THE XEE: OMAIIA. Fill DAY, XOVEMI'.tK ('. 1014. Mysteries of Science and Nature- Indian Sumrae and Squaw Winter Are Weather Phe nomena . . with -Which Everybody is- Acquainted, but Nobody Can' Precisely Fix the Limit .of, Either By GAJUIETT P. SBllVISS. "When Jwi Indian summer start, and 'how long does It last C. P." There la n4 fixed lat for the begin nlng or ending of Indian nimirmr.1 It Is . a period of read- ' Juetraent In atmo pharlo condition. occurring between " th si u r ti m n'at s equinox (September. SI) and tha winter solstice (December '.Ki .but --usually nearer the latter. ' It -jnay be looked for about tho be ginning of Novem-;-ber. but It some times starts tit ear-.' lie and sometimes later. It, -Is .characterised by a warm spell, or nxuc'Ceeslon" 6f warm spslls. setting In after the ' preliminary . chill which romea when the sun lias sunk below tha equator on II annual, visit to the south'1 em hemisphere, and it la' caused by .'the accumulated summer heat.', euf filing to counterbalance the' 'decrease of ;the dally leVPR'r from the sun for a' long time aftftfce nights have begun' to- exceed the days In length. Its IrregularltJea are due to variations :f atmospheric conditions that are too complicated to be accurately! traced In advance, but tn the long run it Is a regu lar phenomenon that can - be Counted upon to occur, on the average, every autumn. v Nowhere has the Indian summer season a mora poetic character than In eastern 'America, It seems to lend Itself particu larly to tha features', of our. landscapes, alvlng them a wonderful softness nd charm. Always during this curious- spell of weather the quiet atmosphere Is f II 1 cJ lth a delicate, smoky, film, which pro duces marvellously beautiful efforts of perspective among the hills and valleys. ,;Many Imaginary explanations of the -Igln of the name, "Indian summer," and Of the cause of the singular .and often prolonged spell of weather to which It la applied, have been suggested. The early settlers seem to have thought that . I'be peculiar condition or the atmosphere 'was brought about 'by forest fire est by ihe Indians, This waa a natural con ;Aufalon, beVattse Xh -eefson Ifr-alfnost al ways characterized" b 'the" presence' of much smoke In tha air, and this .smoke does often proceed frorn forest and brush 'fire . ., ,. But to assume that the fires are the .cause of the warm autumn weather Is Jo put the. ,car,e before' the horse. First break, "out because the weather la dry, and tho heat that, they impart to the air Is merely local.' It Is possible, , however, ; that tho presence' of the smoke haa some Itfelhg to do with tbe heat trapping prop erties t the air. True clouds being ab- Mttor many days during Indian sum Trter,' the sun's ' raye are poured unob- . etructedlr ,do,wn upon the earth,' and tbo layer .of. hase.in, the atmosphere -t-vlikj t the garaeners, jpM.jpanfr 4V'ia W- ' hed. retaining the hat that has passed through tn, the form, of visible radiation. j Usually,' before' the Indian summer sets In.'fhero to a spell of cold weather, often " accompanied by flurries of anow, a first effeeto the' sun's dectonsloh' toward the ' south... and -this, was (ailed "squaw wta ter." It la mere commonly known In Canada. ' The tradition Is that the Iij- . dlena. who were good observers of na ture, had long studied these vagaries of the autumn weather and were able to predict .them each year, for which rea son the whites gave them designations suggesting their Indian orlgm. There are similar weather. variations n spring,, due to similar. causes.. Both spring and autumn are only intermediary seasons, coming between the two really . characteristic seasons, winter and sum mer, snd necessarily partaking of the na tare of both. Sometimes one elei.ient arid sometimes the other . prevails. .In spring wintry conditions, brought about by unpredictable atmospheric changes, but such as are sure to occur with more or less regularity every year, often ar. rest for a time the general Increase of temperature; and In autumn a similar recurrence of summer conditions Inter rupts the forward march of the coming winter. ?lr ' ' ...... - 1 1 M I I A Hallo ween Witch .: yr.m,. : By Nell Brinkley Losing Your Girl By BEATRICE P.UBPAX. "It Is eafy enough t be pleasant when life flows on like a song hut the man worth while is the man who can smile when everything goes dead wrong." "t'p to four years ago I was possessed of a happy, optimistic