PART TWO EDITORIAL . PAGES ONE TO TWELVE IT IT Omaha Sun day Bee PART TWO SOCIETY. PAGES ONE TO TWELVE VOL. XLII-NO. 18. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 191 SINGLE COPY TEN CENTS. High Spots in Europe-An Omaha Man's Observations O&ende the Place to See and Study the Sylphlike Water Nymph v 35a.tJi Horn a 0Sce2zd c I -S 11 I! ffl .l.M IRTT Til?! i i ' WJ&M 1 ' I in m m EMmw i I Ifftl V IMII U IS - . O" ! J t (III lilt 1 ' V r'MIIIUII WIlll.'M.T I IB : ; .s'm' ,fi ""- HOT Hi I 1 J p II lit a s y I'1- j ii. ' II By FRANK L. HALLEK. HE next time you go from England to the continent, take the Dover boat to Ostende instead of Calais. The journey across, the channel by this , route will' take two hours instead of ; one. If the sea is rough you will be dead to the world anyway flat on your back in the cabin and one hour can't make you any sicker. If the sea is fine two hours will pass quickly enough in wafching tye shipfe of all nation that make this channel the "busiest stretch of water over here. Ostende is the Atlantic City of northern Europe and largely patronized by the English for week-end holidays. It has a snug har bor filled with a picturesque fleet of fishing boats, auto launches and racing craft; a mile of sea front hotels built of stone and brick four to six stories in height, attractive in design and festive with flags. Long rows of Normandy poplars and distant village church towers give a pleasing introduction to the mainland. . The sea wall and broad 100-foot wide etone walk over a mile long must have cost J1.000, 000 or more. It has the famous board walk oi At- lantte City-beat lu a fraflsnj.Oll Sunflgys-esptTall; :" the promenade Is a most brilliant Bight. Not only the fashion of England and of France but holiday excursions of rural and village people from 5nearby towns add the quaint peasant costumes to the scene.. , The Daily Parade and What Follows Each visiting delegation marches up and down -the broad sea walk wilh its military band and wav ing banners. After the parade they niake a break for the beach. On the sandy shore a tented army of pleasure seekers in gayly striped tents are making the lives of the countless children one long summer of delight and bring the tint of returning health to hundreds of convalescents just out of hospital and Kick room. Hooded wicker chairs, protecting from the sun and wind, and folding camp chairs galore Ngive a home look tdcamp life. Bathing vans, from the plain wooden fourth class springless boxes on wheels to gayly painted cushioned-springed stained glass bathing carriages de luxe, stand like parked artillery, row after row, awaiting the bather. There is no large single bathing- pavilion as with us, with its hundred of cubbyhole dressing rooms. In spite of the fact that it is August and an overcoat felt comfortable, the surf was full of bathers. It is ir resistible; you get into line wih the rest and buy a 20-cent perforated bathing ticket, take one coupon and go to the "costumer" and get a zebra-striped (' armless and legless bathing suit and one towel. Then for the other Coupon you claim a fourth class bathing van. V The dressing room is 4x6, with two eliding wooden windows, a cheap looking glass and a, wooden bench fastened to one side of the room and three nails to hang your clothes on. You pull a wooden lever up and down that projects 'through the eaves and has a red wooden ball on the outside end which becomes' a signal to the man with the' great Norman horse to come and, pull your house Into the surf.' He taps on your window and holds out his hat for a fee, after which your ark begins . to. move, dragging the heavy attached sea steps along with it..' After casting off the last remnant of modesty you brought with you from the United States at the same time with your clothes.'you put on your abbreviated Sing Sing suit and start down the steps. The minute your feet touch the water you for the first time in Europe find all the ice water you want. You swallow your heart four times rapidly in succession and find after the first ' plunge there is nothing in the world so invigorat ing as this Ostende salt water. When through with your bath you signal as before and the great horse comes wading into" the sea up to his breast and pulls your car back on the beach, where as you descend you find the bath woman, who gathers up your wet bathing suit and towel, standing with that tip ex pecting smile that won't come off. What takes your breath away quicker than the Ice cold water is to see a pretty girl come tripping out of a bathing van in one of these skintight armless and legless Jer seys, without stockings or bathing shoes, but with the cutest chic little bathing cap on her head, go into deep water just once to satisfy herself that her wet Jersey will stick to her like a postage stamp, and then join her companions of both sexes and all ages attired as she is and sport in the shallow water to the evident . delight of an admiring audience . armed with binoculars and kodaks. Everybody Stock lngle8 1 But more striking yet to our modest and bash ' ful American eyes is tae universal habit of both sexes and all ages taking off their shoes and J, A v. mm Frank LHaller Sends. The Bee Another Fas cinating Travel Letter stockings and seeing how near the waist line they can wade in. I shall never forget one slim set middleaged spinster dressed all in black, wearing a large black hat, her shoes with i her stockings stuffed into them tied by the shoestrings hanging about her neck, her skirts gathered high up with both her hands, standing thus calmly wading be tween two waves, utterly oblivious of an exposure of shining white beanpole anatomy, showing not onlyjibove her ankles but above her knees as well. Ostende is no place for a minister's son. The best of good nature prevails and audible comments are freely made. The whole beach roared "when two extremely fat country women wearing straw sun bonnets for bathing caps waddled ponderously out to sea, carrying their billowing adipose on supports whose factor of safety seemed ridiculously over estimated. But it is the children, after all, who hAve the best time. With little nets they ' catch the small sea snails brought in with the waves and if ; 'V. "5v,o J fs ' " - I Jim? tie which are eaten raw. They work like beavers with hands and spades, making sand dams to imprison some adventuresome wave that has come top far inland and then float their little boats. They build towers of sand on which they, stand Awhile the -in-rolling waters make islands for them. They dig wells in the wet sand and build, their little castles in Spain. The Punch and Judy shows and venders of toys and kites fill their days