THE BEE; OMAHA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER, 10, 1912. IT mm, 06 ii1 SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT, "Keep Your Mind on Your Work," Says Rummy Drawn for The Bee by Tad TAtCS THAT 8ME8ALC ) V yjKW THE GOOD Of" ' ( VOUfe WOT A potiCEWAM jNJ"" ' I aSiftS oo JL V tfAroovoocAite V hevnascoffim' U gamuts- nnhat is ( cpog-TS AP3toeT EtES;5 H ri .2 i r ; i ' ' v- ' ' , ' " k.: " fOJLAiJ 'Jr-X. Agreeability :M ' IV. .. .. ... j mv i ; v ; : J I k JT-ur r i . I FZ. I ' "J : 1 : : " r Hunting a Husband tHaynes Cannot Conceal His Admiration for Widow and She Begins to Admire Him. By VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DEWATER. " , On the way to the hill where stood the Robbing house Helen explained that she traq going .to stop at her home and five Beatrice a cup of tea before taking" her on to the bungalow which he was to oc cupy for. the summer, . "Pr. Haynea got here with the little girl- In time for luncheon." she exclaimed, "and as she was very tired. he has In sisted on her lying in the hammock on my-veranda until your , arrival, after which . we will : take her over , to your bungalow. I have ordered tea served just as soon as we reach the house." ... "That Is kind of you,", said Beatrice, gratefully. It seemed suddenly good to be here away from the noise and heat of the city. They passed other equip pages . fcontalnlnff commuters returning from town. H having the jaded appear ance common to those who have tolled In offices all day In the heat. The' wives, sisters and sweethearts who had been t the station, for them were fresh and cool, in their pretty summer dresses. Beatrice glanced at her com panion, -whose plnk jawn and white hat trimmed with roses were In sharp con trast to her ..pwn,jtravel sone appear ance. A sudden misgTylnmade her say:. .' " r ' "Really, dear, as Mary .and Jack have gone on V the bungalow, I- think you wouia oeiier ntntj wo uiwtj vw. a " to make myself presentable before I am seen by strangers." But Mrs. Robbins wa determined. "In deed, you look all right," she insisted, "and there are no strangers at my place Just now-only Dr. Haynee, whom you know already. Besides that, we want to have a little chat together, you. and I For now that we are to be hear- near neighbors for some weeks we must plan for some good times." - "Very ;well," agreed Beatrice.''" She would not; let her friends guese how un comfortable she felt at having Haynes see her in her dusty traveling garb. And yet,' after all, what could one expect of a woman who ' had been for an hour and a half on -a stuffy suburban train? The doctor himself was on' the veranda as the two women drove up to the Rob bins home. ' " ' "All hafl!" he called out gaily, coming forward to help them alight "Here is the little princess lying in state in th hammock and almost ready to go, home and to bed." r: . 1 . He did not ask how Beatrice had stood the Journey. All his thought was for the child. The mother bent ever her little girl and kissed her tenderly. "Are you glad" 6 "be out here in this pretty place, darling?" , she asked. "And will you be glad, too, to go witli me to our own. little bungalow over there among the ' trees? Jack - uid Mary are there waiting for you." ' Td rawer stay here if Dr. Haynee The Sign on the Bungalow A friend of mine fell for the lure of the bungalow this year, says the New Tork correspondent of the Cincinnati Times Star, i He engaged a nice little pitch pine house en a particularly glaring strip of white sand hardly more than three-quarters of a mile from the ocean, and allows that when the sea breese keeps the mos quitoes away he is almost as comfortable as he would have been if he had stayed in town. , ," ' : "I do not want, any more country com fort." said "BUI" Kirk, who writes death teas epics on contract ' "I have had it. t can still show the seara" " It Is alleged of Mr. Kirk that when be went to the country he painted him a lit tle name-board and suspended it over the front door of the Kirk residence. - It was a, small," brown house, so the Kirks called it the Nut Shell.