Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 16, 1915, Page 11, Image 11

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    It
Girl's Ten Rules of Life
Young Woman Sure of Success If She
Adheres to Resolutions Gossip and
Anger Barred Truth and Sympathy
Emphasized. : : : :
TllK BKh: OMAHA. SATl'itn.vi. .IAM'AI! Hi. I'M.'..
I Rich Man's Darling or Poor Man's Slave? Py rBf!
t j v CopvrlRht. litl. Intrrn I Nfw hrvrc. .
! r : SpilT" : I
By ELLA WIIKKLEK WIUUX.
(Copyright. lui... llif SUr Compsny.)
The followlnc ton resolutions vsrt for
mulated by a s-hool slil In Trenton:
I will not permit myself to speak while
finery. and I wilt take no heed of an
other who speaks
to mj In anger.,
I will neither
ttosslp about' the
fallings of anotlier
nor allow another
to gossip - to me,
excert ifood.
1 will excuse
w eakness In ell he r
sex, and assist it
to tho best ofmy
abllify."
I will always
wxpress . gratitude
for a favor or
service rendered. I
will consider the
Kpmt In which It
hr ,h '
f 4N
was meant and not the rash value.
I will not fail to express sympathy
w-lth another's sorrow or to'glve hearty
utterance to my appreciation of the good
works dr deeds of others.
I will hot talk or think about my per
sonal ailments. If mortal mind suggests
that I have pain or nches I will deny it
elle.ntljr and not mention it to others.
I will look' on the bright side of all
circumstance and transactions connected
with my "daily life, and will seek to be
rheerfut nnri nlpnsAtit on nil nrrnnlnn.
I will neither eat nor drink to excess,
nor do that which., in m Judgment,
would lessen my mental or physical ca
pacity for the best serviee I can render
to my family and,' myfellowmen.
I will speak and act truthfully and I've
with sincerity toward Ood hnd man. re
membering always that there' is but one
God, namely. Truth, Ixivc, Life, Good.
I will pay my Just debts when due. and
Insist that my fcilowmen shall accord m
the like courtesy. I will not strive to be
come better than others, but to becoma
bettor than" myself.
If this young girl cirries out these
resolutions she need liae no fear of
failure In life.
Whatever sphere eh? may fil she will
dignify tt and become distinguished for
her Individuality. . ', r :
In the home life she' will be'a sliinir
light; in any cureer which she may
chooso Rive will be popular and beloved.
" Thoughts such as these resolutions In-
"Power" Hidden in the'
Sunbeams
By GARRETT I KKKVISS.
"In a motion picture play a scientist,
Achlmedea, J believe, is supposed to havq
eet fire to a Roman fleet by mounting
nevcral hundred mirrors on a, disk, in
such a manner as
1o mak them all
cast their reflec
tion of the sun's
light upon one
.olnt. Do you
think that the re
flection obtained
-would be of suf
ficient density to
Ignite wood? And,
if eo, might not
thla reflector . be
used advantageaua
ly for many pur
poses? O. II."..
The history of th defense by 'Archi
medes of the great Sicilian city of Syra-
cuse against Iho arms and fleet of Mar-j
rellus ds the source, from which the
author of your motion picture' play has
drawn the idea of the burning mirrors
eetting fire to the attacking ahliw.
If you read Plutarch's account of that
famoua siege you will conclude that never
has the power of the human mind against
that of the humuQ fist leen more tri
umphantly exhibited than it was by
Archimedes. Alihouxh he had no gyn
jpowdcr he managed to make artillery of
euch tremendous 'effectiveness that noth
ing could stand aifalnvt lit. Instead of
cannon balls he hurled atones weighing
from ten up to a hundred pound .the
driving power being furnished by some
Ingenious combination of springs, the de
tails of which have not come down to us.
lie also invented engines furnished
with great cranes and grappling books,
which, leaning over the walls of toe be
sieged town, seised the ltoman - ships
moored close to the walls, and lifting
them high In the air. until they spun
helplessly round' and round, soused them
down again with scch forve and sudden-
"1 Delicate
vAx. fy Women
r. yt are too often
tfSjJ . doted with drug
when . their blood u
really starved. They need that
blood strength which comes
from medicinal nourishment
No drugs can make blood.
SCOTT'S EMULSION b a highly
concentrated blood-food and eVery
drop jiclda ret arm ia atrenrtheninir
both body and brain.
