Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 09, 1914, Page 9, Image 9

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    THD BEE: OMAHA, THUBSDAY, APRIL !), 1914.
f f r
How to Make a Ten Dollar Hat for Less Than a Dollar
Simple and Inexpensive Trimmings, and How to Place Them
Mysteries of Science
and Nature
THE .MAPLE TREE. QUEEN"
OF THE AMERICAN FOR
EST; HOW IT FLOURISHES
.VXD SERVES BOTH OUR
SENSE OK BEAUTY AND
COMFORT.
Country
Schools for
City
Children
Jt
.J
4
Itj ELBERT HUBBARD.
As you ride on railroad trains In Amer
' yoti will find young people going to
t ( ty to attend schools, colleges, nead
nies, universities.
The Idea seems
to be that In order
to ffct an education
yo t haw to go to
tho city
Now behold a
re ers.il of the
reposition. V e
ml schools being
a-abl:shed In the
oxintr and ch'l
''rm leaving, their
ivrineo every da'
-arly In thp morn
ing find going out
to the country and
spending the day.
Tho first school of
this kind to he rg.
'abllshcd tas the
illmun Country
School for Hoys.
r ar Baltimore.
Th;a school was started fifteen yeura
ico It Is In a plot of ground cociing
seventy acres. It began with an Invest
ment of MI.OCO, and has grown until It
(as a fine equipment and Is a decided
success.
Vlm'lar Jvhools have been started In a
dozen cities In America, ond the Idea Is
fast spreading.
It Itf a sreut Joy and satisfaction of a
ihlld to leave the city and so Into tho
ouniry. Then he comes back homo at
Might and tells qf -what ho has seen and
lone. Mo lives In two separate environ
ments, and it Is .conceded by every one
that wo are changed through a change of
environment.
Transplanted people rule the world.
For i boy or girl to remain right In
tho district of his home and be educated
there Is to posses: a very faulty form of
education.
The city child goes cut to the country
and Is secure against the ullurcments
and diversions that are bound to distract
him from his books and' studies.
He Is away fr'onj tlial cheap little form
of dissipation, tho. adjacent "candy shop,
where ho goes at recess time1,-If he Is In
the city, to spend ,hls spare pennies and
invito dysepsla . and 1'indlgcstlon:' i
He fe taken of .the pavement, away
from tho fildewalk.JJ out Into the fields.
Half a-day lg-spent at thohooks and the
nther-hnlf oCft 'qf doprs, working on tho
farm, doing Hhjj necessary tasks that
should be done, with enough. fjilay mixed
In to '.season the' whole. '
Children who attend these .country
schools' will surpass far In physique and
mentality and general .health .any child
whoso days and nights arc spent In' tho
city. Ifo gets a, change ho gots away
from his parents -and the home atmo
sphere, which, however beautiful and ex
cellent, cannot be appreciated when he
is there all of the time.
He Is relieved of tho danger ot playing
on the street and belng'run over by street
-ars. automobiles, wagons, and' of the
' further danger of association on vacant
lots with the demoralizing and tho unfit,
ilolng back and forth on the train, trolley
car, automobile or carryall he Is safe
guarded by an attendant. And if there
are a. dozen, twenty, fitly or a hundred
pup'.'s. tho expense of this supervision Is
ve slight. Country schools for c'ty
children arc so In the lino of common
sense that the Idea Is bound to grow and
spread.
And yet most of thete country schools
for ' Ity ehlldrcnure owned, uy Individ
uals or corporations-. But It is the belief
that the public school system will take on
this betterment soon.
As It Is now, mqst women take up
school teaching until they get married.
nd the men who are school teachers aro
taking a course In law. medicine or
theolog.vSyll" Intent to quit the school
teaching as. soon ns tho profession Is
within seizing reach.
Wo must make' school teaching emi
nently honorable. And tho salaries, all
tho way from from $150 to $300 a month)
that ac being paid to competent men
and women who can leach both academic
studies' and agriculture, show that we are
moving In the right direction.
Mothers Tell of
Mother's Friend
Experience Js or should be our best
tetcher. Women who have obeyed the
highest and noblest of all sacrifices, the
et-ugglo for the life of others, should
have a better idea, of helpful Influence
than those who theorize from observation.
At any rate when a prospective grand
mother urges her daughter to do as aho
did to use "Mother's Friend," there U
reason to belicre It the rlsht adrlce.
