Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 03, 1912, Page 15, Image 15

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1912.
13
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SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT-
-Latest Pictures of Principals in the Big Case
Copyright, 1913, Kavlont-1 Nws Aii iv
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CAfUTEIL MAS PIU.S.
Giving Thougths to the Life to Come
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
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, It is a great thmg to give a portion
of each day to thoughts of the life to
come, and to realms which lie all about
us, near, while Invisible.
It Is fertilization
of the spiritual na
ture to think of
t those who have
passed on, and to
picture regions of
.beauty and glory
immortal. But to
do this to the neg
lect of this life,
and the living peo
ple of earth is
einful.
How can a rea
sonable human ber
ing expect to dwell
in heaven, in con
tinual felicity with
angels, who is
dwelling on earth
In constant discord with friends and rel
atives? We must practice the heavenly role
right here on earth, and we must make
our homes and our garden beautiful be
fore we can expect to be given gleaming
mansions and golden streets above.
We must be tender and tolerant and
patient toward the living, or we will not
find peace and joy with the dead. .
And we must broaden our minds on
every topic which tends toward making
the. earth raore agreeable for the living.
It is a crying sin. against the hosts of
Buffering human beings to give so much
valuable fertile soil to the use of dead
bodies. -
If all the cemeteries of New England
were ploughed up and the soil given to
the poor too cultivate, there would be
no need of almhouses. Cremation does
cleanly, quickly and kindly what burial
requires years to accomplish, in a dis
gusting, slow and dreadful manner.
Burial of bodies pollutes the earth and
monopolizes It
Fortunately the progressive and sen
sible minds of the world are all in favor
of cremation.
Recently in England the body of the
Right Reverend Charles William Stubbs
was cremated, and the urn containing
the ashes was placed in the niche of
Truve cathedral.
It was an epoch of progress of Eng
land, as it was the first time a bishop
had been cremated.
One of the promlent Tnglish dallies said
of this event:-
"The growth of public opinion, espe
cially the Intellectual side of It, In favor
of cremation as the wisest and most
sanitary means of disposing of the dead
has been most striking in recent years,
and nowhere more so than among the
clergy of the Church of England and
ministers of other denominations them
selves. Even at Westminster abbey It is
now the rule due too lack of space that
only the ashes of the distinguished dead
shall be placed there.
Since the Cremation Society of Eng
land was first formed in 1885, the remains
of many distinguished people have been
cremated. To take the names of a few
clergymen and ministers we find the
following:
"Since Venerable Archdeacon W. II.
Tribe, the Venerable Archdeacon A. S.
Aglen, D. D-: Canon Henry Shuttle
worth, Canon Robinson Duckworth, Canon
John Henry Coward, Canon W. H,
Cooper, Canon S. Pattenden. the Rev.
Brooke Lambert, M. A.; the Rev. H. R.
Haweis, M. A.; the Rev. Norman Mac
leod Ferrers, D. D.: the Rev. Brook Her
ford. D. D.: the Rev. J. P. Hopps, the
Rev. H. C. Marriott.
"The records also contain the names
of many titled persons and officers of
the army, and navy."
The ceremony of 'cremation robs the
last rites given to the dead of more than
half their horrors...
The imaginative, mind, however re
ligious, is tortured by thoughts of the
body of a dear one slowly rotting beneath
the mouBd of earth, and such thoughts
must, and do, distract the mind from
ideals of the spiritual home of the de
parted soul.
When there is nothing remaining of
the corporeal frame but a little heap of
ashes, the thoughts must soar to planes
beyond the earth to find a resting place
with the beloved one.
Cremation leaves the earth for the uses
of the living, and does away with the
expensive and useless monuments which
cumber valuable ground and do no good
to living or dead.
Those who desire to erect some monu
ment to the memory of their dear dead
can find useful aad humane and orna
mental ways of doing so.
An arch which will beautify a city
street; a drinking fountain for thirsty
and toling animals; a scholarship in some
college; a free bed in some hospital; a
playground for poor childre:!, are a few
of the many ideas which can create a
noble memorial to the dead and still
leave our mother earth clean and sweet
to nourish, ber living chiJcren.
If a little child of wealth passes on,
what better monument to her memory
could her parents make than a peinun
ent contribution to the fresh air fund,
which would send the child of some poor
mother out of sweltering cities to enjoy
country life?
