THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1913. 13 age -1 Beauty How Do You Dress Your Hair, Care of Your Teeth, Keep Your Eyes Bright? 12, By LILIAN LAUFERTV. I Criminal Carelessness ! I - J J) Vy DOROTHY 1IX Talking to "Mary Nash Is not a little mono-dialogue wherein the Interviewer decider what a girl of the particular type of the Interviewed outfit to say and says it for her. Talking to Mary Nash Is, In- i stead, taking part In a scintillating and yet deeply thoughtful conversation in which ono of the most earnest, charm ingly philosophical and spiritually lovely girls of the stage spurs the interviewer on to try to hold up her end" of a chat that begins with personal pulchritude, veers to the problems of living this some times brings to woman and dutifully swings back to a consideration of beauty per se. And be It added, finally, that talking to .Mary Nash and with Mary Nash means fifteen minutes of pure Joy between and added to the acts of the thought-compelling play, "The Lure." In which sho portrays the latest heroine of the Maximo Elliott theater. "Has the play mado you say, 'Beauty Is- a snare and a delusion' and share with the mother In 'Fanny's First Play the thought 'happiness Is from within?' " asked Miss .Nash with that combination of desire to know and understand the humorous appreciation of life that seems to mo to bo her salient characteristic. "It is all true unlets beauty has a guiding forco of mentality and Idealism. True beauty has to be splrlt-and spirit Illuminated by the inner glow from the mam Inner shrine that keeps a woman's beauty a pure, flickering flame. "Nowadays any woman should be ashamed not to be good looking. Prtttl ness may result from a combination of doll-like features and French cosmetics; but. beauty is clean, healthy body shell lighted from within by spirit and high Ideals. . "I say any woman ought to be ashamed not i to be good looking,' for good looks have buen made s easily possible they mean that clean, ' Just-had-my-bath-look that is always so delightfully present In the .pink-cheeked Englishwoman. They mean carefully brushed and washed and neatly arranged hair; and' clean cared-for teeth; and clear eyes .Ujat have nad enough sleep and cold water bathings; and a- clear skin that results from a prpperly considered digestion. "Good looks mean a controlled nature that does not exhaust lltselt In unworthy emotions. Good looks -meaii simple, fresh clothes as free from' tawdriness as' the body' they encase or the mind' that has designed them In '. tuno k with that body. So, slnco these things have been' lectured about and taught and written of, any woman of brains and perception must stop and look and listen and feel shame to fall In her heritage of clean, healthy good looks.. ' "To elevate good looks to beauty, add Pretty Mary Nash, Who villas Boon the Leading Woman In "The Lure." tb your physical care of - tho outer sholl one part' of Idealism, one part of love" lor .thfeMorId(one" part-of willingness to ".work, and study, and one part of simple adherence to duty with these keep the fire In your inner shrine aglow and .beauty won't be a delusion and a snare, but a fact! of universal' delight as your happy spirit wells' up from within. t'Do y6o4cnW, I have often noticed' In the .country that 'the "girls are ffrowing up wlthb a 'flowerlftt? loveliness that' makes the youngKthlhgs all 'do pretty and sweet that thcyBecm. like human flowers7 You see, that is because they are coming to know how to tako care of them selves and .to their own knowledge Is added nature's careful' attention. "If. only the glrjs In tho city would forget that they know where to buy per oxide and rouge and lip salve, and would, instead, make a science of keeping their bodies clean and sweet and nourished In healthiness and tend the inner shrine, too, I think- qur good old human race would grow to be as beautiful as It surely must have been Intended tQ bo befqre we, with cruelty and - ignorance, spoiled the orig inal design. "Oh, If only all the girls growing up would valuo brains and training as highly as beauty for they are part of true beauty's self perhaps the story of Sylvia and of poor little Charlotte Baker of Springfield, of all the 25,000 poor young girls who go yearly to feed the stream of horror would not be true..'' But this is a beauty talitl We will not go on Into the problems of humanity; we will Just content ourselves with won dering If Mary Nash has not helped us alt toward a solution of our own prob lem when she tells us to be healthy and happy and wise and gives us as her Ideal of beauty the beauty of Ideals. (T The Nose as an Indication of Character Physician Invents Apparatus