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Wy, and Charles W. Goddard Cogyright. 1915, Star Company. Synopsis of Pevious Chapters. After the tragic death of John Aines Uiy, hl8 prosuaied wile, one of Aners ica’s greatcst beauties, uies. AL her deaii Frof. Sunder, an asent of the lnteivels kiduaps the bewutitul J-year-oid 8Ll wnd biugs her U dooa o parad Where she secr no man, but thiuks s 18 Laugut by ubgess wauu Instruct her her uussion to iefuin e worid, At he Gke of 13 she s suddel.y thiust anto the WOrld where kvuls vi Lie ready to pretend Lo fina her. The one tu ilecl the ioms of the litile Amesbury girl wost, atier she lad been Spuited Bway by tue interesis, was | Tomimy Barc.ay. Fifteen yeurs later Tommy goes to Adiroudacks. ‘Ihe inteivsts are poi ble for the trip. By accideat he 18 to meet the uitle Amesbuiy giri €omes fortn trom her parsaise us Ceics the glil from heaven luterests are Celestia recokulzes each other. finds 1t an casy inatter Lo tvscue Celesda from Prof, S\tmufl and ey hive i the mouniaius \er they are pursued by Stilliter and’ escape to an island wueie they speud the nint. | Tomiuy s first wun was to xet Celestia | away from Suiliter. After tuey leave Bellevue Tomny s unabie to get any hotel to take Celestia in owing to her costume. But luter he persuudes his father to keep her, When he goes out to tue taxi he finds her goue. Snue falis into the hands of white slavers, bul escajes and koes to live with a poor fam- ily by the name of Douxias. When their #son Freddle returns home he finds right in his own house, Celestla, the girl for Wwhich the underworld has offered u ward that he hoped to get. Celestia secures work in a large gar- ment factory, where a great muny girls are employed. Here she shows her pe- cullar power, and makes fr.ends with all her girl companions. By her taiks to the girls she is able to calm a threatoned strike, and the ‘‘boss” overhearing her is moved to grant the reidef the giris wished, and also to right a great wrong he had done one of them. Just at this point the factory catches on fire, and the work room is soon a bLiazing furnace. Celestia refusés to escape with the other g.ris, and Tommy Barclay rushes in and car- ries her out, wrapped in a big roll of cloth. After rescuing Celestia from the fire, Tommy 1is sought by Banker Barciuy, who_undertakes to persuade him to give | up the girl. Tommy refuses, und Cele: ia | wants him to wed her dirsctly. Ie can | not do this, as he has no funds. Stillite: in the ro But Tommy found it impos- sible to this. 1t was ofther nailed down, or held by some weight too heavy for him to budge. They returned the parlor and eat for a wt in 1 thought. Whatever Colestia's thoughts may have been they coeeded in ng into her eyes a harsh cold leok, und when she spoke at last it friendly voice was 1 g9t an idea,” she said, What woman You know “Mrs, Gunsdorf Celestia nodded “That man out in front,” she said, a human being. If he heard a woman sereaming for help, he would try to help her, wouldn't he? elestia! the | “Oh you mustn't be frigntened,” said e hiding be- Celestia coldly. “You will be 'd that door. Whea he rushes in to me, you will have to seize him and im quiet until we can get away But you mustn't hurt him “Suppose the other ventry comes, 100? look at me have to do what I say " me. “All except “1 suppose,” love you 0. Love! you wouldn't.” “Oh, Celestia, how could 1? a cent in the world.” “What does money matter! isn’t the time to argue about love. is the time to think about saving life." you." said he, “it's (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) and Barclay introduce Celostia to a co- terfe of wealthy mining men, who agres to send Celestia to colliirivs. Aiter being d.sinherited, Tommy sought work in the coal mines. He tries to heud off a threatened strike by taking the | miners' leaders to see Barciay, who re- | fuses to listen to them. The atfike is on, | and Tommy discovers a plan of the own- | | ers to turn a machine gun loose on the men when they attack thie stockade. This sets the mine owners busy to get Tid of Tommy. | ‘The wife of the miners' leader Involves Tomuny an escapade that leads the miners to lynch him. Celestia saves him from the mob, but turns from him and goesi to see. x. - e : TENTH EPISODE. I ¥ -t a ., “How about breakfast?' she’called. “Orders are to supply breakfast on de- | mand."” | “Can you make it breakfast for two? “Certainly.” Ten minutes later the door was ogened, a steaming tray was slid along the floor through the opening and the door was once more closed and locked. Almost in silence, for they were both very hungry, Celestia and Tommy ate a hearty breakfast. Once again, as at the Octagon fire, Celestia and Tommy found themselves in agreement. Each was bent upon saving life. Tommy told Celestia of