n Hi e B e es Hotm e Mag&z I to e P a; Gracejul Graduation Gown of Mull an Inspiration for College Giri Electro-Magnets as Surgeons How Splinters Are Removed from Wounded Soldiers TJ1H KICK: OMAHA. SATTKPAY, MAY 1SU5. 7 " 1 ' - ' " n . Lethe .J By JANE rl.RX. Death wore so fair a presence and he trod with scarce a found. How could I know his footsteps on the petal-covered ground. Where silken silence spreads Its net and dusky dreams abound? Time dragged his veil behind rue, a pull of pain-racked hours, Death strewed the rosy path ahead with apple blossom showers. And all the air was rife with song and sweet with dying flowers. I would have aeiied the ehallce'to my breast and quaffed away Death's potion of forgetfulnesa, but Life must say me nay. Shipping her cold hand Into mine she bade tae work and pray. - 4 GREEK rsfierlinH is found iri (A i droptry of th thaptd llounct le way rrfierfed as pemiiarfy bffitti 1k4 gnwn of the grtduaU. .- . 1 A- f K: 19,1114. V v v v y " - - 'J P v l ' I It, I i 1 f fc ' - - -k .-v , a mMsmw Hearts I Win Another of the Ritfht-O Stories By DOROTHV D1X. k Know, fhat Ifcuff , ojrerr : "Eureka! I have found It." exclaimed the .Bookkeeper triumphantly, as he laid down the newspaper he had been read ins;. "Fund what sure tip as to which way the eat Is jump In the stock market?" In quired the "tenog rapher tartly. -"Better than that. X have found out how to make a kill In with the fe male sex," replied the Bookkeeper complacently. "Tou know, no matter sort of a he throws, man In. Ills secret . soul yearns to know what par ticular line of soft talk a woman will fall for, and I have just ascertained the never -fall brand that will make women come and tat out of your hand when you feed It to them." "How did you get wise?" asked the Stenographer. "By Improving my mind by reading- the newspapers." said the Bookkeeper. "Here's an account of a divorce suit In which the .deserted husband testified that the gay deceiver who broke up his home and stole his wife away from him did. so by calling ber 'a poor, tired little kid,' although the lady was as husky as Jess Willard, and weighed 8 pounds. "That's the dope; that'a the magic formula that you've only got to -utter and the doors of the feminine heart win fly openv. before you. 'Tou poor, tired little kid1.' -Do. yon get all the subtle imDiloaUons .In that? , .Why. Jt a. Hbac, Son" to' youth; and helplessness, ..and.; tenderness, and protection, poured out atf a woman's feet. By Jinks, If I had a fat, middle-aged wife, and aome man had wlt 'ehoiujh to say a thing like that to her, I'd say: 'Here, take her; you're a. better .man than I am.' " . "That man certainly waa . a head lines , In the Borneo class.", admitted, the tenoaTanher. "I guess there Isn't a woman. In the world, from Mrs. Pan- stenographer, "that' I'a-e ' list teed about most men and women, and that Is that they'd rather-be praised for their de fects than their virtue. If you went to flatter a pretty woman, don't applaud her benny, but hurl a few bouquets nt her Intellect, even II she hasn't set any more brains then a hen, end if' you want to got a smart' woman going, ,1ua1 hand her a few about her complexion and figure, ex-en though she's ugly enough to stop the clock. "Same way with . a man. 1 . know a doctor who's done wonderful- things In his profession that- have made him world famous, but the way to Jolly him Isn't to talk about his scientific achieve ments, but to praise his poetry and he writes the worst verves you ever heaul, and I know a successful literary man who purrs under your hand If you praise his, clothes and tell hlnj . he's a second Beau Brummel. "It's a funny thing, but it looks as If the less truth there Is In flattery the sweeter it is and the more It goes to our heads." . ... "Right-," said the Bookkeeper.., 9 :v, ' -9 " -N: ; o,-"t,''j" I ? ' I. , ,.SHS igeatwswsi V, i I 1 it m An Electro-Magnet Extracting a Shell-Splinter from a Wounded Soldier An Operation in a French Hospital at Bordeaux. These photographs show an apparatus devised by a well known French surgeon, Prof, nergonle here seen applying it to a wounded soldier In the Grand-Lebrun hospital at Bordeaux. A radloRraphlc apparatus traces the movement of the splinter through the flesh. In the photograph underneath the dark portion of the splinter ls-due to part of it overlapping In two exposures, one made before the magnet was applied and one after showing. the splinter slightly higher. - - 1 y "' Bead It Here See It at the Movies. CaTTBODUCarQ - EARLE WILLIAMS ae ' Tiassj Bsinia) ANITA STEWART ',x , . ae The Ostflsss v - 4 Written b "' - Gouvcrncur Morris (Oae of the. Most . Voieble Tig. ' area la Asaarleaa Uteranre