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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1914)
THE BKK: OMAHA. SATURDAY. At(;fST UD. 1014 !i Recreation New Fall Models for Miladi's Suit .$2 Napoleon's Blackest Deed 12 i ; i t on Sunday , . .k- t .- . uis I . . . . . . B By KLLA WHEKl.Eir WILCOX. (CopyrlKht. 114, by Fur Company. The face of the world changes: map change; lands ami sets rhanse; customs anti manners change; philosophies am. re ligions change. In th day of our rarly Christian fa thers. In Puritan New England. Pun flay was no solemn ly cbnH that It mi a. day of hor ror to children and 11 younf people full of the joy of lira. Many mm who were brought up under these strict conditions, where .laughter and merry conversation and van amllea regarded at Impious and w Irked In the eight of Ood, broke Into recklessness and auneiam arter they left the narrow en vlronment for the larcrr world Thoee bigoted and Intolerant forma of religion have reused mora wickedness nd sorrow In the world than morality na joy. Fortunately for humanity there are few localities now where such aolamnlty and morbidness mark tha coming of Runday Teopla have ceased to think that nnA qnlrea melancholy and gloom from thoaa wno loved Him or that II imani. op tional paalm alnglng on one day of the ween as evidence of a devout mind .a our land growa In population and the irusta grow In monopoly of the anil Ita products the atruggle of tha msase for livelihood becomes greater and harder ana the hour af leisure and 'nleaau fewer. There are hundreda of thouaandit or moral, hard-working. tlod-lovlng hu man belngi all about ua who have n, houra for recreation or for Ufa In the open air aave on Sundays. Any religion Which dehara three peo pie from Innocent recreatlona on that one lay of tha week la an unwholesome religion and mill nrvor open the galea of paradise to Ita promoter or follower. Lovers of golf and tennla find rent for the mind and vitality for tha body In the harmless game. They send the tired toller back to lila Indoor work on Monday morning with new energy and refreshed, mentality. Tet there are still a ff w of the old type of Wgoted religionists . ho would prevent the opening of golf or tonnla grounds on Sunday If they could. They would have the Puritan Sunday of aolemn allonce and continual church olng and paalm singing ro-eetabllahed. They would nake It a aln to be merry nd laugh and alng anything but hymns n Sunday. These people have not looked deeply Into life; they have not learned that eun. shine and freeh air and all the gift of rial are are an expreaaion of the God they warship; they have not found out that fieeJth and vitality and Innocent pleasures nd Joyous recreatlona are all agreeable to the gnat father who watches over Ma children Juat aa hry are agreeable nd gratifying to the human father, who era hla children amusing themselves In harmless waya and basking In the beau tlea of nature. There la reverence and worship in the tieart of one who really enjoya to the full a perfect aummer day. Every thought of the human mind Ahlch springs from appreciation of the tieautlea and benefits of nature and the healthful pleaaurea of life la rcllgloiia In Ita tendency. , The people who play golf or tennla or ny outdoor game for the joy of tha ex ercise and the pleaaure and health to. he obtained In thla manner are remembering the Sabbath day and keeping It holy. . It I a holy thing to be healthy and happy and to rejoice In life and action. It la far holler than to alt It. a mnl... room and mourn over the alna of the world and comment on the faulta of one't . neighbor. Every human being oucht to alone with hla own thoughts a few momenta or n hour a day. and think about Go.: - He ought to think about the lords of Karma . who watch over human Uvea, about tha InvUlble helpers who are near, bout the dear ooea who have passed over the border to spirit realms.