Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 05, 1914, EXTRA, Page 7, Image 7

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V "The CureM vf g Stubbed Toe to llnusM Heart Dy NELL DRINKLEY
, Copyright. 114, International Newa Service. e V
The Haven the cureIs the one big, sweet word that is soft and
tender, brooding: and mellow, In all languages: Mother the sure
healer for the griefs of a chap from the time he stubs his toe to the
black, anguishing day when he stubs the quick of bis heart.
When you were an atom of a curly-headed kid you fled to the soft
hollow of your mother's shoulder and burled your rainy face In the
Giordano
Copyright, 1914, by Star Company.
By KEY". THOMAS B. GREGORY.
To pluck out the heart of the greatest
of all mysteries, the mystery pt the
world and man's existence therein, has
been the one supreme desire of earth's
brightest minds from
the beginning of
human history.
Among the first of
the moderns to tackle
this stupendous task
In dead earnest and
with soul a f 1 r, m e
with a holy enihus
iaam was Giordano
Bruno, born In the
little town of Nola.
Italy. In 1648.
Sad and glorious Is
the Ufa story of
Bruno sad when you
think of what the man suffered, but
glorious In the light of the splendid
triumph that in the fulness of time
crowned his sorrow and his toil. ,
Bruno when yet a very young man be
came a Dominican monk, but soon
learned that In so doing;, he had made a
great mistake. He was required to, atop
th.nk.ng-, a command to which hla active
mind could not possibly become obedient.
He kept on thinking, and soon found
out that he was a "suspect." His brother
monks looked at him with wide-opened
eyes full of amaxement and terror. They
ualled him a heretic, and he was expelled
from the order.
Cast out from the monastery, Bruno
began his continental wanderings, pro
claiming himself wherever he went the
Evangel of Reason, the Knight Errant of
Scientific Truth. Wonderfully handsome.
Very eloquent, the Incarnation of courage.
nd the greatest living master of the art
of expression, he drew to himself hearers
as the magnet gathers about Itself the
iron filings.
Everybody in those days believed in
Aristotle, The old Greek was considered
Infallible. To doubt him was to invite
the maledictions of all. As a sample of
!he absolute sway that was held by the
taglrlte over the minds of. the period we
have the following Incident: A bright
rounr natural philosopher, having dis
covered "spots" on the sun, communicated
BLACKHEADS CO QUICK
BY THIS SIMPLE METHOD
Blackheids-big ones or little ones soft
nes or hard ones on any part of the
body, go quick by a simple method that
lust dissolves them. To do this get about
two ounces of. powdered neroxln from
ironr druggist sprinkle a little on a hot.
Wet sponge rub over the blackheads
rUikly for a few seconds and wash off.
You'll wondur where the blackheads have
tone. The powdered neroxln and the hot
water have Just dissolved them. Finch
tig and squeeslng blackheads only opens
;lie pores of the skin and leave them
pen and unsightly end unless the black
leads are big and soft they will not come
tut, while the simple application of ner
.xln and water dissolve them right out,
waving the skin sett and the pores In
:helr natural condition. You tan get
towdered neroxln at any drug store and
I you are troubled with these unsightly
Flemishes you should certainly try this
lmpla method. Advertisement.
mi
Bruno
the jfect to hla pastor. "My son," replied
the learned doctor, "I have read Arltsotle
many times, and I assure you there la
nothing of the kind mentioned by him.
Go rest in peace, and be certain that
the spots which you have seen are in
your eyes and not In the sun."
Bruno pitched Into the mighty Aristotle
as David did into Goliath and slew him.
"There Is a greater than Aristotle," he
declared, "and that great thing Is reason."
Bruno was the originator of the noble
motto, "Not Authority for Truth, but
Truth for Authority." It was Bruno who,
for the first time among the moderns,
said: 'That which Is indorsed by enlight
ened reason and the facts carries along
with Itself Its own authority, but no
amount of authority can make a lie to
be other than a lie."
With truth ' for his object at.d reason
and investigation as his guides, Bruno
flamed through Europe, announcing things
that human ears had never been called
upon to listen to before. He told men
that God was in the universe, not apart
from it, and that the universe was a
much bigger affair than they had been In
the habit of thinking it was.
The first to fully grasp the mighty
significance of the discoveries of Coper
nicus, he was the first also to nercelva
that those discoveries necessitated a new
theology, and a new philosophy of the
world and of man.
