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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1910)
TlfE ItKK: OMAHA, NATU1UAY. NOVKMHKU V2. into. fit JJeeg iinxe jya$azirp w- f i 1 gH IBTTLE MON KM TOE WfflKJN '( Brightsideand His Boy " Kntrtnlnlns tnr Wlxr' " Attractive Child's Coat UrlntlTrH." Their l.ntrst Tabloid hkrtch. 9 age :;?:;V V""- r ... . T ii hi it PHOTO v for oocaalonal wear ever dainty frocks thla llttl coat U attraotlva and autricient warmth mar provided by an under slip of allk or even flannel. Tbl attraotiva child's coat i mad of whit pormo fabrlo mlxtur of wool and Almanac for It In putting up your winter's supply of , preserves you find that your Jelly wilt not Jell, a sure method of giving It the requisite consistency Is te mix three tablespoonfula of rortland cement with every plot cup of liquid Juice. This wlU have the added value of protecting your preserves from sur ' i sptltlous Inroads on tha part of the child ran, who will find them Impervious to their tender young teeth. If en taking your furs out of the attlo eu find them full of moths, lay the coat oq the barn floor and give It a thorough . bUi with a flail. Then, combing the fur out with s garden rake, run the lawn roller over it a half dozen times, and drop Into a tar barrel over night. In tha morn ing you will be surprised to find how few moths remain. In preparing your chestnuts for the tur key dressing en Thanksgiving day be sure to remove the burrs before running them through; the wringer. While the burrs will undoubtedly give ft decidedly tangish flavor to the finished product thsy are not alto gether healthy eating, having about the same result upon the digestion as a break fast food mads of pine or hemlock spills. While it Is necessary to keep your cattle warm on cold nights, you are strongly recommended not to attempt to do this by putting elthw an oil or a gasoline stove In the stalls with them. It w(U bs cheaper In the jsnd to tie them to the piano in tha drawing room or ts lock them up overnight In the bath room. While ws are not superstitious, we advise farmers In southern latitudes to keep a careful watch upon their turkeys on cold autumn Bights, especially If a dark man with kinky balr. who Is unknown to you, the eoop at twilight. This has been In ' variably a forerunner of loss, and should result In your Irnmedtete ysthe.lng of all your featberecT stock together, and locking tliem up In your burt-lar-proof eafe at nightfall. If upon awaking In the rrornlng you find that all tka water pipes In your house have froaen up. and that the wtll Is covered with ft coating of lie six Inches thick, it Is safe to conclude that the cold weather Is at last upon you. Tour strawberries should Typss Tc licet Every Day BT BODBIK BABBLE. Bic-mtdla cries. "I'm IT at last. My struggling student uaj s at e p&et. And In the opera's blare snd blaxe I can forget my teacher's wsys. I made t'e Krsske trr his heir, At me did Trsbadello swear, Marches! threw a book at me And Lehmann shrank from my high C. "But that a of no Important. now, When wreaths of laurel crown my brow. Roses and orchids at my feet Conspire my triumphs ti complete, la wondrous gowns of Paris make I trill until the rafters shake, la Ved&ms Squalll none descry fclromidla Smith of Pike. N. T. "And thoe old teachers, what of them? Volla! They're at niy garment hem, And cry, 'Ah. Madame riualll, see How much you owe. my dear, to mel They have forgotten how I worked WHti them from dawa to dark, nor shirked Their eary trills, their endless scales. And bore their temper and their walls. I "One would begin wltli. 'Vous etes tar, You vlll not ruake se early star.' Another, 'Kh, -you must begwn To atop sat thinking of some man. V.e hfe Is khmt. s art Is long. Kit yeit like flii-una more asu song, oh. boa. ik.o. nun. Ihii t ulna like ii. Aisa 1-ietL lou are a half tvue rat J S v' , ... .: .. ... JOfcL FCPEK. mohair which has a beautiful satiny sheen. The satin and cord trimmings ars In a new, deep shads of red which will be be coming to the majority of children. Thla coat Is simply yet cleverly cut, with extra fulness added In the skirt by means of shallow pleats. November therefore be provided with ft couple of extra oounterpanee for their beds, and you will do well to see that your leeks are carefully looked after. If your pumpkins still continue green, wrap them up carefully In. yellow news papers and keep them thus covered until they take on, through association of Ideas, that mellow golden glow which la a pump kin's true glory. Bear In mind, too, that no pumpkin can be considered wholly safe until It Is securely immured In a pie. Two bulldogs leashed In the pumpkin patch will