V i. i You Can Do Hunting a T f Ei AfJlEfc T7ME TVCV 1 ' f- VSNQOOf 1 S CHtCKEM IN THG, , 9 ( 'ONOey V tOBQV 77KES A JtArr YSSS- TIM . CT r v VrNTr6 HOW- AT I'MABOtTAS 'HMtlWvooMuir WANTED TO S? IVvt rrmr fvN a yt (W MH6 A 9lACT5(C , . V IHBWMORg. J MeWoM- I feATS DOnT HOLLER Nty NAnS The Widow Decides to Accept Maynard, but a Cruel Reve lation Halts Her. By Virginia Terhune Van De Water. The following morning Beatrice lay abed late. Jack had been-restless with the pain in his hand and had called his mother often during the night. But, al though she did not get up at her usual rising hour, Beatrice did not sleep after the first rays of the sun struggled through- her drawn window curtains. She lay quiet, thinking of Maynard, of his goodness and gentleness last evening to Jack and of what he had said, but chiefly of what , her Instinct told -her 'he would say. In the Interview she had promised to grant him. She was sure that he would propose . to her and she. was almost equally certain of her own favorable reply.-. ; , She did not love him, perhaps, she mused as she lay In her shaded room, her arms crossed above, her head, her fair hair lying in a shining mass about her face. But he was clever, and kind, and a gentleman, and abundantly able to sup port her and her children. Moreover, she, bad. married once for love, she re minded herself with a bitter smile. Yes, she would accept Maynard. Her hour of calm thought had brought her to this de cision. She would be calmly contented with him as a husband. The episode at tendant upon their trip to Claremont she had banished from her mind. He had practioally denied to her that he was a hard drinker, and she could certainly ac cept his word as truth. He could not i have been well the afternoon of their drive, or it was all something that she could not understand and would not try to understand. She would trust him, that -.was . all. To this point , had Robert Maynard' s tact . and good manners i brought his erstwhile critic. The matter, satisfactorily settled In her own mind, Beatrice arose, bathed and dressed herself, eating her late break -' fast with a good appetite. She was busying herself with a bit of sewing. when the telephone rang. Thinking to herself that no other phone In the city ever rang as often as hers, she took down the receiver. When she remem bered that the call might "be from May nard she was conscious of a feeling of glad anticipation, and It was with genu ine disappointment that she recognized Henry Blanchard's now familiar wheeze. "It's 'Uncle Henry,' Mrs. Minor," said the old man with a chuckle. "Were you espeptlng some one else? You said 'Hello' as though you thought you were going to hear something pleasant" "And' I think I am," answered Beatrice.. "Child. ' child, don't try to turn the head .of an old codger like me!" re- proved Blanchard, although well pleased. "I only called you up, my dear, to ask !f you would make me happy by letting me come to see you this evening if you are to be alone. Helen Is going out of town today" with another chuckle-and I want to make the most of my opportunities." "A friend Is always welcome at mv house, whether Helen is in town or not," said Beatrice a trifle coldly. She disliked the air of Intrigue the sexa genaribn seemed anxious to Impart to his visits. But Henry Blanchard, with bland un consciousness, accepted Beatrice's frigid statement as an invitation. "At what time then?" he asked. A refusal arose to Beatrice's Hps, but she was not so much infatuated with her , potential finance as to overlook the ad vantage of an anchor to windward, nor had she-, quite forgiven Helen Bobbins, her subtle attempt at Interference In Uncle 'Henry's relations with herself. "At 8:13 I shall be disengaged and happy to tee you," she answered.' "Mrs. Minor," said the elderly man hes itatingly, "you don't care for flowers do you-" "Indeed I do !" ' exclaimed Beatrice. "What made you think I did not?" "I was going to bring you some flowers the other night, but Helen happenened to mention' that you did not like rosea so I left those I had bought, with Jher Instead,", he stated, naively. "Helen Is mistaken," remarked Beat rice," with nlore charity In her tone than In her 'heart' "I love all flowers." "I'm glad of that," said Blanchard, and rang off.' ' t' He arrived at Beatrice's apartment' at 8:15 with the puctuality of a business man who prided himself on being prompt for every engagement. With him came also a -gorgeous bouquet of roses, deep red aad fragrant VTc- make tip for those' you did not , get," he said, as Beatrice exclaimed at their beauty. - But she, with a woman's tact, refrained from enlarging upon what ehe pretended to consider Helen's mis take, a Lot with a Doughbag ' , ' . . - . . ,, : , , ,..,,,,-,- M i , Husband That evening was warm and muggy, and even in the soft-lighted drawing room the temperature was " oppressive. Uncle Henry mopped his face constantly with a large silk handkerchief, while Beatrice fanned herself languidly, too warm to be comfortable. "I declare," aald the man finally, "this is the kind of a night on which one feels that he would like to go to some quiet roof garden where there Is a breeze and listen to the orchestra." "It is, Indeed," assented Beatrice. Blanchard hesitated a moment 'I don't suppos you would care to go, would you?" he queried timidly. "Why?" asked Beatrice, suspiciously". "From