TIIK TWAl: OMAHA, KRIlttY, JUXK 11, 1913. I r .Ih e Bees HfotneMa gaziePage f How U. S. Women Met War Situation AT tho top is an evening gown made on classic Greek lines. The cut below shows the military influence in tailor mndu suits. It is of ton khaki-kool, trimmed with blue taffeta iind brans buttons. Ik r By ELLA WIIEELEH WILCOX. Copyright, 1915. Star Company. A It ho uk h there has been no war raging in America, this country haa felt the hock of the Kuoperan druggie. Many men who have been receiving large rev enue or moderate revenues through International inter ests have been ob liged to curtail ex penses and dis pense with all save tho necessities of life. One Interesting featwe of such situations has been the manner in which wives and daughters met the emergency. Some, sins, have nmt It with complaining and discontent and that lack of phil osophical reasoning characteristic of certain types of womanhood,;, but then, agtln. there have been sliinlng exam ples of courage, optimism and bravery on the part of women which relieves the gloom of the picture. - "no young woman whoso parents had rnt a small fortune upon her musical .education found them greatly troubled over the reduction of Income. Kndeav oring to turn her musical accomplish ments to practical usage, she soon dis covered her inability to Instruct others In music. Teachers, as well as poets. .see:u to be bom, not raude: and th's .young woman was not born to teach. Having this fact forced upon her. she turned her attention In other directions. ' Although reared with the idea that aho was to he accomplished and orna mental and to-employ people to do what ever she wished to have done, she stepped Into the arena of life to fight her battle ' with adverse circumstances. She took a course In stenography, and after much hard work and concentration she obtained sufficient skill to enable tier to obtain a position which yielded .h'.T a small income. This quite cut her off from most of her old associates who bad been, girls of wealth and social posi tion, ' but the really worth-while friends remained loyal and admired her courage an 1 strength of character. w Scores of young women have taken up nursing, both at home and abroad, and, .Indeed, ever? avenue, of occupation open to women has been thronged with fair petitioners since the war crisis came to upset the established conditions of the social and financial world. . The revival of the art of dancing (which, by the way, is said to always pre cede great wars), has made a lucrative profession for a great many young women. A letter from a young woman w ho -has been educated In Paris and who lias traveled for pleasure in many for eign lands lies before the writer. ' She savs: "i have become a worker this winter apd have found how much happier I am when busy. I am teach ing ballroom and Interpretative dancing. 1 have felt during the early months of the war that J wanted to go to Europe and help. I thought I could not be Idle when there was so much misery In the world; but I finally decided It was better Greek tendencies in evening gowns are vying with the picturesque Watteati and the full skirts and pointed "basques" of Lthe ISM period. One particularly beautiful model of the Greek suggestion shown In a big Fifth avenue shop Is made of while and silver brocaded satin, made with skirt ending In a pointed train and slightly raised and slit in front. Two embroid ered girdles of pearls gleam beneath a scarf of sliver net bound In silver cloth and fastening Into wrist bands of silver. In smart contrast to this eleborete and graceful Grecian form another shop Is showing a Jaunty little military suit of tan khskl-kool, the skirt being short and fitted with a hanging pocket at tached to the belt. The short-walsted Jacket has a flaring peplunt. cut Into sec tions, a narrow belt, cults r and cuffs of blue pussy willow taffeta give a charming touch of color combined with a proper trimming of brass button. High military boots of blue kid and tips and quarters of dark Wue morocco are worn 1th this suit. Will the Earth Be Like Mars? gg There Is Evidence That It is Drying Up. : : : : : . : : I ' m-:-:m' Iff sr f II I . - -.jVavUI .w ' It V 1 4 :rV 1 1 m & a t h. -7 A -If -A f -: J 3 ' , s By GARRETT P. 8KRV1SS. to stay at home and do my work here and increase my powers - of usefulness; in that way. I am really quite wildly, enthusiastic about my work and in the thought that I am accomplishing some thing for myself." With all the innumerable and upspeak horrors and