1 1 Ml I i TTIK llHlv OMAHA. THTKSDAY, DKCKMIiER 12. 1012. The Tne faazirve p)a le SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT The Judge Was All Mixed Up on His Dope Drawn for The Bee bv Tad Copyright 19t2. Valletta; News Nss'n. I FOUND THKM tmi w " -MkT Me& r-r-ci run TVINO , ret" - j n ... . flM Some fresh Guv Pur that iw a. OH MEO.0 WE -WHAT:! I ) agJririlvr; vou 3ao -vou Petri- rM wt - . r)y ?i; ; . , i "mmvm . f I .-"twt- ill. i r Mm Ns-cfi inn ajo i u - - -- i ri . -rtc crca E,g.t.V OM THE vNlw HOME hpP plOTHGV OlOMT OETM- svo-roo.-IT VWOTM AS TlrVTNPET OP yE SOOyt r-EYT IT TH I YJTA 7 i J lcAr.'. TtTniinT TP Ob. lOTIS UUO OK MEVr Breaking the Shackles -J By WINIFRED BLACK. They are out tlie women of tlieharem' t A!l at onc: she caught sight of some Have you seen the telegrams from thn , thing In tin- fuce of one who lookcil at "ustern countries? "Turkish women of 1 her. That tino was n woman quietly high rnnk nib taking advantage of un- 'litsfil. of middle age, Iter face lined mid nettled conditions there to escape from of sacrifice. And on the woman's breast lif) harems. They re travelling, some if them to Mar seilles, some to The Hague, and fosne to Purls Thev curry with them little mono hut many gorgeous tewels. nnd they ire drested in fine tllk? and 'ace "Little mone but Korgeous Jewels. nnO dresseil in fine silks and laces t'nn't you see them, t h e little-footed nig-eycd, toanet lipped women of the woman there In tho cape? harems, ablaze with Jewels, nrustle In 1 swung a little crosH of silver, and th straue creature In the i'age looked ut tl e tllver riiss and stietched out hr hands for It And the middle-aged woman, from sune lltt'.e town In Massa chusetts, unfastened the little silver cross and banded it up to the cage and the little 'human paroquet kissed It and bung t Droui"' lit' r.eck where It would fall n Ude iiiM to her hit. ind she haudud the woman In the street below n bracelet nnd smljled. nnd her eyes weie of n sud- i dm fun of tears. ) nd after that we walked no furthe- I In the slri'vt of sonow and of shame, foi ! .1 . f.v ..f .!, l., ...! i imit- v.i L.i ut.iit-iii, laiuuuci imm.liu I us nnd we nanted to go to the hotel nnd I think It over. AVbv did 8'ie want the silver orosx. the j THff Fil?&T T(Mf; Pt MflN POJtf ON Pl OFSKires HPDoe&HT CUT MUCH ICC IT W6 A7 Tne wbowoo HniSDINQ- OUT THE" CHIN &OODS IH HtS OiVY zocuLnp wflv- He wo up to THE PC0OVLftHer BTUF WHFN HC WH IN7BKVUPTi:C BY THE ChiniKMflfi I WLt. HflVtF TO iMTfffRUPT VOWR lHTeiB3Tirio aPiecn a MOMfNT I H")Wr BEEn fMHI TO PUT THIS OUCdriON OTP TO THE nUDIEtiCB IP f, MflN WENT WCST NOOLD Mff &EflTTt-ff 7" flW TftKE THE H AMD CUFFS OFF J I WONT "Ilk, penniless, hungry perhaps, moro than it little frightened, friendless, homeless, Htrnnarcin In a strange land but free at last free? Free fiom the silken chain that tied them to tho latticed windows; free from th Jingling fetters of gold and of silver; free from tlin "sheltered" llf they were supposed to love. Fred mndev the blue sklee. free out, Jn the clear winds, free from tha everlast- 115 bondage of a superstitious Idea, free t last, the women of Turkey. If this war lr worth nothing else It Is uoith that, and what does not that mean o the nation of the Turks? What kind of ii son can a woman bear ." u man. no matter how noble, how brave, how clever he is, If she he but a lave? Whiil frort of destiny is there for any ountry whtre the mothers are watched flay und night because they cannot be rusted nlone? Once I walked the narrow ways of an Oriental cltv end saw there In the cages jf Rllt little ruHtlliig, whistling painted hlngs they called women. One I remember was a flnnio of yellow ind scarlet, and the embroidery of hr robes was gorgeous to sec, and her 'ewels clinked as she stirred, Jade and merald and ruby, and from her low brow hung great strings of milk white carls. Her little fingers were dyed deep with lenna, npd Imr narrow eyes were