Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
$ THURSDAY, MA) ! 4 i b i ¥ 5 [ A b [ . . ) I 'h ghe Most Imposing Motion Picture Serial and Wisdom of Certain Amount of Watchfulness e Story Ever Create : ¢ $ $ $ $ ‘ e G Odd SS y AR Against Cancer Without Useless Alarm, Which 8o Often Seems to Bring R nd Tt Here——8ee It at the Movies on Dread Disease—Prompt Treatment is Main Thing. : By DR. CHARLES H. PARKHURST. |professional as well as for the profes-|ious matter it rasort to it is not delayed, sfonal—for {here are cortain things that|and with this understanding that once INTRODUCING nta whick anticipate are quite|the former should know in order that|the affected timsues are horoughly re- EARLE WILLIAMS likely to occur. ‘There s §ood philosophy | the professichal may have opportunity to| moved there is no danger of & recurrence Our anticipation of fhem tends | render his best service in the matter. The one thing for hoth layman and o & v that r nticipation of nd et rvice matte ommy Barclay to prepare the way for their coming. | While no attempt is mado by the author | Surgeon to remember is that cancer is ANITA STEWART This is especially the to mintmize the viclousness of the dis-|& disease that will easily met the upper { & ¢ when what we ease, or tc disguise the fact of its in-|hand if allowed to go ite own way. A \ The Goddess |anticipate s some crease, yot there are points made by him [ case of that kind once came under my Written by thing we dread to that tend to lomsen the dread with which | own obseration. A gentleman friend of Gouverneur Morris have happen. Our it Is resarded, for he confidently in-|mine discovered on his side a lump of § (One of the Most Notadle Tig- droad operatea to structs the reader that great as s the | scarcity noticeable dimensions. He H iy S St AR e e perfl which 1t involves, 1t neglected on | thought little of it, but after & time, as | Drasat ‘“lm“'o.nom'm" (o he appearance of the first symptoms, It|it gave slight signs of enlargement, e i W. GODDARD, pening. can, except under certain conditions, be | called to It the attention of a surgeon, f Author of | Job's words hint at successfully dealt with if promptly re-| one of the most distingulshed In castern “The PeMls of Pauline” {that when he says | ported to the surgeon and he be allowed | ygaaqchusetts. The surgeon examined “The Bxploite of Elatme” The thing which 1 to remove the offending srowth befort i anq gave my triend tho consolatory in- greatly foared s It has had time to Invade tho system formation that it was ncthing that riegd = | come upon me, and The public should know. this. and the | oiu ™ i anxiety, and that the h:n i (Copyright, 1915, by Star Company.) that which 1 was |author has rendered bensfioant, aeTvico | iy 1% was to think nothing .nn'uu 1 rwnnu‘ nlb by The Btar Co.. Al For- latrail of is come to |In putting the case an clearty and strongly. | |, ), (o0 slwi . i { 3 & g~ y8 seemod to me that a i Rights Reserved m. e may not | By diminjaning foar of tho disease he | i 1t TEE & NOVE fesmod to me that BYNOPSI8 OF YWR CHAP have connected the eliminates one of ita procuring causes, | 0) Ja OF PREVIOUR CHAPTER { = practice. 3 P DY v 0 - ble o After the t c death of John A | fear and the happen for, as already remarked, we are lia ¢ iy > fasie death ot John Aines.| Ling, and ¥ot. 56 haY to be overtaken by that which we fear| AnYhow the lump yontinued to grow, reatest beauties, dies. At her have. It is certainly will overtake us. He contradicts the | ®9d the patient, shrinking from notify . .;n;“f s;x:m‘;‘r an agent of the ul\“ reasonable that he | rather prevalent idea that cancerous ten- | 'NE his friends of what. was going on baby girl and brings her up in a para- where 6o se¢s no mam but thinks | [should have denctas nay be inherited, and thus brings | onacientiously kept his condition to | The ahove is suggested by the reading | comfort of mind to such as hava supposed | himeelf. The result was that the next {of Dr. William Seaman Bainbridge's | that they were theniselves ilable to the |time he offered himselt to a- surgeon’s | work on cancer. The volume is the re- | Infliction because doacended from some [examination he was immediately ordered | sult of mary