THE BBB: OMAHA, "WEDNESDAY, JITLY 15, 1914, ? ll .'tr ,-JZZI The Warrior By JAMES J. MONTAGUE. His hand haa wrested many n crown Prom tyrants in thetr pride; His hand has struck tho pirate down And tossed him in the tide. And robber hordes in countless lands In wild confusion flee, When they descry, across the sands. His flag upon the sea. The redskin cowered in his path. When forth he used to go In terrible, avenging wrath And lay tho chleftainB low. And craven bandits far and near. Well know his dreadful fame, And pale and tremble when they hear The mention of his namo! But now the last black blood Is shed And all the wars aro won, When all tho murderous hosts aro doad, The warrior's work is done. No longer fares he forth to seek Sea-wolf or robber band; With mother's kisses on his cheek He's off to Slumberland. John By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. (Copyright, 1SH, by Star Company.) John Cabot gave America to the Eng lish race; Raleigh, with heroic courage, undertook to plant that Imperial race upon thin continent, and Smith, through much tribulation auccaeded In ac complishing what Raleigh failed in. ' In all history there In not to bo 'found a , more In teresting story than that of the man who made Jamestown a1 suc cess. Born on a farm In Lincolnshire, Englund in 1580, Bmlth was from his earliest years the victim of an un controllable wanderlust. At the ago of fifteen he sold the few effects that had been left htm by his father, and made ready for sea, but being apprehended by a. relative as he was about to sail, was bound out as an apprentice to a mer chant. But the wanderlust was too strong for tho merchant's vlgllenco, and young Bmlth was soon off and away after ad ventures. He had no money, but he possessed a pair of wonderful legs, and after tramp ing over a good part of western Europe, he got a Job as soldier under Henry IV., of France. Following the white plume of Navarre for the season. Smith next found himself fighting. Spaniards In the Netherlands a Job that he mightily en Joyed, for In his heart he mortally hated everything that smacked of the Inqui sition. Having killed what Spaniards he could in the Netherlands, Smith set out afoot through France, fetching up at Marseilles, from which part ho took, passage on a vessel bound for Rome. On the way a, great storm arose, and the pilgrims to the "Holy City," knowing that Smith was a "heretic," adjudged him to be Jonah In the. case and hove him into tho tea. Being a -good swimmer, Smith managed to reach the shores of an unin habited Island, from which he was rescued by a passing craft and taken to Egypt. In 1605 Smith Was once more In Eng. land. He was tweny-flvo at the time, but old in experience. The roving spirit was still strong In him, and having seen most of the old world, he would now sco the new. It was one of the most natural things In the world that Bmlth should become a member of the expedition for the settle ment of Virginia, and lucky was It for the expedition that Bmlth went along with It Says John Flske; "But for this man's superb courage and resourcefulness, one can hardly believe that the colony would have lasted till 1009. It would have auccumed like Lane's colony, and White's, and Popham's; one more would have been added to the sickening list of What to Use and Avoid on Faces That Perspire Skin, to be healthy, must breathe. It also must perspire must expel, through the pores. Its share of the boy's waste material. Creams and powders clog the pores, Interfering both with elimination and breathing, especially during the heat ed period. If more women understood this there Would be fewer self-ruined connexions. It they would use ordinary, mercollied wax instead of cosmetics they would have natural, healthy complexions. This remarkable substance actually ab sorbs a bad skin., also uncloggtng the pores. Result: The fresher, younger un-der-skln Is permitted to breathe and to show itsalf. An exquisite new complexion gradually peeps out, one free from any appearance of artificiality Get an ounce of mercolized wax at your druggist's and try It Apply nightly like cold cream, for week or so, washing It off mornings, To eradicate wrinkles, here's a marvel tuny effective treatment which also sets naturally and harmlessly; Dissolve 1 ox. powdered saxollte In 4 pt. wltchhazel and use as a wash Iotlon.-Advertlement. Smith failures, and the hopes built upon Vir ginia In England would have been sadly dashed. The utmost Ingenuity on the part of Smith's dotractors can never do away with tho fact that his personal qualities did more than anything else to prevent such a direful calamity; and for this reason he will always remain a com manding figure In American history. Smith died In 1631, at the comparatively early age of fifty-one. He had faced death and miraculously escapee from It -a scoro of times. He had boxed the whole compass of human experience and had seen about all that life had to show of sorrow and Joy, of defeat and of vic tory. It is gratifying to know that he died realizing the fact that his fame was secure, and that ho would ever be re membered as the real founder of a great and glorious commonwealth. On June 29, 1619 