Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 29, 1914, Page 7, Image 7

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    Jllh HMJ OMAHA, W4I)M4S1)A. .11 IA Hi), 1114.
' " 1 I i i i HI' " "-
'
j "A Vacation PipeDream" $ m?:XtZM BSHJS
1
7m
41 IS1 if1 !
7,
Lost ,ln the plans for hla two small
weeks' vacation, Billy tips back a fiction
filled head and sees It all swimming In
golden sun and silver moon a wide
hotel-veranda gemmed, like a bracelet, on
the balustrado with myriads of girls
sapphire girls soberly swcot and wistful
pearl girls all In white and smiles topaz
girls with coppery hair and hazel eyes
diamond girls with laughter always bub
bling; and breaking like the pulse of a
mountain spring riby girls with- a dan
gerous eye and a luring curve of mouth
turquoise girls with clear watchet eyes
and turned up nose girls girls gemmed
over everything as thick as the star-powder
In the Milky Wayand himself It Is
in the midst of it all planted In a thicket,
if you please, of curls and adoration the
set In the ring the oak In a gay flower
garden the handsome bachelor-button In
the center of the bouquet!
That'8 from rending wnndcrlnc bits of
colorful fiction, Ullly-boy from looking
at fibbing cartoons that always strew girls
all over the Summer-lnnd, Hilly-boy. You
and your chum of a sablo-nnd-whlte dog,
while you count the days and hours and
dream on It o' nights, seo fields of girls
with smiles for the ono of you nnd bits of
cak.8 nnd brown sugar for the other of
you!
And, woe's mo sometimes this Is
wlint you got If your mind is made up to
a hotel-vacation a veranda as lonely of
lovely Rlrls ns tho sea can hq of a tug
when your motor-boat engine won't
"pltty-what" and Is bobbing up and down,
just ns empty as thnt and you and tho
pup will bo cornorod at ono end of the
golden day nnd half the silver nights with
a skimpy bt of womanhood who gossips'
NBLl, BHINKU3Y.
Man and the Weather
By GARKETT P. SEKV1SS.
"Will man ever be able to control the
weather?"
Not as lone ns it remains a mystery
to him, and a mystery It Btill la In spite
of all tho studies
and all the experi
ence of the weather
bureaus and tho
l)rognostlcators.
Wllcn Bv took
Adam's arm and
walked with him
out of tho Garden
of Eden's sate, sho
XlrBt learned what
damp weather
means for a wo
man's frizzes, while
Adam was probably
not Ions in feellnK
the first twinges of
rheumatism. The
persistent spell of
weather, followed the great explosion Is
as warranted ns many others thut have
been drawn by learned men, because that
would be a logical meahs of causing the
offending pair to appreciate what they
had lot.
It you ask u professional meteorologist
why tho North Atlantic seaboard has
been so persistently afflicted with clouds,
lain, muggleness, excessive humidity
and general atmosphcrlo gloom this sum
" mer, he will very likely look you de
fiantly In tho eyes and nasert that you
are suffering under an Illusion; that the
weather is all right nnd running Us
regular gait, and that you have forgotten
what happened last year. Then he will
discourse to you on the law of averages,
and prove mathematically that, In the
long run, the seasons don't vary.
All this Is really a confession of Ignor-
ence. Meteorology, at present, 'e a
science of averages and generalities. It
has to deal with a subject whose ele
ments ate so shifty thut nobody can
surely foresee their varying combina
tions. To foretell a-change of weather Is like
foretelling the shape that a puff of
hinoke will take; and to account for a
spell of go'od or bad weather is as diffi
cult as to account for the birth and per
sistence of a cloud that hangs for hours
In a blue sky. The general causes are
known, or believed to lie known, but
science, to have much practical value,
general usefulness of weather bureuu
work, but there should be no mistake
concerning the bases on which It rests.
When weather predictions succeed, It Is
because the atmosphere has settled Into I
a state of regular action ana rcucuo'i
between the forces that control Its
phenomena, and then the weather ob
servers can follow the course of u storm
nnd predict Us arrival at particular
points ns easily as a train dispatcher
can trace the run of nn xprcss uenns
the continent by Blmply consulting his
time table.
