THE BEE: -OMAHA. MONDAY.- MARCH . 1912. SILK- HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT Enter Again the Mysterious One Copyright, 15H Nellonal Ken Asm. By Tad - f ' IWrrSftSvWR I 1 S?rr) V A, HUM nC H-MTirVl. GIRLS 3VO(r6. - I L , J V t,G$l l17:tS ( u-rW- 1 ME OF TXATT" ( r . A Husband to Bring Up By UTMFRKD BLACK. V "Xo," Mid the womaa I know, abas ing br elderly bead with decent elderly vifor. "No, I am not sorry for ber at aU-or, at least very "little. She married a boy to brink up and then -shs neglected him. If ha baa ma wild It e aa much her fault aa his." "A boy to tor-" 1'' betas, badly. Tea," repeated tba elderly woman I taow. "Toj. Uiat la what I aald and that's what I meant, A boy to bring up; VmTo what overy ttaii anarrlee whoa obo merrlee at ail theee days, and ovary married westaa knows K. too. "If aba ain't too liar, or too ow. ardly. or toa selfish to bottler, oho Bros uo to what aba knows, too. or makes a failure of tho whelo thing. "Men have Bo mora aaaoa of morals or of responsibility thaa ao many seed aa tutad axtorhleveus popples tbat ara al war aetUag wet and shako tba water all ever people wttb perfectly fraafc ctotboi saaad eating tUas tbat (sake thesnj aat SOU and tot her boaband ran away with another mass wtto aad atoll aa other man's xaooey. aad never dM a thing but cry about It. what aort of a wtto do you call her? Net a toad one, at aay rata. ' ""When aba oaw bow tbtoca were going why dlda't aba aaH a business sessMag of tho firm and aay. 'Look bora, aoor. partner. I deat he the way rou'ro do tad. Btbar yoa'lt bare to awl roar waya or there" bo trouble. I might lot yoa rata my lite, bat I thirst toa much of yoa to lot yoa ruia yoor owa. Tore right around In tha path yau're walking, or somebody ww. oomc alone and aaaka yoa. ""There's tba other wsisin'a beebaod. yoa fcaow. and bar brother, aad there aae arjr brothers aa my father. Tea's: have to lethea wMh thorn, tea. Aad baa to one that fool of a maa would ha at home rradlna- the evoninc paper ttaa Btnato wrtb hie ertfe. aretondlDa' aa Kka at. rteM oapeolu hbn. taatead of baud ebaaad from one ond of tba earth la the other by tho "Ho about that maa wa know who'o Biaklac aa adlot of himfolf orar that ahewaMt Why. an Ms wtfe baa to da la to aay. "Haary, come home aad behave yearoelt If yoa don't I'll take tbe ebiU droa and yaa'U have to euaoert aa all tbe On With the Dance By Tad ,.. .w .-a niuo th-,ieyeoaabalrof yew boy's bead aaaw. or feTto thoVa. at milk they ought to of your Utile lr s abeoa. bTdrtnui brdaa la aid shoes! "H" -ho. to time all right; of fates tbe alley and worrying them rit bewealda t " oa tba sartor aote. If you tat thorn. "Cry-wbafa tba aas of crying Wa lhoyaaasd to go to und.y aebool yoa oror kaow a bad boy to keep away sadlmn Twbat baoptuad to Aaaalaa aad from the iara eloeet baoMM ao knew bis .r. ...TT. k.h i,,,t. ho mother would ery If he went tbrreT fine called the repbet aamra. but. pshaw, what do they taarn aowT Bag-time songs v nuT-Usae morsla. and rag-time com moa start, and osovlng-plirture honcoty. How can you expect them to grow up Into real men? Tber doa thay ara Just big orer-d Uwa to be geoa.'' grpwa boya, tba nest of 'era. to be fnanasred and bossed aad They have to be managed and bossed aad taaaed like so many naughty children, and the weans wee aoaan't want to do that aort of thing had belter stay away from the church on tho day of the wedding. Women hare tbe whsto thing their own way aowadays If they'll only have eecse enough to t.itA it. -Wow tale little goose of ours who Just , yoa? mother abe d be to alt dowa aad tat airs oat hlmerlf eta hist because It made bar cry to thtak be wanted to d It. t "Utile beye-that'e all they are; little, selfish, grredy. good-hearted, fool boy. and U s tbe women's buttrwas to A few day ago Missouri judge eald to a woman In a ease before him: T" by didn't you keep this husband at roars straight?" I wander what It all saeau la tbe new womaa going to bare new ro snsaslbllltlea at borne as well aa abroad? WkMj ea Interesting world It Is, to be euro. I'd bate to die and leave It and 11 its brand-new news lust now, wouldn't Eeplies to Science Queries J By E1XJAR LlCl:!f LAKKIX ,."How Is an arc lamp mww bled whoa the carbons are continually burning away? Is tbe adlustment made by clockwork? A.