THE HER: OMAHA. TUESDAY. AUK'ST la 11)13. he Bees Home Maazi tie Page When Mastodons Were Kings ' The Goddess The Most Imposintf Motion Picture Serial and Story Ever Created . : : : : : : Read It Here See at the Movies Parents and the Child By GAimETX P. 8KRT1SS. ( 1 Among the . remarkable exhibit to be een In the American Museum of Natural History, on the wt aide of Central rrk. Nerv York City, are , gigantlo skeleton -stodone and nwmrnntha, v which .i a way, the ancestors of the elephant. It Is an education . to stand beside i the towering bony frame of the fnls-hrv nmatunes of the pact, and think of the vast chance which have come o t r the earth during the hundred of cen turle that have elapsed elnce they lived on our planet. There 1 poaitlve evidence that man Va already a dweller on the earth In the day of the mammoth and the maatodon, but they have gone Into ex tinction, while he not only remain, but has made ' enormous advance in his physical and mental development and the condition of his life. In a certain way the maatodon. stand typically for prehistoric America and the mammoth for prehlstorlo Europe. Mammoth " remains have' been found In America, and within the area of the t'nited States, and similarly, mastodon remans have bean found In the old world. But, broadly speaking, the special home of the mastodon so far, a his relic show, wa in this country, while that of the mammoth wa in Europe and Asia. Tie relations of the cave men of Europe with the mammoth have been clearly re vealed by archaeological explorations, and pictures of the huge beast, drawn by the hands of men 'who met him, have been found In the prehistoric caverns of France. The discovery of the frozen bodies of mammoths In the ley marshes of Siberia ha enabled us to compare these drawing made by our ancient forebear with the real form of the creature that they were Intended to represent, and the likenesses are found to be astonishingly distinct Evidently - Jhose e"arfy men. clad only In skin garment and armed only with pear and 'dart, pointed with flint and ataghorn, were not afraid to encounter these Immense beat In hand-to-hand con filet,' and were able to lay them. To kill a mammoth, however, they must have employed other means' than the rude weapon Just mentioned. Probably they used some kind of trap, as the natives of Africa did in capturing elephant be fore the white man cam with hi gun. The detail of" their drawing how that the cave men .understood,, J.h anatomy of their gigantic game. , There I very little doubt that early man -met the mastodon In America Juat a he met the mammoth In Europe, but the evidence I by no mean so abund ant. The flret human inhabitant of thl continent left" but insignificant mark of their presence, compared with the In numerable trace of their possible con temporaries en the other side of the Atlantic. Thl arise, largely from the difference of local conditions. It so happened that In those part of Europe, particularly France, where men and mammoth met, xtenive, dry cav erns existed, forming admirable and ecure dwelling place for primitive men, and here they , made relatively large settlement and dwelt for many aucoes slve generations. On our lde of the ocean there were no centers of population com parable, for Instance, with the valley of the Vesere in France, with its bordering caverns and rock shelters, which furn ished a kind of natural metropolis for the oave men. The prehlstorlo Amer icans were, evidently less settled In their habits. But the mastodons asseiriblod In chosen place if the men did not. They worn to have had a predllestlon for marshy places. In which, with their huge, un wleldly bodies, they became helplessly mired. The keleton of mastodons were first found In ancient swamps west of the Hudson river In New York. The mystical Cotton . Mather believed that the tooth of one of the monsters, found In 17. which weighed nearly; five pounds, belonged to one of the giant men of early day, mentioned In Genesis. He calculated the hol of tho giant at seventy-five feet, on the bails of a sup posed thlgh-bon seventeen feet longl There Is a place, some twenty miles south of St. Louis, Mo., called Klmms wlck. where bones representing several hundred mastodons have been discovered, at the foot of a bluff near the junction of two little streams. It seems prob able, says Frederick A. Lucas, the di rector of the American Museum of Natural History, In his book on "Animals of the Past." that. In the days when the streams were larger the