THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1912. 0 SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SinT-AllisFairinLoveandWar Drawn for The Bee by Tad savtwat urn-e chicks CECKlN- THC HATS 0 Hap. AU. OA- rr - I I X- Mi MOI TXAT LSTTLG MSR- He taOS -'K A RL&JH SUV TO MB. HMHA.eCOpTtJLO HINkT00VEO-&OOO P(HOteP- I HOPff v r T-'l lWQOUD ME f0 THC COW t rAKy HT GET TrWT" 6OO0 BK)lte ;R.r-N SEB- HONOR. HE A VOONQr X.ADV OUT OF COUNTENANCE r J AKO VOU SAV Dht-t- BOOO '-. - J Friend Wife I m By DOROTHY DIX. There Is one slang phase that always i makes a hlt with me, and that Is , "friend wife." 1 Do you get thatT Friend wife! If jwhat every man should be able to call the woman to whom he is mar Irled, and yet not ! one man In ten i thousand could I truthfully use the : phrase. There are i wives who are sweethearts, wives who are affinities, wives who are I sparring partners,- i wives who are de- bating opponents, 1 wives who are ty rants, wives who are slaves and but how seldom domestic drudge, wife is a friend Tet the best thing that any woman can be to her husband is to be his friend. It Is the whole of the law and. the prophets as regards how to be Jiappy though mar ried. " ' What is a friend? ;A friend. 1 the one of whose companionship you never weary the pne without' whose' "presence no pleasure Is completet-How.jnarty men -do you know who feel that way toward their wives? The average wife is many ad mirable things to her husband, but she is seldom a companion. He esteems her for her noble qualities but he doesn't take her along with him, if he can help him self, when he wants to have a good time. If you desire to get a line on how little companionship there is between the great majority of husbands and wives watch them at the theater, or at the restau rants, or any of the other places of pub lic amusement. Tou will see them sitting up In a silence so thick that you could cut it with a knife, yawning In each other's faces between the acts of the play, and stuffing themselves on bread and butter at the restaurant while they wait for their order to be served. - Not a word have they to say to each other un less, they get Into a scrap about what they shall have to eat, or whether they put the cat out of doors when they left home. In any company you do , not need a diagram to show you which arc the married couples. Tou can pick the; out by their bored expressions. They did not even notice the pltifu paucity of conversation In the home'; Husbands and wives seem to have liter ally no topic lh common except the bills and the children. The ayerage family cir cle might be composed of mutes for all the. cheerful and interesting talk that goes about it Tet the husband may be famed as a wit and a raconteur in so ciety, and his wife considered as unusu ally bright and vivacious in company. Both of them have plenty to say to other people, but they have nothing to say to each other because they are not friends. They may be lovers, but the lovers' litany is Short, whereas the repertoire of friendship is exhaustless. Tou soon weary Of asking the adored one "Oose ducky Is oo?". and telling a woman how beautiful, and wonderful, and angelic she Is, but you can talk forever to the friend whose mind is but a mirror In which you see your own ' thoughts " glorified, and' who touches no subject but to turn & brighter and more entrancing light upon it. - What is a friend? A friend is the one to whom you can go with every Joy and sorrow, certain of understanding, sure of sympathy and help. How many men find such a friend in their wives? How many women have such friends In their husbands? So few, so tragically, pitifully few! It is one of the heart-breaking facts of mitrimnoy that one of the first things that the average husband finds out is that he can't even be frank with his wife with out her going Into hysterics. He has to lie to her when he wants to stay down- NlTSHoT CHARLS rrws daredevil oerzerwe WAS OOT ON CASfi IN A 3O0 VfZ QAN TOWN. COMING UP 70 rue H0UJ6 CMA6L6"iAAS AU 0 or KNOCKS 0 DOWN Qy A MAN VUHOCAMe DASHAf'G OUT OFT He DA.TU AfAt OUb H6&0 I - .. . 1 AND G-RAB BCD TM S MAA. CMARUe PVLieD A GrON rir voo Ran & the Doomed W0t-P THAT QKfMSf. ,n- r-r-ri i , FA CARRIED WH'S A Foot- rtMD A J kSNTlCKy scour ffve ccta eAcHMouj GT U P AB OUT 4X6 Al hHEAPlERAfAi co WA3 OUT W7H pARtHMfi-NT. UNROLLINCr WAS ON HIS KN?$ SAMEN H6 H6AfcD A LOW M OA N A M 0 0 N Hmil frXti INta He POUND AMAH ouefe upted up rue tsGLLOWS M0AD hp A MAN bOTrt$ M6K WHICH WG OLD NjAM kEPS I hi Ttte CtUAR- I pfajo ah Horn OR TWO 3OiMb oupfc He1 RErCetVES FROfM 141 j wines oorujesr 76Mii t yeBjgy PAE M WAS P(jOWN UP H$ POTATO PATt VAlttCN 5UD0eNi-W AS He over TuzHes a pounp rue tw . lf:A NAN WA5i4lT 8y A TAu-ey cab. CrOT AMeSSACrff BV CABLg GRAB THfiT THAP. , MAN E5 A QUIttrVRLAR AU)HILE COUNT'" H(t TACMtS AND 2iiiroM0&iLf& AMD rrtuKiAc i lift YMAV-allft a . . . i ' oor a J TD 00 TILL "tP -MORROW The Human Iceberg J By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. "I km going with a gentleman for eight months," writes a nice little girl. "He calls to se me twice a week but never shows any affection at all, nor has he ever told me he loved me, although he often speaks of marrying and what he Intends to do when we get