THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1912. SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT " 18 M!1" Copyright, 191J. National News Ass'n- Drawn for The Bee by Tad Ml? BUMK i eisA &OTTI.C OF AVMAVO TXIi CHAm (VP. waVi-rrn a so-j ii n win fH AT WE Trtt J K .Of TH AT - I Gee ro-HAwe to a-ive- I WAWW AWO TWrGT OTJOfJ-S" V I - . If I I UER&V TVte iUlFP- "Ocyi -V. ITU. fAAKB A MAN 0 P, WO J . LOOtC AT; ME (Vers- -you M-AviB TVfi t Borrue - TAKE" A. PfiltVK y f tit ' i dor vovi ) K II I IV. i lev oil AFTER. "TTVKiNCr I'V HOW jwucrc: txev call. him. j TO (C iMLl r The Utilization of the Vacant Lots ' V : for the Benenefit of the Very Poor By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. Have you ever seen a little child, born and reared In a tenement house? Do you realize how many such children exlet In our great cities and how they are living under as unnatural 1 Condi tions as plants growing in & cellar? Have ' you ever wondered as you went about the big cities, and saw acres and acres of unused land, right within the city lim its, to whom this land belonged? And why It was Idle? Some of: our bil lionaires . . became billionaires because this 'land was al- ' lowed to lis vacant without being taxed to any extent, until It rose to a fabulous price, through the growth of the city. Now It has come to the minds of good people that many of these vacant lots might be utilized for the benefit of the very poor who have no privileges of sun light and fresh air, and that the little children growing up in our great cities might be helped by some co-operative ef- .forts along thes paths .of procedure. The International Children's School Farrn'Ieague is one of the' results of these 'ideas ' flare is its declaration of. purpose: "To Promote and Unify a World-Wide Interest in Children's Gardens." 'y, assisting In. starting children's gardens in suitable parks and vacant lot?. . By ..assisting In starting gardens in connection with schools, until boards of education' become eonvinced of their value and take over their maintenance. . By. assisting in starting gardens in con nection with hospitals and Institutions . for children who are mentally or physic ally weak or deficient. , . - By urging the .employment of teachers trained for children's garden work. ' , By establishing ' a training school for nuch teachers. v By exlhlbitlng models and pictures of the work for the information of the public. )By maintaining a bureau of informa tion and-, advice on ' how- to start and conduct children's gardens; furnishing lectures, printed matter, photographs and lantern slides. ' No matter how large or small the number, each child has his or her own garden, on which- he or, she does all the work. A new interest and sense of responsibility comes with ownership, arousing the forces of ambition! and de: velpping at once the need of property protection. Often it is their first underV standing of the rights of property owners; and this awakening of the civic sense of protection is to have a tremendous in fluence. . , . . ' w ' They spread fertilizer, spade, rake, plant, hoe, ; water, weed and harvest. Worthy work well done is always dig nified, and the worker dignifies it. . The child must be shown how to do the work well; arouse his labor-saving in telligence, and open his mind Jo' the forces of the plements that are serving his. Intelligent activfty, and he will never question the dignity of labor that arouse intelligence ana that fills him with pride over the product. Children's- gardens conducted on this plan , ha ve' spaces ''reserved' for varieties of "products grown: throughout the coun try, so bringing the .chieldren to the larger problems of the nation. There is much work to be done in the garden outside of the children's plot. Just as .every community- has public works that must be attended to,' so the children must contribute their ' .sendees to the general welfare of the whole garden. And In this work they learn of broom corn, flax, wheat, cotton and other won-erful plants that are so Important to the world. ' : ' To preserve the neatness-of the garden ihe children are taught to gnthor sum-? and trash, load wheelbarrows and wheel away. In doing! this, and in . keeping in order the paths over which the loads must be wheeled, they learn !n jslmple, effec tive manner to think about one of the greatest aids to civilization transporta tion. The way: In which the question r,r good roads can be brought to children In garden will make them think ?Dorekana more of the fact that "all production it transportation," and that as all material production Is the result of moving things