-No; there Is no dock. A dock could not make accurate adjustment of distance botweea carbone unless ther waste away absolutely without change of rate. Tbe distance of the pemta of the earbona, or rather point In one and crater In tbe ether, le maintained or a mignetta apparatus, whose force varies with varying Intensity of current la tho arc Q. "Is the pressure of Usbt an ac cepted aeleotifie fact? Is Ustit always caused by heat?" A. 1) Light reya eiert presanre upon all objects npoa which they make Ira-, pect. Tbe pressure Is very minute, but bss been detected and measured by ex ceedingly aensUtTo apparatus; and Is now a settled edeatlfk! fact, and amount known. . O Light without heat Is produced by nature la some . insects, notably OreflUe," but the moot eajltivs ther mometer cannot eenfe their heat. The hosts of aebulas aeea la largo tUcooes emlttlag light ara thooiht to be with- cat heat. These are very large masses of matter In a tonoaue eondittoa In frigid j space, yet they . emit Ught Intense enough to be concentrated by great lenses Into tba spectroscope, winch peeves these bodies to be gaseous. . But how caa this gaa la cold specs radiate light? Tbe theory now Is that free electrons are In constant motion everywhere hi space at hKh specific speed. These strike tbe atoms of the gaa aad generate light, yet without beat: or. If beat to ostabnabed, H le too weak to be detected along with tbe light. If this doctrine la not the true one. then the cause of light hi frigid nebulas hi un known, la this eeassctloB It la parbana well to aay tbat absolute cold removes ail resistance agaiast.the transmission of electricity through pure metala. Abso lute aero of eosd has net yet been reached; but Liquid heUum approaches near tbat most wonoenui paint. aoen wires of pure metal cooled by this Squid leee all resistance tha t .le. they become perfect eosd at ewe sad. bat afl the oleo trtcity pass. Jly amotion baa bees called to aa ap parent error In wording made by mo la a receat article la Tbe Bee. where my statement made It appear tbat white-hot ingots bf Iron and steel are lifted from furnaces by means of powerful electro magnets. This does not mean tbat tha magnet-iieads loach tba bet ingots, for beat destroys ths magnetic properties of metals. Huge msrtos of metals ara luted by large magneto and carried shout foundries by the magnets suspended from cars of overhead tracks. But thee masses, weighing tons, are cold. It a hot Ingot is to be carried. It must be clutched by cold raotal. which may be attached to armatures of lifting magrseu by cool rods or chains. COURT HOUSE BRIBE IN COUNTY SEAT FIGHT In the oM boom days of Sioux City aad South Sioux City, tweaty years ago. a movement to remove the county era of Dakota oousty, Nebraska, from Dakota City to south moux City waa pushed fop ward by a quartet of tbe leading baslaees men of tbe Nebraska suburb. At the s pe dal election which waa held oa the ques tion of removal. Sooth Sioux City won by a targe majority, but tbe supreme court decided, upon aa appeal from Da kota City, tbat tbe court house boll dins erected by tbe real estate boomers of South FkHix city was a bribe offered to the raters of the county. Tbe aoart. botd mg to this view, enjoined the removal of the county records from Dakota City. Work ea tha eoastracttea of tho new "court house had proceeded to a point where the piaster waa about to bo pot Boon tha walls and the doors to the vaults were about to bo bung. Upoa tbe aaaouawejurat of. tho court's deeloios ths work stopped short and the building baa remained m tbat condition until this eerred. Tbat photograph shows that the building has not changed in these years. The "Resort brass" le about to be con verted Into beer brewery. Sioux City Journal. WbJ A FrULff COvtrmv AM DC eVi rhS . 