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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1913)
12 i Jhe His Sweetheart's Hair Nell Brinkley Says: Here Is setae lover's glorlflcatloa, hi enenarement, his "Beat Me Dealna," la praise ot his sweetheart's hair. I tie not evea knowwho wrote' it It WW seat to ae. Lovers hare always longed aad. yearned oyer the. skeSn t sillc the heads of tad women they loved. Senetlrees her' hair m 'theft, 'grwdark, tasled in curls, metallic aad erlej?, Soiseghsaea It J hrewa.aad flae and 1-Qisg'aad sleek. gonatiNMM.it i velviet-hlaek aad-Iadlaa-stralght, shadowy m a alghi-eload m4 dwaty-ttae ' to the touch, f Hold the Note " By ADA PATTERSON A Ctrl of IT told nfc her troubles .yes terday. Not love troubles, no lhdedl Bomethlnc that eha caaeWcred at tha time, at least, far mora ' Important tluu; anyjlff ehe might have with Jack. Or than IYank's failure to "call on Saturday night. Jack, and Ifranb wens rele ata far to tho rear. With senti ment they dwelt In tty far bMlciroundi of har thoushta. At with many, of htr wi, bnalMMi waa in the trtgniwi ot her ntfaaVaWM It m a faatura ot btMrfMwi that con centaft hr. A hrv oim( woman oui tomsr KbjiI- been ruda axA tho siri of 17 had (n conb quaca dissolved In In tears. t . Rha'was'a. manlcuriat, and while fcfi toW mo of the womon rliin3 ?h pollahed my; nails, to a high. but. not oo Wen, luBtej-, and 'glanced for a'mrpefit at her flnlhed wprk, Tho. nalli,-polntaL apotlwa. plhk, testified to 'her c'rafui sianehlp. " ' . That happened tdayr Inquired TfeA" ho said, with aJlHairob.'tht waa tike a kicked puppy1 whimper.' 1 "But didn't I tell you that you' did y.ouj work faster than any manlcurUt I hays ever known, who did her work wellf' ' "Tea." "And didn't' the woman before ,me say' uno in aeuenica wim the way you had dona her nails. I heard her iy 'flpa,' Tea." The tears were drying In the blue eyes upturned to me. "Why don't ypu. hold the note?" "Hold tha notr "T. tho not of pjeaaantnw I am.1 CKllAVEB CUT IK)WN JIEAT BILL DOWN " " ' ' . You can cut down your meat !blll two-thirds and get mora nutritjous food by eating Faust Macarqai. A ICe package ot -Faust Macaroni con tains as much nutrition as K lbs. ot beef ask your doctor. Faust Macaroni Is extremely rich in gluten, thy bone, muscle and flesh builder. It is made from Durum "Wheat, the high protein cereal. Delicious,, too. You can .serve Faust Macaroni a hundred different ways to delight the palate. Write for $rets recipe hook ahqwlag how la air-tight, woUiure-proof pack ages, 5 aaC 10 ceats, . MAULL KOS. SC Me, fjJnp aa z. i rp p)a z .Sometimes luis Tod, tho sua, plenteous, stiff the song ot WV-!d .. .. ' Pf 'ShQ braids 'it in two" hoary, braids'. Sometimes it is doop-gold, llko an autumnileaf ,'4 heavy aad silky and ripply. - ' That reach tho carpet nigh, Sometimes it is pale-gold, fine as thistle-down, J like a veil of sunshine, spreading wido arid gener ous whea shaken out, but crushing to nothing 'in the hands. ,..,M.r ' . Whatever of the, pe)e(g t j,4sme lover twists la its sure Mare aad' sends up his praleeful chant Hera I think It must havo boon tho deep-gold .sort, heavy aad silky and ripply, and colored llko aa autuam leaf. Listen: t I 4 i mire that scoldlnge are unusual, for you I' know two compliments you have re ceived for your work. Probably you have had more tday. 