economically, that they may be worth more after they are moved than they k-ere before. ;". : "',-. - t'V J ." ' The widespread use of gardens la th education of children win be a tremeiU cous force in hastening t'ie i'vflpie .oa better use of the land.. For all the people inust know something about the subject tojlntejllgently elect representatives who are to act for them In public matters, and to .respond when action Is taken.. The well being of a nation is not to bo measured by total figures of wealth, but by the number of Individuals who are d.iiip well. The spread of children's 8-A't'cn. Is to be a: tremendous force for this individual well being throughout the land. ' In an address given a few months ago the secretary of the league said: "We have proved that the school garden is a valuable addition to every part of the curriculum. It is an inspiration to expression and language. A stimulant to study, and furnishes material and Illus tration for every subject. ".'Unto him who hath shall be given.' Our' land offers great opportunities. It is for'ua to develop in the children the courage to grasp these opportunities and the ability to use them. ."Visit properly conducted children's gardens and you will see before your eyes the awakening of In dividual resourcefulness, self-dependence, foreseeing thrift, activity for community welfare. You will see a Joy In work that lightens labor. You will see children gaining knowledge of sunlight and fresh air that will affect their future living and housing. You will see them learning many useful things in a way that will affect the methods of the future instruc tion. You will see them instinctively de veloping the traits of good citizenship. It is not high wans, strong locks, or se vere laws that best proteot. It is by each individual knowing how . closely his per sonal well being is bound up with all. All the good things we desire for . our land ' must come through knowledge and understanding. All' the knowledge and understanding to be gained in the garden is of the fundamental things of life." Copyright 1912, International News Service. mswnsBBBBs m mm m i xmm WW ff .IT-WAS PFM OAv AFTCTW 0 0V J UTTUe. fNK JicHQOl. HOU4fc. rN? ftKCttlN & . liTTLE FAT Ky H wfcs cao ufoy. kE Aftors MAfW Hfp A, UttU i-At rAft ITFOLXOVNQO H1L TO fCMOO". ICW MAy Gd ANOTHCf- LAIA WNTEKUAER.S 3 FOOT MV& rfM BONEt A-NO VNA5TWE THW VNfLDTE OW THE NBM WOtK MOfJ H"AWEr GerufATfTO OFrJElG-HBORi OW STICK AROWND KIP I'M (yOfrVft-"TO OPEV up A TAfiA V.p flA GGN-7l.MEW B& STATED .i,' Cones- mistah mv& duwo 4AK ses a meer walk aho wtf. INTEHIOCUTOH-OIP - NO Aio BOHCS VNEX.4- t 010. JKTEUoCutTlR. ffAlV- yootL5euF- ei-puApy . M ctos j BtOADvAAy AlB 1UN CUEAR TO THS Mp. wAtwb rrVtsMArtOie- 5A1D. VNOCH-0 VOO SAW TW6 WAP-OfiV Of J,Nfr JNJ- MOMSMMBINMa ' CSnnEEV TWO (rUl VNHO AffruG AOUr WtwriNt copr. APPeAfrfrOOuW Ar 0 TOICU- MAT l KNOW A Bo ur TH6 GHArT.SO Ali-OUMD' TOW A' OirfrwSET S3Z' fOU irvfiAJii OAr A5A. tMO MNEISTHE OLD J7AC-1? 03ACM AND EVE1? MlSlCT A flW. TU T30iS FJrVALL V 700 TV OK OATANO TDLO H'M TMAT 0 TWE NEVT MOMPAV HE (fcuLD -AW0fp A OAV. BMlOKK iKf jvtevfUAs-e vaj rfAwoAr AOAlt WAS TO MAvC" A OAV OFF F'NAUUW MONPAV MOW CAMS '' AT A M. OAT" JChqwEP V? DdEtffiO TO KU. ATTHE' Starle TMEw&jj MAKJUMpeO up oi -feAT 70 DtvuE OAT OFF AN!' I'm A&Olhf 'ToZlPE AMUMP W1Uyotf.''TrOI.v5ll ASP.FAKAUTHOIt. If A He 15 A IvlQJHEj.? TWEM'J MAWW WOOi EL'-. r Lone Star Society MA lqtc:Ak'T LwlN fir F&fc WAfTerW fjtm) a lctte. the AAAvOCJErVT'WE ABOUT fftAFT. APra. iefoits TWe CflAMO cnwniTEU. A&ouT fl2APT GT WomE AP&wC'WlTMTH-'E VNIFE ABOUT ffAPT T"-3.fl.M. I -"I'-l i' By WINIFRED BLACK. The other day 1 went to the mountain top. It was a fair day In the valley, a day exceedingly fair. All along the way the red Indian paint brushes stood like funny little pat arans, put there long ago to show gipsy feet the road to the summit.' And beside them flowered the tall blue 1 u n t h and the bright yellow mountain f u r s e , and ) as we went higher, through the sighing pines, into the region of the twisted cedars, past the quiver ing aspen groves,. up, ,up beyond , the line of timber, the blue forget-me-hots carpeted the upland meadows like great rugs of priceless worth. Blue, bluo as ths eyes of a new born baby, blue as tapphlre, blue as the sky on a June day in California, blue as forget-me-nots. And a little pale girl sat flinone them and gathered bouquets to help pay for her living there in thfl hills where she v Beauty Secrets of Footlight Favorites the Girl with "Nerves" The Cause and Remedy. Hallucinations of Living J That an old friend and comrade is said to have seen and spoken