10 THE BEEi OALAHA, MONDAY, ATOUST 4, 1913. '8 rpnP ' S The Woman with the Secret Eyes "Care Casts Anchor in the Harbor of Dreams" By Nell Brinkley The Efficiency of Daughters By WINIFRED BLACK. She Urea, dawn In the valley by the run ning water, tlio woman with tho secret eyes. Bha ha three children, a boy and two girls; her husband has cone away, they any. j!h l poor ahd Sb,. angry about rU She does not Uka, the old houce ty. the running water and ahe hatca i)ie nonfc th water Intr all day and all night "it I could only trft tip on the hill," h(5 .say whenever a neighbor wilt stop to talk with her, It would bo bet ter VP there. Btt TfKit gay lives tho people on the hill U't, They have company and the llehti ehln through their window tar, far Into the' nlgpt and thry laugh and slrnr, and down hcrr, where I live, we hear only the waterall day and all night tho water. "My children 6nt like It here, either, fr-wm going to send them away iter they won't hear it all day and nil night, the fining of the water there by the door. JTThe boy 1 agoing away to the city, ftrfl you see the new suit I bought him? ON. I can rr.anare when 1 have to. and tile new shoes, too, and tho hat?' Nothing, better In town than those clothes-he's, a good as the rest' ndw.. . , "And he's smart, too;1 ho- w.111 make nlo"way, and then wewiil live' on ths-hUI, too, maybe, 'The girls are going, too. I shall ate to that Did you notice the pretty new bat I have bought them? Not a girl In town ha prettier ones and, their stock ings, too. Some day they shall havo a piano llko the little girls up there on the hi. I will get It for them. You,') I boo: you'll ate. They won't always be so Wr." . . ' 4I4t night when took., a walk ,hy, the rjtaihlnt water I met the three children M; far out on the road toward town,,and' rwsw a man slink, through, the low trees to the eVobr of the wpmanwlth the secret efts. I ht-ard the woman's voice. She OH laughing , a cruel, wicked laugh, a digi tous leugV ilke the warning of a imck. andi.the man laughed, too. fiqrrow the Hhree, children will have nysitV new things,' tb make them look like' ti children ifl the houses up there on IW hill and the woman with .the secret ey wjll laugh again and bo proud of t'ftno showing her children mako and au"thfe time, she U, digging, digging, dig? Brf a pt for their poor Httla feel; for the people of the town are- beginning to whisper. , , . 1V7 KU, wsamF , iud uim nvuim Mr. gnnAtoKftthef, the cW men-ana the children wohdfcr why. It ils , .thaj; people loqk so sUangelpat them when they put on their. nw finery and - go out to be tt'en. 'L good as the reetl" Poor woman wllh tho secret eye, don't you know, can't you undorstand that those children would be better off If they went bare foot, ragted and had too Utile to eat, and Carried with them Into the compre hension ot growing youth no. secret won lUg no half hidden doubt xf you and of tijr ty you earrV the money to spend a?VAjy on them? . ", v 7jjte boy "Who' goUis; U the city eopn. wKat can he ever be with aiich a mother? rriw. little girt, with the aott'eyea. there, bjbf can she ever hold tip her head when aW remember and understands? The grader child with the pussled eyes, what ,-tiJjl th care ;wht dresses ahe wore $fheh ahe lived down by the ruatiing Jira'terst All, erle will know la -that there ;.'? something 'queer" 'about' her mother,' woman, with the acrt eyea, work.' rub. starve, do anything honest, any- decent and give your children 'a sry of you that will kep them ralglit whan thef own retibegtn to axoVer. Tour eyes are,tae(&el,';bit they. annot hide your story. Some day, some" y th little ones ot your (will know strive as you may to, (keep It hidden, Uriien what of j-our drennia of houses; on' the bin and friends and' Joy?;. Tffurk, how the water jjj'na through .the frisKtnr wlllowa. 