nature," writes !.. A. H. "I was living with my parent In a fine home, being greatly Indulged, rare-free and with no responsibilities. I then came to New Torlt to fill a position to which I hd been called. I have been compelled to mffer hardships and hu miliations which have neon almost un bearable, and which have caused my whole life and nature to change. Sick ness resulted In loss of position, and I have had to 1 contented with pegging along In Ineffective places at a minor salary, while I am confident that with an even chance I could qualify for posi tions of greater prestige than heretofore held. My friends tske other people's sor rows h a matter of oourse. No reading that I do cheers me. Park clouds seem to hover over mo. It la only for the sake of my aged parents that I have not given up hope, t fel down and out at T years of age." When the boy who lives at home and is "greatly Indulged, onre-free and with no responsibilities" comes to New Tork, or any great city, he lias two battles to fight. One la for place Jn the maelstrom'" of city life. The other Is to force him self to keep his grit and go on fighting, Being happy and keeping your grip are one and the same thing, U A. H. It Is easy enough tn be cheerful when you are at home being petted and ln-: dulged and generally unfitted for tho fight of life. The point Is not whether you are plug-' glng'along In places where you cannot, make yo;ir ability tell. The point Is not1 that If chance were good enough to throw something worth while your way you could prove your effectiveness. The real point that Is going to decide whether1 you are to be a success or a failure Is Just this: Are you capable of taking Joy In your work whatever It Is? Are youw strong enough to hope on In the face oF disappointment after disappointment? Are you sufficiently Imaginative . an1t keen to find opportunity fff what to ani other man might seem ordinary routine work? At 74 years of age no man goes "down and out" unless he deliberately loosen 1 his grip on the steering wheel of ' his own life. No failure In youth or middle life no loss of opportunity no peg-gins along at second rate work la; In any way nnai. Aiyimng may oe coming your way tod y or tomorrow. All you need lo do la to be ready when It does come. Now, don't, think that a platitude.. Al most every man who falls is directly re sponsible for his Vn failure. Whether you succeed or fall In life la largely a matter of how long ' you - can manage to . keep ' your . grip and , your head. If you can think, sanely and assure yourself that ; no Tries of.- mt.sfoUine is all ' Ironclad, unbreakable thing that cannot at any moment be switched off Into a series of successes, of course, no failure can daunt you. ' New si nee all thing's In life are temporary, whf not. regard the day's unhappiness this way: This Is for todsy only; tomorrow I may be on the crest of a wave of success." I will keep a firm grip on the steering wheel of my own 'life, and In the end I will master my fate because I have not lost my grip and let temporary misfor tune master life and steer mo to destruc tion and despair.' " Great Chance for Girls is Doing Something Useful By Dorothy Dix anglng At Once! Stops Stomach Misery And Indigestion Do some foods you vat hit ba-k taste, good, but 1 work badiy; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause .a sick, eour, gassy stomach? Now. Mr. or Mrs. Dys peptic, jot this down: Tape's Ptapepsln digests everything, lcr.vlng nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so kafely quick, so certainly effective. No difference hbw badly your stomach .la disordered you will get happy relief In five tr.'r.''.c;.- but what pleases you most Is that It strengthens and reg ulates your stomach so ' you can eat your favorite foods without fear. Wost remedies give you relief some timesthey are slow, ' but not sure. 