Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 04, 1913, Page 9, Image 9
niE BEJfl: OMAHA, FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1D13. The ee; r Bringing Up Father CWyrUht UlS. International News Service. Drawn for The Bee by George McManus . vuuroo-k -ET ME ViAVE AJlUTTUC "w- rrr NOT, one tOP IT! "SIR AU THE W -viuu twiAp& irAovTF f that dovn! JU- ATTRhb .TO r II, H'' J Zr 11 1 V J i V .. . . V " TZ' - I I I II .ill I III. T I i I I I'l I ' i "MI'S J " ''.'" ri " " - 1 , : : - WKE-UED. ' Its. . .'.'. sir KE upT'1- Sure- ilu pavh AND THEM vflj iOME More . AMETHEn ilu t st r it our WON'T QE.' BUT LbVf LfeT ME HAVE THK.CHAM- . n n i . ez i TIRED - SJHt. t At-i 1 CAWT KEEP 1 L AWI DO NT Dtt SO EUiH - ' 'n THIRTY - tU TOO ,AC7S GRlNt '1! " 6y WILLIAM KIBIC. 'Tia a tfojd all men must he&r "When they stand beddo a bier That contains a Illy stem O'er a form once ddar' to them. Oone, a dream that was too stfeot; Gone, a soul to seek the Seat; Qdne, & smile that tripled mirth; Gone forevermbre from earth; -iKlns or beggar, prince or pawn,' Clono. x -t , f 1 Tls a word with meaning fraught, . V ., Giving birth to sombre thought. Gone, a friend through anger lost; ' Gone,' a, chanei you spurned and tossed; Gone, some high Ideal you prised, , '.Some belief vou Idolized; i, Gone, your childhood with Its truth J ; 1 Gone, alas! your golden yoilih;' .' .. V" y.hat a word to give us pause ' . .7' .Rr,wn act with scanty causoi . .'... What a word to dwell upon .. . III " :- ill Stop a Moment! Are x on a ooua i.ic;igiiuwj. a Good Neighbor in Trouble, but Don't Wait Until Then to Be One By. ELLA WHKEJLKR WILCOX l&pyrtsht, li3, ty star Company. ' A'Viru a. good neighbor T . . What a Kood nftlghbort ' Perhaps you are a royal good chum ' with the popular ppopl at your towrti you Kow thm all tprts ol "courtesies, ' and you rejolc In all their aUeceseei, and' - you defend . them against anvy And tnkllce. That is part of the good lieiflw - bors .duty. But. ho Ad you conduct yourself It they get Into trouble? Are you ready to stand by them in poverty and sor rrfw as faithfully as in prosperity aha popularity? ,Wllf y6u be the last to censure even. If compelled to- believe, when' you hosr. they have made grievous mistakes? It !; not a good neighbor's or a good C&rlstlan'i place to deny facts or con don crime. . 'It yod know your neighbor hasStutr' rdled the morals or broken the cont niendments you are not to make your self ridiculous by saying he la an In nqcent or Injured Individual. J3ut If you are a good neighbor.' you Wjll think of his family, and you will not be afraid to show your frlendahlp, ,You will not b afraid to say to th otfender; "I am sorry for yous begin over, and start a new life." And you will be brave enough to help him to do It- ;Again. r yoii' & good neighbor only' In time of trouble? Tbera are many such people to b found in country places. They aro fllla'd' FRECKLES trow la th 31ms to dt Slfl ni Thi Ugly spots. There's no longer the slightest netd ot fiejlng, ashamed ot your freckles, as the! prescription ojhlne double strengtn U guaranteed to remove these homely spots, pimply get an ounce of othlne doubt strength from Beaton Drug Co., also any of Sherman & McConnell Drug o&'s stores, and apply a little ot. It at night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the tighter ones have vanished entirely. It Is; seldom that mors than an ounce Is .needed to completely clear the skin and gstn a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to aide for the double strength othtne as tals U sold Under guarantee 6f money back If It falls 19 Nraove reckles. ' Advertlseta with envy pf another's success. They show it by keeping aloof arid assuming a cold or Indifferent manner, They try to find some flaw to pick In th popular or succesiful neighbor! the)' -begrudge him all his pleasures and his triumphs! but let him fall sick or lose his money or a child or wife, and they Wilt fly to 1)18 rescue. They wll,jihbw him Sympathy in his tnlsery where they begrudged him con gratulation in his happiness. This Is admirable In a way, yet hot an altogether admirable