Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 21, 1911, Image 12

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    The BIX'SJuniopBirUidayBoQk
1'
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(
muter echoed., as the near approach of
Jhelr destination galvanized a languid rall-
r"Ai porler to new life.
Hmell . the pines'" ahe continued, en-
thufriaxtieally. "Don't you breathe In
health and perfume with every breath?"
The Confirmed Commuter, who had
breathed- clndera for three-quarters of the
Journry, ..sniffed an.ilously and none too
enthusiastically at the coatly mountain air,
w n:h bad them welcome to camp life.
Incidentally, It waa a Ion distance wel
come,, for the eat ate on which a friendly
capitalist had permitted them to pitch their
HO tent a waa ten , milea from the railroad
station. and they had engaged by t(t
graph a guide, philosopher and friend to
how them the way.
H and Friendship Thrown In.
J They "were tha only psssengers for Eagle
I Rldfta; and when their train slowed Into
( the atatton a nonchalant Dorter and a ruth-
s baggageman dumped their belongings
tertta, guns, fishing rods, cooking utensils
and 'portable boat on the deserted plat
form,' hopped aboard the train and aped
becfr'to civilisation to Invest their tlpa.
Meantime the Hopeful Housewife looked
confMlng''y toward the Confirmed Com
muter. Like other good wives, ahe waa always
confiding when there was nothing else for
her tab.
"I suppose ouf guide Is a little late." ahe
hazarded. "Of course these mountain roada
ara very alow traveling. Lets ait down on
our tents and wait for him."
"Oh, no,, let'a taka a taxlcab!" aneered
her husband. -
Nevertheless he seated himself sulkily on
a pita of canvaa and acanned the horizon
In gloomy alienee for the apace of five
efeterettes.
Jh blue and brooding mountatna rose
hUgh 'above them, and acanned their nar
row -paths padded with pine needles led
Into mysterloua distances.
"Pont you think wa might find Mr.
Johnson's place without a guide?" asked
the Hopeful Housewife when an hour had
passed. . .
"And leave all these things here to be
stolen?" Inquired the Confirmed Com
muter, Indignantly, "What are you think
ing' about?'
Actually, woodsman aa ha had always
Imed to be, he waa afraid to strike out
that wilderness where experienced
(era had been lost for days at a time.
The little station., with Ita -year-old rall-
I ry .schedules, its closed ticket window
.ggind. a, sign which indicated that soma day,
JY some time, a telegraph operator would re-
X lurB' fmea their last clutch on civlllxa
if tlon.
"Well, dear." she said, philosophically,
"if we can't, go. away and somebody doesn't
come to. fet. us pretty soon I'm going to
Wehf a can of baked beans, and eat them
ftul of the shell! I'm simply starved to
death! And If we-ve got to stay here In
thlft rilnpi' i',fi' t 1 T iLri.
i hiight put Up one of the' tents! And' to-
miifrow morning, there'll be a train back to
1 Ae1
8 into
1 Vhuni
I Th
1
"HE SEATKD HIMPELF flri.KILY ON A
PILE OK CANVAS."
New York, and we can go home!"' ahe
ended, plaintively.
"Huh!" anorted the Confirmed Commuter,
"do you think I've traveled 400 milea to
turn around and go back again? Now that
you've brought ma up here to gratify on
of your whlma you might, ahow a little
patience, a little fortitude. You got us In
this place, you know, and you might aa
well wait for me to get ua out!" .
Hla wife sighed meekly and looked away.
With all her soul she wished herself In her
suburban garden, coaxing the backward
rose bushea and - bribing school boya to
climb the cherry trees for, her.
Buddenly the ghastly mountain stillness
waa broken by the sound of hoofs.
'Here comes our guide!" exclaimed the
Confirmed Commuter, with marked energy.
"I'll dork him half a day's pay for keeping
ua waiting!" ha added, furiously.
In half an hour for the aame hoof beats
which seemed so near had had many miles
to travel a heavy, rickety hotel omnibus
drew up to the station.
. "Fay!" called the hatleas, coatless and
collarles driver, "are you the folks that
Bill Summers waa to meet? Bill told ma all
about it," he added, genially. "He fully
allowed he'd be over here to , meet 'your
train, but thla is pay day, and It'll be a
couple of days before Bill can travel; I
guess you all had better com up to the
hotel." ' ' .' "
"Wa have come up to the mountains to
camp," replied the ConflrmedComniuter;
in hla most dignified manner.
"Bure you have!" echoed the bus driver.
