THE -BEE? OMAHA,. FRIDAY,--AUGUST 9, 1912. 11. 5?" f. aaz.ir J)a SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT-Oide of That w Eunning Smoothly Drawn for The Bee by Tad NEW PoftWO 1 TUff A AM-HA-A5 1 Jis 'I HAWE V JHoor -TTrTi -ii ii ifc. -- s ATTXNH0SVIU-E" eerKt-ano rr&jO Krm ir" Air Twe--- .. rAlCi:TKsMrjEit!: CO 6E a JflAP- ire&i. as chap A5A JJEAO NICK6U HERE' OirESS ItU LOOK fW THE (JATe? -Mi. f- HE -nee -I VMEE-E" VHA.r'5 up ( THE VNfFET i or- AT ME . tn . f w-v. ,5 TMOJ' THAT I P" VOi) TO JTf TO C The Baby and Trouble Time By WIXIPRED BLACK. his k J Deaf-Miss Black: Can a jnan love a baby when he gets angry .because his wife objects to playing with It and getting it excited (as it ts baby's bed time) when he gets home?- ' Also, does he love his wffe when he would "rather- ' the baby would ' go to any one but her? He could get horha' earlier,' if he' wanted to, ' play with the baby be-' fore she ' got so tired, ' and it makes the' mother cross. as it takes her all the evening to get the baby asleep and she has no chance to do anything else. Worcester, Mass. THE MOTHER. Well, well, well what a tempest in a teapot!' . So daddie wants to play with the baby,' and mother thinks he ought not to thinW of such ft thing except at certain times and nobobdy loves nobody, and nothing is right In the little ' Worcester flat. Poor," little,' worried; conscientious, tired out -'mother. I'd' like to Set hold of that' big, stupid, bothersome husband of yours and- box his ears.' And after I had boxed them well I'd sit down and have a real heart-'to heart talk with him. I'd say, "Look here, brother, you love that baby of yours: Don't you love him so hard that you simply can't let him alone, no matter what time of night ft is when- you see him; and you don't see why the baby's mother is such a crank about, your playing with your own child. "Well, you run down the block and stop in at- the very first doctor's office and ask htm about it. "He'll tell you, and he'll tell you very quickly, too. , - "If he's the right, sort of doctor he'll give you a few facts about babies and what not to do with them that will make you dizzy. And the first thing he'll tell yoif is that a baby isn't a toy to amuse you;' it is a human being with a set of nerves and a brain, and that will need thai set of nerves and a brain when he grows up; and he won't have much of any icft if you're going to play peek-a-boo and ketchy-ketchy with , him when ever you want to amuse yourself." Laugh! Of course, the baby laughs. It would laugh if you should start in ,ahd .tck.le i't to death-die laughing at that-bufj what of. it? Can't you tell the difference between a real laugh of real fun and a poor, frightened, nervous, hys terical giggle? Well, It's time , you learned. Stop making a plaything of him and help make a man of him a man you'll 'be proud of some glorious day. And another thing, that little wife you like to tease when you toss the baby in the air and laugh to see him gasp, if you had the headache she's had ever since he was born you'd be In bed right now with; a doctor on one side and a trained nurse', on the other, thinking .you were going;;" to die before sundown. Stand It? Of course, she stands it. Shi's'." woman. She has to stand It; but how- are you helping her? Lnve-you!'1' Of course, she does, just as milch as you love her. Of course you have, poor little, half sick, worried thing. You aren't a bit like the ,glrl he fell in love with at the dance. What was It you wore blue, with a, silver band In your hair? - And the music what was that waltz? How he could two-step, too. "Oh, You Great Big Beautiful Doll;" you sang the fool ish song together as you danced, and how happy you were. How the world sang with you, the .. whole glorious, beautiful, light-hearted world. And he- walked home on air that night because you smiled when he asked you for the, rose you wore; and you gave it to,, him. Why, it wasn't two years ago. He's the same man he was then, and you are the same woman, only things have happened.' You've been very ill, and he's been worried about you,' and things haven't run as smoothly at home as they might since baby came. Why, you .poor things, there's nothing really wrong; not a thing in the world. You are Just passing through Trouble Time, that's, all. Don't let the bigwaves swallow you and your happiness. "Oh, You Great Big Beautiful Doll!" Silly