"Mother's Friend" Is an external ap
plication for expectant mothers. Its pur
pose Is to furnish pliancy to the muscles,
to take away the strain on the cords and
ligaments, to relieve the tension of nerves
and tendons so. apt to provoke or ag
gravate nausea, morning sickness, twltcn
Ings of the limbs and to on.
Although, in the nature of things, a
woman would use "Mother's Friend but
hut rarely, yet so effective has It been
foujtd that this splendid remedy Is on sale
In most drug stores throughout Uio
United Btates. It has been prepared by
Bradfleld Regulator Co., 400 Lmr Bldg.,
Atlanta, CJa., and advertised by us for
over forty years. This Is a tine record
for such a special remedy and the grate
ful letters received to-day are Just as
appreciative as were those of years ogo
notwithstanding that methods are sup
posed to have greatly advanced. Ask at
the drug store for a bottle of "Mother
"rlend." It is worth while.
No. 1 Cost
By OblVKTIE.
The hats this year may. be a bit
' odd and fantastic but don't
criticize them for that, little Miss
Economical. Never .before was n
hat strictly a la mode 'so easily
within the compass of your meagre
salary. .
'For a dollar plus a little patience
Art of Centuries B. C.--Relics
AVitli Cauldrons, for Bones of' Oxen and Sheep, and Amphorae, for Wlno and Oil. Prof. We8elowsky with Some of the Splendid Dis
coveries Mado lu tho GmTe of n Ruler of Uio Third or Fourth Century B. C.
IT''
Ry.EIiLA AVHEEIjER WILCOX.
Copyright, 1KH, by Star Company.
Or. the Madison and F ourth avenue
trolley line, which runs to tho Grand
Central depot, there Is a young conduc
tor who prahably Is Just beginning hla
uutlf.
lie is in nis cany -P
twenties at most,
he has a bright,
boyish face und a
very alert, busi
nesslike manner
lie seems to be
In perfect health
and Is y quite con
scious of the im
portance of his ro-sltlon-
Hut there Is ftio
thing of which he
Is not consclou
Thut Is the Impor
tance of courtesy
and politeness to-
ward the patrons of the road. Not that
this young conductor has been guilty ot
gross Impoliteness, lie has simply been
too brusque, too dictatorial, too "Ameri
can" In his methods, to make him stand
In his, position as an admlra'ble examplo
ot ambitious young: manhood forging hlf.
way to the top.
Three ladles were boarding the car with
all possible speed, two with many par
cels and o'ne with a suit case, when this
young conductor called out brusquely,
"Step lively! Step lively! And the words
were accompanied wun un aggressive
pull at tho starting strap which almost
pitched one lady backward.
Jt is sometimes necessary for pas-
I IBBHPBHfcBSt7W
91.00.
No. 2
and multiplied by a little In
genuity you may have a duplicato
of one nf the smart hats that Is
priced from 15.9S to 25 as you
travel up from Second avenue to
Fifth.
"Mother's lost her feather duster;
father's Hhavlng brush Is gone,
but the twins have Faster bon
nets, and those hats have got them
on," Is a true word this year
Behold how, with a flower or a
Are You Brusque or Irritable?
scngcrn who aro standing on the plat
form of cars, and blocking the passage
way while they bid adieu to friends on
the street, to bo reprlmaded by a request
to "Step lively!" But theae three ladles
were hurrying and using more speed than
i grncc ,n tUo(r cUon to ent(r tn( Cftr
Therefore the young conductor's advice
WLB SUpcrflous and Impollto. One lady
wished to leave the car at Thirtieth
street. It was moving with great speed,
and she arose at Thirty-second street to
make sure of getting to tha door and
making her cxltT
"Please stop at Thirtieth," she said.
The young conductor gave, her a Took of
scorn, "Hit down," he commanded In a
most dictatorial tone. "That's two blocks
away "
Iiut before lui tlniuhrd speaking th
car had reached her street. The lady
uiirted to tell him to learn the great art
I of rourtcay, but she had not time; so,
ll-rtead, she smiled at him, and ho, smiled
most amiably In return and : helped -her
with her suit caso to descend to the
street.
Which proved tho young man to be
really amiable at heart end his brusque
manner only a surface habit. These
woids are written hoping he may chance
to sec them and remember -them, and
recognlzo himself.
Kvcry thinking man and woman knows
how hard and nerve racking is the
work of a trolley conductor on the
crowdod . lines of a great metropolis.
