THH nKK. OMAHA, KDNKNhAY, .IAN IT ART 5. 10l. Hhe Bees.-.Home Maazitie Page. Gaby Deslys and Her Pet; First Dog to Wear Earrings The Sun His Own Timekeeper Sun DiaJs Beautiful, i Useful and Romantic Were the First Instru ments Invented to Meas ure the Flight of Hours, and Are Still the Truo Watchdogs of Noon. Anita Stewart's Talks to Girls No 8 The Smoking and Drinking Menace By AMTA NTKWAKT. gTVcA" -s . . . reW : V tvMA VBjm .J v-- ; h - Above, are shown pictures of Gaby Deslys and Babe, her tiny Mexican Chihuahua dog. The dog Is the first to wear earrings. These earrrlngs were- made of pearls to match Gaby's famous $200,000 necklace, reputed to have been given her by former King Manuel of Portugal. Mrs. Ella Wheeler Wilcox has written of all this as follows: By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. Tha dot- is an Interesting animal of great intelligent. In the ntire animal kingdom .be la the farthest advanced toward the human incarnation, of alt. the quadruped. This is due greatly to his cloae association with human beings and the education received through their com panionship. Everything which Is contains the divine essence. It sleeps in the mineral kingdom, stirs In the vegetable kingdom, sounds In the animal kingdom and thinks in the human kingdom. Everything is on its way back to God. Everything has its place and sphere in this present incarna tion. It would be folly to take the min erals and try to use them as vegetables. It would be ridiculous to try to make vegetable appear as an animal and It is quite as ridiculous to undertake to make an animal appear like a human being in attire or deportment. Animals are entitled to our kind care, our sympathy and our affectionate treat ment. By bestowing these we help them along toward the development which will . fit them for . a higher plane and at the ; same time we develop our own characters by showing our consciousness cf respon sibility toward weaker things. But the moment, we begin to give animals the ' same treatment which we give to chil dren or human adults we make ourselves " ridiculous. There are silly women who give their dogs a seat at the table; there are silly women who talk baby talk to their dogs and lavish caresses upon them in public, and now comes the silliest of all women who la bestowing diamond earrings upon her dog. ' It Is not only silly, but It Is unkind to the dog and accomplishes nothing save to exploit a foolish vanity and desire for publicity. That great soul, J. Howard Moore, says in his "Unlversay Kinship:" "Look upon and treat others as you do your own hands, your own eyes, your very heart and soul with infinite care and compassion, as suffering and enjoy ing the members of the same great being with yourself. This Is the spirit of the ideal universe, it is this alone can redeem the world and give to it the peace and larmony for which it longs. Yes, do aa you would be done by and not to the dark man and the white woman alone, but to the sorrel horse and gray squirrel as well; not to creatures of your own By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Human beings seem to divide them selves Into two classes: the sturdy in dependent folks who work out their own life problems as independently as may be, and the spineless weaklings who waver through life seeking props. No human being is really fully self sufficient; no human being ought to rely to any great extent on any outside In fluence to bolster him up so that his uncured weaknesses will not spoil his life. In the final analysis everyone has o wor iia &i work out his own problems and "dress in weird." After all. friendship, love, sympathy. guidance and the best Intentioned desires to help will aid no one who does not choose to help himself. Do you remember the old fable of Aesop? It Is called "Her cules and the Wagoner." This is how it goes: "As a wagoner was driving hla wain through a miry lane, the wheel atuck fast In the clay, and the horses could get no further. The man dropped on his knees and began crying and praying to Hercules with all his might to come and help him. 