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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1914)
3W j&eg!s- Heme Mp-I I i , I i - ff ' - i.Mr II 1 1 When a Man's in Love Signs and Symptoms New Modes in Furs Republished by Special Arrangement with Harper's Batar) By DOROTHV' DIX. , The third Indication of love is to be iwn in the man's attitude toward your I A great many alrls have asked me the family. If he look bored when papa question, at once the most Important and discourses to him about the part he took the most difficult to answer that ever In the battle of OttyMiurg, and mother confronts a woman, and that Is, How ; bemoan the trlfllmncss of servant aMrla can a girl tell I nowadays, and if he looks a tt he whether a man I In love with her or not? Tou can't alwnyn tel(, daughter, be cause men were de ceiver ever, as the old sons: aays. Also women are ao eager to be loved and so anxious to believe that they fascinate very man they meet, that they a a 1 1 y fool them selves In the mat ter. Still, there are certain signs and symptoms that the man In love mani fest which are pretty reliable guides. The first thing that I would impress upon you, daughter, 's to ray no atten- 'could murder" little brother and sister when they hang around, there' nothing doing. He's merely amusing himself. But when he hang? on' mother' and father's words, and bestows' monsy on little brother and sister, it Is) a clear In dication that he Is trying to make friends at court. ' A fourth Indication that a man Is really in love Is to bo found In his memory. If he recall.! every carelessly spoken wish of yours ur.J tries to grat- 1 tfv It; If he remembers that you wear vloletP Instead of rose?, and that you ' prefer salted almond to chocolate creams, then you may begin planning your wading dress. Only men In love remember a woman's desires. . Hus I bnnda and all other men suffer from I aphasia on this point, j The fifth indication of love in a man ! is when he begins to try to take rare of ! a girl. Av long as he lim't in love with t.oa to what a "m says, but to keep a ! h"B" th,t J", T" "T'J' ""2? searchlight turned upon tho way he acts. 1 l" "" , i, . . Likewise bear In mind that poetic and i t"?!' to mB rubf,r ' fluent lovemaklng is no Indication of i the state of a man's affei tlons. The abil ity to make love like a matineu hero show that the man Is full of words and her. and If she wants to kid herself hy nneumonla or dvsnenala it's none of his j affairs. Observe, therefore, when you go out with a man whether he Inquires if you have on heavy shoes and enough) around your throat, and heed well when hrt orders the meal at a restaurant! whether he presses a good, thick steak j and potatoes on you or lets you eat lob-j eter salad and Ice cream. U he lnslst on rational food, It's a sure sljrn that he's! thinking about your future doctor bills. The sixth indication of love that a r.ian gives la when he begins to tell you howj he hates boarding, and to call your at-l tentlon to how happy the Lovey-Doveys are In a little Harlem flat, and to ascer tain your views about whether two can't live as cheaply as one. Until a man really begins to think about getting married himself he looks upon domesticity about as kindly as he does upon the smallpox, and with the same ardent hope that he'll that he had much experience. When a man is doing the kind of love making that winds uu in a proposal to assume a girl's board bill for life he doesn't quote poetry. He gurgles, and putters, and threatens "-to choke, for if the most momentous moment In his life, and he knows It. The first reliable symptom that a man give that he Is har.1 hit for keeps Is wtien he becomes Johnnlo-on-the-Spot. nd wherever the girl goes he Is sure aa fate to bob up. Men who are not In love SLnd" who have to work for a llvlns; re rushed for timo. They have en gagement they can't break, and they are too tired to go to pluces, but while a man') in love he Juggles with time and finds leisure to chase the adored one. After he Is marrlei he will again get J never catch It, but when ho falls In love busy and not be able to slip away to meet his wife for afternoon teas or a lingering lunch, but while he's courting her he' Mary's little lamb. The second symptom of acute heart trouble that a man exhibits la when he shown an eagerness to adopt all of your opinions "instead of trying to form 'his down ( your throat Also he listens with rapt attention while you expound your views, and becomes Instantly con verted to suffrage, or the higher thoughts, or whatever else you believe. The only time a man ever has any re. nrect for a woman' opinion Is when- he's in love, ns thl I an add test to ap ply ttj hie affection . ,w 7- - , he becomes a rooter for the flrVslde vir tues, t Therefore put no dependence in a man's love talk until it begins veering around toward open plumbing and gas ranges and quiet evenings at home. Of course, there ere times when all signs fall, but, generally speaking, a close observation of the symptoms hereinbe fore enumerated will enable a young woman to diagnose a man's case and tell whether his attack of the tender passion I chronic and likely to lead to serious results or only sporadic and flirtatious. But never, never, never Judge whether a man's In love or not by his talk alone. The Unseen Universe By EDGAR LUCIEX LARKIX. A very notable contribution to the science of radiant-energy, radlo-actlvlty, ultra-Ultra-vlolet-llght radiation : and short photographic rays streaming In from suns and all light-emitting objects in cosmic space, ha Just been given to the great world of science by Prof. E. E. Barnard of the Yerke Observatory, Lake Geneva, Wis. The discovery by photography of two distinct tail or streamers to Delavan's ! comet 1 the cause of the publication of the Yerkes Observatory circular to air observatories. But only one I visible even In the largest and most powerful telescope. The two streamer are In clined to each other at an angle of 30 de gree. But In the negative on the highly sensi tive photographic plat the tall that i Invisible to the eye Is visible to the silver bromide molecules on the glass plate. The waves that affeoted the minute mole cules and arranged them Into an Image of the streamer on the plate are far too short to energize the nerve molecules In the delicate fibers of the retina of the eye. The fact that this streamer Is visible on the plate and not to the eye Is a bril liant confirmation of all of Prof, Samuel Plerrepont Langley's elaborate twenty two years' research In ultra-Violet and infra-red region of spectra -of our sun and U other sun able 'to send light enough Into the silt of the most modern tele -spectroscope for analysis. And Barnard' photograph prove every minute detail of complex discoveries In thl most fascinating realm of nature since Langley blazed the modern way and marked out field of research that are now taxing the ablest living tele spectroacoptst and spectro-analysls In all laboratories. For the unseen universe 1 doubtless more complicated than the seen. Delevah' comet 1 now In the northern constellation. Canum Venatlcatum. And Encks's comet has made its regular re turn and was faintly seen by Astronomer Barnard on photographic plate. It wa then, on Bepetember 17, In right ascension 1 hour i3 minutes, and In declination north 37 degrees i minutes. The fig ure locate It In the constellation Perseus. It periodic time of revolution around the sun 1 very nearly three and ene thlra year, but a curiosity about Encks's comet I that this time ha varied. I have seen thl comet a number of time. And then I have well observed Campbell' new comet coming up from the distant south. It wa first seen from the Cordoba Observatory, Argentina, South America, on September !9 In right ascension U hours 10 minutes, and in south declination 33 degrees 35 minutes, which point fali to the constellation Pisces Australia, the Southern Fish. On October 11, lilt, it was in the con s'ellation Aquarius, the Water Man Comet Campbell never caused a war. And an unaided-eye comet has Just been announced aa discovered in right ascen sion 00 hours 05 minutes, and In south declination 4i degrees; date of discovery, September 25, from La Crtices, N. M. I have not been able to see it, owing to fog and mists hanging over the sea In my southern horizon. And this Is Hag gerty' comet. He Is a professor In the New Mexico School of Agriculture and wa the first human to see It In the clear sky above La Cruces, N. M. V mm J? - )k I', v ji t'!'i j'" I JU M V ' mihii'J fir Mazzini, Prophet of Italian Liberty By OARKKTT !. SKIIVISs. Joseph Maiiinl. whose sorrowful and yet glorlotis career win ended by death forty-two yenrs ago today, did the Wirk. bfore tld Mortality ovrrlook him, foi which his country men and all lovers of Justice and lib erty the wor.d over will never cease lu be grateful. in the history of the struggle fur Italian unity three nnmes stand out fi om all the others Masttnl, Cnvour. Untibaldi M117 rlnl the prophet, favour the diplo ma I, tiiirihaliii mo siiMler. Mimiunl stood for the soul, the Inspiration; Caour for the statesman ship, and tltnibaldl for the imirtlitl fl.e and :ictuttl ritbting. teach of tlie imniortnl lrh was nece sary lo the r.Cf oiupi.hment of the grand work that lav tieforo thnn, ami It would he difficult to any to wh'ch of the thrve belongs the grenter mead of praise or lior.oi, hut it