TIIE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1913. 5 rr Profession of Marriage By Nell Brinkley I The Manicure Lady A Lesson in Hands JStt ' . v. Accompanied by a Striking Article by Beatrice Vairfax. --J By WINNEFRED BLACK. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX A gentleman writing la a woman's magazine tells" us that bo's never coins & marry. He's afraid to, he says. "Marriage Is a profession," says tho jrntleman, "and so leyr women seem U think. It worth wjille to practice It s they should. The ldfafehldned wo nan looked upon matrlmnoy -as a glorious and sacred state of life and id jo gave her whole time and strength and brain to mak ing a home for tho roan -who gave her nil name. Nowaday It Is a rirt of hit or miss affair. Your wife nlay look after jour home, and she may not; It depends oh1 the way she happens to feel about It ''Til stay single, thank you. I don't dare take any chances." ilow enlightening, and, In & way, how tfuel TYlfehood a profession, good sir? "Woll. thin, how about husbandhood, may I sitk? The old-fashioned -woman did devote most of her Umo to home, husband ami babies, that's true, but she did It know ing that husband devoted all of his time outside of business to wife, homo and babla, too. jfoii're so1 worried about the- modern wjjman and the tray she's changed. My good young man, tell mo this: Your father pushed tho baby carriage all tho wfyy'to church every Sunday, sang In the choir and taught the young me'n's Bible class In Sunday school. Then ho ml his wlfo went home together, and be. helped her get the children ready for dinner. In the afternoon If any ono was going to take tho family walking It was father, and father didn't think It a crime ti be asked to tie on sister's hat and pfe that brother's shoes were really but toned. Would you too these things, think fU? (Or, would you run put for a game of golf early Sunday morning and forget toset home till nlghtfull, and then won der why your wife looked Hred and bored after her 8unday managing a houseful of ' restless children . alono. Ypur father never dreamed of fishing trips' away from homo without your mother. How about your little 'excur sions? What .do you wtnt your wife to be doing whlUJyQurIarjB,,KoneT ii, vr j. Clubs your father "thought that any one who belonged to a club' was either crazy or a wastrel. He couldn't afford clubs not and take what he thought was the right sort of care of mother and tho children.- When father went walking after tea It was tea then, wasn't It? mother went, too. When mother had company father came home early and helped entertain them while mother saw that the biscuits were Just right and that there was frosted cake enough to go round. When father played a part In the church play to raise money for tho pul pit steps, mother was in the play, too. Marriage was a profession In those, days, and evjry 'one .who was In ltf practiced It according to the code, - too, or was counted out by public opinion. ' Nobody expscted mother to do. all, tho marrying, and father'" to be perfectly frep.1, When the. new ways came ..In the men's clubs, the men's vacations with oth'fr men, the golf and the polo, and the tennis, and the huntings camps and all that'sort of thing mother 'didn't say a woVd she Just went on andlmttated father, that's all. ' " . Bho Just stopped looking aty marriage as a' profession and looked upon It as an Incident more or lets deeply engross lig, according to her disposition. And now father has suddenly awaked up to find that he doesn't quite like the new Idea In all ways as It works out. Wfehood a profession, young man? Well, so It Is, arid the finest and the happiest profession In the world, but, It takes two to enter Into a professional partnership. Are you who bewail sq bit terly" the passing of the old-fashioned ideal quite read to live up on down- to H on your own, part, I wonder? Tlf- modern wtma,n does not. rwmt Mother's Advice To Her Bai.ghter A Real Lire Doll to Fondle Is Woman' Greatest Happiness. A young woman who sat In a car near me the other day had neither book nor baby to occupy her mind, and It straight way fell back upon herself, and she showed It by tho manner In which she moved her hands. One hand smoothed her hair. The " other- gave a" tilt to her hat. It then be came necessary to feel of her necklace, and both hands flew from there to her breastpin. Her right hand smoothed a fold In her dress, whloh reminded her that It was time to use tho left hand to pull up the right glove a little smoother. "Surely," I thought, "her toilet Is com pleted at last," but a sef-satlsfled look she cast on her dress, showed that the tie on her Oxford was not straight Then It waa her hat again, followed "by the application of a powder puff to her nose. I watched'her for an hour, .and 'n that time her hands were never In repose. They moved incessantly, Indicating In every movement that she waa a most self-centered person, whose sole Joy and ambition In life centered around her .at tire tho human dupltcato of the peacock. An older woman next to her sat