TIIE Rffi: OMUIA, MONDAY, SKITKMHER 13, 1915. Hie. Bees omae Maazitie Pa V On Appearances Fable About the Woman Who Tried and What It iTaughtHer : : r "Good Fishing Weather11 P.vXKLTi IiKIXKLEY 8 e "e" " Copyright. 1915. Int l. News Service. " I ' jSl-- 1 Hy AXX LISLE. There wils once "a woman who found herself suddenly thrown on her own re source. Fortunately, the resources were there. She sold aJl that had made her Ufa beautiful and decorative and took the proceeds to buy useful things that In turn she might sell these and earn a livelihood therewith. Out of the wreck she kept but one ex pensive thing- very beautiful and won derful fur coat which her husband had riven her In the days before Ms life and his fortune had terminated abruptly. The woman had a little baby to sup port and the only mana she found avail able was to so up to the wilds of Canada and Introduce a line of knit food to the shopkeepers there. The fur coat, she felt, would save her from colds and pneumonia which might endanger her own life and so her baby's means of support and life as well. Besides, she was quits sura that the charming appearance the fur coat would enable her to make, however cheaply she was clad underneath, would be distinctly an asset to her business. j no ursi town to wnlcn she cams housed a Urge store which her employer had told her was rood for a thousand dollar order and a 10 per cent commis sion to her. She went In to see the pro. pnetor. and could not quits decide whether he admired her sweaters and shawls and baby jackets or whether his admiration was M for her beautiful fur coat Finally, after he had examined her Koods thoroughly, he told her to re turn the next day when he would have made his choice between her line and that of a competitor. The woman had no doubt of success, for the competitor's In was Inferior In quality and equal In price. The next day shs returned, confident of success. Bald the kindly proprietor f the Canadian emporium: "I gave that tier poor devil the order. He needed I o much worse than you. I realised ih.it an order Ilka mine couldn't mean i Hirh to a woman who had a coat Ilka ni;r!" The woman went back to her cold I 'e! bedroom and flung herself across I- ld sobbing and quit heedless of i...ter she crumpled her coat or not. 1 ho next day In another ancient town, ' Kt an order. But sha went after I irrsd In a SUM black broadoloth she had bought In a bargain run j "nt. ' hrn the got back to New Tork sha . her real cost for just half Its value, '!t cost me a lot, and It lost mi a let, .1 " It taught me a lot," said aha. ,- MORAL When skim milk masquerade I a crenm, peops who arc used to a frugal ; 't may be afraid of It. Do You Know That Olass coffins have been found In Eng land. The battle of Waterloo hours. lasted eight The United States provides more than half of the world's total production of copper. Half an hour of the gooscstep does as much .for the muscles of the leg as halt a Cay's route marching. In the f lords on the Norway coast the clesrness of the water Is wonderful, f nail objects may be seen at a depth of twenty-flva to thirty fathoms. flFTER SUFFERING TWO LONG YEARS IV.'. Aselin Wtu Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pink hara Vegetable Compound. Ulnn.es poils, Minn. -r-" After my little one was born I was sick with pains in .my tides which tha doctors said ware caused by inflamma tion, . J. suffered a great deal every month and erew very thin. I was under tha doctor's care for two long years without any benefit. Finally after repeated sug gestions to try it we rot I.vrlla F. link. barn's Vegetable Compound. After tak ing the third bottle of the Compound I was able to do my housework and today I am strong and healthy again. I will answer letters ir anyone wishes to know about my case." Mrs. Joseph Abeun, CoO Fourth Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. Lydia E. FlnVham'a Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herb, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and today holds the record of being the most successful remedy we know for woman's ills. If you need such o medicine why don't you try It T If yoa bT the slightest doubt that LydU K. Pink ham's Vegetal Lie Compound will help you,wrlte to Lydia ILlMnkharuMedlclneCo, (confidential) Lynn,Ma8- for ad vice. Your letter will be opened, read and ans wered by a woman Caul Lcld la strict cotifLiczcc. 1 . M The lawyer squirms in his turning chair till he ran get a glim pee of the Summer sky and the remote silver of the bay. Observing the soft gray sky and the soft gray water and soft southern wind, he mourns, "Great guns! This is great fishing weather! The big fel How I By DOROTHY OIX. I Tha bureau of publlo welfare of Chi cago has been making an exhaustive study of tha problem of wife desertion. The result of their Investigation shows that men are not apt to leave their wives If the wife is: Ills' and strong and healthy. 