Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, February 12, 1912, Page 9, Image 9

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    THK r.F.K: OMAHA. MONDAY. KKBIUTAKY 1-'. 1012.
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SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT
Fire! Save the Chickens First
Copyright, lli N&ttcnal Nrw Association
By Tad
SAV MA.". VOO N0W WAV 00W f MV
UtAP-T I rea. wy ft V0-Of coo v
I'M 0iSmKTI6- 3UJT7CE A-tb cr
CHesr r- voo on me &acH.vr 'm,
AUMYl HO. A MAN vnHO fAJ HAD A
volU.a.- THEYAA5 TM eiNA4 MUUAMCfj
i-1 twv pay yry ro oixts au. of cm
PvT IM ON A JrP Nt JENP 'JTM TO
UT0- IP I'M aVcA SlUHS A CtAJf -
i KO MOM Jrn H MINE -fv OOWsr
fc.MHAtJi I--rN'rl PtvTATi I Wl ?! l 'rhTPC
COURT (f IN KAMES --2 F,! 7 fK(LAt) nPTO 1 (JTS
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A Mother's Jealousy
Dear Winifred Slack
del traveller wd my age la X My busi
ness takee in away from home a great
part of th tlma. On June I, HI. I mar
roried. Previous to that I ba4 mad a
horn for my
mm
mother, who had
brought ma up after
my father had de
serted us.
Now, I want you
to appraclat th
fact that I realise
what my mother
had lone throuch
for me. and I In
tend to make her a
happy and content
aa Ilea In my power,
financially a a d
otherwise.
My wife .wanta
a horn for heraeir,
which, of eourae, la
quit natural. My
mother take the wrong view of th sub
ject by saying I rind her In th way and
want to get rid of her.
I even propose to take my wife away
and leav mother th home and aend her
money to live on, but ah tdollaea m and
ran not bear to hav m aeparated from
her. Th mult I that a feellnc haa
prune up between th two women folk
that puta ma In a three-cornered came.
Something must be don. If I leav home
with my wife. It will Just about kill
mother, aa eh la vetting along In yeara
and her health la not th beet. If I do not
my wife la going to leav without me.
Mother advise me to leav my wife,
which I certainly do not want to do, for
I love my wit dearly.
Tour In need of aom advice. F. H. E.
Br YVIMFRED BLACK.
I am a commer- , mother out of your wife's home and keep
your wife out of your mother's home.
Wove to a different town if you can, a
different country if you must
Peso at aay price, Justice though It
kills the on who crtea out upon It. It
Is your duty not only t your wife and to
yourself to lake this stand, but It la your
duty to your mother.
She was a good friend to you, the beat
you ever had. Well, be a good friend to
her now. Tak th best car of her as
long a ah live, but that la not enough.
She la Jn danger now, la danger of
cruel hat which la creeping Into her
heart and threatening her very reseea.
You must help her stamp It out, and
there's only on way to do that, move,
and move now. e
Your mother won't die if you leav her.
You'll die If yon atay with her.
Every time you are flv minute lat
to dinner she'll conjure something against
"her," and every time you want to sit
and look Into the fire In peace she'll
make a scene about "that woman."
There's no Jealousy so dreadful aa the
Jealousy of a mother for her eon.
Many women go erasy from just this
on thing alone. Don't lat your mother
go craay. Keep her sane by being sue
yourself, sane. Just reasonable, kind. ,
That's the way t help your wife, t
help yourself, and to help your mother.
Try Ik . . ,. .. ,
Horace, the Jig is Up
Well friend, you certainly are In trouble,
end deep trouble at that.
How shall you get out of It? You are
not going to get out of It aa long as
those two women live and hate each
other for loving you.
What ran you do? Tour simple, honest,
decent, eren-heAded duty. That's all,
and then make th best of II.
Give the woman you have married what
he has the right to ask. what every hon
est woman and good wife hss a right to
wish for horn of her own. Tell your
mother you are going to do that and ask
her to be decent about It. Tell her you
are going to do It any way. and you
vould Ilka to have her mak up her
mind to It. and make up her mind now.
Of course, you will provide for her ac
cording to your means, but keep yom
Dynamite la raralsg.
Like fire, dynamite, though a merciless
master, may be made a good servant, aa
some ere proving who are applying It to
th peacewul pursuits of agriculture. A
man tn Bessemer, Ala., last year em
ployed It to break np the soil on a por
tion of hla cotton plantation and raised
four and a half bale on land that had
befor never produced more than on
bale, and he believe that even this yield
may be Increased. Much haa been claimed
for this method In other section also.
