Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 27, 1915, Page 11, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    11
Ihe Bees Home Magazine Pa
The Last Word in Smart Hats and Furs for Winter Wear
Republished by Special Arrangement with Harper's Bazar
Part
Arc Children of Native
Born Weaker?
rT TIT1 Tll'IV Af i IT 4 L. I IMtM I t' VHTMItlt'tl .T 1 1 T
-
1 s
1 v
(
Ma
nmm insinf
Necessity of Treating
Animals with Both
Sympathy and Kind
ness.
ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
The crying sin of omission with our
clergymen todny In their silence regard
in th inhumanity of men to animiils.
Henry Horgh 1 d more
iel'.s'.nn I ho wrirt
.nan :r our min
isters of the a"
i.d urc fclnj.
iiiiii n Uie
i .ht n : a ii J
i.o.'t t'i i i i h l
t-hn;.u Is
1. j l . , yiu
pnlh.) -Aliat
ninu- ( hi ist liivine.
No man has
i hri i;i H.' Iiourt
who c;m te ani
;.in,tt uLii:jd wlih
uut r. piotfst.
A cler t,' y m a n
tamo to rail on
lady, and she saw
from her window that he left his hortw
tied with his head checked cruelly high.
shs sent a servant to uncheck ths ani
mal and gave the "man of God" a sharp
reproof besides.
Another clergyman sent his coachman
with a basket of kittens to leave in a
strange dooryard.
It would be easier to find salvation
blindfolded than through such a man's
teaching. '
Did you ever look Into the faces of the
horses you nee on the Btreet ana noie t
their different impressions? They vary
as much a-j 0 the faces of human j
belnss.
Weil-grooi'.uU. well-cered-for carriage
horses have an alert, proud, spirited ex
pression. A horne which is driven with
a short check carries a strained, restless.
impatient look In his eye. The absolute
ho
of
hopelessness, the dull despair In the faces
the street-car horses and those at
oned 'to delivery, baggage wagons and
1 11
of a sympathetic observer. It la like
the look of the worn-out laborer or over
burdened old woman one seems scrub
bing public stairways.
Occasionally, but rarely, one aeea an
absolutely happy-looking horse. One
smiled at me as I passed him the other
day. He belonged to a public cab and 1
saw no coachman near.
I was so pleasantly Impressed by his
amiable, contented look that I walked
back to see him again, and I found the
cause of his happiness.
The cabman had returned and was
patting him in a gentle, friendly way.
The horse felt he was his driver's friend.
He lived in an atmosphere of affectionate
Kindness, and work became pleasure and
life was worth living.
" I believe there are hundreds of horse
in this city today whose hearts are break
ing for a little sympathy and kindness.
Meantime, man Is devising cruel ma
chines to tear their delicate mouths, arch
their tired necka and chop their boautl
ful talis. And not a word Is said against
It by the clergymen.
There ought to be a Sunday set apart
called "Animal unday." Ministers ought
in talk to their congregations about the
duty wa owe to animals.
Cats are the most sensitive, nervous.
nly animals In the world. They are.
too, Intensely affectionate and devoted to
people they love, as well as to places.
When a cat which haa a good home Is
left to run in the streets and alleys, or
is dropped In some field or strage door
srd. its mental sufferings are beyond
desrrlption.
Its affectionate nature Is wounded,
f.nd It feels all the humiliation of a soili-d.
utarved exUtence which a delicate human
being would feel If similarly situated.
And It has not the reason, the faith or
philosophy which helps people In such
coses.
eourse, there are cats wno are
born Ingratea and tramps. Just as there
aru uxn of this sort. But after careful
observations of animals and people, it
must be confessed more two-footed In
giatos are found than are found among
Uie quadrupeds.
I wish the Salvation Army people, who
are so full of the real spirit of Christ,
would Introduce the thought of consider
ation toward animals into their work.
It ia a great pity that kindness in their
cutluct dumb beasts is rarer among
Christians than the follower of Buddha.
