THE BEE: OMAHA,. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 191: i 13 1 ' ' I ' 1 i X I 88 Mag azire fe SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT The Jury Just Wanted to Know Copyright. 1911 National News Ass'u. Drawn for The Bee by Tad IS me jidj Si . r . I 1 y x'v 'rviisu-riM il I , I l WUlllLLUiUUI til l ! sHOrVT VOW decide a - W ' J I OH they've I 60TA I'M A n GafajWhev. g. I. rUfHf IF A BATTEL BAU HITS TH6 OMPlVf ' aoes ircoorvr tot, a Hit i THE RUC(t AKG5 I Married Life the Third Year Warren is Notified that After the First of October Their Rent Will Be Raised. By MABEL HERBERT URXER. will remtJti, with to rnalw any re- ' "Read that!" demanded . Warren, as he .; took a letter . from his pocket ind. ; threw It Info Helen lap. ' July 15, W12. Mr. W. E. Curtis, No. West One Hundred and Ten- , ., th" . Street New - York City: v ' My Dsar ' Sir : We beg to (nforrn : I. you that beginning . ; October 1 the renta In your' house are j are to be ad vanced. Ti.' new rate for apartment : No. 604, which you ,are now, occupy . lng, will be 11,4001 I As we are now . hnvlnar. many an- . I plications for these . apartments, will you ! kindly let us know , at ine aruesi pos j sible date If you ! wish v to renew i your lease? ... W hnrt that vaii las, and will' be. glad 1 palnp sr- Tdcorattog, thai inay Me es .essaVy. ' Vsry truly 'yours, . ; ' ', . THB if ARMSWORTH REAt'tT CO, "Fourteen hundred ' Helen looked up 'with? a gasp of dismay. "Surely they , won't charge fourteen hundred for this apartmentT"", j . j "Sounds as though- .they"re' going to, doesn't' ltr "' " '' I "Ahd thla.ii the middle of Septemberl iWhy, Warren, what CAN we do7" - "Pay Itor get but, of course. Don't ,glve us much time, though. , Tou see j that's dated July 16-came while w were away, and got mixed In with some Ipapers at the office. Didn't come across lit till thla morning." ' "Then this may be already rented. Since; they dtdn't hear from" you, they've probably leased it to some one 'else." "Ko I called up the' office today. It's still open, but we'll have to decide this week" - - . "But could we get anything else now"" Warren shrugged his shoulders. "Won't hurt to try, f How about ,those apart ments on Central Park West? That new house, we looked at with the Steven's this spring. The Palisadlum, wasn't It, oa some siicH hlghfalutln name?" "Qh but it's too expensive. Didn't they say they hadn't anything less than six teen', hundred?" -V r "Well; I'd a darn sight rather pay six teen .hundred there than fourteen her Put your bonnet, on-rwe'll take a look at them now." y "But Isn't It too late to see aoart mentsr. objected Helen. "Why, it's al. most eight." v -'.- ''They'll be glad enough to show 'em. Come, ; get on y6ur thtngs. When you make up your mind to do a thing, that's the time to do It." : Warren often acted on some such sud. dim (raoulse. and Helen knew it' would- be useless to protest. Half an hour later they entered the marbled, ' over-decorated -, hall . of the "Palisadlum." 1 - :; ' I 'v'.'' ' ' 1 The brass-buttoned elevator boy said the superintendent was out, that they had only one vacant apartment which he coujd let them see, but he did not know the rent. He took them up to the fifth floor front . switched .on the. lights and left them there while he -hurried back to jhtr. elevator. ' " - r ; It was a seven-room apartment with the (library, living room and dining room 'thrown' together, i V - ' ' " : "Oh, these three rooms are really won derful!" exclaimed Helen. 