married. "Don't you think if he loves me he would have to show it? I hear other girls talking about how their friends act and it makes me feel very blue. Do you think it would be right for mis to show hlra some affection? He gave me a very pretty diamond bracelet for Christmas, but he Is as cold as an icicle in his actions." One of the greatest tragedies, that can befall a loving and lovable woman la to marry a human Iceberg. She knows she would find no. comfort, no return ot emotion! If she went out and hugged a snow man. She realizes that there would be no warmth. In throwing her arms around, a marble tombstone and pressing her cheek against It. Tet that Is the kind of com panionship she : is choosing for life In marrying a cold-blooded man. If the fu ture holds any Joys for them, she re ceives no ' kindred smiles from a man like this nice little girl describes. If it. brings sorrow the will find more consolation n the companionship of a stone pilar than in that of her husband. His kisses wil be like the dripping of cold rain on a stone porch, aud his car esses, if there are any, will chill like the north wind. ' He may come wooing with a diamond bracelet, but there would be greater hap piness if he came wooing with a warm and tender heart and an affection that would make some demonstration. , Men have been known to be col 5 and reserved as lovers who made - good hus bands. ' I am sure the majority do. They are good In this: They are loyal, con siderate, always gentlemanly, always dig nified, always true. They, never wander off. Neither does a snow man. If a woman has reached an atrophied state she will find such a husband be yond reproach. But few women' reach that state, and I pity them if they do. This nice little girt has the right since an engagement exists to show this man some mark of affection. If a demonstra tion from her, a little caress, a kiss per haps is received as coolly as if she banded him his hat or a boiled eggI insist that happiness for her doesn't lie his way. His training, which has made him a human "iceberg, must be overcome be fore he can he melted and remoulded. Some women can do this, and many have done It But it Is a process that requires rare tact, rare patience and time. The majority of women who marry for love and find themselves hugging a snow man to their breasts make a hopeless effort to warm into life the man chosen for life. And when this fails they accept an unhappy fate with patient resignation. Of warm, loving natures, and only happy when they are showing that love, they are like the plant that never thrives because an ignorant gardener keeps it too closely ..pruned Coldness has been known to come after marriage. When it is apparent the out look is tragic. Thla human Iceberg is not for you, my aear iittie gin: tie snouia select a woman like himself, and his voyage through life with a twin iceberg float ing by his side, majestic and cold, will be ideal. The World Bj- ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. With noiseless steps good goes its way; The earth shakes under the evil's tread. We hear the uproar and 'tis said. The world grows wicked every day. It is not true. With quiet feet, . In silence, virtue sows her seeds; While sin goes shouting out his deeds, And echoes listen and repeat But surely as the old world moves, And circles round the shining sun, So surely does Ood's purpose run. And all the human race improves. Despite bold devil's noise and stir. Truth's golden harvests ripen fast; The present far outshines the past Men's thoughts are higher than they were. Who runs may read this truth, I Sin travels In a rumbling car, While virtue soars on like a star The world grows better every day. say; If you wish to have your table linen look nice do not put it through a wringer, as it makes .creases that will not come out even if the cloth is ironed when very damp. By rinsing vary thoroughly it looks even better if not wrung very dry. Just try it and see. In fact any clothes that you wish to look very nicely when Ironed you will find come out a great deal better if wrung by hand. town of a night and play a game of cards, or go to dinner with some man. He wouldn't dare to tell her that he had happened to meet some woman he knew near the door of a restaurant and had asked her to lunch with him. He'd only tell these things to his friends and not one of them would be "friend wife." Whyt the great majority of men are not sufficiently friendly with their wives to even talk over their business with the ladles, or to open up their hearts to them and show them their hopes, and plans, and ambitions." When you want to talk about real things like that they go to some man. It's mighty seldom that a man finds bis real confidante in "friend wife." Nor are women any more fortunate in this respect. It doesn't take long for a clever woman to discover that if she wants her household machinery to move smoothly she must keep most of her real thoughts and ideas to herself, and all of her troubles, and that the best way to work her lord and master is to make him comfortable, and obtrude her soul longings on him as little as possible. When a woman wants to discuss a problem play, or a new novel, or her clubs, or the suffrage movement, she Is rarely fortunate