TTTE DEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1915 S Why My Wife Left Me COMBINATIONS OF PLAIN AND FIGURED FABRICS will be a feature of the spring and summer fashions. One piece dresses with coatee effects combine the plain material in the coatee, while full skirts are of the figured material The. Mar with an Evil Temper Tells How He Killed Marital Love. I) r.y noiMjTirr dk. Read It Here , See it at the Movies Vy r wa- . w v w "Jr J C i . iU " ' " .. f ' " ' r: ii y , v . - . ' - ,P O. ,1' i w hw? c THE WEDDING OF JUNS Uy upM-lal rrnnKHinnt for thin pnpr a j.lic)(o-irHiiiH rurroMiiunillnR to th limloll I'unta t "lltiitHway Juno "- may now b fn t llio l-'JltiM niovlni plvturn th nirr. l!y nrrniiKin nt mudn ltli th uMiiIpbI I'IIiii riii'iiiratt(in It U nut only jMMibl.' to raiJ 'ItutiMWHy Junr" nch lnv, but nl ftirwiirl to movlnff jM'-lm-ca UlUHtrating our mory. (upyrlt'ht.U'lO, hv Atrial publication ', . . Corporation. I'lHST WISODK The Man With the niack Vandyke. CIIAPTKR I. . Tho iuivcrlnjf cnntor,o(f the intcnx aKltptlun In llrynport waa llounrcr. That r.ii g-tlc rellio roulil rpniomber no oc- r.'ion an xrltlns at thla In the Mooro JioiiNholJ: lint, aa evrry utio armed thor iiiiclily Balifl(l, Hotiij'yr hollKNj In th 1'HPplnciw uiitll hla tall ached. Onm, and om:f tmly, liqmicer had been nlilo to Rt pant old Aunt Debhy. Thla lime he caught that oal black cook with tier hand full ot snow whit dough. She tt her dlRnlty and her center of gravity nd aat down on the floor with a plump watch jarred the house aa Bouncer plunged beneath her flaring aklrta, but rh aaved the dough! Bouncer mean vhlle waa up the beck atalra, and a brown and white atreak had flaahed Into the daintily cretonned room of hla friend, Tiii.itrraa and playfellow, pretty June .MiKire. Here all waa billowy ponfuelon. June lierwslf, atandlng by the-, long, low row of fleeilly curtained wlndowa, waa Die niirleua of all the frothing whlt. ljer airllah cheka were flushed and her eyes were wide and aliinlng, and Tat dreitahiaker, with, her Up In her. mouth fnd a maxe of diabolical wrlnklea In her lirow, waa on her kneea completely en circling June , with pata and pulla and Iwltchea. browbeaten dreamnaker'a )irlier. with a Ilamlng red H)t In eacli icbeek. and her yellow hair dragging to lenote her reprebaed airnny, and with iter boaora atuck full of plua mid reedlet and thins, waa atandlng rigidly to one ide hohilng an oianyo blonaomed veil. June'a mother. In a very apeclal dreaa nd ttb her hair done In the moat pain ful prectelon of which a Frenchman waa car hie, atood juat iu front of June, v linking her hands and htlplng with her yea In all the aacred oen'motilea. ' Marie. Marie of the broom and duater. )lack haired and red-gummed, waited near, with a wide grin and uiotat eyaa. to have thlnga hung uion her when there wait no more apa.ee upon the little white bed" nor any of the chairs Over i the door, talking incenaantly, waa Iria iKIetherlng, aa black-haired aa Marie, aa la!! aa the ('reaamaker'a helper and more excited than all of them put together. rhe waa the bosom friend. " For only a moment Bminrer was per mitted to gaae upon thla putxllng aceoe. .When he eprang too near the central .figure of it all, with the perfectly natural, and commendable Intention ot leaping .upon her to ahow hla undyiug affection, there waa a combined abrlek front six nomcn, and five of thcin put hint out. - "Well. It aa a strung world, and ,by way of setting his mind at eaae Bouncer I an six t lines around the houae and clit-aed .a cat up . a tree and ekthanacd loud lews lth all the neighborhood children who bung upon the fence waiting to see t lie bride. - There were pink bridesmaids st every wtitdow. and a nice, regular father, ger temad arid eilk-hatterd and Prince Al-U-rlrd. walked up and dowp the porch! looking at y hla watch until eternity 'dragged by, bu,t whe the end of time waa come the limousines began ts mo, and Bouncer, with a yelp of welcome, ' sprang to his regular seat by the side of the flrat driver.. Jerry Plled Boun cer's ear and shut the long-pointed in ut ile In a giLo lined flat and gave him other rough tokens of friendliness; then ii. dour opened and there came out a iw- y utlon la whom the neighborhood - i hililien