r IE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, MAY 4, 1914. Jibe ;3eetKffitttMfoc JPajg IP THE PROFESSORS MYSTERY WELLS HASTINGS 2B BRIAN HOOKER. WITH I LLUSTRAT1 ONS by HANSON BOOTH conrniciiT i9ii vrTitc dodds-mcrrill company You Can Begin This Great Story To-day by Reading This First Prof, Crosby, waiting at a suourban station for a trollev car to take hint to the Alnslles. where lie had a social en gagement, encountered Miss Tabor, whom he had met at a Christmas party the i winter before. She. too. If Invited by the ' Alnillcs. When the belated trolley comes, I they start off together, to meet with a j wreck. Miss Tabor Is stunned and Crosby, ; assisted by a strange woman passenger, restores her, finding all her things save a slender golden chain. Crosby searches for this and finds It holds a wedding ring. Together they so to the Tabors', where father and mother welcome the daughter, calling her "Lady," and give Crosby a rather strained greeting. Cir cumstances suggest he stay over night, and he awakensto find himself locked In his room. Before he can determine the cause he Is called and required to leave the house, Miss Tabor letting him out and telling htm aha cannot see him again. At the Inn whero he puts up he notices Tabor In an argument with a strange Italian sailor. Crosby protects the sailor from the crowd at the Inn and goes on to Jhe Alnslles, where he again encoun ters Miss Tabor, who has told her hosts nothing of her former meeting with the professor. The two are getting along very well, when Dr. Walter Held. Miss Tabor's half-brother, appears mid boars her away. Crosby returns to the Inn and demands to see Miss Tabor. Held refuses, but Crosby declines to go until st)e tells htm herself Miss Tabor greets him In a strained way and tells him it Is her wish he leave and never try to see her asnin. H says he will not unless she send for .him. That night she calls him to join In a hurried trip by auto to New York. The rhauffeur noes not appear to relish the Journey, but Crosby fixes the ma chine and they are driven Into a crowded tenement district of the city. Hero they ascended several flights of stairs, and found the door at the, top blocked. Forc ing It open, they discovered the body of Shetln. MIm Tabor's nurse, bleeding from many wounds, but with signs of lit. Carucrl, tho strange Itallnn, who Is also Sheila's husband. Is In n drunken stupor In the next room. The 'hnuffeur weakens, but Crosby carries the Injured woman down to the rar, and propares to drlvo It himself. Crosby succeeds In elud ing the police, but the timid ohatiffour escapes. With no further adventure the party reaches the Tabor home. Now Read On ? ? ? ? f CIIAPTBR X. And How "Wo Drought Home a Difficult'. (Continued.) It was part of this earn a strangness that I only felt the. exhilaration of the present without any thought of trouble that lay before me and behind. I was a conquering hero, carrying my prlnceaa home In triumph out of the castle of the enchanter, I had overcome desperate ac cldenta and won my spurs; this page of tha fairy-tale boro a picture in shining colors, and I knew of neither the last page nor the next It was In this mood that I passed, unheeding, through the gathering familiarity of nearer land marks, past the Inn and tip the winding hill, and drew up at last before the Tabors' door with some vague fancy that I should hear a trumpet blown. I sup pose that I was uneonscleosly very tired and In part asleep, bo that it camo upon me with the shock of a, violent awaken ItlS when the front door swung open and Mr, Tabor hurried out to meet us, fol lowed by. Or. Iteld. The fairy-tale burst like a bubble, and the actuality of all that those two men tood for In my last few day and all the days to come drowned me In a breath. I .got down mechanically to 'help than. I suppose we must have spoken a few words while Lady waa helped down and half carried Into the house between the two men. Hut I do not remember. I' re member only the three figures In the doorway, the drooping woman, with their arms about her. Then the door closed, and Iady stood alone upon the steps above me. Her eyes were larger for the shadow under them; but there waa no bloom upon her, and I wondorod why I had thought her really beautiful. "I'll take the car around and leave It," 7 said, "Oood-bye." 'Tou're a strange man," the muttered; then with her sudden smile, "Aren't you coming In to breakfast? You've had an adventure, and you ought to be hungry." Her tone jarred. "Never mind that," I said bitterly. "I was to go this morning, and I'm going. There's still plenty ot tlnie tor my train. The sooner it's over with, the better." "What do you mean?" ahe asked. "Mean? 1 mean what you told me and one thing more, I understand now what ou meant yesterday, because I found your marriage notice In an otd paper." 