jMany Children Unfitted for College Education "Parents Should Take Into Account Temperament and Ambition of Boys and Girls Before Spending Time and w i . vrr a. wir.i-. im r i i .... Club Life in Flamingo Land Queer Birds, Whose Tongues the Roman Epicures Greatly Prized The Disagreeable Third Party C . T . t - """" S By DOROTHY MX. . In. certain family of limited means there ire .a hoy and a girl who have just .graduated from high school. There. Is Money enough to give one or the other of hese young peo ple college edu , cation, and the lnrents arc . anx iously asking which one shall it he. Shall John go to Harvard and Mary tsy at home and wash dishes? Or shan Mary go to . Vaesar and John go to work? Of courtc. It is only within the last few yearn that such, a problem could have vexed any family council. If there was money enough only to send one clilld to college, there would have been no argu ing on the subject. The boy would have gotten It. lint the world has come to see now. that a woman has quite1 as much need of an education as a man has, and that a daughter ts even quite as likely to have a career as a son ts. Therefore, the question of a-x must be eliminated In deriding the matter. It aeetns to ma that the answer to this conundrum of w hether the boy or the girl sha.ll be given the college education Is very simple. it ts to give the one who has the most definite ambition the edu cation that will help him or her to best realise that ambition. Also the child's temperament must be taken Into consideration. There are Plenty of Children who have a head full of good, hard, horse sense, but who lack what we call book sense. They are hope lessly u'nllterary, and you can no more -flake scholars out of them than you can make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. One of the mobt pathetic things on earth Is the sight we continually obHcrve of parents tit meager circumstances slav ing themselves to death, and sacrificing every comfort. In-order to send boys and girls through college who are constitu tionally Incapable of acquiring any edu cation above the three R's. AU that -these boys . and girls ever bring home with them from college are a college yell.' a soririty pin, swelled heads, and the habit of loafing. A tragic price has been ' paid for eh Junk; and it's a pity tlsat parental affection prevents a man and woman from silting down and coldly slilnguvLhe metal, ability of their children "be fern they make their heroic offcrlnev.to tbe fetlcb 6f"atollege educa tion. ifiiM. .-i. , i! '- 4 There's i John,' brtgh( ' a; a new dollar, quick as" they-, make then?, capable and alert, the tlrst tp catch on' te every new thing, but Who heiver 'read a book' if be can help It. and whose only Interest even in the dslly papers Is In the eomlc vl' tures. Whnt Is the use in sending him off to college'.' He's the kind of a boy that will get his education In the great school of life. Ho'l get his knowledge of mathematics from account books and ledgers. He'll get his philosophy from experience. In the end he'll know more than any college professor, but he'll get It through the sweat and toil of living, not from printed pages. It Is my. firm belief that unless a boy is going to be a professional man It is a handicap, and not a help to him. to send him to college. The four or five yeae that come just after a boy has left high school are the formative ones of Ms life, and they should be put In on learning the rudiment of . whatever business or trade he ts going to follow. For proof of this, observe that 90 per cent of the successful merchants and business men you know went to work from the high school and had no college education. As for girls, why should her parents sacrifice themselves to send Fluffy llttf fles to college? One look at her peaches and cream complexion, and the way she rolls her eyea at men, shows that nature destined her to write Ma before her name Instesd of M. A. after It. Of course a college education won't her, nor hinder her from making Just as good a wife and mother as she would be without tt. but nobody can deny that it will lessen her chances of matrimony. For men have not yet gotten to be al truistic enough to desire wives that know more than they do. Besides which a college -course keeps a girl Immured within college walls during the very time when the dew Is on the rosebud, and she Is most attractive to the opposite sex. On the other hand, if a boy Is a scholar by nature and Instinct, If from his child hood be has . evinced a strong bent In the direction of any of the professions, hia parents