8 titt: tu:k: omatia. Monday, jamjahv 4, 1915. jug How War Will Aid Faith Strangle Should Proceed Until the Entire Thinking World Has Ceased to Believe in Fighting. Fever Must Rage Until Poisons Are Driven from Human System. The Mighty Hunter By Nell Brinkley Copyright. 1!15, Intern'! News Service. Copyright. 1914, Rtar Company. By ELLA AVIIKELfcB Wlixm. " r Like Mine schoolmaster, kind In being stern, Who hears the children crying o'er their slates And calling, "Help me. Master!" yet helps not. Since In his silence and refusal lies Their self-development, so Ood abides Unheeding many prayers. He Is not deaf To any cry sent up from earnest hearts; . lf hears and strengthens when He must deny. He sees us weeping over life's hard sums; But should He give the key and dry our tear. What would It profit us when school were riom And not one lesson mastered? Whst a world Mi famed Pandora's box were such mi." i'lr. As Ho in human hearts. Should our cIphIivh. Voiced one by one In prayer, ascend to (iiwl And com bark as events shaped to our wish. What cbaoa would result! In my fierce youth T sighed out breath enough to move a fleet. Voicing wild prayers to heaven for fancied boon Which were denied; and that denial bends My knee to. prayers of gratitude each day Of my maturer years. Yet from those prayers I rose always reglrded for the strife And conscious of new strength. Pray on, sad hcurt. That which thou pleadest for may not be given. Rut In the lofty altitude where souls Who supplicate Hod's grace are lifted, there Thou shalt find help to bear thy dally lot Which Is not eleswhere found. Many foolish people are saying that the present war calamity will Increase the materialism of the world and destroy Ita faith. Faith which can bo ao canity destroyed I" not and never ha been faith. That the old theology has received a body blow during the last six months is quit true. Put that does not mean the death of religious sentiment any more than the passing of crinoline or the hobble skirt meant the passing of fashion. Fashion stays ever In the world, while modes change. Religion re mains ever, though creeds change. The religious scholars, the physics and the seers have long known that this war muit be. In Msrch. 1U, A. P. Wnnet gave a lec ture to a large audience In Albermarle street. Ixndon. Ho said be had received a message from his Invisible friends of such an unusual nature that It seemed desirable to give It wider publicity than would result from being kept In his note book. The following Is what he related: "There was a thickening foros gather ing on the lower astral plane which could not fall to have terrible effects on the physical plane when It buret. The Masters wer trying to soften Its effects. The present German plan was not to annex Holland, but o attack Belgium. There would ultimately be a general war. In which Germany, Including Austria and the Turks would be opposed to Great Britain, Russia, France and Italy. The German emperor was the center of German hostility. It had soras regard for his English kinsmen, but was the bitter enemy of the race. Bismarck was working on him, though he was not con scious of this. Direct elemental Influence had accounted for some of his speeches. Ills second son not the first, who was weak, but the sailor was of the same tersperament as the father. The same Advice to Lovelorn A Family Quarrel . Dear Miss Fairfax: I have Ween es tranged from my brother for a year and a half. Will vou advise me bow we ran becumw reconciled without losing my dignity? The club to which he belong gave an evening affair, and since he whs registering officer he could not take nie, but gave me two tickets for myself and girt friend. 1 went upon O Impres sion that he would tske me home. lie paid no attention to ma all evening and since we were strangers we were both wall flowers. Worst of all, he made no 11- i 1 ' .'! ..,.1- II .) .il '"jr 'I'M'1: If you, too, are embarrassed by a pimply, blotchy, unsightly com plexion, nine chances out of ten. Resinol will clear it Just try Resinol Soap and Res inol Ointment regularly lor a week and sec if they do not make a bless ed difference in your skin. They also help make red, rough hands and arms soft and white. BoU br ! SriiftuW. For trill frr,wri s IMV4. 2t-ti, ksutul, BsluaofS, Ma. THE OMAHA BEE Till: HOME PAPER sr w " a-r i 1 .VSAl TW" .. I jAshcirn ed ofhrf bad complexion elemental forces worked tlirmmh both. The kaiser's scheme contemplated a direct attack on the conquest of England. He was not aiming at an Indemnity, hut he wanted to be crowned king of the British' empire. It was decreed that at the war's end there would be a great redistribution of European territory. Mr. Klnnet is a man of wide culture and large experience, and has, during the greater part of his life, been Interested In studying the profound phases of psychical phenomena. Ths fact that he delivered this lecture three years before the break ing out of the present war should cause the most doubting Thomas to realise the truth of the words. "There are stranger things In heaven and earth than are dreamed of In our phyloaophy." As well might one doubt the existence of a great ruling power in the universe because human beings break the law of health and suffer from typhoid