Dut when the powers of the air concert
a change of schedule, tho
meteorologist la. for a time, as unceitatn
and upset In his calculations bb the popu
' Inr weather prophet, and less to be dc
'pended upon for local predictions than
I Borne wise old farmer who studios the
j behavior of tree frogs, earth worms, hens
' .l 1. ( -1 - nil- i.a animal, whl"tl
i utlll Vllivncon, ti u tt i v, " " .........
conclusion that a gecm tQ ,)ave a foreknowedge of nature's
rainy unu b moodf( thn( ,s den,eJ t0 us
Meteorology can tell, from observa
tions gathered widely on land and sea,
what tho general state of the atmosphere
Is during a' long spell of wet or dry
weather. It can also make (very general)
picdlctlons concerning chunges likely to
occur in theao general states of tho
atmosphere, but It refuses to be held to j
strict account In such things. K you
use an Intellectual microscope you will'
find In Its schedule what Is common on
railway time tables: "Subject to chango
without notice'."
It Is no wonder, then, that thousands
of people have more faith In Ht. Swlthin
Just now thnn in the weather bureau.
Last Wednesday was St. Swlt'hln's day,
and the old saw says:
"St. Hwlthln's day. If thou dost rain,
For forty days It will remain.
St. Swlthln'a day. If thou be fair,
For forty days 'twill rain na tnalr "
This icotch-Kngllsh weather saint Iibb
his compeers in other countries. in
France it Is St. Medurd. the state of
whose day Is supposed to govern the
summer weather for forty days after.
AU over the wprld there re tdmllar
superstitions, which are superstitious
only In their form, for there can be no
doubt that they are based on the results
of long continued experience. If the type
of weather prevailing about' the time of
the occurence- of one of these days really
does, upon the whole, continue for
several weeks. It must be because u
Murder of Love Is Commonest of Crime
And All
Too
Frequently the Death Wound Is Not Inflicted
by a Stab, But by Pin Pricks
lly DOROTHY DIX.
mend thnn It In slain by enemies I finds pleasure In any of the nmuuemcnt
the outside. Mo which he was accuMomed, und yet
Beautify the Complexion
IN TEN DAYS
musi master wic Url law U in oDeratlor. tending to
I do not mean to cant doubt upon tne .... in ih tt of th
Jillfuuvu . -o
atmosphere.
St. Swlthln'a day occurs between three
and four weeks after the summer solstice,
and it is well known that, by that time,
Ithe character of the- season has generally:
Nadinola CREAM become sttled' and not ,"abIe ,0 te
. ,, , , f, ., I much changed until the sun has sunk eo
TheUnequltdBeulintr Up tQWard the ftUtumnBl equlnox thal
used and endorsed I tne heat received by the earth during
by thousands i the dayUme becomes so much less than
Guaranteed to remove it ht radiated at nlcht that a general
tan, freckles, pimples, atmospheric change of state In the north
liver spots, etc. Extreme j ern hemisphere must necessarily occur,
cases about twenty days, i We need a meteorological Newton; but
Rids pores and tissues of impurities. if we had one Is It certain that we
Leaves the sUln clear, soft, healthy. nould be any happier? Newton estab-
Two sizes, 50c. and $1,00. By toilet 1 nshed the law of gravitation, but now
counters or mail. there Is much dlisatlifactlon because we
ftATlONAL toilet cowany. ram. T (jon t know what gravitation Is. Newton
Sou bj Shrma fc MctBtn uruis storti, w- could only tell us what It does,
ton Uruz Co.. lirjudtli D Tin Uept ol ottwt. ( " " '
H is a snd and a grotesque fact that
luie is out-net- done to death In the hoiire
or its
from
When wo reo a
man nnd a v, nman
scientific -who are mndly In
love with each other
when thoy marry. In
the course of a few
years land in the
divorce couit, or
else arrive at a slate
where, although they
stay together n tan
hear their matrimo
nial fetters clank as
they walk, we are
opt to rush to the
conclusion that some
big und tragic wiong
has awakened them
from love's young
dream.
Not at all. Nlnety
nlnc timeB out of u hundred an a-Jtopsy
on the body of their dtad love would
show that the deceased hud come to Its
end, not by a clean dagger wound that
struck through Its heart, but that It had
been pricked to death by pin points.
