Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 12, 1915, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

New Tho One of the oldest and sweetest cus- toms among the religlous denominations 18 the telling of the beads of the rosary. The Puddhists, the Mohammedans and the Roman Catholics have preperved this custom, whose orlgin cannot be traced, #0 remote isvit "There is something poetle and beauti- ful about it. Without question the habit has been helpful in bringing the minds of religiots devotees under control and developing the power \of concentration. } New thought, which takes its cen- tral ideas of the upity of life and he divinity within :IW the oldest religlon knotm to history, oAn b made still more potent by the in- troduction of the rosary idea. No beads are necessary—written phrases will serve the purpose—and let each earn- est moul, seeking to find the lll’ht\ and to develop the latent powers within, pro- vide its own rosary. Are vou discouraged and given to mel- ancholy and nervous md&n‘;: y’no: that everything goes A ::: that the future holds nothing but worrow for” you? Then Jet H be your rosary. Write down the phi and put them where you can see them as you sit alone for your moments of concentyation. “String your beads” of these -fi-/—l 1 am peace absolute. 1 am serenity. i, 1 am happiness al h 1Afe holds nothing but good for me. 1 ath realizing all my heart's desires. After you have lesrned th words by heart you will not need ‘written ros- ary. it will become & part of your thoughts You il shy your rosary over as you walk the street or sit in public con- wveyanoes, or drive in your carriage or lle in i bod, and you will find B rld power coming to you as v health you o vesie g ovarsd put down ught Rosary Few Oonvincing Phrases Which such || of Content !'.om "M" o.f or about your financial condition, new heads to the rosary and say: 1 am health, energy, vitality. 1 am prosperity and plenty. Opulenve I8 mine, and the wisdom to use it wisely. Everything 1 do succeeds, and 1 filled with vitality and strength. Familiarize yourself with these words ahd make the rosary a part of your daily mental and spiritual exercises A worrled and despondent business man who belleved he was born to misfortune acceded to the wish of a friend and car. ried the rosary she wrote for him in the lining of his hat, reading it o¥¥r whenever he feit the despondent mood approaching. After a time his nerves were less tensely strung; he was calmer and mere philos- ophical. That was all. Then came & complete business faflure, awnd he sald to his friend: ““You see, the rosary did not work, T am born for fallure.” But right after the failure came the best fortune of his whole life, and it came through the faflure,- just as the erection of & fine marble building walts upon the destruction of a cheap, wooded structure oftentimes. |~ Health, happiness, succe and power have come to many lives thibugh the repetition of one of these new thaught rosaries. String one for yourself, of such mental aqualities as you crave and such possessions as you need for your happi- ness and usefulness. The explanational is perfeotly logical and natural, You simply bring the vibra- tions of your mind to chord with those of universal good. You cease to make a dis- cord in the mental and spiritual realm. feal transformation by your change of thoughts, and “As & man thinks.go is he'' proves to be literal fact as well as a 4 mflu,u«fl”‘t‘ If you foel the rom of your domestic e fading, If hF seems to be dying in your, home, make yourself a rosary to help bring the habpiness which is the earthly vestibule to heaven. Proclaim love, compatibility, sympathy, romance and cohstancy as your own, As- sort that you love, and are loved as in the Anys of your honeymoon and shut your heart, eyes and ears to any other belief, The new thought rosary has been known to even bring Cupid back to the hearth was on the eve of deserting. Surely it 19 worth the effort of a trial. and her fragile pallor, entered the door THE, - Wierever the smart sat congregates X heavy bundle Beautiful June Warner, more appealing | and sane and well bent and 1ed | than ever In her plain Mtle black dress | and happy you must work with " the landiady | which was lettered “Eiizabeth Sawyer— | your hands as well strayed corner- | Real Estate and Investments,” afd found | as your head. white hand, upon | herself in the ralled off reception space | The cure for a sparkling solitaire, The | of & large office which was allve with | grief is action. waddied away, the hum of energetic business. A thin, stiff necked young weman came , and qu‘cut and went directly to the beautiful bundle of pants which she | Birl with the plain black dress. | “Will you gome in™ she invited with