TIIK HER: OMAHA, MONDAY, JULY 2(5, IMS. Hh e Be es t r tine Masaziinie i ' Away Ry JAXK MLEAX. You are child of fortune, and the surge is In your reins Of life wild and unbounded and the drive of heavy rains; The pot of gold fast hidden where the rainbow cuts the blue The lure of wild adventure, for the winds are calling you. The tears that sting your eyesllds and the sob that chokes your throat Are Nature's golden dowry when you answered to the note Of the throb of life within you and the swallows winging south And the wild lift of the ocean and the salt spray on your mouth. Take up your cloak of wanderlust, the minstrelsy that lies Within the wide marsh spaces and the glint of quiet skies. And know that there are myst'ries in the lure you never knew Along the gypsy roadway for the winds are calling you! Head It Here See It at the Movies. By Gouverneur Morris and Charles VV. Ooddard Case-right. IMS. Star Onapasy. 6ynopU of i'cviuui Cliaptcrs. After the tresle death of Jolin Allies bury, his prostrated wife, one of Amer icas grealast beauties, die. At her death I'rof. Buillicr, an asant of the Intaiuata kidnaps the beautiful 1-year-old baby KIM and brine, her ui In a paradise wbera aba see no man, but thinks alia la tauclil by angeia who lualruul tier fur bar uimatoit to lelonu lha world. At the ae of lx ana ia suddenly thrual Into the world wheie aKuuls of lha Interests ere ready to pruteiid to llnd her. Fifteen iwi later Toim.iy soaa to the Adirondack. The interests are reapunsl bla for the trip, liy accident he la the fh at to irittt the llttie Ameabuiy Kilt aa alia couea fortn from her Paradise aa culestia the (III from heaveu. Nllher Tommy nur Celeatla recoantzes each other. Tommy finds It au ey matter to rescue CuluaiU from Prof. rJtllliial and they hh In the niuunlaina; later they are pursued by milliter and escape to an Inland where they aieud the iilsht . Tuliuuy a first aim waa to get Celeatla away from blllllter. After they leave liultevuo Tommy la unable to set any hotel to take Oeleatia In owing to hr otumo. Dut Inter ha persuades hla fathar to keen her. When ha sues out to tna taxi ha finds her gone, bhe falls Into the hand, of white alavera. but eecapoa and oea to live with a poor fam ily by the Mini of Doualas. "W hen thalr on Freddie raturna home be flnda right In hla own house, Celuetta, the ajlrl for which the underworld has offered a re ward that he hoped to set. Onlastla seourea work In a largo Bar men t factory, where a treat many girls are employed. Here aha ehowa her pe culiar power, and makea frlenda with all bar girl companions, ily her taika to the glrla ah la able to calm a thre&toned strike, and the "boas" overbearing her la moved to grant the relief the glrla wished, and alao to right a great wrong ha had dona on of them. Just at this point tha factory catchea on fire, and the work room Is aoon a blaming furnace. Celeatla refuses to escape with tha other girls, and Tommy Barclay rushes In and car ries bar out, wrapped in a big; roll of cloth. After reaoulng Celeatla from the fire. Tommy la sought by Hanker Barclay, who undertakes to persuade him to give up the KlrL Tommy relume, and Celealla wants htm to wed her directly. Ho ran dot do thla, a ha has no funds. Milliliter and Uarclsy Introduce Celeatla to a co terie of wealthy mining men, who agree to aend Olee'lo, to the i'ollprta. After being diinhnrlied. Tommy sought Work In the coal rulnoa. He tries to head eff a threatened strike by taking the miners' leaders to aea Barclay, who re fuses to listen to them. Tha atrlke Is on, and Tommy discovers a plan of the own era to turn a machine gun loose on tha men when they attack the stockade. This seta tha mine owners busy to get lid of Tommy. The wife of the miners leader Involves Tommy In an eacnpads that leads the miner to lynch him. CeieMia awves him from tha niob, but turns from him and goes to sea Kehr. EUSVTSXTiFePISODB That so many cf the strikers had had .the narrowest kind of an ascapa from be ing blown to pieces by dynamite did not make their feelings for Kehr and his men FARMER'S WIFE TOO 1LLT0 WORK A Weak, Nervous Sufferer Restored to Health by Ly tlla E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. Kasota. Minn. "I ant triad to iT that Lydia K. I'inkham's Vegetable Comjound has done more for me than anything else, and I had the best physi cian here. I was so weak and nervous that I could not do my work and suf fered with pains low down In my right side for a year or more. I took Lydia E. Ilnkham's Vege table Compound, and now I feel like a daTerent person. I believe there ia riotlinjj like Lydia E. Pink ham's Vege table Compound for weak women and young girls, and I would be glad if I could influence anyone to try the medi cine, for I