Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 19, 1915, Page 8, Image 8

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    T11K HI-IK: OMAHA, MONDAY, M'Rll, 1H, 1915.
8 &Zrttt&. jry
T, n G n
Some Queer
Superstitions
: of Love
Europe's Great Struggle
Will Arouse the World
To Much Higher Ideals
"Information?
11
By Nell Brinkley
Copyright, 1916, Intern! News Service.
&
By 1KKXE WKSTOX.
By DR. CH ARLES II. PARK HURST.
It li I fact that ought not perhaps to
surprise ua that In the sarae month In
which mm arc computing the coat to the
world of the blood that la being- abed on
KnMtin battle-
field they are a Wo
calculating the
gain to the world
In the acquisition
of higher Ideals, In
the broader rap
upon the doctrine
of the brotherhood
of man. In a more
earnest torch
after the . thing
that are true, and
In a deeper ex
perience of what
ever . la spiritual
and eternal. Uvea t a
auch aa are now
being chronicled
work upon the
hearta of men ', In
something" th him war that earth
quakes work in nature, which shatter
the mountains and lay open the seams
of Bold.
The soul is that half-asleep Vlnd of
thin that rannot be aroused Into full
wakefulness except by being startled Into
It. We read In the Hebrew scriptures
that l -e only after Moses had wit
nessed the strange seen of the burning
bush that he felt equal to becoming the
emancipator of the children of Israel.
So In the newer scriptures Is the story
of the war In which Paul was fitted to
become the chief apostle of the ohurch
by the dasxllng experience of the great
light whlcJi he encountered on his war
to Damascus.
There is enough In any man to make
of him a prophet and a master of events
If only he be overtaken by some Influ
ence penetrating enough to reach Inward
to the hidden spot where are closeted his
possibilities.
That la the philosophy of the present In
tellectual and moral and religious condi
tion of the world. It has been stirred
out of Its sleep and will be still more
thoroughly aroused than It Is now by
what the coming months have In store
for ui. Unsettled conditions make men
aearch for more stable foundations. An
English writer has recently made the
- statement that Rngllsh publishers are
now Issuing only 00 per cent of tho usual
amount of novels, and explains It by say
ing that the appetite of the reading pub
lic Is for literature that deals with what
Is real rather than with th fMJtous.
.All of which Is a symptom of the deep
ening of the popular consciousness.
The same Influence Is also affecting
the world religiously. Every Quality sug
gests Its opposite. If beauty render de
. formlty more repulsive, so deformity Im
parts a new charm to beauty, and th
very horror of th times, th flendlsh-
ness of them. Is Itself suggestive of it
opposite, and creates a longing and a
passion for "whatsoever things are hon
est. Just, pure, lovely and of good re
port." And th lesson Is being burned In
In a way unparalleled In our history.
Both here and abroad are evidenced
the preliminary symptoms of a quick
ened religious life. Peoria are praying
even while they are killing. It seems a
monstrous Incongruity, but on needs not
to be a great psychollglst to understand
how that can be. Men's souls are roomy
and ran contain Incompatible passions
without danger of mutual Interference.-
If on were plsoed on th planet Mars,
with eyes strong enougn to appreciate
the tumult that racks th city of New
Tork on a busy day, with the population
surging from north to south In the morn
ing and back again from south to north
In th evening; carriages, wsgons, de
Ill STERLING
LIVES A GIRL
Who Suffered At Many Girls
Do Tells How She
Found Relief.
SWHng, Conn. "I am girl f 22
year and I used to faint away vary
month and was very
weak. I was also
bothered a lot with
I emal weakness, I
read your little book
Wisdom for Wo
men,' and I saw how
others had been
helped by Lydin E.
Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound, and
decided to tryit, and
1 It has made me feel
like a new girl and I am now relieved
cf all these troubles, I hope all young
girls will get relief aa I have. I never
felt better ia my ufe'-Mrs. Jon
TrrxxAULT, Box 118, Starting, Coon,
Massena, N. Y. "I hav taken Ly
dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
and I highly recommend it If anyone
want to write to ma I will gladly tell
fcer about my case, I was certainly In
a bad condition aa my blood was all turn
Ing to water. I had pimples on my face
and a bad color, and for five years I had
been troubled with suppression. The
doctors called it 'Anemia and Exhaus
tion,' and said I was all run down, but
Lydi E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound brought me out all right "Miss
Lavtsa Myees, Box 74, Massena, N.Y.
YoansClrls, II oedTLii Advice.
