Hi e Be es Mom e Maaz i u e P a: F r II II - - How to Keep a Husband's Love By DOROTHY DLt One of the burning toplr cf iMc-rest to every married woman, and especially to th married woman who is Retting: unfair and fat, anl forty, and whose husband I accumulating enough moitey to make him attrartlvt! to oth r tvotnen. Is '" to retain a hus uand's Icve. ' Und r nKh rond' llona keeping a firm. Vet gentle grasp upon a slim, slip ncry eel Is a safe and settled diversion compared to holding a, man nailed to his own fireside. Hence most middle-aged ladies spend mucb ilme, and thought, nnd labor on how to Veep their husbands frsatnated. and thus lreumvent the harmer, and prevent the head of the hours from roaming. Men do not hothor to try to preserve Iheir wives' affections. Whether this is n rompll'mnt and Indicates a husband's feet lalth In h'f wtfe'j love and l"y- nlr, or whether It is an Insult and ws that he esteems bee ru unattrne- iv that he thinks that ho can't lone her. no woman knows. And she'd five a good deal to know In her own par ticular Individual rase. .It remain", a fact -that the average middle-aged married man Goes inrough none of the sriiles of leaiouey iibcut his wife that ho Ones alrfiut him. Xnr does he die, or exorcise, or tifO linlr tjonlo to keep himself lookinff t his wife )o the romantic yong -j".n she tr.ur d. while jhe r-ies tr.Mish the tsrtures the Inquisition In a vain attempt 1o t eserve for 'lira the Illusion that tJ.e '. still the bride lie led to the altar In spite or 'ccause men 00 habitually leave the stable door unlocked, cccnticn ally the gray maro doss nolt and pies i ft with another master. Indeed this .Ubs trophe is happening with increasing fre quency, and it benl'is to look as If the time might come wliei; a husband would 'iave to take as much trouble 1 1 keep lis wife as a wif Joes to Keep her. litis and. An Interesting sldlf It Is thrown on ihls view of the sublecl ty a nan who is lulng a wealthy To'-hano for alli-nation ot his wife's njtet!;n, and who sjve.; the following ways In whie'i" her love was won: - - "Spending money while .out 'i'n l.er: Tine dressing:, treating hr to e!aLcr:,te luncheons; glvlnar her expmuive preni'.lr; taking her to places cf amus'.ment; send ing her flowers: remembering her birth day; by the lavish tips he Kitve tvatera In ra'es. hiring taxis and allowing them to stand by the hour rpgardle.s or x penae." Presuming that a woman's love is a purchasable commodity, it is easy to un derstand how the charms of a good spender could prove irresistible If the lady had the misfortune to be married to a. tight-fisted husband. Without being ariclous. It Is intoxicatingly fluttering J a woman to feel that a man does not ink that the best is good enough for Jcr, and that lie willing to throw his finoney away to give her plensure. Ro nr in iiu-untru i jyso I' " "u j lady whoa errant neart went after the man who used, its her husband avers, "fourteen lavish ways of spending money" to win her love. But, after all.ithe moral of the case is ixit In what the lover did, but what the bysband left undone. Few, if any, women er really sell their love, but many men life a woman's affection because they ar tk stingy to keep It. The majority of hhands. however prodigal they may have bn In gifts before marriage, after marriage are apt to think that It's too much trouble to make their wives a present. They justify themselves by saving that Mary or Sallle can buy what she pleases at the snops, and they hold that In puy iiig her bills they are making her a perpetual present Even on the occasion of Christmas or birthdays, the present only to often takes the form of a check, which satisfies the man's senpe of duty, but brings to the woman none of the romantic thrill that she would have had in some little gift that represented some especial whim or fad of hers. The man's excuse under such circum stances that he didn't know what she wanted adds insult to injury, for it shows hew little she is In his thoughts, and what tmall notice he really takes of Tier. There was a time when ne did know what she liked, and even felt It hsr preference In chocolate croams and flowers. To mn It may sound faroial to my that a man won a woman's love by the big tlp. he gave to waiters when they went out. together, but women will un derstand the psyrholoKii al significance of it. They know h w often, whr-n tliei" husbands take them out, they do i be cause they've been held up by the wife's tongue. Nothing is so f uner -al as a pleasure jaunt forced upon one, and the man who