TIKE: OMAITA, TUKtfDAY, t- - l . . mmmmmm .. . j I 1 U I .. L- 1 1 . T P I II .1 ' m-m , , .The Bees Home Magazine Pae- " . i Eead It Here See It at the Movies. The Augusta, Ga., Girl An African Beau Brummel He Shows His Culture in the Way He Wears His Hair. : : : : Iff: - , f7 , ,i Tf,- 7, Arr-n-v . j r ' xjTTXODucaro EARLE WILLIAMS m Tommy Barclay ANITA STEWART M Th QOdd Written by Gouverneur Morris (On of the Kott Kotabl Tig. nre la iiuiiou Xdterataze) Dramatised Into a Photo-Play by enri.w w. oooDAmu. Author of Th Ferlla of Manila" Th Bzploit of Slain" Vopyrlght im. by the Star CV. All For Mfrn Right Kr served ' After the tragic death of John Ane burr, ht protetratert wife, one of Amer ica's greateat beauti. dies. At her decn. Prof. jtlllltr, n agent of the internet, kidnaps the beautiful S-year-old baby girl and brtnKx her up In a paradise where she sees not man, but think aha la taught by angel, who Instruct her for her mlfrion to reform the world. At the age of M ah la auddenlv thrust Into the 'World, where agenta of the Interests are ready to pretend to find her. The one to feel the loss of the little Aineeburg girl most, after she had been eplrlted awar by the Interests, was Tommy Barclay. Fifteen years later, Tommy goe to the Adlrontlancks. The Interests are respons ible for this trip. By accident he la the tint to meet the I;t:ie Amanbury girl, as i h come forth from her paradise a Celestla, the girl from heaven. , either .Tommy or Celestla recognize each other. Tommy flnda It an easy matter to rescue Celestia from Prof. Sttiliter. and they hide In the mountains, later they are pur aued by Stlllter and escape to an Island, where they spend the night. suddenly In her face and xclalm..1 In a I tone of sharp command, "Sleep, Celeetla," either aha was too atarlled and be wildered to se the crystal at all or for once something was kecking In the pro iFM, for she sirang to her feet with a cry of fear and ran from him, calling upon Tommy by name at the top of her lunge. Bo she ran after Tommy, and fctlllter ran after her, and the two guides and rid man mellagood came out of hiding unil followed after him. And In this order they came to the shore of the island, toward which Tommy, alarmed by Celeetla'a cries, w-aa struggling In a waiter of foam But when he artualy saw Celestla, Tommy's enthusiasm for being of ser vice to her seemed suddenly to cool. He let his feet drop to the bottom and stood with Just his head out of water. standing, ha saw ,tlllter etie Celestla by the wrist and attempt to force her back toward the ramp. He saw her shake herself free with an ettonlshlng show of energy, and it ywas na If her eyes no Ires ihan her hand went outo him In an appeal for help. The veins stood out on T(iram fore head. "Don't let him take me away, Tommy!" she cried. . "You leave her alone!" shouted Tommy. "If you touch her I'll knock your head off." But Milliter by now appreciated Tom my'c predicament and amlled dryly. t "Come and do it," he said. "You know I can't eom and do it now, you dog," said Tommy, furiously, "but you Just wait:" "Can't," said Stllllter. "In a great hurry. Come, Celestla! You'll be better oft with mi. You can see for yourself that the young man has no Intention of risking himself against four of us." A certain king onoe offered his king dom for a horse. If Tommy had possessed a kingdom he would have exchanged It i cieacia. iiua wiui wio vwwii,,, not troubling her mind about celestial affairs. She felt very earthly. 8he felt as any young girl would have felt In ! willingly at that moment for the simplest such novel and romantic circumstances, pair of bathing trunks. And much that had been clear to her Celestla. meanwhile drew herself up, the previous day and of surpassing Im- ! tall, proud and cold; she; looked at portance remcd now dim ami futile, to Tommy, Just once more, and sho looked . j A nr. in is nnmv I km If linn imit nevrr seen him nefnre. Then mat a tow mure utn wi" , riann rt ju- . VArii r,m ... occult influence, and direr- sho turned to fltilllter. "I will go with , cl'"0 to... 1w yor- tion of Prof. SHIUiter might have made a you," she said. norrral person of her. Two P'n h Presented themselves The reason Tommy oould not under- to Tommy. He could have told Celestla aland" Celestla was simple. Bhe could to shut her eyes until he told her to open not explain herself. Phe believed beyond them! then he could hava oome out of the ..uestton