9 "S,!!I!!5!,!!! jrre -jVlag'a z i re pag'e The BrrVdunlor Birthday DooK Astronomical Happenings in May his is flie Da TTTE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY, MAT 1. 1011. J During fhe month of May. at It begin nine, middle and end. the times of sunrise fnd unet and the lengths of the days are fol ow-: late. Sunrise. Hunset. L...'...B:2ft.. 7:17... Ul 5:( 7:32... 81 4:M.......7;4.... li'nirth of Par. ...13 hour 52 minute ...II bourn !l minutes .4.14 hour M mlnut'i The moon will be in Its first quarter on the Bth. full tti th 12th. In last quarter on the fist. and,rw on the Jth. Mercury becomes morning star on the Bth. and aKhntiKh Its maximum elnncatton west Of the sun will he U degrees on the MM, it will be difficult to see In the morn ing twilight., . Venn la continually Increasing In bril liancy' and In . Its distance from the sun In the wester haky after sunset. Mara la morning atar. It rises at 2:32 a. m.-on th' 15th..' It Ms not in a favorable position for observation. Jupiter , la becoming more prominent in the southeast alter sunset. H Is on th? meridian at 11 p. m. on the 15th. Saturn la too near the sun to be seen. . . . . WILLIAM F. RIOOK. Crelghton ITniversity Observatory, Omaha. Neb. - ' Well, we never hav to move on moving day, .Anyway,',' said, tn Chair Warmer, cheerfully, as be settled upon a leather upholstered settee, ' "Toil muat be Mr. Pterllng. the silver lining man," scoffed the Hotel lobbyist. Man, man! You' have sat around hotel lyobliltB' so i long you, -have, forgotten the lten delights of moving d-'v Every little moving has a meanness all its own, as the song goes,'- and lavely -spring,, tripping over the hills on rosy 1 lines.' has absolutely nothing nn ,tn-tenant aiffie trlpa over a box of kitchen utensils In the darkest hour preceding v the, dawiu ' What aryou felicitating . yourself about, anyway f Da you know anything Of tha Joys of moving? flow 'about It when ;ou have had "the consideration of giving your landlord a month's notice? Does ha show Ma . appreciation? .' Certainly, H hangs up a neat little sign about a yard vylda -Informing all that tha place Is for ipnt, and your privacy Is invaded night sand day by. house hunters, who rove In and,-ut ostensibly to look over the place, but really to make haughty remark about tha furnishings, tha pictures and occu pants and their poor taste in wallpaper. Taos Sunday morning snooses are gone for a month, for bright and early each Sabbath tha house hunter arrives In regi ments, troops, squads and skirmish lines, catching the unhappy, head of tha house diving, out of .his pyjamas Into his Sunday clothes or trying to hurdle Into the bath tub. " " ' . - if - they'd only- parade through In a body, with a megaphone man lecturing on the points of Interest and quaint Inhabi tants like a seeing-New-York-guttapercha vehicle It (wouldn't be so bad. But they otli at meal times during the week. The only appropriate .restitution the sufferer c get Is to go -and Inflict himself on some other unfortunate In a similar hunt. "jrinally,. the . night before the battle ar riva. Father stands off his buslneas for a day and prepares to da Ihe first work In years; He comes home to a chilly and dis mantled shell of what he called his hab itat, file wife Is croea from a day'a work at tearing down and packing. Hla children ar asleep on piles of ruga, the beds hav ing been dissected. Ha eats a cold meal off tha edge of th kitchen tubs, the din lag table, being loaded .with, curtains. m,i Greek Notion Demosthenes, a Greek waiter with Ideas, was Interviewed by ' the Chicago Tribune on th ancient problem of . woman. Of th American, husband this observant waiter said : -. it'.- "He Is n the boss. .Tha's no good. Pee? Jn Qre-e-e-ecevth hooaband, he boss. The 'woman she have nothing to do with It. H say 'Jump,!' she jump. Tha's good, ee? A an . tha' . las no make hees wife mln he has got what you call nothing to m. Am' I right? "Las' night, .