Which' Perfects Telephonic Speech by Utilizing- Nasal Sounds J 1 GARRETT V SERVlSS. Napoleon preferred big-nosed men for his eimy leaders, and the correctness of his Intuition concerning the significance of theVnpstf as an indicator of character seems to have been vindicated by his txpe'riene'e at Watorloo, for tho fluke ,'of, Wellington hud on' of the big gest noses of his day, and anchored, as ltiWere, by the Iron fpuke's nose, the English army remained Immov able i 7 until both night; and Bluchtr lxrivscU"- T-nvnter. the DhVS- lognoDjlst. laid strong stress upon a large nose as a token of a sturdy, ener retlc nature, and this feature bos gener ally been regarded In that light. Science has discovered no reason why the nose should possess this kind of slg ilflcance, but It has recently been found out that the note plays a far more Im portant vart than had been suspected In Iho utterance of speech. Tho dlragree oblo sounds of what we call a "nasal voice" are due to the fact that the nose does ot properly perform Its functions. When it is well shaped wtthtn and Un obstructed, tho nose perfects the voice, i without Us syllables containing the consonants .'.'m'1 and "n", cannot,. he has glveii special study to the f uncltons clearly uttered.. Dr. Glover of the Conservatory of Paris of the nose In speech, and he-points out that the chief ' trcnible with" the ordinary telephone Ib due ,tolhe oc-that it does not transmit the sounds, that are peculiar to the nose. - Only the mouth sounds are . transmitted to 'the vibrating' membrane,; I the consequence being that 'many words are neara ODBCureiy, xne nasai sounds which would complete their utterance being absent. Accordingly he has Invented a special' form of telephone transmitter, furnished with an extra tube, which gathers and transmits the sounds coming from tho nose. The results have fully corre sponded with his expectations, for when one speaks through a telephone of this kind the words are transmitted In their Integrity, the "m" and "n" sounds are distinctly blended with the others, and the reproduction of the speaker's voice Is perfect. The speaker, himself, It Is claimed, finds it easier to use this form of tele: phone, for It requires less exertion 04 the voice. It Is not necessary to speak, loudly in" order to be well. heiM'. Dr". Glover has also found that Interposition of a, very thin paper between the mouth and nose of the' speaker and the vlbrat 1 tory apparatus does not In the least d. ! minlib the distinctness of the sounds. while It serves to prevent possible- con tamination, lie calls his new apparatus tho 'phy siological telephone," not merely because of the precaution to prevent contamina tion, but more especially because with Its aid, for the first time, the full physiolo gical value of the voice Is utilized In tele phony transmission. The voice of the speakor Is, at the same time, rendered clearer to the hearer and Its timbre ,,is completely transmitted, so that It sounds more natural, as If the speaker were actually present For th.04p.wh6 are .curious about such things It may bo Interesting to remark that this function of the nose In speech may possibly have- some connection with the observation of the physiognomists that the nose Is a significant feature In revealing the mental character of Its pos sessor. Every part of the body that is employed by the mind for expressing It self Inevitably acquires tell-tale marks which enable a shrewd observer to dis cern something of the mental make-up. It Is notably so with the mouth, not be cause It Is employed In eating but bev cause tt Is an Instrument for the expres sion of throught through the medium of speech. Since the nose also takes part In the verbal utterance of thought, why should It not, too, exhibit similar Indications of character? It is not alone upon the stse of the nose that the physiognomist bases his conclusions, but upon peculiarities of shape and appearance which are grad ually developed and emphuslzed as the individual grows, older and his mental characteristics begin to Imprint them staves on his features. A v great many of us and we are not hard-hearted people either read with de light the other day of a Judge who had the courage to sentence a man to eight years In the pen itentiary for acci dentally killing his friend. It Is about time that somebody called a halt not only on tho fool who fools with a gun, but on the other criminally careless Individuals who go on their devastating way .through the world. breaking hearts and ruining homes, and who think they have suffi ciently atoned for the harm they do by saying thoy didn't intend It In all the length and breadth of con tradictory human