Tin: m;i;: q.maha. Tiin.'spw, maitii :. it. c i Science for Workers Spending Money Wisely Plants. that Eat Insects Some of Them Secret Pepsin to Insure a Good Digestion Py fclMJAFl LICTEV LARKLX. n In ( By ELLA WHKKLKH WILCOX. Copytlght. llo. tho Star Company. Christ Mid J.W ycttta apo, "Sell all thou tiaat and icIvp it U thr prx.v." Bvit If Christ wirr here among uk now In praaant conditions ll ( certain lie would evr Klv such command. II r would say that if each human , bolnn pcanesatna; wraith wr to !! all he had and give it lo thp poor in a very brief time the worM would ron taW nothing hut bajjrars, ami, He would realise that iharity bettoweri without logic or reason or ayitem or Judgment is a sura way to make the need of' con .- 4. 4 tinued charity In the world. Thousands of people at the present time In America, posiwd of comfort able means and assured Income, arA haartlinff their money anl refusing; thrm aetvea the comforts they are amply able to enjoy because they hear the cry of hard timea and are (illnd with fear of harder times coming. They are produc ing harder timea by this very method. If you, my dear madam, or sir. are able to buy the materials and pay the dressmaker or the tailor for a becoming suit of clothes, what are you accomplish ing by denying yourself good apparel and by hoarding your money? You are de prfvlng your dressmaker and your tailor of a respectable source of income. You are marking the way for them to enter the bread line. If you are able to employ several dom estic to keep order and comfort anl beauty in your home, what are you ac compliahing for the world at. larise by dismissing your assistants in order to save your money? You are depriving maids and men trained for this especial, line of service or employment,, and once again you are adding new. members to the bread-line regiment. Reckless extravagance and foolish ex penditure of money are not recommended, hut It Is advisable that men and women in our land today should provide thein enlvee with the necessities, ' the comforts and the luxuries for which they are able to pay. and It requires no far sight to aee that by this method the poverty of the land will be decreased and the pros perity Increased. , Money waa never meant to be hoarded. Money,, ike blood In the human system., Read it Here See By special arrangements for this paper A photo-drama corresponding to the In stallments of "Runaway June" may now be seen at the leading moving lc(ui theaters. By arrangement with the Mu tual Film Corporation It Is -not only pes-t-lble , to read "Runaway - June" each week, but aIho afterward to see moving pictures illustrating our atory.. Copyright, 1915, by Serial Publication Corporation. - i' SYNOPSIS June, tha bride of Ned Warner, Im pulsively leaves her husband on their honeymoon becauae she begins to realize that he must be dependent on him for ! money. Bhe desires to be independent. June la pursued by Gilbert Klye. a wealthy married map. She eacap.s from his clutches with difficulty. Ned searches distractedly for June, and, learning of Blye's designs., vows vengeance on him. ELEVEXTH EPISODE. In" the Clutch of the Hirer Thievea. 1 . CHAPTER II.-Continud.) June laughed in relief. It .waa good to so human beings who were not in pur suit of her, who would befriend and pro tect her. and she had Almost run down to meet them when suddenly loud, angry voices cime from the frail little craft. There was a bitter quarrel. In which the woman took a fchrill pArt. and as the boat landed the woman Jumped out and i stooped . swiftly. The man with the erraggl? mnataehe and the scattered tufts of beard on his fsce Jumped ashore, cursing. The womsn raised up swiftly and. with a shriek like a est. Jumped for the man with a long knife glutei ins In ! ker hand. The knife flashed down, und tha man ataggered back. The gleaming blade waa raised again, but before It could deaeend again the' huge, raw-boned j man, who had Jumped from the boat, j taught the woman's arm. j June eaw no. more. Fhe ran wddly around the little hut. looking vainly for soma place - of concealment A rusty stove, a rickety table, some rude benches, two straw pallet that wus ail. There was no other roorh. not r.-n a cupboard. In the celling June's frantically roving yes found A trapdoor, one of Its bojtr ls lenae. On the wood.n wall beneath it was a series of rroa stlcKx. snd wlt'inut hesitation June rn up this rude ladder shoved the IrMpdoor aulr and scrambled into the attic. There wete vn:cre below Th.- ouairel. whatever ll had been about, had evi dently been settled, or the woman was laughing, and so was the big. raw boned man J'Jn .re4l linur through a rracfc in the ceiling l.ord. There to and the lean fi-lk, n with it., ho.'k nose ere !es,jr,l w i' I t ii.l - urr y The big mm wr i'ie s on I s hci .1 ro rr.J I i h 4 c ri (, wit', S .!,t',T SIM I'. ti-4j -t' M I. Ik of rhli.u riiU'l t ,.f r.,r of tnep- T lie -;. an i r.- t - l1 n1 ' u. Iic.i. t.i rr b'.ie.