Those Baltimore Broilers Are Bears The Strongest Like Socrates, Luther, Wesley, History, it is He Who Has By DR. C. How often it goes unexplained why it was that Athens killed Socrates? . It really is no wonder why they lulled him; that flat-nosed, awkward, bare footed inquisitor, forever poking his flat wse into, other people's affairs, showing them that the wisdom they claimed to have was but foolishness. Yet a Socrates Is indispensable to every community a man who . will , force you to understand yourself, to examine your own thought, and see that your wisdom is foolishness. We think that we are thinking, but even a Socrates is needed to show us where we stand. We have today a Socrates with us. The dramatist Henrlk Isben is a direct de scender) t of Socrates, and has inherited his right to make us think of the founda tions of our knowledge. Ibsen never claimed to be more than an interrogation point; he has no phil osophy or views of his own to system atize or falsify of your own thoughts. And of all hlti .plays, the one of which he himself Is" the hero is the most strong, simple and tfrett; the drama ''An Enemy of ;the People.' ; ,-. The hero, Dr, Stockraann, the man who haa been so ready to tell' the people of his town' Wherein they are wrong, when defeated in his purposes, boycotted, and evert beseiged in his home, comes at last to the declaration that he made to his wife, "I have discovered that I am the strongest man on the earth the man who stands most alone." "Trust thyself," says Emerson, "every heart vibrates to. that iron string." So then, that Is the secret of the foundation of strength. The great men of the' ages who have stood most alone are the men of whom we are now the most proud. Luther etands for the great institution of Protestantism, Fox for Quakerism, Wesley for Methodism and Lincoln for the jgreat nation "which he' saved. In the case of Lincoln, in particular, it Is Impossible to account: for his greatness unless we remember that he 4ld. stand alone. Afte he had reached the age of 49 he had absolutely nothing in his life 'that had been successful, but he etood; so that when he was called to the highest office that the people could give he was ready to take it and make that power which Was given to him the power that should save the nation. j Courage and faith are the foundations of the victory. The hedgehog sees a movement an inch from the end of 'his nose and cries that the world is coming 10 an end. There are these hedgehogs in verv urtA nr iir The Manicure Lady "Libraries is great things, ain't they, George?" asked the manicure lady. "I think there is something awful grand about a library.; There Is so many books there, and all that" "I never went lnto no library,' said the head barber, "since I was a kid. "The bid man had a lot of books at home, and I used to read some of them when I had been a bad kind and was locked in, but since then I don't know no more about libraries than I do about the Inside of a Jail." "Cheer up. George!" said the manicure lady, sweetly.. "Remember that while there Is life there is hope. But I was starting- out to tell ' you something. George. It seems that Wilfred has a friend that is an attendant at the big library on Fifth avenue, and .the other night the old gent took Wilfred and me and this library fellow out for an even ing. I don' Uling ttotw meant to ex tend his' hospitality outside of the regular family circle, and he would Just as soon have barred Wilfred at that but mother wasn't feeling well, so pa wanted to use up bis four seats. We all went to a swell show where Blanche Ring plays soma so,! ti a Wall street girl, and we seen Eddie Dunn aodthad a great visit and after the show we went over to one of them lobster palaces that you hear so much about and eat so little in. Father and Eddie Dunn bought all of the drinks not that Wilfred wouldn't have bought if be had had the price and so I suppose the library attendant figures tluU it was up to him to give us some kind of a re turn party. So he . invited us to the library. "It was a grand treat, George. Me and Fathej 4nd,rilfred roamed among them books like a lot of care-free children. IThe old gent had what cynical folks Man on Earth Lincoln and Others Great in Courage to Stand Alone. F. AKED. Lord Acton, when asked what the great est single event of the century was, an swered that it was the sinking of the trlat steamer of Fulton in the Seine, for its perfection under the government of Na poleon would have changed the history of the world. And the hedgehog people in New Tork stood on the dock and de clared "It will never go," but it did go, and Fulton's stand alone was gloriously Justified. In the church, the charge is made that evangelicalism is dead. It is not even dying. It can never die, for it is founded on the living faith. The world is waiting for new incarna tion, a religion that shall be as good for the polling place as for the prayer meeting; as good for swapping horses as for saying prayers; as good for the pri maries as for the presbytery. The gospel of today is a gospel of social service. We may be thankful for the promise of mansions on high, but what we need is more decent ' homes, on earth and more decent people in them. Religion is not a thing of the" stars"; it Is a thing of the streets. In the drama referred to the hero de clared that In a democracy the majority rule; that the majority of the people are fools; therefore,- the democracy Is ruled by fools. . How far can we go on this? Where Is the fallacy? In