fever, as to doubt Ood because war rages on earth. The fever must rase until the human SVStem rlda Itself of the nntanna within The war must rage in order that the numan race may rid itself of the last vestige of belief In war. However the family of the sick man may pray to have the fever arrested, it la for the a ood of the nuilrnt th.t it should reach its height and finish Its course nerora it Is arrested; however the advocates of peace msy prsy for peace. It Is rkxht and Just that the war should proceed until the entire thinking world has erased to bellove In war. Our prayers should be directed toward the Source cf Light and Strength, and we should ssk for those qualities to enable us to await the end. Prayer la a ladder on which the human mind climbs and conies in contsct with grest spiritual forces. Lt us pray. By Beatrks Fairfax attempt to take me home, and after 12 o'clock we had to go home alone. My mother was so Incensed that sne ma.le me give him the money for the tickets, lie became Insulted and since then he doe not talk to me. Fur the sake nf having cheerfulness and anUabtllty in our hotnii 1 have made several overtures to him but without success. Tie claims nm was nuni in not taxing us home, he cause he did not take us up end says he Is entitled to an apology. What shall I d0? MONA. Tour brother treated you with a great lack of consideration and courtesy. But since It was so marked he must have felt some justification. Tou are really In the right, so you can afford to allow for his viewpoint snd to make every effort to become friendly again. After jrou are on good terms once more talk It over with him very quietly and make him see that he showed no consideration for either your pleasure or your safety. Don't con elder your dignity, but think only of the real affection you and your brother have for one another back of tills par ticular disagreement. A "lstf mt Leve. ,.air."f"i V?tUs: 1 " 17 " called good looking, entertaining and lov able. 1 am In love with a man J and have declared my love lor linn on numer ous occasions lie has treated me shame fully and only comes to see me when 1 write and ask him and only takes me out when 1 foot the bills. 1 would tw happy to work to support htm until he an do better financially than at present I have a lame acquaintance of m wh sre considered more attractive and' yet I care for him and am ready to lay my love at his feet. Can you comfort me? t'LAKA M. Tour present methods must surely cause Slils man and any others who know of them to sneer at your weakness. I can not comfort you unless you are strong enough to simply root up this weakness out of your life. No self-respecting man would Permit a girl to "foot the Wile" for an evening's entertainment No self, respecting girl should do such a thing Htop your undlgntflod pursuit of a man who la such thst you ought to reject him, evn If hre came wooing. Neither you is parricuiarly worth saving, Jddglng by or own evidence. Hut Te, that If you will just right about face you may really be the lovable girl you ssy people call you. Nell Brinkley Says: The wisest hunters go after their game with the camera or the noose, bringing them home without broken skins or hearts. Most times lxve's a savage, and riots In butchery, winging his maiden-game with poisoned Law that Governs the Tides Iy GARKKTT 1. SEKVISS. "Assuming that ths normal tide, at a given point, rises four feet, what would It be if the moon were but half or one quarter the present distance from the earth? What If It I were twice as far? 1 Please give the rule, or law, which ; governs in such j matters. John Brereton. Wood I land, t'al." j On the assump I tlon of a normal tide of four feet. caused only by the moon, the height )f the tide if the i moon's distance distance were re ! duced to half Its present amount would be eight times four, or thirty-two feet; If Its distance were reduced to one quarter of its present amount, the height of tlie tide would be sixty-four times four, or 2G4 feet. I On the other hand. If the moon were removed to twice its present dint ante, the height of the tide would be reduced to one-ehkhth of four feet, or six inches. j while, with the lunar distance increased four-fold, ths tide would be only one-alxty-fourth of four feet, or three-quarters of an Inch, In height. Ths law underlying these things may be stated thus: The tide-raising force varies Inversely as the cube of the dis tance of the body whose attraction pro duces the tide. Observe that It Is the cube, and not the ! squsre. of the distance that is employed in the calculations. This usually sur prises persons who remember vaguely, from their school days, that the attrac tion of gravitation varies Inversely as the square of the distance. This law of "in verse squares" is perfectly true when we are dealing with the simple attraction unawn no oouies consitiered as whole, tor then the attraction must be regarded as focused at their centers of gravity. But tidal force Is a different effect; that la to say. It represents the difference be tween the attraction upon a nearer and a farther point of ths same body. In this raae the Inverse cube of the distance determines the force. Tbe total force of the moon's attraction upon the earth la measured by the mass