spring floods swept down the bodies of animals that had perished during the winter, to ground In an eddy beneath the bluff. "Or, as the place abount In spring of sulphur nd salf-water. It may be that thl was here the animal assembled during cold weather." The cause of the extinction of the mastodon and mammoths remains to be discovered. What to Use and Avoid On Faces That Perspire . must perspire must expel, through the t-orea. Its share of the body s wast ma terial. Certain creama and powdera clog the pores. Interfering both with elimina tion and breathing, especially during the bested period. If more women understood this, there would be fewer self-ruined complexions. If they would use ordinary tnercolisAd , they would have healLhy ixirirxUna This remarkable substance actually absorbs a had skin, also unclog slng the pores. Result: Tife fresher, younger under-akin is permitted to breath and to show itself. The exqutsli new complexion gradually pel out, on free from any apfearance of artificiality. Obtain an Hit of mercollsed wax f rum your druggist and try it. Apply nightly like cold team, for a week or two, wash ing it oft mornings. To remove wrinkle, here's a marvelous Jy effective tre.t men t. which also .u-ts PHtursily end. hsrroJsaly. Dissolve 1 ox ii(.4 solite in ' pt. w.tc-li hii iiJ use ss a wash lotion. Adveniecnuut By Gouverneur Morris and Charles W. Goddard Ois it u ma. mat ' b)UuHUai of rtrkiu Chapter. John Ameabury is killed In a railroad aocioent, and his wit, one of America' moat beautllui women, aire troia Uie shock, leuviu a Jfr-yeeu-old uaugnier, wno 'Is lakeu. by frot. Milliter. aunt of the interests, tar into the Adlronaacka, w tiers sue is reared in the seclusion o a cavern, fifteen years later Tommy Barclay, wbo has Juat uurreied with his adopted inn, or, wahuuia mio tue wooua anu (Un covers the Kill, now known as Oleatla, in company with trot, milliter.- Tommy take the girl to New York, where sne falls into the clutches or a noted pnv curess. but is able to- wm over lh woman by her pecular hypnotlo power. Here she attracts Freddie the ferret, who becomes attached -to her. At a bin clothing lartory. where she goes to work, she exercises her power over the girls, snd 1 saved from being burned to death by Tommy. About this time Htllllter. Barclay and others who are working to gether, decide it is time to make use of H'elestia, who ha been trained to think of herself as divine and come from heaven. The first place they send her I to Bitumen, a mining town, where the coal miners are on strike. Tommy line gone there, too, and Mr. Ounsdorf, wife the miners' leader, falls In love with hlro and denounces him to the men when lie simrns her. Celestla save Tommy from being lynched, and also series the strike by winning over Kehr, the agent of the bosses, and Barclay, sr. Mary Black. rt?.ne5..who u Uo ln ,ov "It" Tommy, tells him the story of Celestla, which she FlfLS n RmWrMl - IhfAllBk 1 . I - tt, jvaiuilBy, Kehr Is named as candidate for president on a ticket that has Sumter's support, and Tommy Barclay is named on the miners ticket. Stilllter prolespcs hlm- ," wun i-eieetia arid wants to Kft her for hlmwir t..v.u . to marry him. Mary Blackstone bribe Mrs. Ounatinrf n n tn. ..a. ... while the latter Is on her campaign tour. -- -- " 1 " mv num. Mrs. Ounsdorf 1 a rain hypnotized by Celestla and the murder averted. THIRTEENTH EPISOOE. "Once more for luck." said Celestla, with a kind of awful grlmness, "make It a baker's dosen. Thirteen, now she' dead. Now she can't help anybody any more. You're sorry now and frightened, aren't you? Well, perhaps, they won't catch you. Nobody saw you come, nobody will see you go. But, of course, poor Celestla will be found murdered and there will ha a great hue and cry. And If they find a woman hiding In the wood with a wild, hunted face, and bloody hands inri bloody knife ln them, they'll know ln. what to think. Bo slip Into the bathroom mere and get the blood off your hand and off the knife. The left-han tan i. the hot water. Hurry! There ls.no time to ipse.'