that she had always lived in water and fought for her; but he dla- heaven until the day before, when after carded that first plan because he liked a glca rush through space .newfound tho second better. In thU ha would come a glorious iun iiwv . ' . . out of tna whan aha hart mne. .tin herself on earth, watea oy - v - - --- --- and looking into xno ey ' (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) ' ' ( y Kjr GAnUKTT P. tiKHYISft. The good example of the combination of gabardine and taffeta Is expressed In a costume worn one morning recently at Augusta, Ga by a prominent mem ber of a party returning from San Fran- water Tom Barclay. : " . Do ro ver Theaf -you-know how eal the most proposteroue .clream can teem, at the time, and for awWle after you woke. Suppose you d'eamed that 'you were perfectly happy? Tou could not afterward describe Just what that had felt like, any more than you can describe the magical ir..... j dream, nor the spoiling scenery which so often accompanies n1""?- . . Almost the whole of been pa In dlnL, fl sleeping, she had dream.4 . dreamed. But her a reams had not been of the hap-hasard kind that oonu ,t the rest of us. She had dreamed what she directed to dream. Bh. had to .hat's master pathologist and n dreamed that tt would be beat tor her to dream. Himself unn far away, she had dreamed a. There had been people to walton her. ind see to all her physical needs, but for yTTr, she thM dally- In the face and never saw them, instead she saw and dwelt on'"f.e anri.!s. and subllmlUe. ""t massing all descriptions and In a state of tbsolute uninterrupted bllse. Kducated to her flturer tips In the lan guages of U.ls world, she had never had . m.er. In dreams she had been taught, without know-in that she waa .11 that a great and ecrupuloua dreamer had thought best for her to And as she leaned to the work of cook ing, her lovely face, red with the heat .f the fire, that very dreamer was watching her. from a neighboring thicket, with almost as much admiration . h felt for himself. And why not? He felt what she was. what she wii going to be. was all the work of his own mind. He even felt responsible, but with less Justice, for her beauty. At leaat be bad selected her for his purpose from thousands and thousands of children; l.artly because she was physically per fect, partly because hr parents liad been physically perfect. And partly becauae he had felt rather than known that her imby skull contained a brain upon which he could play with all bis power and Imagination. la a stone pure? It la neither pure nor Impure. But a normal stone Is cold. 8o .vaa Prof. Stllliter. Ceieetla's beaut affected not hi heart and circulation, but his mind. Power and success alone touched his heart at this time. But he wondered why, considering that she had packed almost W whole life under hia Influence, she had, at what she had sup posed was her first sight of him. showed that she disliked and distrusted him. In fifteen years he had taught her much, and prepared her for much, but then. her dream life ended for the time being. he had shown himself to her, and she had fled from him with a stranger, as if for her Ufa. "Well, my beauty," be thought, "if you must hate me, you must. But you will do as I wish without knowing It vo't wfll apeak to men aa I dictate, and looking at men through your glorious eyes. I eh all compel them to believe what you say and to do aa you com mand. Whole multitudes) will believe and obey." He arose from his hiding pla-.e and stepped cautiously toward her. It Ms Intention to hypnotise her aad get her awar from that place Quickly and quietly, so that Tommy should uot have in opportunity to make further trouble. It needed aa more now than a gtlmpee of that sphere of rotk crystal which Prof. Dtllltter carried always with him to reduce Celeetla te that oundlUon of mind In which slie spoko and acted upon . impulse that did aot rise within hr- The skirt Is very full and the yoke tt not really a yoke at all, but a wide band of taffeta gathered In one piece with the cloth section. The Joining seams down the ttldes show a binding of silk with tassel decoration set below the hip line. The coat is so shaped that it conceals the skirt yoke at the back, but In front It assumes the form of an Eton, belted by a girdle of taffeta, which appears to be fastened to the Jacket by two orna mental button Taffeta Is used to face the cellar and re vers, and