has to take his wife out because sl:e has nagged him Into doing it. is in a kurly temper that makes him take it out in rowing with the street car conductor, abusing the plsy they go to se and bad gering the waiter at the restaurant. Not so acts the man whose pleasure in lelng with a woman makes him smile upon the world, regard the street ra Mindurtor as a long-lot broth r, every plsy as a masterpiece, and the waiter as a goUling who serves nectar and am brosia, and who deserves to hsve gold and silver offered up before him. There's a letson for men in the man ho won a wife's love awav from her unbend by fourteen lavish ways of "(-ending money. It's good economy to keep things ' in repair, even a wife's nert. and lots of divorce expenses and alimony could r-e saved by a few judicious Investments, of small cbsng la tsBdy uid violets. 1V: V. T1 11 The Most tie Uoddess Story Ever- r, 1 lf- '. i - v i ' S V ' Jr H i 1 tfe ?kx? w ,vJv A w& S ; rl w -vs , n ;o .ti:zu n inX , ;. n p . I. 4ivu x'.; . t I i I . i !trtJ -'t .v:vv..v 1 1 Sw (Copyright. 1915. by the Star Co. All For eign Rights Reserved.) SynopsiH of IVevioua Chapter. After the tragic death of John Ames' bury, his prostrated wife, one of Amer ica's greatest beauties, dies. At her death I'rof. Stiiliter, an agent qf the Interests kidnaps the beautiful 3-year-old' baby) girl unci brings her up In a. paradise i where she sees no man, but thinks she Is taugiit by angels who Instruct her for her mission to reform the world. At the aae of is she is suddenly thruBt into the world wliere agents of the Interests are ready to pretend to find her. The ono to feel the loss of the little Amcsbury girl most, after she had been spirited away by t lie Interests. was Tommy liarclay. Fifteen years later Tommy goes to the Adiroiiiim.K!. The interests are responsi ble for the trip. Hy accident ho is the first to inert thu little Ametbury girl, as ahe culms forth from her paradise as Celestia the girl from heaven. .Neither Tommy nor Celestia recnmilzes each other. Tommy tiniis 11 an eu-y matter to rescue Celeall;l from Prof. Htllliter and they hide In the mountains; later they are pursued by Stllliter and esrupe to an island where they spend the night. That night, t-'tiiiltcr, following his In dian guide, reaches the island, found Celestia and Tuminy, but did not disturb them. In the morning Tommy goes for a swim. I Miring his absence Stllllter at tempts to steal Celestia, who runs to Tommy for help, followed by milliter. The latter at on e realizes Tommy's pre dicament, lie takes advantage of it by taking not only Celentla's, but Tommy's clothes. Stilliter reaches Four Corners with Celefelia lust in time to catch an express for New York, there he places Celestia in Bellevue hospital, where her sanity It proven by the authorities. Tommy reaches Bellevue just before Btll 'Iter's departure. Tommy s first sini was to get Celestia away Jrom St'.lliter. After they leave Bellevue Tommy is unable to get any ; hotel to take Celestia in owing to her costume. But later ho persuades his lathsr to keep her. When he goes out to the taxi he finds her gone. She fall Into the hands of white slavers, but escapes and sroes to live with a poor fam ily by the name of Pouslas. When their son Freddie returns home he finds right In hi own house. Celestia. the girl for which the underworld haa offered a re- ward that he hoped to get. ' SIXTH EPISODE. Tommy tried to fight bis wiy to It. He intended to get to it nnd fight the girls ba k from it so that it could be opened. It feemed to him a matter of life and death that he should do this, and I'm afrjld lie wasn't very gentle, and didn't stick very closely to the rules of chivalry, lie waa very rough, nnd ho used every ounce of h's strength. Beit those girls, wrought upon by terror, were a;) If made of steel and wire, and it seemed as if thev thought that tlielr one chsnre of safety was to keep Tommy away from the door. One young girl, joei earning at the top of her lungs, hit Ihlin sgaln and again between the eyes with her clenched fist, another flung her i arms around his neck and tried to twint his head off. He forced hi way to the middle of the crowd, and then he had to give up. It was all he could do to fight his wsy out again. The other end of the room was In flames. Through the roles of his shoes Tommy knew that the whole floor was burning on its under side. A glance at Celestia filled h.n heart ,' with pity that was almost intolerable. I Fhe, too, it seemed, had gone mad wlih terror. Along the walls of the room I were