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THE BEE: OMAHA, THURSDAY, GUST After that he walked to Stur- tell them what undertone. tevant and Semmes to bad happened. “He's been insane for some time” said Advice to Lovelorn L'==——mpby BEATRICE FAIRFAX_——: Nothing Wrong. Dear Fairfax: Would I be doing right or wrong to marry a woman the same age as mine, she being a divorced woman, having & daughter about 13 Y rs of age She is a business woman, and T, in business also, am greatly infatuited With r.., ana she is with me. I _have known her for u good many years. She is &ood and of excellent character and tue cause of her divorce is not to her Jis- credit LOVES She has a right to have a second chance at happiness and 1 hope you will wee she gets it. But be sure of yourself. Have you the qualifications to make you a good step father? You must remember such a mar- riage entails dual relations and dual re- sponsibilities. M being Let Her Have Her Way, Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 24 and was keeping company with a young lady of , 'whom 1_iove dearly.” Now, huving &One out with her about two wéeks, she toid me that unless 1 take my father up to her house to talk things over our acqualntunce mus, cease. She has only her mother and 1 mne only my father, who is wealthy. She oor. This is an Italian custom of umm do not approve. L 8 R It is a good custom to win the parents’ approval before an attraction like this proves too serious, and you should love her ail the more for respecting the cus- toms af her country. You say you love her. Let her have her way. Why Notr Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 15, and my people signify their disapproval of my having a &r! until I am older. Do you ik that 1 should follow their advice? BOY “Is there one reason why you should not? They are the best friends you have, and upon their shoulders would fall the burden of the support of & wife if you take one at your immature age. Don't Try It, Dear Miss Fairfax: 1 am 18 and deeply in love with & youns lady six yeers my senior, am not in position to marry b. for at least four years, both in apital. Will you kindly let me know how I can tell her this, and if she is too old for me, B F. G, Four years' engagement is too long very unfair to the girl. Moreover, vou ure so young you will change -~ ten times old ¢ rry and your before are At beast yugh te you i August Records Now on Sale. Two new McCormack Records, that are beautiful. Step into any Victor Store and hear them. Nos. 64,433 and 64,496. Schmoller & Mueller PIANO COMPANY 1311-1213 Farnam St Omaha, Neb. Hear the Newest Records in Our Newly Remodeled Sound-Proof Demonstrating ilooms on the Main Floor. Nebraskg = sxsi 334 BROADWAY Council Bluffs Corner 15th and Harney, Omaha. Geo. E. Mickel, Mgr. Cycle Co. | ™ wants to dance, Victrolas in Victrolas Sold by A. HOSPE CO., 1513-15 Douglas Street, Omaha, and 407 West Broadway, Council Blufil, Ia. Brandeis Stores lking Machine Department in the Pompeian Room The Fox Trot, Castle Pol- ka, and all the other new dances—and the Victrola plays as long as any one There are Victors and great v of styles from $10 to —at all Victor dealers. Victor Talking Machine Co, Camden, N. J. i I's easy to learn the new dances with the music of the 26, 1910 Y g e — The Most Imposing Motion Picture Serial and Why we Quarre'ed . go 2~)Th« 'lv‘v;ie }\;thsTold Her Husband M A verythin, ells Her Stor, B Al L B ’ e O e S S Story Ever Created. s $ s : : $ ¢ y Rud It Here——See It 1 at the Movies | (Copyrignt, 1915, by Star Company.) ¢ | Ky \irginia Terhune Van De Water § g My husband and 1 quarrel because he 1 By Gouverneur Morris Sturtevant, e ‘wouldn't' stop. al any ann, that what s sauoe for the . thing 1 to God he hasn't got a ROOS for the gander 0 and stick of dynamite with him. He'd think n wards. he is absolutaly | P’ nothing of blowing himself to pieces, | ont with rgard to the matter of cor *4 bl ¢ \ with tegaid to the matter of con t Charles W. Goddard we went, too nees. He:oxpects mo to tell him all - Gunsdorf had no stick of dynamite. 