rrrc bee: omaiia... satcrdat.' jtse . s. . wit gee - nn 8e If" Serious History in Comic Vein "I see," snld Show-Me timlth. the morn or less eminent historian from the wise state, "that Skipper Hob Fulton Is Lack." "Who," I asked, wondering what was coming now. 'Skipper Dob Fulton." he repeated, calmly, "I've Just seen his boat tied up, away up town. They call It the Clermont, and they say its a steamboat, but It looks more, to me like a canal boat dressed up than anything else. However, that's prob ably because Pklpper Hob's been gone so long. It's been unite a voyun. Hut he came back all right, and that's more than most of them do nowadays. "Aa soon as I saw her I went aboard nd knocked on the smoke-house door. " "Where's Fulton?' I nays to a man who poked his head out. "He looks nie over n minute and says. 'You'lJ either find him taking tickets down at the Ferry or catching fish down at the Market. If you don't find him there, ask Bweoney.' "Neither Fulton nor Sweeney was around either place. I suppose Skipper Fulton owns both places and Sweeney manages them for him. Must have quite an Income from thn. I'll bet Sweeney gets his share. "It was after discovering Brooklyn, I be lieve, that Skipper Fulton invented the Clermont. Probably the quickest way he could think of to get out. Ha got his idea from the famous invention known as the aide-wheeled Brooklyn baby carriage. "Wandering through the Fulton street shopping district over there one dnyi he saw a lusty-lunged Infant yelling at the top of Its voice and trying to wheel Its perambulator Into a store by grabbing the IKkes and pushing. ." 'Ha, ha'.' said Robert, 'the Brooklyn peram gives me an Idea, I'll bet I can make a slde-wheeler go without using half that much steaVn. .Labboard there, Who's Who "I'm going to play ball tomorrow!" the Confirmed Commuter announced exult antly. "Do you know where my cap and my fishing clothes are?" he asked. "Oh, yes, I'll get them out for you," she remarked obligingly, and then her darkly prophetic soul compelled her to udd, "and I'll walk down to the drug stoi - to morrow and lay in a supply of arnica and bandages." "What for?" snapped the Confirmed Commuter. "You won't need to ask me that to morrow," eha bland,ly replied. "You'll know." But it was evident that .whatever grim posslblltles the future held, the Confirmed, Commuter faced them with delight. He ww never more happy than when starting on one of these little excursions. He waa so happy, indeed, that he got up without a murmur, . and at a moot, ungodly hour, to catch a train to the ball grounds, mora than two hours distant. But what la time or space to the sporting spirit? .'. . .. His wife, who waa president, secretary and all the membership of the. Society Opposed to Early Hieing, went back to her bed and slept peacefully for four hour.. . It was nearly 6 o'clock when the joyous bark of Woof-Woof, her angel collie, pro claimed that someone. he knew was ap proaching, ' and, looking across the lawn, he perceived the Confirmed Commuter, his step as old and hesitant aa Enoch Ardeu's, hobbling slowly toward his home. She saw that one hand waa bandaged, while his face, burned a lobster red, had already begun to peel. Even to the eye of love, he waa neither romantic nor a pleas ing object. "Got any arnica?" he called In ardent greeting. "Yes," his wife replied. "There's every thing ydu can think of In the house arnica, cholorform liniment, witch hazel enough to start a drug store." "ArnMa'll do," grunted the Confirmed Commuter ungraciously, ' and, leaning heavily on his wife's arm, he limped Into the house. When ,hls sprained thumb had been bathed and rebanduged and he had sunk (with many groans and wrlthlngs into the big reclining chair In the library, he told the story of the day's woes. Yes, his team had lost all on -account of that doubled distllled Idiot Crowe, who Insisted on pitch ing. Some of the men had played bril liantly almost like professionals. Hooper