Bees I: oiii e Ma line TV jf ' "4 "4 The Most Imposing Motion Picture Serial and HP (I Tirbrirlaa Story Ever Created. :::::: Wisdom of Certain Amount of Watchfulness Against Cancer Without Useless Alarm, Which So Often Seems to Bring on Dread Disease Prompt Treatment is Main Thinsj. :::::: Read It Here See It at the Movie gazkiePag-e - . . f i It? EARLE WILLIAMS mm Tommy Barolay ANITA STEWART M "Tha Oesg WrttUn by Gouverneur Morris COa af ta sCost Hotabl rig. res la American Xdteratorr ) Dramatised Into ft. Photo-Play by uwmi.va vr. oossajls., ' Author of " ' Thm "rutla of "raoline" ""fa BXPlolla Of Klals," ; ..(Copyright, by pttr Company.) ' Copyright, MM, by The HUr Co.. All Kor in Rights Reserved. ' BTNOPSia OP FREVTOCB CHAPTER. After th tragic death of John Aines bury, hi prostrated wife, one of Ainer . toe's greatest benutlea, die. At her death Prof. StllUter, an agent of the in terests, kidnap the. beautiful X-ycar-old baby girl and bring her io In a para dise where aha eeea no man, but thin ha la taught by angel, who Instruct her lor ner miMon to reform the world. At ' the a;e of U he 1 suddenly thrust Into fh world, wher. agents of the Interests .are ready to find her. By an accident the hero gee .her flrt and ' hide with her In the Adirondack. SECONTJ r8T A LLMKNT. "Mentally, they were polea apart. Tommy, though ha loved to apend money, was given to asking foollah questions .bout th ways and prerogative of cap ita. He couldn't understand ' U'hr tha majority of people In thl world have to he poor and dirty and unhappy. Why -the real producer ahould have such a small share In what he produce. He dll not go tnto-theee. questions very deeply, but Just .enough to be something of a socialist at heart and to feel a certain contempt for people to whom tha col lecting of money wan the moat Important tiling in the world. Perhaps he only took up eaoialtstlo Ideea in order to amum himself ' at tho expense ot those who maintain opposite theories, for he didn't so for anything, except game, very seriously or very fhorouf hly. He did feel very strongly, however. vthat In' a world containing so many able mind It vn a shs-me that so much poverty-and misery should be allowed, to exist Tou couldh'tVUve k H hmiso that had a dirty attic "and. a filthy " cellar and tuberrtilow rats behind tho wainscoting;" ho- ono said to- Ttarclay.. -, "How l)n can Muae I sj.j(i jiniute. 'tout In- tha city, if wantedttf cUan irup. teijJwouldn't I'Whi), wouidjfty - ;,; r .,. f .Why,' .'he . vcr people who. make it dirty. Understand, Tommy, that in this sijntry any roan who Is Willing to" work, olv , noti alx" yr. eight hour a day but as hard e,he rarf. and will live on, leas than Hereame, ran be clean and rich. It'a a pihall price to pay. Borne pay It. I paid it.' Other would like to pay it.- but aUU, nt3ir won't letjhem. It ien't the rich w;rio keep the poor down. It'a the poor wiio band together to keep each other down and to pull the rich dowii on top of them. If they can." ' Rut Tommy wu not altogether con vjneed, and he loved to argue. When lie '-got arguing h got carried away and often a(9 things which he didn't mean, iiut which troubled Mr. Barclay deeply. V'V r. B art lay was supposed to be the coolest, calculator of. poaalbllitles t in America A a matter of fact, he 'wai s. man who owned hla an-eatet .success to Impulse.. But la the1 case of Tommy Bar clay, whom he had adopted, not - after careful deliberation and caclulatlon, but .upon Impulse, It looked ax If he was go ing to be disappointed. V: JTor a long time Barclay kept on hopliu; ayainst hope, and attributed Tommy's f&Hureg s,nd wrong-headed principles to hia youh snd high spirits. Then on day tbere ; ;aJPered an interview wt)tch Tornmy'nad pi ten to a reporter, between tha chuckers of a polo game, and Barclay threw up hi hands. . ....Tiklmr with- the-wild care.lej.ne of youth. Tommy had given it a hi opinion tht in-' the gnaat coal mine strike In , western Pennsylvania, then at Its height, tjie miner were really fighting for their existence, and that the pwnera were op .. pressing them. To Barclay such opinions uttered by ifm adopted son . amounted to . treason. And. " he had the-Impulse to abandon all those hope which he had entertained for 'the "boy' future; and he had abandoned thni. . . . . First he ent for hi nephew. Carlton Pitch. To thla one he made no elaborate explanation of hte changed attitude. He aid, "Carlton, I want to see you married and settled down. You are said to be in live with Mary Flackston-!." A light seemed to glitter in Fitch' ; eye. "I'm afraid her father doeen't like me, , uncle," he said, "and there is someone - w hom I think she likes more." "Tommy?" . Fitch nodded, .and Barclay smiled ' grimly. "I will take care of Blackwtpne and ; Tommy," he said, "you take care of the girl." Then