this ihe majority does not rule, It never did, and never will. The minority rules; ideas govern. It is your strong men who stand alone whose strength is In brain and heart These sit on the throne of the ages, and sway the majorities to their will. It is your Wesleys, your Luthers, your Cromwells and your Lincolns, who make and mold the mighty forces with which empires have had to deal. Then, the majority Is not so given to foolishness after all. In the long run you can trust yie Innate sanity of human nature. Demos is not a child of Chaos, It is a child of God and the outgrowth of the Christian spirit Democracy Is the expression of the highest of the teaching of Christ . What is the manifest destiny of the American people in the growth, of thle democracy? America has years of glory behind her, she Is young and daring. What is her mission? It is this: to build up life on truer. Juster foundations that the Old World ever laid; to evolve a nobler manhood and womanhood. This Is the destiny of America. , call a holdover, and on the way down town he had went into three places to telephone, so you can see that he was equipped fine to look at the backs of a lot of grand books. We must have seen tlie backs of J0.000 books, George. Some ot them had their titles printed on the backs. Tou could read them Just as plain. "There was one swell set there that I would like to have took home with me if I had a dray. It was called -Gibbon's Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire.' Who was Gibbons, George-some baseball writer?" "No," replied the Head Barber, "Gib .bona is a middleweight prlsefighter and you can take it from me that he Js a bearcat. He can hit as hard as Ben Speer, and be is almost as fast on his feet as Tank Sullivan. "Oh, you are thinking about a differ ent kind of a man altogether," said the Manicure Lady. ''Gibbons, the writer, is the man I mean. It'i funny that a baseball fan like you don't know the man who wrote the "Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire.' "And there was a lot of swell books, too. There -was Waverly Place novels, by. Sir Walter Goldsmith, and the com plete works of Charles Byron and Lord Dickens, to say nothing of a lot of smaller writers that I never took no time to read. But all the time I was wishing I was down to Coney. Some Old guy wrote something once about the wonderful beauty of books, but give me Coney Island when it is lit up at night" We know spring is here when old Jack Frost chucks' his job as advance agent for Old King Coal. " ,, ' When a girl begins to call a man by his first name, it's a pretty good sign she has designs on his last 0 ' " The Story of Ahab and Jezebel dW ( aft v Su Ml 1 , k 1 lilt ? -iiM V?Ca ll 1 The eighty-foot By GARRETT P. SERVI88. We all like to see the stories of the Bible, which Is our youth, at least, we read with wonder and veneration, con firmed, in some of their most Interesting details, by the results of modem explora tion, which seeks only for hard facts, and often obtains them In unexpected and surprising ways. Most of us, no doubt, have been better pleased with the thrilling stories of . the earliest adven tures around the Dead Sea, who thought that they had seen the very pillar of salt into which Lot's wife was changed, and had caught sight deep beneath the tremulous water of the walls of Sodom " old palaces and towers Quivering within the waves' lntenser day," than with the more scientific relations of later travellers, who find only Indica tions of a great geological catastrophe there, yet even these, In a manner, confirm the scriptures, for they show how the legend of the destruction of Sodom may have originated. But lately there has been made a dis covery which offers a more direct if only partial, confirmation of one of the most fascinating of the Bible narratives, that which tells of the wickedness and woes of King Ahab and Queen Jezebel, and the adventures of the Prophet Elijah. Explorers digging on the site of the ancient royal city of Samaria, have un covered what are believed to be founda tions of Ahab's palace, or 'Ivory house." containing Hebrew Inscriptions, with familiar Hebrew names, and, what seems especially significant, references to a "vineyard." This, it la thought, can be nothing other than the vineyard of Kaboth, which the Bible says lies near Ahab's palace, and the coveting of which by the king, who wished to turn it Into a royal park or garden, brought about a terrible example of the wrath of God. The owner of the palace, some of whose walls are shown in the photo graphs, and which occupied about two acres of ground, with its many cham bers grouped around Inner courts, "did more." says the Bible itself, "to pro THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1912. Copyright, m National The remains of the Jewish gat at f . 