the tassel ap plication of the skirt Is repeated on the hack of the coat and also en the under arm, where the curved sesm Is tsrml natad. How powerfully the old (lieek ailie, as rendered li Pope, "the proper study of mankind Is man," appeals to one who look at tfce acoimiHinyliig phot.vgmph of aii Ariruit warrior, dwelling In the valley of the Kafue river. In the center of the southern half of the great "dark rrmllnetit, and on the line of the pro posed Cape to Cairo rallrond, near the Itth degree of south latitude. He Is one of our contemporaries on the earth. Krlm hla point of new he ha Jimt aa good a claim to be consid ered "up to dute" aa we have. While sharing with us the general oliarartsr latlca of a human being, ha lias a genuine, belief In the superiority of his own kind of culture, or civilisation, which we cell savagery. The fact that the white man has many Invention which putsle him snd mako htm afraid does not convince htm that he ought to abandon the ways snd Idess f his fathers and live like the pale-fai-ed wearers of superfluous clothe and beemra of flre-apoutlna weapon. He docs not admire them. They look an ridiculous to him with their trouser and hat as he dees to them with his powerful barn logs and horn-shaped top knrt, ronaiatlng of plaited hair and bark strings stiffened with clay, polished with greae and pointed with an antelope's horn eoraped down to a Up of almost needle snarpneaa. He knows that his dress and hat manners, his person and his deeds, are pleasing to the bailee of hi tribe. And what more oould he wish? The fact Is that as we look over this world v are al tog-ether too self-cantered In our thoughts about It. We have got a deep aoated prejudloe In favor of our own waya and ideas. Becauae we can outwit and overcome the less olvlllied or savage races, and because they have manners and oustome repugnant to us, we are too apt to think that they have no right to he either what they are or where they are. We exaggerate all their bad Qualities and Ignore their good ones. There are too few of nt who eee the other sld of the medal. How many readers of then lines, looking at the pic ture of this African man. In the midst of his native fields and woods, stops to think, with sstonlshmont and rhame, that for unnumbered centuries the self- ' yTSV yVfTT y.nw'wawweww: w-.,Vywyr' yry' ---- i m , - ? v, . ; 5 v V AVjA.4V ' , t .v... .. , . IS.'. 4 -" v ' - - j -'..-''. ' iX'V S v. '-"-t f ';'' High shoes of the. Russian order are I worn with this cowtume. They are of dark blue kid, exquisitely fine In quality, the color matching the ribbons of the sand-hued hat. Sand color, by the way, la the color of the suit, the silk being a tone or two lighter than the cloth. The gloves are of a pale eaxe, Indicating a compromise between the pure White walk ing glove and the putty color which reiis haa advanced for consideration this spring, but which American women have not taken up with any enthusiasm. I called superior races have made Africa Dreams that Never Reach Port : Thry Are Ettbrr Qhoata or, TVotm Still, Jailer. By BEATRICE! FAIKFAA. "And the way to end dreams Is to break them stand, walk, go-" Are you drifting Idly in the stream of life? Are you a dreamer Do you sit and fancy what would be fine In life- provided It could be, or do you set about bringing into your life the things that ahal make It splendid. Dreams are splendid, glowing, glorious, wonderful things provided they are In centives to action. Dreams are poor Utile ghosts provided they are only fan rles, and dreams are cruel Jailers If they are permitted to weave tbemselvea over a life and so prevent the spirit that should be up and doing from forcing It self out Into action and expression. One sf the saddest effects of dreamt lies outside the three ordinary classifica tions Into which dreams and tbe dreamer fall. It la the tendency of dreaming to work itself out in drifting. Drifting It generally an unconaclout move steadily ahead toward some worth while goal, come quickly enough If one tits up dreaming of what one will do to morrowalways "tomorrow," the man ana" of laiy Oriental and southern tem peraments. And out of these lacks grow a definite over-supply of the "lalsset falre" spirit that thing that makes peo ple imagine that things will take care of themselves. Nature, in it abhorrence of a varum, J supplies another quality to take the place of energy. It Is called by some the qual