f TIIK HKK: OMAHA, TUESDAY. AUGUST 3, 1915. 1 'Th e Be es Mom e Magaz i ti e P age Ir ! Ir . - 1 1 r n Picking a Husband Shall & Girl Trust Her Head or Heart? B7 DOROTHY DLX. "" A young girt doslrea to. know -whether he should he guided by hep head or her heart la choosing- a husband. Both, child, both. A happy inarriaga muit be backed by oth lore . and Judgment A proper husband must both' com up to your ideal and fire your fancy. Of couise, thU la a rare combination, bat nnkMM you get . it you will sever make marriage a It doeen't do for a girl to be' raided entirety by her heart when she choose her husband, . bcoanss. nifertsatuir. son of the moat ohannftnoT men on earth are the leat destraW aa life mate; Indeed, nature seems to take a mallotou delight in making the man fascinating; to .women that bo woman in her right aenaea should, think about marrying. The man, for tostanoa, who has all the octal grace at bla fingers' ende. ao often can do nothing with hie hand to make, a IlTingr. Irunkarda and black fa eep bare nearly alwaya a certain curi oua boyishness about them that make an almost trreetstible appeal to the ten derneM of a woman. Often the very fact that a youth la llght-bearted. and ray. and Irresponsible Invest him with a tranacendent charm Just by contrast wKh thoe who are eameat and ' aerlooe-mmded. It 1 eaay enough for a girl to fan in low with any of these, bat heaven help her If ah marries on of them! For, the poeta to th contrary nevertheless, love isn't enough fa matrimony. Not by a long shot. It take money, and th ability to get along m th world, and the reliability, and strength of purpose, and endurance, and unlea th man at th bead .of th household ha not these qualities; that marriage la very apt to go to smash. It doesn't matter to a woman that her husband 1 aa handeoro aa Adonis If he oaa't make, a living. Vto man who can't pay th bllbi locks good" to DM wire for long. No woman' la long enamored of Peter Pan If she marries Mm. Matrimony is a full-slaed man' Job, and she wants somebody to lean on, not a child to b rsleed. No woman finds any aMdmff charm In Irresponsibility when she's married to It and asoertalns that It other nam 1 fn ocmpetency, nd that ah haa to take car of her husband Instead of his tak ing oar of her. Therefor, daughter, when you go to piok-out a husband, remember that th heart is an. unreliable guide and one that to mighty apt to lead you to repentaao. Take counsel of your head, but bear in mind that Just a the heart la apt to err in one direction, so th head is prone to err in to other, for if w cannot live on entiinenV alone, neither can nr exist on a steady diet of cold, bard facta Tour head will tell you that when you go to pick out a husband you should giv htm the once over, and see if he la strong and healthy, and intelligent and moral, aad ascertain the state ' of hla finance If this Investigation la satis factory, then on with th wedding march. Those who advocate thts bustnes-Uk system of picking out a husband con tend that such marriages turn out better than those founded on love alone. They say that romance la aa fleeting aa the mists of dawn, anyway, and that It Is bound to be dispersed by the coming of the long proaalo day of domestlo life. When th sentimental Illusion Is gone, the girl who haa picked out a husband by her heart alone has nothing left with ' which to comfort herself, but the girl wh has selected her husband with her head hla, as a, consolation prise, all the luxuries and pleasures that being well placed In the world gives. To a degree this Is true, but ths heart is an unruly member, and there are not very many women who are philosophical enough to take his oold-btooded view of the subject. They may want luxuries, but love Is a necessity to them, and without that the finest house Is an abomination of desolation, and they starve though their -tables groan every day under the feast spread upon them. Cupid Is a revengeful little chap, and he punishes mercilessly those who flout him In arranging their own marriages Instead of leaving the lob to him. When a woman marries for her head Instead of her heart, he doesn't good naturedly come- around and shoot off an arrow where It will do the most good so that she will fall In love with the prosperous and worthy man to whom she Is unltsd. On the contrary, he tortures hsr to ths last day of her life with vain regrets and longings for the romance that she never knew. . J The woman whe marries a man just be cause she loves htm, without any refer eno to what th man is, or th place he can make for himself In the sun, takes a long shot at happiness. . Ths woman who marries a man Just because he le a good chanoe. also gambles with her happiness. Between the two risks there is small choice. Th only safe ptay Is te pick out a hus band Who appeals to both your head and your heart, one who is a man every luck of htm, and yet who ean make your hearing pit-a-pat. luckily, the combination Is not aa Irn pueslble one, and any girl ao find surh a. mat if she'll Just bfcte her time and look carefuly enough. . I i t f K ax v . 