I'.H."). o m e Magaz 1 ii e Pa oe Bees mm TIIK WEE: OMAHA, WKDNT.SDAY. (HTOHKW No Other Place Above Thy Home "The Little Gods of the Household " ' Are Jealous Gods." By DOROTHY D1X This, the ninth commandment of mat rimony: Thou shalt exalt no other place above thjr home; neither thy business office nor thy bridge table, nor any cause shalt thou put before thy home, not neglect thy home for it. If the true co-respondent were named In the majority of divorce nults, it woulJ not be the same blond-haired e ren, or some romantic loi '.ing Lothario. It would be busi ness, or society, or the uplift move ment. These are re sponsible for the breaking up of more homes than the whole bunch of wayward im pulses and fickle fancies and straying pas sions. We Ameri cans are not by nature a romantic and a sentimental people. Ideals ap peal 'to ua more than Individuals, and when we make fools of ourselves, and hash of our lives. It is oftener over a thing than it la a person. Thus It happens that when the average American man neglects Ma wife and leaves her to go her own gait alone; when he is so little acquainted with his children that they think of him as that man who comes here every Sunday, and when he has to consult his address book to see where he lives, i'. Is not because some other woman has stolen his affec tions away from their legitimate owner. He still thinks when he stops to think of her at all-that his wife Is the one woman In the world. He theoretically adores his children, and he spends money lavishly on his home, but these are not the real Interests of his life. The thing of his pas-' slonate preoccupa tion, that he thinks of by day and dreams of by night, that hi.s every hope and ambition cen ters around; the things that makes his pulses thrill, or sends a chill to the marrow of his bones, Is business. . It is the hus bands absorption in business that marks the beginning of the parting of the ways of most couples. The man gives his real Interest, his real enthusiasm to his work, and not to his home. He hurries through his breakfast with the paper propped up before him so that he can read the stock market report, and if his wife tries to talk to him he mum bles an Incoherent reply that shows ho hasn't heard a word she said. As soon as he has gulped his coffee and eggs he joyously rushes for the car and is swal lowed up In an alien world from hers. ;When be returns at night he is too tired out to want to go out with her to any place of amusement; too tired even Be Mistress of Your Nerves to Be Beautiful Bj MME. UNA CAVALIERI (The Most Famous Living Beauty.) Realizing as I long ago did that the ex tremely nervous woman cannot be beau mistress of my nerves. I studied the sub ject chiefly by noting the effect of a cer tain regimen upon my nervous system and leaving out that which I found was of bad effect and cultivating that which was good. I observed that when I was acutely conscious of my nerves I was in one of two otates. Either I was su.'fertng from the state of netvoue irritation or nervous exhaustion. One state wis ts bad as the other. It was not in degrees of misery, but in symptoms they differed. Nervous irritation caused me to be ANY WOMAN CAN SAVE $5 AN HOUR Put gasoline and solvit In Vash boiler and dry clean) everything. Ever dry clean at home? Well, It's o easy, inexpensive and the results so pleasing you'll be surprised. Any woman can clean and renew the bright ness of ribbons, silks, satins, laces, yokes, silk shirtwaists, kid gloves and shoes, furs, neckties, children's coats, suits, caps, swtss. lawn, oruandy and chiffon dresses, fancy vests, veils, woolen garments, network draperies, rugs, in fact any and everything that would be ruinea with soap ana water. Oet two ounces of solvit at any drug store and put it In two gallons of aasj line where it quickly dissolves. Then put tn the goods to be cleaned, rub a little and out they come loo'inr m bright and fresh as new. Tou will find nothing fades, shrinks or wrinkles, re quiring no pressing. Any woman can do five dollars' worth of homo dry cleaning in a few moiiint and you can't make a mistake. Tour grocer or any garage will supply the gasoline and the drug store will sell yon two ounces of solvit which Is simply gssollne soap. Then a wash boiler or large dish psn completes your dry-clean-tog outfit. Advertisement, to talk. He never has time to go off on little .'.aunts with her, and when he does takes his pleasure he wants to take it with other men with whom he can con verse on the only topics In which he Is interested. Sometimes a woman Rre mtfl after sor.loty, and drafts her husbsnJ down into poverty by t mn to k.cp up with people who are better off than she Is. Instead of her homo being a spot of peace and rest for husband and children, she makes of it a place of walling and discontent be cause she cannot -have the things she wants. Sometimes she even starves the family that she may give smart entertainments. Such a woman wrecks her home be cause she never makes it a place to come to Joyfully or to stay In contentedly. Her IdrRl of happiness Is to get away from home to restaurants, to cabarets, to sum mer resorts and winter resorts, wherever the excitement is most fast and furious, and the pace most killing. She has no time to have babies, no leisure to raise children, never a minute to do anything so dull and deadly as to try to entertain a husband and make him