Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 29, 1912, Page 9, Image 9

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    SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE' SUIT-
ft HOIST THAT VW CllEMT
QETi HIS tUSHTS-THtifc
VtfHtTE p.ETUTT7 0 N" .
AND MR HMDC-HE
f
A Lesson from the Hills.
Bjr WIXUREX) BLACIw
Th other day, whn I want , up into
th hills I had a worry. rnawlnj, tar
int aonliing. worry. It kapt m awake
at night and it walked with tn at noon
day. and whan tha
gray avenlng
stepped, y a 1 1 a d,
. Irom : the aunaat
Bkles there was the
worry coming, too,
'' Ilka the disagree
eble' cousin that al
ways heart of tha
party and cornea
; f "without' i waiting
tor an invitation."
I was pretty tired
of the worry, but
eoihehow I couldn't
aeefn to get rid of
It Tha busier I was
' the busier the
i " i
i
worry was, too; and when friends came
to tea me I heard the worry's voice
above all that the friend were trylnjt
i to say ana jifa was getting to be a good
oeai -or a nuisance.
- And then I went to the hills, and the
wuirj went aiong, or course. catch a
I good ; sized, able bodied worry staying at
home with v the old .clothes and the idle
furnace and tha empty Icebox, t
Every day In the hills' I went walking,
short. Walks at first, ' then long ones,
V over f sdn-soajced trails ' that led higher
and ever higher up the red hills. Shady
f aths winding among ctedafs that'looked
thousand years old. Down soft val
. fey With the green a benediction to. tired
eyes. Along little streams that laughed
and gurgled at the Joke of life as human
beings live it, " always walking," always
. out under the great dispassionate skies,
now blue, '.now gray, now, flecked With
'foamy, white, but always remote, always
unprejudiced, always Impersonal.:' -'' V
, And one day, all at once the worry was
jgone, vanished, , disappeared from vie
'and almost from memory. .'.
' Gone down stream with the little bits of
brown bark I learned to sail la the gig
j gling water, gone up the canyon to listen
to tne crooning of the wind in the cedars
and the gusty sights of the pines, gone
to play with the fluttering leaves of the
t aspen, in the shade by the turn of the
, trail, gone forever. Tbr the hills wril not
let a worry stay with you. --
; I am glad I came to the hills; they
taught me how little and how foolish
land how ungrateful I was. ' ,
,; "When the worry bit the deepest there
I stood the eternal hills, smiling at me
I from under the scurrying clouds.
"Wait." they said, "be patient, take
Icomfort, see the little sauirrel down there
in the ehadow-ee how he hurries about
his business? He's worried for fear he
won't have enough, to last him throush
tno outer winter. He will. I know h
will, . for I have seen his grandfather
worry the same way, all for nothing.
; "Once, when the season was poor, the
i squirrel's great-grandfather did run short
jof food late ' In , the cold snow, and he
Jdled, Just as easily as be would have died
I a whil later, anyhow, If he had had all
; the fruit of the great oak stored In his
.ceuar unaer the cedar roots. What dlN
ference did it make, really? Why did he'
worry so; the worst that came was hm
1 so bad,' was it? ' -' ;
-Tha , little striped squirrels there "on
the rocks are quarreling among them
i .7.! . i .
, The Forecast
' ' ' By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. ,
TS1!! ..PirmlMlon fr0? Housekeeping Magazine for July).
It may be that I dreamed a dream; It may be that I eaw
The forecast of time to come, by tome supernal law. , .
I Jeemed to dwell in this tame world, and in this modern time; :
Yet nowhere , wag there eight or sound of poverty or crime. ' "
All etrlfe had ceased; men were disarmed, and quiet Peace had made
, Ajnousana avenues for toll, in place of War's grim trde. 4.
From east to west, from north to south, where, highways smooth and broad
Tied, State to state, the waste lands bloomed likefgarden spots Of God. .
. There were no beggars In the streets; there wnre no unemployed,' ' '
For each man owned his plot of ground, and labored and enjoyed.
Sweet children grew like garden flowers; all strong and fair to see; -' 1
, And when I marvelled at the sight, thus spake a Voice to me: v
"All Motherhood is how an art; the greatest art on earth; '
And nowhere is there known the crime of one unwelcome birth.
From rights of parentage, the sick and sinful are debarred; ; -V ' v ,
For Matron Science keeps our house, and St the door stands guard.