With commanding , eloquence Bruno
discoursed, with are ardor of one of the
old crusaders, of a universe that was
boundless. He divinised nature not by
degrading the Deity to the material, but
by lifting up the material to a participa
tion in the spiritual.
And so, anticipating Bacon, and De
scartes, and Newton, and La Tlace, and
Darwin, and Herbert Spencer. Bruno
passed from country to country', the
herald of the dawn, the pathfinder of
modern solentlfio and phllospohlo truth.
Of course, the position of a man of
Bruno's kidney, at that age of the world,
was like standing on dynamite. His life
was not safe for a day, or for an hour.
He was liable, at any moment, to be haled
before the tribunals to give an account of
himself.
The Inquisition got after Bruno and
cast him Into prison. He was a dangerous
character. He was making people think
a business that has always been un
popular with "those In authority."
The criminal was finally taken to Rome
and eubejeted to a mock trial. The dice
were loaded, and by the throw it was de
cided that the champion of reason ehould
die.
When Informed that the deoree ot
death had been voted against hlin he re
plied: "J suspect, yen! pronounce tbla
sentence with more fear thsn I receive
It."
It was on the 17th of February, 1600,
that the brightest man In- Europe was
publicly burned to death, in the fifty
third yeer of his age.
Hcioppius, one of the wise men who
heard Bruno sentenced in the hall of gv.
Maria 8opra Minerva, left this estimate
ot him: "A horrible mail. He taught
that there are Innumerable worlds; that
the world has existed from eternity; that
God is the soul of the world, and that
Moses composed his own laws."
heaven of her breast with the sorrow of a toe that, fairly radiated, so
bitterly did it hurt.
Now that you're a great, lanky chap, it'll work Just the same try
It when you're in the griefs and your heart's brulued black.
For she gripped the star-seeing toe and the poor little parent foot
in the soft crushed rose of her palm and whispered little things into
Love at First Sight
By BEATRICE! FAIRFAX.
Do you believe in love at first sight?
Numerous people write and ask me this
question, and each and every one shows
plainly that they hope I am going to
apeak words of approval for the sudden
feeling which they doubt even when they
cherish it
I do not believe in "love" st first sight.
In the charm that atracts at once, in the
magnetism that makes itself felt almost
before a word haa been spoken, in the al
lure that reaches across tides of lack of
knowledge and understanding, I do be
ieve. But that any of these or alt to
gether are stable things worthy of the
name of "love" I gravely doubt.
Love ought to be based on understand
ing, knowledge, congeniality and respect.
Unless it have a firm foundation it cannot
last.
There Is little durability or wearing
quality to a cobweb. Now the magnetto
quality that makes Itself felt as the at
traction called "Love at first sight" Is
no more than "a cobweb wet with morn
ing dew" and sparkling delightfully in the
early sunlight. When the sun's rays be
come warm and hard to endure, or when
the chill east winds blow, the misty cob
web become a dusty, lifeless thing or a
chill and sodden mass of gray.
Love at first alght is too often exactly
like that. It cannot endure the warmth
and friction of daily living or the chill
winds of adversity. It is a thing of
glamour and of mystery. Understood or
analysed or put to any test of living, it
fades away.
If a man la taking a business partner
or a woman is hiring a cook, do they
plupge in and take some one whose looks
they like, or who haa a pleasing way
of tilting their head? Not at alU Mister
Man makes sure of having as his partner
some.oD whose talents dovetail nicely
with his own, some one for whom he has
admiration and respect, some one with
whom he can endure the friction of dally
contact. And Madame Housekeeper will
have no one as her cook of whose capa
bilities and qualities she is not sure.
In buying a suit or a dress or a hat a
woman studies wearing qualities and suit
ability and becomlngness and sums it all
up by saying. "Can I afford that suit?
Will it serve well?"
When a man gets a lawn mower or a
new auto, he studies the 'workings of
that machine and dues not decide upon
it until he Is sure he knows all about it
and considers It a "good buy."
Isn't love as important as any of these
things?
Of course It is. And love Isu't worth
entertaining unless It la baaed on actual
knowledge and la sure of itself.
At first alght a given man feels more
attraction to one girl of a group than to
half a dosen others that would assay just
as many charms. Well and good and
natural enough. But he U not la love
with her. He Is ready to judge her faults
with a lenient mind and to find delight in
all her charms. He is la a receptive
mood for love. Put truly la love he can
not be.