he sent for Tummy. "Tommy." he ald, "I'm very fond of you and you have been a bitter disappointment to . me." "I know it." said Tommy. "I can't help It. I'm made that way, but I'm aw fully sorry." "The bulk of my property." arid Bar clay "will have to go to some one with mora respect for property." "Ya sir, I see that." i "But you will always have plenty." "Thank jou, air." "That's because I'm fond of you, and because It is only just." "Kvea if you are reappointed In me." said Tommy, "please don't stop liking ma." There was something very wistful and manly about the bo", and Barclay wan more deeply moved than be cared to ad mit. - "I shall always be fond of you, , Tommy." he said. .... Ten minutes later the great man wrote y'f5,wtrtu'tiaQiia4 enUQi.s on a sheet of nefc-iiper? Shfl sent Oiein by "a special Biessenger to Mary Blackstoo's fsther. you llv In jv tV, ntn-tnthe of it Mil or 'dirt. JnJsejy and, dlsease.rTo wh'lch Barclay Shad-.ttnewored:! 'v "In ;VWiy own M !' : i :: SLiAA.f - 111 9 ? '-' ' vT-'- ft fex. ' f 111 : ! Oneof the Vision Tbinniy. Barclay . Saw in Ilia-Dream , ,.. ' Senator Ttlaokston. a man' with a lrfrge mouth, hook-nosed face and white' side whiskers, frowned heavily after reading; "Barclay's note; frowned heavily, heavily paoed th floor .pf his library, gave. Tent to defiant muttering, and then suddenly collapsed into a deep chair, a If very tired, and read the note again: i Pear Blackstone: ' Don't by any chance allow your daugh ter to throw herself away on my adcptal son. She belongs to the aristocracy of wealth. That aristocracy may one day become a nobility. Mary Is fitted to wear the purple nnd to share the throne of the world's greatest empire. The world in which we live Is pregnant with great events. .And. the. weak will 'go under. Destroy this. Yours In haste. Barclay. Mary Rlackntone eat for a very long time staring Into space.-. She didn't want to give up Tommy. She. didn't want to give, up all those wonderful possibilities that her .fat her, had talked about so sol emnly after exacting from her a solemn Victrola IX, Mahogany iit;r - 'J5!'-'"' "".. I i f ' . The following Omaha and Council Bluffs dealers carry complete lines of Victor Victrolas, and all the late Victor Records as fast as issued. You are cordially invited to inspect the stocks at any of these establishments. Setiieoll PIANO COMPANY 1311-1313 Farnam St. Hear Ihe .Newest Kccordt 8ound-l"ru( Ik-monMratlng Corner 15tn and p . n pi Harney. Omaha, f .WrrW ( I . ' ' .USVl.l.Ill. XI Co. E. Mickel. ckel. Mcr. f that it Ifeld and Celostia. promise" of secrecy. r Couli iV be frue that J tho old order of things, a president cater ing to this vote and that,' a congress oon tinually throwing obstacles In the way of Knterprlse. and efficiency.: was. to change. all of a sudden? Her father said so. The people would begin' to clamor for effi ciency in high places instead or burtoon ery.'.for trained, men instead of dema gogues. They would clamor to be hot flotsam and jetsam in a sea of politics and Incompetence, but integral . parts of such a machine as the Standard Oil ' or the Ft eel trust, with someone at the head of it that would see to the comfort, clean liness and efficiency of every one of those integral parts. Instead of taxes to pay the people would clamor for divi dends to spend, and they would get them. Her father said so. . . "They have ground down the trusts," he said, ."only to find that they have ground themselves down at the same $5(T or oak Omaha. Neb. in Our Newly Ileinodeled Itooins on the Mala Hour, W V Her SETTS i ; - - in ii a of Heaven and all the Wonders time. "Now the pendulum Is swinging the other way. Gradually the trust will re gain what they have lost. What Is the next step? Greater trusts? Ye, but be yond that, staggering belief, a trust of trusts. A trust In whose hands, will be all the trusts of business of a whole con tinent, and whose stockholders shall be the Inhabitants of that continent.' Pov erty end degradation will cease to exist. The head ot that trust may be called chairman, a president, dlutator, perhaps he will be called king. And already the powers who believe In this coming change have such a man In their eye. He will not bo tho first king; he Is very young, but he will be the second. After him, who? Why, a son of his body, trained from birth to fill that great position. And you, my dear, If you wished, might be that son's mother, and wear a dia dem." (To Bo Coninued Tomorrow.) fs easv steps with. Victro Victrolas Sold by A. EOSPE C0.9 1513-15 Douglas Street, Omaha, and 407 West Broadway, - Council Bluffs, la Talking Machine Department in tho Pompeian Room lly lU. rilAIU.KS H. IWUKHI RST. ICvinl ehl'h we antlclnale are quite likely to o ur. There I good philosophy Ii- that Our nntl'-Hsilon of Twrn tend to prepare the way for