Till; IJKK: OMAHA, SAT I'UDAY, DKCKMKER 12, UM4. nrn 13 Sailors ' of Feathered Race Vis'-': : . By GARRETT I SKRVIS8. The romance of the sea Is in the very name of the "stormy petrel," and the bird lteelf ia one of the mot Interesting of the minor Inhabitants of the earth. It I a great sailor. possessing the char acteristic mark of the true mariner. which is that the U if . :; - t harder the winds blow, and the fiercer the rush of the waves becomes the more com pletely a t home It seems to be. The petrels are related to the al batrosses, but are smnller and owe their name to a pe- m-jtiW culiar circumstance a play of the nautical Imagination in duced by their appearance on the water. They skim so close along the surface- as to give the Impression that they are ac tually gulling upon It. This suggested to srme fanciful observer the thought of St. Peter walking upon the waves, and so the name of "petrel," meaning "little Peter," w8j,eBtowed upon the bird. This, at least. Is the explanation of the origin of the .name commonly given. Petrels are also called by sailors "Mother Carey's chickens," and their appearance Is regarded as presaging the near approach of a storm. The explana tion of the origin of the name "Mother Carey" la as fantastical as that of the name petrel. It Is said to be an old Eng lish rendering of the exclamation of Italian sailors upon seeing these ominous birds at sea: "Maria ears!" meaning "Dear Mother Mary!" There are about seventy-five species of petrels known, and they are widely dis tributed over the oceanic parts of the globe. In their habits they are almost as much marine animals as are fish, for they never voluntarily visit the land ex cept during the breeding season, and tht wildest storms cannot drive them off the ooean. They skim swiftly along the agi tated surface of a tempest-swept sea, following the changing curvature of the waves, safely defying the breaking crests and the flying spume, and seeming to re joice In the uproar of the elements. In the darkness of a great storm, when ships' masts are bowed to meet the toss ing waves and canvas Is torn from the shrouds by the howling gala, the petrel will sometimes flit about a doomed ves sel like a malignant spirit of the storm. Among sailors it is deemed to be a very unlucky act to kill one of these birds, even by accident. The commonest species of petrel seen on the Atlantic Is a little black bird, with white rump, about six inches in length. It will occasionally follow ships for days, picking up food from the refuse thrown overboard. It seems never to tire, how ever long it may be kept upon the wing. Owing to the externa olllness of Its -feathers they --are' Impenetrable to water, and the bird can rest upon the undulating waves as tightly as a cork, - The stormy petrel remains a mysterious bird even when It visits the borders of the sea for breeding purposes. Its nests are always hidden among rocks close along the coast, and are very difficult of discovery, even by professional egg hunt en. The more effectually to conceal their breeding places the petrels, when sojourning on shore, go out la search of food only at night, or in dark, gloomy and stormy weather. The famous Scilly Islands near the Brit ish coast, which have been the scene of so many ship tragedies, are a favorlta breeding ground of the stormy petrel. Until reoently it was thought that all the nests were contained on one site in the Sclllies, but It has been found that they are much more widely scattered than any one had suspected, and the dis covery la due to a Voracious cat, which, being an inhabitant of the lighthouse on Round Island, where petrels were never seen on land, astonished the keepers by furnishing Itself each night with a Petrel for Its supper. Investigation showed that the cat had found a breeding placa of the birds on the Wand the existence of which was previously unknown. "Nobody Home" -v By Nell Brinklcy Copyright. 1S1. Intern'l News Service. 'Wm 'Ul Mmt f M;mXirn ft ft The Manicure Lady & & By WIIXIAM F. KIRK. "I seen a piece In the paper jester day," said the Manicure Lady, "that told how a oM gent tvnrrlcd a young woman lawyer that hod won a case for Mm. The old gent hnil nothli.g hut I money, the story said, and I wan Just wondtrlng. Charge, why It Is that I have never saw such an . opening. I have read about trained nursese marrying tl rich old man that they had nursed back to life, and I have , read about manicure -Irla geUIng hooked ' tip before some Justice of the pence with some old Jnlner, and now along comna.thls story of the lady lawyer-and all thin ftme I am patiently pointing finger-nails and listen ing the long day through to everything lexoept matrimonial prospects." "But you are so young." said the Head Barber. "Lay off on the sarcasm, tJeorge." snapped the Manicure I Ally. "I know 1 ain't as young as a spring buttercup, hut I've got a few years to go before I got Into the Wondering class, and I could have grhbeUany one of a doien minor league husbands long before now.