'Uli; HHK: DM AHA. TIiniSPAY. SKPTKMRFK .'W. 115. ie. Bees otite Maazlme Pa Why We Quarreled Miss Barnes'. Rules for Gaining Poise Evolution Mighty Work of the Creator Seen In Progressive Forms of Animals Left in the Rocks To the Soul Science Can Ap ply None of Its Tests. : : Heavens in October waw. s isswsi js sss . ?," i VV""" 'v't''S:t''y''r ' " " IB 1 No. 10 This Husband's ' Untidiness Causes' His Wife's Story of Dispute By Virginia Terbane Van de Water .Copyriht, 1M5. by Star Company.) My husband and I have quarrelled be cause ot nia anuarent inauierence ii 10 how hla noma and he himself look. Io the first place. Paul smokes, and no amoker 1 thoroughly tidy. Then he la not aa careful about hla personal clean llneea aa I think a gentleman ahould be. To be sure, I have not had much ex perience with men, aa my father died when I waa a mere child, and I had no brother. Bo It waa hard for me to be come accustomed to the odor of cltjrrs and clcarettes. But for the take of my huaband, I tried to do thla. I am naturally very neat, and It make me acutely uncomfortable to nee things In dlsordor. loon after our marriage we moved to the suburbs and bought new cottage. All our furniture waa pretty and dainty. Paul seemed aa proud of our belonging- aa I waa. Bo It waa a distinct disappoint ment to me to note how little pains he took to keep things Immaculate. First of all, he bought a dog1. Now, 1 am fond of animals, and the thought of having a dog on guard when 1 waa at home alone waa comfortable. But t sup posed that the creature would be kept out of doors. "When will you gut his kennel?" I naked on the day of Hover's arrival. Ho won't need a kennel." my hus band Informed me. "He will spend mont of hla time on the veranda." "But In muddy weather, think how dirty he will got the place," 1 ventured. "In stormy weather he can come Into the house," my huaband remarked. "lie la too valuable a dog to ho left out at night tn ail weathers." I looked at the thoroughbred KnKHh setter, and reflected that he was nr talnly an ornament to any household So I offered no further protest nt the time, It waa autumn, and with the first cold, rainy evening Rover scratched for ad mittance on our new front door. Pnul smiled aa ho aaw the marks of the dog's nails on the polished wood. "Come In, you rascal!" he called, oppn Ing the door. "You're as wet as a drowned rat." He apoke the truth. The doj hud been j running through the woods not far from ' our cottage. He now made straight.' for j the open fire, in front of which he pro- I deeded to shake himself vigorously, the i drops from Ms, shaggy hair flying In all j directions. "Oh, Paul!" I exclaimed. "Thla Is too much! Just look at my pretty furniture." But Paul only laughed. That Is his way. That la also the way that he took my comments on hla smoking and many other untidy habits. When he waa a boy hia mother must have let him do just as he pleased. He waa her only aon. Perhaps that accounts for his carelessness. It seems a smalt thing to quarrel about, doesn't It? Yet, after a while, I found conditions almost unbearable. Our living room waa ftnlahed In white enamel paint. Our ruga and hangings were in an exiiuis- j ite shade of dull blue. It was an Ideal room. At least, that la the way It waa when we were first married. Iater, when my husband's dog waa not lying on my one white fur rug In front of the fire, my husband's muddy boota were drying there. He liked to tramp in all weathers, and when he came In, he would throw his damp mackin tosh one on chair, his wet hat on an other, and, stretching- himself out on the oouch, with bis head on tho delicate colored cuahlons, proceed to light his cigar, and smoke, dropping the ashes about promiscuously. Then, when din ner was announced, he would go Into the dining room and bit down at the table In his rough clothes, his hair unbmfhed. his hands unwashed. I stood thla for one year. At the be ginning of our second winter In the coun try. I had a long talk with Paul. I told him how unhappy hla way made me and begged him to be more careful. He seemed Impressed by my talk, which I made aa rentle and conciliatory aa I could, and promised to try to comply with my wishes. With my own money I had the rugs cleaned, tho sofa cushions recovered, the fnor "dene over." and the whole house put In perfect order. Then I went away for a fw days to visit a friend In the city. I returned on Sunday afternoon instead of waiting un til Monday afternoon, as I had planned. All the way home I was thinking how different our little homo wmiM K nnur that Paul was going to be more careful. It was a bitter cold day, and. as I took the Tillage stage from the railroad sta tion, I pictured my husband's happy aurpriee at my arrival. 