the fighting temper the strikers were in and Celestia told Tommy of Kehr's preparations for making the defense of the stockade a “hambles of those who should attack it. She told him, too, how she had made a beginning of softening hearts, but seeing that she had been locked up she feared that' the softened hearts had owned up to Kehr and been put where they could do no mercy. “But, Tommy,” she sald, “they wouldn't be such fools as to attack in broad day- light, would they " “They are very strong numerically, and very weak in the head. Their cause is just enough, but they always present it to motice in unjust ways. Their every passions seems to them an argument. Labor 1s its own worst ememy. What labor needs is friends, friends of educa- tion and experience, dispassionate men and women with no axe to grind. If they succeed In rushing this stockade and mas- sacreing everybody, what good will it do | them? None. And they don't see it. They | think capital will be so frightened that | it wil! simply curl up its toes and yield | to their every demand. Why Celestia there | ure men in that town so ignorant—you wouldn't believe it! There are grown men over there who think that all the forces of American cavital are impounded in this stockade, and that If these forces are scotehed capital will no longer have any- one to take up the glove for it. Guns- | ddorf's a wise old fellow, but he's not in | this game because he loves labor, but be- | use he loves Gunsdorf. Carson is a fanatic—an honest fanatic. Cracowitz is | an out and out anarchist. It's a pity, be- cause fundamentally theirs is the side of justice. I wish I could hear what they are saying with old man Kehr. I'm afrald it won't be a soothing interview for any- one," | “They came with zou? Tommy nodded | “I begged them not to come, but Guns- | dorf would do It. I think— | “What? “I think that if there is an attack on the stockade Gunsdorf doesn't want to be mixed up in it—technically. I think he intends to make Keh: so angry Kehr will throw him and his companions into the lockup, white flag and all. Gunsdorf's not returning at the given 1 | { time o'clock, will be the signal for the attack: and good | Lord, how the poor fools will be slaught- ered ™ If you could g about Gunsdorf? “They might not believe me, but could get to them 1'd certainly try it ‘He has no right to lock us up,” said | Celestia, *1 t to them and tell th n i1 wonder how many men are guarding this house?” It was only a matter of moments 1o ascertain that there we but two, 17 H houge ceins one & row that had wia dows only ut the front and the buck “We might zet away over the roofs, ‘Tommy suggested Sound a iadder which led to a trap door | lall the mental How Widows Find Husbands So Easily By LUCILLE CAINE. Perhaps there is nothing half gerous in the feminine world widow—the little one especially. #he happen to bLe the possessor of good looks there is no limit to her power 80 dan=- as the aver men, . Consequently, Jt. is n-nur*\_g that she sliould sometimes ingur the deep aispleasure of members of her own sex But it is not her fault. If men will.full in love with her it is only ‘right and proper that she should help them do it pleasantly Thus she has the whole art of . flirta- tion and coquetry at her finger tips, and has practically reduced the art of lur- ing hearts, and keeping them as long as she wishes, to a mathematical system, But perhaps one of the secrets of her indefinable charm over men is that she understands them perfectly. Her marriage gave her a knowledge of weaknesses that man is heir to. All his tender spots, his mani- fola inconsistencies, and all those things he simply loves and hates in & woman. She is obdurate when another woman would satiate! when others would desses. She knows by instinct when to tease and when to refuse; when to be yielding And when to be cruel. She can be coaxingly sympathetio—that art which so few men are impervious to; she knows how to flatter them; but, above all, she knows how to keep their interest at boiling point by never allow- ing herself to be the same twice run- nin Small wonder, then that men find her 80 fascinating, Of course, the real reason s that there is a delightful air of competition about her, which appeals to man's cternal love of conquest. He invariably asks a widow to marry him for the simple reason that he wants to see If he can cut the “other men” out of her affections, be dignified god- Advice to Lovelorn By BEATRION FAIRFAX Marry the Girl You Love. Dear Miss Fairfax: 1. have been en- d to a voung lady for three years, ut I feel that 1 don’t love her. There is a girl 1 love dearly and know that 1 could be happy with her, but because the former one s pretty, rich and tulented and the latter has only & good education and & churming disposition in her favor, my friends teli me I would be a fool to break my present engagement. Are you with them? HPFP I disagree heartily with your over- worldly friends. You would be very foul- lsh man to marry without love; that would be doing your flancee a far Ereater Injustice than to tell her the truth and set her free to find her happi- ness with a man who cares for her. She is Not toe Old. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 20 years old and dearly in love with a young lady four years older. Kindly let me know it you think she is too old for me. I bave a ood position with 'a promising future. BMS Four years' seniority on the part of the bride Is certainly no bar to Congenlality and sympathetic are far more !mportant than actual years. Marry the girl you love by all means. happiness. A Secord Marrluge. | Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 am divorced from |the palacomastodon. my former husband for two vears. have the custody of my child, working. I now love a worthy roan who, I believe, longer in the same easy' “but 1 it. That woman put it into my “is | When men look at me, they “I know that,” gald Tommy, “all except because 1 1 begged you to marry me and 1 hu\'(-n't: But this This Should | She is cajoling and sweet | interests reciprocates wy uaffection. Do FRIDAY, JULY An Amazing Creature of Bygone Ages ’ Arsinoitherium as it appeared dnrving life. s L SER RN | By GARRETT P. SERVISS." The addition of a mounted skeleton | of"that most extraordinary creature the arlsonitherium to the Gallery of Fossil Mammals at the British Museum ot Natural ‘History marks an event of real | Importance. It is the only complete skeleton yet mounted, and it is, beside: one of the most remarkable animals in | that gallery of wonderful beasts. | Slanding about six feet high at the | withers, it resembles, in its general ap- pearance, a rhinoceros. It differs, how- ever, entirely from this animal In the | singular armature of the head. In the | rhinoceros, it will be remembered, the snout is surmounted by a great horn, in the African species there are two horns, one behind the other. These differ entirely from the horns of ruminants, such -as antelopes and cattle, for instance, for in them these | weapons are formed of bony outgrowths of the skull ensheathed in & horny case, In the rhinoceros the horns are formed of a solld mass of matted hairs, and have no supporting skeleton. The horna of the arisnoitherium were of the remi- nant type—that is to say, they were | formed of bony outgrowths covered with | & horny sheath. There were two pairs of these in this great beast—a huge pair, placed side by side above the eyes, and a much smaller palr between the eyes | and ears. From the general bulld of the animal it s prefty certain that it was a browser, and conveyed food to its mouth by means of a long, prehensile lip. In i the shape of i@ limbs, as may be seen 'in the skeleton, it resembled both the elephant and the rhinoceros—that is to say, its legs were massive and plilar- like. This is & common type of leg in animals with bulky bodies, and is no indication of kinship. There is one pe. cullar feature of this skeleton, however, for which no explanation is forthcoming. | and that is the singular forwardly di- rected curvature of the ribs in the middle of the body. As to the precise relationship of this animal nothing s known, but it seems probable that it is distinctly related to |the little dassies or rockconles which | abound in Africa to this day. The discov- ery of the first remains of arsinoitherium |made & great sensation some ten years |ago. They were found In the Fayum, the lake province of Egypt, occupying a de- pression in the desert to the west of the [Nile valley, some seven-and-fifty miles | south of Cairo. Ages ago this district was occupled by a huge lake surrounded by vast jungles |swarming with & host of strange beasts long since extinat. Some of these, since they were contemporaries of arisinoithe- I rum, deserve special mention here, First 'and foremost come the primitive ele- phants discovered by Dr. Charles An- |drews of the British Museum. The earliest of these which appeared on the scene {while arsinoitherfum was yet in the 1muklnx was the little moeritherium, a | creature of about the size of a large pig, {and bearing no resemblance to an ele | phant whatever. This was succeeded by This may be de- bed as a plgmey elephant, but differing and am again|conspicuously from the elephants of to- |day In having the lower Jaw prodigiously you think that after one Inhappy mar-|prolonged and armed at the tip with a riage It would be possible tor & second one & success’ as 1 am doubtful By all means marry the man you love. Your first experience bitterness, probably taught you much that will enable you to assure the sio- cess of & second marriage. Don't deprive | , yourself be- Laf of a chance of happiness cause once you knew unhappineds, |ie full of ecompensations, and you will| Was pushing a baby carriage. ‘“Why d They ascended to the second floor, and | probably find yours in joy so great as to make you quite forget past suffering. through its vvr’t to mak - e | fi‘,“,.