Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1913)
THE BEE: OMAITA. RATFRDW, MAY 17, 1013. 15 f e The Rights of a Mother- in-Law Ellm Wheeler Wilcox Answers Some Questions and dues Some Pertinent Advice to Women Whose Daughters Are Wedded By EILA WHEELER WILCOX Copyright. 191S, by Star Company. j A question, or series' of questions, per- I tain to the old, old subject which hat 1 troubled the rolnd of man since the be- , ginning of creation, with the exception of Adam ahd Eve. i 1. Has a mother-in-law any rights that a son-in-law In honor should xrsptct? !. If a mother-Ir.-Wvn' and run-In-law; have had a bitter quarrel ovor" dimestlo nffnlrs, hat the son-liv-law a moral right to command his wife to cease all social or loving Inter course with her mother? 8. If the wife de cides, through a mistaken sense of duty to her husband, to forever remain on ttrms of sundered companionship with her mother, Is she deporting herself in a proper or filial manner toward her ; mother? 4. If the wife has a brother who be comes a chum of her husband under tho state of affairs above mentioned, ls-lhat non showing a proper love or protecting j iuwaru mo momer, wno is old and nlone?. Those questions are eritlrnlv inn h. stract to permit of a definite answer. I it- an depends on the nature of the quarrel or misunderstanding. If the ; mother has been Interfering with the domestic affairs of the household, and ' offering unsolicited opinions; If she has -been officiously Intrusive In matters ; whloh pertained solely to the husband ahd wife, and whloh they could settle be tween themselves; if she has been pour ing kerosene upon flames, Instead of oil ' cn troubled waters then, Indeed, the husband Js right In suggesting that his wife choose between a home with him self or with her mother. j A- mothcr-ln-law has been known to ' Incite her daughter to jealousy of a most faithful and kind husband. If he remained In the office a half hour later than usual; If he chanced to walk a block ' on the street with an acquaintance of the cj.poslte sex, the mpther Insinuated In-,, fidelity and neglect, until the comfort: of the household was destroyed by her presence. When the daughter, who proved to be a '.oman 'of common sense, and Just as sensible. Informed her mother that she would suppirl hii away from her' own I nome, but not In It, the mother.llfted. her voice In a loud wall of being "for saken" by her own offspring, and the majority of the public sympathised with her. Yet the daughter was right. So Is the husband right who takes a similar standi wl en he finds that harmony and peace miC love exist in his home when his mother or his wife's mother Is out of It, nd that tli-v are driven from the win dows In at'. .,ut when sho enters at th duor. When a woman marries a man, when a man marries a woman, their personal, linanclal, domestic and , sentiirentil , af fairs should be decided between tr.eni with no Intervention of a third piirty until they ask assistance. Many a mother falls to reallz.i that It Is her place to stand second In authority, i as an adviser to a son, or daughter, after 1 it.m .... . . . i ctiiiw ias mneu mo vows oi matri mony. If the daughter has selected a husband ivho has Ideas, habits or austoms of which the mother does not approve, it is her place to keep silent. sinea hp dHUghter has made her choice, anl net ' undertake the work of reconstructing their Uvea according to her Ideals. A word of loving counsel or admonition is all very well, but a continual inter ference and espionage Is quite another thing. When the brother of the wife takes the part of the son-in-law against his mqther, the evidence Is somewhat trotig in favor of the husband; It suggests the Interfering and selfish mother-in-law, v.ho c The. Fight for By REV. TnOMAS B. GREGORY. The "Seven Years'' War" between Eng- 1nH anA nA fni tTna nniMtilnn nf the North American contlnet had its off- j clal beginning 157 years ago, May 17. 1756. i In point of fact the war that was declared on May 17, 1758, had al ready existed, for two years. Wash ington and his Virginians had be gun It at Great Meadows, and XSraddock had been annihilated In the P e n n s y Ivanla woods, and at va rious other points the Saxon had been made to bite the dust at the hands of the Gaul and his redskin allies. It looked blue for the Briton. The govern ment was downcast. Even Washington,, who at that time was as faithful to the mother country as later on he was true to tho colonies, wan deeply discouraged. But there was a man over In England who was destined to save the day Wil liam Pitt, earl of Chatham- "the greatest war minister and organizer of victory that the world had even seen." Having burled his declaration of war at France. Pitt prepared himself for a struggle to the death for British supremacy in North i A? cannot permit her married children tJ dlfect their own lives. A mother who Is ''old and .lona" Is not necessarily lovable