TIIE DEK: OMAHA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1915. r The Bees Home Magazine Pa The Borrowed Christm Drawn for The Dee Dy Windsor McCay Girls in Business Wkt Have You Done With Life? Our Deadly Habits rvi ge v i-opyrigm, wis. intern I Dews u.rvic. i 7 ( v. " No. 2 Bolting Our Food Part I. By Woods Hutchinson, A. M., M. D. The World Best Known Writer on Med cal Subjects. Our American dyspepsia, our nervous nen, our vanishing teeth, our premature baldness and our early death have all been confidently ascribed to "bolting; our food." "The reason?" Why, reasons were a Plenty aa blackberrlea. The atarch was -,n escaped dlgostlcn. Our teeth did noi gei. cnougn exercise ana. nncr, i wa rned and fell out. Our food waa swal lowed In aolld chunks and, hence, acted ; like lead In the atomach and laid tha foundation for dyspepsia and constlpx- j Worat and deadlleat of all, we were aravely assured that the stomach had no teeth and. hence, that anything whlrh escaped mastication In the mouth cou d not be tackled In the Intestines and passed through the body unchanged, causing an appalling wastage of good food materials. One by one these ecarehrads were ex ploded. The main reason why the sail vary digestion of starch, which consists In changing It into sugar, waa supposed to be destroyed by bolting the food, was that this change can only take place In an alkaline solution, like the fluids of the mouth, and, hence, the process would stop aa' soon as the food reached the acid stomach. ' But It waa one day discovered that in stead of the stomach being constantly acid, the left two-thirds or first pouch Into which the food fell was alkaline after a meal and remained so for three quarters of an hour or more. So that all that waa necessary was to put down the starch, shoot the aallva on ' top of It and the sugar fermentation ' could go on perfectly for from three- fmlf In the stomach. ; But worse remained. It was found that even under the most favorable of cir cumstances only a part of the starch was changed to sugar In the mouth and stomach and that the most Important i part of this first step In the digestion of ; Insoluble starch, turning it Into soluble ', sugar, took place under the -influence of the powerful ferments of the pancreas in , th lntaftnAa. I The most valuable feature of the saliva is Its wttnui and. aa waa woven bv the drinking at meals test, the more you can i add to this wetness within reasonable limits tne better the digestion win lane place. So far as starchy foods are con cerned that is to say. bread, crackers, ceres', rice, corn, potatoes, etc. all that Is necessary in the way of chewing, Is enough to reduce them to a. soft pulp capable of. being readily penetrated by the watery juices in the stomach and in the Intestines. Anything beyond this is a waste of time and muscular energy. It often happens that the reasons why we do certain nature!, habitual things are different from what we suppose. We have always been sure that the chief virtue of masticating our food waa to mix It thoroughly with the digestive fer ment of the saliva. Now we know that while this sugar ferment of the saliva is of tome Impor tance, yet the two things which are most important to mix with our food In mas- v I tlcatlon are water and air. This does II not mean that you are to chew JjL mouth open and masticate a ,ITjorell aa rhythmically, though illusion would be quite aa ratloi II not mean that you are to chew with you audibly a the on quite aa rational as th "Chew-Chew" fad which had Its vogu soma years ago. Porousness of our food Is as Imports n for good digestion as porousness of n soil is for a good crop. One reason why breads and hard biscuits, hot or Fold, are such excellent foods, and mushoe and cereals and gummy puddings and slop of all sorts such poor ones. Is that a pulp of bread or hard biscuit remains porous when wet, while a pulp of mushes, whether cormeal, oatmeal or hasty pudding, or soft biscuit, or soggy dough. Is almost as waterproof as so much gum. (For the same reason, another popular illusion - fell namely, that soft-boiled eggs are more digestible than hard boiled when it was discovered by the irrefutable method of dropping tea spoonful of chopped up hard-boiled white of egg and a teaspoonful of soft-boiled white of egg into test tubes of pepsin arid hydrochloric add side by side that the hard-boiled waa dissolved first, be cause the pepsin could penetrate Into It quicker than it could into the gummy pulp of the soft-boiled. But. of course, hard-boiled . eggs must be reasonably well chewed, and nobody bothers to chew ' a soft-boiled egg, and couldn't If he