Girl who are troubled with painful or
Irregular periods, backache, headache,
draggtng-dowa sensations, fainting
spell or indigestion, should immediately
seek restoration to health by taking l.y
' ia E. II&Lbatn's Vegetable Compound.
livery carta, elevated trains, automobiles
snd black specks mcssoring five and a
half feet by a foot and a half, all
steadily perambulating snd erurrrlng In
every direction between times, what kind
of sn Impression would It leave upon him,
with every object movliiK with a deter
mination that appeared sa tho'igh its
own existence and the existence of every
thing els depended on the turmoil being
kept up, and with only enough Interval
of comparative quiet between evening and
morning to allow the ferment to renew
Itself with unabated ferocity? The Impres
sion made upon him would be exactly
that which Is msds when we look upon a
live ant hill or a hive at bees. whire esch
little Insect Is tremendously busy, but
without any appearance of arrompttah
tng anything.
And yet all this miscellaneous and
complicated scurrying la not st all foolish
or meanins-less In the first plitce, It Is
In keeping with the general order of
thlnge To be stationary Is against na
ture. (Everything below and above Is In
stinct with the spirit of motion. It Is a
law of the universe. Its life depends on
keeping a-golng. It is the rule of th
heavens snd all the wsy down to th
minute atom, whose component elements
maintain a syrtem of infinitesimal revolu
tion like that of th wheeling of the
planets around the sun.
Motion thus Is otio of the fundamental
Ideas that, the Creator carried Into the
construction of th universe, so that the
unrest of the city is only In keeping with
the general scheme of things, and a
sleepy town la an offset against the laws
of good behavior.
And not only thai. It la th policy In
pursuance of which men and things, the
planets and the stars work, out their
destiny. In a hive of bees each little In
sect Is tremendously busy, but without
any appearance of accomplishing any-
ming. And yet It Is accomplishing some
thing all the time. Th full meaning of
Its unresting activity It may not Itself
appreciate, and mey not be at all evident
to th eye of the observer, but In some
way It counts In the summing up of
the general result.
It I In that way that we hav to regard
much of what looks to us to be our own
meaningless activity. Ther anneaj-. ,
b very little to show for each day's
exertions. We travel over a great deal
of ground, and go through a tremendous
amount of performance, and at th end
of th day aak of ourselves what It all
amounts to. That, however. It the way
w achieve cur destiny, for with us. aa
with th perpetually stirring honey bee,
ther Is mors In life than we find In It
ana more than w consciously put Into It
Do You Know That
Just a a deep sea fish, when brought
to th surface, sometimes bursts open,
owing to th removal of the great pres
sur to which It has been habitually sub
jected, so th diamond, fetched from th
bowels of th earth, la liable to explode.
In many Instances large ones hav
actually burst In miners' pockets or even
held In the warm hand.
There has been recently placed on ths
market a gun for sporting purposes In
which compressed carbon dioxide la used
a the propelling agent. Th carbon
dioxide Is contained In a small Inter
changeable case holding sufficient for
from 100 to WO shots, and lodged In ths
gun. 1 . ..
On civilian, and on only, has. a right
to pass through marching troops-namely,
a court physician on his way to a royal
residence. He can make even th house
hold cavalry open their ranks to him.
Mr. Kennerley Rumford, th popular
singer, is acting aa a chauffeur at th
front.
One bullet find a lodging In :
body, It can now be located In a few
minutes by means of th X-ray and
quickly extracted. "It la all don In a
fw minute,'" say aa expert, "rive
seconds for a wound In th hand, ..thirty
seconds for on In th foot and ten or
fifteen minutes for a wound in th ab
domen." '
"Th Marseillaise," th national an
them of th French republic, was written
and composed In 17M.
Bead it Ilere See
By special arrangements for this paper
a photo-drama corresponding to th in
stallments of "Runaway J una" may now
ds seen at in leading moving jiictura
theaters. By arrangement with th Mu
tual Film Corpora lion It la nt only pue
slble to read "Runaway June" each
week, but also afterward t see moving
pictures Illustrating ur story,
Copyrujht. Ulfi, by BerUl Publication
Corporation.
lYsorsti
June, th bride of Nd Warner, Im
pulsively leaves her husband on their
honeymoon because she basins to raaila
that ah must b dependent on him lot
suoney. Bh desires t be Independent.
June la pursued by Utlbert til ye, a
wealthy married man. fib escapes from
bis clutches with difficulty. Ned searches
distrautediy tor June, and. learning f
faly s designs, vow vengeance on tiliu.
After many adventures June Is rescued
from river plrstes by Durban, an artist.
Khe poses as th "tiplrtl ot th Marsh,"
Is driven out by Mrs. Durban and Is kid
naped by tilye and Cunningham. June
stapes, tries sweatshop work snd Is dis-
yoaaeseed by her landlady. Wye finds
une In he tenement huine and drives
Cunalnsham away.
FLfcTfcKNTH KPIHODK.
HAt last. My Love!"
CHAPTER 1.
