i w J 1 4 SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT Hey A MAN IJ VN0t?fc A HOUJS OME.KM THAT CW)rTVMBi.ET - HM Abdul Bafia, Teacher of Religion, Devotes His Life to Humanity and a New Faith Hy t:.j WIIKLI.LR WILCOX. America has entertained many na tive and foreign teachers of religion und philosophy. It has entertained two re markable master selfish, aimple, earn est, profound soula woo come with reat mcsaaKes. These two were. Ylvakanaiula and Anna licsant. They came filled with a love for ail religions and hate for none. With no self-interest, with no desire to prose lyte. Only a desire to help. With no egotistical asser tion of having dis covered a truth, but will) humble grati tude that they were utile to promote an eternal one. Now cornea another great teacher like unto thorn two. Abdul-Baha, the Persian philosopher. Abdul-Baha'a lite la one ot active, ser vice to humanity. lie Is working to acne God. yet by serving God he aervca mankind. r'rom his early childhood to hla sixty fourth year ha was an exile and a pri soner, yet th light of but lit and teach ing has reached to the far corners of the earth. From many country have gone to him people of different beliefs to receive spiritual help, and upon leaving Elm they have returned to their various homes to share with other th Joy and assurance of hi spiritual message and to follow In hla path of service. Some of th ordinance of the Bahal faith touch upon the following subjects: Religious Unity. All men are free to believe and to worship as they will, but they are exhorted to unite In the uni versal faith ot Baha. for only through spiritual unity will mankind attain the Richest development. Tolerance. The Bahal should not sep arate themselves from people who are not of their belief, nor should they de nounce or antagonise thoe holding views other than their own. The Church. In this cause there Is no priesthood apart from the laity. Each one who receives the spirit should share It with those whom he meets In dally life. Teaching Is given without money adn without price. Teachers are genrally self supporting, but occasionally they are aent forth to teach provided with the necessaries of life by those who are de sirous and able In this way to serve the cause. Places of worship are to be provided for meeting and prayer. Marriage. Celibacy and asceticism are discouraged. Man should marry and cre ate a family and live In the world where be can show forth la his dally life the I spirit which is In hi souL Monogamy, as th highest expression ot Justice I taught. Resistance. Harshness should be met with goodness and hatred with love. nJy ?. Little Bobbie's Pa BT WILLIAM We had sum moar Acrostlcks up to the houe last nlte. We had sum onst bee foar & Pa ran ut, but beef oar the ladies cairn last nitc Ma toal Pa that if he ran out agenn site wuddent let him go to the boxing match next week. Pa had bought his tickets for the boxing match A he bad Invited a trend, so he got scared rite away A sed that he wud stay. Poor Pa. I know that he dosn't like to beer Acrostlcks ft I know that he doesn't calr for moast of the club wimmen that cums to see Ma. but Ma is kind of harsh sumtlmes, beckaus It does Pa good. Pa promised to be good c not maik tun of the club ladies, In tack, be toald Ha, If you will give me yure sollem word that you will let me go to the fite A let me stay out after the fite as I wish. I mite eeven maik up a AcroatJck myself. Wen the ladies cairn Pa was In the library miiti-g up his Acrostic k, I had to stay in ths parlor A help Ma receive tbe ladles. Ma sed that she always ree Ved on me to help out. There has to be one reels gentelman in the fambly. Bob bie, ahe toald me. The first isdy ;na got up to read her Acrostick read this: T he gratest man we have today A r4 perhaps the gratest ot sll time F lghts for the country ntte A dsy T be strength, ot hum la quite sublime. FeuW OUT With these weapons the Kahala will overcome all opposition. Worship. Prayer supplemented by a puro and useful lite In this world forms the elements of true worship. Faith. without works Is not acceptable. Every man should have an occupation which conduces to the welfare of humanity, the diligent pursuance of which Is In Itself an act of worship. This is what Abdul-Baha