1 ' 1 do, yet there am timea when b \regrer had only an automatic with a few ca nubs me for doing this Oupyright, 1918, Star Compasy. tridges in the magazine, and an insane ‘or example, when we were first ma 5 — murderous rage and hatred in his breast ried he sald that, as my husband, he $ S)nopsis vl Fevous Chnplers. S0 they'd land somewhere, would they? had & HEht to know of all my worries 3 ry i8 kiied In a rulvoad |{He'd be carr back to the starting nd troubles. But there have been many "t ‘:‘In‘:‘.l' v“‘:‘“‘: X\I':yfll:‘ l‘:x: point, would he Not if he knew it. Hia oceasions when 1 could see that he was SaVilly & ) o U deu m~; wuo |Tide on the back of the automobile was bored when | talked to him of these Frof. st i 01 tnelall in vain, was it? He'd show ‘em 1 remergber one might when he came interests, Lar .n.wo the A ch8, Where | garmn vam She 18 S SAASE 18 L6 b N O & cavern e home from the office and asked me, as FILLeGl YOaim saicl Loy Burciay, Woo | And his hands, their strength refreshed {he alwavs does, how things had gone ) 'l’l‘l:l‘myu:mfun:rfllw‘\:‘ “V\f";ufii :30*‘:\!@- hatred, {nsanity a suicidal daring during the I was tired and wor covers the wirl, now known us Celestia, | 0Ught and found the big augur and ried, for everything had gone wrong. 1 in company with Prof. Stilliter. Towmy |began to bore a hole through the bottom |satd as much takes the girl to New York, where sa of the schoone: He would drown, but | d e o “ 3 falis into the clutches of & noted pro- 58 theyt i | L curess, but_ 1s able to win, over tos |90 Would they st 1 complained T have had a woman by her pecular hypmotic puw(r.| After a time the edge of the hole b | headache. the dress that T had cleansed : clothing iaciory, whete she goes to work, [rumed, and the pudding 1 made for din ¢ she exercises her power over the wirl |ner is & faflure 1 ana is saved from being burned to deat oW ¥ shand hates to " 3 by Tommy. About tunis r Stiliite o 4 ¥ hushand hates t e & \3 Patoiay Soi fthecs Wwio rate working t woman ery, so [ did not allow my voice - gother, decide ¥t is time to make ua {even to quaver. Yet he frowned Celestia, who has been trained to think What » 1en lot o rievances to - of herself as divine and come from i iy 5 s oo v heaven. Tho first place they send her | jat @ man as soon as he gets In after n to Hitumden, a mining town, where th {hard day at the office he remarked coal miners are un a strike. Tommy lias sarcastically, “It makes one feel fust ) ®one there, too, and M Gunsdorf, wif a " the miners' leader, falls ih love with him [about as cheerful as a ratny day in the and denounces him to the men when | | country spurns her. Celestin saves Tommy from “Well 1 declare..” [ exclaimed, being lynched, and also scttles the strik | “have ou to ofen th v by winning over Kehr, the agent of the | Raver't you told We oftent that you ex hosses, aud Barciny, &r. Mary Black | pectod me to confide everything to you mone.' who s ko if love with Tommy. | “Everything that worth's confiding." y ells him the story ot Celestia, which she . od. dget’ i R SR R he returmed. “Dut surely Bridget's fil Kekr I8 named as candidate for president humors and the cleaner's delinquencien on a ticket thai has Stilliter's support are not of such moment that you need and Tommy Barclay is named on the nflict them upon me. before you've even sniners ‘ticket. Stilliter professes him sked ) ol s wel? in love with Celestin and wants (c asked mo how T feel. 1 have troubles of (o : get her for himself. Tommy urges her my own, please remember n"v» ;.nm to marry him. Mary Blackstone brihes | His words cut me ly. A o : Gunsdorf to try to murder Celesti: Pl B oo 4 rm"{‘ oo Stns i} #'M'HW M,,m the latter is on her campaign tour rying to run his home