At th moment that Blye mat June,
Ned Warner was aprtnrtiig up the stairs,
bis Jaws set and hi flats clinched.
It ws thus that Ned Warner bad, after
all hi weary pursuit, found hi bride
In the presence of Ollbert Illy.
Beyond th door th dark, handsom
man with th black Vandyk had led
th teautlful Utile runaway bridj t a
heavy men with thick lidded eyes and a
"Hello! Hello! Hello! riease give m
information. I want th email fat one
with the yello' curls, for I want some
thing very 'mportant! And only h
know. (If he shouldn't who does?)
"-Is thU Information? Listen. I
want pleas put ma on the wire of the
man who wants me, too. I don't know
his number. I don't know where he lives.
No, I don't know th street or the town
either. And I don't even know his nam.
Not even his nam and initials I What?
it at the Movies.
round head bristling with short hair. He
sat In a chair, and In tils hands waa
money. He rose aa Juno was led up to
him. and into her hands he thrust the
money. Then he smiled at her, whlU
tillbert Bly stepped Deck, suavely amil
me and stroking his black Vandyke with
his long, lean, white finger.
June sprang from the fat hand which
were about to be clasped upon her shoul
der and from that wide, thick ami!
upon th face of th heavy man and,
laughing nervously turned to Gilbert
Bly, who bent his dark, handsom head
abov her and spoke to her In hi low
voice.
Crash!
The door splintered and saw way, and
through It burst th wild eyed Ned
Warner, hi law set and his fists clinched.
For a second he stood bewildered by th
Strang light which flooded this larg
room; then, with an oath, he sprang for
th black Vandyked man. He clutched
hla flngor around th throat and, with
a savage roar, bore Gilbert Blye to th
floor. Th runaway brld uttered shriek
after shrink.
At the door downstairs there stopped aa
electric coupe, "'driven by a sharp fea
tured woman with a long- nose and high
arcbsd brows. Site Jumped out, and from
th dim hallway there 'cam a short,
thick man with a short, thick stub of a
cigar In on corner of hi mouth. It waa
th well known and Justly famous pri
vate detective. Bill Wolf.
"Oot olm. Mrs Ule." o triumphantly
I I I'm - mighty -rry. I don't know
what he look Uk either. I only know
one no, two things can't you get him
from that? I know that he' llvln' and
I know that he' splendid! And nothing
els do I know. He must hav been ring
ing for me, too. That la If he's had a
breathing minute to lean back and wish
that he might find the only girl ia th
world! Up till now I've been busy my
self. I've been growing and finishing
myself into the girt that la the best I
can do. I've been saving my heart and
thinking- and working- so I might be pos
sessed of a soul and capable hands. I've
husked. "Tour husband I right upstair
-with the girl."
"The viper!" hissed Honoria Blye and
dashed Into the dim hallway.
Bill Wolf caught her a ah started up
th stalra
'Not so fast, madam!" h called, and
laid hold of her arm. 'This way,
please." w
"But my husband! Th girt. June!"
"They're here all right, and they can't
get away. Here' your picture,, ma'am,
and here's your bill."
He handed her a larg roll of paper
and two photographs, en of Gilbert Bly
and one of June.
Upstairs ther waa a aoen of wild
confusion. The runaway bride, her
mother. Iris Blethering and the vivacious
Tommy Thomas war creaming In hys
teria, while the heavy man with th
thick eyelids and the man with the white
mustache and Bobble Blethering and half
a dosen other men rushed upon the
fiercely struggling men on the floor.
"My husband!" shrieked June. "My
husband!"
Into this tumultuous scene there rushed
Marie and Officer Dowd and fat old
Aunt Debby Juat as the man by main
strength dragged from Gilbert Blye th
maddened assailant who had sprung upon
him,
Gilbert Blye rose, feeling of his throat,
and for a moment he contemplated Ned
Warner wtlb dexed bewilderment; then
a flash of anger came Into bis cheeks
and hla black eyea biased.
"Let him go:" he yelled, and. thrusting
th heavy Kdwards out of his way, he
made a mad rush for the man who had
attempted to strangle hint.
It was huge Officer Dowd who this
time Jumped In between the two furious
combatants and. with the aid of hair a
doaea strong men, prevented the desper
1
been growing a merry smile so I might
win th. happy-habit for rood. Oh, I've
keen most busy Just living and rounding
out th angle ot mind and heart. And
now now I hav time to study on which
side my hair looks best parted and what
color looka best next to my face, so I
may please a prince.
"Listen. Information I don't know his
street number nor the town where he
lives nor even the color of his eyes but
pleas find hlmand put him on the
wire."
And say Information, cocking her head
and tucking In her chin, "aura, my dear,
ate encounter which would have ensued.
'My husband!" sobbed June, and tried
to throw herself upon him, but he turned
from her. "Ned! Mr. Blye!"