with her hands folded quietly lnher lap'. "They were hands that looked as If they had' worked untiringly for others, and In this labor had lost all beauty of Jahapev,colori' texturo and proportion. They were strong hands, tho kind ono associates wllt- those , who bear more than their :shareof the burdens, and I felt ault sure. that the. better groomed hands of tho younfior wo-' man that flitted from hat to shoe and back again, and were never still, would never be as mutely eloquent. I .hear frequently from young, men! "How may I know the manner of 'glrj who will make a good wifoT My son, watch her hands. There was a ttmo when the mark, of the useful hand was the callous spot on the palm, but the Invention of 'machinery . . making household tasks light; and the employment of many girls - In lines of ' business which leave no sign of toll, have . mado that teat invalid. ' A well kept hand Is" In a girl's favor, j but not If It la well kept at the expense of tho comfort of her family. There Is ' such a thing as spending so much time polishing one's nails that no time Is loft' to help mother polish tho pots and pans. There Is such a thing as putting more work on one's hands than in them. There. Is the danger of thinking "What "can i' make of my hands?" lnsteatt of "What can I make with them?" Bjr WILLIAM P. KIIIK. "Tho Needed Woman, tho Best Woman, tho Most Worthy Woman, is tho Ono Who Consider tho Work Sho PuU in Hor Hands of Moro Itnpor Uinco Than the Work 8ho luta on Them." BEATIUOB FAIRFAX. The needed woman, the best woman, the most worthy woman, Is tho one who considers' the work aha puts in her hands of more importance than, the work she puts on thorn and this is written in due appreciation of tho Importance of the work that must bo put on them. But well kept or neglected. If they are constantly employed In flitting from children, you say. Perhaps not, but how about the modern man? Does he want them either? Or, when ho does want them, is. he ready to- take his shore In bringing them up? It V.ssn't. so lonesome walking the floor with the baby when father' took turns at the work, waa it, grandpa? But how would yoa like to do that while you knew that father was. at his club having a perfectly good time. Marriage used to be the Important thlni,' In a woman's life and, in. a man's. When men began to look upon mar riage as an Incident women followed suit. What else was there left for them to do? Don't look too .hard,' for that old fashioned girl, Mr. Club "Man. She'd ex. pect things from yoii .'that you wouldn't find in. the least ..Interesting, Vn afraid. I've alway noticed that the man who" talks most about the coi.y little home, and the "wee wiflo waiting"; la. Just, the man; who wants to use that cosy little. home after everything else Is shut, ,Hut, oh, misery! In the .trcjhd of the Uines, ."wee wifle" has got over tho waiting habit. I wonder who tauxht her the now Idea7 Dr. Parkhurstfs Article On Punishment as Eeformation Our Jails Should Save tho Convict and Pro servo His Humonness If They Do Not, Thoy Need Reforming, and at Once Advice to the Lovelorn Br BEATWCe! FAIRFAX: Try UnvlnR Faith. Dear Miss Fairfax- ram"18 years old and deeply in.Joye with; a young man of 19 years, "who, I .know loves me. W have been very great sweethearts, for the last two and a halt yours. .During that time he has always been bringing every cent of his salary to his mother. .Many a time I haye asked him what he was going to do when m?ttera git setlous with us, end-he- tells- me when, the Umo comes his. mother wilt give htm ell h needs. He tells we he. expects that to be three or fouryears front now. BelngJthat we are not engaged yeW my mother thinks that we ought not to go out torrether until we arc. Let me' know what I am to do to have him make himself boss of his own salary, so as .to make him begin to mak4 thing' serious so we can at least be n gaged, F. His money in his mother's hands Is safer than In his own, if he la like most 'young men. Have iv l(t tie more faith, for the future, and you He Is. saving are both so One of the most important matters abort t which women concern themselves is their future status as a grandmother. And she is wisdom- itself who knows of or learns of that famous remedy. Mother's Friend. This Is an external appllcstlrn for the abdominal muscles and breasts. It cer tainly has a wonderful influence, allays all fear, banlihes all pain, is a most grateful encouragement to the young, expectant mother, and permits her to go through the period happy in mind, free In body and thus destined to anticipate woman's great est happiness as nature Intended she should. Th action of Mother's Friend makes the muscles free, pliant and responsive to ex pansion. Thus all strain and tension upon the.'nerrts and ligaments Is avoided, and. In place of a period of dltomfort and con lequent dread. It Is a season of calm repose and Joyful expectation There is no ntura, no morning alek ness, no nervous t Pitching, none of that constant strain known to so many women, hence Mother's Trlend is really one of the greatest blesitrgs that conld be devised. This splendid and certain remedy can be bad of any tfuggltt at 11.00 a bottle, and Is sure to r.rov of inestimable value, not only upon he mother, but upon the health end futti'e of the child. Write to Uradneld llrgula'jr Co., 132 Lamar llldg Atlanta, Co., Ut their book to exptctact mothers. young the waiting should not prove hard.' I Don't limit .: yourself to his attentions; occasionally go -out wth other boys. . This wll hasten the arrival of lovo surer than criticism or argument. I Go to Bee Her. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a younr pro-' fesslonal man' of excellent family, r.nd for the last eleven months I have been In love with aofoung lady, and now for 'some, J time she does not answer tho letters I I send her. Could you tell me what to do? ! E.'8? It is postlblo she never vecelved them! I One hasalways the right to hope in- suqb. rases. Qo to her and tell hr of your I love. There can be no mistake In the' j spoken word. ' 'on Unit Forget II Ira. I Dear' Miss Fairfax: I have known a, , young man fnrabout ne yerr and hi, has told m he loves me. Th.'s young man when he .waa out with me last 'promised to call and. failed to do so. I !J,.thLa y" dearly, but -would. ' tlrely W ri'wln his ove en. 1, i,kno''' Ks out with pther young ; ladies, and when with m h hii. 1 pet names. Can you heln me out in (hi. matter, as I am wild ahout him? PERPLEXED. I am afraid he has been flirting with you. The fact that he calls you pet iiaraes signifies nothing. If he really loved you he wouldn't care to go with other girls and he would, not neglect an 1 appointment with you. j He bears all the earmarks of a flirt, ! and. belfeve me, my dear, a girl is the gainer by losing such an admirer. By dr. d. 11. PARKnunaT. There Is a readable little monthly maga tine published In the -federal prison .t Atlanta, Qa. From some unkhown 'friend Incarcerated there copies of It have for some tlmo been comt.iK to me. The artklfs. aro not pnly' jWoU put top g'eh$r, but contain much' that is Inter esting and aiao In structive to those put of Jail as well as to those In. Their special ex cellence is that they give the pris oners' point of view; and their point of ylew Is. liable to be as nearly oqrroct and valuable as that Jal people who have never been convicts more accurate probably and more valuable, ftr when they write about prison' Ufa, Kb effects, Its Justices. iwA Injustices, - they know what they are ' writing : about, and that Is something of whlch othera'';can' have bnly a borrowed or a theoretical' know!, edge. -If some cme sticks a pin Interne "I Jnow beU'er.',.than 'he how It feels and how I am-phyelrally affected by it. And when, instead of being a matter bf pin pricking, It is -a. matter of pun ishment' by Imprisonment, the most im portant thing to know la still how the ponvlct ls affected by It, and. tbaj is 'ome'.hihg"tHat the convict himself can pe4k and Write about more appre blutlvely and Intelllgently'thar. any one -juteldo sifc Jail or than the prlon keepers on the Inside. And how the prisoner "himself Ms af fected by1 being Jailed by the present method of Jailing Is a prime' factor in the solution of the prison problem; It Is jso If .we are to understand by tho prison ppbltm .the' question how a convict .can so be -dealt with as best to correct hi criminal quality of character. Any and and object lesi radical than that is un. worthy of. any civilization, least of all of . a. Chrlatimi - rlvlIIinMnrv ' 7he leading article In' the October issue oPthe prison magaxine Just mentioned Is .ehtltred Tlif Vinal Aim of Punishment iBjiblnstruetnd Direct," and the first clause VT the" article reads: "Punishment rJsfUly. lnterjrWl involves the Idea of saving or reformation." The writer's way of treating the subjeot Implies that his own experience- as a prisoner does not permit of his feeling that reforma attoh Is 'the natural result' of prison dis cipline as at present maintained. .He writes Intelligently and dlspasslon ately. If would appear that his presenta tion of the situation should be taken at Us face value. If It Is claimed that from the nature of the case his estimate must be a prejudicial estimate: perhaps so, but not more so than the contrasting es tlmate of a non-convict Is a prejudicial estimate. It -must be remembered that among our rgnvlcts there are thousands of people whose criminality Is not of such a character as to destroy their power of Intelligently estimating the matter or of honestly stating It, and It Is due to our pelves aa well as to them to lay great stress on the way In whlo hthey repre sent It However It may be with some ponal in stitutions, the probable consensus of opinion, gathered from prison experience, is that a Jail Is a very doubtful school to which to send a man with a view to his salvation or reformation. If that Is so, it Is the Jails themselves that need In tho first Instance to be eaved and reformed. It Is that point Upon which the regards of the publio are Just at this time rather unusually con. Cer.trated. To shed