- "ill ' - in l I',' '.ll.twr SS . ! -,. II, r ) must le kept In circulation or It stag nates and produces disease. A ynmie woman who had managed to lay atfle a tidy Hit)" bank account, anl whuye purlstcnt and patient Industt-v ha enabled lior to command a good salary for th work she was employed ti do heard this i rv of hard times until lu- In a sort of mental panic regardtne the future. Finding hrriw If one Satur day with p busy day of etinpplnr and going About on erraucs of business and mercy betoin hot. she hesitated about taking a rariiasc to tender her uhv more enjoyable. Ought 1 to indulte in tlil-i ex'rava BMtice," f he asked herself, "wlien the con dition or the country Is so prei arl. us?" As sue approached the line of waiting raLs she was reasoning the matter with heisvlf; tnen It occurred to lier that each one of t;-.cc cibmen was endeavoring to make a living; that he, too, was fa-infi worry and anxiety, and t!-at If each man or woman who had been In the habit of patr.ihir.ing bini were to withdraw his or her custom the whole line of cabmen would he on-.e object!, of charity in a few months. Then she realized that th luxury she was about to grant lima-lf was in no way an extravagance, but wan a very practical mettled of helping the world along. That which Is reasonable, sensible and rlRht to do in the way of dairy llvlnt Simula be done now without anv con sideration of hard times or possible pov erty awaiting in the future. We ahould all buy the clothes w need, employ the help necessary and enjoy the wholesome pleasures possible, and consider that we are following out Christ's Injunction In a modern mid practical way. Instead of selling all we have and giving to th poor, we at-..' sharing whet wc have with self-respertie.R human beings and saving mem from becoming paupers. It is a far nobler act to assist trades men and tollers to s icceed in their var ious efforts at -elf-support than It la to aratter money to beggars. There Is no virtue in denying our support to the one In order to give to the other. When we encounter absolute poverty and absolute want we must do our share toward allevi ating them, but to prevent such conditions is a higher duty than 'alleviating them. Therefore. If your wardrobe needs re plenishing, your home needs refurnishing, if extra help is required to render the home comfortable,- If you feel the need of a change of environment and climate, and yon have the means to one or all of theso things v Ithout incurring debt, do not hesitate on the plea that you must giv all Vou have to the poor. You are saving willing workers from needing your charity by sharing your money with them in legitimate and business like rrtnnner Tn the matter, as In all other, preven tion la letter than cure. it at the Movies. jnd after the people exhibited .different ulicles of jewelry, clothing, etc., they Ntarted cooking a meal. The men were at the table an Incredibly short time. They gulped their food, and then, tired and sleepy, they lay down oil straw pullets for a few minutes of honest rest, while tha cold and starved little run away bride 1m the attl; looked down with ravenous eyea on what they -had left. The odor of the hot coffee mado her feel faint. Only terror kept her on the alert. To Ba Continued Tomorrow.) Victrola IV, Oak , 'IIP ' ;. The following Omaha and Council Bluffs dealers carry complete lines of Victor Victrolas, and all the late Victor Records as fast as issued. You are cordially invited to inspect the stocks at any of these establishments. oiler PIANO COMPANY 131M313 Frnam St. Omaha, Neb. Tree Victrola Recital Friday from 3 to i P. M. SSfc Cyck Co. n, OAHKKTT P. SKKVISS. Seine persons. Impressed by the appar ent rcsemblai.ee- lictwecn plants and ani mal", are ready to bcllee that conscious ness and InteltiKence are not confined to one side of the jne, hut are shared by all things that have life. To a sensitive soul, ow ning such n belief, it Is a morally shocking act to cut down a tree, or to Pluck a flower. .iut a It Is to tread upon a "ornv There l one cla-s of plants which ap. pears to afford striking evidence in favor of the view that intelligence is not con fined to animals. These are the "In sect tvorous plants'- which get their name from their habit of trapping and devour ing Insect". They are really carnivorous, or "flesh eating" as truly so as wolves and Hirers. A wonderful example of plant, nn orchid from Rornea. wl'.l form one of the exhibits at the horticultural show In this city on March IT, and a photograph of It Is herewith Presented. The Idea of a plant feeding upon an animal seems a kind of reversal of na ture, and when a carnivorous plant is actually seen In the act of catching and swallowing lis strange prey a shiver of horror Is felt by the onlooker. It appears a peculiarly r-'onstrous performance, un canny and terrifying. That animals should eat plant aeems to us all right. Science has taught us that It la a necessary process, inasmuch as plants alone have the power lo turn mineral matter Into living protoplasm. They thereby become storehouses of