.;, ... , '8oMrs. Ounsdorf hurried and hurried and washed and washed and Celestla stood grimly by and looked on. "It la curious that It doesn't all coma off, but then there wa such a lot of It. Try the pumice stone, try that little bottlai if for removing Ink stains. I'm afraid It's no useyou'll always see those, spot on the hand that held the knife. You'll really have to co now. Someone la sure to come, and you'll be caught" She accompanied Mr. Ounsdorf. now quaking with terror, horror and remorae, to the rear platform of the car. "You'll hide ln the woods at first," said Celestla. "Do vou see that starT Follow It, for an hour then you'll wake up. But you will remember that you have mur dered an Innocent person. There will be the blood on your hand to remind you. If there wa another, or others who set rou on to do this thins;, vou can renort to them that the thlna- ha been done." Then Mr. Ounsdorf hurjed down the , False - Br ELLA WHEBXKB, WILCOX. Copyright. U1B, Star Company. Do you believe there la anvthtn In th theory of the effect of sstrology on human lives; ln other words, do you think a man or woman Is utterly foolish to have a horoscope of his or her life cast and to en deavor to live by It so far as he or she cnnT And If you do think so. ran you explain how It I that an astrologer who knows abso lutely no thine about his client can give an accurate account of that person s past life, his reronl cnar- fcr'Tl' 'in, tc? A year ago I had i .vcot.e of mv life cast. If I m to belHv what It foretells 1 am to hHve verv won derful future. A I am still quite ouiik 2i i ao not wtxh to make th mistake of taking this thing too seriously; and yet th wonder- tuny accurate tnenner In which all my (-nut life Is described makes It almost Im possible for in not to believe in It. I hope this will not aeom too foolish and trivial a matter for you to answer. To me It Is of vital Importance, having come at a time when things seemed par ticularly dlsouuraging and objectless. U J. N. Some of the greatest men and women In the world' history believed in astrol ogy and consulted the star when about to mako any venture of Importance. Catherine de Medici and Napoleon were devout student of thl science. A belief ln astrology was almost universal In th seventeenth- century. Kings and queens and prime minister kept their personal aatrologrr a they keep secretaries to day. . Astrology wa the parent of astronomy. Th child ha forgotten th parent or remember but to sneer. Yst that a great truth lies under all th debris of super stition which hldea tbla old science from modern eye is a positive as that a ; mighty intelligence lie under ail the ; confusing Ideas of God whic h exist In ' various part of th world today. j The astrologers ef old gave their whole ! lives to the study of the planeta and their) lr.flucr.oc upon tho eaith and human life i K i ii If yv , i i ; ... M.nna..r. r - - .T step of the platform round the main line of rail, glancing furtively ' about her and disappeared Into the night and the forest. i'V . S Celestla dined all alone that night, and went to bed soon after, utterly exhausted, after locking the door of the observation car and of her own stateroom for the first time In her life. At midnight a locomotive wa attached to the snow-white train and it wa drawn lowly on it way deeper Into the heart of the north woods. " Boon after the train had started. Prof. Stllleter entered Celestla' car from hi own, after plying a well-oiled pass-key, stood looking down at the darkness where she lay. Presently Tie 'touched the button of an electric torch and her face shone brightly In the circle of radiance. Then with his free hand Prof. Stllleter began to make caressing passes over the smooth white forehead, up and down, and across and across, never touching It, but always so close that hla hand had a sensation of warmth. After a while Celestla passed from natural to hypnotlo sleep; ber eye opened partially and had no expression In them. "Tomorrow, Celestla, dear," whispered Prof. Stllleter, "when, your work Is done. 8 Prophets of Astrology Do Harm to Weak These men were respected and ofttimes provided with all the necessaries of life In order ' that they might pursue their atudlea uninterruptedly. It la a misfortune that all men and women who represent the exiencea today do not realise the Influence for good they might exert upon the evolving mind of the race. No human being ha a right, under th name of an ancient or a modern science, to plant a seed of fear and de spair In another mind. Here is an extract from an "hourly guide," sent to a friend recently by one ef these widely advertising astrologer: "Sunday-Bad aspect at 4:53 a. m.; fortunate aapect 6:3 a, m.. Indicating Im portant letters; 6:48 p. m., bad anpect; look for trickery In other and Impedi ments In your affair. The Meeting By JA.E It wag a Udy that I met, AU gcarlet-f owned and fair, Wbo made ma all my pain forget With perfume from her