- Three weeks after Mr. Kirk nailed that board over the door he walked half a mile to the nearest neigh bor and borrowed his ladder oyer again and carried It back to the Nut Shell and stood upon it at vast danger to legs acd ladder and pulled that name-board down ind walked to the river and threw it in. "1 had kept track." said Mr. Kirk.' "In the three weeks we were there every fourth' man had gotten out of his buggy, fish - wagon, 'automobile or -trance, as the case might be, tottered up to the floorwey of my humble cot, and when I responded to his knock looked at me and said with a sort of a grin Harry Thaw wears In the morning papers: Is the colonel tn?" ' ' - v . " , ."And every eleventh man wanted to know. If Mr. Worm was at home. - So then I too that sign down. I'm a professional humorist myself, and I know bum stuff." . - stays too," said the child wistfully. The man laughed, well pleased. "But, lioney, ne said gently, ' you want to get to your own house an'd get a good night's sleep. And I have to go back to the city tonight,, you know. But I'll be up often this summer. There Is a power ful attraction here," he added softly. The widow glanced at him, as she fan cied she detected a new note In his voice. Was It only tenderness for the sick child, or could It be that he was beginning to care for the child's mother?, The arrival of the tray borne by maid checked further- conjecture. The tea was grateful to the hot and thirsty woman, and She siged with pleasure as She sipped it ' She found herself once more fond of Helen Robbins, as she appreciated that in spite of petty weak nesses, she was a good friend and was doing all in her power to make the lonely woman's advent to a new place comfortable. John Robbins, Helen's genial husband, wno nau come up rrem tne city in an early train today, joined the party of tea-drinkers, and the group was a merry one; ' At' las't; the physician glanced at hie watch. - "It is too bad," he said, "to break up this , happy party, but it is getting late and that small girl should go home and to bed. Mrs. Robbins, are you going to drive Mrs. Minor and Jean home, or shall I get my car?'' "Of course I'm going to take them home," declared Helen, rising with alacrity. "John, dear, please tell Mike to bring the horse around. I had him tie him under the shed to await our con venlence. Then she turned Impulsively to Dr. Haynes. . "I say," she urged, "let's have some fun this evening! Tou stay out here as late as you can. I'll telephone down to the Cedar Cliff hotel for one or two other men perhaps Paul Maynard among them and have them. up for the evening, and Beatrice will join us as soon as she sees the children into bed and has some din ner and a little rest. Don't you think It will be Jolly r she asked, appealing to the widow. 7 Beatrice's eyes lighted with "anticipatory delight "Oh, I'd love it!" she exclaimed But the doctor shook his head. "I'm sorry o put a damper upon your plana dear Mrs. , Robbins. But I really do not think that Mrs. Minor ought to leave her little girl tonight The child will be in a strange place and Is over-tired and may be feverish and nervous." Helen shrugged her shoulders Impa tiently. "I think It's a shame!" she ex claimed. "I don't believe that Beatrice can do the child any good by staying cooped up there In the house after Jean'? fast asleep. .What do you say, Beatrice?" "Apparently nothing," responded the widow stiffly, "since Dr. Haynes has settled the matter for me." Her cheeks were flushed and Helen Robbins thought that her vexation made her prettier than usual. Perhaps the phy sician thought so, too, for he looked at her steadily for a moment. But his man ner was that of the business-like doctor when he spoke. "As' I said before," he remarked grayely, "I am sorry to have to seem a spoil-sport. Rut there will be many other evenings when you women can have good times together, and my first thought is for my little patient And it has also occurred to me that Mrs. Minor wants to unpack her trunks tonight." There was a note of interrogation In this speech which made Beatrice