Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1910)
I 3 IHlUMOffisi rr THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1910. i; SIDELIGHTS ALONG WASHINGTON BYWAYS A group of eminent antiquarian were holding down the front steps of the Whit House office section when Secretary of Ag riculture Wilson was seen approaching. "The permanent secretary of agriculture," observed Mr. Brownlow of Tennessee. "No, ha Isn't a permanent official," in listed Mr. Austin of Tennessee, "he could be removed, so far as concerns anything In the constitution. lie simply happens to have attached himself to the position In such fashion that nobody knows how to detach him." "All wrong," protested Mr. HardwlcK of Georgia. "lie's the Only One; he has to be Bur TM t0WVJ secretary of agriculture because nobody else ever had a chance to learn how to do It, and the Job must go on. It will go on forever, and he will always be secretary, The only way to Judge the future la by the past " "Everybody's mistaken," Interjected Judge Hlnshaw of Nebraska. "Uncle Jim wasn't always secretary, and Isn't the only person who ever was secretary." Whereat there was loud protest. Every body waa certain that "Tama Jim" was born secretary and that there never was any secretary till he was born into the position, 1 By this time the venerable, but straight, talwart and sturdy secretary was ap proaching within hailing distance, and he was called upon to arbitrate. "Mr. Secretary, we've been having a dis cission about your tenure of office. Can you tell when you began to be secretary?-' "To tell the truth, gentlemen, I don't Just recollect; some time back, though." "Were you ever anything else than sec retary V "I have a recollection of being several other things a representative, a railroad commissioner and a legislator, out In Iowa. Also, X was blamed good farmer." "Do you consider yourself the permanent secretary of agriculture?" "Tamma Jim" grinned broadly and Stalked Inside the White House, but as he walked in he remarked over his shoulder: "No, I've got past that. I'm the hered itary secretary." They used to be"kept trained right down to the minute at the White House, but now they are all getting fat. Doubtlas It is out of delicate consldera- Flavor of Browned Meat or Fat. , Next to the unchanged flavor of the meat itself eamea the flavor which is aeoured by browning the meat fat. The outside llees of roast meat have this browned flavor in marked degree. Except In the case of roasts, browning for flavor Is us ually accomplished by heating the meat In a frying pan in fat which has been tried out of pork or In suet or butter. Care hould be taken that the fat Is not scorched. The chief reason for the bad opinion In whloh fried food Is held by many la that It almost always means eating burned fat. Whan fat Is heated too high it splits up Into fatty aelds and glycerin, and from glycerin Js formed a substance (acrolein) which has a very Irritating effect upon the mucous membrane. All will recall that the fumes of scorched fat make the eyes water. It Is not surprising that such a substance. If taken Into the stomach, should cause digestive disturbance. Fat In itself Is a very valuable food, and the Objection to i fried foods because they may be fat seems Illogical. If they supply burned fat there Is a good reason for suspicion. Many house keeper cook bacon In the oven on a wire broiler over a pan and believe it more wholesome than fried, bacon. The reason, rcsh Vegetables arid Drinking Water "Eat plenty of. fresh vegetables, drink water whether you want it or not, and substitute fish and eggs for meat, and your complexion will repay the change of diet by being fresher and of better color," declared a dletarlan. Bptnach, fresh beet tops and any other green might be eaten every day with ben efit to the skin, for they are filled with phosphate and other properties that act favorably on the system, by clearing the blood. This, Indeed,- Is a characteristic of all fresh green vegetables.- and la one rea son of the beneficial effect of green salads, such as lettuce, escsrole, romalne, etc. Another reason salads are healthful la the nourishing properties of olive oil, It being understood that all uncooked greens shall be eaten with French dressing, consisting of oil. vinegar, pepper and salt, with what ever savories on likes. i Meat more than one a day In eummer 1 mistake, for It overheats the blood and U too heavy to be properly assimilated, xcept In eold weather, when vitality Is depleted. There are physicians who do not permit certain persons to eat any red meats, by which are meant beef and mut ton. Veal, lamb, fish and eggs are nour ishing and poultry 1 Highly desirable In summer. Tomatoes and strawberries are especially good for all who. can digest them. There ar om person who are poisoned by them, owing to the acids contained. These earns acids are beneficial to system with which they agree. Rhubarb Is a fruit that should be eaten dally, and la also wholesome for children. Ahe great benefit derived from