vears of investigation, and | near or remote ancestor that had suffored [to the hosvital to be prepared for the is the most thorough of anything yet | or died from it operation table. Thanks to a good con- produced on that subject. A layman | It Js tie result of his wide and pro-|stitution and the genius of a surgeon might not secm to have any right to | longed study of the field to copeluds|that did not come from eastern Massa- | speak upon a matter that lles 81 definitely | that neither medical nor mental treat-|chusetts, he survived the within the sphere of the physi"™™ and the | ment s dependable as a curative. His|which was an awfully severe one and surgeon; but the fast is that Dr, Bain- | only rellance is upen the knife, the use|which might have been avoided if the bridge has written his book for the nen- | of whicl. need not necessarily he A #r-),.tjent had not been so reticent, and if the first surgeon had had efther the dis- cernment or the franknéss to state things las they were 2 By Bfilkk. 1 have never studied medicine and, of . { course, never sued for admission within | Advice to Lovelorn : Y ||| oo e s o, saniin vine | clety, but cases of the kind just stated | are self-explanatory even to the non-pro- 1 | fessional mind, and it is very much to be ?bo is taught by angels, who Instruct her | for her misslon to reform the world. At age of 18 she is suddenly thru e world, where agents of the in are ready to find her. By an accident the héero sees ‘her first and hides with ! her in the Adirondacks. SBECOND INSTALLMENT. Mentally, they were polea apart Tommy, theugh he loved to spend money, was given to asking foollsh questions | \ about the ways and prerogatives of cap- | ital. He couldn't understand why the | ‘ ¢ Jority of people in this world have to | L be poor and dirty and unhappy. Why | 1he real producer should have such a 5 mmall share in what he produces. He did | i not 2o fnto-these. questions very -deaply, but just .enoush, to be something of 5 soolalist at heart and to feel w certain | treatement, | “ i M t¢ earn $4 in addition to his saiary, contempt for people to whom the col- | Doar it Bt N irlendid man | think. pou ey risk marryins. Bt you | S6ettet ChEl" layiuis' SapINS " WU, Tgcting of money was the most important | asked me to marry him, but I dont know | ot o SRY aretully and trugally, | About physicians and surgeons, should thing in the world. ‘Perhaps he only took | I 1 love him enough. ' He can give mo | (TRF MEICEE Cortt O ntact #ain from Dr. Bainbridge's masterly work ip_socialfetio ideas in order to ‘amuse | | sverything 1 wish Tor, and he loves mie | ° : as much as poseible of its ‘practical con- ' dearly and would give me a ul | Himeel" ut o ‘expense Of those' Who | home. 1 have known him from childhood. | PERBRPRAR | tents. ) mgintain opposite theories, for he dldn't | {but he conld not speak to me of mar Dedp MISh Faftian: 1 am 15 b Bave Cancer is a mysterious and terrible %o, for anything, except games, very | \m:‘w' i now g0 A "(;\'l_l'\l «.'\f {l::‘\l"v-"“:: been keeping company with a young gir] | scourse, and is becoming increasingly de- seriously or very thoroughly. He did feel | e . Tave, Tonn s ol the ove very much. A very dear friend of |structive in its ravages Rich and poor Very strongly, however, that in a world containing’'so many able minds it was a | shame that so much povérty.and misery | nld be allowed. o exist. | *“You couldn’tilive in a housc that had| chance; but now a married man haw come Into my life. He doesn't live with his wife, and 1 don't know whether he |t00k me asi mine who works with me and is married @ w me o Out with her and today he | 8T its victima. It thrives in the opem and ,..1‘ me met to |country and in the congested tenement Ly 4 » Tiam wait- | 8sociate with her, a knew her from | house districts, and 18 no respecter of when he gets a diverce. This man hai L o TSRS o0 Tien ol By the outer or inner surface of the body is & he ~but 1 love him. Please ad- LK ? a dirty attic ‘and. a fiithy cellar and | glf'"\‘:‘:j_ " RN, e wNow, T love the ‘girl vers much and|a sufficlent cause for the ‘Aevelopment m-.m:::-. rats Wehitnil the walinscoting, l it T It n wil for the best. end 1818 | “Without there being any advantage in Onie* of the Visions Tommy Barclay, ‘Saw.in His Dream of Heaven and all the Wonders I }',"‘:;'{}"'.,t";;‘,,’,“,‘,‘,: heard that be | "Give the girl a chance. T think poorly | becoming nervous and foreboding in re- th H: ]d_ nd Celesti would not marry me, as be m‘]l thou, M. of a man who tells of a past experience | §ard to the matter, but, on the contrary, at it Held--a Jelestia. of me as & friend. - b of his own to prove a girl's lack of :m amu::.. yot enough is : B 1t v “w . T H:uf;;"; Senator Blackatane, a mai #Ith a IdrEe |promise’ of secrecy. 