Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 30, 1914, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rill". ltKE: OMAHA. WF.P.YKKIUV. DKCKMUKK :!n. 1!M4.
S3
o
be jSg;!g: ffemc- Ma;
Why My Wife Left Me
No. 1 -TIip Man Who Was a Domestic Tyrant Tprant Tolls Now Ho Killed L
N
the measure of tho two generations of
women, and H'a cold, hard fact which
we men will do well to alt up and tske
notice of.
"I married a beautiful young woman,
with whom I waa head over heels In
love, and with reason, for she had every
quality calculated to make her, under
proper condition, an Idoat mate for a
man.' She was Intelligent and highly ed
ucated, college bred; she waa keenly alert
and alive, and Intereated In everything
In tho world; ahe had been In business
before we were married, and had com
manded a good salary, and ahe nat
'My mother
endured
her
persecutions
without
a whimper
or a
protest.
My wife
went
to Reno."
By DOROTHY VIX.
"The reason that my marriage waa a
failure." aald tho first man. "waa be
cause I waa the most despicable of human
creatures, a domestic tyrant.
"Oh, of course, I didn't deliberately go
to work to humble my wife's pride and
crush her spirit and break her heart, but
that's what it came to in the end, and
now that I've gotten far enough away
from the years of strife and struggle
that composed our married life to get
a clear perspective on them. I don't
blame her fur leaving me. It was the
only thing that an intelligent human be
ing with an Inch of backbone could have
done.
"Yes, my sin against her was the Bin
of Ignorance, of not understanding, air
most the sin of inheritance, for I treated
my wife as I had seen my father treat
my mother. I didn't have aense enough
to see that a new generation of women
has arisen that demands to l uealth
with on a new platform, and that the
arirl of today will no more stand for be
ing made a doormat of, as her mother
did, that the free man will stand for
being kicked around and downtrodden
like a slave.
"I was no more overbearing and dic
tatorial to my wife than my father was
to his. I will say that In my own de
fense. My mother endured her persecu
tions without a whimper or a protest
My wife went to Reno. There you have
proud and independent, and high spirited.
"Wouldn't you have thought that any
body with sense enough to bo permitted
to mam around loose In a community
would Have had sufficient Intelligence to
drive a woman like that with a light
hand, and to give her her head, knowing
that that was the only way to keep her
from getting restive In double harness
and bolting?
"But I didn't. I set out-God forgive
me to break her spirit, to make her give
tho obedience of a child to me. She was
never to question my august will, but
only to acquiesce in my decision. You
see, fool that I was, I was strong for the
archaic Head of the House business, and
determined that I was going to be the
boss in our establishment.
"I began by taking the attitude of a
little tin god. I never told mv wife a
word about my business. I never con
sulted her about anything or asked her
views or considered her taste. I simply
announced my decisions to her, and from
them there whs no appeal.
"Soon after we were married T decided
that I would like to ilve In the suburbs,
and I went out and rented a house, and
the first thing that my wife know about
it was when I told her that the fur
niture men would be arovnd to move us
the next day.
"But, Tom, I don't care to live In the
suburbs." my wife exclaimed. "You are
away at your business all day. I am at
home. Surely Is It more Important to
the woman where ahe lives than it Is
to the man. You should have considered
my taste in the matter, and at least
have let me pick out the kind of a house
I want."
"I have decided the matter," I re
plied grandly, "and that ends the dis
cussion." It did end the discussion, lmt
It drove also the first nail into the coffin
in which our love was to be burled.
"I also refused to give my wife an al
lowance for the house and her personal
I
I
OVP J
The Smile's the Best Doctor
nianvhf King Says So, and What's Moiv, Declares She Can I'mve D
DlaiK'he
Kiujj,
in a
photographic
study
of the
smile,
shewing
how it
lightens
uj) the
face niul
makes a
1eautiful
couutenuuee
more
lioautifu
The reciH
of this
popular
actress
for the
preservation
, of Rood
H'llltll
is one
which every
woman
can afford
and
should not
be so
foolish
as to
neglect.
needs, and forced lirr to come to me
like a beggar for every Mnny she sieiit.
wasn't stingy. 1 uic'n't begrudge a
cent It cost me to support my family
in good style. On the contrary. It was
a matter ot pi klo to mo t hut my wife
waa well drcKxed and my house as hand
some as that of any in our set.