We can not expect every cemetery to
be done away with in this generation
But it is to be hoped that public senti
ment will be educated after a few gener
ations so that no more cemeteries will
be needed, and that the territory, money
and time now dedicated to the decaying
bodies of the dead, will be used for
making happy the living.
Technically Accnrate.
'Tee," said the visitor from Pumpkin
ville, "you have some pretty tall struc
tures here, but our town erected a build
ing with more than a thousand stories
laet summer, and "
"A building of more than a thousand
stories!" echoed his friend. "What brand
do you smoker"
"It's a fact," rejoined the Pumpkinville
native. "I was referring to our new
library."-Tit-Blts.
It's Wash Day
By Tad
""W . If
MHCH Mff 05 TD THE DffrVH .
ALL WAS QUIET IM TH6 HOy&eH
BUT One SERVANT WH1 WAS
Asuep in the parlor, au
OF ASUDDEM SHE WAS AWAKE
N0 6Y THE LOUD RIN4 OP
THE DOOlf BELL RUSH I (IS- 0WM
5TlrT5 5HC WAS MCT PfTHC
VILLAGE POSTMASTER WHO
MWrlOED HERA LETTER.
HASTILY TEARINO IT OPEN
NtT RCt?
A PALL pLAVENrQ8fyNOS
(MA.ft.UN Off TVMO AUNAVi
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146 TrlE&a VOU 'NlTH THC
SlUt (CU- SiT I
VsVMTTB SE TMC GAMS TOO .
ALL THE (rlKLS WEtfEOOTON
A PISHING TRIP. THE WATER
WAS ROVfrH AND A STORM
aHAiWs)a.O, M
I niwi i EJicD . TALIT&ON VI LLE
LENA ADVISED. THE CREW
to turn back tor shore
Before g-ettn cauo-ht
IN THE KAIM.TU3T AS THEK
WERE TuPNiM MAMF MAtn
"Lena spied a bottle in
THE WATEfr.HAyiftfSeCURED
iTTHeYFOMD a MOTe
tNSIDE WHICH READ
IF THE ENEMY tfETKCATEO
WOULD THE FOCUS
TELL HIM TOO U YOU A
Blr PINT TO-OflY WILLI E.
ITS WASH PAY f
OCNTLKMEM BE SEATED
TA-PAtRa-RA-RA
ONE9-MISTAH TOHNSONCAN
you elucidate to me oe diffh
CRENCE BETWEEN A WOMAN
AND A POSTAGE STAMP
INTERLOCUTOR-CAN I TEH.
YOU THE DIFFERENCE BEFWEEN
A WOMAN AND A POSTAfrf
STAMP. No WHAT IS THE
DIFFERENCE
B0E- WHY A WOMAN A
FEMALE AND A POSTAGE
6TAMP IS A MAIL FEE
DROP THAT WHEELBAfROVY
WHAT DO YOU KflOW
ABOUT MACHlNERVjl
The First Quakers
By REV
.Ansnat Hi 5T.
The first Quakers to st foot upon the
shores of this country arrived at New
port R. Li In tho ""IP Woodhouie, the
"Mayflower of the Friends," 2S6 years
ago today August 3, 1667.
The coming of the
Quakers was a
mighty good thing
for' this country; al
though, for a time
at loHst, it was a
mighty . bad . thing
for the Quakers.
They met with a
most ungracious re
ception. The orig
inal "savages" could
not possibly have
received them with
a more ferocious
front thin was presented to them by
the Massachusetts "Chrlftlsns" who had
come over to the new world to escape
religious persecution In the old world.
At Newport the sixteen Quakers who
eame over In the Wood limine encountered
rti mi nsssgwj
It!
on.?:
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3i
"In the Back of His Watch"
Copyright International News Assn.
By Nell Brinkley
THOMAS B. GREGORY. :!
nn rilffieultv. The mnlrlt of Rorer Will-'St
lams prevailed there, and in line wlthjjjj
that spirit every man' waj granted the;2j
liberty of entertaining his own religious :S
views without interference of civil mag-;;:
Istrates.. But It waa different In Wassa-:2;
,chusette; and when the Quaker went to'tv
Boston they, were , fined, whipped.y im-3
prisonedi and finally sent.jiwt.of theol-;Si
ony.. four, of,,tbnj,wec put to death.::!