eome light upon that point has been the object of Mr. T. M. Osborne, In volnntarlly sentencing himself to n week's imprisonment at Auburn. lie was in pursuit of what we have dust called an Inside view of prison con ditions, the same view as the one gained by the ordinary convict fio faivas he has yet published his con clusions, hie- experience in Jail would eom to bear out the testimony given by ,those who have beon sentenced in the ordinary way, but whose testimony has. been discounted because they received their sentence from the court One very definite statement which he has made as a result of what ho saw and underwent at Auburn appears to touch the sensitive nerve of the entire matter, namely, "from the first moment that man arrives In prison he Is made to realize that ho Is no longer an Individual human being." Now, If that la a fair statement and it Is certainly borne out both by revela tions of convicts and by official investi gators made by the governor's commls. doner some vory destructive as well as constructive work ought to be done, and done without unnecessary delay, The best part of a man Is his human. ness and his own lively sense of human- ness, and whatever serves to crush out that does more than damage tho body, it sucks the life blood of the soul, and not only falls of the ameliorating results which prison treatment ought to yield, but unmans the convict puts him out of all proper relation with life, disqualifies him for the resumption of life's duties, and upon his graduation i.,n Jail throws him out upon the world fit for nothing but to be still more of a criminal and clapped back into prison again aa a sec ond or third termer. Prison Sunday occurs on October 26 and It Is to be hoped that the ministers will avail of the occasion to deal with this matter in a manner consistent with the good of the criminal classes and tho honor and dignity of the state. Washington's Farewell Address j nr rev. TiioaiAs n. GnKconv, One hundred and seventeen years ago September 19,' I7W, Waihlngtdn made his "Farewell Address" to ihe people of tho United States. He waa still pres ident at the time the address woe given. Ilesought on every hand to re main for the third term as the coun try's chief executive and refusing to v so hedetarmtned as he was about to retire to private life, to have a sin cere word with the people -who had such a hold upon his patriotism and af fection. It Is perfectly correct to say the fare well address was sincere. Politics hod auove party, and to see to it that our laws should be made for tho whole coun try, rather than for a part of the coun try. iie ueggeu us never to grow cold1 In our affection for the union of the states, ana never to so dwarf ourselves as to be willing to sacrifice the common wel fure for the sake of sectional gain. He reminded us of the fact that Europe naa interest in which we had no con cern and that It would be well for us to keep clear of, all "entangling, alliances" wan toreign courts ana powers. lie besought us to stand firm against the admission Into our country of any unamerlcan Influence, any influence that would tend to undermine our devotion to democracy and the great charter, the constitution of the United States, a doc ument of which Washington bleved to be the supreme law for Americans. He cautioned Us against forgetting the great basto principles of morality tem perance, Justice, brotherhood-and that reverence for Individual and national no place 'In It; policy waa far from It; all guile and diplomacy were conapleUoUs . rectitude without which both, individual . . . 1 ... . . ll'a.htnirtkn'. J . I ...... mm imuuu uro lanurea by their absence. It was Washington a heart-to-heart talk with hfs countrymen, as though a father waa talking to his children. It Is not time yet to be pessimistic re garding America, but it may well be said that, morn and morn, oa the years roll by, do we perceive the need of listen ing to Washington's porting, advice. He Implored us ever to love country it were well If this address of the "Father of His Country" were steadily taught In the public schools, to the end that the coming citizens might be well grounded in patrtotto devotion to the Ideals and alms of their country. This suggestion Is heartily commended to the serious consideration of our boards of education tho land over. eloquently as the hands printed on. a breastpin to belt buckle they speak aa signboard arid the story they tell Is not In the girl's, favor,, ' . ' She Is vain. Bhe has an Idle mlnfl. She Is self-centered and selfish. Bhe la concerned neither with magazines nor books and hasn't on ambition above her attire. Her mind flits from face powder to neck rib bon and her hands move with It telling of what she thinks a plainly as the hands of a clock tell the time. The woman who Is planning, hoping, thing of others in her Idle moments doesn't keep her hands flying from, her hairpins to her belt hackle and back to her eyebrows. I want all my girls to pay duo atten tion to their appearance and having com pleted their toilet to forget It. Let sett