what Helen told me I suppose you have good reasons for the stand you take, Mrs. Minor," said Blanchard. "But," bringing the handkerchief again into play, "It's mighty hot!" "What did Helen tell you?" demanded Beatrice "Well," said the old bachelor, "she in timated pretty strongly that you "didn't approve of going out in the evening with any man In fact, that you had scruples against it." s With an effort Beatrice repressed the Indignant denial that she longed to utter and forced herself to speak calmly. "I'm afraid . that ". Helen is growing strangely forgetful," she remarked. "I was out with her and Mr. Bobbins and we had a very pleasant time one evening only a few weeks ago," she asserted. "Humpf!" grunted the man reflectively. "Then will, you go out with me this even ing? It won't be far. We'll Just go around to "The Arcadian." It's cool there and the music is good." "I would be very glad to go," replied Beatrice, with decision. A half hour later they were seated In a cool roof garden where white-covered tables shimmered in the soft lights that gleamed among the palms, and the strains of a string orchestra mingled with the chatter of the guests. At Beatrice' request, Uncle Henry had lighted a cigar, and she appeared to be listening to his prosy talk while she sipped Iced tea and enjoyed the coolness of the music. At, another table, half-observed by a large palm, a gay party of men were drinking, not wisely but unrestrainedly. Several times their laughter, rang out loudly, and Beatrice glanced in annoy ance in their direction. A sudden roar of merriment made her turn her" head again toward the ill-mannered group. One of the men was standing up with the evident intention of making a speech. His face was red, his mouth loose and flaccid, and he clung to the edge of the table as his eyes glanced restlessly about the room. It was Robert Maynard. The manager hurried up and spoke in a low tone to the three meh' who remained seated. Two of them grasped Maynard and pulled him back Into his chair. "What's the matter? You look ill!" exclaimed Henry Blanchard who had been talking on and had missed the in cident. "I don't feel quite well." murmured Beatrice.. "Let us go home!" "Mother," asked Jack the next morn ing, "When's Mr. Maynard coming again?" ' "He's not coming, laddie," was the grave reply. "Never, mother?" questioned the child. "Nq. never!" said Beatrice in a firm voice.' A Deep One. Another Artemus Ward story comes to the front. It appears that Artemus had been as signed to a local concert. It was an amateur affair and an aristocratic affair, and a nice notice was confidently ex pected. Usually the humorist's copy was in spected before going into print, but some how this got by without detection. It was a nice notice for the most part. The soprano was highly praised and so was the tenor. But when- Artemus reached the basso he stumbled. "The young man has a fine voice," he wrote, "a very fine voice, and it has great depth. Frequently It went so low that fears were expressed that it would not come to the surface again. It is really an unusual voice. It sounded at times like the rumblings In the interior of an juneasy elephant" . There was considerable excitement when this critique appeared, but ae far as known no serious results ensued. Cleveland Plain Dealer. The great trouble with a man of might is that very often he won't It isn't every politician who can nail a He without smashing his flngars. Many a man's idea of practicing econ omy Is to preach it to bis wife. THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, Japanese in Hawaii Send Home for their Wives J "No more orientals of the laboring class are coming to Hawaii, and a good many of our white citizens who cultivate sugar estates are sorry that the faithful Chinese are barred under the law," said W. P. Harcourt, a sugar planter of the Island of Kauai, one of the Hawaiian group. "They are our best workers, , and before the exclusion policy was applied we ' could count on a certain regular Influx of Mongolians to toil In the cane fields. "The Chinese now In Hawaii have been there for many years, and most of them are getting to be old men. Not many of the Chinese have wives, but in former days not a few of them became the hus bands of the native Kanaka women. It was a good cross was this half-breed progeny, and so also the offspring of the Japanese and native women. In recent Cooking By EMJLE BAILLY. People sometimes criticize our French cooking and say that it is too elaborate and over-decorated. A good cook knows enough about the chemistry of the body to realize the need of appealing to the eye as well as to the taste. ; You who cook for a small family re member this: Men who sit all day long in stuffy offices, and women who spend much time in badly ventilated rooms both need an artificial stimulus for a good appetite, and sufficient gastric Juice. This stimulus can often be found in vrira&xn rmsmmmi I v ... WXV II I iVs rNS If JDKCOHATIVE WATS OIT ppr-'- Copyright, 1912, National , r times, however, the Japs have been In the habit of tending back to their own land for wives. In most cases I think the self-eleoted bridegrooms get their parents back In the Flowery Kingdom to pick out wivea for them. . "The matter Is finally arranged through the Japanese consul, the man in the case putting up money for the passage of his intended spouse. The hour that she lands must also be the wedding hour, for the authorities will not allow the fair ones to remain unless claimed and formally mated according to some civil or religious cere mony that both parties consider binding. "Every now and then a wjreless mes sage comes to my plantation which tells one of my young Japanese hired men that he may expect on the arrival of the next ship at Honolulu the girl who has been Secrets of a Famous Chef THE SOUTH AMERICAN WAT. s:RVfN ORAJiIGRO. 