THK MK: OMAHA TIU'K.sDAV, l KUKUAUY 1.), liM. Woman's Work -:- Fashions -:- Health Hints -:- Household Topics Courage : Its Qualities and Its Uses Cleverly Explained Br BART KKSNKDV. It la all very well to rail at the world because It erecla its mightiest atatuea to man of courage. It U all very well to aay that poeta and philanthropist have mora claim to honor than mere fighting men I beltve in the beauty of poetry. I be lieve to the nobility of philanthropy. But the power of poetry and philanthropy never Kept a destroying invader from ravaging a country and Ita homes. It never kept women and children safe. The potent men In times of stress were men with firm faces and hard eyes, who shrank not" from thoughts of blood and death, but went out and slew the ap proaching enemies. The dread, potent men of absolute physical courage. These were the men of .value. And the world rightly accorded to them higher honors than It accorded to other men, for the world, hard though it be, possesses a doeper and sounder wisdom than Is dreamed of by the shallow, squeamish person who forgets that but for fighting men he would have no roof over his head. The wisdom of the world Is the mys terious and at times sinister wisdom of the crowd-mind, which no individual thinker, however acute and profound, has ever fully grasped or ever will be able fully to grasp. For human beings, how ever near to each other, can never fully understand each other. Individuals are Isolated fragments of an Immense being that Is wonderful and manifold and com plexthe crowd-being. And this crowd being acts on lines outside the compre hension of the wisest thinker. 80, sneer not at nor be Impatient of the wisdom of the world the crowd. Personal, physical Courage la the only true and real courage. It appeals to all. All can understand It. The things that are called moral and Intellectual courage are at best but things of comparison. Physical courage la man's moat glori ous gift In life. It Is the power of absolute control of the body at times of Imminent bodily danger. Tou are unexpectedly confronted with Instant death, and lol you are cool and calm. Tour pulse beats evenly and Jlarly. Never have the powers of pour body lived together with more con sonance than now. Within your brain la a clearness. Nay, It Is as If your brain were clearer and more collected than you have ever known It. Before you is the frightful face of Death. But within you is sanity and balance and collectedness. This Is physical courage. And such la Its maglo that Death Itself shrinks from you. It Is not always given to you to know who Is the man who la possessed of this wonderful courage-magic. And It may be well that though you possess It your self yon may not know It The circum stances in which you have lived have been such that you have not boen put to the test. Tou have never known that within you lived this cold flame, magical and divine. Tou have lived out your life in an immense,, noisome town. Toti have wandered not, nor have you mixed with the fine, hard spirits who live off in the farj outer world.. Tou are pale, you are weak, you are one who effaces himself. You are one who knows not the smile of fortune. Too are perhaps a submerged slave who lives down In the lowest deep of the tremendous town. An Ill-fed. weakling slave. And lol you are suddenly put to the dread test. Tou the one who is weak, the one who Is nothing are without warning, faced with horrible danger Tour end Is upon you. And all at once there has arisen within you a' force mighty and wondrous. A force that la at once cold and of fire. Tour weak heart la nerved with an un known power. A god has a'rlsen within you. Tou are yourself a thousandfold. Tour brain la alert. Toure eye la acute. Into your face has come a strength a fine radiance. Tou, the weakling, are a force Indomit able. ISome there are who think that this magic of absolute and supreme courage may be acquired. But It Is not so. It Is born with the being who possesses It. And it is a quality of the soul that Is not to be crushed out. Neither Is it to be crushed out by the torture of the hell-llfe of the prison, nor by the grind and wear of circumstances. It la aa a divine and eternal light. True, It Is that you may be used and broken In to danger. Tou may work slowly out, unalarmed, along the yard when the storm Is smashing and devour Ing the ship. You may stand steadily In the mhlst of hailing bullets. And still you may not possess this absolute and su preme courage f Or you may be a duelist one who has killed many men. Or a wholesale alayer of your kind. This courage Is to known but by the sudden and unexpected test. When a country is In