1 fL - .'V? t,. ; Light Bearers of Ocean's "J.II!S Try ''"ir;'' ti . f . y i a Ma IUlt,ev4L. In this doop-sea fish the head glows with a soft light, while the body is dark. .By GARRETT P. KERV1SS. Tb earth has no stranger Inhabitants than th light-making fishes of th deep a. They are the remote and scattered descendants of the ocean which ages ago were driven Into th depths, where the darkness, the pressure and th scarcity of the ordinary necessities of fish Hf arrested the pursuit of their ravenous enemlea , They may be likened, In their situation and in the peculiarities which distinguish them, to th remnants of ancient races of men chased, like th native Britons and the Indigenous Inhabitants of. north ern Spain, into comers and upon moun tain heights. It is Important to ge this fact clearly Into th mind, for the popular supposi tion that the deep-sea fishes originated Where they are now found Is erroneous. They have become adapted to conditions of life entirely different from those In which their remote ancestors were ac customed. This is shown by the curious ad justments, atrophies and 'developments which their sense organs and the struc ture of their bodies have undergone. They no doubt originated In the shallow waters along shores and coasts, like other fishes, snd when the struggle for ex istence with stronger tribes became too pressing they fled, in the only direction In which they could go, which was down ward, from th daylight of the surface water Into " th night of the ocean abysses.. - . Those who wish to see the forms of some of these, strange fishes,, and to study th arrangement of their set f -Ugh t- Read Oouverneur Morris and Charles W. Ooddard CwjrrigkV Isis, Ma Bnopslg of fevlona Chapters. After the tragio death of John Ames bury, hi prwsuated Ue, one uC Amur lea's greatest beauties, dies. At ber death Prof. StuUier, au agvnt of tbe inteieaia kidnap th beautiful J-year-old baby slil and brlbga bur up in a paradise where she sees no man, but thluka she is taught by angola wtu instruct ber fur ber luiselou to reform th world. At th as of 1 ah is suddenly thrust into th world where aneuts of the interests ar read to preteiul to find bur. fifteen years later Tumiuy gees to ths Adlroadacks. Th Interests are responsi ble for tbe trip. By accldeut h is tbe lu nl to meet the little Ameubm v girl, as she eoiue fortn from ber paradlae as CelesUa the girl from heaven. Noliber Tuuuuy iwr Clesna recoKUiXfc each other, 'i'ouuuy (lads It an easy matter to rescue CelesUa from Prof. Stlllilai and they hiu lu the mountains; later they are buisued by Sumter aud esoape to an Island wbei they spend the night. Tommy s first aim was to get Celeatla away from HUlllter. After they leave bellevue Tommy la uuabi to gt any hotel to take Oeleatia la owing to her ooetume. But later he persuades bis lather to keep her. When be sue out to Uis taxi be finds her gone, sue tails into the hands of white slavers, but escapes and Koea to live with a poor fain- lly by the nam of Douglas, wnen hen their son Freddie returns nome ue iinas rigut In his own house, CelesUa, the girl for which the underworld baa, ocxerea a re ward that he hoped to get CelesUa secure work in a large gar ment factory, where a great many girl ar employed. Her she shows her pe culiar power, and makes friend with all ber girl ovmpeniona. iif her talks to th girls she Is able to calm a threatened vtrtke, and the "boss" overhearing her Is moved to grant the relief tbe girls wished, and also to right a great wrong be had done one of them. Just at this point the factory catches on fire, and tbe Work room Is soon a blazing furnace. Celeatla refuses to escape with the other girls, and Tommy ttarolay rushes In and car ries ber out, wrapped in a big roll of cioth. After rescuing Celeatla from tho fir a. Tommy la sought by HauMer barUay, who undertakes to persuade him to give up the slrl. Tommy refuses, and Celeatla wants him to wed tier directly. 11 ran not do this, aa he has no fund. HUluier and Barclay Introduce Celeatla to a co terie of wealthy mining men. who agree to send Celeatla to the .