with occupation in the open air. So tfanger Whatever of Being browned You are not going to be permitted to drown at Ostende. Besides the life lines and life-saving crews in boats, expert swimmers are appointed as . watchmen to parade the beach. Whenever an ad venturesome bather goes beyond the danger line the watchman blows his horn, the lifeboats start shoreward and the offender is compelled to retreat into safe waters. A. l 4 JrmmT Ostende itself is a town of hotels and boardiug houses, with accommodation and entertainment for all purses, well able to house 20,000 people at pne time. A magnificent casino, with the largest and most attractive concert hall I have seen, where everything good to eat and drink may be had; fine reading and writing rooms, smoking, card and gam- Omaha Public Library and Museum AKEN by themselves, the queer objects in the Philippine collection in the public library museum may not mean much more than other scattered curiosities from other parts of the world. But when you try to find out something about the place where these articles are common, and the people who use them, they acquire a new interest. That charcoal stove, which looks like a broken flower pot with a clay kettle over it, does not seem as interesting as a gas range or a blue-flame oil stove. But when you learn that all the cook ing in all the native homes in the Philippines is done on just such stoves or their variations, then it becomes a little more important , in your eyes. In "The Unofficial Letters of an Official's Wife,' Edith Moses says: "The stove for which I vainly looked, and from whence came the appetizing odors that filled the air, was nowhere to be seen, but on one Bide of the room on a bamboo table was ranged a number of terra cotta charcoal stoves; over each stood an earthenware olla, or kettle; in this primitive manner an elaborate - dinner was being prepared." It, sounds quite easy, though, until you read the account given by William B. Freer in his "Philippine Experience of an American Teacher:" "With a stove of this kind the expert native can prepare a banquet of. many courses and serve IX THE PHILIPPINES each one hot. at the required moment. But woe to the American who, in the absence of his cook, attempts to prepare thereon a simple meal. Likely the fire does not burn; stooping over the Btove, he, places to his lips a bamboo tube and utilizes his lungs as a bellows until he blows the ashes into the food. The fire becomes too hot, the pot boils over and he burns his fingers trying to lift the lid and remove some of the burning fagots. When, finally by the exercise of great patience and self control he finishes the cooking process, he finds that he has for his repast a dish of food well fla vored with smoke and burned on the bottom, which he eats in solitude, recalling meanwhile the family table at home In 'God's country.' " The houses where such primitive methods are still practiced are, of course, Bomewhat peculiar. Some are of hardwood throughout, elaborately furnished witness the beautifully inlaid table in the same case with the charcoal stove. And in the same city perhaps with these are "nlpa huts" of the palm leaves and rough hnplements"ot different kinds. ; Civilization seems to be curiously back ward in some ways; well advanced in some others. , The rice mill in this same case suggests the slow method of preparing Hour usedt for bread in most of the country districts in the Philippines. This is why, as Mr. Freer says, all American teach ers, except those ii the larger cities, eat boiled rice in place of bread, often three times a day, as the natives do. Certainly the rough stone mill, operated by hand, does not give the impression that bread would be easily or quickly prepared from the new product. Another case shows various Philippine articles purchased "at the time of the Transniissisplppi ex position': A wooden money box, neatly carved; measures made of the hollow sections of bamboo; a dipper of a hard cocoanut shell; a bamboo pil low; a rice broom which resembles in shape the fans used by the ancient Egyptians. , All that is needed is to furnish the background for these and they become more than scattered curios; they are the product of a poetical, unprac tical people, accustomed to doing things by rote, and lacking accuracy. Add to this a climate which does not demand even as much of the people as the North American climate did of the Indians here, and you are surprised at the progress made by the native Filipino. If you would know more about the islands and the people, read, in addition to the two books men-. tioned, Worcester's "Philippine Islands and Their People" and Le Roy's "Philippine Life in Town and Country." These books are all obtainable at the library. bling rooms. In Ostende I first saw the government telephone poles. They are usually located in an attractive little park, a block or two apart, built of open ironwork towering fifty feet, with an open grill work cylinder on top from which the telephone wires run down to houses and hotels, doing away with unsightly poles in streets and alleys. v, Half an hour from Ostende you come to that most charming of old towns, Bruges, once a seaport, tha rhfnf f-nmmnrHnl itv in mndievn KiirntiR Tin w three miles from the sea. Still, with its lovely canals, a northern Venice, it draws from all over the world the artist to paint its quaint old houses,' lovers of the fine arts to wonder at and admire its painted shrines and old pictures, architects to study, Longfellow's belfry of Bruges, and wearied tourists to rest a day or two in the quiet of this old, old town. International Exposition at Ghent Another half nour and you come to Ghent, which, in to have an international exposition of botany and agriculture in 1913. The exposition buildings are already partly constructed. One will be the longest greenhouse ever built, for Ghent is the City of Flowers, having more hothouses than any city in the world. This is the birthplace of John of Gaunt and the castle of the counts of Flanders, nearly 800 years old, still stands complete, a perfect specimen of medieval fortress. Splendid old churches full of historic tombs and famous paintings altogether will make the exposition well worth visiting next year. After Ghent comes Brussels, Paris and conti nental Europe, with its endless and tasteless table o noies eiernany me same, mere is one article of food used everywhere abroad, howver, that we might well adopt, and that is green. nuts of all kinds hazlenuts, almonds and English walnuts. While green they do not contain so much oil, are easily digested, extremely palatable when once you appreciate them and as refreshing as a salad,.- '