T1IR BKE: OMAHA. WKPXKSHAY, AUGUST 1S, Iflt.V iom e Mag&z I n e P 1 he Be 00 Bend It HereSee It at the Horlei. Smart Frocks from a Parisian Artist ' Republished by fecial Arrangement with Harper's Plazar. Parents and the Child... affe u53o ) oss -A By Oouverneur Morris and Charles W. Goddard Omrrufin. Wis. wt bynopela of rerloua Chapter. JnKn inwilinn la killed In a. railroad avidem. uid hia wife, on of Aiminc uiokt beautiful womtn, dies Iroiu we hock, leaving a 3-yeai-ola aaugmer. wuw la taHen by Tof. bUllUer, ant of tn interests, far into tha AdlronuacKs. where ne la retired in the secluaion of a cavern. if teen years later Tommy Barclay. w no has Juat quarreled with hia adopted lamer, wanaera into the wouCa and nis covera the girl, now known aa Celertla, In company with Prof, milliter. Tommy takes tha girl to New York, where she falls into the clutches oi a noted pro curers, hut la able to win over tn woman by her pecular hypnotio power. Here she attracta Freddie the Ferret, who becomea attached to her. At a big rlothing factory, where ahe goes to work, no exercleea her power over the girls, and is aaved from being; burned to death by Tommy. About this time Stilllter, Barclay and others who are working; to gether, decide It Is time to make use of Celestia, who has been trained to think of herself as divine and come from heaven. The first place they send her Is to Bitumen, a mining town, where tha coal miners are on a strike. Tommy has gone there, too, and Mr Ounedorf, wife the miners' leads-; falls in love with him and denounces him to the men when he spurns her. Celestla saves Tommy from being lym-bed, and alao settles the strike by winning over Kchr, the agent of tha bosses, and Barclay, sr. Mary Black atone, who Is also in love with Tommy, tells him the, story of Celestla, which she has discovered through her Jealousy. Kehr Is named as candidate for president on a ticket that has Mtillltor's support. and Tommy Barclay la named on the miners ticket. Biiiiiit-r prorcsws nun self in love with Celestla and wants to set her for himself. Tommy urges her to tnarry him. Mary Blackstone bribea Mm. Gunedorf to try to murder Celestla. while tho latter Is on" her campaign tour, traveling on a snow white train. Mrs. Gunedorf Is again hypnotised by Celestla and the murder averted. Stllllter hyfotlses Celestia and lures her Into a deserted woods, where he forces her to undergo a mock marriage, per formed by himself. He notifies the tl uirivirate that Celestia Is not coming back. KreCdy the Ferret has followed him closely, and Tommy is not far away, havirg bfAn exploring the cave, hoping to find Celestla there. . FOURTEENTH EriSQDE. .. . aBaaaaaaMaajBi After half an hour's work, never losing touch wjtb the hut. Prof. Stllllter had colected" sufficient inflamable material to soft boll an egg. This would never do, and he was wasting time. Ha was tormented by that feeling which perhaps gave rise to trie adage the "mora haste, ,thr less speed." Time was vitally important' " isd to- do. .things aquickly and ha potrtdn't. He wtooi against- each of the four walls of the hut' In succession and shouted, for Jielp a few times at the top of his lungs. But, as he expectod. nothing came of them. "Well," ha thought, "I'll hav to burn my shelter.- It will make Just tha big amok I need. And I shan't be much worse off. It won't look like a' camu f jra, but like the beginning of a forest fire. It ought to bring a watchman. The logs of which tha hut was built were thoroughly seasoned and full of pitch. By aid of , the heap of old dried out balsam which had served him for a pillow during the night Prof. Stllllter succeeded in setting it on fire. Ills ears told him that the fire was going to be a success, and presently, too, the-heat that began to emenate from it. i He crawled to a little distance and sat down with hi back to the fir. , It wasn't likely that anyone would coma in less than an hour; it might be many hours before anyone came. But he was ery sure that his fire would bring some- qne eventually) i Bitting and watting, now making at tempts to calculate tha passage of time, and falling signally, now thinking tin- happy thoughts, and now vengeful pas sionate thoughts, h sat on and on for eternities of time. Ha contrasted what might hava been with what was. By now Celestla should hava been his, linked to him by In dissoluble bonds. Perhaps now, ha thought, she would lova ma. Ha would have kept her in the cave for a while, and then ha would hava sneaked. her, feasting his eyes on har beauty, to soma far coun try, where her face and voice were not so well known. There he would marry her legitimately, and by htm she could have many wonderful and beautiful sons and daughters. That was what might have been. . In stead, -behold him, sitting in pitch dark ness, his shelter burning behind him, as a call for that help which might never come. How long, oh. Lord, how long. Suddenly through his right hand, which rested on tha ground, .there shot a sharp stab of pain. He Jerked his hand up ward with an oath. It flashed through lils mind that he had been stung by a ground hornet As a matter .of fact, a little creeping tongue of flame had burnt him. ... . Prof, milliter's