If yoa are frail. lanjrnid,
delicate or nervous, i take
.Scoff's EmmUion after meals
for am autnta. No AlcohoL
Vjsrw- l
i h
.a, .hp,
ulcatc will a M ract a host of Invisible I
witnesses vim will - 1
ever her steps hnd and who will protect,
nido and assist her In whatever she
undertaker.
These resolution will icuulie a fo
cused lr.ind and . concentrated mental
powers. They leave no time for useless
and needless dissipation c.r energies In
unprofitable lino. Tew . of us real'xe
what a large proportion of our powers
are wasted In unprofitable ways. We.
Pie line a sower who goes forth In the!
morn'iic time with a hag of Riain In'i
Plant in the furrows which are' prepared
for hint, but scatters a large proportion
of th seed to the four winds and In the
waters of the rivers (is he passed by and
on barren rocks, so that when he reaches
bis plowed field he ha little left to plant.
Then when the harvest time comes he
complains of poor yield and wonders why
his neighbor, whose fields are waving
with grain, is so much more fortunate
than ho.
Thought Is the most precious substance .
In the world. It U also the most power-1
fill substance in the world.
Isrd ronstructlvely (here la nothing,
that thought cannot accomplish.
Yhen thp creat iinlv.r.. nam rrti,.i.i
lo mK'ht end mn.iestv from naught
The all-creative force was Thought.
That force Is thine. Though desolate
The way may sem, command tliy fate.
Send forth thy thought Create Create
; ness that they were wrecked and their
crews drowned. .
The fact Just mentioned. Vs.. that the
Roman .ship (which, of course, were
small affairs as compared with ours
today), anchored themselves close to the
walls, for the sake of aapplng, or de
stroying them, or of finding opportunities
for scaling them, accounts for the atory
that one of Archimedes' enplnea of de
struction, which spread terror as Well as
death among the Romans, was a gigantic
burning mirror, or combination of mir
rors, with which he managed to set the
ships afire by concentrating the sun
beams upon them,
' If all the early historians were agreed
In ascribing this feat to Archimedes, there
would 'be no difficulty In accepting the
story as historically true, but neither
Polybius, Llv nor Plutarch Include the
atory .that one of Archimedes wonderful
engines, and the story makes Its first ap
pearanoe later. Still, It may be true.
With the ships lying directly against the
walls, Arohlmedca would have to throw
bis burning ray only a few feet or yards,
In order to reach some inflammable ob
ject, which once set afire might cause
the destruction of the vessel.
The principle has often been employed
In modern -times in the effort to utillr.:
the sunbeams as i
(Kjwer. A number
source of mechanical
Mirt . i - I
J! 1.11.1-11 III III TM :
have connived r eliminations of reflc.-tars,
ot concentrating their ravs upon a
lommon focus, by means of which a de -
cree or heat much greater than that
necessary to kindle wood Is readily ob
tained. But in there solar engines, or
fcolar motor., as they ere called, the pur
pose Is rot to produce flre.-biit to heat
water in n boiler, and thus olTcain atcam
to run un engine,
Tner la, or was a few yeaia ago. a
solar motor in operation near 1'aaadena.
C'al.. capable of producing mechanical
energy equivalent to ten horsepower. Its
reflector consists of nearly 2nd small
mirroi s. arranged on a diac-shapd frame,
and concentrating their rays upon a sus
pended boiler containing !M gallons of
water .The ayaiem of mirrors faces thu
1 sun. and within an hour after' the solar
I beams strike it (he boiler Miows a steam
Pleasure of 150 pounds.
I The I.' at at the tiers is so Intense that
a stick or wood thrust Into It bums Into !
flame like a match, and copper Is melted I
I In a frtW minutes. , !
These facta suffice to ahow that there)
is nothing improbable In the story ofwa'k the baby when It has iff? colic (or
Archimedes feat at Syracuse, as far as fin mlriutea without having nervous pros-
the decree of heat obtainable by such
means la concerned. The iower tbat is
In the sunbeama la a kind of romantic
wonder to many jieisona. as you may
convince yourself by making an experi
ment with a burning-glass in any public
place. A aat amount of useful power
could be obtained by such means In any
country where (he sun shines unclouded
during most of the day, but the mechan
ical difficulties are considerable, and, for
the present" at lee st, we have more easily
available sources of energy st our dis
posal. The power ot the sunbeams, like
that ot the winda, ia only utilised when
nature permits. Man has not yet seized
upon It with a master's hand, as he has
upon soma other of the eaeps about
htm.
i . J llL .