water la tOrly through the fact of Its being stimulating to the intestine a well as parrying oft Impurities that otherwise would remain to make their way out through th akin, More thaa en serious I 1 in -) -a tlon for the example set by President Taft, who with all the worries of his Job and he takes It as seriously as any man need falls persistently to lose any flesh. Travel, overwork, loss of sleep, exercise nothing affects him. He hasn't lost any flesh since, during the hard weeks of the 1906 campaign, he worked off a few pounds, which returned as soon as election was over. Under Roosevelt the secret service men at the presidential establishment were all kept In the pink cf condition by the neces sity of walking a few miles In snow or rain at any tlma of day or night They're different now. They don't walk; they ride motorcycles on the flanks of the presi dential automobile; and the result Is that "Jimmle" Sloan and "Dick" Jervla, the nationally known secret service guards about the executive offices, are both put ting on so much flesh that they are wor ried abouf it. Jervls confesses to 204 pounds, which la an Indeterminate amount more than he ever possessed before. It's the same way all over the place. Assistant Secretary Latta used to be very tall which h still la and very slim which he Isn't any more. He is getting, on the other hund, to be a delightfully uphol stered young man, and it really bocomes him, too. They say he is twenty-five pounds to the good under the new and leas strenuous regime, but he doesn't admit all of it Even Rudolph Forster, who has been sub-secretary under three or four presl- dents and secretaries, and wrho knows the routine of White House affairs better than any other man living, has been perking up In the matter of avoirdupois. Forster was one of the favorite stenographers of Presi dent Roosevelt, who used to dictate to him from midnight till 3 a. m.. on occasion and then apologixe for having to stop to sleep a few hours. It didn't hurt Mr. Roosevelt, but It made Forster about as fat a a Kansas cornstalk. Latterly that sort of exercise has been cut out and Mr. Forster is fattening up until It Is believed his oross-section will shortly be easily visible to the naked eye. )''. In faot,' everybody around the White House is getting fat, with William Pan ncll, the negro doorkeepor at the execu tive door, leading all the Vest. Pannell Is now an oblate spheroid. of course, Is that thus cooked In the oven there is less chance for the bacon becoming Impregnated with burned fat. Where fried salt pork is much used good cooks know that It must not be eooked over a very hot fire, even if they have never heard of the chemistry of burned fat. The recipe for bean pot roast and other similar recipes may be varied by browning the meat or part of It before covering with water. This results in keeping soma of the natural flavoring within the meat itself and allowing less to go into the gravy. The flavor of veal can be very greatly Improved in this way. Plenty of Will Clear Complexion case of facial pimples might be cured if three pints of water were drunk dally, not with the rreals, but between them. Liquid with -food dilutes the gastrlo Juices and renders food less nourishing. Taken half an hour after meals or not later than halt an hour before It does not Interfere with digestion and can only be beneficial. MARGARET M1XTER. (r Prattle of the Youngsters .1) Teaoher Now, boys, here's a little ex ample In mental arithmetic. How old would a person be who was born In 1875? Pupil please, teacher, waa u a man or a woman? - "Don't you know that little boy who wear don't go to heaven?" "That's all right, mister. I d rather be with pa, anyhow," The late Bishop Foss, at a dinner at bis Arch street residence In Philadelphia, talked In an Interesting way one evening of children' prayers. "That a atudy of evil In novel or play teaches us to avoid evil." be said. "Is a very doubtful theory. A Bala mother told her llltl boy one day of the children of Israel and their worship of the golden calf, and the next day she found the urchin In the stublo praying to bis pony. "A little girl waa bidden to return thank In her prayer for the healthy birth of a baby brother. She did o, concluding the prayer reproachfully with: 'But, Lord, we needed a motor car far more.' e -mmm i mm i ' r ifjQ3ii. .- if Persistent Advertising la tha Road to Big Returns, i ii u h VELLflllAITA LITTLE VHILE P. -75 i sSjJKOTJy your T Ov I MONEY FOR J Aj" RtEftLCf SHOULD sffp.- k . Tia that eevrr. cggjSS? but.weu.iU COPYRIGHT. 1810. BY THE Brightside and By LAFAYETTE PARKS. "Brooklyn high school girls are indignant because the Board of Education baa ordered them to dispense with the more violent forms of outdoor exeroise," Brlghtslde ob serves, while his omnlsoient offspring toys with the always ready "coffin nail." 