1 . a . ' MeW TO. TMfiwOOS wAS WVAiT'Mw IMTUC JrAU. Ht WAi UHCr3C0.O AnO V4A, to te WT)A7rr -MTO fH SfKijooctyiM a fcMHITw . A. boo ft. OfEriaTO Swotrtuy. MS was, pgjeO ov- aTTxey snrrmZvo V JOOOaTNajy A obev voice THvrioejjeo. IFAfCeoOj 50H I J A TKHCE 4HAC 00 Trre- CAU.A WAS ON? saeTsemweb aaaBSaaaamB.tBBs4s(a o a. lofET HAA Op . , MfeS ALL CAJTL " I'KA SAAAR.ICD NAM AmU m a rwNOt . i Mrr to om riMe. AAAetc wtc V0UN6- CVe?l (leAPVIOA. SWT M.i.t ewe, Twe Hiwn, Iwseo pw JvtAu-ttrutM. mc rtegfrf spttfT awxo-wcx, but TMtj aNfErt irtfi-S Abrh giuAU-V roBAMnnsTB THOSSAT AHtlSMTJOfU WrlSB wf-ATI$. tVUCN ( Atsicn LViCSVAaiC T0V-rtTB0. TMy WEJU AeA. 1UC K "b-THOUOrrr ilZ.r. NW-f,0 AJ F0OA. wXMCM atcx.0 , lA UrrcR rAaaiCARiiuit uu MfOP THAT OVinER. AmO AAMfi TW WHARF. OUST Art) VtCS ir hS0 00 mAAKCTI f 6. iiaoejrowAijxayiTMr; Ar0 MBr0 CtOTHe th r Brce a rrob BROB PA rr rff theer thsn irvrrwtrioi-,- 1 tTrtaiN TeSi fNlN6A0OvOg IMS UdTEl AT i0M fXpitM . TMC TriraTKTrrTjrtCrlJi WlH TOdUsto Of SHIry rHr TMT, eMe,MTrli.laob SQnftS. TMirArtO UNffl 3VSrST.TW b M Nri? TgffA IKAi AN AVtfrul-SPilx-ftf Cf Otfsff y rCtAEKt, euJM MbOTMf0 rVATW-b ieayeVeO ierOF raar.r HV P- ijxt?!1 17 "TNT W0KT tgT TMfi TtieaV TItcrr. ON TH TOR 0a'm6C LCT m KCTdHBTpj-p . AMD &STTUC HViH AOwV MR TH-C Htrur, APrarA, TVSvT"l VNAl-K TV4C t0 OA Kim TVrC tA,0V AH HQiKOAlT THSn fAA FiNlHCD 8 rVg PAygl Ai-UCKV) 1 TuOOTlU. T Cooldng Secrets of a Famous Chef WOKEN TO BE GOOD COOKS afCBT HAVE PRACTICAL, EXPERIENCE AND INSTEUCTION. By KMILE aUIXr. Many people have asked me why tbe moot celebrated cooks ara mea wbea tbe kitchen weald seem la bo a woman's rightful domain. I hare even heard that it la oae of tho argumenta weed against woman's suf frage, tbat avm bare outranked her hi her particular field. - It Isn't true tbat there are no great wemea cooks. There are many very re markable ones. In JEurdpe. oopocta.'ty in Germany: there are wemea cooks with big staff of htteboa employee under them h verloae hotels and restaurants. They ara not only excellent cooks, but ood maaagera. A chef, has to be both. The chef baa to bare at least fire years' expert enae bef.re be can aay tbat be Is master of bis a-..' Throe five years ara years of study only. During, tbat time tbe future cbef ta learning his profession at his own ex pease aad working much harder than any regula employe. I spent oae year learning the art of pastry making. Now. few. women caa afford either the time or money which ta seeded la taarn mg to cook tike tbaC They have to got theer practical experience aad kestractien while they ara earning their f Worth a Drink I dar. A photograph was takes of tho building on the day the decision waa ro-lttvug. aad nataraay war range or snow- ledge ta apt to be limited to the kind of cooking demanded by the small family or the modest restaurant and hotel eulefne. The chef usually studies la otber coun tries beeJdea France, which hi undoubt edly tho main seat of eullaary learning. Another question which I am asked very often Is: What are the best things to order from a menu. To thai I will aa- Tha shabby maa with the blusblag nose approached tbe stranger wha waa aippiag a cocktail. - Friend. " said the shabby man. "it I caa convince you tbat you bare eleven fingers, would you ronsidrr mo 'worthy of a drink at your expense!" "I certainly would," replied the stranger. "New start the count," said the shabby maa. "On your right band here are one, two. three, four, five. Now the left hand six. seven, eight, nine ten. ' swer at once the simple thlnrs. No art can enhance the delicate flavor of good lamb, for Instance, fed on salt meadows. The art Ilea In cooking It ao that all the flavor is retained. Tbe same applies to chicken aad all kinds of meat and vegetables. I think that every bill of faro should be printed la such a manner that one knows exactly what one ta getting. Fancy namea are disguises, very confusing to the average guest. , EGGS WITH USFT-OVEIt MEAT. FOUR COY KM. Take fire good-slxed hard tomatoes. Peel thviu -end cut the bottoms off. Scoop out the Inside, season with salt aad put In a little fine minced chicken mixed with a little sweet cream. Place tbe tomatoes In a dish and over each one break an egg. Then place tbe dish in the oven. When tho eggs are almost cooked cover them with a thin mixture of chopped ham. bcaiea bp with cream Put tbe disb back in the oven and flnlab cooking It. Berre the tomatoes and eggs on toasted bread covered with a light Too lose," announced the stranger. -Nay. nay." said tha shabby maa. "We t cream or tomato sauce, will count back. He-ten. nine, eight. Cream sauce ta made by stirring two seven, six-and five on J our otber bead eunces at butter Into two taUcepooofuls ara eleven." of flour over tbe fire and motatenlini altb He got the dripk.