V) X if V ? 1 tft .7 J I s' r 1 t i i SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT J J ) our formticeiu tHMTi- . $a abct Te ki,EE55 J7' ti II &M 111111 SSfl 'i P 11 v illll fs . ; ; 1 : : L- . J lff?.r.- -.y: y.-t A Deformity The Woman Who Wears a Make Strong Men Quail By FRANCES L. GARSIDE. Copyright, 1911, National Newe Association. Occasionally a man reachca the end of his daya who had devoted hi life from childhood to euch frivolous purposes and trifling vanities that the only creditable thing that may be said of him when the end comes Is that at least he was never tattooed. It la the only folly that escaped him, and this one folly less gives him little poet-mortem luster for the reason that the tattoo man la rarely met. Had he stood behind a counter In men's clothing store and handed out a bright assortment of tattoo designs with ties and gloves; had hs lain In wait In public baths ready to tattoo a man's breast with a picture of his sweetheart while he waits, not so many men could claim even this one distinction. For this reason, perhaps, men should have more charity for the woman vwho puts on a veil that gives her face a fashionable tattoo designs. The beguil ing clerk who sells veils Is met a dosen times a. week, and the woman, being tempted so often, falls. The begullllng clerk points out that the spider design is the latest fashion, or that madame would look -well with a crocodile across her nose, and madame buys,- puts on the veil, and, walks the streets, a sight to make strong men Jua.il and children scream. . Oculists have protested that veils with big polka dots and blotches, with In sects obstructing the vision, are a menace to the eyesight, and the people who are compelled to sit opposite this fashionable form of refined tattoo In street cars pro test that such deformities have Injurious effect on their eyes and nerves and sense of harmony, but the woman who has a veil with pattern of caterpillars puts The Manicure Lady "Ain't you never coming back to your work regular any more?" asked the Head Barber, as the Manicure Lady swspt In, sabled and sweet. " - "You ain't forgot my Inheritance, have you. George?" she inquired archly. "You don't suppose that a girl which has tolled as many years as what I have la going to make herself one of them slaves of the wheel of labor, or whatever It was Mister Mark ham called them. The way thing are now, when I want to work, I work, and when I want to lay off and have a good time, that's me,. Oee, George, it's great to be able to turn up your nore at the whole works. "I used to be different. George, before I fell heir to this estate of which I have told you of. In them days I used to turn a shade paler every time the boss came in the room, and I was even that "W1LFRED SAYS RICHES AIN'T timid I used to stand for some of your cruel sentences which to me you did say. Now, things Ls chsnged about the place. "Brother Wilfred used to tell me that riches wasn't anything worth mentioning. Wilfred, never had any, so I thought he ought to be an authority on poverty, and as I never had any either at that time I didn't feel like contradicting brother. But now I know better. I have tasted wealth, George, and from now on finger nails must be second In the betting, as all you gambling barbers say." "You ought to get around here more regular, though," persisted the Head Bar ber. "If you don't want to work at all, why don't you come right out and say so, to the eld gent ran give the Job to some poor manicure girl that doesn't have any fortune? (Some of these days the old iklp per will tell you to fold up your orange Hick and clors and silently steal away, he .ree' 11 of Fashion Bug - Woven Veil is a Sight to and Children Scream. it on, taking pride In her appearance, and has 'no thought of what her grief, and suffering Would be If the Lord had marked her face that way. She puts on her veil in such a fashion that her eyes are hidden by the head and tall of a snake, with Its body bridging her nose; or It msy be that che didn't like the snake design, and when she opens her mouth to laugh the horrified observer notices a big spider across her teeth. Sometimes there la a string of bees flying out of one ear across her face and into the other ear, giving her head the appearance of a bee hive, and often she looks as if the tattoo man had done butterflies In black ink all . over her countenance. It will come to pass some day that some near-sighted man will give a woman a heavy slap on the cheek, and his de fense will be that he saw a venomous spider there, and when the wise statis ticians have reached this deformity of fashion, whch has so far escaped them, they will discover that a certain percen tage of delirium tremens Is caused by men whose nervous systems are wrecked be seeing