feel that some reply was expected of her. With a swift change of mood she deter mined to make the best of what prom ised to be an awkward situation. , Thi? man should not have this chance to con sider her a fool. He may have done so once; she would not let him do so now. "Really,", she declared with a laugh that sounded almost natural, "that Is what I was about to say myself. Be sides, had I been ' consulted earlier 1 would have made the same answer that Pr. Haynes made for me that I could n&t leave Jean this evening. A. J When I expressed my admiration of your alluring plan, Helen, dear, I was sincere,, yet what I Was about to add to my exclamation of joy at the Idea was regret that tonight I must decline. Dr. Haynes spared me the trouble of making that explanation. And now I really think we must get my dear little girl over to our own cottage." As she bent once more over the tired child, the doctor, watching, saw In her the devoted mother- who would make all things! subservient to what she consid ered her small daughter's welfare. THf BASES WE EE FULL WITH TRIS SPEAKf R oP. OH WHAT EXCITEMENT. IF HE H'T THE TILL IT MEANT THE GAMC, if WIN. HE BANfrED iT.n 6filLD OUT TO LEFT PEtD. THe FIELDER NIBBED IT BUT INSTEAD OF SHOOTN& IT HOME STOPPED TO READ THE PR IN T- IN6 ONTHEOUT.Sinp it IP CH CF ME vr D; Urrt. EM HARD FOR THE MAntc. ' WHAT tS CHABLeV,pQoN ALL UP FOR THE .. LUOkY SPVFNTU RAVC.J THIS MOCNN. I CUT IU COEDS flP WOOD CLFCMFh THE STABLE THEN HFTERTHrTn ftTE MY DINNER THE THE SMflLl TIME COMffDMNS BOUNCED OUT UPON THE 6TB6E TO KNOCK THE AWOfENCf SILLY WITH -WBlRJOKeS AND D ANCFS . 'do YO U R EU THE TAPER MUCH; ASKSTJ Ml WE. NO PIPED FRIT2.V only read it once. bang! went thebis-druivi. Sin! went the 3bse$ WHEN THE LEADSB J&Prts- AND CHIRPE3 IN A THIN PALE VOICE, I ' IP THE CHNESg HORDES ARMED THEM SELVES WED THE WESTERN HEMlSPHFPF-? IDOntCARg.CaUrft COP)) 50 I CLEANED THE 12 HORSES AND MlLKeO 44 COWS AND THPfi I HAD 10 MINUTES R eats. AFrersuPPr , A JERRY 7AM WAS ON HIS FlB$T TRIPTO EUROPE. HE KNEW A WORD OR TWO OF THE LAN 5 OASES. HE HAD HEARD Vrtert iri THE .DIFFER (SWT RESTAURANTS IN HIS MOMS' TOWN. HE BLEW INTO MADRID ONff DAY FUCL OF SPFD. THE FIRST MAN HE BUMPED INTO WAS A BI6 SPANIARD WITH A LOT OF BRfff-HT COLORED CLOTHES. THERE WAS A 5ION fN BACV OF THH ULLSPEARER AND INQUISITIVE TERRY F) Ski ED WHAT ITSAia THE PADRE REA D, " If IT RAINS PITCHFORKS WlLt IT HA"- COLUMBIA.' I MADE SO LOS- OF BUTTER THEN TOOK UP THE CARPET3 TO CLEAN THE neT day. 1 hit THE HrY AT 1 LUCKY DOVLL S II M I V I I Beauty Secrets of Footlight Favorites Don't Try to Follow the Fashions of the Moment. . Bj FRANCES REEVE. I am going to give a little advice to women' regarding the care of their hair. I feel sure .that '. everyone will agree with me that her hair is one of woman's greatest charms, and I think It is every woman's duty to take care to preserve it There are so many women who are not actually good' looking but who possess beautiful hair, which seems to make up for the lack of every other charm.' One Is constantly meettng"'women who exclaim; "My ' hair (s simply coming out in liandfuls. I cant stop It and I've tried everything under the sun." This is true. They spend lots of money on expensive hair tonics and ointments, which they have heard are wonderful, but prove absolutely useless. I have been' through that stage myself and nearly worried myself sick. It was only 3ince I came to this country for the first time, two years ago, that i discovered there was a treatment for the scalp which was genuine and a very sim ple and inexpensive one. The whole secret of it is In brushing, I mean, so that every hair seems to be . brushed separately. It Is almost impossible to do this your self. If you prefer to have it done at home, your maid or some one who knows how to bruBh the hair thoroughly should do it. A tonic should also certainly be used, but it is the brushing that is so beneficial and brings life and lustre Into the hair. f , . I can never understand why 'women dread the approach of gray hair. I think a young woman whose hair Is gray looks