Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, May 29, 1915, Page 17

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R R IRTERY INEIE T W SE—— v i THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1915 13 The Bees Home Magazine Dage !(}mce/u/ Graduation Gown of Leth El -Mag Surg ¥ | vats ; €the % ectro agnets as Surgeons Mull an Inspivation for College Giri How Splinters Are Removed from Wounded Soldiers { { By JANE M'LEAN. ) GREBK reflection ia found i the I Death wore so fair a presence and he trod with scarce a sound | drapery of the shaped 1lounces that How could I know his footsteps on the petal-covered ground, \ . may be regarded as pecwiiarly befitting Wiere silken silence spreads its net and dusky dreams aboun. I the gown of the graduate | L Time dragged his veil behind me, a pall of pain:racked hours, ‘ - ¥ Death strewed the rosy path ahead with apple blossom showers, And all the air was rife with rong and sweet with dying flowers § | : | { I would have seized the ehalice to my breast and quaffed away | Death's potion of forgetfulness, but Life must say me nay. Shipping her cold hand into mine she bade me work and pray. ‘ ‘ i Hearts [ Win :: By DOROTHY DIX. “Eureka! T have found it,” exclaimed the Bookkeeper triumphantly, as he lald down the newspaper he had been reading. “Found what—a sure tip as to which way the cat |Is Another of the Right-O Stories | Stenographer, “that’ I've 'feticed abont | most men and women, and that is that | [ they'd rather- be pratsed for their de- focts than their virtues. It you want to flatter a pretty’ womanm, don't applaud her beauy, but hurl a few bouquets at her intellect, even i she hasn't got any | jump in the stook more brains than a hen, and if you want | H market?” in- to get a sniart woman going, just hand ; awired the Stenog- her u few about her complexion and i rapher tartly. figure, even though she's ugly enough i"Better than that. to stop the clock. I have found out “Same way with a man. 1 know a | how to make @ doctor who's dobe wornderful things in killing with the fe- his profession that have made him male sex,” replied world famous, but the way to jolly him | the Bookkeeper lsn’t to talk about his sclentific achieve- | | complacently. ‘"You know, no matter hat mort of a ff he throws, ry man in his secret soul yearns ments, but to praise his poetry—and he writes the worst verses you ever heard, and I know a successful literary man who purrs under your hand if you praise his cjothes apd tell him he's a second Beau Brummel. An Electro-Magnet Extracting a Shell-Splinter from a Wounded Soldier—An Operation in & | French Hospital at Bordeaux. | These photographs show an apparatus devised by a well known French surgeon, Prof. Bergonie, here | seen applying it to a wounded soldler in the Grand-Lebrun hospital at Bordeaux. A radiographic apparatus “It's & funny thing, but it Yooks as it the less truth there is in flattery the sweoter it is and the more it goes to to know what par- ticular line of soft talk & woman will 1all for, and I have jnst ascortained the mnever-fail brand that will make women come and eat out of your hand when you feed it “Here's an account of a divorce suit in which the degerted husband testified that thé gay decelver who broke up his home and stole his wife away from him did so by calling her ‘a poor, tired little kid, although the lady was as husky as Jess Willard, and weighed 230 pounds. _“That's the dope; that's the masgic formula that you've only ®ot to utter and the deors of the feminine heart will {ly open-before you. ‘You poor, tired Httle Kidt Do you get ail the subtie| || ANITA STEWAR toga. . On her bare feot she wore thin chologist was blind and helple. the scalloped edge of the akirt -baing . T pications fn that? Why, 1t's a dhes 8. The Goddess . - ¢ || sandats on her bare head @ crolet 6f “Pehaps I'm dofng wronk #ald | hound with white satin by way of .a g"od to’ pouth,~ and helplessness, and ‘gold {n which jewels flashed. Her mouth Tomm; “but that girl's afraid of you |simple decorative touch. tenderness, and protection poured out ‘at, 4 woman's feet. By Jjinks, i I had a fat, middle-aged wife, and some man had Wit ‘etiough to say & thing like that to her, I'd say: ‘Here, take her; you're L3 better man than I am.'" “That man ocertainly was & head- lineg in . the Romeo nllls"mldmlt‘l::‘tlho Stenographer. ‘I guess there - woman in the world, from Mrs. Pank- hurst down, who wouldn't be flattered to death to be called a kid, and I know {hers fin't & mother's daughter of us who doesn't want to be sympathized with and told she's bearing & load Heavier than she should, even when she's doing exactly what she wants to do. So I don't know that I blame the lady who eloped with a iman with gumption enough to call her a ‘poor, tired lttle kid.' < see that ha considered her an able-bodied berson, capable of doing a full day's work. “Doubtless he had also remarked upon Her hett. Ho may even have compared L her jnvidiously with slim young maldens { her age and & third her ¥ -l weight. “Under such conditions how like balm upon & smarting wound it must have ‘Vbeen to be called a ‘poor, tired little kid.’ == Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRIOE FAIRFAX Make Him Prove Himself. said the Bookkeeper. traces the movement of the splinter through the flesh. In the photograph underneath splinter-is-due to part of it overlapping in two exposures, showing.the splinter slightly higher. Read It Here—See It at the Movies. EARLE WILLIAMS | & Temmy Barclay =S SR . Gouverneur Morris (Oue of the. Most MNotable Fig- ures in Amaerican Litsrature) Dramatized Intoa Photo-Play by OEARLES | (Copyright, 1915, by Star Company.) | Cepyright, 1915, by The Star Co. All For. | Sign Rights Reserved | SYNOPSIS OF PREVIOUS CHAPTER. [ After the tragic death of John Ame | bus his prostrated wife, one of Amer- reatest beauties, dios. At her th f, Stilliter, an agent of the in- terests, kidnaps the beautiful 3-year-old :.by girl and brings her i dise where. she sees no man, but thinl #he is taught by angels, who instruct her “Well, I'm jlggered,” sald Tommy. 1 haven't found a snake, but I've found the next best thing. ‘Now what the devil is Prof. Stilliter doing in this part of the ‘world ** Again he lifted the glasses and again saw the professor. He appeared to be polishing something on the sleeve of his Norfolk jacket. Now and then tiie some- thing flashed brilllantly in the sunlight. But Tommy was not to Investigate those bushes at the foot of the cliff. He was within a quarter of a mile of them, walking swiftly and quietly along an old lumber trail, when suddenly his quick ear caught a sound of footsteps [and at the same moment his quick eyes | caught a glimpse of something white that moved. 'nrummz with sweat, came Prof. | Stilliter leading by the hand a slim and [lovely girl who carried her head like a ' princess. She was dressed in a white garment that fell in unbroken foids from ' her shoulders to her feet, ltke a Roman ‘had an cxpression of celestial genticheas and smoothness, but her eyes, half shielded by their lids and lashes, wore {without expression. She seemed to Tommy like a girl, not of this earth, walking In her sleep. He had never seen a face 8o beantiful, so sweet or so touch- ingly , innocent. | Having passed Tommy's hiding place, | Prof. Stilliter turned from the trall and led the heavenly vision to a sort of natural seat. that overlooked a quiet pool from which Tommy had often taken | trout, ¥he sat reflected in the pool, and leok- ing straight abead of her, and not see- Ing—if you know what I mean. Prof Stilliter had let go her hand apd was tiptoeing off. abarlioning her apparently, but when he had gone a little way ne with a kind of startled dellght. Tommy for some reason or other was trembling from head to foot. A stick cricked. She turned her head toward the sound, but Prof. Stilliter had made good his tiptoed retreat. e wi no longer in sight. Then Tammy, still trembling with won der and excitement, rose from his hiding place and walked slowly toward her. iy, yes,” sald Tommy. “Then,” she sald, “'this must be the earth: | “Of course," as woll as T do. “I wasn't sure,” she sald, You see I've just h esaid, “you know that “untll you come from | Showing the little mound or wave formed by the tissues as the metal fragment nears the surtace of the body; the final application of the electro-magnet to extract a shell- splinter, === ] peoplo better and happler. I'm to begin with Now York. Where is New York?' | 8he lonked about her as if she ex-| pected to find it somewhere among the trees. | | | run | “What the devil are you doing here™ {he examined. “Now don't get angry, old chap. This is one of my patients and’'— | “I'm not angry,” sald Tommy, nd | don’t call me old chap.” Then Prof. Stilliter sank his volce to a whisper. “Her mind, he said, “is in| an exceedingly critical condition. Now you just vanish, will you? and leave her .