calamities of this war, many good things have really resulted from It. One of these is the awakening In women- kind of the Impulse of helpfulness and self reliance. We shall have a stronger and a more efficient and a more Inter esting race of women in the next genera tion In consequence of this. . No woman should be ashamed to work. But every woman should be ashamed to be Idie and allow overburdened or un fortunate man, whether father, husband. brother or son, to support her. Any re spectable employment Is more becom ing and ennobling to a woman than such dependence. rrof. Winchell, the Michigan geologist, once wrote a book on "Comparative Geology." The Idea that he developed In the book waa that a great deal may lo learned both about our own world and other worlds by the method of dlrert comparison, whereby their resemblances and differences are rendered clearer, and more certain conclusions can be drawn concerning their relations as members of a single planetary family. The one question that everybody, wishes especially to have answered con cerning any other planet Is whether cr not it Is an Inhabitable world. Nine tenths of those who express an Interest In astronomy, without particularly de- string to cultivate a. scientific acquaint ance with it. are moved by curiosity as i to the possible existence out in the sky of Intelligent beings, other than but like to, and perhaps superior to. ourselves. It may be that this question of other inhabited worlds will never be definitely and positively settled, but It ' Is certain that one of tho best ways to undertake Its solution Is that pursued by Trof. Winchell In the hook to which I have re ferred. Something of this kind U under taken In, the pictures herewith shown, which were prepared by Mr. Striven Bolton of the Royal Agronomical society. They exhibit the planets Mars and Earth, and enable the reader to grsp at a glance the likenesses between them. Mara 1 not often a very conspicuous ob ject In the heavens, and It would never have attained the high degree of popular Interest which it tnjnye but for the dis covery of features on Its surface which resemble the oceans and continents that cover our globe It Is a fair argument that wherever there la enough water to make oceans there are,' In all probability, the other things, such a air,, plant life. etc., upon which the higher forms of animal existence depend. The method of- comparison is -not con fined to the present condition of the planets that are subjectod to It. but It Involves their past and future. For In stance, Mars being muoh smaller than the earth (only 4,200 miles In diameter against the earth's 7.9?4 miles), Is sup posed to have run through the stages of planetary evolution faster than the earth has done, because those stages depend mainly upon the process of cooling, and a small body, equally heated at the be ginning, will part with its heat and be come externally cool and solidified sooner than a larger body. ConsequenUy It is argued Mars was probably In a habitable condition mil lions of years before the ' earth had reached a similar stage, and so It may well have developed a species, or several species, of Intelligent Inhabitants now much further advanced Intellectually and morally than we are. This Is a very fascinating speculation, but It opens the way, by the very data upon which it Is based, to the counter proposition that, although Mars may onoe have been in habited by beings superior to us. It has now parted with them, having passed on to a later stage of planetary evolutions. in which highly organised life la Impossible. This Is suggested by the failure of the theory which prevailed In the mid dle of the nineteenth century that the dark areas on the surfaco of Mars were seas. It has since been shown that these are, at the best, only places where seas may once have existed, but that Mar at the present day contains no' large bodies of water. Whether with the gradual desiccation of the planet Its higher forms of life have perished, or yet remain, In diminished numbers, i iee see 3B 5 lBe tte left 4 le to . i . ; . i , . a t . 4l , :-, i f .j ; t . -- ,- 4. Hi I "" ' . ' .(S ' """'77" ; ' I ; t ,'. il I'LL i I y ' f . , . I I -.. . -1 , I . . v . a ' t i " ! i- ---il:.Fri-v its aw ssHaSSSsaB t ' . 