'Back to the knitting needles for the skirts," approves Son. Hurdle racing Is one of the eports they must give up," continues Father, "and the young women seem quite put out about It" "If they must have that kind of exercise," remarks Son, "little bright eyes might do a few hurdle stunts in the flat at home wiping the dust off the furniture. I guess their mothers wouldn't put the ban on any thing like that." 'The pupils have issued a statement in which they afsert they have a right to exercise as they wish," Father resumes. They contend that skipping rope In the open air Is a valuable health aid," 1 wonder If any of 'em ever tried skip ping about the kitchen at home, getting the dishes washed before their mothers could stop them?" mused Son. "The chances are that most of those high school dames would rather skip down the fire escape and beat for the campus than to get caught trying to do any real work that might save mother slavish toll." "High Jumping Is also barred." Father notes from the list of "Don'ts." "They can always Jump up hanging wash out on the Una in the back yard If they feel they can't get along without that brand of exercise," suggests Son. "I'd be willing to lay odds that their mothers won't have to get out any injunction to keep 'em away from the line." , Some Interesting Items for the Women Folks Clearly women are, to a certain extent responsible for their looks, and tha line of defence should Involve clear notions of bodily hygiene, four, rest, sleep, bathing, care of the skin, teeth, hair and clothing, say a writer In a contemporary. "But," I can Imagine the answer, "do I not spend pounds on skin preservatives and hair washes? Do I not etay in bed ten hours and can eat anything?" Well, staying In bed too long Is not rest; it Is Isslness, and leads to physical and mental stagnation. Eating "anythlng'Jnay Imply overeating. It la no use to put cosmetics on th face nd indigestible food Into the stomach; no use to pin one's faith in eye drops and to deprive th brain of Intellectual food; no use to attend physical culture classes and to wear tight stays and shoes afterward, j no us to try anti-obesity cure (many of them dangerous) and saunter around shop windows or the park In place of taking real exercise; peedless even th hundred and one eleotro masssge treatments when the same effects could be' produced by the more rational stimulus. Woman's Lit. "Th self-polse 2of real value is that gained in the midst of others, that aelf coritro! won amidst trials and temptations that make It possible In th stir and pres sure of common life to live well." Ada May Krecker in Woman' Life. Because some on else has borrowed your pet book that you have hardly had time generous spirit by lending it to a friend of lo read yourself, and then has shown her her own, who has passed It further, so that by tha time It gets back to you it has lost the first sweet freshness that helped make It dear to you, is really no reason why you should borrow your friend's best cut glass dish and send It back to her with a crack in it or a chip out of It. Woman's Life. Blessed is th man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving us wordy evi dence of the fact A women, we should not quarrel with our horUon, nor should we shrewlshly ar- NEW YORK EVENINQ TEi-EQRAMJNEW YORK HEIUUt His Boy THEY MIGHT DO A ftW fllfcou Stunts at hokk -wim THE WiT OFF THE, FUfiWrTUOE,.. "Putting the shot Is another of the tabooed athletics," goes on Father. "An Iron pot for boiling murphies la about the weight of a shot," says Son, "and If the girl get Just too excited about being deprived of that special sport, they might try Juggling a few pots over the kitchen range. This is a combination of athletics and domestic that no Board of Education ralgn poor man because he has civilised us at his expense. We must realise simply that emotionally we arc centuries ahead of him, and that we shall have to wait patiently for him to grow up and meantime moderate our steps to his, Just as we do when we take the baby out for an airing. Woman's Life. Colored apron for wear when sewing or presiding at th tea table or over the chaf ing dish are the latest fad among girls and young matrons. These aprons are made from fine hand kerchief linen, though dainty lawn would be as pretty. The shape of the aprons la round or pointed, With bib to match, ribbons tying in the back. The front is In panel effect, outlined with white net fooling- run with a thread of silk floss In simple decorative stitch the color of the apron. The trill Is of the same color, with a row of narrow footing set in above the hem. This frill trims all edges. The apron Is worn over a white frock or one of Its own color. I am so glad to see a change In the ma terials selected for loose summer coverings for furniture. The pale tans and grays that have concealed or protected, a th casa may be, chair and sofas for a num ber of year may have the quality of cool. Hess to recommend them, but they were certainly depressing. Now tt Is the fashion to make the slip covers Of pretty cretonnes, not necessarily light, but In cool looking greens and browns, soft blues and dull pinks, f hese are much prettier than the linen and will laM an entire