We know the cure for darkness lies in letting in the light; '
And Prisons are replaced by Schools, where wrong views change to right
The wisdom, knowledge, study, thought,' once bent on beast and sod,
We give now to the human race, the highest work of God; ,
And as the gard ner chooses seed, so we select with care; ' ' '-;
And as our Man Plant grows, we give him soil fcnd sun and air. '
There are no slums; no homeless poor, all mea are opulent, .
For Mother Earth belongs to them, as was the First Intent." i- -
jit may be that I dreamed a dream; it may be that I saw
The forecast of a time to come, by some supernal law.
" . . .... -. r ' - . .' - -
www"w"w'l'w"''M,'ww'l'''p''w'M",'"l'','','- . .... .. . . . . .. - ' " ' ; J ,
.
selves; they call each other the ' most
awful names. Why do they do it? Life
is so short with them. ,. One season we
see them and the next they are "gone.
Just a little season, rain, sunshine, wind,
a full stream, ' low water, hall,' sleet,
lightning, they are all so wonderful, and
the little Striped squirrels there on the
rock do not see any of these things,
they Just chatter and scold and fight
For what? We wonder and wonder. ;
"The great mountain there, the king of
us all, he never worries) he cannot There
Is bo much for him to do. .
"There are the clouds always getting
lost, and wandering ! around , like white
sheep forgotten by the shepherd; he has
to call up the wind, the singing shepherd,
to whistle them all home again. : '
'.'There is the sunrise. What would that
be without the great peak, and the waters
fall and rise, andvthe sunsets, and the
moon sails In calm grandeur through tha
glorloui sky?.' -. . ,t - , ;
"We wonder among ourselves,. we hlUs,
we laugh together, we mountain streams.
Why, even the yellow flowers there on
the spur of the mountain know enough
to smile la the sunshine, and be happy.
What, poor things you, are, you humans,
you and the squirrels, what good does all
the chattering, and tha hurrying, and the
hoarding, and the worrying do? Tell us
that, we want to know, we hills.",
And it was , while I listened to them
that the worry disappeared, and my heart
Is light again, for I know that all Is well
in the end, and that all the worrying In
the world will not make it better.
And so I live in the sunshine and walk
In the rain and rejoice In a little weather
Just because I am alive, like tha flower
there on the spur of the sreat mountain.
Alive andpart of the great plan. ' Who
am I, to sit and make tha day sad and
the night forlorn with my moanlngs?
Come up into the hills, tha glorious hills
and learn peaoe, oh ye of troubled minds.
The hills that endure, and smile, and re
Jolce that they, too, are part of tha great
scneme. .,'.. ....,
Come, forget for a while the little frets,
leave behind you the small annoyances,
put care In tha stove and burn it up, and
most Important of all, leave yourself.
your, conscious self, at home with the
last year's clothes. . Pack your teif-ooa
sdousness In the garret with the Paris
hat that was such a beauty a year or so
ago and Is such a caricature now.
Tou are out of fashion, too, you your
self. Tou need a change, a new point of
VlaW. "V ' j - . '( U."
It Isn't half so Important as you think,
whether you make that deal or not. Who
will care ten years from now whether
you paid $10 a day for your room or 50
cents; you won't even know yourself.
The cut of your soul is out' of date.
It's too small hare, and It bags there,
and what, a wrinkle right there at tha
heart line. ; Pear, dear( that will never
do. Make it over, that soul of yours, i
You live In town with a thousand peo
ple staring at you Whenever you try to
eat a quiet meal? Hie to the mountains,
build a shack of boughs, and let your
soul growl ... ' . t
The poet-king of Israel knew all this,
for he sang: -
'I-wlll left up mine eyes to the hills
from whence cometh my help." Psalm
121, vl.
. i
THE
HA-H-A-HJk- . If
K Af(W MOCK I N il STS THAT
TRl IS VOW iu Dv.m3
GfANTi VJGOfi pi-AWN AND
THE-iCOH WAS ?TO 8'A-V
PAwCH OP THE rArVT 1
THE LAST H-ACP OP TVT 4
.MWNA-VNITH J. OUT AND,
HAH Si VfA.jNEJl.CAAA"fo GAT
AHO HIT THfc UAi-A. BCM
"FELL-fLAr IKf TtUNMH6
1DF-lWreft$ AHO
pur o"T;'novu woo
Sff tVAT THE. GAHT&
wo HANS DOW V.
pfCOF THAT WHE6L.AJ?R0W
AMttAT 00 VOO NOW
A G OUT M A t H f N SW
I'M A STEHOGUA PHCTt
PoR A WATER CONCOIV
now: i oor Gtx dowv
till&aka 3okt me
MAil, Blow oowV TV
THe CELLAR ftolt A
Jt0e AHO TALK
The Terror
By GARRETT P. 8ERVISS.
