TllK I.KK: OMAHA. TCTKSMY, AIIOTST 17, 1915. "" ' 1 1 i nil imi, i i i l : lb e B .e es Horn e Magfaz line. Page ff ,Tl rr . 1 ni -n I 1 n ,1 . ,e ii . . . ii.ii. . ... ni i HP ivictrvcis of Astronomy 1 il d The Most Imposing Motion Picture Serial and IV T! rM .03 Odd Story Ever Created. Read It Here See It at the Movies By Gouverneur Morris and Charles W. Goddard C.Milsl. Islg. M Caoataay. f "war- By GARRETT P. SKRV1SS. "How far away would th sun have to be to look like a star, and why If It la true, aa I hare read cannot a telescope magnify a star?-C. A., New York." Since the Inten sity of light radi ated from a irtven source varies In versely with the pquare of the dis tance, the sun would be reduced to the apparent magnitude of the brightest of the stars, Slrtua, If It distsnce from the earth were about 13,66 times as great as it now Is. Its present dis tance la 93,000,000 miles, and this multi plied by SJ.Gt becomes 7.780,938.000,000 miles. At that distance the sun would simply be a star In the night equal in brilliance to Elrlus, the Pog War. The calmlatlon la based upon the ob served fact that the amount of light re ceived upon the earth from Blrtus is one t. 000. 000,000th pt that received from the sun, and the square of 7,000,000,000 Is 83,666. If the aun were S3.866 times its present distance away, Its disk would be reduced to an angular diameter of about one-forty-sixth of a second of arc, and the most powerful telescope In existence could not make It visible as a disk. It would appear, as all the fixed stars do, like a piercing point of light. Immeasur ably small, though Intensely brilliant. The target thi telescope used the brighter It would look, because the larger glas wot td collect more light, but atlll the dtik would remain too minute to be perceived or measured. It is true that there wo'jjd be a spurious or false disk, made up of concentric rings pf light, due to diffraction, and, owing to these appearances, which vary with tha brightness, the stars do seem to have visible disks, but the fact that these are not real become evident when we find that they arc actually smaller in the tele scope than whon viewed with the naked eye.. The higher the magnifying power employed the. more mlnuto the apparent disks. The practical dlsappearanca of the disk of a star, while its light continues to af fect the eye,. Is due to tha Inability of tha eya to perceive magnitude below a certain range of dlmcr.slon? perhaps this can best be Illustrated In the following way: On a sheet of paper lying on your desk make a minute circle one-eighth of an Inch In diameter. This circle,, viewed from the ordinary distance for-reading, about fourteen inches. Is of nearly the same itsa as the sun seen in the sky. Tou win hardly believe this to be pos sible at first, but it is easily proved to be true. The angular diameter of the aun Is (using round numbers one-half a de gree, and that la also the angular diam eter of a one-eighth Inch circle fourteen Inches from tha eye. This showa us graphically the interest ing relation between visual magnitude and distance. A globe 860,000 miles In diam eter, viewed from a distance of 3,000,000 miles, appears no larger than a circle one-eighth of an inch In diameter viewed from tha ordinary distance for reading a book. Now, let the aun be removed to eight times Its present distance. Its angular diameter will become one-sixteenth of a degree, and In order to represent its else upon your sheet of paper you will have to decrease your little circle to a diameter of only one-sixty-fourth of an inch, which Is the stse of a very small printers' point or period. Next, remove the sun eight times farther, or. In all. eighty times its present distance. Its diameter will then have 1 become IMHh Of a degree, and your dot on the paper representing Its siss io the sye will have shrunk to a diameter of! only one-six hundred and fortieth of an Inch: In other words. It will have become mailer than, a pin's point and cease to be visible to the naked eye, or If faintly visible In a strong light Its disk will be far too minute for measurement without a magnifying glass. At a distance, then, of eighty times t3. 