Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Health Hints - Fashions - - Woman'’s Work -- Household Topics | S Young people need clear complexions 1f you find yourself ‘‘left out' because of a poor skin, and want aclear, fresh complexion, use Res- inol Soap at least once a day. Wash thoroughly with a warm, creamy lather of it, then rinse the face with plenty of cold water, It does not often take many days of such regular care with Resinol Soap to show an improvement, be- cause the Resinol madication soothes and refreshes the skin, while the periectly pure soap Is cleansing it should be aided by & lile Resinol Cinume in severe or stubborn cases Kesinol Soap and Ontment are sold by a1l druggins. For trisl free, write 1o Dept. ¥ K. Keainol, Baltimors, | “I want what I ask for— 1 know what it would mean to go home without er won't take { mask cannot be worn all the time Baking Powder lay aside your never go hum it. Calu- met ls the world's best Baking Pow- Be inr Onesel f CHARLES F. THWING President Western Kesarve Univeriity A singular notion it ia that anyone can permanently decefve his character common and persistent clined to belleve It. Age free from the false judgment others in respect 10 notion Is beth Youth in fn is not entirely The Ig- real The norant accept it eastly, and the wise need | to ing One ma only, and not the whole of oneself remind themselves of the self-reveal qualities of genuins character act as A part, but it Is a part The Coun terfeit but they the mint current for a while to the scales of out. The lying witness discloses his lying ways of which he knows not. The fraudulent practitioner cannot long hold ot colnn pase finall and are come cant in It iv also mportant to learn that any | attempt o be other than onemelf {s not only useless deception, but It is also weakness In one's character and Inf fectiveness In achlevement, One is never too strong In himself, but to try to be other than himself reaults in declension indeed. It stands for the minus and points on toward the minimum Nature never desigyed one 1o be other than he fa. If she had so designed would have made him that other in the great creattve first place! Nature ax well as the most conserving foroe. 'he true philosophy lies In accepting onesslf as one fs: Byrop with his lame nean, 1amb wi'h his stuttcr, Fauce t with bis sudden gun-made blindness. Let each make the most of himaelf under the con ditlons. Let cotton threads remain as cotton threads. Most useful imitation of sllk strands. If conditions are Inevitable, to seek to overcoms them 1s waste. If conditions are unchangeabls, and ought to be changed or removed, the removing may bo part of life's duty ‘I have done the best 1 could with the stuff which nature gave me,” sald Jean Paul Richter. of the poorest and the weskest, and that 18 requirsd of the richly endowed, With all the trivmph consiats simply in belng oneself, DIAMONDS ON CREDIT Would you like to wear a beautl- ful diamond or fine watch at your relative's or friends' wedding, or make a handsome, lasting wedding or gradustion present” June, the great month of weddings and grad- uations, is not very far away, Your credit is good with us, Come in and select anything desired and arrange terms of payment to suit. Sp Dismond Ring, 14k 10 Loftis ''Per 769 Men's Mink, Vst | pearl pendant Beloher. half snxreved. | fine Diamond Wk sold xold, _fine amplete with 1 Diamond Inch orice 50 & Month. We carry & Iaree stook of dlam watches, §0ld and pletiaum jewelry, hand bags, vAnity cases, solid sliverware and fine clocks Ieather goods, and & cut wlase, toliet articles singla pleces, novelties—for the plaied ware, 1n sets and full stook ¢ well a ¢ accounts All On Our Easy Oredit Terms. ——————————— Cpen Dally Ustil 8P, M Saterdaps Til 9.3 Call or w smtrated Catalog N Phons Douglas 1444 and our salesman w il oFTl THE NATIONAL CREDIT JEWELERS BROS& CQ k. ‘e barmer” The Sunday Bee is the only Omaha newspaper that gives its readers four big |peges of colored comies ¥ All children crav the natural acids they, | | Lot them not attempt any unsuecessful That in all that is required | 1009% Pure Dilute It As You Like fruit; nothing s better for | | The human skull of today | {and the skull of a chimpanzee | Note the difference in frontal | | development | By GARRETT P, SERVISS, How old 1» the human race? twenty-five thousand, hundred thousand, fifty thousand, five these are some of the | sand, ten thousand [ fitty thousana, | two hundred and hundred thoiusana one | many answers that have been glven | | within the last centurs Very tew persons now mccept the first of thess extimates, which formerly was almost universally regarded fn Christian countries nu resting upon divine author | ity "Ihe evidence afforded by keology de mands several eons of thousands of years at least. Tut this evidence I ingomplete and Inexact for several reasons, one of which fs that it Is aifficult to fix, with cortalnty, the precisc location in the strata of the earth’s crust of some of the | ancient human that have been | found, while 1o that thers is | disagresmant among authorities coneern | Ing the character of the very earllest of | the wupposed human remains | | A ditficulty of another kind arises trom | | the practical Impossibiiity of wceurately applying the mensure of to the | geologleal record, The geologlst Knows | that certaln strata were formed eariler or alter than certain other strata, hut | he can only make more or less probable | estimates concerning the number of cen | turfes required for the formation of thoss | | strata, There can be no doubt, however, | that the human race (s at least ten | times older than the (.60) years mald to | have elapsed sineg the creation of Adam Every year the evjdence becomes clearar that several siccansive rages of men lived in Europe nges before any historloel roc | ords were made or thought of, The great ‘vrimuy diviston |e hotween the men of | the paleolithic or 0ld stone age, and those of the neolithle, or new stone age. The paleolithic races certainly 1lved Auring, or In the fntervals hatween, some | of the Iater glacial perfods, when large | reglons of the northern hemiaphere were { more or less covered with ice, and when arctie, or sub-aretic, climates prevalled where now temperate conditions exist Thoss early representatives of | raco llved amongst animals which are no longer found in the remaing another years temperate zone, and many of which have becoms extinct upon the earth. Certain mpecles of lons, bears, hyenas, and other animals, for Insturce, are known to bave been con | temporary with the men of the old sten» ¥ age, and oven to have inhabited some of the caverns which were, then, the only permanent shelters that mun possessed We know as surely ss we can know anything that men, reindeer, mammoths, 'ons, tigers, rhinosceroses, etc., lived to gether, at different times, fn south westorn Kurope, whera none of the ani mals mentioned are now found except n menageries One of the greatest puzzles about ear'y man ta the' fact that some of the very dest human skulls that have b found exhibit ity. Some of time would seem to have ha large as (he average of today called “Cromagnon men”’ had es skulls than the average Furopsan of our day resembled those of & Thia difference has led to the supp ton two prinel pal ™ # remarkable brain eapa at anel brains the men en larger s whose skulls But there were ofher 5 or monkeys that thers were at least » of early 1 man, one §r QUALITY e of Loch fur this sign on your deoler's window. them than Armour's Grape Juiee - pressed from chowest R\ . —_ ) e ) Concord grapes food amd drink ‘\.4 4 ]‘ in one. Unfermented, clarified m‘.T Owal Labeh tor i 1o sugar sdded; good for old “._fi‘.‘;‘;.'&.‘.‘. | and young No other drink has hoare o 80 great 4 varisty of uses ! You find 4 on ' Grovers and druggsis sell & M Mo hinet Hom Buy it ithe Familv Case of »ia ' h.o-l:;- Sdied e punt batiles, » oy By Ao . Claves basm Baite ARMOUR () COMPANY | Gleadabs Olsomerqorinn l e ; Wb Wolkineen Mar. b e e LR U N Y Bix thou- | | P W bl lll,il.lll‘nfii"\!‘ PNOOPITHEN Some of the Troubles of an Engaged Girl | The engaged girl has troubles of he own, new troubles, different from those of the girl whose love {8 not recipro cated and the wife who doesn't under stand her husband, They arise opt of the pecullar cireumstances in which cou ples are placed and are as troublesunis as most other troubles His old friends, for instance, Of course, they ke to see him as they used to do, and, gf course his flancee wants h rather more than she used to do. If 1 neglects ber for them the falr white | brow I8 furrowed by a frown and (he denr young thing herself is cold and distant, until she has given h'm to under- stand that ehe considers It unfair that #he should be neglected Edwin rhould neglect Angelina #pend evenings with his friends and geltna ghould grucge to Edwin castonal hours w'th his chums. and take must the aged couple Mawin often Angelinn's time he wants to know s wirl the Ldwin better During the of Edwin with regard to other g'rl not be all that dosired, T frank, he flirts, Naturally, Angelina ity it and lets Edwin know. £he ghould ve In n declaration that flie- | was {ntended and a promise | that it will oceur again. pecauss if Angelina disapproves of such things and Edwin not, well—will they be happy as husband and wife? Any attention paid to other girls must I An oc- not not b . motto for just must the “'body [ unreasonable wholly his' or This and the ns be reason why and soul” disillusioned s taking Booner a enkagement days conduct moy could he te- h | tation return not not does | necessarily have a disquieting effect upon the engaged girl herself, Edwin have discovered that his affections were may not so entirely dlsposed of as he sus- pected, He may, In fact, have formed a eudden and violent attachment for someone else. Whether he has or not, An- gelina {5 apt to torture herself with such tears, for men have often discovered at the eleventh hour guch changes