"That's what everybody comes fori We've
got genuine tenta with private batha at
tached,' and balsam bough beds fresh laid
every night all meals served in the hotel
$75 a week for twol How does that strike
you I"
"What do you say. dear?"' asked the
Confirmed Commuter, with usual, hesita
tion. -.... . ....
"Say!" echoed the delightful 'youpg wo
man. ."Why. you know I've, always longed
to rough It! I think it will be perfectly
lovely!". . .
.Copyright. 1911.. .I the N,T,- Herald. Co.)
How to Treat a Wife ,
3
'lf a lot of' worthy husbands want to
hand' out to their better halves some do
mestic happiness which won't coat them
anything except a few kind words,'' sug
(ested the . Knowing Husband as ha ad
lusted , Ruth's evening coat, "they will
notice that their wife's new dress or latest
purchase In millinery Is mighty becoming,
and they Will mention the fact to her In a
few Well chosen words.
"I have known lota of fellow who -could
tall you thelc .sweetheart's costume down
lo tQe, last pin, but after the sweetheart
hatd evolved into the nearer and dearer re
atlon, of wife they couldn't nam th color
Wa single dress In her wardrobe, not If
'ihwr' whole, .business and personal salva
tion depended upon the answer. Rutn says
there' la certain woman of our acquaint
ance who simply crave the admiration and
attention of her husband.. He uaed to be
very' lavish (n, his praise of her clothes,
aer mannerism, her beauty. She possesses
1 marvellous cop tralto voice. In courting
lays her' husband actually raved about her
UnJog; knew the name of every song on
her list and sat for hours alternately
.'fTfeamlng and going Into aestactes over her
Vauslo. He still sits for houra, for he has
m Inborn love for musio that seems in
lettable... At the end of th hours h rouaea
lroself with th remark that It must be
kboyA time tee 'turn In' or that 'a bit of
something to eat wouldn't be bad.'
"Ruth ha known that wistful wife to
tpend days concocting a dainty furbelow
lor her throat or a becoming hat, 1n tb
lop of attracting his attention and ekelng
lilt word of admiration, only to have
kar effort passed by unnoticed. Ones she
ear, him say that ha liked to sea women
(rear white, whereupon ah flooded her
kardrob with "billows of white. It evoked
tot a single remark from th self -centered
aV who took tha personal appearance of
tisi -wife for granted.
"Flattery la very dear to tha heart of
oman." continued tha Knowing Husband,
"esrasv after ah has passed th marrlag
siilertnna" 'I hava reason to believe H Is
vastly more mellifluent to tba ear of th
matron than the maid, because in thea
day aa rapid progress and Renos a
woman Is never quit sure and, anyway,
asaurance la doubly sweet when It comes
from the one man,
"I'd Uke to hand a little tip to tba hus
bands who can't see their ' wive except
with the eye of the commonplace Leave
your business cares and worries locked up
behind the door of your office or shop, and
If the woman who cares' for your horn
and for your looks particularly well when
you come In to dinner. If her hair is be
comingly done or her dress unusually at
tractive, don't be abov the pretty atten
tion of telling her so. A little compliment
goes a long way In keeping th home at
mosphere clear."
V
Strangled by Her Collar.
J
The man or woman who wear a tight
fitting collar will find a lesson with a
moral in tha death of Rose Degreran, a
New York woman, says th world. She waa
strangled to death in her aleerj by the
tight collar she wa wearing at th time.
Miss Degeran was a professional cook. On
the afternoon of her death she was taking
a few minutes' rest on th sofa and feel
ing rather tired, she dozed off and wa
soon sleeping soundly.
An hour or sa later, when every effort
to rouse her had failed, a doctor waa sent
for In alarm. Dr. Rosa of New York hos
pital responded and pronounced her dead.
8h had died easily and palnleasly In her
sleep, strangled to death, because her col
lar was too tight. In turning her head in
her sleep she had unconsciously Increased
the tightness of the collar on her throat
Thla promptly stopped th circulation of
th blood to the brain, taking her from a
stat of sleep Into on of Insensibility. As
th tight collar alao prevented respiration
ah slowly strangled to death, powerleas to
save herself.
(where -wj) ( thought rft rw-i jareth?)
GOING? 60IM1 SO OUT TO l l I " HENS W - '
TOR A WALK THE BARN r I I J INw , A f7
AH) IN THERE! THEN LAY THEIR E66S (U I , 1
IS 60 UP itiL fa m WWW PIACESM )
N tflooK inIevery nookJJ( ' Kr5L I tiRAcious!
fA r Umo CORNER! DA STAY fT" ViiL --VlL HAVE To
i - s
OF THEK DIDN'T WE? - fZ-S AN EASY :SWY0U.NSL 1EU
S!eW WE 5H0ULDf72rri ( JOB. I'LL f JVlME ? 13 HAVE
! NOW. YOU'D BETTER 7-wX ikf '. A STELU TW K 4vJ"--0N 6
a0 BACK TO YOUR TflrBsff VA--2) 0UT t50R
, T. Herald Co.)
