THE BKE: OMAHA. THURSDAY. AL'Ul'ST -JO, 1!14. 7 Woman Suffrage at St. Catherine's By Elizabeth Jordan, Author of the May Iverson Stories. Copyrighted, 1913, by Harper and Brothers. Editor's Note May Iverson. Elisabeth Jordan's famous school girl of St. Catherlne'a convent, in know wherever American book and inagH lines are known. Purine the last alx yearn three May Iverson serials, hare appeared, the firm two it. Harper's Magnetic, the third, duruig the current year. In Oood Housekeeping. The story reprinted here, by courtesy of Harper eV Brothers, hus a special Interest, not only because It takes up In May Iverson'a Inimitable fashion the great ouentlon of woman suffrage, but ev.n more from ihe fact that It is Illustrated with photographs of the actual aceno of the tale the College of St. Kllxabeth, I Original, Smart, Graceful Are These Creations by a Famous Parisian Designer. Note the Newest Coat, Which Is So Wide as to Be Almost a Cape. The False Aquariaa Age in convent. New Jersey 1 may as well admit at once that Maudie Joyce was the first ,glrl at St. Catherine's to feel any real Interest in woman suf frage. Usually I am the one In our school set Tvho thinks of new things, and does them; so the other girls have got In the habit of waiting for me, and not trying to' think themselves, in their crude Immature way. But Maudle thought of suffrage all alone, though perhaps Kittle James helped to put the Idea Into her head. Tou see. Kittle started an anti-suffrage club, almost as soon as we got buck to school in September, and she made her self the president of It at the very first meeting. Uefore the meeting was over, Maudle Joyce asked Kittle what the club was for, and Kittle didn't know; and Maudle asked what the members were go ing to do and Kittle didn't know that, either. Kittle said she Just a anted :o have a club because they had one In Chicago and her sister, Mrs. George Morgan, be longed to it She said the nicest feature of the Chicago club was that nobody In it did anything, and they Joined because they didn't have to do anything. It was a beautiful club, Kittle said, and so rest ful. Maudle walked off to a corner after these words fell from the lips of our young friend, and I followed her. I suppose we looked aloof and lonely and disapproving. Any way, -when the rest of the girls had matched us a while most of them came over to our corner, too, and the end of It was that Kittle only got three members for her new club. Mabel Muriel Murphy ,1olned because Sister Edna, the nun she likes best, approves of gentle, womanly girls. Kittle told Mabel the gentlest and most womanly thing a girl could possibly lo was to Join her anti-suffrage club. Kittle said the real aim of her club was to keep women ii their homes, where they belonged, when they weren't at her club; and she said Mabel Muriel Murphy wouldn't have to have a single new Idea,' all the time she belonged. Mabel said afterward It was true, too; she didn't have any. But the whole thing seemed silly to Mabel and me.: We are very Intelligent girls. If we are only 16. and we have lots of mature Ideas and emotions. If we join a club at all, we want to do something in It, even If it is only to eat. There weren't to be any "spreads" in Kittie's club, she said at first, because she has a delicate stomach, and the convent inflrmaiians, who look after her, think she mustn't eat between meals. They don't let her eat much at meals, either, so Kittle Is against girls overeating,: It is an awful thing to behold, when you are held down yourself. However, KiU4 went right on with her club, though, of course, she felt dread fully disappointed when Maudle and T didn't Join. Well. Indeed, did she know what that meant, and how Impossible real success mas without us. So she "strengthened her party," as papa says great statesmen do, by giving offices to her friends. She made Mabel Muriel Mur phy treasurer, because Mabel Muriel's father is rich and loves to pay bills; and he made Adeline Thurston secretary be cause Adeline loves to write poems, and Kittle said writing reports of her club n uu IU wc t nil iiivii v iiimpi von isafj is fvt; - try. When Maudle asked how there could be any reports If there wasn't anything every ingredient right but one and she would let me guess at that. Then she smiled her lovely smile, and changed the subject by asking me why my marks weren't higher In algebra. Of course, all this hasn't anything to do with suffrage, or anti-suffrage either. 