is no occasion these days that Is not made a holiday for the purpose of filching money from the purees of friends for the buying of gifts. Beginning with New Year and ending with Christmas, there Isn't a d&to on the calendar that isn't marked by some mlsohluvous person as an occasion for giving a" present to somebody else, the object of the giving being solely to financially embarrass the donor and make miserable the recipient by adding another name to tho burden of her obligations. We havo become so obsessed with the Insanity of giving that we have broken Into the children's province and make gifts on Easter; "we have thrust ourselves among the lovers and send valentines to friends and mere acquaintances; we must remember every birthday, or offend; we must send .decorated cards expressing lnone sentiments about peace and happi ness every time the flag Is unfurled, and after passing through a year of giving that which we cannot afford, and which is nover wanted, we throw every bit of sense and judgment to the winds and go mad In making gifts at Christmas. 'This social graft is hard on every one, but Its worst victims are young girls. They must make gifts they cannot af ford to their friends who graduate. A few years later a friend's engagement is announced, and a girl must gtve a be trothal gift, followed In & few weeks by a wedding present and, in what seems a criminally short time to the owner of a depleted purse, by a demand for a little token tp be placed in the baby's layette, There must be a gift for the christening, an anniversary -wedding present for the mother; she has a birthday, her baby has a birthday; there are more babies, more christenings, more birthdays, till the friend who is seeking to keep up with the demands this custom makes feels that she will go mad. She begins to regard every new baby as a means for Imposing a tax on her friendship a tax that is collected re lentlessly, and from which no personal need for the money thus expended will release her. Girls are the biggest-hearted, most gen erous creatures that walk the earth. Hopeful to a degree that is dangerous, they will squander this week's income on a friend, thinking to be more prudent with the Income of next week. They buy first for their friends, and count their own needs of little importance. They will buy meager lunches, wear patched shoes and gloves, if need be. rather than have it said they refused to "come across." Flowers Instead of Jewels By Nell Brinldey Copyright, 1911, by Amoricsn-Journal-lSxatntner & t "Flowers oh breast and hair, at elbows, gir dle and knees I" Instead of jewels -says Madame Fashion's crier. . Into my hand the ed itor thrust a picture of a nymphllko girl some months ago. Thero were flowers In her black parted hair, a blossom between her teeth, flow ers In tho lap .of her gown, flowers strung aboat her waist and neck, ropes of flowers In hur hands, a knot In her bosom. "See this," said she. "ThfB reminds me why not tell tho girls to try It Instead of the phony and otherwise Jewolry they decorate their pretty selves with? "Couldn't they look Just as fetching with a flower over their ears Instead of a poarl, whoso sheen would melt off If you licked It, dangling from them? Wouldn't a tobo at the clasp of their girdles make as daring a Bpot of color nB a gemmed bUQkle? Wouldn't a rose bud silk or the dowy real thing bo as fasci nating abovo tho dlmplo In a girl's olbow as u rhlnestono buckle? Wouldn't it? If you think so, tell 'em that." And I do think so, and I'm telling you thn. And hero, eo soon after, comes along a noto In a smart magazine a magazine full of summery gowns, and parasols, an vnnity bags, and what to do with u neck that looks two shades darker than tho faco that goes with it, nnd how to mako your fingers taper on tho ends, and all about tho now puffs In tho sleeves, and and all that sort o thing and tho noto says, "Flow ers all over my lady's gown this summer." And thero you are. If you DO do It, you aron't going to be out from under the comfy sunshine of Fashion's smile. Andr Just for Itself, it's a mighty pretty way of fussing up. If you are of those ease-lapped maids whose every little toilet box or bottle Is topped with gold, the flower-knota at your breast, your olbows, your kneoB, in your hair, will be freah-and real. Your gems would hardly cost you more, for flowers droop and aro gone In an hour. So will your extravagant Uttlo soul be satisfied. If you aro of those little maids who have to tusslo a Httlo, or whose dads do, for the few evening gowna you sport there aro Bomo won derful flower makers in town, and tho pretty fake-blossoms they fashion are almost &a lovely as tho now-cut real ones. And thoy never die. There's tho satisfaction for your tender soul and your slender pockotbookl Try It! For tho buckle on your pump a flower: for the gems in your hair and ears flowers; for tho slash In your gown flowers where now. thoro 1b a gem! What is the Silly Age of Women? By ADA PATTERSON. A man's silly age Is accepted as his d&Ure. Wo attribute