found It difficult to recognise tune Moure, but filmy root's sud pale ' hiK-ks wre no dinguine to Houncer. , "liouiicer!" Jnn iioorc, In all her Im portant finery, fctuo-d swiftly .lown and took bis head between her white gloved !,.uU and looked Into Ills wistful eyes ami touched her cheek, for sa Instant, i-l on his silken ear and whUpertd to AND NED, him, of all the world. Tier very last girl ish secret Then Aunt Debby, now di vested of dough, dragged Bouncer back and locked -him in the shed, while June Moore rode away never to be June Moore again) What was thla ntv world' which she was approaching? No bride knows and no woman. June galled 'contentedly. Ned how he had filled her world! And how happy they were to be! Why, they were at the' chapel, the pretty little gray chapel loaded with vine. And there was Ned at window of the Bunday school room and looking so strained and uncomfortable. And there were the ushers In the doorway. She hardly knew how he was suddenly transformed Into a procession. Why, here was Ned, cloae beside her, and trembling! In a mist they kneeled and asld responses, and Ned put a rln on her finger. Hla own fingers were cqld and clammy, but hla voice waa clear and earneat as1 he promised to love, cherish and protect her aa he beflgbwed upon her all his worldly goods. Some one In the church was crying softly Irle Blethering, the bosom friend. Husband Bobble was comfortably patting her hand. There was a general dabbing of handkerchiefs. Bright eved little old Grandma Moore smiled and smiled through It all, a gay little "grandma with aa smart a gown ' as any there. Ned's father, a strong faced, handaome - man, sat stolidly with hla arms folded and went over . tho ceremony with hla Hps, word for word. Bounoer trotted down the alulo, wagging his tall, hla blue ribbon torn and the marks of the earth under the shed upon his fluffy coat. " Then the organ pealed again, and be neath the vine swung portals, which June Moore had entered on the "arm of Iter By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. A few days ago we considered the cardinal feminine wesknesaea: hypocrisy, prevarication, unreliability . and general pettiness, coupled with too great a ten dency to expect life to yield things merely oecause one Is a woman. A correspondent writes to ask It I have a grudge against my own sex, and i alio if I see no faults In the "Lords of Vreatlon.", Mdoed I ee plenty of faults In . men. But masculine faults. ' like masculine virtues, are big, constructive tilings that ' must be reached In the tn dlvldal and that cannot . be blotted out In the sex. ... Men are seldom petty the men who are are not manly, and so cannot be treated In ariy general view, of their aex. Men have broader liorlsons and larger and more Impersonal vision than thoee of which women aa a sex, are rapabla. Con sequently their -faults are not weaknesses which msy easily be conquered by taking thought, but are actual big fallings which must be worked at to be uprooted. Women accuse me a of selfishness, self- centred nees and actual cruelty, ' and women see these' failings In -men some what because of their own pettiness. : The - one - great 1 fault In masculine t.uinsa nature la its calm air of super! ority. Aa old ptsyer says, "Lrd. I thank Thee fiat Thou has not mad me woman." Modern man does not voice .his prayer, but he thinks and feels It rd his whole attitude breathes -t. Out -4 this attitude rise the unfairness man. hows In his dealings with woman and all hi slowness to aid her la her efforts to rise In the schema ef thlnga. With his vices we are not dealing. Betng a mil has alrays proved such a comfortable affair that roan placidly aits back in selflah enjoyment ef his privil eges, and doesn't offer woman a helping hand as she ' rises alxe his tid-time oriental dexpotlam. Out of the air of superiority comes the calmness with which man accepts his own moral shortcomings and quite takes it fur granted that he niay be "a devil of a fellow," while the women of his owa 1 1 " : . & What's Wrdng with the Men? s v :.' ":: - v father, Juno Warner, on the arm of her husband, now emerged Into the world. Then the bustle and confusion began again the mad scramble Into traveling clothea, and the going away amid show