TJIK 11KE: OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 1915, ii i TTheBees Home Ma n 17 A Woman and Her Birthday "The Arch Traitor By Nell Brinkley fopyr'ght, 1S15, Intern! News Service. Vi aziiHe Page By ADA PATTERSON. A woman awoke early on her birthday anniversary. In the clear, cold light of that first itiin of the morning, when daylight and Intellect are chill and revealing, she fmmmmmmmmmm aw the truth a 7 It was, without any 1 1 or atmosphere. She saw that by Bo trlrk of fancy, no aubterfuge of toilet, could she be longer made young. For she vai not young. The rank of this birthday In the calendar of her years i Irrefutn- ble proof. Even the it". latltuae inn imumn of today permit re- gurdiiig age. life inldnummer waa fading for her. fne might not disguise the fart that for her It was early autumn. Autumn In the rich purples and thickly veiling hase of Indian rvmmer. perhaps, a period gracious but brief, but still autumn. She was attractive till. Tha man who loved her believed It. and she, In the re flected light of his love for her, hart be lieved It faintly. Always a woman Is grateful to the man who keeps alive the welcome fiction ' of her lrresltlblnees: But this morning. In the cold, all reveal ing light, she believed Mm no longer. She was merely grateful that his Illu sion continued. Hor talent had been very dear to her. Too dearT Phe waa not sure. But morning light showed her what she could not deny, that It had yielded her something of recognition, but not all of the fame and fortune that In her youth, pink and confident, had expected. Could she yet avomiillh what she had determined, wlh the aid of this talent to dot Into hr heart entered a new visitor, a faint, Tret mldKlvlng. a doubt of her own trensth. a fear lent the night overtake her ere the day of her endeavor was over. For tlio first time she was afraid. Bhe feared whnt awaited her in tha old hndowi that waited for everyone, at tha end of the road. Yet, turning upon her pillow, her eyes and her soul staring Into that cold first light of day. i he said: "I begin to tee," nodding to her pillow. It was because she had not encouraged the flowers of friendship to grow by that path. She had not watered them with sympathetic tears nor smiled enough Into the faoe that smiled Into hers. "I see now and I will be different," she said. But when she had bathed and breakfasted and read her letters, whem the routine of a crowded dally life began, there waa no apparent difference. And yet that day, and many day afterward, she said to herself, again and gain, "I begin to see. I hope It la not too late." In-Shoots. The small man looks smaller than ever hen he accidentally lands on a high perch. When some fellows raise thunder they are called patriots. Others are placed in the nuisance class. You can l.ever convince at fat-retainer divorce lawyer that marriage Is a failure at any stage cf the game. It Is sometime difficult to determine whether it Is the Tlllan of the play or the author who deserves dire punish ment. T1IE CHARM OF MOTHERHOOD Enhanced By Perfect Phyi c&l Health. The experience of Motherhood If a try 1 one to most women and marks dis tinctly an epoch la their lives. Not one woman ia ft hundred is prepared or on derataxids how to properly car for her elf. Of courts nearly every woman nowadays has medical treatment at such time, but many approach tha experi ence with an organism unfitted for tha i trial cf strength, and when It Is over j t rr ytra has received ft shock from which it is hard to recover. Following right upon this comes the nervous strain ef caring for tha child, and ft distinct change la tha mother results. There Is nothing more charming than ft happy and healthy mother of children, and indeed child-birth under the right condi tious need be no hazard to health or Ix-auty. The onexplainuble thing Is that, with all the evidence of shattered nerves and broken health resulting from &n unprepared condition, and with eav j ' time in which to prepare, women v ill jr.iit In going Llindly to the trial. Every woman at this time should rely t ;-jn Lydi E. I'iiikham'a Vegetable C-u"pcimd, moot valuable tonic and i '.jtbUr of the female organism. In many homes once childless there are now children be cause of the fact that Lydla ii link Lam's Vegetable tX;!. pound' makes women normal, Lt itlwly tiii strorg. If jta w sit spwUl BJriee write t J )C:i C riu.ijfci UevHilneCo. (con 11 U.J) I y un, Yuur httfr will le ; rij J, read and andwert-4 by i i ,.