of the moon snd the distance between Its center and 'he center of the earth. The mm always remains the same, but the distance may vary. If the distance Increases, or diminishes, the rone be comes greater or teas, as Newton Uemoii strsud. In ths ratio of the Inverse square of the distance. That Is to say. If the distance Is doubled, the force decreases to one-fourth, and if the distance is halved the force increases four-fold. But the tklo-raisir.g force depends not merely upon the distance between the centers of tho moon and the earth, but upon tho difference of the moon's distance from tho center and from the surface of the earth. If, then, the distance is either in creased or diminished, the difference lust spoken of will vary in accord with the nexi nigner power of the distance, I. e., tho cube, and halving the distance will not simply quadruple the force (2x2x3 equals 8). The tide-raising force of the moon (or the sun. which also raises tides) It in the nature of a lifting force exer cised upon the water of the ocean. In the case of the moon It amounts to less than one elght-mlUlonth part of the earth s gravity, so that It does not pull the water away from the earth, but merely causes tho surface of the see. to swell up slightly In a tidal wave. Important consequences follow from the law of Inverse cubes roverniiiK ih. height of titles. One of these Is that the tiue raised by the sun is leas than half as high as that raise! by the moon, although the muss, or attractive power, of the sun exceeds that of the moon many million times. If the law of in verse squares governed in thst matter, as it does In the caw of the sun's at traction upon the earth, as a whole, the tides raised by the sun would bo about In) times as high as those caused by the moon, and every seaport on the globe would be swept to destruction! Another consequence is that a great variety is introduced Into the range of height of the tides, since a mmniraiivi. small chang In the distance of the moon irom the earth produces a large change in the tiiul force. The moon travels round the earth In an elliptic orbit, which causes it to be sometimes as much as SVOO miles nearer than at other times, and when it is iiearest (particul arly If at such a time as its tides hap pen to coincide In posil'on with thosw of the sun) the harbors of the earth are scoured with an extraordinary Influx of sea water. Yet another consequence of the same law Is sen in the fact that the alwss keepa the same face toward the earth. This is ascrlbable to the braking effect of the- trenendous tides which the earth formerly raised In the plastic body of tbe moon before it had solidified, and wnue it was much nearer the earth than it now Is. Hecent observations show that the satellites of all the i,l.t. pear to have been brought Into this same state oy me lltiai action of the ni...,. around which they cln.ula.le. a -g darts (see a little tongue-lashing of Venus' to find ou; Just how bad they are) and leaving his coverts strangling with wounded creatures. But the arrow is uncivilized and now he hunts with the singing lariat and one of the faery-foals who can up with Its slender head, snap Its mane and canter seven leagues before you can wink your Why the CHAWiOTTK PERKIXS (JILMAN. Do you look for fashion plates, for cooking recipes, for directions how not to poison the baby that is what you usually find under this caption, but not here. Thes worJs are to call to mind the fact that this great world and all that is in it belongs to women ss much as men. It Is our world in full half share; not to divide snd manage separately, but to administer as a whole, together. All our previous history up to dste has made the mistake of assuming this to be man's world: snd, laboring under this initial error, man has run It all by him self In his own way. Woman meanwhile was carefully rele gated to a circumscribed region called home. This, she was told, was her world all the rest was his. She was the "queen of the home" and he wss every thing else. No, If the home really .was a separate world, entirely under her management, our story would have been very different. As a matter of fact, the home was his home, like everything else. Its size snd quality snd location, all depended upon him an J he ran hop up and change when he pleases tske It to India or Africa or wherever he pleases and the queen must follow after. Also this little queendom is run to suit the king's tastes and needs and desires. The queen cooks and washes for him and lives on what he gives her. The home belongs to man and woman both, of course; and the whole roun-J world belongs to man and woman both equally, of course. It Is time that the women of the world realised this, and accepted the responsi bility. Men tell us our work Is nobler than theirs. It Is. We make people. There la no nobler work than that. But look at the people we make! Are you satisfied with them? I do not mean your own children of course, they are perfect- Ixok at other people's children are they perfect? Are you satisfied with the appearance and behavior of the people you see about you In the street every day? Are you satisfied with the street, with the houses, with the city? Do you like the lend Isws of your country? Are you contented