twelve years before Smith died tho first representative as sembly that ever met In America was convened at Jamestown, and the mighty experiment of Belt government on this continent found its beginning. It was a small assembly, so far as numbers wore concerned. Eleven local constltuences were represented under the various designations of "city," "planta tion" and hundred," and each constitu ency sent two representatives, making twenty-two In all. Tho representatives were called "bur gesses," so tho assembly was known as the "House of Burgesses" until 1776, when the "Old Domtnfon" took her stand with the other colonies for Independence. The eleven constituencies In question extended up the James river some seventy miles from Its mouth as the "crow files," and laterally about five or six miles from cither bank. The population of the region was about eighteen hundred hardJy enough to make a respectable village. It was a very small beginning, but It was a beginning, and In the right direc tion. The representatives were real repre sentatives, excercislng the full powers of legislating for tho colony. Its acts did not. It Is true, acquire complete validity until approved by the General Court of the London company, but on the other hand, no enactment of the company was worth a straw until It had been approved by the assembly. In a word, tho Jamestown assembly was a democratic government, responsi ble, In the final analysis, to the people of the colony, and permitted to make no other laws than those that might be rati fied by the people's will and pleasure. Advice to Lovelorn Uj BEATRICE FAIRFAX Dou't lie Iniputlrnt. Dear Miss Fairfax: I met a deslrubln young man several months ago and until last week we had been keeping steady company. He promised to call me up some time during the week, but failed to do so. What shall I do. as I love htm dearly? MARjORIK McK. The young man for whom you care must be cold or busy, or prevented from communicating with you by any number of life's chances. If you. don't hear from him within a reasonable time, write a little note and ask what Is the matter. Girls ought to treat the men for whom they care with at least as much simple consideration and courtesy as they would show a girl friend with whom some mis understanding had arisen. Dou't Marry Mini. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a irirl of IS. and am In Jove with a boy one year older than I am. l nave been Keeping com Danv with this fellow over two years. but never gave a thought to getting mar ried. But now he asks me to get mar ried August 1. I realize that I do not think he can make a living for me, as he earns only J1Q a week, but he says that I can work and help him. I do not feel as If I want to work for years to come. M. j. A. Your sweetheart is decidedly too young for marriage, and 110 a week Is not enough on which to start married life. It you Intend to have children you ought to consider them and not to plunge Into a marriage the responsibilities of which you are unabto to meet. An Easy Road to Health and Beauty for To the left is shown an exercise in bonding backward; in the center at tho bottom is a resting poso for girls who stand a great ileal. Tho Here is a group of exercises for muscles that are usually neglected. Theso exer cises arc- Important, because thoy bring a group of muscles Into play that are otherwise rarely used after childhood, owing to the fact that girls are put into corsets In their teens. As they grow older the corsets are worn longer and stlffer, and a woman gets to depend more and more on artificial sup port. The consequence Is that the waist muscles grow weak and stiff from lack of use, Instead of becoming strong and supple as they should do. What Is more, tho digestive organs suffer, and dys pepsia and. Indirectly, anaemia result. And sooner or later tho complexion is ruined. Tho modern style of dressing makes It necessary that corsets In sorao shape or other should bo worn. They should, however, be as light In weight as possible. Ella "Wheeler "Wilcox By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. Copyright, 19H, by Star Company. Woman's greatest need today, above alt other needs, Is practical common sense the ability to reason from a common- 'sense standpoint and the will power to put such reasoning. Into dally uao. America- is rich In women of shin ing qualities. Its skies are starred with women of tal ent, women of high Ideals, women of vast ambitions, women of largo charities, women of brilliant intel lect. In art, In litera ture, In music. In reforms, in busi ness, and tn social life, these women shed a luster which reaches across wide seas and Illuminates the world. But one who basks long In this ra diance (no matter from which one of these social centers the light Is shed) soon misses the steady, clear ray of common sense. Uncommon sense has blurred that ray by Its glaring light. And In many tnstancos the winds of pub licity have blown it out. It required uncommon sense for woman first to awaken to tho realization that she had every moral and natural right to equal franchise. And uncommon sense has enabled her to Btand firm during tho long years through which she has