balr. She bore a goblet ln ber hand Brimmed deep with ruddy wine; Her eyea I could not understand. But, ab, her emlle waa mine! "Give me to ortnk." I anguished aought. "From out the chalice rim"; Instead ber owhcool band she brought My fevered glght to dim. ,"Wbo are you?" starting back, I cried; She smiled and said, "I came From that land where men' soul have died. And Folly is my name." Iff l.M v. sV , - : - ,.p, - ,: !W n.v ..irin;rrr T TTTITT IT Witi'TfcTrTlHlll ITsTWWssl''' Freddie the Ferret Smashes when you have spoken to the people, you ara to go back to that heaven from whloh you came. Now that you are be ginning to doubt your divine nature, your usefulness Is over. But the heaven to' which you are" going is not'' what you think, my blessing 1 It will be a heaven on earth. X shall be In It with you. To morrow you are to be married. Hay that you are glad." , . . , ,. Celestla's Hps parted, and In a voice cold and without emotion, slio said: "I are glad." "You wilt say that you wish to go for an automobile rldo In the forest. At S o'clock there will be a motor ready and waiting. You will enter this, refusing' to be accompanied by anyone, and you will jno exactly what the driver tells you. I had planned our elopement for tonight, but there wa a difficulty about the license." He bent over her as If to Ms her. but something at the very last moment seemed to restrain him. "Sleep now, darling," he said: "the other Bleep, the 'sleep of nature that makes us all over again between days." He tiptoed out closed the door to her stateroom behind him, locked It. turned and received a smashing blow In the face. He gave a grunt of fear and pain and heard hid eye-glasses smssh to piece a "Monday Doubtful aspect at 1:38 a. m.; very beneficial aapect at 3:56 a. in., hav ing a very good effect upon our con stitution; 10:45 a. m. bringa clrcumstsncea making you Irritable; you may posalbly lose aomethlng; avoid dangeroualy places, especially where machinery Is In motion. "Tuesday-Bad aspect at 4:61 a. m.; very lucky hour at 6:1 a. m.; very un lucky hour at 12:tl p. m.; avoid quarrels and arguments; avoid fire and be careful ln using sharp Instruments; be cautious during the entire forenoon; accidents liable to happen. "Wedneday Very unfortunate day all through; look out for robbery and ex pect enemies. "Thursday Nothing of Importance till M; then surprising change will occur. "Friday Be very careful during the entire evening; you may be followed by M'LEAV. Prof. 'Stilllter In the Face. they hit tho floor of the oar. For a long time he had been In the habit of carrying, two spar pairs In leather cases, one in each of his waist coal pockets; he now reached for one of these and it was knocked from hi hand, a he strove to ward another blow from his face after the tlow had landed. Guarding his fae and head with one upturned arm and elbow, and breathing fast with fuar .and excitement. Prof. Milliter sought and found the door of the passage that led to the other end of the car, and suoceeded In placing It be tween himself and hi) assailant Then groping with both hands, and In hi blindness humping from slilo to side of tho brightly lighted 'passage, he turned and fled. ,. Meanwhile Freddie, the Ferret Picked up the broken piece of l'rof. Stllleter' glaasc and threw them Into a ouspldor. Perceiving tho leather case containing the seoond pair lying where It had fallen, he picked It up, and after a moment' hesitation opened It, slipped the glasses Into his pocket (he Uiought there might be a reward offered for thorn), knapped the heavy case shut, and laid It In a prominent position on the center tablo. Then he began to wonder what every thing was all about anyway, lie him self had no business In tho observation car without Invitation; but h had au ex strange persons with evil designs, etc., etc., through a whole month. Now it chanced that I was In the same house with this lady during the whole period of the .time Indicated (a month), and not one event occurred as predicted by tho hourly guide. There were no "robberlea," and no Indication of "trick ery," and no accident Neither did the surprising changes oecur. 