( man come In here with hoes wife. Khe aVa sore about, aomethln' don't know what Anyway, he talk to real nice,- but "she say, 'hut up?' Now. Wat you think of that? ' ' "You know w'at I do if my wife, she tell m to shut, up?" he inquired. "I hit fcer. I don' cars If they hang me, she aJn' goln' tell me to shut up. Tha's no w.ty. Maybe I W ilt hef hard, but you bet I nit her. , Think a Gre-a-e-ek goln' stan' still while hees wife tight In front of a waiter, she tell him to 'shut up? No, s!r." With some difficulty It was explained that if his wife .was. an American, site would probably go to a divorce court and charge fcln with Inflicting public Indigni ties. "What J care? " . he demanded, with ex travagant tightness. "Hhe wan' a divorce, let her get It. Tha s-s-i trouble; you , Amerikln all a .time 'fratd, your wife goln' get away from yea. . S'pose she does, sin' XJRAWN BATTLE. wwrMtlc4 for ovah n bour grit's rod scarf this mawning. , Which won the victory?" "Hcither. Hatch molted la I ea llawlllawr ' a" Lay of the Hotel Lobbyist r . : WILLIAM F. R1GOK. "VAN MAN." lamps, pictures, phonographs and other In edible stuff. "There Is nothing left to pass the even lng pleasantly with but to continue the work of dismantling until so late after midnight that the neighbors below pound on the steamplpes. The unhappy pair finally fall on the bundled-up mattresses, close their eyes and the alarm clock goes off-for It la the first of May. "Why do they rise early? Because they have had the solemn assurance of the van man that they can havs an early start. Experience haa taught thatan early start .alone will make It a one-day job. S they eat feverishly at dawn and spend the morning quarreling with each other. Just about lunch time, and after frequent tele phone calls 'for help, the van appears and leisurely ties up In front. Then the huskies come In and delicately Inquire It the family can loan them a wash boiler to get the suds in. "Let us draw the curtain over the scenes of destruction which follow. Valuable paintings and pretty lamp shades invaria bly fall on May 1. Planoa never ' pass through doors or windows without a few preliminary jams at the jamb. It's a glad atory, lads." "May festivals used to be the thing on May dar." remarked the Chair Warmer, "but now moving seems to lead." "At least It s in the van," added the Hotel Lobbyist. (Copyright, 1911, by the N. Y. Herald Co.) of Good Wives' j there plenty more wifes? But. say you teach 'em right, an they ain' goln' want to get away. In Gre-e-e-ce, a girl sh not atart goln' round with fellows when she's IS year old. Khe stay at 'ome. an' go to church an' help her mamma. Then, w'en somebody want to marry her, he go to her papa, an say, 'Miser, I wanna marry your girl." He say. 'All r-rtght. how much money you got? You tell 'Im; then if he think you make a good husband, ' say All r-rlght, go ahead ' Only yon eee tha' he give aomethln', too. "Then If your wife not behave, you take her back to her papa, an' he say he sorry an' beg your pardon, an' you kep th' money her papa gave you. "But this kin' of thing not happen of en. Th' wife she gen'rully sa'sfied. You see, her hosband Iss the firs man she ever know, so sh think he's pretty fin. "Here, long time before girl get married they been runnln' 'roun' with a lot of man, an' just so soon as they get married they remember, 'Well, thla man. he was so handsom', an' this man, he was so po-llte, an' this man, hs had so. much money.' He shrugged his shoulders disgustedly, "Tha ain't no way for pe-pul to be mar ried. A woman, she's go' to think tha her hoosban' Is about th' bes man In th worl an', aay, th' way you make her think that la never let her hav nothln' to do w th no others.' MAGIC "Ah, wpealdef f elcctrldtj that makes tne thiak" 'Really, Mr. SapUegh? Isn't it wos&rtul what clcetridty -car tin R! inmUiinTiTrin7rrrmnj1(iiini,j r tT, It I At . G lA I Are Women Worth the Worry Have you heard that young Abbott and. Miss Stoker are engaged?" asked the Fem inine Oracle. Yes," answered the Student of Femi ninity. And thon he added slowly snd thoughtfully: "Poor devil!" "Why do you say that V inquired the Feminine Oracle resentfully. "She's on of th nicest girls know." "Certainly." assented the Student of Fem ininity. "I'm "jut orry-lor nar. as i am for him." , . 