e Bees Home aziiie-Pa Self Control, Greatest Asset Mag ge 1 ft ' .ilr i iiiir " The Latest Paris Hats Republished by Special Arrangement with Harper's Bazar Death of the World's Richest Man Hy KM,. VIIKKI,I:R WIUDX I !'My Dear Madame: j "An article on Self Control, with a few lines In ver?e lhat might Oe I committed to memory would be of Incalculable value to our girls and par-1 ticularly to our young men, nho so often commit deeds that can never be I ijtuuue oecaune or lack or this virtue. a MOTHER." The roigliiy forces or mysterious space Are one ly one subdued by lordly man. The awrul lightnings that for eons ran Their devastating and untrammeled race Now bear his messages from place to place iAKe carrier 1opf The wind leads on his The lawless elements no longer can Kesist hib strength, but yield with sullen van : Sracct His bold feet, scnling heights before untrod -Light, darkness, air and water, heat and cold--He bids go forth and bring him power and pelf. And yet, though ruler, king and demi-god. He walks with his fierce passions uncontrolled, The conqueror of all things, save himself. Self-control Is the quality moat needed in human nature today, and the ono moat rarely found. Jurt In the decree that a human beinK develops the power of elf-contrr4 he ap proaches divine power. Just In the degree that a human lieln Is self -Indulgent. o ho wanders away from the divinity which Is within hlm elf and fi din every high attainment that la worth while. Self-control means the conervatlon of all the powers of mind, brain and body, and the ability to use those powers suc cessfully for any high purpose. Self-indulence niena the scattering of all'theso forces at. their ultimate de struction. ; Self-control should be taught first In the cradle and In the nursery. Instead, parents, nurses, Rovernesees and teachers usually find it less taxing to encourage their Charges In eelf-indulg-ence than to teach them self-control. The chfld who screams for his bonbons or his toys can be taught self-control by being left alone nntll he wears out his mood, and later (.an be reasoned with and made to un derstand the benefit which will result from self-control. But such guidance and teaching are taxing to the elders, and therefore majority of children grow to adolescence and maturity without having been so taught. -One possessed of powers of observation and who has made any study of human nature must wonder that so many de cent hi. man beine.8 exist in the world with so little assManco and guidance. In the direction of self-control during early youth. The control of the appetite In child hood and early youth Is the first step toward self-control; the control of the mind In the h-ibit of study is the next step to thoroughly master one lesson be fore another Is began, no matter how long the time gien to the attainment of this end is of the utmost importance ir, the shaping of a child's character. But how many parents and how many teachers direct their energies to this end. Our school destroy the powers of concentration und lead away from self control. Children enter our kindergartens almost invariably possessed of wonder ful powers of concentration. They leave high sot-.ool with very little of this qual ity remaining. The Bible lells us that "he who overtometh Is greater than he who taketh a city." The greatest re wards are promised to those who over come. Self-control in Us fullest sense means the overcoming of nil that Is weak and Ignoble in their nature and the develop meno of all that is highest and best. It is never too la'e to begin the attain ment of self-control. What Trait Do You Most Admire in a Man? Amt '"''jf'" ' ''ww- I ':r-' 5 J By '"ADA PATTERSON. jfcWhat trait do you most. aOmlre In- i man?" a magazine Is asking its women iveaders. I predict that there will be a remarkable sameness In these answers ; If the replies of the women f eaders are sincere; they will' all -be summed up. In' one word" man liness. ' ' ' ffcJvery "woman, "be she feather-headed or of ' the' cranial furnishing of a inorva, a manly ; man. No, the ad jective is not re dundant There are creaturea masque radlng as men who are without manliness. That which every woman admires in a man and calls man liness Is courage. Courage of mind, courage of body, courage pt - aoul. A sight to which every woman responds Is that of the man who Is unafraid. lie must have courage of mind. He must have the willingness and tho power to attack the world and wrest from it those things which he wants. Women have falsely been classed as mercenaries be cause they are won by successful men. It is unjust to women to say that the dazxle of gold In their eyes blinds them to everything else. What women care for ia less the cold than tho power of wresting tt from the tightly gripped fist of present day conditions. They are wooed' by the might of tho man against his adversaries, the conditions which en compass him. Often when a woman Is being: criticised for