Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 26, 1915, Page 7, Image 7

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II II Tny TT TT , ? if cT o THW iS X
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Comedians of the Antarctic
Sir Douglas Mawson Found Creatures That Outdo Man In Farce
The Palm Beach Girl
Helping Husbands to Success
Hum Wlvca t'nn l:xil Mnko or Ilroiik ilir ltiislnc Cnrcrr of Men
A Penguin at dose Quarters ou an Antarctic it-p flop
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P .tv. , - ....... (- . I a
Vi fl I - ' 4 1 4 "! '
u - .-''Mi. " '
ft T " t iW x-?'
bout on ico cakps and imu;r lhrm.vt
making; grotesque l'a-e; they rl up
unit pretend idno a they pa"!1
flipper before their fa es; look of mil.1
iu prise are followed by ainnrra of In
different a their fellow InhaMtanta. the
H'fa'ntio foa elephatits, trj' to outdo them
at funny fa makina.
The aea elephant, a ponderous animal.
I m eaty-five ft lona ami weighing about
vono pounds, is also a lomedlan, hit. c hief
asset being a funny nosa; this resrmbles
tha trunk of an elephant, and with it he
arouses mora mirth than was ever p re
voked by the nasal append&ca of Cyrana
d Bnwerac.
Tna rate alfoi-t are watt had with
deep interest and graciously en-oured
by tha penguins, who stand about and
lth their wing-like flippers appear to
applaud. Tha penguins, by the way, are
the real ' head-liners" in the buaineaa of
laugh making. They are about three feet
tall and, when walking erect, have the
appearam'e of eiumsy clowns in full dreie
suits. In the motion pictures se-rured by
Pir Douglas and now being shown in this
city to illustrate his thrillinr elon' of
adventure In thl unknown land, millions
of these comical creatures are seen surf
bathing at their otn "Atlantic City," and
burlesquing foar of the waves. Aloiia
Lover's Lane they nnd their heads in an
all understanding manner, and their com
edy love making and mock gallantry out
rivals the efforts of the hret human fun,
makers.
Penguins, ar even more human in their
actions than monkeys and, as laugh
creators, they far surpass our supposed
a noes tors. They stand more erect than
the monkey, and from a short distance
they are very like old gentlemen, labor
iously making their way over uncertain
ground. While ungraceful and alow on
tha land, they are marvel of speed and
dexterity in the water. Their swimming
power are wonderful. Unlike any other
aquatic bird, they swim entirely under
en. l ummmmmm- i u
rrtJ I
ft' .4 '"V " 1 ' t m h w- J, -J
i ii yTrr.R'jffluvuH. i w
I Nib J IMBilift
Kj lHiKO'tllV UI.X. .I'V miking him physlcnlly comfortable at
. j home, if elic Ji Interexled In 111!" buetnvs
A few ilaya np a mun who. nl It, had nd nmbliicius for liliil to get along, he l
j roiic to woik In one of the Inru. t maim-I Junt ! eurn to succeed as the spark
fn toiies in thin count rv ns nn office hoy. Hre to fly upward
took Ills prat in the prrxirirnt'v chnlr u ! Hut If Ills wife l iiitlen by the society
the head of it He
; had rleen by hi
nV i-
: . a ! .
, .1 .V
I bus. If eh tries to keep the pac-e with
j people better off than they are. if she
, own ability from
the very bottom to
the very top of the
! ladder that he had
started out to
I climb, and he gave
i much of the credit
of his MH'cesS lo
his wife.
' Hhe helped nie
at every foot of
the way," he sal. I.
"Jhe was always
bhlni me biioatlng
me up, urging me
on. Khe never put
any obatarlea la my
way. For mstaore.
fr many years 1
spent every minute when I was at honte,
and not eating or sleeping, in studying
to try to remedy my defective education,
and to find out all that had been written
about tho partteclsr line of business that
J was engaged in.
"Many a woman would have objected to
this and demanded that her husband en
tertain her on aa evening, or go out with
her, but my wlfo always saw that I had
a quiet plat to study and that nothing
interrupted m. Mh even studied with
me when my interest showed signs of
flngglng. Any msn with that kind of a
wife Is bound to get on."
AVhlch Is too true. Any man with that
kind of a wKe is bound to succeed If he
Is not a hopeless clod. Let a man have
n ounce of talent, or ability, or one par
ticle of energy o ambition, and that hind
of a wife will pull, or haul or shove htm
Into some sort of surcern.