'Ons would think from the way you speak that your own marriage is a fail ure," th Oracla rejoined reproacnruiiy. Do you talk to other people Ilk that? "Then without waiting for a reply she added: "On would think you were woman hater!" . So I am sometimes." the Student re joined. "There ar lucid moments in tne life of the most confirmed souse wnen me mell of whisky is 16athsome to mm There ar hours when the devote of dope turns from his soothing poin- There is time when the most inveterate admirer of your sex aske himself tne queuun. Are women worth the worry 7 n quarter of an hour which o married man can hope to escape. You're Just talking now!" returnea ine Oracle with her most superior maimer. You know very well that If every marriea coupl told the truth they would admit that no day In their lives is witnoui us uu quarter of an hour. In fact they'r lucky If it isn't three-quarters of a day." How about those people that get up on the fiftieth anniversary of their weddings and swear they have never exchanged a cross word In their lives? What do you think about them?" "I think they're old hyprocrites! replied the Oracle, "and you know they are! But what do you mean by asking If women are worth th worry? What worry? Do you suppose there's a man on earth that haa to worry about whether or not his wire will be horn in time for dinner? Yet that's what every woman in th world Is thinking about every afternoon between e ana s o'clock." Well, th man's worrying about how to pay for th dinner and his sort of worry ing haa longer hours," answered th Stu dent. "Occasionally, too," he added, "he f Loretta's Looking You ar not a good fellow. Tou cannot b a good fallow. Tou ar reaching for the impcsslbl. Tou and th baby who hurts his little back bone stretching for the moon ar allk. Not lust alike, either. For the stretching strengthens the smalt spinal column, which has a vary hand to keep It from brak ing. You have not that hand. In your so cial gymnastica, to keep you from hurting youraelf. Unless you let m play th part. And I warn you I shall presume upon the privilege and spank. For it is so stupid, so futile, so undignified,- so gettlng-ln-her-own-way-and-stumbllng-over-heraelf for a girl to try to be a good fellow. I think of an old riddle that asked: "When is a sailor not a sailor?" and th answer was. "When he's aboard." Inspired by it I mad a riddle of my own: "When is a girl not a girl?" and I make the answer, too: "When she Is trying to be a good fellow." In th depths .of your heart, you do not want to b a good fellow. What you ar after Is to enjoy th priil gs of good fel lowship and not th disdvanUg-a But may .wasle a little time on speculating as to whether the dinner will be worth going home to ea' ' - "The great trouble with women is that they build their Ideals like one of those high priced, fancy knives that have, a pair of scissors, a corkscrew, a complete mani cure set, a drinking cup and a sheep shear ing apparatus, in addition to'' the regular blades, yet not any one thing; in tha whole blooming outfit is good for anything!!' ' "You want a cook and a tieauty a wit and a door mat -combined! The' very man that wouldn't expect a thoroughbred racer to make any kind of a showing at draw ing a coal cart marries a soelal butterfly and feels terribly injured because she can't make onloa soup." , ' "There's a great deal In what you say," the Student admitted. "And, .. of course there is only one solution." ' "What is