should move heaven and earth to give him the verv nest possible education that they can. There are men who are scientists In their very cradle; men who play at doctoring and surgery when they are nothing but kiddies; men who are painters, authors, actors from their youth up. These have a well de fined ambition and their parents should help them realise It tf they can. And precisely the same may be said of gtrls. The studious and ambitious girl whose thoughts arc centered on a career In stead of beaux, and who Is more inter ested In Browning than' she is In the lat est cut of-skirt, baa a right to a college education If her . parents , can possibly manage it. If. there is 'a choice between sending a. bookworm girl and a base bail boy to college, give the girl the preference, be cause she will make the most out of her opportunities. That's the whole question In a nutshclU not .what the college can give, us, but what wo can take from It, and as a matter of fact, we all do get Just what education we can assimilate. I, ,v - 1 t - . ' x- Is , , r::- . ' v im$ I mil f. xn vk lv- ?jM i I I ( , 1 aj -f'.'-'N-. . -rfhm i I i j rTMvn tt I Women's Ingenuity in Devising Ways to Be That Kind of a Third Part is Infinite !) KM. A WHKKI-KR WII,lt)X. j i'oiix i ight. Msr t'ompstiv. Tl.e woman ho Is the faithful and tr e,t rriend Is woithy of respect an.1 prslse. I but the wontan who tan be the third 'party Is wot thy of stlil greater n Imlra jllon, since the sttccest'id third iiaitv must I be i1si the good , friend. t The most sublime devotion of frlend I hhip brings Its own i lewant, but the 'lairlflce and for . Iicaiance 01 the ; riUH'pmtfiil i third :ivv V 7jl ? Flamingoes as they appear in their haunt exhibit in th Museum of Natural History, s in the Bahamas. This group taken from an . Read it Here See it at the Movies. By special arrangements for thin paper a photo-drama corresponding to the in Htallments of "Runaway June" may now he seen at the leading moving picture theaters. By arrangement with the Mu tual Film Corporation it ia not only pos sible to read "Runaway June" each week, but also afterward to see movinj pictures illustrating our ntory. Copyright, Ul'j, by Serial Publication Corporation. sTUOIU June,' the bride " of Ned Warner, Im pulsively leaves her husband on their honeymoon because she begins to realise that she must be dependent on htm tor money. Bhe desires to be independent. June is pursued by Gilbert Ulye, a wealthy married man. f he escapfS from bis clutches with difficulty. Ned searches distractedly for June, and, learning of Wlye's designs, vows vengeance on him. After many adventures June Is rescued irom river pirates by Durban, an artist. TWELFTH EPISODE. The Spirit of the Marsh. CHAPTER I. tContlnued.) A third boat, a trim lithe little cutter. From It scrambled the white muatached Orin Cunningham. Through his powerful hlno'culars Ned Warner say Cunningham, too.' give way to a fit of fury, and Ned tinally gritted his teeth and clinched his firsts as he say these scoundrelly pur suers of bis lovely bride race up the dock. They hailed a pausing taxi and whirled up the street. A fourth boat. A .It tie French chauf feur with a tiny mustache and a' stiff woman with high cheek bones, whe bent ,md unbent painfully as she was pulled to the dock. "Hey!" The overcoat and cap ut last had moved, rapidly, violently. They pounced between Henri and Marie. "You are pinched!" "finched, montitur? ImpoJiible!" pro test U Henri In astonishment. "For what is (t that we are pinched? Behold the boat! We have returned It " Marie started to run away. "llouray!" On his tide llemi jetked an1. laughing cailv, sprinted a tor Marl?. Up on the street. In the'shcter of a ware It tuse, stood a touring car. As he raa Henri reached In his pocket for a key. Remind them came pounding the over eat and the cap, blowing a shrill watch man's wtilnatle through the s.lt in the collar. .The fugitives fro.n Justices easily outdistanced tLe hay rubler .boots, gained the csr. With a bow whl-h had In it all the grace and gallantry which could have been diap.ayrd had he used much more time Henri assisted Marie to her eat. He sprang in beside her. He inserted his key. He pressed the starting button, silence! Pah! The motor was cold' "You're under arrest!" And an iron-like mid le finger thumped Henri on the shoulder. "Arrefct. il. Officer?" cried llcmt "im possible!" And he gave another vigorous i will of Ms crank. "Look, the host we have" .. "Do'Vo know officer Dowd.'" asked AUn. "Dowd?" repeated the solemn i elke man, shaking his head. "Do you know