Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1912)
THE BEE: 0A1A1IA, SATURDAY, MAKCH, 3. 1912. f e SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT lsam a ftrrj Copyright. 1912, Kational News Ain. Judge Rummy Got it All Balled Up 3 Drawn for The Bee by Tad ATTOrTT- KUt KOTO 310 Gel ALOtAMQCS. AVMHAtJIR. JKTVPOM fW DtVH VHO AtMOir KILL. HrA. iwatvovtojuw jitx I Mc vox cor to ut tAH a iiJXtac l-1 ( h"wax J I mIL Fx, ST .o isL. gsssst- "' " "1 11 ' ' ' . s I . ' I' . . f ' , Happy-Go-Lucky " Al-tJt " f The Unification of the World j By WINIFRED BLACK. 1 1 A A millionlr for a day. That's what thay called him. the man who went east not mrur aco thro wins Quart era out or the car window and tlDDlac the waiter 11 Ilka a craxy man. . . ,- What a bad nam Tor blm. Uttl ad (ho on who cava Mm the name know j bout millionaires. How ' many of them do yon know millionaire? . A down or tot How - many ' ol se throwlnc money out of ear window or anywhere elM? Do tell! ' A millionaire) for a day. Do you know what I'd do If I wanted to make people of discernment think I wae- ' a milllonalr? - I'd cont every penny till my eye ached, and I'd look do sera. at every one who earned to expeat m to spend a cent ef It " ! Trarellnf? Why. look at that mi there In the teat aposlt you In the amuia car. nee a niiuvniim w w dost fo eae, l it (take a rood dinner on it. -".''. . ; . lioat da I know? . Why. can't you aee him counting what every -trdnc la (otoi( to coat before a erder It? Look, he' caloulatinc whether daughter really ought u hare a tape rate order of chloken or not, or whether ahe couldn't fet on Ka a part of hi and There he tell ing hi son that It doean't do to eat too muck trivetlnc: tt la bad for the eie tloa. . ' Tip? Not o you'd notice lt. rte'rl watch Um waiter and set a chance to Up out of the car without remembering him at all. It he' a real millionaire. That'a the way you en tell them. That' how he got hi money by watch ing It And that' the way he I going to keep It. too. Th man acroe the a!! there, who' he? He a poor relation, and alway Koine to be poor relation, too. It take no prophet to tell u that Ha couldn't mis a KMO at a minute notice to rnve hi life: but Juat observe the dinner the lascal Is ordering. Soup, bird' salad, wlne-not the most expensive on the card, but wine-dessert . . . 1 . . 1 lul warran no imh in wrv car manager has, too. lie's out for a trip with a hundred or io la his pocket, and, dear me, bow be I enjoying; It! And he will go ta good hotel, too, th apeadrlft. and kave on of th seat noma la .th place, and every bellboy In th establishment will know th number of bis room before he's been there a day. "He'll eat when be' hungry and drink when he' dry," Ilk dear Haprry-Oo-Lucky la th old tale. And what aa ap petite he ha and what a thirst! I'd ilk to look Into hi suitcase when he" start for home. Trust Haay-Oo-Lucky for a bag full of present tor th "horn folk." Queer presents-things 'you'd never think of. Aa aVigator pear or so for a salad, lust to surprise them. With a gay, knowing fellow they'll thlak him when be shows them haw to oat It The litest thine la fa tor otnr. She'll never wear It dear soul, but bow her heart will wan when ah takes It out and shews It to th millionaire's wife, whoa husband never brought ear thing a personal aa that tor bar la hi life. Why should ha? Hsaa't (h bar own bank account and dress allowaneet Hunted all over town for that book tad spiritualist) aid anat who Bva with him want. And what' this, a natty box for Uttl si start Toti couldn't af ford that, Happy-Oo-Locky, you know you couldn't, aa imitation metal would have dona Just a weJL . . - Theater? He'- been to. every one in town, and be' taking the program bom to show, too, aad-bercan remember the plot of every play he saw aad the very costume of the- girl on the end of the roe well r he won't say "so much about that but hMI remember It ' How delighted they WUI b to see Hapay-Go-Lucky at borne. Row dull the bouse ha been without blm. . He'll whkxt.e all the Dew tune and ullJ all th now Jokes aad who'll car whether he ha a penny In the bank er not or whether hie not la good ta tb market? Poort