many lire buc kets, half lull of IwMcr. Celestia had csugbt up one of 'them and was running toward the strug gling mssx of humanity around Uie door. But Celestia had not gono in id. She was excited, hut l.rr mind was still capa ble of putting two and two together. She hurled the contents of the bucket Into the thick of the crowd, and laced off for another. The effect of that sud- den herd shower of cold water was ex- inordinary. It seemed to rhsr.ge the Tommy carries the rescued Celestia to safety after the fire. psychology of the crowd from fear of file to fear of water. Tommy, perceiving this. Instantly him self caught up a bucket and began to fling water on the crowd. And between them they began to clear a way to the doc"'. Hut the fact that the floor was beginning to burn through helped, Tommy got to the door at last and dragged It open. That started another stampede that had to be controlled with more water and with more violence. But gradually Tommy got to the door and Celestia In the crowd began to bring a little order out of the chaos, and to herd the girls through the doorway like sheep, not too many at a time. Twice there was a jam, but Tommy straightened the half-witted girls out, hurrying one and restraining another. He was too busy to see what Celestia was doing, but ho called to her from time to time. It had been a slow businecs, and hy now the floor was hurnlng clear through in many plncea, so that some of the last srirls to paa through the door to safety went with burned feet. "Hurry, Celestia, called Tommy. "We can go now. ' Khe did not answer. He saw her at a window struggling to I C-1. ii., duo you mav aav. on a little Island of floor surrounded, well not yet by a sea of flames, but by a strongly rising tide thereof. "Thl way, Celestia! For God's sake don't Jump!" And ho ran to her acroc the smoking and burning floor. A he reached her a portion of the floor over which he had just passed foil In with a crackUna. crashing sound, and through the aper ture name ana smoke roared upward as from the crater of a volcano, Celestia had not succeeded yet in open ing the window. As Tommy reached her she etajgered and fell 'tnto hia arms. He turned with her toward the door and groaned like a thing that had been . ' "a Dcen " "Lvf inai Impossible. way was I supporting Celestia with one arm hr auoceeqei in opening the window. The crowd In the street below saw them, and a kind of groaning and lamenting arose. Celestia beran to revive. Tommy had turned his hack to the window. Not until the last moment would he let her jump, and then only to escape a more shocking death. Mean- while his heart best timmiv mn . pressed h'r c(oer and closer to his breast s if he thought as thev had at best but few mlnvtes to live he must l'"ake her understand how much he loved . ner' Speech cotid not help much. And 1 ' "i rot in those moments or speech he hsl rot in those moments ianv r'at command So he preused her :'"e to his breast and k I used her upoa Advice to Lovelorn He la F.xlrroirl; Foolish. Iear Miss Filrfax: I am secretly en HKei to a young man two years my senior, but since we became i ti -aired ho K'tca to .ilaces rf amusement v.Fout ice. In the name boildum- 1 work Is a ynun man who wish's my attention whom I very PS of I a me to go to places of amusomeni, which I rof iie on account of rny engage ment. He has asked me for a kiss which I refused. Knee, uvon refusing, he kissed me and said ho had moie right than any onn else to kiss me. J like him. He ants at if he loves me. Tell me how I can find out If he does, as he does not know 1 am engaged I'L'ZZI.KT). Slecret engagements are always unfair to the girl, and you must either announce yours or break it. Your fiance la un just; he refuses you rights which he re serves for himself. I think the second man show a more lovable disposition. Imposing Motion Picture Serial and Created. :::::: Read It Here See It the eyes and the mouth, and murmured and murmured over her. "Oh," he thought, "If only she could love me, oould let me know ahe loved rre, before the end," It seemed to him that he couldn't die, that he mustn't die without her knowing that. Then a sudden and more practical thought came Into his head. If he was to die, he must die trylnr to save her. I Then she would understand. He looked I j about him wildly, and his eyes fell upon a great roll of black rnd white atrloed material for making shlrto. leaving Celestia leaning against the wall near the open window, he made a dash for the the shirting and unrolled a number of the fire buckets