THE CO UK I Ell Warren several years later coincided with that of his predecessor. Mrs. I Damon also stated that women con- sider much more carefully than do IJ nen the character of candidates and both political parties have found them ' selves obliged to nominate their best I men in order to obtain the support of L the women. Increased responsibility Jj means much In the way of develop ment to women Kxperlence teaches us that her first thought is to fit her jtlf for that responsibility by acquir ing knowledge. If the responsibility iomes in the form of the ballot she dt-cepts it, not as a right, but as a l duty, and fits herself for the discharge f of that duty by making use of all available means. The natural aim of woman is toward the highest good of I the community. Their method Is not I by radical reforms, but by slowly I working toward those measures which they believe will bring about the best social and moral results. Said Mrs. Rosa Modlin of Beaver t'lty: "Taxation without representa tion is tyranny. This is an old theme. However, it is just as true today as it was in the days of our forefathers. All men are created free and equal; all women are the equal of all men. Women would be happier in their homes and would make the other in mates correspondingly happy if they were represented by themselves and not by a husband, father or brother who voted the other ticket. I asked a woman if she thought the homes would be happier if women were represented at the polls. She said, 'I believe it would draw a woman and her husbanri i loser together he would find it .is pleasant to stay at home and talk poll tics with her part of the time as to sit on a dry goods box and talk to some man.' Men say they are pro tecting women. It seems to me it is in the same way that people protect ca- nary birds. If we had never been P plated in a cage we would have triel our wings more and would have had no need of a giant outside to protect or to eat us, as he saw fit. "We are tire 1 of being classed with the imbecile and piuper. Many children with the wrong kind of a father have not much respect for mother. Mother is a convenience. I rpfTi necessity. They say "pa owns K Vnis house. Pa gave me this horse. Pa helped me to this farm.' Where has the money gone that the mother earned during a lifetime, and whose fault has it been that she did not get better wages and handle her wages herself?" A question difficult of solution for most mothers is how to send a daugh ter to school and at the same time five her a practical education in house work. School monopolizes such a large Part of the day that even to perform a fpw tasks about the house seems im practicable. There appears so little time for systematic training that in many families the daughter never has the re sponsibility for any part of the house work, and learns only what she may happen to pick up helping mother. Tiile mother sweeps. Jessie shakes the rups and runs for the dustpan, says the ifiladelphla Times, then stands rest Mdy on one foot waiting for the next wtier or for the opportunity to run aw-y and play. On baking day Jessie K called to stone the raisins, to get the flour-sifter and the cake nan: and hen mother cooks. Jessie must be around "handy" to pare the potatoes. ,0 run down cellar in short to wait on mother while mother does the work. The same method or lack of method 's continued until the girl Is sixteen or eighteen, when the mother begins to wonder why her daughter knows so lit tle and cares so little about housework. " 'eft to keep house for herself for a week the resulting chaos would hardly lead you to suppose that the girl had "elped about the house almost evprv y from her childhood. 1 A little consideration would show the ack of knowledge and Interest to be sfmply the natural result of having the s'rt help .1 little here and a little there. "ver learning to do anv one branch ct housework by herself System in teaching housekeeping is as much re quired, and will produce as good re sults, as system In teaching anything else. As the time each day is very lim ited, the best results will be obtained by teaching not more than one or two things at a time. The little girl should begin, of course, with some very simple task: she might first learn to wipe dishes, or to do cer tain dusting, or to do both: but she should understand that the task Is her own particular part or the housework, and that she must apply her mind to It and learn to do It well, just as she would study arithmetic or geography. When she has learned how to perform one piece of work so well that there is no danger or forgetting It soon, others may be taken up in the order which is most convenient. In cooking it Is an excellent plan to teach a girl how to cook one article of food, and allow her to prepare that on every occasion possible till she feels confident of her ability to cook that particular disli any time, at a moment s notice, and with no assistance. In pin suing this plan of teaching one thing at a time, it will be surprising to set- how rapidly a girl will become proficient in the various branches of housework. Tin understanding that each day when her allotted portion is properly performed she is at liberty to devote some time to her own plans and pleasures, does much toward stimulating her iiiteir.M in the work. Lincoln Man Honored Xo politics for M. J. Waugh! He is a business man, and the rewards of the politician have never caused him to pine for office. The manufacture of good paint is his aim, and he is es tablished in Lincoln because he saw in the locality the center of a vast paint consuming region. That was fourteen years ago, and he sees the time that K ik has proven him perfectly justified in his prophecy. In other words his cus tom