'Laiy fellow said Hercules, get up and stir yourseir. Whip your horses stoutlly. snd put your shoulder to the wheel. If you want any help then. you ahall have If " How wonderfully this tells the whole storj. Anyone worth helping will make a loo the effort to help himself. Anyone who cries weakly snd ineptly for assis tance would fail even when assisted, be cause each time failure stared him In the face he would shriek aloud for help. The "clinging vine" is miserably un fair to himself and equally cruel to the "sturdy oak." Every human being has Ills own problem to face and his own burdens to bear for everyone the per sonal problems are hard enough. To some strength enough is given so hat they have it to spare for others e ven after they have managed their own Uvea. To them Inevitably an appeal will lie mude by the "weaker brethren." And a treneroua nature must atwaya give lav Ih1iI of lh help and underatandlng It has In Its pouter to offer. But if you are one of those who are In I - "-:''1 ! I , , ! , v x ; - anatomy only, . but to . all creatures. Do more than live and let live; live and help live. Do , to the being below you as . you would be done by beings above you. "Poor, undeveloped, untaught creatures. They are fellow mortals. Let us be kind and merciful to them." But that doe not mean that we are to give our four-legged animals diamond earrings, necklaces or lings, put them in chairs at our tables, or otherwise place them on a par with human beings in a manner which does not benefit them and which they cannot understand or ap preciate. The finest bred horse In the world would not enjoy a four-post bedatead as a place of slumber. What he needs is a light, airy, comfortable stall, with clean straw 'for a Looking for the Props the habit of casting your burdens on others, stop for a moment and think : Are any of your problems ever really solved when you do not solve them? Don't you see that life in Its wisdom in sists on disciplining you and "whipping you into. shae?" If today you are given a certain situa tion and if Instead of facing It you rush with It to a wiser mind for solution and unreasopingly and with rather pathetic faith accept the solution Just because the wiser mind has offered It, you are deny ing your reasoning powers a chance to figure out your problem and refushlng to seach your own nature for the re serves of strength which may well be there. Read over again the little fable ot "Hercules and the Wagoner." Determine to stir yourself when you find the wheels Advice to the Lovelorn IT BBATaUOa Do Net gee Illns Awla. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 11 Thla sum mer 1 met throutrh a flirtation a man eight years my aenlor. Ha aeemed to be a gentleman and I took great liking to him. He asked me if I would let him be a good friend. Now I hear he la married and a gambler. u. J u. Vou must have absolutely nothing more to do with this man. You should never have flirted with him In the first place, and now that you know he Is a gambler you must drop htm at, once. The case would be still worse If he Is married. But whether or not he la, he la still a danger ous associate for you and you muat end your acquaintance at once', l-t Well Fh Aloa. Pear Visa Fairfax: I am going about with a young lady whom I love dVarly and who has told me that my love Ik reciprocated. Previous to our friendship she had aeen much of another man, but aft. r she bad consented to become my wife the refiiMed to see him. Now he h begun t-lMihoiilng her, anil akin whether le in call, tu which ahe re- fled no. He rrsiitel her lth a nunl- cuio set, which she has never uvd. bedding. The most Intelligent cat or dog u u Bot rlffht for euiml1tt ,nnumorous In the word, however finely bred and perTOn, who for of another. carefully educated, does not appreciate , want t0 known the exact tlme ghown having his mistress call herself hla, by th. ,un at tha pomt on the ,arth mother. where they happen to live, and not the The devotion, the faithfulness, the loy- conventional time shown by what astron alty and the unselfishness of many a ' omera call the "fictitious sun," which dog, in fact of most doss, may well put they have created to make easy work for the majority of human beings to shame. clocks nobody being able to maks a Few of us have the faith In our God, j clock that could accurately follow the however devout we may be. whloh en-1 sun, whose apparent motion through ables us to illustrate It by obedience and 'the sky varies in accord with the varla devotion suctr as a dog shows his master tlons