Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 19, 1922, SOCIETY EDITORIAL, Image 18

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    8 B
TUB BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. MARCH 1!. 192:.
The.Omaha Bee
U O K M N G L V L N I N lr b U N D A V.
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WMMt IM I mi PI I Hill HIMIlf M 4ll.
Tk t circwtatioa of The Omaha Baa
far February, 192
Daily Average ....71.300
Sunday Average ...78.325
THE BEE PUBLISHING COMPANY
. MEWEH. Grl Maaagar
IXMER S. ROOD, ClnuUttoa Mmiir
"al1 Ma 34 ar tl
(Suit
W. R QUIVty, N.tary fabll.
BEE TELEPHONED
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OFFICES
Mala Offia ITta ana Varnam
Ce. Bluffs 1 Scott bi. Bout d Jt 8. t4ik St
Kv York 2l rifik A.
W.lr,.t0 IJIt C Si. Chlcaia I7!S M't'r BMg.
Taria, frao-4. ga at. honor
Foreslalion for Nebraska.
A month from now Nehra.kans will observe
with fitting cerrinoni.1 a holiday that, originating
in this state, lias spread over the union, and in
some way has influenced the world. Arbor Day
)'. distinctly a Nebraska institution, and its ob
servance has been of immense benefit to the stale.
But the basic idea has uot been realized, and the
small use that has been made of the plan is in
significant in comparison to its possibilities. Also,
regrettable as the admission may be, Nebraska
is among the backward states of the union in the
matter of forestry service.
The magnificent possibilities of the state for
growing trees have been tested until there is no
longer any doubt about what kinds will do well
here. Experiments, carried on over many years,
and on a practical scale have demonstrated that
useful trees will grow just as well as those that
have little or no use, save for shade and orna
mentation. Attempts have been fnadc many times
to arouse a public interest in the matter, with but
little success. Bills have been presented to the
legislature, seeking to set up the proper state
control, only to die in committee or be killed on
the floor, and one of the greatest possible assets
of the state has been permitted to languish.
Every farm lot that has a grove of cotton
woods, of poplars, box ciders or soft maples,
could have similar groves of walnut Or hickory,
pine or cedar, or other useful' timber. It takes
ro more trouble to set out and nurture a useful
tree than it does one that is useless; longer time
is needed to grow a walnut than is required for a
t cottonwood, but when it is grown its owner has
a tree worth something.
; Trees are a crop for the future, and the
present must take some thought of the future.
We have no right to go ahead without making
provision for those who will be here after the
generation now active has passed on. Ne
braskans, when they celebrate Arbor Day next
month, shuuld honor the name of J. Sterling
Morton by giving to his motto "Flant Trees," a
new and worthier significance. They should
commence now to inform themselves as to what
. i. involved in forcstation for the state; let them
see what has been done at Halsey, and then pic-
7nn nnn - :.. i ' j u:n. t j
vv,'v'v .viiv OVIVJ ill ill SOIIU IIIIIS) tUVClCU
with a growth of pine timber from which might
be harvested each year a lumber crop of $10,
000,000 or more at present values, and this to be
" a perpetual source of revenue to the state..
It can not be done in a day, or a week, but' if
ft is properly set about, those who live in Ne-
1 t. rr... f - 1 1 i ,
L'ii3Ka 111 years iroin now win nave less cause
.'to complain about the amount of farm produce
;it takes to meet public running expenses,' for
.much if not most of the public funds will be de
prived from the publicly owned and managed
forests.
. Nebraska and Its Builders.
f The builder of the first house in Washington
county is dead. One by one in recent years the
newspapers have chronicled the passing of these
pioneers, the first residents of the various towns
(?.nd. counties of what has become, with the span
of their lifetime, a great state. Few are yet to
, go; time passes and the state grows older. Each
hew story of the toll of the Grim Reaper em
phasizes again the youth of this western country,
draws attention again to the virile manhood and
"sturdy courage which pioneered its prairies and
"gives fresh inspiration to thbse who, unfaced by
" terrors of frontier days, nevertheless have prob
- lems to meet fully as great though of a different
' nature. The story of Nebraska has been a story
of slow and tedious exploration, then the rush of
emigration incident to and following the civil
war, then the gradual organization of the new
community as a complex social and economic
... ' organism. Its story in the future must be the
. maintenance and development of that organism
to enable the fullest possible the of all of the re
sources of the state for the common good of
all its people.