bugs and flahworms and alli gators crawling across their wives' faces, v If there were any attractiveness in the style of a bug-woven veil, there would be some excuse for a woman wearing it, for it Is a pleasing trait In every woman to want to look her best, but it Is a style that Is hideous, deforming and In jurious. The woman who wears auch a veil can not sniff with scorn at the man who la tattoed. He, at least, doesn't wear this token of a weak intellect on his face. J like them Arabs that Mister Whlttler spoke about In Whlttler's "Lady of the Lake." The Manicure Lady stopped smiling here, and began doing a little deep think lng. "Maybe you are right, George." she said, finally. "I guess labor is the only noble thing after all. As Joe Blow, the bookmaker, was saying in here the other night, since the days of racing is no more, labor Is the most noble thing In the world, only, as Joe aays, he ain't no nobleman. "Well, George, I am here for a good long run now, and here I am going to stay. When I was abroad last month I brought back some new ideas about trim ming nails, etc., and I am going to be the talk of Broadway. Here are some of the new rules, George: "Dgn't talk to your gentleman custom- WORTH MENTIONING.' era. They will . talk enough. "Don't ever make pointed tips on the nails of an ill-natured woman, fhe may have a husband who hates to be scratched. "Don't pay any attention to j anything whispered In your ear by an undergrad uate. Make allowances for them and, also, for their allowances." "Jt sounds like good logic, most of it," admitted the Head Barber, "but the thing I tipped you off to a minute ago still goes the way it lays, kiddo. I want you to get around here more regular." "You want me to get around here?" snorted the Manicure Lady. "When you talk that way to me. George, you must think I'm pretty dull." "I should say not," declared the Head Barber. "You're the only bright girl in the shop." "me yaga z, i rp p)a Officer, Instruct THB. fOOHAtTOf JTR-OUJiMfl-V? AtVlENP.DOVrr A,N oyT HE ft PA.U AND MirriHO-OTHE-R. XTCTPEP 3Aqt A I IT to ask woo owe 9oesnort IF you camT GET A rACeliAC CAN OV GUT A CoCHf H CHN Ar ? OFF I CELF.'! N5TuCT VON CqnSmOL TO JUrANVON MC A GEM D ARMS . Meii. t a err aamsto me. dTMSTR pAV A HO KU0 A-T A TO ft A A ' Pbvvtr. OH A &A-sTW VJWAOKM At-1 I H-As. TV DO MOtM i TO MOt-B aa4 TO ats it A Snap THEX 5k ? J9 i T ) Sherlocko the Monk THE BEE: OMAHA, "WEDNESDAY, NOYEMRKK 29.' 1911. tr0-m-0m tsrm-t-m -rr-v-M-.fxfru-u-w-i-i - .-u-M-ir-u-j-i-r-a, an. l -inrLrn. ijxrjvx The Judge Knows a Good Thing 0TT"ftl. ItlL. Kitto.uu Kim AaMcuttoa. Your Constable ITS NOT Trtt tly 'AUllNir A ' wTi THa '0ig. O0R $uT TMt 'AMME '.AfANaa. 'MMtt ON THS OOCBfOGAft. HAr LOST MIS 8u- HS OHW MAO ifstTE: fM VrtUlC TD FfexO lT TWID-V MurvrttX HA. 6UT TXEKE- THC CAODiE piCtcEX? UP A 0AL.U Af40 tOOC1N Cr AT IT lEKO rtiOrtVr ACftoij me Gau- IF YDHM O.TT. CrAviE. HI JUNOAV 4CtfOOt- CLASS A P(SNTFOf b&ifiMfOH. VNHAT VNAS THE. RENA3-0 N I LI. I AiA '.'. tape YOVrtVEgi; OVT 0F-TH6, oven AT ft THS.OO cm Ar t 9ah.CN So home M th OarOi vnA(m oiiMfcV Liinrx to a StiN Anq ,y q I f in THB hax AhO OONT To TV J0 GaTTVeTKiO M0VArO DS3-J.VJICTV f I" 1. THS I (VO MQ"t & A 8 AN A0 JONC (ofe& ,hO th acii to couecr AUN J tCOAb 3iU.l MMi TO &tT Of The Adventure in the Chinese X I MIND, VAT40, 14 LESS. V 5 : W CeEN THAN i ) By Tad AFPTR AN AfiiCMC.. oancKBu-V Hwb MMii ASflOAO 0-0 HCO Bt 'NTOTHe Cl-uO, NoTATH(N6 HAO CrAOCO JSAnsE" O"-0 5TTuE OP vrtnui OLO POKGTR. (sAMstj iAME OCO CUCKtN6 0 pOOUDAl-l-S AtV C.UNKINO OP f(.ASrai.VNAOtrid TMfCXJH the. 5M0KJT UCfN ATMOiPHCTR.. Wli GUrA JpoTTtrO IX E. VLAUE VNHCT-e THC. MCTIV MvtlCACrE- VN Ai SCRWEO KCnoSi TVHs MAMaCr Arsv. CAU.JN6- TM tVAHtCV ON Eft Hu MuitMOHro, ,Tmu THAT CAflMalK MAfct AU CF-Mii GCXTLEM AN TO "??, QBE- A UAPW MOTH I H TO 00 71U- TILL (X 4 i I1V G18 MAUKIt Copyright, N(lol Naws AmocUIIos. Laundry - n - ui ln wwnfnjjJXjurLi-jrunrL When He Sees It The Grip of Ily OAIUIETT A curious question comes from a cor respondent, who gives evidence of pos sessing a good general education, which seems to have been somewhat neglected on the side of physics Inasmuch as the difficulty which pussies him may trouble others, it seems worth while to answer his ques tion. "Millions of tons of ooal," he says, "have been dug out of the earth, and have gone up In smoke, leaving be ll I n d apparently nothing but a meager .residue of ashes. la not thla a direct loss, and is not the earth mlnue the weight of all the coal consumed since coal was mined? But for the reception of tela Inquiry from ao respectable a source I should have regarded It as unnecessary to point out that smoke and gas are as much subject to the control of the earth's gravitation as solid bodies. The products of combustion which