When we consider how tinnleasitnt It In
I to be a passenger on one of these cars at
rush ll0urH wo have only to exert the
' imagination a little to realUo what it
( musl tw t0 reiriajn on that car l0Ur a(ter
i,0Ur f avoid collisions with motor cars
Cost 71 cents.
ribbon, or a dustbrusb, you may
have n chapeau a la 1914
Number oqe: The "halo" hat or
the avenue you may duplicate for
SI And this is how you do It:
Huy a wire frame for 25 cents, a
bnndcau of velvet fpr another
quarter, and a yard and three
quarters of tulle) for 36 cents more.
To this total of .S cents odd 15
cents for a single white waterllly
and behold $1 buys you a hat
from a Scythian
This photograph BHowaln graphic, faBhion how certain treasures
from, tho tomb of the Scythian king appeared Immediately aftor they
had been unearthed In southern Ruesia. The particular articles shown
nro from" a number round at eome distance from the king's skeleton
bronsc cauldrons containing bones of oxen, sheep, etc.; a series of
earthenware vessels, including big nmphornc, boarlng painted Greek
lottcrs, for wjno and oil; small vases, and so on
and trucks and pedestrians; to stop and
start at every corner at the exact spot
and moment to pteasn a vast army of
travelers and shoppers and business peo
ple, and to ho subjected to all the 10,000
annoyances which crowds of human be
Ingn generate.
When an elderly conductor Is crotchety
and brasque one feels sympathy for htm,
knowing tho trying causes which have
led to his stato of mind; but when a
youth sets forth upon this vocation It
seems, a misfortune for him to begin his
work In thin state of nervous tension and
needless Irritability with unoffending
passengers.
In any position which necessitates be
jhg thrown with thousands of one's
Advice to the Lovelorn
Hy HEATRICE FAIRFAX,
A Mnttrr of Taste.
Dear Miss Falrfsx: Is it proper for a
young man. when escorting two young
ladles, to walk In the center?
ANXIOFK.
The gentleman In the center affords
better conversational opportunity, but
custom places him on the outside of the
walk for better, protection. Either posi
tion Is right.
Muld ar Jtfatron,
Dear Mlis Fairfax; A says that'a maid
of honor must be a married woman.
n says that she could be cither, but' is
(.'dually a young girl.
Tlcase tell me whlchj Is right?
SKLMA.
When unmarried, she Is called a maid
.0f honor, If married, the one filling that
position Is called tho matron of honor
No. it Cost 80 cents-
which you line with a bit of black
stuff taken from mother's piece
bag.
For the second hal. Buy two
dusting brushes at a penny apiece
and add them to a smart llttlo
shapo for which you have pld l
cents, Total 71 cents and a bit of
work.
Number three will cobt you R
cents. This becoming sailor shape
may be bought for S cents, and 10
King's Tomb
J
fellow men of all classes good nature and
courtesy are rare astiets. They are fao
tors In future success. They lead to
promotion and growth. They conserve
one's forces.
Nothing wastes und disslpatos our en
ergies more than the habit of being
easily Irritated over smull matters.
One of the most Important resolves nny
young man can make when hn sets out In
any vocation In life Is to cultivate ami
ability and polso In his dealings with his
fellows, And to add courtesy and an
agreeable manner.
Ho wll he astonished us he cultivates
these qualities o see how many of tho
worrisome happenings of dully llfn dis
appear before u smile and how many
troubles vanish when met with poise and
equanimity.
Kvery street car conductor needs to
realize that to greater or leKs degreo ho
Is Influencing the feelings of every person
who boards his car.
A nervous, tired and despondent pas
senger can he mado still more norvous by
a disagreeable and brusque conductor,
and can be mad correspondingly less
norvous and Irritable by n gracious und
kindly presence In the perron of tho
conductor,
rCanh one of ui sends forth vibrations
through every waking moment, And
those vibrations are Influencing everyone
who comes In our vicinity. Whether they
are good or bod, peaceful or warlike,
restful or Irritatl-ig. depends on our state
of mind.
Hmllc a little, smile a little as you pass
ulong:
Not alone when life Is pleasant, hut when
things go wrong.
Do not make the way seem harder by a
sullen face,
Fmlle a little, smile a tittle brighten up
the plar
No. 4 Cost 00 cents.
cents each will pay (or the radiator
brush that extendi up the front
and a yard of ribbon that winds Its
wire stem.