nature there Is nothing stranger than that we should take this overly charitable view pt carelessness. The slmplo testimony that "he didn't know the gun was loaded" has been ac cepted as a handsomt apology for murdnr In Innumerable coses. To say we "didn't think" the rest of us regard as a blanket excuse that we can stretch over all tho lesser crimes In the calendar. We work It for all that It Is worth, yet In reality It Is a plea for pardon that nobody but An tdtot Is justified In putting forth In his awn "behalf. , What reason, that anybody ought to be expected to accept, can an Intelligent human being give fqr not thinking'.' It, always reminds me of a colored phlh osophcr I once know,t who. meted out 11 stern Justice to her offspring, and who was particularly severe on them when they da rod to offer tho excuse, "I didn't; think," by way of an panacea for their shortcomings. "Didn't think,, ' didn't think," sho would exclaim, xvrathfully, "whuts de good In havln' a thinker f you don't wuk It?" 80 say wo all, brethren and sisters what's the use? To take the matter up In Its most prac tical aspect Is to recognize the fact thut It Is other people's carelessness that lays our heaviest burdens upon us. This' Is especially true as regards women, and there Isn't a mother, and wife, and housekeeper in the land who doesn't know that it is because her family don't think that she must slave at a never ending job, that has no let-up from year's end to year's end. Even more to be deplored than this Is tho lacix of thought we show In our con duct to those of our ownhousehold and whose happiness or misery lies In our hands. I often think that when ' the great judgment day comes for each of us, -and we must answer for the deeds dono' In the flesh, we shall not bo so appalled by the one or two great wrongs wo may have committed as by the thousand little acts of criminal carelessness that darked our past. What, for Instance, are thoso husbands, ttlMUB llf V1IU IUUK 1 1 1 U JOtVC! Ul I woman's happiness In their keeping and '.hen we're so careless that they threw It vay? The world Is full of heart-hungry wives, who are starving for a little ap preciation, a little love, a llttlo praise. 'e don't recognize It as a tragedy be cause we are too familiar with It; but thero is really no sight sadder than that of the woman who spends her life trying' to please a husband who accepts her labor without thanks, who passes over her achievements without commendation, and who growls and grumbles over every mistake. Another place where we deserve to do time for our criminal carelessness Is In the way we talk before servants. We discuss the most Intimate matters before them. We hazard gilesses at people's motives. We repeat rumors of Intrigues. Wo talk as If the maid who was' waiting behind our chair were deaf as the adder of the scriptures and dumb as a coffin nail, Instead of being an elongated ear and a talking machine combined. Then, when a distorted and garbled report goes forth of some family happen ing we wonder how on earth It got 'put. Perhaps it Is not far short of the truth to say that we are all the outhors of our own scandals, and that our own ser vants are' the disseminators. They" get a word hece and there, and put their own interpretation on It, and the result Is that reputations are ruined. Mr. and Mrs. X discuss family flnancen at the table, and Mr. X remarks that they can't afford so and so. Listening Mary Jane, bringing In the dinner, picks up a few sentences, and by the time she has confided what she thought she" heard to Mrs. Jones' cook, and she has passed It on to Mrs. Brown's nurse, all the world Is awaro of a rumor, that tho X' are toppling on the verge of bankruptcy and can't pay their servants. We despise the boso rumor we call kitchen' gossip, but we listen to It It makes and mars char acters, arid the pity of tho thing Is that It Is our own criminal carelessness that lays Its foundations. Thero are also the criminally careless people who terrorize society with the malapropos remarks. A forbidden sub ject draws then on to their doom as surely and Irresistibly as the magnet at tracts the needle. If there Is a tender spot In your soul they put their finger right on It Let an- old maid be present and they get funny on the subject of women who are trying to marry. If there Is a divorced person In the company, wild horses couldn't draw them away from a discussion of marital unhapptness. Has somebody a son who Is a black sheep and who has brought shame and sorrow on his family, they dlsccunie on forgery and betrayed trusts and prisons. Of course, these people always excuse themselves by saying they didn't think It should never