of the earth's real motion around or mistress. All theae things are to be lit. Four times in a year, about April 16. appreciated by the right-minded human June 14. September 1 and December M, being, and affection, protection and kind- neas shown the animal. To go farther than this simply makes us ridiculous and does the animal no good. of your chariot are caught In the mire. Give yourself the exercise of. trying to extricate youraelf.' Then if you fall, you have a right to wiser counsel and when you see it applied to the altuatlon, you will be able to figure out why you failed and ao act more Intelligently in your next difficulty. Don't get Into the habit of rushing with all . problems- to some one wiaer and stronger than you. Aid and counsel are splendid things. But the exercise of your own ingenuity and Intelligence and good Judgment are of equal importance. Don't be a "clinging viae." If you are, you will impede the oak to which you faatened yourself and you wilt make yourself so weak that if storm bends or breaks your oak you must be cast to the ground a mm of tangled leafage, doomed to destruction. TAJJKF&X. Would it be proper to return this to htm. after ah had It more than a year? P. F. Tour friend should have returned the gift st the time whan ahe ceased receiving the other man's attentions. To do so now would be merely to give him a ohanoe to protest, and so to reopen affairs between them. 1e beat way to rid herself of his uaweioome attentions Is to tell him frankly that she cares for some one else. Has Treated Yew Vafalrly. Dear Mlas Fairfax: I met a young girl ten months ko and learned to like her. I perausded her to Improve her education In KuglUh aud music, for which she hu a talent; ahe accosted It and J started to rein her with expenses After eight months I told her ray inten tion, hut she aaid she did not ears for me. Wilt yuu advise me if you think I have any hope tu win her heart? 11KAKTBKOKEW. You had best discontinue your aooualpt ance with the girl; ahe certainly had no right to let you pay her education, and now that she has tn'd you ahe does not cure foi you, both riUnlty and piooilcty otiiiand discontinuing your frleudahip. By GARKKTT 1. SKItVISH. "Kindly tell tis all shout a sun-dtal, how It la built, the prlnrlpte underly ing the bit a. Can a set nun-rilnl give the correct time summer and winter alike? W. N. N. Richmond Hill." Moras non nuraero nisi sprpnaa ("1 count only the sunny houra". Sm-h waa the favorite motto Inacribed on the old sun-dlals, and It reveals at once thp true application of the Inatrumpnt aa a mpaa urer of time, and tha poetic beauty of the conception on which It la baed. The sun-dlal has given to literature one of lla finest allegorical phrases, "The shadow on the dial." What metaphor, or rhetorical flgtire. excela that In contem plative power? strung girl. The slow on-creeping of the d.irk gray, Aside, however, from the physical ef-dellcate-edged aliade of the gnomon, fecta of cigarettes, I am personally faa gradually reaching and covering the sue- tldloua, and It revolts me to smell a girl's cesalve figures of the hmira is a curl- ! breath reeking of tobacco, and see her oualy fascinating eight. It Is like the fingers stained with nicotine. If I were march of doom. With a magnifying glass j a man, j shouldn't like to klaa that kind you can see the movement of t'me's , 0f nps nor hold that kind of a hand, shadowy finger. To the Imagination It I never smoke rtgarettea, and I never Is an uncanny sight: It Is mere motion ; made visible, for what seems to move Is nothing, because a shadow has no substance. There is' no Invention that man has ver' made which puts under his eyea so startling an image of tha fleetlngnea of life as Is furnished by the sun-dlal. The movement of clock-hands has no such effect, for that la mani festly a purely mechanical phenomenon. Here, perhapa, Ilea the occult reason why these instruments have never been popu lar. why they were often attached to churchea and cemeteries, why moral maxims . appeared In the mottoes that they bore, and why, in these days, when ever you find a man who has taken pains to furnish his garden with a sun dlal, you are sure to discover that he is of a meditative or contemplative dis position. The sun-dlal tells the true sun-time, at the place or on the merldinn