to Captain Smith, who went down with the ill starred Titantic, is, we suppose, one of those.'strange hallucinations as to persons longi dead being still , alive : with which every student of history is familiar. We find such a belief underlying many of the folk tales of the olden time. Oisln and the earl of Kildare are cases In point. At least two very successful novels have been built around such a con tingency. But, apart from folklore and fiction, wo find even in comparatively modern tlme-s pertinent .. illustrations. The duke of Monmouth, an Illegitimate eon of Charles II, organized an unsuccessful Insurrec tion against his. uncle, James II, and was defeated and taken prisoner at tha battle of .Sedgemoor In 1685. He was sub sequently beheaded on Tower hill In the presence of many persons who knew him well. Yet for more than twenty years afterward the belief was all but universal among the peasantry of Somersetshire and throughout the west country that Monmouth, as they loved to call him, was still alive and would one day return and lead his followers to victory. For several weeks after the death of the younger Pitt, lh February, 1806, many people were prepared to testify on oath that he was still living and that they had seen him. The delusion was in this case probably helped out by the fact that. In one of the government offices there was employed a clerk who bore an ex traordinary facial resemblance to the dead statesman. " In our own day there "Were men who were convinced that they had frequently 'seen General Gordon "In the streets of London long' after he had so miserably perished at Khartoum. To this day there are hundreds of people in Ireland with whom It is almost ah article of faith that Parnell, So far from being dead, Is merely in retirement waiting for a favorable op portunity to come back and take the lead of toe-famous PameUite party which he had fashioned . into a powerful political machine. To them the tombless grave 1n Glasnevln or the St 3audens monu ment in the principal street of Dublin carries no conviction. They hug the de lusion to their hearts and find in it a strange comfort. Washington Post Home Remedl In Verse. The head of a family, who thought to save some of his hard-earned dollars by trying out. simple home remedies when one of his household bame 111, came in a few nights ago with- a book under his arm, which he handed to his wife, re marking: "Here is a work on burns. I found It at an auction this afternoon. As one of the children Is almost sure to get burned some day I thought it would be a good investment look It over carefully and be prepared in case of an accident" The wife opened the volume dutifully and then exclaimed; ' ' . 'How odd! It's all poetry!" Kansas- City Star. By MARIE VERNON. People say it's the fat man who suf fers most in summer time, but don't be lieve It The real sufferer Is the girl with the nerves. j. Why, I know girls who can start In and worry themselves into heat prostration, so that you have to give them aromatlo spirits, put Ice to their necks, fan them and sympathize with them until their nerves calm down, for It is Just a mat ter of nerves. On the stage, people seem to expect a display of temperament, but from what I have noticed this temperament when it isn't put on, is JuBt nerves uncontrolled, and the greatest actresses, those Who make the most success, don't indulge tn nerves, and, indeed they have learned to control them absolutely. I was in the company once with our best loved American woman star. I won't tell you who she was because you ought to be able to guess. Never during all the time that I was there did she give a single display of nerves . behind the scenes, though she had to be very emo tional before the footlights. Somebody asked her why she was So quiet and self possessed at the time during rehearsals or when things went wrong in the .com pany. , ; "I can't afford wasting my vitality in having a tantrum and In losing self control, . which is really what an attack of nerves is," was her answer, and it gave me a good deal to think about, as she was a delicate little woman, the kind you would expect to go all to pieces at the slightest thing. I learned' from her to hold myself in hand and to govern and control my own nervousness, and since that time, though I- doti't want to flatter myself. I think' I-have grpwn much better look ing. -Vv. - The girj who . lets "herself have nerves will': soop find a" lot of little lines, and wrinkles forming in her face. If she has a very fine sklni they ' look like tiny little elehed, lines on the surface of her face, and when she is gay and merry they don't