rise Into the atmos phere gradually fall back again, because they are specifically heavier than air. To get away from the earth's control they would have to be projected directly up ward with a , velocity of nearly aeven miles per second. If they had that ve locity, and If the resistance of the air New York Ily SAM The cold snap has brought out the fur bearing creatures In large numbers. Their coats are all that could be desired, and that's where it ends with many desired. Hut they show an amailng variety in color, length and fit, and along Main Lane yesterday it looked like a parade from the ark. Belief In the theory that the length of fur Indicates the coming weather has been seriously shaken, Instead of long furs meaning a hard winter, they now mean a fat purse, and scant furs or no furs at all can be safely figured as the result of a had market, or that the old man was on the wmog side when the line formed at the cashier's window, But to see a warm and caressing back ground of fur setting off a pair of pink chaeks and bright blue eyes as car or carriage rolls along the smooth roads, ls a sign that crops or pickings were good for some of the neighbors. There are many different kinds of fur bearing creatures and they show many different kinds of coats. And it la In teresting as well as strange to note the domestic tralta shown by some of theae coata. - ' Out of y SAM O, actor, out of You know the l Would give you work and eke good pay Driving the ash-cart bay? O, actor out of a Job, ! A while and then will come the snow; lias to be moved lad, y'know; Cheering news that eh, BoT WW'PflBi,'f?8Si a Job, say! , B. C. today f W Ait Trts A Jp& UrfoSlP A J O, actor out of a Job, oy! Mi ge 3cL By Tad Gravitation J- 1 8EKVISS. were removed, then they would escape -never to return. Of course, no such velocity la ever lm- ' parted to the smoke and gases arising from combustion. When Vesuvius la In violent eruption it sometimes shoota smoke to a height of six or seven miles, and Krakatoa. In 1SN3 sent clouds of fine dunt perhaps twenty miles high, but the velocity of such particles shot from vol canoes Is small In comparison with what they would have to have In order to throw off the dominion of the. earth's gravitation. Singularly enough, while no cannon and no volcano la powerful enough to over come the earth'a gravitation oompletely, a certain force, of which we are ordi narily entirely unaware, and which acts only upon Infinitesimal particlea of mat-, ter, can do it easily. This ls the force which keeps the molecules of all sub stances In continual vibration. The vel ocity to whloh It gives rise varies from the atomic weight of the aubstance con cerned. In hydrogen the average veloc ity of the flying molecules la nearly aeven and a half miles per second, from which follows the fact that there la no free hydrogen in the earth'a atmosphere. If It was once there it has long ago shot away into space. But the molecules oxygen, nitrogen and water vapor, whoss , velocities are only about two miles pes. second, cannot get away from the earth. All of them, however, could escape from the moon, where a velocity of a mile and a half per second would open the way to freedom, and this, perhaps, is the true reason why the moon has no atmosphere. Nature Notes SMALL, JIU Ground Keeper Mason Peters walked into the Forty-second Street Country club yesterday and areluessly threw his coat on a chair to free himself for an approach to the ham. Brother Peters had Just stepped back with a choice cut of ham carefully balanced when his coat suddenly sat up in the chair, waved its ' paws and barked three times. An old man, mourning the loss of a French poodle, wept at in lAmlllar, sound tried to comfort the coat. and Nuts, are as plentiful this year as at any time we remember. Our soil is un usually productive, and every known, variety can be found within the limits of the township. Many have been stored, away in the nut factories, and the squir rels have been busy, but the visible sup ply has not been appreciably diminished. There are lots of squirrels this year;., so many. In fact, that It la hard to dodge them on Main Lane, and It la a wonder that aome of the passing automobiles do not run over them. The activity of these ' bright-eyed fellows Is marvelous, and it is as true now as ever It was that the ' Broadway squirrel cannot be prevented from doing a Reno from the ground. a Job SMALL, JR. Buy for yourself the Xmaa Joy, Bell him q'vlek schon Joy! O, actor out of a job, hip! A happy thought the cattle ship. To Europe, old top, make a trip; Some scheme, eh, wilt? A pip. O, actor out of a Job, hint! I could for reama extend the list. IMS A HORSP. Cut I'm quite sure you get me right, Kt-ul woik eh? Help! UOOD NlUUr!! Xq4 make It by the cusi side, boy,