Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 02, 1912, Page 9, Image 9

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Golf and Base
By WINIFRED PL-CK.
Th golf widow and tho ' fcae ball
widow have just been to see me.
The golf widow is fairly young anel
more than fairly pretty, but She's noth
ing like tho beauty
she was a year
ago. There is some
thing a little wist
ful about her eyes,
and her foolish. lit
tl mouth has a
doleful droop that
is not quite be
coming The base ball
widow is quite at
different type.
Rather a sarcastic,
bitter. look in her
bright eyes,' and
when she smiles it
is a little sad to
Fee her, I don't
quite know why. and yet she's gay and
very lively, and always what she calls
"on the go."
There's something wrong about both
these women, and yesterday I found out
just what it was. Listen a minute and
maybe you'll know-, too.
"I'm the most miserable; woman alive."
said the golf widow, "and I don't care
who knows it. My husband, used, to be
perfectly devoted to me and now I'm
lucky if I get a glance from him even
onco a week. I'm down sick over It, and
if it were, not for the children I'd 'disap
pear' like those men you read about who
turn up in Seattle married to some one
else and never knew how K happened.
"No. It isn't another woman, it's golf,
golf, golf, morning, noon and night. He
leaves his office at 3 o'clock-dear me,
how we counted on the time when he
would be able to do that -but much good
does it do me, that extra time. He tears
out to the links as If the fiends were
after him, plays as long as he likes,
rushes home late for dinner; makes us all
wait while he changes his clothes. After
dinner he goes out Into the garden and
practices drives, and then comes up on
the porch and falls asleep In tho swing.
He's just 'about as much company as
a deaf, blind and dumb man. He doesn't
rare about a thing nn earth but his old
golf, and all I can do is to sit and wait.
What, stay with us take me out. Why.
Ithe idea, it's golf. golf. golf, all day long.
!and I can cry my eyes out alone, and
'he'll never notice they are red.
"I'm about desperate. I don't believe
ihe cares for me at all any more, and
this golf is Just a distraction to take his
imlnd off his broken heart."
The poor little Golf Widow had all she
(could do to laugh, pretending she didn't
mean it, and all the time ehe was talkine
her wistful eyes were full of tears,
though she did her best, to pretend she
'didn't know It.
The Base Ball Widow laughed-such a
mean little laugh.
"You're a goose, my dear," she said.
I used to be; but I've recovered. What
,do you care what your 'husband does
between meals so long as he sends ymi
th check to pay for those same mea's?
"My husband is quite decent all winter,
but the minute the base ball-season opens
I might as well put on mourning and buy
a 'not dead but sleeping' wreath and be
done with It.
"I never see the man I'm supposed to
love, honor and obey at all except for a
minute or so between games. He's always
lther at the grounds yelling himself
hoars-or he's at the club telling how this
play was bad and that one was 'noble.
"He doesn't know I'm alive till he pays
the bills for my new hat or something.
"Care? Not I. I'm glad of it. I mar
ried a man, not a foolish little boy, and
th boy bores me to death. I'm glad to
b rid of him. I have my own friends, my
own world; my husband doesn't know me
the real me at all.
"Row can he? He hasn't time to get
acquainted during the summer and when
winter comes I'm busy at my own fads.
What he doesn't know about the sums I
lose at bridge will never worry him. I
Just put them on some bill or other and
let it go at that.
"I used to sit at home and weep over
the shattering of love's young dream
while husband was in the grand stand
whooping himself red in the face over
some Southpaw This or Straight Ball
That but I've outgrown It all, and so
will you, my dear, In time."
The Golf Widow smiled tremulously,
ighed, twisted the wedding ring on her
trambling finger and said, "I suppose so."
sadly, and they both seemed to think the
thing was settled then and there.
I think that both of them were wrong
Ail wrong.
Wheiv will women learn to give up
trying to make men over into a kind
of glorified woman? When will women
lern that the life lived by the average
man is the same normal, sensible life,
and that the life ehe wants him to Hve
is at far way from his natural In
stinct as It la for a rooster to sing a
lullaby V neat ful1 of downv cn'cks?
A man Is first of all a human being,
"he ec
AS VOJ A
f TV4I5 tS MV
.SpeezP kiu
tTS HAMS
i'
octuA&e
Ball "Widows"
then he's a man, then he's a husband.
A woman is first of all a wife, then
she's a woman, then she's a human
being. She's got the procession all
wrong, every bit wrong, and it's about
time she woke up and railized it.
The woman who spends her ttme
"waiting" for her husband is wasting
not only her own good time, but her
husband's.
He is normal. Why doesn't she turn
around in her tracks and be normal,
too?