-, Thla ' ahould be done t avery.'dayj- not merely on Sunday. ''' 'fjV But It ran be done In the open world. In the wooda, or In the rioin. or In the church aa one may choose. r It caa even be done In the crowded ubway or aurface cat a . by thov ho l.ave learned how, through comentratlon of thought, to find alienee in the mldat of nolae and aecuUion in thrones. . An hour, or a half hour, or a quarter of a hour given every day to holy and geaeeful and reverential thought opena the doora of heaven to'ua far more cer tainly than keeping Fahhath in the' old faahtoned melancholy manner, and by ahunnlng all pleaaure. all aniea. all muaementa for one dayMn the wtck. Every day ahould be a holy day. but the one and only day In the wevk when 'work-weary men and women have free dom' to enjoy the outer world and In vigorating game and aporta ahould not ke apollrd by false notion of what con stitute religion. It la aomettme eaaier to pialae God and love our fellow men while driving a golf hall la the open air than while attlng through an Interminable fimuo baaed on worn-out dotinaa wbk h inUrepreaent the glory and goodpeaa of our Omnipotent Creator. Our chun-liea ahould . be maintained. ana the putora who pnaoh the rel)ion of lo"K and hunianitHtUniam and who work for the estab lahment of real broth erhood will nevtr preach to empty pema nd ibeae pastor alii be broad enough to know the benefit that outdoor game bring to tlrtlr purlahiom ra. There la one if the atrontliolda ' hlch the Roman ratliolio pi i. aa have upon thlr people-tliev un.i. riland thtlr md of auih re-reationa and -oourage them in outdoor xen iee on Kunday, ao long aa they are faithful at aervice. BLHOLI) the forerunner of li winter fashions the new Tall model. The spring suit is shabby by no', and ffl woman who can re pleninh her wardrobe a;aiiuit tool clays In town and shorn will do well to consider this chic model (to the right) of terra rotta broadcloth combined with red and jsray striped clot h. The coat la a very full blou:ie, with slralght reverg and fitted pep 1 u in. It has a square collar of the striped material at the back and an ornament of the stripe crossed by white soutache holds the coat at the waistline. Cuffs of the stripe finish the full sleeves, and tha entire skirt Is formed of the strTJies arranged to form a bias of deep Ys in front. The skirt is a one-piece model, seamed In front, and with the extra width at th waistline draped down In deep "pockets" over the hips. It lifts a bit directly in front in a deep, irregular box plait. Another of the new fall models (to the left) haa been exhibited In spite of the summer heat. It shows several new features. The coat is a kimono, cut with an extremely short waist and with a full peplum falling below It In the undulations of its circular cut. The coat has the great length of a waist coat in front. There Is a very full tunic over a tight underskirt, as haa been seen on many of the summer modeln but one feature that Is quite new la the broad sash that starts at the waist in the center front and continues down over the hips to slip through a large pearl buckle at the back. Kvery line of this chic little model Is new and presages the radical changes that will come with the fall and winter styles- And to add to the good effect she produces the wearer has chosen one of the best new hat models. It is neer easy to find a good hat early in the season, as the styles are not positive and the price's are high. But the modified Gainsorough of black velvet can be used throughout the winter with tailored suits or aeml evening dresses. The broad side of the hat flares high on the left OLIVETTE. . I I v,V.ar ' y tk 4 M ... w f i I (i If i ; - I S The Rotation of the Earth By EDGAR LIXIKN LAhKlX. Q "Please explain what the theory la as to the' cause of the rotation and revo lution of the iimh.." UeorKe U. Sndor. Chicago. A. The ole cauae of the rotation of the earth on Ita axis la oler-trlcal induction. And, bv the wa. electrical Induction la one oi the most protound operations of nature. Thla a coming to ,be aen In the etudy of coemlcal physics, ns well aa In tho power house of an electric rail way, eltctrlc lighting system, or, now, electric heating outfit. The baae of every machine n all of these buildings, fhopa and laboratories is the Induction of electricity. I have often explained elec