"When ull Is said. It Is easier to forgive
a big wrong than it Is to put up with
constant little Irritations. It Is the con-t-tnnt
dropping of wuter that wears awny
stone, and the ceusolesB little shattering
of Ideals and rending of Illusions that at
Inst shatter domestic happiness.
Take, the woman, for Instance, who
adores her husband to that the Is fran
tically Jealous of him. He loves her, and
he feels thut she mlsht trust him. mil
have ixime respect for his loyalty and
honor. Abstractly bho does, but when It
comes to the concrete alio cannot endure
to see him show another woman even
ordinary civility. When they go out If
ho does not act like a boor to every
woman they meet, there, are tears ant
hysterics when they git home.
She Is even Jealous of all other women
collectively and goes through hla pockets
for letters In feminine handwriting. Bho
calls him up over the phone to see that
he Is really at his office, and makes her
lelf a pest and a nuisance by suspecting
a mythical ether woman
The result Is Inevitable. She could not
kill love quicker If -he'd gone out gun-
I nlnrr fnr ft with a cattllnc nun. Her
husband recenta her lack of faith. She
bores him with reproaches, and on the
principle that one might es well 1
hanged for a sheep as a lamb, she often
drles a man who would have otherwir
been faithful to hunt up aome mora
rcionable woman for solace.
Then there Is the woman who makes
her love a prison house In which a man
Is always conscious of the bars and bolts.
She makes the marriage ceremony de
prive him of his llbfity and thenceforth
she arrogateh to herself the right to
police hi every movem- nt. He cannot
move from his own flresldo without gl.
Ing a ccmpktc a-vount of all he did, mil
said, and thought, nnd furnishing nn
alibi for overy hour.
it Is not reasonable to supptse that oe
ciiitse a man takes n wife he changes nil
of his tastes and habits, unci no longer
this kind of a wife never even gives he'
husband nn evening off In which to on.
Joy himself In his own way. She niakiu
of lilm a liar because he has to tell un
truths to iciuaro himself nt home, al
though he would be truthful enevsh If
she would only stand for the truth. This
woman kills lovn because It Is not In
I human nstuie foi anybody to love his
Jailer.
rntches no more flies nfter marrlHge than
It did before, and the wlfn who linn to
stand for Inrmlts from the bully that the
Is married to learns to hate him and fear
him Just us any other woman would who
was forced by circumstances to endiiro j
How Can I Know My True Love?
Hy HKATIUOK FAIRFAX.
u cad.
Men kill their wives' love by
parsimonious to them und by making the
women who spend their lives doing th
dreary round of domestic work feel that
they nre slaves who am grudgingly fed
and clothed for their services. No love
Wan ever robust enough to survive the
nucstlon: "What did you do with that
quarter I gave you last week?'
In nil the old fairy tales, Prince Charm
ing come riding upon a wundnrful while
charger und his happy love knows him
at sight. 1,1ft, unfortunately or luckily
(according as you prefer to have your
pleasures reudy made or to work for
them), Is nut In the IchsI like the fairy
tales of love.
I .If ii Is full of People who would not
; sexes. I.ovc Is a supreme longing of one
I In.llt'l.lllnl fnt. ntinflin,. fill th.t Iam.Ihw
.. Ht., .... . ...... flu. J(4. '-.. ,u. ,..
Is to shnrn all the realities of life and
not emotion alone.
know their true love If they met, or of
beln j folks who get tired of waiting for lovo
snd marry for a home, or for support, or
to sutlsfy a passing fancy. Hut there are i
many honst souls who are convinced
thut thpv wrnilil not know Invit If tliev
met him. nnd they write me In great ,0nl inonusiiiu pins sex attraction.
..v .uusjwiiiniitj j i iiiiiiu aim a fii ii. a
Tho person you low truly Is the ono
nlth whom ymi long to shaio all the good
that conies to you, nnd whom you yearn
to protnnt from nny ovll that threatens
them.
I.ove should be bared on companion
ship, on congenially, or respect, trust,
teiulernesi anil a loyal belief that llfo
with the object of your nffectlons at your
side will be better nnd liappUr than It
could ever be- under nny other circum
stance.
