Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 05, 1913, Page 7, Image 7

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Bringing Up Father
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By KLLA WHEELER WILCOX.
(Copyright, 1913. by Am ortcan-Jouriial-Kxamlrwr.)
I.
Wo cannot chooso our sorrowg. One there was,.
Who, reverent of soul, and strong with trust,
Cried, "God, though Thou Bhouldat bow .me to the dust,
Yet will I praise Thy everlasting laws,
Beggared, my faith would never halt, or pause;
But sing Thy glory, feasting on n crust.
Only one boon, one precious boon I must
Doraand of Thee, oh, opulent great Cause.
Let Lovo stay with me, constant to the end,
Though fame pass by and poverty pursue."
With freighted hold, her life ship onward sailed;
The world gave wealth, and pleasure and a friend,
.Unmarred by envy, and whose heart was true.
But ere tho sun reached midday, Love bad failed. ,
II.
Then from the depths, in bitterness she cried, .
"Hell Is on earth, and heaven iB but a dream;
And .hurnan life a troubled, aimless stream; '.'.'
And. God Js nowhere. "Would God bo deride
A loving creature's faith?" A voice replied, v
"The stream flows onward to tho Source Supreme;
Whero things that aro replace the things that seem; '
And where tho deeds of all past lives abide.
Once at thy, door, Lovo languished and was spurnod,
Who sorrow plants, must garner sorrow's sheaf.
No prayers can change the seeding in the sod.
By thine own heart, Love's anguish must be learned,
.Pass on, and know, as ono mado wise by grief;
That in thyself dwells heaven and hell and Qod."
Marvel of Chemistry
1
"I '
4 t -
By GARRETT P. SERVI8S.
If the traditional "man In tho street"
wero suddenly placed In the presence of
all tho new discoveries that modern
chemlste have made within a few years
past and could comprehend fully their
I B n 1 Icance ho
would be amazed
beyond expression,
lie Would then ap
preciate, for the
first time, tho fact
that tho Human
mind has found a
field for Its ac
tivities of which we
who do not dwell
In the Inner world
of science have no
c o n.c e ptlon, but
which. neverthe
lec . Is .closely re
lated to our every
day life and our well-being'.
The work of these explorers of nature
It as far apart from the concerns f
Wall street, of politics and of trade and
commerce, as if It were being conducted
In another world, and yet Us results,
either Immediately or In the near future,
must affect the welfare of all the In
habitants or the globe.
A most Interesting Instance of tho re
finements of tho methods employed by
the "new chemlitry" Is afforded by
Prof. 3. J. Thomson's discovery of what
may prove to be an entirely new chemical
clement n element whose existence has
been predicted and which has been sought
for, but which until now has given no
int matlon that it is really present upon
the earth.
1. ko no many other discoveries In re
:ent years, this of Prof. Thomson Is
Quick Way to Whiten
Arms, Hands and Neck
It 1 a real trial when one's neck and
arms are so discolored and coarsened she
is Gihamed ta go out without collar or
long sleeves and must taboo evening dress
entirely. No woman need worry on this
iccount Is she'll treat her skin properly
with buttermilk. There's no better bleach
jr skin softener known, which Is at the
tame time perfectly harmless. The best
method Is to cover the skin liberally with
presolated buttermilk paste, rubbing It In
gently. This also costs lets to uso than
the liquid, which la perhaps ninety pas
cent water. Allqw the pasto to remain on
is long as convenient, then remove with
loapless water.
This Is a fine thing for freckles, brown,
sver-red or rough skin for face as well
as for neck, arms and hands. It soon
makes the skin soft, white and beautiful.
Most druggists recommend It. It does not
rnakes the face greasy and It also takes the
place both of soaps and face i-rrams.
mlly Coulson In Town Tattler Adv.
based upon tho mysterious rays that are
given off by various substances under
the Influence of electric action. When
such rays- are caused to pass between
two sets of plates, one set electrified
and the other magnetised, they arc
sorted out by the forces acting upon them
and each ray Is bent out of Its original
course In a direction and to a degree de
pending upon the nature of the atoms or
molecules of which It consists.