1912. News Assn. picked out as his wife. I do not think that In many cases the principals have ever laid eyes on each other. On the receipt of the message, the man gets permission to go to claim his wife, and pretty soon the pair are domesticated on the estate. "Not long ago a ship from Yokohama arrived with forty or fifty so-called pic ture brides. Every one of them had been chosen through photographs forwarded to Hawaii some time In advance of the ar rival of the originals. Occasionally there Is a pathetic case, as when not long ago a very pretty young Japanese maid was forced to take the next ship returning to her old home. Inspection showed that she had trachoma, arid the rigid rule that ordered her deportation could not be waived. "Baltimore American. THE LARGE PICTURE ABOVE SHOWS THE CUBAN METHOD OF IMPALING A PEELED ORANGE ON A FORK. THE SMALL PICTURE ON THE SIDE SHOWS AN "ORANGE BASKET." viewing spotless napery, flowers and shining silver, and one or two well cooked and daintily served dishes. - A delicate bouillon also stimulates the appetite and two fruit Juices are used with particularly good effect, especially here in America. These fruits are the I orange and the grape fruit The later contains a proportion of quinine and Is a tonic, while the prop erties of the orange as a promoter of appetite are well known. The best part, In fact the only part, of the orange, which should be eaten, Is the juice. Consequently that method of pre paring It which gives one the pure Juice without pulp Is the best Many people object to drinking this out of a rfass and want to see the teel and smell the delicate aroma of the oil In the orange peel. That Is another appeal to the gas trie juices, which the also stimulated by the sense of smell. The illustrations show several waya Drawn for The Bee by Tad Flirtatious Married Woman She Goes a Kenning: Wrong When Good Sense Would Keep " Her on the Straight and Honest Road. Uy DOROTliV A poor, bewildered, disgusted married man asks me this question: "Why do middle-aged married women flirt?" The answer Is, because they are fools. Nobody , with a grain of sense In her bead would risk so much for so little as the mar ried woman does when she engages in a flirtation. On the one side are the love and trust of her husband, the respect of the com m u n 1 1 y, home, children, social position, On the other, the pleasure of having her van ity tickled by the thought that she can still attract the attention of men. With the price of divorce, and the loss of everything worth having for a woman. There Is no other such one-sided game In the world, and the marvel of It Is that any human being outside of the home for the feeble-minded, could be found reckless enough and silly enough to engage In It Yet there are thousands of women who stake their happiness on this desperate venture. It Is Incredible, but It Is true, that there are womes who have all the goods the gods provide; who have kind and generous husband, luxurious home's, beautiful clothes, lovely children; who are not satisfied with all of the blessings but are never happy unless they think they have secured the admiration of every man in sight Such women carry on clandestine ac quaintances with men their husband do not know; they write foolish, sentimental letters that compromise them, they run after celebrities, and they form the follow ing and make the fortunes of all sorts of false prophets and exploiters of new cults. Wltbiut them the fashionable preacher could not go to Europe for six months In the year nor the fashionable doctors roll around In limousines. Nor Is there any extent to which they will not go in their mad desire to attract the attention of men. If there Is nobody else about, they will make eyes at the dis reputable old rounders that hang about cafes and roadhouses, or the very waiters that serve them. Age, that should bring intelligence and discretion, seems to bring to those women only an additional recklessness and folly, so that they are less" careful of their conduct than the flightiest girl would be. Yet they know, If they would only stop to think, that the faults that the world exouses In youth It does not excuse In sober maturity. It Is a curious fact that the most sus ceptible time of a woman's life Is tiot when she Is sweet and twenty, but when she Is fat and forty, and old enough to know better. But she doesn't. A young girl may suspicion a man's mo tives and assay his compliments to see how much of veracity Is in them, and weigh his vows of devotion to ascertain how heavy they are with real feelings, but the middle-aged woman's vanity Is so hungry and so voracious that she of serving oranges popular In different countries, especially in the south, where the orange grows. A Cuban method Impales the peeled orange on a fork after it has been peeled wilth a sharp knife. A round slice ts taken off both the