000,000. or 7.440,000 000 mil's, the sun would present a disk too small to be distinctly seen without a telescope, although it would still shed upon the earth about a million times as much light as comes from the brightest of the stars, fiirius. It would continue to be a sun to us, rather than a star, making a daylight about 100 times mora intense than the light of a full moon. Tet all that light would come from a disk Imperceptibly small (to the unaided eye), although the spurious disk formed would be very con picuu. Putting the sun at greater and greater Distances, we should find its disk getting mailer and smaller, until even a tele scope could not reveal It, and Its light itmlnUhlng until, at length, that, too, would become too faint to be perceived. Tne enormous difference between the tensltiveness of tha eya to light and Its ensitlveneaa to minute spatial magnitude may be shown by simply supposing our vanishing dot, representing the sun's sUe on paper, to possess a power of light equal, area for area, to that of the sun. In that ease wa could see the shining dot when It had shrunk to an angular di ameter of only a few thousandths of a second of arcs, just aa we could" see the sun aa a faint star If It were removed to everal mlH'cns times Its present distance. Tha star on the paper and tha star in the aky would be precisely alike. bynopain of Pevioua Chapter. John Amesbury is killed In a railroad aociuent, anu his wife, one ot America a hums i beauutui women, ates trom liie shock, leaving a s-yvai-ola daugmer, who is taken by t'rof. bUlliier, aavul of uia interests, far into tha AdlronuacK. where she is reared In the neciuaiuu ot a cavtrn. If teen years later Tommy Barclay, uo naa just quarreled with nia aaopted leaner, wanui-r into the wouds and dis cover the girl, now known aa Celestial, in company with Prof. Htllllter. Tommy takes the girl to New York, where falls Into the clutches ot a, noted pro curess, but la able to win over ino woman by her pecular hypnotic power. Here aha attracts Freddie the ferret, who becomes attached to ber. At a bis clothing factory, whole she goes to work, ho exerciser! her power over the gtria. and Is saved from being burned to death by Tommy. About this time KtUllter, Barclay and others who are working to gether, decide It is time to make use ot Celeatlu, who has been trained to think of herself as divine and oome from heaven. The first place they send her Ik to Bitumen, a mining town, where the coal miners are on a strike. Tommy has gone there, too, and Mrs. Ounsdorf, wife the miners' leader, falls In love with him and denounces him to the men when he spurns her. Celeatla saves Tommy from being lynched, and also settles the strike by winning over.Kehr, the agent of the boeses, and Barclay, sr. Mary Black atone, who Is also In love with Tommy, tells htm the story of Celestla, which sh has discovered through her Jealousy. Kehr la named as candidate for president on a ticket that has Stllllter's support, and Tommy Barclay is named on the miners 'ticket. Stllllter professes him self In love with Celestla and wants to get her for himself. Tommy urges her to marry him. Mary Blackstone bribes Mm. Gunsdorf to try to murder Celestlu. while the latter is on her campaign tour, traveling on a snow white train. Mrs. Ounsdorf is again hypnotized by Celostia and the murder averted. Stllllter hyi'otlxes Celestla and lures her Into a deserted woods, where he forces her to undergo a mock marriage, per form ort by himself. He notifies the tl umvirate that Celestla Is not coming batk. Frec'dy the ferret haa followed him closely, and Tommy Is not far away, having been exploring the cave, hoping to find Celestla there. Tommy stumbled on, shifting tha heavy basket frequently from hand to hand. As It got to be broad day, he was '."are ful to make no noise. At any- moment now he might hear sounds of milliter and Celestla approaching. About thin time Freddie and Celestla (or rather Kreddlc alone; for Celestla merely .suffered herself to be led) were trying to find their way back to the cave. But for once the luck of the tene ment dweller was at fault. A man brought up on numbered streets and rectangular city blocka haa no Incentive " T-ra'gwig i iyr n' Jt -r " U - "' A V " T" V s V FOURTEENTH EPISODE. He still had Tommy's knlfo and with this he cut a great pile of tender balsam for Celestla to 11a on. By good fortune the night was not cold. Celestla lay till morning without moving or closing ber half-open eyes. And Freddie stood guard , over her, then sat guard, and then slept. Stlllitcr also slept after a time. . He had found his way to the hut. and had con trolled his tfanlc-stricken mind sufficiently to reason that If he was to find help or ! If help was to find him It wouloT.n0fc.be at' night, but "in the day time. Ha had many nightmares. Toward dawn he walked in a cold sweat. In his sleep he had asked himself this question: "How will I know when It Is day?' y ",, it rtas'isav.f it - in ii- - - SaMt i r - ' ill , v . ; I II i ;...