* K But on first trying them on he found that he looked too much like a Roman warrior, and he discarded them. This armor that Napoleon had on but once is toâ€"day to be seen under glass in the Army museum. It is also said that the Emperor. whose figure in a long grey cloak and "bicorne‘‘ is everywhere faâ€" miliar, had made for himself a he!â€" met and breastplate set with emerâ€" alds and ‘diamonds. His service sword, as he called it. was so rusted in its sheath that at the battle of Arcisâ€"surâ€"Aube in 1814 he had to call an aideâ€"dleâ€"camp to help him draw it. In recalling the sword which Naâ€" poleon presented to the Russian Grand Duke Constantine at Tilsit on the occasion of the treaty beâ€" tween Napoleon and Russia in 1807. a Paris newspaper asserts that alâ€" | though Napoleon always carried | two pistols in his saddle, ho \'er_\'l rarely used them. l by a civilized state. But this i crude, democratic age, less admir of upholstered _ roguery, perha than its predecessor. champagne at the Had Emerald and Diamond Breastâ€" plate, But Discarded It. cause the low men from the the support bred and t} AD re Aad 3 1t M t} NAPOLEOX‘s sworp RUsty. ight t} t« «dra and & #lre If The Medical Times agrees with G. K. Chesterton that it is high time science began to concern itself with thr "distinct disabilities‘‘ of the *‘parasitic rich.‘"‘ Why, it asks, conâ€" centrate on the poor alone! People ought to know by this time that while poverty may give more famiâ€" liar ‘"pathological reactions,‘"‘ the snake dance and the monkey dinâ€" NOTES ANDCOMMENTsS wener abuses r sort sh it nté Di & M 64 &DS rude and A rough cracksman woul«dn t ate them, and talent of the sort should be encouraged & ight to He medical jargon for various D the it w € n grounds were In &D.y it m gentliemen now lan n r money than n iT en« 3 U & idvanta anvasback _ and expense of the ksman wouldn‘t it psychoses," which AT t n nt n is whether nfinement 4 not apJ n 0n L n n n errs rather more ncraslies more miu sevbar igent way nden n breeding Al A the man men n A n fm.ming / According to an ins o:-rhaps,[ger. Paderewski has | sured for about £40.00 insured his voice, an«< this actress is not the USTY. |person has insured th A policy was recent Breastâ€"| by a scientific man on [t. in@ to the fact that f work was a constant « ich $&~ this instance the p Russian | rather high. Policie nt they ar irded in i respon N As n N & € m iting th ArIA t means C C uJ much on ng cab Th gh on n en th 11 n rm it It‘s a long honey doesn‘t get eclipsed. n n 12eb 1OF 2900, Unée evemng. when he was out walking, he stumbled and fell and injured one of his toos so bodly that it had to be ampuâ€" tated. _ He claimed his irsurance money and got it. She was very pre Roman noseâ€"and siderable amount was always a p might meet with sides insuring he;j taken artists for emotional â€" expre eyes, henee her care According to an in There has been of la land, a great increase ness of insuring the va:» tant parts of the anat« fessional persons. _ Th Miss Grace Tyson, an : appearing at the Lo House, who has insure for £5.000. She has a British Companies for Profession ©se clated by women who wear face veils for motoring, yachting and other forms of outdoor recreation. They are made with a square or oblong of plain silk mesh, surâ€" rounded with a figured border and figured mesh to complete the rest of the veil. They are of silk and are very carefully and well made. Sometimes they are thrown over the hat instead of worn over the face. embre takes Ome and s \ _ One of the new all black hats shows a double brim of straw. A »pleating of tulle is fastened beâ€" tween the two pieces of the brim, which meet firmly on each side of | the tulle frill. The frill stands out, or rather falls, about an inch beâ€" yond the edge of the straw brim, and the omnly other decoration to *the hat is a big, stiff black silk f1 EYES AND NOSES INSURED. Supet ind The hats made feathe ward correct. are hung the waist The way to in which belts sav that they or rather fal yond the edg and the only *the hat is a Th @JOUL on the n# collar elfect se i the new French t with a strip of { ng. _A piece of s an be fastened abo ir of the linen suit nish. It â€" should An easy way to gain a bewitchâ€" ing shimmer on an embroidered chiffon gown is this: Embroider the pattern in very bright silks of heavy strand and in sharply conâ€" trasting colors. Then cut pieces of chiffon to cover each bit of emâ€" broidery and outline them â€" with heavy rope silk in a dark shade of the color of the chiffon. The bright eolors seen through the chiffon shimmer and glisten in a most atâ€" tractive way. A beautiful imported