quality. If V6U are this type Of glod nlhbor dd not take pride in it. It indicates that you are fitted With envy of another's success, and that you like t6 bestow favors lh order to proyn that you are In a superlqr posltlbn, rather than from a spirit Ot pure brotherly love. If the latter spirit dominates you, then indeed you WdUld b .the realty good neighbor, WHO rojclcei In his brother's hour of pleasure and .sorrows in his day pf adrerclty. . It Is a curious tact that hundreds ot people will flock to i man when sickness and death enter his home and offer hint every kind ot attentlpn and give the greatest proofs Of unttlfUh regard for htm who have previously tn his times of prosperity and pleasure been thorns itv his flesh It is, ot course, mora admirable to treat a man kindly who is dOwh than onj who is up, It you have not nobility enough In your nature to treat him kindly at all tlmee, but when yqU wlt; to show your good aelghborllness Until disease or death knocks at a man's door, you are, In a certain measure, plac ing yourself with the birds ot prey who. follow after death and dlseaae, and pot with the songbirds who Ing him awake In the sunlit mornings of summer. .A gpod .neighbor. Is nevsr Jealous? ho never fawns! he never flatters! he never envies another's su&ecs; he congratu lates him sincerely when hspplness and prosperity are his comrades) he sym pathises sincerely when trouble and Sor row are at his door, and he encoqragos him to live down error and to start an when he has md mistakes. Ite matfes his neighbor realise that ha Is at his command when needed, but he does not obtrude himself either in his Joys or sorrows. Are you a good neighbor? tNir Sninmr Dane. Trimmings ot flowers are much uetd on dancing frocks. Sometimes the low cut neck is edged with a smalt wreath of rosebuds or other .lowers, and the same trimming idea U carried out in the skirt Occasionally .the flowers ar put on the lining, so that only a glimpse or them can be had. This is also very sf fectivs, Iany dance frocks are worn with fancy trimmed corset covers, the outer waist being of a very simple type and very sheer. Fancy shades are used, showing the eublst and futurUt colorings, apd .sometimes a combination of two ot more plain-colored ribbons A Strictly Parisian Creation . n r-7 r rTT n i ; . h: J I f 1 ' WJNTl . n . It V 1 Thrt Chlo Porlslenno Is Showing ft Qrcct Fondnoss for - thi 'Model , Pictured Here. At tho llaccs , . and. In tho . . Smartest Cafeg " of tte Boulevards ' On Bees Maay Black Mllaa Hats' . ,Tttrsed',- ' . , '; Bltfrply "Vjl Up h the Lefi. This Ciuileoit is Almost Fnlvcrsally But It Takes Clover to Produce tho Bimnio Elgarlco witJt which tlie Black featln Folds . Drpo the OrpWB Artakgo'i the MagBldtiat Full Plume i at tho Most .Graceful Apgle, : . 1 j . j BLBIbbbbHsBsbbbbIbHbbHsbbBsBV&P1 BBtBBjtBMyv'j y W -trf,-' A Chlo Model. Natural" His toryvLesson$ The Lobster .sr By DOttOTUV DIX IIB tAbator is a small red animal, the color ot a new born Infant, which It greatly resembles, except that It lacks the phonographloi record Qualities ot a baby. Otherwise It Is a mens matter ot choice between tho two aa a house hold p6t, some tadlen preferring tho baby, others vlco versa. The Lobiter Is ono of OUr most valu able sources ot food supply, and has not only prevented rosr.y a poor, 4i8-a-weo.lt chorus girl .from, perishing of starvation. but has enabled her to w.ear Imported. .... . Baby's Lessons In Evolution the Beginning of Progren in the Step of Life Child Btgine ai Quadruped and It Acquirement of Erect Attitude Rtveale He Postage from the AnimalStage By OAimfiW P. &ERVI88. Your bAby Is a, qUadrUptdl HaVe you noticed that? , It is ho mors able to stand etect without the aid of its hands than a monkey Is. It goes on all fours. Upon that simple fact you may build Up the whole- law of evolution, which soma Persons find so difflouit to cdm- prehtnd. If you doubt that the earliest human farms rsembleed those ot the apes and monkeys, who had the earns com mon ancestor with us, you can get rid ot that doubt by studying the attitudes of your baby, and tne cnanges that take piaoe in its bones and