'Tomorrowi" It Bay tomorrow" do you never listen to. the ICarnSng It la trying to give? ' IF YOUR SKIN C ITCHES, JUST USE RESINQL , "The moment that Healnol Ointment jtoAche .Itching skin, tho Itching stops and healing begins. That la why doc firs have prescribed It successfully or Dr! than eighteen years In even the, iyerest cosea of ecxenja, tetter, ring 3tfr?n. raabeo and other tormenting, un Jk'hMy skin ervptiona. Aided by warm, SSa,th,s, MlIM Reslnol Soap, Iteslnol Olnt, attnt restores the akin to perfect health, Pf)$ comfort, quickly, eaallr and at lit tU oost healnol i also an axceUent houae. bold remedy for plmplea. dandruff, sun burn, (nsect bites, Ivy poisoning, sores, bursa, bruises,-bolls and for a score of ulher usta where) a soothing, healing application Is .needed. It contain iothinjr of a harsh or Injurious nature K8& can bo used with coufldruce on the Uadentft or most irritated surface. Practically every druggist sella Jlealnol Ofutrotnt and Helnol Boap. Trial free; WeoC S-P, Iteslnol, Baltimore, Jtd. IbbT' st A Girl's Eoom By MRS. FRANK LEARNED Author of "Tho Etiquette ot New York To-Day." A Irlrt'e nhttrActor find InrflvMtiallfV nrn " ' ' - . - very, clearly shown by tho condition and fifllltsuifl nf hnl nwn hMlmrtm. Tf nih ! nftat ahd orderly, careful of her belong-1 inga, or careless, wasteful, rieatructlvo or emphaalxed In her room. Taste whioh are reiinea- and cultivated, or tastes which are trlval and mean, are reflected there. Her surroundings show her cul ture, or the need of It. The habit of keeping her room, desk and clothes In order, havlne a nlaoa far everything, and everything In Its place, is an immense ntip toward training in method, accuracy and thoroughness. A glfl may well cractlce these ilmnl but neoessary rulea of orderliness. They will be an aid toward character building and an aid toward the maklnir of a widr sphere of Influence, It Is generally ac knowledged that those who are negligent of order are untrustworthy and lncapublo, iretiui ana unhappy, A girl's room may be a place to holp to mold her character to tha Ideal girl aha wlahea to be. . "I ueed to h verv apasmodto about keeping my room In order," said a girl. "I waited Until It was In frightful disorder, then I rear ranged everything. But tnv exnarlenea la that the habit of puttlpg my things in oratr, ana the harder task, of keeping them so. Is a tremendous help In manag ing myself. If I can manage all the little external tnings, it Is easier to sort out good thoughts from hurtful. wlinl thoughts, and keep charaoter In order." If a girl lovea books. and pictures a few of them, at least, will be In her room. She knows that well-furnished mind Is like a well-appointed room, and that by forming a habit of reading and arranging time for the companionship ot a good book In the day's work, ah win nt ni Increase her Intellectual work and the racuiiy with which she Warns, but will make her an Interesting woman.. The girl who has a bright wide-awake mind uses her talents and never ceases to be reoeptlve. Her books are not the pasting, ephemeret novels of the div. nh .Mi not spoil her taste by reading too much traan. but she gets the right start, learns to choose the books worth roadlnr. m ahe cultivates reading, not as a task, but for the great enjoyment It give. And so a gin naa her bookshelf, where ahe ac cumulates graduallr her rollootlnn r booka. On the wall ahe has a few good picmrea. xnese way b neatly framed prints cr Phototrnnhs at famous ntrtur of the world. If possible, each girl In e, family should have her own room, whet aha may have CPPOrtUnltltS for tln alone, an tnr puUJvatlng htr own rtsourcea; where the n!rjau. imuy, patnt or sew. In this way she la helped to depend on her In dividual Interests t-athar than rn th. xeltemtnt 0f constant companionship. 4111a rwm if merely a transient spot to ateep and dress In, and not a place to read and think in. ah mimi.) understand the pleasure of a room of her own. Facilities for solitude are not en couraged enough In borne life, yet they should be recoifnlted as a necessity for growth of character. In the quiet halt hours of solitude, strength of soul Is formed to face perplexltlee or 'tempta tlons. to commune with one's own heart and conscience, and thus to solve hard problems, Nell Brinkley Says: Wafere is. the Wicneloir bo shifting a certain loneliness which ho dubu "care" from Ms busy brain, dream such a dream as this in His cigarette smoke a. bit of a bungalow in the winding shades of