-.i: v .f v rlt . U "''." " ? i r . bl "., ' :' I ' s t - ' I ' I ' : " ' ' ' ' I : - ; if Mother-in-Law Question Still Supreme No Other World Problem So Fraught with Misery and So InsolubleWoman Who Has Been Saint in Own Home Becomes Fireband in House of Her Children. : : : : : Ths angel wife Uy nOHOTHY MX. Perhaps there In no other problem In the world so fraught with mltcry and so Insoluablc as the mother-in-law ques tion. In It are condensed Jealousy, and and selfishness. and stinginess, and temper, and greed, and tyranny every mean and unworthy Impulse than ran sway the human heart. Just to put two persons to gether In tha rela tionship of mother-in-law and daughter-in-law, or aon-In-law, seems to bring out the worst that lain them, as a hot poultice brings out tha measles. The mother who has been a saint In her own home be comes a firebrand in her children's home turn Into a spitfire when she has to live with her husband's mother. Chival rous men treat their mothers-in-law with a lack of courtesy that they would not show to a scrub woman. Any dlvoroe Judge will tell you that nine-tenths of the dortiestlu Infelicity that reaults In the breaking up of homes la caused directly by tha mother-in-law, and Just how much "of the unnecessary sorrow of life Is oaccasloned by the In ability of In-laws tn get along peace ably together no one knows. Here Is a case In point: A man writes me that he haa a mother. 81 years old. and that hla wife has left him because he refused to turn hla mother out of his house. lie says he loves his wife darly and his mother dearly, and has dona everything he possibly could to make them both happy, but that when It came to a show-down between his wife and his mother he simply refused to send the mother away, because she Is old and help- loss, while his wife Is young and strong. The man wrltea that he la bound to hla mother not only by every tie of natural affection, but of gratitude, for hla father waa a drunkard who misused Freddie Deals Out the Cards in a Superstitious Effort to Learn What to Da to develop a bump of locality, and at last Freddie, with cold fear In his heart, admitted to himself that h waa hopa- t -1 . . 1 T .knnlJn't U - IJ 1 Tommy found hla candle at laat. lighted ,' ",1 . t . J . . , . ' ... . . . , , "... lessly; the mariner has his sextant and compass to guide' him across the waters; It, and, retraced his steps by means of the hit upon tha general direction of cava. tha xhallt markafl (ha tnnia Anil fnrka in . ' .-, ,,,v, . ,,, u , I "a woodsman haa the sun and tha stars, the mouth of the cave. He had not ex-1 t. - , , . . ... ..,.. . . and the mossy sides of trees to help out pected to find Celestla. And yet. It ! , ,.- .. ,, . il ... - . , , ' ' , , in intuitive sense of direction, and Fred- hocked and unnerved him not to Y ml K. t. . . . 71 . . . .n , . .... . - ... die the Ferret, feeling In his lnsldo pocket, bar. Ho died to her at th, top of hisfoun( to h, unmltlrate, tnat . lung, twice then thrice, and to Fred-! had nte k f die. He had no answer. To continual t;.. . . , ,, . . forthwith he made Celestla alt down, shouting waa a , waste of breath. He ,H . . . . . . " . , ' . . and he knelt, and having shuffled his would need all his breath perhaps to --.. ,. uv,k.. j u .J. . w ... -,.,,. . , greasy and shabby deck, he dealt thlr- catch up with Stllllter and OeleaUa. Al- twn card. f down mcc m I ?" .W'y. T Vr4'1 circle.., Thsn one by one. a look of f.lth- whlch led eventually to where he had left fuI expectancy on his face, he turned tha purloined automobile, and along which tnem over ,mewh.ra or other h. '.oped to come up Twfllve of th- CArd he the ni Lh,,' pcholOK,an andJU v,cUm' , up and put up with the pack. The thlr BUUlter, Tommy reassured, on coming teenth wa th- mce of heartg up with the abandoned automobile, mi.Bt , Th, FreddlB ,fted wUh rever.nce d a Ktrn,JTn W' ,at care, so a. not to change tho dJree- and reached the vicinity of the cava byjtlon to whch ,t polntcd unt ,t reache CZ 1. aa, . . ithe ,eveI of h 0oW 8tht Why hadn t Freddie the Ferret given along It warning? Tommy thought that the poor A blallte(J Dn, stantn bIom WM the boy had probably been shot down in cola. tnt undmark to which the goddess of blood. There waa no time to look for