chiffon evening gown of vellow, n out by sever ts who are afraid the use of their i n Touches in Summer Fashions. Vith a& strip of inilling or ruchâ€" A piece of stiff net frilling be fastened about the coat colâ€" of the linen suit to form a smart h. It should be fastened ight up in the back and it ild be full enough so that it will oose over the shoulders ; otherâ€" > it will pull the back frill and > away the very effect it ought on evening gown of th a panel in the front rt of purple, showed a ut the top of the straight the skirt of bright peace n ture waist line for a few inC t and hang down at the method of wearing th a strange downward and l slope to the figure wh in many of the lately im is from Paris. ather decorations for in modified sailor shaq ) up of a band of fine « er joined with a buckle feather. Thevy are m: lady wh« crash â€" are n th 00 ay to describe the manner belts are now worn is to they are hung about the This description is quite Many of the belts actually g. They are fastened at t line for a few inches in trame ve of their hand remarkable c wski has his hand out £40,000, Carus voice, and the cas is not the first whe int ithn an accident. Beâ€" her life, she took out ier nose, and for ten e premium regularly. man who did all his his toes insured his proud and as ffect seen on so : French models it rip of frilling or () 1 in the front of the ple, showed a border of the straight flounce of bright peacock colâ€" ery, masked with yelâ€" ewed on with golden T stra y gain shoulders ; the back fri rvy effect it e various imporâ€" anatomy of proâ€" The latest is an actress, now London Opera nsured her eyes las a reputation Write Policies al People. mot« m she did a y are ma ther color e clent ed I them. irance ma his hands toring there ty that she cident. Beâ€" ite, in Iing in the busi eyes, vy taken his eves are appreâ€" a wear face achting and 1€ m s researct ive upâ€"springâ€" _ so many case ind backâ€" which is imported and ts 14 {f th in ind it It Here is an instance of the soit anâ€" swer that should turn away wrath : Wife (at 3 a.m.)â€"‘"This a nice time for a husband to come home." Husâ€" band _ (goodâ€"humoredly) â€" "Sh‘, Mary ! This is not a nice time for a pris better D in the proper snou deca and abou sOUrI that p n f1 81« D any w h hould used in an ordinary pl to spray the garbageâ€"ca the principal attractior door flies. A good plan fly trap in the cover ofâ€" _i a, whal Her own." 14 miXxX a with the s and t berth. ways numb intn t erin n 18t For the stray fly use sticky fiy paper and poison. _ The best fly poison is made of a solution of forâ€" malin in the proportion of cight teaâ€" spoonfuls to a quart of water. This is a safe poison where small chilâ€" dren are about, for should they drink it it would do no harm. darink it it would do no harm. Break a small nick in the edge of a bottle mouth, fill the bottle with ths solution and stand it inverted in a saucer. Enough of the poison will flow into ths saucer to answer the purpose. A picce of bread covâ€" ered with sugar should be placed in the saucer to attract the flies. Fly traps are casily made, or can be had at the stores at trifling ex a byâ€"produ e found vei nflammable. The stable l large swept _ _Denver, I am happy to report, | has begun the most drastic crusade | * against the pest ever before known ; and under the direction of the |I |Committee on Hygiene of the Colâ€"| ) orado Medical Society, has begun a |© campaign to educate the public, not | * only regarding the danger of the | 8 pest, but to promulgate plans|" whereby the fly menace can be reâ€" |° duced, if not wholly averted. d _ Reels of motion pictures, describâ€" | , ing and illustrating the life of the | 1 fly from the time it is hatched in | P ‘the filth of the barnâ€"yard or cessâ€" | pool until it has reached its maâ€"| * turity and spends its time in flying | M from a decomposed body to the rubâ€"| t ber nipple on a baby‘s milk bottle, | t have been prepared and are now | P on exhibition at the moving picture ' k] theatres in Denver. ; Bcientists have found that from 25 ‘ 5 to 50 per cent. of the typhoid fever | " cases in the large citios can Im"i' traced directly to the house fly, | " and in military camps the per centâ€"| . age is very much larger. At The committee aforesaid has preâ€"| * pared some very suggestive rules | for the extermination of this, th(‘lrl‘)‘ chief pest of the summer months, | which should be of interest to| * everybody wherever located. First | kill all the flies in the house byl 8 closing the doors and windows and | ~~ ited W ale f1 ntent It is The house fly and disease have now become synonymous terms in the