be accepted. People who haven't enough brains to think have no business , in society. They should be locked up In asylums for the feeble minded until they learn enough Intel ligence to keep them from wounding other people by their dangerous conversa tion. For my part, I would prefer to be killed by the clean stiletto stab of an enemy to being kicked to death by a donkey, and I would Just as soon have my feeling hurt, or my vanity wounded, by an Intentional unklndness as by the blunderlg stupidity of the criminally care less -who never think. Fashions That Are Coming Soon Exclusive Styles Described by Olivette BHHH liiiiBillllllllllllBlBssBllB Mil W'fti li jfKisssssssB iiiiHsBbsbI19eW sbbbbbbbbbbbbIbssbbbisbbbbbbsbbbbbbbsbbbbIIbbbS HB jll nsKaBwiEniBEBllilllllllllllllH IxB&tKFtBKSKb u Nl -fjR-" PiiflRBlilBllHBilHlilHlHBHiBBBBBIBBBBBBR By Olivetti This Blmplo tallor-matlo. or dirk, greon duvotyn cn .th'q.left' 1 absolutely the "dernier crl" of tho Paris modes. Tho -woman who moans to copy It must mako stiro that her tailor is an adopt at lino. For graceful easy lines are moro than ever neces sary when simplicity rulos In tho tailor-made realm. Tho three-quarter coat Is cut away aboro tho waist and ends In a swallowtail at tho back. At tho nock there lB'ii round collar of Ivory liberty. Tho sloovoa havo Uickg -at tho lino that would ordinarily mark tho cuff. A drapod bolt of the duvetyn passes through straps formed by cuts In tho coat and Is knotted at tho back in two sash ends finished by a double row of silk tassels in self-colored silk. Tho plain, round skirt hao a panel of pressed pleats extending across the back in sunburst fashion. Tho afternoon frock in tho center is of coppcr colorod crepe meteor, with a dash of sapphire bluo in tho Boft silk girdle. Tho kimono bodice opens to the waist lino in a surplice. The deep collar and cuffs are of embroidered white linen odged with a double row of knlfo-plaltod valenclonnes. Tho little waistcoat is mado of folds of ivory not. Tho blue glrdlo ties' In a square bow at tho loft sldo of the surplice. " The short, round skirt Is gathered at the waist and falls straight to tho ankle, whoro a narrow fold finishes tho bom. Tho front panel is trimmed at tho center of Its length by four close-set two-Inch tucks, This stunning afternoon dress on tho right bears all tho hall-marks of the smart French dressmaker, and yet tho woman who has a bit of skill or a clever seamstress can fashion ono like it. Tho matorials used nro pralrio green satin for tho coat and bro caded cropo of tho samo beautiful shade for tho skirt and slmplo bobo waist. Tho waist, which is Invisible In oUr picture, has a deep yoke of not trimmed in simple flounces of tho same material. Tho coat 1b slightly blousod with broad, low armholes, from which tho material extonds in a long, half-flttod sloovo, buttoned with tiny round buttons up to tho elbow and finished with little net frills. Not is tho broad shawl collar edged in ploatod flounces of tho samo. A hugo ornamont of embroidery In light tones fastens tho draped glrdlo at tho middle ffont. Two poIntB gathorod at tho waist extend from the glrdlo on each Bldo of tho front. At tho back there Is a small square panel for tho same height. Tho skirt fastona in front and 1b' trimmed In groups of tho satin buttons; and at the foot thero is a short silt to show tho foot 'Just to tho anklo. Tiny tucks extend bolow the'lilp-llno and from them a bit of f ullncBs goes to rellovo tho scant line of the Bkirt. m m Of Poetic Authority By BKATIUCU FAIKKAX. "I am In love with a girl of my own age, which Is 20 years," writes a young man who signs himself "K," "and, though I have seen her only three times, she al lowed me to kiss her when we parted. Can a love like that be true?" "None ever loved but at first sight they loved," wrote George Chapman, and the poet who knew more of the human heart than any slnco his time, Shakespeare, held that love at sight was the supreme test. He wrote; "No sooner met but they looked! no sooner looked but they loved: no sooner loved but they sighed; no sooner sighed but they asked one another the reason." The times have changed. The human heart Is just the samo Impulsive organ It always was, but the head has grown wiser. The head warns against love at first sight, or, if that Is beyond control, against Its manifestation. The girl may love you truly; I hope she does, but It would be better for her sake not to kiss at the third meeting. "Miss 'Impulsive" had-received the at tentions of a man four months. lie told her' he loved her., She refused to tell him the state of her heart. Ho failed to keep an appointment, and In her wrath she refused to accept