"The only rcamin tliut 1 retried my
wife an allowance was because it grati
fied my vanity for her to give a visible
token daily of her dependence on me.
When she had to cuiuu and uol me for
a dollar and explain .lust what she was
going to do with it, lelt myself some
superior being, a source of blessing to
a lowly creature who was knocking her
forehead three times on the floor In front
of me.
"And I never sensed how thus humilia
tion was burning into the soul of the
woman who had been Independent, or
how pitifully mean and contemptible I
looked in her eyes when I took advan
tage of holding the pur-e to degrade her
to the level of a medlcant for the money
that was as much hers as mine.
"And there were other things. She
could never go anywhere without ask
ing my permission. She could not belong
to a club without I graciously consented.
She could not read a book or hold an
opinion, or see a play without I ap
proved of It. She could not have a
friend without my O. K. on her. She
was nothing but a slave, and at last
she did what every other slave with a
particle of spirit does. he rebelled. She
broke her bonds and escaped to freedom.
"The failure of our marriage was my
failure. If I had treated my wife as an
equal instead of an Inferior; if I had
realized that autocracy hns played out
Just as much in the heme as it has In
government, and if I had made of my
wife a companion instead of trying to
make her a slave I should not today be
a lonely man mourning his lost happiness."
I 1
If - ' .,
it : v I
f - :i:v.'. s i J a
1M is AG
' ' '.j
E l'.JS'f .1". J ' .', ... SX J .. . ,' , . t -L,!:
iei ."A '"A "V -x 'V . 1
1 m1 t t i ! . ? I
I V' , j J;-.'- 1 ' - I )
Land Prices and
Fuel Problem
By HLANCIIE R1N(J.
"uh.
Who is Playing at '.he Palace In
Papa," a Tabloid Farce.
Rhow me tho man or woman wliose
smile begins in the heart and Is re
flected on the face and I. will teli you
without asking that doctors and medicine
play only unimportant parts lu that
person's life.
The dyspeptic, the idle woman whose
only occupation in enjoying poor health,
Little Bobbie's Pa
By WILLIAM F. KIRK.
I asked Pa lust nlte what Is a Pick
latof. Why? sed Pa, I Jest saw the
word in the paipcr, I sed, & I want to
know what it meens.
A Dlck-tator, sed Pa, that Is a vary
Hmpel word. I am surprised to know
that you are not familyur with that word,
Bobbie. You ought to have lerned that
word long ago at skook
Well, tell the child what It meens, sed
Ma, befoar I beegln to think that you
tioant know the mcenlng of tho word
yureself.
Certlngly I know the meening of the
Word, sed Ta, & of course I will tell our
lltel son what It meens. A Dick-tator,
ced Pa, is one who Dlck-tates. Suppoaa
you are my stenograffer, Bobbie, & I
How To Get Rid of a
Dad Cough
t
A noaae-Made Kesaedy that Will
D It (talekly. Cheap aa
Easily Made
It you have a bad cough or chest cold
which refuses to yield to ordinary reme
dies, (ret from any druwrmt 2 ounces
of 1'inex (5U cents wortn;, pour into a
pint bottle and till the bottlu with plain
Krauulated aui;ar syrup, t Start takinz
a teasMnful every hour or two. In 21
hours your cougb will be conquered or
very nearly so. Even whooping cough ia
greatly relieved in this way.
'J. lie above mixture makes a full pint
a family supply of the finest cough
syrup that money could buy at a coat
of only 64 cents. Easily prepared in 6
minutes, i'uil directions with I'm ex.
'ibis Piuex and Sugar 6yrup prepa
ration takes right holU of a cough and
gives almot immediate relief. It loos
ens the dry, hoarse or tik'ht cough in a
way that l really remarkable. Also
quickly heals the intlaiued membranes
which accompany a painful cough, and
stops the formation of phleirm in the
throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending
the persistent loose cough. Excellent for
bronchitis, spasmodic croup and winter
cougha. Keeps perfectly and tables good
children like it.
l'inex is a special and highly concen
trated compound of genuine Norway pine
extract, not in guaiacol, wnicu is so
healing to the membranes.
Jo avoid disappointment, sV your
druggist for ounces of Pinej," do
not accept snytning else. A guarantee
of ! lute satisfaction, or money prompt
ly refunded goes with this preparation.
