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I'HFE The Bees Home Magazine Page % The Goddes 8 — = Use Common The Most Imposing Motion d Picture Serial an Mysteries of Science and Nature Sense When S Story Ever Create : $ : : s : Discovery of Ancestor of the Horse in California Brings | Y Read It H. BUs It o she Novies Up the Whole History of the Strangely Suggestive | ou Meet Development of the Man's Most Faithful Slave Sttangers By GARRETT P. SERVISS {he hotse were graduslly CHABNS: ¥ato \ " hoof. while the animal grew larger. i \ recont dispatch from California tells | StrOnEer, swifter and more graceful, is By DOROTHY DIX. |6 the discovery In the southern Sierra | A% fascihating as a fairy tale and at the Nevada mountains, in wtrata of the|Same time as authentie and uncontra | It I8 moet unfortunate that in order) \llocene age, of & fossil three-toed horse, | d1ctable as a Roman monumént. It im | to warn young, {gnorant and unsophistic- | which is deacribed | perhaps, the completest and most con | ated girls against certain perils that beset as & long-sought | vincing chapter In the book of avolution them it is necessary 'to overetimate the | missing 1nk" in | Moreover. it fn distinctively an American fanger and fay \BReHSATY emphusis the evolution of contribution to evolutiomary history, for on it. They have { the horwe. the “eohippus,” the four-toed Ancestor not judgment | While there Is | of the horse, as well as the “‘protorohip igh to dis- | evidently some | pus,”" the “mesohippus’” and the protohip . iminate - ai- mistake here, a pus” (all of which had several toes, and ' cases, and | 1 shall presently an increasing tendency to merge them t | sho 3 into one), have all been found in the rock » to protect them show nevertheless . n fou n O must warn the discovery is of [strata of the great west em against the deep interest, it It our five toes, or fingers, should by sard entirely, as [ tor no other reason A Drocess of evolution be merged into ‘a ou would keep & | than that it may single one, the nails at the same time | | serve to call gen blending into a uniform horny covering P b | )eral attention te | or hoof. the result would be what hap- e the marvellous his | pened to the horse, as he changed from e~ e { {tory, which ex | hin early ancestra] tormas. Looking at in the middle of ploration of the rocks of the sarth’s crust | this avolution, in ita successive yateps the room [ | has brought to lght, of the origin and | shown In the American nruseum, one is For inatance, it | | development of the horse from a little | irresistibly impressed with a feeling that I s & el known | animal no bigger than a fox, which llved, | some gulding purpose controlled it. afd act that there are wome two or thres million years ago, in one can understand the thought that this entle, gray-haired, ) the far westarn parts of our country | burpose arose like a soaring ambition In motherly looking | 1f the fossil just discovered in Cali- | the mind of the little eohippus, as poei 1y 4 women, a fornia had five toes instead of thres it |feally expreased hy Mrs Stetson (quoted ‘) P i v arently the very essence of respectabil: | would be, indeed, a missing link and one | by Mr. Frederie A. Lucas in his “Ani It v, who travel about on boats and ot r:'er;:\l:!n:\-l‘-l :mvo um;“ n::l;‘ .u-fl mals of the Past™) H trains for the sole purpose of sc | sirous to find, for it is generally beljeve: ‘ quaintance with t > —— | among them that the horse onoce had an | ‘Rald the Httle eohippus. 1 prétty young country | with fiv & R Basw I am going to be & horse girls going to the citics to seek employ- | ancestor with five toes, an ey know And on my middle finger nails ment. 1¢ g the Bartble bullndds of {hess |that it had one with four toes. because To runs my earthly course ” {men of such a one, found in Wyo- harpies to gain the confidence of these | & 198 9 OF colives. thh i It " ‘ ) changes undergone in and’ to- benevolsully -efter tham | ming, exists and can be seen in the Amer- the structure of the feet were not the only ones that the progenitors of the experienced. There were many others, consplcuods among which was | fcan Museum of Natural History. The story r until they can find something and thus to lure the poor innocents to places of infany, frora which many of #igls, @l & of how the original toes of | 1 horse | | { them never escape. | the evolution of the teeth, fitting the ) For this reason the welfare socleties | g animal to live on the grassy plainm for young girls, the Traveler's Aid so- | Ad t IJO 1 whera ita further development was to the dark ways of the world, impress on | 1 y SEATRIOR PAIRFAX | the form of the hoof was easential to the ‘ { the minds of girls the darger of making preservation of this brave but inoffensive chance acquaintance when they are The Stage. animal travelling with any womwan, no matter Lo’ R e b i‘.’