song, ' wasn't it, the two-step you used 'to dance to? Forget It; you're singing' a - better song .. now, a-' sweeter oh, 'Orie.more worth the sipging. .Why don't, " you ' stop i. thy" , fooSieh . nonsense, the - chlldlsh i spat's, and ' sing it as it should be sung the : great, splendid, melodious, noble song of life together? c The Manicure Lady "I see that Miss Helen Gould has came out strong in favor of the old maids," said the Manicure Lady. "She. thinks that nobody ought for to attack them, because so many of them are noble women. She seid in a article she wrote that if she had found a suitable husband she would never have had a chance to spend so much of her money as wisely as she has. There may be a good deal In that George. "That sounds as ifshe- might have had to stake her husband every week or so, if she found a suitable one," said the Head Barber. "I don't see how she could blame anybody but herself if she had married a man that couldn't support the two of them, the way some folks in her set happened to do. Any phi that lets a man marry her for her money, giving nothing back except a shopworn crown or coat of arms, oughtn't to squeal. If she had found a suitable hsuband in the shape of some good, solid American business man like her brother, George, I guess she would have had as much money and as much time to devote to charity as slie has. Not that she ain't a grand woman. I know all about all the swell gifts she has made. I guess everybody in America is proud that she is an American girl, married or not." "That's what brother Wilfred was say ing up' to the house last night." said the Manicure Lady. "Wilfred thinks th world of her since the lime he wrote a poem about one of h-5r big gifts and mailed it to her. I don't remember much of It. except the finlsn. 'Oh, thou great benefactress, thou art greater than an actress.' He got an answer to It when You . are passlne through the breakers i he mailed it to her. The answer was now. both of you. . . - ! wrote by her private secretary, and said The first five, years of marriage ought. tnat the receipt of the letter and poem to becalled "trouble time." The baby wag acknowledged. is a lot 6t trouble to her. You just have ,.But setting tack to the old maid part the fuiv-of it and you don't know. ; f th, , GeorKe, i don't think any. If I were that little mother I tninK I'd have a bad headache the next time I you waked that child up to ply with.rt, nd ra rim to the neighbors to lie down,! body ought to be too hard on old maids. Their lives ain't none too full of sun- shine, as they go along on their own rod then you'd have to get him to sleep '" "'" - vourself ' Rnd ParTOts t0 klM away them unavalN i'Bye-hve. shut vour little eves"-not I i"g tears that springs unbidden from half J' much fun as .you thought an j the heart I wouldn't have a cat kiss hour ago. Bye-t.ye"-what. no signs : away any tcnri of ml"", coo.ln- knnu-'s, o tW sandman ?-"Bye-bye. cr In? j because, I have never liked oats since r.ow;,?or. little,, tired, nervous fellow." I got to bp a light sleeper and moved Now do you like it, you with your into a neighborhood where cats have their strong baek and powerful arms? How i conventions. And as for parrots kissing do., you. suppose It looks to , the little mother when she's hardly able to stand anyhow;?;-;;. ,',. ' , . MeStl business,- wasn't It small busi ness. J Hardly ...worth while for a man and the . father of -someone that's going to be' a man some day. - Suppose you drop ,H! right, now,, the jopllsh teasing, the Boyish, jjiay. It's'-, man's world. Be a man' and live in it. And ss for you", little mother, what foolish talk about whom" he loves and he doesn't ,love. He loves you, of course.'' He chose- you for his com panion all tnrough life. There were lots of -other girls, but he liked you best; '.What's happened since then that he should change? - Haven't you changed a little yourself? away tiar from mv r-ves, with them awful beaks of theirs, there wouldn't he a chance In the world of me consid ering it. I think too- much of my eys to have them kissed out by a parrot's beak. "No. George, you can't make me believe that folks ought to fee! cold toward old maids. Love is woman's whole existence, as the poet . Oliver Wordsworth said. The hrmiet woman In t wnrM ' the woman that marries the gent she loves, even if she might have a shy bankroll when she wants to go shopping. I