, THK KEK: OMAHA, WKDNKSDA V, NUVI iM I'.Kl, 17, l!.,.. 1 line Bees no m e Maff azitie Pa -III . I ii : . Should Witc Stand by a LI tar: in Br BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Copyright. IMS. Star Company, it la. of course, nobody, business when ?tand b' n unfaithful and lying husband, who haa humiliated her In the yes of the whole worm by hla lnfldcll- VP- it- We read In the dally paper Inci dents of that nature, and eome of os aay: "How beautiful la such Ottot Ion," and om of ua aay otherwise. Th e r e are wives who ink It very noble to "stand by" a Very bad husband. There 1 In the nature of most women a strong tendency to act the part of re forming; angel In the life of a man. That Is why so many dissolute men find It an easy matter to Win paragons of virtue for wives. The wife of such a man always believes she Is to guide him Into the straight and narrow path of good behavior, and some times aha does. It depends upon how much character the man has developed and how much tact. Jove and patience the woman pos sesses. There are women who know how to make a respectable life as fascinating to a man as a life of folly and dissipa tion. There are women who know how to keep a man so entertained and occupied with happiness that he finds no time or inclination to. return to the paths of the prod leal. It is wise and womanly for a wife to pause and look over her own part In a man's career If he falls to keep the vows he made at the altar be fore she consigns to the divorce court. Many a good woman can trace a hus band's neglect and failure to be loyal ner own door ble were she to say she intended to "give him another chance" than to say ehe In tenaa to ' stand ny" h:m. There Is no credit In "standing by" and defending crime. It would seem that some women never show real affection for a husband until he becomes a criminal and breaks every moral and divine law. How can a woman really know whether she loves a man or whether It Is a mere Infatuatlin of the sennits, or a habit of association? some one asks. There are women and women, and no one answer will apply to th s qu-a Ion for all The more Infatuation depends upm the man's physical presence usually or upon some personal reminder of him. Ills magnetic inriuence sometimes leaves a wake behind It for a time, but a pro tracted separation and silence break the spell. There Is another Infatuation of the Imag nation, which takes strong hold of some women only when absent from the man win has I nap red It. Such women revel In dreams of happiness when away from the lover; but once let him enter their presence and they are co!d, un responsive and concl -us of a sense of dis appointment. They mentally criticise the man, his appearance, his manners, his words, and wonder how they could have Imagined him fascinating. Yet out of hla sight the spell returns again. It is the r anal in of the Imagination only, The affection of habit of association is very often mistaken for a great love and frequently ends in marriage. Sometimes It results In real love, and again It does not, yet the fact is not discovered by either contractor during this life. They jog along oontentedly and suppose they have experienced all life had to offer. More frequently one finds that a mis take has been made, and runs forth to or stumbles Into a pitfall of hopeless pas sion. There are women who can neither feel nor tnsplre a great love. They have ten der feelings and loyal affections, and they often make devoted nurses for their Q ner own door If she is honest with I herself. A momentary weakness on the families, but they do not love and are pari or an otherwise good and loving husband may well be condoned end a new trial given him without a loss of womanly self-respect. When, however, a man deliberately plana the wooing and marrying of an other woman under another name, when ha descends to forgery and Innumerable lies and deceptions to bring about such a result a result which means ruin to the girl and humiliation and disgrace to the wife and when he Is finally ex posed and punished it is hard to con ceive the type of a woman who feels that she is doing a noble act to "stand by" her husband and live for him. A passing fever of the Ben sea some women are able to understand and for give In a man exposed to peculiar temp tations Pine, noble, strong, true men have fallen temporary victims to such experiences and expiated them In sor row. But when a man lies, deceives and plots an Infidelity for months there would seem to be something wrong with his mind or his whole character. Only by regarding him as Insane and taking the responsibility of his care as a nursa can a wife stand by him and retain her self-respect. Possibly such a woman finds greater happiness in think ing she will save the man from further fall from decency by leading htm, through her self-sacrifice and devotion, to repentance than she could find in any other walk of life, having once teen his wife. V T .... .--L 1. 1 aii ma iaii?r ibci urs per coiiuRSttl Bor row, and however seemingly hopeless work she takes upon herself, with the author of her misery, all women must feel sympathy for her and wish her God speed in her efforts to make a man out of a manikin, even if they do not re spect her for choice of employment. But It would be more moral and sens!