Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 20, 1916, Page 10

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m Tealth Hints -:- “Careers”’ N, ""”Tm‘,‘,‘“" 14 Wy m W OYALLY we put the mother-career where it belongs—under a | g halo, In the full, falr shine of the “spotlight;” but in these days you dare not sniff at any of the othery that girls aspire to, if tHey be In earnest. Because-—these are times when girls are expected Lo, and expect to, care for mothers and fathers growing old; when girlg dream of mother having the silk dress and petti- | coat that are her beau ideal, and go out to earn them; when girls | 1ift their eyes to some coveted ease for the Dad that has trudged, R . 1R A8 5 . b3 . Humanitarian man the free use of his house, Mr, Ap ment that | plebaum printed cireulars and announc .»'I‘ o our of seasons; | believe shouldered brother or two will permit cvery then uplifted level Humanitarian Cult By BLLA WHEELER WILCOX, (Copyright, 1916, Btar Co.) The land which gave dirth to Tolstol % an atmosphere which seems to & meeting for Bunday morning and in The vited forty of his friends, Owing to rain an boy 1s now attracting the at tlon of the musical world with his veloua achievements at the age of jended by Joining his band and he is but one of many whose Referring to this meeting, he 5 haa i diiiass onlus 18 expressed through the medium | has always been a question in my mind| joug 10 the music. whether It was 1 who spoke on that| (o (he delight of Mr. Applebaum cvery one | of kindness and love tariun 1 non-mec nays: "It Four Hundred other extreme, the % looks ko the busts of Bhakespeare | which was started on that rainy Novems' We do not “p 4 whose wonderful mentality bas | ber morning, 18 to develop hetween Indls | (ributions, and we ask pned in the direction of humanitarian- | viduals a p or sense of responsibilily, | he sent to us asx we to develop a mense of helping from a senst of love rather than from o are mit colloctions nor that no not wish m. mankind | assume the rosponaibilit Porn In Russia in comparative wealth inclusive, and not Theat of philanthrophy, tries to keep itw vi himea of the ny positiona oxperiences were not gublish the \ . § S “Tell your mother that Star e | R s Stockinet means not only clean -5 4 ham, but best ham." “The Star Ham is smoked in this Stockinet Covering, which has kept ¢ in all the meaty juices and flavor sound and sweet as & nut" ; As you slice it, b cover the cut end s with the Stockinet; the e Y S il i st alice will be s 4 Tastous a8 b Rest Baba half of Iy I s squally oo, ot or cald i koap the teet far Deeiling Buy Armour Star Bacon « The National Proariaan ARMOUR = COMPANY AR ARt Jenes M O L Duaka Web Wk WiRasen, #9h and O ol Be 110 BREERIENCED ADVERTISERS ADVERTISE IN THE OMAHA BEE- RESULTS SUR) OMAHA, hine-like, back and forth on the same trail in an endless circle when girls toss at night with the unrest of ambitions that used only to stir boys' hearts—the dreams of lifting head and shodlders above the level; when girls educate and help dress small #ister and brother nestlings; when girls keep an open purse for the dipping hand a small, goft Atlas with the great lump |« of an idle world on her shoulders! one to rise, economic “Gradually lias no desire| been extended. to estavllah any new religlon, nor i it| to One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, from Klghth avenue to the river, west We provide eine first and then Investigate, tor d genlus. On every hand wo hear it, at the hour of the meeting, twenty stran- | interested «in the form of religion Its it and find it in our midst. A young |Fers were prevalled upon to seck shelter | members practice It recognizes only in the bullding and, to the surprise and [ong religlon—"Every man's" “The spirit and consequently and Its members be as woll an ‘down and Mishs Applebaum, the founder and | day or the spirit of the sweet fragrance qutor ANl are cqually welcome der of the Humanitarian Cult, 1s a [ of my mother's memory.” The founder aay It does not cost ung Russian, whose hend above the | The object of the Humanitorian Cull apy money to be a member of the cult self respect con- money send uy ¢ of returning it, | write exclusive are doing it as a selfish pleasure to ourselves, dden reverses left this young man when | & sense of duty The only qualification necessary is youth dependent upon his own ro- | It Is agninst the aystem of capital, that | desire to be just human and of some Fcos. In four years he passed through | creates poverty and then, under the cloak | assistance to our fellow men. We do Ameriea, whither the young man had | tim from actually starving nor the names of applicants for assists me