This is &e
Day We
Celebrate
i ii
3 r-)
S'''''N
a..i . . . . ...-jf hd .rt(v iMj
(Copyright, 1911. by Tha N,
Wit and Wisdom of Bildad
J
We may be sorry for Adam and Eve, but
who cares to live In a garden after the
fall, anyhow? It Is apt to be very cold
Until spring.
If one-half tha world understood how the
other half 1tved. It would probably -decide
that life was not worth living.
When a man is ambidextrous, he should
be careful (o let his. left hand know what
his right hand la doing,-lest he overdraw
his hank account. -
It tnay be true, aa soma have said, that
money talks; but It is generally In the
form of a money-logue, rather than a real
conversation. . ,
Many an artlse of splendid technique
never realizes that he la not an entire suc
cess until he tries to draw a check.
Riches are said to have wings, but, after
all, even the best and surest of coupons
ara clipped. '
Some men are so entirely devoted to the
general proposition of uplift that at the
psychological moment they are not back
ward even In raising the deuce.
There Is compensation In all thlnga. The
man with a abort pocket usually has a
long face.
When it cornea to sermons, man wants
but little here below and wants that little
short. ...
Uove may laugh at locksmiths, but when
he finds himself In the presence of a cross
eyed chaperon, the combination Is too- much
for him.
The fact that truth lies at the bottom of
a well la probably the reason why truth
Is often so fearfully watered.
The egotist is a man who has an I only
for number one, and even that Is so over
worked that it cannot see straight.
Many a man who la a poor shot la very
successful when it comes to throwing
bouquets at himself.
There are people who are so panicky
that they send for an ambulance when all
they really need la tha water wagon.
Some men are so economical that, instead
of hiding' their light under a bushel, they
conceal It under a pint Horace Dodd
Qaittt in Life.
Nb of Knowlesjde.
Tournaments started In Northern Europe
In 850.
Names were given to bells as early as
968, when tha mammoth bell of tha Iateran
Church waa named by John XIII, for him
self. Needles were known to the ancient
Egyptians. Steel needles were first used
in . England during the reign of Queen
Elizabeth, but the process of making them
was kept a secret until 1660,
c
Ice Cheap in Persia -
The fact that ice Is plentiful and cheap
makes living in Persia more pleasant than
It would otherwise be, and the fact that
it can be obtained at all is Indicative of
the Ingenuity of the people of the country,
The ground Is so porous that water perco
lates through quickly. There are therefore
few rivers or lakes from which Ice can be
obtained, and It Is seldom so cold In any
part of Persia that loe of a thloknese suit
able for packing would form under the
direct rays of ths sun. The Persian ob
tains his ice by making a shallow pool and
building a high wall which will protect It
from the aun. A thin layer of ice will
form; this he floods at night with water,
and so he goes on adding Inch to Inch until
he can out a block of considerable thick
ness.
r
Loretta's Looking Glass-Held Up to the Snappy Woman
j
Tour conversation la a series of snaps
and Jabs. A ploture of It would be con
fusingly Ilk a Mors alphabet But, un
fortunately, it Is not of ths BtUI-llf type,
lending Itself to the serenity' of silence.
It Is always bursting, with small and
scratchy xploslveneas, into the harmony
and peace of mind of your associates.
Just aa surely as the breakfast table
la a scene of domeatla bliss, you are seised
with the notion that you must be the in
centive to speed. You begin with your
well-known snaps.
"PLEASE pas's the waffles. Some of
the ; rest of us have business to look
after. ' We cannot waste all day here!"
The waffles are at your husband's left
hand. He hastens to set them changed
to your neighborhood. Not because he
wants to hurry, but becauae he, like
other mistaken humans, cherishes the false
Idea that a snappy woman can be robbed
of her snapptness by acceding to the re
quest that the first snap expresses. But
It Is useless.
"Drink your coffee before It gets
cold!' Is the next explosive you hurl.
Just on the face of the snap it appears
to be consideration for the palate rf the
coffee drinker. ' But It Is not It's a sub
tle way you have of hurrying him up. He
knows It He hates it He gulps the cof-
As it Really Happened
i
THIS I (vjW
MOMTE' ,
ND THIS 16 HOW rie
FOLLOWS THE HOM5E5!
HERE'S A MOTION PICTURE .