It uncover force of nutrition that the
plow cannot reach, and It I va pre
dicted that In time dynamite will sup
plant this plow In penetrating to the
real productive Ufa of th ground.
Springfield Republican.
Favorite Fletlea,
"Any child ran manege our furnaoes."
"Police on track of criminals; arrests
momentarily expected."
"Living skeleton."
"Expense account of my last trip."
"I've waited here an hour and a half
for this car."
"Circulation of the Basoo, MO copies."
"Total expense of this delightful trip,
PS." Chicago Tribune.
5
f
Votes for Children
By CHESTER FIRKINS.
Wo want to vote. We're here to put our bid In,
For Children's Rights, and we will get 'em, too,
This modern world' no place to be a kid In,
When older folk can tell us what to do.
If we are poor, we spend our days at labor;
If rich, our parted parents make us roam
Around the earth, or lend us to some neighbor
And yet you say the Child's place is the Home.
II
a
Show us a home we never even saw one
Sorely it's not this place you call a flat.
Or. if It is, we certainly can't draw one.
For children aren't allowed in lairs like that.
Surely it isn't Tommy Kelly's attic.
Nor Gladys Vanderaator's palace hall.
Perhaps you think this country's democratic,
But It's an elderocracv, that's all.
We have the testimony of the sages
That childish characters are good and sweet.
This may have been the truth In other ages.
But not since yon have thrust us on the street.
We're wise as any voter in the nation;
Onr sins are visited upon each dad
Back to the sixth and seventh generation .
Why can't we vote like you? We're Just as bad.
You've taken from us all our fond illusions.
We scorn the fairies and old Santa's pack.
Our games are "lacerations and contusions,"
Our playgrounds are the street and railroad track.
We want to vote like mommers and like poppers.
But here comes the polices we must be gone.
Take up the march, though. We'll defy the coppers.
Ballots for Babies' Uaaard, go-carts, on!
Ag rx skr r r
n w
(CtOCUXea SAH t AM AN (XO rAN AnO HAVS MAO fAANV
JKfiJ But M05T ftf flve(! HAPSlNKP
By Tad
EMMET TH OA COIE CU) S
wan was, jjrnNfr in me
WTIH Root OF Ml J TAWOAITE
MWCIUOC aWPORicrA.rr WAi
(ArTA-M and m had nsr
If MINOTES fN VI Ml CflTD VNHAf
HIMJO-F AtAUMBTMC l-AtT-
QVltT tip VANTAfttf .JUT AS H
vi rxxrr To TVef.tr HIS
escrj AftooMo tmc frobixr
A VOICE For TVrCFfRrTFtACg .
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fcrrcp aucc maao wotxo
tvues in woHotm Oho .'
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m. nco coats me comnct.
OK I SVOTTA PfT JD
NOV I ifA N0-"N -'N
AN INFAn COAT
House. I Pont ruf
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jomc cocoa :
LITTLE 30fi Trie A$NFt- -AO
VAi CkLLEX) vfOH TO JfcTAlC
lG BACKED UP TO tVE rOHtrteAi
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EV0W rwt THAT r C0M TO
TOWN
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I 0ONTCARH IF He IS A
MOON'
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TMTEACHR PATTED Ml KHOt
THE VNHIJPEKJ fN MIJ EAR.
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K(CK HIS CR.IIXH
I'LL HTWiM WrN M FALLS .
ftuiM Toiwe owfwce.
JwECT UP, ENTER TMC
Nail, in THC nail toor,
TVfBV (UTfcT 00t1 AnO
ni akc otr tiu-x anjwejl
ALUTHeT THONe CALl-4
ifvjfBoor
ok laro-lwl WEi-fmg At-5 n THgH
0m e-0 ZEKaT VNA4 fAX'NO
Nil HIDE rote-UFfi. jupotNtV
HO 6if BLACK CNARotR WEfrT
OowN AmP MOU-eO ON TOP 0T
NN.TP-VAS HE WOULD 1.K.KS
COOLO NOTOfTHlS LCW TK0
WNOal TVt NA&.TVEN A
BRlfrHriPOk CANC" TO N'NM
And un Buttonno- ms scd
JUiPCNDBpJ He WAwvt0
OOTOP HI J PANTS, UfTW '
THE FALL4TX JTSlD ANO ;?Ano
T6 THE JAOOLE J)iV TWEH'
JACK JAUEW. THE PeOflA Oas.