that still contained water. It was his notion to wrap Celestia In the wet stuff, to take her In his arms, and carry her safe to the door, and to that safety which still seemed to exist bevoud. By some strange freak of the fire there was still quite a large area of flooring surrounding Celestia, as yet un burn ed. But between that and the door, to make the crossing, seemed to offer but one chance la a hundred. The one who was carried might live to tell th tale The one who did the carrying could hardIy hop for " much- H would be so badly burned that although he might lie alive when he reached the street, he would not live long thereafter. It takes many words often to tell of what happens in a few Instant of time. From the first cry of fir to the time when Tommy had wrapped Celestia In the wet shirting, and was preparing, you may say, to wade through hell for her, was only a few minute. The last girls to leave the sewing machine room had only Just reached th street. Fire engines were still coming. The crowd thet watched the conflagra tion was still growing. "Now for It." thought Tommy, and to ;celestlan he ahouted (he had to shout to make himself heard): "Don't be afraid, dear. I'm going to get you out of this." And he gathered her strongly In his arms, pictured out, with swift eles, what appeared to be the best route through the flames, drew one gtat, lone breath of fresh air, and Just then another great piece of flooring hell in, and Tommy saw i the narrow hallway beyond the door burst ! ullen!y into a perfe?l bell of fir. I 1,8 w too late by a matter of in ttants. If he had not wasted those precious Instants In kissing her he might have savea rver. J he agony or soul that h went through with this realisation was frightful. Death by fire seemed almost Bj Beatric Fairfax nepeeds Oa HI Parse. liear Miss Fairfax: l am engaged to a young man, whom I re very often. For the last two months 1 have bad to do night work, because my empleyer has found business dull and bad tj do away with some of his help. A week ago he 1 told ma that I woul i hare lo continue j working nights for somt fcur weeks, I making It Impoawlble f ir nrn to see my ' young man so often a haforc. Now he Is continually quarrelling with me and 1 wants nie to look for another position. 1 Io you think It Is r Is lit of him to inter- 1 fere in such a case viieii ven by work- ! Ing overtime I see blm a good deal? I K. W. 1 He is very unreasotiu' le and selfish, i Hold on to your position. If f t vfie f j th rig-it sort ,i would make no .it tempt to Interfere with your work until in a i position to take vou from It by niatn- I mooy at the Movie too good for such, a fool. Then suddenly It seemed as if his mind broke and that he had gone mad, for he began to shout and laugh all at enoa. Had be gone mad' Or hadn't he? To Be Continued Monday. JJJJaUJJLIJU hall The "Nu Way" ImproTcd 12-Section DRESS FORM Mde The "Nu. W" Dress Form glvi you a per fect model, repro d uces your figure exactly. Most easily adjusted, no reaching In side to ad Just; no set ere ws to loueen, no handles to turn, per fectly sim ple and sim ply perfect, waist can he length ened or li o r t n ed as recjulrxd. hips for Din ning or draping of skirts. Term t II cash, f I a moath. m Is : V,.r,ii I i 1 M JPI s Hfirtir hi SIS- 3 Y tin 2)- r Romance ! By GARRETT P. BERVISS. One of man eldest comrenlone on this I lonesome, moon-chased earth Is the silent. little lover of dark corner and destroyer or wool, fur and feathers, eal'ed the clothes - moth. The g host -white wing of these fluttering crea tures of the twilight have haunted human habitations from the earliest recorded times. The patriarch Job. who was a great wool raier. knew only too well their ravages when he compared himself to "a garment that Is moth eaten." It is probable that they I n a I n a a ted them- Into the smoky caverns of the prehistoric cave dwellers, and luxuriated In the first fur garments. -The fondness they exhibit nowadays for tailor-made smlts and other expen sive products of the loom." saya C l. Marlatt of the TTnltet States bureau of entomology. 