Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 25, 1915, Page 8, Image 8

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    Till JIKK: OMAHA, MONDAY, OCTOllKH LV,
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The Bees Home Magazine Pa
Military Cape Coats Novel Season Fad
Suit Designs Tend to Short Jackets, Affording Yoke Feature Display in Skirts
"Wonders of the Heavens 3
Comets, and Why They Are Like the Sword of Damocles
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The type of hat variously
known as Olrodtn, postilion
or Dlrectolre U made of
uede cloth with velvet-faced
brim. A steel ornament is
surmounted by an ostrich
feather.
B QERMAIXB OAtTIKR.
Capes are featured la many of the new
coats. According to sartorial Inclination
and flgur Unas on may select a modal
wtUt a ripple cape, a coachman's cap
or a postilion cap. The descriptive words
refer to the shape of the accessory, soma
of which are out extremely ful. while
others fairly hue the shoulders and
hardly leave room for arm movements.
It rote without sarins that these capes
are not to be adopted by the short, stout
woman. They tend to decrease the ap
parent height of the wearer and to give
greater breadth through the shoulders.
Nevertheless, they ere wonderfully chid
when worn by the right person.
Cherult has sent a distinctly coat o(
Garibaldi red In the new chamois oloth.
It Is mad la three-quarter length and has
a swinging cap attached to the wlds turn
over collar. 'in fact, this collar serves
the purpose of a shallow yoke and audi
to the unusual style quality of the model.
Th esvpe. by th way. does not cross
th front of th coat. It starts Just fui
ward of th ahoulders and ripples freely
across th back. In this way It bears
closer resemblano to th coats of th
military officers.
The sleeves are eut In comfortable
width and are gathered at th bas into
a self eutf. The buttons are bullet ehap
and are covered with th coat fabrlo.
Ther 1 no fur trimming. One puts spe
cial emphasis on this because It Is so
rar a thing to find fur absent from
autumn models that on Is Instantly Im
pressed thereby, Ther Is no luw to prs
rent tbs ultlmat possessor from adding
a fur collar; but Cherult wss too cop
tstent and artletlo to mar th simple
Unas of ths military model by affUlng fur
thereto.
Dreaaea. too, ar to exploit little
boulder capes. Tbs latter ar especially
effective when bound with braid or
bordered with fur, and H is "hely that
they will be mad separately from th
garment, to be worn or not as the dlctat
of th wearer suggests.
Alone with capes on finds revere re
turning to favor. Mostly they ar ot
th broad rippl sort that may be folded
over and thereby close the coat or dreaa.
Of course, the uee of rever preeuppoaea
vests or foundation effect. Sometimes
this Is of brocaded saUn or novelty satin
Vesting.
A good Illustration of ths rever suit Is
offered la a model of midnight blue vel
veteen. Tbs skirt Is a yoka affair, fall
ing tbenc in full, even lines to ths shoe
A foremost de
signer ot Paris bas
sent a dance frock
of apricot silk,
trimmed with sliver
tissue ribbons and
lace. (Shown In
the Illustration
above).
Cherult
signed ft
coat o f
cloth In
red. The
has de-
mllltary
chamois
Garibaldi
cape is
the special feature.
;o
tops. Ths coat Is much shorter In front
than at th back, being particularly
graceful when viewed In profile.
A narrow band ot sealskin edges th
coat, and on the sleeves and about th
neck ther Is a band of whit ermjn.
Th ensemble U very attractive, tnclud
Ing th broad draped rvers beneath
which the coat Is fasteneda In a doublc
breasted diagonal line.
Some of the suits hav th coats so
short that ther la opportunity to show
novel yoke features on the skirt. Many
of th French designer have essayed to
confine skirt fulness In a series of cord
tucks running In up and down lines and
standing out from the figure. The ef
fect Is more novel and decorative than
the old scheme ot flattening the tuck or
plait.
This schem of tuck placement Is often
repeated on the coat, the wide space be
neath ths arm and across the bark of
fering room for such treatment, and
sine sleeves hav grown wider, the tucks
ar sometimes Introduced at the top of
s3 j
OAItRETT P. SKRVI8S.
A large part of the fear that great
ion-lets have always lnsilred Is due to
an Instinctive dread of their tremendous
powers for evil. They look Ilk besoms of
dertructltn and those who know nothing
about astronomy accept them at their
apparent face value.
And, In truth. If they could come within
hitting distance of the earth they would
do an enormous amount of damage, and
eorre of them might be capaMe of putting
the earth temporarily out of commission
as an Inhabited globe.
The terror that was aroused In many
quarters by Halley'a comet. In 1910, has
been recalled by the appearance of sev
eral r.ew comets within a few months
past so that It la worth while to consider
what an evilly disposed comet could do
to the earth If It got a chance.
There are two ways In which a comet
Could cause damage to th earth first,
by running straight Into It with 16.000
times the velocity of an express train.
and, second, by Infecting th atmosphere
with the poisonous or stifling gases con
tained In Its tall.