.!i’é’ w:‘r:x‘i‘nx' in 7’:1“!‘0':-::: When the eohippus began his aspiring ' how much like a mother she whpears, | for six years. She has gotten very thin |COUrse there were no men, the coming -, ghce, when & benevolent old lady speaks | and nervous and tired of working in this | friends, companions and teachers of his i a young girl she is apt to be severely. [ pray; She i» now dolng everything possl. | geacendants, vet in existence. But our ibbed, and should she artlessly offer Volee cuttivated, Her teacher has aiready | Prosenitors, too, had made their appear- : e girl some peppermint drops the girl promised hor & ten-week o ment s | arce upon the planet, although not in a { would decline, because she would be sus- | | o . A ety 15 sk My | shape externally recognizable as hum N piclous of being drugged. Nor, if the old | | posed. He would rather have her be a |and the two geanealogical lines, so. widely ady should faint, would the girl rush to ‘|)“|‘mvv“(l"r.?‘r'leleshmm'l:‘rl,‘ n;;'l ‘-lm; u(.;»g ditferent and yet destined to be ro in- Y ler rescue, because she:has been told | D e e oy ot el or o0t | timately associated, ran their separate { that that is a favorite trick of it? Kindly advise a courses upward toward their invisible ‘i % Now, obviously, most ¢f the garrulous | PERPLEXED MOTHER. | meeting point. At last when the pos- 0ld ladies: who are travelling about, and | \who would like to fall luto convérsation | | with the girls they meet, and Wwho re- | inind them of their own granddavghters, are guileless and harmless as babes. But low is the girl to know which old lady A self-respecting girl who has ability | terity of the eohippus nad become trus | and the willingness to work can keep her | horges, swift, strong, teachable, fa'thful, {head and save her dignity and reputation | companionable, diligent and tireless, they {in almost any condition of labor. Don't | wore encountered, on the fields of - this W | force your daughter to take up uncon- |'wouq by the big-brained hrood of that genial work. Stenographers and telephone | .y ynrecognized brute ancestor of man, jo u leader in the church in Bird Center Celestia comforts the weeping gin. ‘.':‘Y’IF;‘::""‘: N o oatre | ¥O causht the Eleaming spark of riental wnd which 18 a White slaver? She Aot [(Conyright; 195, by the Star Co. All For- |ana done to you? I teff yoy I'th ashamed. with fear and excitement, gifis ran this Bappening at the Dine-hound door., 1t [to succeed ‘of the atdsé would be very | Hres Which Hickelad uetficlont in the tell, and Bo' in the iIntolest of, her owg| ojgn Bights Reserved) [T don't Xnow what Weps sme from sink. | way and Uwat, screaming and howling.|opened fnward. The first girl to'reach|foolish to lose ‘aff oppartunity such as | oon Mol of scifle Bige apelfis cre safety SH) has 1h:be"TRUSHE" (O B8 AU — 1ng Gown through the floor The hard. | Béwink tiachines ware ovarturned, $irla |it had fiung herbelf againkt it, of couree: | your' daustitsPs thacher, can effer het. [ (rw and DikwdvSstes: fisine then ams ] VIGIOND S RN SRR <SR, Synopsis of Previous Chapter. |est things I've got to say comes next |foll and were trampled on in the rush(and tried to make it open outward. That g -— to UpHE ST A Precisel§ the same thing i5.t0 Le 5aid | After (he tragic death of John Ames- |Some of you girls know me for a hard, |for the door, the room's sole exit. Tommy |samo girl now looked as if she was try- | You Would Probably Be Happy. To Shiy predectined widdunter UM v about thé,girl's dealings with men. The |bury, his prostrated wite, one of Amer- | cold-hearted man. Is there any gir! here |Was almost knocked down Ing to climb over