9 s) Hie Bees Home Ma 4 tine Pa "Time Waits P By Nell Brinkley Copyright. 1!1. Ititern'1 Newt Service. May Irwin Tells Women How to Make Investment Money 7eaci Girs a Trade TIIK HKK: OMAHA. r-WlDAY. (HTOHKIJ 2 l ;!.". ge I w " "in map i. -T f- , II ! I 1 By DOROTHY DIX. The school year Is Just starting and hundreds of thousand of girls are re B liming the pursuit of what they are pleased to call their education. For the most part, this la mere flub dub, a smattering mQ of this and a smat tering of that, a ,3 glimpse of mnthe- rnatlcs. a Blanco at literature, a stab at music, Wind not enough of any one to be of the slightest assistance If the girl ever needs to call upon It for help. For the average girl's education may best be de scribed In the words of the popular dltty which de clared, "I don't know where I'm going, but I'm on my way." Nobody knows which way a girl Is going, or In what direction she la headed, and so she Is given a sort of hit or miss education that her optimistic parents fondly believe wlU fit her for anything, and that In . reality fit her for nothing;. ' There la no other Individual in the world who gets auch a cruol deal In life as the daughter of the well-to-do Amer. loan family. Her parents simply gamble with her fate. They have no fortune to settle upon her; no dowry to give her when she marries that would secure her financial .Independence If her marriage proved dls- astrous; not, a dollar to give her If she does not marry; ' not penny to I dwui ucinooji tier ! and . want If the father dies, . or be comes disabled, but they do not make her self-supporting. Thousands of dol lars are thrown away on the girl's education, but she is not . taught one single thing thor oughly enough to make of It a mar ketable commodity. Nobody thinks it worth while to teach her ,a trade by which she can support herself if It bo comes necessary. Her parents have banked everything on the one chance of her getting mar ried and acquiring a husband who would be able to keep her in pink cotton .the balance of her life. Now catching . a husband Is by no means an easy a thing as It sounds, and It grows more and more difficult year by year.' Besides, husbands lose their money, or their jobs, only too often. Sometimes they turn out to be drunkards or dast ards with whom no woman can live. Fre- Changing Styles in Men World Moves Fast, but Gentleman is Always the Gentleman By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. The man of today Is accused of being a coldly business-like person whose heart resides In his pocketbook and whose sym pathies are always with the winning side. That is almost as true as the sweeping assertions which deny to the woman of today heart and feeling. Efficiency is a modern fetish, and some- IN STERLING LIVES A GIRL Who Suffered As Many Girls Do Tells How She Found Relief. r Starling, Conn. "I am a girl of 22 years and 1 used to faint away every I month and was very weak. I was also bothered a lot with female weakness. I read your little book Wisdom for Wo men,' and I saw how othera bad been helped by Lydia E. nnkham'a Vegeta- Ible Compound, and decided to try it, and ' it has made me feel bice a new girl and I am now relieved of all these troubles. I hope all young girls will get relief as I have. I never felt better in my life." Mrs. John TSTREAULT, Box 116, Sterling, Conn. Massena, N. Y. "I have taken Ly Jia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound and I highly recommend it If anyone wants to write to me I will gladly tell ber about my case. I was certainly in bad condition as my blood was all turn ing to water. I had pimples on my face nd a bad color, and for five years I had been troubled with suppression. The toe tori called it 'Anemia and Exhaus tion,' and said I was all run down, but -ydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound brought me out all right" Miss UviSA Mybes, Box 74, Massena, N.Y. Yoanjj Girls, Heed This Advice. Girls who are troubled with painful or rregular periods, backache, headache, bragging-down sensations, fainting pells or indigestion, should immediately leek restoration to health by taking Ly jia E. Pinkhsm's Vegetable Compound. HIE OMAHA BEE THE HOME PAPER M'JUUIMIM.H' jH ii.n.i.ili.;.;jT.