trie Induction and electro-mutfnetlo Induc tion! also the reverse, magneto-electric Induction. Put now I will again try to explain electric induction In apace. And Imagine that the period In souoe waa when the eaith and million, of atmllar world and millions of suns were In pr w ceaa of formation. I cannot spare time to make a drawing, which ought to be made to clearly explain. ' But the reader may muke the drawing. or better by far. make an apparatus. The minute Instructions arc: ' Flrat Secure a crouuet ball or any ball made of wood. Becond t'orit it with lead or tinfoil. Third Drive a tack or pin Into tha wood. ' .'.' Fourth Get a allk thread, tie it around the pin. and tie the oilier end of the thread to a peg In the ceiling. This sus pends the coated ball In apace. t - Fifth Make two more coated bulla with ailk cords attached. Sixth Charge one ball with static elec tricity from any static machine, or rub a glaaa rod with ailk ccV, 'until - It 1 strongly charged with positive electricity. Seventh-"else the allk thread attached to one of the balls,- lift -it up: hold gias rod about one-quarter of an inch from metal coat, and a minute apark will leave glaaa. which Is lightning and you hear a aound thunder. The electric'tv will apread all over the ball, saturating the outside laer o" molecules of the film of metal. Eighth I'ut aay the uncharged glaaa rod. Ninth Selxe the other ball by Ita thread with the other hitnd. You now have a auapeniied ball In each hand. Tenth Hold the charged anhete bv Ita thread with the left hand, bung it near to tha left aide of-the ball hanging from the ceiling. Bui d not let any ball touch any ether. Eleventh riring ball in rtfilit hand close to right aide of auscended ball at a dia tance of. any. one-quarter of an inch. Then there will occur one of the moat remarkable thinga known to modern nan. The nsturhl electricity In the coat of the hanging ball will be Instantly Sep tra ted into two kind, positive and nega tive, by II. e Inscrutable proceea of Induc tion, the action of a tone through th air-that la. the charge of positive in the coat of the left-hand ball separatee the quieeoent or neutral electricity In H e hanging Insulated ball. But the negative part In the hanging ball la. attracted to It lert aide by the positive In the ball In the left hand; 'and the positive Is re pelled to the right aide. Twellth Bring ball by Its thread that Is In the right hand up to within one quarter of an Inch of right aide of sus pended ball, and all of the positive in the swinging ball will flash Into the coat on the right hand ball. 1 Thirteenth Hemove both halle, place them on a table anywhere, and leave the ball atlll hanging from the celling. It la charged throughout on the ex ereme external layer of molecules of metal with negative electricity. Or if the flrat ball, I. e., one In left hand, had or iginally been charged negatively, then hanging sphere would be endowed with a positive charge,' the oppoalte having been removed by ball In right hand. Tie a string .to a lump of coal, atone anything; hold it up and carry It by the hanging ball, at a short distance. Then the eye of man will aee the exact cauee of rotation. The atone or atlck will turn on an axis of rotation. For the side near est the ball will be attractod . more atrongly than the opposite, and the dif ference causes rotation. The earth revolves around the eun, and the cause haa been sought for centuries. First Make a dot on paper and call It the center of the aun. anywhere In space deep. Second At any distance make another and call it the center of the earth, and Imagine the two bodies to be dlBtant a. million, billion, trillion or quadrillion miles apart. Then gravitation, providing both bod lea are at abaolute rest, will cauae them to approach and collide with great force. But. If either or both are In motion in, any direction, except on an exact straight line between, they will ap proach, and both revolve around a very remarkable point In between their cen tersnamely, their one common center of gravity. Let the movement of the minute speak, the earth be watched. When trying to to pass