comfortable. Her Ideal of life Is camprlsed In try ing to know tho people who don't want to know her, in seeing her name In tho society columns of newspapers, and hav ing a hat that cost more than she can afford. Her con ception of home Is a hotel suite and a Pomeranian dog and It Is no mar vel that she so of ten spends the sea son at Reno. Another woman who is a home wrecker, albeit un intentionally, is the woman who gets interested In the church or the mis alonary Eociety, or ' some cause that she leaves her home run Itself, while she tries to run the universe. She works hr fingers to the bone making flannel petti coats for the Hottentots while her own children's stockings need darning, She lets her own servants steal and waste; while she lectures on political economy. She drives her own husband to drink crusading for total prohibition. She knows everything except the one vital fact that the most Important work any woman can do Is taking care of her own man and children, and fulfilling the duties she has taken upon herself. The trouble with both men and women Is that they do not rellse that the little gods of the hearthstone are jealous gods and that if you fout them they fly out of the window. This is why it Is so Im portant to remember the ninth command ment of matrimony: Thou shalt exalt no other place above thy home; neither thy business office nor thy bridge table, nor any cause shalt thou put before thy home, nor neglect thy home for It overactive, to refrain fro:n rest because rest was impossible. It was such a state as the exhlllratlon of Intoxication. Ner vous exhaustion, on the other hand, is an extreme and continued fatigue, with a tendency to melancholy. These states write different characters In the face, but both are expert facial handwrlters. Nervous Irritation causes the eyes to be strained. It causes a faint but perceptible twitching about the lips and eyes. Frequently I have noticed that in this state the face is mottled with bright red spots, showing that the ever charged nervous system has reacted upon the circulation. Nervous exhauwtlon produces the lines of discontent and despair. It ploughs dep furrows from nostrils to lips. It etches perpendicular lines between the eyes. The Hps are pale and the cheeks bloodless. When a woman has reached this sad state, every effort exhausts her. She loses her appetite. She sleeps fitfully or not at all. She Is In a vague but painful state of apprehension. Friends and occu pations or amusements bore her. She Is tired of the world, tired of life. It Is much to be regretted If one reaches this state. It Is the open door to suicide. The cause In each case is the same. The sufferer has msde an overdraft upon her energy, an act as foolish and with results as serious as to make an overdraft upon a bank. On the other hand. If I am of irritable temper, if I am over-lnter.se in my pleas ures or my pains- If I talk too much and needlessly, if I oxagRvrate when I talk. If trifles asmime more than their true proportion in my life, then I know that I have reached the stage of nervous Irri tation. If by draining your vitality either of these stages of nervousness has been reached, you should address yourself at once to a cure. Of course. It were far bet ter to prevent nervousness But if this has not been done, by simple living and vigilant self-control, then not a moment should be wasted. If you are in that fever-ilk condition that betokens nervous irritation; If your ; eyes are too high. If your fsce too vividly j expressive; If your voice Is of too high pitch, your tones too sharp, you must remove the cause of this concert pitch of the body. Don't talk about your aliments nor per mit others to talk to you about them. Over-sympathy Is worse then none. For over-sympathy makes you sorry for yourself, and there Is no more depleting stats of mind than this. i Know a Girl There!" & "She taught me to say New O-le-ans 'stead of New Urleenit ' She proved that there- was something as warmly white, with a touch of gold nd violet in the shadows of Us petals, as sweet and as trop ical as thd l&arnolla and lovelier still! And when I went away she aald, In her soft, mild drawl, "I'm mahghty so'y to see you-all go 'war." There are no high-lights In the southern girl. She is all mellowness, softness and dusk. Her eyes can be gay, but they never lose the velvet softness of a southern night. All things that whisper out of the word "South" she is made of. Jessamine flower, and yel- "Why We Quarreled By VIRGINIA TERHUNE UK WATER. VAN Copyright, IBIS, by Star Company. When I was a child young girls were not allowed the freedom which is theirs now. And they were far gentler and less arrogant than is the young person of today. My daughters are twins 1 years old. I insist that they are still children and should be treated as such. They should have the Innocuous pleasures suited to their age. "And what are those pleasures?" my wife asked me once when I made this statement. "Candy pulls, simple games like domi noes and checkers, walking or driving parties and picnics always In the day time, and always with a mature chaperon along. That's the way my sisters were trained. And you were brought up In the same way," I supplemented, remem bering suddenly how strict Irene's mother was with her. My wife laughed as I enumerated the various amusements I considoreJ proper. "Imagine a modern, up-to-date girl satisfied with that kind of entertain ment!" she jeered. "Why, they outgrow dominoes and checkers by the time they are 10 years old. Walking and riding parties have gone out of fashion. As to picnics, they are well enough In their proper season, but they are very elabor ate affairs nowadays, and are only possi ble In summer, at any rate. Even In your day picnics were not given In mid-winter, my dar." I saw that she thought my contentions ridiculous and It vexed me. "Tou may sneer if you like." 1 said, "but I do not consider the parties our nrl attend the proper things at their age.