o " - Trrnv At au a Gttmhav tWTJV I mana . OMAHA,. ftUNfrAV MokNIK(- JULY, 15, l9lt. " 00 Comb Honey By EDWARD BLACK. As Others See Us. The other day we attended a dem onstration of bathing an. infant cor rectly in the pood old summer time. Not very thrilling was the incident, . but something happened to set us thinking. -There were forty school girls present the locale was in a school house and the demonstrator was a school ' nurse. The nurse caused the infant to cry and the lach rymal activities of the child aroused the risibilities of the girls. -The an guish of the infant was merriment for the youthful, spectators. This is the thought: There is something inherent in human nature which makes one person laugh over the plight of another, if that plight is of other than a real serious nature, and some times even serious plights are turned into occasions of mirth. Willie laughs at his pa when the latter strikes his thumb with a ham mer. Pa says, "Gosh ding it!" and Willie and ma laughs, as much at to say, "There is more than one person in this household who needsa little practice in the art of using a ham ' ner." ,' ,'-,. v . Take the case of a fat man chasing his straw hat along a street What map 1 s si arYi-nmt1r in O 1 1 II a 1 1A11 Aft? A one want than that? The fat map "sweats and frets and just as he reaches for his headpiece a gust of wind comes along and takes the hat for another twenty-yard 'dash. The fat man is in pain - but the 'onlook ers laugh at his misfortune. . And if a street car or an automobile passes over the hat, 'another outbreak, of laughter is due from the gallery. Y-' fihurvfA x, woman on a Street car the other day, frustrated because she had neglected to. advise the con ductor of the. street where she wished to alight She was of troubled mind and did not attempt to conceal her feelings. Her remarks to the conduc tor could not have been mistaken for s recommendation of his efficiency. Most of the passengers laughed. Did you ever observe a person skid on a banana peel and land in a re cumbent position with face toward the azure sky,. or towards the clouds, if there are any clouds present at the time? Or have you observed a woman, with worried mien, searching through hef money , receptacle for a jitney, while many persons are wait ing to contribute their mite toward the maintenance of the traction company?- :.- v :, ,; ' We saw i woman upset a cup of coffee over . her new ftock and her distress brought forth an outburst of cachinnations from a group of wit nesses, v ; , , . 4 , - The instinctive ' predeliction of laughing at the misfortunes of others was appreciated by the comedians of the old school of slap-stick comedy. We recall that the harder one struck the other the more we laughed. It was an exaggerated suggestion of someone's being hurt. Jt may be a case of "man's inhumanity to man." Did You Ever Meet One? Specimen No.777 in the gallery of human types: V , "This,. ladies and gentlemen, is the male newlywed who .gets peeved when his bride introduces a gentle man she knew many years before she met him. His astigmatic vision does not permit him to appreciate that in all probability his bride is proud to Vintroduce the male acquaintances of other days to her new hilsband. He takes a lot of the joy out of life for himself and others." .. . With Whiskers and Without Whiskers! r - Of Course You Remembered Their Appearance Fifteen fa Twenty Years Ago! How They Looked How : They Looi Now Gfofe Hiaw of Oinalia Allflie truth cmi untruth thats fit to know A. R. GROH. CHAPTER XXII. Police. :" The police force has kept -pace with the growth of Omaha. It was started in 1866 with four men,, including the chief. Today we have about 181 men on the force, according to the report of 1915, which is the latest that the historian has at hand. The force includes captains, chitf of detectives (now suspended without pay for ninety days for calling Kugel a bad name), desk captains, lieuten ants, sergeants, emergency officers, traffic cops, motorcycle officers, stray JTyJowA'e force fas grown! animal officers (formerly designated dog catchers), turnkeys, etc., etc. The police force grew right from the first- In 1868 the city, council voted to have the policemen dressed in uniforms so that when they went to' arrest someone or ordered some body , to do . something they could First Bearer of the x Red Cross Sign The Red Cross is at least 320 years old, for it