Ihe I'iuex Co, i t. Wayne, Ind,
am yure boss. I will say to you, Yung
man. take this letter on the tipcrlter.
Then you will take the letter & 1 will
dlck-tate it, & that will maik me a dick
tatoc. It doesnt say anything In this peece In
the paiper about a tiporiter, I aed to Pa.
It is all about a Mexican gentelman
named Hurty. It says that he is a Dlck
tator. O, sed Pa, that Is another kind of dlck
tator. That kind of a dick-tator is one
who tries to dlck-tate & gits a kick ou
the shins. Any time you want to know
anything, Bobble, Pa aed. cum toddling
to me & I will fill you full of wisdom.
By tho way, wife. Pa sed to Ma. isent it
a shalm that I am not down thare run
ning Mexico, lnsted of things beelng in
the terribul shalp thay are now. I have
always had a kind of a dreem that I cud
subdus thst stormy country, sed Pa.
What maiks you think so? sed Ma.
Beekaus I know those Mexicans, Pa sed.
I lerned thare ways wen I lived In Mex
ico City, yeers befoar I met you. I feel
that I cud go down thare now smooth
things oaver much better than the man
that is thare with force of arms. You
can rule a Mexican by kindness better
than you can with a ahow of force, sed
Pa. I used to rule hundreds ot them.
Thay called me a Mexican pet nalm wich
meens the Mighty Smile, sed Pa, It thay
used to stand around the corners waiting
for me to smile at them.
Moar likely thay called you The Big
Laff, sed Ma, & it thay was standing
around the corners it was vsry likely
thay wanted to seo you sum tune wen
you was sober & not smiling. I doant
see ware you cud do anything to put
down that terribul civil war thay are
having thare. You cuddent do half as
much as the yung soljcrs down thare
now.
Yes I cud, sed Pa. Them yung soljers
is single & I am married. You know
yuresclf, sed Pa. that a married man
knows a lot moar about civil war than a
bachelor. I wud go down thare & ex
plain to them that It is much nicer not to
fite. I would tell them to till thare fer
tile soil & live t die happy, not on the
horrlbel field of battel. I wud encourage
them to raise more ehlidren & Iras Cain,
Pa sed. & long after I wud be ded &
gone, all Mexico wud tell In huohed ac
cents of the grate whit man that raini
out of the north & taught thew the ways
of peace. Tnat is the kind of a Dick
tator I wud be, sed Pa. I get so excited
sbout It that my hed rocks back ft forth,
sed Pa.
Does it, sed Ma. That must be Reesoa
tottering on Us thorns.
Mysterious Rubber Tree
By GARRKTT P. SERVISS.
wm.4
n
The German emperor, it Is reported,
possesses a set of automobile tires msde
of synthetic, or .artificial rubber. Two or
three years ago artlfidul rubber tires were
in regular use on an automobile belong
ing to Dr. Duis-
berg. In Elberfeld.
it does not appear
whether this labor
atory rubber Is as
good as natural
rubber or not, but.
at any rate, the
cost of its produc
tion at the present
time is prohibitive,
from a commercial
point of view.
The facts above
mentioned suffice
to call attention to
one of the great
est triumphs lying
at the doors of modern chemistry. Not
more than the first stop toward that
triumph has yet been taken, but. Judging
by the history of all previous advances of
practical science. Its complete achieve
ment la only a matter c? time, and per
bapa of a very short time.
Rubber Is one of the strangest products
of nature. It possesses properties which,
until very recently, could not even be
imitated. If its full usefulness to man
could have been foreseen a generation
ago, it would have been regarded as a
secial gift of Providence, Just as it used
to be thought that the ' breadfruit," the
cocoanut with its 'in:ik" and other
similar "read-made foods'' of the tropics
were specially designed for the main
tenance of human being who lived in
climates too hot for daily work.
Whatever view one may take of the
theory that the earth was deliberately
furnished as a home for man and filled
with thintcs that would come in handy
fur him, it Is certainly a remarkable fact
that if there had been no rubber trees the
bicycle and the automobile would not have
been developed.
It was India rubber that made the pneu
matic tire possible, and we should have
to give up the pneumatic tire today and
go back to the Jolting locomotion of our
fathers in case the ruLber tree should
suddenly fall unless the creators ff those
artificial rubber tires in Germany or other
rhenilaU still more ekllful could greatly
Improve their product and enormously In
crease Its finality and decrease Its cost
But even the chemists would never have
thought of such a thlntr as rubber If
nature had not first produced it. And the
botanists, on their sldu are yet In a
qusndary over the question why nature
ever did make rubber, anyway!