In this way the chemical elements con
tained in the substances under examlna-
I tlon, even when they exist In extremely
minute quantity, are revealed to the ex
perimenter. He causes the rays to pass
over a photographic plate, and on that
plato each of them Imprints an Image
of Its curved path. Hydrogen atoms have
their characteristic path which no other
atoms follow; oxygen atoms have their
path, and eo on. The flying atoms of
each separate element, no matter how
thoroughly they have been mixed, to
gether, branch out when they are sub
jected to the electrio and magnetic
forces, and each kind follows its own
particular course.
In experimenting with this astonishingly
powerful and yet delicate method of
analysis Prof. Thomson has discovered
certain rays which do not correspond
with thoee of any known substance. But
the curvature of their path Indicates that
this strange element has an atomic
weight of three on the chemists scale
1. c, It Is three times as heavy as an
atom of hydrogen.
Now, the great Russian chenilst. Men
delletf, long ago predicted, from theoret
ical calculations, that thero was, or ought
to be, an element of precisely that atomlo
weight, three. If It should turn out that
the substance discovered by Prof. Thom
son Is really this misting element, and
not, as Prof. Thomson Is half-disposed to
think, eome peculiar form of hydrogen,,
then the circumstances of Its discovery
would rpcall those that attended the dis
covery of th planet Neptune, whose ex
istence was predicted and even Its place
1 In the sky pointed out by means of
mathematical calculations before any as
tronomer had eyer seen It.
It would be a great mistake for the
reader to assume that a dWovery of
this kind Is merely a curiosity of science
In which he can have no practical in
terest To do that would be to fly in the
face of all recent experience. When the
X-rays were discovered they hod at first
only a curious Interest for the general
public, but now they have established
their practical Importance In medicine
and surgery. The phenomena of radium.
i also, at the beginning only excited the
i sensation due to a novelty, but at present
the streams of particles phot off from
that singular substance have likewise
proved a boon to mankind.
Young Girl Sprinting Mary el
Miss Julia Downey, defeating Mlta
Hattio Mutchlson of Montreal, Can
ada, in their 100 yards match race at
JObbots Field, Brooklyn, for the in
ternational girls' sprinting champion
ship. Miss Downey is a native of
Brooklyn and Ib only 16 yoars old.
She negotiated tho "hundred" in tho
fast time of 13 seconds flat Hor
admirers claim that tho little Yankee
girl is the greatest femalo sprinter
In the world nnd aro anxious to have
her moot tho pick of forolgn grl
sprinters.
His Lesson
By WILLIAM P. klRIL
(Bte-v-- " 'mrrf' k' -III
Tho rich man trudged along tho road,
Mb car had broken down;
And through tho summer heat ho Btrodo
To reach the nearest town.
A fat, old farmer came along v
And, with a cheery grin,
Said ho! "This rig 1b plenty strong
Git In, stranger, git int"
Ho drove the rich man to tho town
As ono might help a child;
And when tho rich man sought to pay
Ho shook his head and smilod.
"You moan it right, thar ain't no doubt,
And I ain't rich,'' Bald he,
"But holpln' of a feller out
Ib pay enough for mo."
Back to hlB homo tho rich man went, . .
Aa ono who knows bis faults.
And novor put another cent
. In safe deposit vaults.
Ho learned to holp his fellow men, ,
And help them with a grin;
And how ho chuckles, now and then,
"Olt In, stranger, git inl"
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Science Questions
innflAH LUCIEN LARKIN.
When lh tlnltefl Btatos government
surveyor divided tho land Into towrishlps
and seotlons and oa the bounds of civil
isation moved ever onward toward the
west, they had flrs.t to locato standard
i.... tin., with all uosslble accuracy.
These UneSf marked by cornerstones,
were lpoatefl with great precision by
n.na nf natrmiamlool observations.