a, canon, with a fireplace lu It and roses oyer the door, tho fine wlno of. twilight over it alj, a little woman shading her eyos, her skirts Mowfoff la. th coming night wind, holding tight tho hand of a ottbby, tanned-kneed baby, waiting fbr'hiai at thVend of tho path? There'll bo a dog, too maybe not a thoroughbred (thpugi the first two ara( alt right), 4t(d taiaybe a llttlo tame door In a wlro enclosure under the trees an'drr - ahd whero. is the btcheloi who. the harbor-'of. a dfaaiaf ?, V How to Measure t&e Motions of the Siktf 1 By EDQAlt LUCIEN IiARIUN. "How do' astronomers assign props! ivotlons to the stars?" A By long, and accural trlfeonoii)et Heat measures- of ''.distances', of a, .sus pected star from a number of . adjacent stars. .When we attach, a," mlcrometpr small measure to a telescope and 'look, in, we see .a, system ot croied,.'fjjced and movable spider threads. In some'' microm eter, the lines, are , all movable. One. Is turned Until it la'ln .the celestial .equator and the other In'-the celestial' meHdlan. Then, at Interval. tha distance of the star east of the irrierldan ur right ascen sion Is mkasurifl with great accuracy and recorded;. Ukewiso Its dlatance north, or south df'the equator deollnatlon l( measured with 'great care and recorded.' If the plajes'tore different the star lias moved perhaps, Dlit tho motion rpoy-be that ot bqth. base linen, meridian arid equator. They both slide around the, en tire celestial VaiUt Jfroiu east to wesvln a mighty period of SS.S78 .years. This mys terinua motion .must be computed and added to, or subtracted f'rom, the meas ured motlona of 'the star under examina tion. Aberration, of llkht la another harasalng cbrraotlon. Refraction of light In our atmosphere must be measured and allowed for .aloo. The retro'graaa tlon of the equator, and meridian .affect all stars alike; theru to detect .absolute motion of any oner star, keep mtas'iiring distances from Jt to other adjacent Suppose that five aetc ot trianglea were made from our suspected star to five others, and many acts from theso five to each other today. Then. In a year, or two, let the tr.tanguttlons all be made again. It the angles' from .star to star show no chance they are nkowtt to be at such stupendous distances that their real motions are insensible. But If all the five angles leading to the wandering star have changed, the amount of change can be measured.' but In angle only. The displacement In mile cannot be told until the star's distance ''from tha earth is first found. It took 120 ysgrp'of .hard atudy to fipd" the distance et the nearest star, twenty five trillion mtUr. 3nce. the Invention ot the micrometer proper ruotlono- have .been detected In all directions In th 'celestial vault. These ar-tnqHr very small lo angle, but very, great )n miles. The most rapid motion of jsoy star known for-a long time was that of I he star numbered 1X30' in Astronomer; Oroorab'Idge'B cata logue, given n between aeVen and-eUjiht seconds of arc anntiajly. But Astronomer Kapteyn dlscovrd on a photograph, ot the stars a smalrori having th most rapid proper motion known. nine eocond pr arc per year. There are 1.6,00) sec onds In a circle, which would make the time required for one circuit of the aldereal universe 1U.CGQ years. The nearpst neighbor of our. sun. the sun Alpha Centaurl. moves 17 seconda per year, while the gigantic sun Arcturus easy-going, "hard-same' arrow-nroof does not pi pian ms iittio ;nsutuuon traverse IS eeconda. The angular diam eter of the moon-la 1.VS0 '.seconds, -o the time for Arcturua ,to move over' a aky spade equal to', the Angular diameter ot our moon', ia S0 yeara The majority 0$ aun having pfoper mqUohf ' rbove with rates of from ,tl to t'wtve-seconds per century. Jh(jWearfequre htindrod Of thousands pfear tb: change the coh hguratlon .of';, the constellations of the stellar structure, These movements; 'were all deteoted and meaaOred ' by mean's of the micrometer. But suppose a 'star to be coming on a straight llpe toward thtr earth or going away on' a straight line.