What . .-j 1 . 1 I am in faror of the acrobatic dance. What dancing has dPno for By MARGARET MORRIS. iOf "The Qiiecn of the Movies" Co.) In this article I said that I would ex plain hto difference between the benefit delved from the ball room dance and tho ("THE KING OF A Thrilling Story of a BY LOUIS You Can Begin This Great Story To-day by Reading This First Philip Ancon, a boy of 15 when the story opens, Is of good family and has been well reared. Ills widowed mother hag been disowned by her wealthy rel atives and dies In extreme poverty. Fol lowing her death tho boy Is desperate On his return from the funeral. In a violent rain, ho is able to save the life of a little girl, who was caught In a street accident. lie goes back to the house where his mother had died, and Is ready to hang himself, when a huge meteor falls in the courtyard, lie takes this as a sign from heaven, and abandons suicide. Investigation proves the meteor to have been an Immense diamond, rhlllp arranges with a broker named Isaacsteln to handle his diamonds. In getting away from Johnson's Mews, whera the dlamqnd fell, he saves n policeman's lite from attack by a criminal named Jockey Mason. Ho has made friends with Police Magistrate Ablngdorn, and engages him to look after his affairs as guardian. Thla ends the first part of the story. wT.h.e econ4 Part OP"" ten years later Philip has taken a course at the unl. yerslty, and is now a wealthy and ath letic young man, much given to roaming 3Ie has learned his mother was sister of blr Philip .Morland. who is married and ha a stepson. He Is now looking for hi nephew. Johnson's Mews has been turned into the Mary Anson Homo for Indigent Boys, one of London's most notable private charities, Jockey Mason, out of prison on tlcket-oMeave, seeks for vt-nge-anee, and falls in with Victor Qrenler, .1 master crook, and James Langdon, step son of Sir Philip Morland, a dissipated rounder. Philip saves a girl frqni Insult from this gang, and learns later she Is Ihe same girl whose life he had saved tn that lalny night. Grenler plots to get possession of Philip's wealth. His plan Is to impersonate Philip after he has been kidnaped and turned over to ,)oo'v Resinol stops scalp itching and promotes hair health IP yon are troubled with dandruff, eczema or other scaly, itching scalp affection, try shampoos with Resinol Soap and an occasional treatment with Resinol Ointment. You will bo sur prised how quickly tha trouble disap pears, and the health and beauty of the hair improves. Avoid Imitations. Rnhwl Soap and Ointment heal skta eruption a, c!r Wway punploa and blKshaari a. and f era a noat raluabU houMbold treatment for toraa, barn. boili. pfU, tic Yor trial staa. fj.wriW to RnlnoU Dapt. 22-8. Baltimore Md. SoM by alldmrrltta. PraaeribedhrdoetoraforlSyears. Home Dancing Will Do for No. 2 Ballroom Dances Versus Simple Acrobatics more acrobatic dance of the stage which can be practiced at home any time. I myself am entirely In favor of tho acro batic dance for thla reason: There Is really llttlo or no physical benefit to be derived from the modern DIAMONDS" " Modern Monte Cristo TRACY. Mason. Just as this oalr has come to an understanding, Langdon returns from tha girl s home, where he has attended a re ception. The three crooks lay their nlans. arid (n the meantime Philip arranges so .Mrs. Atneny recovers some 01 ner money from Lord Vanstone, her cousin, and secures a promise from the daughter to wed him. Anson Is lured by false mes sages to visit a secluded spot. Anson Is trapped by a gang at a ruined house. -He la hit on the head by Jockey Mason, who thinks ho has slain the man he hated, and Victor Orenler helps strip the body. They throw the naked body over a cliff Into the sea, and Qrenler completes his preparations to Impersonate Anson. A note from Evelyn warning Philip of danger is, opened and read, and Grenler tells Mason to call Anson's servant. He finds Anson's check book, and with Jockey Mason sets out for the railroad, meeting and chatting with a rural police man on the way. Qrenler goes to York and opens communications with Anson s bankers, with Abingdon and Miss Atherly. Orenler secures possession of Ansdn s be longings, and Mason gets an unexpected summons to visit police headquarters. Grenler forges orders on Anson s bank, and determines to swindle Mason out of lila share of tho plunder. Mason goes t" police headquarterr and there meets his two grown sons. The boys take tholr father to their room, and tell him tho story of how their mother Was cared for In her Illness by Philip Anson, and how they were reared and trained at the Mary Anson Home.