Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 30, 1915, Page 9, Image 9

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    , TIIF, BKK; OMAHA, Flu DAY. AI'RHj :K), 1915. . 9
The Heavens
in May
"The Faery Woman" -amotion-
By Nell Brinkley q
t'opyright. ISIS. Intern'l News 8rvlc.
By WILLIAM F. RIGC.K.
She A ever Appears Wonderful to You, Even When You've Caught Her
f
If the resder hs missed seeing tho
t-loa conjunction of Venus and Jupiter
on the morning of the 15th of lat month,
ho will have another, although Inferior, ,
similar opportunity of observing the con
junction of Venua and Mara on the morn- t
ing of the 14th of Mny. Venua can
be Identified without difficulty In the
morning twltlpht, alnoe It haa about
fifty times the brilliancy of a standard
tn.r of tho flrot mejtultndo. Mare, how
ever, la not ao easily found. Its brilliancy
it the time being teaa than that of
standard atar, whereas Jupiter last
month, and even at present, haa a bril
liancy of about eight. Mara, on the 14th,
will be about a degree or two lunar
diametera north of Venus. The two will
ris on that morning at 3:6? and the
sun at t:0. eo that we will not have
much time to observe the conjunction
on account of the lenKth of the twilight.
The standard times of the rising, meri
dian pas.HRe or southing anil netting of
the sun and moon at Omaha for this
month, are as 'follows:
8CN.
Rise Noon. Pot.
12.21
12.il
12.il
12.)
12.20
12.20
12.20
12 ISO
12. ai
12.20
12.2D
12.20
1120
12.20
12. 20
I2.2
12.20
12.20
12.20
12.20
12,!
13.20
12.20
12.20
12.20
12.21
12.21
12.21
1221
12.21
12.21
I
MS
7.1
7.21
T.2J
7.23
7.24
7 K
7.2
7.27
7.28
7.29 I
7.30
..31
7.32
I MOON.
Tti.ie. Mer. Pss. et.
1 1(1 43 I 64 4 24
3
4 OH
6 10
0K
42
.:i4
7. .14
7.X.
7. .Hi
7.37
7.3S
7.39
7.40
7.41
7.42 I
T43 I
7.(4 I
7.44 I
7 .4 ". I
7.4
period
11.44S
Midn
1? ;us
1 IB
1 48
2 14
2 3S
2 67
S K
X7 '
4 01
4 21
4 :
r as
21
7 IB
x i:t
i
10 12
11 30
. Ii39
1.47
2.5
4.14
1 .
KM.
47.
11 oj.
12.12.
23 !..,
V 1 . n .
41
10 28
11 It
11 M
12 44
1 :
5.24
.Via
4.O0
4
6.W
, (tM
7
ft 36
.
10.
11.12
11.51
..
..10
..11
..11
..M
3B....14
M ...13
27. ...1
4.64 Midn.
6.42 12 22.
S.2K
7.14
7B
8.47
2
10. M
11.:.
.17
..IS
..1
..20
..n
..12
..23
..26
8.16 Midn
.2S U41
10.27 1 40
U.2G 2 64
between
12 61
l.lo.
1 8.
2 00.
2 26.
I 63. ...
... .57
4 .... I
6 0X....2H
12.... .Ill ,
7 r.....si
the hours j
1....5 2S
!.....' 24
J... 5 22
4. ...51
6... 6 10
1....5 IS
7....SW
g 113
'.... 14
10.... 6 13
11. ...6 It
12.. .6 11
13.. ..5 10
14. ...SOU
15. ...5 OS
U....6 07
17. ...RW
If).. ..606
19. ...504
20.. ..6 04
21. ...5 OS
22. ...6 02
23. ...5 01
24.... 6 01
2S....6 00
.4 fi
27.... 4 K
2S....4 SK
4 57
HO.... 4 57
31....4 88
' The dot or
and minutea signifies P. M. time. The I
time not so marked are A.. M. If we
wish to know how muoh the aun is fast
of sun time, we have but to subtract the
minutes after 12 o'clock tn tho column
headed "Noon", from 34,. .the , constant
amount our city clocks have been set
ahead of local, or aun time, in order to
show standard time.