had distinguished himself by rapping out a homer with the bases full and later by ( One of the Bachelors Has His Say J Editor The Bee's Home Magazine Page: A few days ago I read Clementina Wall flower's remarks under the head, "Borne Pertinent Whys." 1 have been looking for you to publish the answer. But it must be a very busy time with the editor and since he hasn't the time to attend to It. I beg to submit the following remarks, hop ing that they will be of some small bene fit to Mistress Wallflower. I was particularly Impressed with her longing Query "Why Is a bachelor?" Per haps by answering some of her questions I may help her to solve the riddle. She asks, "Is he a hard man to satisfy ?" Tuke it from me, Clementina, he is not. It he were, a very few years of life In furnished rooms and boarding houses would suffice SOLEMN TRUTH fF "Ifi wonderful what a chang oew clothes make in man!" 'Its wonderful what littk XXkj tear 1 V ,7 P.'jw IV. f TO Skipper Kul ton and the Clermont. WHBiUS FL'ITON GOT HIS IDEA. son. lalboard. or you'll have your crnft In the gutter.' "So taking Brooklyn's chief Industry- as a model, Fulton rigged up this craft that looks like a scow embellished with a couple of woodsheds and decorated with a pair of mill wheels. It was to be both a day and a night line about four days and nights to the run. " 'We'll paddle up to Albany and see Tim Sullivan,' said Fulton, and maybe Tlm'll charter the Clermont for his next chowder.' " 'Bet the Clermont don't get above Grant's Tomb,' was the odds laid by the folks that didn't take any stock In the bpat. "Which was the foolish bet," concluded Show-Me, "for I was up town day before yesterday and It was two blocks above the tomb then." (Copyright, 1911, by the N. T. Herald Co.) in the Home i&ad.u ns.r r" "GOT ANY ARNICA?, HE CALLED." licking the umpire; Simon and his office pal, Simmons, had both tried to catch the same dinky -fly, and after- they had got through stepping on each other's feet the batter was on second base. 'And then what chance had we with, a fathead like Thomas at short? Willie and Louis, the office boys, who filled In, had us all beaten although I put up a pretty good game myself." His wife listened In smiling silence. "But you had an awfully . good time. didn't you?" she gurgled enthusiastically. "Did 1? I did-not!" the Confirmed Com muter answered between groans. "I feel as If I'd been working without food or sleep for a week, and I'm so lame and stiff and sore that It will be days before I feel like myself again. I guess I'm .getting too old to play base ball," he added dejectedly. "I feel like an old man." '."'.' "It's not age," his wife answered, "It's unused muscles. Why, when you came across the lawn just now I thought how like a college boy you looked!" The Confirmed Commuer smiled pleas antly and the look of anguish left his face. He did not groan any more. Already he felt on the road to recovery. For arnica, chloroform liniment, witch hazel, etc.. . all have their soothing uses but a flattery plaster Is the greatest rem edy of all. (Copyright. 1811, by the N. Y. Herald Co.). to send him to the state asylum, under guard. "Why will be Insist on struggling with things that a woman can do ever so much better?" . He doesn't InsUt. Circumstances may in sist that he struggle, and he may yield to superior force, and struggle his best; but meantime his soul cries out to high heaven, even while hp so carefully cultivates that conceited smirk by which he is known. "Ur isn't it Just the Inherent notion that he must look his beat when saving woman I a tout T" Uy no means. He knows that. If he looks a trifle alouchy, "saving woman" will re member every detail of his appearance and will tell her sister and her brother-in-law and all the neighbors and. wonder how a man con be so trlflmg and disreputable, and why don't his relatives Insist on bis being presentable, etc., etc, for sixteen chapters. He ought to be arrested. No Clementina, you