1 Just put It In to show how acute I am, so the gentle reader won't be surprised when I read people's heaits the way I'll have to before I get through with this chapter. We w ill now return to Maudle. For a long lime she was silent, and thought gathered deeply on her beautiful, high bred face. At last she said, very slowly:' " are, too, suit ragettes. We've been suffragettes rlffht along. May Iverson. Only we haven't known It." I gasped then and began to say I couldn't be anything like that without knowing It, for my first lesson in life had been to know myself, and I learned It when I -ass II years of aa. But Maudle went right on. rudely Interrupting me. Fhe said she hadn't known her own heart till ihe went to Kittie's meeting and heard Kittle talk. She said all the time she was there she kept feeling more and more un comfortable and stirred up Inside, but she didn't know why. She even thought It might be Indigestion. She said it was only this minute that It burst upon her gloriously that from the very beginning of Kittlo'a meeting she had been a suf fragette, unconsciously working for the cause and trying to get Independence of thought for women. She added that when she heard Kittle Jones express her silly little Ideas, they made her so annoyed that she 'most wanted to slap Kittle. Then she woke up and knew she was a real suffragette, for that's the way they feel In England. She read all about It In the newspapers and a friend of her mother has seen Mrs. Tankhurst in Chi cago. By this time Maudie was very much ex cited, so when I didn't answer right off she said she was ready to die for the cause, and If I didn't feel that way, too, and Join the suffrage club she was going to get up. she'd never speak to me again as long as she lived. 1 Of course, that's no way to talk to the daughter of a general in the army, who Is a literary artist besides, and I pointed this out to Maudle In tones that wero cold and firm. I said she couldn't force me to do anything by threats, but that she must appeal to my reason and con vince me that suffrage was a good thing for women. And I added frankly that I didn't think she could do It now, anyway, I because she had anno;, ed me very much j by the way she begun. I was 'most sure already that I wasn't a suffragette .and didn't ever want to be. Maudle changed her methods then, right off.' She has associated with Mabel and me so long that she has a good deal of sense. She begged my pardon very po litely, and she fixed me in her big, comfy chair, and gave me a glass of ginger ale Ity KIHait M l IKN LA II KIN. Vi Will you kin ity answer through the Omaha llee. these question: lit Whrn will th" procession of the equinoxes pass from risers to Anuarlus? (2i loes a new eia occur t such Ins tates from oi:e elan to another? Merced. Cat. MBS K. C. SUA Rf'K. A. I had not lecn up here very long before questions relating to some laoked for. highly Important cent anon to occur began coining. This, to the letter wrllrre, seemed to he of transcendant Import, the liealnnlna of a new world era: a great change In all human events. A new dis pensation wouhi soon come and the na tions of the earth were to be affected, governments change and a general up heaval come on suddenly. The all-potent, looked-for event was made clear to me by such questions as: "When does the aim enter Aquarius?" "When will the un pass over the line?" "Please give the year when the sun will leave risres and enter Aquarius." "Will there he wars when the sun crosses to Aquarius?" "How long will the Aquarian age last?" "When will the equator cross the line?" When will precession cause the sun to enter the sign Aquarius?" "What will be the first efrect of the Aquarian era?" A number of these letters came from astrologers receiving money from the people for horoscoles. To say that 1 was surprised Is to stale It mildly. Why write to me? Why do not astrologer already know when the crossing "did." "does" or "will" take place? About hair of the letter asked when did the svin crocs and half when will the and a cookie, and started in to appeal to my reason. She said with her f'rst words that she was very glad to have my reason to ap peal to, and not the other girls', and she asked me to Imagine how I'd feci if I ever had to appeal to Kittle