Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 21, 1913, Page 7, Image 7

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    TUK BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 21, 1DW.
. (
I
Happiness
What It is, and How to Get It
Hy ADA PATTERSON
Happiness 13 a gentle exhlleratlon of th
soul depending upon deep and frequent
draught! of content.
It Is largely a habit. In great measure
a point of view.
Happiness must m
not be confounded
with Joy. Joys dot
pathway of llfo
now and then, here
and there. Happi
ness Is a radiance
that sheds Itself
upon It and that
can be mado con
tinual. I was about
to say perpetual,
and will so say,
for the habits
of thought formed
hero assuredly per
sist In another
sphere. Joys aro
Inseparable! from
affections. Happiness
at ono time. The secret of getting what
we want la to let It bo the ono thine wo
ui.s.,1. utiy alter clay, nignt auer nigm,
through calm and storm, through suc
cessive seasons, and behotdl when wo
have watted long enough soma day tho
precious things become ours.
Life rebukes the greedy gatherer of
benefits, but rewards him who counts
upon one. Do we want success? Is that
the neynoie of our lives, tho craving of
our being, tha cry of our hearts? Then,
sometime, somehow we win It. Do we
want love more than aught else. Then
some heart assuredly will answer to the
call ot ours. Hut It we ask for success
and love, wisdom, fame, we may miss
them alt
Another clags of persons who enjoy a
Science
Egypt a Hundred Centuries Ago
Brought to Light at Tarkhan
may be apart
from them and Independent of them,
Joys are occasional visitors, rapturously
welcomed, and capricious as to their
goings and comings. Happiness Is a state
of mind that can be attained by any ono.
Joys are accidents that, may befall us.
Happiness Is a condition we ourselves
create.
riovlewlng the long procession of per
sbns I have known so welt that their
soul states were readable to me, I rank
as the happiest those who did not depend
upon others for their happiness. Some
of those were hUBbands. some wives,
somo parents, or brothers or sisters. The
lives of all were Interwoven with others
in the commonest of life's relationships.
But they did not lean upon the other
Individual in that tie as a ladder against
the side of tho house. It Is omnloua for
such ladder against the sldo of the house.
It Is omnloua for such ladder If the
house be a crumbling decaying one.
There aro ladders that have supports of
their own, that are able to do their work
of hoisting humans to higher positions,
yet that stand sturdily upon their own
support.
Persons wise, cither Innately or be
cause they aro of tho rare folk who
distill wisdom quickly from experience),
do not expect to derive the full measure
of their happiness from anyone. Having
judicial minds, able to put themselves In
another's place, they know that It la
asking too much from anyone, to keep
tho cup of someone's else content full
and sweetened exactly to his taste.
Tho Ideal hero of a novel may perform
this miracle, but no average human be
ing ever did, alnd most human beings
are average. Except In ono of the tran
sient Joy states no one has ever enjoyed
being anyone's Ideal, for being some-
one's'ldeal entails living up toe the heights
established by the dreamer. A young
woman complained to me of the Idol
atrous feeling she had Inspired In a dis
tant relative.
"I hate being worshipped," she said.
"It Is so hard i to live up to the plans
and specifications." Therefore, wise folk
do not Idolize others because the wise
are' also Just and they do not want to be
Idolized. They expect an average of
human conduct from the persons closest
to their lives, and without making their
efforts too plain, try to raise tho average
by a good example of their own.
To them, friends r.re not a necessity,
but a luxury. They enjoy them, but they
can get on comfortably wlthput them.
Pom. taught by tho defections of Sue
or Harry, they have learned to stand
alone. Tho first stago In tho evolution
that follows is bitterness. The second Is
Plain. The last Is happiness, that strong,
calm happiness of self-reliance whose
price Is experience.
Continuing to review the procession of
persons I have known close to the front
rank of happy folk I see the group of
those who know what they want Happi
ness attends these because when we know
what we want we go after it and get it.