It?" breathed the Feminine Ora cla with flattering Interest. "Polygamy!" ho answered bluntly. "Do you mean to tall me?" aked the Oracle, with deceptive calmness, "that anybody but th lowest down barbarian brute could consider such a thing? And besides if every married man wonders If one woman la worth tha worry, think of all tha worrying he'd have to do about ton." "Oh, no, not If h was a good picker." the Student retorted. "Now, if I had to select ten. wives I'd order them all just alike." "Just like what?" breathed the Feminine Oracla eagerly. ,. "Just Ilk you pretty and clever and iwmI and devellsh," he replied warily. "Is my halo on straight?"- she asked coquettlshly. Th hid of th hippopotamus is In places fully two Inches thick. Reports of the proceedings in the House of Commons were not permitted until 1M7. For short distances th salmon is stated to be th swiftest fish. v Nubs of Knowledge 1 Glass-Held Up to the "Good Fellow" Girl Jj you cannot do it. Always yqu get sour with th sweet. And the particular acid that comes from your effort st this kind of fellowship is th contempt of th men you ar endeavoring to please. It's rather cruel to be misjudged by th very ones with whom you are tiying to be Jolly and Informal. But it always happens. Tou see. your idua of good fellowship is too ladylike to be th sam that a man entertains. If he were ready to treat you as he would another fellowwell, even clever men cannot do th impossible. And certainly a clever man would be th last to attempt it, for clever men hav the wisdom to guard their Illusions, even if a stupid and imaginative girl gives them a chance to spoil them. Gilbert Chesterton says. In on of hi books, that a lady asked htm if he believed in comradeship between th 'sexes. He says he was driven back on offering the obvious and sincere reply that he did not. "because If I were to treat you for two minute like a comrade you would turn mm out of th house." Z am not so sur that h kaew all about ' . ' " "' ' '' I r House for Kwang Hsu Th late "Son of Heaven," the lamented Chinese Emperor, Kwang Hsu, having followed his ancestors Into eternal desue tude, must necessarily occupy one of those magnificent mausoleums of cunningly carved and almost Indlstructlble precious woods, whose slae as wtell aa quality must be extraordinary and almost unapproach able. Th forests of Asia have been care fully searched and after much compe tition the contract to supply this material has been awarded, to a Manila .lumber companyt whoa first shipment .-of 60,000 feet- will Inaugurate the work of adding another splendid mausoleum of the tombs of the Ming Dynasty near Pekin. Some of the giant hardwood trees for pillars have already been felled In Mindanao, and are sixty feet high by four feet In diameter, weighing over seventeen tons each. Na tional Magazine. c Where the Pins Go J For some centuries, the scientists and curious questioners of mankind have buied themselves with vain guesses and vainer speculations as to "What becomes of the pins?" says the National Magaxlne. Every body knows In a general way and a very few realize fully that many hundreds of thousands of tons of copper, tin, steel and other metals are made Into pins every year, only to go into use for a brief period and then, like the fated hunter of the "Boojum", quietly vanish away. An English gentelman, "who wanted to know, you know," has quietly experi mented with pins of various kinds, and now announces that a very brief time elapses, not over One hundred and fifty four days, before the lndespensabl hair pin Is resolved Into dust and blown away by the wind. Bright pins last nearly eighteen months, polished steel needles, two years and a half; brass pins ar very short lived; and steel-pens even when not exposed to acids In inks are nearly eaten away in a year. A Possle. Why is It. do you suppose. Every little kid that grows Wants to use the garden hose Only