TI1K I IKK: OMAHA. WKIl.NKNllAY, MAlicll 111. I'M. Good Work of "Widowed Mothers' Fund Br ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. "l- t, , a .. -t.' -v -sa i Copyright. li'13. Star Company. Were half the power that fills the world with terror. Were half the wealth bestowed on camps and courts. Given to redeem the human mind from error. There were no need of arsenals or forts. Do rou know that New York state has more In stitutions and less family life real home life for the child than any other stHte. In the whole world? More than 34.000 children are at present In New York state institu tions. The large ma jority of half or phans are there only because the mother In, wholly against her will, repulsive to every fiber of her mother-love, forced to part with her own children because she is too poor to maliitnlr them! No other cause. No crime ! Thus the children are swallowed up ,in the pauper, institutional or foster homes, and mothers are weeping for their chil dren "rcfusliiK to be comforted because they ere not." It costs approximately 11 to house and board a child In an Institution for one week . That institution frequently farms out tho child with a foster mother and pays her the foster mother for its keep. Heretofore more money, energy, time and attention have been devoted by the federal and state governments for the conservation of the streams and forests, for the protection of fish and frame, for the treatment of diseases of the horse. the cow and the dog. for the care of epileptics, feeble-minded, insane and the more unfortunate beings totally bereft cf reason, than has been Riven to the willing and waltliiK. sane and susceptible, eager and bright little children hungering" and longing for the mother-love, and some one to help until they can help themselves, and afterward render more than an equivalent to their benefactors, to aoclety and the state. Now the coun try Is beginning to awake to the needs of a." widowed mothers' pension law. Illinois, under the leadership of Henry I Nell of Chicago, was the first to bias" the way in 1912, and since then twenty states have followed. Why should Nw York, the greatest state of all. lag behind? This bill Is now before the legislature, j and If passed will take effect October 1. , lido. ! It is not a fight against Institutional , homes! It is nut a protest against private char ities! It is a supplemental or comparative proposition working on harmony and co operation and not against real charities Instead of giving the child and pc week or any other sum. to the Institution, localities are empowered at their discre tion to give the 13 direct to the mother and not tear the child away from her affection often a !t has transpired to the previous disaster of both mother and , child. But while we are waiting for the wise j men of New T irk state to paaa this bill, and for It to go into action, there is an opportunity to assist a private organisa tion, banded together for the same pur pose, the assistance of widowed mothers and orphans. This is the Widowed Mothers' Fund association. This society has strong names to sustain it. Mrs. Simon Baruch and Mrs. Munroe Stern being among th number. It has exlrted six years, and It has spent t.wn. Of this amount 123,000 win used directly in giving relief to widowed mothers. U.000 only being em ployed In expenses Incident to the organ ization. .V greal many of our large charities use three-fourth of the money they receive to pay for expensive quarter and to pay salaries to their officers; therefore, it Is rather unusual to find an association which can show sin-h statistics as the Widowed Mothers' Fund association Only thone who try to ussist the unfor tunate women who have been left wid ows with email children and with no in come realize the need which exists all about us. With all the., charities which can be named there is no one more worthy than this association, organized by a few : women who realised the tremendous! amount of good that could he accom-1 pli.hed In this particular field. Throusu the efforts cf this association hundred! of worthy Lut destitute niothert and their little children have been eared for. This (.rsnnization derives Its support from the general public by voluntary contributions and annual membership dues. Its sphere of psefulnes Is limited only by tin funds at its disposal. It is a worthy organization, and should he maintained and strengthened. The Lady o"". Lent & Copyright, ll"'. lptern'l News Seixlce. By Nell Brinkley ye 1 -roHCiM YOU DANCE OAhP'lSV'e- ra w Q .so She forgets her dance card for short seasons, even though her heel and toe ache for the ecstasy of the hesitation. She cuts her old friend Danny on tlie street, 'stead 'o makin' ftoft eyes at him as usual. j She plasters her flying hair down, St. Cecilia fashion, to