tried. So much for three-auarters of our odatuff starches. When It comes to the bulk of the remainder, the meats, the situation la even more surprising. It was long ago discovered by experiments both on human beings and animals that so active and vigorous are the pepsin of the stomach juice and the pancreatlon of the pancreatln, that meat swallowed a. vuwv .,aw u id m u . ...v.. , . . . , . . . . . .1 is wen aigesiea in a neaitny aiornacn ana 'ntestlne. Not that It is advisable to swallow it in chunks of this sice, but simply aa an illustration of what the digestion can do If it is put to it. Our ancestors of the stone age, and for the matter of that of the fifth and sixth centuries, could gorge thirty pounds of meat at a sitting, when they could get it. In chunks th else of which waa merely limited by the r swallowing diameter of their throats, and he none the worse for It. except a little drowsiness for three or four days. That is the sort of a pedigree our stomach has. In-Shoots It never cleanse nastineaa to call it 1'pon the whole, a paying job la better than a hero medal. To appreciate histionlo art it is better not to know th actor. The woman with a velvety voir often iia a disposition like a buss saw. ! 11,11 I W II! m i i urn m Lot t i i M $ 4Lis?M. .., s i ; ii : F mWm vf P ' I 'i z MWirx 'Aim :H VA mm: J&i A, xiLMmM. "v'"'- y- M i I V31 J "N . iraS imfT -.1 U JCV J . By JAMES J. MONTAGUE.. f course I know there ain't no use of gettin' sore because Them children on the avenue is friends of Santa Claus. lie's like most everybody else in this here world, I s'pose; -ife'd rather pass his presents round among the kids he knows. No matter what some people says, I'll never think he's mean i 'ecause he don't buy toys afl'.things for folks he's never seen. 13 ut when I see them Christmas trees, all loaded down with toys, 1 wisht that we was friends of his, like other girls an' boys. The window we've been lookin' through is only made of glass, But it's the same as iron bars, if we should try to pass. An' on the side where Santa Claus came visitin last night There's blocks, an' drums, an' tooting horns, an lots an' lots of light, An, on the side where we are at it's awful cold an dark. An' we can't touch the nice warm glass for fear we'll leave a mark. An' somepin' maybe it's our hearts inside us Bort o' aches It's funny what a diff 'ernce that thin glass window makes! It's always this way, every year, we cannot keep away We just got to go down there an' watch them children play. We try to think that we're inside, an' sometimes we pertends That we are like the children there ;-all Santa Claus' friends. An' then it seems a lot o' fun, an' often we forget That we an' Mr. Santa Glaus have never even met. An' when we line up at the glass I look at Sis an' say: "We'll borrow Christmas for a while; that's somepin,' anyway 1" r - 1 1 I i H nw flip P.nrtfi Xnfl Fnrmrl II ; 1 By DR. ART HUB L. DAY. Home Secretary of the National Academy of Sciences. It must hav been a very turbulent sea. the molten surface of our earth upon which the rocky crust began to form. The flrat patches of crust were probably shattered over and over again by escap ing gases and violent explosions of which our waning valoanle activity 1 but a fee ble echo. If the earth was first gaseous, and th outer surface gradually condensed to a liquid. Its outer portion at least must hav been whirled and tumbled about sufficiently, ven a few thousand year (which I a very small Interval In th formation of an earth), to mix it va rious ingredients pretty thoroughly. It has accordingly been hard to e just how It cam to separate into Individual rocks of such widely different appearance and character. Of course, the num. ber of its ingredients was large. Wa hav already discovered eighty or more different elementary substances In the earth, and there Is an almost endless number of more or less stable compounds Of these. Th f reeling of an earth Is therefore, different from the freetlng ot pur water, but the freeslng of salt water offer a clue to th explanation of the nay in which th earth solidified w find It. When aalt water freeses, th calt la practically all left behind. Th Ice contains much leas salt and th remain ing water relatively mor salt than be fore freeslng began. Applying this famil iar observation to th supposed molten surface of th earth as it began to solidify, we have a suggestion of order and reason In Its separation Into so many kinds of rocks. Now, what more promising questions occur to one than these: If th earth was originally fluid, aa tt appears to hav been, and has gradually cooled down to Its present state, its