- not loved In the full meaning of that word. Such women form the great ma jority of the commonplace. The woman who really loves a man loves him absent or present She loves him with her Imagination and with her senses. She knows his faults and may tell him of them, but she will permit of no one else to speak of them or to criti cise him In his absence. She could as easily tear her own heart strings out as to allow one word of ridi cule or censure to be passed upon him without springing to hla defense, like a mother wolf in defense of her young. She will bear any trouble or burden for hla sake and love him the more, and her love would liva and thrive on sorrow, but would not endure humiliation or injus tice, because then the very basis ef a great love of a great nature respect la taken away. It Is the woman who demands much of the man she loves and who gives as much as she demands who Inspires much. The spaniel woman who licks the hand that strikes and the doormat woman who thinks to have a man wipe hla muddy feet upon her la a proof of hla devotion and her love, are fortunately going out of date. They know nothing of love or of being loved for love besides passion and loyalty must also contain dignity and self-re. spect. Only when it Includes these quali ties can it ennoble and elevate Its ob Ject. That is what a great love always does. Say not that any man haa been the object of a great love unless he has grown worthier, kinder, nobler and grander In character. Some element Is missing from the woman's devotion if the man degenerates. To love fully you should stand upon the heights. How I Discovered Myself By ADELAIDE SIMPSON. Principal of the New York High School for Women. Strange to say I was educated for society girl and cut out for a teacher. I can truthfully say. too. as I look back over nearly twenty-five years of teach ing, that there has never been a minute that I haven't been Inspired and encour aged by the appreciation of others. I woke up to the fact that I was very young and I must utilise the education that had been given to me to its best advantage. I chose teaching, because It offers an opportunity for diversified knowledge, because there is a broader field to conquer, because all other walks n life are specialised and therefore All my life I have been a student. I have atudled everything with which I amai In contact, and not all of it has been the lessons set forth In books. Human nature has came in for Its share of study, and the ability to reach and understand the individual haa been my goal always. If I have reached this goal in any way, I can say that It has been the keynote of iy success that I have had. I was principal for a long time In the Italian district, and it was through my work wiUi boys and girls that I became Interested In the High school for Women. I kept thinking of the countless women who wanted an education and could not get one.. I kept thinking of the wage earners, and their efforts to scrape along on almost nothing. If any one Interested In my work wants a real inspiration let him come to my evening high school In the Washington Irving building. There I am nightly raised to a higher plane; there I receive all the Inspiration necessary to carry m along for days; there I do a'll in my power for the women who are In earnest. Can any one imagine a more Inspiring sight than a school filled to the brim with women tired out with the tolls ot the day, but willing to sacrifice any thing for more knowledge. Why the wage earner is a living ex ample of self-sacrifice; the women who come to my school are frequently hungry, for it is often necessary to go without a meal so as to make the time for the , evening lessons. Wbea I felt that there was need of me In the world, I awoke to the fact that there must be a soul In me, a some thing bigger than I was and therefore a something that I must give to others. I have always believed in the school as a hitherto unrecognised field, because the world Is a school, and the applica tion Is therefore limitless. In the world we are all students, but It depends largely upon ourselves where and from whom we learn our lessons. In a school the danger is less and tue Influence greater, teaching is wider than all humanity, and we women who take the helm must guide to safety all the souls entrusted to us, therefore it la a huge responsibility. My work with the High School of Women has been a constant reward which sometimes almost overwhelms me with its strength and earnestness. To be connected with so wonderful a work is to me so great a privilege that I want to share it with others, lest I keep too much of the, glory of giving and the glory of being Inspired for myself alone. Style Cues Are Taken from 1830 Period new modes In Danw Frocks (Jive Wearers More Freedom and Ease A rich sealskin coat haa a border, collar and cuffs of con trasting fur. The special fea ture is the flare cuff. From C. C Shayne & Co., West Forty-stnond street. Optimism Cheer up! If you're sick of the turmoil and strife Of fighting for fortune and fame, If worn with the struggle and weary of life And utterly spent with the fame, Back out of the harness for some other chap Whose one only aim is to carve A name for himself that will show on the map, And then you can restfully starve. Dont worry! The burdens you grudgingly bear May seem far too heavy for you: The present may loom like the Mount of Despair, The future rise gloomily blue. But some other fellow will take on your work And set about making his mark. While you have abundance of leisure to shirk And sleep on a bench In the park. Be brave! If success Isn't even In sight, Jf you know that you can't make a hit Though through long years you may drudge day and night. It is always easy to quit Some hustling young fellow will slip on your shoes And figure some day in the headlines, . While you drown your grtofs and your troubles In booze