er of lice, and the earnest godspeedlng of friends, and the semthysteria of Iris Blethering, with Bouncer harking hla Indignant proteat somewhere In the muffled dlstanoe. Juat before June came dowWaJrs in her trim little traveling suit of blue her mother had alipped something Into the hand of the daughter. It was the sym bol of every woman's tragedy. It was a purse stuffed with crackling bills. ' At laat they wero Alone, launched upon the sea of life! They were In the tiny drawing room with a white-toothed por ter stowing things Into racka and Rang ing things on hooks and sticking flow ers everywhere. Ned had claaped her In his arms and had covered her blushing face with kisses in thst first realisation, and now ahe sat by the window, her head pillowed contentedly upon hla ahrulder, and out side the world' thoy had known bp to this point In their lives waa slipping past them. A tiny cinder darted Into her eye. Her flrnt Instinct was to grab her hiimierchlef, and the search for" that resulted In a little cry of dismay. "My purse!" she saaperi. At that moment her mother, returning hi me to a houae which had suddenly grown lonely, picked up from the table In the library the little purse. "Too bad!" Ned's voice was full of sympathy. "Anything In It?" "My money," she replied In -concern, with all at. once a panic springing, Into her heart. "la that all?" he laughed.. "Well, lit tle wife" add he laughed again at her world must be spotless angels, wrth no one to admire the set of their lialos. Thence, too, comes ths sneerinK attitude toward women of the half-world and the under-world. If, he has chivalrous ira pulMes toward them. If he thinks of them as human beings who have slipped out of the path on which their feet were set. he conquers theae feelings because of the masculine sueriortty which per mits his double standards. Men are too easy with themselves, too tolerant of their own fallings, too willing to excuse themselves, too willing to ex cuse selfishness, thoughtlessness and tv unklndneas on their own rxurta. They do not give fairly enough of their own per tairre Between Bret here. i . Iear Miss Fairfax: I am K and in leve with a gui of i-. I have a brother a year and a hdlt older than myself who waa previously enaaged. My brother Is so I angry with me for contemplating mar-I rtawe awhile he Is yet single tlutt he vows rever to know me as a brother hereafter. Moreover, as a eiater younger than either ef ns already been married for some time, nry loot her and the rest of the fnmilv sympathise with my .brother. 1 hey are very much aet agalnat irte and will not meet the plri 1 love. Now. I alwaya a.ivlaed my brother not to think of marriage, aa we were supporting mother and younger aletera ani bi-otheia. but now I think differently What shall I do? v HKAftTBROKtN. The fact tliat an elder brother la un married ia no reason wby you should not marry, in bringing thla up as a reason against youe marriage your whole family ia unfair it eu. But If you kid' any Influence In causing your brother to glvu up thoiishta of marriage because ot hla duty to help .support your mother and your younger brothers and sinters, they they mut all leel ttiat you. who caused him to give up his happiness for their aakes, ought to live up to your own principles In the mattei. Mupixiae yo.i talk thla oxer with your mother and : . w. I . .1 Advice to Lovelorn : SS1" 1 j. vy ' . swift blush "why nm I here?" "I know," sho faltered, "but" She stopped, confused, -uml cast down her eyes at her Interlacing flngrrs. "I'm Just the same as your purse, ex cept that you can't lose me," he told her, dwelling with fond eyes upon her long lashes, her smooth, 'round cheeks, her red Hps. He reached Into his pocket with bluff heartiness ani produced a roll of bills JuHt a the porter came In with two snow pillows. a "Good work, George!" approved Ned, and, catching two bulging eyes fixed upon the roll of bills he held In his hand, Ned stripped off a dollar., "This is my letter of introduction," he observed ns he passed It over. . Ned turned to Jun, smiling, as the porter went out of the door and took three bills from the roll. "I think you'll feel happier carrying this around." He stuffed the bills into her clasped hands. She tried to cloae her