Their are many things we ran teach
t.ie Oilentals, but there are also many
important things they can teach us, and
no i.nfo.'tant thought they need to
......
i i our onnoaox people is mat numun
nigs uo not monopo ize all tne ' souls
nttuj I v i. oil.
i:vc: i liinj wlrih exiMs ia poult, tseil
.r il-i. divin" .s;.aik. and when we leurti
I., think -f horses, dugs and rats as o n
'I'ti.theis who are handl apped In toe rue
if I..'... llii wo Id Mill be the better fur It
:' -
V -.T- !K, ...
ll 1
Respect for Older Generation
Its Viewpoint May Seem Narrow, but Iw
Object is Invariably Praiseworthy.
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX.
"My folks never want to let me go out
and have a good time," writes Jennie.
"They seem to think that a girl can go
to business all day, then come home and
help get aupper and go to bed at 9
o'clock perfectly contented, without hav
ing any fun or going out with any young
folks. I can't stand It, bo I think I'll
leave home."
Of course. If Jennie la a sensible girl
she hardly needa roe to tell her that she
must not leave home but a little review
of the whys and wherfores of the con
ditions she meets at home help all the
little Jennies to a happier understanding
of and with the older generation.
Jennie's parents are. In all probability,
hard-working people who either come
.rum .
tlcally unknown or who still hold to the
... . . .
IV. I U. 1WI I 1.1 1 I C V u I I I ' ' "II.
an environment.
HunDOHA Jennie's rva rents came
t
America when ahe was a little girl. In
whatever land they dwelt, freedom for
girls was an unknown thing.
The 20-year-old German or French or
Italian or Russian girl who chances not
.A V.a kib.hI..J la clmf In mnA nMlnM.1 1
and guarded Just as she waa when she
was 15 and approaching the marriageable
r.ge o' her land. Her marriage was an
arranged affair in which the parents
selected her husband for her. 8he waa
supposed to have no experience or knowl
edge of the world on which to base any
Judgment of her own in regard to the
arrangement of her life.
Under these circumstances it is scarcely
amaalng that Jennie's parents should
fail to assimilate the standards of liberty
and independence for young womanhood
prevalent in our own country.
Suppose Jennie's parents are American
born and come from hard-working stock
to which plousure was barmy Known,
and through whose thrift and frugality
Jennie Is able to enjoy a good home
and some of Its comforts. They live in
their own youth and cannot understand
the pleasure-loving butterfly living stand
ards of today.
Perhaps Jennie's mother and father are
country folks to whom city ways are
new; perhaps they are poverty stricken tno, Public men and women on the other
souls who want Jennie to devote her- ; '" f h" question, who yet approve
self to work so that she may rise out of or at lea,,t acquiesce In (yes. even some
the tenement environment where they ! become' parties to) the legal mur-
have to keep hr. Any of these supposi- i" "t the state commits,
tiona Is far more likely to be true than Tk th Bnlffen case, for Inslanoe.
the one that lurks In the back of Jennie's I 1)14 not moralists, who are shocked over
mind.
What does Jennie think? She imagines
that he la cursed with tyrannical elders
who hate to fee her have a good time
and who enjoy l.o.sslng her around and
1 ....... I tVrlr nl.ll.r..ilv fte allA I I II U l i IU.II
""- " .......-. --
.... . I. 1 I s. B'llA ....
; "r are fi-ijhi um intin . .... i
neri; no ine wnim in nua
: IVihMp tin y
todiy's !Mrt
rahiK.t quite un I
f. r i h jiure we I
'.-trih'l
it-
m-M 1'iit tiny ':'.di.r.;tiiiti il
tiriy'n (hnvfr'H loerinr foe
a; an cel. '!"(' :i; e Jinil
t -. .-.el'
pleas ic"
a f: .. .1 .
- MW' -
To tho loft,
int. with
Rose, sacrificing all her youth and inno
cent sweetness for a little brief gaiety,
and they long to pratect Jennie and as
sure her of lasting happiness Instead of
momentary Joy. Their love makes them
Inarticulate They hardly know how to
explain themselves to Jennie. They take
It for granted that the fifth command
ment must mean something to her.
And Jennie, with her auperlor educa
tion and with the better chance than had
the older generation. Judges them Im
patiently and thinks they begrudge her
youth and Joy.
Trust your parents. Jennie. Try to
convince yourself that it Is Just as im
portant for you to understand them a
for them to understand you. Have a
little faith in the love that brought you
into the world and protected your youth.
