THE REE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 20, 1015. he Bees oomeMagazitfiePa C 1 The it By GARRETT P. SERVIS9. The planet Mars la preparing- to show himself again during the winter In one of the "oppositions'' for which he has be come famous. His red disk will gleam like a battle lantern over the fields of strife, and many an eye will be lifted from the trenches and the trampled xnow to that lurid portent in the midnight sky. , , There seems to have been no reason other than Its suggestive color fori the election of this planet as tho celestial symbol of the war god. Vet It was uni versally so regarded In ancient times. If we could tell why Mars Is red wo might hit upon the whole tecret of that strange planet:. Its color Is probably due to some peculiar quality of Its soli. It may he principally compos! of material resembling our red sandstone, or it may be stained red by an abundance of Iron in Its rocks. Do You By ADA PATTERSOX, Is yours a limited life self -limited? I refero not to the length of life, al though that, too, is largely in our own hands. What is in my mind is whether you have built a high fence about your self and live within it.' refusing to look out at the wide world that lies beyond that fence? There is dsnger, very great danger, of building that fence- around ourselves and our Interests. The fence building is called selfishness, and the process goes on and on. Its punishment is that the fence closes in upon us. Everyday it closes further and further until we can hardly turn about, can scarcely breath within it. The conditions of life tend to drive us Inward. We should counteract them by a supreme effort of will. It will repay ua to make this effort. It will pay dividends of actual worldly profit. Consider the housekeeper. It she builds that fence so high about herself and home and family that she never learns how the woman two doors down turned her cur tains or that they were good for two more seasons; and if she does not meet and chat now and then with Mrs. Brown about how she gave the children of the neighborhood a picnic in her back yard at small expense; and If she doesn't hear about thst new dressmaker who has come to town and who is so adept at remodel ing old gowns Into new that she laughingly named her establishment a "hospital for sick dresses," that woman How To Make the Quickes tjSlm pies t Cough S Slmplei lemedy lia Mark Better tfcaa Ready. MaaVe Ki4 am, 1 Have SA, t ally Uuaraateed, This home-made cough eyrup is now used in more homes than any other cough, remedy. Its promptness, ease and cer tainty in conquering distressing coughs, c lift t and throat colds, is really remark able. ou can actually feel it take bold. A day's us will usually overcome the ordinary cough relieves even whooping couch quickly. Splendid, too, for bron chitis, spasmodic croup, bruucliial asthma, and winter coughs. Get from any druggist ounces of finex (50 cents worth ), pour it in a pint bottle and fill th bottle with plain granu lated sugar syrup. Ibis gives you at a cost of only 64 cents a full pint of better cough syrup than you could buy for f 2.50. 'J ki-s but a few minutes to prepare. Full directions with 1'iuex. lasted Rood and never spoils. ou will be pleasantly surprised how quickly it loosens dry, "hoarse or tight coughs, and heals the inflamed mem brane in a painiul cough. It alo stop the formation of phlegm the throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the per sistent loos cough. Pine is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine ex tract, rich in guaiacol, which is so heal int to the memo's pes. To avoid disappointment, be an re and k your druggist for "ZVi ounce Pinex," and don't accent anvthin? elu. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this preps rs'ion. The Pines. Co.. at. aviie. ma. WHEX AWAY FROM BOMS The Dee Is The Paper yoa ask fori if yoa plan t W beast mot tfcaa a few Saga, Th sail4 t ye. Red Secret of .... 1 - J . . I. 4 The approach of Mars toward the earth will not, on this occasion, be very close, the two planets will be some sixty mil lion miles apart, but, on the other hand. Mars will be well 'situated In the sky for observational purposes. Its northern hemisphere, which Is the least known, will be the one presented most conspicu ously to view.. The Idea of trying to communicate with the Inhabitants of Mars Is sure to be put forward again, especially In view of the recent achievements of wireless tele phony. , . It is now perfectly certain that we can send electric1 waves, bearing signals and capable of reproducing the sounds of the human voice, completely around the world. We shall, soon after the war Is ended, begin to talk with people on all the con tinents, wherever the proper apparatus can be set up. But these marvelous Lead a Limited Life? will go on keeping house and entertain ing and planning her wardrobe, in the same way sb did ten year ago. That is going backward. Communion of ideas is going forward. Th business man that ha built a fence about himself and conducts his business as ha did before, and thinks that way good enough, presently notices a falling off in his business. He may attribute th falling off to 'conditions." That is a big elastlo word that we often use t cover our own shortcomings. 