Near the old city of Halberstadt, fa
mous among traveling Americans for its
beautiful specimens of ancient wooden
architecture, there has lately been dis
covered, ; in digging for brick clay a
cemetery of extinct monsters, of the
tribe of the dinosaurs, which has not only
aroused the enthusiasm of German pal
eontologists (a paleontologist is one who
studies the life and remains of ancient
creatures of the earth), but has also at
tracted the special attention of the em
peror, who, delighted with Mr. Carnegie's
gift of a pIa8terot-paris model of the
gigantic American diplodocus, is now
pleased t6 find that German soil is capa
ble of showing up something of the same
kind, if not of equal magnitude.
The photographs reproduced herewith
EXCAVATED BONES
fir-'L, . , Ill, V: ONB OF-THS DINOSAUR eiCELETONsi
H S- "S-y 7":"'",'"-
I V s.' S & - enable ; the reader to, uriderstand ! the
1 1 -
BEE: OMAHA";, MOXDAT,'
; A : Midsummer's Day Dream
" , Copyright, 1912.,Nstlonal News Ass'n.' ' ''. .
TE MAW VWR$:
THfi CoHNtT
TM6 TWO O-AW OOO-S LEANED
AQAIH ST THff MAM04 AM V
N THS MCtUtW MUClLAfrfi
TAtUJJ- J-APPINfi- UP TW6
BftCNw. owe: wa ttvmv :
TO JW TWl S FASr
f SOU SnuHP fftARp JnoM
HE.TH.iEo tT TPCR. fvLL-y
rtALp AH HOOlt TVV THE
fcArtTCHOEfc LAH6f OVCT.
Aw& PPSO ' k , .
(TS GorNfrTt) TJE 9UITE"
I3MT r?
He, wAr oo vo'u thak .
A SAM el OPOKff?-
gun 7Hr r 'X.fw
TUCN 0 TH fRt
t TVS OFPlCt TLL)
t. COP TUB hOSf
pAPElii AHO ffAB'
A CAIt fOP- HOME
N ma ifiterxfw
pAOTOf CAftOl AMO
P-ETUP-H TO PLAV HAA.
PNOCWL&, GO VP
AfrAirV 0 A JTAUt
TKO &EX TH2 0-D
CM frl ki PBL in t-tU. e
A.T 6o
Beals
A OI0ANTIC. SKELETON
READY FOR REMOVAL
. . . i " k t m
' ' t, "" "" '
JULY 29, i 1912.
ga
z in
tef?Nmor TO fCAV
15 HIS OWN TVlurc.
THEN ' I THB U C(t-G '
?ALA.&" A0 TMCiAV
.TWO 0000 i vNETLE TTt.V'Nlr,
wthbKTtn of fiiicyin . .
rSVv0ei OvElL. '"'.
THS PPO&LfW a-nO Fi nAllti
SAT POW AlU i hf . v '
at that -moment-a aaa
vmjtjh a Banner.. PasieO .
OM T M OUGHT IE 7VPS
VtfOOLO V0 JAV 7KWT THS
PApCR. TH BOVS (MA)C6.TES
VwiTH ISFW PApSH?
. WAS THT WOMAN ?;V
n
SET '-v
-oop-c
ArfATPy
1
Monsters of
Belittled by
FOOT OF A DINOSAUR. 1
To ,
tee the fenormbus feet and Claws Of these
mohsters suddenly'.' protruding from the
ground,', as. It- Is opened up at a 'great
depth In the peaceful pursuit of clay dig
ging, Is an experience calculated to thrill
e
Drawn for
Blind as
By BEATRICE
I have 1 received the following letter,
and Its pemsual, cause much regret
that men walk the earth who commit
graver crimes than highway robbery, but
who are beypnd the clutches of the law;
"I am 15 years of age and I am - in
love with a gentleman of 41 years, with
whom I became acquainted about nine
weeks ago. My parents absolutely refuse
to let him call on me, to lately he has
been meeting me after school.; Last
week he asked me to elope with him, as
my parents would never onosent to us
being married. He Is a very nice man
and has , no bad habits. He says he
loves me dearly, but I don't know what
to do, as, I am almost afraid to tell him
'No.', And yet 1 hate to deceive my
parents " , " J
This little girt is pasting through the
same stage ai ; the -' kitten. Born with
Its eyes shut, nine days elapse before it
opens them, v -..'..y, ' ' '.'.::
' Her nine dayt of life have, not elapsed,
and I am much afraid that "unlei some
kind providence Intervenes the wllf open
them on a world of pain end sorrow and
disgrace. 4 -m; .; f"" U
No man of 41 loves a girl of IS in the
right, way Is, he encourages, her to oppose
her parents. Forbidden her home, he
shows every mark of a villain In meet
ing her on the streets. . ,
i lie doesn't "'o her; he doesn't know
Teutonic i oik-Lore , A , .