'What marriage notice? I don't under stand." "Yours; on the th of May three rears ago, to Dr. Held. That's all. I beg your pardon." The color cam back Into her face; and under the trouble of her brows I thought she almost smiled. "That was my jtster," she said quietly. "My name's Margaret; I thought you Itnew." "At least you may as well come In to breakfast." "I should say he might," Mr. Tabor crcd behind her. "I have Shells safely stowed nwny, nnil now I must moko sure of you." I must have looked nearly ns puzzled as I felt. "You sco, Mr. f'rosby, I owe you an apology. You helped us out of a tight plncu last night and we nrn deeply In yuur debt; your coals of fire are upon all our heads." "nut " I, sold, nnd heslated. " 'But; tint that's what I say. I owe you an npnlogy. Wc fired you out the other night because we had to. We had something going on here then which we did not caro to have a nlranger mixed up in. Wo lmit every regard for you but, after all, you were nn outsider, and we simply could not risk you. 80 we threw you out. You understand that I am upeaking to you now In confldcnre, nnd becauso I lake you to be a gallant gen tleman. Neither can I explain. Of cuurse, the explanation I did give you was a sheer bit of bluff. I knew nothing against you whatever; but you forced mo Into saying something, and that was the most effectlvo thing I could think of to say to n man of your kind. Relievo mo. 1 hated to do It. Will you shake hands?" By thin tlmo I had got my breath again. "I will do moro." I said laugh ingly, "I will congratulate you. You are one of the ablest and most convincingly finished a ' "Wars." ho prompted. "That I ever hud the privilege of meet ing." 1 concluded unblushlngly. Mr. Talior olnpped ino on the shoulder. "Thank you. I am honored. We shall get along very well, I promlso you. Lady, lead the way whore breakfast waits; this low fellow Hnd 1 will follow." 80 the three of us made a, very com fortablo meal. Mrs. Tabor was not at thn table, nnd I mippoecd her break fasting In bed, If Indeed she were awake; and Dr. Hold. It appeared, was yet busy With his patient, Wn told Mr. Tabor our adventure, turn and turn about, and I found myself listening to Lady's warm pralso of what she was pleased-to call mjf rescue, with a tingling at the heart strings. When we had done, nnd Mr. Tabor had listened very carefully, he nat frowning beforo him for n while; nnd I thought tho he saw more In the recital than did wc ourselves. "Well," he said at Inst, "I suppose all's well that ends well; hut I do hope that It has alt ended. Are you 4filte sure,'' Mr. Crosby, that nobody got a look at you or Lady or the car who would be likely to have mind enough to give the affair clearly to thn newspapers?" "I'm pretty sure of It. sir," I an swered. "The only people who got a good look at anything were the 'little group of tho usual slum roughs; and from their 'general air and the hour of tha night, tho probability Is that there Wasn't ono of them that was not nrettv well befuddled." "How about the police?" "I didn't get n good look at the police myself; hut I think that wn were too fast for thorn. You seo, Miss Tabor had the number off, and wo started with con siderable speed. They may havo a gen eral idea of the car, but I think that it about alt" "I wonder what Caruccl -will do?" mused Miss Tabor. "He looked rather unpleasant on tha sidewalk." "Ho will have to say something." I said uneasily. "He couldn't have careened around there very long without falling Into the hands ot the police; and they would certainly arrest him. They usually arrest anybody In sight when one person has got away and they don't know quite what the trouble is." Mr. Tabor nodded. "Yes. they doubt- loss have htm safe behind the bars by now; but I don't think that will hurt us any. Personally, I can lmnglne no place where I should rather have him. unless It were far upon or under the deep blue sea." "But, father dear, that is terrible. If they havo him la Jail, he will havo to talk, and he will be blamed for that poor wrecked room and everything. He'll havo to give some explanation to save himself; and ho must know that we are the only peoplo that would be likely to come for Sheila in an automobile." The Italian, my dear, la not that breed of man. We may be very glad for once that he Is an Italian. Thero la only CHAPTER XI. EXPRESSIONS OP THE FAMILY AND IMPKKSSIONS OP THE PRESS. With that, all the strangeness of the day, all the feeling of moving In an un natural world which had hung about me since the dawn, blew away like the shadow of smoke. It was a summer morning of breezes and cold tights, gar rulous with innumerable birds; and I waa Btandlns" With mr feet umn n1M Mrih glad beyond measure tor the knowledge inai l waa a rsxu. The very Idea of it bad been absurd- and best ot all. there wera still things to be done. "Cod b thanked." said I to Lady, She smiled down at me very sweetly. "So much as that? It doesn't sound as if you