Wake up little Golf Widow, the world
is a most interesting and most incredibly
pleasant place. If you'd only look around
and see it. Wake up and find some of
the interesting people; wake up and get
some Interesting books; wako up and go
walking, or motoring, or tennis playin
or anything on earth but "waiting."
Make a fad of the children; they are
fine fads, the most fascinating things
in the world. Don't sit around and
wait for husband to get through with
everything and everybody else and then
come to you.
Be "getting through" with something
yourself and you'll never know he's late.
He isn't your whole world any more
than you are. his whole world, and the
sooner you realize this plain, every-day
fact the sooner you'll be happy ajid mako
your husband happy, too.
No Men on the Planets i:
The fascinating speculation the prob
ability of the planets being inhabited
is discussed in the journal of the Royal
Astronomical Society of Canada by Prof.
Robert Grant Aitken of the Lick Observ.
atory. Prof. Aitken summarises all the
latest researches, and his conclusion In
regard to the possibility of a high form
of life on any of the planets are a3 fol
lows. The Moon The moon must be regarded
as practically a dead 'world, although it
may be that low forms of vegetable life
are sustained by water vapor exudipg
through crevices from the moon's In
terior. Jupiter Obviously in such a world
there can be no question of life. The
conditions are chaotic. Jupiter is a
sernosun, probably gaseous throughout
with matter distributed as on the sun.
and there Js no well-defined surface or
crust.
Saturn This planet resembles Jupiter.
but It is probably not so far advanced,
and is even less fitted for habitation
than Its larger neighbor.
T'ranus and Neptune They are so far
away from the sun that its heat and
light can hardly be effective in protect
ing life upon these two planets, even
should life in any way originate ther.
Satellites and Jupiter and Saturn-It
is possible some of them may have wa
ter and an atmosphere dem5 enough
for life. This Is merely conjectural, and
not very probable.
Mercury It apparently, always keeps
the same face toward the sun: It get?
seven times as much hpat as the earth,
and neither its eternal night nor its
everlasting roasting day is suitable fir
any form of life. It seems to have no
atmosphere.
Venus In size, mass, density and sur
face gravity it greatly resembles the
earth. It has a dense, cloud-filled at
mosphere. The whole question as to
life on Venus' turns on the problem as
to the length of Venus' day. If Its day
equals Its year, that planet must be
utterly desolate. The question Is . still
an onen one. though the evidence favor
the belief that the day and the year on
Venus are of equal length.
MarThrA undoubtedly are strong
marklncs on Mars, but astronomers are
not screed as to whether the marklne
are natural or artificial, canals or mere
earthquake cracks. The Martian atmos
phere Is rare, and there are no perma
nent bodies of water on the planet.
There is not enough water on the whole
of Mars to fill one of the American
great lakes. The so-called polar ice
caps and "frost" on Mars may be de
posits of carbon dioxide. The best that
can be said is that while the tempera
ture on Mars Is very low, there may
be on that planet, to a limited extent,
the conditions essential to life prob
ably only vegetable and animal life,
but no beings of intelligence. Boston
Transcript.
Not Classified.
"Who was that man who was talking
so loudly Just now?"
"Eh? don't you know him? Well, well!
Couldn't you tell by his talk who he
was?"
"No. I couldn't tell whether he was a
pugilist or a politician. Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
Lion of the Ladles.
Mr. Morbid I have called, sir, to offer
some words of sympathy to the unfortu
nate wife murdever in cell, 1.001.
Prison Official Take the chair, madam.
As soon as the new block of six Is made
up we will dimiss the ladies who are
calling on him now. Our corrldurj ace 1
very narrow you Know. PucJc , (
r
THE
rrp Uactziip f)a
- ,11 -
wotw cmce mck&V
VWITH A ROASr 1
Me op ecu e O'O.- J
in sav tmat" oertcnv 7
f ATHCT-P li A FAfc
OLE FRANK X. MURRAY
THE GUY FRCT THE 4r
hit unie New Xow-
TieklNt OUT OF HIS
iHwr eoiMjyor be ?u6we
HE VJAUKGD INTO A BAR
QER. SHOP AAJO SAID TO
"frftr HEAD BARBER H.V
PORr DO YClJ 8H0F
HORSES HRe THE BAR
Afob AfOS-VUeRED
if es.en. is fisRMAv
li a uTTETt scotch-
IrVWMSClFTAJOW. I'M
AM ACT
HBO ITOAJIX RONS
SHOU4 A DAY A Mb A
tAVtE
to F
THC
DCvjb.rir Alow A,rVJ D,
The Making
By MARGARET HUBBARD AYER.