fire was spreading. Crevices in the rock In which were lichens and dried mosses, 'carried little torches hither and thither, torches that were only too eager to find and set fir to something worth while. The main fir mad such a crackling and roaring now that Prof. Stllllter had not heard tha lesser sounds which It made In spreading. It waa some mo ment before he realised that he had rot been stung but burned. It was a smell of burning cloth that made this clear to him. The professor's coat had caught fire.. H moved further away un til there seemed to be nothing about Mm but unburnable rock. H found the place in his coat which was burning and managed to spit upon It till It waa out. He sat down . once more. He was in the midst of on of those great open splashes of grsnlte on the mountain side. As a matter of fact, he was near the Mge 'of one of these masses. Within reach of his ' hand was a dense tangle of tinder dry acrub trees, shrub and dead wood. Suddenly this shrubbery caught and went off almost like an explosion. Prof. Stllllter staggered backward from the Intense heat, and realised presently that he was backing Into another area --of heat equally intense. ' On Ms hands and knees he made off In a direction that took him winding bt tween the two; he went quite a long way. In his breast was : the first touch of panic.".' ' i ; - Now for th second. Directly In hi path there arose a steady, a vibrant, a horrid and incessant claahlngrof all tha sounds In this world the coldest blooded and the most menacing and sinister. The fir urged him forward. Th rat tlesnake colled in hi path, dared him to coma on. He rose to his feet shivering and In an agony of fear and dread. Suddenly ne cneo aioua: "My God! My God! What have I done to deserve this?" Only the fire answered him and th rattlesnake. Presently It became neces sary ror him to go forward or to burn to death where he stood. He went forward with slow high steps -a iigure at onca tragic and grotesque. But th anak. too. had grown uncom fortable Jn th increasing, heat, and ha. too. made off after ona final balancing ana a rawing pack of hi head, th jaws wiuo open as u to strike. (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) HOW Yffil AVOID I OPERATIONS y laking Lyaia tu. ruuc- ham s Vegetable Compound. 'Oakland. Ohio "My left s!da pained ma so for several years that I xpeciea to nave to undergo an opera tion, but th first bottle I took of Lydia E. Pinkhern'a Vegetable Com pound relieved me of tha pains in my aide and I continued ita use until I became regular and free from pains. I had asked several doc- If t 2 SL tore if there wu anything I could take to help me and they said there waa nothing that they knew of. I am thankful for such a good medicine and will always give it the highest praise." Mrs. C. II. Griffith, 1563 Constant St, Cleveland, Ohio. Hanover, Pa. "I Buffered from fe male trouble and the pains were o bad at times that I could not ait down. The doctor advised a severe operation but my husband got me Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound and I experienced great relief In a short time. Now I feel like a new peraoa and can do a hard day's work aad not mind it. What joy and happiness it la to be well once more. I am always ready and willing to speak a good word lor the Compound. Mrs. ADAWlLT(S03WalnutSt,, Hanover, Pa. If tbere are any complications yea do not understand write te Lydia E, Hnkksm Hrdiciae To. (rontldV&tUl) I.Ynn,Mas. Yonr letter will Deepened, read ami answered by a woman aad held in strict cooiideiice - Advice to Lovelorn ay rainics Kaxarax: Write Hint a Fraak Letter. Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been going He ha declared his love for ro. and 1 love him dearly, too.- One day w parted, and ha seemed mors attentive to m than ever. That waa th last I aaw of hlm- x.wrot. h,m- ard revived no an swer. The only reason, it seems to me. of me7 " "'fc lIrea I am losing interest in my work, and In a short time I have changed so in auoearanca that nu " ZZ . remark it ' " " lnona" try to forget hlmT SALLY. P. Writ once more and state your cas to th man with all frankness. I am sure you could bear th Iom of his lov. if one you knew positively yu had to and schooled yourself to endure It. If h Is cruel enough to ignore your letter, Just set your Imagination to work on the kind of misery you would bav to ndur as th wlf of a man who knows so little of pity or kindness. My dear girl. I am heartily sorry for you, but I feel sure, one you know whether or no you have th loss of this so-called lov to fac. you will ha .hi. n.. w . 