their coming. This I especially the cas- when what we. anticipate la sotne tMnc we dread to have hMlen. Our il r a d operate to precipitate It hap pening. IS .lnh' words hint at that when he aaya: The thing which 1 greatly feared la come upon me, and thnt which 1 was afrnll of I come to mo." He inny pot have rnnuet ted the fear and the hnppen Ing, and yet ho may have. It Is certainly r -2 reasonable that he Mould have. The above I etiyg td by the reeding of Dr. William Seaman Rslnhridge'i work on cancel. The volume Is the re sult of mat y year of Investigation, and I., the most thorough of anything yet produced mi that subject. A layman might not iem to have any right to apesk upon a matter that lie ' definitely within the sphere of the phynl,""' snd tho surgeon; but the fa?t is that Dr. Bain bridge has written his hook for tha non Advice to Lovelorn " Nplendlit Ma." Ienr Mir Kslifnx: A srlendld mull asked me to marry him, but I don't know If 1 love him enouah. He. can give mo i-vervtliltig I wlh for, and l.e loves me. dearly anil would give me a i-cautirui homo. 1 have known him from childhood, but he could not apeak to me of mar Mage till now on account of having to take cure of his mother. A few year sbo would have been glad of the chance; but now a married man has come Into mv lire. 114 desn t live wun his wife, and I trm't know whether ho loves me; but I love him. and I am wait ing for him to nsk me to marry him when he gets a divorce. This man hs nothlnrr-but 1 love him. Fleae ad vlne me. The man who asked me is 39 year old; I am 13 years old: and the married man I 2D year old, and I have heard that he said that. If he were free to marrv, bo would not marry me, as he only thought of me as a friend. PERPLEXED. Don't spoil your own life by waiting; and lontlng ' for some miracle to do everything for you at one stroke. Don't do a fine man tho Injustice of marrying him merely to "get settled" In lire. Can't you dismiss the foolish Infatuation from your mind and appreciate the man you speak of so highly? Twelve Dollars a Week. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am twenty-four and have been keeping company with a young man a few months my senior for four years. Now, we would like to get married, but want to ask your advloe. This young man 1 a letter carrier but I not on steady, and earn on an average of 12 a week. I am willing to do work which would pay $4 a week. We have saved VV between u. Now, Miss Fairfax, do you think we could get along on this?" T. D. Has your fiance any chance of pro motion? If he ha and Is sober and In dubious and you are sure of your ability to leam tlie th The Fox Trot. Castle Pol ka, and all the other new dances and the Victrola plays as long as any one wants to dance. There are Victors and Victrolas in great variety of styles from $10 to $250 at all Victor dealers. Victor Talking Machine Co. Csunden, N. J. flre professional a well as for the profr-1 lonal for there arc certain things that the former should know In order that the profeel nal may ha opportunity to render his best eri In the m.itter. While no attempt Is made by the author to minimise the vlrlouine of the dis ease, or t: dlsgi.lee the fact of Its In crease, yet there are itointe made by him that tend to loseen the dread with which It I retarded, for he confidently In struct the reader that great as t the peril which ft Involves. If neglected on the appearance cf the first symptoms. It ran, except undr certain conditions, be successfully dealt with If promptly re ported to the surgeon end he be allowed to remove the offending growth before It has had time to Invade the system. The puMtc should know this, and the author has rendered benitlcen,t , aervlco In putting the rase so dearly and strongly. By diminishing fear of the disease he eliminates one of Its procuring reuses, for. a already remarked, are liable to b overtaken by that whlih we fear will overtake us. He contradict 'n lather prevalent Idea that ranoer'U tc n denrl" may be Inherited, and thus brings comfort of mind to such a hv supposed thst they were themselves liable to the Inf Motion because descended front some near or remote enceetor thst had suffered or died from It. It Is u.e result -tt hi wide and pro longed study of the field to conclude that neither medical ner mental treat ment Is dependable a a curative. Ills only reliance Is upon the knife, th use of whtol. nd not necessarily be a r Br Beatrica Fairfax t earn 14 In addition t hi salary, I think you may risk marrying. But you imiat manage carefully and frugally. And try to keep your nest egg intact A Ulrl's ttenatatten. Dear Miss Fslrfsx: I am IS and have been keeping company with a young girl I love very murh. A very dear friend of mine who works with me and Is married saw me go out with her and today he took me aa'.dn