Perhaps some lad's flashing blue eyes
and broad shoulders attract a certain
lassie the very first second she sees them.
She, too, is ready to feel the force of his
every god quality. Hut she should try to
Hudge him with somewhat ths same open-
1UK BhJv. OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, AUiUST 6. 1U14.
mi ndednesa that she would show in her
judgment of any one of life's far lesser
interests.
The world is sadly full of people who do
not wear well. There are numberless
lavoble soamps, or likable vixens on earth.
Don't be fooled by them because they
exert on you when first you meet a cer
tain charm.
Love ought to be based on mutual
knowledge and respect. And these things
come aa time proves worthiness and con
geniality. If they are added to the first
attraction, which is generally merely a
snare of the senses, -they elevate it to a
worth while plane.
Don't yield to "love at first sight" unUl
you have Investigated It and proven that
it Is love and mere fleeting fssclnatlon
you entertain.
Advice to Lovelorn!
I'untshmeat.
Dear Miss Fairfax: Am a young man
tl years of age and considered very hand
some by all ray girl friends.
I am deeply In love with a girl who is
several years my junior. Recently I
held an affair which I thought positively
she would attend, but she failed to ap
pear. I have not seen her for some time end
have written to her several times, but
failed to receive a reply. Kindly tell me
how I can gain her love, as I am heart
broken. G. W. P.
You seem too calmly certain of your
good looks. Perhaps this sensible girl
wishes to show . you that you are not
Irresistible. If you really care for her
persist, and loyalty may win her.
Dear Miss Fairfax: Won't you please
tell ma how I could meet the gentleman
aiming his name A. W. A. in your
columns isst evening? I am a young
lady of much ability and refinement, but
seldom meet men of my moral Ideals
and would like very much to meet him.
guiET.
This column Is not a trystlng place.
Names are not furnished under any cir
cumstances. You should bs patient and
trust in your own goodness. In time the
right man will appear.
Ortalaly Not.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young man.
12. and love a glii who Is five years my
junior. My aulary Is email while hr
earnings do not overflow her pockets
either. Now would you advise me to
disclose my intentions to tier by sending
her a few dollars tor a dress, as she Is
lresaid very plainly. Hhn la an orphan
and stays with her married sister.
J. r.
It would be sn Insult for you to send
this girl money. I am sure you mean to
be kind, but you would only hurt her by
suggmtlng that you were ashamed of her
shabblnees. You may not pay for her
clothes until you are married. In the
meantime show your fondness by bringing
pleasure into her life.
t oaejaer Voir Jealoe..
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young man
of 10 and am in love with a girl of it
and have been going with her a little over
a year. Hhe Is out with other fellows
quite often. What would you advise nis
to do llrJARTHKUKBN,
Until a girl is engaged Mhe Is quite free
to have a number of boy friends. Don't
permit your selfish jealousy to begrudge
her friends, or plesssnt tlmts.
your hair that only mothers can say (and the language hss never been
put down in black and white it has not) and the pain oood
away!
And now she can hold on tight to your bursting heart and whluper
the same soft things if you'll fly to her quick and that pain, too, will
sleep and die by-and-by. NELL BRINKLEY.
Easy Lesson
By KLBERT 1111111 ni.
A savage is a man Who eats, every
day, all the food that he secures. Ths
savage sees only one reason for securing
food, and that Is, to eat It. When his
hunger Is satisfied
he oeases Industry.
When a man be
gins to store up for
future use. and to
supply others, he
becomes a capital
ist. All capital comes
from savings above
Immediate necessi
ties. These savings
of labor constitute
the weali.U of the
world. If men did
not produce more
than they con
sumed there would
be no civilisation.
Wealth is atored-up
labor.
The first organ
ization is in the family, where the chil
dren work to help their parents, and the
parents work to help each other and the
children.
The clan Is a combination of families
thst are Inter-related by marriage.
The tribe Is a collection of clans. There
Is always a tendency for tribes to split
up through personal animosities, jealous
ies or misunderstandings.
Near every communal or co-operative
concern is tho opposition known aa "the
dump," made up of come-outera. Every
big factory has little factories near, man
aged by former employes of the big con
cern. In the pure savage type each family
secures food for Itself. . The hunt and
the chase have the Incentive in hunger.