chant, directed Freddie the Ferret the body. Tommy proceeded at a dog trot "We re not lost now," he said, and ha -not run exactly, but that gait, a lit- heiped Celestla to her feet. tie faster than a walk that makes the You may call It what you please. The least demand upon the wind and muscles. fact remain, that Freddie the Ferret o aops una up. wun occasional lapses had a return of hla usual luck and had unu lasi wauling, uaiu ina moon set. "They must have had a tremendous start of me," ha thought, "or else," and his heart sank, "they're gone some other way." He paused abruptly and hesitated. "Why," he thought, "he would make the poor child take this long tramp again' without a good rest Even I don't like j It any too well, and I'm strong aa a horse, i He's probably taken her soma where Just I out of the ear-shot of the cave, he may know of some shelter, and I've been get ting further and further from her Instead of nearer to her." , Still Tommy could not make up his mind to go back to the cave. Nothing was sure. If BUUlter was . somewhere ahead with Celestla, and Tommy gave up following, the game was up. It they were merely resting near the cave they would be coming along in the morning and he could ambush them somewhere along the trail. And he hurried on aa best he could In the darkness. Ills own car was as he had left it Btll llter'a waa standing Jturt behind it The driver had' wrapped himself In a lap robe 1 and waa sound asleep In the tonneau. Also in the tonneau waa a good-slxed wicker plcnle basket, which on examina tion proved to be well stocked with sand wiches, cold chicken and thermoa bottles containing hot coffee and soup. Tommy carried the basket Into tha ! woods without asking permission of the ) From the foot of the blasted pine he selected another landmark and pressed on. At about this time Prof, milliter waked from that aleep In which he had asked this question: "How will I know when it Is dsyT" He had got up and groped about In the hut until he had located the door. He opened this and went out. The door was on the shady aide of the hut; no warm rays of tho aun fell on the professor to tell him that It waa day. It waa aa cool aa night In the shadow. One hand always touching tha but ha felt hla way along the side of it until he had turned the first comer. Here the logs felt warm U the touch, and he knew that day had come. He sat down in the warm sun shine to think out a plan. Above all things he must guide him self by pure reason and logic. If he yielded to impulse, nothing good would come of It. He mustn't make a false start To begin with, what had beqoma of the trusty guides who had lived in the vl clnty to keep watch and ward over Celestla and the scout of the cave. Their pay went on; It always would; but BtU llter, sure of their good faith, where un falth meant a hounding down with death at the end of it, had not kept close track of them. Old man Smellsgood, the In dian, probably atlll bunted and fished in the neighborhood. Or, if all these had gone, others perhaps had settled In the Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax houses which they had built. It waa far better than Prof. Btllllter should be found than that he should go through the danger, and agonies of seek Ing. under ordinary circumstances he knew the region Ilka the palm ot hla hand. The cave Itself ha could find hi way about in aa easily as In his own house. But knowing things, when you see them Is verydlfferent from knowing them when you can't aee them and can only touch them. What I. merely a de pression by day la an abyss by night. In wooded countries there Is nothing better than a fire to attract attention. If any lonely or hungry person Is In sight of that fire, that Person will go to It, across lakes and mountains If necessary; Prof. Btllllter had matches. He might or might, not be able to find the mater ials for a fire In tha neighborhood of the hut. He wished to make a big amoke, and one 'which would endure a long time. Is her one ray of sunshine, and he cannot send her off to live among strangers, to be lonely and neglected, and waited upon by hired hands. Tet he loves hla wife, and hla heart is torn between the con- fllrtlng claims of these two women. He writes: "What shall I dot Shall I give up my wife, or shall I forsake my old mother, who has got such a little while to live, and make her last year desolateT If you can settle this ques tion you are a wonder." If I could settle the question ot the niother-ln-law