are on the wrong track. A bachelor la, because he Is forced to be. Because he doesn't make the dough her father makes. Because he wants a wife with something in her head besides her own good looks and the popular plays. Because he wants a wife that can pass in a crowd without exciting comment. Because he wants a wife whose intelli gence be can respect. Besides this, he wants a wife that he ran love and kiss without shutting his eyes. Do you still wonder "Why is a bachelor?" Omaha, May 31, 1911. OXBOFT11EM. vxr. . Bearing? Pa. "Fa, did you use to crawl under the cir cus tent when you were a boy?" "Sure! I never paid a cent." "How many times did you do It?" "Twenty time, at least" "There was a man here this afternoon who said that he was the proprietor of an old-time show, and that he had heard of you and as. around trying to collect, with Interest." 1!TTIEM0N TO WE WEffi END m Paaslaar to Btrome a Prince. I. Sam. ;27 "Ftand thou still first." "Hear the word of God. ' I. Sum. 10:00 "Is It not that Jehovah hath anointed thee to be prince?" It was a rare day In Saul's life when he paused to hear the word of God and be anointed prince of Israel. Hare, because of a peculiar Intimacy with the supernat ural, and a consequent revelation of duty and glory hitherto undreamed of. It Is always so. The glory of Christianity lies in the opportunity It grants all men to have so rare an experience; Its pathos. In the neglect of men to have It. I'auHlng was a pre-condition to Saul's elevation to prlncehood. We do little paus ing nowadays. No time for that. We are too busy pursuing our pursuits. Rush and bustle are the order of the day. After the wearying exactions of work-a-day life, we pay strenuous -court to Dame Pleasure, whom Milton called "The reeling Goddess with a soulless waist." Herein lies our peril. It breeds a fatal Inattention to, and inconslderatlon of, the dtep things of God. Inconskleratlon was a much lamented sin of Israel centuries ago. It finds striking modern echo. Blessed is the man who pauses amid humdrum tasks and con templates God. himself, and His spiritual state before Him, for He makes a mighty stride heavenward. Moments of contem plation are God Inviting The full words of God are full of hope and promise. They tell of yet greater things to be. "The Lord spake," Is an oft Loretta's Looking You are ashamed of the home town. You always answer a question about where you were born by a bald prevarication. Y6u calmly assert that you are counted In the census of a small city some twenty miles from the village where you actually entered mundane affairs. ft's because the village Is so little. The grass grows In the main street. You hate to be asked If . "It Is on the map." You feel as If you took a sort of toboggan' slide in the estimation of those who hear your' confesslbn of such a humble birth-. place. A h.-yaedy feeling crawls over you as you acknowledge yourself a resident of a, town where the cow pastures and the court house . nestle close together. Tou feel cheap and small. And you are. You are cheap and small. Your nature Is .one of the narrow-gauge kind that cannot carry a broad idea.,' ; But why be hateful to the girl from the hometown? Oh! her hat Is tacky. Her dress Is out of style. She walks as If she still felt the clods under her feet. And you have s'naken the dust of those clods off yours. You do not want to be reminded of the. town. You have been away to school, where ysu pretended that your real home In the village was "a country place" meant exclusively for week ending. And, while you were abroad, you registered as coming from New ' York. When A mart HB4.LO John, my ncifil lost The, TICKET So Tla. have. TO ask vou "TO LOOK up MY LAUNDBV "KnMOUT IT., NCW Look A HtnE MY (sOOD MAM. 