1 !:--1 basssa Mnp of Mara Tlie distribution of what is regarded as land (while) and water (dark( approxi mates future terrestrial diNtribution on the eartli in the remote future. . Read It Here See It at the Movies ,jsswii il , ' " "'"'1"'"1'" ''J 'Tii''"'"'?1! S"'i'i'i" TLr' tfjF JrY camoDTjcxsTa EARLE WILLIAMS as Tonuay Barolay ANITA STEWART aa Tae Ooddesa Written bv Gouverneur Morris (Owe of the Most WotabU rig. area Is America uteratnre) Dramatised Into a Photo-Play by CWasU.TH W. QODOAJUI. Author of Th erUe of saaUae" The Baplolta ef Blaise" Copyright, 1915. by the Star Co. All For eign Rights Ki served. yaopsle ef Prevloae Chapters. After the tragic death of John Ames, bury, his protstrated wife, one of Amer ica s greatrst beauties, dies. At her deah, frof. milliter, an agent of the Interests, kidnaps the beautiful J-year-old baby girl and bring her up In a paradlae where she sees not man, but thinku she is taught by angels, who instruct her for lier mission to reform the world. At the age of 1 she is suddenly thrust Into the world, where agents of the Interests are v-ady-to pretend to find her. The one to feel the loss of the little Anieaburg girl most, after she had been spirited awav by the interests, was Tommy Barclay. Fifteen years later. Tommy goes to the Adlrondancks. The Interests are respons ible for this trip. By sccldent he Is the first to meet the little Amesbury girl, as aha comes forth from I'er paradise as Celestla, the girl from heaven. Neither Tommv or Celestla recognise each other. Tommy finds It an easy matter to rescue Celeatta from Prof. Htilliter, and they hide in the mountains, later they are pur sued by Atlllter and escape to an Island, where they spend the nUht FOURTH EPISODE. "Well." thought Ktilllter aa he followed iVeatta and the guides. "We've a ntiileus of votes agsinst the time when we need them," and being a psychologist, he wondered why the younger guide kept looalug at Celestla and the elder didn L "Bhe works like a charm," he thought, "and she is my work-mine." And in a way she was; but the scien tist took too much credit. Left to herself, Celestia must have been a force for good. Toward the end of the long tramp there had to be frequent rests, for Celestla waa getting very tired, and when at last they reached Four Corners It waa only just la time to catch the New Tork express. During the few minutes there were to spare, however, Celestla gathered all the crowd there waa to gather, and made tlte deepest and most lasting Impression that hud ever been made upon that woodland community. Something of interest happens In the midst of a remote wilderness, and within a few hours the incident "written up" with details appears In a newspaper. That this is possible Is owing nine-tenths to good management and one-tenth to good luck. "Johnny" Cumberland of the New Tork American had Just stepped off tho Mon treal exprrsa at Four Corners for a few dsys' rest and holiday In the woods. lie had earned this by tracking down, through a period of sir weeks, and caus ing the arrest of a certain gentlemen who had beer using the I'nlted States mall to serarate unsophisticated people from their money. "I want to go somewhere for a few days," said Johnny to the city editor, "where there Is no news." The city editor did not make the usual cnlcal answer about Brooklyn or tin state department. He ssld rimply: "Try Four Corners, Waykotcus county. New Tork," and dismissed Johnny with a quick, pleasant nod. Johnny, however, had no sooner stepped off the train at the iwwslcss place than he ran head fust Into news. And that afternoon there appeared in a column of the American devoted to Oleatia and headlined tke this: "Angel from heaven found In Adiron dack, la the most beautiful wpman In the world, insane or an advertising scheme. Some think her a female Billy Sundey wsnts to reform New York will be tskru to' lleMevlew iilxervstion ward." Think of the maddest you have ever 4? 5? 4 lit n i le 44 T Tt-TvJT tfrJ? S '? s " " i ? V T -T - -w - - - - e ee ts w e ee se se tee tie I Map of the World When our globe, in the remote future, reaches an advanced stage of evolu tion not dissimilnr to that attained by Mars today, land area will ex ceed that of water (shaded regions.) v ' struggling against the fast narrowing conditions that surround them. Is an unsettled question. We know that the earth haa probably begun to dry up. and that the relative extent of Its oceans and continents will be greatly changed In the remote fu ture. The question Is whether w shall be able to survive as a race whon the terrestrial seas have shrunk say to half or a third of their actual extent, and when the space then Included by them Is covered with a merea film of water. The two charts here show what the appearance of the earth will be millions of years hence, when Its oceans will have shrunk to relatively mere shreds. The resemblance between our planet and Mars will then be muoh more striking than It Is today. It Is possible to make such a chart of the future appearance of the earth's surface because of our knowledge of tbe Jeeps and shadow of the ocean and ft 1 certainly very singular that when made this prophetic ohart of the drying earth bear so strik ing a general likeness to a chart ol Mara aa shown by telescope. Advico to Lovelorn By BBATaUCa JTUBVAX 82 f orget toaraeif. Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 1 am It and sensi tive. People ay and do different things to me, which probably they do not mean, but It hurts me so that I cannot help allowing It, and they think me disagree able. I am considered pretty, and girls and boys seem to be fond of me, but they seem to tlrs of me soon, and I Imagine for no other reason than the above men tioned. Would you kindly advise me what to doT KLtUklN, Sensitiveness la sometimes too great modesty, but more often it is . selfish self-consclousnesa The reason people tire of you la probably because you .are al ways thinking of yourself and f the consideration and attention you troagln are due you. Instead of complaining be cause people do not understand you. pro ceed to try to understand tlienv. Pon t demand from other give) graciously and accept thankfully. - t Legalise the . Dear Miss Fairfax! Would a marriage ceremony be genuine If It la performed with a name that the man would assume for his lite thereafter T , PROBPECTIVB. When a man wishes to assume a name other than hi own he must hare ' the sanction of the court, unless It Is a stags name or pen name. Otherwise he must affix his own name to legal document. been, multiply that by ten, and you will have somo Idea of Tommy's state of mind when he found that hi clothe were gone It was half an hour before he was able to think. And by that time there waa no longer any sight or sound of Celestla. Almost it seemed as though she never existed, a if she had been an hallucation of some sort. But that he waa without clothe was a fact which he war not for a mo mrnt to forget, until he had contrived something to take their place. A large, angry horso fly lived on the Island and wouldn't let him forget Sooner than have that happen It would take the trouble to bite him suddenly in the small of the back. Still furiously angry, but calmer, he hurried to the hut and used up a precious hour to make a suit of clothe out of the buffalo robe. He succeeded with an eld nail, which he found, in making holes for his arms and legs to go through and in cutting a strip of hide for the belt, but as a suit the affair wa not a aucce. Finally he determined to travel naked. carrying the buffalo suit over his arm to be donned hastily in case ho met anyone. So he swam to the msinland, keeping the buffalo hide out of water as much as he could, and on feet which were soon bruised and bloody, headed straight for Four Corners. He chose this course not because he expected to find Celestla there, but because he was well known there, and could get clothe and If neces sary a posse of men who would help to find out what had become of her. Badly bitten by mosquitoes, gnats and deerflies, he hsd by B o'clock arrived within half a mile of Four Corners, when a sound of footstep caused him to dsrt behind a virburnutn buab and dress heatlly In his buffalo robe sulL Tliat so dressed he resembled a rroa between the w lid man of Borneo and a Chritma stocking, did not trouble him. li wag covered and proprieties were preserved. That wss all that mattered. Stepping hack Into the trail ind renewing his wsy he raine face to face with John Cumberland of The American To I Continued Tomorrow.) THE SUMMER GUEST km i If IS if. t is not always a welcome guest where the housewife must wrestle with the servant question and other vexatious' problems of household management. The Summer guest is generally a wel come guest when you have .We Ti (Diec Wheat in the home. All the goodness of the whole wheat made digestible and deli ciously palatable by steam - cooking, shredding and baldng. We have done the baldng and saved you the bother So easy to prepare a deliciously whole some and nourishing meal "in a jiffy" by crisping a few of these biscuits in the oven and serving with berries or other fresh fruits and cream and the -cost is only a few cents. Made only by The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y, i