nourishment for the animal world, which could not exist If It did not feed upon them. Rut why should plants, under any cii umstances, eat animals? A narlial answer has been found. In the opinion of some biologists, in. the fact that the species of plants which are car nivorous usually. If not Invariably, live In places where nitrogenous matter is very scarce or virtually absent, and that the planla supply this lack to their nour ishment by seizing upon the Insects which visit them. The apparatus by which these plant satisfy their 'carnivorous appetites con sists of wondeiful modifications of leaves, or parts of leaves, whose movements are startlin&ly suge-estlve of acts guided by Intelligent comprehension of what needs to be done to accomplish the object in view. Sometimes the apparatus resembles a beautiful flower, a fact wnlch renders its carnage so much the more repellant. The most celebrated of the Insectivorous plants la "Venus' Fly-Trap," - which has a flower-like mouth, consisting of two hinged ploces. or petals, capable of clos ing quickly together, like the Jaws or a mouse trap. Btiff bristles on the margins of the lips and sensitive hairs lining the tube below aid materially in the catching And swallowing of any unfortunate Insect which Is lured to the trap. The sensitive hairs are, Indeed, simply triggers, the touching of which Instantaneously closes the trap By that time the Insect has 'got I far enough within to be beyoud the rhaiire of escape. Once In a while, however, the victim does escape, whereupon the trap 'opens again. The pro'fsa of diges tion Is aided by a secretion of the plant, nd when It Is completed the trap opens and the Indigestible portions are cast out. In the plant called the "sundew" the leaves that act as Insect catchers are covered with glandtilous hairs which" seise upon the victim. While A sticky gum glues It fast until It digestible Juices have been Absorbed, when the remains Are let go. The plants called "bladder worts." living In ponds, have a kind of bladder which acta like a miniature eel trap In catching minute water creatures. Carnivorous "pitcher-plants" are very $15 & Mueller t-.- :- ... . -.-... -! ' '...-;,.. ... . . . - , i . J An orchid wonderful. The flower-like tube, or pitcher, often has a lid, which closes down when Insects are entrapped. A sweet accretion around the lips Attracts the victims. Inskle the tube Is lined with downward-pointing hairs, which force the unfortunate prisoner toward the bottom, but prevent his return. At the bottom there Is usually a consider able quantity of water. A. W. Wallace found some pitcher plants In the Malay Archipelago which could hold aa much as two gallons of water. The Insects Are drowned In the WAte.r, which la contained In what might be called the "stomach" of the plant, for digestive substances, resombling pepsin, .exist in the water And promote absorption -of the edible parts of the piey. I have read' that the wiry mosquito sometimes .breeds In the water of a pitcher, plant, and geta away to pur sue his tuneful career In the. outer world. I do not guarantee that atatement. Mimosas, or "sensitive plants" make the same suggestion of Intelligence. Tha Mimosa Pudlca ("bashful" mimosa), 'mimics anlmnls that pretend to be dead when threatened by enemies. Mr. Wal lace says that where A large surface of ground Is covered with this plant the effect 6f walking over it Is moat peculiar. "At each step the plants, for some dis tance round, suddenly droop, as If struck with paralysis, and a broad track of prostrate herbage, several feet wide, -Is distinctly marked out by the differont color of the closed leaflets." s easy to leam tine Jii steps wit Victr ola; Victrolas Sold by A. MOSPE CO., 1513-15 Douglas Street, Omaha, and 407 Wett Broadway, - Council Bluffs, la, IBrandeis SltoFes Talking Machine Department in the Pompoian Room from Borneo which traps nnd 1 1 L Advice to Lovelorn : B'r Seek Your Kdainatlon. Hear Mlas Fairfax: .1 am 1 years old and the oldest of five children. Three years agu the woman who had kept house for us slnn my mother's death left us. I left school and took charge of the house. Thng have run very smoothly and we are all happy., hut now fathnT fenls that alnco I could carry out my original Inlentlona of being a teacher with four more years training, I ought td do 1t, so last week I went to regtwter for my .senior year in high school, but now that It comva to my actual gylng they are all beginning to, worry about having a atranKO woman in as hniiMckpcpcr. You see I am the only mother the children ever knew. My l".