'Why, this lllbrftry must he over twenty feet.' : , "Um-m," Just, about twenty, I should 'say. They're good sized rooms, all right j good, shaped rooms, too." ' "And look at- W , floors why, dear, jthey're all parquet And the mantels and iwood work .are so good. Fumed oak lisa't It? Don't you like this dull finish? Let's see the -bedrooms," eagerly, j But both the bedrooms were small, and the maid's room smaller still. ; "Well, you can't have eve-yihing I'Pkav'wA mi m TI ill fenAM In ikMa rooms, and had to skimp on these.". '.'' I "Oht what i a HtUe closetlV dlsap 'pointedly, as she opened a door display ing a shallow space. r "Why "don't- they have more closet room?1" Just think, only three small closets In all this . apart- toentr :."V,!V. ""."'''' "Women are always howling for closetc. Don't collect so much truck." , "Why. dear, we must have some place to put our clothes." . ' , But Warren was now investigating the bath room. "Qood-sUed tub that's what I like. Tou have to ait humped up in most of 'em. That .'looks like a good shower, too." "Oh, what cunning Utle medicine cabi nets! And look, dear, another long mir ror In this door that makes, three. And we haven't one that I can see the bottom of my shirt in." . But Warren, who was examining the plumbing, seemed more Interested in that than In the mirrored doors. Then they went back through the din ing room to the kitchen'. Helen was most enthusiastic. ''.'.) " r?"Oh, what a nice kitchen! Don't you like the way the range sets back? These china closets are lovely. White wood work Is always so good for a kitchen It makes everything look so clean." "Qood-slsed pantry, ' too," as Warren swung open the door. "Yes, it ;ls a big pantry; and what a lovely refrigerator!" "What's this?" he demanded, opening a small metal door near the floor. "Oh, that must be a ventilated garbage box. Mrs. Stevens has one, and she says they're to nice.'- But what's this fort"; ; - "Search me. , I'm not up on all the latest ' hbusekeplhg ;KnicK-linacks. v But I should say they've a Pfetty good outfit here."' ' ".-: "Oh, the appointments of the kitchen and pantry are wonderful. The whole apartment is Ideal If they only had more closet room!"' " - ;" 'Throw away some of ' that rubbish. You've got stuff crowded. In those elrfsets until 'you can hardly shut the doors. , It you had a dozen closets you'd have 'em all full. ' Now let's see these front rooms again." "-,.,,.,-' ... , - - i He threw up a window In the library and leaned for out. 'Tea, you get good light and air here from all sides. Let's eee-thls face south-that gives us south, north and east windows. Ought to get any brees that's going." "And Warren, have you noticed the chandeliers? This one Is particularly good and those side light are good, too." "Yes, those look like expensive fixtures. I should say this was a pretty good house, well built and Well fitted. I'll call up the agent" tomorrow. Guess we've seen about all we can tonight You go on out, and I'll swttch" off these lights. That boy doesn't seem to be coming." As they waited for the elevator, Helen scrutlni-ed the hall ' and stairway. "Everything seems so clean and well kept." - : i ' "''''.j "Yes, but all these apartment . house halls have an institutional look. Can't Imagine anything less cosy or homelike , This might be a hospital or a reformatory from the looks of this corridor." "But I suppose they have to build then; fireproof, V ventured Helen. "Perhaps that's why they can't make them more attractive." ."..';' .'".". "Have you a plan of the building?" Warren asked the elevator boy, as they went down.' . "Yes, slrj but' you'll hve to get tia: from the superintendent" ' "How about freight and service every thing go up on this elevator?" , "Oh. no sir; there's a service, elevaf r back there." '' "Laundry In the basement?" . "Yes, sir, and we have s, large St m drying room." , ' I "That's a good house," declared warren when they reached the street. TT11 wager it's kept up well, too. Did they have 4 mall chute? I forgot to notice." "Oh, yes, dear, right by the elevator." 