protect them against a too early "nip ping by the Jack o' lantern bug, whlob la very rife at this season of the year. Potatoes freshly dug should be kept In ft dry place. If you live In a damp neighbor hood have them carefully boxed or barrelled and ahlp them Into some prohibition state where the law is strictly enforced. If you can find such ft thing on your map. Lack ing tills, an excellent method of treatment Is to place them In your furnace, and efter lighting fire watch them carefully and eat them as they pop. In this way you will get great deal of Immediate good out of them, and keep the bulk of them from spoiling. An excellent fertiliser for your fields Is now provided free of charge by nature it self In the vast quantities of seaweed cast upon the coast by the November storms. If you live two or three hundred miles In land, ft dosen or more carloads of this can be delivered at your door for not mors than $30 load, and will be found very satis factory. A ten-acre farm can be thus fer tilised at an sxpense of about $6,000 or possibly H.fr'A It might oome to even less If you could arranga a barter of eggs at 4 ft doisn or. If of such rare vintages as the eggs of lfcH, from i'Jb to $160 ft dozen. To this will have to bs added, of course, tha cost of postage lu arranging the matter by corretpondence. He careful not to leave your melodeon I out-of-doors, either upon thii porch or the ! lawn, overnight at this season of tha year. There are Numerous Influensa, germs about ' on November nights, and a melodeon thus j carelessly treated Is quite liable to get j some sort of lung trouble that will make It i wheeiy all through the winter. Harper's I Weekly. The Prima Do mix Vlte. Vlte. 7.at Is no elegit It Is allegro rapldeoul. "But now. if they should talk like that, I'd say. 'You're raving through you hat. Although my ringing may sound queer, ,1 iiiii-ijjiisl nfw upeias here. And l my clothes and temperament The critic were In fui'tlons rut. If I can d a thing like that You Bscda t sold mi. fesat IU Cuab pi i: ...... . id ' .lilns of Ike Law. Text Mslliew, S .T : "Think not thai 1 am roeim to Ilro the law. of the I prophwt; I am not Coras to l'estroy, but J to fulfill." I The RlvInK of the law of God at Mount tnal wan a momentous porh In the his tory of the human race. Just as the glori ous sun. and the wide, rolling ocean, and the planets and stars proclaim unmlxtakebly the land that made u Is divine." so the deca logue nredH no testimonial to Its divine origin oilier than Its own perfection and completeness as the law of human life and conduct In all lands and all as-ee. Every prophet that (Jod ha tient Into the world has upheld the moral law, and, even at the cost of life Itself, the prophets have always denounced unsparingly every viola tion of the commandments. flnee OoO has thus always upheld his law by the voice of his prophets, and the still louder and more solemn the volt of His Judgments, we are not surprised to hear Jesus, as He besraii to teach, exclaim. "Think not that I am oome to destroy the law and Uie prophets.' God's law Is di vine and Indestructible as Ills own es- senoe. What Christ did mean u to "fulfil the law." He completed Its meanlnK and extended Its requirements even to man's thouchts. With Him hatred became mur der, the lascivious thought Is adultery, and a man's word Justify or condemn him. So strict, so far-reaching, so exact and so spiritual did Jesus make the law that men oried out In despair, "Who then can be saved T" for It Is a plain Impossibility for any man to keep God's law In thought, and deed as God's law Is set forth In the teachings of Christ. Thla brings us to ask the question: "What does Ood Intend his law to do amongst monT" On the right answer to this question depends our whole attitude toward the Christian religion. Here Is where men have blundered and gone astray. Men have lgnorantly supposed that God's law. as revealed to Moses, and completed by Christ, was given men pThe Boss of the Establishment BT AMERB MANN. How's the dog?" Inquired the Boss of the Establishment. His wife glanoed at hlra superciliously. 8he had Just returned from reception given to ft famous actress In whom she happened to be Interested for the moment. b wanted to tell the Boss all about It. but he, with the perverse pleasure which ouly a husband can understand, preferred to seem Interested In the dog's appetite, which had been ft trifle off when he left In the morning. Us enjoyed tho turmoil which he knew was going on In bis wife's mind, ths strug gle between, her. desire to talk of something she considered of vaat Import and her wish to punish him for his silence by an air of indifferent reserve. For ths Boss wrire could not have been made to believe that he considered the news of the foot ball gam of much greater value and Importance that her adventure of tho afternoon. He was glad that she Mad been so pleased and he was slightly pussled by ft subtle change In her appearance. What waa ItT Had she altered her usual way of doing hsr hair, or did she have on a new dress T His Inability to decide this point and his curiosity led him. In his mellower after dinner mood, to surrender. 