Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 26, 1912, Page 9, Image 9

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    THE BEE: OMAHA. MONDAY', FEBRUARY '-'(J. UUi
SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT
Judge Riimmey is Gone on the Honn' Dog Song
j iii.ui, v., nauuiwi nw
By Tad
-xr 2zJ . r-r (jsa- lr1 Kg J rea J f v v IW) :i SSsS fin
11 The Higher Education . J JgW SJd&Qr """ la "" UA" om' 1
By ELBK11T
AVhat 1 popularly known as 'The
Higher Education" costs an Individual at
least four years lima and tO.009 In cash.
About 1 per cent of university graduates
work their own way.
' Of necessity, th
higher education la
within reach of leas -than
1 per cent of
ilat peop!. There
fore, It (tamts for
caste and exclusion
and to that degree
Is un-American.
It is a law of na
ture that all per- '
sons! . possessions
which the Indirid
uat i bianrtf does
not eara are targe-. :
1V for. hUn," flafU '
tiou and. vara' la
vaitw.' ' : T
The fallaey"ef the .,
higher . education .'
for a few and tba struggle for the many,
slips the knockout drops of weakness lata
th aedagegl for mala, asd fsta, like the
'0
grave, puts all an a parity-
1
To educate a few and leave Ike many
la Ignorance at a temptation for the see
called educated. te piece out knowledge
with pretense. And pretense is a remedial
move en the part of nature to lay the
pretender low,; J
And so this supreme energy talks the
liyw ill. weakens1 the si lOgaiHr-tislte
the rich. ' And always and forever the
country boy who haa warmed kls feet' ea
November morning where the eowe have
lain dowa goes up to the ceHea and takes
them eaptret. ( i -' - j
Boston iw1th' 'her culture. pedigree,
books and beana la ruled by the sons of
Irish emigrants grown great on spuds
and hsrd times.
There is ene greatbualness man In New
York who was born there bat I've sever
been able to get his name and address.
And the Scotch, born In cottages on
t,-,, ,.....
I ,
HriWARD. ,
nlud swept heath and heather, oatmeal
and haggis fed, battling with hardship
and deprivation, bring their red-headed
industry, and economy to bear and got
their full quota ut every good thing,
everywhere.
Thus are the vain attempt to monopol
ise wealth, power, knowledge and the
good things of tba world ever frustrated
by nature ordering a pew deal.
What ve asnl and actually what w
get Is equality of opportunity. Bat this
would not be so ir ike higher education
were a fact and not a barren Ideality.
"There Is a divinity that shapes our ends,
tough, hew Ibsin as we will." ,
The college gives honors where there
la no merit, position without character,
rewards the unworthy. Inflates the fool
ish, makes mention of th mediocre and
advertises nullity.
It Imparts to a nobody the standing
of a somebody, and as such supplies a
service which WIU. probably, long be
In demand. '
: It admits a man ef mediocre ability bite
a certala society on a basis which a
person of similar atalnmaots could never
otherwise reach, and this. It should be
explained. Is the. society of affect at loo.
pretense, cheese straws.; ttddledy-wlnka
and poetic parches!.
The man of genius Is everywhere wel
come, all doors Try open at his touch.
He who haa the talent to Instruct,
amuse or entertain needs no passport.
Rut the person who can neither create
nor ' proline, who can do nothing that
i. rM t-sw .. c . jt . ' . -,t w. ..ti.ii..
e nay to Which the world will listen, re
quires eerUftoate.
This letter of credit the college under,
takes to supply. A college degree Is
a sort of social) letter of marque and
reprisal. . ., .
One who is without either character or
nersooallty need not feet abashed so
long as he has his degree he can yet
Join a unlverstty club, proudly wear the
pin of his fret and rah-rah-rah! when
thr mood Is on. Copyright. IMt, by In
ternational Newe Service,
1
THE RSETSrVr DOrlrJ. HER
juuat he uxu)"re um see
HIM VHKEM H6 0ON6 If.