'That's a convenience. They're not putting them is so many houses now j have to have a certain number of ten ants. Well I should say If we can get that apartment for $1,600 we Ought to take it But 1 want a two years' lease. No moving again next year." ".".'" But,, dear, do you think we could af w II if 1 I I Trie StOHO ESKIMOS HAD WffVCT? 3BCf1 A Re&tfiW CITY. THCV rtwfieveRsCeN much of anything untijl we EXPtoRei? FQVHD THEM. HE BROUGHT CtiS OF TnCM TO ht w YOK TOOK HCR UP BeOflDWAY AND WMi-B .eCATCD f N A BlCr CAFE He ASKED HE? WHAT 6He'D HAVE 3HC SAID NAU6Hf 3UTi.00Wrt6 AT THE VYATEJ? "FF0TAT0I5W'R5H Af pte CAN YOU Tett MC WHAT ATI lflDlAN-APOL'15? AIMT VOU MEVR MEN Nft PL AftP? the eesr wav to 6et ahctao is to RAISE CABBAGE . WALL STREET CHARLIE WA OVER HIS HEAD IN STOCKS his sTuprwis 60N6 Down 6TBADILY AND CHAPLIE WS ALL READY TO TAKE A BRODE Crr THE WOOi-WGRTH BUiLO lfS. HE WAITED A MOMENT THINKING HE'D TAKE A LAST SLANT fin THE TICKEP. NEwVOUSLV FINDER INO THE TAPE HE READ. CALLS ON MARY AHNJHC COOK, IS THAT A POLICE COURT r JUST BORV M WHERE I LIE)! HELLO JifA WR5 OVCK TO MY FhRM ALL LAST weejf. TOTUPAT5CUr 30 ACRES OF HAY TWen rJU.fi D 10 ARGCli WITH POTATOES- fVTCR DIME pitched io tons op may and then took Ten minutes for -supper after gwb &CNTLEMEN BE SEATED TA-RA-RA-BA BONES-MR SHIELDS, DID YOU KNOW I HAD WRITTEN APLAY MR SHIELDS- NO BONES I DID NOT. WHAT Hfive YOU CALLED THE PLAY,' BONES-WHY ISE CALLED IT 'THE MARATHON RACE" . MR. SHIELDS-THATS APCCOLWM NAME. WHAT POSSESSED YOU TO CALL IT THAT' BONES-CAUSE I EX PECS IT WILL HAVE A LONORUN STEP OUT OF THE Gutter boy and let the WATER GOBY 'J 1 VVE HAD A PARTY AND I WENT FOR THE O-OESTS IN A Bl AND R0UcHT THEW HOME AfTER. I WAS. ALWAYS 0i THE Ml fn 2. x X t SEE' YOtlRE A HAPPY GUY YEP H0THIWT0 D0TIU MORROW "To Keep Your Beauty You Must Cultivate Harmony," Says Miss Irene Timmons Bjr MARGARET HUBBARD AVER. "I would be incapable of enduring the strain of my work If I Fere not In com plete harmony with my surroundings and with the rest of the company." That Is what Miss Irene Timmons, the leading woman and most popular member of the Prospect theater said to me the other day when we were discussing the eternal question of good looks and good health and how a woman can retain them amid the arduous life of "stock" work. Miss Timmons Is slight and almost frail' looking. There is something quite childlike in her manner, and only a pair of keen and Immensely clear eyes suggest the latent possibilities of this actress who looks like an Ingenue and play tho heroine In "Kreutzer Sonata," "The Girl of the Golden West" and the Mother In "The Witching Hour" with equal sue cess. ..', "No woman can really accomplish Her best work or .- express her Individuality unless she is in harmony with those about her," said Miss Timmons. "Of course, she can't be" beautiful If she lives in a i constant state of discord, for there Is j nothing that wastes strengtn, vuaiuy nnd so destroys yputh and good looks as d'scord, while harmony develops beauty. ' We work Very hard here every one in 'stock' has to. A new play every week, with rehearsals every morning, two per formances almost every day, and always costumes to get. Oh, if it weren't for the ilressmaker, I have her with me almost All the time," sighed the young actress, "but I am very strong naturally, and then I adore my work and my audlenoe, and I think they are fond of me. "The leading lady in a stock, company gets a great deal of admiration, and that helps one, doesn't it? But I don't believe In living on admiration, as so many do; :t's rather exhausting never to have a moment to yourself." And Miss Timmons told me some stories it the adoration of her matinee girls and .natrons whioh would have turned a more 3raetlcal little head than hers stories of itouquets and anonymous presents and a ,lttle band of devotees who follow her bout and won't even let their favorite itress shop In peace. ,.