an unexpected agreeableness, and she led the way Into the very center of this web of industry. \ & slam, and the collle, Bouncer, was -on the ground. Frem the car sprang the young husband of fune Warner, his jaws set und his fists clinched. There followed the stern father and the gentle mother of Jund, her bosom friend, Irls Blether- ing, and Bobble. “They're in there!” called a dusty volce, It was the well known and justly June 'Warner's eyes brightened as she entered the private. office of . Elisabeth trait’ of Elizabeth Bawyer, & tall, good looking man end three handsome chil- The recipe for ut s action. To have a body that! ig_free from disease and toxins you must let mo- tion equal emotion. sake creates & current But love that finds form in musie, sculpture, work is divine and beneficial beyond words, That is, love s an inward emgt! it stified, thwarted and turned upon itself tends to gloom. melancholy, brood- But love that is lberated in human Art is the utliization of jove's exhaust out of & Job s & good man for A school that does not supply work as well as facis is false in theory and wrong its pupils ab not pomsess healtn, Bavpi- OMAHA, MONDAY, APRIL 12, 1915. HOT SPRINGS GOWN The bodlce ‘has {he fronp cut in one' The rage for white and black offects with the skirt, to impart a princess lin-, |o excellently fllustrated in a frock re- From shoulder' to belt thers are bratd cently worn by Mra, Arthur Gibb, at Hot bands simulating the modish szouave, "s;nnn‘ Va. Even among the galaxy of which seems to be the hall mark of the :Modish gown worn daily by patrons of Parls styles. ‘Phe/neck Indicates u vuflh-i"‘l tead, that lady's was distin- tion between the high collar and the low, Wulshed its demure lines and its sug- and by way of compromise the m'l‘ulon« the passing of the Leénten sea- shows . double ripple extension of the som, the later conveyed in the sirdle and #ilk, while the fromt is left Tn round out- [cordings that trimmeéd the frock. line and uncavered i “Tunics, flounces and other furbelows Like many of the gowns well-dressed |found no place in the decoration of the have adopted this | Paris dress. Instead, the skirt was shaped leaves of this model are of jon full ci r lines that brought into closely fitting the arm, and |eftective the two<tone shimmer of the length, as in-|yellowlsh-white taffets with the regular sloeves. in all [stripes of black, leghorn I worn with frock. The crown Is low and round and it is ‘trimmed with two mag- titully with the beige of the gown: By REV, MABEL IBWIN. That uncalendared saint, Frances Wil- lard, one sald: ‘““There arv no Hiigitimate ‘hildren, only illegitimate parents."” Tt would seem' tifat this fact alone; when once recognized, 'lo\lld'z"‘l! ) away with te moral stigma that has al- !'.!I attached itself to certain children ness or power, except on a fluke, Bmotion balanced by motion ellmina‘es dead tissue and preserves sanity. For of motion congestion follows. Al comes from a fallure to mwake motion balance emotion, Ympress and eéxpress; inhale and ' ex- bale; - work and play; study and laugh; love and labor; and rest.’ Study your own the most out of life. Realige that you are a divine trans- and which has ‘‘visited the sins of the it is to call to mind, “'Sutfer liftle child- ren to come unto me,’ the forgelting of which should cause a professedly Chris- tian social order to blush with shame. The time has passed, let us hope, when nd decide to got/an unmarried mother was regarded as the off-scouring of the earth, and so treated. Tt is coming to be that these are often the genmtlest souls, the most loving unsuspecting girls of all. The speclous pleas of the man who says he Joves her, that this is the supreme test of hor love, and that no priest or law can make her more his wife in the sight of God than she already is, leads her to take a false step. The recent move in France—where there are tens of thousands of ‘‘unmar- ried wives and mothers,” to allow them to be married by proxy to their men now tighting in tho trenchies—is a notable ex- ample of the rapidly changing public opinion. The wife and children of such soldier will in the case of his death come under the protection of the state. This seams but human, and worthy of emuly- tion by the other nations at war. © motion equal emotion and you liminate fear, round out the cen- tury Tun and " be efficient to the last. And to live long and well.is to accept life «in .every phase—even death itself— ond find #t good. { The fear of death tends toward death. it which 1 feared has come upon me," sald Job thirty-five. hundred years And the same Is true today. People who are willing to go or stay, stay a long time. ‘When we learn how to accept iife and find, it good then the average man will live to five times the length of time that it takes to reach his maturity; that ls, five times twenty, or one hundred vears. ovelorn o By Beatrice . Foirfax Advice to treductions. bas beon used to so mueh in h.l:r Pairfax: 1 am 21 years old present Missi home® PN R ainted with | Don't quarrel with your good fortune. """;‘;"‘..