with the quality of the goods you buy snd the price you psy? Is this world the kind of place you like to have your children grow up In? "The home Is woman's world," they tell us. "If shs mskes her home happy all will go well." Here Is a new version. The world is woman's home If she makes her world happy, all will go well. Suppose men get up a war, which they eyes quick once. And let me tell you that It Is a winged horse and a hunter and a lariat-song that are to bs feared, if you are a comely maid with a way with you and you don't want to lose your new bat in the air behind you and find yourself with a tightening golden rope about your heart! World Needs continually do. Men fight by nature be cause they are males. Why should they? It is merely the old brute instinct of sex-combat that makes men fight; it is not a human performance merely male one. Yet. bo convinced are they of the superior beauty and service of the srt of fighting thst they would' deny us a share in the government because, for sooth, we cannot fight! Will some one please show the social service of fighting? "It defends the country." they cry. Defends. It against what? Against whom? "Against the enemy!" they answer. ' What and who is this enemy? "A foreign nation." they tell us. ' Never In the world. Never in all history did one nation at tack another. It was always and only the men. A nstlon Is composed of men snd women. A nation does not fight men fight. They have retarded civilisation from age to age by their manslaughterinK; strewing our green world with death and agony; wasting the wealth of gen erations in noise and destruction. The duty of women, when they wake up, rub their eyes, see that this world belongs to them. too. and that It might be much better managed the first duty of women will be to stop the fighting. In later aire, ages of peace and uni versal prosperity, we shall look back and laugh at this period, when women were refused their rightful place In the world because they were not the fighting sex. This is what the women need to realise; so long as men alone make the world as bsd as It Is, woman alone cannot make the home any better than it is. The real business of life Is to main- In-Shoots A shrew can look pleasant when out in company with an angel. A lot of snow appears to fall on the straight and narrow way. It Is better to burn money than save it at the expense of your health. The man who has been stuns once rsn usually appreciate loyalty when he finds it. The great diplomat usually stands hark and lets the other fellow hand out the diplomacy. It Is possible for one to be ntrir.ti without acting like a Fourth of im. celebration all the time. Self-made men always taks ths great est delight In complimenting themselves on ths excellence of the job. a Mother tain, reproduce snd Improve human be ings; to keep them all in rood condition! to see that the stock does not run out, snd to Improve that stock. There Is room for improvement. We speak as in a "feminine" view of life must be neces sarily narrow and one-sided. If it is, then, so is a "masculine" view. Tho previous assumption Is that men are people men are humanity and wo men are their females. Biological knowl edge is reversing this Judgment, showing us. that iu strict sclentlfio faot the female is a race type, the male Is a varlent of later introduction. We need not try to aet up a counter claim to ssy that women, are humanity and relegate men to the position of a subsidiary sex. That time has passed forever. But we can and should recognise the fact that women are humanity exactly as much as men, and have an equal interest and re sponsibility in human affairs. Even those of use who do work, who do earn our ows living, do not yet appre ciate or use the power that comes from independence. We look Jealously at one another as If we were still in the harem. Wc think only of our separata family Interest instead of our common human interests. We do not even count up our wages collectively and see what enormous sumi they represent when put together, ana how much more comfortable we could live than we do now. even on that money. We do not mass our forces, and team, as men have done, to raise our wages by the power of union. We do not study social conditions, find out the causes for our general poverty, and unite to remove them. The trouble lies in this blind scceptsnce of ths old talk ubout "woman's world'' being the home. The home is only psrt of woman's world. The point to lesrn-to learn thoroughly, and live ud to-ia this perceived fact that the whole great world belongs to us as much ss tn .n. Then we begin to exsmine the affairs in this world of ours and we do not ap prove of them We do not like the way children are treated. We do not like the way women are treated. We do not even like the way men are treated. And we propose to take a hand and Im prove things. They tell us all sorts of sweet snd lovely things about our power In the home. "Whst is home without a mother"' they say. "WcU-what la the world without a mother?" ii is wnat m n have made It Black with smoke (which need not be made). V w ej lllaaiQfJ T red with blood im hi, h ... . .. full of noise and quarrelling from ton to bottom. Poor world. The world needs Its motb.er-s.nd iu mother Is coming,