Officer O'Toole? ' And she beamed high up Into the solemn po liceman's face. O'Toole? O'Toole? East Hide?" "Listen, M. Officer, eh? broke in Henri. Marie had furtively kicked him on the shins. "W toolt the boat, yes., but you will comprehend, monsieur" "Get It? He says he took the boat!" This was from the cap and the overcoat. "Take 'era along!" rumbled the cap and overcoat. "I guess I'll have to take you," the of ficer said regretfully. "Will you walk or will you ride? It'g only up a couple of blocks." "Walk!", exclaimed . Henri in astonish ment. "Never!" He rushed to the front of his car and cranked it. Off they went to the police station. HAPTER II. A furtive-eyed batler, with a young face cn the withered and stooped body of an old man admitted the runaway bride and her escort into a magnificent studio hung with rare tapestries, embellished with exquisite paintings, fitted with quaint furniture "and objects of art from all over the world. And here June Warner wss In troduced by Artist Durban to his wife,' a bright-eyed woman of great charm. She received June with almost gushing cor diality. "The Spirit of the Marshes," laughed Durban, and tt waa with a professional eye that he this time surveyed the beau tiful girl. "It was an utterly impossible adventure, my dear." He stood before an elaborately carved Florentine table, while the ladies sat In the tnglenook. In the flare of the grateful fire. Hia eyes still glowed with the excitement of the morn ing snd he laughed "First time' I've had a chance to use the revolvers you make me carry when 1 go out for the nan!) sunshine. I was busy sketching, trying to catch that wonderful scarlet of the sun and the mist you know, my dear when suddenly I heard a piercing J scream. It could come but from one direc tionthe hut. lmmrnse! A real adventure! I folded my easel, drew my revolvers and told Jimmy to push through the reeds for life or death. Before we eould reach I the hut there were shrieks upon shrieks In a young girl's voice, then shots, one after another. Wonderful!" He shook By GARRETT P. 8ERVIS8. If you want to look at one of nature's oddest freaks In animal life go to the American Museum of Natural History In Central Park West and ask to be shown the ; way to the "Flamingo Group." There. In a large recess, at the corner of two hallways, Mr. Frank M. Chapman has reproduced In the most realistic fash Ion a scene in the Bahama Islands which Is so strango that you might Imagine that It was a view encountered, some where in his wanderings by Blndbad the Sailor, but not a part of the wide-awake world. It Is a vast city of what, in spite of their outlandish form and attitudes, you recognize as birds, wtiose legs are like stilts, whose necks are like rubber si phons, whrwe beaks are like nothing in the world, and whose bodies flame with s mazing color, a light vermilion, varied With harmonious tints. Away before you, apparently for a mile, the extraor dinary red spectacle stretches, down to the edge of a bay, or lagoon, beyond which runs a long, curved coast, backed behind with nodding palms, and a mass jof tropical vegetation. High in the air x mlle-loug line of flamingoes in flight form a chain of great triangles traced against the sky, after the . geometrical habit of those queer birds. The realism is astonishing. You have to search care- j fnlly before you, can trace the shadowy lines where the modeled foreground, with Its set figures, blends Into the painted background, and produces an Illusion of profound ' perspective, which ought to teach you never to believe your eyes un less their evidence ia corroborated. No doubt a flamingo does not seem to Itself, or to its fellow creatures, to be a freak or a joke. It has a perfectly natural feeling. If tt could sees its enor mous, scoop-shovel beak. Us wire-drawn legs Its' little, chucky, goose-like body, and Its endless twist of a neck. In a looking-glass It would find, nothing funny about them at all. It stands on its nest of dried mud, In shape like the stump of a tree, with the greatest gravity and pa tience, sometimes on one Irs. sometimes on two, and sometimes unrolling its neck and letting its head down four or five feet, to give something to the baby, or to gobble something from the ground, with the top of Its head turned down ward, on account of the curious bend in the big beak, which looks ai if Its back were broken. . By careful observation naturalists are usually able to discern the reasons why nature has given such extraordinary and fantastic forms to some of Its creatures, but they can never drive away the Im