charming, and I'm sure the average man will agree with me. Most women think it suggests age, but on the contrary, It gives a more youthful expression to the face, and lends a certain charm which is Indefinable, I counted ten gray hairs on my head this morning. I must admit I prefer them to be on the temples Instead of down the center 7 r- la & i it r.f-AVv ft kcv'-uU. 7 - J 'i I MISS FRANCES REEVE. parting,; nevertheless, there they are and there they'll have to remain, because nothing on earth would Induce me to dye them. That is a mistake so many women make. They admire a certain fashionable shade for hair and promptly dye their own that particular shade, forgetting all about their complexions, which do not blend with the new color of their hair and make them sallow in consequence. My advice, therefore, Is If you were born a brunette. Just remain one, how ever popular blondes or tHians may be. I have never craved for masses of hair reaching long past my waist. This Is not a question of sour grapes, but because people who possess It have told me how difficult It is to dress, and how It often is the cause of headache. No! I shall be quite contented so long as my hair continues to be moderately thick and long, and shall not worry until get really old and have no hair, because without my hair I know I shall look hideous. I do now, when It Is pulled away from my face. I What Has Become of the American Dude? , Ry ELBERT George Peabcdy, the great American banker, had one thing which will make any man or woman rich. It Is some thing so sweetly beneficent that well we call It the gift of to la k tA,! ... J ;Wi the gods.' The asset which I refer agreeability. Its first requisite Is glowing physical health. The sec ond 1 Ingredient Is honesty. Its third is good will. Nothing taints the breath like a lie. The old par ental plan of washing the boy's mouth out with soft soap had a scientific basis. Liars must pos sess good mem ories. They are fettered and gyved by what they have said and done. The honest man Is free his acts require neither explanation nor apology. He is In possession of all his armament. If I were president of a college, I would have a chair devoted to agree ability. Ponderosity, profundity and In sipidity may have have their placai but the agreeable man keeps his capital ac tive, His, soul Is fluid. I have never been In possession of this social radium, so as to analyse It, but t know It has the power of dissolving op position arKl melting human hearts. But so delicate and Illusive Is It that when used for a purely sordid purpose, it evaporates Into thin air, .and the erst while possessor Is left with only ;the mask of beauty and the husk of per sonality,, George Peabody had agreeability from his nineteenth year to the day of his death. Colonel Forney crossed the Al ls ntie with him when Peabody was In his seventy-first year, and here Is what Forney says; "I sat one one aide of the cabin and he on the other, lie was reading from a book, which, he finally merely held In his hands, as he sat Idly dreaming. I was melted Into tears by the sight of his Jove-llk tread framed against the HUBBARD. window. His face and features beamed ' ' with high and noble intellect, and his r eyes looked forth In divine love. If J.' ever soul revealed Itself In the .face, it was here. He was the 1 very king. of men, and I did not wonder that in the; -11. past people had worked the apotheosis , ; of such." " ' ' ' To the clerk who would succeed, I say cultivate agreeability. Conrteoua't manners in little things are an asset . v worth requiring, Tou rise when a cus- N tomer approaches; you offer a chair; , you step aside and let the store's guest' pass first Into the elevator; these are j little things, but they make your. work , and yourself finer. To guy visitors or to give short, fllp- pant answers even to stupid or Impudent people is a great mistake. Meet rude- ": ness with unfailing patience and poUte- ',, ness and see how much better you feel. 