Man first lived In caves. To utilise
the skin of an animal for making a tent
or a house marked an evolution In In
telligence. A stone was the first weapon, and used
In the hands of a gorilla la decidedly ef
fective. To attach a handle to the atone
by means of thongs, and thus make a
hammer, marks the beginning of the stone
age. To sharpen ths stone and make an
axe, and then a knife, an arrowhead or a
spearhead, probably required a good many
generations.
The corporation had Its rise In the fer
tile brain of Julius Caessr, and wss
founded on the Idea of the Tenth Legion,
that never died.
The soldiers In the Tenth Legion may
have been killed In battle; but Ins renks
closed and the column advanced over
their dead bodies.
That night, when the legion c suited,
new men were put in place of those who
were lost, and so, although Individuals
might die, yet the Tenth Legion lived on
forever.
The I tomans were builders and engi
neers. Caesar 'set aside a hundred men
to build an aqueduct. Knowing that It
would probably take longer than th
lifetime of these men to complete the
task, Caesar ordered that whenever one
of the hundred died the rest should elect
his successor, and thus, though the en
tire original hundred men ehould psss
6,
w
in Evolution
away, the corporation would yet live on.
The word corporation simply means
body.
Lord Coke of Kngland said that the
ld-a of the corporation, "a body without
death and a mind without decline," was
the greatest idea ever evolved by human
orain.
j The modern Joint stock , company Is
, built on the Roman Idea, and had Its
evolution In England about WO years ago.
j A hundred men would go out end start
jan English trading colony, and each man
, would represent one share of stock. He
u me privilege or selling this share of
stock to any ons else, and when he died
It could descend to his oldest eon.
H was an essy step for men to put
money Into a stook company and receive
two shares Instead of one by paying twice
as much as ths rest did. Then we get
companies chartered by the crown, say
liko the East India company, and, be
hold, the joint stock company then wss
fully organised.
With the discovery of the expensive
n-"er of Hentn and the ability of a
steam e.iglne to turn a vast number of
wheels and run a great manv mhin.a
inaouiuciurlng In factories took th0 place
of the handicrafts In the homes, instead
of whittling out commodities by the fire
side, or the wife weaving by hand loom,
minus were done In a big way In the fsc
toiles.
At first all the shares In Joint slock
companies were owned by the workers,
but gradually It wss discovered that the
investments in factories were good ones,
and we find many man embarking In the
manufacturing bualneaa on a Joint stock
hauls.
W have 2U.0uO.Outi mkge earners In
America.' These are equal to the work of
l.eoo.ooo.ouo years ago. Here we find a
vast Increase In the production of wealth.
To ue this wealth for human good is
the problem that Confronts t:s.
T limit the production of wealth be
cause some oi.e misuses w.alth would be
on a par with limiting health because
ome one had laughed out loud In meet
ing. Iton t be afraid that any one is going
to take his wealth with him when he
dies. Also, don't be afraid that he can
tie It up so It will rot biesa and benefit
mankind. The unfit are always redis
tributing It, and killing themselves In the
pro ess
Economics Is sn elevating science. We
will never Set to the end of It. Ideals
attained cease to be ideals, and the dis
tant peaks beckon us on. and on. Com
binations that Increase production should
be encouraned, not forbidden. What this
world needs Is more wealth, not less.
The evil In the tiust Is not In Its organ
ization, nor In Its bigness, nor in Its suc
tes. it Is threefold: First, corruption of
pul.llc Officials to obtain special privileges
denied to competitor; itecond. the ton
sequent oppression of the competitor and
the consumer; third, watering of stock
and then extorting excessive profits to
pay dividends or such stork.
These evils the law must cure without
destroying co-operation, dlscoursglng en
terprise, or Impeding progress.
All Intelligent men sre working to this
end. It is evolution we want, and not
revolution. 4
I Bf
ckf t T .7 77..
3cauty Lesson
I.HRSO XII PART VI.
My diet which I outlined for you In tl.
Isst Inntallmrnt of this ("on with tl
following exerolsv will reduce the evei .
sr patient three pound a week. I Cj
not recommend more rapid induction.
Unless the patient la very stronn It may
work harm. Moreover, If reduction K
alow and steady, it la more apt ti. be pc
manent.
Arise In time to have a free half hou
before dressing for lura'rii.rt. Begin with
Ui breaching exerrlies outlined In Lesson -X
and follow by the general exercises
Iven In the flrt part of thla letl-n.