1 simply an illustration of tbelr ability to keep pae "lh man In his development" Like the still more objectionable Im pudent gnd dangerous hanrcr-rm. the house-fly. the clothes-moth doge man's footstep wherever ha ". embarts with him on 1.1a voyage of trade or discovery, crosses oceans with him. and officially helps him to Inhabit any tiw lands that he may find. Thus it appears that clothes-moth eama over with the Pilgrim father ef ome of the other early white settler on thut continent, for Tr. Marlatt apeak of thilr early Introduction into the United fltatoa, which soems to carry the Implication that they wer not her originally. But, if . they multiply with astonishing; rapidity a soon as they got a foothold, for by the year TTtt they had becnm terror In the Tillage of Philadelphia, hy their destruction of woollen and for. Jt I not by th way, the moth them selves that undermine the hair of your costly fur evorcoai. plough winding chan nels through the surface of worsted gar ments and eat holes off th pU of ex- Do You Know That Martial men, good fight" of choleric temper, have red and spotted ftrurer nail a The phrase "to Uonla a mast tn stare at him a a wonderful person arose when a show of Hon was th great st tract! on In th Tower of London and everyone went and stared. "Hurrah! was originally a fighting exclamation, and I derived from the Slavonic "lluraj" '"To Paradle"-4h belief being that valiant fighter went straight to heaven If killed. FOR THIS HALL CLOCK With a Purchase of $75.00 or Over As a special trade induce ment for Saturday we make this very attractive offer to sell one of these handsome 6-f t. oak clocks for 25c provided other goods to the amount of $75 Mde of ?- 'umd or over. They are splendid time- flnlBh neat pper- . j n 'n. two top drawers. keepers and fully guaranteed. pt,ced $11 75 $495 2-Inch Post Iron Bed y! la Varalg Martin, (old bron rone f 19 luar-M is a s s 1 finish or white, any als, fully anteed, now only Solid Oak Splendid Table Value Made of solid oak, well built and well finished. 6-foot extension, at of a Moth pensive carpets, but If Is their offspring, the larvae, or caterpillars. These are o' a dull white color and hardly three eighths ef an Inch long, with a brownish bead. They are odd-looking creature, for they clothe themselves, as if they carried their un reel prorated for.c'ncse for human society to the point of tmitatlni. thetf big. two-irgged unwilling hosts, hv wearing a garment. The garment of the moth i-s ter;iilla r conslnsta of a kind of sack, or packet, woven hy its i.wn hand, and lined with soft silk. In which It enecounces Itself up to the car, and wh"n It takes a walk It puts out a short length of Its neck snd a hunch of forelegs and drags along. It never take rff lt strn-'ige packet i oomes out cf it unless pulled oui by an Inqiiialtlvo entomologist, t'erhapa remeni bertnkf lis own dcsllngs with laid-up gsr menta. It keeps Its clothes always In use. Mr. Marlatt has g1v-n an lr.teretlng (description of 1hl, curious appendiute: "With the growth of the larva It be comes necessary from time to tlino t-i enlarge the esse hotli In length and ir cumference. and this is accompllfhd In a very Interesting way. Without leaving Its cast the larva makes a el It half way down one side and Inserts a triangular gore of new material. A similar Insertion Is made on the opposite side, and the larva revere Iterlf without leaving the case and makes corresponding tilts and additions in the other half. "The ase I lengthened by successive additions to either end. Kxterlnrly the case appear lo be a matted masa .f email particles of wool. Interiorly It l lined wHh soft whitttiMi silk. By trans ferrlng the hirva from time to time to fabric of different colors the case msy be made to assume ss varied a pattern as the experimenter desire." When it feels It end drawing near the larva usually attaches it case to the garment on which it ha been feeding, but ometlma carries It elsewhere to be attached. About three weeks later the transformation la finished, and the moth emerges, ready to lay eggs for the produc tion of a new generation. The egg are laid in April. May nr June, according to the latitude, a a cer tain warmth is required, and' usmally they are deposited directly on th gar ment that la to serve as the foraging field for the larva. The eggs are scarcely visible to the naked eye. Sometime thev are deposited In crevices of trunk and boxes, m which garments have been laid away, and a soon as they are born the larvae creep In through the minute cracks and begin their forbidden feast. Th best way to protect garments is to begin In April or May and heat and brush them thoroughly every few days before they are put away In tightly closed receptacle, with camphor, tobacco, naph thaline, cedar springs, or some of the ether "repellents" commonly used. But If any egg have Seen left In the gar ments they will J ten, and the larva will promptly set to work. 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