the top of it. The pres- Dea: Miss Wairfax: 1 ani 41 years of | piration of the little eohippus had ‘led ), sreat matority ot men are caivalrous|iSh] SLERCeL beeutian RCh ALREL ACAEE | who can say worse than that of met” | There Was no longer any doubt that | sure of her frensied companions had litted |fafe ‘taa itk - theea® ehihren. Lately 'a | Ny race: His highly orgepised and high. ; toward women, and & girl would be as | iocy SULIOE ai agent of the intereats | Nl C ised s if waiting for a reply. |the bullding was really on fire. Just |her head and shoulders above them, and |lady friend whose age s 32 years, has | sbirited deacendants quitted thelr wild safe with them as shme would with her |girl und brings her up In a paradise |Tnen he went on: Thow the smoke ot into the sewing ma- |it was doubtful If there was any mors | D8N trving to make love to mo, and fre- | life at the call of a still nobler, more [ “wn brothrs. But there s that terrible | vBere she sees no man. but thinks ane | BETC QUL ) here who could |€hine 1oom you could not see, but there |lifo left In her. The nolse those poor guently talked marringe, saying that \f | mastertul, intelligence than theirs. and { ninority. who' are ,.flw,i. n-sheep's <llgm. ;Eo, "‘t’h\l“"; 0 ,,,,,‘}.:‘,, ‘lh' gvorld.‘ At ::, - worse than that of me, if she would. | Was plenty of it, enough to make Tommy |girls made was trightful. They were tuke ool care of my {laren. | She | became the willing subjects of man, con- N ¢ ing, and who ruthlessly prey on Inno-|age of 13 she i3 suddeniy thrust into the |ue ghe won't. She won't squeal. So I'll [COUBh and to fill his eves with tears. |manlacal with terror. They eg |S0cma to bo Honest, Wn her people | tent to be subordinate in the empjre of | | cence, and to protect herselt against | ROGS NSO SEPATA OF, Lhe, Intereata '"lhc:e to do tll\e ::unlnl:u Molly Bryani |Celestia, after a desperate attempt to [that the door had been xiym:\d':"::-: i‘.‘fi“‘ra';"»".f..n"}'f.%‘;‘lbu?.?'i.’n!'.""afi?:w‘.‘.'&! brain-power, and. agvay. seaking (o 6> b | them the girl has to be taught to 'ware | “Ine one to feel the toss of the little |Step forward. please. Molly Bryan. I've [calm the girls, had not moved. It seemed |yelped, they howled like wolves; they |betwean out ages, LAWRENCE B. W. | cape from it, but, on the contrary galu- i | cvery strange man. !f»".‘r?:f&‘""‘-:’d most, after she had been | o eining to say to you that I want all [8Imost as it she was waiting for Tommy |bit, acratched, hit and pushed, pushed, | Since the girl loves you and shows it s ing, through their submission. an added E | She has to be taught the danger of what |JH 00 SIAY, by th ¥ i Jour friends and well-wishers to hear.” |10 come and get her pushed to get at that door. | ¢rankiy, 1 think you are quarrcling with | acceleration to their evolution, for ths i | iccms an innocent flirtation: not to pick | | Fiftsen years later Tommy oes to the | very slowly s slender girl, with tragie | ' COme. Celestia,” he said, “let's. wet —————— | your g00d fortune in hesi(ating,to make | Nobler forma that the horse has taken Bl | b acquaintances who have not been prop- gdiadacks, The AT are Toeponsl | naunted dark; eyes came forward. jout of this nnted SomOrIow.) [ her your wite—if you love her. Don't do|under human care and training he could { erly introduced and vouched for: not to| o yieet the iittle Amesbury girl, as she Stand alongaide of me, Molly, and turn | _A# he spoke a billow of smoke shot up | Keep on Thinking. her the injustice of marrying her to get|ncver have attained by the simple upers- | «ptor int conversation with men she ac-| conen forth from her Paradise s Coloatia | oo everybody can soe you. Some of |PCLWeen (Wo planks, and for the first| Chelly—Before T met you I thought of (& housckeeper or a governess for your | tion. of Tiathre's. tondiie T Hhis ¥ idently meets; not to eat or drink wn:.