Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 14, 1916, Page 8, Image 8
1 , THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1916. f -r T.i -w-T- . -n 7 TTT J TT7 7 TT 7 .7.7 rTJ-A Health timis -:- rasnions -:- ir oma s . KK ora -.- nousenoia luyics How to Win Happiness Everybody -is in pursuit of happi- will look to Him who sendeth joy and ness tnd yet no two are governed by the same ideas as to what constitutes perfect bliss. It is the exception when anyone is found who is really happy and contented. The 'more resources people have the less likely they are to be contented or reconciled to their lot in life. Generally, when people are satiated with everything that life can offer, they are morose, and sigh for more worlds to conquer. They are out of health from over-indulgence, or some thing is wrong that they cannot in some way right. They are out of tune with themselves or their envi ronment. It was never intended that mortals should be so satisfied with this world that they have no desire to try to get to a better one. The truth is, there are few persons who are so ituated that it is possible for them to be happy. Naturally, there are times in the lives of most persons when afflictions fall so heavily that it seems difficult to find a rift in the clouds through which any sunshine may be expected to brighten the future. But if one SPECIAL CARE FOR THE WOMEN Many women are coining to my office for daily .or weekly treat ment. Many easea cured and most all are benefited. I DO NOT AD VISE OPERATION, aa most doe ton do. Consultation, $1.00. Ex amination or office treatment, $2. I give yon the medicine. No mat ter what your ailment, I invite you to call. 1 DR. J. C. WOODWARD, ..' 301 Rom Bldg., 14th anal Faraam, Omaha. AlTearDtabN RUM) Ml tsistiiervj7S"' sorrow, there will always come a lightening of afflictions. A thing is never quite so bad but it might be worse. Joy is the legitimate successor to grief, but can only come to those who "take up arms against a sea of troubles, and, by opposing, end them." The lighter and the deeper veins ever run parallel. Smiles follow tears as the sunshine follows the rainfall. Conflicting emotions are ever at war with us, yet it is within our own power to control them. We can fos ter sadness or gladness as we will to do. We have only to appreciate what we have, be thankful for the manifold blessings daily showered upon us, make the best of everything, be cheerful ourselves and let our light so shine, that others seeing our happiness, will be influenced accord ingly. Happiness and misery are merely questions of temperment; neither is brought about by circumstances surrounding one, but are the result of one s own construction , and - ac- eeDtance of them. Persons, with well-balanced minds are not affected by poverty or wealth, youth or old ge., They look back at things from a rational standpoint, and turn, to ad vantage all the opportunities that come to them. They laugh at trouble and folly, and take hold of wisdom and happiness. They do not indulge in repining be cause today it is raining; tney are sure that on the morrow the sun wilt he thinini. Thev see the gold of their hopes and ambitions at the end of every pathway, though they may have to cross the slough of despond en route. they do not stop by the wayside to pick up all the stones of trouble that impede their progress. They do not aDDroDriate to themselves all the de licious fruits of pleasure. They do not overlook the struggling, weary travel ers who oursue the same . oath.- but stop ever and anort to. help them along, by lightening their burdens and giving them at least a word of cheer. They scatter the bread of kindness to the winds as they go through the world, and it is constantly coming bark to them in multiDlied loaves, ' They climb 'to the top of all the mountains that rise before them, and send back cordial greetings to those who save them aid and encourage ment. They are always ready to help others whom they encounter on their journey through life, Drawn for The Bee Their Only Chance : " . tyraZl Vacation Piano Sale at Hospe's Big List of New and Used Pianos and Players From $150 Up Eas? Terms A. Hospe Co. 1513-15 Douglas Street - ---------MMig?i"i i .wei-aaaaegBatageg- a" 11 . sasaaeagtaWCSeaaaBgia Advertiting is the pen dulum-that keepe buy ing and telling in motion r--, .... .. .,. .... , PATHE' Prcsenls T1D For Luncheon or Tea Table Currant Cake.' One ' nound of flour, one-auarter pound ' of butter, one-half pound of sugar, one-half pound of currants, half pint of milk, one teaspoonful of car bonate of soda. Mix all the dry in gredients together. Place the butter in a basin a little way from the fire until it gets soft, beat it up with a fork until it is like cream; mix a good teaspoonful of carbonate of soda in two tcaspoonfuls of milk, set aside until you have mixed with a knife the flour, etc., with butter and milk, then pour in the milk and soda; beat well until thoroughly mixed, place in a greased tin, leaving plenty of room to rise, bake slowly lor nan an nour, then in a hotter oven for one hour. Date Cake. One pound of household flour, one half pound of dates, six ounces of butter, a tablespoonful of vinegar, milk (less than a quarter of a pint), one-quarter pound of sugar, mixed spice, carbonate of soda. Rub all the dry ingredients well together, melt the carbonate of soda in the milk, and add to the mixture, then add the vinegar, beat all well