Ixivn hns hern called "Friendship with
out flowers or ell. ' In reality It Is a
numbers to ask how they may recognise
love when It comes.
Now love of the right sort Is based on
j Men ll their wives' lovo by petty mom than mere attraction between the
Them ' also tho woman who kills love ty,unny ttnJ by sheer Injustice. The man!
y her complaints. Si foigcts that sh wtlo tnUcl! ailVuntagf of his wife's flnun-!
by
. marries of her own free wH nnd accord.
and that she knew that she was marrying
a poor man. She makes tho deadly ml
I lake of striking ut a man's vanity by
I leniouiilng the fact thut she could huve
i miri-icd better, nnd lamenting that she
clul dependence on hli to trent her .i
he woilhl not his stenogiupher.- or his
cook, or any woinun employe who wns
free tp get up and leave, doesn't shine
as a horn of romance In her eyes any
longer. 'He Just lookn the poor, miserable.
can't have us fine things ns some of her j tyntempllble coward ho Is.
by wounding her bun
No man ever forgives a
neighbors do.
.She kills loe
band's self-love.
woman for thut.
Men kill their wives' affection for them
by Indifference. There Is a theory that
a woman who once lovci a man can't
stop.
She Just goes on loving him anyhow
This is it mistake. A woman's lovo can
bo starved to death very quickly, and
when a mun absorbs himself in business
Rnd ceases to show his wife any atten
tion or tenderness, her affection Is
mighty apt to turn up Its little toes to
the daisies.
Men kill their wives' love by sheer
brutality. There uie husbands who think
that marriage gives them the right to
criticize their wives, and say things to
them that they wouldn't dieam of saying
l.ovo Is an exotic that can only live in
the warm air of a happy hum. Ho
cannot exist In an atmosphere full of
Advice to Lovelorn
By nUATKIOD FAIRFAX
l-'oriret Hint.
Hear .Minn Fairfax. Hovers! years ago
). wa ansnged to a young man und al- tomes a lonnlng to be
though he has loft me I I nve never been j , .,,,, ,,,,
ubh. to forgi-t him and love him more ! Bn'1 "Pirntlltl so that y
fully as Important as the longing for
emotion and affection that many peopto
confuse with love.
Qlrls unij me,n alike may know their
true loves by four signs that point to
love as the signs of the compass point In
.the four great cardinal dltectlons. The
i hi vat signs cf love are four and there
urn four inluqr ones, too.
First, them Is n longing to be with tho
object of your nffectlons. Next there Is
a drslie to save him ull pain und to giv
! him ull Joy. Then comes great surging
I faith In his strength and honor And then
In all things fine
you may be worthy
.....1 ...f ...... I.. ...w. 41.
,,.S ,,.. . .... .r... .,, .. ,,t j,,,,,, , t,,uugt , t.ni,, forg(Jt 0f U. ,jf h)8 )0Vp.
'"i'-"""'-" " .r ,ow..n ..,.. inm, inn several years nan leu me just i (of fne folr nMflr
HI1U IL'lllI.I'l (J. H .VUOD.I1 UT IIIV DUI Ull?!. I ..I.I BnUlU IHUfllU Hill). , HHP IIUU I'lUlllJ
of fine chances with other young men
" "1""' , , , ... ! that have u meat deal inom than he.
Yet there are women who deluge their, but nono of them seems to appeal to inc.
husbands with reproaches und who nag . Ho you think I shall ever outgrow my
M,m m-.pj mlnnln III unfortunate m..n ' nr,t 'ov UH 1 Rl" tl" JOUtlg. Uo J-Jll
them eery minute the unfortunate men , tll)lU (l woul(1 l)e r)lht f(). mH ,0 ,narr.
ore at home, and there are men who hlui If I run win hlin back 1 cannot
vet- speak a pleasant word In their own I understand why I still love mm, as he is
n... urwi .1 u-iii... nnnmu.-i, tunoi.t. nor ""'I ' nothing that would nttruct
uiet Hnd at whose approach .laughter le Ver..ie alii. Your advice vlll b
nc
hout
Is hushed and the very cat takes to the
cellar.