erratic conduct of male humans to what platn-tongued folk called second childhood and others term senile debility. That there Is no fool like an old fool Is accepted to be true of men, and we thtnk a man takes leave of bis hard common sense, at- least In matters involving the heart some time after he" has reached the fifty-year line. We expect It any time between the ages of 66 and 0. But what Is the silly age of women! A sour-tempered old bachelor who had not yet reached the age of softening of the heart, which some times unhappily accompanies softening of rho head, said that every age is the silly age of women. That Is not true, or least not of all women. But observation, unbiased like that of the bachelor. Indicates that the silly age is that time when woman mar ries a man considerably younger than herself. Even a girl, who Is expected to be silly because she has not had time to mentally grow up, knows better than to make such a match. Instlnotlvely sh9 either detests or patronizes a boy younger than herself. But from the age of 38 to 70, and. even W, -many wpmen take leave of their cpmmon sense so far as the choice of a mate is concerned. The fact that some of the world's most brilliant women' have married men young enough to be their sons, or at least their much younger brothers, convinces the student of woman nature that It is not because women are mentally defective that they make curious matches late In life. Baronets Burdetto Couts. Mrs. Cornwallls West and the , late Jive Ixigan, Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett, Ellen Terry, Myrtle Heed, are among brilliant feminine minds that lent them selves to these matrimonial errors, In most lnstancrs soon repented. That age may not mate with youth any more suc cessfully than oil mingles with water Is a principle overlooked by these keen bmlned women. The silly age of woman would seem to be that period in her life when t she Is Inclined to make a foolish .marriage, especially with ono much younger than herself, This Inclination has Its pathetlo as well as its ludicrous side. For the woman whose cheeks have lost their youthful plnkness, whose eyes often looked tired, and about whose eyes and lips Indelible lines are beginning to form, Is not In love with the youth who pre sents hlmsejf as a suitor, but Is In lovo with her own youth. It Is & matter of grief to any woman, no matter how strong and clever and solf-retlant, when sho feels and tees that her youth Is slipping away from her. Deep in her heart, though, she makes a bravo show of not caring she profoundly cares. Then appeares the youth who makes love to her In the manner of youth, who addresses her in the terms of youth. Ho tells her she Is as young as himself, that she looks young, Is, In alt save "years whose passing have Jeft no traco upon her, as young as himself." "Younger, my dearest," the adolescent suitors usually odd, and the foolish woman, trying to lay hold upon a will, o'-the-wlsp, hesitates and marries. The elderly woman who hesitates over an offer of marriage accepts. The marriage of the old woman to a man many years her junior Is a search for the pot of gold at the foot of tho rainbow. What she finds Is usually an unpleasant hour In the divorce court. The foolish age of woman, then, s the time when her youth has passed and she allows some callow male to convince her that It Is still with her, The reasons such marriages nearly always end unhappily Is that the woman was not In love with the lad who wooed her, but the picture he drew, of herself. It Is the last dVlng flame of her vanity. Colors and the Eye By GARRETT P. BERVISS. I know n. lady who cannot endure the color red. She says It hurts her eyes to look at It. More than that, sho dcolarca that It almost turns hr sick If shn Is compelled to see it for a oonsld'erabln time. Hut blue delights icr, and gives her an Indefinite sense of Inward pleasure. Bhe Is not fond of yellow, either, but all shades of blue. grpun or violet are delightful to her. She likes to have them about her, and nvers that they stimulate her nervous system and make her msntally brighter and more cheerful. All of us havo similar, though less pronounced, preferences or prejudice! about colors, sometimes without belna fully awaro of the fact, because wo have never analysed our feelings about them, , myself, like nearly all colors, but my favorites are a bright red, a rich yl loy and a deep blur, so that they ex tend nearly from one end of tho spoo trum to the other. If I were compelled to make an absolute choice I should probably select some shade of blue. mow, there is reason for thinking that this question of color preference poss esses an Importance far greater than Shows on the surface. It nuv deeply affect our physical and mental well-being. Soma think that It Is merely a. mil. ter of artlstlq temperament or training, out it strikes deeper than that It Is a matter of sensitiveness to vibration, and recent discoveries show that vibration, in one form or another, lies at the basis of all physical