Managers, Mergers, and the Theater.
We question whether the public pulse will be
'greatly accelerated by the announcement that a
: group of New York theatrical magnates have
.'decided to merge their interests. So far as sur-
"face indications show, the project is purely com
. mercial. Such members as are involved have in
. view the limitation of the theater, rather than its
extension. They will discourage building of
'" ; theaters, in order that those now under their
ownership or control will be left without possi
ble competition. Then it proposed to so ordain
' the production of drama that in towns where two
or more . theaters exist, the possible exhibition
of two similar attractions simultaneously will be
evaded. Other regulations will be adopted, to
the end, presumably, that competition will have
. a pretty tough time if any springs up.
All of which is reminiscent of the great idea
.that evolved into the C B. Jefferson, Klaw &
Erlaneef syndicate of twenty-five years ago, with
- " riC lUUSClJUC II l t VI lira vtnaiiiuwua v.-
perience of cities that sought to breakaway
; from the "trust." The "Shuberts" have survived
the various combinations that sprung up toxjo
4 battle with K.' & E.," and strangely enoug
low that the original coterie has dissolved, it is
th Shubfit jme that he.di h Jut ef the ntw
tru.t.
A theater Ptedl business management,
much si it peedi srt, for without (ireful manage
ment it can pot lurvWf, Yfl without art it cn
rot etn it. Therffoi. the point at Uue
it, How far will the patient public submit to be
led About by the managers who will, si the rt
has Amply proven, undertake to dictate as to the
rti.tic as well as the other merits of their at
tuition? And will ttie ffrienee of Minnie
Middern FiVe, Sarah Eerriharcft and some others
be repeated?
The people want the theater, and will put up
with much that t not worthy to get a little that
is, but we doubt if they want another syndicate.'
Unruly Youth at Universities.
Now and then the staid and sober citizens,
forgetful frequently of their own salad days, are
pained and grieved to read at the breakfast table
of some unseemly demonstration, staged by cot
If gf boys, or high school students. It shoiks
one's sensibilities that the peace and quiet of a
community should be seriously dixturbed by
youth whose occupation properly should induce
decorum and grarlmis demeanor. Yet, if that
ame staid and sober ciliren were to follow back
ilong the track of the university or college as
these institutions of learning have come down to
us from medieval times, he might be encouraged
by the progress shown in manners and behavior
of students.
Dr. Albert Mansbridge of England, in begin
r.ing course of lectures at Lowell university,
according to the Boston Transcript, set forth:
In medieval days, students of all ages,
boys as well as men, attended the universities.
Lack of means was no obstacle. If they had to
share a bed and even a cloak one with another,
it did not matter, so long as they were at the
goal of their desire. The student changed city,
university and country as he pleased, lie made
his own laws, and conformed to the custom of
his kind. They were a wild and motley crew.
"Wherever Clerks are met together." said Friar ,
Roger Bacon, "as happens at Tan's and Ox
ford, they shook the world with their feuds,
their contentions and their vices."
Learning was indeed a passion in those days,
and according to Dr. Mansbridge, "This passion
was the first burst of learning. In a sense it was
free of church and king as, it never has been
since." We do not present this as justifying what
the authorities now and again euphemistically
designate as students' pranks, but just to show
that it was even more so in the good old days.
Another One for Solomon.
Is the female of the species really more deadly
than the male? We confess, we don't know. In
boyhood we thought we understood all about
girls. They were fraidy cats and silly things
who played with dolls and little houses and were
even afraid of dead mice.
But we have revised our ideas regarding
them, revised them several times since then. We
have found, for instance, that they have a mar
velous capacity for arousing certain trembly feel
ings in our breasts, feelings which have even de
prived us of our appetites and caused us to write
foolish letters and to make extravagant state
ments regarding their beauty. We have found
also that they have an astonishing capacity for
tenderness and pity and sympathy.
Last week we went to a certain exhibition at
which strong men in a ring smote each other
with their fists encased in boxing gloves. They,
smote each other until they were half senseless,
their noses were bloody, their eyes swollen, some
of ,thcir hand bones broken.
It caused even a revulsion in our own stern
manly bosom.
Two young women of our acquaintance were
there. One is a graduate of a large eastern girls'
college. The other is a devout church woman.
It was the first and only prize fight they ever
witnessed..
"Ah," we thought, "how their tender hearts
niust be quivering with pity at this brutal ex
hibition!'' Next day we asked them about it. "I didn't
see anything brutal about it," said 'she of .the
large eastern college. "I was hoping there would
be a knockout," declared the devout member.
Women seated near us at the fight seemed
much bored even when the males of the species
were in the height of excitement.
We have decided never to even try to under
stand women.
Decomposing a Kiss.
Having resolved the sunbeam, shattered the
atonr, and determined the bulk of Arcturus,,
science is now in. pursuit of its ultimate goal.
The kiss, of whatever degree is to be analyzed,
decomposed, scheduled as to its qualities, and,
presumably, card-indexed, so that the casual in
quirer may at any time refer to the tabulated
charts and determine for himself the exact na
ture and components of the caress he has just
been favored with.
Perhaps. Get Milton's immortal '"Paradise
Lost," turn to and read the glowing, tender pas
sage that describes the' nuptial night in the Gar
den of Eden, and then recall if you can all the
long line of kisses that have come down'through
the ages since. With this in mind, picture, if
possible, the sort of individual who would try to
catalogue a kiss. It means sonicthing or noth
ing; it is responsive, or it is cold, but it does not
lend itself to classification. Passionate, dutiful,
deceitful or trusting, a kiss is a kiss, and usually,
like mercy, it "blesses him that gives and him
that takes."
Also, try to imagine an ardent lover, equipped
with a modified sphygmanomometer, trying out
the instrument on the girl of his soul! To make
it perfect, some sort of registering device should
be attached, that length and number may be
recorded. Then, after the contest is over, and
before he retires for the night, let him pore over
the index card, and discover by virtue of the
lines thereon traced, the quality of response with
which his own advances have been met.
Science may detect deviation from the truth
by measuring the blood pressure, but it will be
some time before it can lay down rules for kisses
that will be observed by those who indulge in
that oldest of indoor pastimes.
Curiously enough, the office of the Scottish
Home Rule association is on Hope street, Glas-,
gow.
Now comes the rain that makes the advent
of spring more imminent.
The "help wanted" column is another good
sign.
Nebraska's chief ailment is growing pains.
The Husking Bee
It 5 Your Da i
Start ItWMiaLauair
THE TASS1NG YEARS.
Tl' years are pasting slowly wt
And as ch one goes by
We wake to see a new year dawn,
With firm re.olve and high;
The year may bring us os or gains,
May put us to the test,
Let it be said when this ear wanes,
At least we did our hot.
We can't postpone our journey liete,
We need must carry through,
So let it be with hope and cheer
And good that we can do;
And count the year that go and come,
With fearless hearts and brave.
But milestone on our journey from
The cradle to the grave.
'
PHILO SOPHY. t
If all the world is a stage there are a lot of
bad actors.
OR MARRY HIM.
"A girl doesn't necessarily have to approve of
a man in order to love him.
Why houldn't an old maid be competent to
give advice on the upbringing of children? Every
old maid was a child once herself.
The women don't like Margot Asquith. That
cught tq insure her a bumper. male audience.
.
DON'T ALWAYS CO.
"Be sure you're right, then go ahead,"
Was Davy Crockett's motto '
But Davy never tried, 'tis said,
To crank a stalling auto.
Charlie Black is setting out bis business to
devote all hi time to the postoffice.
What we are wondering is if P. M. G. WORK
had anything to do with Charlie's decision.
Little Bobbie thinks sister's beau is the
wealthy owner of a chocolate mine. ,
THEY COME READY MADE.
And Dr. Tierce Is Making Incisions In Chadron.
(From the Ainsworth Democrat.)
Speaking of one thing and another, it may in
terest you to learn that in Hastings, Neb., Doctor
Foote specializes on the Eye and Ear, and in
Wichita, Kan., Doctor Era Nye operates on the
feet. And yet some folks think we manufacture
these things. Chadron Journal.
.
Here lies beneath the sod, alas,
The form of Albert Lane;
He had his foot upon the gas,
But failed to see the train.
Canton (O.) News.