to seek hin fortune. | The cult, which was founded on Novem-| nnee 0N the 9th of November, 1914, Mr. Ap- | ber 1o, 1914, now has a total membership We have up to date relleved 5,/ per baum went to the owner of a otion | of 16,000 ons, provided 267 with positions, helped ure theater and had & talk with him The object of the cult in to uplift ours twenty-iour ex-conviet and fifteey [or he had finished he gave the young | selves, so that we may create an environs | drunkards-nearly all vietims of a faulty tively THURSDAY, APRIL hard first, more often than I like to of a broad- | ‘ hers, hands it on, weariness, the same rewards | taken the trall 'long side of you? same gpurs that rowel her ambition and send it up and up, the same And just as you do, she gets money for the talent she markets; and just as your eyes shine over it, so do And just as you do—If you are high caliber Cult Doing a Great Work wae have relfeved every applicant in district and that no one need be in want environment the territory of rellef han It now Includes Vifitieth in that territory “If & member food, clothes and medi-|jp e and he provides merchandise, for an embrace a tempting variety of whole: some biscuits — some sweet, with fillings of cream, some crisp and flaky, but all good T'ry Krispy Crackers, These little biscuits are fine as a between-meal nibble, or eat them with milk, The dealer nearest you probably handles Sunshine Krispy Crack ers. Buy a ten cent package first, then you'll want the famuly size tin, loose Wies Biscurr (rmny Junsh ne Moot wol Baked in Omaha 10¢ feels able and send him an unfortunate whatever Js nec amount We agaln ask our members not o |fles, are sent him and he 8 wutside of this district, as |to the stores we cannot handle them. A good many | “In this way not one cent Bo put a finger over your lips when next you begin to whisper disdaln of any girl-career that {s not the mother one, Is she so different from you And think a fellow— now that she's Bhe has the pame aspirations, the requests to care We wish to Inform everyone that we essary. In case the burden becomes Ao not care to recelve old clothes, What- | heavy some other good soul takes up the over clothes the members choose to give work to tho needy is n matter for them to If, however, a person is kindly in declde, but we do not belleve in distrib- | ojjnod byt has not the timo to personally uting discarded clothes. It does not help |10k after the unfortunate some other unfortunate to regain or keep his|member does the work and bills for is wasted notes and ask us to take wome (and, since everything is obtained with 'I"T'-fl A3 personal favors, We are not | special discounts, for every dollar spent doing this work as a favor to anyone; by the member about $1.2 i delivered to the unfortunate B YA AR R Wo ask you to co-operate with attempt to help the need The headquarters of the Humanitarian of the entire city before we are able to |Cult Is at No. 179 Broadway. There iy With such a large army we would | just one thing this enterprising young ourselves without the time to do man ought to do. He should indentify resl work and we profer to stick 1o one himself with the single tax movement and do the work there offec- |That 1s the great means of removing the " which lead to povert she turns and NELL BRINKLEY, \Vanity and Its Uses. to Those Who \Have It Ny DOROTHY DIX, Vanity Is the nice, purry fecling in side of us that makes us feel worry for everybody elsc because they ain't us, It also makes you feel about seven feet high, and perfectly beautiful, and #0 bright that you wonder that other people don’t have to wear blinders when they look at you. s It {8 very wicked to be puffed up with vanity, but most comfortable, for It you think well of yourself it does not make any differenco to you what other folks think There are n great many different kinda of vanity, and it's very funny to notice {the various things that people are vain | about | Home people are valn just hecause they can lift a heavier welght than | other people. Other people are vain be ause they have more money than thelr | nelghbors. Other people are vain WR ause they know a lot of things that | nobody else i3 Interested in. Other pes ple are vain because they own a Pome ranian and still other people are Aln because they are kin to dead ones You n't have to have anything to be nin about in rder to be vain, which A merciful dispensation of providence Vanity s a when other peopl | ha but when you have vanity | reapect | s golh, for it w ally v what ! tolka th vauld ¥ at s dnd o M Iy ' ot o . Iy M ) {ahee N shions -:- Woman’s Work -:- Household Topics An Antiseptic from the Sea By WOODS HUTCHINSON, M, D, It the dreadful polson-gas