I would be more than a wonder. I would be wisdom Incarnate and the greatest benefactor to my fellow creature who has ever lived, but, alas, I don't even pretend to be able te solve this heart-breaking enigma. The only way It can be solved I by a great and, unselfish love, and very few people are capable of that. If this man' wife really loved him enough to put hla happiness above her own ahe would cher ish hla mother for his sake. She would feel that she could never do enough for the woman who had gone hungry that her little boy might be fed, and 'she would never look at the old woman' work-knot ted hand without wanting to klsa them because they had toiled so hard for that little lad who 1 now her husband. Suppose the old woman la cranky and querulous and set In her ways, aa old people are apt to be. It la a poor and paltry love that is not capable of making some sactflces, and the wife who la not willing to purchase her husband' happi ness at tha price ot putting; up with hla old mother certainly give him every roAson to doubt her affection. rrectsety the same thing may be said of men' relatione to their mothers-in-law. It would seem that th man who truly loved hi wire would look upon her mother aa the one Individual who had bestowed upon him the most precious gift on earth. But, on the contrary. mot men hate their mother-n-law at sight and treat them a It they had done them an Irreparable Injury by bringing Into th world the woman they married. Which Is uncomplimentary, to say the least of It, to their wives. It Is a strange thing that neither hus bands nor wives seem to realise that him and his mother, and finally deserted when they hale their In-lawa they are them, and his every childish memory is Jeopardising their own happiness. ot her tolling all day long and far Into with all but the moat dastardly, the love the night to support him. Now ha wants to repay that devotion by making her old age happy and comfortable, and hla wife demands that he turn the old woman out as if she wa an old work horse who had served her day. The man cannot do It. He know that he I nl mother's all. Every Interest ah haa In life la bound up In him. He (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) Do You Know That Ouineaa were first made In Guinea. Bplder have six to eight eyes. Saccharin I J30 time sweeter than cane sugar. In the seventeenth century a single tulip bulb waa aold for 13.000 florins. There Is a law in Venloe which com pels all gondolas to be painted black.. There are over 300 female, blacksmith In England. ' ( The Russian "vsrst" Is about three quarter of an English mile. Franca was the first country to Intro duce a really successful submarine. Over one-third of Italy' population Is engaged In agriculture. of our parent I .Interwoven with th very fiber of our souls, and husbands or wives try to destroy Chat to their peril. Not long ago a man, asked why he had married a certain girl, replied, "Be cause I saw how good she waa to old women. I have an old mother that I worship, and for yeara I had refrained from marrying for fear my wife would not treat her properly, but when I saw Mary's tendernesa and conalderatlon for her old aunt I knew I had found a woman I could trust." Practically all men feet the same way. They love their own families. They re sent their wives' ill treatment of their relatives, and you will never find a woman who la on good term with her husband' people who Isn't repaid a, thousandfold by hla devotion to her. Nor Is there any one thing that a hus band can do that makea his wife so grateful to him aa for him to be "nice" to her family, and especially to her mother and father. She know It is hi final proof of love for her that makea thokc that are dear to her dear to him. It la only unselfish love that can solve th mother-in-law problem. The man whose first thought la for his wife's hap piness; the woman who la willing to make any sacrifice to Insure her hus band's happiness will treat their mothers-in-law as they wish their husbands or wive, to treat their own mothers. And that' all there I to It Yea Must Answer. Dear Miss Fairfax: About one and a half yeara ago girl friends dared me to write to one of their friends In another state, and on January 1. 1914. I wrote her a New Year's card with a little verse. I didn't receive any reply until last Christmas. 