1 If she la a good , cook. It she Is sweet , tempered, helpful. , Interested and af fectionate. If there are chll- j dren In the family. j If the husband Is i a man earning' a i email salary. ' On tha other hand, husband de sertion Is sn ever present peril to tha wife who Is: I HicKiy ana physically weal. Is extravagant, sherwlsh and untidy. Is over critical and nagging. If thi-r are no children, j If the husband Is a large money earner. This report contains much food for .thought for all women, because It squares ' with common experience and observa tion. Also, because It gives a tip to every wife who has sense enough to take one, on how to keep her husband happy and eontented. and from wishing (that ha had the courage to duck and run. For, believe me, dear ladles, not every man Is a wire deserter who would like to be one, or who at various time has contemplated being one. So your danger Is greater than you think. ad It's up to you to take out a little be. stand Insur ance by taking to heart the garnered wisdom of this report on the why of wife desertion. The first thing about It that strikes one Is that It turns a searchlight on the y. . ' . - -X. to Keep a Husband exceeding humanness of husbands which Is a thing that the average woman never takes Into consideration. She regards a husband as either a little tin god or a brute. She expects him to be either a iupmian who will not be lrrltatt-d by hr own fullle and weaknesses, or notice whether the cooking Is good or bud. or else she suts him down as a mean. grouchy tyrant who will find fault no matter what she does. All this Is far and away from the truth. The average husband Is just a plain, everyday sort of a man, who wants things comfurtabls at home, who desires to be met when he comes home at nUht by a bright, cheerful, chummy vile, who Isn't above haiullng hi in out plenty of soft soap aud Jollying him along, ami who sets him down to a good dinner In a tidy house. Given all those thti'gs. and especially when there Is a strong tie of rarenthood to bind a ntan and woman together, and the danger of a husband deserting his wrfe Is almost negligible. That Is what this report means. liefore marriage, beauty and grace and fine clothes may attract a man, but after marriage It Is good nature, and sympathy, and chserful companionship that holds him. The man who la married to a woman who meets all the exlgeocles of life with fortitude and philosophy, who knows how to make allowances for his faults and fallings and who never throws his nils takes up to htm. couldn't be dragged away from ber side by wild horses. Nor do you ever hear of men' asking for divorces from wives who are eracksr Jack cooks, and who make heme a elace of peace and rest Man's matrimonial Ideal U expressed In Mrs. Boffin's favorite motto, "Oh, Lord, let's be comfortable! Do!" On the contrary, just as the woman who Is amlabls and thrifty and efficient, grapples her husbsnd to her with hooks of slel, so the woman who Is shrswiah lows are biting today like so many away. Great fishing weather!" But there's an angler who right bait, that's all. Of course. a quirky little fellow with curls and nagging and wasteful and extrava gant and a bad cook and manager. Is In danger of rosing hers. For my part I have never blamed the man who was married to k vixen and whose whole life wss spent to an accom paniment of recrimination and reproaches from leaving her. Also I have ever felt that when a man gets a wife so laxy and trifling that she will not learn to cook and keep house decently that the law should give him the right to dump her back on her par ents, on the ground that they have palmed off an Inferior grade of goods on him. lie's been flim-flammed. That more men do riot do this, and that so many men stick by the bad matri monial bargains they Lave made and go en enduring a married life that Is an earthly purgatory, when there are a doxen railroad trains out of every city on which they could fade away and leave j their miseries behind them. Is one of the greatest proofs of the Inherent no bility of humanity thst I know. But It's one that wives should not take too many liberties with. There Is one other significant point In the Welfare Research committee's report on the wife deserter that should be a comfort to poor women and that Is that the lack of money often means the cxn tlnued possession of a husband. For one thing, the very struggle that a poor couple make to get along brings them very close together and gives them a mutual Intereat that holds a family In tact. For another, the man who has not money to spend Is out of ths sons of temptatioo of the adventuresses, who pursue every rich man; so ths poor woman stands a better chance of hold ing her husband than the rich one. On the whole, the report of the Wel fare committee la full of hope, for It shows thst ail that a woman aa to do to keep her husband Is to be cheerful and amiable herself, and feed him well, and keep him poor. All of which any .woman tau do especially ths last Item. pet kittens. If I only could get doesn't need "weather." Just the Summer-time's the best time. She's and a child-smile, and a tongue of Gigantic GAUKKTT P. SKHVISS. "Which atsr has the greater area, Birluc or L'apellaT Also, pleuse give dimension of both. Oerard Uolding. Chicago." The- "area," or d.sk, of no star U visible, even