'Hold tho note In ycUr mind. The 'Other was a dltcord. Have you ta$lano or violin lesaonsT You knaw wh yoU atrlke a dlacerd how quickly ydtf nd the note and paaa to pleaianter ont!That Ic what we should do In life t'-lit'Ymi ware eartUaa whan tho woman rebuked, you, resolve never to do that fcaHteuku1 thtac aatn. It the woman was orosabacuae aha waa 111 or worried, pity hr. Women hava a habit ot carry Ina' their stawartMr burdana Into shona an' dropplna' them on tha ceocls who ,Va itham. They ahauldn't do ao, but' tjy do. Whan yau jro home forget that. wat4n ana remambar only the apprecta llira words you have heard. You will .fall aatoa with a aw 11a (natead of a scowl." "The little maalcurlat proralatd n X vWanf home thinking how much aweeter Haal ba the muale of lira It we all held the. fteta of pleatantneaa. note, iarasseatt cllnca to It the" while It jbtien h honyad flood Into our ears. We, tha Ipterpretera of the harmonj-of -our oVh Wvfm hold the tanct1 K If "there la a harih. note in tha day we dwell upon that. We tell our neighbor that. Buila has the earache. Instead of Uiatr John won tha boat race. We shed because husband waa surly about th,) burnt roaat at dinner, lnetetu), of re-memberinfi- tha new jiat ho waa at palna to. carry home to us. We tret because Fannie waa preoccupied .when wo met her downtown. Heavens knows there la a reaaon for preoccupation: for any woman who has a husband who drinks and a child who la a cripple, and we for Sjet that Edith, amdt the multitude ot her'duttea, sat homa to writ a lonr, Jov. In- letter or inquiry about tho sick mother at home. - Most colossal of ours Is tha fault of be. ,lnar less grateful for the thins: we got tnan we were easer for It before wa got lt.(lt la human to rise from bie$chlnc kneas op which we have wretlel for omtt)tnr we craved about above any thin else, and vfcrn It la granted, tum about to find something also to wrestle for Instead of hithlng tha soul In very bll)ows of thankfulness. "Wa hold tha note. Oh yea, wa hold the note, but ant tha right one. We press our unyielding1 finger upon tha key and mamorr gives forth what we thought waa a atlght. a disappointment In tha ls.it gown a dressmaker haa aant home, a bell-boy's lapae of memory about tha pitcher of lea water we had ordered. Wa olur tha note of a friend's splendid offer ot help In Urns of sorrow. Wa forget tha ahlnln; example of atlf.for- getfulnesa of one ot our own family when wa were ill and helpless. Wa glide over tha favor, unexpected unselfish and tre- mendous, that someone had dona un asked. JUT would ba so different so sweetly dltfercQt-lf wa would hold tha right note. THE BEE: glittering hair by halr In , . to touch, thick and deeplyjf:. And And I A Why We Should Stop Capital Punishment It Forces Men to Kill Other Human Beings and so Brutalizes Them, for. No Matter How It is Doric, It is LcgalizedVMurder By ELLA 'HliEfiEIt TILOOX Copyright. 1S:3 by Star Company. In tha atate of Npw Yqrk, .the former superintendent o( prleona, Joseph V. Scott, onca superintendent? Elmlra re formatory, haa said In his current re port; , "I believe that capital punish- m e n t should bo abolished aa a rello S" barbarism, its. deterrent effect Is overestimated and materially reduces Ih'o number of con- Mctlona But It It la t-o bo' t'h a Con tinued - policy - of the state, tit ere, should. l erected a prison, ram'oved from'-tha atate. prisons, centrally . and suitably located and' devoted to this purpose,'.' Warden Hoyle of -Ban Quentln prison. California, says:, , "I think It la benerally believed that the death penalty, has-not materially les sened the number, of murde'ra committed In this state." Former flovarnqr J)U haa .written; "I am opposed to capital punlyhmept It Is one of tha remnants of'tha Btblcal in junction, "A Ufa for a Ufa. an eye for an aye, a tooth for a' tooth, and a hand for a hand.' We have dona 'away with all of these exceRt the 'Ufa for 'a Ufa,' and be lieve that 'society through tha process of law ahoul&take a Ufa for a Ufa. To my mind tha real' punishment will coma if th4 capital