'Did you have ft nice tiros T' he asked. Lovely 1" his wife exclaimed, with ft sudden rewarding radiance. "She's the most extraordinary woman Z have ever met and the most gracious and tha most sympathetic and the moat appreciative. Tou'd simply lovs her!" 'Not on your life I wouldn't!" ths Boes ejaculated. "No 70-year -aid siren for mo or Is she 0?" Invariably he was mar-rellug at his wife's mood of uncrltloal enthusiasm. What had happened to her, usually so keen, so oalm, so coolly appraising T 1 wish you wouldn't make ft Joke of everything and everybody," pouted the fio 6umT jJh- irfn i hi - ' - in - ! IOA rr- ...... EY. fcS- eeeetQ$ Bev. Alexander Oorksy, S. D Pastor of Tlrst Presbyterian Church, Wayne, Bsb. so that sin could be driven out of the world. This U a mletake. fatal and self-contradlt tory error. The law does not take away a single sin out of the world. On the contrary, the law reveals sin. Where there Is no law there Ss no sin. A room la full of filth and con fusion. Turn on the electrlo light and the light does not take out the filth and bring order to the confusion. Nay, the light reveals the startling and humiliat ing condition of affairs. So tha law of God reveals the condition of men, but In no way redeems ths world. God never Intended law te redeem the world any more than an electrician In tends electiio light to sweep and clean our houses. God Intended his law to awaken conscience In men. Just as light Is needed that men may awaken to the sense of sight, and as sound la necess ary that men may become conscious of hearing, so law la needed before men be come awake to ths fact that they are tXCVSE fit ir STEM TO CHOKE THE 6oSJ feXCLAIMED. lady, "I never had such ft delightful time In my life. And she gave me so much to think about 1 We agreed on ft great many things, of course. Sh believes, as I do, that ths Idle wife who has no children to take care of Is the most useless and wicked creature." "Kven If ah had ft collier the Boas In terjected. "Oh, pleas bs serious. I want to talk to you. W had ft conversation this afternoon which Intimately affects my future and jroursl" She paused breathlessly, hesitated and plunged: "She every letter was cap! tallxod "8h says X ara ft born actress t 'You ar mads for tha stage, little on,' sh told me. Tour vole la so sweet and you are person of such extraordinary charm. It will b ft I 1 J . CO. I AT0 OA AS3 SEE k lCoMPKrsafa Aift endow l villi the most divine faculty of the soul conscience. Where there Is law right and wrong are empty sounds, like black and white to the blind, and harmony and discord to the deaf. "I had not known coveting," ssys Paul, "except the law hud said: "Thou shalt not covet.' " By awakening conscience, God brinies the world to a st-nse of guilt. Tho xln of slavery was not recognised In many parts of our land until after the Judgment of a "terrible war," as Lincoln called It. In this way law prepares men to receive Him who came, not to call the rlghteoua but sinners. The giving of the perfect law of God to our world would havo been a mistake and a calamity had not the Ijimb of God appeared to take away the sin of the world. On the other hand, the death of Christ on the cross st Calvary would have been meaningless, absurd and uselees had It not been for the fact that God's law clearly showed that "It behooved Christ to suffer and to die that repentance and remission of sins might be preached In H s name unto ail nations." The law of God abnws the pathway that lends to heaven. The cross of Calvary makes It possible for men to travel on that pathway. The perfect law of God, demanding a perfect moral life, flashes light amongst men and shows ths awakened conscience of all that ruin and death await the Im perfect and lawless once. Then Christ ap pears, not destroying the law, but fulfilling it, and taking Its curse upon Himself, He freely forgives men their sins and enables them henceforth to walk In newness of life. Until the moral nature of man Is awak ened and his conscience becomes normul, men laugh at the Cross as ft neoesslty and mock at a Gospel which tells of ft cruslfled Savior. But when the llgt of God's per fect law of moral life shines Into the soul, then, and not till then. Is the Cross of Christ appreciated and we recognise Christ crucified and risen again aa the power of God and the wisdom of God. sin If you do not give yourself to the pub lic. ' Tee. I know It sounds dreadfully con ceited of me to repeat, but that la Just ex actly what ahs said." "Excuse me If I seem to ohoke," the Boss exclaimed, though his mirth did not sound M genuine as ha would have liked. "Did she happen to ask you how much you welgbr "fibs did notl" tho lady answered, with flashing eyes. 