was that long ago that a soldier first wore the emblem to mark him as one who ministered to 'the sick and wounded. The history of the sign is communicated in a letter to the New York Evening Post by Mr. .Stephen H. Horgan, who names the first bearer of it: "This was Camillus.de Lillis, to whom Pope Sixius V granted per mission to use a red cross as the dis tinguishing mark of.the society he was forming and which Pope Greg dry XIV confirmed by. founding the order, in 1541. "The real origin of the badge of the Red Cross came from a dream which Camilla Coinpelia de Lillis, mother of Caniillust had just before he was born. In this dream she saw J a child with a red cross on his breast followed by other children with similar emblems. "CamUlus de Lillis by his work' as a nurse and the reforms he brought about in caring for the sick, both in hospitals and on the battlefield, was eventually canonized a saint, and Pope Leo XIII, on June 22, 1886, an nounced that St . Camillus de Lillis would be the patron of nurses, whether they wore , a Red Cross badge or not." ' Dogs Invaluable in War. : Dog 'Jiav proved invaluable 6 the pree nt war,' Day and night, through the, many month of fighting, the cajilne heroea have aoqultted thtmaelves nobly a acout and aeniriee, In the rapid movement of light tana, and in lerking out the wounded over look! hy ambulance men. . 1 Then. '- ' v , -.. , . ' ' e i t . X show their uniforms and prove that they were policemen. The first uniforms were dark blue, single-breasted coats and pants, or trousers. ' They had dark-colored but tons. They also wore caps with brass plates on the front marked b'City Tolice." ' It was a proud day in the city's history when" the police men first appeared dressed in their nice uniforms. t . ' ' Such, a good appearance did they make that the force was increased to eighteen men, including a captain and a lieutenant As time went on the police force grew until 1887, when there were forty-two men on the force. At this time an unfortunate dispute arose over paying the salaries of Chief Seavey and fourteen of the policemen. This was fought for months, the men serving and not receiving any pay, Thexactiomof the grocers and butch ers during this time was very com mendable in extending-credit to these irien for provisions. Their faith was vindicated when the courts approved paying the salaries to these police men and they were paid by the city, not, a dollar being lost by any of the grocers and butchers who had so nobly stood by the officers of the law. It is interesting to compare the po lice statistics of 1891 with those of 1915, the latest report which the his torian has at hand. In 1891 there were 6,386 males arrested and in 1915 there were 12,250. In 1891 there were 895 women arrested and in-1915 there were 2,007. In 1891 there were 181 accidents reported and in 1915 there were 508. ' -.-' Not a single automobile accident was reported in 1891. In 1915 there were 178' automobile - accidents - re ported. . In 1891 there were thirteen suicidesi reported and in -1915 there were fifiy-tour. All this shows very' gratifying progress, The .humane department is a de p'artment that has been organized since 1891. Hans Nielsen is in charge look ii up in the statistic and his report shows the important work he did in 1915. He shot six stray cats and took up five stray horses on the streets. Barns inspected and ordered fixed up, eight The stray animal officers, two col ored men, are'now provided with a handsome Ford car in which are two compartments for the stray dogs to ride in. Thestray animal officers are provided with wire loops with-which they are very skillful in catching the stray dogs. Questions on Chapter XXII 1. Describe early uniforms of Omaha policemen. 2. How many men were arrested in 1891? In 1915? "' : 3. How do the stray animal officers catch dogs? s ', - - '.. . 1 v . . , '. ' : 1 ",'' ' " ' ' e e ' e a ' ' ' ! ....... , .... Led Jfiiti to LeaVe Cleveland tve By A. EDWIN LONG. He might nave been a lawyer. Also he might have been an. athlete, for he loved to wrestle and pull fingers with the biggest chaps that ever came lumbering out pf the back woods. That was C C. Belden. The legal ambition began, in Mesopotamia, O., where he was born in 1849. He watched the prosperous lawyers with their gold-headed canes on the streets and he wanted to be one of them. Then father spoiled it all by -moving the family into the deep dark backwoods of Wisconsin, where the elder Belden was one of the pioneer lumbermen. C C. was only 10 years old at that time, and for one year he chased panthers and wild cats, picked huckleberries, and bounced on the knees of the heavily-booted lumberjacks. 