ity of being easy-going and amiable; other name it contentment, and atlll others say It la a belief In fate, or faith In providence. Nonsense I Lack of energy tt none of these euphonious things! Lack of energy Is sheer, stupid lazi ness. And lattness may manifest Itself In a mental Inertia that lets thing talc care of themselves, or it may be an aotual physical Inability to turn Itself to honest toiL But lack of energy work thing. Make yourself very sure of that. Aot Do. Don't be carried anywhere by the stream of Ufa. But ret out Into the current of action and dlreot your bark. Tou wU find teat In tbe mere Joy of being a factor In deeds. And If the time ever come when you can afford to drift you wont want to. There la no luxury In laaineaa. The on luxury In life w the active pleasure of making your dreamt com true I proceaa. All ""unconscious processes" I itself out to the same end all through all processes which are not directed and Hf. It presuppose, It postulate defeat guided by the wind are fraught with danger. Drifting generally gees with the eur. rent of life In general. It fits itself Into event and circumstances, be they good or III. It calls for no expression of will It lets the tide of Ufa carry you where it happens to be going. The current of events will not ttop and direct lUslf out of its path tor an In dividual. It eddlca along or whirls for ward or sluggishly prooeed where the power, and generally proceeds In the op-; great scheme of things oarrle It And poeite direction from that which will power would direct the Individual to go. Now, whenever will power I Ignored, the danger signal of a life are set i The way to build strength of character. the way to work toward succeas Is to develop will for will 1 needed to over come obstucle. will la needed te fight danger and to meet privation, will Is re quired to endure all the hardships that rear themselves on the path to success. What call doe te drifter ever make on hla will power He la floating around with the tide perhaps the tide Is sluggish and lets him glide Into a backwater where there is hardly any communication be tween the movement of active and am bitious II f and the mere exlsteno of dullness and stupid oontent Perhaps the tide that carries the drifter la a wild and turbulent one tt may take hi in over the rapids of dissipation and wreck him there. It may carry him out into the un chartered sea of wickedness and Im porality and there destroy him. Or the tide may bring him into collision with the bark of some ether life. Then the drifter is all too likely to harm and wreck and destroy the well equipped sailing vessel which haa no fault othvr than the misfortune to get Into his path. Or the drifter may be whirled by the tl'ie against some stout craft that will cripple the drifter and leave him a derelict on the sea of life. Drifting presuppose defeat. It results from dreams gone wrong. In the begin ning w all tav fascia of the big tiling we will make of the event of our live. In tbe beginning we all dream that we will do deeds of hUh emprise. Most of a start well enough. But If we merely dream not do if w permit ourselves to drift defeat I sure to be life' portion for us. Dreams must he coined Into deeds Lck of effort to hold oue e self In the wsy nt arr.bltlon or to stem the tide of lasuiejs; lack of a sense ef direction lu a hunting ground for slaves, and that even yet alave caravan t rave no Us highland. It forest and Its rivers, carrying off Its inhabitants as If they were wild animals, to be turned Into beast of burden? With all It forbidding historical fea tures, Africa la a land of fascinating romance, not lea so new than in the daya of Bruce, of I4vlngston and of Stanley. ' The - vast central plateau, stretching thousands of mile In all directions, with Its picturesque woods, broad grassy plains, tree-shaded rivers, waterfall, rocky hills, winding paths and trails, lakes, mountains, primitive vil lages, strange, beautiful and terrible animals hlpopotaml, tebraa, giraffe, ele phants, buffaloes, ape, gorillas-and Us curious tribes of men, is almost Ilk a separate world. Everything about Africa bear a stamp of originality. The oloud of mystery that rests upon It haa not yt been cleared away. Tbouaanda of square miles of Ita territory have never been visited or seen by a white man. Antiquity ha left singular mark upon tt, footstep of al moat unknown conqueror, ruins of mysterious structure, memorial of an mnt forgotten day of pride and power. Ita riches are a yet unexplored, except v.: i.. , r V:::'.:. ?.iv7 A, t 1 A warrior of Hi e Kafue region, proud of his head-dress. , In the far south, where almost at the first touch of the pick and the spade the wonders of Onlconda have bsen eclipsed by the diamond mines of Klmberlay and the gold mines of the Transvaal, It this savage, who looks so quaint to our eras, ha a comprolier.slve knowledge of the patt history of the continent that has bred htm and hit ancestors, he might regard us with disdain a uneaay, up start Invaders of his older world,' which long ago forgot the fever of civilisation. Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice. Fairfax Btebberaa. Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been keep ing company with a girl of my age for about half a year. I love her dearly and she return my lov. Now, Miss Fair fax. I am dlSMuated with her on amount of her egotism. Bvery time I suggest something h never gives In. Could you tell me how I can make her change with out hurting her feelings? t B. R. I The girl 1 a little selfish and spoiled and stubborn, too, no doubt But per haps you are a bit dictatorial tnd In clined . to fall In eonalderatton of her testes. Why not make a llttlo "fifty fifty" agreement whereby each will take turns at having your ewn way. Talk It over with her and ee If you cannot make her foel that It t fair to be more equal partner, Far Too Teaag. Dear Ulsa Fairfax: I am It and des perately In love with a girl two year my Junior. About eight month ago a quar rel separated us. But I knew she loved me. We differ in nationalities, but I love her all the same. Would you advise me to try and gain bark her sincere love, or would you advise different? ANXIOUS (8, B.) I. would advise you to attend to your work, whether that be studying or earn ing your own living. Tou are far too young for sorlous thought of lev . and marriage. OC3C 0 lOOC DC the Individual who geta Into an eddying hlrlpool la sucked down to death aa surely a the one who drift Into a back water perishes of stagnation, and th on who I swept out to an uncharted sea, 1 wrecked by breaker or reeft or rammed by pasting vessels or driven derelict m the living death of rudderless impotence. When the tide, afaer a great storm. bring flotsam and Jetsam up on th beach, are not the thing flung on th and by th Incoming and receding waves pathetic? But I there not a cer tain feeling of acorn for th wreckage of the aiorm mingled with pity for th help less accumulation at your feet? Now how can an Individual stupidly put himself In the way of being Just suoh flotsam and Jetsam of th storm of life? No undirected tHp can make harbor except by accident. No undirected life can find Itself In a safe port Drifting carries us over the rocks or upon unchartered tea. And It all starts Innocently enough. Dreaming la such a comforting and seemingly Innocent occupation. One can hardly see where It passes the bound of safe plersurs and leads to Idle drifting. Do you He In bed in th morning and imagine the clever thing you will say th remarkable way you will do your work th great eneigy and invention you will bring to your tasks that day? And then do you almost Imagine you have done your duly by yourself and aeeonv pitshed a day's work, because yeu havw dreamed about it? Or do you pis au tlvsly one or two things you will do be fore set of sun. fling off the cover of loth aad fairly whirl up to be dclngt . On which principle do you build your day "ramies thst might be" or "fact tht rT" Pon t dream and drift Instaad think and act. Choose your way In life. The first step sway from tlie thraldom t,f dreaming and drifting la to appreciate i the Joy of activity. There ia no happiness 1 Summer Strength and Stomach Satisfaction come from eating t ' dlWIh with Strawberries 3CDO 0 d v'uifii TRY IT FOR BREAKFAST EAT IT FOR LUNCH SERVE IT FOR SUPPER lf. 4ut -though he-fleered th crystal I th rath of life; lack of determination to ln " l ' "t constructing some 0 OCTDC A dish that combines all the muscle-building elements of the whole wheat grain with the wholesome, laxative juices and delicious flavor of the choicest berry that grows. Heat the Discuit in oven to restore crispness ; cover with strawberries or other fresh fruit ; pour over them milk or cream ; sweeten to suit the taste. Your grocer sells the biscuit and the berries Ml) DOOC DC 0