got four standing nffr. George, and T'm going to grsh one of them a ntr n m and mother makes tip our mind whtr-h Is the mo't likely t hp the most different husband from, fathe " - s ' 1 I i I . .a. ft I I i m ill iruun urn 7flUO f srww" E, hfWN IN THE HOT WH OKU JTTlC ft! hut juJr.vvr nxiTn Lcuuzh ttBvLLmTVZ: llkA At) Mi am rv aV .. - . . . . .. If !! rT I I UADMlVTWi JvJn NlADc. OF THE" DAV m-AOOm i ii mm t mm tnjt. 1.1 W-UIf IP A HAIN 6P A PSCPUTHAS iWaui mditt (.uuni dcri' ANitMt HCVK MlfttW HiRS . .a. mm mm m mm mm. a m m vm mu mm m FiSHTHAffl fFTANARStEi AAA rA mm UtfStePIMT AfSOTtiATIS mfUM ALE I (XATTHEN HE PULLED ME1 Pirst Prohibitionists LOOK HOW 04L 6fE S OUTAND lCTti fife wH&ysMost KOVtlAfl NY SEEDS HDW LOOK TO PAjJ OR VO ORE The Making of a Pretty Girl The Athletic Miss By MARGARET HCBBARO AYKR. "My lady Is an athletic girl," said the proud mother of 1-year-old Nannette Tar box Beals. To show what she could do the baby swung valiantly, supporting her own weight while holding to her mother's fingers. The daughter of this well known busi ness woman. Mrs. Jessie Tarbox Beals, began her athletic development when she was about 2 months old, for there Is no limit for the athletic girl. You; can begin whenever you want to, and you can go on as long as you like, or take up athletics when you are well advanced in middle life. The grandmother of some friends of mine still goes swim ming at SO, and she attributed her superb health to the practice of outdoor exercise. Every girl should have some sort of outdoor fad something that combines ex ercise and amusement-some sort of ath letics. When you talk of athletics many a girl thinks at once of golf or tennis, polo, riding or some sport which necessitates an expendtlure of money etlher for habits or costumes or for the implements used. Riding, for Instance, Is quite beyond the pale for those of moderate Income who live in the city, and the girl who lives Inland can't enjoy the delights of swim ming as can the girl who Is In New York, for Instance, or in the lake cities. It Is this Idea of expense that keeps so many girls from Joining pome ath letic club or league. But there are always ways of avoiding the more ex pensive forms of eport, just as there is always time for the girl who wants to take it to develop herself physically and to gain health and good spirits in regular out-of-dooK exercise. If I had my way, the girls who want to b pretty, and of course that includes all girls, chould belong to email groups or clubs, who would pur sue the culture of beauty out of doors tn some form of athletics. The girl with the athletic fad has no time for foolish wool gathering, and if she Is bent on making herself physically strong and well, she will not be the one to dress In some of the ridiculous fashions of the " day or to paint and powder her face an4 make herself un pleasantly conspicuous in other ways. The girl who wants to go in for the simplest, as welt as the most healthful, form of athletics can Join a walking club or get one up consisting of friends and. if possible, one older person, as chaperon and Instructor. These walking clubs are quite popular in England, and there Is no cost at tached to such an organisation. The chaperon or Instructor should be a per son of moderate leisure who has time to study up the points of historic interest In the neighborhood. No matter how new the city or town, there is always some place not far away where some interest ing event in history occurred. Get books on the subject at the library. The walks- should be taken to these points of Interest and the instructor should know enough to call the- attention of the members of the olub to bad car- ) r;age, awkward n other defects. Annas! 0, 1TSS. One .'hundred and .eeventy-nlne years ago today-August 9, 173S the) governing body of Georgia, by a unanimous" vote, prohibited the use of rum In the province. Thus It will be seen that this na tion of the Georgia authorities antedates that of Neal Dow and the Maine peo ple py one ' hun dred and twenty-one years. So far as our country Is concerned, the king's trustees In Georgia were the original prohibition ists. While as yet Maine was an unor ganized wilderness, untenanted save by the Indian and the bull moose, the Georgia temperance decree was on Its way across the Atlantic for signature by the king and the com mons. The royal signature was obtained, and for