‘ 'c:u:m. !rltmv:;‘n'\':mfl.:-re‘ilhne‘r"f{om%s;“g)r' you:" he went on, “have known Molly a |Ume the crackling of burning wood could |nothin {;‘\p”m:kug money. children. If you really love her you will| a5 he is today is partly the product of | accept courtesies from men she doesn't | fnde it an easy matter to reacue Celestia | long time. Was there ever a better hearted be heard. M”l"llr'fi e -peg"‘“: ':;‘\»‘“k ';::x'l'l;d‘:!n'l\'l': be able to bridge the gap between your | human intelligence gullding the blind inow. This etrenuous rule often brings | from :‘)r:':imsiln,{:{”.?ge they hide n |y il "or cheerful worker? Look at By this time really horrible things were | Rocord. ‘ s forces of life, d about idiotic and ridiculous resuits, as in| the SROURtEING: JAlCk (ACY, LIS, 8 Chere [ poor Molly now! She looks as sad as the | . the case of a Kind-hearted and police they spend the night. East river on a winter day. It's no news P SCR—— = gentleman 1 know, who ‘séeing a young| That night, Stilliter, following his In- s to any of you or I wouldn't go into it. | But Molly's got no big brother, or no heavy fisted father to look after her. ! All she bad was herselt to look after herselt and a heart that trusted every- body. ARd you know as well as 1 do, as | well as she does, what's come over her | to make here look the way they do, Look | | | dlan gulde, aches the island, found Celestia and Tommy, but did not disturb them, In the morning Tommy goes for a swim. During his absence Stilliter at- tempts to steal Celestia, who runs to Tommy for help, followed by Stilliter. The latter at once realizes Tommy's pre- dicament. He takes a ntage of it by taking not only Celestia’s, but Tommy's clothes. Stilliter reaches Four Corners with Celestia fust_in time to catch an express for New York, there he { Celestia in Bellevue hospital, where her woman having a 30 hat about to Ve melted down into a pulp in a sudden shower, and mindful of how his own wife would feel about such a catactrophe, gal- ntly proffered his umbrella to the lady ir, ' she exclaimed, haughtily, “I will @il the police if you speak to me again.” \ \s:m another man of most innocent in- bere— He took a much crumpled paper from 1tion who seized a girl by the arm and tched her from sudden death under More Muscle for Less Money 5 Good muscle and good brain are a combi- ‘ . i “|sanity 1s proven by the authorities. i the wheols of an automobile Sot “Wretch! | Fmty 18 o Doy ellevue st Bofore Si. |his breast pocket i | Jlow dare you!" for his pains. liter's denarture “Girls,” he said, “this here is a license | Of colrse, this is carrying the ‘matter| Tommi's first aim was to get Celestis |¢or ;e and Molly to get married, It's away from Stilliter. After they Bellevue Tommy fis unable to get leave silly extreme. any n Still, in order to pro- four months old now, but it's a perfectly | | 1 i son Freddle returns home he finds right in his own house, Celes which the underworld ha ward that he hoded to x SIXTH EPISODE. 1ot bound by them, and they shculd have enough intelligence and knowledge of the world to know when and where to make exceptions, and to be able to discriminate ctween men who are deep, Gray-eved | illians and men who are compenionable, t the ewe lamb against the wolves it|hotel to take Celestia in owing to h«rlgm lcense, in perfect good working | . \s been necessary to engender a distrust | fostume, But later bo versuades’ hif | orger. 1 fooled her -with it. That's wha h th t will beat th ld Th " B e R Containg brewst. |88 {5aC lnds ver-gons: EEe” el |1 o g nation tha € worid. ere 18 } But while these swoeping rules apply :'it_g‘;["‘m;":::. OF i white | Slavers, DUt! e turned abruptly to the sirl st his | to young glrls, women of mature age are D S I e W (B [ a6e. i | don't ask you to firgive e now, Molly, not this moment I don't, wot till I've made food with you by Kind words lapd thoughtful deeds. But I do ask you {to step out with me right now fo the the offere rl for a re- morz digestible, brain-making, muscle - building material in Shredded Wheat and who lcok upon women, not from the| As for the man, Grady, she had looked {office of the nerest inagistrate, and— i point of sex, but as fellow human beings. | into his eyes just once, and he, too, be- and 1'Il always be good to ryou. R i i e rd, This point of view s emphesized by|lieved. But dark thoughts tormented him, | Colestia stepped awitily forward, too the a cxperience of a young woman of my & woman of yeurs and {the girl's thin, pretty face between her There weie upon his conscience, for on * e |two hands and kissed her, bad just beem born In him. many sins quaintance, a level-headed business woman, who spent|of hard-heartedness, brutality and work. | “I know you'll be happy.” she caid a recent Sunday afternoon In tho pars.