1 (ft 1 U happiness and contentment . h will Probably Go. Dear Mi irs -. aTOin.T With . aWaV"T ' .f .lVn m auajit.,..' r.r.z" ". ood ?jr?r soquainuno of two years T j a vn. u r It shows a very nice spirit on your part to Intend askins tha iriri'. . - C II L. IDT permission to escort her to the theater. i inma ana win most certainly b per. mlttel to go. Have Notbiaa; to Do with Him. Dear Mis, Fslrfsx: I am IS and in fatuated wfth a married man of to. He ha aaked me several time to go out I have refused, although I have been as sured that his intentions are of tha beat W. H. B. Hi intentions may be what thev Uka but when a young girl goes out with v eiaeriy m.mea rrsn sb is open to ths unkind criticisms of tb world. Bek com panion of your own age and don't play th dangerous gam of flirting with an other woman' husband. H ought to b axh.med of .himself for attempting to show attentions to a girt young enough to Ni his daughter. And th is a ailly little room unlet ahe dismisses him at unco and lin.ll;'. The bodice Prement makea very plain, almost autstere in Una, so that the interest of the costume may center in the skirt as in this black taffeta model wlb ruffles which bob at either side of the plaited front panel. The taffeta collar he supplements by one of organdie. The toque is wreathed in roses. It was a happy thought, the wide bet of soft silk, gay In color, that gives the effect of a yoke to this frock of black taffeta, and Premet bas lightened the bodice by a chemisette and rucblng of white organdie. The toque has an upstanding ruche of white grog grain ribbon. True Love in a Cottage 0 It Can Be Attained, but it Means a Lot of Self-Sacrifice. : : : Need of Obedience to Those of Authority By BEATRICE FAIRFAX. , "Love in a cottage" Is not a poet'a dream; it is a real practical possibility. Bub ajid there is a large but everything deenda on whether th lov and th cot tage ar both real. Lova can make a ros-twlned cot tag out of a room in a slum tenement, and cruel Indifference I capable of turning a rose arbor over the door of a beautiful Itttl home Into a hedge of thorns. If th foundation of lov ar firm, and so, too, ar thoa of th little house where it come to dwell, both will stand sturdily fsctng storm and tempest and ill th wear and tear of heat and cold and fortunes mischance right through life until eternity itself. Now this I gloriously true; but you have to b fairly cure of both your lov and your cottage. Mora, you have 19 be certain of them aa on may be of any thing In all this mutable world of ours. I am not raoommandlng a stampede to ths altar on 111 a week nor yet on 115 and "1300 in th bank." For soma "good managers," for som sturdy workers with futur advancement assured, suck sums might assur tha monthly payanta on th cot use and th bread and milk for lov' sustenance and the warm gear to keep his spark of llf burning In th world's winter. Thar is a happy mean In marrisg aa in all other things.' Ovarcautlon does not know It for ovarcautlon will waste iluriou year of youth trying to work yond the "lov in a cottage" staU ..at lu.t Mile cottage be haunted by a spect of love In rags. Nor does reck less emotion know the happy mean for marriage. It takes sans judgment In each Individual case. How good a manager is LucyT How much luxury will ah go without? How patient will sh b when ahe sees other women better dressed and indulging in trip to pleasure palaces from which she Is barred by lack of ths price of admis sion T How willing Is sh to work to keep her cottage bright and shining and her soul radiant and her body sweet and dainty? How much strength has sh to kep on hoping and to encourage Charley to fight on in the fac ot failure? These ar th question sh must ask In-Shoots, ' 'It is better to work than worry. But occasionally you can worry a friend Into standing a loan. .Wicked man ar always comforting themselves with th argument that (her I no hell. Tou can sometime trace th progree of a vocal student by ths expressions on th faces of neighbors. An expensive collar Is no proof that the dog Is worth th price of a biscuit. id it is so nlth men. 1 herself even after she 1 well assured that Charley is tho man she loves su premely of all the men In this world.. And Charley must add to his knowledge that h wants Lucy and wants Lucy to be happy, thess questions ot him self: "Will I love Lucy when she is tired and worn from working to make by scanty earnings cover our wants? Will I work with vim and vigor to get ahead for her? And am I sure of myself and my deter mination to succeed? Will I b tender and kind to make up for ths luxuries I csnnot give. "Will I keep away from pleasures I cannot afford and forego being on ot th boy and find my happiness with my wlf and in- her happiness? Will I aid her efforts to make m a horns and not Insist on miracles of housewifery from a girl who is as adept at her game aa I am at rain of earning th wherewithal for her to build us a nest?" If both will bear and forebear and work together aa partners if both will face difficulties with a laugh that marks Iron determination to win above them if both will bring unset ft shnass and considera tion to keep love blooming and fresh if tenderness and strength ar there to keep their romance alive then lov in a cot tag Is a wonderful thing. But love In a cottage is not for physical weaklings or moral cowards, or idle wast er. A year or two of amotion will for tnm be followed by breaking haalth, or insane jealousy of those who do not have, to say, "I can't afford that," or extrava gance that leads to ruin. . ' ,. Lov in a cottage may mean purgatory or "Heaven bflow." Each of us has to decide what it shall mean In our Individ ual case- and then file It or embrace It reverently, it will spell happiness when It houses perfect love mingled with Inde pendence and proper pride and willing ness, plus ability to work and mutual confidence and trust. It naeds loyal partners to keep it bright and then lov In a cottage la lov in a cottage over which th roses climb and on which th sun shines. (Copyright. 