1 Back to Mesopotamia went the whole family then, and at thirteen C. . C. got his first real job. It was a real job, all right, for it consisted of sweeping out a general store in Mesopotamia, measuring, out jugs of molasses, unpacking butter and count ing eggs. Of course there were many other little duties, such as cutting kindling, carrying out ashes, selling husking mittens to the farmers, and sicking the store dog onto the store cat when the cat took liberties with the cheese. Here it was that young Belden nearly developed into a professional athlete. His kid hobby was pulling fingers.' When a customer came in while the boss was out, young Belden did not concern himself at once with filling the customer's order. He first challenged Khim to a finger pulling contest. The two would whip their fingers together with a sharp whack, lock them, and then lean back ana pull. One was no man, if he wasn't lowtL, - game to pull fingers with anyone who challenged him. . Yes, and one was rated a real man in that neck of the timber if he could pull young C. C Belden. So it was that many a time young . Belden and a farmer across the counter, braced their heavy shoes against the top of the counter, leaned back and tugged at one another's fingers, until the counter creaked and wailed under the strain their heels put upon it. . Not because he pulled fingers like a demon, but because lie sold silk carefully and swept the store' neatly, he was made a partner in a little store in Garrettsville, O. He i;ext jumped to Cleveland.where he and Mr. Thompson, his present partner in Omaha, formed a - partnership and put out a line of stores at Cleveland, Youngstown, and Fremont, O. ; His attention was drawn to Omaha principally by the word of two men. They were an uncle, D. D. Belden, an Omaha-pioneer, ,who was the fourth mayor of Omaha, and-by the late Everybody Has W. M. Nash would rather snap a kodak during: his leisure hours than anything else in the world. He bought a high-priced camera recently which cost so much that he is '.almost ashamed to tell his friends what it did cost.' Yet he will not sell a picture. When he takes pidtures he develops them and gives them away. A f,w years ago when an eastern specialist told him that for the benefit of his health he must give his nerves a rest and must- take up some hobby like riding horses, studying birds, or some equally restful pastime, Mr.' Nash im mediately bought a costly camera and began taking pictures. His friends say it is wonderful the amount of pleasure he gets from the camera, and wonder ful, too, the way it has benefited his nerves. . Clarke Powell's hobby is known only to his little son. It is to grow or buy some hair for his head. Re cently Mr. Powell brought his. little son to the Commercial chjb for lunch eon. Thexchild was playing around the lobby after luncheon, while his father was -talking auto supplies to some one in the corner. The genial girls at the club asked the youngster: "Say, little boy, when you grow up are you going to have as much hair as your father?" i Promptly came the reply:' "Oh, daddy's going to get some." Harry Shields, local ticket agent of the Wabasb. is said to have a hobby which he has' never practiced. He has tried all his life to practice this hobby and has never been ableito'do it.lt is a hobby with him just tne same, for it constitutes the ambition of his life. It is to make a lead pencil stick back of .'his j ear. Harry's ears are of. a peculiar cut, and pencils refuse to stick. , Miss Minerva Quinby, employe of the Federal Farm Loan bank. of Oma ha, loves flowers. She loves to plant them, and then get someone else to tend them, the rest of the summer. With her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Laurie J. Quinby, she is at present living in an apartment. She scratched the dirt a little on the sunny side of the apartment house and planted some flowers. ' ". x She asked the old Irish janitor and lawn keeper to water the flowers. He promised. Two or three weeks later snc iouna inenowers , loaning uau, and apparently suffering from want of water. "Pat," sTie.said to ; the janitor, "I thought you said you would . water these flowers." "Wather," shotted Pat "Phwatare ye tajkin about? Sure and I'll be after seem if they grow first before I be wastin' any; wather on them." ; . 