THE RKK: OMAHA, NATUKPAY, DKl'KMHKK 'J:. 1015. MMM 1 .iheBees Home Ma New Thought Creed Meets Every Situation "Laym' for Him" By Nell Brinkley 'opjrlRht, rlS. Intern'!. News Service 4 I Hi n.v i:lla wheeler wiltox. Copyright, 1915, by Star Co. The wife of a clergyman ha been reading "New Though Literature." 8ha writes me In m'ich distress Nrtuw, while she Is personally happier and more broadly rellg'ous than ever before, she I.da herself accused of being a "heretic, ' a "dissenter." an "athe'rt" and "unbe liever," and many more unpleasant names am hurled at her by her hus band's congregation. This Is an unfortunate situation, but It Is one which will occur more and more frequently In the next decade. Annie Hesant passed through a s'mllar ex perience in England, when she found her self unnble to believe In the doctrines 1 reached by her husrmnd. Unfortunately, the dHlly cnvlror --ent of Mrs. Remit "Hi" her husband's peculiarities of dis position caused her to doubt her Creator for a time and sent her over Into the ranks of the Infidels, but she finally swung !nt: line with true, practical re ligious thought and devoted her life to helping humanity to higher ground. Some centuries ago Vasco da Gama was cast Into prison for declaring there roiild be any country other than that memtioned In the Bible. He asked for rhlps to go and seek the lands he knew existed, and the council of whom he reked the favor put nlm 'n chains. Th world grows wiser slowly, and we must not try to force its development. Neither must we arrest our own de velopment to please any Individual or nny organication of Individuals. The lady ho bas written me ought to apply the New Thought principles to r situation and learn the power wh'ch In serenity. She shouln think more an she talks. The creed of this New Thought Is the most simple and beautiful and ran only help her to conouer all seemingly aggressive and unfortunate conditions If she will be patient. T.et !-,er say s'lently every day and many times a day: "God is the Spirit Love. All things snd beings came originally from love. I am an expression of this Infinite love, and nothing but love and goodness can go from me or come to me." Tf she lives up to this thought every hour in the day she will not long be unpopular In her husband s congregation. She should avoid argument regarding creeds and dogmas. If obliged to listen to them let her say her little rosary over snd over, mentally, until It absorbs all other Ideas. When asked point blank Just what her belief Is she should answer: "I love my Creator with all my strength; I love humanity as myself, and strive to do as I would be done by al ways. When I fall I only renew my ef forts. I believe In the divine nature of every creature and my desire Is to cul tivate that element In humanity and In myself. I believe all of success and health and continual kindness and un selfishness and cheerfulness and pa tience and unlimited lor are the meth ods for development. "I make It a nil to never go to sleep with a resentful or angry or Jealous feel ing In my mind, and when these emo tions seek me, as they do at times, I hive them out with mental assertions of inve and kindness. I fear nothing but indulging In cruel or unkind thoughts, and I believe my thoughts are shaping my future In this world and the next and that I must save myself." If the questioner Is not satisfied with this creed It will be useless to carry the discussion further and It should be drop ped. Disputes on religious subjects are a proof that both the disputants have no rellelon worth talking about. It Is the dally life In the home. In the neighborhood. In the market place. In the shops that proves the worth of religion. IJve the new thought and you shall be loved ana reepeciea oy ine wono-.ir.:, . . . f lh. n.-.,, Am members of all denominations and all j ,pKtti tosrt The toa(, personally, no creeds and all men. favorite of mine, but I speak for him And those who know you will cease to unJr a .ene of pU)n Jllllflr. n,.,.,,,, ssk what your faith Is. since your life tho fPt , nU cajM, officially accum wlll show It Is the creed of love for uod u,atw, fcy ,he Departm.nt of Agriculture. and humanity. I appear to establish beyond question his It Is not a one day religion, or one rljfht to tr.ated , fr,,nd .j,,, tlly which depend, upon a form or a dogma of man ln th, Btruggle for existence. -It Is one which must be hourly lived. Tn. Mng tru the we known ,nd curo. Live it and the world must recognise m llsneM of the toad no 1tl,er its worth and respect you. i furnu)n an excuse for the contempt and dlsliko with which he Is almost univers ally regarded. The blemishes of a friend, says an old philosopher, are comely to the eye of affection. There Is. perhaps, no other of man's animal contemporaries that has been the object of so many baseless calumnies Be sure you are right and then prepare anj supertltloua notions as the toad. He for a lot of knocks. : has been denounced as a poisoner of rhll- idren with his breath; aa a producer of The man who takes himself too on a hand, that touch or ap. oualy Is courting unhapplneas. 