the aun at any distance, a time must come when a straight line drawn from the center of the earth to the cen ter of the sun must make an exact right angle to-4he direction of the earth'a mo tion. Now, If the earth haa fallen far enough to develop centrifugal tendency to just balance the attraction of the aun at instant of time of the right angle, then the earth wllj move around the sun In a true circle for all time, unless some outside force dlaturba It. If the earth has fallen too far, Its speed at the angle will be too rapid and It will paaa beyond and move around the aun on an ellipse. If the speed is greater, it will pass on a parabola or hyperbola, aay goodby, and never return, a la tramp cometa. And these are origins of rotations on axes and revolutions on orbits. 11 H Girls and Graft H ji By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. "Won't you write an article on the girl who take clothing and money front men? I caught one of my alstera accepting money for clothe from a man recently. Mother and the right kind of brother would welcome uch an article., and It would have a good Influence on girl. I aru sure. Many . ao-alled 'nice' girla niuke a practice of doing thia. Won't ' yd i talk to them?" wrltea "A Brother of Four Glrla." Never can thla be aaid too emphatically or too often: No arlf-reapecting girl takea money from men to whom aha la not bound by tie of kinship or legal bonds. From husband, brother, uncle, guar dian, aa well as father, a woman ma ! accept money to pay for the necessities of life. If she accepts assistance from a man who doe tint stand In auch cloae relationship, aho Is going deeply Into a debt that she must be prepared to pay some day. Of course she never thinks of that. She never consldera that all human eoclety la baaed upon gle and take, upon Indebtedness and payment, upon the basis "for value received. I promise to pay." Tne glrla who accept money or clothing or valuable gifts from the men of their acquaintance fall into these claaaifica tiona: The girl who la so driven by neces sity that ah accepts help in deeperatlon and without measuring the consequences, the girt who la atruggllng to get ahead and feela that aha la aure to win auccea and be able to repay: the girl who la fond of pretty thinga and takea them as her due with no Idea of ever repaying or rewarding the donor beyond a "thank you." a aweet amile; and gracing hla gifts with ker prettineaa and charre; and the girl who la so desperately fond of luxury and ease that aha will pay aay price of character rather than labor for what ahe wanta. For. thla laat class of woman society haa a bitter name, and life haa an even more bitter price that it will exact for her wickedness and folly. It la to the other three classes that I am talking. The girl of 'class No. I Is desperately foolish and unthinking. Let her merely consider the simple rule of business upon which all human intercourse la. run for all we get. we pay. Now what can you pay in return for the favora you accept? Even if ou fall Into the second classi fication and think you can some day repay, how will you meet your creditor f he become Insistent that you owe him gratitude and subservience In return for what you have accepted? How can you meet the sneer of the people wo think you fall into the fourth classification? How can you be aure that you won't be driven over the eilge of the precipice by an exacting creditor? Now let ua suppose you belong to the great third claae the class of "grafters." There are many women who have this attitude of calm acceptance who believe that men are born to support women, to do favora for them, to give of their strength and substance and receive In nturn only graceful gratitude. The form of feminine graft that leads tohe acceptance of favora from men cannot get away from the principle , of payment . for favora. The girl who ac cepta favora from a .nan and usea him aa a rung of a ladder by which to climb la making for herself a contemptible character, a bad reputation and a cruel enemy when the man wake to the fact that' he haa been uaed and then cast aside. My dear girla, you have to