stained ' look dark and glowing. She worn ni"ii I ci slender ankles bracelets if ued gold curiously jewelled and In th. midnight of her satin hair hung .learning nars of diamonds and rubles. Pl.f enme to the door of her little gilded og''. b'ung like the cage of a canary un bi wall f a long alley, and she cried to ard s-ang a funny high-pitched sing--ng ditty, and she dances! a little and M:d!i-d wanly under the paint. A little umrn paioriunt preening her gay feath is the glare of the night lamps In the .tuii'Qi' old rtreet of sctrow and shame. What would she or such as she do with it? Did she think it an amulet, or did she read In the cye.s of the elderly woman it deep Pity and love for al wljo are enslaved nnd cannot escape whether their cagen be of gold or of Iron? What did she do with the cross when we hsd gone? I How did she think, of us who stood thoro!' nnd looked at her with such alien and ' for the most part unfriendly oyes? ' Who. shall say? but o It happened, tlio ' woman in the rare ana; the woman In'the! street. One young, prettj, loaded with , gorgeous Jewels: the othr plain, middle- aged, her kind eyes full of sorrow and of the memory- of soriow. but free. fre to walk the earth, free to eat. to sleep, to Btarve. to die alone, but free. Does she live now, the little strutting paroquet? Is she faded and gray, and By JIAlUiARKT HUBBARD AVKK. I mum one ut a uona siave ana gray, and ' obey such as she once was? Has she UT'5 SEE I HOWMVW INDIUM TRIBES ARC THERE OM EARTH? THEWS H rite CHIPPEW, (M.ACKFEETJ havajq an 'THE cree 1 tea THOD. THE TR&IH tflME TO n STOP 1HB eNOIHEBR jumpco out ono ran up to THE Fei.UOW AfAVWr" TW bed SHIRT- WHPTti. THS M FITTER H CRIED ? flPTer? Trif &IHK fcTflBBCDTHefll" n w TIMES THE BHaiHEEFS CALMED, OUT " WHO CflNUNDCRGTflNoJ THE DBftFnHD DUMB JLrWOye " CAN f'ED q BfltD-HEIO-CD PneENGR."fU.l. 17IOHT THCN, OST THIS tfuy 1 "firTCR river minutes or noi3&t.t?s& G-0&&IP QflLDV HOLLERED, " HE vMn T TO KNOW, wrtfN TH E TfiZeSE & L COVG1 DO THEV TRKS THEIR TPUNKSf- JOHNl FEED 7H WTTyA' AH l THVT'S THE TRIBE Ithimk. ,ha.s'em auu skjmkeo to a frazzle it's SOMETRroE. WHAT' AQAlN ? Tfl'Rffftfl'Rfl BONffi- Wffi.1., i&ee L.UCY fVOJ3i.eMflN rtRTCO HLU IHTEPLOCUTOR'LUCV? WMrtT LUCtA IHTCR.LOCU70F!HuH. THAT6 ORCflT 30KE. Wrtrr7r XSOS& 7HB PORBIO-N NOBLE MfiN ervTer? into it r BON 35- WHV7HE LOSITPNIft CrtME UP THff By ONE DrV LnB' WEEK PND OOTTIffD UP TO HE? PEER Hfli-7.' SHE BBLiEVES IN THE ChU&E, LftfF 1HFT WOMftN BeH KNOW r-W DENTtTlflAfVE, $00K? T t r IT. ' 1 . s NO; WHO i i . VIA THE. BOOB v What put tup CREE m CREATION. Climbing Mount McKinley By (JARItKTT I". HKRVIKS. In Hearst's magnslne fyt liccember vou I nnvbody else. It Is onlr tiy contlnustin. will read the story oi the final 'con- untiring effort that u nmn can perfect I quest" of Mount McKlnhci the loftiest himself. If you find yourself becoming mountain In North America and vou will lar.y. Indifferent, easily discouraged, dls- Beauty is Womai's Greatest Aid, Declares Miss Sally Fisher r,til the little cross of silver that shrt begged from the woman who Mood In the street below her that night or silver nnd of velvet under tho oriental stars.' wonder, 1 always wonder. They are out now, the women of the harem; they are running away from thelt cages, away from the perfumed darkuest of the zenanas, away from th splashing' "Ilov can you expect me to give ad vice on health nnd beauty when I um (Irk In bed, ond lmve H wretched and per te.:tly disfiguring cold? 1 consider that Utterly heartless. ' groaned Miss Sallle FiRhei. from the depths of her pillows Bhe wasn't the Halllo Fisher I expected to see. for she was really and truly III The Kparkltng animation and ivacit ; which waa part of her fascinating pei- i sonallty were subdued by row of nf Mia fVil 1 .iu l I .. i nway from the little gray ar.es thev kr . 'nedlclne bottles, but. noverthelc.HS. evn for compajiy, away from tho strutting ! ,,B,n nl"1 "u'ferlng cannot daunt the In birds they train for amusement, away tervlewer In .