hands " ,T -""--""""'" wnicn. I-" .k w . W e" uiii iiiiMij, uui nm lingers were the stronger, and, laughing, he kissed her and straightened up to put tho balance of the money in his pocket e, . , V " Whll', ' pIow.tr.en. Women praised my gallantry and f Uiah of crimsoncame up over her face. toUl mv wife how them envied her being Why should this have embarrassed and married to a man who paid auch charm humiliated her? It seemed abaurd, for i,,, complimenta. and who was so gentle this was a part of marrlago. Bm, .ttcntive to women. I was also much Ned sat beside her and put his arms . csteeVned as a dinner guest becauso of ai.u mo neiu hi ner lips 10 be kissed. Suddenly she burtet her head on hie shoulder and cried. Something had been awept away from her, some thing had been broken. The man had given and she had received. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) sonsltiaa. the tn nn i-i...i to the demands of other personalities. v'Annle came Joyously 4o meet nus bub They are not sufflcienOv ehtvir,.. i.. over with some little plan she had their attitude toward womanhood. But all of thla la directly traceable to thelfor "n9 ha1 done . nothing, to provoke. iir of superiority that ex- n,e' F"l.aps " wa bu',p a f masculine a presses itself in the old prayer, "Ioid. I thank-Thee that Thou hast not made me a Woman." The business absorption, the over-ambition, the, lowered standard of righteous, ness and honor, of which men 'are guilty today,, are all directly traceable to this fountain hesd of evil. What's the matter with the men? The matter Is that they think there Is nothing - at all the matter. brother. If you make an. offer to con tribute toward the support of your family after tour mrria? it may Tnenge their attitude. ' - It Is ttmt Iloaermble. Vear Miss Fairfax: ls.lt honorable for a man to liy -to make love to u eiorag-d airl? The Kill. Is a wonderful person, about 2t. I am an average' man. .11. My rival ia In tr.a saiuu mo.ii. I ani .financial Poait4on ns I am. All thnee of us work in the same of nee. 8lie eared for me tefore she met htm. but he Is a fine follow and Won her leve quickly. I love her more than anybody In IIiIk world. Now that sits is engaged, would It ts honorable for me to attempt to wia her love ? We moet dosens of times' dal'y. How ought 1 ait? R. 8. It la most dishonorable for a man to try to make love to a girl who Is engaged. Hince she knew you first an had not Klvcn you her love at the time the man for whom che rarea caijie into her life. It waa either because you bad tailed to try to win lier then, or bea-euse you had tried and failed. It would be perfectly Inexcusable for you to attempt to win her now. Probably you would' succeed In estranging buh of your friends If you uiado the attempt "I lot my wire," said the fifth man, "because I was a grouch, and because I thought that home was a dumplns ground for 11 of tho 111 temper and sur I'ne that a man doesn't dnre visit upon the outside world. "III tragical an'd humorous, Un't it, that the people we love the beit wc trckt with the leait cons lderatlon, and lli'it tre a.ffectlon we ali.u n.cst ve put tec revere I .'vin upon'.' l-ool.!ii3 b;icl now upon the wrocl; of ivy hupp.' ncss I can see that If I had chown to my wife ono tithe of . the politeness and defer ence and tic pal- lsntry that I did to any one of my women clients I should j have ma le of our married life a success I Instead of the failure that it was. - "When I murrled Annie she was a pretty, bri-rht, light hearted girl, fond of the (ray things of life, bat sensible and .a' tical. nnrt willing to de her psrt lit tho matrimonial partnership. She was goou housekeeper, a thrifty man&Rer, but not one of the sort of women who reek of butcher's bills and domesticity, for she had all sorts df outside Interests. In short she was the kind of woman who makes not only a good wife but a gwM chum If her husband lets her. "Now, I ean nervous and Irritable by nature, and In those flrat years of our married life I was overworking, Btrain!ng every nerve' almost to the breaking point to gt a solid foothold In my profession. This made me still more nervous and irritable, and In vulgar parlance, I 'took It out tipon my Innocent and unoffending wife. , "I realized that In my dealings with my law partners. I had to ba self-controlled and reasonable. I knew .that I had to turn a suave and smiling face upon our clients. I dared not flash out angry ani sarcastic speeches upon the outside world, but I could see no reason for mak ing myself pleasant and agreeable at home, nor was there anything to prevent my making crvel speeches to my wife. "She was my property. She belonged to me. She had to stand whatever treat ment I accorded her. She couldn't knock me down for an Insulting speech as a man would have done, nr could she.plck up and leavo as would a servant to whom I had been offensive, "Of course. 