OF THAT UAftQ-C 6AM K!
HAVE A rKB PBEP AT
THAT PALATIAL- YACHT!
I AH! ANO HE
fee and gets a long. Irritated surface of
seered food track for his wiUlngneaa to
obey your snap.
Thereafter his toast scrapes. The water
he drinks feels rough. And you make a
trio In the scraping finery that envelopes
htm.
"Are you going out this morning?" he
asks with would-be solicitude. "Tha day
Is fine. You ought to get out in the sun
shine!"
"I have other things to do!" you snap,
managing to insinuate a reproach and a
complaint In your steel-trap observation.
It Is too much. He wads hla napkin
up and makes a quick progresa to his
hat In the hall. You have gotten him
"hurried off." Harried would be a better
word; but those of tha human family who
ara most like the reptile with the active
Jaws, you never seem to appreciate that
your snaps leave scars.
And you snappers are so clever. When
you are being courted you can make your
snapping seem like a mere radiation of
a valuable energy. You can delude the
lover Into thinking that you are of the
sprightly, energetic, animated, competent
variety of women, You can make him
gaaa into a future with you aa a wife who
will be electrically alive to execute all
wifely virtue He will think you "have
not a lazy bone In your body." Ha can
not guess that your activity concentrate
In a musclel He does not dream that
your tongue can snapl
But your family knows. There never
waa a match so carefully aided and abet
ted. Your small sister wllljun errands
till her leg ache. Your half-grown
brother will "hid out" for very night
of th week. All to give the lover a good
chance to be "snapped up." , Your mother
will feed him. Your father will treat him
with prodigal liber al'ty to hla best cigars.
It la all an outrageous deception, ef
course. But It la the only .way to get
rid of the Girl Who Snap. . And eh is
sufficiently Irritating to drive a family ta
any means that will perpetrate her on a
huaben-who cannot be rid ef her.
BBATRICB PtHiMW,
Emmett Street.
June 21, 1911,
Name and Adrirrsa. School. Imt.
George Alsman, 8158 Amea Ave Monmouth Park. ..1899
William Beloyed. 708 Center St., Train -....1900
Clyde H. Babcock, 1000 South Twenty-eighth St.,.. Park .......... .1901
Louise Bennett, Loyal Hotel - .High ..,. 1890
Beatrice Cullen, 3037 Emmet St Sacred Heart 1895
Edward Crosby, 2694 Charles St.. Long . 1904
Margery Cohoon, 1415 Ohio St Lake 1905
Jesale M. Claren, 1405 South Seventeenth St. ...... Comenlus 1896
Grace Drummy, 623 North Thirty-sixth St...- Saundera ...1905
Rrna Dunacombe, 314 North Nineteenth St High .1894
Mary R. Druesedoro, 809 South Thirty-first St..... .Park ........... 1904
Earl J. Donnelly, 808 North Forty-fifth Ave. ..... . .Saunders 1897
George P. Davis, 217 North Twenty-fifth St Central 1900
Minnie Eliza Evans, Forty-ninth and Castellar Sts..Beals 1896
Isaao Goldberg, 804 3 South Eighteenth St Castellar 1898
George H. Gilbert, 1807 William St Comenlus . 1899
Helen Hantzlnger, 2420 South Eighteenth SL St. Joseph.. ..... .1896
Tony. Hudecek, 1033 Dominion St . .Vinton 1896
Earnest P. Hoffmann, 1403 South Sixteenth St. ... Comenlus 1898
Leon N, Hamilton, 2869 Plnkney St Howard Kennedy.. 1902
Anne Hoekenschnleder St. Joseph 1896
Stefania Klepethko, 1956 South Fifteenth St. .... .Comenlus 1897
Abram Lach, 721 North Sixteenth St. Cass , 1897
Violet Lawrence, 8515 Jones St ...Columbian .' 1902
Catherine Lumry, 4736 North Thirty-ninth St. .... .Central Park 1900
Dorothy Lundell, 2504 Hamilton St Long 1898
John Miles, 1310 South Twenty-eighth St..... Park ... 1896
Helen Nelson, 8110 South Eighteenth St Vinton 1904
Charles Prawlts, 2703 Camden Ave Saratoga 1894
Edith A. Ross, 6677 North Twenty-ninth St Miller Park 1905
George J. Robertson, 2802 Spalding St Druid Hill 1903
Frank Raum, 1507 Ohio St ....Lake 1896
Harriet L. Schwerln, 3820 North Twentieth St Lothrop 1896
Dessle K. Schomerus, 2025 Ohio 8t Lake - 1899
Mary Stewart, 1122 North Twenty-third St .Kellom T902
Bessie L. Tlmm, 4110 North Twenty-fifth St Saratoga .1897
Eugene F. Vaughan, 1522 South Thirty-third St....Park .1896
Leslie J. Van Nostrand, 4243 Ersklne St Clifton Hill 1902
Clark Whitehlll, 2101 North Fourteenth St Lake 1903
Samuel Wlesman, 2018 North Twenty-first St Lake .1897
Elmer Westgate, 8602 North Twenty-eighth Ave Howard Kennedy.. 1900
William Ware, 1820 North Fortieth St Franklin 1896
Arthur I. Zlebarth, 2818 Franklin St. Long 1908
Father Was Game
J
"When I knew John Flake," said a west
ern politician, "he was in the lumber busi
ness In a western city with his son as a
partner. Both were heavyweights and both
had the same name. John, sr., for years
had scaled about 960 pounds. He was a
mammoth man, being more than six feet
tan, very wide and very deep-chested. His
son waa constructed on similar lines, and
they were styled by their Intimate as the
'heavyweight firm.'