with the must powerful tele- '"J'""'. "1 scopes. -no siai ft he are all so remo . v r " that they becon. mere points of Ugh slthough these point ere virtually magn fled Into spurious i seeming disks of dll fraction of the light The larger the telt scope the smaller th spurious disk of star with ths sam - magnifylns powe But tha star look brighter with the larger telescope, be cause more of Its light is concentrated In Its telescopic Image. The differences of brightness slmilsrly affect the naked eye, and the brighter the star the larger it looks although In every case the real diameter of the star subtends an angle too small to be visu ally appreciated-. But there Is an Indirect method of estimating the probable slxe of various stars, which gives some very Interest ing results. By taking Into account both the relative distance and tha relative brightness we can determine the actual amount of light emitted by any star whose distance Is measurable by using the sun as a standard. To Illustrate ! this method, take the two stars that you Inquire about Slrlus and Capelia. To our eyes Birlus appears about five times as bright as Capelia. but this Is an illusory superiority, due to the fact that Capelia Is much more distant than Slrlus. If they were at an equal dis tance Capelia would far outshine Slrlus. According to the best estimates, Capela la about KM time more luminous thaa I IM,I If honey, and a .way of looking up in a "fish's" face that says, "My, but you know a lot most everything, don't you?" and with a soft little heart on her bent pin she draws them in one by one! She snaps her fingers at "fishing weather!" What does that matter when you know the bait for any weather! NELL BRINKLEY. Size of Some of the sr. and Slrlus only 40 times. Hen . the principle on which such calculation rest: First, coiuuare. b means of careful measurements, the imount of light that we receive from, he star In question with the amoun. eccived from the sun. The comparison !s not easily made, and the results ob- lined by different observers vary rathe, widely. But we may take as fairly ac curate the estimate wh.ch makes the light received on the earth from Hlrlus rine-sevcn-thousand-niilllonth of that re ceived from the sun. Now, the distance it Sirius Is about &30.UUO times the dis tance of the sun, snd If both were qua) In actual luminosity then the sun st SIriua's distance, ought to appear just as bright as Slrlus. Remembering that light varies Inversely ss the square of the distance, let us cal culate how br'ght the sun would be at 630,000 times its present distance. The square of UO.Ufc) is. In round numbers. Snap-Shots Li Common sense msy tell you when to begin, but It takes judgment to know when to stop. Common sense counsels many an un ro mantle woman to save her love letters. Her lawyer may need them some day. Common sense keeps men from fltrtiiuc with widows. They find It quite unneces sary. Common sense doesn't kcVo some people fmm mivtwim KAn.uluA- . . ... . .. . I ... vw -m 7 uui wiivn from being sold! Common sense ought to keep men from arguing wtih women. If the eternal ' feminine Is right, man loses: If she I. wrong, she weeps and then how can he win r the Stars j0,000,0u0,000, which, taken Inversely, shows that the light of the sun, at the distance of Slrlus, would be reduced to only one 2$0-thousand-m.Ulionth of Its present amount. But Slrlus, at that same distance, gives one t-thousand-mllllonth of the sun's present light, whence It fol lows that irlus must be. In reality, 380 divided by 7, or 0 times more luminous than the sun. sTo form some Idea of the slxe of the stars, or the area of their surfaces, we must begin by making an assumption concerning their surface brightness as compared with that of the sun, per unit area. Suppose, for simplicity's sake, that we assume thst the arrlount of light emitted from each square mile of Slrlus is the same as that from each square nine oi me sun. Then, since tna total luminosity of Slrlus is 0 times the sun's, and since the areas of circles vary as the square root of 40, which Is about H one of the circles, the disk of Slrlus, Is 40 times greater In area than the other), the daineter of Slrlus must be the square root of 40, which la about ( 1-1 times the diameter of the sun. This would matks Slrlus about f.i&.OUO miles In diameter. But there are many reasons for thinking that the luminosity of the surface of Slrlus, area per area. Is much greater than that of the suns surface, so that It la probable that It exoeeds the sun In slxe fsr less than the caioula tlon .'ust made would Indicate. In the case of Capelia, however, we have a star whose constitution appears to resemble very closely that of the sun, and we can. with mora eonftdenoe, make the assumption that Its surfaos brilliance equals the sun's per unit area. Then, applying the . same calculation again, we find thst tha dl ella should be the square root of 9U0 (the number of times It exoseds the sun In tout luminosity) times the diameter of the sun. The square root of M Is about 14. which makes the Boaaible diameter of the star CaneUa Marly 12.kW.0U0 salles. ) i