1 proach him; as a brlnger of untimely rain; as a wanderer of the brute world who cannot die, though Imprisoned for agca in solid rock; aa a natural magl- I'ntll an emergency is faced no man ". carrying a necromantic stone In knows whether he la a coward or not. h lth whlc ""Heel cures can , be performed. A fair exchange Is no robbery. But ' This last la referred to ln Shakespeare's what's the use of trading without profit? line: 'The toad, ugly and venomous, wears yet a precious Jewel In his head." It is well a be forgiving, but do not j &r. Brewer, In his "Dictionary of Phrase lick the hand that smites, unless you are and fable," quotes an old English writer a dog. J sa saying: "There Is to be found In the hanHa nf all nlri mwA vrl.t toads atone Occasionally the male with a deep voice th.y eJ, or ,,., whlch belng. ra n inoui oui iui em. A HI ( if t rr tfmWuf j And there's an anxious and sleepy mother listening at the crack of a door, with her arm through their Dad's, and whisper ing whimsically, "Will they ever go to 3leep?" and "wouldn't they bo iong gone on any other night but this?" Nell Brinkley. Our Ugly Ally, the Toad By GARRETT P. 6ERVIS8. In-Shoots As a rule tew weslthy man never gets credit fcr the honesty in his make-up. keeping In the archives of the French Academy of Hrlenccs. After eighteen months, when the flutier wss broken open, two of them were still living. The Kngllsh geologist. William Buck aid. Im mured a number of toads ln cavities In randstone and limestone. Those In the sandstone were fnund dead after thir teen months, while those shut up In the imestone lived nearly two years. Popu lar stories of toads Jumping out of rocks that have been blasted open, and ln which they must have been encl'JH d for cen turies, are common, but scientifically un authenticated. Still, there Is no doubt that toads are long-lived and very re sistant to ordinary causes of death other than violence. One fact whl-h gives them a oertaln title to human sympathy Is that they are great lovers of borne. Where they were born they stay. If they can. Mr. A It Klrkland of Boston, who is one of ihs ch'ef champions of the toad as a useful snimal. says that-he has cnvtnrfng evi dence that two toada have occupied door yards In two different towns for twelve oi raiseuo non- ued a rings, gives forewarning against , venom. j These fabled toad-stones, for no na turalist of today will grant that any such ' thing really exists, were said to bear , alwaya a figure resembling a toad on The philosopher la usually the fellow 1 1' eurface. and It was believed that ho provided "don't worry" rules for toucn of cured the bltea If wicked man cannot sprout wings, he should at least try to cover up his tracks. the rest of us. I'nlesa a paid member of the band, don't waste time tooting the horn for the other fellow, . J - I J L. .k 1 i y Tne acanuai munar. mi sauna, ran for a time poison the atmosphere. Hut the odor soon blows away. There Is no conceit like that of the chap who imagines he can win the affec tion of a girl by simply toasting his shins before the old man's f rs every tit. of venomous anlmala In a collection of antiquities at Londes bo rough there la a silver ring with a reputed toad-stone set ln It, and the legend connected with th's ring avers that the stone "sweats" and changes color when any poison Is brought near It. But, while most of the strange beliefs have only a fanc'ful foundation, that which concerns the remarkable longevity of the toad and Its ability to resist star vation and close confinement derives a little support from sclen'lf c experiments 'n 1777 M. Her Imnt imbed ed t' ree toad In plaster, and p'aod the in for safe and twenty-three yearn, res e the y. The widespread belief that little toads sometimes rain down f r. in the sky 1 based, Mr. Klrkland thinks, on the fart that young toads have la n concealed .'iidcr slones, rubhlh and leaves during the sunshiny lio..ri will ruldenly come forth by hundred when an unexpected shower occurs. But now for the evidence that the toad Is really an ally of man In his war against noxious insects. This depends entirely upon examinations of th fod that toads consume, as shown by Inspe -tlon of the stomach. They are decidedly "carnivorous," since no less than 9 per rent of their food Is of animal origin and consists mostly of Insects noxious to man. It remains to tell how ha g-ts the'ii. since most of them are alert and lively fellows. The secret of his success Is In his tong ie. which Is long, and, what Is even more to the purpose. Is hung st the Inner instead of ihi outer end. ("onw quently It acts like a lasso, which he flings with lightning