rn T11K nM.MIA , .,M0; DAY. (M T )'VAl i, ini:. the Bees Motiie Magazine Pae MMMMt",SjW',,,M'"'"awBMfcBlwlg"WSWSSWBiaS M I . World Inside the . Atom What Is a Pretty Girl? V iL D n 1 Repubbshed by Special Arrangement 1IU1U UIC 1 alio UpeilliJgS X with Harper's Bazar. : ir (UimKTT r. he it via. Thl la the aeconj of a aerlra of three articles written apeclally for thia page by the creator of the un rivalled Harrison Fisher glrla. Editor. By HARIMHON' FISIIKH. A great many person don't know how to Judge a pretty girt. The reason la that they have a mind of the nilcroaoop o kind, that seek a for blemlahesv The only Just way to Judge whether a girl la beautiful, or poaeeaaea that lesser degree of beauty which la prettlneea, ia, first, whether her face la balanced; sec ond, whether her figure la symmetrical. Personally. I am opposed to accepting Those Who Live in By BEATKJCE FAIRFAX. "The past waa goodly once, and yet, when all la aIJ. The best of It we know la that it's done and dead Duty and work and Joy these things It cannot give; And the present la life, and life la good to live. . lt H lie where It fell, far from the living suii. The past, thHl goodly once, ia gone and dead and done. HENLKT For all who live the time la now; the day la lier, and oppirtunty )- ahead. Why then gr'eve over things In the paet '.hat we, may. well wish uiUo..e, but that aj'as q ' T1 I today but you have a ri II JJ leme to face today, and I'f VI TV H 0,',lrnc, ru n attentl l (f- Vl II V i H U M tu worry over the way ai ' U day's situation. t!"""-A'tVjf A I teeterday la finished. I -: tint knHlln. von Ma unr. certainly docs heal eczema Inourfiteot reports, covering a rttMl rI twenty year-, literally tlicutunila ( ihysicuirtt tell tnw aucrcssiui the Rcs- um4 treatment is hircccnu and similar skin tnxibli-s. The firrt ue jI'Ki.iiv4 Ointment and Reiinol &tapuaually stoisj the hxhing and burning, and thev Soon clear away atl trace of the eruHion No txher treatment i"i the 'ori nuw eUxi Die puMic can gliuw guch a recurd of pro(cbrutl aiiruval fx.U br at 4rv.rf.tt. for tril bt wrtM ts 1m, i.m4, Uiiiuu Ma, t ptf A ' "Tkla la era a of mr ( ' prttleet," Mr . Mr, FUhvr. the mnona of the ancient O reek a. 1 have to be convinced that they had any more authority for Baying that a body should be ao long, shoulders ao wide, a foot ao broad, than have we moderns. The Iruth la om of the work of the old masters were, ao far aa the aubjirta were con cerned, atrocloua. I have never a n t'Kl'er worn, n than those whose portrait were done by some of the mastera. ' Wtnoked" ham" my father haa called II. cm. aa we mt'de our way down a gal lery corridor Ixavoctlng ahiiia worka of art. In other worda, I am of the opinion that It la possible for an artist of today to have too much reverence for the old niaatera. For Instance, I aay very for ell our wishing are accomplished facta? If the man who la atrlrken with blind nrae were, to alt and grlet4 over the fact Itself Instead of trying to adjust hlmaelf to new condltlona and to leara to uae hla other senses to take the place (aa far aa poaslhlc) of the one he has lost, would not hla life become desolate? It I only in adjusting yourself to the condlt'ona of your present circ umstancea whatever they are that there Ilea any rhanre of your finding life worth living. Ycaterday'a Mumlrra belong to yeaterday along with yesterday's hopea and tears. Because those hopes and fvarf and blunders were part of your experience yeaterday, you may, be a Title different today but you have a new eet of prob- you must not attention front them i'ou met yester- Testerday la finished. It la not a p'ece ) ......... w i, uii . , ... uu w.r. nature. Tou cannot atop flower from eotn tig If certain aeeda are planted and Advice to Lovelorn : 'I tent !." frttiM Mr. Dear Miss Fairfax: I have been keeo- i i In ioi.i.iiy with a young man fur a j-ur ..d a haii. He conns rvsu.a.iy to (tie houHe. but alwaya wishes to ronnlu In the par. or tnsir.id of go.ng out (r e.t- ju)iiiiiiU 1 fai lo ask In m to take in i ou:. as be supports . Is mother and llitle I k..:. .v but aix nds It all w.ih the boys. II us often spuaoii of aflecilon (r n.a. but for thla ion I t atm oi be li ve It to be true. io yiu really t.ilnk 1 oi);ht to le main wlih l.im. and baa he any affection for toe?" CNLUCeiMCD. A man who supports hla mother and young brother can have very (.ttle motuy j to spend for ploaeure. Tou must never dream of asking aay luaa t take you frankly that I think the Mona IJaa ugly. It to a form of anobbery that found tx- , preaalon In the widespread professed ad- , r. . T 1 ,cu- ,," " , ' Uaa-a Ion nose and aly smite are not iiumrif i ku wumuwv . - w. n.. around