or In the tight A son or a daughter should look alter the physical well being' of such a mother and should be respectful in pejeh and deportment toward her, hat to co'ncldo with al! her whims and to idoot all her prejudices and to uphold her in nil hor IdeaB Is morally wrong The duty to humanity and to one's sense f justice Is a greater and higher duty than thRt to a parent', u child or a friend. It Is a pathetic position for a son or a daugh ter to stand between a parent and & wife or husband. All children are reared to think mother love the most unselfish and wonderful dexoUon on earth, even In the faca i-f i facts which so often prove It otherwise and when they see a mother unhappy they are Inclined to make every, posslb'e excuse for her, because they feel that to, take Issue against her will put them In a bad light before the whole established order of society, and that they will beat their heads against traditions wherever they turn. It Is a most pathetic situation for a man this position between a wlfo and a Jealous mother. My heart always aches for the man In tho case oven more than for the woman who Is misused. Sometimes the wife Is In the wrong. Sometimes a man marries a woman who Is so narrow and so selfish and bo Jeal ous - that she begrudges the husband's mother her son's affection. Sometimes a loved and cherished daugh ter marries a man so selfish, so tyranni cal, that he wants utterly to obliterate childhood and girlhood from her memory and leave only himself the tyrant for the Wife to think about. But I must confess that I have seen but one 'such wife or husband where I have seen ten selfish and disagreeable mothers-in-law. And with what pleasure and admira tion I recall the few beautiful and noble, mothers-in-law I have known. I can count them on the fingers of one hand without Including the thumb. There aro just four whom I can recall. They really loved their sons, and loved whatever and whoever gave these sons happiness. There Is a dear old lady living with her son-in-law today who always chides the daughter if she -disagrees with hor husband onany trivial point. "You have such a good husband,' she will say, "how can you disagree with him?" An other mother-in-law said to me one day, "If ever there was an angel upon earth it Is my son's wife." The wife was, In truth, a very ordinary, amiable young woman, but her mother-in-law had Ideal ized her Into soniethtng angelic. Would that there were" more like her In the land, , Madame Mother-In-Law, so far as your rlehts are concerned, you have no more right to Interfere with the domestic re lations of your son or daughter thau has any stranger In your town. You are entitled to love, If you are lovable; to respect, If you make yourself worthy of It, and to respectful treatment at all events on humarltarlan grounds. You are entitled to good care and-protection from your children, but this, does not mean that they shall always make you a member of their households, If thev find It more expedient to care for you e'wwhere. It does not mean thaj you have the privilege of criticising the domestic arrangements of their lives and homes. If your son or daughter asks your ad vice, sympathy and counsel give It as wisely as you can. but keep away from such a position If possible. Pour oil on troubled waters and soothe" and allay wounded feelings when possible. Act as mediator and adjuster of difficulties, rather than the widening wedge. And if this attitude does not make you a welcome member of your child's home, find another home as soon as you can, and do not pose as a martyr. Your own child x will always love you, if you are lovable. We arc not loved for relation ship, but for the qualities within us. If you are not obliged to be a member of the household of your married child do not be. If you are, try to be an agree able one. a Continent J America. With genius almost preter natural, and energy that smacked of the demoniac, Pitt threw himself into the mighty work that lay before him. Well aware of the solemnity of the struggle, and of the far-reaching issues that were at stake, the great commoner tolled at his task with a zeal that was sublime. And great waa his reward. So soon as he took the helm the tide began to turn In Britain's favor. Victory followed victory; Loulsburg fell, stronghold after stronghold was taken; the crowning triumph at Quebec came, and thus, as John Flske puts It, "came to a cloze one of the greatest scenes in the history of mankind, the final act in the drama which gave the North American con tinent Into the keeping of the English race instead of the French." Flsko's words are strong; but strong as they are they are fully Justified. Had the French won In that war It Is safe to say that there would be today no United States of America, no world-glrdllng British em plre, no world-wide influence at work for the moral. Intellectual and economic up lift of the race. "You say this man Is rio