his apologies. "Of course," she writes. "I was not respon slble for my words then." ' That, my dear,. Is where you are mis taken. There comes' the time In no man's or woman'srilfc when he' or she Is not responsible for every word spoken. This, notion of claiming Irresponsibility bo cause of temper Is akin to the plea of. temparary Insanity made by- the mor derer. Rebuffed, he stopped coiling. Then she began to miss him and asked him to call. He appeared delighted at the invitation, but- never called. "There Is no sweetness In lovers .quar rels," wrote Kdward Ilulwer Lytton, that compensates the sting." "MIbs Impulsive" should olgn herself Miss Temper." The mistake Is a conti mon one. All who are quick-tempered claim to be Impulsive Instead. She laughed ut love, she flouted It, she abused St, and tt turned away and comes back no more. I am sorry, for "there Is no calamity In life that falls heavier upon human nature than a disappointment In love." There Is nothing "Miss Impulsive" may do but benefit by the experience. "Perplexed" writes:: "I am 21 years old and for the last two years have kept company with a man of the same age whom I love very much. About a month ago we had a slight disagreement and he (old me It would be best for us not to See each other, as we were having too many arguments. A month has passed and I cannot forget him. I have now made the acquaintance of another young man who has asked to take me out, but my mother objects, as sho thinks It Is not right for mo to go out so soon after having been with the other young man so long." You lovo tho first man, and It seems that you have lost him. - Under tho cir cumstances, the attentions of the second young man seem almost providential. "Jealousy," writes F. Marion Crawford, "Is the- forerunner of love, and oftan Its awakener," Perhaps the knowledge that another man seeks you may awaken the first man to tho danger of losing you. If you are not willing to try this means, wrlto him a note telling him that," so far as you are concerned, there will' be no mora arguments. Hut can you do It, knowing that this means you will never have your say for the rest of your life? To marry a man with whom one argues through the engagement Is like undertaking a long oorney when all signs point to a storm. "Argument," my dear, i a- word that means nothing moro nor less after mar riage than quarrels. "I am M years old," writes R. 8 "and I am earnestly In love with a man one year my senior. I know he loves me, as he has declared himself many times. I havis been keeping company with' him for eleven months. This week he called on me, and when he was about to de part he attempted to kiss me, which I resisted and refused Htm. PleaBe tell me If I did right by refusing, as he has turned very o4ld since." The foolish fellow thought that a klsa was tho proof of love. He does not know that If evory ks proved love, no ona would be single-hearted. You love hint, but you want the engagement ring on your finger before you kiss him and you are right. "Tho greatest sin 'twlxt heaven and hell Is first to kiss and then to tell." The girl who kisses freely Is In danger of kissing promiscuously, and the man always tells. Ho has professed his love for you. Can you not ask him, my dear, If that means he wants you to be h)s wife? For under no other conditions may you kiss him. I am sure the laws that govern loving will give you this right without stamping you as forward or unmaldenly. Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Your Mother Knows Best Dear Miss Fairfax: We are two chums, both 19 years Of age, considered, attractive ai)d good dancers. The young men of our set are very slow about asking girls to affairs, and we have been In the habit of going without male escorts. Now our parents have tojd. u Sye cannof do this any more, as they think It isn't nice for girls to attend dances alone. Please tell us If they are right In their attitude. Wo have been told that, the reason the young men do not offer to take girls to dances Is that their salaries are so small they cannot afford It, Also pleas ad vise us whether It Is proper for a young man who escorts avglrLCto Jt'drtnce to stay with her throughout the; evening, or to provide other 'partners, for-Jiet! STATEN ISLAND, Two young girls should not go to dances alone, but this does not mean that Ihey must deny 'themselves the ' pleasure be cause no mftii'tscort them. A mother or1 father should be' willing; to act as es cort, or If a number oi girl chums can get on' olderly"lady to chaperon' all ot them, the trouble will be mastered. When a man escorts a girl to a. dunce; If Is-hts duty to see that she has a partner foi every dance. t. f