A more generalised name for rubber Is
"latex." Iatex is a kind of viscous, or
thick and sticky, Jtlce contained in cer
tain plants, in addition to the sap which
all plants have. It flows through a set
of vessels of its own. Independent of tho
sap. In the rubber tree these vessels are I
la the inner bark Just outside the cellular
network that carries the sap. Any boy
who goes to a country school Is likely to
know what latex la, though he may not
know its name, for he gets It on his
hands every time he breaks a "milk
weed." India rubber is simply another kind of
latex closely related to the "milk" of the
milk-weed.
The botanists understand . very well
what the sap In plants la for, but they
sre not sure what the latex Is for, and
especially are they puxaled by the rubber
species of latex.
But however Ignorant botanists may be
concerning the uses that rubber aerves
for the plants thst contain It In their
veins, all the world knows exartly what
It Is good for when It gets Into the hands
of man. It not only makes his life far
more sgreeable snd luxurious, but it
helps on the material triumphs of civil
ization In a hundred ways. A few years
sgo a kind of shudder seisad the riders
on pneumatic tires when some pessimist
predicted the approaching exhaustion of
the rubber trees. It was thle that set
the scientists at work to see if they
could not make an Imitation of rubber,
while at the same time plantntiona of
rubber trees and plants were started In
various countries.
The best rubber Is the product of a tree
growing in the Amazon valley, and this
is known sa Para rubber. For several
years the export from the Amazon dis
trict has averaged about .OO0 tone.
There are native rubber plants of dif
ferent species in Congo, Mexico and else
where, while plantations of the true rub
ber trees are now flourishing in Ceylon
and the Malay peninsula.
There does not appear to be any danger
now of the exhaustion of native rubber,
out the demand la continually Increasing,
so thst a flrsUdass artificial rubber
would be a aother boon rom science.
and whose liesrt goes wrong the minute
she Is crossed in sr.ything. seldom
smiles.
Every frown and every sigh add a
tiny wrinkle or an almost Imperceptible
line to the face, while a smile does more
to eradicate the ruvages of time than
all the preparations ot beuuty doi'tora
who ever lived. Tho cniilc is the real
fountain of iierpetual youth.
The mun or woman who looks only on
the bright side of lite neve.r grows old.
I found that out ono day lust summer
when I went to cull oi! some cno de
scribed as "a dear old lady of ninety."
Of course I expected to see a kind of
animated fossil who would sigh feebly
and have aomcthlng to say about the
expected visit of the angel of death.
But when tho wrinkled face was turned
to mine I saw a smile that had all the
frexhness of youth, and heard a laugh
that was as Infectious anJ happy as that
of a carefree girl with life and Its beuu-
1k Kxplaaatloa.
fteorse Cohan, at a luncheon at tho
players club in New York, u talking
about a millionaire banker of hi, whoa
wife threatened to dWorce him on ac
count of his "ward," a beautiful churua
girl of 17.
"Home," said Mr. Cohan, In his quaint
a ay, "home is where Ihe heart Is. Well
some of our graui old millionaires are
s big-hearted they naturally have to
Lavs asvcfal homes."- Vwk Ulobe.
Advice to Lovelorn J
" By BBATSZOB TAXBTAX I
.ratllade.
Ileal- Miss Fairfax: Three weeka ago
I returni-l from a business trip In tha
wet and learned that during my ab
seiise my mother had suffered a serious
accident and waa nu mod by a girl
neighbor and her mother. 1 am g.iing to
return to the west shortly. Would It be
proper and mnnly for me to extend an
invitation to the girl and her mother to
Ilve with us, as my own mother needs a
companion and 1 will be ralleit away very
frequently? Would it also be proper to
give this girl and her mother a gift?
EI). K.
You must consider your own mother
first of all. If it would have her happy
to have these kind neighbors Join house
holds with her, ask them by all means.
You might very properly mskn some
little gift to each of tl.o two who took
care of your mother In her time of
need. I like your spirit of appreciation;
It shows the depth of feeling for your
mother.
Tale Hearers.