says are signs of servant of God: To live the life. To be no cause of grief to any one. To love eaoh other very much. To be kind to all peole and to love them with a pure spirit. Should oppoaitlon or Injury happen to us, we must bear It, and be as kind aa ever we can be, and through all. we must love the people. Should calamity exist In the greatest degree, we must rejoice, for these thing are the sifts and favors of God. To be silent oonosrnlng th faults ot others, to pray for them and help them through kindness to correct their faults. To look always at food and not at the bad. If a man has ten good qualities and one bad one, we must look at the ten and for get th one. And If a man haa ten bad qualities and one good one. we must look at the one and forget the ten. To never allow ourselves to speak oae unkind word about another, even though that other be our enemy. To rebuke those who speak to ' us ot the faults of others. All our deeds must be done In kindness. To cut our hearts from ourselves and from the world. To be humble. To be servants of each other, and to know that we are less than an one else. To be aa one soul in many bodies, for the more we love each other the nearer we will be to Ood: but that our love. our unity, our obedience must not be by confession, but of reality. To act with cautioness and wisdom. To be truthful. To be hospitable. To be reverent. To be a cause of healing for every sick one: a pleasant water for every tnirsty one: a heavenly table for every hungry one: a guide for every seeker: rain for cultivation: a star to every borison; a light for every lamp: a herald to every yearning one for the kingdom ot God. He that knowa not and knows not that he knowa not He is a tool, shun him! He that knowa not and knowa that he knows not He Is Ignorant, instruct him: He that knows and knowa not that he knows He Is asleep, awake him! He that knows and knowa that he knows He la wise, follows him:" Abdul Baha belongs to the latter class, even a do Vtvakananda and Anna Beaanl follow them! ii J F. KIKK. AH the lsdies clapped hard A sed Oh, laent that clever; ahe meens Mister Tart Then a other lady got up A this Is the Acrostiok she red: W hither roamest thou from Jersey I mo what remotest region? L et us for thy safety pray 8 Inc thy friends are almost legion. 0 thou learned, learned man, N ever Join no Chinese cian! Isent that Just perfectly dear? sed one ot the ladies. She meens Wilson, the guvnor of New Jersey. Isent that splen did? Jest then Pa cairn in A sed Ladies. 1 do not wish to intrude, but I have a littel acrostick that I shud like to read to you. If you will give me a minnit of yure attenshun. I shall read It now. By all meeas, by all meens, sed one of tbe ladies; let us bear It. 80 Pa read: W hen the country needed men. H ardy men that loved to fite, I nto battel plunged tnou then T hnl a shour ot dynamite. E ver climbing- up some hill H suchty. brave, a foe to fear, O ther soldier got a chill. U scless lhy lu volunteer. , 3 a: statesman, scrapper, seer, E ver shall thy name be dear. But that isent a man aatra. sed one of tbe ladles. That spells White House. know, sed Pa, but I was Jest kidding you old gala As Mister Raserelt. TIIK r i i aariini iiHWBpegMPgn i n ii i imsamxsa. hH6 AMATEUR PAJCMEe ...... Ait! I IMe I )D ..A V MII.ILW f lea,i i a w I THI3 tCOKS MCit A OOABEV T4AW A OA0CH La ITU ALL THESE ROC 5 Oft A Wl LED OUB VOONO HEfeo A3 He STfceTCMeft UlS -.ON LNICV A-CSS, a,AVN&HO-t OF THE D.Si.OtATeP AN 0-DPtArJ 0fOW : XAMItNr.lTMEj ',F TXSyVBAU IN Softens a ' MOW DO YOU Uk MV HAT ? t A MICIINCM jjve NOW .Ilia ptve r seu-s a-m The Climb to the Pole Startling HOW THE SKXTANT IS UBKD BY AN EXPLORER TO ASCERTAIN HIS EXACT LOCATION. Br GARRETT P. BKRVISH. A bird s-eye view of the route taken by Captain Roald Amundsen to the south pole look like a mountaineer's picture of the way up to an Alpine summit. It waa a climb. After marching 382 miles across the wonderful plain of floating ice, called the Great Antarctic Ice Barrier a frozen floor from sW to 1.900 feet thick, which floats on the surface of the ocean Cap tain Amundsen encountered the real edge of the toutii Polar continent In the form of a lofty range of mountains, burled deep under snow and ice. Then he began to climb, and