THE UMAIiA, MOADAY, MAI 17, 131.7. BaSSBBJSBBSBBBSBBBSSaSBSBWaBaBBl ge The Bees Mom e Maaz i u e P a Read It Here See It at the Movies IVofien Fringe a Novel Feature of (he Prese?it Season V Fashions I Ambition I' . J '.UD&ViadG 1 1 a - , ?f zsTBOsucnra EARLE WILLIAMS M Tommy Bitolir ANITA STEWART aa Tb Qoddea Written hv Gouverncur Morris (Ob of tb Koit Mottbl Tig. r la America Xiteratar) liramntlzed I ntn a llinto-l'iN v hr CKAKtrja W. 093DAKB, Amlior cf "Th etUs cf FmUm" "Th Exploit cf Zlalc" , 0..pjrWhl. I'll.-., hv Slur "ominy.) fihht Krisonr. fvr Han-lav: Kvery inilivHiiKl voter '"In that hr :uld run the tMtlmi hotter t!nn timer. Sppnlnlod o ,)n an by himself and tho'i enrt of others just I.Ip hint. Otic vnti-r would put Hie tariff hirl.fr thai: t ever wea before; thi- ict would rr.i!ih It. But. whichever tyre of thinker pet pis -anfllriatr Into pwr. there r-uvilit al '" In these lnlted Mine iiilMlnna of people who have ! I.c poor, dirty and d!nr."nientd. Trom thl even n it'j would ion lii'lj either Ihit a vast inajrnty of pontile arc doomed to unhapplne' ! tnc tlatl who made them, or thnt n vast maj.-irity of polltlrlana are InmnahM governts. Aa to the first confT.-slon. p know r thlnK: l":t aa to the errond, we are r'rtnln bynnd peradventure. With tn'trhty few exceptions, those whom we pi t ver to fovern tia are the mon Incompetent lot of legislators and ndmlniatraiora In his tory. For the most part they are men tsguely trained to th law. Th.-y talk tetter and oftener on a greater variety of topics than the veraae min who la making or try In to make an IioimsI liv ing. They make it tone biisineje to be conspicuous, Inatead of the opposite, and ao get themselves elected. Aa a body of men they know practically nothing about anything uaeful or Important, and their small mlnda am ao tangled with the lit tle law they know that they are unable to ae through the tantrtc Into the tir of law, which la justice. If lawyers eould could 1m counted on to do right the pawnbroker down the atreet and the hoemaker round the corner would not rav to be called away from affair. Im portant to them, to alt on Juries and do Justice. But the thing a-oea deeper. What In each voter'a Judgment la the one chief thing that ia wrong with thee United BtatesT There would be almost us many ' answer aa there are voters. I've asked lota of men, and no two agreed, but I liked on mail t answer a, lot. He said: "The chief trouble with th country la that Ita cltliena have to pay taxoa wtosu they ought to be reoelvlng dividend. And thta," ha said, "would be the case If from the atart we had been governed by our beat mlnda, Inatead of by our wont; If a a nation w had been run front tho beginning th way "tandard Oil, tor instance, ha been run aa a trust." I am not standing up for th rapacious, neea of trusts, only for their efficiency. Aa nation wo have been more rapacious and dishonest than any trust that ever lived. Thl being so, and a Mot Upon ua that ran never be wiped out, a wrong of our own doing that tan never be righted. It Is 10 wo pities that we haven't been efficient, too. How many billions of dollars was this country worth, as land. coal, oil, forest, gold, silver, Iron, etc, etlT Only astrono mers think In big enough figures to answer that. Anyhow, as a nation we grabbed. Mole and cheated It all away from the people who owned It. And then we began to play ducka and drakes with It. If from the start our resource could have been handled by Rockefcl ler. he well he might be a thousand times richer than he Is, but we we would rone of be poor. And our houx would be clean and efficient from garret to cellar, and not gutted and creaky and full of vermin and half the celling down. Think of a whole country run aa a trust, with employment at more than a fair return for every able-bodied man, and fat dlvidenda for everybody In good years. In auch a state by force of pub lic opinion even a Bryan might be made useful. Even In Utopia there are office ' which have to be swept out. If there t salvation ahead of us. In atead of ruin, something of thla eort will have to be worked out from what la left to ua of our natural reeourcea. Failing this those of u who are rich enough and contented enough aa Indi viduals will be pulled daw a from our hUrh place and trampled by an unreas oning mob until there la no longer any thing ktabte nor any one contented. Th air rf this greet city which we breath 3 1n-C: kr a seals setisidv accurate. Prevent kiula-dg bearing fcota mating. Klna, too, frr surgical and scientific laauu urjtL Keeps r aaatarnieh away. A iiclHnry of a buadre ott.e m rtih eveiy butlte. tue.XSc.au .J stare. Three In -On Oil Col, a awty, New York i WEIGH tfflli THIS .Igl! II' Stars Who Are Appearing in "The Goddess" v l . . ; : ''' ' ' j fiifs-i i ijin miini ii Mii.il iiiiiiiMiisiiiiwwMiL :' jujiiijgiiiii KARL WILLIAMS. I 10 per cent air and 90 per cent revolu tion. The only man with sufficient mind and power to effect anything good Is your self. But If you personally were to preach the gospel of efficiency people would think you were working, to put It bluntly, for your own pocket. This gospel then ostensibly must not come from you. It must not come from the rich. From whom then? From the poor, you answer.' But alas, my friend, even the champion of th poor are open to suspicion. Thla gospel then must come from where? Why, from hewn, of course, whence all good gospels have come, or are usually believed to have com. And, seeing that w are in America, where the women ar given the belt of everything, our heaven-sent messenger must be a woman. I aee your gesture of horror. But she shall not be as you see her. She sVall be young and beautiful and good and sincere. 