The world is crowded with wobble folk.
They want this today and that tomorrow
and yesterday they wanted something dif
ferent from either; wobble folk are
greedy folk. They want to corner life's
Joys. They would like-to form a merger
of all the desirable things of earth and
be at the head of the merger. In youth,
at the threshold of life, If everyone knew
what he wanted everyone would be sure
to secure It, (or nothing can resist the
continuous attack of the person who
wants one good thing from life. We can
noe effectually ask of life many things
Hy GARHETT 1. SERV1SS.
Civilised people lived In Egypt ten
thousand ycarB agoso long ago that
the North Star, which, ftom tho days of
the Phoenician navigators, when com
merce was young,
until our time,
has guided ships
at sea, was then
many degrees
from tho pole of
the heavens
while another and
a brighter star
glittered not far
from the north
point of tho ce
lestial sphere!
The excavations
recently made by
Prof. Petrlc of tho
British School of
A chaeol gy have
serene happiness Is those who havo the established this fact, which must uj.p a
consciousness of having done their best very astonishing to those who still i
with the equipment which nature has tain the old belief that tho world Itsell
gven them. Every man and woman has
n gift. If only for shoeing horses or mak
ing cheeses. Ho is happy who knows
when evening sets Its grey seal of silence
upon his labors, that he has made good
shoes and that each horse has gone forth
from his blacksmith shop well shod. Tho
woman who pushes back the lost mpuhl
has the pleasant pride of having fash
ioned her cheeses as richly and firmly
and cleanly as she could, The pleasure
of the work consciously done Is one of
the greatest that life affords. Moreover,
It Is a permanent ono. The rewards ot
our work nrny not seem to be what it
deserves. But the deep satisfaction of
doing our own work In our own way,
no better perhaps, but a little different
than any other has done It, no power nor
combination of powers In the world can
take from us.
Happy are those persons who are un
lonely. Among the concepts of the statu
of perpetual punishment Is that of an
utter hopeless and perpetual loneliness.
A great teacher used to say: "Let mo
never hear one of my pupils complain
ot being lonely. No Intelligent person
ever need be lonely. The resources ot tho
developed intellect are so many, thoughts
are such good fellows, we should never
sorely miss frequent association with
other persons," An old clergyman said
In my hearing, "My child, whatever sor
rows the world may heap upon you, bo
comforted by the fact that you havo a
wett trained mind." We lean always to
ward pty for tho only child in a family.
We think of htm as self-centered, Intro
spective, of an age far In advance ot his
years, a child that has been cheated of
most ot his childhood because his com
panions have been those ot another gen
eration. Tet there la compensation for
this state even In a child, and that Is
his seit-aurnciency. sucn a cnua win
never know loneliness. He will never
fear the bogles ot the less Belt-reliant.
The speotre of loneliness will never stalk
through his soul.
The Restless
Spirit
J
To The Young
Expectant Mother
Women of Experience Advise) tho UiO)
of Mother's Friend.
There Is a certain degree of trepidation In
cubjoct of motherhood.
the minds of most wumen in regard to the
ana longing 10
poiaeis Is often contradicted by the Inher
ent fear of a period ot distress.
But there need be no such dread In vie
ot the fact that we hart a most noble
remedy In what Is known as Mothers
Friend. Thin la an external application
that bas & wonderful Influence and control
over the muscular tissues ot the abdomen.
By lis dally uie the muscles, cordi, tendons
and ligaments all gently expand without
the slightest strain; there la no pain, no
nausea, no nervousness: what waa dreaded
as a severe physical ordeal becomes a calm,
Keren, joyful anticipation that has IU lav
press such as our foremost teachers of
Ihigeolcs are strUIng to drill Into the
Binds of the present generation.
Jn almost erery community there are
iromcii who bare used Mother's Friend, and
they are tbfc ones that recovered quickly,
conserved ttaetr health and strength to thus
preside over families destined by every rule
if physiology and the history of succtsi
'ul men a- women to repeat the Story of
rrrater at ment .