James' reason. When I clapped at that, like a real audience for anyone who knew Kittle could see what a powerful point It was Maudle asked me if I was willing to fol low the banner of Kittle James "In a done, Kittle said the club would write up struggle which was of vital Import to things that were not done. Then she looked past the sides of our faces and changed the subject by making Hattle Gregory vice president. We left- the meeting after thst, and went to my room and ate picklea and talked about how sharper than a ser pent's tooth an ungrateful child Is. Kittie was most like our own child, for she Is more than a year younger than we are, and not Intellectual; and Mable Blossom and Maudle Joyce and I have really directed her education since she came to tit. Catherine's, three years ago. While we were talking, Maudie said aha wondered what Mabel Blossom would think of all this. Mabel hasn't come back to school yet. but she was coming in a few days. Before I could answer Maudle spoke again. In the quick way she has rhtn she thinks something. It s just as If someone had touched a button in her I. tain, and often Maudle Jumps when it happens. - She Jumped this time, and so did I, for I wasn't expecting her to. and the doctor says I am a nervous girl, singularly high-strung. Besides, of course, I have the artistic temperament, and you know what that does to folks. So I Jumped, and then got cross over it, the way any literary artist would, who lil.es to be "well poised and dignified." is Sister K.ir.a sa. Ms-u'.ie Joyce didn't even apologize. She Just sat staring '.n front of her for a minute, as If she saw k methirg that wasn't there. Then she laid, very slowly: "May Iverson. let's be auf fragettesV 1 Jumped again, because the idea sur prised me so much, and I said: "But we aren't suffragettes, so how can we bi'!" Maudie looked at me with a patient ex pression, like tlie one Sitter Irmlngrade Hears toinetin.es In the class room. I analysed It once, for literary practice, to help ine observe life and put down all I ee; it had astonishment In it, and pained egret, and resignation, and a kind of holy calm, struggling up through hope ettnest. After I analyzed it. write it all out and showed the paner to hieter Irmlngarde, and asked her if I was right, blie looked very much surprised at first, but finally ahe said she thought I had the humaa rare." (She got that out of a newspaper. We have to read one every day, for our current events class.) j I stod right up and said I didn't want i to follow Kittle s banner, or anybody s but my own. I said I just wanted to spend my life elevating the masses by writing pure literature for them, and I didn't see why men couldn't go on voting, and doing the heavy work like that, while we women uplifted them. I felt just full I of thoughts, but Maudle made me alt j down before I could say any more. She j said I had promised to let her appeal to ; my reason and she wished I would do It and not Interrupt. That was n rebuke and it annoyed me very much. I sat down right away, but It was quite a long time j before I could get my Intellect calm ' enough for Maudie to appeal to It. I kept I thinking. Instead of crushing things I j might have said before I sat down, and ; It was dreadfuly hard not to get up again 1 and say them then. They would have been a help to Maudle, too. But Maudie was going right along with her speech all the time, and getting more excited every minute. I don't believe she ; f lilt ill I lfMSl V O'Ux'Ir p mm fmmr:'h V fa r i' , y SB oome of tne newest coats are almost aa wide as the long capes. One of these of the type which has appeared recently has been sketched by a lending Parisian coutourler for the Princess Fizlandoff. The small coat Is of strawberry crepon de colon, very short at the front. It makes a basque with wide stitched plaits caught under a stitched band, fastened by a button of the material. The long sleeves are finished by high revers of white linen, hem Btltched as the collar. The blouse Is of white tulle. The skirt, of white crepon, strawberry striped, is a plain and round model and hemmed with a strawberry silk braid. The opening, at the middle front, Is outlined by a row of small crochet buttons. OLIVETTE. Little Mary's Essays-Wives Ity DOROTHY D1X. Wives is what men get wiaht on them when they get married. Sometimes the man looks like my cat dl I when he et