8h shall not speak her own thoughts, but our. Th masse will .be lle in her. The claa may, and if tfley don't t!y will have er ee enough to pretend to. With you to help, I believe, upon my word of honor, that I can make thl thine happen. Will you help? Whet do you thlukT Tour aa ver, ' " , MILhX 8TILLIT6.R. To this letter Prof. RtlUltcr received the following answer by return mes senger: . Dear BtllllUr: I'll help If.ynu can answer one thing eaturactorlly. To be a successful goapsllat th woman, aa you) Intimate, must be sincere. Hhe must be lieve what aha preaubo. If she la sin cere, how can aha tell people that aha cornea from heaven? Ton aay aha must come from heaven In order to believe, jit la quite a rigmarole. I know that yuu Genius is in Every By PROK. MAX NOHUAl We are on all side sar rounded by exalted and touching exhlblUoiia of vir tu on the part of humanity. Kvery thing apeak to ua of great and noble qualities prvseaeed by man; every Inven tion, for example, sneaks to us of hi ingenious mind and hi skillfulnres; every science of hi talent for patient observation and his earnest. Instinctive desir for truth; vry fact in th history of morality of hla unselfish goodness of heart and his loving regard for hi fel low creature. I used lo be of the opinion that th en tire white race of man might be thrown back to the standard of th middle ages, or even atllt further back. If only their heads were struck off the ten thousand or more ooploualy clever of my contem poraries, who aevmed to be the sole real upholder of our civilisation. Now, however, 1 no longer bold that view. The superior qualities of humanity are not the exclusive inheritance of a few who form the exceptions, but fun damental attribute which are evenly distributed throughout the entire mas of tha rare. Just aa are the organs and tissue. Just aa ar tha blood and brala material and bones. No doubt In Individual Instance, there are more than the average, but In every there ar some. What a pity that th experiment raanot be triad. On theoretical grounds, however, I ran sup. pons t myself the following rase: Take a number of the most ordinary, average men. without any special Intvllei'tusl training, without professional knowledge, persona w ho d- not ponaess a more In- liiutte knowledge of anything then Is oh. talnub.e fio:n a haatv pesuaal of new uauer aiUi l o. oublle house conversa ANITA 8TBWART. have been thinking nd experimenting for years toward aome auch end a thla. But I am a business mn, and I have to lie shown. Tours with sincere Interest. To this I'rof. milliter answered: War Barclay: She onfly haa to believe that she come from hraven. If aha can bo made to believe that, are you satis fied? .8. That night the two wen met by ap pointment. Outlining his plsn, and occa sionally suing Into detail. Prof, milliter tslked rapidly for almost two hour with out stepping, till tho sweat stood on hi brow and hi voice began to fall him. He finished with these word: "And for a few of .us, as a mere side Issue. thr Villon in It.'' (To Be Conlnued Tomorrow.) Hidden Man tion, and suppose those to be shipwrecked and cast upon a draolate Island and so thrown peitnunvntly upon their own re eourcea w hat form would th fate of uch Kobinu Cruaoea assume? At first they, would come off worse thaa the average savage of the southern laeas. They would never have learned to turn their natural talent to account. They would be unaware tha! it la possi ble to lak meals without those being erred ty waiters, that article of food are to be found elsewhere than the stall of markets, and that the necessary hard ware can be provided In other way be side going to tho retail shops. Thla state of matters would not. how aver, endure for any length of time. They would soon find out to help them selves. They would, in the first place make discoveries In themselves.' and la the next place Important Inventions. They would nolle that In the one a great tech nical skill exulted, in another philosophi cal talent, and In a third sn organising capacity. They would in th course of one or two generations repeat of their own ao cord the whole history of tha develop ment of mankind. All of them must have seen steam engines, though none prob ably would know very accurately how such a math in 1 oonstrui-ted. and they would soon, therefore, by the exercise of pemonal reflections, get at the root of the matter and make on for them selves. All of thm, too. must have heard tell of gunpowder, though none probably would know very accurately the propon tlnus In which it Ingredient are com bined; nevettheleas, they would very soon prep.ire for ' heuwelves eervtredtile gun powder. And o It would be with all in' rumen! 