1 know such a man. He owned a restaur ant in th center of a colony of business buildings. It was so crowded that men UMd to stand behind chairs at the tables, reedy to slip Into th first chair vacated. Just as you sea women customers stand with an air of forbearance behind filled chair at th luncheon tables In the big department stores in th city. His place was popular then, but th trouble with "Hank" so all th men patrons called htm was that h was satisfied with that success! H erected a high fenc about himself. . His patrons cam to know his menu by heart. They used to recite It backward. In a deep toned litany. "Hank" thought It a joke and laughed mere loudly than any of them. Some of th men spoke seriously to him about their desire for new dishes. But "Hank" would not change hi menu! "They used to be good enough." he said stubbornly, "and if they were good enough then they ar good enough bow." The New By CHARLES H. PARXHURST. There la; a considerable number of people who fear that they will not be credited with poasess'ng superior intel ligence unless th idea they put forth are essentially different from those previously given to the public, or perhaps, ven directly contrary to what ha been commonly accepted. . With them originality no matter what sort of a thing it Is that they originate 's a symptom of genius. Hence it comes bout that the world of ideas Is flooded with all sorts and description of nov elties. We have, therefore, what 1 known as th new though, and the new theology, the new art and the new morality. To believe substantially as people bare been for a long time accustomed to be lieve is to place one's self In th class of the unthinking or even of defectives. And now Dr. Krehblel of Leland Stan ford university ha been regalllng th conference of Clark university people at Worcester, Mass., with another brand new doctrine which he calls th new na tionalism. H says of It: "Th time will com when It will be so patent and will have so influenced public thought that nationalism will be recogn sd as an old win bottle not fit to hold th new wine, when some form of international organisation and co-operation in har mony with life will be demanded." Ills Idea appears to be that a man la const'tutlonally International, and that he Is so universal In his Interest and he la so nujveral in his Interests and filiations, and sprawl out so exten s velv I i every direction beyond all geo I r; Y j 1 frontiers that such frontiers will taic entuauy in nave any suoaianuai Isnirieatu'e. To make a specific application of his Mars If! ' y U waves are not formed In the atmosphere; they travel In the ether, which fills all space and extends from planet to planet and from star to star. It Is questionable whether they are not more or loss Impeded by the atmosphere. It not, the deserted lunar world may be conceived to have become, with a few years past, the haunt of strange electro magnetic echoes from the feverish life of Us big animated neighbor. Unfortunately the needed evidence of life upon the moon Is not forthcoming. Our nearest neighbor In the sky appears to be a dead, or totally abandoned, world. With Mars the case is different. Mars has air, which the moon has not; Mars has water, which the moon has not; Mars has days and nights and seasons resembling the earth's, which the moon has not; and, finally, Mars has signifi cant markings upon its surface, which at leart suggest the work of hands guided by a high intelligence. Stomachs rebel against the sam far continuously served. Th old patrons be gan to disappear. Men stood no more behind the chairs of other masticating men. The rush became a memory. Vacant seat began to show even at th rush hours. "Hank" grew sullen. But he wouldn't change his bill of far, wouldn't introduce new dishes) The pLace around th corner won his former patrons. Even his friends fell away. They had been fenced out. Yesterday when I slipped iato "Hank's" for a cup of chocolate there were new faces and a new air In the place. "Hank'' had sold out, for th benefit of his creditors. Better have contact with our fellow. Better turn inquiring eyes on what the rest of