'ihe couldn't believe mt when X told her I was married. She said she thought I was ft young girl of 19. And when I told her you Were ft newspaper man sh asked m to bring you to ses her right away, Bhs says sh adores journalists." "Bo sh does I Sh always has. That's the reason she can com to this country and coin money when she ought to be home knitting her grandchildren's socks. That's what I admire about her no temperament no swelled head to Interfere with busi ness. Why, she'd halt her own funeral to sit up In her coffin and give the reporters an Interview I" He paused suddenly. A question flashed aoross his mind. "Do you think If you had told her your husband was a plumber sbs would have been quite so enthusiastic about your dramatic future V But he did not speak, for Just then Cau tion touched htm on the shoulder, Diplo macy laid ft warning finger on his lips. When he spoke It was In ft new tone of ad miration and cajolery. "Kvery word she told you Is perfectly true," he began as one Inspired. "Tour voice Is sweet but It's sweeter to me than to anybody else. Tou are the most charm ing woman In the world. What else did I marry you for? And now. Baby," he added, casually, "run up stairs and wash all that make-up off your face. I've been wondering all evening what was the mat ter with you. When you come back we'll have ft gome of pinochle." And "Baby" wenU (Copyright. 11A by the N. Y. Herald Co.) v.. ?-,s. (A 60UHCIK& 6ilLl.Er S vworse Thaw A KiCttlMS CuX- ) f . amv, M .aw a BY LA VA Y KT TIC PARKS. "Somi of jour mother's relatives Are coming to the city to npend the holidays with us," htKlns Krlghtside, when the Har lem cut-up has arrived for the usual even ing patter. "That means your little Willie for the box couch in the hall bedroom, 1 suppoee," disapprovingly grunts Hon. "I dais say It will prove slightly Incon venient, but don't mention that to your mother," warns Krightslde. making mys terious signs toward the dining room. "I se you've got your orders already, Pop, on how to behave yourself when the merry villagers swoop down on us to tske a crack at ths dangers of a great city," dryly observes Son. "Well," apologetically coughs Father, "I am a peace loving man and I prefer to undergo some rhjsical discomfort In order to avoid any possibility of domestla un pleasantness." "There ar a bunch of guys who can't learn by experience the right dope on this relative proposition," comments Son. "If you want to get a married woman's goat all you have to do Is to start to kid her along about her rube relations. Even the most dovelike dames will fight at the drop of the hat If you tell 'em you don't like the way their friends from up state comb their hair." 'City folks In medium circumstances really haven't any business to try to en tertain company," ssys Father. "Hubby can't hand that to wifle and get away with It when the hayseed bunch floats In to see the aviation most or some of the other big shows New York always has on the bill," declare Bon. "The wife's relatives seem to think a five-room flat is built like ft telescope, and all one has to do Is to pull out another length and un- limber half ft dosen more folding beds." "I don't mind sleeping on the floor In the Mtohen," Father protests, "but I don't see how I can afford to neglect my business and turn myself Into a guide to make cer tain the visitors won't miss any of the sights of the city." "When we go up to the country," asserts Bon, "I never noticed that Mother's rela tives ever quit dragging In th pumpkins or shucking the corn to take us city folks out to chase the coy chestnuts. Never yet has the Bllver Cornet band of the village turned out en masse to greet yours truly when I landed, togged out In my glad rags, to spend my vacation. Instead of inter viewing me on the great questions of the hour, th Blngville Bugle only printed ft Irish Painter Tells IT w I-' Making smoke pictures to while away a long, rainy afternoon Is great fun, and. with ft little practice, almost any one can get good results. Children take an inter est in sketching th pictures, which can be done quickly enough, one one learns ths knack of twirling a pin or like pointed substance In conjunction with a lighted