marrying a man for his money, ahe la loving him for the atrength that la in him that has com manded that money. Weak women suspect that the business world is a grim battle ground, strong women know tt. The woman in the home admires her lord, who goes out into it daily and brings home the epolls of com mercial war, the wherewithal to feed and clothe and house his family, and to pro vide the emergency fund against the day of Illness or trouble. The self-supporting weman admires him yet more, for it Is with deeper knowledge of the fierceness of the combat. The courage of mind to attack and the force of will that keeps a man fighting for what he believes to be his own are winning elements with all women. Courage of body is to a woman always admirable. A man won a girl's1 heart by coolly opening a suspected bundle that arrived that morning by mail, which looked aa though it contained a bomb. Another man lost a girl's heart by the panicky manner in which he received the nea that the sky scraper In which his office was sit uated, aa one of the cells in a honey comb, was burning. That a man should realise the danger and make hasty plana for escape Is natural. That he should turn craven and hang out the distress signal of the white feather, is quite an other matter. Every summer supplies Its sheaf of news that girls having been rescued from drowning rewarded their rescuer by marrying them. Each of these girls would say, "I fell in love with a hero." Courage comes, in large part, from con sclous strength, cowardice from conscious weakness. That a man has in him the atrength that defies the bodily dangers that frighten her always excite woman's admiration. rrberein, too, Is her everlasting claim to Ida chivalry, for aha may acquire net ono vote, but two or twenty. gho may equal and distance him in some of the professions and arts. But the fact that she is of slighter frame and lesser vigor than he should command his service as the cry of a child stirs woman's pro tective Instinct. Courage of soul Is the finest form of manliness 'and the finest women know It. Courage to take aa unpopular stand be cause he believes it to bs right; courage to face unjust criticism; courage to fight on though beneath a tattered flax; cour age to do his life work with a smile and to die without a slgh-'tls this kind of manliness that keeps alive the diminish ing art of hero worship. Ho Ions; as there are heroes there will be hero worship. " f I L It! L '.T ms. V"- Xi C -fTi f v v v a fc " Jj j 9yr 1 rt ' J ; i 1 x , Ns,- ' "':",.. r'v 8 4-i ; ' 1 M til - i M s J5 1 V sVvr) ' f i V HI n 'I if !t:W ' ': a X!vv.. -' . Jr .... i : I fly F.I.P.EKT III IU1.KI. 1 rfi at I V 'r1 r. Thei has lirt asnfil av the richest man In the world Not only was he rich In dollars, was pasxlna ilch In hrntn. And yet so iiiilet- ly did this man live, and so thor oughly In hand were his sffnlri. that hlx dosth creates no iIIk turhance In t li e world of business. Nathaniel M. Hothsrhllri w u a worth between one snd two billion dollnrs. Thin msn traced a direct pedigree to Mayer Anselm and his wife. latitats, who lived lo mnke the century run, sane, senalhlc, and proud of her splen did family of five noble ms and five gills Just as able, and tneir fine families. William the Kles-tor had turned his money over to Mayer, an olvecure banl'er. who lived In the Ked-Shleld, or "Kolhsohlld." when Napoleon came marching that way. The elcctor had remained in hiding for four year". And now, behold! came a pardon from Niooleon. This whole procedure was essentially Nspoleonlc. The Corslclan killed or kissed, as the mood took him. William came out of hiding, hack to Frankfort, anil was received by the peo ple with open arms. Ho sought out Kotltschtld at his office In the Judon gasse of the Ghetto In Frankrort. The banker received him with quiet courtesy. "My money my money. Mayer Anselm the French have stolen U from you, I know," said Wllllnm. "Sparo me the do talla. I only come to you now for a loan you will not refuae me wo were boys together, Mayer Anaelm, boys to gether! Kate has smitten me sore, but now I have my name back and my broken estate I must begin all over. Tho loan you will not refuse me?" The banker coughed gently, smiled, and answered; "I regret I have no money to loan. IJut the fnnda you deposited with me are safe. ' The best I can do is Jto cive oii fxchntice on I.-indon. j such little ready nvmevHn you now ic In ioinlnti I quire. I hate been expeitini: oi. II ' lis the i In ilule. The iirinilpnl, with li but hi ( teivht nt .1 per cent, makes me yoin dclj.ci ; for little over tllHlciS itv M, N. it han. in London, hns the money M ! I: , j Jen In yo.ir check." 1 I W'illi.iui (.tared, dialled, ( uti hi I S-VK ii fcounier for .-npixirt. sntl l.irt liin Me the .1 t Ic I was lnkn to the icshlenc i;ii: o house, mill l.ciltxia served l.im i .lea. W'lllhim became culm, unit tin:; il, Clllieil. 'The pll;icinl. Mi;i-r. I '.l;ll , never t,.i., h. hhouhl not know w ! I l I il.i with i . iinyv.