- The micrometer la useless, In these oases. Bdtsoue of thet,moat wondertul).achlove menu ot hlmau' hands and ri)lnd' was the l(spbvery that a, High power spectroscope could, solve this apparently . Insoluble problem tho measurement- n miles' pen second of approach or recession In the line of sight. Any center eqilttlng. light send out wave of- light energy. In white light there are atualmoat Infinite number of wave per seoond of an almost In finite number of shades or tints, merging together, A prism separates these Into even well defined groups;, the shortest By 11BV. T1IOMAH 'B. . OREQOK Nineteen hundred and- sixty years ago, according to . best reckoning, Caeser bent Bbornaces at Zela. ' nortbe-tstera Asia- Minor, and sent home to the con fcrr pt fathers his famous "Vnl, VWI, Vicft'I came, I saw, I conquered" the short ot battle ri ort ever written. i'ha whole affair Is charocterletlo ot Catfar . Winning the great fight In an Incredibly short time (and almost before hi opponent Wa aware of Its beginning), Ceasar snt home to the sepata an account of his victory In three words, and Port t us became forth with a part of th Itoisau territory The directness of Caelar the short cut to results the suddeonees and. swift nes3, and yet completeness of fils work is astounding. lht "foremojt man of h!1 ,U.la, world" never tarried ov thn way, r.oer took "two Wtes "at, a cut-try." never exhausted his time and nrrglc villi i flection and reonrli)cratlon he roade up hi mind what ho nedd to f . Veni, Vidi, Vici . I '. . who does not alt back and. wuoso caro never casts, ancuor in, J. .waves are violet in color and range 6300 In-' one inch, while dull red waves are S3.000 to the Inch. But the.fact was' dis covered that' If . the light Is' approaching the. waveu' are .compressed, and the band of color. shifts sldewlso toward .the vlo letj -andi If receding, tlje waves are length bned and tho band shifts, to ward the red. Years ot arduous research have reryeajed that the stars nearly all move with speci fic speeds of from ten to thirty miles per second; our star, the aun, moving about thirteen miles per seoond. Bat the rapid stars, those having large .proper motlops, say, of 8 or 9 seconds of arc per year, are. flying at such territlg velo cities that they form a class by them selves. Their speed are between 100 and 00 mites per second, 1a lattef being that of the huge sun Arcirus. sThe attraction of the quantity of mtes injalt suns that 1, oodles that -arc visible -to the eye, or to photographic plates la totally unable to cause these immense velocities. This sh6wa' that tha quantity of invisible matter Is far greater than that Irt-.the 100.COO.000 visible bodies. The quantity of- matter able -to Impart a speed ot 100 to M0 miles per second Is .far beyond all Imagination. Lowe Observatory. CaL, 'U. 8. A. do and did It with' the qufcKue ct tho llthtnlnr flash. From the memorable -day on which he crossed the Itublcou to the .day on which he anlhllated Porapey at ParsalU onlj a jrear and a half had passed, so rapid. bo like the stirm-driven cloud were hi movements. Through' defeat and through victory he move straight on, never stopped by the misfortune of the one or the elation ot the other until ha was the master ot the world. And that mastery, brief as It wn was stamped with Caesar's spadlnesa The mlglUy ran ruled as king of Borne five and a half years, but out of hat abort period hta aeven great campaigns a. lowed him to be In the .cacltal not more than fifteen month altogether, and yet. In the words of Momraaen. "He regulated the deatlnleo of the world for the present and the future, from the establishment of the boundary line be tween etvllUatlon and barbarism down to tho removal of the rain-pools .In the Ftrects o( the capital. AmJ( for wonder never case to -crowd upon us In the story of this remarknMr man) Caesar's work, notwithstanding th rapidly With which It was done, was u perfect in It execution that tha political 4lfe of the nations nai dorlng thousand of year again and again roMed to tha Uoea which Caeaar drew." Little Bobbie's Pa .V. -J By WILLIAM F. KUtK, fa took Ma & me out on the -lake fish ing bullheda last nit. TVs stayed out on the lake a Jone time &. it waii getting lite wen we got'hoam. Ma. was 