-', But we were wandering from our sub ject and Mr. Frank Oersten, her man- How to Treat a Gossip By WINIFRED BLACK, V - i f v 1 i! 1 ager, was evidently anxious for me not ford to bind; ourselves for two years at jto waste time, .so we got bark to the $1,600?" :: ,. ..'-. - -' , ' "Wouldn't suggest It if I didn't" ' "But you wouldn't decide I mean you wouldn't sign the lease tomorrow?' "Why not?". ; "Why why, I though we might look around a little first" "If that apartment suits us, what's the sense in looking around? That's like a woman. Even if she finds Just the thing she wants, she trots around to see all the other things she doesn't want" "But dear," protested Helen, "It was only that I thought we might find some thing for a little less." "Well, I don't want anything any less. That apartment Suits tne, and If I can get a two years lease at tt.tM I'll sign up to morrow. And for heaven's sake, don't you begin worrying about the rent If I've got to pa It I can do the worrying, too.- '.' question of beauty. "Let me see," mused Miss Timmons, "klmple food, plenty of sleep, If you can get It nd don't have any long, new parts to learn. But the main thing Is harmony. If you are worried, fearful or unhappy, all the beauty preparations In the world won't do you any good, and many of us live in a -state of mental anxiety brought eq by our own "thoughts or th critical and unkind thoughts of others. . "I'm glad to say that there Is such a lovely spirit of kindliness in this com pany, from the . stage manager down Even adverse criticism Is tendered In a friendly, sympathetic way, and that spirit saves us all unotd worry and -unhapp1 ness. . . .. .i, ."Get Into harmony with your surround Ings, is my advice, and get to a better understanding of yourself. "Avoid criticism. Cultivate harmony. , ffi' ' " f I 1 't j ' ' MO l I r : ?v,l, , PfpJ: f What would I do it some one I thought was my friend went and told things I had confided to her, thinking she would never tell them? And what If she made the stories all over, so that thy were so different when she as through that no one would ever recoRnlie them? What would I do? Well, my dear correspond e n t, I wouldn't do a thing but think what a goose I'd been to tell anybody's se crets , to , anybody els- and expect them to stay se crets. . Quarrel with the one who told? Not L Life ,1s too short to quarrel-too short to hate, too short to "get even," ; I'd just see as little of that perfidious person at I posalbly could, and some day I'd thank heir for teaching me a lesson, the lesson every Impulsive,, open-hearted person has to learn soma time or other, or go through life In hot water. Why did you toll this particular woman this particular secret? . Just because she Jived near you? Or did you pass a month together in a Stupia summer reion, ana wasn't there a thing to talk about except what should never be mentioned? Good reasons) weren't they? What did you know about this .woman who has made you so much trouble? Did she wear her hair the same way you do, and did she use the same kind of powder? Thrilling thlngBi to be sure, but hardly security for the secret-telling test, were they? ! ' -' ' - - ' What was your secret, anyhow some thing about why you wear curls that are not your own, or did ?you really tell tho perfidious one that you and your husband hud a quarrel? Well, what of it? Do you suppose you and your liusband are the only ones who ever quarrel? Dear me; If you could only hear the diimutes that bo on under the roof of your dearest friend, who Is pretending to be eJ shocked at what this scandalous telltale is telling! Tut. tut. little woman: there are no such things as secrets-real eecrets-In the lives of decent, people Why should there be? i - ' You and your husband have a little Rpat about the woman who sat In the front seat at the theater," or sbout the man who took you in to dinner, and be fore you've made up, the cook and her beaux are quarreling over which one of you was right ; The woman who plays bridge with .you tells you roma day In deep confidence thaVtha huxband of her neighbor flrlnks tnru mlifti anA th whnU Klwlr knaw 'ft..