know it will do all and much more than it is claimed" to do." Mrs. Clara I'ranks, K. V. D. No. 1, Msple crebt Farm, Kasota, Minn. V.'omen wbo sufTer from those dls trefi&ing ills peculiar to their sex should be convinced of the ability of Lydia E. J'inkl.sm's Vegetable Compound tore store tht ir health by the many genuine) and truthful testimonials we are con stantly publloLiag in the newspapers. If you bv the hllg-btest doubt that I.ydia i:. l'inkluviirs Vejreta lily Coiitiiii w ill L-ii J tt, rlt5 tu I.yd iat I'. l'iitk Lam McdU ! ue Co. (t-oii4i ;--taial) l,yiiit,.MuMfor ul lt . Viur It-ll-er Mill be oii'l, rrviid t.iit niiti-rej by is wotiiuu. any friendlier, but one thing was cer tain. If harm came to the girl who had risked her Ufa to warn them of their danger It would have to come to her over their dead bodies. Wherever she want among the strikers aha 'was welcomed with a kind of gal Innt adoration. Something about her seemed, when she entered a room, to pull the rudcat and the moat Ignorant men to their feet. Everywhere she went ahe preached her gospel, softened hearts and mads men and women hopeful of better thlnga Her r atrum was the kitchen, the front steps, the shade of an elm. 8he was Indefatigable. No mind, however feeble, was unworthy of her greatest pains. Little children she took upon her knee and talked sense to them. And presently only those who were nat urally bloodthirsty and who loved violence for its own sake talked openly of at tacking the stockade. It seemed to Ce leatla that the strikers' demands wets not unjust, and she determined to end the strike by persuading Kehr and the men he represented to meat their de mand. Elections were coming on, and the best way to secure the labor vote was to see that labor's envelope was better filled than ever before. With a new form of government In control of the nation's moat dlalntereated and able men there would be such a saving of national waste that doubling tha pay of every laborer In the country would be but a drop in the bucket. Tommy could not see any possible good In Celestla's form of mlllemum. He felt that. Innocently, of course, and wKh the beat intention, she was trying to betray labor into the hands of capital, and he fought her doctrine tooth and nail. But what she seemed to offer was so glittering' and alluring to the poor and needy that Tommy's opposing argu ments found few listeners In Bitumen. Celestla preached that government of the people by the people for the people has been proved a gigantlo failure, for two excellent reasons: First, It Isn't by the people, and second, ft Isn't for the people. The fathers who set dowa some very noble aspirations In black and white, were instantly succeeded by poli ticians, who twisted those aspirations to their own ends. We are today a gov ernment of the people by the politicians and for the politicians. Patriotism, if It isn't dead, has gone to sleep. There are patriotic Virginians, patriotlo Ver monters, too, but there are very few patriotlo Americans. It the great city of New York under the threat of the enemy's guns was mulcted of a billion dollars in tribute, do you think the states far from salt water would care? They'd make a loud noise with their newspapers, but a majority of their patriotlo inhabitants, I think, would laugh in their sleeves. And thla sort of thing is the fault of the politicians, who have beclouded all the clear issues. That every city of the else of Fotta wotauut should have a poat office twice too big for it U not doing anything for the people. A navy powerful enough, to protect the Atlantlo coast and the Pacirio coast from any enemy or group of enemies would be doing something for the peotiie. The eelartee of eongreae men and senators and Pensions paid without reason or Juettoe would go far toward eradicating ooneusnptlon. As It Is the money la absolutely wasted, -f some PonTeiuen and senators are able and patriotlo M per cent of tham are tbe opuoalta, and render really able and patriotlo legislation out of the question. No business run as these United States are run could possibly be a i rrt No employe of such a buatnees eould be blamed for falling In respect for his em ployers or In loyalty to them. 80 we 1 want our country to be respectable and a success, or don't we? Let it be run with the same American efficiency with which tha Standard Oil company has ben run and nobody will b poor and no part of any city win be dirty and full of disease. If there was no waste there Would be plenty of money for everybody, or at least of the thlnga money can buy. Cel eatla waa Insistent on thla, and personally I atn hanged if I don't tttlnk ahe was right The Lord Qod gave Us the apple tree. The kinder you are to an apple tree the kinder It will