1 didn't think out these towardly arguments at the time, but they were subsconeclously In my mind as they are in the( mind ' of every other grouchy husband who takes advantage f Ma poBlt,on B, a husband to treat his w0"t than he does any menial he employs. "So I became a domestic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Out in tho world I was cele brated aa bulng a good fellow among my geniality and wit and my lnex- haustlhl fund of good stories. "And these people who found me so amiable In public never even guessed that In private I wras as surly as a sore headed bear, and that I divested myself of' my good manners at my own door even as I took off my hat. "I had wooed my wife with tenderness snd gentle consideration and fiery ardor, else she had not married me. and I can 1 . well remember her hurt bewilderment when, soon after wo were married, I dropped the raaak and let her tee the unlovely side of my nature. Something had gone wrong at the . office and I ii , came home seething with the fury I had I had to keep suppressed all day. made. I don't know yet why I did It has a Kino or lay in miruni aoyouo in Its power. Just as a brute kicks around his dog. but I turned on my wife with a torrent of abuse that made her shrink away from mo as from a madman. "And that was the beginning. The bars were down then. Poor little Annie be came the escape valve for my temper nnd nervea. Whatever It nock a the out side world handed me I paased on to her. If rich Mrs. Hmlth tried my patience went homo with a' cowl on my face that made my wife afrall to apeak to me. K I lost a case I took cut my chagrin by making bitter and sarcastic speecnes to my wife. If one of my partners tailed my attentton"to a mlatake 1 had made, b sure I blasted Annie '.vith niy withering criticisms. "There were daya and rtaya in which I indulged myaelf in sullen grouches in which 1 would not speak to her except to return -an Irritable nrswer t some question. There were times when I rage4 like a lunatic over th merest trifle that had gone wrung. There were other times when 1 stabbed her to the heart with cruel speeches snd the pity of it all ia that I didn't know what I was ooing. I didn't san realize that I should have Uen' leee of a brute If 1 hud 'beaien her ph Really than I was to conUnuslly flsy her with my temper. "Still 1 did I realise that I was mur dering love. I thought In my musculine egotism that a woman went oh adoring her husband no matter how he treated her. I know better now. for one day Annie left me. "'Even worm will turn."' she said. 'I have stood your .ibnse as long ss I can. and I am going w-xy where f shall at least receive clxtlity from thoae with whom I am associated. In a passion of remorse I told her of uny love and my repentance, but' It was too late. he had come to hate me with a touoeiit rated bit terness with which a woman only liatue the man that he has loved." fey llrlm The combination of plain and figured fabrics is featured in midwinter gowns', of which the sketch gives a very good Illustration. Like its forerunners of the fall and early winter the model has the appearance Of a little suit, but in reality it is a one-piece affair. The skirt ia hung from a sleeveless bodice lining of white washable silk, and . over this the blouse Is mounted. The salient note In the skirt is the double line of cord shirrings placed be low the hips and confining the fullness thereabouts. Below the shirrings the ma terial flares to make its own flounce, and it is weighted at the bottom with a narrow ruche of old lue taffeta, which contrasts effectively with the spotted . . . , . "In Time of