continued to mount higher for days, ascending first to tM feet above tbe sea: then d.aUO) feet; and finally, after some slight dips down ward, to 10.000 feet, which was the highest point he sttained. although he saw, aside from his route, peaks 15,00s f-et high. The vast white stairway up to the polar plateau, the greater part ot which Amundsen ascrwk-d in four deya. is something over forty miles long. Once on top of tiff immense snow buried plain to which this strange climb led him. Amundsen found the surface comparat ively level, as if te had arrived In the midst of a lofty prairie where snow and ice and hummocks took the place ot grasa and trees. An almost atralghtaway march of about 2T miles, over the level top of tbe plateau, brought him to the site of the south pole, which Is raised 10,000 feet above the sea. Across the lofty plain, whose center Is the southern hub of the earth, fierce winds blew, charged with ice particles as piercing aa needles, and Amundsen and his four companions now encountered their greatest difficulties. To the dis comfort caused by the storms was added the exhaustion arising from the rarity of the air at an elevation of nearly two miles from sea level. But they pressed on. until on December H. their observa tions showed that they had reached the pole. For them east and west, and south It- se!f, bad vanished, and turn whatever I way tiiey would, they were always fac ; !ng north. i Round them the sun, keeping about Zi degrees above the borison, circled con tinually, neither rising nor setting, and neither getting perceptibly higher nor lower In the course of twenty-four hours. Wheat they saw tAuv Ui JuteK (JiS BKE: OMAHA. MOXDAY, A Rescuer Cetunrtcht. IMS. ' " " J VPOM BltOACwAS TVf PTMCT MA. MOULbBE THI3WA5 THE" OOESTIfSM. BV A HViE BMLOt-E.R.e MA1H5 3lTTrN ON 15 EOU5 AND "STICKS To H(R POST, ASTHfl DAsee peon te b ouc ee i MEN DP(.V VJ I LI THE CHICKENS 0 PtVUAVat&tfd joe kcllv RAtse'Oj' "WOiM-O yoO 3AV A WAN troM cmcAiVOvaHO C OiXONT SI AHJ Tr 37i?Efl TeAFtiC WAS H.UNOI5 RUN MAM fc0N Trte 0LOOPH0UND3 ACG ON OOZ TttHL. AHEAP!-. USt 00V Torv VA MAO OF- (SOOPi BsVM JftME JAMpttJ lOTVt Boy THH I A hh wArt wit me any (LxlX.Z Totto TC SOB. RIDa VtAI TO lp4 ",06 c4am o thr C0UNTEL3. WAIT eosia nmxi WIX ft OFF, i I'M". 0 ' i or. . SSL a-V;i ' I E -?, -A j-"jsP t .h LJ. JKMUE . Bamrr 'ie-ovce Una a m- aw f ; - -y 4 0CPOT r S novn jr n in, k.eT ,1 X . ' ' 12 JatXJt 1 eirwtrasehagOCTStjropps Hthm-' V? 8C)leparichss 0CT25 ' atarh Ajsm mVnx. .e f .Th, PaUr tarly of iswt. M .. snt jrsnvieis for asionlha ... . wviifFSAMrlflM .w " C 1 r' '-.' at- . --w A BIRDS-ETE VIKW OP THE ROUTE TAKEN BY CAPTAIN ROALD AMT NDPEN TO THE SOUTH POLE. pole was beneath their feet Hut human sure, they camped for three days, snd senses are uncertain In their action, the repeated their observations again and atmosphere varies in 'Is poer to bendagaln. and finally marched around the rays of light, instruments are not per-neighbor hood of their camp, covering a feet, as.1 a small change in the elevation circle of sufficient diameter to make them of the sun, too slight to be noticed, ought absolutely confident that the pole could mean that the observers were a mite or not lie outald ot the area that their giurfrfinm the trwa jgio-aiMt so, tu maaateat had trad. ( APRIL 22. 19li is No Business National N.ws Am. " A CKJTK, ArW A KMOUER TO T THE 3AN " iTlWNB SATFf MIDDLE MAN-BONES- i SAV YOU POttowiNW Ame:cMriii INTO A 3T0HC Vf Tree STRtrfr TO-DAV- 1 EN0fl-V6S SUH. MlOOLf MAN-LOO K.E0A5 TAO' you Airls KLrUTHINS h rt uaw, USA SUSPICIOVS P&SH teND MAJv-NO-DH-Hej AtJAtiet SMITH- ,.,..,,air. MIDDLE MAN- ' "lrn you roLi5w him ikto a DC PAST ArCWT STOf rNo sdANrWcxiK uf wrATtN to make qomc Pu&cHases Iand I weMTIN T0tit4THe OlCASMiTU SHOCTlMKM TUP MJDBlJr MAM BMtKtb HUG CXACfrF OFTMg V M 6t I OAPfj ' IBP NDTHa TOOOTlU. and Y !Ldl! i if vovttr I .AWCrfl 4 Facts Concerning 'i&mndsen's Wonderful Feat !hsdasWt.7 i rMo taJW 0 8' ' , . . t Land . '. . a HOC 5ft r r4 Mam oB Z A i ""fx -. THE .GREAT BARRItK ' . Udoa A 4 gledsa i s - -zJA' ravn for The Value of Friendship Among Girls Br BBATKICK VAIKPAX. If In the half-sane modern manner seeklnk Inforaistton. I should ask "When 1 a friend 7" what would you reply? Wouldn't there- pass before the mental Image ot every girl reader a picture of one who feed the' hungry, who wipes way th orphan' tsar, who binds up the wounds of the afflicted? Perhaps to some girls there would eeme also a vision of those to whom they soused their little sorrows and woes, and who oomfrrted them. They would think of those to whom they cave their confidences and who re spected therp. Pom girls mho have never looked far ther than th.ilr own homes tor a good friend, woulo answer, "Mother," and girls who make that reply exhibit a wis dom far beyond their years. But to-all there) would come a mental vision of a "certain (uunarltsn. 