When you go down the street you in
stinctively judge every girl you meet by
her clothes, dt.n't you? Do you realize
that she is judging you by yours?
I recommended a young girl for a posi
tion as stenographer not long ago, and
sent her with a letter to a friend of
mine who had a very good position to
offer.
The girl was capable and efficient,
and wfiH nicely and suitably dressed at
least she was when she left me with the
letter but she evidently thought she
would improve htiseif by adding a few
trinkets and make a better Impression
on her new employer, for I received this
irate message from him over the phone:
"She's impossible I don't care how well
she can work I can't stand cheap Jew
elry why should ahe wear a big spark
ling flim-flam on her chest in the of
flee? My wife would never think of
wearing so many noisy Jewels for a big
dlnnpr."
It was hopeless to argue with him. as
the thermometer was almost at boiling
point and (he man was right, anyhow. I
had a heart-to-heart talk with, my small
girl. She won't make the mistake again
of wearing imitation diamonds, even In
the form of hatpins, during working
hours, for she was judged at once by the
most conspicuous thing about her, the
sparkle of cheap, .pretentious and abso
lutely false and unsuitable ornaments.
So much imitation Jewelry 1$ worn now
adays that one cannot merely wave It
aside and call it all vulgar, as was the
custom even ten years ago.
There are plenty of good near-precious
stones, but there Is one unfailing rule
for them. Never wear the imitation when
it woqld not be good taste to wear the
real jewels If you possessed them.
No woman of the fashionable world
wears her beautiful diamonds with a
plain shirt waist or a simple cotton
frock.
The woman of wealth never wears
a profusion of jewels except on 6tate
occasions and never by daylight. She
confines herself to a brooch and lace
pins generally of semi-precious stones
for morning wear such as are neces
sary to her costume. Incidentally it is
not considered good taste to wear many
rings on the middle finger, for the
simple reason that this makes the hand
look larger and more awkward than when
the rings are placed on the fourth finger
Of either hand.
The girl In the picture is wearing $1,000
worth of clothes, including her hat. With
this costume, she could wear Jewels of
any price, and were she to wear good
Imitation jewelry no one would ever be
lieve that it was not genuine. But she
looks as if she were a young person who
does not believe In sham of any kind,
sham Jewels or sham feelings.
Now sham jewelry Is almost always
detected, excepting when one Is dressed
In such a manner as to hrow the Jewels
In the shade. If you wear Inexpensive
frocks, wear plain and inconspicuous
pins; even a real pearl neckless will be
branded ts "fake" if it is worn with
an inappropriate costume.
Whatever clothes you wear, see that
they and all the accessories are ap
propriate. A party hat and a raincoat
don't go together unless the hat is pro
tected by a veil.
The business girl can't dress like her
Ister who stays at home, nor should
the busy housewifely woman dodge the
early morning dress question by slip
ping on a wrapper. The shirtwaist suit
buttoned In front . In . one piece Is a
UeEing -tito. .srctUer Jiian were the
4
BEE: OMAIIA, FRIDAY,
Judge Has No Second as
Copyright, 1915. National News
I'ii-iJUir SO BODVA' AND
AVp-FOLLOF GUFF
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rtoirtAJE ea en show
AW HCU1.
AM b IT MOWS rAt
IT OP BEFORE
HOVX) i - r
of a Pretty Girl
The girl in
the picture is
wearing $1,000
worth of
clothes,
including
her hat.
With this
costunle she
could wear
jewels of
any price.
Were she to
wear good
imitation
jewelry no
one would
believe that
it was not
genuine.
One Thousand Dollars'
shirtwaist and skirt, and it has come to
stay. There- is no reason for untidiness
on one hand and overdressing on the
other, for these simple frocks are within
the means of almost all of us.
No Expert.
A gang of navies were employed on a
railway contract removing earth with
wheelbarrows. While proceeding with his
won. one ui the navies noticed that the
wheel of his barrow was squealing terri
bly, and to put a stop to the noise he
turned the barrow over, and was in the
act of greasing it when the boss noticed
him and shouted out:
"Halloa. O'Brien, halloa, sir! What the
deuce are you doing?"
I m greasing my harrow, sir.
"Who told you to do that?"
"Sure, no one. sir. 1 took it upon my
self."
"Well, don't let me ratch you at it
again. What do you know about machin
ery? "' llt-ttlts.
Dead Wrong.
In some of ihe country districts of Ire
land it is not an uncommon thing to see
carts with their owners' names chalked
on to save the expense of painting. Prac,
tfcal jokers delight In rubbing out these
signs to annoy tne owna
: i x 2' J r t i i a1"
Anw - l , 'i w
AUGUST 2, 1912.
a Letter Writer
Ass'n.