VELUTD
F FA IS j-RIOU
IS MA-3E1TV?
Flaw tve r?E?u aur toi th
ONc TTACr; road ii Btocrrev
AHAPfN
VATIM TX6 JiaM 90A0,
TAsre AN nxENTOAV 0
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TO DO TILL.
TONflRMW
Temptation
I T. PS7 . . 1L
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IS-
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t)sir"i "
i A.'tj-.
Le. itsfrTTaniti an. , , i (ITnit .futil l,Wrtjhaw-.wah
Since Eve tint decked herself in leaves
And made a mirror of a brook,
Her daughters all crave gorgeous clothes
If just "to see how they would look."
So when you see a girl's tired eyes
Light up in looking at a hat,
It's not all envy prompts her gaze,
But something deeper far than that.
James Oglethorpe
Ily REV. THOMAS & CRKOORT.
hraary It, 1TSS.
It was Kl ars ag today February U,
lTIS-that James Ogirsthorae and hla colo
nials ere led the Tamacraw muffs on the
Savannah river and hrgan laying the
foundations of th stsl of Georgia.
Th "8 metre
state" of the south
had Its origin In the
noblest linpulees
that swell the hu
man heart. 1 1
founder, the ervoni
pl lined and philan
thropic Oglethorpe,
witnessing about
him In the old
world the In
humanity of 'man
to man, seeing th
prisons full of Im
pecunious debtors.
and th highways thronged with the vic
tim of retlgtoue fanaticism and spite,
resolved that he would find In th new
word aa asylum for th unfortunate ones.
where they ehould b no mora oppressed
by th rich or dragooned by the bigoted.
Th colony started out beautifully. Th
men who had been pining in Engiisa
jells because they could sot pay the el
ections of their hard-hearted creditors.
and the men who. In Auetrta and Oar
many, had been made to feel th terrors
of religious faaaOdsm. war glsd to be
free, and they wen only to willing te
accept th founder's will that there
aheuht be no slavery la Georgia. Th
Institution got a foothold much later on.
M
but It a not th fault of th original
colonial a
Beautiful, too, were th Initial rela
tionship between the colonists and th
red men. Old Te-me-chl-cht. th chief
of the surrounding Indiana, presinUng ;
Oglrihorp with a buffalo akin erna-i
mented with the picture ef an eagle, said,
lo him: "I give you this, which ft
want you to accept. Th eagle mean,
speed and the buffalo strength- The
English are swift aa th bird and etrenr
th beast autre. Ilk th one, they flew
over the area to th uttermost parts f
th earth, and. Uk th ether, they rt
trong and nothing can reelat then. Th
feathers of th eagle are soft and mean
love, the buffalo sals Is warm and mean
protection. Then I hop th Kagltsh wilt'
lor aad protect eur little famines.":
Alas! th time was to com when the
whit iren waa t forget Ts-mo-ehl-chlV
sreaant and the spirit with which It was
made.
In 1741 Oglethorpe left Georgia fsrevefr
after having given It the best that thenar
was la Ms head and heart for tan years.
In 1IU Oeorala became a royal provtoc,
sad remained suck till the brassing
of th revolution ht 1771, through which
h helped her sister colonies te fight'
their way to victory, whea she took ha
place among th Mold thirteen" free an
Independent nates. . ,
Oeorgla started all right, and alter aom
mlstakea and considers bl Buffering she
Is sll right again. Her fao la toward ttm
anrta and her future la rosy with th
promise of which her founder
dreamed.
The Glory of the Heavens
By GARRET P, BERVIB&
How many readers of The Bra hav
thought during th bright nights that
have recently revealed the tarry vault
In all Us hlemsl speador to take a look
at the anlveree around us? How many
hav seen Rlrlus,
the ancient star
of iha Nile, flam
ing Ilka a diamond
on fire, or Orion
striding, with up
lifted shield and
club, arrosa the star
dust to meet tha
charge of the gi
gantic hull, Taurus,
with his "golden
borne" entangled In
the Milky Way, and
th gorgeou
Pleladee, hanging
Ilk a bandeiilla
on hla shoulder?