to please him, traveling on a snow white traf Mrs and s it not in the discharge of my du Gunsdort Is again hypnotized by Celestia tles along these lines that most of my and the murder averted ) . trinls come If things went wrong at 2 1, T . Stiliiter hynotizes Celestin and lures her { “Br 3 3 g as Thv e nto a deserted Woods, where he forces his office, would T not be glad to have Bridget Hus Been as Cross as Two Sticks,’’ T said. bher to undergo a mock marriage, per- n tel! * formed by himself, He notifies the t: \:f;:“ | me of them? T saM as much o | «\pout a fortnight ago,” I replied talk with Mrs, Blank, as they were dis- umvirate that Celestia {s not coming | g y. cussing S back. KFrecdy the Ferret has followed | “But T wouldn't tell you of them, he | MY husband flushed angrily bty ,I.\‘m‘ P g e L him closely, and Tommy §s not far away declared. ““Ihat's just #t. Do T ever re. | NIENt Ago!" he exclalmed. “Why dian't 'ichard lsa lawyer and she i one of his havirg been exploring the cave, hoping gale vou with an account of tfice | You tell me about it® b yaioreestmenes o find Celestin thers b e ¥ L SRENON As her town house is closed for the Stlliter fires at Tommy in the cave hy's latest stupldity, or my steno- | I recalied to his memory the fact that summer, Richard could mot meet be and thinks he has killed him. He then proindhe Sht] recbht WABHERRELE W R . : . R ould nof v end thinks he has killed him. He it rapherts moat recent nestigence No, [ that he had been annoyed by my telling there, und he did not like to. ask her to ringe, but Freddle interferes and in th inibas hen I come home I leave all | him somo of my experiences. Of course, come to his stuffy office. So they met fight that follows Freddie gets Stilliter [that kina of thing behind me.” ho was displeased and sald that I Was und had o cup of tea together at the teq Einsaen and Ieaves Hi Mfind. " Preddy | “Because you can,” I refoined. = “But n | inconsistent and had willfully miscon- poom Y ' Jxan, SRS L0 OnaSommy, ‘and St | woman cannot leave her trials behind | strued his meaning. I let him talk on| “ju¢ you wouldn't have told me of The fire spreads and | before it Iher. They are right there before her |until he added "meeting her if I hadn't see falls into a lake ‘ommy an i {eyes duy and night. 1 do think you men Moreover, you decelved me. 1 have 3 Berxd ol cb b o Crles‘ia return t ., where the: 1 s § v you?' 1 charged. find Sturdevant teling a big meeting tha mizht understand that n right to know when you lunch With “Ceptainly not,” he replied. “It wis & Celestia has returned to heaven. Later T got to thinking over what he |other men—even with a cousin. Married pter that aid mot concern you, Bust fmhpn {hnd sald. and the more I thought the | people should not keep such things from o and professionsl men have 1o right FIFTEENTH EPISODE. more indignant | got. T made up my |each other. It is not proper.” to tell such things." i mind o (alk loss of my affairs since ho | It I8 not worth while to relate in de- wppen o woman ought not to be ex t Then very softly he returned to’ the showed o plainly that he was bored by | tail our argument on this subject. Ho yoiiad to tell her husband the private deck, half closed the hatch, and, thrust- them. won out, of courne, and I almost let him g¢fairy of herselt and her friends,” [ ing Ms head through the opening that When, a week later, a cousin of mine— | persuade me Into the bellef that he was ' ventured remained, he called loudly, “Wake up,| Gmudorf "l lnsanc Fufy. Borcs a HOIe in t"c BOttom °f the Boat ittt fellow who had been my chum | right | “That's entirely different!” declared theiet" 3 4 S [when T was a girl—came to town and| But I had cause before 1ong to Alter my pyopard The snores ceased and were followed by |t trickle from the bit, then to spit and hold, were two sacks of unalaked lime. |2 man waking after a great drunkenhtet, | oiaphoned me to lunch with him ~at| roluctant opinion. Happening ono duy ' Jieins s mun, he was satisfied with I SPtd ot Wdaiy. sroniiki hiss, then the bit went clean through, |After a time a trickle nrbnnlar found x:” during which, let us say, he has com- {grerrie™ T went and sald nothing about | Into & certain fashionable tea room n vortind Yt R AN s IR b; “Gunsdorf,” called Barclay, in a sharp,|And when he had withdrawn It water |way to these, and they began to smoke. | mitted some ctime which to his frensied it o my husband for some days. ‘Then | Fifth avenue, whom should I ace sitting ¥ N incisive volce, “can you hear me?" spouted upward as If from a garden hose. The first person to be aware of the | brain at the time of its commssion had \1 mentioned casually that Reginald had In the rear of the dainty little place but — . P2 hear you Gunsdorf laughed aloud and at once |$moke was Gunsdorf. It filtered into the | seemed a reasonable and even a meritorl- | heen in the city. my husband and a woman whom I know “What are you doing on this boat?" [began to bore a second hole. When he |mAin hold before jt found its way 1o |oug thing to do, but the memory of which Oh, has he?’ Richard asked. ¥ow do|by sight, but whom I Lad not met! She DO You Kn Th t No answer. had nearly finished the third the bit |the deck '-""’;“"")f at the moment, “‘"h | makes the same brain, the fumes of nl—lgnu know? DIid you hear from him? dld not know me, and my husband's back (") a s S ppuindad 5 4 3 ’ of diaholical eagerness, was trying oy “ v Well, you'll not be able to do any mis-|broke short off, and Gunsdorf cursed. |8 kind of ¢ cohol gone, a prey to the most awful ter- Yes,” 1 rejoined. “He called me up|was turned to me. Yet I would hs Jules Verne's real chief. You seem to like it down there. I|But the Mary Nye was taking in a good [to calculate the rapidity with which the | o0 ng remorse. | one day recognized that back anywhere PR Dame WhS. Dibenite am golng to close this hatch so that you deal of water, and the failure of the bit [Water was rising. This was a difflcult | *y, "ot (he man had recovered from| “But you didn't see him, eh? He didn't| I did not remain for any tea. I had Tioots wear out faster in simeier than can't open it. You will not get out until (only seemed to have postponed the time |matter, owing to the motion of the ves- |, = a0 0na cuicianl madness, He (come up here?” made up my mind I would talk the matter n winter the boat is back at its starting point. |Whern the sea should close over it. | el ; was sane—a rational creature, who| “He dldn't come up here, but I saw him|out with Richard that night. I felt now e The caytain is a safe man. You will not| But in the book of fate the Mary Dean | When he smelled the smoke his.heart | 411560 what he had done and that the all the same.’ |that T was tully justified in keeping my ere are over 10,000 islands in the Brit- find Jut from him where I have been set |was not destined to perish by water | almost ~stopped beating, heé Was 80 | 4o0n was in vain, and that he alone woula | ' Where?” | counsel about my affairs. 1sh Empire asbore. So good night to you.” alone. - Among her heterigencous coast- | frightened. Water and dynamite had no |y, gestroyed by it. “At Sherry's. I lunched with him| That evening when I told my husband el Gunsdorf's answer was to fire two wild wise cargo which had not been unloaded | terror for him, but death by fire had # there."” T had seen him, he sald nonchalantly that Presidents of Switzerland are elected shots from his automatic. Barclay|from the small hold back of the main |always been his nightmare. Ho was like (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) “When was that? he was glad I had not interrupted his for one year only, slammed the hatch to and succeeded in | ! fastening it so that it could not be opened from below. Then he went once more to the captain | 1 and talked to him for some time in an