Let us consider the first case of a comet
shock.
Two things have to be taken Into ac
count, vis: th velocity and the weight
of the colliding comet, considered as a
gigantic projectile, shot against th earth
as a target.
Comets ar very deceptive In regard to
weight or mass. They ar enormously
large, but relatively very light. Th
comet In the picture Is th monster that
appeared In 1W1, which first grased th
sun and then swept the earth with Its
tall. Tou perclev how Insignificant our
globe looks In It presence. But slse Is
not everything, for small as the earth is.
compared with that great comet. It out
weighed It millions of times.
Halley's comet also occupied vastly
more space than the earth, but a careful
estimate has shown that It probably did
not weigh more than 80,000,000 tons, which
Is much less than the weight of the ma
terial excavated to make th Panama
canal. . v
It might be thought then that th
earth Is In no more danger from such a
comet than a battleship Is from a boy's
beonshooter. But now the velocity begins
to com Into play. Th speed of a comet
at the earth's dlstano from th sun
would be about twenty-elx miles per sec
ond.
A mass of thirty million tons shooting
through space at a velocity of twenty
six miles per second would develop. In
round numbers, about twenty qulntlllkm
foot-pounds of energy, equivalent to th
development In on second of thirty-six
thousand million million horsepower.
Where th comet struck everything
rock, soli, vegetation would be melted,
vitrified, and ven vaporised. In an In
stant, for all this tremendous energy
would u turned Into heat, through th
sudden and complete arrest of th swift
motion of the comet. Th six hundred
qulntilllons of "absolut units of en
ergy" developed by th stopping of th
comet would furnish enough heat to
liquefy more than a million million
tons of solid Iron.
Th result would be a very big and a
very deep hoi In th earth. Thousands
of square miles would be mor or less
directly affected by the terrific Impact,
for the shock would be greater than that
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The comet of 1801 that grazed the sun and then swept the earth with Its t0, showing Its comparative size
to our planet.
of th mightiest earthquake, and per
haps buildings would tumble into ruin
and mountains would shake off their
fringes of rock In all parts of the globe,
while the sea would hurl itself In whelm
ing tidal waves upon every coast and
drown ell the low-lyino; .lnnds.
Ths atmospherlo disturbances would
also be enormous. The suddon develop
ment of great heat at the point of col
lision would unbalance the air currents.
and destructive and capricious winds
would blow to and fro over ths earth.
We hav only a little apace left to con
sider the effects of a collision between
the earth and the tall of a comet. This
Is something that has actually ocourred
two or three times within a century. As
already said, th comet of 1861. shown In
the picture, enveloped the earth with the
spreading end of Its tall for a few hours,
and In 1910 Halley's comet brushed Its
tall over th earth, but apparently tho
electric repulsion developed prevented the
gases of th tall from entering th at
mosphere. It Is possible that in every
cas this would occur, so that cloctriclty
may be our effective guardian against
deleterious substances that might other
wise be Introduced Into the atmosphere
from the switching tails of close-passing
comets.
the shoulder and again Just shove the
cuff.
The fabrics this season are of unusual
Interest. A woman may have her tall
lour made of almost any fabrlo from the
ulltartan serge or gabardine to costly
Making an Asset of Regret
How to Make Valuable the Little Blunders
of Everyday Life.
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
It Is Just as Important to . b sorry
about soms things In life as to be glad
becauae of others. Ther Is no partioular
crlm In making a mistake, provided you
make It on eel -
If you can win knowledge from blunder
ing and wring strength from your wak
neseea you may svolvs a wonderful per
son out of yourself though that self
was a very weak and Insignificant In th
beginning.
Tou must regret very day you loss
In Idleness, vanity or laxlness. When you
cast up account at night, ask yourself
silk velvet. The middle course Includes , ir you hava grown any uiai oay, u you
wool velours, suede cloth, kltten's-ear and ; nave accomplished anything eonstruetlv.
broadoioth. Then ther ar th vel- f u r ntf ani stronger for what
veteen. and corduroys, svowedly 'M hav. don that day ftnd ,f you hav
but worth-whil neverfheless. The
French makers have ued quantities ot given anything to 1L
m h- mti. sent to! If ths day has been lost, regret It; out
America. One finds It not only In tall- ' ot that regret svolvs ths determination i to
leurs and street frocks, but alao In ooals maks tomorrow count so gre.i.y un
i - . ia ri-.i at nretensa to un-! loss of today will not b complet.
Regret every hour you have lost and so
that hav a good deal of pretenss to un
usual elegance.
The Three Paths of Love and How They
Lead to Disorder
May
fortunate man ow the way to execution.
Except for fortunate circumstances in
your own life you might be In the plan
et th lowest criminal. How, then, shall
you judge another? And if you have,
regret it bitterly, for the Judgments re
flects most of your own charity and hu
manity. Never regreat any confidence you have
placed In human nature, or any kindness
and sincerity you have shown.