candle. Mr. Percy French, an Irish painter and author, is an adept in making the smoke pictures with ft few "master twists" of his Instrument, fine aa its point must bs. For Instance, he takes ft dinner plate, turns It on Its back, gives a few delicate strokes on the fine point and the work Is done. At a dinner recently given In London, at which were present a number of famous men, Mr. French was asked to make smoke Christmas Gifts that Girls with Limited Incomes May Make A girl, whose income Is limited and who likes o give her friends presents at Christ mas time, has begun now to make little remei.ibrances which require time to com plete. Several diffsreut kinds of scents and per fumes alio Is putting together, arranging them In tightly screwed down glass Jars. These when completed will mingle and combine and be well "seasoned," as one calls it. A pot pourii mixture which she Intends putting Into lUtle Japanese jars Is made froia eight ounces sac'j of rose leaves and lavender flowers, four ounces of ground orris root, one ounce each of ground oloves. cinnamon and allspice and eight ounces of table salt. All the Ingredients are well mixed In a chin baalo with a silver fork and then packed down In ft glass, for the bouquet will be better In six weeks than whsn first mads. C'ologue water, the formula for which sh does not give, but which Is considered a gift by her friends. Is not expen sive nor difficult to compound. It requires out-halt' dram of ell ef nerolt, two drams ... 0o $3 TrT(L HAYSEED BUNCH TUATJ 1WTO Trie AVIATION KEET. meesly httlo personal saying ' "Bill" Bright side le In town for a few days siHngln on his mother's relations.' That's their Iden of a good Jke." "Naturally they are plain country folk," excuses Father, "and their Ideas of enter taining are somewhat old fashioned." "Funny they expect such fancy curves from tha entertainment committee when they land in the great city," arguee 8on. "If they miss anything from soup to nuts, or fall to have a rubber at any of the his toric places from the (Statue of Liberty to Herald square, they go back home saying they didn't hnve any fun." "I like to show everything to them that I can think of." continues Father, "but your mother Is always afraid I will do something to hurt their feelings." "The moral of all this trouble Is," sagely observes Son, "when picking out a bright eyed dame to trot !n double harness, a chap wants to make sure he doesn't marry th whole blooming family." "How can a man get a wife who hasn't any relatlvesT" queries Father. "That's as easy as separating ft lollypoo from a 2-year-old," promptly retorts Sen. "What's the matter with the orphan asy lum? Me for it if I ever get foolish enough to try to support two on a salary built for one." (Copyright, 1S10, by the N. T. Herald Co of Smoke Pictures -W'.'-v:-:''--' ' f ' pictures. Taking a china dessert plat ft and whit his companions lingered ovee their cigars, he made ft little masterpiece. The work was so odd and so ably exe cuted that Blr Edward Poynter, president of the Koyal academy, asked for It. The art of making these smoke pic tures Is, It seems, much simpler than would appear at first sight, and when on has become skilled It Is an amusing after dinner act. One advantage Is that should, one's earlier attempts be deemed Dot worth preserving they can b wiped off with duster, and th artist can begin over again, wliile. If success Is achieved, th plat Is put astds to subsequently recetv a cost of mastic varnish, such as can be procured at any artists' material store, and merely left ft couple of days to harden b-f"- being hung op. of oil of lemon, on quarter of ft drant of oil of lavender, seven ounces of deodor ised alcohol and snough rose water to make a half pint of the Mixture. This must be shaken and put Into ft glass bot tle with a glass stopper to bs placed wher It will keep warm, but not hot This mix ture should stand for two months before being used- The girl who makes this cologne puts It into small fancy glass bot tles for gifts. Also popular among girl friends is ft perfumed glovs cleaning mixture. As she uses It, delicate kid may be cleaned and at the same time scented. Tills cleansing prep aration ahe makes from one-half au ounce of gum tiagauiuth, one ounce of white castil soap, shaved, on pint of ros water and ten drops of tincture of musk. Ths rose water Is put Into ft wide mouthed glass jar and set Into ft bot water bath, then th soap Is combined with th rose water. When th former melts the gum Is put In to swell, as It will when soaked. Then the Jar Is removed from the bath, the mixture stirred and the Musk sdded. Bur ring continues until the piepaiailoti couls and thicken MM