Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 02, 1914, Page 7, Image 7

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    THK UKK: OMAHA, WKDNKSDAV. DKCHMHKU l 1'.I4.
Poet's Theme (
' Jil
The Girl Who Refused Him
By Nell Brinklcy
''PVrltit,- I!1. Inter'l. News Service.
r ella wheeler wiloox.
(CopyTljrht. 1914, by Star Co.)
Wby should the poet of then pregnant times
Be asked to sing of war's unholy crimes?
To land and eulogise the trade which thrives
On horrid holocausts of human lives?
Man was a fighting heast when earth was yooc
And war the only theme when Homer sung.
'Twlzt might and might the equal contest lay;
Not so the battles of our modern day.
Too often now the conquering hero struts
A Gulliver among LiUiputs.
Success no longer rests on skill or fate,
But on the movements of a syndicate.
Of old, men fought and deemed it right and Just.
Today the warrior fights because he must;
And In his secret soul feels shame because
He desecrates the higher manhood's laws.
Oh, there are worthier themes for poet's pen
In this great hour than bloody deeds of men.
The rights of many not the worth of one
The coming issues, not the battle done;
The awful opulence and awful need
The rise of brotherhood the fall of greed.
The soul of man replete with God's own force,
The call "to heights," and not the cry "to horse."
Are there not better themes In this great age
For pen of poet, or for voice of sage,
Than' those old tales of killing? Song Is dumb
Only that greater song in time may come.
When comes the bard, he whom the world waits tor,
He will not sing of War.
Mysteries of Science and Nature
Curious Results of the Laws of Motion as Applied
to Persons in Railroad Trains and to Those
Falling from Ascending Aircraft
By GARRETT P. SERVIBS.
fee "
. Kid 1
"A young man and I were having- u
dispute over, this: If you wr in a
train, and the train was going sixty miles
an hour, and you jumped into the air,
and It took you a
second from the
time you jumped
to the time you
touched the floor
again, would you
land as far back
as the train trav
eled In that ' sec
ond? I aaid you
would land in the
same place that
you Jumped from.
Please settle this
dispute. A. S."
This is, in its
various forms, one
of the oldest dis
putes that men have ever enraged in,
and. moreover. It U I dispute full of
substance and of educational possibili
ties. In some of the shapes in which it
turns up it sadly befuddles the minds of
those who have little or no knowledge of
the laws of motion.
The easiest way for the writer of the
above quoted letter to satisfy himself
that he is wrong and "the young man"
right would be for him to actually try
the experiment In a running train. If
he tumped straight up be would find
that he would land at the same spot on
the floor rom which he started, whether
the train was msklnr sixty miles or any
other number of miles per hour. The
reason Is that everything Inside a movlnir
, train shares the train's forward motion.
If the front and rear doors of the car
were open so that a torrent of wind was
rushing through from front to rear, the
jumper might be swept backward a short
distance by the moving- air, but other
wise he would come down on the place
from which he jumped,
If this were not so it would be perfectly
safe to jump from the side of a train
running sixty miles an hour, for If you
lost the forward motion of the train the
Instant your feet ceased to be connected
with it you would strike the ground with
only the force of your Jump. But In
fact, as sll experience shows. It Is not
safe to Jump even from a moving street
car, for the moment you touch the
ground you are hurled in the direction
the car is going with a velocity cotre
spondlng tothat which your body had ae.
quired while it shared the motion of the
car.
Scientifically, all this is explained by
Newton's "first law of motion," which
avers that "every body perseveres In lti
state of rest or of moving uniformly in
a straight line, except Insofar as It Is
msde to change that state by external
forces."'
In the case of jumping from a moving
train the external force of the resistance
encountered by the mov body from
the Immovable ground with which It
comes In contact. But If you simply
jump straight up inside a moving train
no resistance Is applied to arrest your
body In Its forward motion with the train,
since in a closed car even the sir goes
light along with the train.
If you stand at the resr of a train
traveling sixty miles an hour and drop
a ball over the edge of the platform it
will fall to the ground, and then im
mediately begin to follow the Jraln, leap
ing and bouncing: madly over the ties
until its forward action, derived from t'.ie
train, has been destroyed. If the height
from which It has been dropped Is sixteen !
feet It will reaoh the ground eighty-eight
feet ahead of the point where it left your
hand. If you throw the ball straight
backward from the train at the velocity
of sixty miles sn hour (eighty-four feet
per second). It will, neglecting the effects
of air resistance, stand still, and tho
train will leave It behind at the rate of
sixty miles per hour. But, of course, It
will not remain poised In the air, but will
drop straight down under the force of
gravity, touching tho ground in one sec
'. 3
Prof, i.mmimmJw- I
Little Mary's Essay
(Laughter)
lly DOKOTIIV MX.