And these people have the nerve to com
plain that their husbands nnd wives do
to any other woman on earth Vinegar huve destroyed their happiness.
very much appreciated bj . A IlliAOKH
He uppurently doesn't care ery much
for you, or he would not 1st several years
elapse without Indicating the state of his
not lovo them, and that their homed are ! feclInsM. You would better put him out of
unhappy! 1 youi- life, If IU possible. Try yourself In
And they never realize that they havliht. comtmnv of othtri. read anod books i Jealously and distrust and nrltv selfish
murdered love, and with their own hands and see If It does not help to clear your j "ess und a doslre to prove your power by
directions on
the couipuss of love there are these four
"symptoms of love-." A constant etato
of comparison In which no ono else seems
to even upproach the high standard of
your beloved. Next a foolish little ten
dency to shirk work and fall a-drcamlnc
of film. Th'rd. u w'ah to run and tell
him nverytliing that happens, and a feel
ing thut nothing is worth much until he
has known or stun It, too. And, last, a.
grt-ut dlsdnln for uvery one who Is not
wise enough to appreciate the dearly be
loved. When yon feel all these emotions and
The Seeing Eye
mind. If h Is worthy of vou and tares wounding are no part of your attitude,
for you. he will come back, but you would you may he auie that your true love has
bo doing yourself a great wtong to try come.
1 to lure him hack i
Hy CONfiTAXCK CIjAIIKK.
One saw a homely cottage small
Against a beetling hill,
Home straggling trees that dropped their leaves
Upon the low door bIII,
The loneliness of all outdoors,
So deep, and dark, and still.
' c .
The other glimpsed a dying fire
Upon a hearthstone wide,
A twinkling flame of candle HbM
That fitfully descried
A woman In a low armchair, ,
A cradle by her side.
One was a stranger doomed to roam,
The other called the hovel home.
Til." Vest Kan,
Cains New Complexion
By Peeling Her Skin
l.atr lleiurs.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young man
of W, and deeply In love with h girl of
the same age. Is 150 cash on hand enough
to get marr ed on Willi a position paying .... , : :
118 ys-eekly? Could I start a home with , ,rlve,'i f '.f '."flV' anl a "P f,;
this amount'' X V. 3 ANXIOI'S lnK; bblnd tbe clouds is the sun still
I ,V1 L i..!! i . .1.1. r. mJ..r.!"nl,Un " 1 was forcibly reminded of these
I think you will be able to nunage , ine wll(,n , u(ter months of Irettlng over
nicely on your Income and to save about j my ugly .omplexlon, I found how easy It
11 a week. "UH 10 remote ine ciouuy, mutiny siciu
1 got an ounce of ordinary uiercollxed wax:
at my druggist's and used this like cold
cream every night fur two weeks, wash-
... . j . ... ' Inir It off mornlnss. I-n ami hehn il' That
MVmtnt I Tarty on July "and 1 left sa d ' P Tht healthy
naFtv It l S a m anS the DeoDle who 'ung skin underneath gave me a com,
2Ce the uarty were hlelilS hwu fed I it I'lcxlon as puie, white and soft as a,
my actio n sa y I ng that I shouhl ha ve lrl's ' experienced no discomfort,
waited limit lunch . seVvSS o you sTein came off so gradual.y anu sently.
think me at fault for what , have don.v j wjra. lend-Mv. been ar.y.n
- - ii, . i ......... .. ........ .. i . i ........ . i . .
iaui.ru, luii.iu... tiiuiciru, uiuit-u, lllijm
- .... F .. ... I H nn. n ..... 1 1 . ,u. I ....... I . . n . . .
t U'.-
remsrk.
. . itiuiu treatment.
J.V. . - . 1 . , . - . . V. - . 1 . . L .
- miutiiei tientniriit tout uruuant ilium
freshmoiits should be served before mid- unshlne was one to remove wrinkles A
I soiled, tanned, withered, blotchy, pli
No man who attends seriously to busl- or freckled, run nciiulre the loved --st
nets can afford to stsy at parties even plexlon ImuginabU by rslng this rem
as late as the hour you mention.
night- If you say a courteous good night
to your host you have nothing with which
to reproach yourself.
lace bith made by dissolving 1 oz. pow
dered aaxollte In M Pt witch hazel, soon
erased every line It's wonderful.--Julla,
Orff In The Queen, Advertliemtnt
f