'r i r.Ar arr-THATs-uiET VOU PINK tYlD ) fio TtCC .. SM, J. F. Franklin Haas, Pastor Diets Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church. repeated Old Testament phrase, fraught with meaning for this busy generation. His voice Is to the sons of men. The In dividual Is not lost in the multitude. lie wishes to speak to thee, it does not nec essarily mean an actual voice. Knocking at the door of the outer ear, . God expresses Himself In diverse ways., Memory, con science, providence, revelation and nalure, all of these, speed sounds "Intelligible of that eternal language, which God utters" Glass - Reflects Girl Who What a lot of trouble you take to escape the- little town that would . be cordially asliamed of you if .lt but knew. But, there is the girl from home still. She saw you coming along the great, busy, stranger-filled street. Her heart bounded at .sight of you. She was so lonely In the city. . ' ':: ..''. '".' And what did you do? What would any girl do who had given so much time and energy o lying herself out of her birth place? -There" Is one clear marked course open for. such despicable, disloyal individ uals!' Ybtt took if.'' You simply did not see; her.! . ' How you have perfected the, art of un consciousness when someone you do not want to' see is right under your very nose I With a complete absorption1 in the ambient air as if you watched a day dream drifting by, you' passed that girl from the home town. '.. ' A prairie dog sliding Into his hole on one' of. the broad plains of your native stater never took such a tumble or dwindled suj completely out of tight as you did in that girl's estimation. She was lonely and she thrilled at the thought of exchanging con fidences about the precious home town. Now, she would rather trust to strangers for a bit of comfort than to appeal to the thing you call a heart. You hurt her pride. You hurt her out-reaching heart. But you cannot hurt her loyalty. Shi i Say the. wife Lost MY TICKE.TV me. Shirt ! stE no ticket', Gotta have 5hk?t! (7) BLOTF ME EYE! its a boot -time Somebody showed UP "THIS OiiMESt. BoOKKfCPINsfr SYSTEM think: of it no Smikt. no ticket: No-ncwrTT no shibtt BAH '113 from day to day. God will be heard. Abuse or Ignore the woos and whispers of the Divine Lover, and thundering of Slnal will cer tainly follow. The prophet learned his speech as a rhlld does, by listening. Grace romMh by the open ear and heart. Blessed Is the pinn who listens, and snswers: "Speak Lord, for thy servant heareth." for he shall be elevated to princely dignity and position. Among Saul's qualifications to the princely office, was his "goodly stature," he being "higher than any of the people from his shoulders and upward." Princely men are God Illumined and God Inspired nun. They, too, tower above their fellows, but In moral prowess and spiritual stature. The genius of religion is the creation of princely men. It takes the Interests, de sires, affections, ambitions, aims and con secrations of a weak man, ami by a pro cess of regeneration, makes him new and biave, loving and sacrificial. Such men the world needs today. The whole "earth doih not yet shine with the glory of the Iord." Philistines are still abroad in the land. Those, with common walks of life ! must be brought to the feet of the rf.-ien and reigning Jesus. To accomplish this j result we lo not need the "laughing lions" of Wletiche, nor "Samsons and Mllos" of Bernard Shaw, but we do need a big supply of weak men made strong by the spirit of the living Christ. This Is the only hope of society and the individual. The oppor tunity Is today. The price Is the pauae; the attentive ear; the obedient heart. These steps lead to prlncehood, to endless life. Cuts Home Town Girl loves the home town. Her heart, , under Its Jaat year's gown, and her head, under Its tacky hat, are true and clear. And- you! You'are a dead-souled, Insig nificant Miss Nobody from Nowhere. The right kind of a girl is the one who sticks up or. her home town If It's a crossroads postofflce. Yoj are the other kind! 1 ' Modern Wise Saws On the principle that haste makes waste, a man may lose a lot of time by hurry ing. Many a loving couple think