If you have suffered through some
one else's sorrow, If. you have rendered
service and have met with ingratitude
for both, still you have no cause for
egret. Rather rejoice that you have a
aeart capable of generosity and kindness
and determine to give them freely to th
world since they are what you can con
tribute to life about you.
If you are humanly lender and it
causes you grief and suffering, you must
still rejoice because you know the finer
feelings. .'
If your dreams turn out to be vain
illusions, never regret them, but go on
hoping and rejoice that you can hope.
The only things you need regret are
the things you cannot look at squarely
and honestly as the fruits. of your day.
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
(Copyright. 1S1, by Btar Company.)
Two paths ar open to the nun who
la la love with a married woman. On la
to go away and leave her to th healing
and obliterating prooees of . time; the
other to drag her
through the mlr
of a divorce court
nd marry her. A
third oours a
dark by-path that
Jways leads to
moral and social
destruction, re
mains to become
her lover and al
low her nam to
b used lightly for
th remainder of
her mortal Ufa.
Th last Is th
coward's method.
A man los little
cate socially who
U known ss th
ii t.f a married woman.
guire btra and only a few women avoid
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Men ad- I
him. 11 usually marriea an innocent
girl after he tires of his amour-aa h 1
quit certain to do In the process of
time.
A married woman who baa a lover Is
always Insanely Jealous of him, and this
becomes Irkuom and unbearable as
months elapse and th novelty of the
situation wears off for th lover.
Before a man Induces a wifs to ob
tain on of thoas quick and easy di
vorces, so purchasable In our country
today, both should try seriously to con
sider th matter, and they should care
fully analys their own feelings.
Many a man and woman mistake a
fleeting Infatuation, baaed on personal
magnetism and Intensified by obstacles,
for a great love.
A woman may seem adorable to a man
who la obliged to steal an hour with her.
while she would Irritate him in a thous
and ways were he to hav her constant
association. A man may seem like the
hero of a three-volume novel who la mak
lng ardent love sub roaa, but th same
woman would find him Inspportabl were
he by her aids through ths dally viols
sltudes of Ufa.
There Is a hlo which aurrounaa ne
desperate and dvaralrtng lover, without
which he not Infrequently becomes utterly
commonplace In a woman's eyea.
A wife teeda to be very aura that in
lover for whom ah acrif!cvs the respeci
of the publlo and the sincerity of ncr
home life Is not a creatur of romantio
Imagination.
A man want to be very sur that the
woman whom he takes by fore from th
bonds of marrlsge will not bore him to
th verge of Insanity after he obtain her
for his own. I would recommend to suca
a lover the thought that the very highest
proof of love for a woman sometimes con
sists la going sway and leaving her alone
with her sorrow and her soul.
It may result In extrem suffering for
both, yet to grow spiritually and meu
tally often necessitates suffering. It Is
not always safe to take It for granted
that w must posses aa object because
w Intensely long for H.
Many a man In the world Is worshipped
In the secret heart of a woman aa little
lower than god because he left her un
molested, who had he defied heaven and
earth to obtain her. would hav suffered
th misery ot seeing her disillusioned.
determine to have no mor such cause
for regret.
The old proverb says, 'Ths speken wort
comes not back." How deeply then must
you regret every unkind word you
, uttered. Perhapa the speech that wounded
darkened ths day for soma ons else; per
haps It destroyed soma one's faith in hu
man nature; perhaps It sowed seeds of
cynicism and bitterness, and surely In
J j your own nature It planted th weeds
of unklndness, ot lack of consideration
and of cruel thoughtlessness.
In regrett.ng the unkind words you
havo spoken, determine to mak amends
for them. Go humbly tomorrow to ths 1
friend you have hurt and say, "I spoke
hastily and unkindly to you yesterday.
I am sorry. I will never wound you so
sgaln consciously, and If unconsciously
I do It, I will try to soaks amends. Can
you forglv mat"
If you hav Judged any on hastily; if
you hav suspected any ons unjustly,
those things, too. you must bitterly re
gret. Your hasty Judgment reflected on
yourself, for the Ignoble action of which
you thought aoroe on els capable was
conceived In your own mind, and ao was
a thing you yourself might possibly havs
dons.
Tour suspicions mark you In ths same
way. Regret them because they were
unfair to yourself and your neighbor.
Regreat them and resolve to Judge less
hastily, and even If possible not to Judge
at alL
Remember, "Ther but fur th grace of
God goea John Bunyan" were th words
of that philosopher when be saw aa un-
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r-rN'Hfi-sasF-s.-VWWsf.-r T&$J'jr-rrrfnn r "Sr-irr-w-,i-? (;vJMB
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-ftsi Air OS is p
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Address THE BAUER CHEMICAL COMPANY, 2
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