pression that it has been. In many cases, a rule-of -thumb worker, trying experi ments often In a very eccentric way, and getting at what she wanted hastily and clumsily. Because the. flamingo was destined to live partly In the water, at least to seek Its food there, It manifestly had to have long wading legs; but those It has ' re ceived look as If they had been Inserted as an afterthought Into the body of an animal at first Intended to be a goose. Having to scoop up Its food, little fishes, worms,- crustacean-, mollmiks, front wa ter and mud, It had to have a shovel teak, but then, what an awkward look ing thing nature made of It. ' And what an undignified attitude It compelled the flamingo to assume. In turning Its head upside down In order to get Its food. But It looked out very carefully for the me chanical details, making the wonderful beak like a sieve, so that the mud and water can run out while the little ani mals are held fast. The flamingo Is said to be Intermediate In organization betwr the Ui"-k and tho stork. Thero are six species, dis tributed in warm countries all over the world. Flamingoes were formerly very common in Florida. They live In large communities, an bree In . marshes and mud-flats, making their nests of mud. In which the eggs are Intd, and where the female bird hatches fhem out by sitting on them. The birds migrate in flocks, and always fly In lines having a triangular shape, or that of a string of triangles. How did the birds get that Ruelidian bent? Of course It has a purp.ise. Perhapa the bends In the line enable those In the rear to keep the leaders more easily In view. Those curving lines of flight arc almost the only graceful tiling about the flamingo, exoept thut Its feathers are at tractive. Considering its manner of feeding It seems surprising that the tongue of the flamingo should have been found In Itomiin days to he the most cxq'ilslte of table delicacies. The tongue Is armed with extraordinary sets of spines and looks like the last thing that any .cook would choose for n tidbit. Yet when Lucullus or some other ancient Roman high-liver wished to give a feast that would be talked about even In luxurious Rome, he never falh-d to furnish his guests with the best selected I'lumlngo tongues. Ll- V I PHity are seemingly without recompense, j Yet their omission is the syure of un limited misery and trouble. But the qualities make the woman friend seem innde uuate to meet the exigencies of the third parly's position. The woman who loves to talk and the woman who loves to listen find each ( ther's st.ch ty enjoyable year after year. Let the talknlive woman's friend npiear upon the scene, however, and we find the usually giiod listener rllstrall In man ner snd bored In expression. Or let the listener Introduce her friend, ann the talkntlve woman becomes straightway dull and silent. The Ingenuity of won.an in devising wuys In which to be . the disagreeable third j.srty Is infinite.. The woman of the si I test naltue and the sweetest disposition whom you-have found unvarying In her amlahlluy will suddenly deve'op the quills of s porcu pine at th Introduction of a friend whom you have long desired her to inMt. You have described - her ns the essence of amiability and she resells herself a mon ument of agresslvenesa or frigidity. Again, the friend who hmi ever been the Incarnation of cheerfulness and good sense and whose quick responsive nature has been your delight, develops nn ob truslve humility wh;t she Is called upon to play the third party. he makes herself conspicuous by her absence from acctiitoincd places, and obliges you to send for her snd in reply to your ques tion says: "Oh, I felt 1 would be in the way. You did not need ine. I would be d trop," i enormia you and your friend Inexpressibly tincomf i tntde. The woman who has always seemed to view the world through rose colored spec tad is nnd whose mitotic of charity has been lirge enough to rover the sin of a multitude, lll become the severest' and most relentless of critics when ' she' sttrmpts to be tin third person. Hhe will chII your attention to flaws in the appesr ance and manners o.' your friends, which, you had never previously observe!, and she will .unearth hid len faults of char-. .ctor or disposition never before notlred by you. '' " ' . Sometimes she does this openly and with no attempt at concealing her critical spirit. . ' 1 Again she will suaar-coat her remarks, leaving the Impression at first that she has complimented -your friend, until a later analysis of hrr words undeceives you. ' ' "What a very pretty