component minerals must at some time hav been much mor thoroughly mixed than now; how did they com to separata in the procea of StlarMed the Off Ear. "Bobby." Inquired the mother, "did you wash your fac before the music teacher came?" "Yes'm" "And your hands?" "Yesm." "And your ears?" "Well, ma." said Bobhy. Judicially, "I washed the one that would be next to lnr. " Louisville Courier-Journal. Sot. coooling into highly individualised masses and group a w now find them, and what were the step In their deposition? If th whole earth w hot, whence cam the marble of whioh w have so much and which can withstand no heat? What has given us th valuable deposits or iron, of gold, of precious stones? i What determines th various crystal form found In th different materials, j and what to their relation? Borne must hav formed under pressure, some with out pressure, some with th help of center, and what th source of energy In our volcaaoea? All these questions, and many more, th geo physicist may attempt to answer. i nm uvopnysicai leDormiory or in car- I negl Institution at Washington has en tered upon some of th Investigations ! suggested by this long preliminary study of th earth the physical properties and condition of formation of th rocks and minerals. The department of terrestrial magnetism of the sam Institution has undertaken another the earth' magen tlsm; the German geophysical laboratory at Ooettlngen a third th earthquake and these will no doubt be followed by other. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Temptation exists mostly for the peo ple who look for It or Invite Itt This Is not the hard-hearted statement of one who falls to sympathise with the troubles of her own sex rather It Is a generali sation to which they are Indeed excep tions. All throught the world. In every walk I of life, there are unscrupulous and do ! signing men. The girl who Uvea shel ! tered and protected In her own home meets with temptation. The alii who goes down to business meets It, too, but In both rssrs one of two things Is true th girl is unfortunate In the men with whom she comes In contact, r j;in der on her own part Invite catastrophe. Ther are plenty of men In the world who are beasta of prey rather than hu man twinge. From them neither maid, wife nor widow la quite safe. But the average man is a sane, decent person, with plenty of kindly Inst. nets and a great deal of chivalry. Such a man respects nobody more than a self renpectlng working girl who Invites ne.ther Impudence nor familiarity. A pood deal of the talk about the "wolf In sheep's clothing," who Is the average employer, is hysterical and quite untrue. If the g.rl who goea down to business goea clad In an armor of dignified Kelt, respert, of efficient determination to do her work nnd do it well, and of faith in the fnct that the world la built on the principle of "live and let live, ' she likely to get on famoualy and to find herself quite undisturbed In her desire to do her work. Rut does the average girl go thus equipped? Doesn't she rather have u '.Ittle sneaking feeling that her sex Is an asset and one she might as well make the most of? Doesn't she dress to be attractive so that even office boys will gallently sharpen pencils and tun errands for her? Drean't she roll her big, blue eyes at "the boss" when ah wants to get a few extra 'afternoon hours off? Doesn't she Invite admiration because she Is a pretty girl rather than because she is n efficient worker? If she dons those things. Is she justi fied In poslr.g aa a persecuted martyr when some man takes her at her own valuation and treats her as a forward coquette rather than aa an efficient j business woman? Not all giria do go down to business with the idea that It Is a superior sort of matrimonial agency or a place where feminine charm la to make feminine work a far easier thing than It wouM be if the employers were women. Not all men Imagine that the bual ness girl is an adventures who is look ing for trouble or a shy little creature who Is fair game fur any man. But there are men who take this umhlval lous and contemptible attltuJe towai'U women just as there are women who warrant men in taking It. Tho temptations of a bus ness girl are due directly to two things the weakness In tho armor of urns silly girls who cause more dignified oues to be mls- j judged, and the wickedness In the natures or some men wnicn a ciigntnea gin Dy meeting and meeting well may possiDiy be able to lessen In slight degree. ! I The xlrl who goes down to business 'willing to do her work and not to be a I cry-baby, and try to take advantas of her femininity to get her off from any I