that Mona Llaa waa the work of a maeter everyone profeaaed to Intensely admire It. It la not fair to measure a modern girl by the old standard. We should Judge her by whether the impreaalon made by har face la that of harmony, of balunoe. Personally, I admire the tilted noae, and t have a right to my opinion. The personal element entera -r ' ,V.hry 1 .IT.' ' lt"tnaynotbejnorethan6ntwenty- ! V.T0 V.r .V n""J hat tUr"'tm",,on-mlll,nt ' " th up .lightly at the tip give, piquancy to of atom mucB e two.hun. the face. Accordingly, until I change j dred-and-flfty-mllllonth of an Inch. If my mind, my plcturei , of girl, wll have j th corhcU the that characterise. And a face la not ; ,t be, ta ooo tlmea aa great In diameter l. T V ""u " ln"1 I ' v. m iiu, un irm bii i no viner turea ara aquiline knd ao do not match. It doea not matter what the type of face, .whether .oval, ,,, . i qullln or nearly :r.d: 'f ".,t:v',.th.! 'rzn - tlve. If one feature la out of harmony. If It spoils the balance, It will mis beauty. 'And k of the figure. It may be avelte or plump, tall or short. It doea not mat- ter what the plan of .Ita building iro-!he ivlded It has correct proportions. , the Past ferllllsed-you cannot prevent weeda from ' ror,n ,ven cuemlcal compound." There springing up under certain condltlona. ar m" 'hty different chemical ele But learning what producea flower and ntJ- -nt oonaequently tome eighty dlf- what weeda, you can be careful about the condltlona you produce. So with your yeaterdaye. They pro duced certain th nga. Don't worry about them uselessly. lkn't let your past he a ghost to haunt you. Instead, uae It aa a bit of experience on which to build a better future. Perhapa you are ashamed of your paat. But shame won't be a factur for future growth If you merely wallow in the murk of w hat you wish had not I ecu. J. hat been. You have not your yeaierday tj live over and better. Hut your today you have now, and your tomorrow eu wfll have aoon, and there la nothing In your paat ta prevent your living them well. Don t repeat your past blunders. Hit Ao more must you dwell on them in memory. (Jive your attention to making your today and. 'tomorrow ao splendid that your yeaterday In the great lalaiu-e of lira will he outweighed and will not count. oyt thai suggestion must com from the man, not the glil. i . eW a Mevottclllatlam. iear Mia Kalrtax ., I am in love l h V youiu man. siu I know n carea a A .l..U 1 t. t,i. ll a . ,.l u ...lurP..l Wr h.id llm nut luokrn fur ,,. time H,.i K ..f 1 ' to bmic. Iut neltnAr n,n wil. ap.loa-iae firs. J on want to bw hia love, but 1 wt I. .in to MriluaUe b.-la.v t aj; tit tne c.rcu nsta' ca it la on y iitni um ii snot. in. nnti win i ao .o bt.ng I. Iiu back l.inet ANXlUl 8. Iiurt let falae pridw aland In your way. It I a fine thing to be the first to ak pardon f-r a fault. Ha will admire y iu all the more It you are woiuaa enoash to say, "l am - ' "To what rxtont la matter discon tinuous? I have honid It said that molecule a rnmpnsrwl of only a few chemically elemental atoma; and, again, that It la mad" tip iiiiiunH or mun, each Isolated to a remarkable degree. Which view U right? ia the hypo thetical electron ruppoacd to bear the yams relation to the atom aa th atom doea to tho moUou!e? If a molecule, of water, for example, com lnlMoa only two atoma of hydrogen and one df oxy- ' ' "v f ' 4 ft; :J1 aen. where la the Inter-atomlc apace of which we hear so much? Or la there r distinction between the chemical atom and the phyalcal atom? "EDWIN SUTHERLAND. "New York." When the man of science tore Into the realm, of atoma, molecules, electron, all of which are Individually too amall I to be aeen, ha finds hlmaelf wandering. like the hero of the "Pilgrim's rroirreia," throtiKh obaolute darkneaa, amid, pltfalla and ulna that beaet hja feet on every l aide, and with confusing demons whis pering misleading suggestions and falae analoglea Into hla eara. Ha has nothing but hla Imairlnatlon, trained by the re sults of experience ana obaervatlon In the visible and tangible world, to guide him. The remit la that hla deflnltlfina of the things that he ftnda, or aeema to find, although they may perfectly describe hla own Impression, appear, sometimes, contradictory, or unconvincing, to the average man who only read about that marvellous underworld of the atom. Hence auch queatlona aa those aaked e.bovo. . And the confusion haa . been vaatly Increased in consequence of the discovery that the atom tnatead of be Injr, aa waa formerly thought, a almple, Indivisible particle, the amallaat possible portion Into which any matter can be divided, la.' in fact, a complex object, made j up of very