-i W quently they die, leaving their wives nothing but a house full of children. Then the woman who has been given nothing but an ome let souffle education has a right to rise up and curse her parents whose folly Is responsible for her utter despair and desolution. If she had been trained to any trade or profes sion she could turn her hand to It agnln, and her loss would be merely a misfor tune Instead of the overwhelming disas ter that It Is. Of course, when you talk to mothers find fathers about having their daughters taught some occupation by which they can make a living, they always reply that about the time you get a girl fitted for a career, and have spent a small fortune in preparing her for It, she ups and mar ries. This may be true In many cues, but the special training I not thrown away, as the parents seem to think. All education Is broadening, and makes for human happiness and usefulness, because It opens new doors to the Individual. Moreover, whethor the woman who has fitted herself to be a lawyer or a doctor practices her profession or not. she has not only a source of constant Joy In the wider knowledge she possesses, but she has the tclld satlsfictlon of knowing that she has an anchor to the windward. She could support her self If her husband died or deserted her. She would not have to continue living with him uncer con ditions that make marriage a putga toiy, as so many women do because her husband is her meal ticket and she would starve with out him. There are many professlo n and trades to which a girl may be trained by which she could make a living If need be, and which will add to her efficiency as a wife ar.d mother If she doesn't need to support herself. The woman who Is a fine musician or a competent artist can find dally scope for her trained talents In her home. So can the teacher and the klndcr-iartner. The girl who Is a graduate of a business college can run her household accounts with more system than the woman who can't add up the grocery book. The girl who can make her own hats and gowns well enough to pet a Job In a millinery or dressmaking establishment can dress ten times as well as the bungling amateur sewer, and the bride who Is a domestic keienco expert wll cauBO her husband to call down blessings on her head. . times admiration for efficiency carries this beyond the bounds of normal human action Into almost machine-like pre cision. Money does seem to be the god of the modern world, but, after all, it is mere .seeming. And underneath his hurry and bustle and high tension and Irascibility the man of today Is 'a kindly, fatherly sort of person if only you know him. Of course. If you approach any human being with a flustered feeling that he ls a money-making machine and must be; placated with all gentleness he la likely! In ronr VArv mnph lilcn tha heRjit tit nrevl you take him to be. But styles in men fit styles In times. Today a gallant courtier with powdered wig and satin breeches would be de cidedly an anachronism. Strong men tality and power probably flourished in the days when men wore patches on! their faces, shook out ruffles and walked , with mincing steps. Those externals' would be absurd now, and so, too, would be the methods and manners that fitted ' in with them. ) The world today is In a state of rapid change. It Is advancing from movement, to movement, and the man who does not' vant to be hopelessly left behind In j weak, old-fogyiHhness must move with It. Efficiency, strong determination and ! clear-sighted vision of the goal ahead are; needed to make the man of today sue-' cessful. lie cannot stop to consider times. He cannot always be as gentle , and kind as his heart may dictate. But j sturdy honesty and decent consideration of others will never go out of style. HlBh ! Ideals are as important as they ever were. There may be model "robber" barons , and "captains of high finance" whose success Is based on the fact that they "get away with It." But there were ; feudal lords of exactly the same sort In the olden times. And so today the "per- feet knight without fear and without r-! proach" lives wen as he did In the days ' o.' romance. Affection and love and longing for a home and all that It means Have not i Koita out of style because a few lone.y I old bachelors and unhappy married men j live In clubs. The modes of living have' i changed, but the Individuals who live a I la 1915 are Just the same, j The man of today is not a brute or coldly calculating In hln attitude toward woman. He Is just a rather svliUh, selt abrorbed creature ho Is racing to keep abreast of the times, and who gives his best when it is asked of him, and not when his worst is demanded. After all, people are very much what we think them. They respond to our Ideals and to our demands. If we look at the world kindly and feel that human nature Is a pretty decent thing, and that most men are gentlemen and not raven- i lng wolves, we generally find our theory based on fact. Styles In men may change, but a gen tleman always will be gentle and kind and willing to give others the benefit of the doubt, and a real man always will be willing to fight for the light as he sees It. -H-1 M r !as:rS Ciy XwVS'irer- f "And he up with his hands before his face," before his shocked, de lighted gran-father face, and who said time never stopped! the clock waits for a heartbeat a whirling eternity while the daughter of the girl who once kissed the girl's father, below his tall, gilt mahogany form, kisses her lover's face and is kissed In return! The shiny old golden face grows Into kindly shape, and some Narrow Religious Prejudices By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. (Copyright. 