|In that bullding there was not one girl | After Celestia, many others, some cry- \ middle-aged man occupled the other|whose life he might not have lightened a {Ing With excitement, came forward to » ’,/ { | 'nd of.the bench or which she sat, and [lttle if it had pleased him. It had |kiss Molly and wish her well. And then Y \fter & while thade some casual remark | pleased him to do the reverse. Suddeniy |the manayer made Molly take his arm, \bout the passing throng. She nmswered | h¢ felt moved to take the whole world |and he led her the length of the room, | n the sawe t, and they drifted into|iuto his confidenc and to promise |looking proud and manly, and out of uwI | most interesting conversation that they | amends to those whom he had injured. |door. They passed very close to Tommy, 3 i Joth enjoyed, and they parted without the| “Girls," he said, in a loud, strong voice, |and, of course, he could have stopped than m beef-atenk or eggs. Wue Old Mother nan making the slightest attempt to finl|“Just one or two words. please. I don't |them and told them about the two Young | g e, gl he e o LU A 08, D WIRAS FIMAN 5 AU en amekink Wiptretted. Wik 8o ST | Nature made the whole wheat the most per- It was 1l as fonocent and friendly and| to has done to you. But it got me. I The sceme which he had just witnessed | \ . mpersonal an two aibe Uhat hail each charged this—1 den't know wheiher to (seemed o Luve wiped the matter from | fect food given to man, and along came an ther as they pass at sea, but the Youns (gay lady or whether to say angel—a big [nis mind. As for Ceelestia, she seemed voman's family gave her a terrific scold- | ng when they Leard of it, and considerad | hdt she had committed a grave indiscre- | American genius and made it digestible by steam-cooking, shredding and baking it. The price for the privilege of speaking to you | 1o have disappeared under a wave of| for ten minutes. 1 want to say, tirst of |§11ls, and Tommy turned on his heel and all, that it won't cost her a cent, And it Woved toward tie door with the intention s on I |of waiting for her outside the building | . o o i Thie 1 utiar Dosssnen A weenaa of 15| 0F 0048 moser 1o earry on her. meed |o€ el Eor Dor, Se U WCUARE | tasty, delicious crispness of the baked wheat ears hus enough sense to take care of > 'his hand on the door knob, and had i meait umlens ha’ a win ioasie, s [T BuS thate mut all Tve wot toreer. (00 BN D, IR0 I N orewnthes | pleases the palate and delights the stomach hould pot be u ed o | vh } i o size & man up and tell what his inten- | *1L'0Ut 16ttng the last least one of YOu { i) oy g pudgenly in & loud, ple e the man wh win holeso heal | ions are, even before he knows himselt. %" ""lh"““‘h“"l‘" “: :.'"e; "":' volce . : i Who-wants to ¥ by e th- oA, T O e o o |driver 5o long that I got hardensd to the | %, 2 F urishin, ici 1 e ooty e S e ark, 1 o 1 37 Mt 18| e e e A e ful, nourishing. Dellaiun. for anhinet. with he woman who works with men soon|™e It seemed to me that I had 1o stamp | o, ;ihep voio ith berries et oy s e | o o e, Tow driee 7o St 2o uing ‘B e Gee. Lawk 59 SUPERN A ST Sy M kd lirt With every woman, and that no|9riven you till you hate me and fear|, 4\ y,oi gt it!" | fruits, yoman has sufticlent attractions to make |™e. and till you can't call your souls| mommy, a sudden great dread in his nen pursuc hor after she shows them |Your own. I might have been different |peart hurried toward Celeetis. He had ! that she doesn’t wish to be pursued |and got the work done just tho same.|trav:csed half the length of the room | ; After all, the best chaperoa in the |But I wasa't, Well, I'm going to be: 8he | when ‘he girl who had spoken first world 15 good, hard, horse sense. The said things would get better some time, | gcreamed at the top of her lung Fire! | woman who uses that cean size up any They're befter right this minute. Caw't | Fire! * | situation, and ad the sale path \vu'uulyou feel the differemce’ Can't you feel Others took up the cry, and upon the piudenze snd dery. |that I'm sorry for the things I've said |instant pandemonium broke looss. Wild |