'-V ,: - ..
they rad In th
Does be ever fail to make his moan in print, in the deeps of his heart,
in verse dusted with the Jewel powder of extravagant words, when a woman
cannot love him, calling her a "lump of ice?" Just because you, with the
torch of your ardor, and Danny, who Is always trying impossible stsnts and
things that he knows won't work, wltlf his careful bonfire, cannot melt the
freeze about her heart, that doesn't aay that there will not come some one
before whose warm eyes ber Ice will vanish like a witch cast spell! So rub
out your torch and kick out your fire, two purple besiegers, and go your
ways to other maids. But though your fire has burned against her frost
as futlley as a flame on a diamond stone, 'though you have found her walled
about like a flower in the heart of a crystal bead, don't call her a "lump
of ice." How know you how warm her heart beats, who cannot reach it?
NELL BR1NKLEY.
Making Your Own Home
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
"1 am engaged to be married to a man
who is a model In every way but one.
That one thing is that he doesn't seem to
think that I am like every young girl
who expects to get married and havs a
home of her own. He wants to live with
i hi iiurpnta and nee ma to take It 'for
ond If the height from which it Is dropped I granted that I am going to do so. I think
Is sixteen feet and remaining st the spot
where It falls, since the backward veloc
ity that you imparted to It precisely neu
tralises the forward velocity Imparted by
the train. '
One very Interesting consequence of this
first law of motion, or law of inertia, as
it Is sometimes called, applies to persons
young married coupie snouia live to
gether! in a home of their own. But the
subject simply does not Interest him,"
writes B. K. M.
And she lilts upon the fundamental
doslre of every natural woman to have
a home of their own. The homemaklng
Instinct is almost as much a psrt of
falling from hutftly ascending aeroplanes I womanhood as motherhood Itself. Given
or balloons. Such persons actually ascend I a tiny hall bedroom In a shabby boarding
for a briof time after the accident, and j house, a girl will find a souvenir fan or
might, by skillful manoeuverlngr, be re- i a draggled artificial flower or a battered
cued through simply decreasing the a- j photograph to decorate the place end
cenaing motion or the machine. imake It more homelike. Wherever you put
If the machine were eaeending, for in- ' a tru woman she wants a little corner
stance, at tho rate of thirty-two feet per : that she catt jnfuBe wUh the atmosphere
urconu ai me moment wnen the victim of home
fell rut, the latter would rise sixteen feet ,. It
How To Get Rid of a
Bad Cough
A Hasae-Mad Heated? tkat Wilt
D It dalekly. Cheap aaa
Easily Made
above the level at which the accident oc
curred before gravity destroyed his ascen
sional force, and there would be one full
Second during which he could be hauled
aboard by diminishing the upward motion
of the aeroplane sufficiently to keep be
side him. But, at the end of that second
he would be falling at the rate of thirty
two feet per second, and at the end of
l another second his rato of descent would
be sixty-four feet per second.
Man basks in this atmosphere
produced for him, but he has
If you havs a bad cough or chest cold
which refuhes to yield to ordinary reme
dies, set iron) any druggist 2hn ounces
of 1 inex (60 cents worm I, pour into a
pint bottle and till the bottle with plain
granulated sujcsr syrup. Ktart . takint?
a teaspoonful every hour or two. in ii
hours your cough will be conquered or
very nearly so. Even whooping cough is
greatly reiisved in this wsy.
lue above mixture makes a full pint
a family supply f the finest cough
syrup thst money could buy at a cost
of ouly 64 cents, tsmly prepared in 5
minutes. Full directions with I'mcx.
ims rinex ana nugar byrup prepa-
Kb
augii and
It loos
ration taxes rigut noiu oi a coi
civet slmost immediate relief.
ens the dry, hoarse or tight cough, in a
way that is really rewarkaMe. Also
quickly heals the inflamed membranes
which accompany a painful cough, and
stops the formation of phlegm in the
throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending
the persistent loons cough. Excellent for
bronchitis, spasmodie croup and winter
coughs. Keeps perfectly and tastes good
fiildren like it.
l'inex is a siefisl and hlgMv concen
trated compound of genuine Korwsy pins
extract, rich in gimiteol, which is so
healing to the membranes.
To avoid dikappoitMnient, aW your
druggist for "ity ounces of Pinex," do
not accept anything else. A guarantee
of abaulute satisfaction, or money prompt
ly refunded goes with this preparation,
lbs Jiuex Co., k't. W ayne. Ind.