8lnce the world Ttegan th good friend who wears the guise of "a certain Samsr- itan" has been eulogised In poetry, prose and painting. Jt Is unfortunate that th lllble con tains no parallel parable of a friend who oame also In time of prosperity. It Is not enough to give to those who lose. That la no great test of chanty The Instrument on which they prin cipally depended to ascertain their loca tion waa the sextant. Th way It I used is shown in the picture. To understand this It I necessary to remember, that 'the height of the un above the hdrtson at noon and on any given latitude may be known from astronomical tables calcu lated long In advance. At the poles the latitude Is W degrees and there, during the six months day which prevails alter nately at each pole. It Is always noon, because throughout the course of twenty tour hours the sun keeps at virtually the same elevation. When, than the explorer finds tliat the sun remains at th same elevation, as messured by his sextant, for twenty-four consecutive hours, he knows that he must be at one or the other of the poles , be cause nowhere else would the sun remain for twenty-four hours at an unvarying altitude. The sextant la provided with mirrors so arranged that, while looking direct at the line of the horlson. the ob server csn oause the Image of the sun to move down until It touches th horl ton. Then a graduated circle shows him at a glance the angle through which the sun t Image haa been moved and that gives Its elevation above the borison. At sea the visible horlson can be employed for this purpose, but Slot en lend There, the explorer, like Captain Amundsen, must use an artificial horlton. which consists of s dish tilled with mercury which Is carefully leveled snd In which I lie Image of tbe sun Is reflected. In this ease th angle between the sun as seen direct through the Instrument snd Its Image reflected In the mercury Is Just twloe the altitude of the sun above the real horlson. Another way In widen an explorer could determine roughly whether he were at the pale or not would be by erecting s vertical rod In the aoow and measuring at frequent Intervals the length of ttt shadow as the aun passed around the sky. If the shadow always retained the same length he would know that he was at pole, but If the length varied dur ing tbe twenty-four hours he conld not be st the pole and the side on which the shadow was shortest would show him which way the pole lay. It Is a curious fact, which may possibly have something to do with the alight un steadiness of the earth on Its axis, that while the south pole lies in the midst of a plateau of land nearly two miles high, the north pole Is situated In the center of the basin of a sea. which Is, In places at least, about two miles deep. Why this precisely opposite state of things exists It is Impossible to say. On result of It, however, is that although it will be pos slble to erect at the south pole a monu ment that might stand for age If its foundations were dug down through the snow to the solid rock, nothing of the kind could be done at th north pole, be cause there the actual pole Is at the bot tom of the see. and th explorer stands on a roof of floating ice which Is con tinually In slow movement and gradually traveling away, while new ice take It place. One of the most aignlflcant things of all Is the fact that round th south pole. Just ss a round the north one. wherever thed naked rock can be reached, vestiges are found ot a former age, when ptaste and animals la abundance flour ished rioee about the ends of the earth' There must hare beeava time, theai The Bee by Tad J of and broadness. It Is a greater