HV JUOfrta
THE. TAV6TKI
WAKT TO &0W
HOW I C0O-O
JPENO AU
TMrAT 000 frH"
TP THE-
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W MAkJAit UP FOR. LOST
"ffME. HE COULD
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THE
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,
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How to Brest'
Appropriately
Wortli of Clothes.
A constabulary sergeant one day ac
costed a countryman whoso name had
been thus wiped out unknown to him.
"Is this your cait, my good man?"
"Of eourso it is!" was the reply. "Do
you see anything the matter wld It?"
"I ubsaivc," suid the pompous police
man, "that your name Is o-blltherated."
"Then ye re wrong," quoth the country
man, who had never come across the
long word before. "for m name's
O'Flaheity, and I don't care who knows
it." Youth's Companion.
The Old Days.
A political worker it was in the "old"
days went to a member of the legisla
ture of his state and asked for a Job as
doortendcr.
"Find a door without a doortender and
you can have it," were the big man's
Instructions.
The worker looked around for several
days and then reported.
"J can't find a door without plenty of
d ooi tenders."
"No door?"
"Nary door. Guess I'll go home."
"Wait a bit. You've been a good party
winker. I'll have a door cut for you.
Drawn for
tfiAt CH'F. see TMAT JOME OF OUR'loin .!
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yjLESi.y
Abolition of
By REV
Aonit 2, IT SO.
Feudalism, after He grinding reign of
a thousand years, was abolished by the
French national assembly 133 years ago
today, August, 3, 1789.
It Is no wonder
that the French
revolution has such
n mighty hold upon
the Imagination and
affection of man
kindno wonder that
despite the terrible
excesses into which
It finally drifted. It
still appeals so suc
cessfully to the sym
pathy and admiration
of lovers of humanity
the world over.
There Is something simply bewitching
in the French world of 1789. It was full
of hope, full of enthusiasm, almost In
toxicated with that most beautiful of all
the sentiments that cen stir the human
heart faith in the victory ef right over
wrong; and above It all shone the child
like naturalriess and simplicity which
seemed to say, "It's all right now the
reign of wrong is over from now on jus
tice will rule the world."
All this divine hopefulness, this holy
expectancy, hud Its voice in the famous
national assembly . with Its 1.231 picked
representatives of the rea'm, looking Into
one another's eye? and planning .to wipe
out' all human Industry, .by simply de
creeing that It should no longer exist!
And so the blessed optimists votod.
unanimously, that "the feudal system
be utterly abolished!"
Feudalism! What a condition that woid
brings to mind. In the France of 17R9
the aristocrats of church and stat?, num
bering some 300,000 souls, owned, alony
with tho head aristocrat of all. the king,
quite two-thirds of the soil of France...,
Elimination
By ELBERT
"1 cannot beg and to dig ' I am
ashamed," said the college-bred prodigal
as he asked for a hand-me-out.
If one wants to get a little glimpse of
the way the times
are changing, plea?
make note of the
fact that the geji-.
era! government in
Spain has recently
passed a law making
begging on the, pub
lic streets a misde
meanor. Any individual so
begging Is liable to
arrest with a fine
from SI to H0. For
second offense Im
priFonment is pro
vided, without the
privilege of paying
a fine. Third of
fenders are liable to
be sent to prison
for the rest of their
natural lives.
AH a-down the
centuries men have
been urged to give to the poor, and we
have always taken the view that poverty
was a virtue and riches a disgrace-that
poor men were good and rich men bad.
When wealth was only obtainable by
robbery, this view of things had a certain
basis in fact. But wealth obtained by
rendering a service to humanity is a
thing of which to be Justly proud.
The parable of Dlvos and Lazarus has
gotten a firm grip on the Imagination.
Lazarus In heaven and Dives in hell is a
particularly pleasing proposition for the
great family of Lascrus.
The only way to help people Is .to give
them a chance to help themselves. That
is all anyone should ask for-opportunity.
Giving to the poor Is lending to the devil.
Money earned means manhood. Money
gained by an appeal to sympathy is
tainted and it stains the toul of him
who gets it.
Now when things ate coming around. to
where most everybody owns a home who
really wants to, we are getting a new
focus.
Italy and Spain are the homes of beg
gardom. But now Spain penalizes beg
gary and Italy is Introducing the Monte
sorrl system of education, which means
eventually earning your living;' not merely
securing it.
The church hss always cast a mantle
of sympathy around, the . sick, the lame,
the decrepit, the unfit and the poverty
stricken.
Scientific sociology with Its high power
lens shows us In the distance an Ideal
world Poverty will be done away with,
disease eliminated, crime abolished.