in his best of clothes? women. I hav a suspicion that, if he had done, th lady might have allowed th in suits to her femininity Just to prove that ah was broad-minded enough to be a real comrade, a genuine good fellow." That's th mistake you make. You think so much of proving your superiority to your sex's so-called narrowness that you let the men who will take advantage of ycur pose go a good deal further than they ought. It is because you are a woman that where they go Is "too far." If you were. Indeed, another fellow. It would b all right. And a man does not 4ov a woman who underestimates her own wo manhood. Why, haven't you seen girls who ar especially feminine simply walk off wKo th available men at summer resorts? It Is the appeal of their womanliness. That Is why men like them. If you ar encour aging th idea that you can be popular by being a good fellow, you are mistaken. Shed your mongrel manners. Doff your mannish ties. Wear girl's hats and girl's shoes and petticoats, even in your disposition. 0 We Celebrate I T I 1-1 m-. MONDAY, May 1, 1911. Name and Address. School. Year May Anderson, 3118 Leavenworth St ..Farnatn 1901 Hayman Broude. 1S33 North Twenty-third St Long 1904 Amy Berqulst. 1318 South Twenty-fifth Ave Park 1897 Athol B. Brophy, 2803 Woolworth Ave Park .....188 Millard Bauchman, 2361 South Twenty-ninth St.... Park ...1897 Adolph Benson, 2578 Pratt St Lothrop ....... .-1898 Edgar Beebe, 4910 California St High ...... .....1896 Charles W. Barry, 2710 Shirley 8t Dupont ...... ....1903 Harry H. Bailey, 640 South Twenty-fourth St Central 1897 Frank Bosanec, 1307 William St Comentua ........1900 Rachel Cameo, 2210 North Twenty-sixth St Long 1894 Gwendolyn Cheek. 2060 North Eighteenth St Laka .......1905 Edith Clifton. 1306 South Sixth St .....High .., 1895 Ellas Domet, 1424 South Twelfth St Lincoln 1908 Agnes M. Doran, 1556 North Seventeenth St Holy Family 1896 Allen Dowltng, 3915 Blnney St Clifton Hill 1904 Lola May Eachler, 4315 Seward St Walnut Hill .....1901 Charles Ellis, 1810 Grace St Lake 1900 R. I. Furay, Fifty-ninth and Center Sts Seals 1908 Maud Frankland, 4731 North Forty-first St Central Park ....1895 Edith M. Grosjean, 3816 Brown St High 1889 Antonio Gillotte, 2020 Pierce St Mason 1905 Frank Granor, 1918 South Eighteenth St..... St. Joneph -1900 Minnie Greenberg, 1464 South Thirteenth St Comenlua 1901 Katie Graff, 917 North Twenty-fifth Ave Kellom 1897 Raymond Hahn, 2322 North Twenty-first St Laka 1904 Lima Hinkhouse, 3334 South Nineteenth St High 1893 Walter Hill, 3522 North Twenty-eighth St Howard Kennedy . .1908 Mildred M. Jack, 2022 Howard St Central 1904 Hazel Jenkins, 4825 Cass St High .....1891 Frank Krlss. 620 Hickory St High 189 Vivian G. Kaspar, 1421 South Twelfth St Lincoln 1903' Arthur Lindell, 704 North Thirty-third St High 1898 Izzle Levlne, 2629 Patrick Ave Long 1901 Charles La Hood, 2739 Elm St Bancroft 1901 James L. McDonell, 1224 South Fifty-third George Miller. 3608 X St.. South Omaha St. Joseph 1900 Clarence Murray, 901 South Fifty-second St Beals ..1905 Emery F. Morse. 4216 Grant St Clifton Hill 1903 Foy Parter, 1612 South Twenty-ninth St High 1894 Hulda Peterson, 3415 Dewey Ave High 1891 Ethel Pilgrim, 4021 North Twenty-sixth Ava Loth-op 1900 Laura Ruhe, 4523 Hamilton 8t Walnut Hut 1896 Warren Richmond, 2767 South Tenth St Bancroft ........1903 Pearl Russell, 2207 North Twentieth St Lake 1902 Tony Satorle, 1322 South Third St Train ..1896 Anton Skellenger, 514 Woolworth Ave Train 1897 Sam Specter. 2007 Paul St... Cass 1889 Herbert Schroeder, 1114 South Twenty-seventh St.. German Lutheran.. 1893 Leona H. Shannon, 1429 North Seventeenth St Kellom ....1899 L. Dewey Webber, 2909 Mason St Park 1898 f . . Serious History in Comic Vein I - ' - '; ' i j Well, who'd hav thought old Quaker- viHe-on-th-Dlawar had that many up her sleeve?" exclaimed Show-Ms Smith. What's the matter with Philadelphia, Bhow-Me?" was' asked. Why, here's a paper says In one column that they're going to cut down th number of saloons In Philly by flv or six hundred and In another column that th whole town's going to be lit up. 