-ollKTles. The wife of the miners' leaner Involves Tommy in an escapade that leads th miners to lynch him. Ceestla saves htm from th mob, but turns from hlra and goes to see Kehr. TWELFTH EPISODE. "1 know that you belter that." said Tommy. "If X didn't know that you be lieved, I shouldn't let you go to the stock ad." "You couldn't hold m forever " H drew th back of hla hand across his eyes, as If to shut ou some horrible scene. "No," he said, "I couldn't hold you for ever. They would coin and take you away from ma I should have you would have to b so that you couldn't speak to them any more." She came close to him and lifted her hands to his shoulders and looked up Into Ms eves, a pitiful little figure, ahrluklng and frlghtend. "You couldn't have the heart. Tommy not me no matter huv Wicked you By thought 1 was." Af 4 iT.iv. ... i ' '4 -8 - This strange drep-soa fish is known by only a single specimen dredged from a depth of four fiths of a mile, in the Gulf of Guinea, and the west coast of Africa. The body of the fish is a shimmering glow of iridescence, while the protruding eyes shine like automobile head lights. The formidable teeth mark it as a ferocions carnivore. tng apparatus. v should visit the exhibi tion of models of deep-sea life recently prepared m the American Museum of Natural History. Ther are two controlling circumstance affecting deep sea life first, tbe absence of sunlight, and, second, the enormous pressure of th water. Below a depth of a few hundred feet there Is practically no light received from above. It has all been absorbed by the supporting layers of water. To meet this condition some of the fishes have developed phosphores cent organs, which enable them to sup ply light enough to produce a faint Illu mination In their Immediate neighbor hood. At th best they can only be com pared to persons going about by candle light In a forest on a black' night. They It Here-jSee It at theMovies "I couldn't," said Tommy, "thinking that you are a misguided angel of light. Tto I couldn't . Well, dear, God know I wish I had your eloquence and the power upon hearts. Tou wouldn't find everybody on your side. You'll find many abler men than I talking and writ ing against you, and trying to save this country from madnesa. I oh, I love you so that I feel as If my. heart was break ing. And ro think that I can't even wish you luck." "There's the motor for me now,'' said Celestia. "I know you can't wish m luck, but you could kiss me if you wanted to." These who had heard her speak often said that she had never spoken so well, with the exception of just ths first few moments, when she seemed to be a little daaed and nervous. Three times dur ing her speech the crowd rose to her and shouted till It seemed as If there was never going to be any end to 'the shout ing, and when she had finished speak ing, and stood there swaying like a Illy, and 'flushed with a sense of nobility of power, and triumph, pandemonium broke loos. Out of that pandemonium that began with cries of Celestia CelesUa. another nam gradually took form and substano Barclay Barclay, thy bellowed, at first in a kind of syncopated roar, then In unison, and finally with a rhythm that drove men half wild with the desire to be in time with It, and that actually mad some of the buildings In th en closure sway. "Barclay-Barclay we want Barclay; Barclay for president Barclay Barclay." Thus the boom was launched. Barclay rose from his place on the platform, walked straight up to CeUetla, took her right hand in hi and lifted It to his lipa Then he turned, standing on her right hand and faced the shouting and th tumult. There was no smil of triumph on his face, only a look of grim, bulldog determination and probity. After a long Mm they let him speak. And after he bad spoken they went wild again. "I will do what a man may," he said, In a voice that carried to th moat re mot pair of ears, "to make the wishes that you do me the honor of wishing, com true. If I am elected president. I will make these United states Into a fit Advice to Lovelorn Voar Mother Mast Me Him. Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 am considered fairly good looking, and am fairly edu cated, bout in music and la buelnes . I am fond of a mnn 3s years. He Is a sue. oeesfui business man. and bis buatnee would Improve about Km per cent If he could win me. 1 tell you this because my mother is much aghlnst this melon, berausH nf hla ate. although she has never seen him. He loves in dearlv. He thinks a ereat deal of me because l teli him that 1 can't go against my mother's wishes He wants to meet her and try to ev plain to her tnat It Is nar row -minded to think so. Kindly let nut know what to do. an I want to iileaa thcin bolti Vuj know Ihm no t,ia ( m n I Midnight Depths nu mi jiyn'.ev ew see only by glimpses, and, in fa' t, most of their phosphorescent organs omit flaches of light rather than a steady illumination. It is thought that In many cases-the purpose of the light lsto' at tract prey rather than to Illumine the way. Of course, the first fishes to take. 