the world Is doing. Best take an uncarplng interest in what, and those, that are going on about us. Else one day w will find that they have passed by. It is well to rub brslns with brains! Don't acorn what the world of today is doing. Its tastes may seem a hit cheap, but Carlyle told us that the Instincts of the masses ar what govern the world. Better understand their way of seeing even though you don't see that way. And who are we if, not of the masses. For our own sokes, for the sake of the world's progress, let us not narrow our interests. Let us r;ad the newspapers, see plas, talk with our friends, our neighbors, with strangers. Let us not fence ourselves about, narrow our in terests, limit our lives. Nationalism doctrine the professor would say that tha - tun Is coming, although he doe not say how soon, when Americanism, in th present sense of the term, will no longer signify, and that the univers ality of our loyalty will erase our pa triotism, as th incoming tide gather up into one deep continuous sea all the pools left behind when the last tide re ceded. bo far as his theory carries with it th hope and expectation that with the prog ress ot Cbrbttian development our frater nal Interest In mankind will become more and more widely extended, we should none of u be disposed to take exception to his statement. But it Is a phychoiogl cal fact that a different sentiment, to be of any practical algniflcanc or force, is conditional upon a confined concentra tion of sentiment. W can cite domestic life as an illus tration of our principle. Ware w to follow out the professor's Idea to It ulti mate, w should have to expect that th universalizing of our interest and affeo lions would issue in gradually relaxing and eventually obliterating bom ties, till at last our homes as such would ceas to exist, or, at any rate, would serve no other purpose than that of a convenient habitat for purpose of eating and sleep ing. Now th contrary of that 1 th fact. The true home, ln the fullness of Its concentrated and confined affection, is th very plao most to b counted upon a tha point of divergence, out from which radiate those ever-lengthening line of devotion by which th world at large Is mad better, brighter and sweeter. Loving our own America more will give u more -heart for all mankind Instead of an increased Intereat In mankind re ducing and contratcilns- our duvotlon to America. Courage More Important than a Bank Account By JOHN II. T. MAIN. Trealdent Orlnnell College. Orlnnell, la. Many a boy that ought to go to college and that wunts to go to college does not do eo because he fears the handicap of Siendrr resources. Ills fears overcome his deelre. Tnstend of Kolng to college hi takes a Job and loes a grat opportun ty . To be anre his lack of courn.'.-e has gone far to prove that he was not tie genuine college type. It suggests that he would not have won out ca a college man. A college man needs courage In the far f difficulties. Courage Is more important than a bank account. Any lad with a conviction bnsed on good common sense and a fair ii-cord In the preparatory school is ontit'ed to a college education If he wants It. and It Is Certain to be his !f he determines that I it shall be. . Borne weeks ago I sat near four lads In a railroad car en route from North ampton. Mass., to Springfield. Their con versation indicated that they were In the last year of a high achool courae. They were discussing tho prospects of next yeer In college. Three of the Isds hsd chosen the same college. One had chosen Harvard college. They were eager, quick-witted lads, alive to the problems of college and the future. Their speech Indicated that their re sources were slender. Three were urging th fourth to "com along," but the fourth hsd his mind muds up and finally declared warmly, "I am going to Har vard. I am going to Harvard If It takes all the rest of my life to pay the debt." The emphasis of his words marked him out as a fit subject for a college educa tion. He had planned his educational fu ture. He was determined to have what be had planned to have. He had made his choice and Illustrated the fact that in comparison with courage and the will to achieve the questions of money, of expense, of location are quite Incidental. This lsd already hsd success well In command. Success wss already his nerv ant. In th ordinary and normal course of things he will go to the college of his cholo. He will leave It at graduation In debt. He will not stay in debt, but ha will go to work and pay his debt snd be a suc cessful man and citizen. His debt will be a perpetual Inspiration and a perpetual Investment, bringing back not only dol lars, but Innumerable satisfactions, both material