1 - - il IT wide staircase In Ahab's "Ivory House." voke the Lord God of Israel to anger than all the kings of Israel that were be fore him." . Hft fundamental offense was in marry ing Jezebel, the daughter of an Idolatrous king, and herself a worshiper of Baal who steam-rollered the enemies of hor religion with a cold nerve that would have- made even a national committee man's teeth chatter. It is irue that tho Other side had set her some example, for Elijah took her prophets and "brought them down to the brook Klshon and slew them there." When Jezebel heard of this she sent to Elijah a message, which, from the point of view of literary effectiveness of expression, must be regarded as one of the most blood-curdling threats evor uttered: "So let the gods do to me, and more also, If I make not thy life as the life of one ot them by tomorrow about thistlms." Elijah, who had Jtt performed a mar vellous meteorological feat by putting an end to a three-years' drouth, quailed at that threat and, In the language of tho scriptural writer, "when he saw that (tJe Right Klad of Hustler. There is a good story concerning a certain trip of inspection, when Louis Hill and a party of officials were taking a peek at the station agents somewhere along the line in Minnesota. At a sta tion we may call Oscarville an agent, perhaps forewarned, was observed fran tically moving trucks and cleaning up. "There's a hustler for you," said one of the party. - "Humph." said Hill. At another station the agent met them smilingly, smoking & good cigar and clad in his best clothes. He was frankly Idling, yet nothing was askew. "Well, what do you think of that?" commented one of Hill's friends, "there's an agent who has time to loaf." ' "Humph," sal Hill. A month later the loafer was promoted. "If a man can get his work done with out doing it himself he's the man for me," was the explanation of the railroad president-Metropolitan Magazine, aziie p)a News Assn. " h MMcn Rfilenr ot Archae ology Confirms the Narrative of Samaria. queen's message) he arose and went for his life." But the full anger of the Lord was not excited against Ahab and Jezebel until the Incident of the vineyard occurred. When Ahab told his relentless wife that Kaboth refused absolutely to sell his In heritance to suit the royal pleasure, Jeze bel took charge of the affair herself. She trumped up false charges against Naboth. got some rascals to swear to them, and then had the unfortunate, man stoned to death, by due process of law. Then back came Elijah with a message to Ahab from the Lord God of Israel: "In the place where the dogs licked the blool of Naboth shall dogs lick thy blood, even thine." It all came out according to the word of Elijah's message, but the wicked queen, strangely enough, long survived the husband she had ruined, although she, too, finally felt the vengeance of Je hovah, for she was thrown from her pal ace window, and when the dogs were through those who went to bury , her found only bones. Beat the Kins; at Poker. How the late King Edward VII of Eng land lost ttC.OOO to J. J. O'Toole of East St Louis in a poker game and presented a gold purse to him in recognition of his superior ability was told in St. Louis before Justice of the Peace Bell. According to the testimony, O'Toole won the $SO,000 and King Edward's admiration by beating a "pat" set of four fours, held by King Edward, with a set of four eights. "His majesty had his fours all the time, and I pulled in one of my eights, after holding up three eights and an ace for a 'kicker.' " O'Toole said. The story was told at the hearing of Frank Wllkins, charged with "larceny by bailee." Mrs. Thad B. Strait, a sister of O'Toole, testified her brother gave the gold purse to her, and she pawned It She caused her attorney to redeem it. The attorney gave it to Wllkins to keep In his saloon safe. Wllkins sold out his business soon afterward, and then sold the purse for $14 it is charged. St. Louis Timet Drawn for The Bee by Tad The Artistic A Young Lady Writes to Miss perament She Gets By WINIFRED BLACK. She wants to be an artiste's model, and she has written to me asking me how to get work at being one. "I. have an exquisite molded form," she says In the letter, "and an artistic temperment. I am ; very talented and have done artlBtlo work. My work has been accepted ' and highly praised tn various stores, and I, would like to go on with It, but they offer me such ridiculous prices that I can not do it. How shall. I get Into my proper sphere?" My dear, sweet foolish little g'ri, your proper sphere In right at home with your good, sensible mother "who worries about you," you say. I don't blame her. If a daughter of mine ever get the Idea Into her little head that he had "an exquisitely molded form" I'd never give her rest or peace, night or day, till I got that notion out of her brain, if I had to discharge the laundress and give daughter the family washing to do to make her realize that there Is only one thing on earth worth having, and 'that Is rest I ',. ,'.'; Artistic temperment! If I ever caught any girl of mine thinking herself "tem peramental" I'd shut her up In a con vent with a wail six feet high all around the place, and I'd keep her there till she came to her senses. jArtlstlc temperament! Tes, there is such a thing, but the people who have it never know It themselves. The one sure s'gn that a girl Is absolutely without what we call temperment, for want of a better name, is when she starts talk ing about it And your work, poor little girl, that "artistic" work you do so delightfully, what Is it, tatting or wool work? Per haps you make doilies with marguerites on thim, or tray cloths with pond miles all over the part where the unoffending cups ought to sit, or maybe you paint panels or decorate china, all nice work, all ' delightful work, for a pastime; but how can you think that there Is anything serious about It? They praise you at home and tell you you are "so artistic." Well, so you are, no doubt, within the limits. Why don't you stay In the limits and be happy? Some day some nice young man will see you sitting on the porch embroidering a bureau scarf, and he'll think, "There, she Is the right kind of a