my canary, but mostly be looks like he just wtuht he knew who done It to him. A man speaks nice and polite to a lady, and he takes really caret! much about suffrage when , he.' arm and helps she began, but by the time she finished ' her across the she was ready to give up her work at St. I street, but he snaps Catherine's, and her dream of being a j up a wife w hen khe great actrers, and go right s it and be a j speaks to him, and auffragette, and get arrested and sent to when they walk on prison. She had read about the English the streets to women in prison, snd how they ere fed ! gether she tugs through tubes, and she called themjaong bmd him. ... I A man calls a ahe was going to have Adeline Thurston I young lady "angel write a poem about them. I spoke up j f., nd ,.gwf et. again, ana reniinciea ner mai Aoenne was an anti-suffraglst now. and would only write poems against suffrage. Maudie groaned and aaid: "This Issue will split the convent. It will be like West Point at the break of the civil war. when the : heart" before they ' are married, but a man calls his wife "tay." Also a man klat.es a young lady fey s moutii when ht cttuets had to take aides for the north i ner "Muy oeiore mey are married, or the south." Then she looked at me ! but wh'n 1,6 xily to his wife he wlih her ejes Mazing, and said: "May j k" npr bark ,1,lr- 1 know 'ls Iterson. at such a cilsis will you be o.i ,ru- because I watched my Aunt Susie the fence, tninklng about life and trying nd h'r b'u. nd my mamma and my to write stnriea, or 111 you be out on the great butllefitld, fighting shoulder to khoulder with your dear ones?" (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) 36c andejrbilt ISofef 1 (SlvrtlTyburlk Strttt east at dffitrJt oAcumae, j)u) York WI.TON H. MARSHALL. Manager. An Ideal Hotel with an Ideal Situation Summer late? papa. A wife Is one of the moat useful of all our domestic animals. She cooks, and sews, and mlnda the baby, and does the I khoplug and the marketing, and enter 3 J tsios the company, but she does not havs j to be paid any money like a cook, or a, housemaid, or a nurse. Women who are not wives have to work for a living. Oh, how thankful a wife should be that she does not have to work. A wife Is also useful to lay things on I That is why men get them. When a man doesn't wunl to do anytl.ing be al ways tays that his Mile won't let him do ii, ani wlu-n a man plae poker and lores j works, and pinches, and pinches, and Henneries in neip ner nusDana get on, ana who never has any nice clothes, and who tides on the street cars; and there's the Keoond Wife, who has diamonds, and Paria dresses, and a limousine that the good First Wife saved up' to buy for her. And there's Thin Wives and Kat Wives, but I guess wives Is like automobiles. Every time you get a new ono you try a new make. Wives have many curious peculiarities. One of them is that they have got noses that ran smell things ss fir as a hound dog. When my papa has had a drink my mamma can smell It before he gets within a block of the house. Also wives Is like cats, and they never sleep, and no matter how easy you tiptoe In, you always wake them up. Wives is very noble creatures, and they feel It their aacied duty to tell their hus bands about their faults. Men would not know how many faults they have and what poor, miserable worms ot the dust they are If they did not have wives. Wives save their husbands a great desl of trouble by spending their money for them. A man who haa a wife never has to worry about the danger of banks break ing. When a man's wife dies he has nobody to quarrel with, and this makes him so lonesome thst he runs right off and gets married again. That la all I know at present about wives. Theoretical Aetlrltr. "Lady." said Plodding Pete, "have you any wood you want chopped?" "Yea, lndd." "How much?" "There's about half a cord that ou can start on." "Thanks, ma'am, t'ould you l-nd me a lesri pencil snd a piece of paper? ' "Don't you want an axe?" 'No. 1 ni repretentin' the Association of Industrious Inspectors. The secretsry ' ' . . . . sun cr.-ss the line. Now. so long aa they take fees ror their wisdom why do they nut know to them by their own theory- the fundamental point? 