- I want a champion when I wed. Oeorge.'a cham pion." ' ' "Ton do -rve one," agreed . the Head Tarber. "You have youth," Intelligence and beauty. You are one girl In a million, and 1 have often hoped that ;wlien you do leave this job to he a blushing bride, you will be leaning on' the arm -of a real corker. I wond.'r ah. It Is that so many of thrm rich old na tnarrv their nurses." ' - . ' , "They say -that a mftir'.ed. woman Is a young man's slave ami n old man's nurse," said the Manicure ' Lady. Maybe that Is the aeniiun the nurses frt the about-to-dte-rtch fellou'J. But It . would be Just my lurk, if I was to -turn trained nurse, to find out that all' tlte rich old men had tiled or got married, and then I would have nobody t rurse but am er gfnoy cases. "Hrother WllfieJ U getting my goat a little lately. He don't say mucli at a time, but h Is all the tltrk throwing out little lilnts about the friends of mine that are getting ninriied and settling down. Xvcry time he hears aN ut a girl friend tf mine taking the lover's leap he says something about the girl not being half as sweet as I am. .1 vri't help wonder ing, when I hear him going along like that, if he thinks I am due to be a bachelor lady." "There Is many a girl who said 'Yea Instead of "No" that wishes she was still a Whelor lady," said the Head Barber. "The' reason you charming girls ain't mnrrud Is because yon are too hard to suit and too good Judges of human nature. Your hrother ain't got brains enough to kid. you, girlie, and lint let him think he has." ' ?i V, ' "George, you was always a great booster for me," said the Manicure Lady, "and the reason I like you so much Is because you ain't got no strings to your friendship.'' But 1 sometimes wonder if I am letting my last real chances to get married slip by. Ton don't know how a girl like me feels ahiut being lift out In tie cold after having gave a dosen fairly good prospects the North Pole nod. JuKt think. Oeorgo! Ten years from now I will be getting along toward rrilddle age. But as President WUson says, lots of things can happen In ten years." "Yes," said the Head Harder, "and I i. i rmtnii out that when a iman la president lots:)t things cam hap pen In one. i w. ' w i id r .tv.f ..wi iv H I This Great 7-Piece Ware-Eternal Pure Aluminum ICitchen Set 1A5 "Nobody borne!" Her heart looks red and warm like any other heart you might come across on the Sentimental Road, but It's only a bright red gumdrop with sugar crusted over to fool you, and gumdrops are hard eating soft but tough. Here in her per fectly coiffed hair, which is never a minute behind the times in its fashion of lying on her bead, there is nothing but an empty casket, bright enough, but unfilled save for the stray little hard thoughts, like bullets thoughts of lace and feathers and the flare of a petticoat, and whether there is a tiny ghost of a line coming in the lid of one eye ("I must stop laugh ing If there is," gasps she) that go rattling 'round in side It, , i If you listen close enough before you go'sd deep in love that you can't wade back until the storm's all over and you get slammed back onto the beach again, ' you can hear these little, little thoughts rattling loose behind the white forehead and the arching brows that she'g so vain of. ' . - Love knocks here, and kicks his toes until doomsday, for there's "nobody home." So the cynic, says, sneering at the follies of fashion and the minds j . of maids. And while I think oh small maidens who lean bo' to seeing themselves where their eyes, and their thoughts linger dark hair has nothing to do with gumdrop hearts and this case, have it NELL BRINKLEY. She just happens to Advice to Lovelorn a. aiiniOl VAJmraX Not Wronor Uaaarerous, Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young girl and am considered good looking. I am engaged to be married to a man now In . BpaJn. In the meantime I am going about with a young man who spends his money on me and shows me a great deal of respect, but I am afraid he Is begin ning to care for me. My mother knows I go with him, and I have also Informed him of my engagement to tills other man and often ep-ak about It to Keep it in his rr.lnd. I would like to know It you think I am doing wrong? M. D. What you are doing Is not morally wrong but it Is not the height of loyalty to your sbsent fiance, and It holds the possibility of danger for you and the young man who cares for you In spite of the fact that you are pledged to another. Hard Times. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 19 and for the last two months have been going out with a young man five years my senior. Of late he is quiet. This he attributes to his money affairs, as he is hard pressed. As I know him to be of a carefree dis position, I cannot believe that he should always think ef this, especially when in my company. Please give roe your opin ion in this matter. WORRIED. My dear girl, when a man Is discour aged and depressed over his money af fairs the presence of his girl only aug ments his sufferings If he thinks of all the things he cannot do for her and the impossibility of supporting a wife. This U the time to prove the sincerity of your devotion, and patient helpfulness will do It. Try to cheer hlra Instead of selfuhly thinking about what be owes roe. raaawthy. Dear MUs Fairfax: I have bean In the company of a young jum for about a year. I have learned to lovetilm very much. He told me that he loves me. He left the city on account of business and promised to correspond with me. tils friends told me that business is very slow and that he feels very depressed. He has not written to me. Would you a'lvioe me to write to him? ' I. F. L, If ou feel that this young man Is ill and discouraged over the state of his affairs, you might write hlra a friendly little note to cheer him. Little Mary's Essay Love, and Its Effect on Men and Women i 1 1 -,-,.1 V ! t if ' , r t By DOROTHY DIX. Love is something that makes you feel all nice and purry Inside. Love Is like the measles you generally catch It when you are young, and the worse It breaks .- . out on you the sooner you get over It. Love doesn't hurt the young much, for it seldom strikes : In deeply, but ! when an old man ! or woman gets a J bad case It gener- i ally provea fatal. j You ran always , tell when people j are In love, be cause they go about with a tooth-powder smile on their faces; also they tell people all about their symp toms, which makes everyone hate them. that he would rather meet a woman w)h had Just undergone an operation in a hospital than a man who ts in love, and be'd rather meet a raging lion than either one of them, because - he would, prefer being torn alive to, being bored to death. My mother says that my father should not talk that way because once he was In love himself, and 'my father says. "Well, it I was I took the love cure that Is called matrimony, and got over it," and when he said that my mother said he was a brute, and she rushed out of the room and slammed the door behind her that way that makes a door sound like it said "damn." My father says that love la Hl -"-'"k. and that a man who is tn jve acts Just like a man does who is intoxicated. He says that love goes, to a man's bead and takes away all of his brali.s so that hs hasn't got any Ju.lgment left. and, goodness knows, that'a lucky for the women or else there'd bo lota mora old maids. ' ' My father also says that lore and liquor make a man see things that aren't there. My father says he's known men who saw pink elephants sitting on the My father says WHEN FLIES PLAY 'POSSUM It la not only in the summer that the enemy of the fly should be busy, ac cording to a bulletin Just Issued by the committee on pollution and sewerage of the Merchants' association of New York, but In the winter as well. "Kill the winter flies," Is the burden of the committee's appeal, and It declares that now Is the time to begin next sum mer's campaign. , ' "Most of last season's flies, having com pleted their life cycle, are dead," the bul letin reads, "but those hatched late hajve loft their eggs tn a favorable place for Incubation In the early spring, and these eggs will survive, the winter unless dis posed of. They will hatch out during the winter In an even temperature. "These winter files will become the progenitors of next summer's countless billions. At the first approach of cold weather, the files seek warmth and pro tection in houses and stables. From cel lar to garret they hide in nooks and cor ners. Keep them out. If any succeed tn' getting In, kfll them. - "Don't trust the cold to kill them! Don't assume that they are dead when you find them lying pn floors or window sills In unused rooma They are 'play ing 'poeaum,' and Will revive when the temperature rises. "Clean up the house and give special attention to every out-of-the-way placa where flies may lurk. Make sure there Is nothing left which miy harbor their eggs. One flv that survives the winter will be come th4 parent of hundieds of millions next summer " mantelpiece making faces at them, and men who, when they were in love, court n't tell the difference between a red-heaJed, freckle-faced, cross-eyed living skeleton sort of a woman and Lillian Rustcll. My .father says that when a man's drunk he always wants to confide in you, and that he takea you by the but tonhole and holda you until he tells you the afory of his life, and that when he's In love he does Just the same wsy, only ; he tells you how wonderful and beautl-1 ful, and what an angel the young laly la that he Is In love with. . And my . father says that when you see a man coming whom you know, who is either ( In liquor or in love, the only safe thing Is to run the other way as hard as you 1 can. And my father says