- ;s J Icll la strict coaCJeuce. Wit There Is One the son of the Ledy of Beauty who rose whlte-and-f old out of the sea who wanders about the face of the Winter land with a melody box strapped by a pale blue ribbon (pale bluets the color, you know, that Is supposed to be man's weakness) to his cold little back (what i ft blue knee and a frosted toe and icicles on his lashes If a bachelor-man or maid Is to be snared by ltt) and he'll likely come begging some day or other at your door. There are folk on the soft green isle with the blue lakes like bits of sky gemming it over who believe In the "Little People" still. But even If they're wrong and there are no more of them, browny and green, tucked away under tree roots and tweakln' your oapple over ' Read Dy Oouverneur Morris and Chftrlet W. Goddafd OwrteUi ISIS, fttas Ceases Synopsis of I'evlous Chapters, fur the, traslo death of John Autes bury, his yruitualed ti. one of Aiuar ic s SOMtlval UnuliM, iU. At hor dtlQ i rvf. biuiiler, so aunul of ilie luleicui kltluaps Ui baauliiul .-year-old baby lit and brings her up tu a vartulim to her aba m, no nutu. but Ihuiks she Is lausiit by aiisots who iiuiruwi iter fur Umi luualun tu iciorm lh world. At the of 1 she IS suddenly thrual tutu tu world wiisie ajivuts of tits lulervsla ar iuy tu prloi.tl lu find hor. sirtsau years later Tommy goes to the Adirouilacka. The tutials a isaooual tn Cur lue irlu. liy avctduiit he Is lh ul lo nisol tha Utile Anieabuiy ali'L. as sue iuiiwi (olio Hum her lx.ia.uuto Cflesna the siil trora hsaveu. Naiiiir Toauuy uur Coteail recoKuiscs each oinor. Toiiuuy tluda n au iiiaHar lu tosuus L'aivaua fruut i'rut. bLlUliat ami thy hUu, lu tha uiuuuialiui, Uter ibay ar vutauad by bullilar cacape tu au Ulautl wuol lory auvutl tua ItlsiiL Tutiui.y s flrat aim ,as to sat Ceistla ay tiom bullicer. After may Ivave beliavua Toiiuity la unable tu sat auy boUal lu ta.ka iVlwlla lu omlng tu l.ar cualuiua. ilut IkUr lie teraua.dra lila lailiar Vu aveD her. When ha aueS out lu the tan! ha fiiul bar a una. biie I mitt Into tha hands uf whlta alaveis. but uoapw and itoaa tu live Milh a boor fam ily by tha name of loulua. Vv nuu llieir sou Fraddls returns houia be fmda rlvbt In his ou hvuaa. CaloaLia. tha aul fur which tha underworld has ol'leieu a re ard that ha huoad lo ant. CWaaUa sacures work in a lars Sar man I factory, where a treat many gula are employed. Hera aha shows her pe culiar ur, and nialtes friends with all her sii'l couiiMuiuna. kiy bar talks lo the aula aha Is able to calm a threatened atria. a, and tha "boas" overhearing her la moved to sranl in raiiei itie giria wuyueo. and also to right a rvat wrong be had done one or theiu. juat al ti ls point the favutory catches on rire, and the work room Is soon a blasins furnace. CalealU retuaea tu cacap wlia tha other grui, and Tommy liarclay ruat'es la aud car ries her out, w tapped ui a tii rull of doth. Aflrr resoulns CeUjalla from the fire, Toiiuuy la aoofcht by tlanaer ta-ciuy. to ho ub.dvrtai.rs to paiaua.ie him tu gle wp the u! loii.ioy rI-;a, and CvlciiU tJIfiKTrTU. JEW AT ' BOO rl tHOU It Here See It at the wants him to wed her directly. He ran not do thla. as he has do funds. KtlUlter and Barclay introduce Ceteatla to a co terie of wealthy mining men, who agree la send tcieeria to the foni-inus. The wife of the miners leader Involves Tommy in an earapado that leads the miners to lyncn mm. ce'eaua saves him from the mob, but turns from him and goea to see Kehr. TWELFTH EPISODE. And at that moment there was a sound of footstepe Just outside the tent. The feet which mode the sound belonged to Freddie the Ferret With his usual good luck he appeared to have arrived In the very nick of time. Prof.. Stllllter was not at that time to receive the klaa for which his greedy mouth was waiting. 'Wake up!" he said la a disgusted voice. Celestia put her hands to her eyes. woke, and couldn't remember just what had been said. "I think I'm too tired to talk," she said. "Ho I see," aald BtUUter as Freddie entered the tent. "Better rest then." And the psychologist withdrew, quite sane again and rather badly frightened. An open Tapped tent waa certainly no place for making love by violence; yet for a moment the cautious man had lost all thought of elf-control and all fear of consequences. It was on the afternoon of the next day that Barclay, Bturtevant and Semmra came to Bitumen wtlh a whole tralnload of capltallats. and biddable men expert la politics. The entire town almost the entire township waa at the station to meet them. Several brass bands played different patriotic, airs at the same time arid doubters and skeptics were carried off their mental balance by the excitement and the ahoutlng. Swaying? and tottering above tha heads of the crowd were all sorts of banners and transparencies, var loualy Inscribed and erablasonod: "Vote for the New Constitution." "Every CltUt-n a Stockholder." "IXvldends instead of Taxea." "Kehr for hrnati.r." From the station to the stockade, now TNt T. AT HtLDTI TIS Hlfl T II M ART wA ' SMn A U K 1 I WW I MT.JTYJ. v - . . N' i x . vrv v j a MiATtT " a ftp TnT a.cna. cues a - TnR TIUWOH WIN AMD MIKKV CtHRABU your eyes as you pass after dusk there's one who Is "own brother" to them, playing