- Mason suffers from re morse, and the Yorkshire policeman In spects the abandoned grange. Copyright, 1904, by Edward J- Clode. The Ilescnc, When Philip's almost lifeless body was flung over the cliff It rushed down through tho summer air feet foremost. Then, In obedience to the law of gravity. It spun round until, at the moment of compact with the water, the head and shoulders plunged first Into the waves. At that point the depth of the sea Is sixty feet at the very base of the rock. At each half-tide and especially In stormy weather an Irresistible current swept away all sand deposit and sheered off projecting masses of stone so effectually that In course of time the overhanging rllff must be undermined and fall Into the sea. High tide or low, there was always suf ficient water to float battleships and the place was noted as a favorite nook for salmon, at that season preparing for their annual visit to the sylvan streams of the moorland valleys. The lordly salmon Is peculiar In Its habits. Dcllzhtlng, at one period of the year, to roam through the ocean wilds, at another It seeks shallow rivers, In whose murmuring fords he scarco finds room to turn his portly frame. And the law protects him most Jeal ously. In the river ho is guarded like a king, and when he clusters at Its mouth, lazily making up his mind to try a change of water, aa a monarch might visit Ham burg for a change of air, he can only be caught under certain severe restrictions. lie must not be netted within so many yards of the seaward limit of the estuary, he may not be caught wholesale; the nets mutt have a maximum length of WO feet, they must not be set between 7 p. m. on a Friday and 1 a, re. on a Monday. Viewed In every aspect the salmon Is given exceptional chances of longevity. His price Is as high as his cullpary repu tation, and the obvious sequel to all these precautions Is that certain nefarious per sons known, as poachers try every arti fice to defeat the law and capture him. Row Read On y f ? p THE BEE: Miss Marris's back and shoulders. dance, because there Is not enough bodily exercise. In the tango, .the only muscles exer cised to an yextent are those between the Isneo'and the ankle. The arm movement r also slight, and the bodily movement lies In the bending' back of the body as illustrated. This movement Is used to some extent In the mnxlxe, but really not enough to make any difference In the slenderness of the waist. Of course. It Is better to dance the modern dances constantly than not to dance at all, but a combination of both would be Ideal You could uso the acrobatic, steps at home, practicing diligently every day, and then dance the ball room dances for tho mere pleasure of dancing. For me, however, I would far rather practise my splits, arid cart wheolB and so forth. I made a specialty of tango dancing once, and it wasn't any time at all be fore I began to feel still, all the limber-' ness seemed to have left tho upper part of my body, my feet were nimble enough, but my body seemed all out of sorts. I learned a lesson that time which I have never forgotten, and when I went A favorite dodge la to run out u. large quantity of nets In Just sush a tideway as the foot of the cliff crowned by Orange house. None can spy the operations from the land, while a close watch seaward gives many chances of escape from en terprising water bailiffs, who, moreover, can sometimes be made conveniently drunk. When Philip turtlcd Into the placid ea his naked body shone white, like the plumage of some gigantic bird. Indeed, a man who was leisurely pull ing the coble in a zigzag course while two others paid out a net so that its sweeping curves might embairuss any wandering salmon who found himself within Its meshes marked the falling body In Its Instantaneous passage, and thought at first that some huge sea fowl had dived after Us prey. Hut the loud splash startled the three men. Not so did a cormorant or a whlte wlnged solan plunge to secure an unwary haddock. . The net attendants straightened their backs; the oarsmen stood up. The dis turbance was so near, so unexpected, that It alarmed them. They looked aloft, thinking that a rock had fallen; (hey looked to the small eddy caused by Philip's disappearance to see If any !gn would be given explanatory of an unusual occurrence. Were Philip thrown from eue'i a height when In full powenlon of nl senses, in all likelihood such breath as was In his lung at the moment of the fall would have been expelled by the time he rea-hed the water He must have resisted the rush of sir, uttered Involuntary cries, struggling wildly with his limbs. . 