Lk to the blowing Km ah o T. Laufbinf." h Mys, "Into tb. world blew At am tha allkaa UihI af my Puna Taar, ana IU Traaaura on tha Canfca thtww." Ruaaiyal. Shall wa arv With mpact than w da mlaUtw Ta our rroif t 8hakpara. Sex War Talk Is Foolish Fiction God Divided the Race In Two and Man or Woman Cannot Change It. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. An American correspondent, writ- ing from London about the English labor situation, threatens us with a "sex war." It is safe to say this gentleman never wrote what is known as a "best seller," and that a knowledge of human naturt plays no part in his journalistic equip ment. The bugaboo that has terrified him into prophesying sex warfare with its doleful accompaniment of "no homes" and "no population," is nothing more serious than groups of English women dressed suitably for the heavy work their country demanded of them during the war. If they had worked in mills and factories or on buses and street rail ways in their good old reliable georg ettes and high-heeled slippers, he wouldn't have said a word but flat- heeled shoes and trousers 1 he cries havoc, and lets loose a threat of a ex war. Bobbed hair he also considers the final symbol of celibacy. "Why, if a woman intends to marry, he asks, "should she rob herself of her crowning glory?" Other times, other fashions the gallants of the '40s were equally perturbed when the ladies pinned up their rfcpglets. Perhaps some kindly missionary may agree to meet this pessimistic scribe on his return to New York and lead him to Greenwich village, where he will find bobbed hair and romance to be almost interchange able terms. Prophecies About the Bicycle Twenty years ago pessimists were saying the same thing when women adopted bloomers for the bicycle Yet we had no sex warfare on ac count of the gentle and antiquated wheel. On the contrary, with greater opportunties for comrade ship, and America's first introduc tion to the great out-of-doors, there was a tremendous speeding up of romance. Open any of the maga zines of 20 years ago and the bicycle story was then what the aeroplane yarn is today in up-to-the-minute fiction. If women have been able to en dure the disadvantages incidental to sex lack of education, opportu nity, unjust laws, etc. without re sorting to sex warfare, it is not likely that they are going to start anvthinsr of the sort at present, with the dawn of better things in sight. The tragic question that is agitat ing European women at the pres ent time is not a concentrated sex grouch that will commit thf.ni to celibacy in order to hold war jobs but the well-grounded fear that there will not be enough husbands to go round. The future of the "third sex." as the women who have adopted male attire for faster working conve nience are called, does not convey vistas of celibacy to friends of la bor. They are better informed, they know through the statistics that have already been published, just what proportion of these women are already married and the mothers of families. And the figure is a large Aa tn th unmarried women Who have gone out into the world as conductors, bus-drivers, messenger girls, porters and the like, there is absolutely no ground fpr presup posing them vowed to celibacy. Their chief concern, as has been stated, is a lively fear of enforced spinsterhood. Uniform Highly Becoming. And as for the uniform being de terrent of romance, which is( more attractive the "yeowoman" or "conductorette" in her neat, service able uniform or her stay-at-home sister clad in an unrelated assort ment of "styles" each of which is on bad terms with the other? The strongest passion in woman is the maternal. It has taken na ture some millions of years to de velop this overwhelming impulse which has been instrumental in leading the race from the blackest savagery to such development as it now boasts. And it is going to take more than a uniform and the opportunity of earning a fairer wage to kill that which is stronger than life itself. With new . conditions, brought about by the war, revolutionary changes are bound to come. Women will be forced from home in- greater numbers to help maintain the fam ily, but the child will continue, as from the days of our cave ancestors, to be the great uplifting influence in human destiny. Therefore, when the pessimistic correspondent says that "the sight of short-haired women wearing trousers and doing men's work with excessive competence and self assurance" was a shock to him, and he began to inquire "what is the future of this third sex?" I, for one, do not share his panic. Women working in big industrial centers even if they bob their hair and wear trousers are not as appalling to me as; women withering away in the sequestered villages of New Eng land or the south, where they have no opportunity for either marriage or self-development. These are the women who are likely to become man-haters if there is such a thing, which I doubt rather than the women who keep "sane because they are busy and be cause their minds come in daily contact with other minds. The tor respondent says that in London he has talked with "trousered conduc torettes" and that "they show a lack of sex consciousness which is ap palling." Why should the conductorette display "sex consciousness" in tak ing your car fare or insisting on "Step lively, please," any more than the young man bank clerk or waiter should display sex consciousness Pockets vs. Pocket books lit U.UV N IS Ji.ll II vw im mam' )t jj VyvyAN) TO WALK WITHOUT HAVING TO CWRll A POCKET-BOOK IS A PLEASURE.. Some