together, and bake for one and a half hour in a moderate oven. Ginger Cake. Three-quarter pound of flour, three nuarter nound of svruo. one-fluarter pound of lard, two tcaspoonfuls of sugar, halt a teaspooniul ot spice, a little candied oeel. one teaspoonful of ground ginger, one ditto of car bonate of soda, a little milk. Mix all drv inirredients together, then add enough warm milk to make a stiff dough. Bake one and one-quarter hours in a moderate, oven. HOTELS AND RESORTS. Why Jack Spratt was t Wrong Not to Eat Fat : "Jack Spratt could eat no fat," says the nursery rhyme. A great many people have a prejudice against the fat of meats, and a recent issue of the Londan Lancet shows why they are wrong. Many minor ills ot t(ie body would be avoided if only care were taken to include a sufficiency of fat in the diet. Fat, we know', is about the most com pact form of fuel which we possess, while it exercises a favorable effect upon the process of the internal tract. In excessively cold countries a rich fattv diet is indispensable, for fat is the only substance which will rapidly replace the heat lost by" the body, and travelers in the Arctic regions have related that they can only be kept warm and comfortable by a general supply of fatty foods, in com parison with which the effect of ex tra clothing was inappreciable. The tendency of today in many quarters is to exclude as much as pos sible tne tatty portions oi animal foods. Pieces of fat are carefully cut off the slice of ham. mutton or beef. and only the lean parts are eaten. In deed, for some unaccountable reasons the eating ot tat is regarded by not a few as positively vulgar. Such an attitude, of course, displays an ignorance of physiological facts. Cold feet, hands, fingers, ears and chilblains would in many instances be avoided under a generous diet of fatty foods. A digestible fat favors nutrition considerably; it spares much waste of the tissue-forming elements of food. When lean meat alone is given large quantities are required in order that nutrition and waste may balance one another, but if fat be added the demand for flesh is less. Besides, therefore, giving an advantage in re gard to making good the repair of the body, the use of it is economical from the point of view of dollars and cents. The absorption of large quantities of fatless meat again tends to over load the blood with nitrogeneous waste products. In anaemic persons the partaking of an easily digested fat is commonly followed by the best results, nutrition is greatly improved and the condition of the blood is often restored to. normal. It is well known, again that easily absorbable fats, such as butter, cream, cod liver oil, bacon fat and dripping, are espe cially valuable to sufferers from wast ing diseases. The introduction of the old fash ioned and well prepared suet pud ding into the diet is in perfect ac cordance with scientific teaching, and from the dietetic point of view, es pecially in the feeding of young, growing people, does probably a real ly beneficial service to the country. tesmrir mat Aura saatf Pathe's Mightiest Film Spectacle! ' By Louis Tracy Featuring Jackie Saunders and Roland Bottomley Tames M. Curley, Mayor of Boston, recently declared: "Humanity, is in the Grip of Evil., The struggle for a livelihood is more brutal in our day than in ancient times!" With food products going up, perhapa too have wondered how your children and your children's children will wrist John Bur ton, miUionaln-marquia, but once a laborer, eata out to discover what's wrong with the world, , . The Result of Burton's investigations of present day problems will be revealed in an amazingly entertaining fashion in i ' ' . TThe Grip of Evil." first of the gigantic offerings on the new $5,000,000.00 Pathe" Serial Program stupendous master plot in fourteen epiaodea elKming the real aidc huinanity -eapoeingtb. evils of aoektyoneby one. Doe Right alweye triumph? 8ea "The Grip of BviL Coming Soon! . at the Better Theatres Beleaacd by CEAJKE'l 1 , Read the Story in The Omaha Bee Prodneed by BALBOA mm nMnSHMBM i THE PLAZA NEW YORK World Famous Hotel Opposite Central Park at 59th Street Uom as All Theatres and ' Shop 5 SUMMER fC 3(1 . ' GARDEN fcT v ' and Outdoor Tamos 5 Cool and Refreshing Place to Dine. ' Wrtfft hmtllm 7Wf FRED STERRT. Mnfie Director ROOMS WITH BATH HJO UP ITT trVJhf" Stuffed Spanish Onions By" CONSTANCE CLARKE. This is a delicious dish, tasty and just what one wants when the appe tite is not just as keen as usual. Put four or five Spanish onions as nearly the same site as possible into a saucepan of boiling aatted water and let them boil until tender. Then take out, wipe them thoroughly and scoop out the center, leaving a half inch shell Grate one-quarter pound of cheese into a bowl, add one-half a cup of fresh bread crumbs and one- half cup of cooked macaroni, pepper and salt to taste. Mix well together. then gradually mix a teaspoonful of mustard into a half cup of milk, then stir into the dry ingredients and beat all together. Fill the shells with this mixture and cover .with bread crumbs. Wrap each one in a piece of buttered paper and bake in a mod erate oven. Serve hot, garnished with parsfey and strips of green peppers. (I omorrow JUittie Kussian laices.j Each Atom a Universe, and Perhaps Inhabited By GARRETT P. SERVISSr- We are beginning to get glimpses into the world of the infinitely little which startle the imagination even more than the vast