- ' ' - ' MSW' ' fitl ' 'Sks . is, , Tin Ynn Knnro That
Love's a fakp clairvoyant I the crystal the man "with
and if you ask him ho al-(youth and his .heart in his
ways finds the same one in) hand for lie lias n softness
Little Mary's
By DOROTHY DIX. , tancts. You can hear It above the muslo
.' J t any afternoon Tea Dansant.
Dancing Is ti e funny way people act j l'Pl uped to like to go to the circus
when they have fits to music. I t0 the Performing elephants and the
If you would go out on the street where J''". b,'t nw th7 preTer to
to a restaurant where they have tea
there wasn t any music and jump up and j dance,, and see fat old ladles, and gen
down, an kick , tlemen with hay windows, trvlna to do
out side ways, and
move round In
j circles, every one
would My, "Poor
creature
Hug
sure." house for
j n no
I would
the police
come and
c"" n
mbulanco
and take you
off
to a hospital.
Wut when you
dip and duck, and
kick, an 1 go rounJ
and rouii't where
there is music
evc,ry one says,
'How graceful,
and what a beau
tiful dancer."
My teacher, says
that in the Orient
rli h eoile ' do not
dance, and that they hire poor girls to
do their dancing for them, .lust as wc
hire a scrub woman to come In and mop
our floors. But Americans are very In
dustrious, and they do their own dancing
without ever whining or complaining
about the severe labor It cn'alls upon
them. .
There sre a great many curious thlnts '
about d im lug. One of them is thut a
frail, delicate little woman who cannot i
tralion, and wko would scream if anyone
should be cruel enough to her to ask tier
t" wash the dishes, ran dance forty
miles of au evening without feeling the
slightest fatigue.
Another curious thing about danrlng la
that when a gentleman is dunclng with
a lady tt Is perfectly proper for him to
put Ida arms around her und hold her
hand, all hough she would he shocked to
death if he wero to do r when they
weie not dancing.
I do not know why this la so, but It
Is s .
My grandmother saya that In her day
only the young people danced, but now
everybody's doing It, and the click' of
the bones of the old and rheumatic when
they do the hssilatioin sounds like caa-
, i t
-.--i i
Essay-Dancin
me iox trot, it is much more amusing.
and the funnier people' look dancing: the
more they do it.
Oh. how kind fat ladlea aad gentlemen
are to make spectacles of themselves for
ua t, ai:4h st.
When a new dance conies out everybody
say, "oh. ii-i. t ,it awful,"Tnd the
1 1-reai heis preach rermona aaalnst it. and
then everybody goes aqd pays 110 a les.
son to learn how to do It.
Oaming la a lucrative profession to
follow, and It enables many men and
women, whose hrnlns are located In their
herlu Instead of their heads, to make a
living. A darning teacher used to be
looked down upon, but now everybody
respecta him more than thy do a su
preme court Judge. Also it doesn't mat
ter what sort of a complexion or dla
position a girl has got If she can dance
the lulu-fado-all the men run after her,
and she d jes not have to paper the
walls at a nail.
When I grow up I am going to be a
swell damn- and then 1 ahull be a belle
and 'marry an old millionaire with the
gotit.
Advice to Lovelorn
I'rttlaess.
Desr Miss Ki irfax: I am In love with
a man of whoso affection I feel positive
hut at the sam- time things he doua pux-1
sle. me very much. We nine home on
the same cur every evening and he buvs
newspaper t a certain tie. stand every
night. The jjirl theie exchange glanoes
and conver'alh.n with him but ignores
me complete.ly. I feel sure he means no
harm and care nothing for her beyond
liking h.r pleaaant smile. It Isn't the
thing Itself, but the way it ia done and
the aptM-eiance of leaving me out In the
cold that troublv me. f'KKPLtf'XKD.
Don't permit pally Jealousy to make
you unhappy. After all. moat of ua like
pleasant smiles and greetings, You say
you are euro that the man you love
moans no. harm, so don't Judge him un
kindly. If, on the other hand., the girl
at the newsatand takes a malicloua de
light in teasing you, why give her the
that way," this little sibyl!