been battling for that right. Hut she has shown her pitiful lack of common sense, In tho last score of years, by her persistent acquisition of mascu line, old-world vices vhlle she was pro claiming from the housetops that the race needed her refining and uplifting Influence in politics. Today three-fourths of the women prominent In our social life and In our artla.tle circles are confirmed smokers. They carry their cigaiette cases and of fer the weed to tholr guests and callers as men offer cigars. And the custom Js growing. Clear reasoning must Indicate to her the lad. of wisdom In emulating the un I and not In the least tight anywhere. "Women no longer jplnch tholr waists, but they cram their dlgestlvo organs to gether most distressingly. Girls In their teens should wear no corsets at all, but should dress so that the weight hangs from tho shoulders. This Is the most hygienic form of dross posslblo for growing girls. And now for tho exercise which will develop and strengthen tho waist muscles and make tho wnlst round and trim, and also make the digestive organs healthy. Tho first exercise Is known as body twlBtlng. Stand In the first position, hands on hips, and turn tho body first of all to the left as far na It will go, then back ngaln as far to tho right as possible flvo to ten times In succession. This exercise Is practically useless un less tho legs and the whole of the body below tho waist arc kept absolutely rigid, desirable habits of tho sex with which she claims her equality. If nho Is to lift politics from tho mud in which It has long made Its bed, tho cigarette will not prove an effectlvo lever. Tho nntl-suf-fragist Is quite as frequently found to be a devotee of Madamo Nicotine as her larger-minded sister. And her lack of common-sense reasoning Is shown In her plea for the preservation of the sanc tity and beatlty nf tho home life, while she endangers the physical and mental wclfaro of her tinhorn children by the uso of a slow poison. Argue as we will of tho Importance of good fatherhood for children, tho fact stubbornly stares us In tho face that a mother carries her unborn child under her heart for three quartera of a year, nnd that her condi tion, mentally and phvalcally, during that period is of moro vitau Importance to the child than the condition of the father. Not long ago the results of scientific experiments made by physicians, during a considerable period of time, relative to the uso of tobacco were given to tho public. The conclusion was reached that the habitual use of tobacco In any form reduced tho mental capacity 10 per cent. When a woman persists not only tn In dulging but In defending the Indulgence of a habit which affects the nervous system, fouls the breath, stains the fingers, and turns her salon Into a sa loon, there Is surely an evidence that she lacks that rarest of qualities com mon sense. Yet brilliant, gifted, cultured women, occupying high positions in the social and Intellectual world, may be heard any day defending the cigarette habit. So universal Is the custom In England that the woman who does not take the proffered cigarette after luncheon or dinner Is regarded with polite surprise. And this Is the land where woman Is, rightfully, even when wrong In her meth ods, most vigorously demanding tho bal lot. The absence of common sense reason ing has been ever evident In woman's attitude toward the subject of dress. It was never more evident than at thu pros unt day. The woman who does not regard dress an an important Item In this mortal phase of life 'errs in Judgment- A woman who used good .sense In her reasoning would know that Indecent fashions never emanated from decent one for twisting the body; to the right an cxerclso in bending forward; feet and legs should be supported on a cushion. while If correctly done It Is Invaluable, The second exercise, known as "forward bending" should be added to the list. In this exercise tho legs must be kept per fectly stiff and straight, the back flat tened and the hend slightly tilted back. The hands should be plcd ixther fr back on tho hips and the only- must be slowly bent until It Is at right angles to tho legs, and then slowly raised until It Is upright again. This shiu-d be done five tn ten times. A slight strain should le felt tip the backs of the legs and In tho lower part of the bark. This means that thu exer cIbo Is being dono crrrectly. Backward bending Is the next in se quence. It should bo done 1 1 exactly tho same way as the preceding .movement, excepting, of course, that the ludy Is bent backward, instead of forward, sa far as possible whlsh usually Is not vcrv far. on "Common sources. She would know that the woman who exhibits her baro flesh on the street to the multitude, attracts attention, but never admiration. And hero is another delicate, line of demarcation which the masses of women seem unable to deter mine, because of their lack of plain common senso the line which separates attention from admiration. Tho man who said that the absolutely well-dressed women always passed unnoticed was as mistaken In his Idea of what constitutes good taste as If he had said that the most exquisite scenes In nature were nlways unnoticed