'Tape's Plapepsin" Is ou'rk. positive and puts your stomach in a heslthv condi tion so tha misery won't come back. Yen feel different as soon as "Papa's tXapepatn" comes in contact with the stomach d'streis Just vanishes your stomach gets aweet, no gases, no belch ing, no eructations of undlgestel food, your head clears and you feel due. . Go now, make the best investment you ever mads, by getting a large flfy-ctnt case of Pape'a liapepin from any . drug store.. Tou realise tn five mloutes how needless it Is to suffer from indiges tion, dyspepsia or any stt-mseh dikorder. -A d ver UeeoMtbt, This a a time of peculiar upheaval In the feminine world- l"p to now the aver age American girl was expected to stay at heme until she was married and then go to a home of her own. And she could fairly aafely count on getting married. . In the last few years, however, this comfortable program of life has been altered. The high cost of living has made it impossible tor the man In or dinary I'lrcumstancea to support a family of girls in comfort. The -girls -themselves have heard so much about the parasitic woman that they have bee ashamed of hang! like a millstone, around a pr 01(1 father's neck. Also the chances of catching a husband are greatly diminished, and young women . of presentable appeerance are no longer certain, as they formerly were, of getting married. I All of these conditions have turned the , thoughts ot girls towsrd self support. Thts is well. There Is no more reason for an Intelligent and able-bodied young woman should be dependent on some body else for her living than there is why a man should be. It develops a womsr. s brsln and brawn and char acter to do some regular work, whereby the earns honest money and acqulre the strengih to stand on her own feet Instead of flopping, like a limp dish rag, on some stronger Individual. 1 But It takes a long time to rid our selves of the tuperstltlops of the past,' and one of the most persistent of these hoodoo is that when a woman works she must alwaya do some lady-like kind of work that Is, something eristic or literary and that la genteel Just as it wss considered In the past more refined and elegant for a woman to do em broidery than it wss to do, plain useful sewing. For this reason at least 80 per cent of the girls who want to work want to f on the ktege, or to recite, or do parlor entertaining, rr write, ' or paint. Also they want to do these things In a delet- tante manner and rece've large rewards for thrlr labor. They overlook the fact that to succeed in the tine arts as well as In common occupations you have to slave like a dray horse, and that there are absolusely no short cuts or quick roads to success Bobtnd "every etsr on the stage and every well known writer there Ilea an apprenticeship that haa been served in toll and sweat and blood. Now, of course, if a girt has the divine fire, and has given unmistakable signs of a genius for acting or painting, -or writing,, she does well to choose the cull ing lo which ' her talent dedicates 'her. But there" Is no such thing as a girl .mak ing herself Into, a Maude Adams because she would like to be on tbe stage, or info an Ellon Glasgow because she would be ploaced to eee her name In print. Na ture settled that question for her once and for all before she Was born, and all the .work of the world will never take the place of talent. It's as foolish for an unsifted girl to think that she can make herself a writer or an actress as it would be for a short, stubby woman to think she could make herself into a tall, willowy goddess. It simply can't he done. It is my unhappy lot In life to see hun dreds of thesn would-be artist and actor and writer girls who come to the city seeking their fortunes, and who find no market for their poor warns, and are stranded ' In Us hard streets. " There's hardly a week' in-the-year-that halt a dozon of these 'forlorn creatures are not knocking at my door.' begging me to h)elp them launch'aomo sort of concert or en tertainment or benefit to help them out, and In which good-natured patronesses hold up. their friends and make them buy tickets. Now these girls have plenty of intelli gence. They could make good livings If they would only come down off their high horses and plough a little and do some thing practical, give some useful service that the world needs. Tou don't see every man trying to be an actor, or writer, or doctor, or lawyer. If you did ' you would see among men as wholesale starvation and failure as Sou do among women. Men realise that they have got to' be grocers and butchers, bakers and candleattcJt makers,' and that while we can do without the fine arta on a pinch we have got to have the' com mon necessities, and ' that the purveyors of them are the ones that ' maka the money. t So l entreat- the. young women who are contemplating going to work to support themselves to choose something Useful to do, something practical to do. . Do - the work that Ilea closest to you so- well .that somebody will