" 'Father,' remarked th son one day, 'I
rather think that I've been gaining on yoj
lately, and I wouldn't be surprised If I
weighed more than you do now,'
" 'Foolish talk, my boy, I'll beat you by
100 pounds. You are heavy, but you are
rot In my class yet."
" "Let's get on the scales and find cut
What do you ay?
"Quite willing to submit to the test they
weighed. John, sr., balanced the beam at
exactly 362 pounds. ' John, jr. scaled Wi.
Although astonished, John, sr., merely raid,
'I didn't think It, John, and you certainly
don't look It, my boy.
"Separating, the young man gave no
more thought to the incident, but the next
day he was further surprised. Tha firm's
name had been changed. Hitherto It had
read 'John Flske Son,' but now the de
posed heavyweight had transformed It to
'John Fluke A Father.' " St Louts Republic
1904. The poulation of Nevada and Wyoming
In 1910, together, la about equal to the popu
lation of the hospitals Insane In the Uni
ted States. The total annual cost of caring
for the insane In the United States is In
the neighborhood of $fO,0u0.O0O per year.
About oneslxth of the total expenditure
of the state of New York la for the are
of he insane.
The Hen
Insanity Spreads Fast
J
Seretary Homer Folks of the Stat Chari
ties assoiatlon of New York says In th
Amerian Review of Reviews that It will
doubtless surprise most persons to know
that the number of Insane persons tn hos
pltals tn the United States on January 1,
104 (no later figures are available for the
ountry as a whole), waa not leas than
lfiO.lBL This was more than double the
number In 1890, which was 74,028.
From 1904 to 1610 the Insane In hospitals
In New York alone Increased 26 per cent.
It is safe to say that the insane now In
hospitals In the United States number, st
least 200,000. These unfortunates, if gath
ered together In one place, would make up
a city approximately the size of Rochester,
St. Paul, Seattle, Denver or Louisville. '
Th population of th stat of Delaware
In 1910 Is almost exactly th same aa tha
number of Inaane In the United States In
SAME EVERYWHERE.
X 3 yrTftr)
ci
a
The hen la such a cheerful bird,
I think of her today,
And as she lays so many eggs,
I'll sing to her a lay.
From dawn to dark, on busy days,
She's always up to scratch.
And when she's brooding on her nest
She has some plot to hatch.
Her language is a little harsh.
Her voice Is sharp and raw,
But It Is very sweet to hear
Her laying "cut-ter-qua-a-a-w!"
She never has been noted for
A surplusage of brains.
Folks say she doesn't know enough
To go in when It rains.
1
She may not know so very much
As learning goes, and yet
Without her we could never have
A Spanish omelet.
Kind nature has endowed her with
A genuine rubber neck.
And when she wants some corn to eat
She goes and takes a peck.
Her natural temperament Is calm.
And placid Is her mind.
Though she g?ts quite excited when
A dog comes up behind.
8he always takes what comes to bar,
And doesn't blam her luck
If she has but on little chick
To summon with her "cluck I"
And she 1 moat persistent, too.
If she can only get
A doorknob, ahe will start right In
To hatch a dinner set.
In short, she is a useful bird.
For agea ahe has tolled
To please us. and we like her beat
When six months old and broiled!
Bomervllle Journal.
rROTECTETJt
"Confound the party fiotwl
Thars's aiwvrt a wfccU tntacii
talkiof oa th vW
"lie tasks boom rank deckkxask
tm bra toe ooxr wnparc -vrsj 1
ft tttftu stack QraiTgh ta 1
5 1
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