speed snd unerring aim. "And tho best time to do it will he dur ing Christmas week." She emptied her heart of other con s'derHtion. She filled every 'number of I' Willi the Mile locked out children. There wrr- ninny of them in her dis trict thut ler htiMmnd represented, she found. She set to work. She energized tremendously upon that problem. The result is that a huge new armory building In that quarter of Greater New York will be open on Christmas and New Year's day and all the ila.is be tween, from 10 In the morning until at night. A Chiiatnins tree and playground and sand piles and warm luncheons and com fortable fires will be provided for the locked out children and their kind. The week will he on great throbbing toy to the children who would otherwise be ('hi'lstinasless and Joyless. Isn't that the way. I wonder, to unlock the lurked In heart T Isn't the key of It a little child's craving for Joy? The chamber of the heart may be gloorn-tllled. The key may be rusty. Hut why not let some little child tun that key? What If you have a quarrel with life' What though Its conditions are not wha you would have them? Try to get sotn child's feet upon a happier path. Lot '.' turn the grating key. You will be sir prised at the strength of Its weak lit. I' fingers. So strong are they It may b that they will make you forget why '.r. locked that door. ii The Locked Out Children By ADA PATTERSON. Have you a locked in heart? Whether or not you are sure about It, let me tell you the story of the locked out chil dren. A congressman's wife was suffering one morning from the locked In condition of the heart, which soma of us call worry, and which others call self-centredness. At all events, there are moods in which we are apt to lock the world out and ouraelvee In and brood upon these things which are not aa we would fcave them. And the last state la worse than the firs':, for no good ever cornea of such brood ing. The locked In condition la always a bad one. Our spirits, like our physical aelves. need air and wide spaoea and freedom of movement, and the eye of the soul need, to look outward rather than Inward. A friend called, bringing In with him a fine whiff i f bracing outer air and told a story, "Such an unpleasant thing happened In the neighborhood. Not two blocks away from either cf us. Just half way be tween your homo and mine. It's true that one-half the world doesn't know how the other half Uvea." "What Is the story?" The congressman's young wife felt the turning of a key ln the lock. The door of her heart was opening, a little. "It happened In one of the rear tene ments. The woman Is a widow. She hat two children, a littlo girl, aged 4. and another little girl of She has to no out every day to work. She la a frill that If the children are left In their inf erable home something may happen to them. The house might he burned rr some heavy piece of furniture mlg'nt fall upon them. She Is a Poor, shy thl.ig. who doesn't know her neighbors. Sne doesn't speak their lsnguage. The k'n deigarten In tbe neighborhood la f'j'l. Bo she did what she thought was let She locked the little ones out neigh bor found thm crying In the hall In tho evening at 6 o'clock. They had bee- stsylng In that dark hall with a :id wleh apiece since T o'clock that morning. The door of the listener's hesrt swung wide. "Something must be done," she said. s5 ff$50 mTa Mft "ri.1. i . . . i inn raijijipiiv a,v Uod" XHauiond sUngr stands X.oftts "Terfeo- " inauiond sungr HlanlM alone aa ine most pert i t ring ever produced, hlneat quality pure white diamond, perfect In cut and full of fiery brllllaiiry Skllliful ly mount.! In our famous lfii "1'er- f.plnH'' ft I .. . . . L . 1 . , .11 , " ll.ill v-i'iong I IIIM. 1 . n Hf.ll'l IIU, aacd In velvet ring box ready for pre sentation Itea-ular $5 va'tie. $.'j6. TIlHIi M A MOUTH OPEN TODAY . AM) THIS HVKMMi CHRISTMAS For the Convenience and accommodation of our cus tomern and. friends who have been delayed In completing thlr Christina chopping, and for those who have been gur prined by the receipt of Christ mag present and wish to re ciprocate, our htore will be open all day today Christmas and everr evening during Holiday Week. OUR ANNUAL HOLIDAY CLEARANCE SALES BEGIN today and continue to and in cluding New Year Day. These great Holiday Sale are the event of tha year, and afford you an opportunity to obtain a fine Idumond. Watch or other artistic jewelry at 'ii to 0 r rent be low actual value. Confidential credit terms to alL There la no gift that can take the place of a watch, and there la no gift that de mands such care in Its selection. Thta is the watoa to buy for KsUday .Pressnt. SOLID GOLD THIN MODEL Illinois, ziefa or Walt ham Wo. lla Illinois, r:igln or Wallham Watch, full Jeweled, 14k solid gold rase. Kits In the pocket like a ailver dollar. 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