Mothar's tfrleed Is prepared after the
formula of a noted famllr doctor bf the
Uradfleld Ilegulator Co, 138 Lamar Bldg.,
"'writ' tblra for tbtlr instructive book to
ripectaot mothers. You will find Mother's
Wend sale by all drug stoics at H.00
t oottte.
By MRS. FRANK LEARNED.
Author of "The Etiquette of New York
Today."
Early in llfo it Is wejl to realize that
the spirit of restlessness must be resisted
as an enemy to a normal condition ot
mind or body. Many people think that to
achieve results they must hurry mako a
stir. Good work and hurry do not go
together. Clear thought and flurry can
not dwell In the mind at the samo time.
Tho person who succeeds In life has
steadiness, ot mind, self-dlsclpllne ana
quiet thinking. Tho mind that Is not
flurried by eventB or activities balances
the person who achieves good results.
The mind that is clouded by flurry can
hot face opportunities or solve problems.
Some persons think that they Impress
ethers with their importance by" talking
about being terribly busy and telling ot
the rush In which they live. There Is
no time for any pleasant, friendly Inter
change of thought They are "going on''
somewhere and have not a moment to
stop. One feels, when talking with them,'
as though one were whirling along In a
motor or on an express train.
To live In a state of unrtkt and rever-
lih excitement is not conducive to happi
ness. It is better to try to do a few little
things which are Worth white than many
ot the things which require a continual
drive and are a waste ot energy or time,
and certainly waste of peace of mind.
There are numberless llttlo tasks ot
every-day life which need to be done.
A good way to cure restlessness Is to do
them, and to do them as well as we can.
It Is a very pleasant thought that there
Is generally something that each ono ot
us can do, some very little thing, per
haps, some small, lowly task or act, but
which no one else can doi or there Is
ei roe one to whom no one can be qulto
as useful as we may be. Too efetn we
ncsjicck mose 111110 tnings which are
plainly before us, almost asking to be
done.
A girl who Is on the watch for the
little duties at home and does them cheer
fully and gladly will find that they help
to make happiness.
It may not seem a great thing to go on
an errand for a mother, or to spend an
hour In mending, or In arranging a room,
or putting a desk In order, or making a
delicious dessert to please a father; but
perhaps these are some of the little dally
things demanding to he done. Any form
of work is worth doing, and if It is donfc
In the right spirit It Is sure to brighten
our own Jives and the lives ot others.
The trouble Is that the spirit of rest
lessness creates a desire to do anything
else but what Is the affair of the mo
ment. There is a, discontent with present
surroundings, a visionary longing for
which one may be totally unqualified.
A girl must try to see very clearly what
are her duties at home and whether slid
Is needed there before she determines on
on Independent career away from home.
A very old and sweet saying la a great
help In time of doubt as to action: "Do
the duty that la nearest. The second duty
will already have become clearer."
i ,M null -w 'if - -?J!sfi'',tMi.rL
1
I
Ten Commandments of The Summer Wife
uy nonoriiv nix.
Arlxo sister. gird up thy straight front,
put glad raiment upon thyself nnd take
thy vacation; yea, tuke It though thou
hast to fight for It with tooth nnd nail
for she that hath wrestled with tho rob
ber thot lleth In wait In the butcher shop
and the despollcr who nbldeth In the
grocery store and who hath provided the
wherewithal her family Is fod three times
a day for 306 days, needeth to slip tho
yoko for a space whlto the gulled place
uenlth.
x, When thou takest thy vacation, go
It atone. Be not as thoso foolish wives
who say, "I have never been parted from
my husband, and to, where he gocth there
will 1 also go," for bel'ka thou hast got
ten on thy husbnud's nerves nnd ho would
full) lmvo a rest from thoe.
