. THE OREGON SUNDAY , JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 6, 1910 A Composite of Her Ideal Calls for a Manly Husband, Plenty, of Children and a House Near Town . wowd May JT T"E? is the first accurate, authentic fl" account of the collie girl's compos. ... ite idea of what her home should he.. It answers one of the most often-asked questions of the day: Does education fit or unfit a woman for the prime purpose in life? It shows that, instead of making a girl unfit to he the mistress of a home, knowledge instils into her the highest possible ideals of home life. . ' y ' If college girls, do not marry, it is not because they are mentally antagonistic to the martial state, but because they are unable to find men who will measure up to their stand-. ards of what husbands should be. More than that, it is shown that these college girls do not contemplate childless homes. Out of a representative lot whose views were obtained, but a small percentage had any idea that their lives could be com plete without their fulfilling their obvious destiny. Coming at a time when the activities of tvomen are everywhere arousing attention, this contribution to the literature of the college maiden is of more than, usual interest. It was secured by one of the leading educational institutions of the country, and is presented by a member of the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania. Surely, nothing could come from sources better fitted to give the true ef fect of higher education on the female mind. deed, tha question of children was not even suggested to them, yet In every, cata children were considered as an essential pert of he home. In. view of the prevalent Impression that college glrla arehe most serious offenders In the crime of race sui cide. It is Interesting to note that of the twenty-one jlrls who specified the number of children 1 4ttM t or 4 rfctldf-ra i advocated S or S ebildrrn J irorBtt4 llot children . I Mvoeated 1 to auUuren One answer which appeared very generally through out the papers Indicates eremarttably advanced view point for an Immature girl, namely, that "the number Of children should depend on the site of the Income." ' : The father In the Ideal home must really, "be a man," "a person of high clvio wortL," "a person of character," worthy to be the father of noble children. If possible, his business must allow him sufficient leisure to spend t least a portion of each, day, with the family, assisting SOME OF THE IDEALS. "There should be from two or three to six or seven children, according to tha size of the income." "The mother should have the principal household duties, the training of the chil dren, and later in life, when her family is grown up, some useful occupation." "The father should spend enough of his time at home to know his children thor oughly and for them to know him." "There should be daily duties for each member of the household By Professor Scott Nearing, B. S., Ph. D. Of the University of Pennsylvania. ill if mmJl. M fe mlmm1kil 4L m iifK L M " i "I T IS a fact that the college girl Is rot a home- mfcker. The matter has been thoroughly dis cussed and the public has reached this con clusion. The circumstances tempt one to reveal an Irish an restry by asking, "Is this fact a fact?" Is the poslUon held by public opinion a tenable one? Is it true that the college girl does not want a. home and that she shuns the responsibility of children? Public opinion holds that It Is, and cries it aloud In the market place. On the other hand, the friends of the college girl assert Just as posi tively that the failure of college girls to make and maintain homes is due not to a lack of desire for home making on their part, but to the allure of modern men to measure up td tha college girl's standard of manhood In Puritan days Prlscills, archly asked John Alden. Tfc Sorter Must Jfealy Be & Afar? . & rerso77 of rra? CWeWbrfA' what the college girl regards as an ideal home. The first paper goes into careful detail: "I. Conditions of marriage. (a) Love based on mutual respect 1 i (b) Health and physical habits important con sideration. (c) Independence in action and thought comradeship. (d) Not too great disparity in ages. House; environments. (a) Single house no flat, double house, apart -Oierit ! Size unimportant. (b) Grounds not less than two acres. Or farm. (c) Convenient to husband's business not city. Children. (a) Desired from pure love and understanding of them! "II. "III. (b) Two to five children give chance for highest all-round development. (c) Care and training undertaken by parents alone shared by them. IV.- "Home" atmosphere. (aj Work and avocations shared equally by hus band and wife! Wife must guard against growing narrow or mentally out of date. Husband must guard against growing domineering or impatient. (b) Respect and consideration toward every member of family ! (c) All interests, pleasures, worries, misfor tunes, affecting home as a whole, should be shared and discussed limitations according to age, of course a common responsibility." The second paper treats the subject more generally. but emphasises the same Ideas: "I. A man with a positive character and a sense of tha f ? .... i i . reponsiDinties 01 latnernoou. A woman of similar nature who has children cause she realizes their value. As many children as are compatible with tha family income and the strength of the mother. "IV. A house or apartment no larger than necessary,' "V. An income sufficient for a comfortable moden life ; no more. "VI. All the members of the family doing something,- and interested in society and its problems. "(There are very many other things I want, but I think these are the essentials.)" These two papers and the summary given of the other thirty-three Indicate that the college girl wants a home, the primary essential of which is well reared, healthy children. 