Do You Know That
no idea at all about producing It for
himself.
Now, B. V'.. M.'s fiance has not the
same desire for a place of his own that
actuates her In the nature of things he
has to be true to tils sex and like com
fort and convenience, but not need the
feeling of possetaorshlp of his Lares snd
Fenates that his wife needs. It may be
that he thinks It the part of economy to
take his bride to the home where he has
always been comfortable and happy. Or
It may be that he has an Idea thst living
with his people wl) save his bride from
"tedious" efforts at housekeeping, lis
The fifteen-Inch gun. which is possessed simply hat a certain masculine obtuse
only by the British navy, can hurl a pro- j nets ss to the fcnlnlne Instinct for home
Jectlle weighing almont a ton as far as I making.
from ten to twelve miles. i But however kind and considerate hit
- I parents are, and however happy he has
A atented rubber substituts Is made j been In his own home, he ought to build
by mixing gelatine with glycerine and a a littlo "nest" of hi own if he can pot
solution of camphor In acetone and treat- j ,t,ly sfford It, unless his parents are In
big the mass with sulphur. i any w,y dependent upon his contribution
, . t , . . , ' ' ! to their household expenses.
In the heart of the Rocky mountains , , . , . ..
may be seen the mountain of the Holy I th" ,,r,t lh' old truism holds:
Cross. V.000 feet In height. It derive. Its ! There n,eypT w" "I' with
from uau ntl- rmi rm nn alri I two 'nlstrcBses In It Nor yet Is there
near th. summit, formed by fl.tures in ! quU rnom ona h..u" '"r s'ner-
the rock 1 1"" lo 'arry out meir mesis perrect
I lngepcnuenuy.
Now, the bridegroom s mother and
father will wsnt to go on In their own
home as they ha v. always done. And
the bride and brldegroum will want to de
velop their lives along certain lines that
will interfere with and be Interfered with
in turn by the ideals of the already es
tsblished home.
There is always a certain friction In
sdusllng yourself to constant assoc'stion
with a new personality. Bride and bride
groom must fit -their personalities to
dwell together In harmony. And they
can best do this In th. environments of
a home thst they have built with mutual
Interest and pride. If they go to live
with the family of either there Is all
sorts of additional strain In adusting
themselves to households that are al
ready established and running along In a
certain ordered way.
Building a home and planning to make!
It ever and ever more a happy neat gives
bride snd bridegroom a closeness andj
dentlty of Interest that brings about hap- ,
plness In marriage. Ixive snd liking are
not based entirely on caring for each,
other; caring ifor the same things plays j
its psrt. And in msking a home a young'
couple romo to possess something that la.
theirs snd that they shsr. with mutual
snxleiy snd mutual pride.
A little home of your own is a wonder
ful place for the babies thst you long to
have. Jn this nest your children grow
up In the hsppy freedom of childhood
thst you want for them, and you train
them In the way you want thnm to go
with no . Interference from any other
authority.
The little bride who has a home of her
own has a legitimate outlet for her ener
gies and Interests. Tho home gives her
things to do and to plan and keeps her
from seeking some way of "killing time"
In doing which she Is likely to an
nihilate her pesce of mind snd most of
the pesos In her vicinity.
Heal marriage Is based on 'home and
family. To deny yourself one may be to
lack the other. 1 advise sll young cou
ples to make tte!r own little horns.
engaged. Now, my fiance wsnl to
marry next year, but my parents object,
hecaupe 1 am I ho only and eldest daugh
ter, and , tli only one working besides
my father. They want me to watt four
years inpre, until my brother Is old
enough to work. My fiance does nut
want to wait, ami 1 siKike to iny parents
shout It, and thev said they would not
consent. 1 love him dnrly and Want to
luarry next year, but 1 am perplexed at
what to do. ANNA V.
t'nless your peopla sr actually In
need, 1 do .it think It quite fair that
they should sjik you to itostpoiie your
wedding for four years In order to con
tribute to their support. Would it be
possible for you to live with them after
yinir marriage and pay a little board and
so help them? Why not suggest this,
snd nlao offer to help your mother with
the hounework, sewing, etc., If they sre
In nevl of ssslstaiue from you? Four
years Is too long to ask a man and girl
to wait for marriage. Talk this nil over
with your pal-en's, never foi getting that
you owe tlmm a grave duty, but that
you. owe something slso to the man who
loves you and to your own self ss an
isTuividual.
I-aiiKlilcr U a noise like a hcotch hlgM
hall.