smile your friend has!" she will say. "I never ssy a woman wuclt such ugly teeth whose smile was so agreeable." Or: - What a very.flne appearance she makes for such a slovenly person! After all, I think such people get along quite as well and received s much admiration as those who tak;e more pride In bcln heat and orderly." ' Of course, you are never able to think" of your friend again save as slovenly and the possessor of ugly teethtwo points which had previously, escaped your observation. Then there Is the won.an you litve al ways found ready to anticipate your slightest wish and thought whei alone with her. who l.ecomes seriously obtuse in the role of third party. Hhe never thinks to leave yoi ' alone' with the newcomer now and then, who may have sorrows or Joys to confide tit you alone, and you dare not suggest this to her leal she Imagine you mcaa to talk about hrr or that you are shutting her from your confidence. And if you talk to lier'sboH your friend she listens with a distrait, unlrrt,er ested exnresslori. which tella ou t lolner than 'words ftl she would preltr some other topic of conversation. - In this kaleidoscopic life of oustsnt surprising changes the friendship which demands a monopoly Is of practically little use. It Is the friendship -which Will litr I h iwialnnil hItbIii nl Inl.iialnn and which proves Itself elastic enough to cover the position of third psrtjr wlthput becoming threadbare, which we need. : Last Night ; ' I i i i p .I. J !ly ANX LIHLK. ; . Last night, far from tntJ throbbing 'ton'ti; I watched the darkness streaming down, A mantle for the tired day; So aU my work I laid away And watched know darkness soothe the light Last night. Last night up In the city bold, ' They dressed the dark in robes of gold. In silver dark I dreamed of you; Did your heart bold a vision, too? Which dwelt in darkness which in light Last sight? Advice to Lovelorn ' SIATsUOa rAJ&TAX i I Harm. Dear Miss Fsirfax: I recently escorted a young lady to a dance, and during the early part of the evening I Invited her to have something to drink. Khe ordered some lemonade, while i ordered beer. After the waiter had served us she no. litely informed me that she did not caie to ait with anvone who would ordir an "Nothing to Eat but Shredded Wheat" and the richest man in the world could not buy anything more nutritious or more easily digested. Happy is the man or woman who has learned through stress of stringent economy the real goodness of hired died Wlheaft It means good digestion, physical and mental vigor the power to do things that are worth while. A daily diet of Shredded Wheat will put the weakling on his feet Try it for ten days. ' Made in America Two Shredded Wheat Biscuit, heated in the oven to restore crisp , nest, served with hot milk or cream, make acamnlata. nouriaKinsr. . r' satisfying meal at a total cost of five or six cents. Also delicious with fruits. TR1SCUIT is the Shredded Wheat Wafer, eaten as a toast with butter or soft cheese, or as a substitute for whit flour bread or crackers. " oara nair ana isugnea ana nis ; you think thU was entirely too personal, wire paled. June trembled and grew faint with the memory of it and her eyes dis tended with a recurrence of her terror. "As we burst through ths tall marsh rushes I saw on the Island this beautiful creature held by a gigantic murderer. A woman with a beautiful silk shawl over her rough clothing was running toward llie nut. Another murderous thief wss lying on the ground. Down the. channel from the ooen water there .came two speed boats. (I'o lie Continued Tomorrow.) as I sm a very moderate drinker and failed to see where she could be of fended If no offense was intended? 1 wish you would decide this for us. SOBRIETY. .Tou did nothing discourteous in order ing a single glsss of beer However. I hope she voiced her objections very gently and quietly since it Is always very bad taate to reprove a friend pub licly. Evidently the girl has splendid principles, hut Is a little over-aealoua about imposing them on others. Neither oae of you has cause for a uaricl. ' 4 " r ' i II Made only by U The Shredded Wheat Company " " --h & lt" M! i I i ' ,' ',! f IM! ; ' i ll Mllll inW.ia.A ill 1 '.if . ... t l' ! ' 1 1 ' I I I ; ' II ' II ) ' I I ' Hi " I i I F ' s-7 - ., - i i ! 1 I t ' I - i 1 "(Till. ...nil" i M M I I 1 1 . 1 i 1 i ( h 1 -I If .f: t ' ' f - ' ; : ?' it TT'lVtlcaiiu iiuHIIH II?' ', M "I . fl . r-aaass tt.t-ea.asaa,..siia.aJfti.1 tti fci ij H i r j Sjf j li i j jj 1 1 n aa I ssswsssa t s in .. . i i i 1 1 f ( 1 1 I tliliaaillluiiiu;: HiUatMiMMM&UW