1 also fancle-1 how eoay and inviting the cottage would look, iiut when I entered aoftly, I stopped short in dismay. My husband's muddy foot-prints and tho doga equally muddy tracka were everywhere. Paul wore no collar, and he had evidently not been shared since my departure. He had had two bottles sf beer brought Into the Uv. tug room that morning, and the "emn. ties" and a glass still stood there. The place smelt of stale beer, cigar butU and t dog's hide. My husband laughed at my csdamaUoa f disappointment. He always laughs at fcuch things. Then be kissed me. The bristle on hi ehla scraped my face, hU soiled Unen and spotted clothaa offended " w w ms Dressing point and t pushed him from me with both bands. "Don't touch me!" I oommaiidetL "What la Um matter T ha asked. la a lew strong words I told btm. And we," I said, "the time Las come ahett you are either to alter your hatilta, gvi nd of your doc or get rid of me!" I know many woineo will eoodMDs me, for my husband was fond of me, waa a Frotd provider, and a respectable member of aorusty. But to one lrotgbt up as I waa. un cvsxaiimas In nereoa and saAlts la harder U, ijrar than some actual skis would he. i Saa-:-OV Today Miss Barnes finishes her article on calisthenics aa a means of aiding women In their search for graci ard beauty. The specially posed exercises which Miss P-arnee Illus trates, used In connection with those given yesternny, arc classic In sim plicity. They are within the reaoh of even the busiest woman. Hy HELEN' RARXEH. These exercises complete the series I started last week. ' First Raise the kneea as high aa pos sible with amis outstretched, shoulder high. Alternate raising kneea as rapidly as possible. Second Lie flat on the back on the floor. Clasp hands above head and raise one leg as high aa possible, keeping the other stretched on the floor. Just a word about the general rulea governing these exercises, which are beat taken in rotation as a complete scries. Remember you are not doing them dally Just for the fun of the thing. You want results! So put a little head work Into tho exercises and keep eternally at them. You'll only 'waste your time If you go about them in any other spirit. Do each one at least ten times, and do them all rapidly. Twenty minutes for the whole wrles Is, quite enough. Start them in the mornlrm after your cold shower i plunge and at night go through the four exercles for a few minutes Just before retiring. Tho added benefit you will get from your sleep will V : , i . .rt'ittei miU'iiiM t v i ,r xm a n-1 1 1 m mm n cj.mu:TT r. hkhtih!. Answers tn the following questions will be greatly appreciated: (1) Hclnnre if fers the theory of evohrtlon. Ies litis destny the truth of the nihil, al narm tlve of creation? (I) Does science ad-- -in , , mlt or deny the ex- if: '"J" j istenre of the soul?" II f?" tf. -fiia, ... . h V v ,1 .Suinnsn somebody Tl i , , v5 should say to you: K' ,V.. Jjf;'.-'! "We are bound to i.V.;. , t : to believe from what IfS ., 'jA.,V,--.' .. . .. . , :i Li is saia in umrsis ','''' i .1 u about the creation of animals that the I . i r i.i it M m -onp'.ete and er- H'' feet horse. The Al mighty nm.de the Hrles bono In the beg lining hs a horse and nothing else." If you had no siwclal knowledge on the subject you might aewpt that as the truth, and you might believe that It was a truth divinely revealed to man. Hut, now aiipiose that you enter the American Museum of Natural History. In Central Park West, and that an at tendant ahould ahow you (as one will dn If you go there), a long aeries of foasll bones and skeletons, taken from the ancient strata of the earth, and form ng a complete chain, leading up, link by link, from a little animal about aa big as a fox, which lived millions of years ago, to the fully developed horae of today, and suppose that he ahould point nut to you (as alao he will do If you ask him i evidence, which any court would have to accept, that these changes were gradually accomplished, by regular etepa, one' following another, and all progress. Ing In the order of time so that the bones and skeletons taken from older strata bear less resemblance to a horse than do those taken from newer strata, and suppose, finally, that he should (as he can do), show you. In (he skeleton of the a 3 VKWin mnarj.B'i inn r, surprise you. These calisthenics will reduce flesh; they . are especially good for adbdomlnal reduction. Conscientiously followed they will work miracles if you asaiat by not overeating.. Women nowadaya eat too much to kere in condition. One good meal In tho evening, with Just enough food during the day to keep from being faint, la tho beat way to live. These suggestions are especially