muscles as It gradually acquires the ability to stand, and. to walk freely about upon Its feet Otis ot the strAngest things and ons ot the most Illuminating that science has discovered the fact. that animals of all kinds, including m exhibit, during tneir individual development, besinnlnj from the earliest germ ot physical lite, the principal stags of Evolution that their race has passed through in Its slow rise through the Various orders of being. Many or the ancestral peculiarities chat were Assessed by their remote preduoes tors show at the start of their existence, but disappear, ons by one, as they ap proach the! adult, or full grown form, that characterize, thorn at, present If you will look into-tho works of Hux ley, Hieckel, Metchnlkoff and others xyho have studied and illustrated the develop ment f the form of man, you will bo astonished by the absolute likeness be tween the embryo (from Oroek words meaning "in the bud") of a human be ing and that ot a lower animal, und you will be yet more astonished to see how this likeness yanlshes, by Successive steps, as the human form emerges and the ani mal characteristics drop away. To fully understand the arguments b&sod upon those scientific Investigations you must havo considerable knowledge of an atomy and physiology. But. It you will study, without any special scientific knowledge, the dally development ot, your baby you will comprehend evolution prac tically Just as well as If you had gone through a course of study In biology. And, perhaps, your conviction of Its truth will be all the stronger. The bby begins as a quadruped, "tak ing the attitude of its enormously remote animal ancestors, who could not walk erect because their hip Joints (as Is still the case with monkeys) were so placed that the center of gravity ot tho whole body was ahead fit them. ' The baby still retains this pithecoid ("ape-llkq" or "monkey-like") characteristic after It has otherwise become a miniature man or woman. But, very rapidly, a change manifests Itself. As the baby grows the curvature Of its spine slters in such a way as to bring the. center ot gravity of the body not only over the line of the hip Joints, but even a little back of tt- Thls pauses, as you will notice, A ten dency of the child, when It first 'begins to hold Itself erect, to totter and tall backward. Since a monkey never under goes the change tn the form of the spine which transforms a quadruped Into a biped, It cannot fall backward even when, with the aid of its forefeet, or hands, It gets itself into a partially erect attitude. Its center ot gravity remaining tn front' ot the hip line, It always comes down face forward. In the case of the baby nature pro vides for the backward falling tendency by tho development of bands of power ful muscles on the front ot the hip Joints, which enable the human being to hold himself In balance when he is standing upright, and which no other animal pos sesses. Nothing Is moro Interesting than to watclr a child gradually acquiring con trol of these musoles. When that' con trol Is acquired It runs, leaps, jumps and rejoices In tho possession of the most . . u I.. II.. .,i... 1 (II.. Q..Lla'. . L- . .volution has yet developed qn our globe. Then, st, last, the last monkey Character istic has disappeared. . Some people seem to resent the Idea that the human form takes Up Hse by regular variations and gradations out of mere animal shapes, and, for sentimental reasons, persist in rejecting it. But rightly considered, this process of evolu tion Is tho strongest possible argument for the exlstenee of some kind ot "di vinity" in man, because It shows that. Without violating the laws of nature, he has boen enabled to reach a position which seems to place him, in some le aped, above caturel s,Jf rooks and Paris hats, and keep hr owri (automobile. Thus aro we called upon- nirnln tn nnto tlin tvUftntn nf PlflVlllpnOe In , supplying JUet the thing necessary to mcot every contingency In life. What tho Impecunious aetorlne Would do with out the Lobster we tremble to contem plate. ' But she does- not have to do with out It It is always there, ready, tor her