spectacles ot tne firmament above us. The unlocking of the atom, within the last few years, has revealed the fact that all things about us. even our very bqdies, are made up of min iature solar svstems. somning so swiftly that their infinitesimal "plan ets" may make as many as three mil lions ot revolutions, or even more, in a single second I No doubt you know what an atom is, but, nevertheless, we will define it again, according to the older ideas of science. An atom, until the recent discoveries were made, was supposed to be the smallest particle ot any kind of matter that could exist When they spoke of an atom physicists and chemists thought they were referring to something that was no longer di visible. There could be, they be lieved, nothing smaller than an atom. When they got down to- that they imagined that they had got to the very bottom of things. Out of atoms, as the ultimate particles, every kind of substance was built up. Now we know that this was all wrong. An atom is not the smallest possible thing, and instead of resem bling an unbreakable, indivisible par ticle, an atom is made up of a vast number of things so much smaller than itself that, in comparison with the whole atom, they have been liken ed to the sun and planets in compar ison with the whole solar system. The name corpucle has been given to these infinitesimal particles which constitute an atom, and it has been found that an atom of hydrogen probably contains a thousand corpu cles; an atom of oxygen, 16.UO0: an atom of iron, 55,800; an atom of gold, 197,200; an atom of mercury, 200.000. and an ?tom of radium. 225.- 000. This is sufficiently marvelous in itself, but it is by no means the whole story. Amazing motions are continually taking place in the atom. Its corpu cles are in constant revolution, like the planets going round the sun. But they travel, in some cases, 100,000 miles in a aecondl In some sub stances, like radium, a certain dis order arrivea in the revolutions. Ow ing to the escape of energy the veloc ities are disturbed, and certain corpu cle fly away with a speed of 20,000 miles per second! It is as if the solar system should suddenly reach a criti cal stage and go to pieces, the earth and other planets shooting away into space. Now. atoms, with their corpuscles, combine into larger (but still invisi bly smari) particles, called molecules, and in these also revolutions take place. The atoms in a molecule re volve around other atoms. They do not travel as- swiftly as the corpus cles in the atom, and yet it has been shown that in a drop of water the hvdroffen atoms, which are the light est, may revolve round the oxygen molecules so tast tnat tney . mane 3,000,000,000,000 revolutions in a sec: ondl Inis is tne same nuraoei we have referred to above. .- Imagine one of those revolving atoms to represent the earth, and call its neriod of revolution an "atomic year," thus comparing it with the rev olution ot tne earin arouna mc sun and then go a step farther, and im agine infinitesimal beings inhabiting that atom. If their lives lasted the same number of atomic years that our lives last of our years, at least fifty thousand million generations of those creatures would pass in a single second of our timet A similar comparison was maae by Dr. Johnstone Stoney many year before the discovery of the real con situation of the atom. At that time he took the velocity of the vibrations of light as a basis for his calcula tion, and he said; "The motions of light bear the same relation to one second of tin that the motions of our limbs bear to a period of 30,000, 000 years. If there were sentient be ings with bodies which move as deftly is this ether, and with thoughts and perceptions as quick as their bodies are active, there would be sufficient time for them, within a small fragment of one second, to live the lives of all the generation of men that have dwelt uoon this eartn, thinking all their thoughts and doing all their acts." . The comparison becomes all the more striking when it Is based upon the revolution of an atom, which so curiously simulates the revolution of the earth in its orbit, it is no viola tion of reason to suppose that an m hohitsnt nl an atom would think and act with a quickness proportioned to the measure or time ;n un . Are we forbidden to imagine such beings? No more than we are for bidden to imagine gigantic inhabi tants among the numberless worlds of space. We do not know what life is, and it is mere folly to assert that it tan only manifest itself in the fnrm familiar to us. The quality of mind is of so incalculably fine a grain (if such an expression call be used ot mina; tnat. as iar as we can see, it might as easily be present in a creature transcending in minuteness the utmost imaginable powers of the icroscope as in an animal six tret tall. Things Worth Knowing Drive a nail through an empty spool. It will make a handy peg to hang damp towels on. The spool will not tear or rust the article hung upon it. , . Cream cheese into which chili sauce is mixed, rolled into balls and served with lettuce salad, is a piquant relish. ( To prevent lard or butter from spattering out when potatoes, eggs, etc., are dropped into it to fry, sift a wee bit of flour into the fat just before they are put into it. Grind up left-over meat, roll to- with hatn era fnrm inln cakes, cover with biscuit' doueh. steam twenty minutes ana serve witn tomato sauce. Makes a palatable aud economical dinner dish.