-earch of Infonnatlon. from the lattices, away from thn dark j "' was a vp,' iain c.'HOY' K:tid Miss and the secrecy and tho stench of the i ,'''llft1'- teuilnlscent look of pain. slavery of tho harem. "Hut I have ultttos longed for bcauU world. 1 1ft that on) to look the world honestly In the face 'woman ran have. Hnd It's absolutely Rt last! I riuh-dub for u woman to say that she Sell your Jewels, put away your soft I dooin't lung for It. silks, lift up your beautiful eyes. No, "Beauty is- essential to huccess und there is no shame In being a woman, we j happiness in every walk of life." ure proud of our mothers here, proud of I "That depends, of course, on what our own great destiny, loo. for may wej0u considered beauty." I interrupted, not teach our childrmi how to bear free- -Well, of course, we can't all exneet to Now may the air nf freedom blow light mora than anything elsu in tin upon you, sisters, and may jou learn think that it Is the greatest glfl dom nobly and as a gift of God? Free-True at last oh, bond slaves of ancient tradition, the sound of the break ing of the locks that held you prisoners shall echo around the world. The Manicure Lady At lait 1 have found nut something bat Wilfred can do," said the Manicure l.ail. "There was a long time that my nother failed In everything he at tempted. especlall when he tried t i ite them ven-e things. Brother VI- look like Mlllan Umsell ur Muxlnn ntliott. 1 who to me repre.cnt the two opposite types it perfect beauty. But I think If you struggle hard enough for It. some de- j grces of prettiiieas can be achlevod by , the girl wh i detfimines on It. J "Here is where I'm to give -oiiie ad- vice." Mis Fisher went on. "Never let J an ugly child rcallre Its own plalnnesp. j Nowadays so much can bn don to make people pretty, and it's such a heart-rend- lug jciimtioii to know that fine Is plain and told me that when the hunt was over j that every child should be spared It his sister would be pioud of him for once ' "If child hu ny one reunite that ' In his life. And o I was. drome, the good she could be fined from utt' t home way It turned out. llneur, and nowsdio when beauty is , "Wilfred nhoned me a place when' much a question of mlmi and will Ihe there was an old log, and after he had ,,s alwavs a charve for th plain gir (i.'il Is good at one thing, though, and I jseraped off the snow and put a old newsr . "nut. Mls Fl'her. how dlrl jou effect "hw liliu prove tt yesterday. lie canpaper on the log for me to sit on. iiei'not transformatliii hoot rabbits. I don't know if shooting rabbits Is one f fhepi manly arts that I have read ibout. but If It Is a manly art Wilfred - sure full of manhood because we war lo n on Long Island yesterday and thu other took hi rhotpun along. Father .Minted tho right to uw the gun part of He explained to me that It would bt foolish for him to follow the dog. He aald that the dog would remember where he wan sitting, end would chase any rab bit he found right up to th place whet he was. "Sure enough, after we had at their. e t'me on account of the fact that he about two hours, that beagle started to .! bought It and paid for It, but WIN bark, way off In the dlst&uoe. We could j beautv of Sallle Fisher who brings the In yiMirtelf ' 1 in Miss Fisher beamed her ei hunl i,r smile. "I Just love compliments." she ald. "even when I don't believe them." nut 1 Insisted that the little girl who I had made "Dearie" famous all over Hie I see photographs that will thrill you with tins excitement of dangers and diffi culties met and overcome. It Is a remarkable story of ii wonderful feat Hut wo ate all philosophers, often without knowing It. and many will ark "What Ih the good of this desperate, mountain climbing, what do(ii humanity gain by It. after nil" i From a stilrtly ultllltavlaii point of view It Is difficult to answer Hitch ques tions. If you are one of