I Heapect the experience of your parents
, rather than the worldly wisdom of
j4. .., . ,. . . .
tawdry little Rosle. Pon t toes your head
and take the dangerous "youth will have
Its fling I am only going to he young
,,nce aiuiuae lowara me.
j The older generation has the wisdom
' Us ae and suffering and experlenoe.
I Convince It that the Joys you seek are
: Innocent Joys. Make It realize that you
do take life with a certain amount of
seriousness. And live at home, where
the conservatism of the older generation
may guide you rather than the danger
ous fllghtlneaa of the untried , new generation.
"Dr. Haiselden Wise and
Humane"
By ROHK PASTOR 8TOKEH.
Wife of J. C. Phelps Stokes, the Million
aire Settlement Worker.
When a woman brings Into the world
a hopelessly Imbecile child, such aa the
Bollinger baby, that Is doomed to live,
she perpetuates not the human race, but
a curse upon the human race.
T cannot understand the attitude of
m ueain or mis aunormai mrant ait
I smug In the arm chairs reading the dally
reports of the doctor's fight for her
life, feeling a thrill as she was reported
belter, feeling depressed If she was re
ported worse, knowing all the time that
tiie state waa fighting to Have the life
of this perfectly normal woman (who,
pushed to dcsirattun by Sinu:dum It
xi If. tried ti poison herself and her d. r.rly
I'Uil leibvi In order that it mlcht hur
He opP'H t '";.ii .. to !i--.nlly murder her'
i' t iluie any piote.t then fioin our
...o' ul.i.. .' Nine- thi'i evident.
:T-.rvw
a Talbot Maek tail'ola
trrecn chinchilla, ami a
black velvet hat by Guy, with
melon-shaped muff of fox.
Epicurean Episodes :
By DOROTHY nix
The great national dish of our country
Is not, as Is erroneously supposed, turkey
or pumpkin pie, nor even baked bcana.
It la chicken. It Is true that In other
lands chicken also
may be had, but
no other chicken
In the world has
the pep, and gin
ger, and flavor of
American chicken.
Indeed, It is our
chicken tnat has
made America fa
mous, and it la
not only the favor
ite dish among our
own people, but it
appeals to the
Jaded palate of the
effete aristocracy
of Europe, 1 Spe
cially is this the
oase when the
chicken la fat. and
atoaa.
served garnished
with p'enty of the long green. Tn such
oases Impoverished, but epicurean lords
and dukes can never get enough ot It,
or the trimmings.
There la much discussion as to what
part of America grows the finest variety
of chicken, and connolaaeurs are divided
on this point. Each section raises a bird
that haa some peculiar merits of Its own.
The western variety is large, handsome
and showy, but Inclined to be a trifle
muscular, and for thla region it Is gen
erally roated. especially by antl-auffra-glsts.
The southern species Is plump, and Is
particularly delectable when caught at
the frying size.
The New tlngland breed of chickens Is,
on the contrary, rather thin and runs a
little too much to neck.
The middle western variety la very
fresh and sweet, and when raised In a
barnyard full of corn or wheat, or In
the shadow of a browery or stock yardH.
Is noted for Its fine plumage. These
western chickens, especially the variety
known aa heiresses, form the staple diet
I would like to put this question to
the Jwlges and moralists whu have ex
pressed their opinion in this matter of
the child: If it ia not a crime to kill In
cold blood normal men and women driven
by abnormal conditions to abnormal acts,
why Is It a crime to keep hands off while
a naturally doomed abnormal Infant, that
can be snld barely to have licen, cease
to he?
If I had been the mother of that child,
and It had been, not my fourth, but my
first and only one. I should still have
been in absolute agreement with the phy-
sldan who decided to "let nature take
fey
lla course- rather than save the life vl : cm throwing In any seasoning. Serve this
the Infant, If I trusted his Judgment, ami -with a sauce niuusaellue, cumpoaed of a
If in his Judgment the child bore the couplo of weeks of moonlight nights In
stigma of hopeless Imbecility. Ijune: one white Bwlsa dresa with blue
In tlm circumstances they were, to my j ribbons, a pair of oxllke eyes, and a
mind, a wine and humane mother ami j peaches and cream complexion. Dish up
doctor. However, had they been a wiser! whllo Dltilna- hot.
mother and doctor fin time) they might,
perhaps, have prevented these circum
stances. H it mothers and doctors, like
charity workers and philanthropists, are
exceedingly hImw to learn that prevention
is hM'cr than cure, liettei thun doling
Ou: nllr J to the poor would he to remove
ihe lausea vt rxmrty.