Number four consists of a lS-ccitt
Jonquil with Us bright hit of grn.
a yard of taffeta ribbon at l"i
cents, and to make the. extrova
gnnt total of m cents the ever
popular prlco of fi cents Is paid
for the dashing little black straw
"areopluno turban."
The Black Republic
By REV. THOMAS 11. GREGORY.
One hundred and twenty-one years ago,
April t, 173, tho .French government
abolished slavery In tit" Island of Haytl,
und proclaimed for white and bloolf equal
political privileges.
This wns altrxwt
Immediately fol
lowed by whole
sale massacre of
' tho whites, nnd
from that day to
this tho beautiful
Inland hits been it
hell on earth. The
second lamest Is
island of tho West
Indian group has a
history that has
lllornlly boon writ
ten. In blood.
Baytl, from the day Jt was discovered
by Columbus right down to. the present
.i ZVa.u . . . j """""' " "r"' spools, bobbins, rollers, pulleys, bowla,
' h,,nnv. '"J a "'" I brush bocks, crutc.tts, type cases, fancy
rw n(1 handle, of agricultural ImpV -whom
worn cither slaughtered or worked . , ,
movement, has boon an inffrno, When '
to death In the mines Inside of thrty 1
yearn. '
In 1517 the king of .Spain authorised the
Importation of negro slaves, 'the fpst of
whom were' employed on the plantation of
I'edro Columbus, son of Christopher Co
lumbus. Ily 1!7. When lloytl wns ceded to
France hy the-treaty of Hyswick, tho
negroes on tho Island were as "thick as
hops," must of-them slaven, some of them
wealthy plantar.
In 17X1 ciinio the emancipation, tho mas
sacre of the. whites and the episode of
Toussalnt I.QUvortUro. Toussalnt felled,
but the Independents ot the island may
Ixi said to date, from the year 1WI, when
DcHsallnoH became governor.
8lnro 1S0I there have been In Hoyt nnd
San Domingo (established an u rpnrute
republic Jn 1W). Innumerable "governors,"
"gone V "presldcnU" und "emperors,"
with revolutions for breakfast, dinner and
supper, and wtlh holl enough all the tlmo
to satisfy anyone.
What tho final upshot ot the JIuytlan
problem Is to tin doth not un yet- uppeur,
tut tho prospect Is not very hopeful. If
there Is any light along thu horizon It lei
very fulnt, inquiring the cyotdght of the
strongest of optimists to detect It.
Ono hundred und ten years Is quite a
lung period; but long as it Is 11 has fur
nished no ground of hope, for a -happy
bolutlou of the problem. After more than
a century f oxperiment tho Jungle still
prevails und from the mire and rankness
ho View Is ufforded of the hills, with the
firm footing and the pure air.
Will Uncle Hhiii have to htep In before
long und clear the Jungle. It remains to
be seen.
Girls! Have Beautiful, Charming Hair
And no Dandruff 25 Cent Danderine
Try this! Doubles beauty of
hair in few moments, and
stops it falling out
Grows Hair.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy,
abundunt and appears as soft, lustrous
und beautiful us u young girl's after
u "Dunderlne hulr cleanse." Just try
thls moisten a cloth with .1 little Dan -
derlne und carefully draw it through your ! pretty, soft hair and lots Ot It suielv
hair, taking one small strand ut u time. . get u cent bottle of Knowlton'a Dan
Thls will cleanse the hair of dust, dlrtj derlne from any druggist dr toilet
nnd excessive oil nnd la Just a few mo- 'counter, and Just tr 11 -Aihertxrment
By t JAR RETT l SERV1S9.
1 have just been rending a government
bulletin that has filled me with renawed
( thankfulness for he fact that t had the
good fortune to spend my buyhood In tho
rnuntry. wtiere t
made the Intimate
acquaintance i f
the, queen of A'.v.rr
i Iran tree, t h e
i ntgar maple, which
I Is far more won
1 derful In Its sifts
, to mankind than
I nny of the vavntcd
Monocotyledons of
lib 1av tmiMr.
with their ready
made lueii.l n id
i leady-soured milk
, If you have eei
"tspped"' n sugat
lluaple it ltd drank the .iter fresh from the
; tree; If you have ever attended a "sugni'
party" and tasted the Indescribable
I "candy" produced by throwing the boll-
'. In syrup upon a bank of fresh snow,
' .i i, i . l.i.i,i.. . .. .. ... ..
v. nrrc li la iini.iviy ifi'ftcn inn, m. iuuhha
that seems to combine the flavors and
perfume of all the fruits and flower of
rnr.idlse; It you have, ever enton, on your
morning pancakes, real, genuine, unadul
terated maple syrup syrup that would
; pnsi even Or. Wiley's Inspection syrup
that would turn sour In the mere pres
ence of a patent can: If among yoU1'
lather's trasures was n "secretary" or
I big writing desk, made of that most ex
' qulstte of cabinet woods." "bird's-eye
i maple" then you will rejoice with m
1 i.ver the news contained In tho "ugrlcul
i tural bulletin" to which I refer.