I.' irrtnin that without the prophet-soul of the mnn from k (lenoa, Italv would never Imve t i'oiiie a na tion, All action, whether In cabinet or on bnttli f lelilH, i horn of thought; and heforo any Kolld fuct co.nes there must come the gi-ent Illuminating. InsplrlniJ I ides. ; And It was Mnr.rlnl win gave birth to ilhe Idea and kindled the gmat burning ' ir.'iplrntlun. It wns Masxlnl who breathed : Into the minds of Italy's sons the thought of Independence and unity, and filled the hearts of Italy's sons with the deathless passion for freedom from the scoundrel who h:id so loim oppressed and degraded them, lie wss the fountain whence csmo the never falling stream of hope and courage unci the unconquerable resolve lo mln. Oiest was favour, great wns Mariba'tfi, but greater was Marslnl, who from h i over-trusting, ever-suffering oul poured out the Inspiration that nerved the itateHninn 1 in ihe cabinet and the Whter in the field. Anil In till 1 dny of democratic Ideals It i veil to remember that Maszint was fir.t, ln.l ami all the time a democrat, loving Ihe people, believing In the people, aril reach to trust the people to take care of themselves. The "liintty that doth lieilg- the King' wns to Maxctnl arrant nonsense, lie wns a lepubllcan, having no respect for kintrlv rule, and wanting only one form of government, that form of government which Is "of the people, for the people, and by the people," Il was glad to see Italy united under any condition, but rotild lie have had hi way he would have had a republic rather than a monarchy. 1 Boy Who Is Pampered By BEATUK'IC IWIKKAX. "My folks ren't a bit fair to me," suttl Donald, a god 17 years. "they seem to forget that a fellow Is only young once. They think that I o'lght to be In by 11 o'clock at the latest when I do go out at night, and tney want me to sit und study five nights a week. They do nothing but tglk books anil work to me. Pon't you think that they ought to let me have a grand good time so thai I'll bnve a hapny youth to remember when 1 am old?" Now, Donald Is lucky boy who hss beautiful home lind living parents. Hut he Is an unlucky boy In that life Is be'nn made too enay for him. Ills greatest trouble Is n "cuiflderatlon of the good times of which he feels that hn U living In Homo slight measure deprived. llo Is tintj compelled to go out Into the world and rtrugglo lo make his way to tho top i f the ladder of success. Instead he Is to be sent to Harvard and thrn wil come a few yen is of "polishing oft" In a world tour, and lifter that Donald will itep Into a business that Is ready for Mm and that affords him every oppor tunity for success If hn has the senso and energy to avail himself of It, Tho very best "good times" youth can have are simple, wholenome pleasures A tail In front and a long one, and a shorter one In the back, makes up a unique neckpiece of fitch. A bow of brown taffeta draws the high collar close to the throat and email perky bows of tho taffeta finish the long ends. The muff is a large one, drawn in at the ends by a' frill of the taffeta. A strip of ermine binds the edges of the black velvet trlcorne trimmed with a cockade of white gros grain ribbon and ermine. To wear in the afternoon while calling is this clever little Jacket of baby caracul. Though falling only slightly below the waist line in the front, thero is a panel in the back reaching al most to tho hip line and, like the front edges, it is bordered In skunlc. A deep collar of the skunk extends across the bark of tho garment and well down over the shoulders. The draped muff of the caracul is edged at the top and bottom by skunk. Advice to Lovelorn li Mr asATBicra rasr JJ Korgrvt Him. Dear- Miss Fairfax: I am n girl of IS. 1 have been keeping company with a voung man of 3u. He neemed very much devoted. I did not care for him at first, but finally grew t lexe h' dueei him to a girl friend, whom he now goes With, inn liu t.li in. . in, as he continue to 'phone and snya he would like to come uuck to me. ?nv mv runsent. but he never come, 'lease tell me what vim think nf him. cHieAoo aim.. I think he Is a fickle young man, who Is best forgotten. He seem to ho about as disloyal to your gill friend ho was to you. Just eliminate him from your life and consider yourself well out of a bad business. I th.it give healthy mind In strong bodies. Ttarrplntf In the woods and studying Ief and tree and bird and beast are country ' Rood times of which city youth knows ' little. Skating and tobogganing and go ing on lung bobsled ride re winter pleasures that are not enough cultivated. j Ary s mple outdoor pleasure that bring mi home with blood racing and eheeka tingling and glowing Is a real good time. Hut the ai'llflcial pleasure