'l'lk . If your business Is to wait on eus-i tomers,' be careful of your dress and ap-'1 peaiance. Do youf manicuring before you reach the store. Dental floss is a ' good Investment. A salesman with a'?.l bad breath Is dear at any price. Let 't'r' your dress be quiet, neat and not too -.ft fashionable. To have a good appear- ance helps you inwardly and helps the .j business. . , Give each customer Trour "whole atten- tlon and Just as considerate attention to a little buyer as a big one. If asked1"' for Information be sure you haVe it before you give It. Do not assume that'-', the location or facta Is so now because you once knew It so. Don't mlsdlrect.'iA Make your directions so clear that theys..) will be a real help,. ( - I The less you require looking after, the more able you are to stand alonei-A and complete your tasks, the greater ' ! your reward. Then if you cannot. only yJA do your work, but also Intelligently and ;s effectively direct the efforts of others,:; j our reward Is in. an exact ratio; and J " the more people . you direct, ant the ' higher the Intelligence you can rlrhtly,U, lend, the more valuable is your Ufa. 'A' The most precious possession In life is""r good health. Eat , moderately, breathe''; deeply, exercise out-of-doors and get'j eight hours sleep. And cultivate agree- 5-J ability, as a business proposition. Copy-; J right, 1912, International News Service. The Manicure Lady J What has become of the American dude, the dandy of yesterday? The question has been brought forward by the assertion, just delivered In; Paris by M. Le Bargy, renowned upon ihe continent as the best dressed man In Paris. This great beau, actor and mati nee idol, has announced that his mini mum expenditure annually for clothes Is S6.0CO. '. ' -; ' 1 ' A' ' 1 ' When the news reached Broadway and sped over to the avenue thoughts ran back at once to the heyday of E. Berry Wall, Harry Lehr, and, of course, - John Drew. But those who discussed the news bad to confess tfhat a decade at least had passed since the avenue and Boadway had been compelled to botf to the dis tinctive male fashion plate.'- ! An authority on men's fashion who modestly declined to allow the use of his name pondered at the question."" "What has become of the American dude?" "Really, you are quite right where Has he goneT' this man repeated. "The at tire of our men seems to be gradually reaching toward extreme conseratlve taste. The dude, as we all liked to call him year ago, has passed and gene. Of the reminders of the one-time famous E. Berry Wall, only those great spreading collar wings still remain." "The Frenchman's estimate , that the correct dresser must spend a minimum of 16,0c annually is absurdly high. When you consider that in Europe men's cloth ing costs just about one-half what It does In America, the figure is doubly absurd. M. Le Bargy must have Included the cost of his theatrical costumes In the Item. "There are three tailors in New, Tork who obtain the bulk of orders for the best dressers. I am familiar with their prices. Let us see what it will cost' "The man who desires to be perfectly attired at all hours must have four suits dallyr In New York there Is rapidly In creasing a set of men who spend their time loitering and dread. - "For such a man there must be a morning suit, an afternoon suit, a dinner suit and an evening suit. The- best tail or will provide the evening suit for tbout $126. Each of the other three will cost $85. The best dresser will ot Two months' wear out of each suit is not at all unusual. "Of course, there are other necessi ties. Waistcoats are very popular, but the man who possesses more than five la-unusual. The price follows hi f.,; The waistcoats may be bought from $10 w eecn, though few men would pay more than $20. "8hlrts may be tailored from to $35. Bocks they buy from 11 to a m. Underwear may be purchased in .n quality and at almost every price. The man wno Keeps in his closet a stock valued at higher fihanj $150 would be dif ficult to And, In New York. "George," said the- Manicure Lady to the Head Barber, "have you ever did any crying since you grew up?" "I might have sniffed a little." replied the Manicure Lady's friend George, "but I can't remember It. Why? What's the ajiswerf" "Oh, 1 war Just wondering if grown up men ever cried much," said the Manicure lAdy. "I seen the od gent cry Ing last night and It seemed sort of funny, because he had Just came home frnm nrsanlzlnir a. now lodire with some of his rother order joiners and usually, George, after one of them sessions the old boy is as full of sunshine as the aurora parabolls Is full of colors. "Ti maan h aurora boraclc." the Head Barber said, by way ot correction. "Parabolls . Is something tnat mey give kids to make them go to Sleep. 