‘:;"“' of short, chisel-like teeth. ‘The upper jaw bore a pair of short tusks destined to achieve huge sise In the dis- tant future. The descendants of this “Why does a baby cry so much when here's nothing really the matter with 7 “I don't kmow," replied the woman who - | & man become so grief-stricken whon the home team loses a ball game | ington Star. AR creature migrated from Africa into Asia and Europe, where the lower jaw under- went further lengthening, while the up- per tusks increased In size. Later, stlll, the lower jaw underwent & shortening process, till at last the curlously truncated (lower jaw, typcial of the modern ele- phant, came into being, Then a return to the old haunts in Africa took place, but not before the whole of Burope had been invaded by their wandering hordes. The same fossilifcrous deposits which have ylelded such beautifully preserved remains of arsinoitherium, also entombed remains of the forerunners of the dugongs and the whales. These last are of immense interest, for none but the expert would see in theso remains any likeness to the creatures we know as | whales ! They were comparatively small, long- snouted animals, and had the jaws armed with large, curiously serrated teeth. Herein they differ conspicuously from the Iteeth of modern whales, which resemble In shape those of crocodiles. Fumher- | He wont hear. TN only scream—in moderation 1 Tommy laughed alond, and Celestia | : o forgetti about the Gunedorf woman S— s s o o “Wo must get out of the stockade | S i up e R R R s | | somehow,” suld Celestia. 4 | “How will we keep bim quiet, after | we've gone? “You must hold him so that he hae to As shown, in skeleton form, in the British Museum: An arsinoitherium, a unique type of animal remarkable for the great size of the horns and the curious shape of the ribs. more, the skull was o1 a muen simpie type. Of the rest of these animals at present, we know nothing How vast arc the chankes which this ( region of Africa has undergone may be | gathered from the fact that, besides the primitive whales, remains of sharks and rays have been found there. When the sea retreated, dense, well-watered for- ests came into being, forming the nursery for hosts of animals long since extinct, or represented today by descendants transformed, some into glants, some into dwarfs, as the “struggle for existence' dotermined. From the evidence of its fossils, it seems clear that before the continent of Africa took its final shape, it was more or less directly connected with South America. These fossils show us that what I8 now a burning desert was once a streaming forest, and before this, was the hunting ground of sharks. The days of arsinoitherium date somewhere about the middle of these tremendous happen- ings. Epicurean How to Prepare the Clam and the Lobster By DOROTHY X, Among the honored Crostaceans that tables #0 commonly found as the clam and the lobster In fact, no public dinner would complete wtihout them, and as they come extramely Righ they sponsible in a large measure for the extravagant cost of such functions, The clam is a amall, reticent, pal- 14 - complexioned creature, distin guished by its cold feot, which ia found all along the sastern seaboard of the United States and in Eng- Iand, whero the very finest varle- tles extant are pro- produced. A very have none an o about pln our banquet or arc superfor quality of |clam, however, i indigenous to Boston: but none s produced west of the Alleghenios or south of Mason and Dix- on's line. This makes the clam somewhat of a gastronomic rarity in America, and per- haps explains why it is considered a tid- bit by epicures, as it is in reality some- what flavories and the taste for It has to be generally acquired by fasting. There are two varieties of olams, little neck clams, which wear a fourteen and a half collar, and have bulging brows, and long hair, and carry a heavy line of conversation about the superman, and Itterature, and muelc, and art. This varlety fs extremely ocold and clammy, anfl s generally found attached to some uplift movement, from which, however, it is easily removed. === ) Household Sugg: stions dust-stained alabaster orma- To clean ments, miake a paste of whiting, soap and milk. The paste must be left to dry on and then washed away, the surface being first dried with a cloth and thea with a flannel, when the ornaments will be found clean and unharmed. To clean real lace, place It between folds of tissie well sprinkled with