summer without : a visit to th laundry. A simple portfolio make a welcome gift to a friend who will travel this summer. In a portfolio all that is necessary are two pieces of cardboard th desired else. These can be covered with art eanvaa and lined with sateen In th same color. Th two materials are neatly overhanded all around th edge, and th hinge la of BY ED. 6RINHAM CO . M Rights Reserved, "Girl Athletes as Dish Washers," Their Latest Tabloid Sketch. J would dare butt in on. Us men, you know must have our three big eats per day." "Foot races are limited to fifty yards In length for the young students," reads Father. "The dames are not much on tha sprint, anyway," surmises Son. "unless they are on the way to an Ice cream eoda fountain. Then they're likely to break all ehont dis tance records. For a 5 cent drink of the sweet suds little goo-goo eyes will put more ground behind tier in a minute than a professional sprinter could In a week." "The girls are permitted to throw basket balls,'.' Father avers. "That ought to soften the blo.w some," Is 8on's belief. "They can keep in practice for the time when hubby la due to dodge flatlrona, rolling pin and other brlo-a-brao." "A warning has also been sent out against tha Marathon danca craze, which seams to have swept over the oountry," Father puts In, 'I am rather In favor of dancing for girls, as I believe it helps to make them more graoeful." 'Some of these giddy little waltsers will glide around a danca hall for ten hours and say they are not tired," Son declares. "If they had to dance around the dining room at borne with broom, chiming up the crumbs, they'd be ready to drop In ten minutes. Even a leather medal wouldn't keep 'em on the Job." "Somebody will have to perform the do mestic duties," Father asserts. "It won't be tti girl with athletic prise medal pinned all over the front of her shirt waist If she can pass the buck to dear mamma," eonoludes Son. I (Copyright, 1910, by the N. Y. Herald Co.) ribbon. One of the covers may be decorated with a monogram It wished. Two ribbon passed around the portfolio are tied to keep the contents secure. A single pansy for "thoughts" worked on gray eanvaa is effective. Such a receptacle will be useful for preserving any prints or drawings that may be bought during travels. A smart looking and practical acoesory to a woman's toilet Is the latest model shell hair pins, Th braids worn around the head at prs ant are so thick and heavy that even large square-headed pin tall in their mission, that is, to be both useful and ornamental. If set in securely it beauty is frequently lost, and If placed in an outsandlng posl tlon, use is sacrificed to beauty. Thus the reason for new pins that combine utility with beauty. This pin is shaped like the average large square-headed pin, but th Improvement lies In its being turned back at tha head tor an inch or mora, thus making th pin shorter. This turned back portion lie directly on the braid, displaying Itself. The prices rang from 75 cents upward for a single pin. Two are considered necessary to bold a heavy braid, Another novelty In bair ornaments Is the barert and aid comb of tortoise shell decorated with a row of three red rooster. The effect may be described as more unique than elegant, still, I suppose women will wear them Just as long as th eharv tecler fad exists. The Suesln silks inak Beautiful gradua tlon frocks and simple wedding gowns. Though light and silky looking-, they wear bettor than China Uk, by reason of the Interweaving of a few strands of Egyptian cotton. Not that this introduc tion Interferes with the lustre of the silk, for the outer thread Is of pure silk and th fabrlo has th appearance of being all silk. . In addition to black and whit, there are about forty color in different tone. This silk costs 7H cent a yard, and la twenty seven Inches wide. " (uvht a all department stole r- Things You Want to Th open air performance of "A You Like It" on th Whit House grounds In Washington will mark another great step In the revival of pageantry. This enter tainment, given under the patronage of Mrs. Taft, will attract special attention to out-of-doors festivals because It will be the first performance ver given within the limit of the Whit House grounds at night. The remarkabl revival of pagean try, both In England and America, Is one of the most Interesting evolutions of en tertainment In modern times. Tills ancient form of procession, tableau and symbolic depiction of historical and religious event has dropped Into almost entire disuse un til within the last five years. When th little village of Sherborn, Eng land, decided In 1905 to enact Its eleven centuries ot growth the Idea was looked upon more with derision than Intereet, but the entirely creditable manner In which that community's M0 townspeople enacted the whole history of England from the time ot Alfred the Great caused the Britishers to awaken suddenly to tha fact that here was a form of education and patriotic entertainment which had been allowed to fall Into