valuable to remember during not weatner. it s really a woman s own fault if she gets flabby and ages physic ally. Just aa soon aa she does she Is liable to sag mentally, and then her youth is gone. Exercise every day In your room. Make It a sort of religious rite that must be kept up at all costs. Bat less, sleep more and walk every chance you get. Then some day you will wake up to the fact that you stand better than you used to and that you have learned the secret of poise. The old awkwardness that caused you such agonies of shame will be gone. Isn't that worth sacrificing a little for, now? Pacts for Mothers Tea Is poison to a. baby. No child sl ould sleep on the floor, aa all heavy, Impure air sinks to the floor level. Green wallpapers should never be used In a nursery, as some contain arsenic. If a piece on being burned garlic, arsenlo is present. smells ot Children should not be hotter than adults the temperature ahould be from DO 8 to W degree Rwedlah mothers put money Into their Mt4 d a first bath, believing that thla brings future wealth. Mothers In Oreece before putting their children In the cradle turn round three times. Thla Is to ward off evil spirits modern horse, pivofs that Its hoofs hsve hern developed from three-lord und five toe,! feet, like thnoe pneecl liy In llll pmliin anccMois sues ngo. and that Its teeth, and other parts of Its l1y. have likewise been developed from the forinn which they had In its piMgenltots after seeing and hearing all that, what would you suy to tho man who told you that God created the horse st a slrukeT Would you feel tht you were disre spectful to the Orrst Creator If you de c.sred upon the hssin of the evldin e put before you, thnt lie did nut take (lie horse In an Instant, by virtue of a sud den flat, but built It up Hrrtduallv, throng many woi.derf Hy llnkid foinis requiring mMlniis of years ol their t voni tlon? He has left the record of how he did It In the locks, and where Is the Irreverence of resiling and believing that record II lispprna that we hsve a very com plete series of ancestral forms revealing the evolution of the horse, but the evl denee that all pe-ea of animals not ex cepting man, have been gradually de veloped In a similar manner Is Just as clear and Irrefragable as It Is In the esse of the horse. The monkey anil the ape are often spoken of aa the ancestors of man, as If they bore to him the same relationship that the extinct hyracothe Mum and phllohlppua do to the horse. But the falsity of thla notion (which no evolutionist entertained or taught) Is sufficiently Indicated by the fart that the apes and monkeys are our contempo raries. The teaching of science la that they are. physically, a collateral and In ferior branch of the order of animals to which man belongs. The simple fact la that men and apes have been evolved from some common ancestor different from both. That an cestor has nut yet been surely Identified Its fossil remains may. Revert .el .-is, be somewhere embedded In the earth's rich cruat. W'lth the effeot of these fact upon the narrative of creation contained In the Hebrew holy books', axlence dons not concern Itself. Science did not sot out to dlslroy or disprove that nsrratlvai It set out only to learn all that It could about the earth and the universe, and the history of the earth and the universe, aa far aa they can be apprehended by human senses. If the facts of evolution had been known In ancient times the Hinlu would not have been written aa it waa written. Concerning the soul, science has noth ing to ssy. because, to that, It can apply none of its testa. It Is a conception lying entirely outside of the scientific field. Nevertheless, solunee does not af firm that the soul does nut exist. There is ne raon why the man uf science should not be Just as much Impressed as anybody else by, the wonderful words that Hoi rates addressed to his fr.ends when he was about to dlei "If the soul la Immortal, then does aha atand In want (( care, not only dur ing thla period which we call life, but for all time, and ws may welt consider that there la terrible danger in neglect ing her. If death Indeed were an eacaps from all thing, then were It a great gain to the wicked, for It would be a release from the body and from their own sin, and from the soul at the same time; but now, aa the aoul proves to be Immortal, there la no other escape from evils to come, nor any other safety than in her attaining to the highest virtu and wisdom." Hy WILLIAM F. IUOGE, 8. i. :ty risers, If the envious tlouda d'l not prevent, will ae the starry sky Its its ! est array. With Orion, the finest of the constellation, on the meridian, and Klrtus. the brightest of the stars, at Its left. ITccyon. In the Smaller Ijg. will he s.imewhnt towsrds the east, and the twins, Cniir nnd Pollux, higher up In tho eastern hrnvetut, w'th the unlet planet Saturn and the wandering fiery Mars In tlulr in-mediate company, and the brll I ant planet Jupiter very low down In the west, set like Jewels In the sky. The Uig Dipper win be In the northeast, Cas siopeia, or the Lady In Her Chair, In the northwest, and the Lion will be climbing up out of the eastern horlson. There Is nothing like this at present. In the early evening sky, except the lonely planet Jupiter In the east, which rics at 4:37 p. tn. on the lMh and souths at 10:17 p. ni. Fstvim rices on the 1Mb it 10. 