Here beneath the grass you'll find
The body of Gus Rule,
He thought it smart to stand behind
The hind leg of a mule.
,' Hastings (Neb.) Tribune.
The daisy careless childhood picks '
Now grows above Jim Ball,
One balmy day he tried to mix
His gas with alcohol.
' i
1 Early Sunday morning diversion watching
the" kids in the block bob out on the porch in their
pajamas and nighties after the funny paper.
The good a man does is interred with his
benesand it doesn't usually overcrowd the
casket, at that.
OUR GUESS.
Our speech is called the mother tongue
Just why is it named such?
Suppose 'cause mother is the one
Who uses it so much.
' ' -
, : DON'T NEED HUMANIZING. v
"Movie people are but human," says a de
fender apologetically. Then what do they need of
Will Hays? . 4
. -
Maybe it's the jazz music that is causing the
earthquakes.
Our idea of a light occupation is to be Third
Vice President of an association.
,
OUR ACADEMY OF IMMORTALS.
Thilo: May I not be permitted to nominate
for membership into the Academy several ladies
and gentlemen of the First Central Congrega
tional choir?
Among the sopranos is Miss Harrier, who
could be the Academy barber; Miss Hart, the
Academy dear; Miss Sleeper should be on the
Academy police force; Miss Peacock, the Acad
emy modiste; while among the altos is Mrs.
Fudge, who could keep the candy shop.
In the tenor section Mr. Maxwell could tend
the Academy garage; Mr. Starr, the Academy
astronomer; Mr. Bing could wield the big stick;
Mr. Putt, the Academy golfer; Mr. Poore could
hold any job around the Academy necessitating
attendance, for, as you know, the Poore we have
with us always; Mr. Herman, the Academy
magician, and in the bass section Mr. Sage could
handle all the high-brow stuff, and Mr. Snow
could be high keeper of'the Academy refrigera
tor. As for Miss Gordon, one of the soloists,
you can mix your own. J.. L.
fcout Frank Carey, "dry" cleaner, suggests
Lynch the Plumber. We've seen some of them
we'd like to. s. '
How to Keep Well
By PA. W, A. tVASS
Qoliaa iHimi.1 kvfiMia, Malta
liaaj mi fvaiM ml Aim., tuk
Mill. a la Pr, liaa. by ,Mra al
Tk Baa, dill W aaaowcA araaautly
ufciact I ftmmf iMMtaiwa, ll a
tainpad, aaaiaaaaA anvaloai I
'. Dr. Itaaa atill awl auk
AiafKMla wr ar.rik fa n.iaiMl
diMawa, A44ia kllar In !' tl
Tk Bm.
Cnkli
Reconnoitring Evcmt
Thirsty Virgins
CLNTER SHOIS.
Philo: For skinner to the Academy, t .pro
pose Mr. Muhle, employed at the Q. M. corral.
Mr. Ham as butcher to the Academy; and no
man who has the good of the order at heart
cotild vote against Mr. De Lay, meter reader for
the Nebraska Power company. Maque.
A CREED."
I'd go to the gates of hell for a friend,'
Through thick and thin
To the very gates my help I d lend,
But I wouldn't go in.
See where the radio telephone is going to put
the modern song writers out of bus. . .
" For this relief, much thanks. .
TODAY'S IDLE THOUGHT.
As soon as a guy gets on easy street he
imagines he is headed for Bradstreet.
.
A. Cuckoo Bird says: I may be wrong, but
it seems to me this world a brighter place would
be if men would spend upon their wives, to put
some sunshine in their lives, the coin they later
on invest to plant a tombstone on their chests.
WHERE DO THEY GET THAT AT?
Three hundred times King Solomon wed,
. Three hundred wives, of course,
And yet in all his life, 'tis said,
He never got divorce
And still we often hear 'em say,
Sol was a wrise guy in his day.
AFTER-THOUGHT: Strap-hanging might
be called a riding habit. ' PHILO.
DANCER OP GARAGE FUMES.
The affinity of (lis .loot for far.
Hon moiioxulf ana ia JoO timr-a timt
for ovtcen, In ronwijiieni", Wheil'
ever air rmilaln any carbon limit
oxii, perautia Itihalinar It will have
It'cir bliMiil mora or Ii-m anaked wiih
id ia harmful fan. Onco It in into
ma iiid it hulria on in tha sua rar
O'HiaT lirnmirliiliiii fop tinura, making
It dirrii'uit fur tha tlwiiea to gel the
oxysm iney nreti.
