Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 28, 1916, Page 11

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BEE: THE OMAHA, FRIDAY, Wages of | Uncleanliness | By WOODS HUTCHINSON, M. D. } PART 1L 7t ta abundantly within the rights of the ; community to demand that none. of 'ts | members shall appear in publie in a dimy, offenstve or odorous condition Fifst, becauss they are a source of an noyance and discomfort to their fellow JANI \l 1Y 38, 1914 Copyright, 196 TIntern’l News « By Nell Brinkley “Second-Hand Joy!’ . Service By DOROTHY DIX. w y swift ke A mar A woman who & deeply In love with fmagging her husbahd, and who frankly acknowl- | petin edges that she 13 Intolerably jealous of him, without any tangible cause, wants [ the other wor to know if there Is any cure for jealousy. | ¥ The only cure for fealousy is common sense. The only remedy for the green eye i to look a situation so straight in the face that the jaundioed halo with which you see it surrounded fades away, ing & man if & husbana s many a wife de slignt fancy into spying breaks dowi Woman’s Work -:- Fashions -:- Health Hints -:- Household Topics | Editorial for Women :: and sure by w Away from you to another as by Let n wife make herself a per finder At I ends her husband stralght as a die to Man tor Be comt n affinity Nor i anything to be galned by watch The most perfe or a wite wishe eloped her husband P AT S AT AP 1 .o I;nrothy _D‘i.r“Gives the Cure for Jealousy. : : cetving her, for Wer suspecions make hin feel that he'd lLeiter get the benefit of her doubts. Ono had as weil-be hung for mo and she | & sheep as a lamb, you Know. Of course the jewlous woman will say she can't help ber. jéalousy. Love 's more or less a matter of self-hypnotism anyvway, and any wouian an keep the good thought on her hus- hand's affection for her just as effecs teally as she can dwell on his fait h to drive forted. Thus That's non- ot system of e point, and to decelve rd ness an of him that citisens; second, because they are at and you behold it clear and normial, in- | the other, there always comes the oppor| - g5 1 say to® this jenlous wife . léast thrée times as Ikély to be the | stead of distorted by a bilious hare tunity to do it your husband's one little, sen ae'de. | 136 ’ carrlers of some’ form of infectious dis- Of course it hurts a wite's pride and| 1In the end it 5 bound to be & auestion |waaq to him, 1o cheerful, and atfeo fon- eane. | vanity to find out that she is not all in] of honor betwion the two, and #0 the | gio and charmiig to him If you want to ‘ But, It may be objected, would not | ll to ber husband as he is te her. Mut| wife who goos through her husband's | keep him, and make him think you srs such & step in the present state of af- | 1t every woman who has made that dls- | pockets looking for letters fn feminino | (i pluckiost 1itle woman; and the fines fairs o adding insult to injury? Many | covery went about beating upon her | handwriting, and who poy Iflee | gomrade & maa ever got. There's it hard working and honest toilers are en- | | breast and tearing her hair, wa would [to see whether hu has a Eood-lookInE | \iuch you know, in a greenceyed nagging ( gaged in work of such a character as to not be able to get through the streeta| stenographer or not, and who makes him | wire to keep n man nalled to hix dwn mhake it tmpossible to keep their hande for the curls and transformations that | establish an alibi for every minute, that | fireside. That's the reason that Sealonay SaE aothlog dnd, 47en facss 15 clPknly would encumbet . them, and this world | he is out of her sight does nothing to! s o hoomerang that always flk back and presentable conditions. Would it not work a grave hardship | and injustice upon day laborers and fac- operatives going to and from their tor work in public conveyances? | At first perhaps it might, but the ulti- mate result would be to beneflt them greatly,-and that surprisingly soon. It there be anytiung which s forging rap- idly to the front as the dominant note in the new #pi¥it in business and modern, up-to-date methods of factory and shop operation, it §a cleanliness, almost spot- losspess, of rooms, of. benchos, of floors, | of processes of manufacture, of materials | handled and of the hands, clothing and persons of operatives, | ‘A dirty, untidy, sloppily dressed opera- tive couldi’t hold his job three days in any modern model plant, even if he had succeeded in “slicking up” well enough 7 to get hired In the first place. | Tt makes 1o difference whether the fac- | A tory. 18 handling