M A COOt SHAfSf BREEZE,
OoT ONDEH THETReEt),
VOP PviHT WEWE , SAIO
THE- EDITOR. WUAf Dees
TUArNEAnl TBAALAteD
mva eNcuriH. Twe? peer
STOPPED, VJ EMTodT AN f
0ST A HAIR CU17CAME
Back, and said ttj rwfr
etc.. it The p.eT"
MVsJM !, AME RWAAi Writ
GUN ARABIC?
FOnrAUOAJ 0N6CHEst
MA- A LvtAt6.fi
INSPECroft NOW-tOMt
Get uf tiu. u 50 a-m
THCN I uiH pariMt .
GSfi5NPOMT TO aOVTrt .
tlte aorTA VrrT KtCttiM-sy
AOUM-5Ai M ttostx tot ae m
(HVAWfAVV Oet TH OUAJfMt Of
wutkm 1 AwiSutATtiOrH. McraoeoU
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maiX jr mtsrrH yomi--
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TwOR WVH. drTErAtTl4 .
fT A MavrTOL Of- NO MCKrfTTD
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VwOOO WAS THE CMTA(M ?
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imH.wiToiL.nc wakutet
UtON MIS iTHEO AMO
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9 00TIU.
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What is the Winning Attitude? . J
B DOROTHY DIX.
"Eccentric Ideas" as' Defined hy a Judge and an Editori .jjf
OpUmlstlo People often-express sails-1 .: By KLL.V WHEtl.KH H11O0X.
tatloa that we are iivbae m aa age of
IntelllgrnCw and foleratlow. v X
"Heretlce" are not torttireq, nor
"witches" burned today, because they
hold different re- .
llglous views from
m
Cold Air a Cure for, Disease
J
Diseases cured or Improved by cold air
are evidently much more numerous than
we have hitherto Imagined. Malaria is
particularly benefited, even If not cured,
and It relapses by return of hot weather
facts long known as to tuberculosis.
. dysentery snd other ,lntestlnal cases.
Rosa and Thompson report that their ani
mals were far livelier, healthier and
more vigorous In the cold, and It fully
explain the curative results In Trudeaa's
classical experiments with tuberculosis
animals treated outdoors, 'or the eun
rhlns had nothing to do with the labora
tory cases In Liverpool, as the room was
but indifferently lighted.
Crane long ago showed that cold air Is
beneficial in human tetaaua, and that ex
periments Indicate that guinea pigs In
fected may not develop the disease in
cold air, but hot air hastens th appear
ance of symptoms. Our former sad rec
ord of Fourth of July cases shows It Is a
hot-Weather disease, and now we see It is
not only due to the fast that the organ
isms then grow In garden mold.' but that
the children are more susceptible.
Cold air In yellow fever haa been both
suggested and condemned and must, be
further studied. All In all. there Is no
doubt that we must spend as .. mack
money cooling the sickrooms and living
rooms In summer, as we speod warming
them In winter; Indeed, It 1 far more1
Important to cool them, for we can live
In cold houses by dreeing for It like
millions of other nations do., p.. . .
' Ae for theraphy. coed air Is now as
beceasary as qslnJie or mercury and every
hospital must be equipped... Ln a short
time It will be a mere routine as to pre
scribing the .degree of cold to be teaia
talned In the ward, and It will than, be'
done by a turn of a valve wltho-t alter
ing the ventilation In the least.
. The 'reasons why cold sir Is c.-rative
Lave not been discovered. 7he only thing
wo know is the fact of .A cure,, but pur!
ignorance must not delay the application j
of the new knowledge. We haven't the.
remotest concept loo of how quinine cures, i
bat we do not hesitate to use It. The!
main fact known, and about the only one
Indeed, at the contraction of superficial
arteriole a condition extending also to-
those of the mucous surfaces whose In
flamed condition often disappears mh-ae--ulooaly,
Skin leatoas Indirectly due to
heat are largely the direct result of cap
illary dilation and disappear with cold.
of course. j
! Cold air haa more oxygen and requires j
fewer respirations end lees heart energy. :
both, of which are vital matters where!
tlons. An anemic person makes his blood
more effective, and Indeed we may
actually need less m the oold then In the
heat.