Well, maybe, from th stand point ot his rich unci: but wMsper: What's money for If It hurts you t do anything with It? For my foolish part I'd rather spend a dollar and sate to It ring whoa I drop It on the eoemter than to have a theaaand f his brothers locked p somewhere aad get heart dlseas every time I Ira agin I might loo some of them. - Rich, poor-what relatlv term they are. after all: " A mllllonarrs for a day. To dldnt know how to' play tb part, Mr. Man. and any one who- knows anything; about the breed Will ten Jrou that THt moohmn c wcu m me hVJOJ CFTMC LAM AT iAir. " LfrA HAIMWN1 TM1 K JfNJHC OUKTar ia?? wan wn vLt Ta imxir. hlvhhncO. how is ir iHttrUH? nun TMe 8or smi pi coo p. AlAVAVX NAKEl A 5H-H- tM CHA7.V AloJT VOO. HA-HA- I'M AUurvA auJ WJrpv"rOUJ6 PAMrVerMeArFAtT GTTTjTRCOFfiCi AT K9mNiyMB. MAIL 9rveV HWel HSOFTMC rrANDOMC r-v'rv OCAIC WAS TOOBtfso CHICASO INTTefi PAyTIMeT VelTH ' A TVn0. sNEINtOPV tN ThC Srro Knbm Iiowev fon ttOHT HOT IN WMeHNEA vp vot 1 rue j ara f rut f erotw.' frvav tmoa ftor now. Urr PAUKt-TM6 FfturrJrAriOOp ijft'rtowrrv JbMfaiNfc .FACAitrooNiri . Cfiooxtro is ah ILUsSniAJdlL? . waihamwaBww O0W, WHAT 00 you rruOKTHt CttrtTCAtBvPAH. TA1"5 A Jt Aotr AT A now TrWOAfB AJT xj, i?cT.' fl4rTie3vose POJM FAC4T ftTE THE WoVUSSTrVtAV H BOISS CITY ANO THATS FLyV HiwH w as cooAnrvo- parrrv M AAwUCTiTr JT CtArp. . f 6TI FloWAEo MiMjeXP A flfS in Trie MA-TIAJMONiAC ITAietS 3(T f A HAP Af(3TrtCH. tcr POWrV. ONE HlwHr-TMC &AOUW0J tan quit oe;cTEO our hM T60K A Few SHOTS 0 EvC TOMIC ANO OaTOPtO TB UtL TUG MAThlMON'At. TNevft .HCffeifiLT it " A1 MS w BOUT TO CM. A rrUiKV VOI Ct PP6.0 IfSAJoLENC RUHSTHe AlTO WrtATMAKgaTXg OlSCQ V. HAST'tW ACHM6T, THE VASriNKDO . r06fAleiAT7 TAJ OW AtuOv Are A Few W-'tecPriCAti fon -Arr avrAri, moms at A M 7rtTri, ON Fog. HO tMATCIt (N MOrtM'rwa. TOPOTIU. Y Br GARRETT P. BKRVISS. A." The Dog's Stoty J Cooldng Secrels of a Famous Cbef How to Make Flaw Saaoo and Other Relishes. By PERjCTf SHAW. (Amuadsost Las givea away tb dog who made th trip to the) Pole.) . But the ioul ot a dog U a thing of elsjr.. , Too hav written It down; you bT said 70 kow. ' Do tto wordi of your choosing maia It oT . Wa clung to him when the war eteep; ' ' When our feet were pore, when oar eye were dim; -' " ' When we groaned for food, when we ached for sleep '. ", , ' W atTAlned at hU Vole and w Uved for him. " , " l " Stark walls dared ns their peak we scaled; We toiled, we suffered, hut on w aped. . . ; Shall hero say that hl dog team failed When they dragged hie fame on burdened aledt The hUaxard came and the ke flake flew Like the bite ot tlrebranda thick aad deep; Three of er brother were gone, we knew , . 4 " The eong ot the dark wae the call to eleep. ' . la th teeth of the galo we picked our dog . - (Aa men la the stross ot despair might do); ;, - ; " . Sublime is the aoul of a man, yon say. ' We aent him back through tb now-waUi tog . . . T look tor bia brother the U he knew. ' He tonnd them aad died out on we went- -- "The end of the wortll" wat the hero's cry; Oar leader axnk and their fUah waa rent (Kaa U hla brother, so why not I?) t " i Th hero won; on a springtime day - He reached the end of the long rainbow; . , ' Stopped, the raced oa hla homeward way To let Us world ot th mortal know, ' " I W who clung whea th way waa steep. He gave a ay to a aeedy friend. Oh, different far ia th faith w keep In th crowded mart or the world' bleak nd! . ' Sublime ta the sosl of a man. you say, ' But the soul of a dog to a thing of clay. Do ;.l still beiiev who have writ it ?' Are to rare la roar wisdom yoa know you know? . By KM1LK BAILLV. The moment you talk of French cooking you summon ap though ta of marvelous nnoes. Th sauce is prs eminently French. but nowadays It la a mueh-abuaed addi tion ta cooktndt. There are many hundred of saucea vary oa haa created an, at least; but all ot the sauce are made from one of three sauras called In French "lei sauces meres" the mother sauces. The - sauoss are: Baoch Bechamel, Sauce Allemende, or Oearmau sauce. Bauce Eapagnole, or 8panlsb sauce. Of eourss, every hotel and reauurant keep the principal saucea on hand all the time, so