Peace Prepare for Peace" By BISHOP HAMl'KIi FALLOWS. (Illinois department commander of the Grand Army ot the Republic, formerly brigade commander in the Army of the Tennessee, former chaplaln-in-chief and national patriotic instructor of the Grand Army of the Republic, now chaplain of the Second Infantry, Illinois National Guard.) I would change George Washington's aphorism to read: ' In time of peace prepare for peace." The best preparation ir adequnte pro vlHlon for self-defense. I believe perhaps Prcsdient Wilson didn't say all that waa in his mind. Per haps he didn't want tu give the rest of the world, which w at' lies hla utterances as president carefully, the knowledge that we are not prepared. That,, of courae. must create a fa'.se sentiment In thla country by leading our cltltens to believe that we are ready. No one can predict what we may be called upon to face at any time, now that Kurope has proclaimed the new philosophy that nations cannot Jeu! together as in dividuals on a plane ot honor. Tlila, In effect, means that each nation is supreme that no I'ombinati.in of nations Is superior. It does away with our Hague peace tribunal and compels every na tion to rely on Ita own resources. I believe that of our 100.000.UO popula tion 30,000,000 are able-bodied men. ' Is it too much to ask that one-fourth of this number, or one-third, be trained in the elementary principles of military move ments and the bearing cf arms? 1 think not. Let us give them, six months' training. Let us drill them snd rryWde- for proper target practice. This country has for gotten the Ovll war. when not on, ufa.i la had any knowledge of n4)ltary drill, and hardly one in 100 had ever shot a gun. The national guard ought to be stif fened and properly equipped. It should be kept up to Us full maximum atreutuh all the time. This, even, is not enough. There are not guns enough for those men or am munition for them to fire. We mupt have them. The burupean war teaches us that moat of our guns are obsolete. We muwt be ready to meet the iii-centtmeter guns with others of ojual measure, served by trained men. and with plenty of am munition. Ws must have aerial craft, ships, everything . to cope with all the blue and white of the foulard composing the skirt. Of this same blue the blouse Is made. Thero are little pocket Introductions on either side of the front and these show embroideries In gay colorings. Sleeves with a greater degree of full ness are gradually making their appear ance, and, as Indicated in the sketch, they partake of bishop characteristics, although In a very modified way. Within the next few weeks we shall note a greater use of corded shirrings and flouncuigs. Their particular use Is to give tho stand-out effect to skirl, edeta with undulating hems. Many of the new gowns, in fact, have the hems widely scalloped and then defined with a nar row plaited quilling of the dress ma terial or some contrasting fabrle. advances In the science of warfare that Europe ia displaying. Those who say our extended coast line and our great eastern and western moun tain ranges are sufficient protection are teaching a dangerous lesson. Suppose ' no enemy could penetrate far Into the Interior of our country. Shall ww leave our great coast cities, with their tre mendous wealth and wonderful beauty, at the mercy of any enemy? Never! The newspapers of this country should put the situation before the people. They are reedy to listen and to Insist 'that the proper steps be taken, but continue the fight until "In time of peace we are prepared for peace." How to stop dandruff and loss of hair with Resinol Here i a simple, inexpensive treatment that will almost, always top dandruff and scalp itching, and keep the hairtliiclc, li ve and lustrous: At night, spread the hair apart and rub a little Resinol Ointment into the u alp gently, with the tip of the finger. Repeat this until the whole calp has been treated. Next morn ing, sliampuo thoroughly with Res inol Soap and hot w ater. Work the creamy Resinol lather well into the the scalp. Rinsewiihgraduallycool er water, the last water being cold. kaiial Saas sae Ruiool Oiotmnt saaOy hail uim sad suaiUr tkiMrusaoea. bold by all druj i .. for aaaipls trm, write ts Uap. V-S, Kausal, Baltuaata, Me.