'Coflidtibe irue that | time. “Now the pendulum is awinging the | DOt epoll your own uo by N8 | character. You are far too young to |known regarding the disease, sven as’ ‘) “How 'fben can oD, | B and longing for some miracle to do|think of love and marriage, but, perhaps, | true of tuberculosts, {0 render wise a cér- 3 o/l mouth, hook-nosed face and white' sido | tho 6id order of thiiigs, & resident cater- | other way. Graddally the trusts will re- | Ul s "oy at one stroke. Don't | your loyal respecttul friendship will prove | tain amount of rational watchfulness over ’w . . Whiskers, frowned heavily after reading |ing to this vote and that. s conkress con- | gain what they have lost, What is the (i (B0 S0 ilbion or marrying | Just what she neads to holp hot. one's self. Nature holds sut danger sig- ¥ hg wouldsr't? o | Barclay's note:ifrowned heavily, heavily | tinually throwing obstacles tn the way of | next step? Greater trusts? Yes, but be- him merely to “get settled” in Iife. t J nals, Wo need not hunt for them, but f w"”l "a"' verR :“"’" ‘"‘:‘ ’"."“I It | paced the floor of his library, gave yent [knterprise and effitlency, wih to change yond that, staggering bellef, a trust of you dismiss the foolish infatuation from Do No Narrow. must respect them on thelr appearance. | t nn“ :‘L h:'lnm:;m‘ tl ! ;‘:: to defiant mutterings, and then suddenly |all of a sudden? Her father said so. The |t 8. A trust in whose hands will be your mind and appreciate the man you Dear \fiss Fairfax: While on my vaca- | pyberculosie has been widely -m i @pntry any man who is NE 0 WOTK. | collapseq into a deep chair, as if very |people would begin to clamor for effi- [all the trusts of busingss of a whole con- speak of 80 highly? M"n last simmer 1 m e Not so cancer, oh, “0‘4;"‘ "'"":;': ::‘I"; s "“;\' "":n'“‘yum and redd the note again:* clency in high places instead of buffoon- | tinent, and whose stockholders shall be L ot RIS T RCR T il R B BB IR brifE the "“’d AS_he ran. ive on, less than | "5 Blacksts ery, for trained men instead of dema- |the Inhabitants of that continent. Pov- n Yo earne, can bo clean and rich. It's a Don't by any chance allow your daugh L . ISR SRR W S ng to see her about once a month. The | whole matter closer to the sclentific re- gogues. They would clamor to be hot [erty and degradation will cease to exist. 4 fast “time 1 went (0 see her, inatead of .~ Others would ks o pay it. but "-“Hnenuh "That aristocracy may one day |and Incompetence, but integral.parts of | chalrman, a president, diotator, perhapa | young man & few montha my senior for K:r“_lmfl:"“, LS Tt SV o et Tha St fl\b\m won't let them. It jen't the rich|become R BORIHEY. ALY 1".“,“:“‘ 10, ¢AT | such a machine as the Standard Ofl or |he will be called king. And already the f°r""' A aiild iikes 'to ik married, but [40ne Hght ' Would you advise me fo|g O “""‘uw‘, X i “"." o keep, the poor down. 1t's the poor | e RiPLE LAGE" St ™ e "Worta in | the Steel trust, with someone at the head | powers who believe in this coming ChARK® | want tor aak your - adeics Fhis young | Tite her any more, and 1€ eo."what ta | e, ¥ "b“u‘»;ummmm i wilo band together to keep each other|which we live is pregnant with Ereat | of it that would ses to the comfort, ciean- |have such a man in thelr eve. He will |man is letter carrior but ia not on S sy ST Tt ShHos homevic s 4 say. x | wh like to keep company with such a girl, a:vm uva,l; pull the rich down on top ?:c".'