-Wahinxton Star. J, viM aIu , naif of bo-.lins milk, rlavor . -.. - . jto taste with wait, kltel-a twiact. etc--. Onry s fewrrnen fiaveswn en interest- . . in career that they can mnko money " er mlnmea. B-at into selling their autobiographies. hlJ' "Pful ot crtM,u- The Cotton Gin By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. J March d. 1 1,114. It was lit years ago today March t, 17H-that Ed Whitney, the New England school master, patented the cotton gin. Tha Tan It re pedagogue, who Waa at the tttne down la Oeergta "teaching the young Mea bow shoot. little re alised that his In ventloa was to re sult In another kind of ahootiag be tweea Oeerglans and New England era, aorthecners and aouthorners; a sheeting that was ta birht up half a coalmen with tha ftaeaes af etvtl war. aad cost ths nation, before they wora eMmgulshed, the lives of a million of mea aad tho ex sen 4M are of billions of treasure. ' Ths ootton gia mads cotton voltare profitable: cotton saltare arsmed. la the onlaloa of lbs southern piaster aad tbe New England slave trader, to necaaaltate negro slavery; aad the merest tyro la American history knows tbat It waa a are slavery that brought on the war. It ta perron ly true that the south waa fighting for tbe right to have aegro slavery with out d Mat tea from tho aorta, rather thaa for negro stsrory Itself; but H Is aoaa tbe less tree that but for slavery there would have been as trouble. To get aa Idea of the affect that the1 Invention of tbe oettan gia bad upoa cut ton culture, nod. Uerefora, upoa eleven'. It Is only aencsssry to oenaldor tbia single fact that la 17K the year at Whitney s patent, tba cotton product of tba whole country waa thaa thaa XO.oat pounds, while In IMS, sis years later, tba product had rtaen to ll.eN.ue) pounda. And that waa awrely the beginning, which waa lo sioiist up by great taaaa aad bounds to tbe Lsto.aw.aw ot pouada In late. There was prosperity with a vengeance I There waa never aay thing like It. It was weaderfull "King Cotton" was tba great est ot saoeerehs, aad upon southern planter aad aortbera trader ho showered his riches with a magmtieent Prodigality. Tho southern Slavs holder, delighted wltlt tba wealth that there waa la cotton, wanted mora negro slaves, to make mora ootton to make more wealth; and tho founders at tho "blue Mood" booses of Maeaachueetia aad Its sister states, aad New York, kept the slave ships buoy pi), mg between Negro lead aad southland aad all went merry aa a auuriaga bell. . Of course, there had to come a reek oalag. It waa very aula aad very aloe la Mr. Whitney to lavaat a machine tbat waa able to do tba work of (.No human hands, but tha awiuel, tbe sequel! Well, too aottoa eta la still here; and tba. loAM,aa ot pounds of cottoa baa grown to tmmMi and the soatk ta still here, wtlh mora people aad more wealth thaa the whole country had la Mat and slavery la gone and aeitber north nor south would have It back agala lor tba world. i I The Jealous Wife Br VIItGIMA TKKHIKE VAN 1 VTATKR. seated upon a hotel. Jealousy. What, I Last veranda, 1 was an Interested listener to a conversation betwea two women, both married, and, tho casual observer would have Judged satisfied with their eeodi tlon. In spits of the fact that I, a compara tive stranger, made a third In their group, they discussed their experience with the green-eyed monster, Jealousy, freely. One confessed honestly and uaembar raasedly that aha waa Jealous of her bue bsnd; ths oilier said, with more evidence of regret thaa her compaaloa manifested, that she waa "sometimes a Utile Jealous ot James." Bhe added: "So far as I can discover be baa never given ma any actual cause to feel so. but I doubt If any womaa caa lore ber husband deeply aad not be Jeal ous ot him." Tho remark made a lasting lmaroaetoa upoa me, and I have thought ot It often since the a- To bo Jealous Is to be so un comfortable that oao would, I abould think, avoid tha stats aa oao would shun Ject ao seriously that tba other day I turned to tba deflnltloa of Jealous ta the dictionary at my elbow. I read aa fel loes: "Anxiously watchful; eueptoteueiy vigilant; suspicious." Must oao he these things la order to love duply? If ao, love cannot bo a happy condition, but a species of pain ful Insanity. "Anxiously watchful." Tea, many wives are that. I wonder It