that aTter a man has been drunk he wakes up the next day with an awful head and a dark brown taste in his mouth, and he won der why he did it, and my father says that after a man gets married he has about the same sort of a katsenjammer. Ladies do pot get drunk, and when ! they fall in love they Just cry on every-1 body's neck when they tell that they are ! engaged, and the spend their time writ ing letters to the gentlemen they are en gaged to, and when the man leaves a cigar stub on the ash tray they tie a. blue ribbon around It and hang It on the wall. Also they telephone a lot, and they have fits if the man has to go out of town on business, and they make every body very tired, but all the other ladles aay, "Oh, poor dear, let her alone; she won't feel this wsy after she's married." - It must be awful nice to have some body in love, with you if you are a young lady, because he sends you randy and takes you to the movies, and don't never dispute what you aay like a husband does. My mother says love la the great est thing In the world, but I'd rather havej an automobile. 'That's all at present about love. Worth Sj sTlli. ox BALK HATUHOAV Terms:$lCash, 50c Weekly ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY IS OFFERED YOn TO PURCHASE AT ALMOST FACTORY COST THIS WONDERFUL KITCHEN UTKKSTb OUTFIT. The order placed with'th manufacturers of 1h(s celebrated WARE ETERNAL PURE ALUMINUM was so large that we bought these complete outfits for letis than half price. THE KKVKX MOST PRACTICAL riKCKH OPKKKKI) IX THIS 8KT (V1XMIST OF: One alx-quart tea kettle) .with a double boiler 1 nsert that can be used an shown in (his picture), or removed, as tlta lid, fits Itoth of tlioeo utcnstla. The. kettle lias n rt imnNpout and! spiral liandle';' tfuit in always cool. On 1 U -quart soup utralner ; ' one 6- nturl llerllp kettle with lid; one 4-quart lipped snap sauce pan; one 6-quart pre- nerving kettle; one U-quart percolator. Absolutely guaranteed and special for Saturday's Felling, only at .the price quoted.- Mali ordent filled for cash, only- v;' ., ' " '" , WOOD COA.STSM Bound Bteel Banners THKSK . Hl.KIirt AUK Kl.KVKN lNl'llKR WI1M ANI AK TUTTtTY-eEVKN .INCIIklfl l.ONU Made' f hant wood, natural flnlah, neatly decorataiL Have round steel runners. Usually solil for $1. On sale tominorrow, only jjc.,-.r - : - Large Size Blackboard 19c This . h i a c k boat d cannot be duplicated alse where for dou ble the price which . we are asking for It. stands '38 Inchea h' I m h. 18 inches wide, st r o n gly made with heavy wood frame, and can m used on eitner side. ' onl- 600 of then cpeeioJIy nrlced Willie the small quantity lasts. 71 mm m B 3 SF liS Wonderful Special Only 19c XMA TOY iPECIALS AT HAltTMAN'8 Are sold to get your good .will, .not for profit. Our spactnla are priced at cost ' and lens. . Not these fntir barguinn herein quotei. It 4 aw- x, via--' ,.. ...... ' " vwW 19 Wonderful Jmnping Dog A marvelous 1 mechanical toy which when wound up "rnakss several complete aooteraaulta. r la: exceedingly original and very entertaining for both. young and 010, and our special price .la only.. Z35c 24-Iq. High . Character DOLLS WltH Vabraak - abla HeaCs. 79c lTlir.se dolls ,ar fully dressed in fins elder down mater ial, cap, leg gings and s u tt and black leath er tielt, ei ther In blue r ping ma terial. Bold a t o t h e r stores at from' t to II. BO, our price. .., Tto p Store Open Saturday Evening ' fT T v - ' . an"- A CORRI2CT ARTS A Nil OIsAFTH lift. 81QM IN A THRKB. PIKCH MISSION SUITE,, aultabla for llbra.ry or parlor. Hade . entirely of eolt-i ' , oak, finished fumed, j Set consists of large table fitted nMMi catlonery draw ers, ohair and rocker upholstered In guar anteed Knanlsh brlould leather over full net of steel prtngs. Complete act spittity offered at tins tiii- usui once. oiiereQ at la tin- t O ual lowij.55 Eh mmmm til 4Room Com- : -r'" ";.""-. P!fte!y Fur T :fil TV 1 mU Gh.s fLEMAn bMOKINO HTANU, complete with bruah bruss ash tray, clKar and matcn bolder and tunveuient drawer for pipes, tobacco, etc. Alad of genuine quartersawed. oa and beautifully fumed, a cum smokers' tabl extremely low price AN AMAZING VALUE IN A. THREE PIECE BRASd BED COMBINATION Bed baa heavy 2-lnch posts, tea fillers, ! well made . and , absolutely guaranteed. ( AnKle Inin eprliiKS with woven wire top, cop- ki i-uii, mippui ia in center, jt mm m mmi Mattress cotton top, covered K I J II fZ I with heavy ticking. i"oniplte) f J . JM I outfit at this very low prlise T w " A luxurious COLONIAI, ROCKER, uphol tared . In guaranteed im. perial leather; the masclve frame is made of Amartcan quarattred wu imtiaiion ooJi. Unusually large and exceedingly .comfort- auie rocKsr, iuuy worth 7.uU and built to last a lifetime,'-' our price only $4;2S 1414-1416- 1418 j wwuiu via www 33 rate OatAXA'g OBSATS8T XOBCirVBsTTBSinta I - - FJ?IWK? A MC4 'lafoJ 'II 7. W fti ( lAih ' VL 1 ' ' -S-S : -gr- I