show, at all. But the minute she "fs the least bit tired, or begins to fret and worry, she looks ten years older In a very few minutes. I suppose neives' come from a poor constitution; but I have seen lots of perfectly healthy girls give away to their '. fretful thoughts, and become Just, as nervous,' as If they were chronic In valids; while,- on the- other hand, I know girls who really do suffer consid erable physical pain,, but who have such woiderful self-control that they never Indulge in tantrums, or let . you even think they have ; aching nerves in their body. - '-;''' I, don't know' what .the . medical cure for nerves is,' but' lots of times a girl Can cure, herself without, having; to go to a doctor, for. I was my own physi cian, and I think f, made, a very suc cessful cure. . When I found that my -' nervousness was beginning to affect my looks and that I was getting thin and harassed looking. I decided that raw nerves were a very poor investment for a girl who wanted to make a success on the stage. I decided, first of all, that I wouldn't worry about anything that could be remedied, and that I would make my self stop thinking of the troubles that couldn't be changed. Of course, this took some will power, and nobody can do it' for you; so the nervous girl has to just buckle down to a hard mental ' , 1 - ' f v' , ""A - ' ' ' 1 11 - i f.-y:-,::. K 4 Vy" - -J - " X. If r : ; k t, .; f vJ -- w K:'' 'ivV-, &&L I : III WV4 - F --Cv,w f ! i k y' hoped to find strength. And We a bought the boquets and smiled Into th shy eyes of the delicate child, and askaj, her whet she railed the dog who w$i her sturdy companion. And some of us thought of healthy" children of our own, happy at home, 4n$ some, I think, remembered children who, had tried to live, too, and had failed. Up we went, up and up to the top ft the world, and there we saw the glory, of the skies. t They were blue that day, as blue, as the forget-me-nots, and far, far below floated great fleets of snow-white clouds like Icebergs adrift in a strange an' sljent sea. And some of us could not speak, nnd some sighed, and some, . know, wept for very Joy at the great beauty of It all. . And one stood beside me and sniffed, "Say." said she, "I don't see anything much here, do you?" , "Not a thing." said I, and then she told me the mountains Were all a great fake, and she wished she had stayed ay home. , , "Spent a lot of money all for nothing,'? she said. "I'll know better next tlme III tell you that." t " .,. And a we went down the mountain side we talktd, and t found that she liked the town near by "rather well.' "There are two picture shows thereat he said, "and every night there's vaude ville, and a band concert twice a wee)c, nnd lots of folks moving about all "tlje time." " , I And we laughed together, the womaa v ho sniffed, and -I, fit the , people who were "Jay enough," that was the expres slqn she used, to like the mountains, and the fky, and the fleets of clouds, and the fields of heavenly nlue, and I sup pose that woman thinks she saw all there was to see In the mountains, too. Poor, foolish, blind, deaf, dumb, half living creature! Why, she never sees anything, she Just thinks she sees. Whut do such people get out of the world, I wonder? What a queer, mixed, up, foolish sort of place It must be to them all the time! ' What fools they must think all the other people, or maybe they think th' test of us are Just putting on when wa, like to see beauty Instead of ugliness, glory Instead of Btiualor! I knew a man- once who said he knew iio one really liked to read, they just satd tl ey did to "put on." 1 f1 I know another man who declares ha can't see the difference between a dinner) at a good restaurant and a "feed" af" cafeteria, "it s all grub,", he says, "whsf the . difference, (. except . the airs?" ,AtTd he really means .lt, too. . .. - - .j ,. $ .All men are equal, says the old lawi oh! if some law could . only make, them so. AlPmen are equal,, and one Is blm4, and one Is 1-ome.; , j1, , ; , a . Arl.men are equal, and all women. t f-perhaps! - ; ; ., .': . : .' ., . j. m .I wonder If the .woman who cpjildfft see anything worth 'looking at," oh ti mounwirr top minks so, too? , -. drill all by herself. I the things I wanted to do, and I tried reading a book during the time that I otherwise would have spent ' In fretting. I was very thin, and looked about for a diet that would be soothing to the nerv ous system and fattening at the same time. After a while this -is about what I settled on for my dally meals: For breakfast, cocoa, a ceteal, two e?K and plenty of bread arid butter. For lunch, cocoa once more, macaroni, vege