. ' ''TV
. iiiirr r i
..... . .... . a.-' o.ii.
luUmat Home. 1 Wipes:
rilK'kKN
Town Style.
of fashionable schools and dressmaking
estublialiments In the east, who live upon
them. They are also In much request ,
among young men of the smart set, who
are too proud to work, and are thus en
abled to feather their nests by the simple
process of going through a marriage cere
mony, The consensus of opinion, however,
among bon vlvants Is that, whatever may
be the merits of the poultry of other
sections of the country, the great and un
paralleled chicken run of he world Is
Broadway. Nowhere else can iwh per
fect specimens be found aa here, and here
are produced the celebrated champagne
fed squab chickens, for which New Tork .
is noted.
Having decided upon the variety of
chicken you prefer, the next step Is to ,
chicken that you prefer, the next step is
to catch It. here again, wo see the differ
ence that climate and environment have .
upon the different varieties. The western 1
chicken la exceedingly wild and hard to j
catch. The southern variety, being more j
dnmestlo and lees sophisticated, can easily 1
be captured by throwing tho chaff of a few i
pretty speeches before It, while the mid- :
din western chick is so tame It will come i
and eat out of your hand, and the New j
England variety will run after you.
But any variety of chicken may easily ,
bo caught if you will scatter enough ',
dough before It.
Chicken may be prepared In a great 1
many different ways, but possible the ,
two methods that apaal most to the popu- '
lar taate are chicken, town style, and .
rhlcken, country stvle.
To prepare chicken town style, select j
a nice pretty young b'rd, either plump
or attenuated, accord'ng to taste. Pay i
particular attention to Its feathers, and
see whether they are plentiful and of fine
quality or not, for this will save you ,
much money later on. Also take notice
ns to whether It looks lively and healthy,
or appears droopy and melanaholy, as
nothing Is lees tasty than a hen with the
pip.
Above all, be careful to choose a
clvcknn with a red top knot, that ruffles
Its feithers at the slightest provocation
und that shows fight and a disposition
to use Its besk. Many men disregard this
precaution, and aa a result receive hen
pecks from which they never reoover.
Having acquired your chicken In the
marriage market, proceed to drees it with
an much silk, satin, millinery and Jew
elry aa you can possibly scrape together.
j Then put It on the gridiron of domesticity.
and le; it cook until d jne. Chicken town
style should always be served with a
iuc pl'iuant. Make this by mixing to
gether, in equal parts, a sliopptng ticket,
tango teas.fox trots end theaters. A
divorce a la Keno la often served with
chicken town style, but while this Is
strictly dn rlgeur, and In accordance with
the usage In most fashionable society, It
In not necessary.
Chicken country style Is a much whole
roner dish than chicken town style, but
It lacks the flavoring and the taste. To
make this dish, take a fresh young
rhl'-ken, suoh a you f'nd In the rural
districts, and atsw it In matrimony, wlth-
City men fum y u),l k n rountry stria
very much on their vacations, but when
they Import It to town they seem to lose
j their relish fwr It.
I K. It.. -In selecting poultry, be careful
j that you aie not deceived, and do not
j ,take a i-inKy old p.i'l 't for a spring
jchlck u.
Itjr WimmIa llutrltinnon. A. !.. M. I.
The World i Hem Known Writer on
Medical Suble-ts.
i An inlerritlns and illntlnctly 1!Mm bins
llnin linw Just been published In the re-
port oi' Pi. Wllilum It. Oullfoy. reels
Itinr of t'io lualth depn rtnient of New
Vol!. City.