disuse without reason. Immediately ther was a great revival. The town of Oxford followed the example of Sherborn with a great pageant which lasted six days, th chief events naturally being in connetion with the history of the university. Then the ancient town of Bury St. Edmunds presented Its past In a procession In which 4,000 performers took part, and more than 1,500 years passed In review before th spectators In two and a half hours ot kaleidoscopic color. Th great oelabratlon Is remembered by all readers, as well a that at old Chelsea. Naturally on would expect to find that the revival ot pageantry had taken a Stronger hold upon the British than upon th American mind, because our history is so recent as to preclude any very ex tended parades. But such Is not th case. Indeed America may be said to have set the pace tor England. The first great pageant on the American oohtlnent waa that given In Boston, Mass., June 6 and 8, 1906, when the history ot education was depicted in a most remark able series of tableaux and processions In which hundreds of performers took part. The pictures Of the different epochs In the history ot the advance of civilisation wer presented with a brilliancy of color and accuracy ot detail which sat a standard tor the world. Closely following this came the great tercentenary celebration of the founding pt the city of Quebec. Trie pageants took place on the historic heights ot the city where many of the most stirring episodes In th history of the American continent have taken place. Then Evanston, III., came forward with a pageant of the great middle west. Philadelphia told the his tory of th American people in th pomp and panoply of pagentry when it 5th anniversary waa celebrated with 6,000 people taking part And last fall New York celebrated the anniversary of Fulton and Hudson in a similarly elaborate fashion. A a sort of forerunner to the popular pageants ot the day there was held in Cornish, New Hampshire, in th summer of 1905 a celebration which In point ot artistic merit perhaps eclipsed anything of the kind ever undertaken before or since in the United States. It was a masque given in honor of th great sculptor, Augustus Satnt-Oaudens, in which som eventy promlnent artists took part. The masque was given on June evening in th grove on the estate ot the sculptor, A symphony orchestra wa hidden behind a pin thicket. Two giant pine trees marked the limit ot stag and erved to hold the great green curtain in place. The masque represented th determination of Jupiter to resign as ruler ot Olympus, and when he announced his Intention to the assembled lesser gods a great bowl was presented to him and he drew from It the nam ot Augustus Saint Qaudens, who was thereupon presented with the token and given command over the assembled gods of tha world. From one Of th current accounts of the cele brations is taken this vivid recital of the procession ot the gods and goddesses: 'First, came Pluto in black and gold and purple; then Neptune and Amphitrlta, with their attendant nereld in sea-green and blue; Venus and her bodyguard in varying shade of tender rose; Plana and her nymphs in white and silver and pale blue; th Wood-Gods in green and dun and yellow; Apollo and the Muses In white and gold grouping themselves about the altar pf Ceres, who was clad in yellow and crowned with corn; Pan gilded all over and exactly imitating an archaio Oreek statue; Mar a gigantic figure in blood red drap erle and armor, - and last Chiron, th cen taur, frankly comlo, at the head of a band of wildly sportive children half clad, rep resenting fauns and satyrs and sprites of the earth and air." Last summer tha old England town of Selected Short Stories REVENUE PRODUCERS. Knicker The magasine are charged with causing a postal deficit. Bocker But think of the stamp sold tor all the poems sent to them. HER NAME FOR HIM. "Mother." said a little girl who Is vry apt at pamlng things to suit herself, as th tlwsboy on th train entered tn car with a large basket of fruit on hi houl fler, "her come th grocery-brakesman." THE GENTLE GAME. Knlcker-Dld he set foot wher man paver trod before T Bocker Yes, h kicked another player on tb skull. COULDN'T PLAY IT ON THE HARP. In a Chambers street crosstown horse car nw conductor did om rough work the other day in an ffort to add to his day's wage. An Italian and an Irishman wr sitting beflld ach other, and th conductor held back th chang when the Italian gave him a dim from which to tak th t cent far. The Irishman also presented a dime, and th conductor moved on with out sivlna- him change. "Bay." called th Irishman loud enough for all In h cr to hear, "glmm m nickel change. Ye can play that on the organ, but y can't play It on the harp. UNDER THE NEW RULING. Inspector Ar these cigar for your own uT Fair Passenger Certainly;- I got them to kill th bug la th conservatory, The Revival of rHgeantrv, Gloucester gsve a pageant ot remarkabli artistic beauty. It took the form of at acted drama and wa called 'Th Canter bury Pilgrims." One