| ana 1 the dark portion of the one made before the magnet was applied and one after, g said In a tone of command Bleep, Ce- N Y lestia, sleep.’” o vise?" asked the L How mhfl“von get wise?' a Tommy simply stopped forward and | f.’,‘,“".',‘;,"min my mind by reading the knocked the crystal from Stilliter's hand, nn"yu P < .uu rtod Skeoper: and Stilliter turned upon him with l‘ howl of ruge and attacked him with a shower of windmill blows. Tommy was no longer a small boy, but an thlete in the early twentles. He retreated slowly, guarding himself, and then, when he thought he had drawn Stilliter far enough from Celestia, ho quietly reached in under the rain of blows and disarmed him. In other words, he removed those great black rimmed spectacles without which the great psy- take a chance. He darted to the girl's side. afraid of me?" ‘“Then come." He led her back to the trai! and along it. (To Be Continued Monday.) “'Are you £he shrank from his proffered hand | “Celestia,” sald Tommy, ‘“don't | want to go with him?' i “No,” she said “Don't he atrald, then “you shan't.” Tomray Barclay,” sald Stilliter, “you keep out of this or you'll get into trouble. you | | | sald Tommy, | | va. with He stepped quickly into a thicket my Lord," sald Tommy, “she's|Come Colestia.” J\L;fvil‘ll;\i“ll‘.!‘:nv“:l’nli knlo:mm)"“ltlrw is re- |of alders, crouched low and to all in-Imad as a hatter. How terrible! Ana yet| She did not sthi | ¢ turned. Our parents have Mf&'d n |tents and purpeses was blotted out of she looks sane.’ In a flash Stilliter had drawn & polished “ [ T et hia. position. ' He |existence “I'm Celestia,” ‘resumed the vision, | Crystal from his pocket and was forcing | 4 says that, unless I get married to him | Along the trail, his heavy baby face|“and I've come from heaven to make|the girl to look at it. As he did so, he | secretly, he won't try to get work and will leave town, mever to come 4 hit If I do as he wante, he will try hard to get a job s=nd see that ke comes to something. Now, my dear M advice' would be I told him 1 would ) a® soon as 1 see your answer printed in the paper—whether 1 right to got married secretly, before my - sweotheart #hows me that he ¢an support Fairfsx, your kind { By AN EXPERIENCED BACHELOR | the statement of a man, who as such is , And you make such quaint mistakes, | h! me, and whether it Is right on his part | B A8 s g i d oty 2 x5 g * = { B0, 37 Whether it 1o HEht o | My Dear Girls—If there 1 ome subject | PoUnd to have wider and deeper knowl- [teo. You will oftsn snup a man who s = HEART-BROKEN. 'piore ‘than another you all belleve you | ©46® of that portion of humanity of which (all, or at any rate, most of the world = i The fncentive of winning the girl he!iyooughly understand, that subject s mn-.uu;xl Ih;nn the most q-‘rmllnv woman to you—l don't mean on purpose, but = loves ought fo make a fine man labor | Y and: Wh oy il when | 80 possibly have acquired as an out- |unconsciously, or without being able to = N Bl li M th. et and ety S5 Wit AL k| 208! 84, wheo the Ums comps when | BN g g L A pon P B = and as you lift the glass to your lips reflec t wight. T am a'hearty alsbeliever in se- 300" 0 Ul O00 O TGO I (T | Take, for example, that supremely |couragement, without in the least In- Z three million or more glasses of this wonderful - ‘ret marriages. They generally vésultin o o) that you can read him back- | Fiictlous assertion—doubtless evolyed by |tending to, to a man who might go up = A RIS MR 18 0 et | e Bm TR e Rl o T Mol L ar (LA (s 0 WAk who Fueht o o Z beverage are consumed each day—making it indeed g serious ‘thing and ousht to take place |, "o, o one of you may have no- |couldn’t tell neck of mutton from sirloin |cared. And you do this all the more if Z the t N ti nal drinl! l, with dignity and the knowledge of one's |, ;" qe gnusing part fs-—that is to |Of beef—that the way'to a man's heart the all-the-world man Is present. This' = grea atiol % [ nearcht abd Coarest relatives Put him .-yl o0 sioe cenerally speaking you | WAs through his palate (please note that |sort of thing sometimes gives you a Z i on his mettie~to be-ambitious enough . T . i and entirely wrong: you |1 bave put this more delicately than the |heartache for a day or for anything up | 4// g o s to get a fresh etart and to be able to |l b T ag o3 men, not even A man, WOm&n I question ced the brute!" |to always, according to whether you are Z DehCIOUB and R,ef!