top and bottom of the orange. One of these pieces Is put on the fork making a resting place for the orange, which comes next and the last piece Is placed over the orange. The r tariKi Is eaten without soiling the fl"'er end only the pulp is left on the fork. The ordinary way of serving an ui...,;e la u t'.u tUe fruit in half around the center and place it In cracked ico. When the orange Is eaten In quarters, too much pulp Is consumed. A South American way shows the orange cut in half, the skin turned back after being separated from the orange by a spoon drawn under it. When eaten in this manner only the juice Is taken. Oranges and grape fruit serve many decorative purposes and make excellent receptacles for salads, fruits and des serts. The peel can be scraped free of pulp, dried and kept as a seasoning and perfume. 13 f e swallows whole every honeyed speech a man makes her. Possibly this explains the middle-aged married woman who still tries to flirt, but In does not excuse her. Nothing ex- -cuses her except the assumption that she has not enough gray matter In her head to comprehend the danger she runs ' and the harm she does and the certainty . that she has not enough sense of humor to. perceive the figure of fun she makes of herself. ( For there Is nothing under the sun more grotesque than the spectacle of the -middle-aged mother of a family aping the airs and graces of a debutante, and , ' trying to act kittenish and cute when her antics are only those of a perform ing elephant. Yet how often do we see this done, and how many women do;, we know and laugh at, who believe them selves to be fascinators because they a; are surrounded by a horde of synoophan tic men who flatter them for the sake of : . eating the dinners and riding In the cars, and sitting In the opera boxes, and spend- tng week-ends at the country places that "' the women's husbands pay for. " Be sure that if any of these flirtatious middle-aged married women could hear what their admirers say of them behind . their fat backs, they would be Instantly ; and forever cured of the belief that they :v were second edition Cleopatras with; weather and age proof charms. " . These married flirts consider themselves ; good women and pillars of society be- -cause they hold to the letter of moral law and only transgress the spirit But '-'. they judge themselves too leniently. The ' wife who seeks admiration of other men . than her husband, and who lures them on as well as Bhe Is able Into making ." love speeches to her, Is false at heart and J" untrue to her marriage vowr. She has no reason to draw her skirts away from--; her sisters , of the street Indeed they ' may be better women that she Is, fori she, at least, has not known their temp- r tation. ' ' It Is one thing for a woman to be driven ' Into wrong-doing by hunger and cold, and want, or some deadly Injury that has -been practiced upon her. It is another thing for her to deliberately dally, with slna the finery her husband has given her on her back, within the shelter of her home, and with the tenderness and love of a good man protecting her. Yet that ts what a frlrtatious married woman does, and it makes her offense a particularly Iniquitous one. It la hard on a woman to be married to a man who 1 flirts, but it Is doubly hard on a man to have a flirtatious wife, because so ciety pities' and puts a halo about the head of the wife who forgives her hus band's armours; it sneers at the man and , calls him an ugly name if he shuts his eyes to his wife's faults In this particular. For this reason and because when a woman married a man and he gives her his name, she Is more bound In honor to keep It clean than If It were her own, no married woman with any sense of de cency has a right to engage in a flirta tion. Men friends she may have. Charm ing she may be to them In her truth and loyalty and devotion to her family, but for her the days of . love dalliance are over. No man may make love to her without Insult She may not listen to it without degradation. . And beyond all this Is the folly of It the supreme Idiocy of risking everything : . In the world worth while for' the sake of a handful of lying compliments. Clrenlatlnsr a Pboay Dime. Two men were strolling the street when one of them spied a coin on the side- walk. He plcltj it up and discovered It " to be a dime. But It was bad. "Here." : he said, generously, to his companion, "you can have it'.' Replied the recipient, "Thanks we'll get a couple of high ones r, with it. You can pass even wooden money In a saloon." Forthwith they sauntered . to a bar. The glasses before, them, the dime was handed over. The bartender took it, looked at it and smiled. "Now," said the man who found It, "we'll .have. one on me." Again the glasses . were . set before them., He fished a quarter from his pocket and paid for the ber. The, bartender's smile broadened. Ha gave the man his change a nickel and , the dime he had discovered and dls- ; owned. And the worst of it was ha::, couldn't refuse it because his friend had Flven it over In payment A lot of" morals are obvious. New York Tribune. ' The thick-skinned man Ts never im-. , pervious to the spur of the moment The doctor will treat an imaginary ill-': ness. but hells never satisfied with an' imaginary fee. ' Many a man has lost hU health staking mntiov in order to enable him in rn Labrrrtd and regain V 4 It