appreciated Walter, Mr. Crosby. Z can easily Imagine a worst husband rayslt" "I don't mean that,'' said I hastily. M least-1' A Trio of the Newest Tailor-Mades 1 J f SBiBBHBfiiBaSBHaiSBBBSiBiBVw "BBttfekaiBiBBBSBiaiaiaiaiaSiaiaT flSBisSflHfliSBBI&JiSBBHiSiSisV Y'BBSUiBBiSiUSBSfliBiSBSN VflinHHfHililHiHHailB S iHBsBSiSnBnHiBiSHSSSBiBiB VBHHflK w .BSBSBBBhb9RBSBSBSS2bBBSBSm . BslBs'flBSsSRHiHBBBSBSBSnBBSBS 'JstHSBflsBBsBHBSSiBiBH V HBB BwAVAHHHhHRwAHHVAb iHHBk ilia9!aiBi8HLiaiaWi ssflssflssiBBsHSBiBHiBiBiBK sjSwiP '''''SfBHiPBiSBk r ,1, I TAILOR SUIT IN SOFT SHUCK. The coat, vrhlch hnm collar nnd vralstrnnt ombroldrcd In ulnidm to tone, la cut vrltti tlr pnjtulnr todet-alinped tnnlc without plruts nr Rattier, beiirntli Tfhlch 11 11 prnr the atrnlKbt and closely f It tlnK tunic of the skirt, proiIurliiK r slim effect vrhlch Is very oharnilugr. COLLAR AND WAISTCOATS OF WHITE PIQUE With a tallor-mado coat, a collar and waistcoat of muslin, pique or linen Is moat attractive, being' particularly becoming to the face as well as giving a smart tlnlBh to the costume; white pique Is used in this instance, and the costume Is of blue golfine. BPFECTIVK TAILORED GOWN. In plain cloth Tvltli nit-eves nnd trlnimlwr of silk inoueIliie nnil Iloinnn striped untln. There Is 11 pleated tunic, but the InrRc pleats lielwr firmly atltclird down the irrneefnl outline of the kotfii Is preserved. ScvernI small pleats at the front of the skirt give de llRhtfu! freedom. f Does Marriage Change the Character? By DOROTHY DlX. A man asks this question: "Does mar riage change the character for tho better?" That depends on tho Individual man or woman. When wo ere young our na- nbout one thing in tho world that a man tures arc fluid, of his race and class will not do and They may be com- inai is, tarn to the police. It Is part of ins rami not to. He will cither Invent some all-enfoldlng lie that tells nothing whatsoever, or else he will not say a word." "But ho musthava struck her with something," said Lady. "Suppose they should find that, father. He'd have to tell them to save himself." I slipped my hand Into my pocket. "I don't think they will find It," said I. and showed the thing above the table. Lady shuddered, and I quickly returned It to my pocket. "Just what you would expect." said Mr. Tabor, "and If you had left' It. I am afraid Caruccl would havo had some difficulty In explaining things. A mar llnesplke, Isn't It? Poor Sheila was really very fortunate that he didn't stab her with the sharp end. A stab would have been more In his Une-the beast As It Is. I don't believe the police will ever find out any ot the truth of the matter." (Continued Tomorrow.) pared to tho1 Juice ot a grape', nnd carriage may be likened to the fer mentation process. Borne It turns Into sound wine. Othefa It turns Into vine gar. No experience of lite leaves us Just where it found us. We are cither the better or worse for It. and this Is par ticularly true ot marriage, which Is the greatest ot all human experience That la why marrlago makes or mars a man or woman. The Idea that matrimony Is some sort of a miracle la very generally accepted by the unthinking, and It Is responsible tor more suffering and more broken hearts than anything else In the world. A man will be caught by a pretty face j,id7i"'rrisssa r Coming Out 4 CONSTANCE CLARKE. Why do you bother me? I want to sleep; I am bo tired, and when the shadows creep Around me darkly, I can slip away And drift, and drift where only thoughts may stray. I think1 1 smell the scent ot mignonette .Prom over on the window sill, and yet Why am I In this funny, small, whUe bed, And who are you? Why do you bathe my head? And who Is crying? Won't somebody tell? If I've been 111 I'm going to get well, of a girl whom ho knows to be silly, vain, selfish and frivolous. He knows that these qualities In u wife will make any man miserable, yet ho goes along and marries her under the delusion that mar riage will change her character and con vert her Into a wise. Intelligent, unselfish, devoted helpmate. Of course, marrlago 'does nothing of the kind. It doesn't put brains Into an empty head, or' a heart Into a sawdust-filled doll. He gets what ho married. 