and spiritual. Many business men would advise this lad not to go to college. They would say to him, "You can't afford It." Buch men have no capacity to see a debt as an investment. They do not rcs.ll a that the greatest Investments that have ever been made have originally been debts. They see only the difficulty and do not realise that a wis tad reduces a difficulty to Its sim ple elements or pays no attention to It whatever. A story Is told of th Wright brothers. I do not know whether It is true or not. If It Is not true, it ought to be true. When Wilbur and Orvtlle Wright were lads they worked In their father's back yard in Dayton, O., on various mechani cal devices, spurred on by the ambition that they might some days make a fly ing machine. An old neighbor noticed . k - 1 ..LI.. XT wiiiM MMalnn<v ! VliV W7I .. u niii,. . " " - i - J com and watch them. On day th old neighbor said to Wilbur: "Wilbur, don't you know that nobody ever did make a flying machine?" Wilbur reflected and mad no reply. After a moment th old gentleman con-, tlnued: "Wilbur, don't you know that nobody i ever will make a flying machine?" Still no reply from Wilbur. And then; finally, as If to ttl th whol matter: I "Wilbur, if anybody ever did make a I flying machine, It wouldn't be nobody In j Dayton. That remark finished th neighbor, but tho flying machine was built, and a new mechanical world was created. It isn't every lad that can achlev th ; "impossible," a th Wright brother did. but every lad with common sens and an adequate amount of that Indefinable qual-1 ity known as "gumption" can find a way J to go to college, and If he goes to college j he will ultimately achieve success. Bat-', ter still, he will b achieving success all the time. Success Is a process. He will capitalize and recapitalise his debts and his capacities and bring hack to himself many satisfactions and give them in turn , back to th world. One William James, In beginning his courae In Harvard university, said to th students who filled hi lecture room something Ilk this: "Possibly there ar no geniuses in this room. I hope there's none, but every one who Is here. If he works hard, if he gets a Job, if h persists when h is 40 years of age will be a useful and re spected man In hi community." The lads who ar fit to go to college are not primarily the one who have re sources, not the one who have genluj, but the ones, regardless of resources and genius, who have the wlll-to-achleve. In-Shoots Tainted money usually sprouts wines first. When the house divided against Itself falls the bricks always hit the under dog. It does pot always reform a man to get married, but it usually make him more cautlou. Th girl who want to mak literature count will first memoriae th content of th cook book. W ar often saddened by thought that ' the handeom movl screen hero may hav a sissy vote. Th fact thst a few of us ar still living seem to tak th snap ut of lot of these deadly germ theories. Kvery nun should be patriotic enough 10 listen anne tne other fellow slnjs "6 tar fpsngkd Banner" now and then. I Anita Stewart's Talks No. 6 A Girl and Her Money f ? A,- V 4 I ' r IAS' St '? -ft: W- ;- i " y- J4 A Recent Photograph of Anita Stewart in an By ANITA STEWART Copyright, 1915, Inter 1. News Service. The first money I ever earned I made posing as a ragged, barefooted little country girl In a moving picture film. I received only a few dollar for It, but I felt richer than many a millionaire. They talk about th music of the spheres! Do you know what I think It Is? I think It's that crisp, important rustle of th first money we ever make with our own hand and brains and en ergy. Not without reason do they stamp tha eagle the emblem ot liberty on a dol lar, for there's no freedom without fi nancial Independence, and that' what you achlev when you begin to male money for yourself. , But it' on thing to make money and another thing to save It, and th say ing la what I want to talk to girls about today, for lot of girls can make a good alary, but it takes a real heroin to accumulate a savings bank account SLi HOLIDAY CLEARANCE SALE Our great Christmas sales bar left many broken lines la Diamonds. WatchM, Jewelry, etc., which we have placed on sale during holiday week at greatly reduced prices. Now la the time to buy a handsome Diamond Ring, Stud, Ear Screws, Brooch, La ValUere. Pendant, Bracelet, Watch, Wrist-Watch. Chain, Charm, etc., and tic u re an exceptional bargain. Many persons, unable to decide Just what Christmas present would the greatest pleasure, make a present of money. Tbe recipient usually desires to Invest the amount in some article of real worth. To aucb we BUggeat the purchase of a fine Diamond. If your gift of money la not (95 : 6ft L. a d I in o n d Ring solid gold L, o f 1 1 morid R I n jC. "Perfection" ritzn prong Tooth mounting. IlIO l,i i M OW ll.SS a Week mounting. . . , w a atoata Solid Gold Wrist Watch With Solid Gold FxtpruJon Bracelet $0175 c $2.50 W C a Month 103 Wrist Watch Cas and Bracelet are both fine 14k solid gold, kever set. full nickel jeweled, either white 1 1C or gold dial, guaranteed " Credit Term I HM I Month, Vi To. 4 Men's Dla , six . 