1915. Star Company.) It seems curious In these days of broad thinking and liberal religions to find a friendship Imperiled Ui rough a difference of religious belief. A young woman writes as follows: "Why cannot we all believe the same doctrines? I have a friend who threatens to cease being my friend; she is a sincere and faithful Ro man Catholic and so are my par ents, but I am not a follower of that creed. My life has been full of minor trials, but I welcome them all and try to make mm r J - the best of my situation. My God comes first of all In my thoughts. In Him I trust, but this fact does not satisfy my friend. She really believes I am doing wrong; It is impossible for ber to change her views and Impossible for me to change mine. My mother Is an angel, and I have never told tier that I do not fol low her creed because It would pain her too much; but my friend knows it and worries a great deal about me and threatens to stop all associations with me If I do not come Into her line of thought. What can I do about It?" Meantime here Is another case of a Protestant young woman who possssfts all desirable qualities, but she refuses to marry a man because he Is a Catholic. The young lady has chanced upon an exception to the rule of liberality which marks the Koman Catholic. he should. tesw ft where in its intricate, whirring brass (nsidPB its old heart skips a beat. If ever you are suddenly, some where, in your snug room of a win ter's night, or drinking your gloss of red wine at a friend's table, or play ing bridge with your friend's friends, caught with a strange sense that mother earth halted for Just a breath, Jarring the steady old feet under your body, that time's heart not let the situation distress her. Neither will the woman who is capable of a genuine love, which would make her a worth while wife Hnd mother, allow a matter of creed to separate her from a good man who is fond of her. Different creeds are different roads to the same goal. Several of us may start out in the morning bound for one des tination; one may take the short cut; one may take the long cut; one may go over the hill; one may go around the hill; one may go by water; one may go by motor car; one by train; yet all wilt meet at the same place In the end. I must do as you do? Your way, I own. Is a very Kood way. And still. There are omutlnn- two straight roads to a town One over, one under, the hill. You are treading the safe and the well worn way, That the prudent chooae each time; And you think me recklt-H and rash to day Hec-auhe I prefer to climb. Your path is the rUht one, and so is mine. We are not like peas In a pod. Compelled to lie in a certain line. Or else be scattered abroad. 'Twere a dull old world, m thinks, my friend, If we all went Just one way; Yet our paths will nut, no doubt, at the end, Though they lead apart today. You like the shade, and I like the sun; You like an even pace; I like to mix with the crowd and run. And thtn rest after the race. I like danger and storm and strife; You like a peaceful time; I like tne passion and surxe of life; You llku Its gentle rhymu. You like -buttercups, dewy sweet. And erocuxes, f rained in snow; I like roses born of the heut, And the red ca million's low. I must live my life, not yours, my friend, For so It was written clown; We muat follow our given paths to the end, But I trust we shall meet- in town. stood still and be held his breath why, somewhere only this two lovers have kissed beneath an old, old clock! NELL BRINKLEY. ' '-fjgacr'WUa'" -.t .a i -1 1 ii JSjxt-Lxi - ,nnsMwmwwsMiniiTr-ii i iiwrTftn rff4 4 "s By MAY 1KVIX. Women say to me: "Will vou nlenmv tell me how I will ever get any money to invest In anythlliK? Certainly. That' the chance 1 ve boon waiting for. 1 wanted to tell you jnt t tin t. Are yon a Mlf-mipirltt!K woman or what Is known aa a "homo woman?" Which ever you are them In a particular way In which you can save. The bent way t know la to cut your luxuries right in two, Jut na ui halve an apple. Out that sum In tWO that Vrttl In Id out for an extra gown or for tho new Tug In the front room. Don't do without them. I wouldn't go so far as to advise timt. I do not preach agalnM enjoyment of life's ploas urea, nor against tho adoption of It gmcpa. Pleasures In nimW.t ,.,,.... quicken rho brain and lengthen llto by adding a healthy savor to It. The little graces of life, as the new evening gown, and the rtig of your favorite shado, add greatly to the beauty of life. I wmild not by any words of mine tmge your life with the taint of miserliness. To ut terly fteprtve yourself o. the things you lo narrow your vision and make you mean of soul. But rut i- i.., and save the other half. Suppose that you nave planned an extra evening gown. Suppose that you have al loted tv) for that dress. Make it $20. Gasp, If you want to. but don't frown. I've seen many charming evening gowns that coat no more than I've worn 'em. It can t done. Just put the extra $26 worth of thought and taste Into It. The result will please you. And the comfort able consciousness of having placed the 3 saved by careful management, Into the bank, la a state of mind to be envied. f4 BANr Advice to Lovelorn : Appeal to Their Manhood. Dear Mlsa Fairfax: I am a stenog rapher and the only girl among five men. Because 1 allow no familiarity they make It very hard for me, I have stood this for 'nearly two years, and now It Is getting unbearable. 