3. Ucflcct that nine months ot the year
can a man rejolco nnd be exceeding glnd
to be married. Ten months can ho stco
liltt heart with fortitude to endure. It, but
on the twelfth month he notlceth that hi
wife's noKo Is crooked, and ho knocket1
hor cooking. Thereto e, get theo henco on
tho twc.'fti month, and when thou shall
return to him nnd ho will make a feast it
thy coming.
4. Stay not too
long, though, on
thy vacation, for it
In not good that a
huAhaml should bo
loft alone to Ills
own devices until
ho can find tho ne
crct spot wherein
tho clean shirt
hldcth Itself and
tho fresh collars
aro accreted. Ver
ily It was written
In tho Book of tho
Prophets that a
little absence mak
cth tho heart grow
fonder, hut too
much nbsonce Incllneth It to another skirt.
5. When thou roeke.it In the chair that
swayeth back nnd forth on tho Bummer
hotel gallery, boast not thyself of thine
automobile, and thy butter, and thy social
prostlge, and the diamonds thou hast left
behind theo In thy hushand'e safe; for
the women thou braggest to aro the
Daughters of Missouri, that oven require
to bo shown, and they shall mock thee
behind thy back as a liar.
C. Toll not the secret ot tliy life. Ilevenl
THEY SHAM MOCK THEE,
Upper Picture Carved Table of Stone from Egypt of 10,000 yentu
Ago Middle Picture Skeleton as Found by Prof. Petrio Lower Picture
Carvings and Remains of the Ancieuta.
Is only about six thousand years old.
But such Investigations as those ot
Prof. Petrle carry the same over
whelming conviction to the reasoning
mind as that which has caused all In
telligent persons to accept tho conclu.
slons of geAlogy concerning the millions,
upon millions of years that the earth
has been Inhabited by a great variety ot
animals, some ot whose descendants, but
little changed In their forms, are co
dwellers with us today upon this an
cient planet.
The nature of the excavations made
by Prof. Petrle in Egypt may be clearly
seen In the photographs which are here
reproduced.
There you nee the beautifully carved
tables of stone and of alabaster, tho
animal figures, the spltuixes, the speci
mens of pottery, and the irranlte an.
ccplmgl, or coffins, which that wonder
ful, prehlstorla people mado for them
selves. There, too, you see somo of tho ikelo
tonn of tho "sacred" animals which they
honored with burial oeretnonlea hardly
less elaborate than those which weru do
voted to their kings, queens and rulers.
Prof. Petrle and his asslstunta havo un
covered not less than 800 ancient grayes,
none of which aro loss than about ,000
years old.
All of them tell the same story, viz:
thut ho long ago as that men had al
reudy learned many ot tho arts which
wo often, think aro peculiar to tlme In
cluded within tho limits of written his
tory. They could not merely build atrong
and beautliul structures of masonry nnd
carve stqtues and shape vases nnd sx
clte tho admlrntlon of architects and ar
tists today, but thoy knew tho use of
the most precious metals, and formed
exquisite ornaments of gold nnd silver.
Theso things must set one to thinking,
for wo know that arts and sciences are
long In being developed, requiring thou
sands ot years, and that no civilisation
can grow up except as tho result of many
centuries of slow advance How far
back, then, should wo have to go n order
to find the real beginning of Egypt?
Ten thousund years must be but a Htuu
In that long march of human progress!
The poles of the heavens may havo
nwung more than once completely round
tholr great 20,000-year orbit since tho land
of tho Nllo began to bloom with cultiva
tion, nnd Its human inhabitants started
on their upward courso.
Nothing can bo mure Interesting that:
these delvlngs Into tho past history of
the globo slnco innn cumo upon It, and
tho farther that Unwritten, but still not
unrecorded, history strut a lies hack the
more the wonder growH, for every now
discovery plunging deeper Into the age
shows thut wo ure yet far from the start,
lug point.