not only be willing, but anxious, to pay you tor doing It - There's never any dearth of a market for a super-excellent quality of goods, and this applies to labor "more than to anything else. The world Is flooded with ama teurs',' but there are never enough experts in any line to go around. Many a girt who falls as an actress could make a fortune raising chickens If she put half as much study on the tem perament of a hen aa she does on the psychology of Lady Macbeth. Many a girl who palnta dauby pictures that she can't sell for U apiece would have women breaking their necks to pay her 78 for hats. "Many a girl who la starving along trying tq write pot boilers could bo rid ing In her own automobile If she had worked aa hard at the art of keeplpg boarders as she does at trying to learn how to write. Do something practical and useful, girls. The world has always got to bo fed and clothed, and washed and cleaned, and have its socks darned, and Its bills kept, and ss long aa you minister to the world's comfort you can always get paid for It. lon't be misled by the glamour about any kind of work. The only fancy brand on work la the dollar mark. And the way to get that Is to do something that people really need. Do You Know That A candle sixteen feet long and weigh Imi 4"o pounds, the finest and largest wax taper ever produced, has been mad In New York, anrt Is ultimately lo stand In the Vatican at Itome, where It will b lighted once, a year on All Eoula' day, In memory of the late J. Plerpont Morgan. At thts rate It will have an endurance of. quIto'S.JM years assuming It Is left to burn twelve hours on each day -when II Is lighted. " '.., The two sides of the human, rare ara never alike. In two out of five' the eyeg are out of line; one eye Is stronger than the other in seven peases out of ten, and ' the right car . la generally higher than tho left. The cstrlchfOlalms the distinction of laying the largest egg. The egg which ws.'ghs ibqut three pounds. Is considered; equal In contents to twenty-four, heat eggs. ' Toward tha end of the new year tha kaiser's new ' yacht, Hohensollern II, M , to be launched. It will be the largest and most magnificent royal yacht ever bullU and will cost at leaat 12,500,000. . ' Aeroplanes and the Wind By EDGAR LUC1KN LAKKI.N. Q. A few friends discussed recently upon the effect on an seropiane In motion of favorable or adverse winds. For ex ample, a ' machine travels by Its own rower th rty miles per hour in calm at mosphere. il Thn flying mechanically at thirty miles ner hour with 11 wind blowing thirty miles rer hwir. Or, H) Flying by its own power against a v.lnd having a rstc of th rty miles per hour? A. U Hrlndle, Kan Francisco. A. (1) With wind, speed of plane would bo sixty miles per hour; and In 12) It would be at rest vertically over a point on the earth reached at instant the opposing forces neutralized or bu lanced. Q A said tiat when a wagon is mo v. ing the part of the wheel 011 the ground movn sljwer thnn th top. Is this cor rect? If s . pletu-e explain . Itotx rt Cony bear, Chicago. . A. The answer of A is correct. The earth ts a globe, and the center of mo tion of all objects on Its surface Is the center of the earth. Tfe bottom of the wheel is nearer tho earth's center than the top. In. t the top must move in tbe same time over a greater distant; there fore the velocity of the top la greater thsn the bottom. Suppose that the wheel is four feet In diameter, that the earth la a smooth sphere -end that the wheel rolled entirely around it. Then the diameter of the orbit tra versed by the top of the wheel Is eight feet wider than that traversed by the bottom, and 2M328 feet longer. - But this added number of 25.1328 feet must be tra versed In the same time, To do thla the top must move faster than tho bottom. Draw a line from tho center of the earth out lo the surface, through the bottom of the wheel, through Its hub or exact center, and then through the top. Now, the meaning of the word top Is the In stantaneous molecule or atom of metal In the tire that Is In the 'end of thts line to the canter of the earth. And this interesting molecule moves faster thsn Its opposite at botton of wheel. Thla question, the question of a fish In a bucket of water pn a balance, that o squaring a rlrclo and on per petual motion, are atandard, and In all my life they have kept coming at rate of about one-hundredth that of questions on religion. The word "equal" should have read Advice to Lovelorn This Bltnnllun -! Tart. Dear Miss Fairfax : I am 1. and have bheu.oui with a young man two years my senior for tho last three nienths. Me has token me to many places of a,n)use-im-nt. Now. what I want to know la this: My parenta do not want-me to go -with a young man Unless he ties serious Inten tions, snd they are always nagging at me by asking me what he means by calling three Units a week. I know this young man can support a wife comfortably, but I can't go ahead and ask him whether he is going to marry me. My parents say If I don't find out they will, so I told th m 1 would not go out wllii him at all If thev would approach him Willi a ques tion like that. Do you think it would be proper for me to say anything to htm about this mat ter? ilANCJ!L;. I consider a girl of IS and a boy of 2u I far too young to marry with any promise : of lasting hspplneas. Of course, if you ara with this young man three times a week, others will feel that you have se rious intentions with regard to one an other. Suppose you discuss with him very tactfully tne position In which this puts you. I think this would be far bet ter than dropping him without a word of explanation or permitting your family to ask his Intentions. rosins; for tbe "Movies." Pear Miss Fairfax :: I am a factory girl and ara disgusted with my position. There Is a cham for me to get a posi tion to poke for a moving picture. Kindly give me your advloe If tills Is a position for a respectable girl. It. K. Tun moving picture actresses are com ing to lie recognized and admired all over the world. I think you are fortunate to have a chance to do thla interesting and well paid work. Do not hesitate to oc tal t. "unequal" in my article several weeks ago on the subject of daylight as seen from either pole of the earth. The optics 1 property of the earth's atmosphere of refracting light makes the sun, moon and stars soem to be above the horison longer that really. . Then from either pole some part of the edge of the sun can be. seen for three days after It haa crossed the equator, going south from the north side and north from the aouth side. Then from either pole the light of day grows dimmer and dimmer after the edge of the disk or the sun Is cut off by the horison when tbe solar motion is going away, and blighter snd brighter when coming. Then the reduced light of day endures six daya longer than the exact half year. That la, the first minute part of the upper edge of the sun Is hastened three days in rising and retarded three daya In disappearing. Full daylight does not appear during these six days, because all of the sun's disk is not above the horison, tha horison being tho equator to an observer at either pole. Then the reverae. or polar nlghta, from the same cause, are these sis days shorter than the precise half-year. To see these full effects the entire horison must be water, the air pure and clear. These cannot be, however; so actual ef fects are never fully seen around the en tire horison. Household Economy Hew te . Havo tha Beat Cawnck Reaaedy aad gave 93 y Maklasj It at Hoama Cough medicines, aa a rule contain a large quantity of plain syrup. A pint of granulated eujjar with pint of warm water, stirred ior 2 minutes, give you aa Rood syrup aa money can buy. . . Then jret from your druggist 8 ounce Pinex (60 cents worth), pour into a pint bottle and rill tbe bottle with sugar avrup. This gives vou, at a cost of only 64 cent, a full pint of really better couuh svrup than you could buy ready made for t2-60 a clear saving of nearly $2. Full directions with fine. It keeps perfectly and tastes ood. It takes hold of th usual cough or chest cold at once and conquer it in H hour. v (splendid for whoopinjf cough, bronchitis and winter eougha. It's truly astonishing how quickly It loosens tha dry, hoarse or tight cough and heals and soothes the inflamed mem branes in tbe case of a painful cough. It also stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, time end ing tbe yertiatent loos cough. Pinexls'a highly concentrated com pound of genuine Norway pioe extract, combined with guaiacol, and' las been used for generations to heal inflamed membranes of the throat and chest. To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for.4'2W ounces if Pinex," and don t accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt ly refunded, goes with thi preparation. The J'mex Co., it, Wayne, lud.