People can Inush. Animal, except
donkeys . that go hee-haw. can't laugh;
J The difference between felks and animate
Is that one can
Inugli and one can't
Mush. Tn -re la no
difference between
a donkey and lota
of people.
There r.re tmo
kinds of laughter.
One kind l where
people laush with
ou, and you love
them for It, and
the other kind in
where thy laugh
!at you, and you bat
I tin m over the head
it you are big
i enough and strong
: enough.
Home people laugh
; no easily that they
! laugh nt their own
Jokes and at what
I runny papers, but most folks have to b ;
jelxen chloroform before you can pull a
laugh out of them.
Also some people laugh because ther
Ihaxe got s funny bone snd ars easily
tickled, hut other folks laugh IwcauSo,
they have got. a nice set of tenth.
Uentlemen laugh a great deal mom
than ladles do. I do not know why this la '
unless It Is because ladies havs not got .
much to laugh about.
When a gentlemen laughs a lot of.
people ssy he Is a Jolly gopd fellow. bu
when a lady laughs much all the other
ladles ssy thst she Is a frivolous crea
ture, and thst they wul wsger trat she
Is no better than she should be.
It Is nice and respectable for a lady in i
ry, and all the other ladles speak well
of her when she does, but the most that
a perfect lady can do In publlo la to sml
a tad, sweet smile.
People who laugh a lot sr. awful
popular, When a man finds another man
who will always lsugh at th. right spot
st his stories he holds on to him with
hooks of steel, and when a man meet a
woman who laughs at his Jokes he mar
ries her so she can't get sway from him.
but I guess lie s sorry efterward, because
wives never laugh st their husband""
funny tales. They always look mi and
say, "You told that before."
laughter Is somelhlnff thst is like a
dress suit nnd a ball gown. Its for com
pany wear, and you do not put t on at
home unless you are giving a party.
When you go out In society you lajigh
a great deal of everything that is said,
but If you sat up at home nd laughed,
.. . . . I . 1 . n 1 . 1 l,Blih(in
sll ins iinio eoiiit5u.i7
for the doctor.
The funniest thing sliout laughter Is
th. queer things people lsugh at. At tha
theater they laugh when one mm kicks
snother. On the street they laugh when
anybody tla down. At the table they
laugh when somebody suys something
that g'ls somebody else's goat, snd every
body laughs st children until they make
them cry. I do not know why It la funny
to see iieoplo suffer, but people just
csrkle over It.
The way you lsugh shows how polite
you ars. There are some people so polll.
thst they laugh at the sume Joke a dosen
times, eetwclally if the one who tells the
Joke Is rich, and gives good dinners, and
hss an automobile.
When I am grown I am going to have
a Ittllgll lliei IB ll'illR w " - -
and everybody will Invite me to go
places because I'll whoop things up and
make them Jolly.
r
s-
mklm
if
M
T
A snow sampler and weigher for the
use of the Swiss Gletseher-Kommlaslon
The sampler is iwemy iwi ions aim
made In sections of five feet to facilitate
being carried to the mors Inaccessible
portions of th. mountslns.
No more novel method of gold "min
ing" has ever come to light than that
pursued at a deserted mining camp near
Wickes. Mont. It is the remains ef whst
was once a thriving village st the Oreg
on" mine, snd the sand used In plaster
ing the houtet rame front ponds rich in
gold. Now the' old cottages sre being
torn down snd the plaster carefully
smelted.
24TH AND L STS., SOUTH OMAHA
Quality HighPrice Low Not One Day But Every Day
Advice to Lovelorn!
li BKATmrra unrix L
A Utagkler'i Duty.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been keep
ing steady company wilh a young rnan
(or about one year. Itecently we became
6c YANDERBILToUi
A J.'tr- l r gr.
QjJurtyJZurtA t&reet eat dtdKtrk QfitonuA
An Ideal Hotel with an Ideal Situation
WALTON H. MARSHALL. Msnsscr
a
o Vour Shrisfmas
at This Store
hopping
aue Money
and
.ffill Bogs'
Other Gift
Suggestions
Smoking Sets, Cedar
Chests, Waist Boxes,
Bed Room Suites (in
-all woods), Leather
Chairs, Dressing Ta
bles, Dining Sets. Etc.
The are al
ways a most
acceptable
gift. Get our
prices on high
quality Rugs
and then com
pare them
with what oth
ors ask.
Mr. Man
There is noth
ing you could
give your wife
for Christmas
that would
please her
more than a
Home Favorite
Kitchen Cabi
net $33 value
$27.09
T.:
Do your Xmas shop
ping early. Goods select
ed now will be laid aside
for Holiday delivery.
Sco Our Now Daylight Display R6om
1)