cal- cined magnesia, and put between the leaves of a book under a welght for two or three days. Shake out the powder and the lace will be found quite clean. By peeling a potato 10 per cent of its food value I8 wasted. The skin is rich In useful mineral matter, and the part just beneath the skin—the fibro-vascular layer—contains far more proteid than the inner bulk of the tuber. When a dark serge sult or dress gets shiny, sponge it well with hot vinegar and press it in the usual way. No odor of vinegar will remain. To polish grained wood soak a flannel in a little Lhinseed ofl, rub the wood well, then polish with a dry eoft cloth. To soften water in which flannels are to be washed, allow two teaspoonfuls of glycerine to a tub of water. To remove the smell of cooked onions from a pot fill it with boiling water and drop in a red-hot cinder, Episodes | other species of the clam is just » rotund, unsentient body, with no initiative of ita own. This s undoubtedly the native atock, the claim that was born clam in contradistinctiorn to the clams which have oultivated clam miness. | The | targe volition or Some housekeepers, who are particular about the kind of clame they serve out At their table, go out and pick out their own clams. But the majority of women are sadly lacking in enerxy and thrift and g0 thay order in their clams over the telaphone, or obtain them from the soctal rogistor, where they may bo had |for the asking. In this way the clams for most week-end parties are obtalned Clams may be obtained in a variety o toothsome wavs. Occasionally one may be found In the soup. This is known a¢ |clam bouflion, and is a dish that host |e8%es delight to serve at semi-lterary |and musioal functions, where some liter |ary or artistio lon is invited to try tin | strength of his or her volce against the {combined conversation of seventy-five o1 |a hundred ladies | Btewed clams are a very common sight At our best tables. Little neck clams i« the bost variety to use for this disi |To make stewed clams begin by prepar Ing & sort of sandwich by placing the olam betweon two fat dowagers whor conversational range Is limited by dix ease, dress and domesticity Pour over this mixture an assortment of cocktall: sherry and champagne, with a dash o Benedictine Serve as soon as it s mel low The favorite way of serving clams | however, on fce as a relish at the be ginning of the menl. This makes any thing that comes afterward seem o Nelous by contrast. As the clams have n flavor of thelr own, the only way | which they can be made palatable is t #erve them with sauce piquant, made o large wads of the long green, combinc with equal parts of automobiles, theate: tickets anq smart restaurants. Season up in this way olams become the fay orite dish of many women, but clams d | mot appeal to the feminine taste in their plain state, Although, as has been sald, the fines lobsters grow In the west, obeying som law of nature, as soon as they have arrived at the spending age they emigrat to New York, where they disport them selves in the liquids along the Great White Way. This makee the lobater fishing off t! Broadway banks the best in the world, and large numbers ard annually landed by young women who are especially ex- pert in augling for the deliclous crus- tacean, Lobster is served in a variety ot ways, one of the favorites belng stuffed lob. ster with hard Inck stories and pathetic tales of cruel employers ,and mercenary oreditors and romances of never having loved before. Thow in the salt of tears, unlees it makes your nose red to weep, and flavor with a little paprica of jealousy. This makeas a rich and sustaining dish upon which you can support life indefinitely. Brolled live lobster, with deviled sauce s excellent. Having caught your lobater place it on a griddle made of whims and caprices, light the fire of jealousy under it, and, when it is done, pour over it a red hot sauce made of the artistic tem- perament. When a lobster is 80 or more years old the most satisfactory way to use it is to can It and keep It on a shelt for esmergencles. There Iy, however, fortun- ately no danger of the lobster orop being exhausted, as a new one 1s born every minute, | | the Bake-Oven Two biscuits, The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y. | The Closed Season for We have built a two-million dollar bakery with which to supply you with a perfect whole wheat bread. Make our bake-oven your bake- oven during the Summer months by serving hredded Wheat the life-giving, muscle-building “meat” of the wheat. It is ready-cooked, ready- to-eat. Close the bake-oven for awhile and serve Shredded Wheat in many dainty, delicious combinations with ripe, luscious berries and all sorts of fruits and green vegetables. with milk or cream, or fresh fruits, make a complete, nourishing meal.