I'e)r M'm Fairfax: I am -3 years old
snd expect to be married poon. My fiance
lives out of town. Lately 1 found out
that the leltcis which 1 wot him are
opened by his family, wouldn't wont
him to know that 1 was told of this,
nor do I want to send any mors mall to
his home aildress. He always gets angry
at me when he finds out that I listen to
(that people tell me about his family.
ANNA II.
Co on sending your letters to your
fiance's home. Try to put In them noth
ing that you would be ashamed to have
other people to read, As a matter ot
fact tho tale-bearer who said that his
people opened your letters Is like all
gossips, not worth listening to or be
lieving. Get ready to meet the family
of the man you love with an open mind
and don't listen to tales against them.
Keep Hefaslna;.
Dear Miss Fairfax: Is It right for a
girl employed as a stenographer to ac
cept Imitations from her employer to
Spend a day on his yacht? He has ofen
askeil me to dinner, but 1 alwas refused,
liu is keeping company with a girl and
exKcta to be married this full. Can
you advise me what to do? It. K. tt.
I strongly advise you against a"-epting
Invitations from any engaged man, par
ticularly when that man is your employer.
You must not dream of spending the day
on any man's yacht unless you are chaperoned.
tlfnl possibilities before her, and I knew
that my friends were wrong, and that
this wasn't old age at all. but youth that
had endured In spite of the flight of
time.
One of the most beautiful and hopeful
mottoea 1 ever saw was "Hinile Damn
You, rinille!" which hung In a business
man's office. The man himself was
worth a million, but he still smiled, and
the result was that all his employes were
prosperous and happy. Kvery tlmo he
raised their wages or did something for
their amusement lie smiled, because h
thought It was such a Joke on other rich
men nrounl him who thought they were
getting Just as much out or their work
men for less money, and who were
wrongs
You can alwaya smile If you look at a
thing from the right viewpoint. The
young man Just beginning life who has
been discharged from his Job his first
because of incompetency should smile,
because the Joka is on the boss, who
didn't know a good thing when be had it.
Then all the boy has to do la to go to
work In earnest snd prove to himself
and others that his was the right way
of looking at It.
Tho girl whose more fortunate friend
has a new hst of which she Is very
proud-snd shows it and. which puts her
own last year's one. made over at home,
completely In the shade, can smile all
the envy out. of her heart snd at the
same time add so inuca real, wholesome
beauty to her face that her own millinery
looka quite beautiful to tha young fel
low who doesn't know a thing about a
hat, but who can be win so easily with
a smile.
When hubby comes tiptoeing in very,
very late at night, if wlfey smiles before
he even begins the splendid explanations
he has been rehearsing from the time
he succeeds in finding the keyhole until
he softly opens the bedroom door and
finds her awake; If rhe tells him how
glad she Is to see him. instead ot putting
him through the third degree as to
where he has been and what he has been
cluing, the chances are that the next
time he wants a littto recreation after
his duy's work she will le Incln.led In
the festivities.
let the tired buaiuess man. the ner
vous woman, and the sweet young girl
who Is sometimes Impatient and fretful,
all try my wonderful preventive and
r.iarvelons cute. It is very simple. Be
gin with a resolve to smile every time
you are tempted to a hasty word or a
selfish tliouuht. Give It u fslr trial, Just
as you would any other treatment, and
you will be surprised to find how you
will feel both mentally and bodily.
Of course, life cannot be all smiles; but
Just ss the sunshine of a summer day Is
all the brighter because of an oocastonai
tempest, so a little flash of spirit now
and then only makes brighter the smiles
that precede and follow it.
By KDGAR Ll'C'IKN LABKIX.
Q. "Where Is destined to be the high
est priced bind In the. world In tha future
of our race?" W. I.. t Chicago.
A. This Is a question of very great Im
portance. My emphatic answer: Every
arable soon re foot of land between the
I tropica of Cancer and Capricorn will ne-
come almost a valuable as present city
I lots
This brlt sround the earth Is twenty
three and one-half degrees on each side
of the equstor. or a band of forty-seven
irgrees width. Humanity In due time
must crowd towsrd the equator for solar
warmth. All of the surface coal will be
mined, and then deep mines will be th
only source of supply. This will greatly
increase the cost. In the fullness of time
only the wealthy can hope to use coal.
This problem of fuel must be faced.