'The strange persons" on Friday were dear Intimate friends who called. Fortunately the woman wss not of a nervous temperament and she waa pos sessed of good common sense. Possessed also of a fo'th In Ood and her own soul, these hourly hints from the occult world did not upset her mind or nervous sys tem aa they might easily do with tho average woman. I believe In a great stratum of divine Advice to Lovelorn aaarmioa taxmtax jJ lie II ones t with lilm. Dear Miss Fairfax: Whera I am em ployed there la a gentleman who pays muun suenuon in hie. 4 on not care for him. but I am afea'd I could not eay so lie Is a fins man. shout a il m 2ui anrl he has told me repeatedly that he loves me. I think he would make an Ideal hus- niana tor any one who likes him. My people like him. 1 have been InM I would make a mistake to think of giv ing mm up. ne is now earning 3o a week, with bright proxpecte, and hss already figured out with me that we could Ilv comfortably on that amount. DIXIE. To marry a man you do not love la to do him a grave Injustice and to cheat yourself of your chance of real happl tiess. If you Ilk him well enough to be afraid of hurting him. be brave enough to av him the greatest possible hurt which having a mercenary and unlov ing wife would mean. Tell him of your indifference. He may be able to conquer it by devotion. If he la not, do not marry him because ha Is eligible and there la no other man on your horison. Walt you are only HO, and life and the possibility 'of real love and Ita supreme Joy lie ahead of you. Don't sucrlflce your chance bf them. S3 i. T cellent excuse. He had almost missjnd the train, had Just managed to awing on to the rear car, and sinre ho was one to 'whom no slmplo lock offered any dif ficulty, had let himself in. He had been on the point of passing through the train to hla own quarters forward, whan It had seemed to lilm that It would be a glorious thing to stand guard, all night before Oleatla'a door like one of those knight of old of whom he had Just been reading In a book which, according to Freddie Judgment wa half glory and half animosity. There was only one light burning very low In the observation car. Freddie turned thl out and started to stand guard In front of Celestla' door. After a while he moved further off and sat guard, and then slept guard. Then he henrd some-. thing moving and without thinking, for he was still halt asleep, attacked that thing, and as he would have said him self, "made a monkey of It." Discovering now that his victim had been Prof, stllletor. who had only come, probably to 'fetch a magazine or some thing of that short, Freddie wa in mortal terror. It would have comforted him greatly could he have known that Prof, Htilleter wa equally frightened. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) Minds truth In astrology; but I believe in very few aHtrologera; Just as I bellevt. In the great truth of the creed of love taught by Christ;, hut I believe In very few of those who attempt to translate HI word. And I believe the Immortal soul of man Is greotor than the stars; and If we keep our minus tuned to the thought of our divinity we will be able to "overcome crret enemies," to be protected from "robbers," and to turn whatever occurs to our Ailtlmats food. . InHtAfkH ft A. .n ., I, I - ... I 'iiivmi yuur nouriy guide" every t. n s-- .n1s pf the day, take m nan nour nna it alone with Aiod and your own soul, and think of the words, love. . truet, peace, go i will, serenity, usefulness, opulence, benevolent e. hnppl. tic and wisdom fay that all of these aro your and that only good can com to you. Do this for one-half hour dally, and you will need no hourly bulletin of ml- ror iuni'1. The kingdom of heaven is nithin; seolt It first, and all other thinga shall b added. Wy till half-hour given absolutely to commune with the source you will be strengthened and enllirhien.,H ik.i j whatever events aro written In the star tor you will turn to good results, liut.lf you live ln a ronilnu.l I sphere of fear and allow yourself to imagine evil is about you from a. m to midnight your perception in Intui tion will b- onie dulled and your will power paralysed. Vou will be no mort than a broken shutter blowing in the wind. f am .