'I guess you.couldn't sleep peacerut 11 you didn't et a chance about once every ten minutes to air your knowledge, saia the Manicure Lady, favoring the Head -.. 1. .i , v. . ian.a nf nnrmt dls- Dltruci wuii m Bwiv. - - -r- daln. "But. anyhow, I ain't the kind - of a girl that lets the vaporing of a whisker whlttler's brain put me off my mental . . . 1 -.... 4hv .all it. I v-H' W 1 " 1 ' 7- wanted to tell you about the old gent, and so to ret back to h'-m. "Father came home crying, and crying actual. George. I don't mean none of them stage tears. I mean that he was sobbing on the level, crying like one of them Yellowstone park geysers. I thought at first that be was going to choke himself to death with salt water. And do you know what he was crying for, George? On the level, I guess you couldn't guess It in a million years. He was crying because at this here lodge meeting he had met 4 friend' of his that had a friend that had went to Princeton and had a friend In the same class with Mr. Wilson and was afraid Mr. Wilson wasn't going to be elected president, of the United States, t suppose the friend n. me Ann all the cnrlne first, but It must have acted kind of sympathetic with the old gent, because by the time tie got home he waa weeping willingly himself. . 'Tears Is funny things, George. If a gent sees a lady weep'ng tears that , springs unbidden from her heart, he pulls the old frosty face and same some- ...Ji thing about the weakness of a mere woman,, but let me' Whisper something, ai' Ham Crane would say-that tears - that : has been shed by all the women In the b1' world ain't one, two, three with the tears that Is shed by gents old gents and young gems-after coming home for sA1 lodge meeting." , , A' "I never cared much for lodges and ll never cried much since I grew up," said the Head Barber. ."What little I cried J ;H always choked off kind of quick by thinking of something funny, like musical comedies." , , ,; "You ' don't say sc4" exclaimed the r Manicure Lady. "Thinking of most of ! the musical comedies that ' I have saw . would make me cry all the harder.." r Vs Big Business as a Pioneer For fifty years in all America there 4 was no more forbidding place than Death - Valley In California. It was a seething J desert, Insufferably hot. below the level ' of the sea. Its inhabitants were rattle. '"' snakes, tarantulas and centipedes. Death ' ? ' Valley might well be called UW Valley' ! today for it has become ' a thriving".;!; land. Business has taken, and Is already,' taking, millions of 'wealth out', of it a cleansing material that .finds a. market ' In every household. Not' far away from-" C Death .Valley it was found that there were clays that could be umA tn .,.' w IUQ f r making of tiling of the finest kind. American business works best in coA4 operation. When many Industrie ! oomblne, as It were, and each reach out '; me neiping nana to one another, there i are achieved the best results. Thu , ''" cleansing substance and the clays brought f,A in uxeir train other things. , The demand- ) for water to make life able in time Introduced irrigation, ana'r. on me desert s very edge orange groves. " and fruit farms commenced to blossom.' Big business had scored It had made habitable a region whlch-menjk once mougnt waa created only to Increase the mileage to the Pacific coast in th. big eastern cities today, and abroad, may "w -r .no,, miv iiavo Decome rienvMr through the opening of this ne Umrf. A though theye were not in the original eu. terprlse. Harper's Weekly.