37 p. n., and Msrs at midnight. en us and Mercury are too near the sun to be seen. The day Is 11 hours K minutes long en tho lot, 11 h iurs minutes on the ttth and to hours SO minutes on the alst. a lass of . t hour 16 minutes during the month. The standard time of the rising, meri dian passege or southing, and stilting of the sun and moon at Omaha during this month, are given In the following tabler Kl N. 1111. Rla.iNooa.Ml. Oot. Frl. 8a t. MOON. 121112.14 8.07 221IM.1jA.0ft MII?.11.vU S H 12 13 8.IK1 25 13.U 10 6 a"1. .1li 5M V, 12.12'.. 6 2s-1 2. 13 bM iWjUi.iy.M ni l2.lliK.hl ti MlU.lfllft.MI H .1.1 12.lfli5.4AI U4 12.10 ti 41' fthllll 10ifi.44. 6 ?, 12.(10,6.43 IW'lJ OtVR 42 a II2 5.4H 40II2.UV A K M4I IX'DIMI'i 4 il2.W'b i 4412.iHi6.H6 t6 12.00,4.33 Hun. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thu. Frl. Bat. Bun. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thu. FtI. Hat. Hun. Mon. Toes. Wed. Thu. Frl. Bat. 4 ItCs'S t2 47 12.!t.BO 4i 12 0 6.211 Tues. 4'U.(6rT Wed. SM 12.Wli.ZMI 12 12.0v6.2C. UMil2.0ni5.24l Bun. Mon. Thu. Frl. Hat. SIM ut! SM. TTssi Mldn 111 IK 1 14 70 1(7 10 0 11 21 12 28 IX 108 141 Sit a 17 Id 4 20 4 41 I.Ot 6.12 t OR 8 41 J.W 1.17 18 10.18 U!l Sl.l8Mi:Os6.24l Sun. IMidnl 8 43 1 1 7s 04 161 (3T 10 33 IIS? 11 4 144 M4 4 i2 160 1.43 S3 10 01 10 44 11 37 MtdnJ u u UM 1 IM 1 1 4" 17 158 tn tii 4.21 6 04 IV to s.6t r.R 8.( It 10 24 11. in Mldn U60 101 lo 4U I ID 24 7 U SI4 85 M 24 1127 13.18 UM .15 . 1 . 1 . t A '. t . 9 7 . . .1 :!1 .18 .14 .16 .18 .17 .18 .19 .20 .21 .22 .ti .24 .2e .38 .37 .18 .lf .30 The dot, or period, between the hours and minute Indlcatea p. m. times. The times not so marked are a. m. Thf sun la fast the whole month on sundial time, the exact amount In minutes being found by auhtracting from twenty-four the min utes given after 12 In the "noon" column. The sun will enter Hcorpio on the 24th. The moon la la last quarter en the lat at 144 a. nt, new on the (tn at 1:4 p. In firat quarter on the ttth at IM a. m.. full on the 224. at :16 p. m. and laat quarter again on the 30th at 1;40 p. ni. It la in conjunction wth Saturn on the lat and 2tMh. with Mara on the Id and list, and with Jupiter on the IMh. The conjunction of the moon with Mara on the 24 will be pretty clove and amount to an occulatlon on the North Atlantic ocean. t'lelghtou University Observatory, Omaha, Neb. . n n y n 11 n lie s easy to learn icme . mew dances with the miiasic of the Vktrola VIf $23 Oak s BY ALL MKAXS Hear the following numberg of the new Victor Records, on ealo now. The great eit list ever issued in any one. mouth: 7444S 354C8 17822 35477 88540 7442S 87218 74445 4S066 f."137 17802 17805 17648 Old Black Joe, by Alma Gluck with male chorus. Angels' Serenade and Ave Maria (equal to a Ked Seal). LaPaloma (Saiaphone Sextette). Old Time Soags, by mixed chorug. Blue Danube Waits, sung by Frieda Hemple. A Oreat Song, by McCormlck. Thine Kyes, by Miacha Elman and Fntncea Alda. The Broken Melody (a beautiful violin number by Zlmballst). Two Cello Solos, by a wonderful lady artist. Irish Eyes of Love (another River Shannon). Two attractive Accordeon Solos, by Pletro Dlero. Two of Mendelssohn's most popular compositions for orchestra. Two splendid Military Band Marches. If you don't bear tbetn Take the Numbers for future reference, for they are great. Vidhrolao ..i jT W-SS II ii III I mi i i. i . sjj.u ,m The Fox Trot, Castle Pol ka, and all the other new dances all played loud and clear and in perfect time. There are Victors and Victrolas in great variety of styles from $10 to $ 300 at all Victor dealers. Victor Talking Machine Co. Camden N. J, SchmoUer & Mne PIANO COMPANY 1311-1313 Famam St Omaha, Neb. Hear I he Newest Records in Our Newly Remodeled Sound-Proof Demonstrating Rooms on th Main Floor. Branch at 334 BROADWAY Council Bluffs fet Cycle C0 Victrolas Sold by A. HOSPE CO., 1513-15 Douglas Street, Omaha, and 407 West Broadway, - Council Bluffs, la. Talking Machine Department in tho Pompoian Room Ms.asxlMre. Venxxs Csstls Halving tke CsstU folks X V-.- .a.