caeea are segregated In a prison by themselves; out off from the rest '-of 4he world,' arid upon .conviction noninterference "with that eentence shall prevail.' The' leading crlralnologiit In thli coun try Is probably Prof.' Charles H. Hender son of ' the -University of Chicago. He Is the American representative ot the Inter national PrUon commission, composed of representatives ot all citflltad natiena Prof. Htndorson puts h( reasons thus; "I am opposed to capital punishment because . "L It too often serves revenge. ' Not needed for tha protection ot society.. ' "S. Occasionally Is Inflicted oa tha guiltless, "t Is irreparable. "f. Tends to Increaaa brutaUty.. "s. Diverts attention from' prerentlve policies." All these reoaona era good reasons for doing away with capital punishment. But there are two other reasons. Capital punishment creates a legalised class of murdtiars. OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST 25, 1913. Copyright, 1913, International News Service. . "i,- . - ., - - . v ( '.!' Jf . . II. - VtJ"rjrJ" III.'' ' . ' ". ', i . J winds, them crosswise, nape to crown, i h To cross again' and then .come down,' , cross again on, high. f watch: with Joy that never fades; fortunato man am I.. . It forces men to kU other human be- No matter, whether the kllljngr Is dono by the guillotine, the hancman'p rope or the electrlQ- button, it Is' still legalized murder; lt?ls taking 'the life of a fellow being Into human hands and destroying Jt, and thla must brutallii and Jiarden tho nature 'of the men who perform this act It .must produce, an,, unmoral! effect on tho minds trained and taught to take away life, no fnattor how dangerous, thdt life may ;h.;tQ',the world. uut thara- is, atm another reason why capital punjshtnanp ahoUld 'ba abollBhod. Tha lnfjuincftof Tjumari beings after th'ey leave, the .foody .d6es not ceasa to affect tha aarth plan or Ua 'Inhabitants. While the very.-sPlrituM being, who dlea pass.es In av very brief period of time to attend (o, his; Kaher'a business tri realms, of azalea of pOnsclousneaa for. which ,!ha has fitted himself here, the very" .carnal i5d gross and -depraved, be. lug retrtalria jntfch longer in the. Vicinity of tia of consctousnesa ,or plane, end .hja deiaqrreturW'to active partlcl patjon In jeToeneaAo- haa left often enablea hirrffovaWaa'weak and vicious mlndsjya.nfl Ip crtata ,far more crime artd oo rar.moTflwt'ctor a peaaon, than ha could ha-srt-pilihed had he cqnUp- uo story told of a, weak- fmf1 VOUnC 1HAT1 wiln Wa one day 'SfiieJ'wiib: an.:uncontrollable; de sire to eri,tan a low saloon which he fro quently paiaed, put which he had never berore tbought.ot enterlnk. He went lp and begairitO;rdcr, drjnit to the amaze ment of tho bartender; who know him to ba temperate.and mildJnJita hahlts. A Dead . By WILLIAM P. KIRK. "I iednJthe -evening paper," said my Arizona friend, "r?0W ai f elor -waa shook by his Missus, and brunff her life, to an end. That'll bo-lota to pity the teller, and Bay that it sarved her right, Apd I ain't a-setttoK in Judgment, nor takln' up no one's fight But I never could shoot a rabbit, out whar rabbits la thick, And I flgger that Bhootin a lady is a similar kind to trick, Rabbits and ladles and babies they can't shoot back, you eee, ' . And the guy was a cur that murdered ber!" said Phoenix Phil to me, "You remember the sal out in Phoenix?" said my Arizona friend. "You remember the homo sho made me, and the dream that had to end. I never was able to flgger, when I seen I was In the lurch, How she left my Iclnd ot a feller tor the rat she met at a church, But I wasn't no ideal husband; I was always fast and wild. And she wanted a feller with manners and his shirt all proper blled. I heard that he made her happy,, so I flpgered I'd let her bo. Which is harder sometimes than murder," oald Phoenix Phil to me. , J.'ShcttwlBts-H-from a silken twist Into a coll instead; '.