'sitting cross, .too. Wife, sed Pa wen we started out, you may not "know It, but a bullhed Is better eetlng than any other fresh water fish. A bullhed lsent the prittlest thing In the world to look at, Fa Bed, being moar or less slimy, like a eel, & with a big hed & two sharp thorns one on eech' side of its neck. Its eyea are ' -very small & fathomless, Fa eed, like the eyes of a fat German after a picnic, & t haa long whiskers that lok like string of spa getty, but when you ' .have caught yure bullhed Si skinned him, &' fried h'lm oaver a nice, wod fire, thare sent 'anything nicer to eet in tho wide wurld. Walt till we git a boat load of the grand "fish,, Fa sed, & I M'lll ,treet you ft llttel Bubble to a feed fit for the gods. T used to eet bullheads wen l'-wns a Uttcl gurl. sed Ma, My father used to catch them In the mill ponds, out. In Wis. conpln, & If I remember rite thay was awful hard to ektn-& thay oertlngly was good eetlng. He used to catch -them with angelworms, Ma sed. He was not ; sportsman, sed Pa. I al ways catch them with flies. I cast for ' them, Pa sed. I I am going to try wurrns, I" toal Pa. . encourages him a. great deal, if there's Marry Mlsner toald me he always caught , a domestic problem carving furrow ln them here In this lake with wurms, & i(hls forehead, she can persuade him to got sum wurms from him for nothing. j tell her of It, and she can help him to A lot of good wurms will do you, sed solve it, if not by some Idea of her own. Pa. You better talk off that hook & ' at least by her ympathy. Perhaps she git one of these hackle files on yure llnt can win Brother Jack from his "wild. No, I sed, I am going to try the wurms. ness" or Sister Mary from that Uladvleed When we got to the place' ware Pa i match, thought thare would be sum bullheda, we It la a great day, a day of load light put out the ankor & Ma bet Pa a cigar j enlng and spirit brightening, when daugh aggenst a box of candy that I'wud catch ter comes home from school or when she moar bullheads than he caught j returns from that prolonged visit or It is like taking candy away from a series of visits. We hear a great deal child, sed Pa, but I will take the wager. I about efficiency these days of mid 1918, I doant belceve you will catch a bull-1 the efficiency of employes, of employers, hed with a fly, sed Ma. Sldcnt I tell you 'of captains of lndurtry and cf the na my father always used wurmsT tlon's head. But If every daughter re- Tha bullheds thought yure father was 1 solved to Increase her efficiency In the a older brother, sed Pa. I always thought j family there would be an Impetus to he was n kind of bullhed anyway. He smoothness and beauty and labor and dldenfseem to think that? I wud amount to much as a son in law. That was wen you were yung A wild, sed Ms. You have Improved since you got oalder, ft now he likes you vary much ft T doannt wat you to call him a bull head, eethur. Jest tnn I got a bite & pulled in a nice bullhead - neerly a foot long. Qood for you. BobMe sed Ma. Keep up 1 th good work. Look at old Ike Walton hero, throwing that (ly all oaver the top of the water. , Newer mind me. sed Pa. I will git moar ft bigger fish than Bobble, ft then wen he sed that I caught another one. ' Poor, deer husband, red Ala. Why doant you reslte the bullheds that peece of poetry you rote for the bankwet the other nite. My father used to resit peeces fmm TivhA a m h. - m &svs n vu cut bullhed fishing, ft then. J caught a aw ful big bvllhed, that made three. We mite as well try another spot ware thay will rlae to a fly. sed Pa. This spot Is all rite for Bobble, sed Ma. We will tay rite ware we are. caught so many bullheds that I got tired ft all Pa caught with hta hackle fly waa the rim of Ma' hat 1 By ADA PATTERSON They call It the "Keep Cool club." but It should y&e named "The Daughters' Efficiency club," or "Tho Efficient Daughters." Dispatches from Washing ton Inform us that Miss Snllle Wil liams, daughter of United States Sen ator John Bharp Williams, Miss Lucy Hope Smith, daughter of Sena tor Hoke Smith, and Miss Carrie Loe Chamberlain, daughter of Sena tor and Mrs. Chamberlain, and girl friends of theirs have organ ized to make the hot days of the summer seaslon of HQ Congress pass as pleasantly a possible for thetr BWoltcr lng, dle-at-thelr-post senatorial papas and their patient, but summcr-wearted momma, who are too good wives to leave their husbands In the capital on the Potomao alone while they seek cool ness in mountains and seashore retreat, Joining the great army of deserting wives, matrimonial traitors who seek their own first comfort, and then In vanity and, pained surprise, say withering, thlrura of affinities or would-be affinities. But affinities .at best are a painful subject, and daughtera-eBpeclally daughters at best are a pleasant one. The objects of tbl "Daughters Effi ciency club" are. as stated!, most laudable ones. They propose so to dress a to sug gest coolness: to keep the house In such condition that they will be cool havens of relief from the hot streets and heated debates; to devise out-of-doors ento tain ments; In brief, to do whatever they Can to mako summer in one of the hottest cities In the world bearable. For tho elder of their families it, Is a good ex. ample these daughters of senators have set for the girls of their nation. Girla have organised for classes In phtl- s anthropy. They have Joined societies for tho regeneration of the heathen. They are doing .uplift work among tb fallen of their sex-. They swarm at settlements and even .build hotel for working girls. All this is commendable, some more, soma less. But these daughters lingering In Washington during the dog1 days are bt pinning their ministrations In tho pri mal places of ministration. They are be ginning their effort for the amelioration: of conditions) where charity should be. gin, at home. If all the -daughters In every community should form bands for greater efficiency as .daughters, what . an uplift there would be whero Improvement la most needed, the American home! . We, would see the careworn facos ot mothers lose their tired lines and weary expressions, for daughter would havo taken upon herself the roendlnff of bed and table linen, the last straw on tho camel's back of domesticity. Mother's Clothes would have a fresher and more modern look, for daughter, instead of giving mother up as- "hopelessly and' stub bornly dd-fashloned," would contrive to remove soma , of the old-fashionafl full nana frofti the skirt, and aw a bit of youthening lace at throat and wrists. The table would no longer look like n place ot burdened necessity, at which to spend as little time as possible in illent gorging. There would be a bit of green or a vivid flower at the center. The eye would search In vain for spots on the cloth, except to destroy somo well-done darning, and daughter would lengthen tho meal by pleasant chat. The younger children would be taken out for a walk when mother had a headache, that aha might do what she ha longed to do, bat hasn't done for years, and which she thought she would never do except In the grave, "rest In peace." Father's crabbed speech would In time soften, for daughter would cast a smle his way now and then, and father hasn't been used to feminine smiles for triny a year, and they make him feel young and hopeful. She will drop into Ws office) now and then to write some letters for him that require diplomacy; or If she ,1a barred from the office, as are so many of the female folk of business men's faml. lies, she can coax him to brlnf home some of his work at night, maybe she can help him a HtUe with It Certainly she friction-savin In the home that would amaze the nation. ' EAT MEAT SPARINGLY DURING SUMMER Meat heats the blood eat very ,little of It durlnK hot weather. That rinren't mean that vou hav tn (.. rlt lce nourishing food because it is ,,,.,, ueaunK You w,u fInd FaU8t Spaghetti more nourishing than meat, and !( la also a light, cooling food.. By analysis you will find that a lOo package of Faust Spaghetti contains aa much nutrition as 4 lbs. of beof. , iv, t.,ir,,. j . I rich, glutinous food made from Durum Wheat, the cereal ex tremely high in protein. Faust Spaghetti can be served In many different ways write for free recipe book. Sold in 6c and lOo packages. MAULIi BROS. St, Louis, Mo,