9, attainments and a eomplHh-niento XEW no'r in Sprint trimmtn-j iry tmm and ont'iiitrt ui(j is found in irviltn frinyt- It mat tithtr match the r.loth o, ih garment or be ticrf t'n ccn trasling rnlnr. It was Beer who Introduced tlu; woolen fringe aa a decoration for the spring dress and suit. Sometimes the fringe ex actly matches the cloth of tho garment or It may Incorporate a bit of color. uch as green, dull yellow, terra cotta or old blue In a fringe of black or dark blue. As Illustrated In the sketch, the fringe is used to define the slightly diagonal earn of the skirt front and to border the hem. Thla hem. by the way, I cut shorter In front than at the back and th profile view assume a decided cutaway contour. The blouse has the narrow shoulder lines which fashion haa offered an an alternative to the broad epaulette ef A ..Iff ,11. ri in ii s ii in i U- V?.V ' U S Ml I'll III I Ml f i Things Not Learned at School By GARRETT P. 8ERVISS. "How can tho sign of the electricity on a charged body be determined by means of the electroscope ?-J H." First charge th electroscope with, say, postttv electricity, which would be pro duced by a glass rod rubbed with silk. Then bring the charged body near th knob. If the charge la posi tive the gold leaves 1 of the electroscope. a.icarty standing apart, will diverge atlll more; but If the charge is nega tive they will tend to close up. "When th full moon shows - Just' above the horlaon it looks much larger than when It I directly overhead, and yet it ia the some distance, away. What ia tb cause 1 A. C." ' It Is an optical Illusion, due to th preseno of a great number of visible ob. Ject on th earth, lying at various dist ances between the eye and the horiaun, whksh have th effect of making th horlaon appear te be at a greater diet ancs thaa the aenlth. Owing to tha re flection of light from the atmosphere and tb clouds tb sky appears to us in the form of a material dome or vault, the center of which Is called th senlth. The top of this sky-vault seems nearer than rts borisoa edges for the reason Juat mentioned, vis., that the eye finds no Intermediate objects stretching away, one behind tha othsr to produce, by perspec tive, an apparent prolongation of th dlstanoe. Thla being su. It follows tthat whoa w see the moon poised on the horiaoa we Instinctively Judge Its distance to be greater than wben It la seen In the sky-vault overhead. In consequence of this error In Judging dUtanoo the form of the moon on the horlaon seems to loom Into extraordinary dimension. As a matter of fact. ta moo it actually sub tends a greater angular diameter when It 1 overhead than when It 1 on th horlsoa, because In the former case It Is nearly 4.000 miles nearer the observer. This kind of optical Illusion la often encountered, and It sometimes produce alarming as well as amusing effects. I was once an astonished victim of auch a deception while standing on th sum mit of Mount EXna and looking off across the Medlterraneas, cVa. X number of far-distant sailing vessels approaching the eastern coast of Hlcliy on the sky blue water looked to me like kites float ing in the air, a mile ur mors from the mountain, until a sulda readjustment fect brought about by war habiliments, and as the latter have not proved becom ing to every type of woman. It ia aome comfort to be able to elect the con trary kind and still be a la mode. Hlch collars are gradually being dis placed by rolling neckwear. Insuring a considerable degree of comfort as the spring . season moves forward to greet summer. As Indicated In the picture, the collar 1 of white organdy bordered with French blue, and this combination la repeated In th vestee and in the tin deraleeve. The latter I cut rather wide through tho wrist, after th manner of the bishop adaptation advocated thl season by Paris. of th focu of ray eyes banished the Il lusion. Among Edgar A. Poe' stories I one very much to the present purpose, en titled "The Sphinx." The Imaginary victim of Illusion In this case is dis mayed by the sudden appearance on the opposite shore of the Hudson river of a gigantic monster, which turns out to be nothing but a minute Insect, the six teenth of an Inch In length, wriggling its way on a Invisible spederweb, cover ing the window-pane, within a atxtenth of an Inch of the frightened observer' eye "Are there any astronomical mean of positively ascertaining which of the seven days is the last day of the week? a W. a." The week is not one of the natural di vision of time, like the dy (measured by the earth's rotation on Ita axis); the n,onth (measured by the moon' revolu tion around th earth), and the year (measured by the earth's revolution around the sun). Nevertheless, the seven day period called a wee ha been in use from th tiro immemorial. The names of the day of the week and the order of their occurrence ar of unknown, but probably astrological, origin. Th names are based on those of the sua