to consume. The lobster Is found In all parts Of the civilised world, but the largest arid fattest and juclest come from Pittsburgh, Pa., where, we aro told by travellers, they aro devoured raw. In Farts, where the supply ot Lobsters 'Is also largo, t h 0 y are served In a sauce a la dlable, but It takes Broadway to know how to rtatly do a Lobster to a turn. Tho Hingllsh Lobster, sometimes known as the ''Bounder," appears to be particularly easy to catch, and quite a few havo been landed by our musical comedy ar tists who have fished In London watera. nnn.rnlnff the origin ot the Lobster, naturalists differ. It is the consensus of opinion, however, among scientists who i..v. studied this subject most deeply. that the Lobster Is generally the off spring of a pa who has unexpectedly busted Into a trust, or struck oil some wov. and a ma with social aspirations, This eomblnatlbn seems' to Invariably pro- duce a spawn that only needs foUr or five years at 'a fashionable oollege, with unlimited money and automobiles, to develop It Into an Al Lobater, ready for the New Vork market, Thus Is this toothsome morsel evolved, His Diploma ByMINNA HIVING, He can row as It from Venice, He's a crackerjaek at tehnls, He's a wlsard on the bunkers And a wonder with .a cue. He's a wizard on, the bunkers Hp can navigate the ' breesy In .bis. monoplane expensive That ha calls the Parley-Voo; He pan take a hand at poker, ' And. at bridge he Is no' joker, He's a marvel on the banjo And tho tinkling mandolin; And ho keeps a polo pony, Kor he thinks the game Is tcriy, And the football team he captains Is the one that's sufe to win. He .belongs t'o halt a doxen Clubs exclusive, and his copsln Is an English duke WHose photo He Is caretul to display. In the pla.ee ot books of knowledge In his cosy room, at college There's a cellarette where bottles Of the "flsa" are stowed away. Of himself he Is the proudest When his rsjment Is the loudest, And he keeaK super-ugly . Brindte buuuog tor a pet. But the only paper, later, Ho will take from Alma Mater Will be that he always uses When he rolls a cigarette. and that most ot our wealthiest Xamlllfta are engaged In the cultlvatfon ot 'the Lob ster oan but be a subject ot profound 0 o n gratuiatlon to thoae4whio. .tteplpro the high - cost ot living- For jdosena 'and dozens 'of peo ple' have been known to eat orit & alnglo Lqbater fdr lyears. Ot the habits ot the Lobster Wo do not know as ntuih as wo coutd wish, as it is said that its history jnalkes racy and oiina; reading, tOt, .iljfsw this. Inter esting anlraolttmay be said that Its tonvorsatlonal abilities are very' much like those of the Clam, while Its Intelligence Is that Of thanpon key, It Is generally caught byTbaftl a hook with a Peach, and It is swsoureo ot great revenue a$ has boen stated; be fore, to Chorus gtrls, and also to rettuu rants, cabaret shows, Wall stroet brok en! and mining qtock agents, The run ot Lobsters Is pretty fair "dur ing the entiro year, but In the warm weather the city streets are filled, by a sohool ot them that floods tho place up to the root gardens. This Variety is technically known as tho BuronierT Wid' ower Lobater, and It is so tame -that it will Corns up and eat out of the hand ot any fairly good looking girt. Thoro is no sport In catch ing this kind ot Lobster, but the pickings ars fine. In New fork, Lobsters ate so much estsemed aa food that certain reitau ranis are called Lobster Pal aces. These are the plaoes where a man always takes some other man's wife to supper after the play, whereas, he treats his wife to . art les cream soda at the corner i'ratt stbre. j Lobsters, both the dry land and th&Wet sea Variety, aro the most lndtWUb!& ot all .known varieties of food. Test's wny we are an crazy aoout mem. .1 Don't itch! useResinol Just pat a Httla ot that Soothing-, antiseptic Rcsindl on tho sores and tho itching and burninirstopright there, Soon all trace of eatem&cb other eruption is gone. Prescribed by doe tors for 13 year. For liberal sample and booklets writ to Kept 31-S, Reslnol, BaltloAre, M& Sold by every dntgfWl. PHOTOGRAPHS EVERY KIND i L Y MAN Boug, 4337, Mr pt KM,