where It la situated. Clocks ate prevaricators and compromisers. It you want to know the moment when it is truly noon you must go to the sun-dlal for that Infor mation. Tour clock will, ordinarily, give you what la actually somebody else's noon, situated a considerable distance east or west of you, while somebody else's clock will give him your noon, and neither will have the real noon. This Is all right for general, practical purposes In this all-grasping age, when we have made the world our oyster, and are oon- r A mrltV all MM n It mt Anm. hut tne clock and the sun agree. There you have the whole philosophy ot the sun-dlal; It holds up Its motionless finger (the gnomon), exactly In the meri dian on sunny days, and the sun, travel ing from east to west through the aky, throws the shadow of the gnomon onto a graduated dial, and causes thai shadow to move eastward across the dial, keep ing perfect step with its own progress In the opposite direction. It shows the true local sun-time at all seasons. The simplest of all forma of sun-dlal. and the easiest to make, tm a flat plane of metal or stone, placed hortsontAlly, snd having the line ot the true meridian of the plaoe, or the true north and south line, drawn through Its center. Another line, at right angles to this. Is the a o'clock, or east and west line. Upon the meridian line la set up the gnomon, a thin triangular pleoe of metal, one of whose angles is a rigtit angle, while one of Its two other angles is equal to the latitude of the place where the instrument is fixed upright on the dial In such a way that its right-angled corner Is st the northern end of the base, or side on which It stands, while the side opposite to ths right angle points directly toward the pole of ths heavens, whose elevation above the horison always equals the latitude of the place where the observer stands. The shadow of the gnomon will move across the plate on the side opposite to that on which the sun shines, snd will reach, in succession, a series of hour lines, which must be drawn at such dis tances apart aa to correspond with the relative positions of the principal merl dlans of ths globe. Ths edge of the shadow approaches the gnomon before noon and recedes from It after noon'. At noon the sun will shine directly down upon the top of ths upright triangle, or exactly in Its plane, and there will be no shadow, the moon Una on the dial corresponding, as we have al ready seen, with the direction of the gnomon Itself. Standing on ths south aide of the dial, tha forenoon hours will be on ths left, and tbs afternoon hours on the right. The proper pne'tlone for the hour lines on the dial can be ascertained by a sim ple geometrical method, which Is too long to be described here, but which will found, for Instance. In the Encyclotwdla Americana. It la very important to have the meridian on the dial placed In exact aooordance with the real meridian, and the ascertainment of the latter is a prob lem in elementary practical astronomy. Many complicated and extremely beauti ful forma of sun-dial were made In the days before clocks and watches became cinmon. They are precloua curtoa for thoae who can appiectele them. Copyright. 1!1R. lntrrl Ni Prr to. "Ilnva n ilrrlt. Anita? Wbl' Von don't mriokP? Oil, you poor llttl dy-hpfor-)-:tr(liiy Klri:" Thl wlu:t ot( of my frtcndu mv to nr. and thf ar" nlr Rlrla. too. Somf tlmra I tMnk t'irv ar th t ctrln n the worlil born.iac thry have rump 'in aMhPd tlirouch all tnp flrp of tpinpta tion that tlp dpvll hlmaplf llnht around thp fret of a prPtty poor girl In a Ms , city. ' Hut o many of Ihpm iaa rlitarPttpa, , and thpy trll ma that I don't know what j I'm mtarlns whpn I don't Join thpm In j a amoke or two aftpr a trjina momlnf'a l work In thp atudlo. "Oh, ypa. I do know what I'm mlaaln I In not amnklnir laarpttPB., I aay to j thpm. "1 am miming a bad caae of nervpa." And that. If Mtni to mp, la ' thp rpal anKwrr to the qupatlon of why . women shouldn't amoke. We wotriPn are Jumpy enough anyway. We are nothing but bundlea of nervpa, and why we ahould add to our ovpr aup ply by cultivating the cigarette hahlt, I have never been able to underatand. If ' hiiHky and phlegmatlo men find that clarettea are roffln nalla. their effect I la even more deadly on a delicate, high- touch liquor In any form, not