1 OMAHA, FRIDAY, MARCH You The "backward bend" movement back to my favorite work I limbered up In less than a week. Ball room dancing 1b nice for finishing touches, or one phase of a remedy. Tho shoulders can bo beautified, although the process Is slower than that offered by the more strenuous movements. Stage dancing Is not bo much fun, though. If you simply practice the phy Bical movements. That means work with out any pleasure, and that Is why I spoke of learning to uso tho movements In a dance an soon as possible. Music makes It twice as much fun, too, and will help to banish all unpleasant thoughts. You really have no Idea how quickly you will dance naturally. But, as It chanced, Muson's rough hand ling in carrying him to the balcony mado active the vital forces that were restor ing him to consciousness. fie was on the very threshold of re newed life when he fell, and the down ward flight helped rather than retarded tho process. Indeed, tho rush of air was grateful. He drank In the vigorous draught, and Inflated his lungs readily. His sensations were those of a man Im mersed In a warm bath, and the shock of his concussion with tho surface of the sea In nowise retarded the reoupe.Mtlvc effect of the dive. Of course he wan fortunate, after fall. Ing from such a height. In striking the witter with his right shoulder. No por tlon of the human body Is ap fitted to bear a heuvy blow us the shoulder and upper part of the back. Had he dropped vertically on his head or his feet he might have sustained serious Injury. As It was, after a tremendous dive, and a curve om any yeards bpneath the sea, he bobbed up Inside the salmon net within a few feet of the 1-oat. Instantly the flsnerman saw it was a man, an absolutely niked man, who had thus dropped from the sky. , They wero amazed, very frightened In deed, but tl'ey readily haulr.1 nt the dragging net and brought Philip nearer the boat. Even at this fins) slag? of his adventure he Incurred a terrible rlrk. Unable to help himself In the least de gree, and swallowing salt water rapidly now, he rolled away Inertly as the net roe under the energetic efforts of li's rescuers. There was grave danger that he should drop buck Into the depths, and then he must sink like a stone. (To He Continued Tomorrow ) 27, 1014. Making the Stout 1 1 1 im 1 11 1 hi 1 ill iw i m m:4 Clothes nowadays arc generally constructed with no thought oi! tho stout woman, Fashion acta as if all i'eininiuo persons were slender "thirty-l'ours" and then so'dougui? the draperies that tho eye beholds nothing but seeming "forty-lours!" Tho fashionable adaptation of the ono-pioce frock wo show you today is particularly good for tho woman inclined to bo stout. It actually gives her long, graceful lines and yet permits her to be fashionably draped. The front of tho, skirt is slushed to form a yoke effect below which tho plaits are laid in. Wither stitch these plaits or simply press them aud if the material is too narrow to make (he skirt in one piece it can bo a two-piece model with one seam disposed in tho drapery. Developed in chestnut peau do pecho, tho waist is a blouse with broad armholos falling below a kimono shoulder, Tho three-quarter sleeves are finished by three stitched bands of tho material and a puffing of not tightened in by a piping of satin of tho chestnut color. This net is embroidered, as is tho quaint rabat which falls from the right side, crosses in front and flares over a bolt of the same material. OLIVETTE. Seem Slim A Clever and Stylish Paris Creation Fully Described by Olivette Madame, Ise'ielfcs "Scauiy Lesson I.KSSO.V IV PAIIT II. WrlnMm nnil Fnclnl MnRnrc. A nmsHago crrsm Is often spoken of as a ' skin food.