'Not something elce. In like manner a girl falls In love with a handsome youth, who Is a drunkard, or a gambler, nr lazy and shiftless, and she marries htm believing that marriage will change his character. She thinks that as oon as the words of the wedding cere- ,mony are said above him he will never 1 thirst for a highball again, and that he I will Immediately become thrifty, Indus trious and domestic, but nine hundred nnd ninety-nine times out ot a thousand nothing of tha kind happens, and tho marriage estate of the man Is worse than the single. in reality, marriage only accentuates character. It Is a crucial experience that brings out whatevef Is the strongest note in a man's or woman's nature, whether this Is good or bad. But It does not alter this characteristic. It It has any effect upon It at all' It is to exaggerate It. For example. It a woman la a narrow, prejudiced fool, marriage does not make her broad-minded and wise. On the othor hand, as the years go by she gets nar rower, more prejudiced nnd sillier, be cause the very facts of married life tend to confine a woman's Interest to her home, her husband and her children, and unless she has the broad outlook In 'her self she Is sure to hava her horlxon bounded by Just the things ot her every day Ufa, But the woman ot wide sympathies, ot big brain and intelligence finds that mar riage promotes her spiritual growth, so that she gets bigger, wiser, tenderer every day that she lives. Her character has been no more changed than the lit tle, narrow woman's has. Both have Just been quickened by marriage Into being mom completely what nature cut them out to be. Men show precisely the same char- acterlstlcg undei the ordeal ot matrimony.' If a man is a drunkard or a rouo by nature tho inevitable disagree able features of matrimony, the clash of different natures .together, the fret arid crying of a sickly child or an III man aged houso will drlvo him to the saloon fbr comfort, or his wife's fading beauty gives him excuse for attentions to younger and fairer women. Marriage with Its attendant Ills Is an Incentive to wrongdoing to such men rather than a preventive. But thero nro other men whose domi nant character Is loyalty and sense ot duty, and when these men marry, no matter how wild a life they may have led beforehand, they settle down Into models ot domesticity. The knowledge of a woman's dependence on them, and their obligations to the helpless little children they bring Into the world, brings out all that Is best, and strongest, and truest In them. It Is common observation how often a woman who has been a pretty and at tractive looking girl develops Into a slouchy, shiftless dowd after she Is mar ried, and how many women, whom no ono suspects of having a temper con cealed about thalr persons when they were girls, turn Into nagging shrews of wives. Matrimony didn't change these women's characters. It simply gavo them liberty to develop what they were. After she had caught her man the lazy girl no longer. left It Incumbent upon her to keep herself neat and tidy. After she was safely married' the III tempered girl felt free to be as disagreeable as she pleased, In the same way the man who' was lavish as a suitor and makes a tight wad of a "husband did not develop sud denly Into a miser. He was naturally stingy and matrimony simply accen tuated his drslro to save, because it costs money to support a family. Marriage doe not change people. Hus bands and wives do not changp us. They only help us go a tittle faster: up hill or down. Wo decide the course for our selves. If we change for the better we change ourselves. feo far as character goes we are all self-made. And most of us hava mighty little room to be proud of the Job. Science for Workers By EDGAR LUCIISN LARKIN. The Myriad-Minded Shakespeare By IU3V. THOtfAS ZS. GREGORY, Kalura is tiMsceratta. Jl rwre ntp lutsly nothing for the rules nnd regula tions of men. It does not give a "tinker's damn" for our theories or calculations, but keeps oa about Its business QulU' regardless of our human prognosti cations. Kor example, ono John Shakespeare, tired of clodhop ping, quits his farm near Stratford, moves Into town, and goes Into the glove and leather business, and S.V) years ago, April 23, 1554, tho word camo to John that thero had jUst been born unto him n roan child, and that all was welt with the mother and babe. That babo was to becomo Immortal under tho name of William S.hakcspcarc. the king ot kings of Intellect, the master of tho masters of tho htstrlonlo art. In literary power and majesty the "fore most man of all this world." Ask not for the biography of this -unparalleled man. His work Is hla only biography. Ho belonged not to Stratford or to tho sixteenth century, but to humanity and to tho nges. As well ask, for the biography of tho sun, or of tho chemical forces that vitalize the worlds. When tho Stratford man went down to London ho found all sorts of stage plays, of all dates and, degrees of merit, met of them of unknown authorship. Shakes peare reached out for these pieces right and loft, dived Into tho storehouse of tho past l!l;o another In a fish pond, delved Into tho stores ot his native England nnd. selecting what suited him. began his business as 'dramatist. The greatest literary thief that ever lived, he took whatever he thought he could use. In tho first, second and third parts of Henry VI:, for example, out of the 6,01? lines, but 1.S03 wcro tho work of Shakespeare. And so It goes all throush. Toklng theso dry bones he put them togother, clothed them with flesh and breathed Into them the breath of life. Into tho