and the moon and th ftv planet known to the anclenta (excluding th earth). Sunday la the aun'a day; Mon day, th moon' day; Tuesday Mar's day; Wednesday Mercury's day; Thursday Jupiter day; Friday Venus' day, and Saturday 8aturn' day. The question of the order In which the day stand In the weekly round la historical, not scien tific. The sun' day seems always to have led the procession, and Hatcrn's to have ended It, but nobody knows exactly why. Plutarch, even in hi etime, won dered why the order of the days of the week had not been made lo foUow that of the distances of the planets. Very likely the variation was based upon some astrological superstition. The early Christians sdopted the week as they found it, almpiy changing th name of th un'a day to th Lord's Day. Do You Know That Ore y bounds belong to on of the oldest known types of dug. Ths first English field marshal was ereated ao long as ITS. Thar ar ftv person to each bouse on aa average in Ireland. Croat, or four-penny pieces, wore last coined ia Orest Britain la 161 Two women constables hav been ap pointed by th oorporattna of Boatharop- too. ' By JANE M'lEAX. H picked a star to follow, high Above it glimmered frosty, cold: And yet it warmed the quiet gky PecauB" his errant heart wag bold. He wove hi dreams about it. till It stood for all he Hanging aloft, remote Bearing its message The day he, conquering, leaped to fame The star burned brighter, grew apace Touching his life, his dreams with flame. He knew It for a woman's face. Part Work Ought to Manhood and By DR. CHARLF.S n. PRKHURST. This article Is addressed to young men I and youi.g women who work for a living, ! and its object Is to indicate to them the part which wcrk plays cr ought to play In u eloptnK In tl-em a fine and effective style of manhood and womanhood. Work is not ai re njfed for in the divine economy be cause Qod needs to hne It done, but be cause He knows we need to have It to do. The fact should be conceded that work, in itelf considered, Is neither moral nor i m m o rn.1, religious nor irreligious. That, however. In no way counts ' against thia other fact that It 2 m J' A i ' ' - :0" I'lays a recognlxably large role in the economy of life, and stands In direct relation to human char acter and to the achievement of character. The flrot gift beet owed upon Adam was the gift of employment. Th only change consequent upon ' his expulsion ' from the garden was that before expul- slon he accepted the work gratefully, and after expulsion perspired under It grudg 'lngly. But before, as well a after. It 1 wa ordained to be an essential element In the scheme for human upbuilding and Infilling. t Faul's word I that "If a man will not work neither shall he eat." To work, however, merely with a view to earning a living, extracts from work Ita principal significance. It certainly helps t keep out and body together but there is no observable advantage In being kept to gether unless ooul is going to win some thing by the arrangement. Ufa has it animal aide, undoubtedly, and deserve a certain amount of sec ondary respect- We feel for that restless and dissatisfied element of .the com munity that - complains of its lack of creature comforts; but our sympathy would take a different complexion, and be possessed of somewhat more warmth, if it wer more vtdent that while there i wanted (and needed) a fuller participa tion In bodily satisfactions, there were at least equally desired an opportunity to come to one's beat ia those respects wherein a man Is something more than a human body. This method, therefore, of handling tho question of work Involves us in no econ omic problem. It has nothing to do with what work yields in the shape of wages. For work means something more and quite other than the, dollars a man car ries home after a day' toll. It doe not always, hut it ought to. For. saving nothing of the fact that ' a man who labors only for the money that is given him In return Is a poor workman, the more serious fact la that. If laboring with that spirit, he misses the very purpose that was In God's mind in putting him in a workaday world. It Is tor that reason that tena of thousand of our young men and young women, who labor ten hour a day, five and a half days a week, and fifty weeks In the year, have nothing to show for it all, so tar as relates to the benefits in tended to accrue to them by the original divine Institution of an economy of labor. Some of you voeng people, snd perhaps older ones, have never thought of it in that way. More Is the pity. Tou hav though only of the wage aide of the transaction. There is no exception to be taken to waes. That the laborer Is worthy f 1.1s hire Is good, scripture. But wages. If that ia all that hae resulted to you from your work, leaves you at the end of the year where you were when the year began, with only enough com ing to you in the way of board and lodg ing, clotnes and the like to keep you on your Job. WJiat is the advantage really of tolling through twenty, forty, fifty years of lolioioiis existence and eomfn? out at the end personally untouched and unbettered by a quarter of naif century of wearinees and wear? A young man ia given a place in an Advice to Lovelorn : By BSATBZOa rilUiX "Os Mere Cksse. Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young girl of 17. I know a man of U. I have a girl friend that my friend does not like. He ) lias told me not to chum with her. Eight months sgo this girl and I went out. We i met two vouiul men and went to a cafe. When my gentleman friend found out , he aald he would not keep company with me any onger. . About three days ago I went out with j the same girl and I old the sum thing. , I pleaded with him to try me one more I and he said to aak you if he should aive j me one more chance. W. H. u D. j Your actions war exceedingly wrong, j You must give up the girl whose in flu- ; enca you are not strong enough to resist. ; I advta your friend to bo loyal to you I and give you another chants, .but more ( strongly still I advise you to be worthy of his faith in you. What vots arc doing may easily wreck your whole life. Prom ise yourself that It will never happen again and keep your word to yourself I to. I hoped to and still, frostily. Play in Developing Womanhood office. After a while, some years per haps, he comes to me and says, "Tou have some influence with employers, cannot you recommend me to some posi tion where I can better myself and be in the line of promotion?" "How long have you been where you are?" "Half a dozen year." "No, I cannot. What you have been doing these years is probably this: Tou have gone into the office at 9 o'clock; not any before 9 unless your watch hap pened to be fast. At 4, or 4:, you left the office, not any later than that unless your watch happened to be slow- Iu the meantime you did chores for your employer, or what amounted to that; so many choree so many dollars. That I r,v iv it, tenures ana aouars, mor in your pocket, but no more in you. "leaving out of account the dollars some of which you probably spent In a silly way there has been no addition msde to you personally that would not have been made to a machine if any machine had been Invented that would be suited to that kind of work." In reply to that he says, by way ol explanation, that when he took th posi tion he was put at ths very bottom grade of service. Surely th bottom is the only suitable place for a novice to be put. The bottom, well occupied. Is th only place that make fair candidacy for at taining th top. There is good Scripture tor that if he chances to be familiar with the Bible; and I would adduce to him instances of men who began low and are now at the summit He meets that by urging that they were men of exceptional talents, and that he haa no talents. "Evidently, and you will not have them till you earn thorn." I tell hfm. "Tou are, Just as small a man today and aa empty, snd living a shallow a life as you were six years ago. Tou have been In a business house where business meant a great deal, business which, In its connections reached perhaps dear across the continent, and which Involved problems of manufacture and finance sufficiently exacting to tax the brains of the wisest and the sagacity of the most clever. And you have been satisfied sim ply to pocket your stipend. , "Practically you have been a chore boy, of the same order a the watchman and th scrubwoman. Tou have not touched the business or let It touch you. Tou hav not been crowded, upon by Ita Immense and significant pressure. The problems involved In It you have made no attempt to solve for - yourself. Yo't are at th bottom, and that I precisely where you belong, unless your employer can find some subterranean spot better adapted to your lackadaisical tempera ment." Two or three adldtlonal matters along the same line wilt be deferred to our next article. HOW VU AVOID OPERATIONS By Taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Oayeland. Ohio "My left ld pained ma to for several years that I expected w nave to undergo an opera tion, but tha first bottle I took of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound relieved me of the pains in my side and I continued ita use until I became regular and free from pains. I had asked several doc tors if there was anything I could take to help me and they said there was nothing that they knew of. I am thankful for such a good medicine and will always give it the highest praise.' Mrs. C. H. Griffith, 15&J Constant St, Cleveland, Ohio. Hanover, Pa." I suffered from fe male trouble and the pains were so bad at times that I could not sit down. The doctor advised a severe operation but my husband got me Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I experienced great relief in a short time. Now I feel like a new person and can do a hard day's work and not mind it. What Joy and happiness It is to be well once more. I am always ready and willing to spealc a good word for the Compound." Mrs. Ada Wilt, 303 WalnutSt, Hanover, Pa. If tnere are air com pllrat loss yoa do not nnderstaad write te LrCia I.. Piakhaaa Xedlcine te. ( road Jea till) Lyaa,Mass. lour letter will be epeaed, read and answered by a wemaa aal keld la strict confidence i