they are two souls with but a single thought when they havn't even that. When you'' hear of a man who would rather fight than' eat, It's a pretty good guess that he lives In jk .boarding house. Things grow smaller as they . are con tracted, but there are exceptions. Debts, for instance. The age of discretion Is only attained by the man who realizes that he is too old to marry, or too young.. The trouble with the man who reaches the top is that. he. seems to feel he is exempt from the laws of gravitation. New York Times. married MY TIF JACH. Go HOME. Aw' Sleep n orr (NOTKkXT srv 5w6 L.E.E., VqoickV f ' sfT (TAKE The BEE'S Junior ( i FAY PTtlCHARD. 2..J6 Charles. Name and Address. School. . Year. ' ' Ethel Allen, 3314 South Twentieth Ave Vluton ....1899 Leona M. Iieckwtth, Fortieth and Pratt Sts.. OentnUrark 1905 Margaret Hesen, 2700 Douglas Pt l-'ornara 1903 Earllne Francis, 1313 North Twenty-fifth St Kellom 1904 Esther Freer, 3013 Webster St Webster 1896 John Franco, 918 Pierce St Pacific 18S! Angelo Ferragute, 417 Poppleton Avo .....Train 1902 Martha F. Gyger, 1328 South Twenty-eighth St Park .....1898 Harry Gadson, 4219 Farnam St ..SaunUera ........1900 Frances M. Gilchrist, 1713 South Twenty-ninth St.. Park. ..,.1898 Mildred Henkel, 2317 Chicago St .'.Central 1899 Mary Hoch,. 4f06 Antes Avo Central Park 1897 Jack Hunton, 2138 South Thirty-fourth St Wliulbor 1903 Christian Jorgensen, 1224 South Fifty-tirst St . . . t . . Heals -1905; Dagmar Jensen, 2021 Lincoln Ave Cuatellar 190! Norris Johnston, 2 626 Capitol Ave. Faruaia 1901 Bessie Kroupa, 4113 South Ninth St. TCdw. nostowater . .1900 Elizabeth Kirschbaum, 913 Atlas St Ktlw. Ttosuwattr ,.1897 Edward Konima, 1316 Pacific St ..Pacific J 89, 9 Lena Klug, 1719 Fort St.... ...... Sherman ,;1903 Doris E. Lineaweaver, 523 South Twenty-fifth Ave. . Mason 1905 Edna V. Mefedith, 2502 South Forty-Bixth Ave. David Marqulti, 1016 South Twentieth St Ada D. Mills, 8517 Valley St Edith McNett, 2310 Laird St.. Clare McGovern, 2615 Chicago St....... ... Antonette Mercurio, 1814 Plerco St. . . . .' . '. Arthur Nebe, 4122 Saratoga St Eugene R. Oglebay, 3317 California St Delia Overwelr, 1212 South Twenty-seventh. St. Ethel L. Posey, 218 South Twenty-fifth St. . '. Fay Prltchard, 2525 Charla St Anna Rasmussen, 3516 Parker St..., Harry Rahman, 1017 Lincoln Ave Frank Rampacek, 2809 Dupont St. June Rutherford, 3227 Emmet St...,.....' Erwln Rohlff, 2569 Leavenworth St Edwitt Rlssl, 1202 South Twenty-seventh St. Byron F. Rohrbough. Benjamin' Stern, 716 North Seventeenth St. Frederick Sholkofskl, 1710 South Twenty-first St.'..'. Cass . Vincent Shook, 535 Park Ave. . . Tony Varlano, 2230 Pierce St How to Treat a Wife "You've talked so much about the treat ment of benedicts," remarked the Wl Husband, casting a veiled glance of prii". at the woman opposite at the head of tl isble, "that I think it about time for the parties under discussion to have a word to say about the treatment of wives." "Go on;" eagerly - urged the woman at the board, wondering Just' what attitude the masculine mind would assume. "Well," continued the husband In a more serious vein, "I should say that about half the domestic difficulty in the world centers about money. Sounds mighty material, don't It, but In one way or another, the little round silver wheelB are the vehicles upon which the matrimonial craft goes Careering to an unhappy end.". 'Take for instance the man who drifts in on pay night, painfully extracts the small est possible. amount from the envelope and hands it to his wife with about the same air he would dole out a dime to a charity ward. 