And board at the) various breadlines! I The Welshman's hat of brown silk braver has the narrow brim extended by brown and white ostrich feathers. Prom Kurzman, Fifth avenue. By GEKMA1NE GAUTIER. There seems to be a logical relation between the wide skirts of the dance frock and the 1830 period, from whloh such frocks take their style cue. Every one Is agreed that they are much easier to dance In than aklrts of a season or two ago, whose hem measurement did not exceed one and three-quarter yards. Like all new things, there is danger of running Into extremes, and when that point is reached the frocks can be used only by professional followers of Terpsi chore, who can have an entire ball room floor or the carbaret stage quite to them selves. Kor Instance, it would be quite Impos sible for the average dancer to adopt a new model whose skirt measures not less than eight yards. The material of mallne and taffeta la not permitted to fall In- icrmauy aoout tne feet, but has two reeds Inserted In the petticoat to maintain the balloon-like contour which the fash ion arbiters are Insistent on showing. To -carry out the period scheme such models are supplied with pantalettes or Turkish trousers, usually of soft net or of satin. These garements are finished In various ways, some of them being gath ered about the ankle above a lace flounce, while others have a deep ruffle of laoe or net closely plaited and hung from a point Just telow the knee. This Idea expresses a sort of foundat'on petticoat over which the tm-ee or four layers of title are mqunted When the skirt Is attached to the quaint bodice with its sloping shouldor line and atralght-across decolletage, one is reminded of the old prints of Fanny Esser snd other dancers of bygone dsys, whose names and whoso art are Inter woven with wars aifd court Intrigues In the Illuminating pages of history. Or, if one prefers to traco the garment to roy alty, there are the authoritative portraits of the Empress Eugenie or of her young contemporary, the queen of England, who at that time had not assumed the title of Empress of India, Georgette ot Palrta is responsible for one of the most successful dancing frocks of the autumn season. It Is almost super fluous to describe it, since It has been talked about, written up and illustrated on every possible occasion since the model reached these shores about the Afternoon gown of orange colored rtroodcloth, with velvet appliqued flowers and fur col lar. of adaptations have beon made by Ameri can dressmakers, and one now finds It in a great variety of fabrics and color combinations. In that model Georgette used a reed to stiffen the hem of the extremely wide overdress of diaphanous material. The stiff bell outline was broken by attaching this hem to a narrow foundation skirt at regular Intervals. In many of the adapta tions, however, the reed Is Inserted higher tp, and a curious compromise between 1830 and nineteenth century Ideas becomes manifest. C Advice to Lovelorn I BI BBATKXCB TAUT AX ' Your True Happiness. Deer Miss Fairfax. When I was 17 I eloped, and aftur spending two years with my husband I became discontented and returned home. It was nenessary for nlm to live In the country, and as I had been brought up In New York I missed the theaters and other places of amuse ment. I am now studying for the stage, at which work my teachers tell me I will te suoreaaful. However. I often foel that I should give up this work and return to my husband, although I am aura that I do not love him as a wife should. He wishes me to come hack and my parents wish it also. Should I return in hlmt DISCONTKNTJO. I believe you could find the greater happiness at the side of the man you married. The loneliness you feel in the country la by no means so great as that you may know out In the world when you have only your work to console you and no one with whom you really stand first, as evidently you still do with the man who cares for you even after your uveeruon or Din, flood Principles. T 1 r, n. . rairrax: i am a Sot in and do not drink or gamble. My friends hi.i Wr,' ch'-Un me. saying that a Will you kindly give me your opinion? W. 11. K. iy dear boy, I admire you Intensely ior naving good moral principles, and I would be equally disgusted were you to sacrifice them because of the foolish criticism of so-called friends. Any boy who learns to master himself early In me is likely to grow to be a fine and successful man. Take a firm stand and do not permit anyone to sway you from wnai is right. Thlek Well. Pear Miss ralrfax: I am M and love Flii of 17. We exr-eot to t next year. I see her often and take her to plaeva of amusement, but when I s" grat staying at home ,h a,na Mm- satisfied, and often refuses to answer roe. mum icu me wnai j ought to uo. Q. V. J. This girl Is so very young that she probably considers life nothing but a chanoe for a good time, and hardly ap preciates ine seriousness of love and marriage. Re careful to make no blunders, for unless you have a wife willing to do her share to make the borne and who will work by your aide as well play by your side, you will neither ..... . . - ii - - ' jm win iivuner middle of August. Of course, a number'J be happy nor be able to give happiness. i l 1 I . air Hi m in i ii i-u ! I An evening? sown of ryv-Mw--T-jTTi'i -wtwii-w-a N. mallne net and laoe ha .Me rTTS I I fi . v. Si-r'A ,r""v" imu intrr tissue : 11 I I FlLj II rT,niM in i.,,., n ..--,v-,,,. ii. i. . ii t A'f nunons. I lie apron panel I I;:rVx;'Lf-''.:J J .r . r w i rr ifiriif hiii nuMmi- ti r .. . . si .-l . 