'rei fuK In th depths did not go as deep as their descendants now live. They had to become adapted to th new conditions gradually. The process of adaptation Is seen in the curious forms which the eyes of some species nave assumed. Jn some cases they have grown Into huge gog gles. These are useful where their pos sessors live on the border line where daylight fades Into absolute night and where It Is necessary to gather every habitation for men and women and little children. So help me Oodl'' i A llttl later Barclay's secretary stole 1 away to the telegraph station and sent a message. An hour later th Inhatltants of Bitumen, dispersed now, and for the ; most part drunk, were electrified by the spectable of a snow white train of oars that pulled. slowly into the station, and I was then backing on to a siding. ; Celestia transformed her few belonging i from her tent to the rear car of this ' train. The car ahead was for milliter and ' certain other managers and advisers. The I next oar was . the office car. The one j ahead of that was for a chosen body of ; select, able and pampered correspondents. Th anow-wblte train pulled cut of Bitumen and the whirlwind oampalgn began. I cannot at this moment lay hands upon her exact Itinerary, but It Is enough to know that representative parts of the whol country had a chance to see her. Now for the most part her audience would b composed of their tall white men In long, black coats, with broad black felt hats, v I pon the outskirts of such negroes could be seen: or she would speak to men in flannel shirts and i leather "chapa." or from the rear plat form of her car, baited at some little station that atood In the midst of wheat: or corn spreading to the horizon, to hard-1 headed farmer and their hard-headed I women folk. Or to foreign-looking men and women,' their handa stained with picking and sorting oranges; or to wildly rough and chivalrous men In mining' camps', to sophisticated crowds In great halls in cities, to. crowds of sweating laborers in choking halls in cities that belcher out ao muoh amoke day and night that you could hardly ever see the sun or moon. Wherever she went the effect that she had upon her audience was magical. But sho could not go every where; ahe could not hope to reach every body In the larger cities: and those who were sent north, south, east and west to speak for her, able oratora , long tried In the political arena, and worth every cent of their pay, had not. of course, the power of hypnotising Into beliefs. 8 he merely looked at a man and he believed. Whereas from them, with all their golden tongue work, their Impassioned friend ship for the downtrodden , and unfor tunate, many went doubting. (To Be Continued Tomorrow. B Beatrice Fairfax I think aim. la la almost my duty to marry A. O Arrange for th man you love to rreet your mother. If she Is convinced of his sincerity and devoUoa and Integrity of! character I am aur ah will overlook! her anwlllingne to hav. you marry him, even though he la so much older then you. Th difference in your ages Is really somewhat too marked, but con-1 geniality, sympathy and real love do! much to bridge a gap. In fairness to you. your mother must consent to meet 1 srr ' y,vzj&JWTXZJas3jr ivmwirwieziCkxrs&Tx?': rrrxssxmpcmjmrsFST tmBsrasssassrrzs 3XS3 siMswwie'T'iiyy.aL " 1 11 possible ray. In other oase, where the creatures live at great depths, th eyes hav disappeared, though their rudi ments remain. Often In place rrt eyes long, dcllcato antenna or tenter have been developed. The luminous organs are .extremely varied, according to the sueoles bearing them. In some rases they may be likened to little lamps carried on the ends nf poles projecting from th head of the ownera Often the lights nr srranged along the sides of the body, like the illuminated portholes of a ship. The - second peounar condition' which these creatures have to face Is th enor mous pressure of the water. This. In creases at the rat of about fifteen pounds to the 'square Inch for every thirty feet of descent. At the depth of a mile the pressure- per square inch ex. reeds a ton. '' In consequence of this the fluh ar ao constructed that water can easily penetrate their tissues, equalising th strain within snd without " When they are brought up and . the prossur Is suddenly relieved the)- some- Buy and Boost Boost and Buy FJ'ITHER way you look at it, it's worth your while and worthy of yourself. It's decidedly to your interest because Omaha products stand ace high with the whole outside country they are better in quality and usually less expensive than competitive things made elsewhere. It costs money to do things right. And there's some risk financial risk. But the Omaha manufacturer banked on your being able to recognize merit when he put in his machinery, hired his men and started to turn out honest goods. He wants to get better acquainted with Omaha people. He wants a side by side showing with the other fellow's goods. He doesn't fear the result. That's what he calls an even break. Will you give it to him? Fishes of Wonderfnl Hues Collapse When Brought from Their Zero Haunts -- , '- v.