-ycnr-old sister begs me to stay honu. My 4rothrs, & and I? years, reflectively, nnr sllotit. I know they want me and vet 1 do not . know what to do. What, do you advice? X. Hlnce your Hstera and brothers are no longer little children, but are within a few years of your own age and beginning to grow up, I think you would be doing yourself a great injustice If you did not follow your father'a advice and go to complete your (raining as a teacher. Of course the housekeeping will bring a foreign element Into your family, but she need not spoil your home lite and It may be good for oil of you to have an older woman temporarily in charge and h th The Fox Trot, Caitle Pol ka, and all the other new dances all played loud and clear and in perfect time. There are Victors and Victrolas in great variety of styles from $10 to $250 at all Victor dealers. Victor Talking Machine Co. i - '.sir-!.-?!-' ll eats insects. to have your younger sister feel that She owva something to the family,' too. ' advise you most strongly to finish your training. This Is only fair to, yourself ana in no way uniuir ai your lamny. "Ilanaekeeplaar." Dear Miss Fairfax: I am engaged to a young man or good social atandlng anil who la better off financially than my lople are. Recently he has been urging me to set a definite date for our Wed ding; rut 1 hesitate on account of my limited k row indue of housekeeping. -' I have never had any duties at borne, and after leaving my office In the evening my time waa my own.' In fact,, I don't know anything about houaewurk of -any kind and aa he desires to go to a home of his own as soon as we are married, 1 don't know what to do. FRANCE H. The Instincts of home-making are strong in most of us. I think you win find It quite simple to adjust yourself to the plesaant task of keeping your horn In order. If your, abilities do not seem to meet, tha situation after your marriage, tako a few lessons at some school of do mestic science. But any efficient woman ought to be able to make and keep and manage A hVnne. Pon'f liesltAle to' marry because of foolish dobuts on that aotir. e misssc; o : j " (A - A s- U ur.AteAv -.(. "Will man. with Hie evolution d lence. ever be aide to control the hat- iual forces? Is It possible that evolu tion w-lll hrinr shout A change In th" form of the human body? Or Is evolu tion working toward the extinction of physical force anil phvsli al orgaolsm'.' "I.II.Y 11. KEN fClSTON, "Sparrow Nest, Moint Vernon, N. V." A. Those are Important questions, worthy of serious thought. Nicola Tcsl told me, and he waa In A serious mood, that "man will some time draw elec tricity directly from nature's store." This was at the World's fair In Chicago... i. If this Is accomplished, man will con Irol natural forces, for A current of elec tricity is far and away the most vAlua'de of all human wsesslons save air, water and food. Kor a flow of electricity is po tential und has the possibility of llgit and heat. Light, heat And power Are next to Air. food and water. Polar heqt lias been used to germinate thermo-electricity, and small motors have been ac centuated with this curient. but this pri ces has not been exploited commercially so far as I know. Testa nn doubt mes.nt that electricity would be taken from na ture's vast reservoir directly, not hy first ualng heat. He did not Indicate any theory or plan, and he told' me this In 1KC. If such men a Thomson, Edison, TesU and Stclnmets cannot "tap nature." we shall have to await further evolution of science. Kven solar-heat-engines, using heat only, and not electricity, are not In general use, aa one would think, r The groat one In the Pasadena' ostrich farm Is dismantled. I went up to see 1t several years ago, and It waa pumping water by loeans of solar heat. TecelVe'd en mlrrprs and by them reflected upon Pollers In a steam plant. Rut the real problem is to take electricity directly from Nature's lavish store. There Is no danger of humans all run ning to brains, a la H. 3. Wells',' plan. Physically the Harvard college (oik Are running out. The big eugenic research back In Cambridge, Mass., discovered thrft "Harvard graduates will have only six teen male progeny In six generations." Rut, th' " we all may evolut away all sorts of atrophied organs. - Mer. useless parts now, but necessary when wa wara fishes snd apes. Anuatlo creatures ln,tha away-back Kllurutn times, . And abnormal beings In tree topa In very recent.. , Do. You Know Tliat In South Africa there is .tha "snee wood" tree, which Is so called beoausa one. cannot cut It' with a,, saw without aneeslng, as tha fine dust has exactly the effect of snuff. No Insect or worm will touch It; it Is very bitter to-the taste, and when placed In , water It sinks. The marvelous fibre of tha mulberry troe, utilised in the Japanese paper tailed '"haahlklraiu," la th basis of tha ma terial that Rear' Admiral Tokuyamit tint proposed for collapsible lifeboats twr ub marines.' London, a 'city" on the rlvar Thmc. in tha- county of Middlesex, OtiUvlo, Canada, has suburbs called London Junc tion and Fating. Tha population1 of. (ho Canadian London 1 4.0v. ' Every week in England there la a' rluaad season, during which net-flshltig for Sal mon fs prohibited. It extends from nuun on Saturday' until a. m. In Monday.' . Upwards of 6,000 ships pass through the Hues canal In tha course of a year, representing a total of more than IO,uOO,90C tons of shipping. .- " new ' A eV , . U " f 'ffie il a I i .4 7