foodstuffs, or wool, or i aotton: fabrics, or furniture, or hardware, dirty methods mean waste of ‘valuable | taw’ materidl} dirty machinery ‘means g grinding out of*delicate bearings, quick wearing out and ‘early breakdown. Dirty ¢ Workfien mean spoiled goods, careless work,' loss of tifie and efficiency from sickpess and' {ll health. : In ‘fact it is now clearly seen that dirt | wherever found means either waste or inefficiency, and usually both. The “dirty vork” of which we used to hear so much, | because it was going to be so difficult to get anyone to do it in any of the moclal Utoplas, ‘is simply stupld work, work | done with the hind feet instead of with the head, work which has not yot been | made 'sclentitic, civilized and sanitary. A couple of years ago the writer was visiting & great modern tool and machine factory employing some 4,000 men. 4 ‘The" possibilitics for dirt and grime and black gredse in this industry can hardly be excelléd, and ten years ago the av- etdge imachine shiop was a cross between | Dante's Inferno and the screening de- | ¥ bartment of & coal mine for blackness. i fact, any able-bodied machinist who showed anything but black about him | except ‘the whites of his eyes was rather | ashamed of himselt {han otherwise. | J But the ‘men's entrance to this great | { rlant was like the hall of some public bullding. v £ o0 H ¢ The first rooms you.came to on the 'right ana left were great -lockers and | washroom, with ‘white enameled bowls | @nd hot ‘and cold water like the locker | _rooms of "a great gymnaslum. There eévery workman was expected -to leave | \hi5 - ptreet clothing and put.on a clean | ault "of ovéralls and a special pair of | .shop_shoes before going.into the work- | Shop., . A lunch room was provided in the | ,label. Phone us your dewi- ) % bullding where he could elther arder a | U b T e i g ] hot. luncl;‘-t little more thati cobt price | Send to us for a free copy or eat:thyilongh he brought with, him, 7 her frock for a dance tonight, the 3 - 14 and whitn he wakhed up. 4t Hight after| When you tenderly peel the wrappings of tis- wanted he a 14 of “Pastry Wrinkles" by »qQuittiug thne; “he’ threw 'his dirty over- alls ints’ great baskets to. be carried to the laundry and would find a élean suit in his locker when he returned next orning, When the men came pouring out through the great.doors again into the ( street they were as cleanly and tidy and almost_as well dressed as the average <clerk op salesman or business man. The sue away from a new frock just home from the little shop, do you ever visualize the last girl face that bent over it when it was folded in away from the light when it started to you? When you draw it out and spread its froth and shimmer out to the light between your fingers, are there ever, for you, lingering ghosts madame had said. And thé gown, passing from girl to girl, arrived at last to little Tired Shoul- ders, with the deft fingers for finishing. And her eyes shone and half shut with the beauty of the stuff under.her hands. And girl-eyes and girl-fingers and girl-heart drew a bit of second-hand thrill out of a frugal | skirt that crosses his pathway would be nothing but & wailing.place. Men's hearts and women's run on different rchedules, Women are monopolists In love, while men are free traders, and it's perfeotly possible for a man to be devotod to his wife, to prefer and admire her above all other women, and still have eyes for every other pretty hearts are| She only Therefore, however nggravating it may be to & wife to find out that her husband enjoys a passing flirtation with another woman, and that he stlil’ likes to be teased about being a gay Lothario, she needn't suspect his faithfulness on this acoount. Nor is it' any (ndication ‘that ho is weary of her. She's still his wife, and just being & man's wife gives her a prestige in his eyes that no other woman possesses For this reason If a man s good and kind and tendor to his wife she 4 wise if she shuts her eyes to the fact that he is prone to be a little too soft where a pretty face is concerned, and that any little two by four debutante with flufty hair and big ‘ayss can make a fool of him. Bvery wife who makes a success of mat rimony has to forgive her husband some- thing, and put up with something, and flirtatiousness 1s not in the same class with temper; cr grouchiness, or stingi- ness. Certainly the jeclous wife does her cause by nagging: for NN S t help there s no Three parts of “Simon Pure” go as far For frying, for ‘shortening, for cakes and for pastry, it is the best that Armour as