- all ths time, .- from school; dear me, what a pother;,., what of It? , So was the brother of the ' woman who wlapered the awful news to" you right in Mrs. So and bo's home. ,'"' Secrets, pshaw; I wouldn't -give a bat- tered nickel for all the secrets In the., worra, roia v me vy every gossip won ever lived. Ten chances to one I know them anyway, and am bored to death very time I have to hear of them. :f My secrets? I haven't one, not ono on',- earth, and don't want "any, thank yoiwr I'm like a friend of mine, who Is a good'.' woman with an unfortunate husband. - 1 My friend almost went craiy the first..; few years she was married, trying td: v keep people from finding out that nor.'"' darling George drank more than was good for him. ' Every time a friend called anywhere-.;; near George's hour to come home my 1 friend almost went Into spasms. 6he'A.'ii sit and watch the window, poor thing, and ; turn white at the sound of a leaf drop- ' ping on the porch till one day the ash " being a friendly and not at all formal ash man, who had carted for my friend ever sines he had left .the same public school her husband attended, said somcK thing sympathetic about poor George. My1'1, friend nearly fainted, but from that" 1' moment on she stopped pretending and', she looked years younger In a week. When George comes home now the?,?, worst for drink and my friend is enter talnlng visitors, she Juct slips out into 1 ,1.. t.Mlk mmi Hm,.. '' n.lttl.. Irt lfa'''' IUV ICVB KMWI B. mwm-,, m w down and comes down without turning a ii hair. " v " Mortified? To be sure. Hurt? To the very,"' heart But not secret not pretending,, not making a desperate effort to' deceives everyone. Sensible woman, I call he rV. :.. I used to worry about things I dldnji want people to know until I found ouV9 that everyone knew them as well as 'i0 " did and sometimes a good .deal better And then I stopped Worrying and havlnijp "secrets." .. ',. , Come on in; all the world and Mza wife look in at niy door all you want to.oo; No, I am not proud of the skeleton thaiL. rattles his bones there In the closet. 2 didn't make him and I'd turn htm out lnr a minute if I could. ' What shall you do with the "secret teller?" Keep away from her on generaK. principles; -she's a gossip, and therefor1, to be avoided as the plague is avoided. Quarrel wtlh her, try to make her "takar It all back," make a row and fuss fw nothing? Never in the wlde.wlde worldV-p Act Just as you would If you saw a refo ant crawling In the luncheon basket at: a picnic. Take a stick and brush the anf away and 'go on eating your luncheon taking good care to keep away from the-v anthill the rest of the afternoon. That's all... ,' ':. . Little Bobbie's Pa J -i MIfS IKE.VE TI5LMONS, Those are the ihlns" that have helped me, and that still help me retain my strength and vitality even In the hardest kind of work. I hope they may 'point the way to others who wish to do the same." Worry la Classed as a Disease, . Worry has been characterised as a dis- ease of civilization. Anxiety Is a mora elemental form of unhappiness. People dreading bereavement, people over whom some vital, disaster Is Impending, are liv ing In anxiety. People concerned with the simple, problem of getting a living ara anxious; those concerned 'with the com plex problem of keeping up appearances are worried. , The persons who make much of .little, who do not discriminate between the Im portant and the unimportant things of life, and who have never learned seK- ..'