9h expects to do her part in making thla jioroe, and she expects the husband and father to do his part ss well. ' Above all, she desires to establish for homemalttpg and homekeeplng a very high standard, which must adopted by men as well as by women. The ideal homa-of the American college girl Is based on children, developed with child training, surrounded by a "homey atmqs k... inrt it watchword Is "Eauallty." - 1 PUBLIC IN ERROR a Once more It Is established beyond question thatthej voice of the people is not necessarily the voice of,God.j for in deciding that the American college girl is uot a. homemaker the public has grievously erred. The Ame,'ri- can college girl, on her own testimony, believes In t,he establishment and maintenance of a real home, and lorf its completion she wishes a man who will accept and 41d; in maintaining the high standard which she has already; set. f When men sccept this standard and meet college girls on their own high plane of homemaking. the result tfill, be a home from which spring a manhood and womanhood that will be the glory of future cenerations. v ' Wny TmtD M w Why don't you speak for yourself. John?" While the pros and cons of the college-girl question are being em phasised in the highways and byways of publio discus sion, would It not be Interesting to Jet. the college girl follow the example of John Alden and speak for herself? Several weeks ago thirty-five college girls in an eastern coeducational college-were given an opportunity to speak for themselves. There were nine seniors, ten juniors, fourteen sophomores and two freshmen. Each of them as asked to outline in 100 words her views on an ideal Some. Che thirty-five outlines were uniform In their advo mcy of a home of unusually high standard. Any one prone to pessimism regarding the homemaking future of the graduates of American girls' colleges should have the privilege of reading that set of answers in order to restore the lost optimism of his youth. ALL FOR CHILDREN The girls did not have the arguments placed before them; they were simply asked tooutline their, ideal home In 100 wordB. AH details were left to their dis cretion. The answers indicate clearly and unequivocally that American college girls do' want a home, the work of which they expect either to do themselves or to super intend; they require their husbands to take an active part in homemaking, and they anticipate children as one ot the essential factors, if not the most essential factor, in home litet ' With one exception, all thirty-five slrls voted for chil dren. The exceptional one said. "Children, if both parents want them; if not, none." The girls were not askedito mention the number of children for an ideal home. la the mother to educate the children and participating in the home pleasures and recreations. In almost every case, the wife "should be a college graduate or its equivalent." "on an intellectual level with her husband," "keeping in touch with Current affairs," "developing herself so that she may sympathize with the children as they grow up." In short, the wie is to live on a plane of absolute equality with her husband, inti mate with his life and appreciating his problems, and, on the other band, she Is to be helped by him, particularly In the training of the children. - Family life should be sympathetic, every one sharing 'the pleasures and the cares of the household. In short. It should be a harmo nious unit, bound together, in work and in leisure, by ties of common interest. - Nearly all of the homes were placed In the country, with "a largo lot In which the children may. play," "a chance for the children to run around," and nearly all of them were placed near a city, in order to insure "mod ern conveniences" and "a good school." "AH children should receive college education." while "the education of boys and girls should be along parallel lines." One standard of education should prevail for both sexes, and that of the highest. The home should be a ''unit of In terest" and "have some special Interest or duty for every member of the household." All should participate In the work and leisure of the home, and "each should en deavor to show fidelity to the rest." The college girl's home Is a real home, in which all have an interest for which all do some work, and out of which strong boys and girls will grow into splendid men and women. There were two kinds of outlines. One (rave in detail th homf surroundings, the other Idealized-the home as "an atmosphere" and omitted the detail. While the form of ihm (vfi IHnri f naiu.,, iflff.H.t ih. . were almost Identical. The two following outlines, one rHEN John, or Arthur, or whatever his be loved name happens to be, stares over at you from his enjoyment of his expensive cigar and growls : "Can women ever get enough candy?" don't you worry oyer it. Just go on munching the favorite nepenthe of your wearied existence, and smile at him that good old reliable smile of yours, which