danger this courage-magic is the thing that alone will avail. At such times the power of gold Is aa- nothing If you have not men who are without fear. Neither do you want men of loud, patriotic words, nor the half-treacherous men of compromise. Women have always loved the man of courage, for these were the men upon whom all depended. In the vague and dread time, gone by tens of thousands of years, these men went forth and slew the Immense and horrible monsters who were then the lords of the world. They went forth and faced tremendous and devour ing dragons. They slew dread, giant tigers. And It was because of these rare men that In the fullness of time the human, man grasped the world. These men of the courage-magio were the gods of the dim beginning. They went to the lairs of unspeakable brute forms and challenged them. They outfaced them In the depths of Immense forests. And so It was that they were deified and adored. And rightly so. But for them some other being than man would now hold the world. And they sailed forth In ships into the far, engulfing mystery of the ocean. These fine men of courage. They feared neither the sweeping waves nor the storms nor the dread monsters that rose out of the black depths to seise them as they stood on their heaving ships. They fronted blackness and mystery and death with Indomitable faces. These men-gods of the old times. They built nations and empires. Aloft they held the sword, and lol beneath Its protecting shade there sprung up the arts and the crafts and the sciences. The sword! Let us reverence the sword. For It brought Into the world the magical calm of peace. 60 rail not because the world erects Its finest and noblest statues to men of cour age. And rail not at the sword. . For from the sword comes life. The world owes all it has to the men who were possessed of the magic of abso- lute courage. And the world will owe to them all that Is yet to come to It. To these men, thinkers and statesmen and Idealists are as nothing. These men of the wondrous courage magio are the men whose destiny It Is to lead the world Into safely and happiness. Away with your talkers and thinkers. Away with your men of compromise. The world Is to be saved, but by the sword. These glorious men of courage! These descendants of the old gods! Let us give them homage and 'reverence! ortable orner Closets J umping to Conclusions Interior decorators have turned to the old-fashioned corner closet, and are busy copying the old colonial examples In mu seums and antique shops, with the In tention of bringing them up-to-date. The idea is to make them portable, even when they have an appearance of being built into the room. Such a closet will he appreciated by people who move often, who have become accustomed to the con venience of a corner closet and dislike to leave ft behind. - I Some of the old designs that have been rediscovered are charming. One old closet, now being' copied, stands' etght feet high and has a depth of two feet and six inches. At the bottom, there Is a closet eighteen Inches deep with double doors that lock; the top of the closet forms the first shelf. The next shelf, eighteen Inches above the first. Is scal loped and cut toward the apex of the closet's angle, the edge being cut out in little slits Into which teaspoons are slipped resting on their .bowls, where they form a ailvcr fringe to the shelf. The two shelvea above follow the second shelf in pattern, one being designed for long stemmed goblets and the other hav ing hooks for cups. The closet has no doors. Well may the decorators admire Ml pattern after this grandmother or closets, for It has a quaint charm that modern furniture cannot show. Of course, the closets with doors are the most practical for they keep .Y con tenta free from dust; of these the ones with the diamond shaped panes of glass In the door frames are the moan, attrac tive. The new closets are equipped with ball-bearing castors which enable the maid to move them without even Jarring the thing on the shelves. Another Idea Is to have closet of well seasoned yel low pine, painted and decorated to match the room In which they are to be used. This makes them available for other rooms besides the dining room, where they will bo appreciated as an added con venience. In a child room, such a closet could be nicely utilised to hold the smaller toys; tt might be decorated with picture of old Mother KubLard, on Its whit enameled surface. The advantage of the' corner chin closet, ever the one standing out In the room, I that k takes up no available wall or floor space. Every one realties the charm of the octagonal room; this same effect rosy be reproduced In a meas ure by cutting off two or more comers through the use of old-fashioned corner closets. Sure! I J , To you get a recommendation, from 1 agi your former husband?" 