‘eshmg § ( marry you openly because he fs able "’iur the Mian. has the currency of a p b; the ab- |a thank-goodness-I-can-love-any-man sort | //// , 1 I take care of you and has won_you We men are not like books of stories SUrd sentence was snapped up by your of girl, or anything up to the rare and //4 ¥ Y J i — in one syllable printed In large type; (%X as & hungry monkey will grab an |preclous one-lifc-one-love type. %, Demand the genuine by full neme Don'i Worry About It. I Sre Tairs” Bhdese v b Doy faio TomBE DU At the same time it 18 quite right and //// —all the wise do likewise yeaoat Mise Falrtax: 1 am & gl ol (o {ones are concerned—books in the lavish | Another widespread fallacy is ihe hes [proper that you should study man. Here ///// my entertaining boys, but as most boys |Chinese language, where you don't even |llef that men are very dense where you 'you have a vast subject, and one as in- Y, T COCA-CO § do mot like music, ind that is the only | ynow .where to begin to read, and in |are concerned. Many of you cherish the |teresting as It is great. Do not lose ///// HE A\ LA CoO. i m;"v‘f)‘ v‘vhi?\h!l‘x-'».:m\"l;:l' nl- - "':"v“:"":wmm. every letter or symbol possesses fiction that we are incapable of drawing sight, however, of the fact that you are Whenever you ////// ATLANTA, GA. / b % s very young to think of enter- At least a dozen l\ul.;e dhllr;(‘t lrwam::'nt :ha’\;lmvlo-l deductions, m.'n ”| ws.'tay o mere student and must .lwu; r&-nu:ln seée an Arrow, ///// Wy ’ My \\\\Q\ Whe: S fan 8 come | For some extraordnary—! was abeu » two 10 two fn any feminine af- as such, though some of you wi oubt- A " :;‘J;"F:nsh(h("‘ e e | st Tt Thet-of soiton (& the [dairure Bl mit ki wmnk taah, Mast o S e e aan others | think of Coca-Cola /////’//////[ i \\\\\\\\\ e i Ther there are gwmes, such as letters, |correct expression, a woman will believe |of your little subterfuges are transpar- |—assuming, of course, that you prose-| ““”l“lmmn“m\\““ | @uesses, etc., which wre entertaining and | what another woman says about man- |ert—charmingly se, Very often—but all [cute your studies with sympathy, intel- gducational. | kind far more readily than she will credit |the time you put us cown as blind |Vgence and perseverance tly cppreciated, as | kive him my answer | ou think 1 would do | i | | Woman's Ignorance of Man | | For the college girl who (s seeking in- spiration for » graduation gown a sug- gostion may be obtained from the above sketch, The material is of sheer mull. A Greek refiection is caught in the drapery of the shaped flounte which lengthens the bodice. The flounce is headed with fine embroidery, which also Appears acrors the V implecement of the front. The sleeves are In bishop effect, permitting a half-rev: concealment of t! (S This model malpi through the walst whi mode since Paquininstituted fashions, almost. a decade ago.. course, came asx A logieal result of the adoption of the stralght- which Mme.. Bernhardt |s responsible, been th These, of coraet, f tofully he P ‘Sure thing, agreed the BookKeeDer. | for her mission to reform the world. At|turned and made curlous passes in the | "It fs a long way from here, said | ‘and the Jeas she Jooked like & poor, tired | the age of 15 ehe ls'suddenly thrust into |y : witn his hands, and spoke suddenly | Tommy. Tittle kid the more scothing to her feel- | Lhd VOTY, FRETe gEOts O 0 cident |in & volce of command, the one word,| “Then I ought to start at once. Will ! ngs must have been the appellation. No 'y, sees t and hides with | wake!" you show me the way, please?’ i \doub( her husband, with the brutal her Expression and light came into the | “Why, yos, of course.” | ‘sandor of our near relations, had let her great eyes, and she looked about her | Then Prof. Stilliter eame back on the : It might have been a pocket mirror, or a | Their oyes met, and the vision smiles the | t0 me. She mustn't be upset.” ! 5 ot “even & 'mofiument of virtue could | great diamond. Whatever it was, Prof.| vision smiled the sweetest, most bewitch- | “One condition of her mind, snid | { have, resisted a sultor with such a hon- | tilliter presently dropped in into his|ing smile, angd In the gentlest and richest | Tommy, “appears to be fear of you." ' eyed tongue as that.” pocket, forced his way into a dense|voice that Tommy had ever heard she| Stilliter turneq from him impatiently. E “There's one thing” observed the |clump of bushes at the.very base of the |gsked bim An etonishing question. “Come Celestia.” he sald, “wa'll go away | cliff and disappeared. “Are you & man?" now, "

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