mea appreciate hew many. auspiajousty vigilant" and these women dalm they leva their husbands enough to entrust lo them their lives aad fortunes. Tbea wby not trust their love? Perhaps I do not look at such matters la tho conventional orthodox fashion but if oao does not trust a man. wby aver marry htm? The Good Book Informs us that "perfect love easts out fear." Is a fearful and doubting tare them perfect? rnderrtand. I am not at thle point ta this familiar talk speaking ot tba womaa who baa good and euftdeat reason to bo aus picious ot her husband, but of too womaa who Is "anxiously watchful" on principle, and because she has tba habit ot being so. Wby shoe id aba watch? Wby not rather decline to allow her doubts to make a slave ot her? Does aba. herself, never enjoy chatting with aay enter taining maa heel dee her owa husband? Then ta aba not foolish to be amde un happy because she sees that asms hus band talking with aa attractive womaa or engaged in eoaversattoa with a bright and lively girl? There ta a word right hero that I would aay to wtvee-a word they may do well lo remember. It la that: It la a mistake ever to let a kuaband think you are Jealous of aim. It produces upoa his masculine mind one of two efects be Is either amused or resentful. ! If 1 L hffMMil kL. 1t. L. MB bo scornfully amused: If bo loves aad trusts her and ta a decent aort generally, bis feeling is one ot Indignant resent ment wbea ' he becomes aware ot ber I has he ever dona that tha woman ho loves cannot be here In Mm and la bla protostatlona of affection? If ho la hot a very decent sort ho may add, angrily, tbat etneo oho suspects tho worst of him ho amy so well bars tho gams aa tbe name. Jealousy Is ao futile, ao ruinous. lC us look at H la a cool, philosophical way. It possible. I acknowledge that It la hard to be philosophical where one's feel ings tor tbe opposite sex are concerned, but let us try. If your husband loves yon enough to remain absolutely faithful to you. you wrong him shamefully If you doubt htm and are "suspirtouriy vigilant ' ot him. If. on the other hand, he loves you so little that he will bo unfaithful to you, your vigilance will do ao good, for If yon susnert Mm and accuse him bo will keep on In tbe course upon ahkn he has enteredonly be will be more careful than ever lo conceal It from you. so in either case your watchfulness would be useless. But. to do mea Justice. I do believe tbat smallpox. I bars pease red oa tbe sub- there era hundreds ot thousands ot good. aoaorablo. faithful husbands. I know thst cynics sod man-haters will sneer at this etatsment ot mine, and will acoft at my credulity. Soma disappointed wives will do the same, and one can hardly Memo them. Tet it ta a pity to tat one anfortanato experience make one doubt an entire ctase. Men are net trained aa ara women; their Meaa are different. I have known good husbands who would hold a pretty woman's hand aad mean no harm by It It waa but an amusing episode In their Uvea, one that waa forgotten five minutes after It occurred. But If tba man's wife bad area it. do you suppoaa that she would over forget It or aver tat him do ao? If aha would, aha ta aa emotionally wise woman (there ara suchi, aad win probably retain her huabaad'a leva al ways If she does not retain K aba may be sensible enough to aparaclato tbat a love that requires watching lest It escape la not worth the guarding. Tha sooner one learns to live without tha worthless thing ths better. Aad What about ths husband whoso wife s hand another maa bona for a half-mlnsta longer that ta absolutely conventional erfll ho bo anjeaiooe and philosophical, too? Well, aa Kipling would aay. 'That to another story," and oae that Is toa lone to begin Just bow. Moreover, wo are dealing with tha wife a suspicions, not the hneband'e. A woman must. It aha would bo happy, trust the maa she lovoa. If ho ta worth loving, ha la worth trust ing; If bo ta not worth trusting, ho Is not worth loving. Let her tbea determine to believe that ha la aa honorabia aa aba Is, It aba really tares him. and. such betas; tho case, let her set tor him aa example ot honest faith and opea dsn ling by re fusing to sink so low that aha caa ha "anxiously watchful" or wuap4ciousl vl gl lent" of a husband who has never girea her Just cause to be Jealous of hisx I