A hand was' laid upon Ned' arm Iris
Blethering. She had forced her way
through th excited throng.
"Why, Ned!" she called, shaking hla
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The new nrcleat ceoking even give you
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Jest pull s damper, and the ovea be
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OMAHA
there' been plenty a-calllng who are hav
ing their breathing-minute and thinking
of finding the 'only girl In the world,'
but they, too, are poverty stricken In
addresses and numbers and any little
thing I might nab onto to locate Heart'
Desire. Which one I It that' been call
ing that'a the one you're looking for?
I'm the one Mg information! I know al
most everything. And sometime I get
him! But I was born of Venus and
sometimes I fsil. Oh, sometimes I fall!
But I'll do my best and give you the one
who sounds like the one you're looking
for. Good-bye!" Nell Brinkley.
arm and looking at the eyes from which
the light of reason seemed to have fled.
"Ned, listen to me! It' Iris! Don't you
see? This is a motion picture studio!"
(To Be Continusd Tomorrow.
The Bee Want Ads Are Best Business
Boosters.
ia) i u
V ' .r..AitSISJ. liTSM
i r:aV4w2
There Is no step along the rose-strewn
path that Icsd.-. to the altar that Is rot
haunted bv Its own pet superstition: and
the nearer to the lovers goal, the mora
thickly these superstitions cluster. And
herein lies much of the charm of wooing
snd being weed; for not a step forward
can he taken without a dellphtful trepi
dation as to whether It will be lucky or
tho reverse, wise or foolish. It Is such
pleasing fears, such delicious doubtlngs,
that feed the flame of love, snd add a
greater brightness to its halo of romance.
Every maid, for Instance, knows that
If she marry In the month of May she
.m .... ih. H.vhnt what of all
Will lUirij l ur . i "
the other months of the glad yesr of
wedding? Which will bring her happi
ness, and which must she shun? Hap
pily she is not left to her resources in
deciding this crucial question, for love's
calendar has all been land-marked for
her guidance. She Is told, on unmis
takable authority.
When February birds do mate
You may mate, nor dead your fate.
, ..... ... V. .... wi n rl a hlnw.
II JtU wnrn ,.in,in ......... .
i .toy and sorrow, both you'll know.
.narry in April wnen you can,
Joy for maiden and for man.
Marry when June roses blow,
Over land and sea you'll go.
Those who In July do wed.
"And so on, until December snow fall
fast, marry, and true love will last."
In nil the year since June and Oeto5rr
seem to shine with brightest promise oil
nuptial bliss, and the day of haprlestV
omen are June 4 to October 8. The mald
who wears her bridal veil on either of
these golden days Is assured of all sweet
things In her wedded life.
Then each month has Its unlucky day,
which lovers on wedding bent will be
wise to avoid. After all, they only num
ber thirty-two In the year, so that is a
liberal margin for felicity. Thus In
Februthy. th. 7th and ISth must be
struck out of the nuptial calendar: In
March, the 1st, 6th and 8th; in April, 'the
6th and 11th; in May, the Bth. th and
7th, and so on to the 17th of December,
the last ill-omened day of the year. Of
all the days of the month, the th holds
least promise of happiness and the 3d the
greatest. Even in lucky June lovers must
give the 7th and 10th a wide berth, and In
October the 6th. ' '
Having chosen the month In th llfrht
of this good counsel, a crucial question
still faces the would-be happy couple,
Which day of the week shall It be? And
here none but the blind the wilfully
blind need go astray. Friday la admit
tedly a day to avoid the altar except In
Scotland, where It Is, curiously enough,
the favorite day of all the week. .Tues
day and Wednesday are full of promise;
Thursday has one conspicuously lucky,
If inconvenient, hour that before sun
rise; while Bandar, Monday and Satur
day are neutral days. The qualities of th
days ar fairly displayed In th following
not unfamiliar lines:
Monday for wealth,
Tuesday for health.
Wednesday the best day of all;
Thursday for crosses,
Friday for losses.
Saturday no luck at sll.
When once the happy day Is fixed, be
ware of changing it. for that way cer
tain disaster lies.
Household Hints
To remove rust from steel motaten
piece of soap and rub all over the steel
then powder and some bath-brick snd
rub well. Polish with a. clean dry rag.
To polish mahogany wipe with a cloth
wrung out In cold water, then rub for
twenty minutes with a dry cloth.
DON'T "GET
HOTMfi
' " F 1
over a smutty kitchen
range. 3-in-One keeps
nickeled parts shiny.
Makes top and lids clean
easier. Splendid, too, for
gas stoves. Makes keys
hold tight work rieht.
a uictionary of a nun-
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every bottle. 10c,
25c, 50c all stores.
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42 N.Broadway, N.Y.
am a '