be to you and the more It will give you. But maltreat It-, let sod shut off air from lbs roots, let luwaee and cows chew IU bark half off, let borers riddle it. Ban Joa scale a tran s' it. tent caterpillars defoliate It. and atill U wUl for many years persist in giving you something. Not the eagle should be the emblem of America a mean-hearted, treacherous blroV-but the noble and generous apple, Belgium. I dare say, could be kept alive for a month on the apples which rot on the ground In w ebU heater county every autumn. As we waste the epple ao we waste everyrhlng else raw materials, finished product, health and bralna In tha face cf Kehrs stubbornness It waa not easy to make progress toward a Settlement of tha strike, and at last Cel- ila telcgrarhed to Gordon Barclay and ki for drlnlte power to apeak for the coal ni.anls and treat with the labor leaders. (To Ue CoiitUiue4Tomorrow.) "When His Ship Came In" By Nell Brinkley Copyright. IMS, Intern'l News Service. Necessity of Young Men Developing Their Hidden Powers. ! i -v W r 1 r i'iu 1 A.. . wealth of a mi- "Oh," says Youth to me, with "Treasure Island" under his one arm and "Aucasaln and Nlcolette" under the other. "Oh, why Is It : 'ships' don't 'come in' with our fortune aboard? " Dear Lady, did Romance truly die once end are all the stories we read only memo ries of her? Why must I meet the girl I'm going to love, perhaps at a crowded dance, with my collar wilted wet from Castle-polkalng and my hair as though I had been in swimming, with her little nose beaded with dew and her breath coming so fast she can't hardly re peat my name Maybe I'll even meet her at a table with a mob of chattering people in bare shoulders and Icy gems, with men stuck in between like magpies In black and white, my eyes lifting to hers for the first wonderful time when Romance ought to be right there with all her. lovely things over over Chicken Southern ' Stayle! " (Though I must say It would be colored with Romance to meet The Girl's eyes . over the chicken my mother can make. And I reckon any girl would . find dreams a-plenty in her Destiny's eyes when it was over frozen strawberry Mousse!)" (Oh, Youth, but your Tummy lies, after all, close to your heart. Maybe It's your own fault that your ship doesn't come in as you would have It) "Perhaps It's Just as likely as not, the way things go IU see her first when my mouth's wide open with a yell when I'm fanning a foot ball game. And she will say, 'I'm delighted to meet you, Mr. Um-haha.' And 111 grin and my day will have come! Oh,' lady, when my ship comes In, not my money ship, but the ship I dream of why can't it come in In glory? Trotting the beach some stormy day, as I like to do with the old gray sea throwing Its mane and trampling the sand and boiling In like the dickens, if I saw a great yacht come ashore or even, who cares, Just a llttie coastwise craft I who am a swimmer, who can ride the breakers like a playing porpoise, would fight my way out to her, where she pounded, and bring back with me out of the gray thunder and wreck a girl, sea beaten and limp my share of the rescue. And Love, unseen .ana smiling through the salt-wash blinding him, would wade out-beside us. There's Romancel I would bring my girl out of the sea if I . could have my way my bit of wreckage that I brought ashore! And, of course, she'd lore me they do In tales. ' Always! ' . "When my ship comes In! My dream ship with the girl that grows somewhere for me. If ft only won't come In and dock at a regular pier, in regular fashion and I there with regular flowers and a regular hat and clothes!" " 80 mourns Youth with "Treasure Island" under one arm and "Aucasaln and Nlcolette" under the othor. Sighing for color and : dream and adventure and the first blooming of Love under the sky . of true Romance. Sighing that his "Ship Come In" in the fashion of tales. "Let me bring my lrl out of the sea instead of discov ering her at a dinner table over Chicken Southern Style!" NELL ' BRINKLEY. I Keep Your Eyes on the Heights :.: ,-"'" ' By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. (Copyright. 1915. by Star Company.) Are you wise or unwfaesT Tills dpee not mean. Do yeu know much of book lore and profound phlkj soph- lea T There are many men In tha world who are called wlae la these things, yet who utterly lack wisdom of the way of right Uvtns. To be wise In dally Ufa means to understand how to obtaia and how te give tha greatest amount of happiness out of each day. Thla Ufa may be compared to a string of beads. Each day Is a precious bead, and If you tear It away from the string and crush it under your foot It la ruined and lost, and your string la Just so much tha shorter. If you slip the day gently off Kg string and place It carefully la a box, those who come after you may enjoy Its IntrUialc value. Every day that you crush under the foot if rtxm. anger. Idleness or worry Is e bead crushed and lost. All rur Uvea are compos, d ofllttle events, little cares, little anx'etlu. little duties, the bfg events onl occur occasionally; tha b.g undertakings must be approached by small undertaking Io not for an Instant Imagine that you can be great in large things If you .are petty In email onea When you awake In the niorulng realise that your mental attitude, your voice, your face, your worda and your thoughts will have a certain Influence upon tha Uvea of those, about you. In your home and In your ptUoe of business. No matter how troubled you may feel over matters resolve to carry Usht, radl anve and enthusiasm with you as you go through the day. Develop your will, shake off tha fetters which seem to bind you and make a beginning In constructive thought. Hefuss to fret, find fault or worry. Bay to yourself, "This day shall be a bright and successful day for ma; this world la a good world, and peace, power and proepertty belong to me. Invisible helpers are near and they are bringing me my soul's desire." Remember that every thought you send out from your mind Is creating your future environ ment, and making what we call Karma for yourself and Influencing tbe Uvea of others. 6top right now and ask yourself what uso you made of yesterday and what you are gWng to do with today. Just what are you doing with tha beautiful cara of this brief, beautiful Ufa on earth' Just how art you using your mind! Some .years ago there were four chil dren reared on a western farm. The farm was never especially valuable and waa ne.wr properly developed. All the children married and went Into their, own homes. The time Carrie when the parents grew old and cne died; then came the Idea of dividing- the "property." Two of the children signed away all rights In favor of a third, who was remaining in the old home. But the fourth member of tha family entered a wild protest, claiming that the matter was unjust and unfair, an 4 finally an aged parent ,waa haled Into court and a feud and enmity and bit temess and hatred which covered a period of fifteen yeais ensued over that wretched little property, the value of whMv could not exceed tf.Ow). Imagine such a wretched use of beau tiful life and beautiful thought material The same amount of energy used con structively would have enabled the trou ble maker to have gone forth and created a profitable business cf his own. Family quarrels over money affairs are the moat Ignoble and detestable form of domeatlo vice, yet all over the land we may find homes and lives ruined and wastsd by these mean and despicable quarrels. "Like a kitten welkins; over tha keys Is the animal nature of man and brain; As an advanced atudent Improves tha tone et mtislo So an advanced soul Improves the har mony of thought There are thousands of human beings. many of them believing themselves to be wise, cultured and educated, whose mlnd day In and day out do no more In the making; of an eternal harmony of life than do the kittens walking over keys. To worry and fret about the weather; to have continual anxiety about what you eat and Its affect upon you; to be afraid of draughts and germs; to fuss over money affairs and dwell on thoughts of the Injustice of the world as you see It illustrated In the pros perity of vice and the suffering cf virtue; to resent the good fortune of your neighbor and excuse the thought. Imagine It a high sense of Justice all this is making discordant souna, like the "kitten walking over keys," and Is wasting the two priceless things hi tha world mind and time. Right about face!. Bet your eyea upon the hclghta, believe in God's ever-ruling power and In your own divine self to do. to have sad to be that which yu desire In-Shoots Blubbering sympathy is seldom more than skin deep. Behind the blush of lha early straw berry may be tha flavor of the lemon. It la so with the girls, too. i By REV. DR. CHARLES H. PARK- HURST. In our last article addressed- In partic ular to young men readers, we divided people into two classes, the valuable and the worthless, those who put more Into the world than they take out of It, end those who take S (Put In. To one or thcl j other of the twrl I classes every rannl I Denongl. When we I : talk about worthies! 