tables, rice or potatoes, and a fruit salad. At night I had a good soup, meat, one fresh vegetable and potatoes, and fruit for dessert. T ate lots of toa3ted bread, with butter, Itr all my meals. You eat more butter on toast than you do on or. dlnary bread; have you ever noticed that? And butter, of course. Is fattening. Just before F went to bed I had a glass of malted milk or milk with an cg beatpn up In it. When I was playing I ate a little heartier supper and kept a bottle of milk In my dressing room to drink be- MISS MARIE VERNON. One of the Zlegfeld Beauties in "A "Winsome Widow" Company. worked hard at , tween times. I had always been very much affected by the heat and groaned and complaint d like other nervous people,-' so I .made up my mind that I Would never mention the lioat apsln. except In a casual way, and that I would stop complaining about It. I soon found", that I didn't feel so hot. and I .looked much cooler, which Is always sustaining to one's vanity. Even now that I don't confess that 1 have any nerves at all, 1 am very careful not to indulge in tea and coffee, and I pay strict attention to my diet, because I think that your disposition depends very largely on what you eat and how It agrees with you. I couldn't work well if I didn't feel in good health, and I cer tainly could not be amiable unless I felt right up to the mark. Now we all know that beauty depends on an amiable spirit and a happy disposition as much as It does on regiiar features and good eyes. Given the regular features you ought to be able to develop a good dis position, and If you have nerves you can and should conquer them, for there Is nothing more certain than that giving away to fits of nerves will ruin the pret tiest face and give it a pouting, peevish expression. Persistent . Advertising is the Road Big Returns.'. " to "On Dotr or Off." Speaking of the ordpr Issued by the managers of the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western railroad to the employes in the transportation service that they must abstain from intoxicants "on duty or off," a New York retired merchant told this story: "My father mado the same rule in his business many years ago. When I If ft school and went to work for him I knew of the exlstenceof the 'tem perance rule,' as it was called, and thought it a perfectly good one. I had not been a total abstainer, but was al ways temperate, and one evening at a serial gathering, at which my father was present, ! joined the men in a drink. My father heard of it, and next day I was discharged. , 'It would be death to disci pline If you ' remained,' my father said. 1 made a trip,- came buck and was re encaged, and have never since that time taken a drink." New York, Tribune. A Resourceful Pleader :? '. During the Maryland lawyers' convei tlon at Cape May a g.oup.oi, lawyers' est in rocking chalrj. on 'the ' .wirid-swejt piazza of the hotel ,teiling excellent legv stories, trie while watching si school Of great, graceful porpoises dl -po; ting lii tSa blue sea. i,.' ,..- ..r;, "'.' V. :.' J I'lawscn .was ' a very., resourcefjil p eader," said. George Whttelock of Baitt more. : ', ..',- J ..- .' ,.."'''! "Laws on a female client who-'wji accused, of stealing a ham. ' He told for oh the way to ; oourt that when in f.tRe course of his 'argument he slapped.' tBe rail of the Jury box she must "burst. Jnl') tears. .The woman said she. would rp member thir. , ;.'.', X . . . . 4 .,'';.' v J "La wsori, though, forgot himself ' agd Slapped the rail at .the climax, of-a funiy story wherewith he was trying to get' On the Jury's right side. The woman buiyt into the most inappropriate sobs' afld wails. .- " "Why, madam, what in the world. ?s the matter with s ou?' -raid the Judge. ? ''Well, jour honor,' the prisoner, an swered, 'Mr. Lawson iold me to cry when he slapped the rail, sir.' "At this, with an air of triumph, Law- son made a sweeping and regal gesturX There, gentlemen or rae jury,',. ; fca said, there I confidently leave my cas3. Could any man on earth reconcile the idea of crime with such candor and slra-i pllcity as this?" " Washington Star. v Here's a New Version. "Talklnjg about dry towns,., have you ever n-een in Leavenworth, Kart T", asked the commercial traveler In the smoking car. "No? Well, that's a dfy town fo you, all right." ' ' ,' J. 'They can t sell liquor at all there?? asked one of the men, . ..--.-v, .' :. J 'Only If yon have, been, bitten- by- snake," said the traveler. '.'They , have only one snake In the town, and.- when T got to it. the other day. after: standing In a line for nearly half the day. It was too tired to bite." Milwaukee Wtsootulnj