-' which Is a good name for it. In appearance massage cream Is much like an ordinary cold cream, except that It Is generally a little stlffer, but It contains a fat or combination of fats that Is capable of being absorbed by tho skin. In other words, It feeds tho skin as well us lubricates It. Before- beginning your maasago move ments, take what orc.im you need out of the Jnr and put it on a clean plate. The habit of leaving the Jar uncovered and constantly putting the fingers In tt Is uncleanly and not good for tho cream. If the massngo cream Is too thick to glide smoothly over the fuce. plnce a llttlo of It in the pnlm of the left hand and w6rk It soft with the fingers of the other hand. No. 1. llegln tho massage movements with the ,forehcjd. Dip the tips of the fingers of 'both hands In the croa.ni and place them In tho cantor of the forehead, back to back and almost touching. Then mnvo the two hands up and down, keep ing them parallel, but moving In alter nate directions, moving them gradually over tho forehead and toward the tem ples'. Finish with an upward movement at the hair lino. Repeat this movement, gently nnd slowly tot) times. No. i. Mo'atcn the second flngor of each hand with the. crrarh ' and place It over tho eyebal) closs to the bridge of tho nose. Now with a llttlo gentle movement cn clrclo the eye socket. Work In as much inn8agn cream at possible, but make the movement light and take care not to dllow tho Vlngcra to rest on tho eyeball. Da thin eight to ten times., No. 3. This movement Is to cradlcs.ro the fan of small lines that Is apt to radiate from the corners of the eyes, lloth hands arc necessary for thla move ment and wo will begin with the left side. Place the second and third fingers (if the left hand on each side of the eye bull socket, flllghtly stretching the skin at tho corner of the eye. Dip1 the third finger of the right hand In the cream and, with a Hentle.rotary movement, smooth out the flnn lines between the open finger. Continue this Until plenty of cream has been absorbed and repeat on the right side. Note: Thcao movement to bo continued In next urtlcle and should be reud care fully for full Instructions on the subpect. Advice to the Lovelorn Uy BEATRICE FAIRFAX. Dear Miss Kutrfax: 1 am Jtlst IS and have been keeping company with a young man threo years my senior for the last year. Ha Is seemingly fond of me, but evtrcmely Jealous and always has been. Do you think It a wlsa plan to marry a man with that tendency? 1C II. F. Thoro never was u mun who was not Jealous, and It takes a very tactful girl to manage the least Jealous ot his sex. It this man is extremely Jealous, as you say, and without grounds, I am sure you will bo huppler without him, You Have Wnltnl lions. Dear Miss Fairfax; I am 15 and have been keeping company with a young man four years my senior for six years. We have been engaged three years and he Is urging me to marry him. I loyo him better than anyone else, and I know he loves me, but he lives with a sister who has an Invalid husband, nnd I think he expects me to live with ner. lie gets J95 a month and I get JW, and I am the last daughter left at homo. INDECISION. It would Indicate a greater spirit of fatrnoss to the man It you had settled this ixilnt before your engagement was J threo j ears old. It you love each other, a love that has stood a long test, you will never be happy it you do nojt marry him, and when a man and wife love each other all problems of relatives settle themselves. The One Who Ofendcd. Dear Miss Knlrfax: I am In love with a young man two years my senior, and have had a quarrel with him. By watch ing his actions I think he very much wants to mako up, the same as I do, Kindly tell mo which of us should speak first. ANXIOUS'. It Is a good rule for the one who first offonded to "speak first." The difficulty lies In tho belluf ot each that this applies to the other. Men are proverbially stubborn, and if your love means a great deal to you don't risk It on tho score ot pride. Make the first overtures, but don't be humble, and don't repeat them if they are rejected. KLES February and March Bring Ont Unsight ly Spots. Bow to Bemove Easily The woman with tender akin dreads February and March because they are likely to cover her face with ugly freck les. No matter how thick Iter veil, the sun and winds have a strong tendency to make her freckle. Fortunately for her peace of mind the recent discovery of a new prescription, Jthlne double vtrength, makes It possi ble for even those most susceptible to freckles to keep their skin clear and white. No matter how stubborn a ease of freckles you have, the double strength othlne should remove them, Oct an ounce from Deaton Drug Co. and banish the freckles. Money back If tt falls, Advertisement FREC t