HE 18 AS A PHONOOHAPH.
not the weaknesses ot thy husband, nnd
pull not forth from thy closet tho skele
ton whero It Is hidden because thou hap
penest to stroll In the twilight with a.
sympathetic sister, for lo she shall tell
that tale to another, nnd she shall
repent It to still another, and soandal
Imll bo heaped upon thy name.
7. When thou play
est bridge, get theo
a Btrangle hold upon
thy purse, for perad
venturo the society
dames with whom
thou sportest shall
shear theo even as a
lamb Is sheared on
Wall Street, and
thou shalt havo to
wrlto homo for more
money.
8. Take not the
lono Bummer man
away from tho maid
ens when ho floest
to thee as to a tem
ple of refuge, be
causo thou already
hast a husband and cannot expect him to
marry theo. Flirt nt with such an one,
but stand thou to e,no sldo and glvo the
virgins their chance, for lo In these days
husband Is acarco and nara to
come at.
0. Listen not to the man who wnndereth
on tho beach with thee In tho moonlight
and who sayeth, "Would Ood I had met
thee In time." for behold he Is nut a
phonograph with one record, and hntn
already said tho same thing to 6St,735
other women. Also he draweth but twen-
ty-flvo bones per In a department ntorc,
whilst thy husband hath aklll with tho
shekels, so that thou adornest thyself In
purplo and split skirts therewithal.
10. Forget not that gossip staiuem
through tho halts of a Summer hotel,
seeking whom It may destroy: thereforo
bear thyself as though thou posest In a
moving picture film and converse as
though thou consortest with a dictagraph.
So shalt thou meet thy husband with a
glad smile when ho cometh down on thei
Saturday afternon train, and thy heart
shalt not quoko with fear when thou
thlnkeat ot what one of the old caU who
knit pink sweaters In the hotel lobby may
roveal Unto him, '
Sc'ah.
im im at o VT Ii-
m
If
rr
The Manicure Lady
Evolution Again
By WJXIilAM U. KIRK.
"I eee In the papers that the prince of
Wales got a call down from King George
for Indorsing a note and getting stung
for 2,600," said the Head Barber.
"That's nothing," raid the. Manicure
Lady, "Lots of princes hao got stung for
Indorsing notes, and they wasn't all
princes oi royal blood, either. I seen
that same piece in the paper, but It was
quite a while ago. dee. Qeorge, I'll bet
he felt awful when the king of England
bawled hi in out. A king's anger must be
terrible to behold. That's what the his
torical novels tells, anyhow."
"I don't see how a king can .ho any
madder at his son for monkeying with
Indorsed notes than any dad Is with his
boy," Bald the Head Barber, "A man
can only get about so mad without get
ting apoplexy. A king can't call yoU
down no harder than Paddy the Pig,
There Is only so many words In the ISn
gtleh language, and a roughneck can
say them as loud and as often as a
king."
"Yes, thore Is a good deal in that,"
agreed the Manicure Lady. "You re
member when I lost my purse last' week,
Qeorge. I was Just as mad aa a humari
being could be when I seen I had lost It.
No king could have been madder. I coutd
have bit the head off unybody that said
I misplaced It, until I found it and knew
J had been careless. Oh, well, what Ss
money anyhowT WJiy should the king or
England bo sore at his son? The kid's
grandfather was the same sort ot a sport , magazine editor will let It got nt that.
Anyhow, them sentiments of hi Is about
Hie same as mlno. I don't know how
much like him, with all his court doings
and pomp, hut I am glad to know lilt
grunuson is a Mnnun being."
"Here, too," said the Head Barber. "I
wish somebody would endorse a note for
me. The landlord Is barking like a
hound."
Ho was more than a king, Qeorge, that
Edward man. Ho was a regular guy.
He knew more about the value ot money
than people thinks he did. He knew so
much about the value of money that ho
knew It didn't have no great valuo at
all. He had friends tbut was rich and
friends that was poor, and he would stick
to a friend that was poor Just as surely
as he would walk away from a pest that
was rich.