-t.. . ... or I am a portion of Om; the One. Part and parcel of thot great Cause I will be ever. I am: I wra. When Mukcr and Moulder of system rsre Fashioned the universe, I waa there All that has been or Is to be Means soul-refining and good for me. Who goes God-hunting and looks within la guMed evor away from sin Who knows he 1 one with th primal power Will find direction from hour to hour And out of evil shall good he wrought Hy one who patiently holds this thought: "I am greater than star and sun. for I .am a portion of Ou- the On a." The Mental Pains of Littlo Ones rs Inflicted by Carless Elders Hjr Virginia TcrJiuno Van do Watr. Copyright 1916. by Ptar Company. Children have a right to the care-free existence proper to their age. Parents who think that they recognise this fact feel that In granting to young creatures such toy, comrade and amuse- ' menta as childhood craves they are dis charging their duties along thl line. But there are still other things neces sary to make chlii.HHXl the happy time it should be. One ol these la freedom from worries that are outside the province of youth. Children are auppoaed to be, a a elass, beedlesa little creature. But they differ in temperament as much as do their elders, tximii small boy and girls have a capacity for suffering that would appall their parents were Its existence recog nised. And one of the strangest things about children Is their reticence. One would think that the trustful youngster would go to the mother with every Imaginary or real worry. On the contrary, children keep most of their most poignant distress to themselves. They may ''complain of physical discom fort or pain, but of their spiritual and mental suffering they 'say nothing. On child told a He and underwent torment of conscience for weeks, re membering that lie. He had told it to hi mother and had stuck to It with uoh obstinacy that she believed him. HI pride prevented hla retreating It Moreover, hi dearly loved mother had said to him: "I know you are telling me the truth,' darling. Were I to learn now that you ' had lied I think It would Just about kill me." He was only 7 and took her satement literally. In the daytime he could quiet hla conacience with the assurance that everybody onre In a while told a fib. But at night alone In the dark, be would brood over that lie, and each letter of the fearful word wa a great black capital. The knowledge that hla mother trusted In him added to hla agony. Again and gain he would start out of bed, deter mined to go to her room and sob out his confession. Then the word. "Were I to loarn now that you had lied to me I think It would kill me," would recur to him and he would creep miserably bark Into bed. HI mother wa not strong. Hup poae hla confession were really to kill her. Then he would be a murderer! ' Does It all sound ridiculous and ene-, lee, oh, wise and sane grownups? Of coarse It does, but let Mm who has for- ( gotten the Imaginations of childhood scoff at It Not until thl poor nervous little boy waa man grown did he tell hi mother of the agony be had undergone when hardly more than a baby. Together they laughed over the episode. But once it had eineed a tragedy, to the ma:t sufferer. Another child heard her father say that when his ship cam in he waa going to take hi wife around the world. It waa all In fun. But th child be lieved It Little did the father auapect how, anxiously ahe listened with dread unspeakable for news of the ahlp which would take her parents from her and 'banish her to a boarding school. As little pitchers have big ears, let ua be careful what we pour Into. them. Do You Know That If CamDhOS Is mit tntlt nlana fnuriiMlH by mice U will completely drive them away. In the last 1,000 year the sea ha natohed K4 squar mile of land from Bngland, and every year the loa 1 increased by about 1.500 acre a. Other name for the lady-bird. In var lou parts of Rngland, are the fly-gokl-Ing, Bishop Baraaby and Ood Almighty cow. When marching on Tlmbuctoo, some year a ago, Oeneral Joffre received a sting from a polsorsom insect which led to the permanent filming of his left eye. It has been ld that the only tao words In the Kngllsh language with th vowels In order are "abstentions" and ' "facetious," put other could probably bo found. Q2EEW CAUSED INTENSEJTCHING Began With Small Watery Pim ples. Spread Around Feet. At Niht Restless From Scratching HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT . "I wa afflicted with eczema on my toes for two or three years. It began with small watery plmplea and caused Intense Itching Boon It began to spread around my feet. Sometimes my stockings would rub my feet when I waa walking, and then my feet would hurt very much. At night I would be restleaa because of scratching my feet .when I was asleep. "I uaed - , Salve and . but without aucoeaa Then I began to use CurJcur Soap and tint meat which soob gave relief and iu a abort time I was completely well." (8igQed) Miss Elisabeth Jacobs. &J1 S.CUy Troy, Ohio. Jan.. '14. Sample Each Free by Mail With 83-p. Skin Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cwtieura. Dep.. T. Bea lm." Bold throughout th world. :