'Caa I! He knows that If I marry gain the Union y he la paying m will atop."-Mfe. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Circumstantial evidence has too many faithful adherents. Too many people Judge on the appearance of facta with out Investigating for the foundation of real truth. In spite of the fact that appearances are a little against a man who comes half an hour late for an Important ap pointment and talks about "a car oft the track" there may really have been a blockade In the subway on the particular day when the outworn excuse makes us laugh at him! It Is easy to Jump tp conclusions. When one knows half a story and looks at a set of circumstances from one's own angle of vision. It Is very easy to form a conclusion that has very little to do with the facts In the esse. Two and two do make four, but there is always a possibility that three has been sdded to tho first two and one sub tracted from the second, which changes the sum materially. Suspicion and cynicism and doubts are great forces In modern life. People doubt and question each other and Im pugn each other's motives. How many a love affair haa ended disastrously because a man who had promised to be some where at 8 o'clock neither appeared nor sent an excuse for his non-appearance! The girl in the case Jumped te a con clusionshe was being neglected, abused and otherwise unfairly treated. At once she must protect her dignity. And off goes an ill-tempered, hysterical, accus ing letter which shows an utter lack of faith and understanding to a man who haa been called out of loan to the death bed of a dear friend and who Is either furiously angry or aadly grieved when he finds himself tried and condemned unheard. "Judge not. that ye be not Judge," la wisdom as well as religion. When all the evidence I In and looks decidedly black for the accused, human love and human charity ought still make allowance. But when the evidence ha not been returned In full, when there are only a few Indication against friend or beloved, why torture oneself with suspicion, why fall friendship with doubt? The lack of faith you show in some one else give evidence against yourself. It you suspect other people of under handed and unworthy dealings, you sug gest at once that you are capable of them. The motive you attribute to some one else is possible for you. If you conclude that a broken engage ment Is clear evidence of tll-faitb and dis loyalty, you could be guilty of lll-falth. and disloyalty. Haaty Judgment I never fair. It I pulled from true center by emotion en th one hand and lack of knowledge en the other, and the only way te swing Striped Clothes Modish for. Outdoor Gaiety and Sports Natural Backgrounds of Natural Colors Advocated-Yellow Popular Jor Blazer Coats and Suits ' ' f t models that will nihke t hoi rappea rs ncel J Yy ' ' - a few weeks hence. The material la bis-, j J J I 1 nviN W ft i I calt-colored gabardine, cut with an ex- J I I Ju IjJ ' 5 f c ceeningiy wiue eairi, wnicn in ininnru If V I 9 ! ? l ' In "front to a sharply pointed yoke to fl J ' s ( I maintain a flat abdominal line. ' m : ! i 'I t This skirt Is attached to the blouse U Jfl k I J beneath a self belt, which Is fastened D ! jj i Y' - il wltn a bucK,e arrangement of yellow t&J f ' I? and red stones. fr i 1 vjj ui im li.ll art b Yi 111 k muYx.-; i w.mm ke i a ' 1 1 nil .; mw.itMKt -J emu IBP The new blacer suit exploit skirt of yellow striped white shan tung completed by a coat of yellow ellk. Girlish model of novelty chip straw with drooping brim with al ternate bands of brown and blue ribbon. Collar of fine shadow lace. Beer ha designed a postilion suit of biscuit toned gabardine, whose salient feature is the detachable cape.. -'Stylish suit of striped serge, fea turing reversed stripes, in panelled effect. Green taffeta faces the wide collar. Economy and N House Furnishing When economy must be observed, ye taste demands attractive furnishings. th selection of wall rter, hnzln? and cv erlnas should Ik- carefully thought out, I'erhapa the description of one room t!ial save the impression of elegnnl reflne ment. yet the cos'. In rash was ah.vu-dl9 mall, may be of help as miRecf tine ilmr lar treatment for those wishing to ob tain equally satisfactory results. A living room that offered pnsslli';lt ea In the way of oienlngs and outline had to be furnished by a fastidious irr'nn, whose sense of the fitting end beautiful wns ever so much greater than lh smoiint at band to 1 exrenrted. For the walls the cheapest roll rnr"r, that I culled "oatmeal" from Its derided ,rMn, wns rhocn In a huff shade nnd wan c r lied from the hnsrhrnrl to the rcr lot iMohlliig. This slmde offers an eCfcctlv Inckgrniiml for v'ctures nnd nlfio Jilvea the ImprcssUn of abundant light. 