1 hold a good paying position and would not Ilka to leave It, as I am a poor girl and every cent I bring home Is a help. My parents know nothing about this. If thev did they would Insist on my leaving, which would mean more suffering and hard work for them. DISGUSTED, Suppose you ask these men If they won't be a little kinder to a fellow worker. Tell them you are sure they cannot guess how hard they are making your Position, which you need. Try to come to a mutual understanding. it is Just possible you have offended, too. Ap peal to the sense of fair play and de cency Inherent In men who are real men. Head the Flowers Now, Pear Miss Fairfax: la it proper for a club to send one of Its femalo members a bouiiuet of flowers during her Illness, and why? , Most of the young men of the club say that It will show the young lady that we sympathise with her, while the young ladles say that tt will only serve to make her feel down-hearted, and that the bouquet should be sent after the are economical, because unusual precautions preserve their original strength from the time they are picked till they are ready for use. Thev are delightfully piquant and are guaranteed pure. Your grocer sells them at ten cents a package. Allspice, Cloves, Pepper, Paprika, Ginger, Cinnamon, Nutmegs, Mace, Celery Salt, Pickling Spice, Mustard, Sage, Poultry Seasoning and others. TONE BROS., Des Moines Established 1873 sVwiofera oft ha Famous Old CoUit Cofee) Same with tho ru. , Shop longer. l.o()'; further. You'll find one that will sn t for haJf the prlcex Put that saved In tho tvink. Arc you mi allowance woman? Ve?y well. I'nt so:;:et hi i" aside from your r.l 1 o w a n c c every month. Suppose yi ui huahaml glvr you two a month for the household expense . let along on $.0 nml regularly save Jii of It. No need to hide jSl ( m 1 1 iroin your T ,1"V,'H,", If he Is n "ST-mZ J I w11 balanced hum in being he will think more of you for it. need of the money you fnmtlv Investment hn And when there l.ne saved In won't be 'a bit shy In reminding you of it. Hy having your luxuries and saving a Oimrter or your allowance you will soon have a rtcront sum for Investment. Then hold on hard to yourself. Pon't run afti.r every scheme proposed to you. Don't even follow linssell a.iRn'u advice, "Keep your money In the savings bank until you can follow a friend into some Investment. Mr. Ssrfe didn't say all that he u n dotibtedly meant. Ho c e r taluly meant Hint you must be care f u I what friend you follow Into n Inve a t m e n t. Ftlends may have kind hearts, but their brains may be scrambled by the spoon of busi ness. Be sure that the friend's Judgment is sound In business matters. Don't accept his assurances that It is. Nor the assurances of those, who admire him and who may not know any more than he did. Wudy tho friend business record. If he has made none or but few mistakes, It may be safe tg fol low Into the investment. Or It may not. My last words on how a woman may make and save money are "n careful." Careful of your money that you mnv have some to Invest, and careful, wit i exceeding carefulness, of your Invest ments. ! young lady recovers from her 111 i " i VVould you kindly give your ophiuo , , this matter, as wc are anxious k0 the right thing at the right time. It Is proper and kind as well to' si-lid flowers to an Invalid. They will men.-i far more to her when she is HI than at any other time. Instead of msking her feel down-hearted. It will cheer her to think that her friends remember mid sympathise when she la suffering. ('nation Her. .j Dear Mine Fairfax: Home time iota-1 took my fiancee to an outing. WhUti danclmr with another K'rl she left the table at which some of my friends and I were sitting. - An hour or so later, in walking through the hall, 1 saw her drlnkimr wine with another man whom I knew aliKhtiy. Now kindly advise me what course to take in this matter. C. J. H. What your flnancea did was in very bad taste, but only for one reason a young woman should not drink wine In a public place. Tell her of thla and then fotget the wholo matter. It Is not worth quar relling about, particularly as she may have done It largely out of pique becausa you left her In order to danca with an other girl. n'W TONE'S SPICES