pay for what you get-eomhow. Of ail danger- ! ous way I trifle with your reputation, aooe la woree laaa taking money frost men. The world wjP question your character it wilt wonder- how you are paying. And the man will wonder, too how you Intend to pay. In hla heart you plant a doubt of your delicacy and fine- nee. , In your own nature yo'i make a lack of -reserve and self-respect. And some day you will have to pay. You can't get away from the debt you areincurrlng. You will have to face It It may be that the man you really love will hear of what you have done and doubt you. It may be that you will be shunned by the people you want to know. It may be that the man to whom you are Indebted .will make aome cruel de mand that you do not know how to meet It may be that you will find your own character weakened by your principle of graft which you will find to be a sad lack of principle. But however you pay, you will find that your debt haa drawn Interest at a cruel rate. And you will have to pay far, far more than the little fripperies you got through unearned and undeserved favora went ever worth. Don't do it. girls. Wear laat year's dreaae and shoes run down at the heela. go without your lunches and walk to and from your work. Youth will enable you to endure and outlive all these things. But taking noney from men la a draft against your youth and your happlnesa. ilKin't draw It. Don't accept gifts of value or money or clothing from men who are not related to you. Rather tsssg Kaow. Teacher-Tommle, paraphrase "the cool I en rose." Tomiuie The Boston girl stood up Jutl'e. Laat Wr4a. A poor man died. Homeone asked what Lis la a I worua were, and a f r end replied: "He had no laat word, ilia wife was wits hum to the en. . . By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. Such is the name that has been given to the massacre of the 4.v) Syrians at Joppa, on the "th of March, 1TW. The Joppa alatighter is beyond question oneofthemost horrlhlo things in Napolenn'a history. To order 4,000 pris oners of w-ar to be taken out and shot In cold blord comes very near being tha very acme cf human atrocity and cruelty. But upon the prin ciple that we are bound to "rive even the devil his due," we should try to be ay Just aa poftalble toward tho man who gave that terrible order. The facts sre as follows: The French were ahort of provisions, which meant that to feed the prisoners waa to starve themselves; to release the prisoners waa to add to the strength of the enemy; to send the prisoners to Kgpyt under guard would have taken from them the force they could not afford to spare; to embark the prisoners waa Impoeslble: to take the prisoners along with them was equally out of the question, since there m was nothinc to feed them with. The council called by Napoleon, after de bating the matter for two or three days, voted to kill them. It was this tlecisior that Napoleon ratified In his order. From every moral and humanitarian standpoint the order wa wrong, but Joinlnl, the great authority on matters military, says that it was Justified hy the laws of war. The training of the . artillery on the Ice over which the Austrian were fleeing at Austerlru, a piece of business In which thousands of mn were drowned like rats, was a ter rible thing, yet It was Justified by the rules of war. Exactly. And so we get hack to the fact that It was not so much Napoleon that was to blame for the Joppa atrocity, the Austerlltx horror, and all the other horrors with which history is so full. War is a demorsllxer, a destroyer of sll the fine feelings and Instincts of hu manity. It makes demons of and mocks ua when we cry for mercy and Justice. It laughs at the moralist and the humanitarian, and. mad with Its blood lust, goes on regardless of alt the pro testations of the better self. Glad should we be to, know that we' are Xv'nB in a time that looks with horror upon the brutal business of war, and that Is doing all It can to bring about the con ditions under which war will no longer be possible. School Clothes on Sale $l.o0 Boys' Shoos.... 98c $2.00 Boys' Shoes. .SI. 50 $3.00 Boys' Suits... $1.98 $4.00 Boys' Suits. . .