rebuke the vanity that looks from her eyes. f sbe's chubby, she holds uj her baud and turns her eyes up in vov of abstinence wlicn chocolate nrc offered. She speaks no evil and keeps her temper, even though the col ored stars fly out on cither side. She burns up the face of the handsomest man she knows so. she may not think too hard of him. Xe'.l Hrinklev. Read it Here See it at the Movies. By special arrangement tor this paper a photo-drama corresponding to the Install ments ot "Kunaway June" Diay now be seen at the leading moving picture the aters. By arrangement mad with the Mutual Film corporation It la not only peaslble to reJ "Runaway June" each day, but also afterward to see moving pictures llluitratlng our story. 'Copyright, 1916, by Serial Pulblcation Corporation.) MXTII EPISODIC. Kidnaped. CHAPTER II. Continued Through the trees the moonlight glinted on distant water, and the shadows of the trees lay In fantastic, twisted patterns on the hillside. Dawn, the red glow of the sunrise, filtering through the midst of the morn ing, stole in at the open door of the VII- Stomach Fine! Indigestion, Gas, Sourness Gone Pape's Diapepsin lard garage and found Marie, with her fists folded under her arms ami the tip of her frosty nose in her elbow, loudly snoring. She limped over to the house, plodded up to her room, dressed herself with numb fingers and after half an hour of dull-eyed thought si lawleil this note, which she laid on June's bed: Dear Miss Junle I am feeling better, thank you 1 hope you will excuse me If 1 take a few hours off. I will be hack lor lunch. HopiiiK von are the same. I remain, yours affectionately. MAKi R She tiptoed out and hurried down the I hill to the station, where she caught the first commutiter'e train. Arriving at the city, she sought Cf fleer luwd and prevailed on hlin to phone Ned's friends and June's parents that Ned had been kidnaped. June in a pretty little morning role was busy among the flowera In Mrs. Villard's boudoir window conui vntory and sing ing softly when she heard a fooutep be hind her. Turning, she saw Vlllard tow ering above her, his hands in the pockets of his lounging robe, and he was grinning. "Oh I" exclaimed June, startled. "Good morning. "Really does" put bad stomachs In or der "really does" overcome indlgeitlon. dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness In live minutes that Just that makes i'at e s Diapepsin the largest selling stom ach regulator in the world. If what you i at lernier.ts into stubborn luinns. you W 1c h gas and eructate aour undigested food and acid; head is dizsy and aches; breath sour; tongue coated; your lnsldes H ied with bile and Indigestible waste, n nietnUr tho moment I'ape'a Iilapetwin cr.mes In contact wlih the stomach all iliitrcsa vaniflux. It s truly astonishing body through the room, and then, with an oath, Vlllard released his hold on this fainting girl. Houreer! He had sunk his tooth Into Vtllsrd's arms, and now hu was a whirlwind of canine fury. The man turned palu with fear, kick ing ii ml striking at the enraged animal. "Houncer:" Thu cry from June saved Villard's life, j tor tne nog. wun a yeip oi joy, wm springing for his throat as he fell. Tlie man lay back. The dog stood still, motion less. The man's hand moved nervoUHly. Tho collie moved precis ly that same amount. Vlllard did not twitch a inusclo from that time, except to spesk. "Call off the dog!" he ordered. "Watch him, Houncer," said June quietly. June rose from the chair Into wiilch she had limply sunk, but a cold anger had come to replace her weakness. Khe walked from the room and, going to the house phone in the hall, called to the kitchen. "Has Mrs. Vlllard returned?" sue In' uulred of the muid who answered. "Not yet." "Do you know where to reaca her?" "Any one down at the cottages will hunt her up and give her your message." "AK her to come home im mod lately, please. Tell her It is qultu Important." She walked back to tho boudoir and glanced In at the di.or. The two statues were as site had left them. At the sound of her footstep Houncer wagged the tip Little Bobbie's Pa Woman's Sphere Why It's Growing I' 1 T j ny Ki.iiKiiT m iunn. A lecturer once iftrd: "Wlist Is wo man's sphere?" Then he paused lo tske a sip of water. land got his answer from the gallery, thus; ' W oman g sphere is n thing she csn . spear." Woman's work is any useful thing she 1 enn do wcM ! The advent of wo men Into the w.irld i o f business has (worked a cnccftil ind beneficent reo- 1 liition. I I'p to the time of the civil war a wo ; man school teacher i was a curiosity.. W j The typical man schoolmaster, with Ids handy birch, can yet he vividly re membered by many. W o m e n teachers sine In as an Innovation, and they have brought beauty, gentleness and love where before there were fear anl force. "The- teacher la the child's other mother," said Frocbel. ' ' ' ' . We didn't believe It at first, but now iv. accept It. By WILLIAM F. KIRK. ( him over to play with your Intel an. j Then they can be ad together, he 'sed. ,, ,, , If IVItx wants to be sad he will have Thare was a funny old Ccrman calm , , (y , up to our nouse .e.i m-. .... ....... .. , ,m , offo (J be , Ilerr Mans lie looked kind of sad A rllM1,,any for hll , too ,hort fof ta.Kcu Kimi or a.n a.. ...c ...... ..... - that , , hBppy of ,h , ft , .. . - I .. . bind f u ut irimA m n I - " - ".tninK it is a grate wurld u live In. I 1 ne weni, occkhub . u.