'It'll be an awful drain on th places that's left "Why, it'll bo almost a national calam ity to yank flv hundred saloons out of Philadelphia that way when she needs all th excitement she ran get. That's why they're going to light her all up, I sup pose, so they won't miss 'em. Looks to me ilk It's casting reflections on Quaker William Penn, and he was th first man In Pennsylvania to buy, too. Stood treat to th Indians like a real sport "There's another little matter history Is twisted on Billy Penn's case. They'v al ways put Quaker Bill down in the books as a real estate dealer with an A No. 1 ratln', but h wa'n't nothing of the kind. William was the first base ball magnat in this country, because he was the first um pire th Indian Athletics of them times found that they didn't kill after th ninth inning for robbln' 'em of th gam. 'Bill Penn's decisions were always on A Philadelphia paper gives a remarkable instance of family Immunity from death. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Bterman of Shenan doah, will shortly celebrat their golden wedding. Eleven children, seven boys and four girls, were born to them, all of whom ar living. Indeed ther has not been a death in the Immediate family la forty- eight years. There ar now thirteen grandchildren. Mr. Blermann Is 73 years old and his wife 6. Longevity seems to be common in th family, for an older brother of Mr. Bler mann, a veteran of the Civil war, who resides with him. is hale and hearty in his BOs. A sister of Mrs. Blermann re cently celebrated her golden wadding. "Hav you any serious trouble with your new automobile?" "Not a bit. Bo far I haven't hit a single man without being able to get away before he got my number." Cleveland Leader. "Wfien I got &ocn I fami taj wUe had gone to ber mother V What Ud you do? Hurried Ttrt&ere and team good mcaLto. f . U . Long-Lived Family II J St Beats the level and usually In favor of Phila delphia, so there never was a kick eomln' to him. "Just to show hla good felln ta tha matter when the first season -wsa over Bill bought the team and went Into th magnate business, payin' part cash down and the rest in Philadelphia scrapple for hla share of th stock. Bill's first season as a' manager was a big hit, for they put th state of Pennsylvania up for a pen nant and Bill's team won handa down. "Th next season they played for Dela ware and Maryland and they'd hav won them states, too, only Big Chief Three Strikes forgot to touch horn plat and it cost 'em the championship that year. Bill had the Quaker meeting with the Big Chief after the game, and them that saw it said they judged the spirit was moving old Three-Strikes ten feet at a time. Bill introduced a good many reforms in has ball. He was th first umpire to appear on th diamond In a frock coat and get away with It. He stayed in th magnate business for many seasons, until h got his present 4ob as night and day watchman In Market street "But what gets me Is why Philadelphia wants to drop five or six hundred ot her gilded saloons. I should think shed b afraid of loweiin' her battln' average." (Copyright, 1911, by th N. T. Herald Co.) J II Nubs of Knowledge Malls were first sent by rail In U33. The Star Chamber was abolished In 1ML "Cash" originally meant a case of money. Th first bicycle with pedals was mad about 1S40. A penny weighs one-third of aa OUOC avoirdupois. Thre tennis courts have been laid out la Pittsburg on land valued at 11,000.000. July derives its nam from Julius Caesar, who was born In that month. A Belgian pigeon trainer haa been ex perimenting with swallows la th plao of homing pigeons, and says they have th advantage of great speed. UGT3 ALLulIOPU Jack called me a fcirt" Not an old hen, I hppe," '