of th most mag nificent out-door performances ever glvei In America was ' that which took place la the stadium at Harvard last June, when Maude Adams, assisted by 1,600 performers, all of the principals being professional actors, presented Schiller's "Joan Ot Arc." Fully 16.000 people witnessed th perform ance, and every seat In tha stadium wai sold many days before the pageant wai enacted. This summer th center ot out door activity will b th Far West Tw notable performances will be Msrgaref Anglln's presentation ot the Greek tragedy, "Antigone," at Berkeley, Cal., and Maud Adams' performance ot "As You Like It," also In the open air. California is accustomed . to spectacular open air performances, but only to a lim ited circle of spectator. In fart, th easl might have gone to th Callfornlana ntort than thirty years ago to learn how t clbrate in th open. Th Bohemias club' "high Jinks" in the redwood forests hav been an established institution for three decades. Th Bohemian club Is com. posod of about 1.000 prominent San Fran cisco citisen who each year go to tho red. wood forests to Indulge In revels In he open. No better Idea of th character o one of these revels can be given than to, quote the description of Percy MacKaye, the poet who wrote ot tha masque "Sons of Baldur"; "After three magical dawns, throe mya terlous moons and three divine midnights, spent in fellowship with the noble pagaq brotherhood of that natural monastery, steeped In the sylvan seclusion of 3,004 years, I found myself by moonlight seated between two companions on one of th ancient logs that form the seat of th forest auditorium, faolng tha oanyon hill side which formed th stage. Above ut) the Interminable tree boles touched th stars. Around us, robed and cowled Ilk ourselves, In red and black, huddled th unbelievable audleno. Before us from th glow-work lights of a pit rose the prelusive maglo of violins. Slowly then, as tha over, ture waned, out of the moon-flecked dark. ness waxed an Imaginary world. Ot plot or theme or episode I was only halt awara, held by a grandeur that arinDod th throat and stung the spirit by Its keeq beauty. At times, almost Intolerably, X felt the Impulse to put my brow to thj earth Ilka an aboriginal. I remember tha for an Instant some 800 feet In mldalr-a between the giant tree trunks, a spirit of rose-hued fire appeared suddenly and as spirit spoke to those on the stage beneath. I remember again descending as on view less rounds of a ladder let down from .soma heaven of William Blake little children fluttering white In rhythmic chin' onfl choir. And again, the death of p 'i-lnr his soul as it flashed skyward t:: t'to sequoia tops with silver flame. l.u . to convey a sense of HI Impossible!" Pageantry has been fitly characterized as "poetry for the masses." It presents in symbolic form Incidents or Ideas as tha case may be, appealing to th Imagination through the senses. This partloular form; of celebration dates from the earliest tlmq. The Greeks were fond of It, and th triumphal return of Rome's conquering; heroes, leading in their train the captive and tho boooty of their successful warfare, wer' nothing more or less thnn martial pageants depicting the battle and the con quest. The great pageant on the "Field of the Cloth of Gold," when the French and the English monarchs embraced esch 4 'ier In a great show of outward affectum was probably th most gorgeous event of the kind aver held. Dickens In writing ot It describes how the whit wine and the red flowed like weter from fountains, and that the warlike hosts of th two grand mon archs gave themselves over to the celebra tion of the pledges of peace. V The fact that pageantry waa allowed to become one of the "lost arts," so to apeak, for a number of years does not mean that such celebrations are apt to drop out of fashion again In th near future. On th contrary, they seem to have coma to stay and no surer guarantee of thla can be found than the fact that they hav proved to be great business successes. No form of advertising has been found so effeotlvft for cities a great pageant. Th people flock to the celebrations from all part ol the country and the enactment of histori cal, eduoatlonal or symbolic scenes la a matter of nation wide comment receiving the Indorsement of educators, civic bene factors and clergy. In future no exposi tion will be considered a success unlesg some vast pageant Is given to symbollsg and typify the event. Th field for nov elty, invention and artistic effect la pageant is unlimited, and the planning of such an event Is a task worthy of thai moat inventive mind and th most artlstlo perception. ' Br BmESEBIO J. HAKXsT. Tomorrow Prise right legislation, i r Daily Health Hint v J A bitter taste in the mouth upon awaken ing In the ' morning may be cured by a small dose of nux vomica taken in water or In pellet form. LIGHT ON THE SUBJECT 7& "I gyeu you see things in dif, fercnt light, young man, since you were married." "I ought to. - Among our wed ding presents were fifteen brael Know