Among ilia rauMa of car lion mnn
oxide gns In the air are the follow,
ins;
Autnnmbila exlmuata. lenklnr fur
liac-ra and ixa tnva. leaking ihiiu.
nrys ami atuve pipe, leaking watr
CM tiittliia. U-Hklnif blunt lid coke
tiirnMi'ra, furnm'a and rolling mill,
varinna mamif;ii'turlnif prrwrMM and
anni nring in minra.
When a liernon ia found unron
acloim from aeuia rarl'on monoxMn
poikfinlni;, for InatMiir. In a rlnarii
garage In wliirh an automobile In
running, the fln.t thing to do la to
get him out of the (umn and Into
the frmh air. Ttemov Mm in urh
a way in to prrp him Hat. It l
better to drag hint along tha floor
than to ruin Ida head and try to
carry him upright or half upright.
Keep him warm, quiet, and IIhI.
If any oxygen la orraent. let him
InliHl pure oxygen.
If reaiilriitlnn la weak or irregular.
do artilteial reNpiralinn hy the
fcrbaefrr method, as follows:
J'laee peraon on abdomen: turn
Ihe hen (I to one aide and rrt on
forearma; remove all foreign bodies
from the mould,
Kneel, straddling; the iernnn'a
thigh, facing hla head. Dace your
handa on the lower part of hla rlha,
with your thumb", parallel with hla
backbone and twO or three Inches
apart, the Angora apread out over
the ribs, the little finger lying on
the last rib.
Slowly and evenly bring the weight
if your body forward and down
ward, o as to cause your hands to
compress the lower part of the man's
chest.
Thls'tflkes two eeronds. Swing
back slowly, permit tine the man's
chest to expand and thus draw air
Into his lungs. Wait two seconds.
Itepeat about 13 times a minute.
Continuo this for several hours If
necessary. If natural respiration
starts up. stop artificial respiration,
but watch the man lest he discon.
tinuo breathing. If natural respira
tion stops, start artificial respiration.
In the meanwhile some helper
should have loosened clothing and
applied heat..
The after treatment consists in
keeping the mnn quiet in bed for
hours or days. Small exertion
might cause the heart to stop with
out warning.
Foreign writers tell of chronic car
bon monoxide poisoning, especially
among cooks, bakers, laundresses,
ironera, pressers in tailor shops,
painters and men who work In rooms
that are being dried by salamanders
and men' working around automo
biles. Among the symptoms are head
ache, dizziness, weakness In the legs,
constipation and nausea. The symp
toms are worse in winter because
in that season the windows are
closed. " .
There are not many reports or
chronic poisoning coming from
American sources.
Diet's Evidently Wrong.
T n M writes- "1. Please ad
vise what the coating consists of
that forms on the toncue wnen peo
rle are constipated or in otherwise
bad health. Also, how is it depos
ited ?
"2. T have seen somewhere, per
bans in your column, that a chron
inn II v rontp rl toneue indicates a
short lease of life to its possessor.
Please say why this is so.
"3. Would any treatment, medi
cine or change in mode of. living
correct it?"
REPLY. ,
1 Prinpinallv epithelium, thrown
off from the tongue. Some of it is
composed of food, some or evap
orated saliva.
2. Never said it. and it is not so.
3. Live principally on bran as a
cereal and as a bread, vegetables
and fruits.
AVhcn Chairs Start to Dance.
A reader writes: "The other day
T fainted for the first time in my
life. I know that if I had known
what to do when I felt myself faint
ing T would have prevented it.
"Please advise me, through. your
column, how to prevent fainting."
REPLY.
To prevent fainting, lie flat on
the floor if necessary with the head
no -higher than the body.
The windows should be opened
and cold air should be allowed to
blow across the face.
If feasible the clothing should be
loosened.
T3.v.a ill. far. mrith cold water.
Inhale camphor or ammonia. Keep
the feet and legs warm.
It's the Walking. Luctla.
Tj. S. writes: "1. Kindly advise
what causes the whites of the eyes
to looK yellow and also the skin.
'2. What is a good spring tonic?