‘.‘.L?‘i‘m Since the girl who loves you is willing il:lollthh: impolite to try n her | to forego a few luxuries for your.sake. ith: b etion? * LA Sy Towid |and s ready to Nve on your salary E‘ think ‘P'g. uhm; (which is & very good ome), don't be too 0 ? She s of | analytical sbout it all. Just marry her Efis’fi: 404, 45 Beaher 0t 8| L10 ocead to work your way up 1 respect this girl s Pest. this ¥ The Stepmother. Lates - 1 her here she will “In, ould you advise ANXIOUS, You are far too young to leave home. | customs, questioning the man or woman | 48rd remedy for femal Try to win your stepmother's love. Go to her and tell her that you are just at w she will tell va oven given that in future. Vancement. e “‘fi t will be & triufaph of which his youns lady is. wi but der you think we would homa of our own st my sslary, Wi Eugenics and Illegitimacy sweetngss you can wis her |t e —— Speaking Seven Languages and LookingforaJob By MADISON O. PRTERS. ! Recently one of our papers ran this ad- vertisement: “Wanted—Work at any= thing by a man of 27, speaking weven lauguages.” . if this young man had had the courage ts be lgnorant of many things he would have avoided the calamity of being ignor- i ant of all thines, it 18 not how much college you have gone through as how much of.the ecol- lege has gone through you that the busi- ness wdrld wants to know. Thée best diploma is the book of acts. The world always makes room for the man who oan bring things to pass. Our country ls full of persons who can do many things fairly well, but do not know how to do one thing supremely wall, The West workers in many lines are forclgners wha, In the old world, devoted the enrly part of their lives to learning a irade or profession, and brought their superior workmanship with them; hence we soldom find such forelgmere looking for a job, The day of untversal knowledge i past. The true measure of a muccesful man's learning today is the number of studies which he electa to let alone. Bread culture may be beautiful and manysidodness admirable, but it s al- ways the men with single aim and in- ftense purpose, who oconcentrate their power, who are in demand when saything worth whilo is to he done. It is not the diffused electricity but the concentrated thunderbolt that is ter- rible in its power. He who knows everything is always looking for something. The specialist does not have to look for a job: the job 18 lo6king for him. To succeed you must be unanimous with yourseif. Agassiz was asked his opinion touching the chemical analysis of a plant. He an- swered: I know nothing about chemis- try.” He was a naturalist. Even special- lets bave their specialty. It does not pay to know everything. Only sophomores are omnisclent. The man who runs on side lines, uniess ithey run on to the main track, wastes |hls energies, smothers his enthusiasm IN BLACK AND WHITE. At the hips the fullness was confined by a broad girdle of violet utln—lpfll’ll" time in tone and glving just the right note of reltef to the basie fabric. The ends | dropped at the sides instead of at the back and they were embroidered in silver and violet floss in some conventional pattern. The short sleeves seamed to indicate a return to a type never quite out of fashion and llkely to be In cons! evidence as the warm-weather sedson ad- vanoes; for they spell comfort and con- sistency and even the faghionable wWoman is never slow to avall herself of such style Mm 'Illd usually falls in all that he under- takes. To keep a gun from scattering put in & single shot. The successful worker today is he who singles out from a vast number of possi- ble employments some specialty and to that devotes himself thoroughly. This 18 & poor country for the average man, and worse still for the untrained man or the miscellaneous genius. Bvery- thing 16 orowded—downstaire! . The men who get to thel top over the heads of a hundred others are not al- ways the men of conspicuous ability, but avallability. The man who knows how to take hold of things by their handles has the call. Young's phrase, “Time elaborately thrown away,” applies to the man who attempts to know or do everything. There. is & busyness which is not busi- {mess. It is soldom that the most brii- Hant achlevé the highest success. The |sticker, lke the postage stamp, ~gets there. 