'people, however, wel I must not be under-1 'dei stood to mean that! . they are physlcMly. I ; mentally or morally! I constructed cf such I I rotten mateial us to j be put bi-vond th 1 Ifii-wcr of l-olns vsHi-l able and cf making I thtlr worth couiit on the ride .if the world'i advantage and wealth, terial kind, perhaps, or wealth in char acter and service. , The.eafnr Mt'v to tnke nd the one marp respoctful to human nature and to the Divine Author of that nature, In that vy Fiinn i nnii .11111 a. yri iiiii. ti'j (.110 by birth a tatrp'-r, but com is Into life with a certain amount of wtfit which -It depends u; on the man himself to tako . - ..a .... . . Li- care ut nim turn ia wwuiii. nH,uuns less than that would argue Injustice on Ood's part. 'V should come . out all right if we were as good to ouraetvee an He Is rood to us and had' as much Interest as He In our well being- and SUCCChS. Kvery Individual is in this respect like a gold mine deep but led under the soil. The gold 1 ' tnere, but the world Is no richer for Its being there until, by man's effort, the mine has been worked and the hidden treasure brought out into tin open nnd converted Into some form practical utility. And yet the owner of mien a mine prises It even before the shafts are runl- through which thn metal IS to be carried to the 'surface; and ho pilios It an 1h willing to pay heavily in order to become the possessor f Hi because imowlns that however worth less the ro". la so long as It remains covered, there Is that there which, when I uncovered,- will become to him an Im mense rouree 01 revenue. Now. the trouble with a lot of vou young men Is tvat yo: do not lcok upon your own hidden r-jwers with tha same kind of respect and warm appreciation with which a man, who has just tecome the owner of a mine, looks upon the hidden mettl. He banks Upon the gold even before hs has seen.lt. Yourselves you do not bank upon. You do not credit yourselves with belmr a'.l that you are. . Tetl hJVM hot taught yourselves to re- allio all that It Is In you to become and to do. You exist, but d- not live, because If you wero teally thoroiiirhiy alive you would grow nd continue to mean more and more t" yourselves and ethers. You eet limits to your possibilities of char acter md accomplishment There are no limits except thone which you set As some one has said: "The fault ia In ourselves thtt we sre underlings." For a man to complain that he does not amount to anything In the world Is no more reasonable than It would be for a farmer to complain that the com which he Is still housing In the cornbln is not recomlrur- a fresh harvest out In tbe cornfield. That which hosts of unpro ductive youni.- men most need is to bavw something happen to them that will arouse them ftotn a condition of se-ml-stupor. The fault is not lack ef power but lack of wakefulness. Something haj--pened to the city of Chicago a good many years ago and the result was that It got stirred out of its d reams. 80 of Ban Franclsoo. n The story is toW of Sir Tsaao Newton, (t do rvtt know with what truthfulness) that he never became thoroughly alive and awake till Wf cne kicked him Jos below the belt Tbe story may be true. There Is na Rood reason why It might not be. . Even in the matter of physical strength no one quite realizes how strong he Is till he fa'ls Into a hole where ne has to gather hlmlf together in rd to get out That accounts for the fact that a lamer proportion, of people . torn ia straltenod -ircumstanees come to some thing than thi-ee-who enter :ife under circumstances more comfortable. The productive ranks of society have contin ually to be rc-multed from families that had to struggle In order to get along. A youn.1 bird might never find Its wings were It not considerately flung out ot the nest by the mother bird, who la sen slMe noutrh to undti stand that tbe fledsllng vlll always remain a fledgling till something htppene to It dltturblnv enoush to make it a real bird. The point I air making Is Illustrated in a lively way hy aayln.t thiit certain children immod'utely upon being born have to be spanked In order to start renpiratlcn. There arc people that have txr. born a long tln.e that have never been hit hard enough to set thorn taking a deep, llfe-stimulattng bresth. There Is nothing the matter with them except that tha machinery of their existence has never lxn really set a-runnlng. It la there, hut ha mnliv. niw a ha. put Its Pieevure upon It of sufficient energy t- mi it In operation. For that reason thore Is nothing so much to the advantage f an apathetil young man as j to r-eccme Interested In sonio big enter , prise or to have put upon him s:ne largs responsibility. It helps him to find him self He is made surprised by the dls coveiy of wt st It contained In hla own nature. Tie inteieit aroused la him st'rs Into wk-fu!ne- anu Into action tl.e powers that had aleaiy existed 11 him, but that had been lying there like the gold in sn undiscovered or tutworked mine. 'Ihere la nothing Ilk.) a l lg pur pose in life to develop a listless youn-i man from a sl unl-crlng possibility late a alpendlu live a tlvity