4 , . -if .' vV(V Of course, there ar far mora tempta tions for a woman to spend money than there are for a man. A man can be well dressed with few suits of clothes that look Just Ilk very other man', and there' nothing In a tailor' window, to mak him want to spend hi last cent on it But clothes make a woman pretty or ugly, and every shop window la a stand ing temptation to her. It's so hard to see a hat that would mak you look per fectly ravishing, or a pair of shoes that exactly match a new frock, and to turn your head away and seise your pocket book and run by Instead of (going In and buying. But be Spartans, girls, and forego un necessary finery. Don't be like those foolish ones who, after ten year of hard work, have nothing to show for their labor but a few yard of bedrag gled chiffon. Remember that th rainy day will com for you as it does for everybody else. There will be time of sickness and times of business depression, times whan you . . i - i- v. . f . S. mm LB'LnJ;i sufficient to cover the entire amount you can make first pay ment and balance can ba paid monthly. Dy making your pur chase NOW, during our Holiday Sales, you can obtain Extra Value tor your gift money. Call and Secure One ot These Extraordinary Itargaias before They Are All Goue. Diamond Rings . ..(16.00 up 1-nu.iiond l.a v aXlerea I IS. 00 no I'lmuoiid brooches 17.60 up l'iamond lar r'lna ........ I H.6U up itunoni 1am kela 15.00 up i'lamond lur Screws 116.00 up Ifluinond Hiae ets IIS. 00 up L'iamond but Watches, solid gold, from 131.00 up Wstth Hiarelets. solid gold.lt4.Tt up Watch llrare eta. gold filled 111 65 up Watches, solid gold , . tli. 60 up Bracelets, solid gold flO.Otl up )ti -ltt n"lu fl led 14 r0 up Ilaiiuid Cuff Links IS 09 up lojiioll Biarf iin 14.1 up laiiund Htuds .116.00 up Kniblem Klnjcs , Id.vO up fcllfnet KlnKS 4 50 up Go d filled Watches $10 00 up fulld Oolii Coat Chains 16 00 up Uold M.lad Coat Chain. .13.60 up Kolld Cii id Folia t&.bO up FollJ Gold Cuff Links 14.60 up OaH or Writ for Catalog ST. S03. Ppaotel AttUa irivaa t Mail Orders. Natloriol Credit Jewelers Mats nor City sTationa! Baak Building, 4-J Soul 110 aurl, Oiaaka, Opposite ar-Xaa Vu ayertta bUom, to Girls are out of a position, and then th dlf ferenre betwrn peaee and despair will be your balance In the bank. If you have laid money aside, you can lak tlma to recover from an Illness. If you are treated tin)istly. you can afford to give up a bad sltuat on while you hunt for a good one; but if you have lived up to every cent of your earnings you ar nothing but an industrial slave, worse off than the blacks were In th south before tli war. Of course It's hard for a girl to save. For on thing, because her family al ways thinks that a daughter's pocket hook belongs to them instead of being her 'individual property; and for another, tecause so msny of her friends think of her as someone from whom they can al ways borrow money. It's hard for a girl to ssy "No" to v;vf - if ' Attractive Pose. tho she loves, but unless she use som enlightened selfishness and looks out for her own Interests she will find that no body ela will. I would particularly warn gtrls against th follow of loaning money promiscu ously. There's an old proverb that say that when you loan money to a friend you lost your money and your friend both, and this 1 worth remembering. . , I have known girl to deny themselves everything on earth and work ilk slave to hep men they were in lov with through college, or to go Into some busi ness, and in every single ess as soon aa th man got on hi feet he Jilted th girl and married somebody els. Th only way you can save money la by adopting a system and making it a) rule to put aside a certain amount every week. I adopted that plan when I first begsn to earn money. I denied myself many pretty clothe and luxuries that I saw other girl having who mad n more than I did, but I hav th reward ot my thrift now la a lovely llttl horn ot my own that I am building. n )j ft r 12 Siza Thin Kohl Elln A Mouth To. S?ft "asea are double stock gold fil d, warranted fur years, poilahed or beautifully M1! engraved , iw Credit Terms I gl.SO a Koath. rfcon Dowglaa 14V44 ama our salaaiuaa wilt eU with a sy rUoi jo wish t . oris vvbmt smw. KOnaAX wia.s ft a