; "Sugar maple." says this official t'ly-
J leaf of good tidings, "Is In little danger
of disappearing flom the American for
ests, for It Is ft strong, vlgoroui, ngsre
Islvo tree, and, though not a fast grower
' is ablo to hold Its own.''
Oloiy to the sugar muplel Olory to Its
American aggressiveness! Without Its
presonco our world-envied autumn land
scapes would bo stripped of half the r
unspeakable splendor.
Hut tho sugar maple If going to stay,
for, says the bulletin, "In Michigan It
Is not unusual for maple to tako posses
ion of land fjom which plno or hard
woods have, been cut clean, nnd front
New England westward through tho lake
states, and southward to tho Ohio ami
Potomac rivers, few other epecles are
oftener seen - in woodlots,"
' Only Dr. Wiley can adequately denounce.
und hold up to universal detestation tho
man who fmtUtc or adulterates, or 'it
any manner "cornmcrclalltes." (and Is
thel-e a more hateful word In tho world')
that typically American product, maphi
nyrupi hut nven Ir. Wiley would be un
able to brand with deep enough Infamy
the enemy of his country who, for tho
sake of putting money In his pockets,
would Imperil the continuous existence ot
tho tree Itself.
Uut, fortunately, there Is no danger o'
that. Although the annual "cut" .rf
maple u tho United States amounts to
1.150,000.001 feel,; although It Is one of thi
best of woods for flooring: although It is
mado Into rolling pins, pianos and organs
without number; although Mnssachusctt i
annually turns more than 13,000.000 "boatd
feet" ot It Into shoo lasts; although sugar
mupla Is the finest furniture, wood In this
country; although millions or situtties,
incuts aro made of maple, yet it "holds
Its own."
It defies alike the two-legged and the
six-legged assailants that have swept so
many other of our nutlvo wopds almost
out of sight.
Htrongth and hardness arc characteris
tic of maple, especially of sugar maple,
one of whose other names is "hard
maple." Fineness of grain It possesses
In a high degreo. The Department of
Agriculture has been studying the origin
of the peculiarly beautiful shape
formed by tho fibers of sugar maplo In
the variety known us "bird's-eye." When
polished, a fine speqlmen of blrd's-eyo
muple Is as beautiful as a slab ot variega
ted marhlo. Tho "eyes," say the official
Investigators of these freaks of nature,
probably due to buds which, for some
unknown reason, have been unable to
force their way through tho bark, and
so, each succeeding year, those Impris
oned buds remain Just beneath the nutcr
rind, and tho new wood that Is formed
around them throws Its fibers Into fan
tastic curves, loops and knots. Layer
after layer of this distorted, twisted and
"eye-murked" wood U formed as tho sea
sons flow on, until, when the tree Is cut
down and nawed up, the strange tracen
Is revwiled In al' Its beauty.
Mlchlguii Ih tin grrutest maple state
producing nearly one-liulf of the annual
cut. Wisconsin stundu next on tho roll
und then Pennsylvania, New York and
! w!"1 Virginia, in that older. In the
oarly duya af many us C.000 muplo trcs
were destroyed In clearing a New YoiK
state farm. Hut luckily they loft onougli
to furnlfh syrup for the buckwheat cakes,
and that precious remnant has had too
much vitality to die out.
meats you have doubled the beauty of
jMur hair,
Besides beautifying Iho hair at om
Danderlno dissolves vry particle ot
dandruff ; cluunses, pmlfles and Invl.
orates tho scalp, forover stopping uci
Ing und fulling hulr. . .
Hut whdt will plaakb you mos nt
bo after a few weeks' uso when you udl
actually see new halr-fliie mid down
at flrat-ye"UUt really nw hair grow-
1 Ing nil over the sculp. If you euro for
'1