by the passor-by. A roso bush In full flower will cause the lover of beauty to arrest his step and catch his breath In silent admira tion, or to exclaim In delight. There are three types of women who can afford to make their own fashions: The young, beautiful woman of large wealth and securo social poultlon; tho old and poor woman, and the religious sister of some ordor. All others limit their usefulness and lessen their power to give and receive pleasure by refusing to bend any of the decrees of dame fashion. The wearing of small bonnets when large ones are the vogue, or voluminous skirts when clinging draperies are de manded, simply make a woman un pleasantly conspicuous, and aoonmpllshes no admirable end and Illustrates no worthy principle. But the woman possessed of good com mon sense will neither go this extreme, nor to tho other, of making herself a. slave to every eccentric whim of tickle fashion. Bhe will modify and adapt the modes to suit her appearance, and the fashion which tenders her ridiculous or unattrutctlve she will refuse to accept. The elegantly and richly dressed woman who returns from her promenade before admiring eyes and enters a meagrely tfurnlshed and disorderly home Is a sight to make men and angels weep. Yet thousands of such women may be fourvl In the circles whore salaried men are striving to maintain a family on a small Income, and where the wife's Ideals of happiness are centred on fashionable attire. These women form a vast multitude, and they are not infrequently women of brilliant mentul attainments. Yet they belong to a crude aboriginal order and are only partially evolved, In all savage ruce one sees a love of personal adorn- the Busy Girl ii i H It Is most Important to Keep the lowtr part of the body flat and ths lM s'.-M'.jrt while doing It. The linnis houd be p-aced on the hips at first. One of the photographs sliuwi tho ex ercUe being dono with the arms nboe the head. This Is In orier to show the position of tho back In it wn that would not 1)0 possible if the hands were on the hips. Finally, nnjther n4tln: poio In glvi-iv This Is hery strongly .idvoja'ed ly medi cal men for. girls and wnmoi whu aro in their feet a greHt de.nl. It is very helpful to those who suffer from varicose clns and swollen feet, or Internal wcukuevn of any description. The wholo point of Jita position lien In the fact that the heels should be higher that tho head. This Is achieved by ;.vlng Hat either on .the floor or a hard mattress, with feet and legs, ns fur an the knee, being supported on a cushion for a quar ter of un hour at k ttni'i. Sense" ment taking precedence of tho home mHklng Instinct. That Instinct marks a distinct etcp forward In the evolution of a higher humanity. A beautiful, well ordered, comfortable home, however simple In Its adornments, a home where evidences of personal Interest and feminine taste nre everywhere visible and where an atmosphere of peace and con tent Is felt by all who enter, Is an ante room to paradise. In the pandemonium of divorce which exists In America nnd Kurope today, one may easily trace the lack of common eensc of woman as a leading factor. When men stray from the path of recti tude und play with danger, they know what they aro doing and know they ure not Justified; hut they Indulge their sel fish Impulses and defy consequences. When a married man or a bachelor crosses tho boundary line of friendship tr'p"M on the real f Pwslon ., umo ,,, wno ,B n0i nla to woo, he knows exactly where his path way leads, uut throe-fourths of the women who figure In dlvorco courts as co-respondents, or whose affinities are named us co-respondents by angry hus bands, have drifted Into tho compromla- b ettuauvil uiruuj.ll u IUCK Ol Common sense, Tliey have listened to the plati tudes about Platonic love; they have allowed themselves to enjoy attentions which flattered their vanity, and they have gradually been led Into compromis ing situations by falling to take a common-sense view of the subject from the start. Love and loyallty. even when accom panied by unselfishness and economy, often fall to render a man happy in his domestic life If there is a woeful lark of tact or a superabundance of nerves In his home. It la a lack of common-sense reasoning which causes a woman always to want to talk or be talked to when the man wants to read or relax; to want to go out when his mood Is to stay at home; to want to stay at home when he shows a desire to go out; to become hysterical or sullen when he praises another wo man; to be disorderly In her habits, or to carry order to tho extent of elimina ting comfort from tho home, and to de clare the will go home to her mother when he objects to any of these small but Irritating xcullarltlc. The misdeeds of mun In the conjugal relation are un usally (urge, and cry forth from the house-tops to all the world, and are the. result of undeveloped moral qualities. i it i Mysteries of Science and Nature Ry GARRETT P. SERVI8S. "In mention of the comet now under observation, reference Is made to Ca pella. Could you give us an article de- 1 scribing this great sun, and what Is 1 known of Its uttl- together with some companion us to size with our solar