that all order for differ ent sauces caa -bo filled at one, but It Is a good Idea for a house keeper when making one of these sauce to put some of rt away for future use. Carefully strained and placed on Ice, tb sauces will keep some time, end or eeuras, they are always valuable In fix ing up dishes and left overs. There la aa art la cooking, a gift which only the bora cook possess and which ao amount of teaching will Impart In preparing sauces. I can give th an re ceipt to twenty assistants aad every one wot make It lost a little different, but th bora cook will have a auc which la perfection. rierhstitel sauce waa Oral mads by th marquis of Bechamel, who rose very high In the esttmatioa of his master, Leeto XIV of France, because of the sauce he invented. It Is made In this way: Tah HI grammes ot batter .as an grammes of fwar f d grammes max aa ouncek. Wet this with four quarts of boil ing milk and boil It geMQr, lor three hours. . Add seasoning (mirejolx,. see be low), rub through a "sieve and beat It thorough ty. Place a piece of butter oa top o keep K smooth. Let tt thicken If it to t be kept for some time, but be sure that It la perfeely smooth. BAUCE ALLCKANCB. Take some white stack mad of real bone aad left ever fowl: add water, can. rota and enlona stuck with dove, a boe sue of kttehea greea. several grains of pepper aad salt Let It boll three sour and strain through rntuha lata a sauce- In -ry - A:;v" II LOBBTEK MAU'iei WITH RICE. An easy way to make this delicious dish Is fully described In tb accompanying article or awuy pan. Have ready 3 grammes of butter and 3 grammes of flour. Melt together sad cook for a few minutes without let ting it brown; add three quarts of the white stock described above and let It boll for three hours, skimming It when necessary. Ta add to tb taste, put In mlrepvlx which has not been browned and made without lard. This Is not ab solutely necessary. Strain the sauce and put It aside. In a large saucepan put 1H quart of cream. of the Juice or water la which mushrooms have been cooked. add a little lemon Juice and nutmeg. Whip all together and thicken over a good fire. train through mualln and beat It until cold, fiet aside for use when needed. This receipt I not a complicated It may m. The Quantities glvea may be gmatly reduced aad only enough made for the immediate us ot two persona. BAUCE ESPAONOLE (SPANISH SAUCE.) In a deep saucepan melt 300 gramme of butter or good grease, with A gramme of Cot. Let It get slightly brown, then add five quarts of beef or veal stock. Bott It for four hours on the back1 of ths stave, Wbea It start to boil add this ft !! lit A TAsTTKarBL WAX TO SERVE AITLB SALAD. mirepoix, which goe Into all the sauce and Is a famous French seasoning: MIREPOIX. On big carrot, two onions, two piece of celery, one enrls of thyme, pars ley, two laurel leaves, pepper grains, half pound ot bacon or amoked lard. Cut the lard, onions, carrots aad celery Into small pieces. Plao a little butter In a sauce pan, put la th lard or bacon, let It meet, add ths other Ingredient and brown them, thru turn them Into sauce. Strain th whole Into a casserole and put It back on the firs nsxt day with 1 quarts ot tomato juice and IV quart of soup stock. Bring It to the boiling point and let It simmer for three hour. Hklm frequently. Pas through a Chinese strainer and then through muslin. Put It in a bowl or Jar and stir until It I cold. I'se when needed. Many cook make these sauces In a few hour and wonder why th result hi not what It should be. Slow, careful preparation Is needed to make a perfect sauce. The more care cook takes the better the result The two Illustration today give aa Idea of serving dlshe tastefully. Th on how th popular apple salad In ha ewa apple dish, the other Is LOBSTER SAUTE WITH RICE. ' Tare bulled lobsters weighing about two pounds apiece- Chop them up. leaving the claws, remove the meat Season the meat with salt and pepper and place In a pea with three ounces cf butter and three eoup spoonsful of olive oB, which should be healed before the lobsters are put la. Let them get a good color. Tare the contents of the pan out In a platter and put