The bracing effect of cold on the ner
vous system Is known, but why this hap
pens Is a mystery, unless the tissue Is
better fed by the Increased blood supply.
It la largely a racial matter that Intel
lectual achievements come from cold cli
mates, but these seme types become
sluggish In time when they migrate to
hot places, so the heat Is nervously de
pressive la some ways. Indeed, the whole
field la fascinating m Its opportunities for
research. Why not get at U as rigorously
aa we have been studying the bugs and
vaccines?
The blood pressure In cold air must be
studied at once, sa It may be the key to
much which Is now locked from us. The
arterial tension Is generally reduced at
first when one goes to high altitudes,
but It Is later Increased, ae a rule, and
thta may be due to the eoM, and not a re
actiea from a low barometric pressors
which really has no mechaaJcal effect oa
the Mood pressure.
It haa bean kmc known that the heart
Is weak, and the Mood press era low as a
rule. In tuberculosis, snd If -we can In
crease both by cold wo have awe ex
flanatlon for the winter cures, snd a hist
for climatic treatment. It begins to look
w tneoxa places with A hot season and
those with no cold, season will In tins
be ruled out for the tuberculosis.
-. The death rate at sense of thee places
has been scandalous, and In aptte ef
rese-Ueited reports of - those Interested
financially and remnlsrelsHy, there is
reason, to believe that many a consum?-,
tlvw baa had Ma life sjreaMy sbortaned by
going to a hot cBmate." If lower blood
pressure really results from the heat, w
may have the - explanation American
Medicine, f ; ., .
- - -j fsiweew raraarapk.
A sermon Is either baaed en a text or a
pretext.
Bad luck Is often but another nam fen
poor management.
But It take a worn a to keep A secret
st-m do-rn't know.
Borne men give a dollar with one hand
and grab two wit the other.
it in axe poorer than vowr relations
it is easy for yea to oodge than.
statrtmeny transforms the poetry of
life into ea ttsmletd expense account.
Many a man uses a crowbar for the
purpose of prring lata the affairs of
others, ; I
ft
.i t s
Yst now and then
w find a fossil Im
bedded In a human
mind; and this
specimen exhibits
sll ths peculiarities
of the original type,
although It may
net possess Its
power. 1
A Judge of the
supreme court and
a writer of ths edi
torial pag of a
morning paper, both
display the fosetr
braia In the following extract:
"Supreme Court Jusflbs Cohslan haa re
fused to sanul a transfer of property
which was attacked before him on the
ground that the maker of the transfer,
one Fullerton, was at the time a believer
In theosophy, and therefore Insane. In
the deciding the lastlce said:
"The circumstance that a man is ob
sessed with sn extraordinary and ec
centric belief 'does not In Itself oonstl
tuts Insanity; otherwise society would
have aa Insuperable problem with which
to contend, for there ere manifold beliefs
held by men equally If not mere strange
than those held by Follerton.'
To call a beHef 'extraoridnary and
eccentric le not quite the suns thing as
dec Is ring It untrue, but It conies so near
It that the theosophlsts wit doubtless
glower darkly at Justice Cohalan and
every sfaaatma will view him with stern
uidtgiiation, . He might have gone further,
aswsvsir. In his description of theosophy
without exceeding the limits of accuracy,
before lie could mention awn of ihe be
liefs which he salw fcere eaaalty or mors
'strange.' T '." ;'.
In all probability both of these men are
Christians. If not piufnosul Chrkstlana,
they would unquestionably apeak with
reverence of the Oreat Master Christ
Ths Judge snd the editorial witter would
not refer to Christ'! creed aa "sooantrie''
or "strange." '!'''