girl. No ten nis for her, no golf, no running around all hours of the twenty-four, but Just as nice, quiet, neat, gentle little soul who'll love to darn socks and look pleasant whle she's doing It" And he'll speak to you with a new note In his voice, and all at once you'll see what nice eyes be Always Too By BEATRICE "Love is exactly like war In this that a soldier, though he has escaped three weeks complete on Saturday night may, nevertheless, be shot through his heart on Sunday morning." Laurence Sterne. It Is not an uncommon thing for those on whom Cupid has spent no arrows to boast that they are invulnerable. They are always too young to make that boast. Too young when the years have bowed their shoulders and powdered their heads. It Is no distinction to have escaped. To be Incapable of emotion is so similar to a mummy existence that those who have reached years of maturity and have never been "shot through the heart" have .reason to be alarmed about it themselves. There is something lacking sympathy, tenderness, charity, tolerance, hope, faith or the power to dream. Such a one should not boast. It Is rather a matter to be regretted and remedied. It Indicates a sickness of the most sacred of the emotions. It indicates a lack of ability to love, a coldness that makes love turn away. Neither is it to one's credit to have loved only once. The heart doesn't die with humiliation at Its first mistake. It lives to make another, and another, and pill airnn tr i, 11 Temperament Black on the Subject of Tern Good Sound Advice 1 has and how broad his shoulders are, and you'll forget all about the "artlstlo temperament" and ' the things that go . with It. ' . )l You'll find yourself walking the aisle of a qu't little church some day j! to the old, cid song the organ sings, and your little head wilt be whirling around v. and around with happiness, and you will have found your vocation and the best ' ' vocation it Is on earth, too. ' Don't envy the girl with the real artls tlo temperament, pity her. She'll fly farther than you, but oh, how her wings t will ache sometimes! ' ; She'll see the world, she'll be part ot It, and half the time she'll be envying you, JUBt simple, contented, tittle whole. ,: some you, with all her poor, hungry ' heart. Oh, yes, they're all right the studio teas and the bohemlan dinners, and the ' "Art for Art's sake" Jargon, for a while, -, but any one who really grows up, grows away from all that sort of thing some -day, and then what? - - ' It's no fun posing tn a cosy corner ' when you're scrawny or fat; no cne looks at you. It's tiresome trying to be tem peramental when your feet ache because they are too small to carry your weight. And who cares how "artistic" the ar-: rangement of your hair may be when you " have to dye it to keep the gray from ' showing? The artlstlo temperament people wlll tell you all about It, little girl. Just get' behind the screen in the bachelor apart- nient, where the woman you envy so ; much lives and tries" to pretend she likes It. She is a genius, a real genius, and, like"' most geniuses, she'a as unhappy as . a woman can be. She has a home some v where and a good man in the home wait- Ing for her to get over her madness and s come back to him and the boy she left when she followed the call of tempera- '', ment. " She can't go back. Her genius won't let her; she Ilea awake here in the little" frame of a disappearing bed after the ' guests are all gone and the wildly hilar- ; lous dishes have been gayly washed and hid behind the piano top, and she cries, and she cries, and she cries. She remem- ' bers the light of perfect adoration in the eyes of her little son. What would she ; give for one such look tonight? Go back? She can't She must work,-' work, work till she dies, and she can't work In the little town in the little home where the boy lives with his lonely father,-;' so she stays on the "studio apartment" and Is picturesquely miserable. . ' Tou don't belong there, little girl, at all. Be content In your "comfy" home, i with your mother, the best and dearest friend you'll ever have. . . And, remember, that he Is coming down the road sometime, maybe today, per- ; haps next week, to round out and fill in your life. "Artistic temperature," '' "exquisitely ? molded form;" forget these foolish words, my dear little girl, and some day you'll be quite, quite happy, y Young to Boast J FAIRFAX. that which is sometimes retarded as a. "mistake" turns out to be the most bene ficial and needful of experiences. The mistake lies in carefully covering one's heart with frost and then making the boast that it Is Invulnerable. There never was a heart so fortified, so watched, so guarded and so closely sentineled that there was not some open ing by which love could enter if he chose. ' . Sympathy, pity, pride, -vanity, hope, who can say which one will point to a weakness in the fortress? There is some mode of entry Into the hardest heart. If there -were not this would be a dreary place in which to live. So don't boast .that time, has left- your heart "whole. . Rather regret it, and remedy It while the remedy still lies la your hands. . . . . , , No Chance for Difference ot Opinion "Didn't you find Miss Brown a very in telllgent glrir , ."Oh, yes." ; - , M ' "She makes a business of reading all the new books as fast as they appear." "So she told me." "And you got along beautifully to gether?" "Yes, Indeed. She had It all her own way." "How was that?" ; "Wb7 I haven't read a book la t y xr , u-"X ,4 H r,- i