.Venus and Mars, as said before, are
morning stars. Jupiter la one also, ris
ing on the 16th at 2:40 a. m. Saturn la
still evening star, setting on thai 5th at
10:24 p. m. The beat chance of the whole
year to see the planet Mercury will be
on the last days of the month. On the
Slat it ia farthest from the sun, over
twenty-three degrees, and mar be seen
by a keen eye In the evening twilight. Its
poMtlon will bo then about twj and a
half degrees, or five lunar diameter,
, north of Saturn. ' '.
The moon Is In last quarter on the 6th
at 11 :23 p. in., new on the 13th at :St p.
in., In first quarter, on the-list at 10:60 p.
m.. and full on the 2Sth at : p. m. It
ia In conjunction with Jupiter on the 9th,
with Venus and Mara on the -Mlh. and
with Saturn on the 18th. On the Ith at
about 1 a. m.' the moon Juat grazes the
planet Uranus. A telescope, however,' will
lie required to nee It.
Crelghton l.'nl. Observatory. Omaha Neb.
HAdvi
lLy i
Advice to Lovelorn
BBACTUCa VAXJajTAZ
n" '
....... f .. : . .- )m2 . "ITTr
1 . . Jb- ' ' ' ;
i t accept him he aaya he will re- i .... , . . , . '
bach-tor. and everybody tella maHo,d,n h, foreloek-caatlng her bright
Yea, If Yi Love Him.
Hear Miss Fairfax: I am 20, and I met
a young man four yeara ago. He la 28.
Two years ago he waa engaged and broke
his engagement, and later he wanted to
gpt mnrrled to me. I always loved him.
If 1 don t accept him he aaya he will
main
I should not marry htm. Ik you think
1 will be happy if I marry him. M. H.
A broken engagement Is aad, but not
wicked or criminal. If thla man found
' he did not love his fiancee he waa honor
able and wine to break off their relation
ship at once. And none of this affects
the love between you two. If you care
for hlin, marry lilru by all meana.
There waa a faery-woman a great poet
sang of the Faery-Woman, I Belle
X'rfme 8ana Merct." The riding knight
questing through the woods and vaiea of
the Land of Romanc came upon her un
aware. And that waa his madneaal For
looking once Into her eyes, lighted with
sorcery, ha set her on his pacing horse
and all day long ha walked by her aide,
his neck bent back listening enchanted
to the roaglo acmg ahe sang. A fancy-song.
Here tn these days, too these days, of
the wildest romance and the .strangest
raltr we have our faary-womao. And;
think hard before you choose to shut the
deor of your home-gat aad wander out
Into th highways: The Faery-Woman
Ambition tide a winged horse that scour
me oounu-y ana city Bias ana set a
pace that kitla!
He run with tune, and that' fast.
Know More of Ulna.
Pear Mine Fairfax: I have been m
ployed In a store for four years, and dur
ing that tiuiQ 1 have become acquainted
wuh a few of the customer. A ctrtnln
Kfntlcmuu iian come In the store evv
rlnce 1 have been there. Ha .haa Invited
I lie to go to the theater with him..
Woul'l you kindly advise me If it woul 1
he- proimr to so with him, as I have
never been Introduced to him and I ilo
not know of any one who could intro
duce ua. I am 19. B. E, O.
. No young girl can afford to go about : rent
with a man of whom she knows nothing. Tour avocation
1'ossllily your employer haa some knowl- J a your plaything,
etie of this man. v If so, your four years yoor reat. your
eye her and ovsr there for the stained
face that mean "I want suoees and the
laurel wreath!" the Faery-woman rides
the very star out of the nlgrht-sky In her
hair and spilling in diamond-dust behind
her; her eye compelling, hot and sweet,
answering allkquestlons. holding all things
the eyes of a aoroerea and a sweet
heart: and high In her hand ah carrle
the laurel-wreath of Fame.