--. Each side rests against her ear;' Hb weight is on "her collar clear, Heavy it seems as lead; A rope thlok as her good wrist. She fastens it to her head, For three diyH" the" 7011th Indulged In a wild orgy, and thenWpke out'of what seamed to htm some e'prfble nightmare. During the three days he had spoken In the voice, and Uped.'e ecpres'slons of a wretched, llfe-lohW BOt'-iind" drunkard who had died In the'tnelgbborhood but a short time previous to thla occurrence. To the student of occult lore these In stances are well knowp and are at once a warning to every human being .to cul tivate a positive wirt and jthe, habit of concentration on hlsnJdeiia ;6f 'Ufa, aad a waml'ns to tho Qro'njft.'fo'' tarusi criminals Into tha woriiW'beyond. aowavar danseroua they may',s5era.)to soclaty. It delays the prosreaa' of Ihe soul wTalla It endangers the denliens. of' carta. Far better for theni apd or us that they be given Ufa terras, arid allowed an opportunity to thlnVendgroW through labor , and right lnitrurflont ' that their minds, may reach up anT'out, however feebly, toward tha llghtbfQto they die. '-Solitary confinement JthpiiW be abol ished' with, capital punUhmejKi. EJvery sinful eoUl finds time enough V mediate at nlg(it; and It should, be given "whole some, constructive work, during tha days and a portion of thin Worlj should- be In the open, where nature cap preach Its wonderful sermon to tha'rarrtng in voices ot,tjhe winds and aongs of'tha birds, and where wholesome aspirations may arise. T.ije way to drive Out, darkness is -to let- in light. Ught does not come to tha darkened criminal mind through death In the elec tric chair. , The eyea must be taught to see before they can discern light. Fire Science By EDO Alt LUCIEN LARKIN. Q. "If the ator Algol has a reat planet in close proximity, how does It happen that the fixed star Is not act In corresponding. m9tlon by Its attraction?" H. P. Schuls, Cosmopotls,""WaUh; A, The "fixed etar."' mlsnottier, since nothing in tho universe, Is fixed or sta tionary, does move around the center of gravity In between il and Its revolvlntf massive companion. Q. "Is the force of attraction of a heavenly body proportioned to Its weight, volum or composition?" flame. A. To neither. But to mass or quan tity ot matter stored In tha body. Q. "Why are the planets of Algolnot to be seen in Its reflecting Hght?"-a.ma A. Because the reflecting power is not. Intense enough to reflect light vlalmV here at the vast distance of the earth from' Algol or any oltier huge sun.-. -All planets revolving, around all suns. U there are any, are Invisible In the h'Shest power telescopes for, .this reason. Plan-. eta revolving around .our own sun, -all near neighbors, very .Tniear In comparison with the distances pfjthe stars, are" only. visible In the largeatl.telescopes; ", ' Q. "Aa light Is trnamlttecr through, 'the motion of electricity t la It not 'possible tb build several great llght-recefvera at uuiereni poius, Jjna. turn uieac ?ira oltancously toward 'aAatar to make an enlarge stereoscopic Image of ' tha heavenly body al a central observatory A. Impossible, right rays are 'not transmitted ' through jfie motion of pec. trlclty, but electrjo light Is caused "by the motion of leijtrlclfy being arrested by encountering resli(ance. No com pound image of a afar could be made at' a central observatory by the uae, of a number of telescopes, ' Each telescope -would make an Image at ita own foppsr but two or mora could not be merged together at any central. . Q. If