chicken stealer" Inquired the Judre. omcleo "Yassuh," replied Mr. Erastus Pink ley. ' Da's whut I said." "What do you know about the fact In this case?" "1 -isn't tf posed to know nufftn' 'bout at facks In de case. I is an expert -witness foh de defense." WaMngfcn Star The Problem of the By GARRETT P. SEKV1SS. We do not sec ourselves as others se'e us, and that Is Is true of nations ns of Indi viduals. To our eyes the red man has practically sunk out of sight. To European eyes he Is still the .most picturesque figure In the western world. If you doubt that statement, then, the next time you are in Europe fall Into conversa tion with any In telligent French man, German or other native of the old world, about life In America. and you will be likely to discover that he Is much more deeply interested In Indians than In fifty-story buildings. Even (he wonders of the Panama canal appeal to him with far less force than do the his. tory nnd the fate of those unique tribes wnlch owned this continent In fee simple ror centuries beforo our ancestors landed upon Its shores. If you have Imbued youtself with the notion that "the only good Indian Is a dead Indian," you may be a little vexed to find that. our contemporaries abroad, with their bird-eye's view of things on this side of the water, persist In- regard ing the American red man as a personage quite as Interesting to the philosophical observer as tho American white man, and Infinitely more, romuntlc. Then you might with advantage turn to an article In this month's number of Hearst's Magazine, where Mr. Francis E. Leupp, recently Indian commissioner, ex plains his ideas about the way we have heretofore treated the rnl men and the way we ought to treat them. A great-brained European once said to me; "I am a friend of your country and an enthusiastic admirer of Us Ideals, but I most respectfully protest against the manner In which you have dealt with one of the most Interesting races that ever existed on this earth. Pardon me for saying that I think you have done very wrong. You might have kept him and made a good citizen of him. Instead of driving him into extinction, or, what Is even worse. Into racial abasement." Mr. Leupp appears to take a similar A Waste By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. A young girl writes: am 17 and Jove a man four years my senior. But he meets other girls, When he meets me 1 when with these other girls he always ' talks to me, but he keeps on meeting . them. How can I break hi in of this? j Ethel tells her troubles: "What do you think of a young man who professes to love a gtrl and still admits he goes with ' others? He claims I am the only girl j h cares for. but still he meets others." "I am IT." writes B. W., "and in love 1 with a boy of 19. Wo have beon meeting each other steady till last week, when he didn't come, and I found out he was metlng another girl and was derolvlng me. For all that, I cannot seem to lose my love for him. How can I win back his loVe and get him from the other girl?" Heartbroken writes: "I am 18 and In love with a boy two years older. He tells I me he loves me, but I see him with other Kllrs. When 1 ask him If he cares for i the other girls he always says 'No,' but I I can't bellev him. Hem can I win him baclr isssssssMiiii i iii i wmmwtm m r j&iv. jstu-wj dsSBS m ''B m BsHsBSiHizSlSslslSSlSslsis in mm 1 1 iBMii p 2W &jmftaxxirs x view. Ho has ideas about the capaolty of the Indian for civilization, and about tho beat way to develop that capacity, which ought to command the attention of a liberty loving and fair-dealing people. The sole Idea of our government seems to have been to make a farmer of every Indian. "Give him a farm and make him work It," has been the slogan. And when the poor Indian, Ignorant of the white man's science nnd the white man's meth ods, fails to become a successful farmer In a single generation or less, he Is con demned aa good for) nothing and treated with contempt and with renewed Injus tice. Disregarding the fact that has neuner me capuai to aeveiop nis iarm nor the experience to enable him to com pete In agrloulture with men of European origin whoso ancestors were trained in that kind of Industry long before Amor- lea was discovered, the red man is re- of Time There are no two In the world, perhaps, who can agree on what it Is that causes tho greatest waste of time. And by that I mean something a little more than time as measured by the clock and cal endar. I mean the value of It, as -compared with the j-esults achieved. Ono wastes time In reading worthless litera ture, but often euch mental nausea re sults that one Is cured of the desire. The skeptical say that much time is wasted In making love, but those of bionder mlnda and younger hearts have learned that every such experience leaves one a little more sympathetic and chari table. Tho man who hoards his money re gards every minute wasted that doesn't bring him more, and