system? T. C. r. "Santa Paula, Cal ' Can I. can any body, truly "de scribe a sun that la at least a hundred times brighter and hotter than the biasing orb which i makes the earth mer's day by reaching across ; 90.000.000 miles of space nnd merely touching It with one two-thousanth-mllllonth part of Its total radiation? If the earth were as near to Capella. a It Is to the sun, the thermometer (If art Instrument could be made capable of bearing such a temperature) would rise In July not merely to a 100, but to 10,000 degrees Fahrenhltl Tho oceans would fly off In puffs of steam. The forests and fields would kin dle and burn like matchwood. The mountains and hills would melt like beeswax In a red-hot oven. The earth In the rays of Capella would be as a moth In a candle flame. People who live on worlds revolving around little suns like ours are the vil lagers and rustics of tho universe; the cosmopolites dwell upon the satellites of giant stars like Capella; for where they shine are the capitals of space. The scalo of things In the planetary system of such a star Is proportioned to the power and splendor of Its central orb. We are very comfortably situated at a distance of some 90,000,000 from the sun. In Capella' a system the same relative situation would demand a distance of nearly 1,000,000,000 miles. A vast and wonderful sphere of light, fading gradually Into the darkness of surrounding Immensity, envelops Capella. The similar, but miniature, globe of lum inosity that our sun forms about Itself becomes so dim at the distance of tts farthest planet, Neptune, that that lone world seems almost lost In the twilight of endless space. Dut a planet encircling around Capella at a distance of Neptune from the sun would enjoy a very brtll- ltant daylight, while 2S2,0OO,0OO.O0O miles away would still have as much light ast Keptune has In our system. If you could lay the sun boslde Ca pella on a table, It would look, as to size, like a boy's marble beside a cannon ball. The diameter of the sun Is about 865,000 miles; that of Capella, on the as sumption of equal Intrinsic brightness of surface, cannot be less than 8,500,000 miles. Its attractive power Is about a thousand tlmrs that of the sun, which Is the same ratio the sun's attractive power bear to that of the planet Jupiter. If tho sun were to approach Capella It would become a satellite of that star, and as tronomers In distant parts of the universe would look through their telescopes and say: "Why, seel Capella hos been pick ing up a new companion, a tiny, shy looking twlnkler which Is almost swal lowed up In the rays of the big star, A delightfully novel, little Incident In Inter stellar space." Dut, tn reality, Capella la already a double star, and one of the most won derful In the heavens. Its companion Is no comparatively body like the sun, but a huge orb of nearly the same size aa Itself. Yet one of these linked stars Is twice as bright aa the other nnd, notwithstand ing their close association they are probably only about 0,000,000 miles apart they belong to the separate spectro scopic types, which Is somewhat the sanio as saying that two prisoners, chained to work togother In the galleys, are members of two races, for Instance, a European and a Malay, Tho brighter star In Cupella (for to the eyo they blend Into one) Is Intimately al lied In constitution to the sun, while the other resembles the "Little Dog Star," Procyon, which haa yie' peculiarity of showing a strong ultra-violet strain In Its screctrum. For the fake of accuracy It should bo added that the relatives flguhea of size and brightness given above, In compar ison with tho sun, should rcallly be un derstood as applying to the two stars In Capella reckoned as one. In other words, taken together they are a thousand times as bright and a thousand times as strong, gravltatlonally, as the sun. Out for ordi nary purposes It comes to very much the same thing, since, as already said, the eye, and even the telescope, shows Capella as If it were a single star. There are also soma variations In the conclusions that different Investigators j havo reached concerning this strange and Dealllful celestial object. According to some, the two linked stars are very lacking In density, so that, while their luminosity is a hundred times the sun's, their combined mass, or gravltatlva power, la only fceventeen times greater ' ,,an h(g Tho distances of Capella front our solar system Is about 230,000,000 miles, which explains the fact that it appears to our eyes only as a bright star, .while In truth It Is a stupendous sun. Distance Is the great enchanter that turns giants Into pigmies. Capella la the brilliant white star seen, at this season, low down In the northwest right after nightfall. Beautify the Complexion IN TEN DAYS Nadinola CREAM The Uncqualed Buutifltr USED AND ENDORSED DV THOUSANDS Guaranteed to femora tan, freckles, pimples, liver spots, etc. Extreme casts about twenty days. Rids pores and tissues of Impurities. Leaves the skin clear, soft, healthy. Two sizes, 50c. and $1.00. By toilet counters or mall. tiATIOtfAXi TOJUST COUPANT. JWU, task! BoM br Sdwimv A atoCouau Drag States. Bm. ton Drat Oa- UruxUli Drw DtsC sad Un