'urtalis of rtetotino In soft gtnylak green, dull re.lt and bright orang- tlnta, with a hint of old bl'io. were found Imp plly lisrmHi'lnuH. Thne it?i1.- t" val ances and slile curtains, while crra n net In n large rrosihar wss used for Rhj curtains. V lllo'v and mahogany furni ture wns selected after ronsi.jc r tig whether these or the early r.r.gMsli wjuld he best. ICverv ece cf the wl'low wa stained a dull greenish gray or g-ny green, and the rhndes for lamp, c ;vcra of tables, cushions, etc, were of the cre tonne, with a border of vivid nrargv th lampshade of tVM and the others 'wild the orange border In plain rhint or cre tonne of the same shade. For such a room the borders of th floor, outside the rug, should be stained the mahogany and a rug with the vari ous tints In soft Persian eferts u-lll b found ' suitable. cVllIng In cream, of course, and while there Is entire absenct of straining after effect, such a r.iora offer a sense of restful harmony that Is very pleasing. A remark made once by a paper Imligck and painter, who waa doing such work for a woman who had to make her heed, and hands supply many a dollar of ex penses, seemed strange to her, but ha proven quite truthful In the passing oi the yeara. "Do you want the woodwork palntctq. white?" he' asked. In great surprise. "Why, most ladlee object to any light color, aay It shows dirt too plain." Nevertheless, the woodwork wa painted white, the delicious tint of old Ivory; chair th same; the email, qualnl Sheraton bufft also In white and th. wall In French green, made of this dln Ing room a picture that wa admired by all who saw It 0 ' r72f75X?7T T7 T7 DO PZ By GRRMAINB GAUTIER. One might as well try to suppress the striped patterns that make their ap pearance at this season of the year aa to eliminate the flowers that bloom In the spring from the scheme of nature. One would be quite as impossible of achievement aa the other. For striped cloths, silks and linens have come to stand for outdoor gayety and healthful sports. Each year these have been advanced in slightly different coloring and In rearrangement of the vertical line, so that they appear to be different from their predecessors. A lot of striped shantung I being ad vocated Just now. The natural color , is the one In greatest evidence and on this neutral background are woven stripes of brilliant green or rose, dark blue or yellow. A variation of the Idea shows a white background, and by way of strik ing contrast the trtpe are frequently introduced In black. , Much of the beauty of the new out ing matertala 1 enhanced by the com bination of the latter with plain colors. It sometimes happens that the skirt will have a blouae of solid hue, and that the coat of a monotone will be trnmcd with the blouse fabric. The wearer must be quite careful In her choice of a hat and of the Inevitable aunahade. because If these are not Just right In shspe. In color and In fabrld they will mar the ensemble. Tellow, which wa exceedingly popu lar last season, la scheduled for a be-between-aeaaon vogue for thoae whose going away plan demand outing cos tumes. Sometime the yellow Is used for the blaser coat to be worn with a striped skirt; or It may comprise the entire suit, which I touched up with a border of con trasting color. Ultra modern are the outing suits of white satin. Indeed, some Of these are said to be of waahable qualities; but, on the whole, the woman who goea in for all white costuming muat depend very greatly on the art of the dry cleaner THE HAM WHATAM TV leaf i all Araiear PtacU baa- tU Oval Label your Judgment Into normal, well-centered balanced la to base It on all the evidence. Don't Jump to conclusions. That pro ceeding may land you In the water of doubt, or cause you to strike and bruise yourself against the gangplsnk of under standing, but It will aeldom bring you safely on board the ship of Justice. to keep her garments In spick and span condition. The outing garb of white Jersey cloth I more durable. It ha less tendency to show soil or to wrinkle easily. Moreover, it la astonishingly modish this season, due perhaps to the lack of other materials; or becauae It offer the greatest sugges tion of novelty. Not only are there blazers, but there are also one-piece dresses of that fabrlo. They are very plain In line and boast no trimming whatever, save collar and cuffs of white linen or organdie. Even the buttons are covered with