the tramp who spends his days blinking lazy eyes at the sun ts sure that everyone who works Is a time waster. But I contend that there is a waste more prodigal that all of these. And that Is the time wasted In trying to win back a Jover whose affeptlons are waning. It la aa If one lost something abso Red Man esV quired to dtvoto himself exclusively to work for which, In many cases, he Is racially and constitutionally unfitted, or else to become a drunkard and a pauper. Some Indians make good farmers. Some of .thf-m-have the' glf( and the ancestral, tendency. Every reader of our history known what the Iroquois Indians did In tho fertile valleys of central and western Now York. When General Sullivan mer cilessly raided tho lake region of Now York ho destroyed farms and stores of grain, of which any Industrious European agricultural community might have been proud. That was a war measure, and, as such, perhaps, excusable at the time. But supposo that an enlightened government had taken pains to develop the skill of the Indians In cultivation after peaco had been established. It may be replied that the Indians ran aw.-iy and refused to bo civilized. True. In part; but at last they could no longor run beyond the white man's reach. As Rvd Jacket once eloquently expressed It, "We are become a small Island In the bosom of the great waters. We are en circled; we are encompassed. The waters rise; they press upon us; and the waves once settled over us, we disappear for ever," v Taking advantage of the terrible effect that '"fire-water" whisky-had upon tho unlmmunlzod red man', his white enemies pressed It upon him, as they press It upon him still, until he became a brute In spllo of himself, The Indian has many useful capacities which he would develop If he had a proper opportunity, but the opportunity Is re fused to him. Head what Mr. Leupp has to say about the multitude of red men who take naturally to mechanic arts and to various trades, nnd the hopelessness of their struggle against the Immense agricultural units that his white competi tors, with comparatively unlimited capi tal, are developing around him, and you may be led to exert your Influence to have the doors of opportunity opened wider to this long cheated race. We may consistently keep out Jap anese, but the Indian was here before wo were, and the principles of eternal justice demand that he shall not. have the door shut In his face. . lutely worthless ln the beginning, and In stead of straightening up and walking I on, glad to be relieved of the burden, , went down on one's knees ln the dust and dirt to seek for that which was lost. There Is a wall and a cry and time is spent In weeping that should be devoted to rejoicing. A love that can be lost Is a mistaken lovoj It Is the best thing that can happen to a gtrl to lose it before It la fettered on her. If It had been worth while It wouldn't have been lost so easily. It would have taken much more than the pretty face of another girl to have won It away. The fact that it could be lost puts a price mark on It, and that price mark Is very, very low. Yet, day after day, girls, op their knees In the dust of humiliation and dpalr, cry to me after vainly search ing for the worthless bauble they have lost "How can I wlmlt back? Help me, for my heart Is broken?" And hpw 1 would like to help you, you poor little girls with your aching hearts! Buj my method would not be the kind you seek. I would raise you to your feet and have you laugh at your loas, ana walk on, glad to be relieved of the care of anything so worthless, and glad that you lost It before Its possession had be come more serious. How to Manage a Husband By DOROTHY DIX. They had admired all of the llttlo bride's wedding finery, nnd hart finally drifted over to where tho tea table was set hy ii n open window. "Well, my dear," said the woman In tho soft white gown, "I hope you are going to be as happy as the dnya are long, and I am auro you will for Jack ts a fine fellow, and. he Is well to do, and an crphnn, so you are going to escape hard times and mothers - In - law, two of the princi pal snags that are most apt to make a big dent In the barque of matri mony, oven when they don't wrock It- 'Still, you must not expect to find everything plain call ing There arc a good many storms on even the calmest sea of wedlock, and you are going to find out that lots of things that you expected to happen won't happen, and a lot of things that you were Positive couldn't occur, do occur with omnstng frequency. 