Dramatised Into a Photo-Play by OKAaUl W. OOOOaVBO. ' ' ' Author ef "The Vsrlla ef - rsjaUae" 'The' azptoisa ef XUalae" streaming with sweat, i-ame Prof. Ptllllter leading by thn hand a slim and hurst down, who wouldn't be flattered to iiwrinhi ibik hv iiKnuuai.i death to be C".e a a o. Copyright, int. by The -tar Co. All For- there Isn't a mother's daughter of us who doesn't want to be sympathised with ana told ssie's bearing a load heavier than she should, even when she's doing exactly what she wants to do. Be I don't know that I blame the lady who eloped with a man with gumption enough to call her a poor, tired little kid.'" "Sure thing, agreed the Bookkeeper, "and the leas she looked like a poor, tired ,-'ti.i via th, tnnra aoothlns to her feel- ' ; . . Vun h annAllAtlnn. No ings mus nv -, loubt ner nusDana, wivn - Candor f our near relations, had let her see that he considered her an aoio-ooaiou parton, capable of doing a full day's work. .... "Doubtless he had also remarked upon her heft. He may even have compared her invidiously with slim young maidens ahouV half her age and a third her Weight. V.' asTd .;Ak itlnnsi V All lilt bikini 1 VJ DUst gajVU wsi ioon a smarting;, wound it must have ben to be called a 'poor, tired little kid.' 5fot';even a 'monument of virtue could have, resisted a suitor with such a hon eyed tongue as .that." '"There's one thing," observed the Advice to Lovelorn uw uinua AxgjrAX ' Hake Haa Prove lltnsaelf. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am In love with a young man and 1 know my love Is re turned. Our parents have agreed. Everytuiiiif waa aatlsfartory until lately, when he lout his iottiou. ays that, unless 1 get married to him Kecrclly, he won't try to got work ami ill leave town, fcevrr to come back; but If 1 do as he wante, h will try hard to get a Jot) end see that be comes to bomelhlnK. . , . Now, my dear Miss Fairfax, your kind advice wnulfl l stoutly tppreclated. a I told him 1 would k'lve him my answer as soon aji I see. your answer printed In the paicr whether you think I would do rlcht to it married fecretly, before my sweetheart sbows me that he fan support me, and whether It Is riKht on his pari. 'O esk me to no such a thing-. elcn Rlshts Keser'ed Sf NOPS13 OF PREVIOUS CHAPTER. After the tragic death of John Ames bury, , bis prostrated wife, one of Amer ica's greatest beauties, dies. At her death Pret, BtilUter. aa agent of the In terests, kidnapa the beautiful 1-year-old baby girl and brings her up In a para dise where, she sees no men, but thinks she la taught by angels, who Instruct her for her mission to reform the world. At the age of 18 she Is -suddenly thrust Into the world, where agents of the Interests are ready to find her. Hy an accident the hero sees her first' and hides with her In the Adtrondacks. , SKCOND INSTALLMENT. "Well, I'm Jiggered." said Tommy. I haven't found a snake, but I've found the net beat thing-. 1 Now what the devil Is Prof. Stllllter doing In this part of the world?- Again he lifted the glaeeea and ag-ain saw the professor. He appeared to be polishing something on' the sleeve of his Norfolk Jacket. Now and then tHe seme thing flashed brilliantly In the aunilght It might have been a pocket mirror, or a great diamond. Whatever! if waa. Prof. Stllllter presently dropped In into his pocket, forced his way into a dense clump of bushesi at the. very base of the cliff and disappeared. Bat Tommy was not to inveetigata those bushes at the foot of the cliff. He wss within a quarter ef a mile of them, walking; swiftly and quietly along an old lumber trail, when suddenly his quirk ear caught a sound of footstep and at the same moment his quirk eyes caught a glimpse of something white that moved. He stepped qulrkly Into a thicket . lovely glri who carried her head like a ; princess. She was dreaeed in a white garment that fell in unbroken folds from fber shoulders to bar feet, like a Roman togs. .On her bare feat she wore thin ; sanoalai en lief ' bare - head a circlet "6f 'gold la which Jewels fleshed. Her mouth had aa txj resion of celestial gentleness and smoothness, but her eyes.. ; half shielded by -.their lids and lushes, ' were f without expression. She seemed to j Tommy like a girl, not of this earth, I walking In her sleep. He had never seen ; a face so beautiful, so sweet or so touch- lngly , innoc-cui- . Having passed Tommy's hiding place, Prof. Stllllter turned from the trail and led the heavenly . vision to a sort ef natural seat that overlooked a quiet pool from which . Tommy had often taken trout. She sat reflected in the pool, and look ing straight ahead ot her, and not see ing If you linow what I mean. Trof. SUlliter had let go