those who think that nothing I wotth while Unit cannot be expressed In dollars and cents then there Is no answer that will satisfy you. Tho climbing of Mount McKlnlev was simply tho achievement of an Ideal, and nobody con appreclnto It whose own life Is not led on tho uplands of Ideality, and uhoio nature does not demand some thing more than food, drink, clothes and ordinary social amusements. Hut to those who do set noble Ideals before their minds, and who bellexe that iillliirlanlsin, In Its Unusual sense, Is 1 1'i'Hth to man's higher nature, tho feat i of Prof. Parker and Mr. llrowne will ap 1 peal with tho niysteilous form of u great . poet a poem written not In words but in achievement. Th.isn men did not go there ineicly to iiiciNiiru the height of Mount McKlnluy. H's height hud already been measured, piuhably more aciirntely than they were able to do It, by menus nf surveying In struments, placed many miles awav In the valleys and on lower peake. Whether Its elevation Is W.IM) feet or M.V) feet Is n matter of small moment computed with the fact that men In spile of enormous difficulties, have succeeded In reaching it summit. The grit, the determination, endurance and courage whlNi they ex hibited form a vnluable object lesson In the development of character. Kvery i euder feels himself stronger, .bolder, more apable as hr follows the nnrntlve of (heir adventures. It Is a tonic for the soul. It innkrrt all difficulties scepu less formid able. The yooni; man who stuns out In life without nny of the advantages of educa tion, or wi'iilth, or soclul position, and by sheer grit ovei comes overy obstacle, , never loblng confidence In himself, never i giving way to discouragement, never whining, never thinking that he is the victim of fatality, or bad luck, never posed to think that fortune has turned her hank on you, or If the world lores its interest for yon. nnd you begin to let j things slide iib they will, wake up. You I need a mountain to climb. Don't envy tht , rich nnd Idle they know nothing of the jov and trenr.th that comes from the nnquest of difficulties. Set nil Ideal be fore you, and mount, over the crevasses, the chasms, the biiow slopes, tho ridges, the precipices, defying the clouds, thn winds, the cold, and the fatigue, until ou see the World at your feet. There are mnnv great nnintalns still to be aicended, both In thv phyflcal und the moinl world. No man has ever yet leached even the foot of Mount Evoicst. the highest point of the globe. Hxploreri have gated longingly nt Its gleumlug summit from the tops of lower peikt a bundled miles away. Some day they will climb It. So, no man has yot climbed the peak of achievement which carries on lis npeic the tnllsman that will unlock the secret of Interatomic energy, the all-enveloping power with which nature Is crommrtl. nnd tho control of which wou)d make our greatest engines teem but the, toys of children,. Hut some day the foot of tnnn will be pressed upon that suihnilt also Hut don't think that because you hao not genius, or great opportunity, there Is no climbing for you to do. You can climb a peak worth conquering every day of your life If you will, Jonah's Fish Stories J In view of the widespread reiort that tho new Maptlnt voislon of the HoK Bcilpturc modernizes tbr story at JonnW by eliminating the "whale." un aiilmai with a thruHt of Inadequate dimensions for swallowing an adult human being, nnd substitutes the less specific and more possible "ureal fish" ah the carrier of the prophet. It seems worth while to re mark: 1. There Is no mention pf a whalu In the King Jntnes version of the Boole of Jonah: Now the Lord hnd prepared a gre.t fish to swallow tip Jonah. And Jonah was In the belly of thn fish three days and three nights. Then Jonah prayed unto the Lord his Clod out uf the fuh n belly. And the lxird npako unto tho fish, and It vomited out Jouuli upon the dry land. There Is no mention of a whale In the Old Testament