It back on th fir with three eschallotea chopped fine and th lobster, over which has been poured a Ct of bracdy. Light th brandy. For each person take half a glass of white wine, one glass of fish stock, one spoonful of tomato puree and half a pint of half plaoe. which Is the sauce eapagnole, moistened with Madeira. Cook from twenty-five to thirty min utes. Arrange the lobster, cutting in small squares. Strain the sauce through muslin and add butter and chopped herba Beat th loiter daws and place In th center of a rice mould with the rest ot th lob ster and sauce. The rice should be cooked In salt watsr. Hudson Maxim. Inventor of high ex ploslxes and terrible guns, and discoverer of th "science ot poetry," believes than 'In a very short tlm there will be only three countries m the world the United State of Asia (In- " eluding Europe), the United States of Africa and th United Slate of America." I have a high re gard for Mr. Maxim, but I cannot put cannot put much faith In his "three nation world." I think that. Ilk Na poleea, he under sstlmats th strength of rc ' feeling. Th great Coralcan wrecked Mm self on that error. Only at St. Helena, where be. had tlm I think la quiet, did as begin to comprehend why the English, the Qermans and th Spaniards would sever stay down after he bad put them down. Eve hi genius eoutd net mite Europe. Asia aad Europe aaited la a Sinai aatlsal The whit and the yellow, sep arated by a payeaoloale gulf that has never been spanned, aad yet Mended enter on flag and following one Ideal guch a thin; la in eontradkrUoa to the whole course of history. We are apt to be Minded by th brll llsncy of modern mechanical trnimpha Because we have brought all parte of th planet Into close oommurucatiou with railroad, telegraphs and steamships: be cause be see Japanese wearing derby hate and shooting America guas and Chinamen rolling their pigtails ' Isto etilgnona and perceiving the evtvantag of republican government we aaaum tkat th world I all on now. and that It re quire but the waving of a fairy wand to banish forever the differenced that have divided men from time Imemmertal and that are Implanted aa deep la their nature a I their mothers milk. Intelligence la common to all men. They only need education aad oppor tunity In erder that all shall adopt l advantages at modem discoveries In science, government snd sociology. In that sense th world I fast becoming one. But behind all that II differences' of mental constitution that 16 centuries may not elralinate If they ever caa bei eliminated. Th unprecedented success et eup American e ape rt merit la self -eoveraaeen t leo tend te make us dreamers when w turn our thought te the unifies tloa of the world. But we to eight of the unparalleled series of circumstances' that have favored us. We have mad en nation of all tb best part of North A maris because, In the first place, this whole country was prac tically unoccupied when our anceetora landed en It here, aad then, ewrng to hlalorio cause, th entire land felt un der th dominion of-a single rare, and before ether race began te son their son here In so aside rabi number we had become ae dominant that they bail, perforce, to make themselves one with ue. The second oaua operating ta our favor waa geographic la Its nature. Esat of th Rocky mountains the whole lead la a geraphle ualty, and, for tunately, before ' another civilisation could grew up wsst of the mountains the railroads bad abet through them and th telegraph line ever them, eo that , alone la the hietory of th world, hv achieved the seeming miracle of leveling a great moluntaln rang a barrier to common nationality. But as Ion as th world atanda It will be composed of many nations, cultivat ing many different Ideal, and they will continue to struggle with on another, to their great mutual advantage, al though la a broad sense, they will be brothers, aad will cease to fight one an other with dynamite. Th war of th future will be th war of brain, net of bullets. Vr The .Ideal Marriage By OR. FRANK CRANE. Let u think to th end and consider what th Ideal 1 marriage ought . to bo. Let us for a moment put away all prac tical Idea, coramoa