There will noL be land enough to grow
wood for fuel and food also. ThS gunny
southland must sosr In prlo s so thst It
will be sold by the square ysrd or foot
K. notorial atinshlne will then be worth
as much as the precious metal Iron
the magnetic metal the most valuable
of all.
riiless science shall find a way or tak
ing electricity directly from the cosmic
store, unless the heat of Ihe sun shall be
msde available mechanically In solar
heat englnrs to run dynamos to generste
electricity, or unless solar energy can bs
trsnsformed and stored In accumulators.
I. e., storage batteries, to be surrendered
as flows of electricity: unless thsse con
quests ot nature sre msde by discovering
laws, the fuel ot heat problem will tax
the human race. Then the chilled mil
lions will go ever toward the south not
westward will .the "course of ejnphe
tHke Its way."
If the energy of the aim now wasted on
Sahara snd all other arid areas can
finally be conserved as electric heat.
Hbbt and power by electro-magnetic In
duction, the rspldly becoming fuel prob
lem will be solved. If not from sun,
winds and waves, running streams or
cosmic sonri's. then man must secure
heat in some other way when coal has
vanished.
Tills other wsy cannot even bs surmised
now. Coal and Iron consumed in the
manufacture of one Audacious dread
nought, if nil heaped up In a pile, as a
real object lesson, would startle th most
thoughtlc at man's awful waste of
precious materials. F.normously In
creased value of land must ensue in be
tween latitude 30 degrees and the equa
tor. , .
Houston. New Orleans snd At. Augus
tine are In the vicinity of th 30th paral
lel. Mexico must become by far the most,
valuable land on earth, and Florida, with
southern. California, also.
Q. "If a. solid metal Is made of severat
compounds and It ia wasted to find what
they are. and respective proportions, how
would chemists proceed? A -claims that
no matter what metals they are they
can be dissolved In acids and then an
alysed. B claims that to a certain ex
tent this Is true; but how can a metal
such as platinum be determined when it
cannot be dissolved by acids?" R. II. T.,
New York City. .
A. But platinum Is dissolved by aqua
regla, a mixture of nitric and hydro-;
chloric acids. No acid known to chem
ists alone will dissolve this metal, but
these two combined, In the proportion of
one volume of nlrrlc and three of hydro
chloric, wilt.
Q. "Kindly Inform me whether tha
same projectile propelled by tha same
power will travel farther on a horizontal
line four feet from the ground than if
projected vertically." Nat Boas, Ban
Francisco Stock Kxchsnge.
A. Fsrther vertically. Thus a bullet
fired vertically with a velocity of, say,
I'M) feet per second wilt ascend to a height
of lftu.3 feet; while if fired with tha game
speed horlxontally. four feet from tha
ground, will strike the esrth at a distance
of fifty feet.
Q. "If an automobile or motorcycle
maintains a speed of, my, sixty miles
sn hour to hold its momentum on a 30
foot saucer-shaped track with a T-degre
slope, would the same machines hold their
momentum on a mile saucer-shaped track
with the same slope, TS degrees, and at
the same speed?" C. R. Austin, Union
Oil Co. of California.
A. Yes. Momentum equals mass multi
plied by velocity.
Q. "Kindly inform rue ot astronomical
telescopes, tl) What Is th six ot th
largest? O If on of great sis could b
manufactured, would knowledge of planet
be Increased? (3) Have attempts been
made recently to manufacture , laig
onesT' N. W. Mohr, San Francisco.
A. Yes. Knowledge of all planets would
be Increased, and millions more suns b
brought Into view. - Each increase la
dimensions ot lenses In the past has been
followed by Increase In the number of
stars made visible. It ia not known, how
ever, whether there Is nn end to the stara
Knowledge Of these stars, however, can
not be obtained without th spectroscope
attached to the telescope to analyse th
light. No telescope alone can analyse
light and thus discover what Incandescent
elements emitted It.
Th largest telescope Is not finished;
they are at work on the 100-Inch mirror
In Pasadena, two miles front this ob
servatory in th valley that area cut out
ot Paradlne below. I can set th. roof of
the optical Instrument factory. Th en
tire sf lentlflo world is watching - and
waiting to see what this huge mirror wilt
reveal In sidereal daeps when mounted
on Mount Wilson, nine miles east ot
Mount Lowe.
Pfc ANDERBILT$oUi
bii iuan,vii.x
An Ideal Hotel with an Ideal Situation
WALTON H. MARSHALL Manager
e s
I