The whole world of man and woman,
too rises up, rip off Its coat and Its tie
and collar, bares arm and throat, push
the hair back from It forehead, and pur
sue her. Home sit down in a fume long
before they ever catch up with her and
there are some that whisper that that I
just a well. "For women," say my!
cynic, "Uiey can't chase love and ambi
tion, too and most time they wish they
had taken love when they are choking In
th dust that roll beald ambition'
teed!" What do you think T Bom drop
down in the road, wrung and weary In
heart and body to take up th chase
later on.
But the chap who catches up with her!
Who gets on deep look In her eye, on
breath of the odor of her veiling hair.
who get on clutching hand tight In th
leather of her horse's trappings, who feels
th whip of ber whit' garment on his
shoulder and throat! What about hlni7
You'd think hi rao 1 don. That am
bition takea him up beside her or drops
Into a walk and turns to rose-grown path
where he can cool hi hot head and walk
In dreams. But it Isn't ao.
Ambition' great black hora never
alow! And th man who get his grip
In hi mane and hi head beneath her
laurel wreath, and hi eyes fastened In
her, must hold the par to stay there!
II must either run with her. or drop
behind with nothing in his hand but th
liver bell from the grip he had, a little
Have a Hobby and
Cultivate It
tar dust In his hair, th nam of having
one run In th awe at and, duet beald
her, and memory!
Onoe I thought fame waa a high pin
nacle "far away from everybody, lifted
high, and, though It was sharp ,nd
narrow and dangeroua, once up there you
at above th roar, eecur and at reat
If only vou held on! But I know better
now. Fame I only a green wreath held
In the hand of a flying woman who
fhundera through our very crowded
street with flying hair and whipping
garment and a madnea In her eyes, who
calls you to pursue and holds you beside
her In the madness that you drink 'rem
her eye, who never slack or wait: and
1 know now that one vou have com
breast with her snd got your hold you
must run Ilk fury till you die to stay
there
Which will you have, little fir! who
wrote to me som day ago to know If
you should leav your garden gate and
go In eearch for th Faery-Woman? "I
have a llttl talent," rou ventured. Do
you want to at ay at home and hang on
your garden gat and watt fer love
for you know h doean't hurry and he
hunt you out to walk with' him and
ettl In a little house off th great high
way where all th busy thing are doing
and mob are rising up at th thunder ot
a black horse' a flying feet? Or do you
want to b out In th whirlpool rao far
th atar that fly from Ambttlpn't gallop
ing hap7
Thar are those with th madn in
their veins who cry. 'It la worth all
weariness" to run spellbound, eye fas
tened In glittering ye. In th light and
(h whirl and tho gasping glory, hand
on th satin coat f a Faery Horse, atar
pike blowing and stinging, th wonder
green of th Faery Wreath above,, and
tho Faery Woman leaning atdewlse, sing
ing a Faery song that lure you to atrain
on. Choo. NIUX BRINKLHT.
The
Nation's
Food
By ELBERT HUBBARD
Every man and woman should have a
vocation and an avocation.
Tour vocation 1 the thing you depend
upon for your bread and butter and
, clothes and house
ot meeting might. Justify you In asking
him to call and meet your parents. Fur
ther than thi you must not go.
The Oar Jeloatay.
I'ear Miss Fairfax: I am It and going
pet with a young man 24. I am about to
ttinme enKaged. but would like to ask
you something before I do ao. I have a
Ufal fault. ' 1 am very Jealous. 1 have
nn cause to be Jealoua. hut still I am.
Won't you please advise me bow to con
mier tills great fault? I am Jealoua of
utmost everybody, and I know it is very
nicked, but 1 cannot help myself.
V. C.
.To conquer Jealousy, forget self. Juat
think to youraelf that there la no cause
for Jealousy between you and the man
who has chosen you out of all the world
for his wife, and remember that after the
first victory th other are raaier.