qur-parts«.of ordinary lard. safeguard her own int puts a premiumn and anniliflates the Jealous one, v on his Tell Your Dealer s to send you delicious, sweet, juicy, healthful * Sunkist California’s Selected Oranges Fine Seedless Navels. Get a dozen today. Save the tissue wrappers for beautiful silverware CALIFORNIA FRUIT GROWERS EXCHANGE Eastern Headquarters: Il’; 'h“z‘l:‘rl Street, Chicago (435) W can produce. So it wears / the Armour Oval Label. ‘To be sure of getting pure Jeaf lard buy it in pails with “Simon Pure” on the Fannie Merritt Farmer. ARMOUR £ COMPANY a Bonk. Budets, Mgr. 1% AN gy, 90th and Q.. 80, 1743, There's an Armour Oval Label store near you, Jomes, D, 325 § \ e . - —seelng in fancy the : ’ ? Test “of : the factory, of coulse, Corre- 4 ! Qragghip of seoondihand jop i ; /Aponded; - the. workshops were floodded of the patient girl-fingers that deftly stitched lucky girl who was to wear the lttle dream b «+ with. light, for all the walls ‘and half the upon it under night-lights so you might have It | 4000 on her way to her precious dance. { ~.Toof were glass, there wasn't a speck of ' . Adust or floating grime, flying ‘dnywhere. ; m’ru floors ::;;_u,m:: as those of average Irgom or kitchen. The ‘Work beuches were brown and well . ofled, but clear of every speck or scrap. + axcepl the‘metal which was being fash- Oned #hd ‘the tools absolutely necessary. " Ali-the seidom-used ‘tools and ‘gauges " and ‘cutters were arranged in racks un- ~der-the care of ‘a-tool librarian, who is- “:sued thern ‘as they were wanted. Every | speck of dust or flylng scraps was sucked *inta basgkets or. hoppers and shot down ~ta the. floor: below, | " Advice to Lovelorn in time? Perhaps they were just as white a pair of hands as yours, and sweeter in shape. Who can tell? Just four fingers and a clever thump like yours—and thrilling to the touch of satin and chiffon just as yours do. Spread out your hand—and think about it. One girl—dark and soft-faced—hunched her shoulders in their cheap little blouse over the last shimmering details—and catching pink rose-buds, dewed with a bit of sparkle in each of their hearts, with tiny stitches—thousands of them-—her fingers trembled with haste and her heart fluttered painfully. For Mademoiselle The brown box that comes to you holds not only a hollday frock and pink and white tissue paper! About it clings countless lovely ghosts —-girl hands that have fashioned and caressed it; a shimmer that may be the light of girls’ eyes that have labored and beamed upon it; its rustle, the faint repetition o some beating heart that bent above it. A box of dreams it is—from “Judy O'Grady” to "“the Colonels lady."” And, mind you, remember it. Mind you, re- member that all the joy some girls ever have is “second-hand!"” —NELL BRINKLEY. There’s One Hotel In the Worl With This Policy— By Buirice Faiciez | The Cash Value of a Wife How To Get Rid of a Bad Cough A Home-Made Remedy that Will Do It Quickly, Cheap and Eastly Made | : T am ¥ mother I kept house for my + father, 86 Y-am'not prepared for the busi ness world. The time has come when I must make my own living; the only 1 can do is to be a cloak and suit it Rests with ¥ By LADY GRACE GREVILLE, least half the men who confess to having | come to grief through living beyond their o | means, ascribe p: v Whether or no, marriage is an extrav- | 10 the tawhie 1o the gxirs The ‘excuse of agance of thelr wives. agance is & question which in greater or | - s Al 18 that of these unfortunate men - s | Adam’ less.degres “‘perploxes many men." court- | g, o ive establishments, kept up molely EVERY ROOM $150°%, del. My friends sav it ls a dangerous ship may, be devoted to.septiment.and | FRICLD BT CCR SR CE POIE position., &s there are too many tempta- | v p e 3 ce In Pots cabnected: with It romance, but when it comes to matri 1 am at a loss | dress upon the part of the women of the mony the stern fact of shillings and | | taa 5 b family, costly entertainments, ruinous | you have » cough or cheat cold pence, of income and output, necessarily i oo 0l (T SUE TR R posr e ‘wlnch refuses to yield to ordinary reme- must be taken into serfous’and ecareful % | dies, get from any druggist 2% ounces Fonsideration. Of course, everybody ought | WO™an Whom “Thou gavest to be with | of Didlex (50 sents worth , pour into & g oo gl i i e B pint botkle and il the botéle wich pinin | love—but none the less it behooves both [ ramined, Suar syrup. Nert dpuing loved to make cer- £ Setmooniut every. ANt or W0, Iy the lover and the be! 3 hours your cough will be conquered or tain that between them they have money very neul[y 80. Kven whooping cough is . enough to make marriage a reasonable greatly reflieved in this wa: { :;:,..:ml..‘_mllrnz:m".r:::‘ :;n;uurse;:uus:: Sasatnlitey The above mixture makes a full pint aimply resign and seek another position. | It 18 only the stupdity,which knows no at to do. The dangers a girl meets in the business World are grossly exaggerated. If you" work for a reputable firm and your i nér is dignified and worthy of respect you will be able to get along on your merits. A cloak and suit model can man- age to be dignitied and efficient if she —NO HIGHER me.” Rash and extravagant speculation often is the immediate vecasion of finan clal ruin, but it is the usual plea that such speculation was entered into in order to satisfy the demand of an importunate wife who wished to vie with her richer 500 rooms with private bathl or private toilet. Every room with outside light and air. “hardly-ever’ wanted the earth, except- niruy that money could buy-—at & cost | Ing in order to give it to some woman. |©f only 54 cents. Kasily prepared in 6 When & man 1s possessed of an assurcd | ipites., Full directions with Pinex. | income 1arge enough to meet the sxpenser | ration takes ritht DOl of o eagh o | | nélghbors. It would seem as If men & family supply—of the finest cough | T no' thought anxiety and literally takes ug! Dosiness world, unicss sho is either will- |70Rd the present moment which com- gl N ind oo, ty g, | Pldcently marries upon nothing In hand into a very poor environment ;and the uncertain hope that something will turn up in the future. | of a reasonable menage, he is entitled to | gives almost immediate relief. 1% loos- | —_ Few people will pretend to deny that, |® Wife if he wants one. But when any | ens the dry, hoarse or tight cough in a | . v Stay with Your Sister. as life goes nowadays, wives, excepting | MAR sits down to wonder whether the af- | Wa) Hv.lm;. is y ly ‘rlemurk-blt Also . Dear Miss Fairfax: ! am 17 ahd live |among the laboring classes, and of the | fections of the woman he professes to quickly hei e inflamed membranes | which accompany a painful cough, and | stops the formation of phl in the | throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending | the persistent loose cough. Excrllenr for | broneh: spasmodic croup lud“: nte, R . My parents say [ must because she has two chil- and it s my duty to help her rnd meantime take care of the office. _¥0 home to New York once in two or sort who “worketh willingly with her |love I8 worth having at a cost of so hands -are expensive luxuries. | many pounds, shillings and pence, he al Sald Thiers: “Most men contemplate |T€ady has solved the problem. Unless he making fome self-denial when they | dsires her so much that he is willing to with my stay with ber | Chicago First high-class hotel in the world to fix one price on all its rooms. La Salle Street at Van Buren near everything that brings you to Chicago three weeks. My father says 1 cannot €0 ' marry. They think they will give up such |#acrifice anything else save honor, in |coughs. Keeps perfectly and tas howis '?..:“:’a?f‘f Tensed Lowant to lea¥e and such expensive pleasures. Later on, |0rder to win her and can count the loss Zefilren e it. | Pinex is a special and highly concen- trated compound of genuine Norway pine extract, rich in guaiacol, which is so ling to the membranes, o avoid disappointment, ask your druggist l‘nr “2:@_ oune|¢l o!A inal,"—g accept snything else. guarantee | absolute satisfaction, "L money prompt- refunded goes with this preparation e Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, &d. know anything about 1ife NEWARK GIRL. advise you to take a more obedient v Bnd considerate attitude toward your when they discover that they cannot do |£%in, he had best love and ride away 0, and at the same time they lack the | She certainly is not worth the money to means to indulge, they complain that it | him. Men who discuss the cash value of is the extravagance of their wives which | Wives wo severely appear to igmore the ts and sister. You are very young causes the inconvenience.” Which wise | Value of love and sympatby, of congenial ‘und will Jearn about life quickly enough. seying is applicable to men in other coun- | COmPanionship. Yet, almost anyone will {Bon't ihsist ‘on taking any eourse of |tries besides that of France. Officials of | Uitimately find that such possessions are | ! Mhick your family would disapprove. |the bankruptcy court estimate that at |beyood price.

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