the wandering minstrel through the world with a pack of tricks under his golden-feather kopf that would make the faery people blush pink with shame for their stupidity. He can smile the frost out of your heart he can squeeze a rainy tear If he Just wishes as much he can look all things -at once and more than that, too unutterably desirable, piteous, merry, gen tle and tender, provocative, so wee, and harmless; and you think you'll never sleep again if you cannot have him and his music beside your hearth 'til the weather's sweeter out. If you ave a sour bachelor who hugs your loneliness close and will own no other but a one-seated (selfish) car, don't open your door at Movies wide open, and shorn of its warlike bar barities, the crowd marched, pushed and scrambled, headed by the bands, and bavins' In Its midst a number of broken- down, funereal look ins hacks In which. four and four, rode the most pompous and distinguished looklrox visitors, smok ing lone black chjaXl and smiling and raising their hats whenever the crowd called upon them by name. When the head of the procession came near the tents of Celestia, set back from the road en a little knoll. It halted, and every man bared his head and began to shout her na.ne. The shouting brought her presently to the door of the main tent a slender, girlish figure all In white, whoso eyes shone with excitement and triumph, whose mouth smiled with in effable sweetness, and who waved b.r followerg and adorers a white and slender nana. Even at that distance her effex-t them was magloal. .Hats which looked as if they had grown on their wearers' heads for years, as fungi grow on stumps, came off, and were waved violently or thrown Into the air. Throats grew hoarse wnn shouting. Then she backed from their sight Into the big tent, after one laat wave of the hand. And they, becauso they knew that she would come tu them later in tha i-wH and speak to them and fill their hearts full of hope and courare, allowed her now to withdraw from their eight, and. after one more minute of shouting they took M the march once more, and went roar ing toward the stockade late strikers, late strike break era eanltalista. nollti. clans, men, women and children, all wild now, with excitement and enthusiasm tha two most contagious dlseasea In the world. Celestia stood meanwhile in the center of the big tent; and she toe was trmebllng with excitement and enthusiasm and the sense of personal triumph. And tint looked so young and Innocent, and beau tiful, that for a moment the frown faded from Tommy Barclay's forehead, and the ache from Ms heart "Oh, Tommy," said Culaetla, "you won't , - . - i r t,,K viu i Mtitir spoil It all now, will youT Tou'll be some where In the crowd there where I can see your face, when I stand up to speak, won't youT". "It goes to my heart," said Tommy, "to see how they love you. It goes to my heart to eea bow happy their love makes you. But I can't go to the stock ade to be a face In the crowd. I'm afraid things might go to my head." "I was so happy," said Celestia, ''and now I'm not so unhappy." "More people are in such a state of mind," said Tommy, "that if you said the word they would march on Wash ington and try to pull the president out of the White House. I've hoped against hope. Ive seen your power, known that you had It, and hoped that you didn't really have It. Tou made a little mark on the great city of New, Tork. you will go back on the wave of your triumph here and sweep It off Its feet, as you have swept Bitumen. If you go to the stockade and show yourself once more to those craty people and speak to them you will start a campaign of revolution that will sweep a sufficiently sans coun try off Its feet I see you floating from city to city and from village to village in your special train, winning all hearts? persuading all minds, and spreading, as I think, upon my honor, the seeds of national disaster. In the name of all that la most sacred to you, Celestia, stop while there is still time. Speak to those people if you must, but tell them that you have ben deceived, that you are the plaything of capital, and that they have been de ceived; wash your hands of politics and sophistries; step down; resign. In the Image of all that la noble and fine, you have created a monster. Don't breathe the final breath of life Into that monsttw snd bring it to life a Frankenstein that even you can never hope to control once It gets on lu feet, and begins to think murderous thoughts. If you go to the meeting In tha stockade you will bring this'monster to life. Have you no fear of the consequences T" She shook her head primly, but with a little sadness. "Celestia," he said, "back of these tents the woods run to the) hills, vhe hills to tha nwuntalna. Will you comet For a moment it appeared that she hesi tated "Won't you comer' Then aha drew'' a depe breath and stiff