that Donald ' crave ilanolng In heatod cabarota, dln- ln and lunching with Billy little "Broad ray belles," being seen at the fashion able places w'th the "mart" people ara not pleoaures but fsvers. It is true tht we all have to experi ence on 1 learn first hnd from life but i we have to be prepared to undorstand what we see and to be able to get It real inetinlng. And books and school and the) higher education prepare the wealthy j youth even a the efforts of business and work and getting ahead school the poor ! man's son to understand life, j "Good times" aren't the fever that ! lorkes you loo sick of mind and body to learn your lift's lesson. They are the whelnsomo health-giving everdse of your youthful energies end activities that help you to grow and endure. j All sorts of athletic are to be recom j mended a "good times" for tho ple- tires train your body nd develop the de- sire to win, coupled with the glortou iiense of honesty that come In the fair play spirit of uur spurts, i Any outdoor rtcasi're Is a worth-while "good time," because It fill tba lung with clean sir and the heart with a Knowledge of nature that brings you close to the real heart of life. Heading the classic ought to be a "good time," because It fits you to measure lire In terms of what the great minds have thought of It. - Studying ought to be a good time, be cause it help you to exercise your mind o that you c an enjoy th! great 'pleasu r of forming a tew original conclusion about life. nut a whirl of excitement that I hera todny and gone tomorrow, with only a lioadieho and an unlearned lesson of nrglncted work In Us wake, I not a real good time for the petted Ponald or the working John of life, The Manicure Lady By VILLI AM F. KIUK. "Every year I pretty much like the Jaat year," declared the Manicure Lady. "I wa hoping that this summer a few guy would eome In here to have their nails did without talking my head off about base ball, but the great national game Is about tho limit of their conserv atory power. Tho gunt that juet went out wa howling himself nearly black In the face about Walter'Johnson. "It sem to me, George, that a gent must have a kind of aoft head to be los ing sleep over a ball player. He lay Johnson I the grandad pltchor that ever lived, and maybe he Is, but what of I It? Walter Johnson ain't no famous great! man just because he I a great pitcher. ' He ain't a great man like Mister, Boose-, velt, which can go away somewhere ( and discover enough new things to keep i the old editor busy. Walter Johnson ! never found no rWer running up a hill, i and If he pitched a ball twice a fast as he can now, he wouldn't be able to dis cover no new race of people like Teddy done." "Nobody ain't seen the new river or the new race of people yet," said the Head Barber. "Bryan said In hi paper the other day that Roosevelt's Idea of a new race of people wa a race that had never heard of htm. And maybe a river can run up a hill, but I want to see It first with my own eyes. All the rivers I ever seen had habit of running down hill." "Well, that ain't got anything to do with baa ball," said the Manicure Ldy. "All the talk I have heard lately has been about some Idol of the diamond. If the gent that come in here ain't ready to faint when the Giants loss and Pitts burgh wins, they are ore about McGraw letting A me go. It seems to me that a lot of grown up men could find a better way to pas away their time. "It' Jyt bad up to the house as It Is down here. Wilfred and the old gent re Just a loony a two ten-year-old br.ys, and they are all the time acrapplng about Uib two big lesguea. Wilfred is a great rooter for the Giants, and father want to see the Yankees win every time out. Neither onu of them know why he is so strong for bis team, either. Wilfred aid that McGraw spoke to him once when he seen him la' hi billiard parlor, nd the old gent like the Yankees on account of their name. The old gent I more patriotic than Wilfred, especially when he comes home nights, and he says that any team with a name Ilka Yankees ought to win. Anyhow, he ran t see np one else, and between the two of them the rest of us Is miserable most of the time. I wish the game had never been Invented." "If a great game, just the same," said the Head Barber. "I think everybody U interested In It." "I ain't," declared the Manicure Lady. "I wouldn't care If there wasn't a base ball park In the country." "1 heard you praising Mathewson the other day," said the Head Barber, "Oh, 1 mKht have said that ha wa good looking when I seen his picture in a tobacco al," admitted the Manicure Laity, "but 1 don't go and watch him pitching," "Ain't you a bit Interested In him?" asked the Head Barber. "Only In a