- yt you sent them to dancing school." she reminded me. ' "Did yoa not expect them to sttend dances later?" "Certainly," I replied, 'simple, sane dances such as w had when we were young." "Times have changed, dear," she said ... gently, "and we must change, with them." I thought that perhaps she had at last reached my viewpoint, since she spoke so calmly, and I kissed her and said nothing more. I hoped that there would be no further cause for such dis putes. They had become more and more frequent with each passing year. But her manner meant only a desire to conciliate me. Kven then she had in her mind a plan for the children, and desired my acquiescence. It wss for a luncheon party of eight girls at a fasnlonabie restaurant, followed by a box party at the matinee, and, after dinner, a little dance at our house In the evening. "It is Christmas week," she told me, "and I want the children to have a good time." "Out," I protested, "the program those girls have arranged would tire a woman of the world. It is outrageous." "Young people can stand a good deal Self Control ny ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. I saw an angel with majestic mien And radiant brow, and smile divinely sweet, Strong human passions writhed beneath his feet; There, too, expired those coward faults which screen Themselves behind inheritance, and lean On dead men for their strength and think It meet All, all lay prostrate, owning their defeat. Then to the spirit with eyes serene I cried aloud, in wonder and in awe: "O mighty one, who are thou that thy glance Can circumvent heredity cheat chance, And conquer nature? What thine occult law? . Art thou Incarnate Force the over-soul?" The angel answered: "I am Self-Control." k "ciU & ?y w m low rose, slow-flowing water, and pine woods, blue bonnets (water hyacinths), the mocking bird, magnolias and the golden moon of the South, the deep-throated crooning of the songs they sing there, the memories of the old South, the gallantry that still lives there, the languor. She is the South. ' Her skin is warmly white; her eyes and hair, if ahe la Creole, shadowy copper; she Is as sweet as a sun-warmed grape. And nowhere is there girl or woman who understands and is as kind to "Adam" as the Southern Eve. NELL BRINKLEY. iti. No. 7 The Man's Side The Puritanical Husband Tells of His Battle Over His Daughters, : : : of fun," she said smilingly. "And Gladys and Hasel have set their hearts on hav ing the gayest affair given by any of their set this season." "It will cost a great deal," I ventured. My wife has her own income and 1 could not use expense as my strongest wespon. "I will defray half tna expense," she said sternly, "If you wish me to." "Tou know I don't grudge a cent for anything that wilt make my children happy," I reproved. "That Is, if It Is also good for them. But you are making fashionable women of little girls." We argued hotly, and, as Gladys en tered the room during our altercation, I knew I was put in the wrong In the eyes of my own daughter. At last I ap pealed to the child. "Gladys," I asked, "wouldn't you and Ilaiel rather have a simpler affair than this one you are planning?" ''Indeed we wouldn't," she answered. NeUBrinklcy Copyright, Mil, Intern'! Ntwt ftrv1c. "All the girls are giving stutnnlng holi day parties, and ws mean to beat them all." "What a false standard you are fo lowing!" I exclaimed. "I am surprised that you should allow It," I added, turn ing again to my wife. To my distress, Gladys burst Into tears. "It Isn't fair to scold mother when shs Is trying to mske us happy!" shs sob bed. "It Isn't fair!" "There, there, dear!" sobbed the mother. "Father doesn't understand tiut mother does!" I resolved to try to understand the sit uation. I know my wife is devoted to her children snd that shs is a good woman. Perhaps, I told myself, I was narrow and old-fogey, as ray wlfs often suggested. Yet when, on the night of the danos in our drawing room, I stood at ens aids and watched my daughters, my heart turned sick within me. The modern dances seemed to ma suggestive; the dresses worn by ths girls immodest. I sought out my wife where she stood In the shadow of ths bay window, gaging with smiling eyes at the dancers. "Isn't it all pretty?" she appealed as I came up. "Its disgusting!" I burst forth. In dignantly. "I tell you I can't stand this kind of thing! It Is bad enough to see a married woman who Is able to take ears of herself, gliding about in the tight clutch of a man but it Is shameful to allow one's daughter to danoe such dances in such a way!" She looked at me aghast. "I would not," shs said slowly and accusingly, "have such an svtl Imagination as yours for all ths money tn the world. What you have Just said Is an Insult to your wlfs and daughters." I cannot piove that It was not, for all the girls In the fashionable