"3. I am five feet four inches and
weigh 92 pounds. W.hat is my cor
rect weight?" '
REPLY.
1. As a rule bile is the stain
which is responsible.
2. Walk out in the woods and
dig up some kind of a root say
sassafras. Walk back home. Make
a tea of the root. Bach day drink
a cup of the. tea and then walk five
miles. .
3. You do not gtve your age,
Luetta, but assuming you to be 20
years old, your weight should be 125
pounds.
Bam! Goes Another Fable.
C. R. writes: "Is sassafras tea of
any benefit to a person as a blood
purifier?" , -
. REPLY.
No.
SAID IN JEST.
'Bn having another mother.' club
meeting here today, Mary?"
"How did you guese?"
"By the empty cigaret box." Judge.
"Can I be of nay assistance?" asked
the sympathetic motorist of ft man who
m looking unutterabla thought at a
disabled car. j
"How. la your vocabulary?"
''I'm & minister, air. -
Drive on." Birmingham Age-Herald.
Bernard Shaw say ha doesn't care to
visit th United Stat We. He doesn't hav
to. The show manager and publishers
send his money over to tiim. Some leefl
fortunate people In England bav to come
after theirs. Evening Mail.
They used to say of the late Louis
.Tames that he waa one of the, greatest
humorists and practical Jokers in stage
history. It is recounted of him that on
a certain occasion, In on of the Shake
spearean tragedies having to shake hands
with a brother tragedian, he left cluch-d
Inescapably in ths latter'a fist a fat, raav
oyster, which tha unfortunate Individual
n obliged to keep by him through th
remainder ot ths aceoe. Th Argonaut.
irMaa Ik hear t Tta.)
Trobably there waa nrtrrt bailer
ejulpj1 f .ediiii,i lian that .(
I.tut. I'ol, i". K. Howard limy t
i'ii in way m (limbing i
Mount tiverrai, una of iluiae
rar) srniurr in whiiti any man if
loiaginati.m liiigln wiklt la rncge
l naj country lo ba entered and atmt
lee) was unknown fa Kurotvaits
suMiina ai-enery would surround lit
intader; ht waa a quaint people
with peiuliar rit iliiat ion a ru
counter, and tit haurd waa not of
kind la oe airep annul. It waa
re.i. letter niiiht when t'ol. Howard
nury told the aiory f Hi rsoedl-
lion to I ha itmai (leograiihlral an
riety. H was afterward primed in
tha Journal,
Th vulleya leading up la the T.v
treat croup of peaka bad been for.
oin.ien ground, Aa lata aa 1S0S t'ol.
Itder. now urvryor general of In.
1ia, could get no nearer Kvereat
than 90 mile. (a beheld II front
Hut i aoiithern) wlerhe. nf h
MaMinapiitr. Not until (; waa
II yraetwoble to approarli Ihe Tibet
an government in ak for pertm.
lnrt lo ascend tha great mountain.
Mr. Hell, who waa going o l.hawt
on a aperlul mission, had a person!
arnuaiiitaii.e wltlt the ilatal lama,
and obtained front IiIiii n! only
paxhporta but letters Of Introduction
to local governor.
Kvervllilng the Indian govern
ment con li do In promote the un-
nertaKing waa (lone. I.rd Heading,
th viceroy, tint only aiimmliett Ihe
way. But nutiwrlbe.l liberally toward
expense. ijrd Itawlinaon. Ih
rnmninnder.ln chief, unpolled ion
picked tnuleg for trannport. Two
ontccra of the atirvev of India. Mai.
Mnryhead and MaJ. Wheeler, were
lent for aurvejing, inuppltig und
photographing, lir. A. M. llermn
of Ihe geological aurvry accompa
nied the expedition "lo study Ihe
Cvology of ihe region, about which
nothing waa known." A. K. It. Wol-
lust on. an explorer of Africa and
New llulnea, went along aa docmr.
naturalist and totnnlat. The bent
of Interpreters, one a kazi nf Kik.
kirn, and Ihe other a Tibetan who
hurt served In the Indian army in
Egypt during the war. were en.
gaged, and by their tact and knowl
edge of Tibetan ways and custom
they proved Invaluable. The start
waa made from Iiarjeeling.