Fossils Found in Germany
the nerves of ' the most indifferent on
looker. One can comprehend ; the en
thusiasm of tha paleontologists when such
a discovery Is made.! Their delight is of
a higher ordor than that of the' gold
seeker when his pick discovers a' huge
nurset of nreclous metal. They are dig
it glng up history which may be millions of
years old.. Thy art uncovering the old
earth as It was in the days of the flying
dragons.' They are treading upon some
of the very foil that was trod by the
monsters themselves. .. .,
Let us consider the dinosaur.' He was
the wonder of the planet in bis time. His
modern name means "terrible llsard,"
from the Greek "words delnos, "terrible, "
and sauros, "lteard," , because he had
Some of the physical characteristics of
the, innocent ; lttte llsard of our day.
Sometimes,, in some of bis forms, lie at
tained . an almost unbelievable stature.
The dlplodocus; war seventy-five or
eighty feet long, and thirty feet tall.
Others were probably at large,', tuch' as
the, brontosaurus, "giant llsard," from
brontes, "a giant," The ' creatures,
varying in slse, but always terrible in ap
pearance, were scattered widely over the
earth in ancient times. They have been
found In America, Europe and Africa, and
so far as we know at present, the Ameri
can species held the precedence in else,
But so much would not be gained for
knowledge if the paleontologists were
content simply to dig out the remains of
these tremendous beasts, and to put thefr
skeletons together and set them up to
be gated at In the museums. , The 'most
astonlslUng discoveries have been made
by studying their structure, and eompar
ing it with that of other animals. Thus
it was found that some of these gigantio
creatures , were apparently predecessors
of .the bird. Some of them had feet like
those of birds. Others bore many ,.i.e
temblances to the modern ostrich. After
ward there arose speoies of. birds which
had Jaws and teeth, showing their reptll
ian 'origin. Vv-''..-;. - ; ; ; :,
One of the most significant facts about
the dinosaurs Is that some of the largest
of them had bones . filled with cavities,
the apparent reason for which was to
Insure relative lightness together with
strength. Nature knew the great strength
of a) hollow tube before man had rea
soned it out. A dinosaur with hollow
bones could grow, to a great site . with
out beoomlng so weighty that he could
not run. Some . scientists believe that
the running birds of., today were derived
from' some of those creaturei The real
flying dragons of ancient times (end the
remains of some have been' found in the
rocks) were 'not of , areaf ; !s-but
their ancestors may have been veritable
giants, thtugh unable to lift themselves
from the -ground.; '..', ,.;, .
, One of the things which-most strikes
the mind in studying these creature of
the past is the evidence that, nature, as
well as man, proceeds by moans of
perimcnt. She has not ; developed her
creatures suddenly, full formed; but by
long , processes of; evolutions There is
no evidence that manlike animals lived
in the time of dinosaurs.' Those giants
were then the masters of the earth.; They
had small brains but big bodies. Tt they
had some brain, and they form en -un-
questionable link In the chain of life 'upon
this globe. '.,.; . :,-u':i",. ii
Never was the power of : the human
Intellect r better dif played than. rih-'( the
forecast which the great French natur
alist Cuvier made concerning tha for-
. V : '
The Bee by Tad
a Kitten
-1 .V
FAIRFAX.
what Jove Is. I do not believe he bjs
any Intention Of marrj'lng her. If t hsl
it Is through some hope "of material gajja. ,
With the girl ,as his. wife," It would m
his lalon-llks hands on her father's purse,, '
He. has "no bad habits., sho snx
Poor little traveller on a strange path!