set danos and dress In ths same styls. But I often wonder If all husbands and wlvss In that set quarrel as do my wife and I about the freedom allowed the up-to-date young girl. Can You Afford It? ny UKATHICK FAIRFAX. We all know that we aro living In ar extravagant age. Most of us d not recognise the fact that we are very strong "contributing causes" to tho n- i travasanre of our age. I As a matter ef fact, we cultivate nil sorts of expensive and luxurious ttal I s and live on the scale suited to the menu of the nun one moo higher up in oi.r financial world. To say "I can't aff.' It" seems to most of us to be a sIk'i ' lncmrtrncc or even of failure. As a matter of fact, bravely lo t n ' edge that a thing la beyond your mein and that you don't propose to squander your earnings is a very fine thin to d It carries with It sincerity and a fesrlees Indifference to snobbery and false values of what makes life worth while. The most pathetlo part atiout extrava gance Is that it so seldom bus us any thing we really wsnt. llo many of the people you see In gay cafes at midnight are getting their moneys worth out of. being there? Lights, music, exuberant people all about to how many people are these really essentials of enjoyment? Most of us enjoy a "cold snack" out of the tea box In the cosy atmosphere of home with a consciousness that we aren't living extravagantly far better than the little flurry In high living that brings us a five-dollar check and the necessity of lunching on a glasa of milk and a sand wich for a week to come. False pride about money matters Is un utterably silly. We ought to do what w can afford to do with a graclousness that makes offering someone our simple home hospitality truly royal. We ought never strive after effects that defeat them selves Just because of our conscious striv ing. There are various sorts of extravagance lavish spending of emotion where It Is not appreciated, a foolish wasting of one's self in lata hours and social gaieties that bring nothing real or vital Into one's life all forms of wasta that mean an out lay which does not repay Itself are in efficient and extravagant. A very brilliant woman who has msde for herself e plaos In the world recently Bald to met "I allow myself two even ings a week during which I keep late hours and play as exuberantly as I like, can't afford to waste my energies li long evenings of jollification that get mo nowhere. I have to save myself up so that I may make my days count. An I If I spent my nights foolishly they wouldn't" So much for wasted energy. Wasted emotion la just as absurd. All the "i can't live without him" girls who shrill, madly for the return of a lover whonj affection was selfish and who never them more than n few joyous rv'tn' to offset hours of pelt ntul silo re ing crlmlnst'y e trivy'nr I 'i I l" feellngsilf In- -' ineuo enoug I !i . t u sclously one "it ' 'I'V- I; was not wan? -u. t' h, mors? None of t i come on thl rtv f because the r -t n: f r bllng after tl-e i i-. , mlt oursolvr l r 1 II 'tc means do not in l.v "I can't af.'orj U li u sp'endld sen fence to loarn lo tny. it gives you the power bravely to defy the encroachment of false standards. It helps you find a sturdy Independence that will make you more snd more truly yourself. Bet your own standard of living according to your means, mental, financial and spiritual. Tou oan afford to do nothing else. Do You Know That An experiment wss ones mads to see how fast a bee could fly. The hlvs was attached to ths roof of a train, which at tained a speed of thirty miles an hour before tbs bee was left behind. Among the curious things on notices on arriving at Moscow Is ths entire ab sence of whips among drivers of cabs, carriages and all sorts of vehicles. There Is a taw prohibiting their use. The fruit of ths umganu-tre of South Africa, yields a stong Intoxicating drink. Eiepnants are said to be very fond of It. becoming quite tipsy, staggering about. piaymg antics, screaming so as to be heard a mile, and sometimes havins tre mendous fights. To- test ths penetration of rifle shots. snow walls six feet six Inches thick were erected in Aurillao, Franc. Rifles were fired at a dlstanoe of fifty-five yards. In each ease ths ball wss stopped at a pen- ciruon oi nv and a half feet LINCOLN MAN IS HIGHLY PLEASED i 0. I. Wood Says That Tanlac Brought Him Quick Results. Mr. C. I. Wood, miller, of the DaWltt Grain Co., residing st 117 N. Twenty eighth street, Lincoln, made the fallow ing statement regarding Tanlac: "I have been a sufferer from stomach trouble for some time. I was run-down, my digestion was very ' poor and I did not seem to get the right nourishment from my food. My sleep wss also af fected and at night I would lay awake for hours st a time. '"Tanlac was very highly recommended to me and I decided to try the medicine. After taking only part of the first bot tle I noticed a marked improvement, and my digestion Is now perfect and I can again sleep better at nights. I d not hesitate to recommend Teniae." Hundreds of people have told of th beneficial results obtained from the use of Tan Is o and of the many peculiar cases, some of long standing, many of which have yielded to the remarkable Influence of the "Master Medicine." Teniae can be had at the Sherman MoConnell Drug Company, . ltkh end Dodge streets, where representatives of U T. Cooper are explaining the luvll rlne to the public AdvmUemcul.