fade from mind with 'the last glimpse of the mirror. When ort the cars or train there Is always something of greater Im portance to oocupy one's mind than one's back hair. If a girt can't, for some good reason, employ her mind In reading, she can with advantage to herself employ It In studying human nature. Bhe can fold her hands quietly In her lap and think of and for others. She Is not thinking; I could almost say she is not using either her heart brain or soul, when her hands are Incessantly occupied with her attire. My son, watch her hands. "Some of those Paris dolts has a swell time of It don't thoy, George?" sold tho Manicure Lady. "I was Just reading about a Miss Fift Foo-Foo, or some silly name like that. She Is one of the lead ing Paris beauties this season, the stories go, and Is much sought after, Tho piece I was reading told about one day of her life, which Flfl goca through something like this: "In the morning sho arises and takes a bath In champagne. Then she break fasts on a Unity biscuit, three straw berries nnd the tongues of two Australian peacocks. After Flfl has ate all she can for the tlmo being, she reads her mall, which I suppose Is mostly mash notes from some of those dear Parisians, ami then sho rests for an hour while she haa her nails did and her hair dressed. Then she dresses for luncheon and after she has went to the eats onoe more she In whirled away In a electrlo runabout for her afternoon drive along the Dots de Bologna, or some other name that sounds like a butcher's nd. "Tho story says, George, that all along the course of this drlvo sho Is spoke to by hundreds of tho gayer young and old men of Paris, and that she speaks back now and then, and It tells how the poor simps that she notices nearly swell up and bust with pardoncblo prtdo. Honest to goodness, Oeorge, If I was a fullgrown gent It would take more than a nod" from some Flfl to make me throw out my chest but I suppose the French people has their own way of being amused, po Tin Is coming Into great prominence, a cording to tho papers." "I don't think that she Is half so happy as a girl llko you," sold the Head Bar ber. "If you have got It Into your head that life Is a aweet song for me you can vet It right out again," said the Manicure Lady. I don't see where you figure that 1 am a chirping songbird, George, I have had to dig away at noils all summer, barring a little two-weeks' vacation, and It looks like a long, hard winter, too. Look at the difference between one day In the life of Flfl, the Paris doll, and a day in tha llfe of me, the beautiful manicure lady, "In the morning I arise, the same as She does, but there our roads divulge, an the novelists soy. I take a bath, but not In champagne, tfo. George, not even In domestlo ohampagne. Water right from tho faucets, any temperature I want It, to be ture, but Just water. Thon I dress hastily and breakfast on some American bread, toasted, an"1 & couple of dainty pork chops. Then I. am whirled away in the sibWay to' my office, where nearly as many- geftts.-sptaks 'tjj, me in a 'day as speak to "Kfl.' and Just abouOus dippy gents, too. 1 don't haVo any mall to answer, much, and If I ever Kot a ride along- the, B6ls dit Bologna I wouldn't know how to hold. ny hands. After a long day listening to simps that don't know what ocean flan Francisco Is on, I am whirled away again on the soma subway, and so home to dinner, where I usually spend 'the ..'evening iltb. tho bid folks," "You are better off than FUl Just the same," dectafed the Head ' Barber. "You haven't got a name like hers, anyhow." "No," .weed tho Manicure Lady. "I suppose the neighbors drf talk-'about her something scandalous." t Anatomical 'Difficulty. "John." said Miss Mary to hfcr new cook, "can you cut up. a chicken?" "Yaa'm, yaa'm, Miss -Mary, 'deed X can." ,V He was left to his work.; Mjs Mary returned to the kitchen later to see hoyr things were salna. . ' "Are you retting along all right John?" "Yaa'm Miss Mary I done cut off the wings, an' do legs and de neck, but for de life ob me I can't manage de st'umlch decently." National Mpntbly Study Thit Picture There's a Future in Each Kace When, we are babies, nature starts us with good teeth. If we safeguard them they keep us in good health thus we grow to a vigorous and ruddy old age. To keep hearty and well, observe the two essentials of V Good Teethkeeping Resolve to adopt them now' 1., Visit your dentist at least twice a year. 2. Make a daily habit of the night and mormnff:use of Driyon's PERFECT Tooth i 'owner Pripand Cor oznosf half a ctntary by a Doctor of Dtnlal Surgery Nearly fifty years of constantly growing popularity 'has established the fact that it is efficient and tafe. Prevents the formation of tartar and the beginning of .decay. Keeps the teeth and mouth absolutely clean. Teach your children to use it night and morning above all, at night. Trie result will be strong, beautiful teeth and good health. Arc ycu reading Dr. Lyon's magazine advertisements? What Dr. Lyon's does not do only your dcotitt is competent to do. Sold Everywhere