has thus far proved adequate to most of the minor miseries that affiict more or less happy couples. If you want to infuse into that smile the sad little look of patient resignation you use on ordinary occa sions, go ahead and do it- It makes John, after a while, rise with vast nonchalance and mosey out to the yard and silently kick himself for being a brute; which is very good for him, at any stage of the game. But mind you don't have to. Beneficent sci ence, in the learned person of Dr. Frederick 3. Lee, professor of physiology in Columbia Uni versity, has come to your aid with unanswerable arguments on the subject of your oft-abused appe tite for candy. You're right, eternally right, in craving your feminine allowance of candy. It isn't any ab normal appetite which impels you to recall, with fond tenderness, the antenuptial evenings when John used to arrive at your home carrying a pound that set him back $1.50, and makes you now stint your table allowance so that you can provide a few caramels or chocolates for yourself. Your candy appetite is founded in the most basic needs of your body, and it isn't peculiar to women at all. The huskiest of men folks need it as badly as you do, only they haven't sense enough to take it. You can tell John that, and more, next time he explodes, if you feel like it. 4 ' A of 'each kind, will show from two different ttaadoblsifl , m than Ajalaox, Jneredlent MPIjR experiments have proved that tutar Is one of the most efficient, as it Is one of the most available, relievers of fatigue' which the human family can employ. Nor is' humanity lone in Its Instinctive appreciation of the practical ben efits of sweets. Whole-species of animals and birds will undergo the gravest hardships, and run the larg est risks to procure foods in which sugar is no more Professor Lee has explained. In thoroughly satisfy ing If rather complicated detail, the precise manner in which the muscles of the body manifest fatigue, to gether with the causes that induce the weariness. Science Is Inclined ft be less positive regarding the exhaustion of the energies of the nerves, because their phenomena are much more intricate and so highly elu sive, no matter how delicate the tests that have been devised. Nevertheless, it las been very clearly demon strated that a tired mind, like overworked nerves, can produce wearied, exhausted muscles and commonly does produce them. The woman who, notwithstanding man's contempt for the mental and physical strain of housework and Ite petty cares, finds herself tired and miserable, is tired and miserable, and, what is more,, she has a perfect right to be, with t solid cohorts of modern science drawn in imposing array to back her up savlnE SO. w .nrmntnrt lmDUlSO is Often tO take ft juail B v " . . . -inir when he confronts similar conditions of fatigue. But his primitive instinct is to eat or imbibe aoma thing which Is sweet. In both sexes the primitive- n tmrt is Invariably right, the acquired impulse toa "Tk. .hnmlml chances." explains Professor Lee, ll dealing with conditions of fatigue, "involve two geh. i ,.iiin consuniDtion of eertain existing substances, which are essential to the activity of the protoplasm, and the production and accumulation within it of certain waste substances. "Of the substances that are consumed In proto plasmic activity wo know most about two oxygen and carbohydrate. It has beer known for some time that, with the usual conditions under which we live, tha main source of the energy of muscles, and probably of other organs, is carbohydrate material, glycogen, pt its near relative, sugar. "In the burning of carbohydrate in the tiauuee its potential energy becomes the actual energy ofheal and muscle work. This fact would suggest tha lose 'of carbohydrate as one of the factors In the oncoming ot fatigue, especially in its later stage." SWEETS RESTORE ENERGY OF ANIMALS The exact investigations of the laboratory : have shown that, if most of the carbohydrate be removed from an animal's body, it presents symptoms of pro nounced fatigue. That Is true, as well, of the Individ ual muscles, which become incapable of performing ha many contractions 'as the muscles of a normal antmai. "Feeding such an animal with sugar," says Pro fessor Lee, "restores his energy and makes his mun cles capable of greater labor. This latter experiment has its counterpart in the timon practioe, by sl dlers, guides and explorersyof consuming- sweets, such as maple sujrar, chocolate and raisins, whew n long marches, while for the farmer in the hayfloM nothing is more gratifying than a sweetened drlnR." So, with all their lauding of tobacco and all thM Indulgence in alcohol, when It comes to the most ex haustlng efforts possible, the hardest and most vlrli of men take to sugar a the Kreat standDy. t Of course. Professor Lee remarks, food, rest, piny I andleep may be regarded as the effective phyjolo , icar-kjitidotes to fatigue. nd there may be something I in the rrewnntttoxln for fatigue which a Gerrnailn i vestigator has contrived from the olood of tired i mala, Just as cures and preventives of peclni !-; eases have beon extracted from tha tissues Infscu i with the disease Itself, - ' .- . ' l But in the ordlnarv- wear and er of life ' woman feels simply ' done outi" and eravp.t her roe. ing chair and tha supremely grteful tUvr -of favorite kind of candy, i-he- Is making no n,itaa w ha just aits down and enjoss I- v .