?f-fi‘y Ana. the. weak will \go under. |iiness ‘and efficlency of every one of [not be the first king; he is very young, | steady, and earns on an average of #12 |y feel as though I ought to write. those who are sclentifically competent to of them, 1t they can.” g B i v. (those integral parts. Instead of taxes to |but he will be the second. After him, & Week. 1 am willing (o do work which | = - R e i anTie A S But Tommy was not altogether con-| Mary Blackstone sat for u very 10ng |pay the people would clamor for divi- |who? Why, a son of his body, trained | $ioo between un 12 you begin now to object because & '-ul e “mm '::‘n;r- those “wu-nh Vjaced, and he loved to argue. When|time staring into space. She didn't want | gands to spend, and they would get them. | from birth to fill that great position. Now, Miss Fairfax, do you think we girl you like happens to go out with an- h" n':: D'" ::M elr l;hl no .u'.: he-got arguing he got carried away and to give up Tommy. She. didn't want to |fer father said. so. And you, my dear, if you wished, might | culd ot along on th o X D. | other man, what kind of a tyrant do you t ln" l“ .u . ':ru ::uum el often safl things which he @ldn't mean, | give up all those wonderful possibilities “They have ground down the trusts,” |be that son's mother, and wear a dia~ as z'onr flance any chance of pro- [ think you will be after marriage? You zm s- up«: m:“ : » ”:n as can Bit which troubled Mr. Bagrlay deeply. | that her father had talked about so sol- [he said,. only to find that they have | dem.” motion? If he has and ls sober and In-|navo no claim on the girl. Be broad o utllised to in ual seeurity and re- |/ . was supposed to be.the|emnly after exacting from her a solemn |ground themselves down at’ the SIME | e dustious and you are sure of your abllity [ mindea covery. coolest calculator of. possibilities ' :in ke Afnerica. As‘a matter of fact, he 'Was | . . > mign who owned. his greatest success to| imipulse. But.in the case of Tommy Bar- | clay, whoin he had adopted, not after drefal delifieration and caclulation, but n impulse, it looked as if he was go- IA§ to be dlsappointed. "Wor a long time Barclay kept on hoping | nst hope, and attributed Tommy's faflures. gnd wrong-headed principles to | his youth snd high spirits. Then one day there xpnrfid an interview which ~ 'Pommy*had given to a reporter. between | ( the chuckers of a polo game, and Barclay | threw up His hands. | Talking with. the. wild carelessnes of youth, Tommy had given it as his opinion tpat in'the great coal mine strike in .Western Pennsylvania. then at its height, | © miners were really tighting for thelr | ‘extstence, and that the pwners were op- | fressing them. «To Barclay such opinlons uttered by | is adopted son . amounted to. treason. | And’he*had the impuise to abandon all | those hopes which he had entertained for | the boy's future; and he had abandoned them, i Fitst he sent for his nephew, Cariton | Fitch. To this one he made no elaborate expianation of we cnangea sitiende. e 1 D€ following Omaha and Council said, “‘Carlton, I want to see you married i sted gowe, rov o 02wl Bluffs dealers carry complete lines { s e e b e of Victor Victrolas, and all the late ’ It's easy to learn the new steps with the music of the Victrola. Victrola IX, $80" Mahogany or oak The Fox Trot. Castle Pol- ka, and all the other new dances—and the Victrola plays as long as any one wants to There are Victors and Victrolas in great varie of styles from $10 to $ . His MastersVoice —at all Vu:tof ea.leu. ey uncle” he wid. et were 1s omene Vjctor Records as fast as issued. meneases, _wna marsy sl YOU @re cordially invited to inspect Vistee Tilling tsiins O grimi; M O bt s e ot muone o0 the stocks at any of these estab- ‘.’:'lh.tn he sent for Tommy "lmlmhv llShments' he sald, “I'm very fond of you and )uv e —— have been a bitter disappointwent to me." L chtrolas Sold by G Schmoller & Mueller mp, “n PIANO COMPANY A. HOSPE CO., [ e air Xase thart . " 1311-1313 Farnam St. Omaha, Neb. . Omaha, (B s e s Sl L, s oy S 1513-15 Douglas Street, and That's because I'm fond of you, and Sound-Proof Demonstrating Lt besdm 1w the Main Floor. 407 West Broadway, - Council Bluffs, la. “Even if you are disappointed in me sald Tommy, “please don't stop liking e Branch at ® o mnies mer 0 srnt mun s Harney, Omaha. Cycle Co Talking Machine Department : 3’?’1“‘ L T & Il W “‘°“"- Mgr. i in the Pompeian Room AT bR