1 | Persistency 1s more effective than bril- {Hancy. In attempting to solve the problem of ilegitimacy for America, however, we are dealing with & somewhat different condition. ™ France In order to marry | the conmsent of the parents must be ob- ! tained; not always an easy thing to do. And in many of the other European coun- he has erved his military term. In stac! v ecountry no such sericus ob- | are put in the way of our young {the men of other countries may plead. This brings us to consider the thousands of descrted girl-mothers in our own coun- |trv, the problem of {ilegitimacy here. Is | America leading in exemplary fashion {the other nations of the worla in its | treatmont cf yeung motherhocd ? The girl In times past has had to pay to the uttermost farthing for her mis-| fortune of her folly, while the man has | been allowed to go free—soclally it not | | inancially,. When his fatherhopd has | | Been unqestioned, he has been compelled, | | somelimes, to bear some-of the expense { His tardy martiage of -the l!"—llfmar-l riage there be—is often régarded as an | act of generosity on his part which | leaves the girl-wife open to the stab-like | reflection that he married her from ! compulsion rather than frors choice. ! | Wevertheless such sins are each day bé- | |Ing lightly comsidered, if not condoped. | by gociety in general, and by woman in | | particular. How shall we account for |this? Is there any possible reason why | & &il 8 and should be held more re- igp’milb!-- than the man in their common | | fransgression against lety and the | child?: She always has betn so held, and | as statistics show, more responsible In | America than anvwhere else. Should | | she be? Must she continue to be? ! {! Is there anything in the nature of the case that makes the mother of the race | morc responsible than the father for the | | conditions which call into being a child?, If 50, then we are bound to conclude that | | woman (s man's moral superior: for it s | commonly agreed that it is the superior | | that is_the.more culpable. \ ! This may belp us to a better under- standing of what has been called “wo- | man's injustice to woman”—an instinctive | knowledge which held her sex more re- | sponsible—and give us & hint, at least, for the solution of the perplexing problem | of illegitimacy. | Eugenics 1ooks to the physical, mental | {and moral inberitance of the child. It |gocs back of all man-made laws and ! a8 to their fitness to become parents .l‘ all, The basic element of fitness is found in mutual love. When this condition is met, others may then be considered. What mutual love as the recognized con- ition under which any child has the it to be bom. the problem of un. fathered babes will have been solved Map always protects—mot * —the hing he loves. Any solution less than this_ of the problem of illegitimate par-| $nth If this falls, write [ents can be put partial and punitive ml | The men at the summit were not shot up in an elevator; they olimbed there. Men are not pulled into positions; they have to push themselves there. No matter what you undertake, -don’t leave it -until you can reach your arms around it and clinch it with your hands r 40 ltries a men mey not marry till after [on the other side. As Dickens’ friend would have us un- derstand, “It's dogged d . The only ‘‘good time o ' you are fathers” with sunwatranted | Vengeance. | man. They have mot the excuses~whioch |JUstified in hoping for is that which you make for yourself. AS MISERABLE ‘COULDN'T STAND Testifies. She Wu Restored to Health by Lydia E. Lackawanna, N. Y. —‘‘ After my first child was burn I felt very miserable and . could not stand on my feet. My sister- in-law wished me to try Lydia E. Pin ham’s Vegetable i Compound end my nerves became firm, appetite good, step elastic, and I lost that weak, tired feeling. That was six’ years ago and I have had three fine healthy children since. For female trou- bles I always take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and it works like acharm. 1do allmyown work.'’~Mrs. A. F. KREAMER, 1674 Electric Avenue, Lackawanna, N. Y. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from displacements, inflam- ‘mation, ulceration,tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency,indigestion, dizziness, l ornervoys prostration. Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Com is the stan- ills. ‘Women who suffer from those dis- i tressing ills peculiar to their sex should be convinced of the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to re- store their health by the many genuine [ and truthful” testimohials we are con- tantly publishing in the newspapers. If you waut special advice write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine ('A.(fll: al) Lynn, Mass. Your letter wili be opened, read and answered by woman and held ia strict M,l 4

Other pages from this issue: