Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 12, 1916, Page 9

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THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1916 (7 f 55 ¥ - J LY alth Hints - - Fashions - i 0ual Suffrug(: Would Bring Women Jurors By DOROTHY DIN T address which an he made a few nights ago to the Grand Juror waNC clation, Judge Mulqueen sald that his renson for voling for voman muffray ” on grand jury cases This Tudge Mulqusen declared, would correct nian Vil Danie A wsecond Danlel, come to Judement! | Judge Mulqueen 1n right blewnings thut woman sutfrage would be country would be to render One of the #tow on the [, arse hody of eftizens ellgible for jur service who would not only have the abil ty but the lelsure In which to properly perform that elvie duty i Whon the avernge man Is drawn for the ) t calls for much a wacrifice that he [ Ing 1t he can possit 1 If ho ta n clerk, hin employer lots him oft with mutterings and gromblings | and he has always wupplanting him in his " gone If he 1w & business or 1) hin wbwence from the r A week or more ma P Hars, and no matter he A ow the Intricocles of w cape e | back of hin mind Ix always an anxiois worry over the probable mistakes tha his employes are making while e | gone | Tt 1w not because men are lacking | eivie conmctence thai they are 1oath to | perve on Juries i mmply bece s | the flercs competition of the sLruxs for existence they can't afford 1t. Th nveraks womat fn not mo hard pressed #he haw plenty of the time that fs not money, an o would be glad 1o do her it for her country having to serve on juries | are numb: by relleving men from In every community there ) of well oft renowned for middie-aged women, lo thhelr and their kind hearts hard horss Aenm women who # wine In the knowledge of the human M Ipe in experience, w to whom | everyone who knows them goew for coun el and advice These women have raised their owy thelr hands are idle and would make 1denl Jurors who would | inhurried, unworrled attention to the nsideration of & case submitted to themn thut Is imposwible to men worrled and troubled about thelr own affalrs It haw always been a cynical Mttle 1o wnl fest that tthe right of trial by fury vhich gunrantecs to the offender against the Iaw “the right to be tried by a fury of his peere di4 not permit women on | Men universally ssert that they have | never Leen able to learn even the a, b, ¢ | of feminine paychology, and that woman Kind I n riddle beyond thelr guessing this, men Jjuries generall up thelr hands and give the int throw problem up when they are called upon to denl with n woman eriminal, and let her ko Keot free. 'Thin gives us those tra estien of Juntice that disgrace our courts re, after the prosecutor has spent weeks of time and thousands of dolinrs 1n proving n woman gullty of some erime the jury brings in a verdiet of “not gullty in the face of overwhelming evidence to | the contrary A woman jury would correct this evil A woman jury would have no traditions of gallintry to uphold nor would it be nftected by the beauty of the defendant or consder that the possession of blue eves and golden halr and a willowy fig yre gave a lady a right to put poison in her husband's coffee because she had | tallen in love with another man And a woman jury would possess the Infallible recipe for testing & woman'n tears and telling when they were genu ine tears of grief or repentanoe and when crocodile tears would women jurfes be unduly o their sex. They would aimply tand just what motives lay behind Nor r act that a woman committed [T would simply judge her intellf ‘ gontly, as men judge another man That women should be on the juries that tr oases Involving lttle childr ving girls 1s self obvious. Mothor o8 an intuition that 18 a sort of | sight in these matters, and that jur of women to dis of a Bolo enable a # foo with wisdom jury is coming odern improve and then we Jut west, whers te and where th have the ry, why we were silly enough without It #o long ( An Individual Bedroom ; 4 ] aftn A day ' ainty plan of the r | ik And bod | arm Py r nd | re of gumwood ad . ale and gracef . ' \ ed lnen | \ \ . nd N . d| I N » o \ | v | sas were ¥ | ) | - Woman’s Work - H ousehold Topics “Insight---With the Eyes of Love!” or - 0P N HE man In the valley, walking down the dusty road of every T day affairs, sees the cloud above the blne, faint hills, Just a cloud——blue-gray—"‘rain perhaps!’’ The blue hills—to him they lle, a great wall, far away, with gold at thelr hearts “If ho only had a bit of {t!"”" The desert trees—twisted creatures, hardy and low, not wasting the precious life-sap that 1s so scant on a great body of branches, dark witches of the waste-—to him they stand a bit of shade to climb to when the heat grows white! But the lover! Beratched with the magic arrow-—his eyes grow P(;stvfre'asurfiér;aid’ Those"of TodayA“How the Homely Girl May Win Ovt] By FORTUNE FREE, drawer, he miswed the ring. What had By GRACK DARLING, and bridge whist, and golf and tennis, become of 1t?7 He had, he informed Bir - and music I only wish 1 had lived a hundred yeats' George, just ma his 4 that the | The moving ploture stac. whose talent| rhe winl who can play the latest rag ako, remarked a gloomy friend to me the stones In It were really tiful, mnd and beauty have won Mer a natlon time or alng the newest songs, or who other day when 1 nsked him how thinks that he would wear it In the future, He wide followlng dances like a falry, or & desirable partner were going with him, e 1s one of those| rummaged furtously in the drawer. Thon | [ have a letter from a young woman in! in any kame, never lacks for invitations, | versons who are firmly convinced that|he went from drawer to drawer, Ad| i no complaine that she fn an ugly | F for the attention of men thr were remarkably happy t every rummage increased his wrath with | #ho con make the merely pretty gir! e : A | duckling, and ways that a girl hadl better Th he s also convinced, were never the thief who must ha aken the ring | who trumps her partner's and dances worse than they are today. A hundred (and incressed his opluton of it value | be dead than homel or lin feet look ke one of thome | yeurs hence, perhaps, they will be all|end boauty. It was not to be found Cheer up ittle wister. Undoubted who were merely “also present 'Y ng Bo t 0 u " I o house | . right again b hero muat be a thief if the L1 Lanuty In n great and: most desirable gitt| Inally. the homely giri muat study the The present (s always the worst time | !¢ was determined to get to the bot-| . Wit (b kentle art of making hermelf agreesble sk M oA PR el - 7 for m woman to possess, by N not 1 that aver was with most people,” re m of the affair, and he spent days for a ToAn POsses gy ; A beauty s nearly always selfish and | and dollars in doing o, | missed having that ring on his finger ho felt robbed of delight. Hix months Sir George met him The ring never found that ring, marked Mark Twaln b man who had heen marred five times and never bettered himaslf. Number tour had fewer faults than number five and number three than number four. The wives gradually became more and more wnkellc the more they retreated into the tsta of antiquity, Number one=dead and burfed years agol—waa a faultiess reature. Number five at one time got I once knew n later He glnnced at hin fingor was not there L'm sorry you remarked Who sald I never found It the other snapped teatily 1 tound it thing had only fallen mto OF oourse The beastly « th N oal Chre Hoot A} worried about her that she et to | Chiok. that reat Soptt! What hideous things they ald tum out in | ric to make fnquiries about this peer- | rings In those days reature. Khe found an old lady t wan noth had known her well" a As long as he had mot it Ing. When he had lost 11, It was every he old lady (nformed her that number | i = 00 08 VRS LN wan cortainly & “sweet thing." and | wut"one of the most miserable § really could never understand Why | ' tne world for many weary isband, whils she was alive, com- | hecause he A4 not appreciatn th ained that he had been happler a8 & of a younw woman with whom he “w achelor, Hin eyes looked back, Nowever, 'not quite sure whether he wis | hat 1 time" when he had been not But he i propose he and unburdensd by the responstbifity | auy wnd so he always put 1t off hlass ye marm™ she sald o something ade b ot altor he's Just one of thoss o tomorre w rett prise what's gone, and don't sount | eia Witer, o ' g of the present When yo J o . L e ad and buried he think & It of » » \ At the haad of number and ok te R and wha . 4\ Piine fart ' (3 win . . " ool . R egard . al . \ relation foe whem Mo hod Household Hints ' A . . . " L dny he| & VI AN /S 14 faery powers —they see! What Is not there for other folks, Faith | ‘with the eyes of love!" The cloud that floats—blue and gray-—has the face of Her molded In It, just as clear and plain, against the blue-bel] sky! And | the flying shreds of it are her curling hair, Before the eyes of him the face of her changes and smiles! The blue hills—so faint and far and fair—the line of them lying against the horizon, is the Iit- tle figure o' her, slumbering there where the sky meets the hills. The profile—the falling hair—the throat-—the tender curves! averything. There are other charms be- | yuin wides good looks, In the first plac wild ehll your | Alver er and apend their time despalring attentio fact that all| ' In not beayty that passes for beauty, and| This (s where the homely &irl has her that many women who have the reputa- | #olden opportunit t having to think ton of belng kood lookars are really very “POUt herself, aho has lelsure to think expacting to platn when you come to serutinize them She expects to have the best of | everything tendered to her on a silver and that everyhody will kowtow flattering By Nell Brinkley (T ) Copyright, 1016, Intern'l News Service. The dwarf tree with the desert and singing thin through the leaves it rears agalnet the sky—and there! In the heart of it, like a pearl In a roughened hand she blooms—herself its core, bursting the bark; her halr spraylng up Into the leaves and mingling golden there; her white arms springing up with the spreading hnuanl! Wherever he looks “with the eyes of love,” the man on the hill- top, who 1s always the man in love, sees her face in the sky-—while the man in the valley, plodding along on the dusty road, sees only u great, gray cloud, -NELL BRINKLEY, o upon to admire, but the discriminating | Ang there's this further canselation, Individuals who admire us, little wister—there {8 no othor woman in This holds particularly true of men,| the world so irresistible as the ugly and that fs why they rave over beauty,| woman who s fascinating, The beauty's but plok out for wives plain-fi women | onarm {8 bound to fade with the years, who are willing to burn incense befors| pye the homely woman's fascination 1asts n husband instead of expectng o be| ug long ns she doss worshiped as Koddeses thomselves, The Right Food she has skt WATCHE S ON CREQIT ' o s6e b . s W B8 & W LT e e (T TRE NATIONAL CREDIT Jweiem [OFTIS i BROSA GO IR naer Barney Bienet Whether you're being served at a stylish hotel or whether you'reserving at home, there can be no more appe- tizing, no more healthful dish than FAUST SPAGHETTI [t is the always welcome dish on any table, because it is good and because it i8 nourishing. Wise housewives serve it in varied forms, all tasty and tempting, Faust Spaghett! has taken the place of meat in homes, [t more nourishing ind far cheaper, Everyone everywhere likes G It wimply a food that is always in place noany table and at any time, many I8 ar Your grocer sells Faust Spaghetti, 10¢ the lurge pachage MAULL BROS., St Louis, U, 8. A,

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