existence. The nervous system Is a vlbrntorv n. Bine of almost unimaginable sensitive ness, it governs the body and Ml tho manifestations of tho mind through the Drain. Every different color is a differ ent vibration effecting the nerves. If you have a horror of red, like the lady of wnom i nave spoken, it Is becausa your nervous system of light is no to vibrations of lleht lengths so great as one forty-thousandth wi n men. iour brain Is something like a wireless receiver, keyed, to short waves, which Is confuted by tho impact ot -r. oi reiauveiy great length. The blue waves please you, and are agreablo to your sense because their vibratory "",H uu no' exceed about ono fifty-five-thousandth of an in, .... oscillations are congenial to you. uv neuner the red waves nor the blue ones havo any color in th.m..i.. ll ' mPly a Uoular impression w f ,v .', M8 oy W'oulor num. ber of vibrations per second striking upon "l'"B "onro- ght waves move 'th '"Uno m they - same length there would bo only one color, But tho short on. .(Hku .. eyp than tho w . A on 11,8 n11i, . ., , f me conse- quince is that they produce an Impression duc an", Cal1 b Ua th h Pro duce an Impression whloh w call red. tnZrZ rMn,D, musical notes. Four an?rti,W,,1 nrt milllon.mllllon Hht waves striking the eye per second Produce the color redi .i.mm.. I waves striklfur th2 J ;" "? due t, c ,0P blur- t7 !T pcp """"a Prto the r no 80 aon o-called oolor. and each so-called mn,i,.i . 11 135 ? "W'on on frequency. ' 0"8 Peclal JLVt? hUW UP th0 Vibrations ot wive. 51 r 'Una ,0 th" th0 " rh.n ?r0 tnwtuU, you. will chsnge tho color, or tho note, as tho case may be. if th( ,lgnt way 8 cause pain to tho lady who d.Usts the color red, could be mad, to enteV her lyl tJ ? ?Vf W4 """""-""Hon per s ond Instead of only m mtlllon-mlllion. sb. would be delighted by seelnV h favorite "color" blue-and y.t the 'aye. ctsel'"' WUld b th 8amo '1 both" Since the sensation which wo all effect of particular frequencies of vlbra- dent that thero must be a physiology m'L eC ence)' of 00,or' 'e study of which might prove of great benefit to humanity. It has already been proved that certain light waves have I "JK ful effect upon living things, such as and h.a ,,T l th' ,0wer ""a18 and tho well known Fensen rays (which are simply the waves of ultra-violet light) "8 W eradlcatlngTome d. of he human skin. There have been ex. f!S..mB"t,,V.1J,oh emea t0 Indicate -that baths" of blue tight may have ,tlmu latins' effect upon tho nervous system of some persons. OI .t.1.' rff clenc could be built up obout his subject It might be possible to find tha vibration frequencies that were most congenial to different Individuals, and thus to develop a valuable system of color bathing that would be a boon to humanity, " 10 Music Hath Charms By FRANOEsTE. CIAR8IDE. When you can't think of any other way of complimenting the ploying of a girl at the piano, say that she plays "with expression." This will please her and means anything. If she murders the piece there Is the expression of murder In every bang of her fingers. Another pleasing compliment Is to say she has a "good touch." This Is also a pill she will swal low and believe till her dying day that It was sugar all through. (tome girls think that to sing with ex pression means to keep the tremolo stop In their lungs pulled open. ISvery girl who plays the piano at a concert demands that tho piano bo turned to the right or left, or the lid be raised or lowered, or the stool turned. She makes more fuss than a general getting ready for battle. When a girl stops in playing because she has lost her way, her mother thinks the pause Is te give "expression." Ask any girl who was tho greatest musical composer and she will think of the wedding march and say "Mendels sohn." There are some women who never Play the piano in any other way. than as If trying a piece for the first time. Every girl has so much faith In hsr friends standing by her that when she Is on a program at a concert she takes a second piece wllh her for the encore. How Englith Beauties Keep Face Youthfu Pht-i.Man Mill. T7. SI f . . . ........... ......v., i-v u, nuicu .cnsii- health expert, attributes the early aging or American women mainly to the "na tional nervousness." The women of Eng. land, she says, can teach us the inestim able lesson of repose. Another valuablo lesson to b learned from the English woman Is that sho does not go In much for cosmetics, tho con. tlnual use of which must ruin any com plexlon. The beauty devotees of King eorge'a realm have tho roeroollxed wax habit, a more wholesome method of keep ing the face gtrllsh-Iooktng and helthy. Orldnary meroollxed wax, used like oold cream, rejuvenates the worst complexion. habit, this wax being obtainable at drug stores generally in the United States. 'It Kvfiicu i jnim biu wuBiiea oil in me ,,.w. .,. v,p , su&iiuiciii to com pletely renovate a bad complexion. It free from the particles of dead and de vitalized scarf skin which are constantly appearing. Woman's HeraJd.-A4vrU. menf, v