and advised me not to associate with her, as he knew her from her dm mt 1'fe. and would not like to ee m get into any kind of a mix-up with her, a he think too murh of me. Now, I love the girl very much and would not Ilk to give her up. a It would break my heart, but my friend tells me It Is all for th best. L. J. B. Give the girl a chance. I think poorly of a man who tells of a past experience of his own to prove a girl's lack ot character. You are far too young to think of love and marriage, but, perhaps, your loyal respectful friendship will provs Just what she needs to help her. Do ot Be Narrow, Dear Miss Fairfax: While on my vaca tion last summer I met a young lady whom I learned to love. Mnoe then we nave ncen corresponding, and I have been golnir to se her about ono a month. Tha last time I went to see her, instead of meeting me, she went out with another young man I did not say anything to her about It, but felt that she had not done right Would you advise me to write her any more, and if so, what to say. However. I do not think I wouki like to keep company with such a girl, but feel as though I ought to write. 11.".. K. C. I: you begin now to object because a girl you like happen to go out with an other man, what kind of a tyrant do you think you will be after marriage? You have no claim on the girl. Be broad minded. e music of J - Mr. and Mr. Veraoa Caatla daacing tha Fn Trot L. am'. V K IMA Vfv ll Vxr j V4 In ioua matter If resort te it Is not oelayed. ami nitii this understanding that once tho affected tissues are finroughly re moved there la no danger ef a recurrencj. The one thing for both layman and surgeon to remember I that canter I a disease that will easily get the upper hand If allowed to go Its own way. A ce of that kind once cam under my own obseratlnn. A gentleman friend of mine discovered on his side a lump of rarolty noticeable dimensions. He thought 111 tie of It. but after a time, a it gave alight signs of enlargement, he called to It the attention of a surgeon, one of the moat, ditlng ilhed In eastern Masachuetta The surgeon examined It. and gava my friend the consolatory In formation that it wu nithlng that need give him snxlety, tad that the heat thing to do was to think nothing about it. It has always see mod to me that a suit might have been entered tir mal practice. Anyhow the lump continued to grow, and the patient, shrinking from notify ing his friends of whet was going on. conscientiously kept his condition to himself. The result wa that tne next time he offered himself to a- surgeon's examination he was immediately ordered to the hoavltal to be prepared for th operation table. Thanks to a good con atltutton and the genius of a surgeon that did not come from eastern Massa chusetts, he survived the treatemenl, which was an awfully severe one and. which might have- been avoided If the patient had not been so reticent, and if the first surgeon had had either the dis cernment or the frankness to state things as they were. I have never studied medicine and. of course, never sued for admission within the sacred precincts of the Medical so ciety, but cases of the kind just Mated are self-explanatory even to the non-pro fessional mind, and It Is very much to be desired that laymen, saying nothing about physicians and surgeons, should, gain from Dr. Bainbrldge's masterly work aa much as possible of Its "practical con tents. Cancer Is a mysterious and terrible scourgs, and is becoming incresstngly de structive In Its ravageav Rich and poor or Its victims. It thrives In the open, country and in the congested tenement house districts, and Is no respecter of persons. A alight invariable Irritation on the outer or Inner surfaoa of th body la a sufficient cause for tha development of tha "neoplasm." Without there being any advantage 'in becoming nervous Snd foreboding In re gard to th matter, but. on tha contrary, a decided disadvantage, yet enough Is known regarding: tha disease, even a 1st trua of tuberculosis, to render wlsa a cer tain amount of rational watchfulness over on' self. Natura hold out danger sig nals, if a need not hunt for them, but must respect than) on their appearance. Tuberculosis ha been widely exploited. Not so eanoer. One object of tha book Is to bring tha whole matter closer to tha tclentltla re gard of tha medical fraternity and closer to tha unfluniad Interest and attention of non-professionals. Tha author, there fore, urge emphatically a campaign of education, to be maintained first among those who are scientifically competent to appreciate tha biological details of tha subject, and then among those whose training permits of their going no farther than to accept and practloa upon such practical aspects of the problem as ran be utilised to Individual security and re covery. mew tine .-:,., i far . m. v. c