-.-.a.. .v, .... .., m away, ,Q j About lii the discovery was msiVs'thst ; women could serve as clerks' In the gov jernment offices at Washington. Women w tin ne husbands, fathers and brothers had gone lo the front took the piecee r the men at Washington, and lot the work w-ent on hist the same. Huy 1870 women were acting a clerks and saleswomen In shops and stores. At the Centennial exposition the,type wrlter was ono of the Wonders of. the lime. In In'SS I pent a manuscript to a pul llaiier and got It back with a note saying they respectfully declined to read any manuscript thst was not typewritten. I lifted a wall that could be' heard a m'le how .ould 1 ever learn to use a typewriting machine! I thought typewriting was a most dif ficult and complex bustnesa, like pro ducing a harmony on the piano. The typewriter makers ' could not sell their machines unless they supplied an j operntor; and so they Inaugurated a I special branch of their business to edir 'catc women In business methods and to I ue a typewriter. Rut In a short time business College-. I sll over the land began to blossom and j their chief concern was teaching stenog raphy and typewriting. ' . . ' The typewriter ranks In usefulness with : the electric car. , Itaptd methods of writing are aa neees '. sary ai quick Iransixirtatidn. ' MriTncn receive w'aites IrJ Anierlca now ! of over eTOO.Oori.noo a year. It is said that the lady typewrltlst has I at times disturbed the domestic 'peace; ! but trolley cars, too, have their victims. I And I am told by a man who married i his typist that such marriages are quite sure- to he happy, because the man and j woman are not stranger they "know j each other! ' ''..'.' I The woman who has looked after a man's correspondence Is familiar . with I his curves. Bhe Knows the best about him and the worst; and he knows hr tastes, habits and disposition. . This Is better than the old society' plan of getting married first and getting-acquainted afterward. , No longer do you hear men talk of making their pile and retiring to en loy It. The man who falls to get enjoyment out of hi business will never enjoy any thing, and. what la more., will not. suc ceed In business. , Good men enjoy work, and wise men know that there la no happiness outside of systematic, useful effort- The Intro duction of the one-price system haa been a leaven that has worked Its Infjuenea through the whole lump. , '. '. Honesty as a business asset la every where recognised. If the good are part cotton and look like wool, you are now f lankly told that the article may.be a yard wide, but It is not all wool. . We keep faith with our customers. ".We make our money out rf our friends our enemies will not do business wIO. - Thus, lluough the- conservation "of I friendship in business, we are gaining an education and evoMng qualities. " V1 And the lac t that honesty In btln'e and truth In trade arrived with the ad vent of women Is no mere coincidence. too. He . aim imam with ra. ra nan i.een ; f(tUlrr , hap,y hB u o j tQJ all the afternoon at a cluli meeting & , ijcn. iau. l . M . I . - - 1 . ,.u II 4 .. . , f .. 1 , UU,I ' ne .e.i .a ..ol-j , Vf.ll are rile Hhh. ; He did everything ne cun io cneer up I his friend, & he acted so cheerful that ! Ma was looking at him vary close. till, lite Is such a sadnea, sed Ilerr Manx. As 1 1 t-ir (Joel he onxt lute When Winter coiihh and I see my father mother happy too. I newer saw my ed Pa, I ant pose k (s tin call of the not far d'stsnt spring, Pa sed but in any event I am falrlv imrti,- I , . IS rt i.. no. i O wis t I'iKTKiy oiip a a &V t'niinh . W Stoa the Thing- that fiuM It S ..d Ike Coog. will Q Mop Itself g "-. .1 w ins Life Is sadder ss everything. I Kut winter is almost none, Ilerr, sed l"a. pattiiiK hlin on the back. Winter Is here ' for but a short time longer. aV then we shall have spring, the Joyous Hiring, sed Pa. rprlng, with Its flowers A Its green shoots shooting up everyware. & the song of the fust robin ,u"" II cud march throu Oeorgy. without get. , , " r"lly T. 011 lids lake . . . . . ; ft" ! fnonils. H warns us that there ting out of wnd. I feel that full of life, flammntioii or obstruction in a d he sed Kring the good old busle bov. .ri i. " ' " A 1 . -..11 t our nest. ia in- oii or obstruction In a rianoer- Olis place. I licrefore. w I. en vnu net a. How niiiili birn.Ms did you transack at 1 ' ,'""sTn l,l"'t pr-eel to dose yourself yure dub. ed Ma iwith a lot of drugs that merely "stop" .,,. ... ii'"" cuugli tempororilv bv desdeninff the guite a lot, quiie iut, ed ,.a MV i throat nerves. Treat the cauwv heal the frend ben-, Her- Maus. will agree with 'inflamed membranes. Here is a home me that it was one of the hardest after- j mile reme.lv that pets riiflit at the cause noons that we ewer put In at the cluh; "nJ will.make an obhtinate cough vanish ut now It I. over. 