'Also, you aro gblng to discover, and U will give vou the Jar of your life, that tho noble idoil of perfect manhood that you are tying up with has got faults, and peculiarities, nnd whims, and crochets that you have never suspected concealed about his person. "Now. you trtke It from me, tlmt the great thing In married life Is for tho wife to begin right, to get off on th right foot, so to speak, for every man can be managed, and brought to eat out of his wife's hand, If only she goes about it In the proper manner." "What Is the best way of managing a husband?" nnxlously Inquired the little bride. "Well," replied the womnn In the soft white gown! "I enn't do better than re late to you the experiences of two friends of mine both of whom married gcod men, but men who Were hh tern perod, and tyrannical,, nnd cross-tho sort Of men, you know, who possess alt of the virtues and none of the lovable quali ties of )lfe. They are the kind of hue bnnds who are too muoh gentleman ever to strike a woman with their hand, but who leave, hor bruised and bleeding, nnd wounded to death In spirit alter they have stabbed her with their tongues. "There arc lots of men like that my dtar, and when I get elected to the legis lature the very first thing I am going to do Is to bring In a bill to make a man s disposition, Instead of his morals, a causa for' divorce. "But back to my story. One of these .Omaha Public Library and Museum if you have ever tried to Identify any of the warblers, you have experienced one of the most maddening things In bird eXudy. Probably you tried I at first In the spring, when the woods urc fairly ting lug with songs of other birds, nnd tho faint lisp of the warbleis Is drowned. If yoifi catch a glimpse of tho bird Itself, It Is. of course, so tiny, nnd disappears so swiftly beyond n trfo top that yoU have only time to catch your breath, say "Warbler." and the bird is gone, That Is true of most of the family; thero are others which are the direct, opposite the yellow warbler, for Instance, which Is like a hnlf-tamt canary In many localities. But for the majority of the wnrblera you can only he prepared by studying up beforehand, so that when you cntch that flectlnc gllmpsu you can say Instinctively. ""Black-throated green.' or ''Parula," as yoif would recognize a palm tree or an orange orchurd when you aee It first. Now that books are so well Illustrated Advice to the Lovelorn I By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Don't Marry Him. Dear Miss Fairfax i. I am a young girl of 1 years and I know a young man whom I hate. He Is 24 years' old. and my mother wants me to marry "'.' couldn't bear to live In the same house with him. Which would be the wiser; To marry this man , or to wait until I meet some one with whom I can have a happy home? A-c- In the first place, you are too young to marry, no matter what the state of your affections. In the second place, and which Is moro Important, you must not- marry a man you do not love, though every relative Vou have may urge It. Your happlDess through Ufa will be sacrificed It you do. Grt Their Consent, Dear Miss Fairfax: I am Jewess, 20 years of age, and am deeply In love with n nnntllo rive years my senior. I have promised to marry this young man, but. owing to nis raun, my peopie nv sincv objections. , They llko him very much, for he In a man of very good habits and come fri'.n a very good family. But the only thing theM have against him Is his religion. I We have loved each other for three longyesrs.anfllKnow.lt wouw oreait my heart If I had to give him UP. but I would like to have my people consent before I marry. A Jewess. All the hope I can offer, my dear, Is that your parents will b won over by your fidelity to each pther. True love s above all difference In creed, and you have proven that your love la true. Good Conduct Counts, Dear Miss Fairfax: I am In love with a girl one year niy Junior, and she In re turn loves me dearly. I gave her an In vitation to go to the theater, but her parents object to her going, with me. I seo the lady once a weK, and her parents object to my visit. What can I do to win their consent, as I love the girl very dearly? T. V. . Perhaps your cbhduct does not please them, Look to that. Or It may be that the girl is too young to receive the atten tions of a gentleman, You do not give her age; neither do you intimate why her parents disapprove, though you must surely kpow. Under the circumstances, all r cutf suggest 18 that ydU wait, be bavs yonwlf and respect their wishes. women whom I nm telling you la Bertha, end she la one of those gentle, sUuv women who aro born salve spreaders. Anything like a jolt In the domestic ma ohmery hurts her to the very core of hr being. 