Xmm Uw Her a a Apology.
lear Mlas Fairfax: I am 12 ana hav
been going eut with a girl two years toy
Junior. About two month ago 1 heailri
stories about her which I believed true.
1 made an appointment with her, but
never kept It. She wrote a letter asking
why I did not call, and I answered,
saying my parent did not oar for my
going with her. I love thus girl dearly,
t'ught I to '(writ to her and explain?
I AKXIOl'B.
Tou were very rude to make an appoint
ment and fall to keep lt An apology ia
due Ui girl for that, for your ready aua
I'lcion of her and also for to II you
told her. If she wilt grant vou the
privilege of explaining you must be du.y
Krateful for htr gentle friendship and
kindness. Write and ask the great fvor
bt a chance to rectify your blundera.
recreation, your
emergency brake.
i your pay chic gov
ernor, your electric
fuse that takea
rare of you when
there la danger of
of a short circuit.
Your avocation
brings into play
another et of
mental muaclea
and gives you fit
preparation for the
battle of life.
It auppliea re
siliency or resting
power, lends endurance
and self-reliance.
r The farmer' wive who go Insane do
so for lack of a fad. a hobby, a play
spell. Th business men who slip their trol
leys and the specialists ' who go bug
wouldn't if they had a hobby and gal
loped It hard and faat an hour a day.
courage, faith
up of Intellect tapping a big reservoir ot
power. And when th mood was) on h
utilised the cosmic current. Instead of
grounding It, and wrote an Immortal
book.
This bool: 1 known to us as "Burk
On th Sublime." ,
The Joker here get hi chano and
come In with "The sublime and Ridicu
lous." And thr I no doubt that people who
reach th sublime often appear ridicu
lous to those who don't or can't.
The enthusiast supplies mirth for th
onlookers. But th enthusiast is th
man who eliminate and find . reat for
hi convolution.
Only thla be sure to ntluise concern
ing more than one thing. A good golf
nthuvaast always enthuse over hi busi
ness the pendulum swing out a far in
on direction a in the other.
The business man who loves roses will
make a success of both buslnra and
roses, and will never hav nervou pros
tration. .
Men -are to bo Judged by their avoca-
( tion rather than by their vocation.
Your vocation may be a thing that fate
compels you to do, but your avocation
you choose for yourself. You are what
1 you are on account of the way you spend
your leisure time: Thla la th you.
Ellhu Hurrltt was a blacksmith all
fy a aa s vs -aiv ,, a a a va u i . . . . ,
If your work U indoor, get a hobby lhe evening he was .om.thlng
... ..i.-. .,, 'els. Kobert Collyer th him.
The question I: How do you fill In tho
chink of th day? What do you do
Saturday afternoon, alunday and eaeh.
, evening from ? to ?
Maraulay. doing all his writing om
I sjoien nine, is a type not Infrequent
among extraordinary mMi They were
great on account of their hoiihlee.
o the Moral i,, get u fud. ; rd If your
. bo) or girj nas a lior.by encourage it.
When Krtmund Burke wss In hi early' A hobhy Is o healthful pla l the
twenties he experienced a gseat f larins . worm, and undying fame at the beat.
that take you out. If your work 1
beadwork get a fad that make you uae !
your bands and feet.
If nothing else, be a fight fan or a baa !
ball fiend.
These thing will Inspire you to get a j
medicine ho.ll and us It, or n Indoor
base ball and pull the household Includ
ing your wife, the children, grandpa and
the hired girl into the game.
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Ihnredded
WJh
eat
9
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Two Shredded Wheal Btscauta, haatod' ia Jh oven to res tor criaow
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th Shredded Wheat Wafer, oatco a
toast with butter or soft cheese, or
as a substitute for whit flour bradl
r cracker.
MsuU only by
The Shredded Wheat Co,
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tii.......ol i
' ! i in 'hi
ii
!!!!!
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