Every woman in the world (leKlres
above every other earthly thing for her ! rry lo 11,9 worU
ilisgs tier hH'haiul about to parties, and
fenils htm dull witte.l and sleepy to work
the net niorr.'.ng. that msn hss no more
chance of geiting on In the world than
a snow-flake hss to exist on a red-hot
Move.
The fr of the bill collector is the
deadly fear that take sy a man m
I courage to fight, and no man who lives
with that drad always hanging over
Mm can in In (he business struggle.
No man who has gnne to bed at 2 o'clock
. in the morning, even If he has been In
nocently playing trtdae and dancing the
tango with his wife and his friends, la a
mutch In energy or wit for the man who
haa gone to bed at 1 o'clock and alto
anses mentally and physically refreshed.
' Pomrstle unhappiness Is another handi
cap that will keep almost any man from
winning sui-ceys in life. The man who
goes to tils htisinese after having been
naasd half of the night, or from a
breakfast tahle row mlth his wife, goes .
with his nercis on eitsre, hU soul sur
rhaiKcd with bitterness ami his temper
st the boilinv point. He is in no condi
tion to deal calmly, disiiassionately anil
widely with any situation. On the con
trary, he Is irritabte, morose ami miriy.
Ills point of view la warped ami lie is In .
a state of mind In which he alienates
clients and throws up a position he has
been working for years to attain.
Uinr a man s pi'ot ts in life have
been blighted by a foolish quarrel with
his wife, and If women had no other roa- .
son In the world for trying to make their
liUHhanda happy they might find It In
the selflah ono that only the happy man
and the quiet and contented one can give
the full measure of hln mind and his en-
Mrg. John E. King of New York City, who ii sketched In n olnj
gown she wore a few nighU aso la th Royal Ponciana HoUl at
Palm Beach. It created a genuine aenaatlon by IU diaphanous
beauty.
hushaad to succeed. First, because it
realise her ambition. No ersonsl sue.
res that a woman ever achieves brines
the same thrill of gratification to her that
she experience when' her man la ac
claimed a big man among other men.
tteeondly. a woman wants her husliand
to succeed because It means the prosper
ity and well being of herself nd her
children. '
This being the case. It la passing strange
that the averaga wife never really aita
down and tries to figure out how ahe
can help her husband to be a aueossa in
stead of a failure in life, and It la mere
than strange that her vision la so short
that she cannot see how you must sacri
fice the little thin; of today in order to
gain tha blg'nhing of tomorrow.
Kor instance, take a young couple alio
are Junt starting out In matrimony. The
first five years of their life together sb
solutaly settles whether the husband la
going to be a prosperous, successful man
at middle age, or whether hn Is going to
en his days as a clerk In aotnebody
else's office.
If the young wife la willing ta not only
live well within their means, but Just aa
economically aa health and comfort will
permit. If she help her husband to save
hla money, if ah takes car of hla health
A woman who loves ber husband well
enough to i for hlni If nereissry often
makes her vrry love n burden that
rushes him down into defeat. Fhe
won't bo separated from htm for a few
njioilhs. so ho must forego some greet
ipportunlty. She cannot deny herself
the plraaure of his society, ao he. must
tslk to her of a night when he should
be sHidylng or working. I heard aa old
physician once advise a young one never
to marry, boraue every tlm he tried to
do tit reading that was neeoeaary to
keep up with his profession, his wlfo
would hare hysteric and declare that he
loved hla nasty oM books better than he
did her.
Other women blight their husbands'
careers by their Inability to understand
that Pegasus cannot be used na a plow
horee. Many a great poem haa been last
to the word because a poet haa had to
walk tha floor at night with a howling
Infant. Many a man haa wasted the en
ergy In hanging pictures, and matching
sample, and cutting the lawn that
should have carried a big business en
terprise to success.
Ijt women consider fives things ami
realise that oftener than they know a
wife writes her husband's price tag, and
determine whether 1m fails or succeeds.
L sHt' W 4
. "''.-;...,.M- f
&.r. J1 fej-iSV-rysr f yUsOUss
A group of f unmakers of the southern ice-bound vr astes as Sir Douglas Mawson caught
them with the camera.
By GARRETT P. SERVISS.
' Let not man imagln that he alone la
the purveyor of farce-comedy. No, in
deed, there are animals and bird who
apparently have a sens of humor all
their owa.