Self sacrifice, abnegation, affected hu
mility are all more or less forms of
hypocrisy. Indiscriminate giving pauper-,
C
1
f e
The Bee by Tad
Feudalism
THOMAS B. GREGORY.
The 25,000,080 of people, owned after. aJ
fashion, tho remaining one-third. But the'
lay and ecclesiastical nobility did nothing''
tonard the support of the nation, with'
the Inevitable result that the taxes all
came from the third of the soli that be
longed to the people. . .
In other words, the people were slmply" -the
slaves of the aristocracy-its chattels
the dumb, helpless pawns with which it '
played its game of greed, power anT
enjoyment. '
For thirty generations that sort of thintf
has held sway In France, changing ltsf
form now and then, but holding Its sub'T
stance, and evermore proceeding upon that
rule that the common people had n.'
rights that the "nobility" was baund to
respect. '
Well, when King Louis and his hench i
men, thinking to Inveigle tho peoplai
Into providing the money that was so,
much needed, called tho national s-t
sembly together on that ever memorable!.
May day of the year 1789 they did not
know that they were inviting the light
nings which were to blast their whol .
Infernal system of oppression and pave,
the way for the coming of a world-wide f
democracy, with Its ultimate Justice for..,
all men. v,
Notice the makeup of the national ssr,
sembly Ml representatives of the third,
estate, or people; 285 of the nobility; and.,
90S of tha clergy, giving the people s,
clear majority of sixty-eight 'votes as.
against the combined ' opposition And.,
the 661 rose up as one. man and voted
to abolish the cursed thing that had held;
them down so long!
Of course, that glorious vote did not.'
kill feudalism, but It was its notl.ee to',
Quiet, und from that day to thin the op
presHion of man by man has been grow-
Ing less,, ""
A1J, honor to the vote of fhe national'
assembly of August 2, 17S9. . , ' '
of the Beggar
-J
RTBBARJ)
le. Enlightened self interest gives free-i
dom.
We have lived in two worlds at a time. '
The earth has been forsuken In order thati;1
we might gain the good will of the skies. '
As Abdul Baha says, "Man must be con-' .
ciliated to man not God to man."1 God :
loves men who love each other, simply "
because no other kind are lovable.
Begging Is a bad business. The more
the beggur succeeds the worse off he Is.
J Beggars breed beggars, and thus make '
beggaidoni perpetual. Spain Is -right-'
begging must be made disgraceful.-
It would be almost unkind and indell-'
csta to call attention to the fact that
this was one of the chief pianks in the
platform of Francisco Ferrer. The "mod
ern schools" taught that beggary should
be abolished.
Ferrer was destroyed because he ex--pressed
himself in undiplomatic language,
and was ahead of bin time, But by his
death and through his. death he convinced.;
Spain that he , was fifty-one per cent ',
right. ' .-:
An so now. behold,. Spain, as If to mak?
amends for you can t bring back the,,
dead Is now encouraging the modern" t
school and Inaugurating many of then
Ferrer ideas. V
Francisco Ferrer, having gone swlm-
mlng In the water of Lethe, certain;,
cowled Hons of Mendax, who worked his';
ruin, have stolen his clothes. Aye, verily
In actual truth they bave divided hi?';
raiment among them, and for his vestura
they have cast lots. i;
Thus does the world move. Galileo was'
right In that remark. "It stands still, all?'
rlght-aber nicht!" Ej
Let us hope that. Galileo. ColumbusD
Copernicus, Bruno, John Brown anii'
Francisco Ferrer can get together these?.'
days at a round table-In Vafhalhj and?,
talk It over, and with Walt Whitman?
say, "Death Is Just as good as life, amlf
u deal luckier." J-
That Is something the world did not?"
kno.v ,-it the time when . martyr flresj)
hovered over Smlthfield Market and when?"
Torquemada drove the Jews from Spain ;
ine typewriter is greater than the"
sword, and it is good to know that evenii
the Spanish hidalgos acknowledge it.:
Amen and amen! '
, , S:
Undesirable- Impression. .
"So you see no future-for socialism?"-'
"None, whatever." replied Senator Sorg-5-'
hum; "at least, not In my part of th5t
country. As soon as you talk to those!
peoplf about a general distribution oft
wealth they take It for granted that you;
haven't any worth noticing and shake-'
you." Was.Vngton Star. t:
i
The Motive. &
"So he believes that nearly all pres-:
ent-day reformers are acuated by selfishfi
motives?".,
"yes, he even Insists that a bald-headed:,
man started the ewat-the-fly crusade."? '
Buffalo Express. ' .