'Now, make this go as far as you can, my dear; you know pay day comes only once a week, -be cautions.' Then he goes In, plants himself at the dining table, and splutters sway because the wife has prepared a SO-cent steak Instead of the (1.60 variety. lie pays C.t5 for a cutitom made suit at his tailor's, and et when his wife goes to a department store arid indulges in a suit for 25 he nets up a howl that can be heard around the block. Nice example of Ingrown selfishness, isn't he? "Another system practised by many of our supposedly best husbands Is to buy everything In books, then go around at the end of the month and square up. They be lieve that a woman is not to be trusted with any more money than the stipend they give her for the merest Incidentals. Often she hasn't enough In her purse to Some Silhouettes of the Sidewalk BY BOBBIE BABBLES Through the corner of his eye He observed the world go by, Cynical, blase and yet Some have seen his eyes grow wet Over some sad tale that took Toll from his fat pocketbook. Bport and gambler, Jaunty, trim, Not all bad that's Honest Jim. On the Street he was a hear Till one day they caught him there Squeezed him. I)ld they get the laugh? Not a bit. He stood the gaff, Dropped a million; yet they soy That today he owns Broadway. Deep, inscrutable and grim Are the ways of Honest Jim. It Is whispered that hi dad Was a country parson. Gad! Only time that hs goes buck To the country there's a track At the Journey's end, and there Cries of "bookies" rend the air. Mounts and Jockles wait for hint To start business Honest Jim And the name? It's bis by right. . Once he refereed a fight In which One-Eyed Bill Rappold Gave him a glass eye to bold. ' When the fight was ended, why, Gravely Jim returned the eye. And. that day they nicknamed him,'. Once for all, as Honest Jim. Birthday Book This is Hie Day We Celehi'aie , June 3, 1911. Beals ...'.'. 1905 Leavenworth 1902" , . Windsor . . . High. .High ...... . Leavenworth , . Central Park , . Webster . . . . . Park .Contra! .... . Long , 1898 189.5. . ... ..1891 i9oa ..190 .1896 1905' . . . ; .1894 I . . . .1897 Franklin Lincoln, . . . . . .1902 1896 , Dupont . Lothrop . Mason . . Park . . . ,1902 . .1895 . .1900 ...t180j, ..1895 High , Cass t(1900-' Farnam 1898- St. Phllomena .., 1 soft ndulge in a first-class ice cream Boda, nuch less invite her friend in for a. treat, ou will usually find that man lunching .nvntown with friends, grabbing for all .u checks In a way that would stamp hint' i prince for generosity. ' "A wife is her hUHband's business part ner. The sooner husbands come to realize this truth the better they will fare finan cially sna otnerwise. -mere was a pnaif, besides love and sancltity to that ceremony ivrfnmiMl At ' th. nltur ThA mlnlatur placed the official seal on the firm of 'We. Va and Company' with equal obligations of partnership. In business partnership one member of the firm- manages the office! and keeps the place In running order; the other looks -after the technical side of the u'nrlf trA ci .1 , 1 1 11 , .tniM'lhlni. U'lthln fa AA It should "be. .-The profits are share and' share alike. Pomentlc partnership is based on the same, principal. The husband pro cures the material for the home, while the" wife makes the home ' and cares for Its Inner workings. The responsibility UT equal, the work Is equal and the two should share equally In the profits or surplus funds. ' 1 "No high spirited woman is going to quietly Bubmlt to havlnit motvy banded to hr as a reluctant Klft. Kape.;Wlly is this true of women who have .earr.e.i their own livelihood. Sooner or Inter iiiey will rebel, and then It Is but a step hack to business, where they may exercise their own earning capacity. ... "If every husband would give his wife an" allowance proportionate to his earnings,' then forget the fact, the chanoes are that he would have a nice little bankroll saved from that allowance at the end of the year, as well as the memory of a peaceful and happy sail on the otherwise stormy sea of The Gambler. There, he stands before the crowd. I'uoi, aioof, and lofty-browed, Cane in hand and dog at heel. Is he happy T Can he feelT l We would give a lot to know How he weighs the passing show And what thought engrosses him Whom they nicknamed Honest Jim. (Copyright, 19U, by the N. Y. Herald Co.) w 1