Tet Jesus Christ belltvod in reincarna
tion, according to His weeds.
In 8t. Matthew, charter XI. verses 1
to li. He says:
"For all the prophets Sad ta law proph
esied until Joan, snd If ys will reeelre
It, thle Is Ellas, which has to come. He
that hath eara to hear, 'let htta bear."
What ess be plainer-than that?
Again. In the sloth chapter of St. Mark,
Jesus says:
"I say unto you that Blaa H t eased
come; and I bey have) dona unto ban
whatsoever they listed, a It is written
of him."
Just why (he onhodoa Christian church
chooses to bo sa St tent regarding these
unmistakable sssirikinl ef Jeans is one
of tbe many sraexpialiaM s stiliims of
modern Caristtanlty.
No man or weanaa ef real InteClgonce
can make aa hsnsst and aatlsnt study
of ths law ef Kanaa and Beclstrarnatlon.
and not feel profound respect for the
philosophy It offers as a working basis
on which to solid character.
This pMlewophy teaches the following
"eccentric" and "Strang Ideas:
Ths Oreat Supremo Fewer we call
God made all swots m the bsgtnnlng.
Each one ef as haa ansssd thrsaarh mil
lions of Uvea, Bret ta the salneral, next
In th vegetable klngdssa, the in the
animal, and sow we are psssrng through
tbe highest plaae. the hussas,
In each ef these kingdoms ws have
and he wonld have to think for scans time
appeared again and again. Ws nsver go
backward: always forward and onward
and upward. '
For Instance, Nero, who as a great ruler.
possessing enormous wealth, snd who
It red aa erU and selfish life, would return
(after passing through many spiritual
plane of purifying punUhment as a
poor man, obliged to learn sympathy
through his labor, and to appredats the
value ef the things he misused by swing
deprived of them. - While Ms social
status would be lower than of old, he
would still be strtvlng towsid d higher
moral pisao.
Every thought and act we have
while here Is a brick which we build Into
the mansion we will occupy In the next
baearsjatlon and Into the house not mads
tth hands, which ws will find waiting for
us beyond ths grave. Just aa our
tbousrfats, words snd acta sre beautiful.
sxsswous a ad kind and patient and help
ful here, so will we possess, beauty,
wealth, friends, love and newer when we
we came again.
We are the expression of God's power;
sad we, ewadves, must build our own
destinies Instead of calling oa Ood to
do K. "
Many t sines we aeust pass through to
work out eM Karate (the law of cause
snd effort); but aa A diligent child at
school can make up for past aegllgancs
by extra hours of study, so we can over
come Ksrma by greet devotion and good
works. When we have eomsselad our
cycle, we become 00a with Oed. Ws
know the rapture of s-rrftet peace. Un
til again the new cycle beglna.
"As It was la the beginning. It now.
and aha be wraore."
These are a few of the betters of thus-Met
gloriona, stimulating, uplifting snd
past pMlossphy.
Ood speod the day when earth will he
eaw liiiumres asylum, and all men and
w mi 1 si 1 In nss tee through their under
standing aad acceptance of these
"Strang'' aad "eccentric" ldess.
The Veiled Lady A Tragedy: of Today
' Drawn by Xerk IoIiemb Tenet by BAak.
I
the heart is laboring. More blood Is ;
available Internally If the superficial sys- j
'tern is partly empty, sad this of itself j
snay cure idiuudibsuvm w, j. m,c-
Give the average dog a bone and te
will be satisfied ta s without a license. I
A woman doesn't care about what her I
husband arns; It s what she gets out of j
MM covou.
It's the uo&trar.Rees of her sex that In-j
duces a woman to agree with a men Just j
wnen ne ooeen t want ner to. mcaae
ews. .