much mailer particle, called electrons. A vivid conception of the. real nature of an atom, ao far aa Ita complexity of structure la concerned, la conveyed by a remark of Prof. Rowland that "a grand ; piano la a very almple meohanlam com pared, aay, with an atom of iron." The atom, then, la not m eolld particle, but an organism, or ays tern, composed of discontinuous parta, L e porta whloh do not touch, or preaa upon one another, an.1 tK nmr ta m 1 . a TITt. rv of th 0- ,W(( M &tom occupied by the electrons, which are bo- ,eve(J t n 0,a,e8, -vomuo,, of What we do know la that the mass, or weight, of an electron la about one-thoua-andth of that of an atom of hydrogen, whloh la the lightest atom known. But thla does not tell ua exactly what the electron's also la, because we do not know Its relative density. Howvex, by cal culations baaed on the eiectrlo charge borne by the electron its else haul been i approximately estimated. In this way it . haa been found that th sl-maUp -. aa an electron. At thla ratio of diameters it would take 50u,O0O,000 electrons to pack an atom full. - . Tlllt It t ..tlm.t.J . 1 . , 1 ----- tnm-,tu viiAfc ilia lljrurosen --,.,. ., , ., " . .i...; ;r ;0 ; aa mercury not more than i0u,0o Thua we aee that there la an abundance (V "open room" -inside the atom. . Sir Oliver Lodge haa made a striking comparison showing the amount of room In an atom. Imagine an ordinary church, says, to be an atom of hvdroin Tha electrons constituting It will be mors. sented by about l.Ooo grains of sand, each of the sixe of a. printer's period, , or full point (.), dashing In all direction or rotating with inconceivable velocity and filling the whole interior of the church with their tuinultuoua motion. Next above the atom cornea the mole cule, Hy the term moleoule Is meant the "smallest combination of atoma that will ferent kind of atoms. But there are thousands of clfemical compounds, each made up of a number of chemical ele ments whose atoma un'te to form the molecule eompoalng the compound. Un fortunately )n physic the term molecule la sometimes used In such a way aa to rauae confusion with the atom. Now, Juat aa the electrona eompoalng the atoms are free to move and are far from being crowded together, pr In direct . touch with one another, so the molecules compos ng any common bit of matter, auch aa a piece of wood or of paper, have ' free apace between them and are In con. j ttnual motion, circulating around and among one another and in certain case having mutual collisions. I From all that haa been Bald above. It bei.oi..s clear that even the most dense ' and "sol.d" bodies , hat we .have any experience of, such, for Instance, as a n.asa of pure gold, are by no means Con tinuous In their Internal atructuro. It la because of tha coaraeneaa of our sense bnpiesalons that they seem solid to us. If we could look at a cannon ball with mlcroacop c eyea. magnifying billions of i lametera, the maaa of metal would die- I solve Into a diaphanous hase composed : . of vibrating molecules, madt. up of re- j volvlng atoma ' constituted from dancing, electrona; a ad all of them tha moieculea i - lit the maaa of Iron, the atoms in the ! molecule and tha ecti-an in the atoms . would be seen to have an abundance ! 'of room around them In which to per- ! form their unendUig gyratlona. ! In short, all matter la discontinuous In it. t.itui. .n.1 h la n.'.v tha Itm t.tlnns I" "f tnrnstia insi um ua iu uiin 01 (anybody aa being a eontlnuoua soil' UVe may aqueea the moieculea of a sub ' , . . ... , stance closer together, and then we w.ll timely heat it, for the molecular vlbra tlona increase In quickness with the re striction of the space, but there Is no reason to think that we could ever force two molecules Into absolute contact, or that we could compress aa atom Into a smaller cotriaaa "Mere fascinating than ever is the verdict of buyers who .attended the millinery openings, in Paris this year. I I 1 ill) J ' N : -1 Skunk fur holds down a wreath of ostrich feathers around the crown of the black velvet hat above from Lewis, which is worn with a neckpiece of ostrich feathers and fur to match, while in the crea tion to the right the return of the Prince of Wales feather is heralded by Maria Guy with a model of niarron panne velvet. The feathers of niarron are attached high on the crown. In the model below Jean Castel combines all the warm tones ol autumn in a toque of brown velvet, with leaves of velvet. How Not to Write Love Letters By DOHOTHY D1X. That millionaire out west who la be ing anted for breach of promlae and has got to listen while 3,000 of hla love let- tern are read In court, la up agalnat tli Jimmy thing