1 have not wasted precious lime all too short in answer ing thefe senseless letters.. Hut this correspondent, not by any means an astrologer, really wants the Information for Its own sake. But I must decline to give this date. I am willing) to answer almost any question that t am able to but this. A hundred astrologers would like to know where the equinoxes are, but I refuse to tell them. .You see that If I should come right out and tell, then thousands of horoscopes now held by dupes, many rostlng in fees from fS away up to $M. would become Invali dated. The victims would all sea that if this fundamental to theifl date Is to tally unknown to astrologers, that their precious horoscopes are all fakee. No! I must "save the faces" of the horo scopes and save the hundreds of thou sands of dollars paid for them. Here are the facts: Thfre la no sum thing as an "era." The Magna Chart was a step In advance of liberty In F.ng laml, and the Declaration of Independ ence likewise In America. The discovery of the steam engine was an advance, but it cannot be eald that we have an era of the engine. The same Is true of tha discovery of the printing press, tha pen dulum, the telegraph and telephone, the electric eng'ne, telescope, microscope., spectroscope, roentgen rays, radium nt electrons. These are not eras. SO tha word may as well be put away over Into the appendix In the rear of tha dlotlon-ary-llke thousands of now abeoleta words. 1 The sentenre. ''chtn enterin tha alga Aquarius," has no real scientific mean ing. The main reason for thla Is that there la no such thing as Amiarlua. All questioners actually aeem to believe that there Is such an object In tha aky as Aquartua. The only scientific, words In the mass of letters and In many frantla pamphlets raving about the approach of a new era the Aiuarlun are these: Precession of the equlnoaes. And thesai few words are cssually alluded to aa If they did not amount to much. Not one letter, book, treatise, pamphlet or printed leaflet on the Aquarian era. reveals a trace of real knowledgo of tha true sclentlflo phenomena, that grand motion, the sliding around of the equi noxes in each period ot ?5.78 years. Why. tha Ignorance Is simply dlsgusUngl "Sun enters Aquarius?" , Of course It doea, once a year. If you will atlll wish to cling to the ancient mythology of tha Greeks. Assyrians and Egyptians, who pictured beasts and stukes, with nyaraa and dragor.s, amid the gUtterln stars. If you atlll wish to believe in a aodlao land its twelve purely Imaginary signs, then,, the aun apparently enters tha hypothetical sign Aquarius once during each year, when the earth apparently enters the imaginary sign on tha op posite aide of the Imagined aodlac. All of which simply amounts to nothing more than mere weather, climate, eto.. and wlnda. Hut tha grand problem ot precession of the equlxcs I refuse to discuss on the same paper upon which I have written tha horrible word astrology. There la no auch thing aa a godlac, no Aquarius, and therefore no Aquarian tge nor era; nor any other era, for all eras are purely aatroluglcal, ail Invented, before one law of nature had bean dis covered. The universe is governed by mathematical laws, not vain imaginings. Of course, the sun appears to pass be fore the distant ttars In what has been Imagined as the constellation Aquariua ' once annually; but It comes from Caprl cornus. What the astrologers ara vainly seeking to find Is when the equinoxes In their majestic motion of preoeaslon pass lrom sign to sign, going the other waya thus, In this question, from Places back wards Into Aquarius. This data I shall not publish for their satisfaction. , But It makes no difference when th equinoxes pass from sign" to "sign"" to any individual human being; or any collection of humans Into a nation. Thla la a fake pure and simple, and Is o based on any lay of nature whtvren, Some years ago the lingerie frock was made of niessallne de com munlante. This year it U of organdy, as shown by this model. The bodice of this afternoon frock Is a loose blouson, continued at back by a small court mantle bordered by a ruchlng of same material. The elbow sleeves are of embroidered net, finished by a ruching. A Bayadere girdle encircles the hips In a cutaway Una at front and catches up a long tunir, bordered at the bottom by a ruching. The underskirt, which makes the "base," Is of white taffeta and to tally plaited. OLIVETTE. Rivals la the Milk TrmJe. The milkman had been discarded for rival vender, and was hotly Indignant. "I don't want to