teat to be able to give to those who 'Win! If there Is a girl In trouble, tier girl friend forget all their personal Jealous ies, or dislikes, and go to that girl with handa outstretched. But If that girl attains a position In social or business life that la denied them, how to they go to her? Are the hands extended as these of a sympsthtatag friend, or are they doubled up into a shape more closely resembling a fist? The winner needs encouragement and sympathy as much aa the loser." though In a different way. Fhe needa th assur ance ot those who didn't win that they are glad tor her sake. She wants her old friends still to be friendly. Ahe weeds her faith In them to keep her from growing hitter. They need the power to be glad - for her. sake, for, lacking it they are bitter. Since we are talking about friend, I would like to ask aty girls this: Do they realise ths splendid Investment a woman . makes by feeing friends with "Women T There ts nothing romantic about such a friendship. It Is true. It la also trtw that at a certain emotional,, enthusiastic period ot her life, a girl has 'a most Intimate friend," whom she changes with as little compunction as she would ehsnge her gloves or hat. That ts due to 'her youth. As ah grow older she grows more discriminat ing, ha fewer "most Intlmste friend.' retain them longer, and th hurt la something that leaves a scar when aha lose them. Th girl who Is popular among other girls has a popularity that haa a good snd sane foundation. Much a popularity Indlcatea that ih la Just and fair, doesn't gossip, never stoops to suspicion, and above all Is loyal. It la easy to presage the future of k girl who Is popular with vther girla. 8he Is the girl who grows Into a useful worthy capable, self-reliant and reliable woman. There Is no school In whloh a girl can get better self-help than tn this school of popularity. If she will make Oder gtrr oome first In her thought, ah will build up a character far greater taaa if ah made popularity with th boys th height of her ambition. And a boy. If he ha ths sense he need to save him from destruction, will gTre his heart tnto the keeping of th girl whom other girls like, and In whom ether girl trust. Another thought about friends: Has an girl a better friend than her mother? The Httle children who searched far and near for a blue bird, signifying hap piness, though they left a blue bird at heme, have many comrade on the Way. Among those who engage In the foolish and fruitless search all over th world: fur that which may be found at boms art- the girls who put the friend made away from home higher than the friend they left there. And that is ths friend found In their mother. Mew Lace Waa first Made. The peasants of Europe have a ro mantic legend concerning th origin ot lace. A lover who could offer hi he frothed no costly gift brought her a leaf which he had plucked In the forest. Bha accepted It as a true token of love and preserved It with care. In time the lover went away and never returned. Tha maiden prised the leaf as a sacred treas ure and when she found only tbe delicate reining left of her keepsake she took needle and thread and tried to copy th fairylike web. And thus was mad th first bit of real lac. Jest A heat slra. From a girl's point of view an enserlnr talker is a man who asks her to marry him. A man should bear In mind that at least six other men have their eyes on his op portunity. tlliM a man a L- vah a k.. mJHA 1. will usually be satisfied if you are com plimentary. Time snd tide wslt for no man hut ff they did some men would set then lata Just the same. Boston Transcript. when a warm climate existed areund the poles. Amundsen haa simply corroborated 8hackleton In finding indication of ,'osai on th south pole continent. But If jthera I coal, there must have Been once great forests ot tree ferns and. other form at vegetation from which coal k derived, and they could only have existed la a climate ot tropical warmth. Some of Amundsen's party ssw indication of quarts hearing ledges, although they had no opportunity to search for gold. Never, theleaa it Is within the range of possibility that great gold deposits exist buried? under the strange and gigantic burden ot snow that covers th AuarcUe aa wUhj a blanket ox concealment. (