pocket-Books ass Such load To carry THAT 7 TAKES TwO STRONG ARMS To MAN A&C THEM! THERf IS VNDtNIABU fRtEDOm FOR 'Your hand and Arms WHeKr You wear, poovsts a clever dressmaker. Can stow away pockets ini any dress Most of the pocketbooks you see about town are so enormous and heavy laden that one cannot help but think of them as the "white woman's burden"! Some of these "burdens" are very attractive, true, for they are beautifully beaded, or of fine velvet or brocade. But they are heavy, for milady carries everything in them but the kitchen stove 1 An erstwhile respectable pocket book, made essentially as a single receptacle for purse and notebook, is now a young valise in which to carry not only the purse and note book but also the powder puff, lip stick, letters, papers, knitting, novel, nightie, talcum, comb, in fact all the paraphernalia tor week-ends and bathing. It is a foolish idea that a woman thinks she must carry all this stuff around with her daily! The trouble is that the bigger they make the pocketbooks the more she will find to put in them! So why not simpli fy matters by eliminating the pock etbook entirely by having pockets in one's dressesr Not 14 pockets in one suit, as man has, but just two to a garment. One pocket for the ab solutely necessary powder-puff and small change purse and the other for the address book and bill folder. This will be about all you will need to carry around with you, so your pockets will not bulge and you will find a great load lifted off you by not having to tote around an extra piece of baggage. Your hands will be free, for you will not have an object constantly dangling at your side, neither will you have to crook your arm to hold your bag; ?lso your mind will be free of the constant thought, "I mustn't forget my pocketbook!" and that will be a relief! When milady goes to dance in a restaurant, for instance, she . must either carry her pocketbook out on to the dancing floor (which is in convenient) or she must leave it on the table in which latter case she is subconsciously worrying or think ing about its safety. When she goes to the theater or shopping she must continually remember not to let her pocketbook slide off her lap, or be left on the counter. Thus a "thing" is always taking up valuable space in her mind and preventing her from enjoying whatever she is doing to the full. Now this is not necessary, and it shouldn't be so, and the way to avoid it is to have a pocket in which to place your purse. Thus you will always have it with you but it will never be in your way. The pocket shuld button so as to lock its con tents in safely. The progressive woman is inter ested in anything that will give her more freedom she has. gained the freedom of a natural waist and a natural shoe, and has gotten rid of the hoop, the bustle and the train. The next thing is to free her hand. Don't go through life with one hand constantly occupied with a burden. Man Is Largely As His Secret Thoughts Are By ORISON SWETT MARSDEN Man is largely what the vibra tions of this thoughts, his motives, his prejudices, his mental attitude, the manner in which he looks on life have made him. Character is largely the summing up of the vi brations which have been playing through life from infancy. Every thought, every emotion, sets the particles in our body in vibration. All suggestion changes our vibrations. If our home is a harmonious, pleasurable place or one of discord and unhappintss we will get a corresponding vibration when under its environment. Music changes our vibration. We are exalted at the opera, if we are a lover of music, because of the change of our mental vibrations. We go to church and we get a change in our vibrations which are reflective for the same reasons. Play changes our vibrations from the tired, wearied, jaded rate to the refreshing, pleasurable rate. We lauuh at a joke, at a funny story it so changes our vibrations that we shake all over with the laughter. Our muscles shake, and we go into convulsions of laughter. While we when handing out greenbacks or an omelet. And I believe women would be highly disgusted and transfer their patronage from banks and res taurants that employed young men who did display "sex consciousness" during business hours. Certainly, we are fed up to the teeth with the girl who, clad in a flimsy georgette waist, makes every one in the office realize that she is there not for professional reasons but on the more serious business of hunting a husband. No, we've had enough of "sex consciousness;" we are charmed and delighted if uniforms have toned down a little of it. are so hilarious some one, perhaps brings us a telegram that informs us our best friend has been killed in a wreck or that some terrible catastrophe has occurred, and our vibrations instantly change to those of sorrow, distress, lamenta tion, sympathy. The New Success. Helpful Hints. Always wash varnished floors with cold water. Tarred paper put in with clothes keeps away moths. Kerosene on your dustcloth im proves the furniture. The final rinsing of real lace should be in skim milk. Dry all left over celery to use later on for soup. Honey custard is made with honey instead of sugar. Pastry needs a hot oven. Mark bath towels individually. Heavy salads make a meal by themselves. Egg yolk in warm water removes c?rtee stains. Pacifiers cause adenoids and dis figure mouths. Borax is excellent to use for hotisecleaning. Rub a little soap on the hinges of a creaking door. Anything that needs to dry quickly should be washed on a hot day. A large coarse cloth