say anything against him, but If you prefers milk that's been knocked about on the railway for hours, to good milk freah from my own cqwa, well, you'll get It. That's all." "Hut lie assures me that thla milk is brought direct from his own farm In tha neighborhood." ' Uoea he? Well, he may bo apeaklng the truth, but It's a funny thing tha, whsn I go up to the station for niy milk every morning there he Is putting milk cans Into hia cart." Manchester OuardlaBM A Philosopher With a Message wants me to turn In a renort on hou his iin.ncv he b'amea hia aire's extiava- ! much woodchoppln' there Is to he done same because he is not rich. : in this township. It n make a rla-hl In- There are manv different klnda of wies. There is Ibe First Wife. bg terestlng paper to read at o ir next neet in, an melibe wa can think up some way o' geitin' it chopped." Washington Star. By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. When Johana Gottlieb KlciHe Hed. Just 1IK) years ggo, January V, 1114, there passed out from the ways of men ons of the finest Intellects and one of the grand est pieces of man hood that ever hon ored and adorned the rare. Ktchte was. in the truest sense of the word, a philosophic a lover of wla dom. He loved truth with all his heart, and not once during hia entire career did he lower hia flag to those who would have him play false with hia honest ronvli tmnr. Instead of living and dying poor. Flehte could have had 5'lsee and power and wealth had he but said the word, hut not for the world would he have s'jI1 his better self for the plaudits of men and their proffered gold. In his lonely poverty Flrhte tolled on for the truth thai he venerated aud loved, and thought of no other reward then that which tame to U.m In the conscious- ff T. -way" ness of bis own personal Integrity and rectitude. Fichte was the noblest of patriots. Never will his countrymen forget his "Addresses to the German People" tha wonderful ap peals wh'ch. may be said to have re created the spirit of German nationality, wiped out tha depression that aettled down upon the people after Jena, and paved the way for the ever memorable ceremony on the Hth of January, 171, when the Oerman empire was proclaimed In the great Hall ot Mirrors at Ver sailles. In the realm of matters transcendental. Fichte anticipated all the profound think ers of today, and among the rest the dis tinguished president emeritus of Harvard. lng before President Eliot was born tha great German thinker declared, "Ood Is the Moral Order of the Universe, the Kternal Law of Right, which Is the foun dstion of our being." There was no scholastic metaphysics, no theological namby-pamby In that declaration, but a scientific truth, around to which all thoughtful persons are sure, sooner or later, to coma. Fichta finished the work that was given him to do, and died In the poverty In the midst of which he had largely lived; but his Influence Is Immortal and of the good fruits of bis labor there shall be no end. fMter's Friend Before Baby Arrive? During several weeks of expectancy there is a splendid external embrocation In our "Mothers i-rlsnd" In whicni thousands of women have th moat unbounded confidence. They have usedl it and know. Tbey tell of Ita wonderful Influence to ease the abdominal muscles) and how the avoided those dreaded! stretching palna that are so much talked about. Thla safe external application as gently used over the sklu to render U amenable to tha natural stretching which it undergoea. Tha myriad of servej threads Just beneath tha akin Is thus) relieved of unnecessary pain -producing causes and great physical relief as tha result aa expressed by a boet of happy mothers who writs front personal experience. It la a subject that all women should be familiar with as "Mother Friend' haa been In use many years, haa beers given the most severe testa under most all trying oenditiona and Is reooramenoedl by women who to-day are grandmother and who In their earlier years learaedl to eely upon thla splendid aid to women. "Mother's Friend" is declared by s multitude of women to be just what ex pectant motherhood require. Tou can obtain "Mother's Prtend al almoat any drug store. Oat a bottle to-day snd tbeo write for ear little g.k. Address Brsdfleld B-ulatur i.- UJ J-amax Wdg., Atlanta, iLia- w 1 i. i ii- i. ii.. T .1 -I '!' til! . i h -11 I I. .1 .'. ' I ' ' I I 1. I