All hut the weather was kind to
Col. Howard-Bury and hla party.
The "rain It rained" almost every
any, but there wero blessed inter
vals of sunshine. Ixird Kawllnson's
mules found the ateady climbing to
nigii altitudes on the Tibetan fron
tier too much for them, and local
mulea had to be substituted. Yaks
were also used, but they had a bud
nabtt of rolling on their burden
and kicking It off. Arrived in the
t'hunibt valley, the Englishmen vis.
Ited the Galinka and Donka monas
teries, "containing enormous prayer
w-heels in which there were over
1.(100,000 prayers. 'Kah time the
wheel is turned a bell rings, and
1.000.000 prayers have ascended to
heaven." At Shekar the abbot waa
supposed to be "the reincarnation
of a former abbot, and was looked
upon m an extremely holy man. .
. . His attendants with much dif
ficulty persuaded him to be photo
graphed, for they said that his time
on earth cold now only be short."
As the expedition went on, they
found superlatively beautiful and in
spiring views.
"From one peak to the north of
Bhong Chu. we had a very extensive
view,, stretching from the snowy
ranges beyond Chomolhari and 120
miles to the east of us to Kanr.hen
junga. and then on to Makula and
Everest, and from there passing on
to the high snow peaks west of Ev
etest and to Gosalnthan, a range of
some 250 miles of snow peaks; but
above them all towered Mount Ev
erest, several thousand feet above
its neighbors."
Photography at the higher alti
tudes required the patience of Job.
In camp in the Khombu pass. 20,000
feet above sea level, Maj. Wheeler
spent day after day "on the top of
a mountain in bitter cold and driv
ing snow" waiting for the clouds to
lift. Near Krcpak a female anchor- i
ite "138 years old and greatly ro-i
vered" was visited. The lady for- I
bade the killing of animals, "and :
hence we found the wild sheep
everywhere were very tame." In the j
Rongbuk valley 400 -hermits and i
nuns lived in caves at an altitude
of 16,500 feet. "All the animals and !
birds in this valley were wonder-j
fully tame." In the main Arun j
valley villages were deserted at the j
Englishmen s approach, the Natives
creeping back one by one when they
found there was nothing to be afraid
of
At length, after many days of
travel, the invaders reached the
Kama valley," "a valley unexcelled,
irr beauty anywhere in the Himalay
as, with the most stupendous, scen
ery." At the extreme end towered
Everest, but a companion peak, Ma
kalu, with precipices descending
sheer for 11,000 feet into the valley,
was more imposing In this country
the leeches were everywhere, a pest
not to be avoided. They climbed
"on our clothes, and legs, and faces;
they got onto our plates and cups
and into our food." On a ridge at
a height of 21.000 feet Col. Howard
Budy saw the sun rise in a clear sky:
"Of a sudden a flash of golden light
touched the utmost summit of
Mount Everest and spread with a
glow of gold all over the highest
snows and ridges of this wonderful
mountain, while behind the deep
purple of ' the sky changed to
orange.
At last, on September 22, the
Lhakpa La col (22.320 feet) was
climbed, "and here the only possi-
irnai Ik ( attfaaki Urv4 I
NOW fepot I r cooling III ht
h Irgm IfcUioia r tailing I'nrte
pant 47 urinthla namea at a lime.
It'a all Ke.'ainut that fiham .1 ..... rt
hir ihl Una country wuhrd upon i Trihui'S,
Ilia minf lending uluna, tha
I bought II nu harm ! too; upon the I
runt w iiit it it. i a l mi tr
rent kick la the wins g!aa. Tha
fulled Piair. it may be rerallrd.
atoxiiliei) tha Virgin tUiuta la krt
oilier tiaiioiia front getting a roiling
nation llirf, gud (hereby tunc
lle.
Tha Virgin are no I demanding
clgareta, imr Hull) wood pictuiea.
nor et are) hry tearing for jnM
Hul Ihey di want ilieir rum, which
waa then 10 their lieaj'ta' foment
under th l'anil rule, before I lie
t nlfeil htatea look I hem oter lo
forestall fortune. buttling ellHora from
brvmid Ihe , A dipii h lo Ihe
I'liiladelpllia lUcord from t'ltarloti
Antalie harbor, way Much tjovrrnnr
H. I., W, hellelo aurd hi prohibi
tion proclamation. Ilniiisli pier
chant who control the imainrsa of
Ilia lliila archipelago; are telling each
other that bankruptcy la just around
in corner. They -e m to hate good
ground for Ilieir feara. Although
tha appliialinit of the American
law a. It cannot be denied, haa had
some beneficial effecta. pariicularlw
in I tie tnstter or health and rduca
mil, lha only biialiieam ono uuon Ihe
ixian.j ia intimately connected with
Iha tnnmifai-ture anil Kale of rum.