ten years the Georgians had to get along without rum. It may be well to state In this connection that nearly all of the Georgians of that time were Ger mans and Scotchmen, As long ago' as the time of Taoltus we read of the1 "thirst" of the Teutons, and from time immemorial the men of the heather have been accredited with being very fond of their "toddy." But the trustvs of the crown meant business, and for a decade Georgia' was "dry." But In those days, as Is the case in our own time, there were powerful "Infer ests," and, the "Interests" decided that prohibition In Georgia should peas, . , The Lumber trust sent Its agenie to England wtth a "tale of woe," afnd the The Big Purpose in AH Work Selected by EDWIN MAKKHAM. The club should meet one ft week at irast for 6 ,lonj walk and during the icuree of the seaeon on or two tJuns to dfttant point ahouid te planned and DEEP BREATH. KO T8 ftNB OP THB' BEBT.KXERCISK8. carried out, on fooi, of courid Theee clubs are very popular In Germany as well a? In Enstard, -niter a aroup of young women with a chaperon and some times a guide fur longer trips will go AN EXERTS!-: FOR RROADRMNu CHKHT AND EXPANDING LI NGS. on walking tours lasting from two to six weens. Walking clubs should train their mem bers to the lowr feats of endurance by slow degrees. On talny days, when the members cannot take their outing, fhey tOiould meet at the home of the member who has the largest rooms and rt through systematic exercises to strengthen them selves In lungs and limbs deep breathing exercises, which I have frequently given, end foot exprclse, of which this is one of :hf ho.-t; Stand erctt, wearing soft allpperi. or, I Letter Mill, in stocking foot, raise the srm above the head, lift the body stretching upward, Inhale deeply and raise the body on the toes) keep It rigid, retain Madam Maria Montessorl's method of teaching children Is practised In Rome, Fails and New York. This method In sists and demands free play of the In dividuality of the pupil. For one thing, she wishes to do away with the stiff desks used In schoolrooms and to let children move freely about. The culture of the social instinct Is Included In her! system. "The Montessort Method", .is; the name of her recent volumes, and 1 take the following from Its pages: "We know only too well the sorry spflcUcle of the teacher who, In the ordinary schoolroom, must pour certain ciU-HiKi-drled facts into the heads of the Kchulais. In order to succeed In this barren task she finds It necessary to dlsrlpllr.e her pupils Into Immobility and to fori their attention. Prizes and pun piehments are ever-ready and efficient aids to the master who mujt -force Into a given attitude of mind and body those who arc condemned to be his listeners. "It Is true that today'lt Is deemed ex pedient to abolish official whippings und habitual blows, just as the awarding or prises has hecome less ceremonious. These partial reforms are another prop approved by science, and offered to the support of the decadent school. Such prizes and punishments arc df I may he allowed the expression) the inc i .t thu soul, the Instrument of slaveiy S.r tlw spirit. "Here, however, these, are not applied to lessen deformities, but to provoke them. The prise and the punishment uie Incentives toward unnatural or forced ef fort, find, therefore we certainly cannot speak of the natural development of the ch id in connection with them. The lorkev offers a piece of eugar to his lioisn be fore jumping Into the saddle, the coach man beats his horse that he nip.y lesporM to the signs given by the reins, t,nd yet neither of these runs so siip:-rblv as the free horse of the plains, "And here, in the case of education, shall man place the yoke upon man? "True, we say that social man is nat ural man yoked to society. Hut if we give a comprehensive glance at the motal progress of society, we sltail se thai, little by little, the yoke Is being , made easier; in othor words, we shall see that natur, or lifo, moves gradually toward triumph. The yoke of the slae yields to the breath for several seconds, exhale slowly, lowering the body and arms, An exercise for broadening the chest and ex panding the lungs: 8tand erect, extend the arms forwardi hands together, throiy the chest out and at the same time swing the arms backward, clapping the- arras behind. . By REV. THOMAS B. GREGORY. . ! ' - Parliament, on July 14, 