In that vast, new Antarctic continent
south ei Australia, the existence of which
was doubted, until the recent explora
tions of Sir Louglss Mawson proved its
reality, the queerest btrda and animals
In all creation thickly populate the froaea
shore and live their Uvea in an atmo
sphere f continuous romody.
Bi baly-yed seals lie lastly drifting
water and secure their food by catching
fish.
The powerful locomotive fore they
exert In the water ts shown when thay
land; coming from below the gurfaoa,
they project the meet re twenty feet tut
the air and alight en breast, wings aad
feet on the floating ice.
A fashion panorama may be seen any
evening la the rotunda of the largest
hotel In the world, the Royal Polnciana,
at Palm Beach. Here congregate well
known society women from all over the
country, augmented thle whiter by not
ables from Europe, who have preferred
tha American Riviera to the uncertain
ties of the present day fortunate at the
usual French and Italian winter resorts.
All the great gown builders of Paris
and New Tork are represented In the
toilettes that add color ami life to the
aaaainer show, bom women woar tha
new creation beautifully, aa though to
the manner born; while other proclaim
their recent accession to the ranks of
smart society by the lack, of harmony
between their parsonalltle and their
clathea.
Mrs. John C. King of New York is al
ways beautifully gowned. One evening
this week she wore a handsome frock
of white chiffon over eloth-of-silver, the . wcro needed for the lack of arm cover
latter giving a shimmering effect to the I Ing.
esfnl-dtaphanoaa fabric. Tha aktrt was Mrs. John Mutherford of Tuxedo, who
very full and encircled by four tucks of.aaa among recent arrivals, wore on this
graduated width. The bodice bad a same evening a gown of green-and-gwld
square deooUetag. and posed from right ' brocade mude with slight silk draperies
shoulder to the left aid of the aaiat- and train; and a bodice of ftaeh-celored
line titer was a spray of amall pink mallne combined with the brocade. A
rose. There were no alonves to speak notable feature about nearly all of Mivt.
nP iR Hnt(ful1v tnntiljtnrl mrmm nf th ' Rutherford's tollnttea la the abenee nt
wearer being a sufficient aplo;y If such ! Jewels.
Re&d it Here See it at the Movies.
By special srrangements for thl paper
a photo-drama corresponding to the In
stallmeata of "Runaway tune" may now
be an at the leading moving picture
theaters, fiy arranKmnt with the Mu
tual Film Corporation it la nut only pos
sible to read ' Runaway June'' each
week, but also afterward to ene moving
pictures lllustratuig our story.
Copyright, irii, by Ferial Publication
Cbrpureiiun.
aoreis
June, the bride of N-u Varnr. isa
pwlstvoly lvee her husband on thoir
honeymoon because she begins to realise
that sii mutt t Ui pi-ndent on him for
money, (the desires to t-e independent.
June is pursued by tiillirrt itly. a
aeaitby married man. (the eapa from
r.ta cluuh witn difiKultv. Ned searches
distrs' tedly (or Jin. stul. barning of
illa designs, voos veng'sme on lam
n taw Hutch of th Ititer Thtawee.
pocket and extracted a little chamois
bag!
to that was how one woman solve; her
money problem, and hr burning eye
told mlth what bitterness she had re
sorted to this hold step. Of more value
than her husband, even In his low pro
feKn. she was atllt his aupine Interior
in the rights of possession. What ahe
had was a gift from him, and, aa June
had heard him put it hlmslf. he gave
her what was good for her.
The woman' She aea coming up the
ladlor! The fugitive hidden In the attic
age stunaed by this tiaespeeted actios.
Noarer and rearer rawie the woman s
heal, and nesrer and nearer to the edge
of the traiaionr exisaded Junes strong
voung hsnds'
' lube' ' Mut ailired uneasil) "Oh,
Ushe'"
The a'ortisn ess iloan the laile like
a el
"Whet?
No ansaei The ir.sn ll si II s ia l
asieeu. Tne wonmn stood over him for
llberately poured a fourth of ft con rents
over Big Ben's face.
"Excuse me," she laughed as he sat
up. startled, and with the earn motion
Jerked a revolver from his pocktt.
He grh-inad at her sheepishly as he saw
the sparkle of mischief In her eye, and
n wiped hi face with his sleeve.
"Tou boas) It e' purpose," be speculated,
chuckllag.
"Think so?" ahe dimpisd.
Big Ben's eye brightened.
"I bellev you're after that shawl."