Maybe, too, he knows that
the words "darling" and
satisfaction of eucceedlng? Try to get a
mora broad-minded attitude toward the
Utile things that give pleasure to the
man you love.
II y All Means Tell Her.
Tear Miss Fnjrfax: Am 24 and have
been married six years. 1 havt kept It a
secret until several weeks, ago, when .1
told my father. Now, I liaye been going
W4th a lady whom 1 denrly love for the
last year and a half, and I know my lnv
la returned. As l told no one. until now.
1 thought It proper not to tell her, but I
fear if she finds or learns of It In some
way,- I am quite sure I will lose. her.
What am I lo doV I have never Been
my wife since we were married.
11 K A ItTTI HOKEN.
Under Ihe circumstances It will be an
easy matter to have your marriage an
nuled. You certainly owe It to the girl
you now love to tell her of your previous
marriage.
tonquer'Yonr Fleklraraa.
Tear Mls Fairfax: t am a young
womnn of if5 years. Two years ago
was divorced from my first husband, a
prominent lawyer of this city) A year
later 1 married again. Hln- that time I
have met my former husband and am
now convinced that 1 love only hlrn. I
am sure my second husband loves me.
Vhat shall I do? VW.'SAACl).
Avoid seeing the man for whom you
once cared so little that you permitted
yourself to be divorced from him. Your
af lections do not seem to bo very stable,
and the love, which you are now con
vinced you feel for your former husband
might turn bark again to the present
one. Try to content yourself with what
you have instead of longing for what
you had once and lost and, probably never
would be able to regain In any case.
Rheumatism
paim are Jangertus if ne
elected. If stopped, they
leased the risk of heart affections.
'1 bote frightful pains, stiff joints
and swollen muscles are laiiaotly
relieved by
SLOAN'S
It I TaTTTayilTTVTT
fine for lumbago and sciatica.
Chu. H. Wc mwonh. Bunilu. Cl.
y. '! a uflrrcr Irom Arm
kheiimaiLm far twelve vein. A irirsd
rscoaimcadcd Slusa't Liniment. I got
a bottle and the puin Jr It a. soon at J
applied the liniw.ot."
At all aaaWra. Prjca tic lot. 6 11.06
Br. Earl S.SIoin.hic. Phili. I St.leuij
('.' slave" juggle themselves
about fomn times on the ends
of those two phTasen.- tXf
Dangers in Fresh Milk
"30 per cent of the milk samples taken for
bacteriological examination snowed more
than the legar number of bacteria."
The above is taken from a Bulletin of the Chicago
Department of Health. Statements like it appear in
almost every bulletin issued by the health depart
ments of various cities throughout the country,
Disease of all kinds is being, transmitted daily to
" human beings through the milk they use. Typhoid.
'. scarlet fever and even tuberculosis are thus trans
. mitted. . j ;
Protect yourself and your family. Use milk that carries
no disease germs. The safest milk is
EVAPORAT ED
Unsweetened
The process by which Cottage Milk 13 sterilized de
stroys any germs the milk may contain. It is packed in
germ-proof cans which keep it from exposure from the
time it leaves our sanitary condenseries until it is opened
in your kitchen.
Cottage Milk overcomes all the dangers of contami
nation to which bottle milk is subjected in bottling, hand
ling and delivering.
Cottaga Evaporated Milk is made fresh every day from milk that
come from the healthiest cows in the best dairying districts of the country.
Nothing ia added, only a part of the water taken out by evaporating.
It has mora thaa twice tha food valua of bottlo milk and can be used for
every purpose where you now use milk or cream. For cereals, for coffee,
for cooking, for the children, it is the idea!; safe milk.
Try a package today. You will like it and the con
venience of always having a supply of fresh milk in
your pantry will appeal to you.
The Milk '
Without the Cooked Taste
At All Good Dealer t
In Two Sizes 5 and 10 Cents
AMERICAN Ki I LK COMPANY
Crilcacjo
In the oounty of London there Is .now
a telephone to every twenty persons. In
Glasgow one to every twenty-nine per
sona and In Liverpool on to every thirty-four
persons. '
The decrease In the number1 of prisoners
convicted In Great Britain for Indictable
offenses during the last ten years Is ho
less than 7,M0.
The 1114 production of hops in England;
Is estimated at GU7.2u hundred Weights,
which represents the largcstiuantlt
picked since 1905. .
Sterilized
ss -