dipped in salt and water will clean cocoanut matting. New tinware has a taste and should be rubbed with lard and baked before using. A long handled button hook is use ful to remove lint from the cutlets of laundry tubs. Baking powder bread is supposed to be more digestible than that made with yeast. White vaseline is excellent for polishing patent leather shoes. A pot of beef extract is a handy thing to have on hand for soups. Cocoa is the better for a tiny bit of broken vanilla bean in the pot. A pinch of soda added to fruit when stewing takes off the acid. Moisten the knife with water whenever you cut very fresh cr.ke. When cutting fresh bread heat the blade of the knife in hot water. Army Billets Women With Y. W. French and English girls work ing in the offices of the Ameri can army in Montoir, Tours, Brest and Paris, during the next few months, will be billeted with the American Young Women's Chris tian association. These girls are organized into the army service corps and will be responsible largely for the clerical work nesessary in completing the records of the American army over seas. The girls at Montoir, 100 in all, live in Barracks. As the work so closely resembles Signal corps work, Miss Vera Shafer, who was director of that branch of overseas work, will be in charge. The plan for the management of the houses is modeled after that of Hotel Moderne, where 30 French girls who, worked in the American offices at Tours were housed under the direction of Miss Sarah Watson. The house was run on exactly the same plan as Signal corps and Host ess houses and was a great success, despite the protest of many French women that girls of their nationality could not be allowed the same free dom that American girls were allowed. The furs should be taken into the open air at least once a month while not in use. Turn them inside out and beat well on the wrong side. This will shake up the hairs and keep them from becoming flattened and greasy as is often the case. The Ideal Family Loaf. Patronize Your Neighborhood Grocer JAY BURNS BAKING CO. EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR in any climate, in any occupation, you can keep in top-notch physical condition by eating Shredded Wheat Biscuit. If you are in the habit of eating meat three times a dm cut it out for one meal and eat two Shredded Wheat Biscuits with milk or cream. It is a real whole wheat food, healthful.whole some and satisfying. Deliriously nourishing with sliced bananas, sliced peaches, or other fruits. Ready-cooked, ready-to-eat-no kitchen work or worry. Shack With Soap and Towels in Rheims Recently there has been set up in the city of Rheims a primitive hotel, a shack. In its general features it does not differ greatly from the hostess houses established by the Y. W. C. A. in America and Eu rope it is gay with retonnes, has the. many comfortable easy chairs which have become characteristic of these houses, and, what is very important, it has soap and towels. It is more than likely, however, that a larger destiny awaits this par ticular house. The American tour ist is even now meditating a descent on the European continent and that organization plans to make at least partial provision for the women of this country who are intending to go abroad. As a matter of fact, the shack in question is already providing for those American women who are in service in France and Germany and who, having a few days' leave pend those few days in Rheims. There are other women similarly minded, but the shack holds only 30 cots, and so the waiting list grows. The building itself stands in a park, sheltered by trees from the ugly ruins of the city, but only a short distance from the cathedral of Rheims; and it is this cathedral, so long a symbol of men's sacrifice, which the world of travelers will mostly desire to see. Timely Tips. The lighter the pan' used to bake bread in a gas oven, the lighter the bread will be. Do not make large quantities of jelly at once. . Smaller quantities bring better results. Hot weather is always tolerable if your nerves are properly fed and aired and rested. Use young carrots, grated raw, occasionally in a simple salad. Noth ing is more wholesome. Rub curtain poles with hard soap before putting them up. The' drap eries will slip easily, f A pin stuck through the cork of a bottle containing poison will pre vent a tragic mistake. The women of Russia are said to be the best needle workers in the world. !B Th. Store of Quality GE33Z3KEii0 Million Dollar Sales Meet and beat all competition fashions of the hour at savings of five, ten, twenty dollars, and in some instances even more. This week ultra smart suits are especially fea tured charming models from our best suit makers. 125.00 Suits in our Million Dollar Sales 98.00 115.00 Suits in our Million Dollar Sales 89.00 100.00 Suits in our Million Dollar Sales. 79.00 85.00 Suits in our Million Dollar Sales 69.50 75.00 Suits in our Million Dollar Sales 59.50 65.00 Suits in our Million Dollar Sales 54.50 59.00 Suits in our Million Dollar Sales 50.50 DeLuxe Fllf CoatS DeLuxe Another ten days in which to purchase from our ample stock of fur coats. 400.00 Fur Coats, on sale now at 275.00 500.00 Fur Coats, on sale now at 325.00 V 175.00 Fur Coats, now on sale 125.00 325.00 Fur Coats, now on sale 245.00 A small deposit holds your purchase till later. 1812-Farnam Street-1812 WUOm WEI Re rf on n n n n sui iiraaii M Mow You Can't Forget Omaha erchants Fall M Week mm mm, m. u i:' i n .aX if. W arket X September 8-9-10-11-1919 Omaha Wholesalers' and Manufacturers' Assn.