She doesn't kriW' the worst of habts
may1 be hidden under the most begumhg
of manners.'- t '
' With an Innocence and ignorance tha?
are appalling, ehs . is Standing 'on thi s
brink ,of a preAplce, and how her liylf ;
world will condemn her if she makes",
mletep in her Blindness, an gfecs ov'f'rl
.am. almost afraid t& .tell' him ;Nop
the says, and therein lies a tragedy. At ,
knows down In her heart (hat his att?n
tlons are hot honorable. She has b& ,
well brought up, and the warnings Of her
parents are ringing' irt her ears when she
meets him. , v . " :
But he is,olrtr, and command all the
arguments andblandishments needed )w
win the heart of a child. She it flattered
by his attention. She is soothad by( Ws
praise. 4 She is, drugged almost to ,'fhe
point of uneonteiousness by the llttls
triumph "of cpndueijt his: preference ives
ner.,-'i i- , i v 4
j One's guardian angels seem' to he often
lax In their attendance1, and I am sore -afraid
the guardian ange)s'ot this little
girl are forgetting their charge at tt
when their vigil should be most un
ceasing. )",.'. i I,: ..'s ev;t, ij.t s-i-' i
"if her mother 'khows the heart of, the
little airl better, she would' not laftue a
command, and then rest secure, because'
bar command, could 'not be disobeyed, j
She would know that man who will naki
love to a girl twenty-six years his Junlot
after an acquaintance of nine weeks will
not let ft mother's aye or po have any)
weight. ,
. If ha ware honorable, it would be,
44
different, story. But .the facts .In
case prove he is not-. , ....
. She' would' not say "Xou must not" ta
her daughter, and then sit back and fold,
her hands. She would see that her ordeia
are obeyed. f ,.. '. .
She would know' that the heart 'of
girl is willful; that, beginning with the
age of IS, girls begin to dream, and they
mistake many4 men lor the-hero of their
dreams before the real' hero appears. ,t'
Vfihe wouldn't expect a little blind KlU
ten to obey an order to stay away from
the fire. She would remove it from afif
proximity to th blase. ' And she should,
take as final and decisive action In a
Ing her. daughterVy' ,' trt-p I'
.Mothers often moan' after the tragedT
"I did not' dream" she would disobey me
If the' mother of 'this- misguided' llftl
girl reads this, t hope she will wake tip
''Dreaming" of absolute obedience, and
realising Wilful disregard of commanffs
are often the traglo order of things.
When a mother faces the- realization
of the latter, with' all its sad results, she '
is often more to blame than the little
blind kitten girl left In her charge.
THE MANLESS -MAN
His mother li a,' Woman, v . 1 ,
The first person to take care.
it n iOUIttlH DUIK, , v v
After she gets, through with him, his
mother , and another. , nurse fmostfy
nurse) control him, - -He sees his father
on Saturday nlghtt. '. ' v: ? ; '
His school teacher Is a woman. 1,1 J
In college , he is in - love . with chorMtf
girls. ' , 4 1 .. " -1
When he goes. Into business- he spends
most of the time in-Ws'offtce with-"
woman typewriter. ,' ' -- , .tl''
At dinners he sits next to i women, erj
He talks politics with' women. ii"
He marries a womsn. '; '.. , 1
When he dies and goesito, heaven tin '
first person ..he Inquires far Is a womafs
Life. i ''S":t '....7--.V i--. ; . fvi
-1 ' 1 y ' '
mer existence of gigantic, reptiles. vsvJOT
as the dinosaurs. -, Cuvier - declared Ja
the result of his studies, that there hfti
been a period when our. planet was 'I'
habited by reptiles "of An appalling mtt-
nttude,'1 possessing, many of thftfRatufcs
of modarn quadrupeds. Atmost nobocii
believed film. :, People - thought he-'-vco'i
drawing too much. upon his ImaglnatiofS
But he knew, that his fmaSlhaticwn, wfei
kept under proper control. Is tha surwt
guide to new knowledege, and It was Jtot
long before discoveries were .made wnica
fully established the truth of his pin--Ion.
aiid then all men of science 'recog
nized' the-fact that i there had toen-aa
"age of reptiles.1.. It was during,thfB
Sge : that- the dinosaurs flourished, and
every stroke of the - pick disclosing ;
Slant skeleton Iri. the diggings near.Ha' '
berstadt is a fresh confirmation, of , the
foresight of Cuvlar, .when that, yislos
of a wonderful lost chapter In the history.
of the earth arose before his masterful
mind. - . (V
T ,