her hand apd was tiptoeing off. abandoning her apparently, but when he had gone a little way ne turned and ' made curious passes in thq air with his hands, and spoke suddenly in a voice ot command, the one word. "Wake!" Expression and light came - Into the great eyes, and she looked about' her with a kind of startled delight. Tommy for some reason or other was trembling from head to foot. A Stick trucked. She turned her bead toward the sound, but Prof. Htllllter hsd made good his tiptoed retreat. He was no longer In sight. Then Tommy, still trembling with won der and excitement, rose from hie biding fiiet and walked slowly toward her. Their eyes met, and the vision smiles the vision smiled the sweetest, most bewitch ing smile, and In the gentlest and richest voice that Tommy had ever heard she asked b'm in astonishing question. , "Are you a man?" "Why, yes." said Tommy. "Then," she said, "this must be the earth;" "Of course." h esaJd, "you know that as wt-ll as I do." "I wasn't sure," she said, "until you told' me. You se I've just come from heaven." "Oh, my Lord," said Tommy, "she's mad aa a hatter. How terrible! And yet ... i : I , 1 f r """ r4'4 J ., !; ' f Showing the little mound, or wave formed by- the tissues as the metal fragment neara the surface ot the body; the final application of the electro-magnet to extract a shell splinter,. . , u . ( , of alders, crouched low and to all in tents and purpeees was blotted out of she looks sane. existence I Tn Olestla." resumed the vision. Along the trail, his heavy baby face "and I've como from heaven to make people better and happier. I'm to begin with New York. Where Is New York?" She looked about her aa if she ex pected to find It somewhere among the trees. "It is a long way from here." said Tommy. "Then I ought to start at once. Will you slipw me the wsy, please?" "Why, yes, of course." - Then Prof. Stllllter came back on the run. "What the devil are you doing here?" ho examined. "Now don't get angry, old chap. This is one of my patients and" "I'm not angry." sold Tommy, "snd don't call me old chap." Then Prof. Stllllter sank his voice to a whlrper. "Her mind," he said, 'Is In an exceedingly critical condition. Now you Just vanish, will you? and leave her to me. She mustn't be upset" "One condition of her mind," said Tommy, "appears to be fesr of you." Stllllter turae from him impatiently. "Pome i.'eleslia." he said, "we'll go away now." Fhe shrank from his proffered band. "Celestla." said Tommy, "don't you want to go wlih him?" "No." she said. "Don't he afraid, then." aald Tommy, "you shan't." "Tommy Barclay." said Stilliter, "you keep out of this or you'll get Into trouble. Come Olestla." She did not stli. In a flash Stllllter had drawn a polished crystal from his pocket and was forcing the girl to look at It. As he did so, he said In a tone of command: "Pleep, Ce lestla. sleep." Tommy simply stepped forward and knocked the crystal from Stllllter s hand, and Stllllter turned upon hltn with a howl of rage and attacked him with a shower of windmill blowa. Tommy was no longer a small boy, but an thlete in the early twenties. He retreated slowly, guarding himself, snd then, when he thought he had drawn Stllllter far enough from Celestla, he quietly reached In under the rain of blows and disarmed htm. In other worda, he removed those great black rimmed spectacles without which the great psy chologist .was blind and helpless. "Perhaps I'm doing wrong." - said Tommy, "but that girl's afraid ot you snd I'll tske a rhsnce.' He dsrted to the girl's side. "Are you afraid of me?" "No." . 'Then come." He led her back to the trail and along it. (T Be Continued Monday.) For the college girl who a seeking in spiration for a graduation gown a sug gestion msy be obtained from the above aketeh. The material. Is of sheer mull, the scalloped edge t the skirt -being bound . with white satin by wsy ot a simple decorative touch. A a reek reflection Is csught In the drapery of the shaped flounce ' which lengthens the bodice.