narrative In the re vised version: And the Lord prepaied a great fish to swallow up Jonah, and Jonah was In tho belly of the fUlt three days and thiee ... t ..... Tl , .,... . . . . , .V 1 I . f . ... I pntaljzlng his energies. or wasting Ills ! Mn ,1(1 , of tle ,,,),. My. time by envying the good fortuno of oth-1 Mnl tnc Lord puke unto the fish, and It -r. Is climbing Mount McKlnlev. and he I vomited out Jonah upon the dry land. will go to the top. When Frederick, who afterward won the title ff "the (Irenl." found himself, like a Imil In the ring, surioiiiidcd and tormented by Innumerable ductules, his (inn) In flight, his capita I captured, his palace looted, his friends falling nway, very circumstance against hint, but his coinage nnd resolution unbtoken. he was 'climbing Mount McKlnlev, and he got to 1 the top. When Hubert Bruce, the Scotch heto, 1 lying on his bunk, a fuxltlve from his klncdom- nloiio. ibserted and half slHi vcd - i-nw u fpidc fir: Its broken line H ilosen times to the nlllng, never giving up Its elicits null) at lakt It made tlir web fart. U. 'I hein Is ito mention of a whale in the Doiiay version of tho Hook of Jonas Now the Lord prrpuied u great flsli to wallow up Joints; and Jonas was in tlm Hellj of tho fish three days nnd threo nights. And .Innim prayed to thn Ixud his Clod out of the belly of the fish And the Ixird spoke to the fish, and It vomited out Jonas upon tho dry Und. 4. The Mingle mention of a whale as the proserver of Jonah occurs In the goiil according to St. Mutthew, translated not from the Hebrew, hut front tho Greek For as Jonah was three daa and threo nlghta In the whale's bell; . etc. This is from th King James version The revised eralon and the Douay ver sion likewise mention the whale. Such Is the oul busts, together vltlt sur'i in- was watching the onquet of Mount j repetitions as the pictorial version In thn .Mi Klnley. and he learned the lesson so I mow Kughind Primer, for the popular well that he lilmtelf noun stood on tlu j idea of Jonah's advmituiv. In maklnc pinnacle. Matthew correfpond "with tho account of Kcry man li.is his Mount McKinley. If the Hook of Jonah tha Baptist revlteis In- is good fir .iiiMliiug. Those who hav. mine iiie of little ute to tbemvelves o- country while she was sweet and a.ttrac- j the, could not lay claim to the dashiilV i r.a.c not done a very audacious thing -New York Sun. MUS SALU FIKIIUH ml kept assuring the old gent that It hear hla bark coming nearer and nearer. .v.. old be foolish for him to snoot at any- nnd finally Wilfred cocked his gun and h ng on aecjunt of him being near- stood readv. like one of thsm mtnuti gbteil men that fought under Napoleon at the When we got down to the place where battle of Lexington, Ky. ithrr and mother and Mayme and Wil- ! "Then I seen the rabbit. It wa a big. red and me was going to visit for the white one, and It waa all that you could lay. my brother digs up some kind of a I do to see It on account of the anow. but tog that he culled a beagle. Did you ever jwhen It got a little ways from Wilfred. a beagle, George "Vou mean a eagle," corrected the Hind Carber. ' Hagles ain't dogs. They lv . Nobody said they didn't," aald the Manicure Lady, "but you are wrong. I .1'dn'l mean u eagle I mean Juat what I said, a beagle A beagle is a lopg. Ion ullt dog that likes to run around In tl It stood up and looked around, and mv "Woinanhater'b club" to their knees every bight ut the Astoi theatei. "If my looks have Improved." said Ml Fisher, -it'j because I lov beauty and desire It so ardently. You can do a great deal to study, you can Improve yourself physically by exercise, diet and catc, but I think back of It all u Is tbr mind, tint beauty loving spirit, the desire to lm- color had coirit Uuvk Into her uhreks. llui bright eyes gleamed and despite tin rnedlelne bottles, she was her health) vigorous self again, giving out tb.it smrk ling vitality whloh is called pummel mag netism, and