extends into all the states west of the Mississippi to the Pacific coast, with the exception of some of the most southern and southwestern sections. They don't use paint there anyway. Why did he select Lincoln? Not only because he judged it the center of paint consumption, but because it is the center of the productive region of paint ingredients. Linseed oil and lead, and what not. used In the man ufacture of paint, can be secured from this location as cheaply, if not more so. than anywhere else. More than that, he was pleased with Lincoln as a location for a home, and he has the home, too. at 1113 H street. There to greet him at the close of his day's labor are his wife and two daughters. In Amherst county. Virginia. Mr. Waugh was born in the year 1S49. A few years later his parents journeyed with him to Missouri and there he was reared. When he arrived at his majority he fancied Nebraska, and set out for this state to begin his success ful career within Its borders. Omaha was his first place of location and there he remained until fourteen years ago. when he came to Lincoln. Omaha was not so bad. In fact he liked the clty fairly well. For thirteen years there he furnished the perishing citizens the drugs that were guaranteed to make them well, and then entered the paint business. After serving for four years as proprietor of the Omaha Oil and Paint company he purchased of Thomas bif - t'$&IK fist. CHANCELLOR KLISHA IJ. ANDREWS Chancellor Klisha IJ. Andrews, of the I'niversity of Nebraska, has always stood for progress and practicality in education. The mental development of the masses, the Instruction of the great number of people who could not attend college, has received his atten tion for the past twenty years. As a result in order to extend university advantages to those who wish to learn he has lent his influence and labor to the Home Study Course now running in the columns of the Lincoln Evening News. Chancellor Andrews has been known as one of the foremost educators in the United States long before he was called to preside over the Nebraska state university. He was president of Brown and also was at the head of the Chicago public school system for two years. While in the latter position he planned a series of articles which would aid the great mass of readers deprived of the advantages of schools and colleges. He was born in Hinsdale. New Hampshire, in 1S1I. His father and grandfather were Baptist ministers. During the war he served In the First Connecticut heavy artillery and was mustered out In l.Sfil with the rank t second lieutenant. He entered Brown university In 1S6S and four years later graduateil with high honors. He next attended a theological school and fitted himself for the ministry. After this he studied in Germany and took up educational work. For eight years he was president or Brown university. Chancellor Andrews is a prolific writer and has published several works on ethical and educational sul jects. besides numerous magazine articles. Wilkinson his paint grinding plant at Burlington, la., and removed it to Lincoln. Everybody will remember the con flagration that licked up this plant ten years ago. It stood next to the Ray mond Brothers' store on O street, a Tour story building. The fire gave no heed to water once it had tasted oil. When it was all over, nothing was left but fragments of the walls. A strange thing marked the fire. The walls fell In not many hours after the fire, and burled the smouldering debris. Many and many a barrel of oil and varnish had been stored in the basement and these were burning when the walls covered them under five feet of brick. This was early In December. The fol lowing March Mr. Waugh chanced to discover a crevice in the pile, through which he could see the white-hot heart of a fire, still burning. The bricks were a molten mass underneath. Four months after the fire the flames were still alive. Total destruction of the plant did not discourage Mr. Waugh. Buying the lots of the present site at Eighth and M streets, he rebuilt, larger and more extensive than before, and the business has prospered from the be ginning. While Mr. "Waugh is president of the factory. M. Weil Is treasurer. Recently they both attended the annual con vention of the National Paint Grinders" convention at Chicago, and when they returned Mr. Wnugh was vested with the authority of v'ce president of the association. Paint grinders from all over the country attended the conven tion, which was in session two days. The officers were elected In perfect harmony. A banquet. In which Mr. Waugh participated, followed the elec tion. The next meeting will b- held in New York, In November. 190::. The duties of vice president of the organiza tion are In no respect onerous, but the office is considerably more than a mere title. Once upon a time Mr. Waugh was urged to be a candidate for mayor, but politics had no attraction for him then, nor now, and he refused. Never theless, he is vigilantly interested in the trend of affairs, ami he has a host of friends, both in commercial and social life. z -i -t "Keeping everlastingly at it brings success" is a maxim worthy of s-rious consideration. "Half a loaf is better than no bread" sometimes is equally applicable. In the university of Michi gan the medical students have long protested against the narrow and un comfortable benches in the clinical amphitheater. Inferring from a nint from one or the proressors that new seats might be obtained if the old ones were destroyed, the students promptly reduced the time-honored benches to kindling wood, and h"v since b?en without seats of any kind. - AL At f W- SV Agent Own your own home. Why pay rent? Tenant Well-er-to- tell the truth-I don't. 41 .' l I 4 :H I' 1 M