of modern war comes from kes-water, mo also does ity antidote, There may possibly be traces of other gases combined with chlorine, but the human vivisection test, the sym- toms of it victims as they gasp in agony and fight for hreath and finally dle, cor- respond quite closely to the polson tests [ for chlorine and bromine, and show no ‘Hn'uumlvjn truce of the effect of an other polson Hesides, almost all other known poisons would be extremely expensive to use in the open alr, and above all, the flendish stuff must be cheap, Fortunately the same eager readiness to attack and unite with living sub which makes this chlorine gas wo deadly, mupplies a protection sgainst it, In that it promptly combines with ather chemicals the moment it 18 brought in contact with them, and forms an al most harmless substance. | By one of the many miracles of chem istry the flercoly burning and polsonous gan, chlorine, nt that it touches o simple alkall, like ordinary soda, I converted at once into that harmiess article of diet ealled from the name of itn parents, the flerce gas and the bland | stances, the mon alkall, “chloride of sodium,” or common it %o that by supplying the soldlers in the trenches exposed to poison gns with masks or respirators stretching across nose and mouth, saturated with a solu- tion of modu, usually either hyposulphite of wodn or the bi-horate of sods, com- monly known as borax, or washing pow der, the fumes of this deadliest gas are promptly turned into common salt, like Lot's wife in the Bible story, Ho that, as Incredible as it may souni, the only effect of this deadly gas when stopped by the sods mask 18 to make the sheets of linen or cotton taste salty in stead of moapy. But the soda must he wet in order t) work this transformation, as the gas can- not combine with a dry substance, and ! that 18 the resson why it 18 necessary 10 these polson masks constantly with water, possible to fill the witn enough bora | koop molstened It s fortunately mesh of thelr eloth 1to lust for severnl haurs' exposure or more, but water, of course, will | evaporate quickly, FKternal vigllance in the way of remolstening or of keeping the masks at hand bathed in solutions of soda I8 necessary for safety. Many piful tragedies were reported from the front before this fact had been realized by the men sudden]y wakened to face the choking fumes found that thelr trusted masks had dried, | lwn | | soldiers; and were no more protection than n folded handkerchlef against the polson gax. By a merciful offset of nature, )f the gas In cheap, its antidotes on the polnon masks-are even cheaper and more accesuible, %0 that there 18 reason to hope that its future use will prove as uneless as it Is viclous and cruel | But it would be unfalr to permit the impression for a moment that thi destructive use of the sea-gas was its chief or even one of its important ap plications. On the contrary, It Is one of the small est and last discovered—would it have been overlooked entirely—and lenst significant, though spectacular enough Although these gases were found too | polsonous and dangerous for genéral use when floating free In the air, It early discovered that when harnessed or very could wan loosely combined with other substances a0 that they would be given off slowl |and in wmall amounts thelr polsonois |ness gave them a high degree of value Las disinfectants and later as antiseptics | Also, it was found that the prompt Yness and viclousness with which the { would attack Hving substances or tissuc | expended themselves with special vigor | upon any coloring matter which might be present, so that faorics exposed to elther under water or in a mojst were deprived of possessed, or, in them, atmosphere, color they quickly any otner | words, After tion of chlorine with soda or lime, was found to work best for thia purpose, and hence Into belng the now well known bleaching powder, or chlorid of Jime Ry a curlous and consoling cofneldenca war which saw the free used to destroy human life or rather adapta- hleached various experiments, a eombina there came the very same gas chlorine also saw the Invention tlon, of ona of the bleaching combina tlons of chlorine and soda as an ant wptic dressing for the herribly ragged and filthy wounds produced by shrapnel These wounds were 0 enormou horribly pulped and lacerated, and so blown and nd and f f germ-laden Ith from the soil torn up by the shel thit our former tried and trusted anti septl nr bi=chloride, peroxide feetle with bora I added to neu Al alkall nted by Dakir ! . nd ! to work » cloa ) N tng wound Advice to Lovelorn By Bealrice Fairfax Was Not Justitied Nt Prap married

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