$2.98 $6.00 Boys 'Suits... $3.98 r0c Boys' Waists 25c 75c Boys' "Waists 48c $1.00 Hats.. 48c 00c Caps 25c Bring Your $1.50 Girls' Shoes. 98c $2.00 Girls' Shoes. .S1.50 $2.00 Girls' Dresses. . .98c $3.00 Girls' Coats.. S1.98 $5.00 Girls' Coats. .$2.98 $1.00 Jersey Sweaters 50c $1.00 Knee Pants 48c 25c Hose 15c 20c Hose 10c Children to J. Helphand Clothing Co. 314-316 North 16th St. 5,000 Lbs. MILK FED SPRING CHICKENS. . . 16 3-4c taXiBlia,i Tg IVUI OSVSSJt PIG PORK ROAST ... ..... 12c rg Pork Butts 14 He Choice Pot Roaet ....14 He, 12c Young; Veal Roast 15c, 11c Young Veal Chops. ..... 14c, 12c Lamb Legs 124c Mutton Roast 7Hc Mutton Chops 12 Mc Mutton Stew 6c Sugar Cured Bacon. .... ,.l&c No. 1 Small Hams. .. ....134c Extra Lean Hams 17 94 c SPECIALS From 8 P. M. till 9 P. M. Lamb Chops .3c From 9 P. M. till 10 P. M. Pork Chops 14 He LAST CALL Umm IAT.H tar m. B wsiT.mr a. m oatv im vaswau Everything haa advanced neaVly double In price. We still hold the price down on account of this purchase. M Iba. Can. Sugar 91.00 With 1 lb. Tea or Cocca . or 3 lba. Coffee SI 1 0c can Corn So 10c can Pea. 60 10c can Beans Be lOo Peanut Butter.... 60 10c Baker's Chocolate So 10c Cocoa So Be Toothpicks So 60 sack Salt aa Prices Good All Week. 10c Mustard Bardlnes So 10c Corn Flakes 5c 26c cans Kumford'a or Calumet Baking Pow der So 10c Royal Bk. Powder So 20c can Red Salmon der ISo iRe hot. Extracts, any flavor .So 25c hot Pickles 14c 25n Preserve 14o Marion Jars Olives, Muf fed or plain 89o 48 lbs. best Flour. .91.85 Spaghetti or Macaroni, per rkg TVio Full Cream Cheese 17Ho Qt. Mason .Tars, rioa. 49o Thick Jar Rubbers. ,7Uc S0c can Sliced Pineapple for . . 19o Mall Orders Filled Promptly. PUBLIC MARKET VSHSSSff J!h We bought a carload of 1914 live Milk Fed Spring Chickens which will be on sale Saturday. We will dress to order at 1G We make' 4 deliveries a day 9, 11, 2 and 4 o'clock. Prompt at-' tention to phone orders. ' Fresh Dressed Chickens. . life Pig Pork Roast 12!4c Pig Pork Butts lSic Choice Pot Roast 15c, 12 lie Young Veal Roast.-. .. 15c, 11 He Young Veal Chops. ... 15c, 12Hc Choice Forequarters Mutton 9tc. Choice Hindquarters 11 He Ko. i Small Hams 1.1 c Sugar Cured Bacon .14 fie Extra Lean Hams 17f4c T 16 Lbs. Dcst Cane Sugar, $1.00 Best branda Flour $1.35 Golden Santoa Coffee, per lb SOo t-lb. can Chaae & Sanborn Coffee 91.0O COo grade of Tea. per lb 300 SOo grade of V4-lb. pkg. Tea lo tlerahey's Breakfast Cocoa, per lb.lso 25c bottle of Catsup ISo -Mason Jars of Olives, plain or atuffed for KinirsforiVs Olosa Starch, pkg. . 7 lba. Bulk Starch 10c Corn Flakes 10c cans of Pork and Beans.... 10c lara of Peanut Butter 10c cans of Deviled Sardlnea... 4 10c cana of Mustard Sardlnea. 4 3-lb cana of Pork and Beana. , .aao . . 60 . ,85o ...6 . . .60 ...So . . .5o , . fl&o .850 Spaghetti or Macaroni, per pkg. .7ie Full Cream Cheese, per lb 170 nvrn no vegetables. Closing out the balance of our car of Bartlett Peara, per box 9145 Fancy Washington Klberta Peaches, per box , 750 Maaon Quart Jars., per dox. 4o Thick Jar Rubbers, per 5o 70 Concord Urapea, 8-lb. basket. . . .ITVjO Fancy Colorado Cauliflower, lb... loo Large market banket of Tomatoes 90o 8 Rockyford Melons 86 Fancy Head Lettuce, head . . ,10o-7He ( lbs. fancy, large Kweet Potatoes. Ufto Home grown Fffg Plants, ach..7H0 Mall Ordlers Filled Promptly at Same Prices. THE EMPRESS MARKET Opp. Wool worth 5c and 10c Stor. J 13 South 16th St. Tel. D. 2307. r In all Weathers and all Temperatures No matter bow quickly the temperature rises, no matter what the weather, fresh, rich cream and milk arc always waiting for you if you have m Cottage MA lb LI Stariaseg I 'a w ! a J mi yoar pantry klf Cottar Milk meant milk economy and milk efficiency. It means uniformity, la fresh milk the food value is nearly all in the cream at the top and nearly ail out of the blue milk talow. 1 Cottage Milk it rich and creamy condensed under the mom aaaiwr coaaiuoM mat wkara ike am ftotvcm 14 aa Mitaat tired a 7 (ml fiuti! taut lawns link- a. a. aw ummh 7 Milk Without c CooAerf Tat InTwo Size 5 and 1 0 cts. At AU Geari Dealers AMERICAN MILK CO, Ouca(e