-a A small, silvery, eel-like fish found at depths ranging from a little less than a mile to two and one-half miles. It has a row of luminous fiores running the length of the body; and in 1 the blackness of the profound depths it must appear like n miniature long dark boat with gleaming portholes. Its green ish, glittering eyes are perched on the ends of slender, horn like tentacles. times explode on account oft he expansion of the internal gase. In fact. It Is con ceivable, as haa often been remarked. that one of these deep-sea creatures sud denly darting upward might throw Itself out of equilibrium, and. throush the uncontrollabel expansion from within, be helplesnly carried higher and higher until Its tissues burst. One of th consequences of the great P renin re Is that all the deep sea species are very small, th largest seldom exceeding a few inches In length. . Several of the species represented by tho models In the museimt are repro duced on thts rag. In th on resemb ling an eel In shnp the ere at th ends of the tentacles projecting from the head are both organs of vision and lamps, sine they give forth a greenlrh light . The atout-bodled on, with th formld able snout. Is remarkable, because It dwells at a depth of at least two and a half miles, where the pressure cannot b less than about three tons to tho square Inch. The ahsenr of light on the ocean bot tom prohibits the existence of plant life mrre, ana lor una reason, ir no otner, th rirep-eca creatures are all carnivor ous, . on i species feeding upon another. fometlmea their Jaws are more formid ably armed than these of sharks, and one can Imagine the terror which these little self-luminous monsters Inspire In their dark, cold world of waters, the profoundest retreat of Ufa on the globe. 1 MADE IN 4 U.S.A. Omaha-Made Science for Workers I Q "If a snoked wheel is set In motion at a given speed, then. In order t throw a stone through the wnoel, is it neces sary to throw It at the same rate of speed to have It pass through In the clear ?"-Fred Heldt, Giles.' Cal. A. No. A stone might pass between the spokes having either greater or less velocity than a point on th circumfer ence. I .larht travels at a speed of lM,,3f4 miles per second. In a moving picture. light falling on a revolving wheel Is shown, as some passing between and be yond the moving spokes, while other rays strike hem and are reflected .back and enter the lenses of the camera. But no wheel In existence can revolve so that Ito tire ahull more at a rat of 1M.38U miles per second. . A wheel of solid steel or patinum would burst Info fine pieces long before any such speed could oe stepped up from a state of rest. Snap-Shots By ANN LISLE. Oh, fcollvh smil ht could not watch nnn wa t T'ntll the hud ahOtild of Itself unfold. Spreading ench satin petal In due state. To show at last lis nean or virgin goia. Oh. foolish fingers that could tear and sou The close-furlod petals, seeking to die- , I r Their plerlotie hoard too soon, ths bud ycu spoil. And never know the beauty of th rose: Dvn a new broom fall to sweep clean unless there ar a pair of wiling arms behind It. A pessimist la a woman who believes that a week after they hav sailed for. seven years of Hf as a missionary to th Orientals she will discover that she . knew people who could have been , relied or if ah had ruased it in tun. . Th easiest way to b wis about women Is to b without experience ys th cynic. That la all right with ex perienced women. But th pretty llttl debutant with a million Is likely to. marry a man with a series of pasta - When a click Is all run down It simply stop working, no matter who depends on It Eut a man Is different especially If he Is a husband and a father. Do You Know That The Persian used not to punsh mur der If It was a first offense. The word "whig" means a pack-saddls thief; the word "tory" a band of robbers. At the close of the seventeenth oenturV a tax was placed on widowers in England. Wearing collars which squeese th neck tlghty la aald to b conducive to bald ness. Goods i 41 1 iuri tu iuMf Mother's lwe. hut, still. ,n11 ou v- v