1742. repealed th,",'. prohibition. Jaw of ths province. Ttu ' lumber dealers exchanged their lumber In the West Indies for rum, which articlai ' they sold to the colontsts at a big profit, and In, consideration of this "profit" th ' Parliament voted to overrule ths trusteH;.' and, make Georgia "wet", again, " The trustees, who appear to have beei''' most excellent men, having ths welfare- ; of Gie people at heart and disposed to 4 what was really best for them, finally resigned, and with their resignation 'thsra , came, in together, the twin blessings ol rum and negrb slavery "blessings" whiehr' the- trustees were sincerely anxious ti., keep out of the province forever, and,., which' thfry might have succeeded In kespJ -Ing out but for the interference of th British Parliament. The "Empire State of the South" Btartf " under the finest of auspices, but ths "in- ; terests'1 wers too strong for it, and 'It', was not long .before It was just.lik; the rest of the "civilized" world. ; ;ii Of the founder of Georgia, James Ogle. .. thorpe, John risks does well in saying", "his nsme deserves a very 'high placa among the heroes of early American hjs'"' tory." Flske might have added that In that history no name stands higher. The ai, , soclate of royalty and the companion oti the nobility, he was at the same time'"'i sterling democrat and plain man of th':-' people. He desired, above all else, to promote" the happiness, and virtue . of ., his fellovr , men. For that purpose he founded the state of Georgia, and but for the disv turblng Influence of the mercenary and unprincipled agents of Mammon he might have succeeded beyond all the othef fathers of American commonwealths. that of the servant and the yoke of the servant to that of, the yorknlan. ' ; 7 , "All forms of slavery tend little- it little to weaken and disappear; even; the slavery of woman. The hUiory of'tlv. lilzatlon Is a history of conquest and of liberation. ' ' .' - - i: "We should ask In what stage of civ lllsatloh we find ourselves, and if. In. . truth, the good of prizei and t.f puniah ments be necessary to our-tuiv.tncement. If we have indeed gone oyond, this point, then to apply, such a form of edu-' eatton would be to draw the new cer.era Hon back to a lower level, not to lead ' them Into their true heritage of progress., "Something very like this condition Of the school exists in society In the- re!e"' Hon betwen the: government and the great numbers ot.the men- employed tn its administrative departments. These dorks work day after day for the general national ejood, yet they'd not feel nor fee the advantage of their work In any immediate reward. That is, they do not realise that the state carries on tts $rat business through their dally tasks and,, that the whole nation is benefited bjr their work. For them the immediate good Is promotion, as passing to a higher.! class Is for the child in school., . ; t "The man who loses sight of the really big aim of his work is like a child vho has been placed in a class below his real" standing: like a slave, he Is cheated of something which Is his right. His dignity of a machine which must be oiled If it ' to be kept gblog, because it does not have within itself the impulse of life. All those petty things such as the desire for decorations or medals are but artU . flclal stimuli, lightening for the moment't; the dark, barren path in which he treads. iT- "In the same way we glye prizes tq' school children. And the fear of not ; achieving promotion withhold the clefk from running away and binds him to Jjii monotonous work, even as the fear ot . not passing Into the next clasg drive'' the pupil to his book. The reproof of the superior Is In every way" similar to the'.' scolding of the. teacher. The correction' '' of badly executed clerical work Is equlv. a'uent to the bad mark placed, by the . teacher upon the scholar's poor compost tion. The parallel Is almost perfect" Persistent Advertising Is 'the Road t' Big Returns. ;y Sot Always Wkil Tkey Seem. r The court was having trouble getting' ' a satlsfaotory Jury. ; , - ... "Is there any reason why- you- could" not pass lmpartlallyon the evidence for and against the prisoner? ' asked ; the judge of a prospective Juror. "Yes," wi the reply; "the very look" of the man makes me th;nk he la guilty. "r "Why, man," exclaimed theJudgr "that's the prosecuting . attorney:7'- Ladles' Home Journal M 7 V