1 . l ' jlAt n 1 1 ! 1 I 'Vho is this 'man .with the long brown pencil in his mouth? That is not a pencil, comrades. It is a Pitts burgh stogie. And. the man in whose mouth" it is burning itself away , is Colonel C W. McCune, collector of customs and custodian of the federal building. The Pittsburgh stogie is Colonel McCune's hobby: " How did he fair into thishabit? vou renisr. Well, one dark' and stormy night when Brother1 McCune was a night editci- en our hated contempo rary he hlied his pipe witn tobacco. It was some sort of tobacco that had not been treated- by a patented pro cess and that had not been aged for two years. Therefore, what could you extect? It bit his tongue, of, course Night1 Editor McCune, forgettingJ his usual calmness, seized the unot fending Dine and hurled it against.the wall, .wher it broke into a thousand t K v - - G.C$e7cfezb Thomas Kilpatrick. - D.. D.. Belden, even after he left Omaha and- was living in Denver, saw possibilities in the Nebraska metropolis and he wrote to his nephew C. C. in Ohio, telling him of the importance of this growing town in Nebraska. ' A little later Mr. Belden happened to go to Cleveland, where he met the late Thomas Kilpatrick, when the lat ter had just returned from a trip to the coast, during which trip he had stopped off in Omaha. y "C. C," said Kilpatrick, "why don't you settle in Omaha, Neb.?" C. CV Belden took him at his word, and came to Omaha so fast that he beat Kilpatrick himself . here by a a Hobby! What's- Yours? pieces. Nobody counted the pieces, but that is the number that things al ways break into when they hit against a wall. s .. Well, a few weeks later he took a trip to West Virginia. While there he made the acquaintance of some Pittsburgh stogies. And he was well pleased with them. Since then he has been a devoteee of the stogie. He can stow more stogie smoke than ''most any man.T He buys 'em by the box, importing them,, direct from the smfcky city. They cost him 2Yj cents apiece, f. o. b. Pittsburgh. Once in a while he inadvertently leaves the box on his desk and' the newspaper reporters get one or two of them. But usually he keeps them under lock and key in a. drawer of his. desk. . , - '-. - , ' , . Hughie Mills, Uncle Sam'ssecreb service sleuth, has a ' hobby. It is "feeding his face." There is nothing wrong with Hugh's digestion or ap petite. . " ' . ' " At breakfast he generally starts off with a stack of pancakes and honey. Next he takes a stack of pancakes and Here's an Indian Yarn that : ' Will Be Vouched For if Needed Here's a yarn a true one concern ing Frank Dewey, county clerk, coun ty comptroller and holder of a couple of other official county- titles : . ,The time of this tale 'was 'maqy, many years ago, long before Mr. Dewey ever even dreamed of serving the taxpayers of Douglas,county. He likes to tell it, as it is the one incident in his boy hood that will remain firmly imprinted in his memory as long as he lives. Years ago in the. seventies to be exact the then youngUewey was a "news butcher" on the Northwestern, his "run" being west from Chicago. He was iust a shaver of a boy the youngest news agent in the service and every trip brought' forth some new adventure. . .. - After the Custer massacre, when the government called a conference of. the big Indian chiefs in an attempt to settle the troubles in the west, Frank Dewey was news agent qn. the train that carried the befeathered redskins on their way to Washington These chiefs, including bitting tsull, Spottea Tail and a lot of other famous Sioux leaders, occuoied two special cars. They were attired in their rrfost gaudy regalia and were, in the eyes ot young Dewey, a "dangerous looking bunch." The youthful news agent didn't ven ture into the. cars occupied by -the chieftains for quite a while. Finally, however, the interpreter who was with them convinced the lad thaUhe pos sibly could sell his wares io the red? skins for it was known several ot them' had the fatal malady "sweet tooth." So he timidly, ventured. into the Indians' cars. He didn't sell much fruit but the old warriors boughthis candy; in fact, they ' "cleaned. his travs." - .. -. With an -eye to business Dewey suddenly remembered a supply Jof. prize-package candy which he had in the trunk in the front end of -the 'train and which he had had on hand for several months, having been un able to dispose of it to anyone.