1 answered her posial, and since they we have been corresponding In a while. Now, this young lady seems to think that she may not be doing Juat the right thing In writing to me because, aa ah puts It, she has never met me personally, but on account of the friendship between this young Isdy and the one I knew, she thought it waa all right at the time ahe first wrote. She didn't say that I had written any thing that sha didn't like, but on the other hand, ahe said that she enjoyed reading my letters and enjoyed writing to me. I enjoy reading her letters and writing to her, and she wants me to tell her Just how I feel about it. I would like to do the right thing, and, aa I alwaya try to be a gentleman, 1 would like to know Just what -you think about It, ao I will not be wrong in answering her letter. H. R. What vtu 4... I- Mth- .ill- I"'"??1,1'? how h"n-!lf you know in your heart that you re- spect this friend of the other girl's, and. get wholesome enjoyment out of the correspondence, keep It up. In any case, answer her letter and reassure her for gry and thirsty and tired he was. The choicest provision In th basket he put ' aside for Celestla. "If I'm hungry and ' tired," he thought, "think what ahe must , bet But I suppose Btllllter tells her that ahe' Just had a square meal and she believes the dog, but that can't last for . ever." Having eaten Tommy rested for half Mot m CoaveraaYtleaaJlat. Friend (Intending to eomplment) I heard somebody aay the other day, Mr. Nagga, that your wife waa a floe conver sationalist. Nsggs Bhe's nothing of the sort. Friend No? Nsggs She hates conversation. She's a a.. nlogtst Baltimore American. ; an hour, took up the heavy basket and j once more hit the trail. Hut now he went : slowly and stopped often to rest tie had .seldom been so tired in hi life, and enly for an overmastering love uid anxiety for Celestla kept him going. I It was no longer night It was:i't yet she Is probably much worried as to whether she haa forfeited any of your respect by replying to your letters.- Tell her that you appreciate and esteem the privilege of hearing from her and hope to meet her through your friend some day. and that you hope she will feel that she may keep up the friendship ao In formally begun. I don't advise starting such a correspondence; but If you drop It now. the girl will surely feel snubbed dawn; but that lovely interval between nd unhappy. She wants the same manly when In what appears to be pilch dai k-l reassurance as to your feelings you gave liens, things become suddenly visible, j 1 , Voi Probably Lave Neither. Dear Mlaa Fairfax: For two years I have been going with a young man whu wanta to marry me. I admire him very much, but two mrmtha ago I met another young man equally as nice aa the one I have been going with. Both men are liked bymy family. I muwt give up on or the other. What would you advise m o do. UNCEHTAIN. Real love doea not doubt Its object. Unless your loyalty to the first man is great enough to overcome whatever fas cination or charm the newer love ha for you, you do not car for him enough to marry htm. And on the other hand, un leaa you feel sure that your feeling for the second man Is great enough to wlp out your tender, memories and affection for the old love, he I not th man for you, either. Look into your own heart and be honest with yourself and the man you love If you truly love either. a Go the Pablle Library. Desr Kiss Fairfax: Can you tell me the names of some good books to he'p me to better my education and to en large my vocabulary? I have graduated from grammar school and cast away my chance to go to a high school for a business education. I now regrat It and am willing to do anything tn my power In order to talk fluently. Can you help me? a. H. Go to the public library or any of Its branches. Tou will find there llbraiiana whose pleasure (aa well aa business) It will be to direct your course of reading. Dear Miss Fairfax: Is It proper when a young lady keeps company that the young man should pay for her clothos? 1. M. No self-respecting girl accepts money for clothes from any man other than her husband or a very near relative. Not even a fiance Is allowed the privilege of Paying for the personal wearing ap !arcl of his bride-to-be. That longing for the rugged health of Youth Alas, the dreams of happy boyhood days profit naught we are "made to tread the mills of toil." And the nearest we can come to bringing back the sunny days of youth is to make timely amends foe the heavy overdrafts . made by work and worry. And this you can do with Sana tog en. 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