8ho Isn't weak. Oh, dear no, 8h vould hang on to a principle, oi n con viction, to eternity, and be loyal to one Hhn loved to the death Itself, ami If yrtti pushed her to the wall she'd fight until there wasn't an dncmy left alive, but the would neVcr argue a question with you, or say a thing that would hurt vour ftellngn, or do anything to make tho rllghtest unpleasantness. "Well; when the rosy mists of th honeymoon rolled up nnd she discovered that she wns married to a mnn who was twin brother to tho fretful porcupine, and whose prejudices simply strewed the ground around her, she undertook Jo managa him by tact. "Sho only conversed upon the subjects that sho knew he agreed with her upon. Sho devoted her days to rubbing his fur down tho right way.' She kept everyth'wr that was unplcAsaht, and that could possibly ruffle him. hidden out of sight, and spent her llfo top-toetng on ess for fear of rousing him and exploding his Infernal machlnn -of a temper In short,' In order to keep the peace tvnd make h?r home happy, she went through a very martydom of sacrifice of all of her desires and Inclinations." "H'm," said the little bride, "and how did the other woman Thanase her hus band V "The other woman," replied, the wom.ln of the soft, white dress, "wns nf a dif ferent type. Sho had a redheaded temper of her own that waH a dead finger for her husband's, besides which she laved, a scrap for tho pure fun of tho thing Bhe didn't dodge tho Issue when' her husband flung a 'debatable subject Into the family arena. She simply rolled up her sleeves nnd salted In, and when tho domestic mlxup was over she' wasn't -always the ono who was on thermal "She wns a good woman and a' good wife and mother, who did her full duty by hor family, and sho stood pat. on her record. She didn't waste any time trying to Jolly or cajole hor nuBbnnn as poor Bertha did, If he didn't like the way sha did things, and her opinions, why, he could lump It, that Was all. She was nn Independent, free apoken woman, and she didn't see why she should wea.r her self out flattering any old husband Into doing the things he ought to do. anyway "And she didn't mind expressing these sentiments, but the result was that their house was a dark and bloody battla ground, with no day without Its spat. ) But that was her way of managing a husband." -litlM,!!, mm if tUtL BVaUml Wftrll'1' asked tho little brldo with a troubled air. . ' "Neither," replied the woman In the soft, white gown. with photographs, you can get a very good mental Image of the bird without ever having seen It. Hut better yet It a mounted specimen, natural ln size, color and position, and labeled as ac curately aa it Would be In a book, and where you can see It from all sld:s. That's what you get from looking at the collection In the museum, where there are over 200 of the 400 birds to be found In this state. Are you puzzled by the queer plumage of a bird you were surf you knew? Per haps It ts the spring or fall suit, which isn't always like tho summer or winter one, Hero is a red-wing b'nckblrd, for Instance, and you mlglit tY.nit that the next specimen wns a fi" ' But shc'is supposed to be dark inn -i. v.SUi a, buff breast, streaked' with b.otl. "Then you learn that the black pe"lm.n. iuerly mottled with light brown and gray, and without the scarlet epaulottes, Id, showing pff his fall plumage,' while tho next onb, In spring plumago, eeems to be In tl proceed of evolution from the fall tu th6 summer suit. Perhaps you have found a nest of egtrJ, and .are not, sure that you know the bird which escapes so qytetly beforo 'you see more than a glimpse of something brown. Then you, enn Identify the- eggs by cofti paring them with thosh In the collection of 00 in the musuum. These are -ft'l numbered according to the A O, VT checklist, and a list of them may be obtained at the desk In the museum. ' If ypu jjvant more Information about th eggt; ,LJ?Mt. Ket, need y "Birds' Eggs of merlcn, and uugpiore'fl "Bird 1 :oth of which are well lllustrat way be that you do not know t' standard bird books n the llbr a.ro nt all Jnter Whlle For guide eated, In s "Handbook gf Birdi tied States" has nd gives spmn n about each tlfylnsr eitat- ficifrlstl Blrda of Village and FIcW species tt s the value of e&c'.i i s well aV giving good descrlfHJolfm-weed and Dearborji, r't?lrda Irj'MhflV Illation Map," Is n Weed and Dearborn' a more complete, treatment o this subject. Some of the. m,0ro. interesting bopkn i( you aro already IghTjj " familiar wlt.h tho birds themselvesyar II. K. Job'a "Wild, Wings,", Chapman's "Camp and Cruise of an Ornithologist" and "Bird Studies with a Camera," and NeUtfl Blanchan's "Birds tthat Hunt and Are Hunted," al! of which are n9t interest, Ingly written and well Illustrated, The standard book, both for adults and chil dren. Is Chapman's "Bird Life." Then there, are others by Mabel Osgood Wright and Torrey and Coues. which are par ticularly Interesting to children. Surprisingly few people are able to rec ognize mora than the half dozen birds they aro accustomed to seeing on their lawns In summer. Just as a matter of education, everyone ought to know mora about such numerous neighbors and be able to appreciate their good qualities, or to make life uncomfortable for some ,Qf the disagreeable members, such as the English sparrow. It takes little time and energy to look at the museum ollec tlon, follow tills up with born abut birds, and so Immediately sc dozens of interesting things happening amo.ia citizen who very existence U mw ft N3BQ.you BSBBBBBBBsVi (U t-U tit '