-" - They were "50-cent -packages," each containing some "prize" in the .shape of cheap, gaudy- jewelry long brass chains, showy rings ' mounted ; with pop-bottle settings and whatnot. Th candy was kind of old and probably wouldn't pass inspection by the pure food inspectors "of today.- But it-was candy to the. Indian chieftans just like anvthing in the old days with alcohol ia it used to the whisky Jo year or two. That was in 1886. The first store of the company was located where the Woodmen of the World building now stands. Then they moved to Sixteenth Shd Douglas, where the Young Men's Christian as sociation formerly was located. The next move brought Thompson & Bel den to the Sixteenth and Howard lo cation where the establishment now thrives. v . Though Belden has quit pulling fingers, he is still a base ball fan, an enthusiastic golfer, fond of horse races, and a member of the Univer sity club, Commercial club and Happy Hollow club. . . ' . ' (Nets la Thli Series How Omaha ot George Brandela.) - bacon gravy. Then, with the edge off his appetite, he begins on the bacon, and after that come a few farm sau sages and three or four fresh laid ' eggs f rom' his next-door neighbor's hens. No, no, no, please do not mis understand us. Hugh buys the eggs, buys them at so much a dozen. You ought to know he wouldn't colllect them at night, not even if he is a sleuth and wears rubber heels. He isn't that kind of a man. Far from it. He also has some fried potatoes for breakfast, and, of course, two or three cups of coffee and half a dozen slices Of bread. C His favorite 1 evening dish is pot .roast with all the "trimmings." Of course, he has lots of things to go with it The pot roast is merely the piece de resistance, as it were. " Prob'ly Food Coffserver Hoover will (prepare special bulletins to be sent to Hugh. . ' It agrees with Brother Mills, too. He's as fat and round as a butter ball. He lives on Fontenelle boulevard, where, he says, he "gets the first shot at the truck wagons coming in from the country." them lemon extract for instant, and otner tnings. - Armed with several dozen packages of the candy young Dewey marched to "the front end of the train and told'the interpreter that he had some thing .new to show the old hucks. After an exchange of Sioux with .the Indians, which to young Dewey sounded like an angry debate in un intelligible jargon, the news agent was permitted to pass down the aisle ..i i . , , . , . witn nis DasKeis oi canay. The old chieftans had plenty of money with them and a few bought packages at 50 cents each. Dewey had returned to the front of the car and wjis, standing - watching Spotted Tail and his fellow chiefs munch the candy, when-suddenly one. of them let out a war- whoop. ". . " 1 v Mr." Dewey -sayst to this .day that Jiis Viatr sfnod' straight tin for a mo-. ment, for he was under the impression that bis wares had been found un-' satisfactory and he believed the red skins were preparing to scalp him.' He stood rooted to tfie car floorwaa the old Indians made a rush for him.. wrw. i f - i I I ' .1 t J ine mosi ingnicncu uujr in iuc,woim, he thought his last day had come. . But here's what really hapened. ' One of the chiefs had found his,prize in the package a long, brass chain . with a hricht-colored charm on the end of it and the other redskins had Seen it' The cheap jewelry struck their fancies and they, didn't want Dewey to get away before he had sold them ajl-the-candy packages in his trays. They grabbed the packages of candy and , fairly threw 50-cent pieces at him - v ; . When the candy was exhausted Dewey had. his pockets filled with silver and the old Indians were danc ing up and down the aisles of, the car whooping and showing each other their "finds." "I could have sold $1,000 worth of that truck if I'd had it " re miniscented Mr. Dewey in telling the story, "but, believe me, it was several days before I got over my fright I sure thought my hour was at hand:? The Indians got off the train at Chicago -wearing the news agent's brass chains and rings, as proud of them as if they were solid gold affairs studded with diamonds. It is said that they kept them on . during the i nr.t.i. -j f, cuiuctcntc ai v-ttuiugiun aim aurr wards took them back with them when they returned to their respec tive tribes . .,