'and here in I ??T ulMy t,,an vou W thought pos- "8o this Is friend wile's pretty new ' tail, but not for one fleeing In- almost marvelous, and the joy Is Its harmless nesa. A large ftftv-eent case of Tape's Pia pepstn will glye you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction, or your druggixt I uinds you your money bsck. It's worth Its weight In gold to men and women who can't get their stomachs regulated. It belongs In your home should always be kept handy In rase of a tdek. sour, uoset stomach durli.if the day or night. It's the quickest, surest , hT shrieks muffkil, but one pair of ears and must harmless stomach doctor In n Bru ' "rrn "' Khiis, the the world - Advertisement. companion. observed vlllard. "Well, friend wife has excellent taste." June moved away. "Don't be In a hurry," lie chuckled. "We must ge acqainted. ' and, suddenly reaching forward, he ut bia band under hsr ohln and turned up her face, tone Jerked away, but he closed tho door toward which she darted and, gathering her in his lung arms, i ru. bed her to him. ruining kUs aft?r kiss ui.ii her suddenly cold cheek. I.ls light gray eyes flaming. June struggles were futile and j flush ut a long, lithe, while au, brown slant did he remove his fiery eyee from the pale gray eye of Bert Vlllard Mrs. Vlllard hurrying . up the stairs within a few momenta, found June In the landing alcove white, shlverli.g as If with cold. "I'm sorry, Mrs. Vlllaid, but 1 am go ing at once," she said before the older woman had even a chance to spt-ak. "Why. child" Mrs Vlllard s face was full of concern, but a a she sLarl at June her brr.ws knitted and a flush crept i.ito her cheeks "w liat what Is the ii.uUer'.'' she faltered. To Be Continued Tomorrow . In the tre.n fields. .4 Its little trout j buxxum of mv Hr..i f.i,iu .... .1 .... 1 . . - - ut, ! flashing in tne purimg nrooas. spring, i arive dull csie away spring, etirnal spring, sed Pa. my glorus country. Pnf 0 ii nnn. r r;.. ' in -..... Three cheers for , worth) in a pint bottle and All the bottle Pat Sfd. A " thraask ' U'lth tilain crrn itlilatwrl guuur ivrnn 1 liial Ana men in ine spring we s.ian ,..avc , cneois toi tne dear Fatherland of Herr K'ea vou a full pint of the most pleasant aln, rain, sed Herr Maus. My poor; Maus. and effective cough renu'dy you ever used. brother August, once It rained in tlie Wen Pa sed Fatherland 11.. r v..,,. . spring and rslned and rained, so that a gan to cry. Ma looked at Pa lafflng and great sadness made Itself his heart in , n,.rr Maus crying. ad yes Indeed 1 and when he to the barn went with a j w(lll i,,, of yo(I u . nl' roiw out of it did he come no more on have been a hard afternoon at the . bin his two feel A. h. the spring, too Is sad, L..H llTr Mat.u A all thft iMHina .M Ihf V ' ".""-m. a. ... iv,. .. ...... r . mAA- I Isilrsellaa R. ' I ' "III Ofc S l 1 1 J ' v . m'... ,. Hut you have yure fambly to comfort "What are you going tu tell your con you. sed Ma. yure wife A child. ! uJnlm w'"" h"nie?" Th.y. too. are .ad. my wlf and child. . . "l U ," ,h '"ything." . . .'.. u T..... L... . f rep.ieu rwnail.r curgnum. ul OUT Way se( lerr Maus. They know aa I know thut In this life is not much Joy and oh. so much aorn w. My lltte son Kiits lie is the asddes littel boy' t have evvor saw. he sed. Tomorrow, maybe, I bringing. the people used to expect a statesman to rie Instructive discourse. Now they require hlin to keep quiet while they tell him a few things.' Washington at a cost of onlv 54 cents. No bother tu prepare, lull directions with Pinex. It beats the Inflamed membrane an f'entlv and promptlv that you wonder iow it does It. Also lootiens a drr, hoarse or tight cough and stops the formation of hlegra in the throat and bronchial tubes, litis ending the persistent loose cough. Pines is a highly concentrated com pound of Norwav pine extract, rich ia guaiacol, and ia famous the world over for its healing effect on the membra. To avoid di'spnofntruent. aslt Tour druggist for "2 ounce of Pinex," and don t accept anvtliinv else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt lv refunded, goes with this preparation. Th Tine Co., IX Wayne, Jad,