Tha bay runt luduetry liaa been hit
runt, nut tna most never slum
nine from the om of patronage of
ciry aea voyagera who ue to drop
In at I'ltMrloiin Anialle haitmr wilh
Kreat frequency.
It wa tlila harbor, by Ihe way.
Ihal flral attracted the affectionate
gin nee of t'lulo Ham. (irrmany.
among other.' waa inuMng eye at
ha fair Virgin. Imxliig in mind the
l-alherlund'a need for w coaling ta-
llott In that neighborhood. I'ncle
Kant paid leniiiMrk ISS.onn.OVV to
part with these fair daughter--and
the harbor la about all the gon we
get front Die bargain. Of cnurae.
that's aonieihiiig, and It Is aonii'thlng
lo have effectively blocked the de-
aigna of Germany and other Inter
lopers eager to eatabllslt a foothold
In the West Indies. Hut now that
our navy I to be so cniiHiderahly re
duced, there will bo lesa need than
aver for for th naval station, with
Ita small floating dock, repair shops,
etc
n old days Ihe ships of all na
tions found Charlotte Amalin
pleasant port of call, but now Ihey
go to the neighboring Hiillnh. Dutch
and French porta, which are wet and
hospitable. Thus the Virgin islands
are In a way lo become an extra
burden since they have ceased td
be even moderately self-supporting
and we will pay out a few mora
millions for the privilege or being
virtuous, or of seeming tQ.be so.
William !. SI, Ado la lng lo
liia in t aliforma, wIimIi baa netee
bad a pren.tcnl. - ietstt I'alti
t.b.br.
'ree Anteiha I irat ' la the Atn
can aloiiaii. ' I'o Amaru i lri" i
lite t uiiipean, ktioMill Juiirnal
Hint to aialeatortir Tha hatchet
will not remain burled, ho. etrr. un-
nvr a double ri,- lUriford I'.nly
Tim,
Moat people favor a betnu If th
lawmaker will remote the "ua
front lavpayins rml of ll A'he
iilo Tnur,
Cetirge WahihUion waa Aral in
War, .c,.e ami the hearts of III
country men, hut he'd bai a hard
lima being Href til Iha lino at (be
tfrlci i.-ryini'uee Herald.
King ticorge tud hia near aon
In-law a Knik'ht of Hie liarter. That
w.ia lnliinaiii.il enough that Iha
,iim rea' husband i rpciicj .i sup
porter. Tulsa. Tilbuiie,
A popular rung writer aaya It li
a tuysieiy In him Inov he doea It.
Hul wa cannot accept Unit aa an
explanation. Ignorance of th law
Is) Hit xrilec. ri. I'.l U I liolmcr-I'reen.
THR
n. ptnj f. 8 aii rv
SANATORIUM
Lincoln, Neb.
Tfiii Institution Is the only one
In the central west with separate
buildings situated in their own
grounds, yet entirely distinct, und
rendering- it possible to classify
rases. The one. building being lit
ted for and devoted to the treat
ment of noncontagious and nonmcn
tal diseases, no others being admit
ted; the other Rest Cottage being
designed for and devoted to the
exclusive treatment of select mental
cases requiring for a time watchful
rare and special nursing.
bio way up to Everest could be seen
Icarly. " Tracks or bares, foxes and
wolves were found in the snow at
21.000 feet. The hairy, barefooted
wild man of legend proved to be "a
large, loping gray wolf." It was de
termined that the alpinists selected
to make the ascent of Everest must
be on the ground early in the sum
mer, before the time of monsoon
rains and gales. George Leldgh
Mallory, the most expert of the
mountain climbers, is not sanflulne
of success. The 3.000 feet above
6.000 may be an ordeal beyond hu
man vitality.
When In Omaha
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1
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