1 crene. with iews.1 emhmM. Ii f . jf '-'! LI . Nt Jtf err. Fmni A T.in 11 I ,-., 1 ii J V nnh VN,ue' nPl ill A I t-V (CM K v- ' u M HWit ... '. r - - z-asx-a-ssrsj-t" zf . . ai . i v kb x. - t .. . a W-LMk Wonderful Romance of the Earth's Interior By GARRETT P. 8ERV1SH. "If It were possible to sink a shaft throush the earth and Install a pasaen ger lift In It. what poxltlen ould the car and the passengeia aasume on o. in line out on the otner aide of the ertht riease ex plain the action of the laws of gravlta ' tlon in this case. Whloh would he tip and which down, and when would power be required to operate the carT It seems all topsy turvey to me. I). R, Newark. N. J." An answer to this kind of ques tion is worth while because It 9 tally unaware of any eccentricity In his Posture, since, no matter where we may be on the earth, our eensea tell us th-it down Is toward the center, and up Is way from It. It should be added that If the car were simply dropped Into the shaft. Inatead of being let down from one side of the arth and pulled up to the other. It would (neglecting the resistance of the sir In the shaft), shoot through the eftrth. attaining Its greatest velocity as It pawed the renter, and rising tu th surface on the opposite side by virtu of the momentum accumulated durlncr Its rail to the center. Its motion would resemble that of a pendulum. The time required to fall to the center would be about twenty-one minutes, and the aama time to rise from the center to the op posite surface; so that, under the Im pulse of the earths gravitation, one might travel straight through the eartn affords an especially vivid conception ot th" thr-" ot an hour. the way gravitation works, a thing about I which even many educated people appear to have very oonfused Ideas. Assume thst ths shaft runs through the center of the earth. Also, In order to avoid quibbles, suppose the earth to be ! perfect, smooth, homogenous sphere, and neglect the effect upon a falling body of the earth's rotation around Its axis. The ear would descend, as tar as the center. In the same manner that an ordinary passenger lift descends from the top of a building, being drawn down by the force of gravity, or the attraction of gravitation. Every particle of matter In the earth exercises Its share of this foroe by pull ing toward itself, but the aggregate ef fect of all these small forces Is a single pull toward the earth's eenter. The smount of this pull upon any body Is measured by what we oall weight The weight Increases or decreases not merely with the else, but with the density of the body, because the pull of gravitation Is exercised equally upon every particle that the body contains, and a dense body contains more psrtlclee than a rare or light body. Consequently an iron can non ball weighs more than a wooden bowling ball of the same slse. Now we come to a very Interesting point. As long as the oar remained on the surfaoe, every partlola In the earth would pull It toward the center. The majority of the particles do not pull di rectly toward the contar with their en- time attractive foroe, but a greater or lesser portion of the attraction ef eaoh particle la toward the center, and as be fore said, the aggregate, outstanding ef fect of all these forces united is a single pull to the center. But when the oar had desoended be low the surface all the particles compos ing that part, or shell, ot the earth sit uated above the level of the oar, would cease to exercise a pull toward the cen ter, and their various attractions, as Newton mathematically demonstrated, would balance or neutralise one another In such a manner that they would no longer affect the movement of the car. The practical result would be that the aggregate downward pull on the car would proportionately diminish. As the car continued to descend the thickness of the shell of earth above its level would increase, and consequent ly the downward pull would decrease, until when it reached the center there would be no pull at all, the forces of ttractlon being balanced against one another on all aides. Here, then, the strain upon the cable supposed to regu late the velocity ot the car's descent would cease entirely, because the car and everything that It contained, would completely lose their weight. A passen ger In, the car would lose all sense of dlreotlon. There would be for him neither up nor down. He could not stand or fall. He could, however, atlll use hie musou lar strength, and might, by a push, or a kick, set himself spinning like a thistle down in the wind. But if he tried to walk he would bound away like a rubber ball at the first step! In order to continue the trip of ths car up on the opposite surface of the earth it would be neoeasary to reverse the action of the cable so that now it would lift against the force of gravity. As soon as the car was drawn away from the center the sense of up and down would come back to the passenger. What had before been the celling would now become the floor. The weight would increase with Increase of distance from the center, and the strain upon the cable would grow gradually until the surfaoe was again reached. Emerging on the other side of the earth from that which he had left, the passenger would haare his feet pointing In exactly the opposite direction from that to which he bad been accustomed on the other side; but he would be to- HAVE YOU A CHILD? f-- ' Many women long for children, but bsrtrase of some curable physical deraneement are detxlvad f this greatest Jail hspptnees. "Pnvea The women whose nsmee (allow were resinml to normal health by Lydia E. 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