-uy . 1'iit n;e : r i'-,' i Interest or it. and it is a'l I hi. nil t- ask," And It was so ilon The Hats of. the Hour in Taris here the' are. Maria Guy, the famous 'milliner, has selected her latest .creation to be shown exclusively in Harper's Bazar and has posed them on the Woman of the Hour, the beautiful -Forzaho.i ' - Through a vail darkly a tete do negro tulle curtain one sees the glorious eyes of Foriane, while the entire flesh-colored straw hat la clouded in a mass of the illusion. When Maria Guy uses wings as trimming this season she poses them to give the effect of height rather than of width, Just as she has arranged the white wings on this toque. Do You Know That The four leading continental countries at war have a total wheat area of about 108,000,000 acres and a rye area of 103,000, 000 arres. The war means probably a loss of 42,000,000 acres of wheat and rye In Franc, Germany, Austria-Hungary and nussla. A recent census with repard to the leg.il profession lit Kngland and Wales allowed that there were 4,111 barristers and 17, solicitors. ! In China a man' pays his doctor only while he ia well. As soon aa he falls 111 the physician's salary stops. In 11S the expenditure on the chief Items of food for the t,tTS animals In tha London Koo reached 128,000. The visitors numbered 1,1(7,974. The Siamese strive ta have In their houses an even, number of windows, doors, rooms and cupboards, for they have a superstition regarding odd numbers. Mm rr Aiselm d.eit In IM.', asr-d i..'. To Nullum Kothychihl, his son. must h. given credit lur i llnntiriiil stroke that lifted the Uollischllils out of flnaln lul competition. It was In 'he hii lim or lsl.",. Napoleon had heen lumixhcit to Kllm. and now re turned like a coiinuerltig hero. Would Napoleon do nKaln wlmt he had done liefore-trample the cities beneath his inconslilei'Mte feel and pnn-vl out the rs'oiile and the land umong his favor ites? " Uuslness was jwiralysicd. People with money were hoarding It. KtwJInnd was trying to raise funds lo strengthen Its defenses, but the money was not forth coming. Coveriiinenl bonds dropped to SO, and a new loan at 7 per xsit had met. with only u few straKglni; aifpltratlcmH. The armies of the allies wrse gathering for a final struggle. Nathan Rothschild had crane to I-ondon with the fort u no of VVIllieon the Elector for safety. Nathan now invade his plans. lie called his cashier and gave him quick and final . orders: "I am going across to the continent. ,1 shall ae the downfall of Napoleon or his triumph, if Napoleon goes down I wy.1 send a letter to myself a blank sheet, of paper In an envelope. When you gvt this buy Eng lish government bonds buy quickly, but use a dosen different men so as not to stampedo tho msrkct. We have a million pounds in Urltish gold use it sll. and buy!" lie rode nway on horseback. Tie left a man with a strong and fast horse every thirty miles from Ixindon to lover. A swift sailing yacht wailed at Calais. Hothachtld watched away the nlKht of the 17th of June, circling uneasily tho outposts of Brussels. He oaw the Battle of Waterloo or such of that mad confusion aa was visible. He saw tfio French rldo headlong Into that open ditch, and he saw the last stand of the Old Guard. Whether Napoleon. was .beaten or not no one could say. . , .. "Ilo'll be back tomorrow ' with rein forcements," map. said. Nathan Koth sohiid thought otherwise. . ., i.- At nightfall he drew, his saddle girl rt two holes tighter,- mounted and rode away. ' He knew his horse be 'was' turning oft each mile in Just five minutes. Ho ruda a hundred miles In ten hours. Rothschild's messenger wa In London twenty-four 'hours ahead of tho regular post. ' '' ', ... ... ' When tha news reached London that the duke of Wellington had won. the bauklnq house of Rothschild had no cash, but Its safo was stuffed , with English .consols. Nathan. IlolhachUd-jnada- his -way leis urely back to Ixindon. On arriving thera he found .Jilmaeif rlchor by more than 500.000 than he was when toe rode.sway. fc : ' - -. " ; : No a 'Vidrola 11 be wiffioiiiii to VktroUIVr$15 Oak The following Omaha and Council Bluffs dealers carry complete lines of Victor Victrolas, and all the late Victor Records as fast as issued. You are cordially invited to inspect the stocks at any of these estab lishments. Schmoller & Mueller PIANO COMPANY 1311-1313 Farnam St. Omaha, Neb. Hear the .Newest Records in Our wly Remodeled Bound-Proof IteBionatratins; Rooma on the Main Floor. I Go today to any Victor dealer and he will gladly demon strate this wonderful instrument to you. Victor Talking Machine Co. Camden, N. J. i 7 Corner 15th and Harney G. C Mlckal Branch at 334 BROADWAY Council Bluffs Srfc Cycle .0 Victrolas Sold by A. HOSPE CO.,. 1513-15 Douglas Street. Omaha, and 407 West Broadway, - Council Bluffs, la. lFSll(fleI fFC Talking Machine Department in tho Pompeian Room Victrola XVI, $200 Mahogany or oak