Kndleott "and, his Puritans., furious; as.;j
so many Mohawk Lndlans When Mohawk)!;
Indians, wars. , at IbeUf worst, flamedjj:
against the innocent Quakers as though'
they were . so many criminals of the.::
deepest dye, and as a consequence Massa-'!
chusetta lost . what, a little later
Pennsylvania gained. i
Driven from the Bay state the Quakers,
reinforced by others who cams over not 3
long after, sought In the wilderness of;;
Pennsylvania, and among the rsd menTi
there, the asylum which had been denied:;
them by the Christians of New. England.
In the Keystone state, under their;;;
gnat leader, Tenn, the Quakers founded
the commonwealth which is today thaj;
second stste in the union and one of tho:
fairest portions of our great country. I3i
'Under Penn's wise, Just and humane
policy the Indians wers tamed and mads J
to feel that the white man was their!
friend, and it goes without saying thstj
there would have been no Indian wars";:
had ' the other settlers treated the rsd j:
men as they were treated by Penn and 2;
his Quakers. jj
It Is hardly necessary to say that thej,
influence of the Quakers in America has"1,
been large and always of the right sort.-"
" Franklin". 'Nathaniel Greene. Stephen.
Hopkins and many others that might bs '
mentioned were Quakers.
The first sohools south of New England-1
were established by Quakers and the
general ciVlllsing work done by them wajr!
Immense.
As humanitarians they take second
place to none. Against slavery, war
. i. KIMI..IAH ne tinmunlli- orrnltlftt tit,'
use cyunuvl1 v uu,,,..,vj, no. -
temperance, brutality and every species
of maladministration In government, they
have, from the very beginning of their
existence, arrayed themselves in solid
phalanx.
There are probably 150.0W Quakers In
the great republic, and if the rest of ttw
people made as little trouble on the on,,
side and lived as finely on the other, w,'(I"
should have but little use for prison.,
policemen and preachers. ilir
Do you know that wan (bless his heart) who, the second time you're met him at dinner, digs from his Match pocket or his breast, with a face alight, a little picture of m
Homan and a baby or two and says, "There they are! It isn't a good picture of them. I've a better one at home!"
r
v
You Can See Double
J
A man more or less subject to fits uf
second eight following the Initiation ef -Inspired
alcoholic concoctions scrambled.-:
up Broadway New York to try out tlw
latest stomach wrecker the "Bull Moose-' .
cocktail. It Is composed of the following "
explosives: vf"'
One-third French vermouth. " T.;....
One-third Italian vevmouth.
One-third gin.
One spoonful maraschino.
Serve It f rappee and then ask forgtvs
nes for your sins. ,l
The curious man lashed himself to s."
bar in the neighborhood of Broadway
and Thirty-fourth street and dared the
bartender to do it The bartender went
right ahead, the man drank, and then
he smiled. "
'"Now, speaking about Roosevelt," he '
volcanoed, "I used to think he wasa i
the right kind of man for president. But"
I dunno but I dunno. I guess I wasA.
tixactly broadmlnded (n my view. Bar-1
tender, make me up another bomb.".
After the drink had been dispatched
the man bounced off again. , (
"As I was saying," he said. "I be-,
ccme more and more convinced every
minute that 'T. K.' is the best man ,in,
the United States for any kind of a Job.
I am very, very sorry that I didn't wake;
up to that fact long ago. Say. pack an
other cartridge." .,J.
Many minutes passed after the third
shot had found Its mark. The man
leaned across the mahogany and dosed,.
This escaped him: i.'
"Gee, thisblsh bully election. Look at
votesh coming in for Rosebush mean
Rosenstein mean Risevllle. Thatsh 1W
Rosevellle. Great name that-Roseville,
Eight millionsh, eleven mllllonsh, six
mlHlonih, twenty millionsh. Givehnuther
one." ' '
Ths embalming fluid made Hs fourtS
trip; '
"Ray! Rosebush 'lected! Tlnk lMt
shelebrate."-New Tork World. ' ' 2( '
Morgan's ItT Bower. '
"When J. P. Morgan ' returns he wHl;
find that the English ivy which ha pe-
sonally planted about, his residence at
Madison avenue and Thirty-sixth streeft
some twenty years ago has reached . too;
roof of his ; house and completely en
veloped the south, west and east sides.'
It has long been Mr. Morgan's wish ta
make his home, which is beautifully!
surrounded by lawns, a bower of leaves,
but it has not been until this summer
that his gardeners could train the vines
so that they reached the eaves. NeW
York American. .
r