The standard meridians, lines due north
and south, were determined by observing
tvitaHa. ihn north itar. when above and
below the truq cslesllal pole. The poles
of the celestial sphere are the exact poinm
whore the axis of the earth would bo It
It extended out both ways to Infinity.
The extension of the north end of the
axis of the earth Into space Is the ab
solute north. Hut this line or point ac
tually moves. And every object In the
entire universe moves, therefore, If as
tronomers at great pains locate a
base line In space, then, In a fow years
It Will be useltss because tho equator
3 KOTO t
Pushing the Perambulator
Friend of Freedom
By REV. THOMAS U. GREGORY.
William Wllberforce, the great-hearted
man whose name will always be asso
ciated with the .abolition of the slavo
trade, died eighty years ago, July 23, 1883.
Carlyle'a favorite
doctrine, that tho
story of human
I progress is simply
the recital of the
Influence of great
Individuals upon
thi comparatively
Inert and helpless
masses of human.
Ity, recolvea In the
case of Wllberforce
A striking Illustra
tion. When Wllber
force, at the ago
of 28, threw hlm-
elf Into the work that he was to relin
quish only with his death, slavery wss
strongly Intrenched In the Ilrltlsh colon
ies, In the United States, and In many
other parts of the earth. Its champions
were many, while those who openly de
nounced It were, like "angels' visits." fow
and far between
In Thomas I'larkson. the grand old
Quaker, the Institution had any unaoin
promUlng ton, and It was fortunate for
the world that, ubout 1787, Wllberforce
made the acqualntanco of Clarkson and
recelvod from him the Inspiration for
freedom und the detestation of human
bondage that was to make him from
that momrit the prime agent In the glor
ious cause of emancipation.
From 17C8 to 1S33 he thundered away In
the House of Commons against the In
stitution t'f slavery- The planters and
most of tho politicians were bitterly op
posed to him, and even among the church
men he found but little assistance. Ilut,
undeterred by tho mighty opposition and
tho lukewarmness of thoso who should
have been his helpers, he kept on, and In
August, US3, one month after his death,
the emancipation bill was triumphantly
pasted by the Parliament. Though dead,
the great man's voice was heard when
It name to tho final vote, und In defer
ence to liln pleadings the law was passed
which removed the sliaokles from every
I slave In the Iiritlsh empire.
It is safe to say that the great abbey
by the Thames contains no nobler dust
than that which was once animated by
' th spirit of Wllberforce.
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
"Kvery time my wife and I go out
walking." a distressed husband writes
me, "alio Insists upon ms pushing thq
baby carriage.
"When any of my friends see me they
laugh and mako fun of me. Kindly let me
know if It Is a married man's duty to
push the baby carriage." I '
No, It Is not hs duty. It never, since
life began, wag his duty.
It U his nrlvllegel
Whose baby Is It, you narrow-souled
representative of your sex 7 Isn't It yours?
And Isn't pushing the buby carriage on
ttio streets the lightest of the many
thousand tasks that attend It?
Old your wife complain during the long
weeks und months ehe carried It before
It was born? Old she foar that her girl
friends would laugh at her or taunt her?
.Did she feel that she had a grievance
when she went down Into tho shadow of
the Valley of Death, and returned, spent
with pain, with your child In her arms?
Has she ever reproached you fqr the
martyrdom motherhood has brought her?
She doesn't ask that you sit by its
slok b U through the long houri of the
night when everyono In the household Is
atieep. She has never expected you to
be always patient, tender, mercfful and
forgetful of self, denying yourself every
comfort If that denial made life happier
for your child.
When you lay your head on your pillow
It Is to sink Into a bound sleep, When
she goes to bed It Is to hover so near
the border of oonsctousness. that the
faintest sigh from the little bed near her
I own awakens her-
When you olt down to a meal it s to
gratify your own appetite. With her, her
I own appetite Is an after thought. Sho at
tends to you and the child first
When you take your pleasure it la
with the thought only of what pleases
you, Trem the hour her baby comes her
amusements are those that are her
child's.
You are stronger than your burdons
are heavy, and she has tasks before her
even hour that are greater than her
t'reugth.
You know only your own aches' and
pains. She suffers both her own and
every 111 to which childhood la heir.
Your apprehensions are centered around
self. Bho fears nothing for herself and
all that life threatens for her child.
When asked to push the baby carriage,
you were ashamed. Ashamed to proclaim
by this little act that you are the child's
father!
She not only bore all the pain alone,
sne Is not only alona in the wearying
ears of your child, but the stands alone
in the pride that glorifies parenthood.
If you were more1 a man and leas on
eit.pty-headed peacock, you would for
Itei yourself in the miracle that loVe has
brought you, and would be so overcome
with pridu that It would make you al
most maudlin.
The father monkey In his cake wilt
chatter with pride when visitors Inspect
the little misshapen Image of himself
In the mother rnopkey'a arms. EJvery
form of life, no matter how low, Is proud
of Its offspring.
Yu call yourself a man, and you are
ashamed of your own child I You ore pot
a man. You ore not of as high an order as
Intelligence as a monkey. You haven't as
much heart as the lowest form of crea
tion. Push that baby carriage, and push It
with ur!d and gratltudel I warn you
that If you persist in your present atti
tude of shame for yqur own offspring,
some day you will find the baby car.
rlage has grown Into a car of juggernaut.
and axis of the earth ore Jn motion.
This mysterious motion completely upset
the ancient Hindu, Babylonian, Assyrian,
Arabian, Egyptian and Greek astron
omers and temple and pyramid builders.
They would locate, orientate their huge
buildings and pyramidal structures with
all the precision possible without tele-
soopes and all would be well for a cen
tury or two. Then a north and south line
through their building would no longer
point toward the north star. And a star
that at the time of the building of the
temples sent Its ray at instiutt of rising
Into the center of the eastern gates now
did so no lancer.
This fact had a profound effect on the
tUerophants of all antiquity. It was an
tnsolvable mystery. A number of years
ago I puhltshed a monograph on this
fascinating subject entitled "The Wanlntr
of the Light of Egypt." The Egyptian and
Greek astronomers watched this majesties
motion of the equator and axis of the
earth during centuries without securing
a olue to Its cause. None among tho
human race Was able to even turmlsa
the hidden cause until tho mighty brain
of Newton rose to supernal heights, dis
covered the true cause and explained It
for all coming generations, The equator
and axis of tho earth move, and, of
course, tho entire solid globe has to movo
to displace these Imaginary lines -among
the stars.
sa
Stork and Cupid
Cunning Plotters
Many a New Home will Kara a Uttlai
sunbeam to ungniea tc
Tbers Is usually a certain flegrse of drsafl
la every wodiin's mlad as to the probable
pain, distress and danger of child-birth
but, tbaaki to a most remarkable reoiedj
known as Mother's Friend, all tear t ban.
Ubed and the period Is one of unbounded
Jojfut antldpstlos. I
Mother' I'll end Is used externally. Ii
Is a most penetrating application, taakei
the muscles of the stomach and abdousei
pliant so they expand easily and natural!)
without pstn, without distress and. Wttl
none of that peculiar nauets, nerrousatti
and other symptoms that tend to weaker
tae prepeotlre mother. Thus Cupid am
the stork are held up to veneration the)
are rated as cuualug plotters to herald tb
coming of a little sunbeam to gladdea tb
hearts and brighten the homes of a host a
happy families,
There are thousands of women who bar
used Mother's Friend, and thus know free
experience that It is one of our grtates
contributions to bealtby, happy mother
bood. It Is sold by all druggists at $1.(X
per bottle, and Is etpeclally recommend
as a preventive of caking breasts and si
other nch distresses.
Write to llrsdfltld Begulstor Co., IS
Lamtr Bld., Atlanta, Oa., for tbtlr ver
valuable book to expectant mother. Ot
a bottle of Mother's Ft load toUy,
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