Then do these three speclnl reduction ex
ercises: R. 1 Hold the arms mifi.l.il -lth palm
towarda each ol'ier, keeping Ihrr.j In this
Irfwltlon raise them slowly hove th
head, stretching (he body as much aa poa
alhla. At the unit time rlso on the ball
of the feet, keeping ateady poise. When
the arm a are atralght above the head
continue the moveVnent backward aa far
on possible, keeping the head between the
arm. Return to erect poult Ion with irmi
straight up. Now bend body to the left,
keeping arms parallel and lued between
thm, now to right. Ilclax. Repeat Ihl
exercise ten tlmea.
H.I Place a rug or aheet, anything to
protect your body on the floor. Lie flat
with erma close at sides. In this position
r.tll over to the right ten tltnoe and then
roll back to original position. Repeat
thla ten to twenty times.
It. 1 Place lianda on hlpa and ben J
right knee forward, throwing loft hip up
ward and back. Now reverse the position,
left knee forward bent, right b'p back
ward thrown, and continue changing
weight from one side to the othor, at first
lowly and then rapidly. Keep the hands
clasped at the back of the head t nd con
tinue this exercise until there I a decldel
ache In the leg and hip musols.
Repeat these three exercise before re
tiring. Walk at leant ot.e hour a day. ,
You ehould do from five to seven miles on
level road. Hill Climbing la excellent. 1
shall be glad to answer any personal
loiters In regard to reduction from any
of my pupils If they will - send me a
stamped, addressed envelope.
Household Hiijts,
Fasten s piece of tape or string to the
end of your scrubbing brush, so that
when finished with It ran be hung up snd
allowed to drain. Instead of the water
soaklna- Into the back and loosening the
bristles and making them soft. For the
same reason, do nut leave the brush in
the pall of water when the floor Is being
washed.
To remove grease from wall paper ap
ply to the spots a paste made of fuller's
earth and cold water, leaving this on sll
night. If the spots have not disappeared
in the morning a seconl application will
usually be found efficacious. It Is well
to take grease marks out of paper directly
they sre made.
Half a cupful of milk put In a dlshtuh
full of hot water will serve Instead of
sosp. It softens the water, keeps the
hands better, becsuxe It will not roughen
them like soap, and hrlghten dishes.
leaning off all grease and leaving no
scum in the pan.
Jars and pickle bottlea that aniell of
onions may be made sweet If filled with
garden mold and left standing qut of
1 doors for tyo or three days. Whan thor
oughly washed they will be found quite
fresh, and may be used for Jam or any
.other purpose.
: When rooking new potatoes to which
! m int has been added, they usually turn
I a bad color. This can be prevented by
'rooking the' potatoea first and, when
I strained, placing a sprig of mint on the
top, closing ths lid tightly. The steam
I absorbs the flavor, and the potatoes sre
kept a good color.
Two drops of camphor on your tooth
brush will give your mouth the freshest.
! cleanest feeling Imaginable, and will make
your gums rosy and absolutely prevent
anything like cold sores or affections on
your tongue.
Stains on white flannel can sometimes
be removed by rubbing them with gly
cerine and yolk of egg mixed in equal
quantities, ttpraad on the stain, leave
for half an hour, then wash the garments
as usual.
A bag of salt standing where there Is
a smell of fish will absorb the aroma.
I Common fern laid down In places frr-'
jquuuted by cockroaches will drive them
sway. v
Face Peeling Easy
Blond or Brunette
I "The blonde's complexion fades earlv,
brcuunc her skin Is extraordinarily thin
and fine." suvs Mine. Lina Cavalteri.
"The brunette's, as a rule, is the reverse.
The skin Is thicker and has its tendency
to an oily appearance."
Fur cltl.er the faded blonde'e skiaerthe
brunettes oily or sallow complexion, the
I eet remedy is ordinary mercollitd wax.
Used every night, this will give one an en
tirely new complexion wl'.hln about a
weeS'a time. The wax gradually peels off
the worn-out surfsca skin, with all its de
fects, a little each duy, without affecting
the delicate underskln in the least. Th
latter will have the exquisitely beautiiul
alow of youth indeed, one may readllv
lose ten or l If teen yeare from her age, so
far as appearance sues, by a course of
liils simple treatment. The wax, sncurable
at any drug store. Is applied Jtke oold
cream. Advertisement. 1
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