ened hr spine. "I believe," she said gently, "that Clod lent me to do what I have done and what I am going to do." (To Be Continued Tomorrow . THA0U6H THS'JACK WITH all when you hear a voice like a baby-bird note outside In the storm! If you are one who's busy being famous you may Just "keek" out at him long enough to tell him where there's ft man down the road who has leisure (for It takes time to be a good lover, you know) and bid him adieu and good luck. And If you are poor! Too poor! With gaunt pockets and fax apart dollars what can you do but tell him your fire Is thin and just warm enough for one, and that you have only bread and cheese and cannot afford klssesT But don't forget to be clever for Danny is a Kobold a Wigief a traitor faery who'll win in H he can. For what will happen see above. NELL BRINKLEY. The Mecca of Our Winged Hosts Alaska the Eden Which millions of Songsters and Game Bird Visit By GARRETT P. SERV1SS. Tou have never thought of. Alaska as a summer paradise for birds; neither had I until I read the Aubudon societies' de lightfully surprising little book on "Alaskan Bird Life." There I learned that "the bird population of. Alaska Is not 'only extensive, but la more representative of the whole of North America than that of any other part of the continent." Thla is an aston ishing statement to make about a land where' there are two or three months of summer and nine or ten of winter. nd no spring at all. Where the ther mometer la capaibie of sinking 60 degrees below sero! Where rivers freese to a depth of nine feet! Where, underlying vast areas. there is a never-melting layer of fro sen soil, two or three yards' thick! Where the ground. In winter, may. In places, be frosen to a depth of 100 feet) Where, In the southern portion, the sun. In mid winter, stay above the horixon only four or five hours at a time, while in the northern portion there is a continuous winter night more than a month long! But the short summer la crowded and humming with life, whose Intensity varies In Inverse proportion to its brevity. And into this little far northern world of amaslngly beautiful flowers and ex quisitely brilliant aunahlne, of sweet, temperate wind and delicious garden odors, come flocks of birds front the south lands, to take their share In the delights of the sub-artla Eden. They have a road Into It that is one of the grandest natural highways on the globe. It lead from wealern Canada down the great valley of the Tukon river, and by thla route go and return many of the familiar birds of the United Mate. 1 The migrant varieties are not troubled by the long, coif winters, for they fly back to more genial climes a soon as the chill begins to' creep down from the pole. ' 1 1 . au jk a m t f. A TCliONtP ? Remaining only from mid-May to mid July, they see nothing of the endless nights, but, on the contrary, enjoy the endless days. In June the twilight Is so bright at midnight that one can read fine print, but the birds, both visitors and natives, are too wise to stay awake Just because the sky refuse to darken. By S or t o'clock all except the nocturnal specie are "abed," where they remain In seclusion until S o'clock la the morn ing. Mr. E. W. Nelson says that during tlte long twilight of the early summer nights he ha often wandered for hour over the silent tundra east of ft Michael watching the sleeping bird on the numberless pond aa well a oa the open land. Alaska not only ha multitude of sum mer bird visitors, but also many natives, which remain all winter, notwithstand ing the gloom and excessive cold. Among these Is the Alaskan jay, called "Whisky Jack.' which ia fond of entering winter camp and cabins, and needs little en couragement to become the play-mate of man, while remaining by nature a voracious thief. One of these jays will sometime at tach himself .to a lonely camp dweller, will perch on his shoulder and accompany him In his journeys. Water ouxsela. In midwinter, when the temperature sinks to from 60 to 70 degrees below aero, will dive through air-hole la the Ice cover ing swift streams and walk along the bottoms seeking their food. These bird are clothed with close-set plumaga, im penetrable to water. Mallard duck winter la some parts of Alaska. Charles Sheldon found hundred of them In midwinter north of Mount McKlnley. living at a point on the Toklat river where the swiftness of the current prevented the formation of Ice, and where, consequently, they oould reach the bottom, and feed upon dead sal mon ' and on unhatched salmon eggs, lodged there. In Alaska many of the wading bird and ducks are ongsUrs In the mating season. Their songs. Mr. Nelson avers, are a musical a those ef robins. The golden plover, "admirable ia their hand some breeding dresa, utter an extraordlav--ary musical series of notea They stand like beautiful statuette on the tundra as they give their one.'