enough to be able to do so with her husband. For the average man isn't interested in the things that his wife is, and he doesn't even make a pretense of being. Therefore the wife's friends are of her own sex if she ja a good woman, and of the opposite sex if she is foolish and a flighty one, but her beat friend Is not, as it should be, friend husband. It is because there is so little friend ship between husbands and wives that there Is so little marital happiness, for the last estate of married life, must either be friendship or ruin. . The romance of courtship is a tissue of chiffon that wears to rags and tat ters with a . year or , two of married life Passion dies of satiety, and then the home must go to piece. Ilka a bouse of cards unless it was founded on the solid rock of friendship. After the glamour and the thrills of youth end beauty and de sire are gone wedlock beoomes the ball and chain that bind two prisoners who are linked together to do a life sentence at hard labor unless they have a friend ship for each other that makes this enforced companionship a never ending Joy or both. Therefore when a man hails the partner of his bosom as "friend wife" we know that he has given the high sign and the password to the lodge of the happily married. f Summer Sneezes -v: J" By DR. JOHN BESSXER HUBER. Happy Days BY HAL COFFMAN. Good old Ben Franklin knew a thing or two; in faot, he knew a whole lot of things nobody else In his day and gener ation ever suspected, and he sensed some things that had to wait until a few years ago to be proved. More than a century ago he observed that people caught eold from eaoh other, and now we know the reason why that germs play their part In most colds. It Is therefore easy to understand how, as germs are always with us, season in and season out we have winter oolds end spring oolds (when the poet sings through his nose, "Cub gedla 8prlg"), and summer colds and autumnal oolds (hay (ever). The temperature ot the air has very little to do with "catching cold," except as It lowers the bodily resistance. Arctic explorers never catoh cold while at or near the poles, but many of them do so as soon as they get back to civilisation, where the germs are. The cold air treat ment is the ideal on for consumptives; these poor sufferers get well more surely in the winter than in the summer If they do as they are told. Monkeys are very consumptive creatures, and are very short-lived when confined in hot stuffy menageries, hut perch them on snow drifts and they will live and thrive the regular span of a monkey's life. So the common cold Is generally an infection, and, being so, Is catching. And here, as in all infections, there have to be two main things' to conslder the run-down condition of the body and the presence of the germ. Summer oolds are the meanest of all because they are so hard to get rid of, and because people somehow resent cold in the good old summer time, think ing of it as an affliction that should belong only to the enow months. Many people catch eold In June, when 'the day Is hot and the next perhaps cool, even cold, and when the weather is apt to be windy, so that the germ-harboring dust is scattered for every one to breathe In. Smith goes off for an outing on a warm Sunday, perspiring in a negl gee and without a vest, and comes back for work when the temperature has gone tway down. By this he gets chilled which "predispose" him to a cold that Is, he is now in a condition favorable to the growth and activity of germs In his body. Or women go to business on warm morning in peekaboo shirtwaists, to get home chilled from open cars; the germs will do the rest Or way off In Lonsomehurst Mr. and Mrs. Jones will dine of an evening with a frlend-rall In the leafy month of June, June is one of the warm months, they think. So they take no wrap to cover the evening gown, no spring overcoat to shelter that tuxedo. Next morning the sneeslng begins, the nose gets stopped up, then follow headache, chilly and feverish sensations, pains in the back, heaviness in the bones and Joints, that tired feeling all which, being interpreted, mean the germs getting busy In the body. No mat ter which get It first, one will catch it from the other in due time; here the male I Just a deadly as the female. And both Mr. and Mrs. Jones are in for a week's snuffling, if no worse. Whenever anybody eneete people say, or they ought to, "God bless you;" for the man with the aneese certainly needs a blessing and the especial protection of Providence. The eneese begins cold. and the end of that cold Is no trifling matter. People say, "Nothing but a cold;" let it go at that, and neglect It But if you measure the neglected cold by Its conse quences you will find it one of the meat serious ailments In existence for cer tainly no other Is responsible for more Suffering, inconvenience, money loss and grave illness. Serious not only to the individual eufferer, but to others as well; for cold, a we have noted, are catch ing, and there are epidemic of them. For example, practically the whole force In an office, or a workshop, or a factory will be ufferlng from one case alone. If a workman come Into the office sneezing, talking thick and making a general nuisance of himself, better send hlra home