aelf-ma-teiial and the belt la likewise of the drtsa fabric. There Is, to be sure, choice In color, since the dress is to be had In rose, bright green, Kuxe blue, gold and purple. A great deal of Ita smart effect de pends on the gaiety of the accessories, contributed principally by the striped or flowered hat with its accompanying para no I. The majority of such hats are large, although not exaggerated to the Gains borough proportions. One may have her headwear aa gay aa she pleases, though (he girl with Inherent good taste will stick to extravagant simplicity In hats as well as in dresses and suits. Peer has advanced one of the most at tractive deml-tallleur of the early aea son. It has only recently arrived from Paris, and without doubt It will be in troduced many times over In domestic Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax Don't Be Sfebbore. Dear Miss Fairfax: Two weeks ago I had an argument with my fiancr. 1 ad mit I wss in the wrong. J have uncon sciously "given In" to his ways, hot Uiih time thought tt best not to do an I have not seen or heard from him since, and I presume he thinks I should mil him up. "DISAPPOINTED." Tour attitude Is both petty and stub born and not In any way compatible with real love. What doe tt matter who make th advance? The point 1 that your are at present estranged from the one you love and that a few words would elear up the situation. Are you not ashamed te hesitate to say thsmf Dandruff Surely Destroys the Hair Girls If you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for It will starve your hair and ruin it If you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wsah It out. The only sure wsy to get rid of dandruff Is to dissolve it. then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounce or ordinary liquid arvon; apply It at night when re tiring; use enough to moleton the scalp and rub It In gently with the finger tlpa. Py morning, most. If not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more application will completely dis solve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. Tou will find, too. that all Itching and digging into the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and fell a hundred time better. Tou ran gt Hquld arvon at any drug atore. It Is Inexpensive and four ounces Is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff )ou have. Thla sim ple remedy never falls. Advertisement. Of, 'rrnours o iUi In tho Stoclrinet Covering An tMthurv Armtur fiturt. Fml. mpplud fr. The spicy richness of Armour's mild Star cure is intensified by smoking in the Stockinet Covering Armour s way of retaining the rich natural juices and improv ing the flavor, ine uvai Label identifies it as Armour's best Buy the ham whole and remove the Stockinet yourself. If your dealer cannot supply you, phone u his narne, ARMOURCOMFAfnr 1 r sSBma PRODUCTS, Try Theset Star Baca "Sbaee Per" Leaf Lara DsvsaaW- Fans Saaatf Ariser's Grsse Jake Clovorileea Batter Clsadal OUeaargeria (WaaaxsJ CMarl Sthrer Caere OUeawrfara AaJ laV'swksr Faaav Indata, Mgr.. 13th and 9on Its. Dong. 105S sTUklDBOa. Mgr., tta and Q an. Tel. Bo. IT 4 ' There's tin Armour Oval J.aU'1 more near ). 9 s its- N O Use Talking to Napoleon He Was Too Busy rrf When Napoleon wa puzzling with GIL the problem of invading England, ho I there In the channel waiting for a wind to come up and blow him across. He was sent word that an American wanted to see him about getting th trans ports over the channel. He sent word hack that he would give the American JUST ONE MINUTE. That American was Robert Fulton and be wanted to tell Napoleon about the steamboat and that he did not need to wait for the wind. But THEKB WAS NO USE TALKING TO NAPOLEON. He bad a job on his hands and was too busy to talk to the young man. There are a lot of NAPOLEONS In the busi ness world struggling with the problem of how to get over. They are waiting for the favorable wind to blow Instead of applying the power of advertising to their transports. When the advertising salesman calls ex plain to them they send out word they will glvo him JUST ONE MINUTE and that they are too busy. Some busy men have much to learn, but they will not listen. The most Important thing In the world In success Is to know wbi to let the other map talk to you to know when to stop talking to him. There Is a lot of steam In advertising that appears In THE OMAHA BEE. It will put you over the chan nel quicker than the frivolous winds of sea-, sons or lurk. Notice the firms that are steaming ahead regardless of time or tide or winds tbelr advertisements are continu ously appearing In THE OMAHA BEE !'Where Continaoxu Advertising Will Pay"