difficulties, will meet with the protec tion oi cveijr OB.vm inan wun wnuin sui; comes In contact. That girl makes it easier for every other girl In th business world! The men who have met her and who know what a "white, honest Uttl thing" she is, remember her and treat all other working women with a- respect due to tha germ of an Idea that "white little thing" engendered. There Is a fine chivalry In work for women. Women ow It to one aflother to uphold 'it Every girl who behaves herself with dignity, who does her work well and who neither looks for trouble nor becomes panicky when she sees actual signs of It, keep that chivalry white and fine. And when ah meets with difficulty sh will find ther are plenty of splen did men ready to answer her with pro tection and to give her th "benefit of the doubt." It does not pay for th business girl to look for trouble. It 1 beneath con tempt for her to Invite it. If she does neither of th two th difficulties that chance to beset her will be fairly easy to handle. 4 This 't Is th produced l i.V liVn brilliancy, 4 m U rVTP-f i mm mm m t. 1 V I . 1 IV ( Prfert cut, BfYl4 HI I brilliant dta- I VVMt S? 1 r.l mond. 3 sn- Lvi ZjAVVt "e Pearl". IT 'AVNuaf" iil ' I' ln. chain, HJg'C S24.50 I USB i OUR CREDIT aa.s 1 i i i i i I a atoata. 1 By ELLA WIIKKLER WILCOX. Copyright, lft 15, Star Company. What have you don, .nd what r you doing with life, O Man, O average man of the world Average man of the Chritian world we call clrllUcd? What have you done to pay for the Ubor pn ' tne mother who bore you? On earth you occupy apace; yon consume oxygen from the lr, And what do you give In return for these things Who Is better that you live and strive and toll? Or that you live through the tolling and striving of others? As you pass down the street does anyone look on you and say, "There gos a good son, a true husband, a wiso father, a fine cltlr.en? A man whose strong hand is ready to help a neighbor, ' A man to trust?" And what do women say of'you? Unto their own souls what do women ssy? Do they say, "He helped to make the road easier to tired feet, To broaden the narrow horison for aching eyes. He helped us to higher Ideals of womanhood?" Iook Into your own hearts and answer, O average man of the world, Of the Christian world we call clvlllicd. Atd what do men think of you what do they think and say of you, O average woman of the world? ' . ' Di they say, "There Is a woman with a great heart. Loyal to her sex, and above envy and evil speaking; There Is a daughter, wife, mother, with a purpose in life. She can be trusted to mold the mind of little children; She knows how to be good without being dull. . . . How to be glad and to make othrs glad without descending to follyj She Is one who Illuminates the path wherein she walks , One who awakens the best In every human being she meets?" Look Into your own heart, O woman, and answer; this. What are you doing with the beautiful years? Is your today a better thing than waa your yesterday? Have you grown In knowledge, grace and usefulness? Or are you ravelling out the wonderful fabric knit by Time And throwing away the threads? . , Make answer, O woman, average woman of the Christian world.. Strikes have been prevalent over the I country, and laborers are demanding that the eight-hour system become universal. No human being ahould work at any one occupation more than eight hours a day. All the work in the world ahould be properly aecompllBhed, and ther could be comfort and prosperity if every one In the world worked six hours a day. It there were no Idle people there would be no neccstlty to overwork the laborers. The time ta approaching when matters will be more fully adjusted and equalised. But meant'me. while you are clamoring to hav your hours of labor reduced from ton to eight, are you maklnr plana re garding what you will do with those extra two hour a day? ' if you r a man, do you Intend to devot those wonderful 1M minute to your home? Do you mean to glv your femlly mor pleasure, and your wife and children the happiness of your society. or are you thinking of th extra time you can spend at th club, or In th corner saloon, or In th poolrooms and gambling houses? " If you are a single man I It your ambfion to devote those two hours of time eaah day to studying and perfecting yourself in some line of endeavor which will enable you ,to fill a higher position later on, or are you hoping to indulge yourself In greater dlsa'patlon and frlval Ity each day during your hour of leisure? Results little short of miraculous can be achieved by applying one's self to a certain line of endeavor two hours every day, A trad can be acquired, a knowl edge of musle, a language, an accomplish ment, a picture can be painted, a . book Advice to Lovelorn j " T BSA.TXUCB FaVOUr AX CsmsK . a Phyatt'laa. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am about to be come engaged to a young man. aa he has asked me to marry him, but I have held olf answering him. until I get your ad vice. I do not know whether I should tell him that my mother died from consump tion, as I know most people are opposed to marrying into such a fnmtly. My father save it makea no difference and there is no use telling him. I o you not think in justice I should tell this to him before I beoom engaged? I am very much upset. HELEN. Consult a reliable physician aa to your problem. Tuberculosis I not hereditary but occasionally th tendency Is. I hope sincerely that the doctor will give you a clean bill of health, but in any event you a 111 never know peace of mind unless you tel th man you lov th facta of th case. Is the Diamond Ring SHE Wants for a Christmas Present famous Ivftl "Perfection" 14k oUd gold mounting, the most perfect ring ever The Urge Illustration show every d tall of the graceful mounting. Our No. 5i. 1 V. "I popular, Biiiiounn we nave all aises from ;. Only the flneat quality are used. Cased In velvet ring box, ready Diamond Bar Sotwws Mrrfetioa" Mntg. v" ' . vaa VfiL? Pin. IV, 1 gold, num top, 7 Diamonds, fro (CMj MM W 1SS.60 a Month. 1 1 SO Ear Screws, 14k no) id sold, i fin bril liant diamond, .CQ very special as.oo Month, T R e a n 4 Belcher Cluster Ring, 14k solid gold. 7 fin Diamonds set In platinum; looks Ilka a single 2-carat stone. . ts.oo a Moats. 1BS4 Ladle' Ring. I fin diamonds, set In platinum; band of ring la 14K HinFf aolld gold aj.so a Month. LOFTIS BROS. & CO. TKI MATXOXfAX. CSSDIT )SWI. Mala most. City vatloaal Bank Block, Opposite Burgeas-Jiasa Co., eepaxiiueai store. i vu tst umii. can be written, and many other wonder fut things ran be achieved by the person who resolutely applies himself two hours every day to some on purpose. Reducing th time of labor does not mean for you a blessing unless you re solve that your brain, your body, your heart, your mind and your purse, shall all share in the benefits which thoaa two hoi'rs can and ahould bestow upon you and yours. If you r a woman, the same state ments apply to you. The eight-hour system will not profit you if your two hours of leisure each day are to be spent in Idleness, in meaning less chatter, in unplanned and misdi rected shopping, or In foolish reading. There are good book to be read, studies ,to take up, and the beautifying of your aurroundlngs to worthily occupy those extra hours. If you havo a home you can do much toward making It a real horn la adding those little touches of comfort and beauty which only woman's loving hand and taste can pro vide. . 1 If you are a mother you can com In closer touch with your children by en tering Into their pleasures, ' by reading to them and with them, and by helping plan pleasures and recreation for them. If you are a alngi man, living in furn ished rooms, you can devote that tlm to a school of correspondence or in ac quiring eome new light and new power in your chosen field of endeavor. Two hours a dny frittered away without a purpose or an aim or spent in frivolity are much worse for you than two extra hour of hard work. There waa on woman whose husband waa industrious and comparatively sober and orderly In his life, while ha worked ten hours a day. Saturday evening waa frequently a time of dread with her because then the man loitered at the corner saloons and came home the worse for liquor. But th remainder of the week he cam directly to hi horn. Finally all the workmen in his depart ment stuck for the eight-hour system and obtained, It together with an Increaae of wages. Within a week after the inaugura tion of the new law th man began pay ing a dally visit to th saloon on his way from work. Every night he returned to his family the worse for drink, and be fore fix months had passed he waa dla changed as an Incompetent workman. This poor wife charged all her mis fortune and unhapplneag to the eight hour system. But it waa the lack of systematic thinking and ' a lack of ideal which caused the trouble. What Ideals have you regarding life? I diamonds, nerfact In iit ind full of fiery for presentation. o.., 12 Size Thin Model Elgin aolld plati Month Xo. 833 -Cases are double stock irold tilled, warrajited for la years, polished or beau- 2 tlfull v enwrsvn1 . . . , ; (UNI (1.80 a Moath. Phone Sour. 1444 and oar talnuas will ralL Cai; or w tt tot Cuts", r W. 913. aos So. ISta St., 0naba, I O B rv rTlTit