Vh a Is. Hint the .lentli rate among ehll-
dr ii tx.ru in N Yoik (Tiv of native rn of ,no moat striking and constant
American parems l hiiilier than that of I harm terlrt lea of the Jewish race, or re
chtMrrn of foreiRii-bmn pnrcnia The H'lon, as they prefer to regard It, Is Its
preiionilernnce Is not great, only shout 1 'iiarkalily low death rate, not only In
.i ,.r ithi, hut It la In the wrong dlmc- Infancy, but In all stages and ages of
liin nnd disturbing, both to our projior i H"r-
I )'i 'le mid also liecauie, on an average. ' Hut prnbabl tho most potent factor in
the flnsnclnl conditions and surroundings i producing Ihe uncomplimentary dlffer
' of niith o-bom famlllon are s ipcrlor to ' enre la one suggeateil by Dr. Oullfoy
! ttioHc of foreign-born ones. hlmaelf, anil that Is, that we are In the
! It fans Into a flame of uncuslness at habit of taking ourselves too much for
j mice our sniolilrrlng apprehension end 'granted, when It tonics to Intelligence
ti ilf conviction. In spite of ourselves, and sanitary cafe i.i the management of
thnl the race in actually declining and I our i lilldren.
j losing Its stam'n.i under civllUation. j The poor, benighted fore'gner. epe-
A iml!i: u'iflnttering comparison ' clally If he has not the blessing of a
lS:i I'l.nle rome jenrs ao between native knowledge of the Knglleh Inngunge, wo
t ii.l for. Inn Norn In tne report of tliejare n'llte sure would be liable to do all
j Tlus 'll Sntif roundntloii upon retarded-' sorts of stupid, thoughtless and Insanl
nera In the public schools. Namely, thatitary things In the way of feeding and
I the rercentage of retardation among na
tive-born children was distinctly higher
Hum In foreign born.
r.ut there are several considerations to
ho reckoned with before wo succumb to
the luxury of pessimism and the doleful
ci ruluslnn that the human race la going
to the bow-wows under civilised condi
tions. One of these Is the prosaic, but
tjutte Important, fact that on account of
their simpler and more primitive habits,
a much larger percentage of forolmi-b rn
v i men nutse their own bnblrs than of
ratlve-born American mothers.
.nd when we recall that the mortality
ciiirlng the first year of life Is anywhere
iron; three to five times a great among
bottle-fed babies as among breast-fed. It
rnn bo anally seen that this single dlffer
i nee would go far to explain the higher
death rate of American children.
Po Important is this following out of
i-alure'n method In the feeding of chil
dren that seasons of scarcity snd dla
tiess, such as famines and sieges, notn
ll, for Instance, the siege of Paris. In
t
LS mtSMW
"1
24th and L Streets. South Omaha
QUALITY HIGH-PRICES LOU
Spocial Salo of
nfli&TftiL rap
Very Maeiive Vernis Martin
post, very special, at
Brass Beds in 22 styles, all
leyoUd
Special HUG Values
For This Wock
9x12 Seamless Brussels Rugs $8.75
paaa gctuiucaa vgivcl nus
9x12 Axminster Rugs
Special Values
TJT
n
ii inoi:L UT; ilk ii g
K BH k -Tf IBM
, Miri'C:
'
ome Pride
!ange
SET UP IN YOUR HOME
TOR
$26.50
Complete Line
of "Quick Meal" Ranges
Sec Our New Daylight
Display Room
l?7f. Iiae actually been accompanied by
x lower Infnnl mortality Inntead of a
hlpher one, on account of so many morn
mothers being ilrlven. either by poverty
or by difficulty In securing cow's milk,
to rsftirn to nature's method.
Another ootmldorntlon of a local char
acter, w hich mi at tie bore In mind. Is,
that of nil forolsn-born parents In New
York I'lty. nearly one-half are Jews; and
clothing and caring lor his children;
while we ourselves, born In the "home
of the free and the land of the brave."
are. from that very fact, models of far
sightedness and hygienic practice.
Do You Know That
There are s.noft.OfM tons of stone In the
Pyramid of Cheors.
Many of the theaters In Petrograd do
not open till midnight.
After rnnstlng, 1 pounds of beef only
weUlis 7 pounds.
French people eat fSn pounds of bread
a head per year.
The wool on the back of a gheep Is
t . shepherd's barometer. The mare curly
It becomes the finer the weather.
When a lion Is frightened It trots away
slowly until It thinks It ts out of sight,
and then bounds off like a greyhound.
Bed, 2-inch
....$3.75
the newest, greatly reduced in
$5.50 to $32.00
oil.UU
; 17.00
in Small Rugs.
i,"::,"H
OTliE GO.
v:-1''S---HSbi