."'" . '- ' :'' ' I control, are the worriers. Anxiety is a shadow In the background of your activ ity, but worry Is a miserable little activ ity ItSelf. ; . , ' : ' : . Competition In drens, in entertaining, in the style of living promotes worry. It Is not the bills for the necessities of life that are. responsible for i he unpleas ant nervous agitation, the furrowed brow, the abstracted, reckoning eye. The bills for the secondary and more expensive matters are the disturbing ones, Women worry over them, mon worry over them, and finally, the .men worry because the women worry aivl vice versa. ' Anyone who 'has the courage to sim plify his life will have no' occasion for worry. ; . ; , .- ', ' . 'Vhy worry?" &ked the sage. It Is an unanswerable question. Youth's Com panion. "- The Proverb Sisters Is cummlng up to the house tonlte, sed Ma, I toald them all that you wud be glad to see them. Ha Ha, sed Pa. & so I will, & so 1 will, for them I'd climb the highest hill. t think that Sisters loving clubs Is Jest a lot of old maid dubs. Did you git that Walt Mason stuff I slipped oaver? sed Pa. Proberb Sisters, welcome to our hoam. Git here early & stay as long as you can, sed Pa. " I am the oul bf hos pitality & i wud rather die than let It be sed that any of yure club wimmen (rends got treated other than as a lady shud be treated by a gent, sed Pa, That malks me think ' of a song I have sang. Pa sed. . I wrote it myself. The title is "I Have to be a Lady to be Worshiped by a Gent." I think thare Is reely -a swell chanst for this song to go oaver, beekaus 1 guess that everybody Is Sit ting tired of them risky ragtime songs A hoaping far the day to come wen reel songs will 'cum back. Tes, yes, sed Ma, keep on. I have herd you say that a mllyun times. I guess Pa wud . have sed It a mllyun It one times if It hadent been for the Proverb Sisters cummlng In. Thay was all in a bunch, six (6) of them, so thay looked like a cuppel of prltty good looking old gurls. . I want you all to meet my husband, sed Ma, & then Ma Interduced the six ladies to Pa The mlnnlt that .thay had met Pa they sed, all together: It is not the cowl that malks the friar. What is the idee? sed Pa. I was up kind of lait the other nlte, A maybe I am a llttel thick. ; . All we say Is proberbs, sed all of the Proberb Sisters at onst. That was a p.oveib we jest sed: It is not the cowl that makes the friar. Well, sed Pa, I euppoaa that is a good.:. . proverb, but anybody, can make one as j good as that, like, for lnstens, It Is not : the gown that malks the broiler. Don't you see, sed Pa, friars as broilers? j i We dident cum to visit yure wife to be re made game of, sed the Proverb Sisters.?-'; ' Friars broilers lsent gaim, sed Pa. . Thayare talm chickens. Shoot us an other proverb and J will shoot one back"f For onst at least. Pa sed, I have met a. bunch of my wife's lady friends so charm-sf lng that I am entering Into the spirit of' the occasion. Bring on yure proverbs. ' 'Then the Proverb Sisters all sed at.j. onst: , .. . . . . . - ; ' :. . ' Live not to eat, eat to live.- 1 . r Then Pa beegan to look kind of pusaled.wr'V Tou see, gurls, sed Ma, my deer husband j Is up a stump now, beekaus you have got .'; ; hi in on,the subjeck of eetln- If you cud thing of sum proverb about sumthlng tha. wasn't solid enuff to eet he mite be -onW; of us, sed Ma. Isent thare sumthlng UvA our list about wine? -.' . r . Yes, thay all sed. Wen wine Is In, wit-" Is out. ' ' ' " That's right sed, Pa. ! Cum on, Bobbli!' let's go out too. "J - " ;-''-; -i , Some Modern Falsehoods." '' ; ;J s "I thought I needed a little as a tonlo,; and unintentionally took too much." , "I don't like the taste of the stuff, but I drink It because I'm afraid of the citr; water." y "It's lucky for him that he didn't sav,'. another word; I'd have smashed him if h?'- had.". , - ; "My only reason for selling the house i$ that the neghborhood Is . getting . tott: 3 stylish and exclusive." . y "Tee. ma'am; It's this mornlng'a mlik. "I can't Imagine how I got that confix my shoes are just as loose as they cuo' ba"-CWcago Tribune.