sen arrangements, adjusting ourselves to things as they exurt, and all (hat Frequently light caa be thrown on th perplexities ot present problem by stripping them of their eon cretan and treating them la their claim abeolutenee. Algebra often save time and troubl and solves pusxles that baffle arithmetic. Marriage Is never going te be Ideal until It Is absolutely tree In choice. The only reason for getting married should be the mutual, trresttstlbie attraction of love, ' Any ether factor mixed Into the matter I bad. stance, coaorm dependence Is not good. No woman ought te get mar ried In order to be supported. Somehow. I know not bow, marriage ought to be removed from tb list of occupations, where It now too often la among school teaching and typewriting. Th fundamental thing to do, then. Is la some way te render woman economic ally independent Thua her aeiaction of a husband ased not be alloyed with t?.v baa metal of seeking a mean ot livll- For this rssaoa I look upon the Invasion by women of the many fields of business aa, on the whom, a move In the right direction, although. Ilk all human con dition, tt I naturally accompanied with some pern. "Whatever says E. H. Origgs. "tends to free women from any external com pulsion to marry place marriage itself upon a nobler plan." Secondly, the permanency (and, hence, the beauty) of marriage caa not finally rest oa strict divorce laws. Outer com pulsion ef thl kind la well enough at present awing te our "harness of heart" and ear Imperfect morals, but at last the sureness and firmness ef marriage must depend upoa she development of aa appreciation ef the worth and beauty and Joy ot It. I believe In monogamy, not because of any law er authority, but becaua It I psychologically and physiologically th most satisfactory arrangement for th Ideal exprrealca of love of women and love of children. Any other system de bases the affection of man and woman, and results in cruelty and Injustice to the child. There le no hope for the family outside of the growth in ths race of s;rong ethical and retsious feeUuas; that la, a sense of the sarodusfs and nobleness of sex relatione. It must be something man want to work for, suffer for, and, it need be. die for. , Aad then marriage must be between equals. I do not me in rank er money or education, nor any such idiocy, but In nsturc. It must be eye to eye, end band In hand. There must be aa super lority. A men Is most manly wuea be le womaaiaed; that I, whea his strength la made gentle aad forbearing and ktad!y. A woman I most womanly when she la) thoroughly mingled with the mauin qualities; that Is, whea her tandernesj and wee trteaa acquire power aad firm 4 nee and practicality. Love does this. Love Is the equalizer. It If the hydrostatic parados of souls, tor aa a column ef watsr ,rlee te Ihel suae level la aa loch tube and a li4 Inch tub wbea they are Joined, as love put two souls en a spiritual level. After ell, therefore, love te the hope of the race. With It we hall g ea up to divine stature; without tt w aba! aurely. revert to barbarism. Thua Tenaysen: For woman la not undeveloped man. But diverse; could we make her ee Us man Sweet lov were (lain; hla dearest bond I thl Not Ilk to like, but ok In difference. The solution of marriage, therefore, dependa oa three things: Freedom, no. blensss and equality. Afore deeply, on one thing love. POINTED PARAGRAPHS Grounds for divorce may be the ceme tery of love. Getting rich quick Is aa dangerous sa it le dlrrvtiit A man with money to burn ss'.dora starts a conflagration. A man haa reached the turn! as point after a pretty girl passe by. Lov I apt to be blind unto, a third party enter then It can see a mile. Perhaps a young vidow might set rid ot her weeds by marrying a gardener. Nothing Jolta aa egotist like the re fusal ef people to pay any attention te him. When an eld man die and hi rela five say that he Is better off the chance or that he la. A man may think the world of a wo man. riit ha should remember that there are others la the world. , F.ither than low ut at the last min ute, the bride will promise te eboy-but she always haa bar fingers crossed -4 Chicago New. , j