our earth' and moon are .so- In- flnlteslmally small, why ar tbey -not disturbed by .the ofher planeU7$ame. A. -.They are disturbed. The earth. Is often "off lis track" -.several thousand, miles, and Is off ita regular elllpsa'now, as 1 write, from tho action of JuPtrr. now magnificent. f Q. Can a telescope extend tho horlt son of tha eyeT Sama ' , " - A. No, the horizon la a circle ort th earths surface having the eye for Its center. Where sky and earth appear to meet, tha contour, dust and vapor greatly hinder the seeing In alt tele scopes, , In fact, no good view of any cosmic body can be had while It la within sev eral degrees of tha hortson. But In free apace tha telescope greatly extends' te power of vision, not the horizon. Tha telescope up here, sixteen, lnchea diam eter of tha object giaases, brlnga mil lions plied on millions of distant auns Into view. Q. Are astronomers paid by the gov ernment, and are wa entitled to infor mation frea? Same. By Nell Brinkley "To: styles -not-blind, ' v .jr.-k- Sho-.cannot bind, as other womendo, " That Bcented mass, that smells of wheat, And lavendor and. apples awoot. ' ' shie plies tho great combs through, More lovely than ail maiden' kind, . ' . A woman twenty; ?" Questions A. Astronomers, only in .government employ receive pay from the govern ment, Others receive pay from universi ties: But the majority have po pay, and are often sorely pressed to gat a living. They devote .every moment from youth Ho death insuflylntr the. supremely, mag nificent laws.'bf -the- ajdereal universe. History reveala that many have suffered in the cold for wan,t of sufficient cloth ing, since no heat of stove can bo any where near a telescope.. . Q. Will you. please explain how a per son is lifted by four persons placing- their index fingers under his 'shoulders and legs, by means of alight lifting force, at time of inhaling a long breath by each person, and by .the parson about to be lifter , , . J. . . Ai haya..bced. 'asked thla qnestlon many times. It.-a person actually lias been so lifted and 'those; doing tha lift lhg tWnfc'-'tjiat the J'law of gravity la partially suspended," tijen the yllfteru a,rviwndec melfhalluclnaUon or auto suggestion Insofar' aa their1. Impression of lifting Is concerned.- vyhey actually lift 'far more than they think,, but they will pot admit thl. ?a' thetf'are partially self-hallucinated In. tha belief that tho body of.the person will)rla'e. And If they really succeed In lifting, the man two Inches, they think It a foot. Autd-hallu-clnatlon a. remarkable mentologtcal phenomena and Is now , being studied by mentaUsta here ami In Europe with minute carer and research. RESINOL CURED AWFULPIMPLES MTiole Face Covered, Now dear Brooklyn. N. y. "I waa troubled with two or three pimples coming out on my chin. In a week or aomy whole face was "coy'ered with them, friends advised me to tue, different lotions and iKalyea. tried them, but they did mo fltttla Ifovsd. If any. I finally woahed'ihe pjpp(es.witn iteainoi boap and applied Repitiol cflntmnt before goln(r to bed. .In,, .the "morning I found the swelling gplnr tdown, and the inflammation gone from tha pimples'. I triad this treat ment for about a week, and found that moat of the pimples had disappeared. I ttept the treatment up for About, a month, and then my face waa clear of all pimples. I have used Reslnol Soap since, and find that the plmplea do riot coma bock." . (Signed) Walter A. Stenatrum Ei Wllloughby Ave., l)ct. 9, im. Reslnol positively stops itching in stantly and speedily heals eczema and other akin humors dandruff, 6orea, burns and piles. -Reslnol Qlntmcnt and Iteslnol Soap are sold by every drug gist. Trial free, Dept. li-P, iteslnol, Baltimore, Md