until he is recovered, no matter at what sacrifice; It will be found the best In the end. There are several germ responsible for colds the pneumonia germ for one; the catarrh, the Influenza, the bronchitis germ, apd so on. They grow in the lin ing of the nose and throat; and when their bodies are predisposed to their development by being first heated and then chilled, or by overwork, or by work, ing in stuffy, germ-laden, ill-ventilated rooms, or by any cause that lowers the health and reduces the vitality then the activity of the germs Is represented by inflamatlon, with the symptoms stated, and with which everybody Is more or less familiar. Catarrh Is a rhronlo cold, hard Indeed to get rid of. and leading much too often to such diseases as pneumonia and con sumption. Cattarrh makes the mem branes of the upper air passages un, healthy and thua a fruitful soil for the germs of diptheria, measles, meningitis; Infantile paralysis and what hot else Pretty much all deafness comes from catarrh. v: , So gat rid of a cold In Summer a In winter and as soon as you can. HowT ' t By leading the physiological life for one thing. Oo to bed early and sleep at least eight hours; get up. in good time; bathe well. Eat three meals of wholesome food , a day and don't rush about It Be In the freeh air all the time, day" ; and night Have the shop and dust al ways well ventilated; avoid dusty, darap--and foul air. Be very moderate in the use of alco " hoi and tobacco. Better by tar have nothing at an to do with alcohol In the -summer. It dilate the capillaries of the '1 kin, and then chilling of the body Is. easy. . ; - Tobacco I no preventive of catarrh; It Increases catarrh by Irritating the " upper air passages. No doctor can ever cure your catarrh while you smoke. ' Excessive tea drinking is as bad for.; women as alcoholism Is for men. Tea, the tipple of women, should be", taken always freshly made In moderation, and never without a bite ot food. Wear suitable underclothing, thin In the summer. . Wear alway warm foot- ; wear and stout, watertight shoes. Never . get your feet wet, nor your extremities chilled. Put your cheat protector on your feet. Cover your chest of course; but not so much a to Impede breathing, upon which good health ever depend. Sleep always with the window open; but avoid draughts-by mean of screens, ' or of a clothes horse covered with a shawl or a blanket Both overeating and eating indigestible foods and too much sugar and starches tends to colds. Children may keep up -troublesome catarrhs by eating too much sweet, although a moderate amount of pure candy is good for a child. Regu-.;, late a child' digestion, and it won't have to blow its nose so much. " If catarrhs and unhealthy throat are 5 not cured, woree may coma Adenoids and enlarged tonsils must be removed in children. f Alwy breathe through the noee. Some people think the mouth la for breathing. ' but this la a mistaken theory. Besides. the mouth breather, look neither hand some nor pretty. Inside the nose the air is warmed, as it should be, for its passage into the lungs. Never eat without having first washed your bands and got rid of whatever germa " may be on thera. Keep your bands away from your face a much a possible your ; whole face. Including the mouth and nose. " Don't borrow pencils or book or any thing else (not even bills, no matter how' much you need them) from anyone witti . a cold; don't touch soiled handkerchiefs. or use publlo drinking cups or stand near anyone who Is coughing and sneexing Dodge such a citizen as you would an approaching creditor until he has shakenj-" bis cold. Keep your teeth always clean; all klndi' of germs lurk about unclean teeth, if" once knew a cltlxen who had twenty-six. varieties of germs in his Jaw; no doubt" by now he ha developed ome fifty-seven" varletle-that is. If he 1 still abov ground. I. If you think a cold is coming on, douche4 your nose be means of a nose cup (to be' got in any drug store), using a solution" of half a teaspoonful of salt to a tumbler--ful of water as hot as can be borne, then gargle your mouth with thl solutlon. Swallow five grain of quinine, and then don't think anything more about It.'' Worry that killed a cat, can develop a eold. Forced to Flfht. Uncle Joe Cannon was asked on his . seventy-sixth birthday recently It he had many good fight left In him. ' "Well," said he, "it all depends. ' There's hardly any animal that won't:, fight If he' chased Into a corner. ' I'll' ' never forget the day I started to school.. ; Several of the boys came around and: " said: " 'Be sure to look out for Oliver Cart-, . mell. He always licks every rew boy- and he'll probably get you.' "So I tried to keep out ot Oliver's way, but at about the second reees period ' he came along when I was right up In. a fence comer. I looked all around for'- place to run, but everywhere was either fence or Oliver. I would have given anything for a chance to run, but couldn't. And the consequence waj.- that I lammed hell out of him. "St Paul Pioneer Press. To Clean Zlne Tray. To keep the line tray ot a gas stovt bright and clean, rub with benzine, then wash with soap and pulverized pumice. .-' It will look like new. ' If spots are stub born, use a little kerosene V I !: s t1 tt ft 1 Ml