way," replied the Manlniro Lady, "the came girl la Interested In any good looking gent. You don't need to look In the glass, either. That won't encourage you none." Common Sense Girls By MRS. Fit AX K LEAKNEU. Author of "The Etiquette of New York Today." Thert la frequently a temptation to girls tj be too Impetuous and excitable In their way of having amusement, too great an inclination to go to extreme In manner, too much of an effort to have a "good time" at the sacrifice of womanly dignity. Girls aeem to object to the word dig nity. They think It has a stiff, con strained, old-fashioned significance, anl they would prefer to avoid ft. They fall to reallxa that It la never old-fashioned to possess the true womanly qualities of molesty and gentleness, and the charm of a dignified bearing. A sul reasserting, L'ggresilv manner 1 alwy a sign of crudeness. A flashy, loud, boisterous manner I the came. A free-and-easy, familiar manner with mea I never ad mired by them. Girl need to remember that the atand i.rd of manner and cpeech which they net will always Influence men manners and conversation with them. A man give hi true admiration, even hi al- j ligiunc e, to a girl who Is able to maln ! tain her own womanly dlnntty. 8he ! gulns In his estimstlon If she kns how j to control and guile the tc-nn of a young man's Intimacy and conversation. Young mn of character, brains, good Sense and purpose In life prefer the friendship of a girl of character and womanliness, rather than that of the Illy. vln, light-minded girl, who make herself cheap by foolish flirtations. There 1 an Innermost Instinct in a man to re spect a girl. It I her own fault It a man tail In respect toward her. If he find that she docs not fulfill his ideals be is disappointed. A man never like or almlrt a girt who make herself conspicuous. He get very tired of a noley companion. The self -a ssorting girl, with Independent manner, who fancies she Is upholding her rightful place In the world by being loud In dress, manner and talk I sure to weary him. If a girl has common sense, bright con versation, and what may be termed per sonality, she will win friends worth hav ing. Khe may be lithe and gay without evej- being noisy. Although a girl may not be remark ably clever, or a brilliant talker, she may have a charm that makes one feel happy to be with hr or to have her for a (rlend. he may be gentle In voice aot manner, sweet' tempered, considerate, -kind, and if she has a wholesome sense of humor, It I the very aalt of life. 75 Pair Lace Curtains Regularly $4.50 To Be Closed Out Saturday && $1.96 These are Irish Point Curtains from our wholesale depart- , ment that have not sold readily, and we have marked' at this ex tremely low price It's away less than the manufacturer's coat to move them at once. Your choice of two patterns, while they . last, at 31, 00 Pfi P"lr or 9S Per curtain. More of Those Bargains in 1, 2 and 3 Pair Lots of Lace Curtains Just the time to ftt curtains for a single room at prices down to cost and less Odd pairs accumulated as our stock patterns fct sold out. l FOIt EXAMPLE: l Brussels Late, SI pnlrs, at.'.Sl.flS I Hfrl1" urtalns, I pair, at ...95 Lat Arabian, 2 urs., at 812.50 $H.50 Not Curtains, '1 pulrs, at 83.05 $18. SO ri,i IViint, pairs, 9I.U MtiH 1 luteins, 8 pre. t 6.75 81.05 Cretonne 334 Off A table of from 70 to 100 pat terns, 12 yards and less of each pat tern; regular 25c, Slic and 50c cre tonnes; to be cloRcd out at ONK- THIltD IlEDLCTIOX. Window Shades Dyed Opaque Shades, C ft. and 7 ft., at 25 30C Oil Opaque Shades, c, ft. and V ft.. at 40 wmI 4SC Have us estimate on your shades and rods, we make no charge measuring. , Base 'Burners, $10 Reductions The original Beckwith Round Oak Stoves the beet stoves made at reductions on each stove of $10.00 FREE With every coal burning Range suld a tt. piece Kct of Aluminum Lt-nsll worth $.00 Applies equally to regular or special priced Ranges. . Saturday Specials In the Basement $2.00 Aluminum Kklllet, SI. 48 No. 8 C'axt Aluminum Hklllet bells for 12.00 everywhere. 5ftc Aluminum Hauce 1'an, 20 1 One quart "War-Kvr" Aluminum llppml Kaure Pan, bbc regularly, 75c DuatlHM Mop, 4H The H-ll ('hnmtcaliy treatsil dustless nop; rKUiariy ).', Patuniuy, 4 so. The 600 !. tow 8o ll.:; U-li Oil Umervoir M(.) SSe 1.0,1 Aluminum 8auc Pan, C0 Three quart "Wear-Kver" Aluminum lipped Hauce fan, tl.OS regularly. I Or perforated ( hair Hrttts, 5 Two-ply Blrcli veneer, It-lnrh Ue, Varnished; usually sold for lc. lUtliroom Fixtures EveryUlIn for the Bathroom many buy leductioa. fu' r y. -A fOnU f( bfjg U CK A taljie lull of useful articles for (lie kltilifii u J I. cm.-. A few of a kind At I, UU miCE. Orchard & Willielm Co. Sfcffisfj?. i0