Here is a lady, fair of face, 'Here the tiung they call a veil ;:(JoTiei the face. 'Tit rerj hard,
Rmllinnr awpai rnnrmitl rr emm Tta tVi a m-nw rrf a rrrosyfnl tola ! TnatcaI wco son a mlavirto rari
1 1 j j m-s ww. 1 mm w t n ' vnA IM IBM 1 1 m,yv . v w-w J i i ww wa
A young man, with a kind and sym
pathetic heart, and who la a rooter for
matrimony, writes m letter in which
h hands out a piece of leap year advice
oa bow to win a husband, lie aays:
"Girls, Just show
a man that yoa are
la love with him
aad he will ask you
to usury him. I
would never think
of such a thing aa
popping the ques
tion to a girl until
she had given me
to understand that
she would say Tel.'
I wouldn't put my
self la the posttloa
to b mortified by
her turning me
down, and I think
that most men feel
aa I do on the
subject."
Oh, shucks. This
mar be A good tip on a few men, but B
is not to be played across the entire
matrimonial board. It wfll win out with
some men and lose out with meity mora.
It sll depends on the amount of vanity
th man possesses.
Undoubtedly there are men of colossal
egotism that find no woman so attractive
aa the one whe sits at their feet and
bums Incense before Uiara. Bach A maa
la flattered and pleased by having a
woman display all the sympieaatAt heart
failure every tune be comss' abosk lie
likes to have her run after kirn, lis ee-
Muys having her call him up on th phew
aid entreat litai to some to see her. He
swslts up with sail af actios when she
writes him six seventeen-page letters m
regard every picture postal card h sends
her, aad he Is filled with delight when he
sees her throwing fits of Jealousy whoa
he turns the light of his conAtrnsnca oa
some other woman. ' '
Naturally this type of the human bull
frog never proposes to a woman unless
she first Indicates that slie's dowa sn hsr
kaees waiting for Mm to eondsacead la
throw the kandkarckief, and that she
will spead the balance of her life return
ing thanks to heaven for her lurk In
getting him.
Possibly tbe wonts a who goes' fishing
for a man of colossal eonoelt does well
to bait her hook with a ready-made ac
ceptance. But he's aa easy to enaaere
as a German carp In a pond. Any woman
with aa much Inulllgsoce as Clod reach
sated aa anglswarra can catch this type
of man. It he le low in oemlag ta the
point, or wriggles on the hook of aa n
gagement, and tries lo get out ef It, all
that she's got to do la to make him think
that she wilt break her heart If She Isses
aim. and that does the busts. lie Is
so sorry for any woman who It weeping
over mlssiag such a good thing as him
self thai he hasn't the nerve ts deprive
her of It.
T the great majority of men, however,
there Is nothing so at ti y dlssoreisirtiag
and disillusioning as a woman whs Is too
willing, and If I were giving advice) oa awn accord.
thai subject I should say that th best
way to catch a man Is to run from him
Instead of after htm.
far a gh-1 to play coy s rouses the
normal maa'g sporting bleed, and lures
aim an Is the ehaee. Msny a woman ha
first Attracted a man's attention by
flouting him. And this la a perfectly
Batumi phenomenon ef human aaturc
There la thrill, and anxiety, end effort,
and adventure, and romance In at arming
the) etladel of A proud maMsn's heart,
and Breaking down Ha fortresses and
taking It owner captive, and. K makes
the man who does It feet Uke a war!
crowned victor, but what the exette
mailt about weotmr a girl who hands you
out title deed to her aflertlons the first
tlms yew call?
Ths mere fact that men prefer lo shoot
birds oa the whig to knocking over barn
yard fowls la the chicken run ought to
put every girl wise to the tolly of being
too fond. Generally sneaking, the girl
who throws herself at a man's heed
ever hit him, for nsea are the Artful
dodgers.