even a cocktail, or a glass of champagne at dinner, although at times It Is embaras sing to refuse. But It seems to me that the water route la the only aufe route for a girl to travel, for young as I am, I have al ready noticed that nearly every woman who makes a wreck of her life runs her craft aground when she Is befuddled with liquor. Kverybody knows this, snd that's what makea them auspicious of ths girl who drinks at all. and that's why you hear men say and they say It with reverence when they are discussing a girl. "Oh, she's all right. Straight aa a string. Never touches anything but water." Just aa they'll ssy with a leer of another girl. "Fond of the drink. That kind you know." Of course this Judgment Is often very unjust. A girl who takea a drink with men may never drink too much. But she is always In danger, whereas the girl who doesn't drink at all Is perfectly safe, so why run the risk? More than that, there's a lot in avoid ing the appearance of evil. We girls are emotional creatures, easily excited, and Just the thrill or dining In ,a gay res taurant, with the mualo, and' the lights, and the flowera, and all the beautifully drissed women coming In, runs through cur veins like wine, and brings a flush to our cheeks, and a sparkle to our eyes, and keys our voices up to eonoert pitch. We may not have had a single drop of liquor to drink, but if there are a lot of wine glasses at our plates, and if we have taken even a sip of champagne, th chances are that every one about us will think that we are Intoxicated. Drink ruins a woman's looks quicker than anything else In the world. It dims her eyes, It washes out tha roses In her cheeks. It puts fat on her figure. It puts folly In her heart, and makes her do the things that she would give her life to undo. It Is a cures to men. but It la a curae and ruination to women, and that's why I 1 1 go a'l Klrls to Join me on the water wagon. "My but Sanatogen makes one enjoy living!" AND you know It V a pleasure beyond l the telling; when, after weeks of overwork have weakened your system's forces, you begin to take Sanatogen and fit! that old-time vigor come back with new desire to accomplish and a new joy in living. - The best of it is that it's no trmptrary relief that Sanatogen gives but a rtal, lasting improvement in bodily health and especially in the health of the nerv ous system. For combining the proper ties both of a edf and a Itmie, Sanatogen nourishes the nerve-cells, rebuilds the wasted energies and tones up the whole system as h helps gather a new store of strength. You can scarcely doubt that Sanatogen will ktlp yesj when you remember that over 21,000 doctors have endorsed it in personal letters and when you read what John Burrtughs, the celebrated naturalist, writes: "lawtumtftMlimw Si 1 m sis. afrM h lk pi cal fcvnaf a wm m pms saw aaS aw artaS uaia sm auaii Saw-mi. " Or what Colon! Watterson, the fam ous editor, writes: f Soaateuak I anal mr "SbSit -eut ft.ut.fM acnfcg ie""Nf te aw aieww apu Sanatogen is sold by good druggists everywhere in three sizes, from $1.00 up. tad Vum. rterMfiouii fflnTsai 0 Jfsdicins, LcmOom, tU i!eMi forElbtrt Hubbard's New Book "Health in the Making." Written in his attractive manner and filled with his shrewd philosophy, together with raoiisl sdvicc on Sanstoges. health and contentment. It is FREE, Tear this off as reminder to addressTHE BAUfcK CHEMICAL CO., 1 i Irving flacc, New Yeik. 1 gawsgssiwsMsaSBBsaaaMsaaeTOaisqsaa MSH'iwwmum w'aweeasa t; v . x i . . 'v ,1 ',..."( ' 7 v"."-.-.' - p Vt." . : i .,:..' I . M ' t ' ' v .VX-'.V vvv ; . a- - ' - ' f:, , -- ' his- (':'--:- " fv ,7,:... ,; : fisasft nnsit sriJiia'f tf T11 " ' "' '' "' In-Shoots Ths avsrage married woman has die to get a vacation. to Aa a rule woman can more by tears than smiles. accomplish None save those of brutal Instincts sympathise with the wlfe-beater. rill It is better to tell the truth In ths first place than to admit things when backed up In a corner. Klavlsh solicitude on the part of the wife seldom wins affection of a selftsn man. Tha business man who begins the day with a smile may be excused If ha lets 11 relsx when a bore approaches. If we could take a peep a hundrel years rjence we would all be surprised to find how essy the World can get along without us. . ., 'dm " 1 ! m rv vim-; - i