good and hard. Isn't he?" remarked the stenographer. "If getting- ao that the only safety for a - rich nan la not know ing how to write," ra ponded the book k per, gloomily. "I shouldn't won der If. In : an other genera t Ion, the oonsclentl o u a millionaire parent wouJd be as care ful to keep hla off spring from learn ing how to write aa he would be to keen them from Warning to amoke VfkTr! '' cigarettes, ' "I'm not doping out any aympathy for a lady whoae woundeu heart can be healed with a few ahlnplaatera." con tinued the stenographer, ''and If I were a man, I'd a heap lot rather she got my roll than to get me fbr keeps. Neither am I rooting the man who makea kive and never makes good; but It does look to me that a ease like this would be an awful warning that would nut ke every man take something for the love-letter-writing habit that would be a sure cure, and prevent him from having any crav ing to siip over on paper." -"Juet think of all the 'angels' and 'darlings' and 'precious aones' anl lovey dovey rot .that a fellow writes while he's got the hectic flush on hlin. and how aalnlne It looks and sound when he's cooled off. Oee, but I could weep for pity on the neck of the man who has to listen to his own passe raves" "Well, I wonder that men are Idiotic enough to write 'em," ttptU4 the ate- nographer. "It didn't so much matter when the forsaken damael um-d to gather up her treasured love letters and tie them up with a blue ribbon and a failed rose feud, and put them in a secret drawer of her desk, where she could get thnm out handy when she wanted to weep over them. , "I3ul,, Judging from the number of breach of promise suits where the love missives form Exhibit A, thst Isn't the way young women regard their sweet hearts' letters now. They preserve 'em all light, all right, but when Komeo files the track and balks at the altar, tbey don't waste any brine salting down his written vows of deathless devotion. "Neither do they tie up his letters and put them away among the aad, sweet memories of their lives. "Do you know what makes men wilto these dopey love letter?" Inquired the Bookkeeper. "Because the fool-killer ha knocKed off business," suggested the Slenograi her. "No." replied the Bookkeeper, "It's be cause every man in hia heart bellevea that he is a poet that could have lammel the spots oft of Tennyson if he'd given his mind to writing poetry Inatesd of sell ing groceries. "Now, the average man hasn't got the gall actually to try to manufacture po etry, beside, it would Injure his business standing to have It get out on hl.-n. o he bottlea up all thia flub-dub sentiment In him until he ral's In love and then ne flies it all at the girt. "He don't really mean It at the time, but he'a got a sort of a sentimental Jag en. and the more he writes, the more he wants to write, and the lovelier and the more poetical It aounda to him. 1 tell you, a man's love letters certainly do look good to hlni " "All the same," said the Stenographer, ' If I waa a man and had to write a letter to my dtatant love, I would ait on a cake of Ice while I penned It, and keep It In thf refrigerator for twenty-four hours before I mailed It. "Rlght-O," said the Bookkeeper, "sni you'd save yourself trouble It you did." L y , THIS WOfMif S SICKNESS Quickly Yielded To Lydia E. Pinkham't Vegetable . Compound. Bridgeton, N. J "I want to thank yorj a thousand times lor the wonderful good Lydia E. 1'ink- ham a Vegetable Compound baa dona for me. I suffered very much from a female trouble. I had bearing down pains, waa irregular and at times could lardly walk acrosa Ithe room. I waa tunable to do my Lousework or attend to my baby I waa co weak. Lydia E. Pinkhara'a Vegetable Compound did me a world of good, and now I am strong and healthy, can do my work and tend my baby. I advise all suffering women to take it and get vell as I did." Mrs. F ANNIE COOPER, j E.F.D., Brldgeton, N.J. j Lydia E, Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots ami herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drugs, and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills we know of, and thousands ' of voluntary testimonials on file in tha Tinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to prove this fact. For thirty years it has been the stand erd remedy for female ills, and has ra ctored the health of thousands of women v. ho have been troubled with such ail ments aa displacements, inflammation. IMVVIBUVl WlllUl llllWI lUtB, If you want special advice trrite to Lydia IZ. I'inkliaiu Jlert Iclne Co., ( confidential ) Lynn. t Ilass. Your letter will b opened, . read and answert'd by a mouuq cd Lcld iu btrict '""Otlcucc. t?a wr