"Wilfred says that he would have did
the same an young prince of Walea did,
only It wouldn't do tho poor kid no good
to endorse a J2,W0 note. It makes an
awful difference whose name la on the
back ot a piece ot paper, George, It ain't
the color ot the Ink or the penmanship
or the pen It was wrote with. But I
didn't have the heart to tell Wilfred that
be would never be nble to endorse a
note, and I gUess ho don't care much for
what little money he ever made, except
to be happy with It. He wrote a poem
yesterday and sent It to a magazine and
this Is the copy ot It;
' 'I do not care for boundless wealth
Or. r.ny thing it brings to me,
Just so long as I have my good health
And vvery songbird rlnus to me.
The richest brewer In the land
Is only rich In gold and silver.
And I, who have friends on every hnnd,
Their love all gold I wpuld not kill for.1
"Wilfred said thot he knew 'silver and
'kill for" was a bum rhyme, but he ex
plained to me that there wasn't no real
rbyme for 'silver,' and I suppose tho 'tired of waiting too long.
Hy KDOAll LUCIEN LAUKIN.
a,i now what has happenod, or oc
curred, taken plaoe or appeared? My
mall Is changing again; questions on
evolution aro comng with Increasing
rapidity. What has once moro started
up the doctrine 3f ovolutton? No hypo
thesis over encountered so many uv
downs. The roarings ot warB ot words
surge In tho papers, magazlnesand books
of tho world, for a time, uie oui mm
main quloscent during an Interval and
then lurid flames of conflict burst forth.
And now the serenity ot this summit Is
disturbed and tho tumult Is heard abovu
tho clouds.
These nro the flying shells: Q. "Ia tho
theory ot evolution true?" "Has the
doctrine of evolution been proved7" "la
evolution settled In BClenco?" "! Dar
winism a teaching of science?" "Do col
leges nnd university courses lncludo evo
lution?" "Do animals really change Into
other kinds?" "Havo nil agreed to evolu
tion, or are there thoso who oppose?"
And these aro the woes, not in Pan
dora's box, but in the Mount Lowo mall
sack, Tho answer Is that there are those
who still oppose the teaching of evolu
tion In many of Us branches. Tor evolu
tluntsta ore divided among themselves.
For Bomo write that they believe In tho
existence of a Creator, while others say
virtually that all things evolved them
selves. Still others hold that the Creator
started the process of volution, and then
I retired, leaving all th'ngs to evolve by
' means of laws Impressed upon matter,
I A few believe that matter itself, or tho
properties thereof, are a law unto them-
aelvbs a refinement or this Deing mat
tho properties uru tho laws.
Having been asked for an opinion, I
give this: Nothing exists but electrons
these wero created by a Creator, and tho
J
much money Kdward the Seventh had Zly mentaV. Urnta All
V'hen ho died, and I don't care, but there . mttttcr( whatever be It- nature, all ob-
,0.t f1,,eop e ln,the wa Jects, wero formed later of tho created
wm hi T ,6" " Wa" hfr' nnd he electrons, also by mental force. All at
w 1 be talked about us a regular mall trIUutM mmitle., properties and specific
o,ttw.lJ,B Tft" h ,1Ike?1n,'0Ut M characteristics of all types, phase,, cle
,?ri ,il V. "m..n r.?,U hl" on oln,t ments or kinds of mnttor wero imparted
Advice to Lovelorn
Iy IJEVIHICK KAHIFAX.
Leave Thut to Ifer,
Dear Mlw Kalr- T am 21 and In lovo
with a girl 19, nnd she lovos me. Another
mon, whp Is much older. Is trying to win
her love, but she doesn't care for him
At present I am not settled, and it may
tnko about three years before I can
marry, while the other man ran support
l er quite nicely. Havo I tho right to ask
her to wait? a. J.