How many he felt
the charm of the
three sinter gems that Orion bears In his
wonderful hell, and whose namea alone
are an Incantation Alnlta, Alntlam and
Jilniaaa?
In these February evenings the Char
ioteer ride over the aenlth, carrying on
his arm the dauilng goat-Mar, Capella,
and the atarrv throngs of his whip
stream out Inte strlnge of glittering
Jewels flung upon the wind. Eastward
of Ih Charioteer, elde bv side, march
Castor and Pollui. aa they marched to
the rescue of Rome, when Aulus, the dic
tator, cried out to his fleeing men:
Charge for the hearth of Vesta! !
Charae for the golden shield!
Let no men stop lo plunder.
But slay, end slay, and slay!
Th gods who lire forever
Are on our side today!
Behind the Twin Brethren fleams the
mystical star-banner of Cancer, and away
over In the east Regulus, th star f
kings, Vise with tha Lion, Straight upl
no nonneastern aay climbs, with lum
bering step, th great bear. Urea Majw,
and In tha northwest shin the beautiful
Caaelonela, la her golden chair, an
Andromeda, chained en th beundleai
coast of th star-deeps, and Perseus oa
his winged hers, with dlamoad-kUtad
blade upraised, flying to meet the sea
monster that Is rushing to devour her.
Like peal of thunder from unclouded sky
A sudden neighing rolls and echoee nlga.
Her eyes unclose: horror and Joy are ene.
For she beholds. Is whirling flight and
free.
The wl,iee1 tinea unlu, Wn sm
Throw hla vast shade of asure oa th
sea.
It I good to see thee Bights and recall
the antique legends, immorUHaad la
th stars at a time when men did not I
know, and when few even suspected, that
there bright points In th sky, which i
seem to hav dropped from pencils of
molten gold sketching th childhood
dreama of humanity upon the canvas of
Immensity, are In reality suns, many far
grander than ours.
Hrlence haa carried ua far from th
realm of pure, delightful fancy which
the anclenta found In the sky. but the
constellstions have remained whll em
pires perished, and will remain as long
aa th nomas Imagination lasts. They
ar the true arroll of mythology, and
Ihe veritable history of th world's
youthful daya Th facta of th present
are not greater thaa th dreams of th
past.
Early Days of Watterson
J
Colonel Ilavld F. yell see. who at the
lime of his retirement from newspaper
work, wss the oldest active editor In the
state of Tennessee, telle an anecdote of
the days when Henry Watterson, editor
of the Loulsvuie Courier-Journal, was
glad to accept a position on a republican
newspaper- Colonel Wallace haa known
Colonel Watterson for fifty years.
"At the rloee of the dvll war." ssld
Colonel Wallace at the Wlllard. "Watter
son and two friends, who had been en
gaged In the publication of the Chatta
nooga, Rebel, were, like other Confeder
ates, In straitened circumstances. When
the Rebel suspended. Watterson went to
Cincinnati. On arriving there a compact
was made whereby the first to eecure a
poettten was to sea that the others did
not suffer for food, and Watterson waa
th fortunate one. obtaining a viae as
assistant city editor of th republican
paper. They saved sufficient funds to get
to Louisville, and from there walked to
rtthln a few miles of Najhrllle.
"la Kaahvllla they had little difficulty
la getting work oa the NaahvlUa Ban
ner, and later Watterson secured trntrol
of the Louf lPe Journal, which he con
solidated w:-d the Courier,
"A few years after tha Cincinnati Inci
dent I mat Watterson on th street in
Nashville, and asked him now. with his
principles, he could hav worked oa a
republican sheet
" Well. Davy.' he said, "when I got to
Cincinnati, I had but few dottn oa my'
back, little In my stomach, and nothing
In my pockets. It was. a eaa of rrot,
hog. or die. and I Just had t root' "-
Washington Past.
Oddly Applied.
"Beaten out of tV said th gold-leaf
dejectedly.
"Experfcmc Ilk this tea to harden
ene," th egg said as It was dropped
Into boiling water.
"A little of this goes a long way," re
marked th aviator aloft as h rnck4
th ash off his cigar.
"I'll atay aad se th thing at," satf
th man who waa at th dentist's ta hT
a tooth pulled.
"I'm against those long hat pins fori
women." tha man tn th car said as h
wiped his bleeding Jaw.
"I do this In response to an foward'
prompting." explained tha aeasick paa-4
senger as he leaned over the rail.-Boston
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