"Flub'd sell It." And she glaaead
serosa at tb slooning nxaa with viadie
tiv hatred.
"Take it," urged Big Ben. rising. "If
Flub sells it tell ma." He picked up tk
shawl and clumatly threw H around the I
woman's shoulders. Fhe looked down at
the shawl and toved wrth Hs long, dell- j
cat fringe. Khe took It off slowly and '
gave it bark ta the saan.
"Nothing tolog," sh aaUly dssel.i
then sne ssewiy tnrnnri and looked at her
hushaad and ealbed aoay. There as a
softening la Uig Ben s tyes as she walked '
sway, and then he. tun. glatxed st the :
tleepin Flub. iie strolle.t to the door
and am hack. Suddenly he stopped
The gtsam of something yellow hsd
suit,i his gate, lie waked lose and'
bent lo. Me pulled tks rlgaieite bokkr
out far enough lo Identify It and puohel
. a . i . k. u . . . , i ,
al.le. to inakt s ire f this, aod started "T "' " " ' V a a
for tl- I. We, -.., Half., .. rue. up 011 ' roaro-l
IK- ,h, . .-,-1 ..il -b sprsng up. die4
eiftiy to iKe end f Ihe hut sad htd the
t II.M-rKR III
Tl.e nomsn twluw acting Irangely
i rr- i asy lue rntialns of Ihe
break! al sr. I iw:t lte dish's I rum
lime Ij lime pse--4 a.ar t r tu
kead. brr.-l.rig on fcuHI'. and fir.au y
ar st. p. '4 I -!. Mm nl l.strard I
kis betl.iig b'l si e .r- her ba. sat
aeal aa'. !' sju (isian
fast ss raeW t in . .nipie rvUse-
. M, - i..- k . . ,r..i ir.s e .l.
grl iri Ta. -n..n f ar. I , . rv see saifl.v lo bee fcusaoAg sad m-!.:
little ihinwii bag h.a.lh S Urt.se !
Whlal Ike etove.
M.e m,m put l leg easy the I set of th
4n a beg SxaVUaly she elopsaal. luraed.
and a elua asaiie epread ha hsvr lis.
Her r t -irt-4 wra a sosr.twr f re ae
Where itst"
I saM grt p. u'i it.k." roare.1 Jl.g
Ha as Waa Jaae abruptly siuf ped saor
lag aad Juiops-d up He as half ay te
Ibo ladshw before be realise that this
as nut a ra4. and June, gfvintag kle
tntealtoa. reea goifily aad put her hsaus
et.t . .. i- tt.g iw. g .,, ..red'- 'T rtH,W ' ,h ',f !
a 1-. .l.en.r ..gareil kvei a-1"":'- ,tm '" - rb
The Strongest Man in the World
is only a baby when he lies on his back and takes orders from
a rebellious stomach and a trained nurse. The best food to
coax back the digestive organs to natural vigor is
Ihreddedl Wlheat
a
-'-v.
a food for invalids and athletes, for youngsters
and grown-ups contains
all the body-building . rmnr
material in the whole wheat
grain made digestible by
steam - cooking, shredding
and baking. The delicate,
porous shreds of baked
wheat are retained and
digested when the stomach
rejects all other foods.
Made in America
''' '. ""...' " ''.':'.'".' fi -sr
Tw Shree'e'sw Wheat BUcauts, Wsats ii
oe.a to reel or en.paesa, saresj wMh bad
oe area as. saaa a sasaglsls. asina
Isig saoal at a total cost ml e
Aloe aebooae with frtuta. TRi&CUlT is eh.
SewoeUo) Wheat Wales-, aa) a a loaot wash
bsMtar a eoft shut a. or a a swaUtate (eg
whtts ilawf brsad ear eswafeoe.
Mesi ooiy kf
Tb Shredded Wheat Company
J
rtegere rail. N. Y.
oasal esrf . f te boae foe talaetaa I
saws edsigM!) iJ us I I"!" I'ssMa.rg lip ptr .4VI Tb
rtb wee u!t oUs J Weal u-i sad
1M II--S 'I4 t S-l o' a slesri r titg l.tl
b as sw abea I sua tx k '
a4 iiss tfclt'b s I-! e ait
laagers aa ..a ted ai am t
H ,ia a -, to kr tae st
v tr l.i . r- er l a ' .p atl 4
I i L ('e-afnueoTr
rewris r
t
ar - r i - - - - -,,' - .. -. 1 1 - ill