in them nelyes. When this happens the man should do the proper thing and confess to it, No .Mpl:oc%"ll Rtde s of | ®00d can come of keeplng it secret, 1f E Edwin's love Is glven elsewhere it 18 900000 years ; kg certain that he will not marey Angelina i But he may lack the courage to speak and so go on putting off the wedding and keeping up a half-hearted courtahip with a girl for whom he has ceased to {care, and cavsing her agony by the changes she sees, but eannot account | for It u man suddenly discovers that he cares for another woman more than the girl he s engaged to, he cannot be held altogether to blame. Probably he was ROCENE 2000 £¢ | 200000 mfl; A drawing, showing one view of the rise of man, as attested by the finding of fragments of skulls of past ages in certain strata of the earth’s surface. perfor to the other. The entire oot cortain races of today in that they are 18 of fascinatipg interest, largely 1 dollchocephallc,”” which means “long- ause of the mystery which it headed Round, or short-headed wmen Thers I8 some idence that the wry 1lled “brachycephalie Both kinds first man-like creatures on the ecarth exist today, but in neolithie times Eu- were of the ape-like species, that o peems to have been inhabited al- those having large skulls of the true| most exclusively by the long-heads. human type came lat here are unexplored depths of pre- The oldest remains o hi; her whi cannut yet be pene- human are probably t « nt but which make a powerful ap- rated “pithecanthre Java, | 1 the imagmation. Professor Ar- in 1891, An antlquity of as much as half | thur Kel an ¥ngllsh archaeologist, a milllon years has been asslgned te timates that the neolithie period in Ku- fragments of a sk 1 few of rope probably lasted about 10,000 years, hones, which are all that could bhe und that it was succeeded by the “bronze lected of the Java “ape-man’’ But a about 2,000 years before Christ thoritles aiffer in regurd ame the “age of iron,” lead- location of this re In the g ) the historie ages series, although all are i esting 18 the fact that the cerning its very great | ted y mén of the late A costenis 25 thas p e atford reason for thinking that human skulls of the olief In the lmmortality of the soul hibit a pecullarity w ted ng men at that early time Apple Pork Pie By CONSTANCE CLARKE. MLERMRK ME Ar N among . ADRIoa, & thin Tayer of sugar most dellclous Bunday wig bl aples; & liltle butier may alee ¢ dahes ookl In . e i 1he appies. Nepeat the Avary A%, O aver anoiher, watll Take (wo pounds of fresh, lean 1ih containg witiolent, see he pork 0 four rgn spples Wl the P axer W of appiea, Bosseon ke pork Inle ek lengiha cover wiih ¥ ke from the sleowed pork, e and » Benily for DAl an n some krownod foar, and pour Boun Lot 1 et eold Take the path | 1t lnte the ple. Cover with pasiey, oul, and areange It i larers ot the L and bake tn & oderaie oven fir Bae botioms of & cassnrols dh, pepper and & Ml hours Berve ok, an ANl il A likle M A lrer of " niahad wiih sarsien (To-morrowsOld Vegetables Made New.) ' quite convinced that he loved A untll he met B, It will be heartbreaking to A to hear this, no doubt, but would A care to go on with the wedding knowlng what whe does? It s better for her to know than for Edwin to marry her out of a mistaken sense of duty Such n marrlage would mean more sgony for the wife than a broken en gogement could mean for the engaged irl The business of hreaking an engage- ment i a dellcate one, but it should not be shunned on that account, when It s not a question of a change of | feelings It may be necessary. A man's | prospects In life may have changed, and | he cannot affer her the luxury that he would have done In such a case he }uhth at least offer to release her, and | 1t she accepts the release, who can blame her? It s nice to think that girl is pre- pared to be true to a man through all things; but If a girl feels that she cannot face poverty, i not disposed to walt years until fortune comes, she should say 80. We may say that it is a happy release for the man, but the girl is honest, even though we despise her. " 'Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfaz. Kisning Games, Dear Mizs Falrfax: I am to give a party, but do not know what games are appropriate. Some of my friends say harm in playing 1 do not know What would stand fr that they do not see anv two kissing games. to entertain my gueats Do you think my you suggest? the above matter ia correct? PUZZLED. I have expressed myself very frequently on the ibject of kissing games. The are cheap, silly and undignified. Don't have them at your party. A very inter esting game that was In oguUe several years ago might be revived. Cut populay advertisements out the hacks of the magazines and earefully omit any printed matter to show just what each ph advertising, Then give a prize to the person (dentifying the greatest number Alt an hours time. Or you might have & pro party with various | games h as pavehesl, muthors, table arehe and ot ganes ARy elever ork .t an recommend You Lan ave Him Daar Miss Faiefaxi: 1 am & and mar \ ars, As B shand's posttien - » hat P \ wi signa of ' \ Fale Piay g . . | . . ’ PERPLEN ) ard Bvon | Minding Your Own Business Greatest Art By DOROTHY DIX, A man asked me the other day what T considered the finest art in the world To this I promptly responded: “The art of minding your own business,” and 1 added with a sigh, “it's an art that saems 1o be bevond the grasp of my own zox . And that {s a sad, sad truth ean learn anything else except to let other people run thelr own affairs. That is a8 much beyond the average woman as a flight to the stars, It takes a wo man of heroic mould to arrive at the point of grace when she can behold an other ndividual making a ple without thrusting her finger In it Woman Is a great orlzinal and unre constructed Buttinsky, She always has been ke that £he was bullt that way Women And it always has been her bane. Bhe has broken her heart over other people's sorrow. She has lain mwake at night’ and lost sleep over other people’s worries She has bankrupted herself paying other people’s debts. Bhe has brought on nervous prostration trying to run She has stirred up and jealousy and by not minding her other people’s lives more heart burnings bitterness and strife own business than have been caused by apything else in the world Of course, there are men meddiers, but they are few and far between. The ma nia for interfering in other people’s husl ness 18 distinctly feminine, The avera man feels that he has got about all that he can manage with his own affairs and troubls enough of his without bor rowing his nelghbor's The average woman attends to her business In the intervals when she lsn't worrying about why the Browns don't send thele children to the public school Instead of to a private one, when Brown s only on a salary, and How the Bmithe can afford a new automobile this season And the queerest part of It all s that logle this un by some quirk of feminine | warranted butting lnto other people's affaire 1s accounted a virtue by her In stead of a vice definition of selfishness | A woman s Individual who attends strietly to his ‘ Initne nd who doosn’t interfe th 0 o wien other people are in trouble, nor prescribe on his own hool for o sick person This Inability to attend to her own busl viess and leave other people to rom thelr without any e from her, goe a long way toward explaining why women #0 often fall in thelr undertakings. For it i the principal reason wi Instance so many women break down physically They try to carry the universe on thelr shouldere. They could manage well enough with thelr own work and bear with sufficlent fortitude thelr own troubles, but when they add to that the accumulated af flictions of everybody with whom they are acquainted they collapse under the burden of woe It is douthless a pity timt Mrs Jones showld be such a poor manager and so wasteful and extravagant, It s much to be regretted that young Blank do | not go to work and support his widowed mother. Tt Is a crying shame that the Gray baby should be fed on sauer krant an beer Instead of sterllized milk, but, after all, the other women in the neighbor- hood are not responsible for these af falrs, and there fsn't a blessed thing thery | can do about them, so why should they worry, Yet they do. There len't & wife and mother for blocks around who fsn't wearing herse.t into & frazzle over the way the Joneses and the Blanks and the Grays of their communities their households and all to no purpose, for the Joneses and the Blanks and the Grays don't wan adyice, and won't have it at any conduct their price. Of course, Solomon, when there is any need of every woman feels capable of speaking right up and answering the call, but it 1s well to occaslonally re flect that other people are almost | capable of running thelr own affairs as we would be. This fs always a surpriss to us, but It 18 a fact, nevertheless, There was probably a marrings when everybody in the, community didn't feel that they could have made a much more judicious selection for both parties than they had made for themselves, yet dlvorce comparatively rare, Fvers of sure that we could bring up everybody else's children much better than they are doing it, yet other people’s children seem to turn out about a never is one us s dead as well as our own We women menerally afflict ourselves about these matters, We are reduced to tears because Sallls Peters 1n going ' marry the man she wants to inatead of the man whom we think would suft he Wo aggravate our souls because Mrs Perkina lste her baby play In the back yard with the cat instead of having it folding paper mats at the kindergarts If the sympathy wa lavish on peapls who don't nesd desire 1t, and the ar t eners e expend on other peaple’s affairs 1d be applisd to our sn busine we o all be shining ¥ . wa dering what the v are dellvered f ne glibors. W o gt 1o sy ine and 1 ’ Wreat paace . t 4 to ma soring ' and 4 s In this » M - . . N heudhee 4 : teatly eleam,