commonplace he put Shakespeara the genius, tha fire, tho Inspiration of his extraordinary personality and lol tho modern drama was born, the mirror was held up to nature, and for ho first time' since the masters of ancient Qreoce ceased to live tho world possessed a stase that was true to humanity and Its actual universal man. As Emerson observes: "What point of morals, of manners', of economy, ot philosophy, of religion, of taste, of the conduct- ot life, has ho not settled? What mystery has ho not sig nified his knowledge of? What office, or function, or district of man's work has ho not remembered? What king has ho not tnught state, as Jalma taught Na poleon? What maiden has not found him finer than her delicacy? What lover has he not out-lovod? What gentleman has he not Instructed In the rudeness of his behavior?" It has often been asked (and Quito naturally, too), "How happenn If that th Stratfc-rd man. with no more education than ho had been able to pick up, before his eighteenth year, in the grammar school of his native town, was so wise, of such encyclopedic knowledge, of such universal Information?" Tho answer Is: It was not Shakes pearo's knowledge It was tho knowledge of all tho wiso who had gono before him, appropriated by him and unified and elec trified by his surpassing genius. Of tho lramortalt dlscoverc of the law of gravitation It was written. "Nature und nature's laws lay hid In night; God said, 'Ixit Newton be.' and all was light." What Newton did for the mathematics of tho heavens, Shakespeare did for tho hitherto hidden laws of the human heart ho flashed from tha stago the secrets of his own personality, and In the flash human nature stood revealed Just as It waa and Is, and Is to be with all It greatness, with all Its glory and all Its shame, with Its good and Its evil, Its heavens and Its hell. Question Please, glvo rule for determin ing tho horsepower ot an open stream, a river. Hupposo a board of any given dimensions Is loaded on one edge so that the upper edge would bo Just visible and the board b'e held by ropes parallel to tho stream, what velocity of water and size of board for each norsepower pres sure would be required? Answer Nothing can be done without the law, and tho law ot nature In this problem Is: Tho total pressure on the board' Is twice that produced by the Im pact of art equal volume of. water strik ing It that had fallen from a height suf ficient to allow grnvlty to Impart to It the same velocity as that of the stream. Let us apply- this law to a river run ning four feet per second. But the height from which a body must fall to acquire a speed ot four feet per second must be found first. Tho space fallen through by a fallen body equals the square ot the acquired velocity divided by twice the force of gravity. Then four squared equals sixteen, and this divided by 61.4 equals one-fourth foot; twice this Is 'one-halt foot Then the true pressure on' tho board must equal the weight ot the water on Its area mul tiplied by the square ot Its speed and di vided by the constant of gravity. Com put for one square foot; thus water wuigha 62.4 pounds per oublc foot. The , velocity being four .feet per second, whose square Is sixteen, we have 62.4 multiplied , tjy one and by sixteen, equals 90.8, which j divided by 32.2 equals 31, the number of pounds- pressure on one square foot ot board! Ahorsepower" Is the rate of doing work of S3) foot pounds per second, which divided by 31 equals 17.7 square feet In tha board to pull at one horsepower rate on the ropes. The board In the stream would hava an efficiency a's erratic as the vapors in tha smokestack, for water wheels aro rated as about 60 per centum of their theoretical efficiency. Advice to the Lovelorn Dy BEATRICE FAIRFAX Slnee You Love, Yes. Iear Mlfw Fairfax: I am 23 and deeply In love with a widower 41 years of ace. I know he loves me and as I knew hla life for some years and know him to bo a good man. Is It proper for us to marry? Our ways are alike. He enjoys whatever I do; but of late I have done him a wrong and h knows It. However, he feels bad, but treats me with the eamo respect. ANXIOUS. There is no reason why you should not marry. If he is willing to forgive anl forget the wrong you did him, don't make yourself unhappy by brooding over It, Circumstances Slay Explain'. Uear Miss Fairfax: I am acquainted with a young man whom 1 care fbr very much, but he comes to . see me only once a week, and never on Sundays, and he never asks mo to go to moving pic tures or to the theater. How can I find put if he loves me? N. B. W, If ho had to work hard; If you live at a great distance: if his salary Is small and Inadequate for more than necessities, bis conduct Is excusable. Look at his side of the story before you condemn him. 36c aNDEIZBILT I)ofef east atSarft (hfConuej&a"York WALTUK U.riAitlAJLL, Manager. An Ideal Hotel with an. Ideal Situation; Summer Tates"