of which she has u quite In exhaustible fund. And with a triumphant air lie marched out of the house -Detroit Free Press. prove In every way. to ntudy, to learn bra.ve brother gave It the Hooievelt work and ac.;omplUh something. All this before It had a cha.net In the world to Uhows In one'a faoe. because the facet Is get away." !jqst the reflector of the soul, and as you "I don't like to see a man shoot n grow to think, and to care for beautiful little wild creature that Is defenselei," 'things, you naturally relleet your con- nlH th 1 f a -J rl n.ll..r .In .il ,V..M.n L. " ,ja,V.. .'Hill 1 llUUh'lll I ,,,, , ...,. "That's the Joke of It. Utorge. ' said If he determines not to sink Into the ..0,, X,u w"ll eh" the Manicure Lady. "This wasn't a wild ilough of homeliness, or to let thti ' . Vfs, you bet' I will. I'll aquure tbU rabbit at all. It was a tame Belgian ,puh her Into ,t. there Is always a rhur.ee um 'argument " hare, and Wilfred 1 ad to pay the fuiniM that Hu will grow Into a prettj girl, hih! And what, m.i. I usk ar you going for shootlnR It Its a good thing 'or if she ant be really piettv she can at I to do" r.-utld have ''id m r sluggis", hrrrt Roosevelt that he left Africa before 'he Imst bear nHreitlng one Do lm going tr. uHf agamst giung f lod n sre t at llttl" Oog tunning th'-n farmers fo'tnl out who was doing tbe As she had gained lntfiet tn her auh- ou Ha bai"t mat a whai I tit going m'-Kts WTfri I akil T.e ti W'J T shooting aro nd there f t Mi-i Fl-' er s rat'iraT lr(H Bin to do Miilnu of n t.'yiilt', .Succesa Is merely a matter of profiting by the fewest mistake Roma people liavo no Jilghsr ambition i than to he numbered among those pres- I ent. I Many ft woman who Is made, up really I looks us though she had been marked down. i aooi'-. hunting for rabbit It reminds jjjT cu o one of them Duch dachhurds. r' ry x has nor" a.nblsh Oee Ueoigc lln engc. "It's all right, my dear: go ahvad and call me down." "I will, and you dwterve It, too." "That's right. Hub It Into ino now. Lola of men wno make the most nolsi Have the Imt word If yu want to. Hat8 1 In th world belong to the exploded the last hundred words. If you like, but , theory cmmi. A girls ideal i.i iiatur.tlly shattered wlinri he iw broke. Smi' i"OpU- r. can nq to have eieri pU- thing In It the place. Don t gi t up Mans a fi-l'nw who o thing ise Imi r ;vt I Nrw York Tim's t l tl -u i nn t find fii.iii count ruled ut iverj i urrleil well WOMEN TAKE NOTICE! A isan cannot understanil the torture and iu3erini( many women tuturt nnoomplainintly. If the injjority of men (tuTered a much pain and endured with patience the weakening tickncsici that moil rromcn do, they would ak (or immediate sympathy and look lor a quick cure. Maoy women have been laved frpm life ol miiery and tutTeriniJ by turoini! to the ritflit remedy Dr. Pierce' Favorite Prescription a remedy which i tafe to take becauke containing no narcotics, alcohol or injurious ingredient. It ii an alterative extrxet of rood, made with pure tfl)cerin, and first given to the public by that famous specialist in the discaie ol women Dr. K. V. Pierce, of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Intlituto oi Buffalo, N. V. Mn. Lizzie M. IixscuEiMER.of Lincoln, Neb., 520 "C" St., stTi; "l fpiii) n testimonial with much pleasure o that some nuffeTfnz woman may know the true worth nl your reuieclle. I was a great sufferer from ferns! trouliles but after taking iiw bottio of Dr. IMoreo' Kavorlto Prescription, which a if: '. 1 advliwl mo to take, 1 fti'ind tnysalf very intioh lm ii' id. A(tr t-nklnvt thre nn.ro bottlw, and using two licne. of Dr. Prfie's L dlon 'J'aie's, I found myself on the road to recovi ry. I was In poor health (or five years but now S am cureu. " liajro all women suffering (rum female weakness will give Dr. Pierce s Favorite Prescription a fair trial. Doctor Pierce's Pleatant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny grasuiles.