Bui while It la disastrous lo her chance
for a girl to wear hsr heart poa her
sleeve, il Is eoaally bad aoHey lor her ts
poos as Proud Lady Ensdalo. In old
(asMoawd novels the heroine are always
handed out the lee pitcher to every aaaa
who casn alsag. and war sUnpty loeult
lr la their rstssrxs lo tbe spwoelts sex,
yst whe alwars had row at suitors sigh
ing at their feat and eurmorlng for their
These high and mighty tactics woutda't
work la tness days, whoa there are not
saoiish h satis a la to gs aresusd, and men
Hfepnbt partieuaarv beat ea istrlsaowy.
anyway. Tea ass biipswh wosnaa wwohi
be left a math ta her own devtoss aa
thai toe-anxious ene, and "ssSBeter" would
carved oa betk of their tains.
All 0 which leads to Bar log that In
her attitude toward men and leva-snak-lag
girl sheeOd strike th anWaa mean.
While aae should not chase sa eligible
gsatlemaa dawn, neither should she take
ta her heri at kia apsroaca. Walla oh
should net persecute him into coating to
ass her. there la oa valid ewjecHon to her
giving him the glad hand when a does
of Ma own vteUUea. While she
never, never look eager, there I
no harm la hsr appearing aa on who
could possibly bo persuaded.
The aloe girl, unless, aa I hav said.
aha Is dealing with aa esrotist. may let
a maa aee that be Interacts and eater-
tains her, that shs admires hi good
oualltlee aad enjoy his society, but she
should not subtly Indicate to aim that
she's aet bowled over by them, aad doss
sot consider him tbe oaa arias parweg '
la the uurtinaalal setter, aad If thi
challenge doesn't tnaks him coma across
with the proposal, nothing else will.
Nlnety-ates aoes ox win risk their
aacks climbing up to get the Peach that
highest en the tree rather than
opea their mouths far the overripe one
that la ready to drop lata them ef lis
. ;
The Drug Fiends
J
By WILLIAM F. KJKK.
(The following veree. published first fat August. ll. an, reerie ted at tba
earnest request of Abe AtteiTs frier, its who bet oa hlav)
When Jolly Jullua Ceear. with bla weM-deverfoped feeew.
Which be called hlg Romaa sassier in the days that are ao more.
Got aa awful ponck from Brutus, through big cuticle and cuUa,
He waa sore.
But though Brutna said "Sic semper," Julius Caeaar kept hl temper.
And before be kicked tba backet all but loyal friends be kutged;
"Friends." said be. 'Tib not tompUlntef. bat mr food lock star U
waning
i was drugged: " '
Wbea Napoleon hit three hundred, wbea kia cannons roared and thundered.
Any time hie foemeo blundered be was gwirt ana sure to striae;
Never from a fracas shrinking, be was always tainklns. thinking.
Bleep or hike.
Wbsa hie Waterloo waa over and tbe English were ia clever.
And be loaged to be a rover while Parisian shoulders shrugged;
"I will bet 70a a slmoleoa." quoth the hard-luck Kid Napoleon,
"I WA8 DRrOGBD!" . ,
When Kid Cala hit Battling Abet with a leaf from father's table.
And the daylight tamed te same for the younger soa of Eve,
Abel, knowing he had plenty, lav and took the count ef twenty
On hie sleeve.
Down the lane cane Father Adam, thinking that hie Abel had 'ea.
Then he telephoned tbe Madam while tba stricken yostJk be bagged;
Tell me, tell me, little baby: tell me hew ft hsppewed, Able,
WERE TOO DRUGGED!" -a
e e
Whea I wrote these little verses, fanny as a string el hearses, ,
' Fnnnr aa line of anraea, I was thin king to myself 1
That the editor would love them aad would never, a ever shore them
On the shelf. -
1 supposed that be knew merit aad could find It like a ferret. '
Now I think I d aria and bear It If that editor were Joxgtel:
For be said, ia accents chilly, as I stood there, sort O sUit;
When yoa wrote these verses, Billy,
YOU WEKI DRUGGED!" " '