1S15, by Ptsr Company.) Ry Virginia Terhune Van de Water. Terhaps I am hopelessly old-fashioned and behind the times, but I bllv In tha Implicit obedience of a child to a Prnt. J am aware that wer I to utter this statement in th presence of many mod ern parents I would be greeted by nu merous protests, and perhaps some se ver reproofs. Yet, in spit of this fact, I still maintain that If a parent doe not know what la good for a child bat tar than that child dors himself, he or she la not fit to be a parent. "But surely you would reason a thing out with the dear Uttla on, wouldn't you?" som on asks. Not until after he had obeyed th command given him. Th "Ion't do that, dear!" should be heeded firat. After that explanation may coma. Th averax American child la out ragooualy spoiled. If on doubts this 1st on watch him for a while. "Th doctor say my tlttl girl must hava an alcohol rubbing each morning. But how am I to give It to her? She alm pty saya aha won't have It,. and that nd it." To my way of - thinking, that ought to begin It. If the mather haa not estab lished th habit of obedience In an S y ear-old daughter It Is Urn that ah started to do so. To b sura, sh la eight years later In beginning than she should be. om patents do not realise that If a mere baby is taught that "mother knows best," there need seldom be th threaten ing and punishing process we rive dln- ouased so much. It i essy tr . ,ch the baby to' understand that "No-no" means 'No-no" and not "I don't want you to do that and I reality tiqp you won't, but I don't know how unCw th sun te pre vent It." Ar we to allow jrouncstera to be small savage until they hava at tained so-called years of discretion and then expect . them to do just what la Hi-ht Long ago I heard a story of the marl . with a trick dog that, he boasted, al ways obeyed hia commands. To lUustrato tlila, he railed th dog. . . "Hera, Towerl" h ordered, "com and glv m your pawl" Th dog looked at him for a moment. than turned hia back upon him and crawled under a tabl at tho farther most corner of th room. "Wall, ' said the man, "then go under the table! I will be obeyed!" Th obedience of many children re. minds me of thla taie. "Please, dear.", the mother say, "sit quietly at the tabl until th rest of u have finished that's a good, little girl!! I know you wUI do that te pleaM mother." , . The 4-year-old promptly wriggles from' hr chair to har fact. ,"I want to get down and play!" ah Insists, vociferously., "There, there, dear!" th mother says,, 'run on anl play then." Aa tha child grows older and wants to, brk rule of various kinds, are those who make them going to stand quietly! aside and allow har to have her own way? If so, alaa for her character! We Parents owe duties to other people; too, as well aa to our children. No man! is justified In Imposing upon hia friend a pat no matter how dear that 1 going) to be a nulsano to everybody with whom h come Into contact Nor haa a parent any right to allow his child to be so dis obedient, so unruly, as to make other peopl uncomfortable. In ona home there are two small boys, who. In slang parlanoe, "own the place." They ar . welcome to it, outsider da- clar. Thar 1 no pleasure In rUitlng the long-suffering mother. She believe that It la not kind to curb youthful) spirits, and her sons run up and down stairs, through halls and drawing rooms at their own sweet will. Thev alan inj .torrupt her aa ahe chats with some mv lortunate who. not knowing what la be fore her, may happen to make har find call at this horn. "I called there onca." a sweet woman told me. "I may go ther again, but It win not be until thoa two small rascal 4 ar old enough to have soma malnnsrs." Tat one la years old and th other I yaara old. If they have not yet learna to b quiet when older peopl want to talk, to speak courteously to the person) who greets them courteously when will they learn? 'They ar happy, cara-free little cra tures. that's all." tha fond mother pleads, "They can be young but once." Tha same might be said of tho playful mall hyena. But w do not car to hava hlm gambol In our drawing room or feed at our table. I Insist that ths child has soma B,i alienable right. On of them Is that at an early age. while h is so younaj that th lesson I an easy on, h bo taught obedlenc to authority. The other Is that he be trained to be th beat, not the worat, self of which ha la capable. It la only In learning to yield to other: that on learns to govern one's self. f 1 to V- , i. - y r ' -" a 1 n 1 m .in, .1.,., .. Doctors Recommend Spaghetti Of spaghetti and its allied prod ucts. Dr. Hutchison, tho famous dietitian, says that they ar ab sorbed almost in their entirety. Their rich gluten goes to mako brawn and tissue. And Faust Spaghetti is so easy to digest Its energy value, compared with meat is in tho ratio of 100 to 60 : therefore it is ideal food for hard workers and children. Write for free recipo book. MAU1X BROS., St. Lands. U. S. A. .