Sho loves you. She doesn't love tho
other man. If alio Is worthy ot a good
man's lore she will wait Indefinitely for
him In preference to marrying a man she
does not core for. Glvo her the right to
decide, and xee that you don't make her
or Impressed hy the Creator of electrons,
beBlde which all other things In existence
are secondary.
Evolution referred to In these questions
relates to changes, advances, recessions
and again advances In plants nnd animals
that is, in the organic world. Tho change
of one kind, typo or plant of one animal
Into another has not been proved. Take
hundreds of kinds of pigeons as mentioned
on page fifteen of Darwin's "Origin of
Species." They vary most remarkably,
but they are all pigeons. Horses are
widely varied, but no matter how they
differ, tho horse plan exists' In all.
Now, I assert, dogmatically, If the
reader pleases, that the first cell that pro
duced a pigeon was created by a creator,
entire mental; likewise the horse and
every other living being from an animal
so small that 60,000 of them sldo by side
would fill out a line one inch long, to the
largest geologic period fifty-ton beasts,
terrestlal or aquatic. And not ono In
original cell structure, nttribute or quality
has changed, evoluted, developed, mutated
or merged! Into another ot different type
or kind.
It is within primordial cells thut tru
mutation or change is to be searched
utter. This search has been made, but
cullutar evolution has not been dlncov
ered. The great founders of tho doctrlno
of evolution do not make extreme claims
Uke some of their followers:
Complete materialists, those who believe
that matter Is eternal, therefore not ere
ated, will find the significant words "cre
ation" and "created" on page 83, volume
II of "Origin of Species," thus: "Slnglo
Center of Supposed Creation.' We aro
thus brought to the question whtoh has
been largely discussed by naturalists,
namely, whether speclos have been cre
ated at one or more points of the earth's
surface. Undoubtedly there are many
cases ot extreme difficulty in under
standing how the same species could poo
slb.y have migrated from some one point
to the several distant isolated points
whero now found,
"Nevertheless, the simplicity ot the view
that each species was first produced
within the slnglo region captivates tha
mind. Ho who rejects It rejects the vera,
causa of ordinary generation with subse
quent migration and calls In tho agency
of a miracle." I would erase tho word,
"supposed" nnd substitute the word "cre
ation" for the word "mlrac)e in tho
above.
The theory of ovotutlon of one kind ot
plant or animal into another kind is not
true. I am out ot touch with colleges at
present, but believe that all teach evolu
tion, mutation, variation, selection and
changes in many of their forms, but
doubt If any professor, if asked by a
student this question, would ansker
"No." Q. "Does a Creator exist?"
Some might reply: "I do not know-thls
Is unknowable"
Or. If the word "know" is not desirable,
the word "aware" may be substituted oy
those who do not like the stronger word.
Man, normal, is nware that a Creator ex
ists. I said this to n, questioner once,
and he replied, " 'Aware' Is a stronger
word than 'know.' " Now let me "dogma
tize:" I know that a Creator exists and
that It Is mind.
Lowe Observatory. California.
How to Wash Face to
Preserve Its: Beauty
(From Beauty's Mirror.)
The face should never be washed mora
than once a day, that In the morning, ac
cording to an eminent London physician.
There's nothing like rain water tor this,
he sayB. It the skin Is not over-sensative,
cola water Is better than warm. Dashing
it over the faco with the palms of the
hands, aids In toning up relaxed skin. The
face should be dried with u soit towel and
not exposed to tho outdoor air tor at least
a halt hour.
Nqver use soap, but at night smear
over the face some preeolated buttermilk
paste, rubbing It in gently and removing
in the morning with cold water. It Is
more cleansing than any soap and con
tains no alkali. Its value as a tkln soft
ener and whltener Is well recognized, and
of courso this applies to nock and hands
as well as tho face. Any druggist can
supply good preaolutcd bufterfmilk paste,
and It is far more convenient to use than
u dally wash ot buttermilk, it Is more
economical, too, bq large an amount of
the beautifying elements being concen
trated In tlui paste Advertisement,