- The flounce Is headtd with fine embroidery, which also appears across the V implerement of the front. The sleevea are in bishop effect, permitting a half-revelation and half concealment of the arm beneath. ' This model maintains j.he, vague lin through the waist which hss been th mode since Paquln Instltyted the waistlee fashions, almost, a decade ago. These, ef course, came as a logical result of the adoption ef the straight-front corset, .for which Mmo., Bernhardt is gratefully he'd responsible. Woman's Ignorance of Man By AX EXI"EBIENtEI B-U HKLOM My Iear Olrls If there Is one subject more thsn another you all believe you The incentive or wtnnms ue giri no i tnorourhly understand, that Subject s loves ought to make a fine man labor . wh.n the UnHS cornM whn honestly and seriously and, with sll hlsth(,r( B Jot 0Be mka w tne wor,d fof might I am ax hearty disbeliever in se- 5 ou ' everyone of you Is under the Im cret marriages. They generslly result in thmt you CM rtrt4 hlm blick. iinhapptne.it. . iluxriutte Is a- sacred and serious thing and ought to take place with dignity , and the knowledge of one's nesrest ar! Cearest relatives. ' Put. him on his nettle to be - ambitious enough tp get a fresh start nnd to be able to i marry y u openly because he Is able to ' take' tare of yo-i ac? has won you. Dva't Worry A boat It. Dear Wls Fairfax: I am a girl of U yeards. Mv gvarcnis nave no objection to niy enter'n'mii j boys, but as moat boys do not like mulc, tnd that is the only thlnar I can think ol. I ltl very awfc Ward when th-y visit me. "J. N. L. You are very young to think of enter taining. When your boy friends come they ought to lie -lad to hear music. Tb en there ai-e games, such a letters, guesaes. etc., v hu li are entertaining and sautatlcnaL wards. Your mother held this view be fore you., aa some of you may have no ticed. ' The amusing part ls-rthet is to the statement of a man, who aa aurh la bound to have wider and deeper knowl edge of that portion of humunity of which he is a part than the most erudite woman can possibly have acquired as an out sider. Take. fpr. example, that . supremely ridiculous assertion duubtloss evolved by some member of your charming sex who couldn't tell neck of m itton from sirloin And you make such quaint mistakes, too. You will oftin sun,) a man who la all, or at sny rate, most of the world to you I don't mean on purpote. but unconsciously, or without being able to help it; while you will give open en couragement, without in the Wast In tending to, to a man who might go up In a home-made aerop'ane for all you cared. And yuu do this all the more If the all-the-world man Is present. This sort of thing sometimes gives you of beef that the way -to a man's heart a bachelor that generally speaking you I was through his pelate (please note that are absolutely and entirely wrong; you pave put mis more delicately than the heartache for a day or lor anything up do not understand men. not even a man, i woman In question). "Feed the brute!" jto always, according ta whether you are or the man. i haa the currency of a proverb; the at- !a thank-godnesa-I-can-lcve-any-man sort We men are not like books of stories jsurd sentence wes snnpped up by your 'of girl, or anything up to the isre snd In ons syllable printed In large type; "ex as a hungry monkey will grab sn precious one-lifc-one-love type, we are more like so far as you fair .empty nutsholl. j At the same time it is quite right and ones are concerned books in the lavish Another widespread fallacy is the be' proper that you should study man. Here Chinese language, where you don't even lief that men are very dense where you you have a vast subject, and one as In know 'Where to begin to read, and In jare concerned. Many of you cherish thn terestlng as It Is great. Do not lose which every letter or symbol possesses fiction that we are Incapable of drawing 'sight, however, of the (.ct that you are at least a dosen quite distinct meaning-- ! the simplest deductions, that if we try a mere student and muat always remain For soma extraord nary I was about ,to add two to two !u sny feminine af- as such, though some of you will doubt- and as you lift the glass to your lips reflect that , three million or more glasses of this wonderful beverage are consumed each day making it indeed -the great National drink. je jfliiK.v te say reason, but lack of reason Is the correct expression, a woman, will believe what another woman says about man- I kind fsr more readily than she will credit fair we shall gel a wrong total. Most ! less become more advanced than others of your little subterfuges are trsnspar- assuming, of course, that you prose crtt charmingly so. Vary otten but all cute your studies with t-ympathy, Intel the time you put us down ss blind. ligence sod persevere nee. V Delicious and Refreshing . GOODS -jay wlih de- Yarns were ' ' " ' ' do clips were TTTT" menufocturers i "!iv cotton goods - M V - ' DeflMutd the genuine by full name all the vise do likewise M A, 2H EV ' iT- SThenever you ,' gee n Arrovr, think of Coca-Cola The Coca-Cola Co. ATLANTA. GA. Dried Krslli a wtU A nn a y iche. weak IB' Pis Mass.. t Deetrayed. May fT.-The plant iii!iiiitmnuiu vWJay'flaie Iatlwr company and .iiianlity of manufactured sloek iv j ;...i i.v fire of an unknown t a loss or '. ..i .VW-N . the workmen was injured. I Bee Want Ads Produc kasu'.U i