minds of the reading public, and it is safe to say that practically the entire population of the United States (and I hope of Canada) is enlisted in a war of extermination against this little germâ€"laden, deathâ€"dealing, dipterous insect. The season for the advent of the house fly is again at hand, and no reasonable effort should be spared to minimize the dangers arising from this disease menacing source. NC nt and I1T‘s TIME TO SWAT THE FLY. in« int t e room, when they )t uwp and burned. or any reason, imy them with "swatters le swatter can be e of wire window sere ve inches wide and s es long inserted in a of a twoâ€"foot stick. r the stray fiy use a w a n at 60| hanging en Coors are \W e m Surprised at Her. ( ace [oI it at is & woman‘s way ? 1Sp tart nple U me home. I am sur saying such a thing set your husband a ng the is ng traps f Spray CHAS. M. BICE 1913. )0 ) is spent e States alo in Canada use fiv. we U ng iv tha ren d the flv. ut coal shovel and ps of earbolic es from the acid 1 the flies in a they can be ed. Where this exnen se ind use ‘mbered sts have n t 90 per cent. l THE KAISER n horse (lrnpr j A new picture of the Emperor and sts the neces.| twentyâ€"five years‘ reign of peace I stable l.;(h?!.‘, y <,»z\|l!l"â€â€œ"â€â€˜ :â€â€œâ€™m‘“‘m‘: 1 the gors favorite gathâ€" which are alâ€" in countless hance to slip on for outâ€" in is to put a { the garbage n i1 anvy ore 1X racticable, *A very made of a cning four x or seven ‘left in the that ‘omâ€" and i pt re Every one wondered at the baby‘s tree when they saw it put out new leaves and shoot up so fast that it was soon far ahead of the slow maple and the slower oak. And when Baby Dot grew to be a tall girl, her willowâ€"tree was a great deal taller than she. The robins l ‘‘Mine | Bertha. ‘"Why, see here!"‘ cried Bertha, one day, when she was looking at the trees. ‘"‘Baby Dot‘s tree is alive and growing! Who ever heard of anything so queer!"‘ â€" â€" | _ get ail about it toâ€"morrow. True enough, Baby Dot did forget her tree, and moreover, there came a week of rain, so that the children could not go into the garden. But the willow branch liked the rain; it pushed a little white root into the ground, and a little green leaf into the afr, and it grew just as fast as it could. "I found a tree!"‘ she said again and again. Bertha and Rose smiled at each other while the baby dug a tiny hole, in which she set the willow branch; then she stamped down the earth with her little soft shoes. ‘"‘Don‘t tell her that her tree won‘t _ grow," â€" whispered _ the thoughtful Bertha. ‘"She will forâ€" said Rose, as she flourished her little spade; "then it will have pretty red leaves in the autumn." "I wish I had a little tree," said Baby Dot. The children were busy and did not notice Baby Dot till she came up and waved a long willow stick, with which Kenneth had been playâ€" ing horse. trees neth, trees It was a holiday, and the ch ren were planting trees in the t@4e88se8 80801 often be greatly prolonged by doâ€" ing so. Obstinate nervous troublesâ€"like insomnia, melancholia, and neurâ€" astheniaâ€"often yield to the treatâ€" ment; rows of cots on roois and porches are as much a matter of course in the modern sanitarium as the nurses or the diet sheets. ment; rows who suffer from anemia or poor trition benefit greatly from treatmeat, anrd go do those have serious diseases of the h« kidneys, or other vital organs. these patients are much more « fortable if they will consent to in the open air, and their lives Doctors now avail themselves of it in pneumonia, in the acute as well as the convalescent stage ; also in bronchitis and every other sort of respiratory trouble. Patients who suffer from anemia or poor nuâ€" trition benefit greatly from this treatmeat, ard go do those who have serious diseases of the heart. n ‘HEALTH Dea222e82,0%0%0®% 0 LATEST AND BEST PICTURE OF THE KAISER AND EMPRESS OF GERMANY $492An8AXÂ¥%*%%*%% 2RAAA I am _going to plant a maple My tree is an oak," said Ken i, ‘‘and the oak is the king uo TORONTO The Willow Branch. is a pineâ€"tree," sa‘d 1 love to hear the pineâ€" Aerotherapeutics. re muca more comâ€" will consent to stay _ and their lives can y prolonged by doâ€" THE KAISER AND EMPRESS ks | stage ; als other sor Patient ar nd Empr Following the example of the Kaiser and Alfonso, King George has given orders for a picture theatre in miniature to be fitted up at Buckingham Palace. This is mainly intended for the Royal chilâ€" dren, but their Majesties themâ€" selves are very fond of seeing the world on the film. The Kaiser has had a picture palace all to himself at Potsdam for over a year, and during the recent wedding festiviâ€" ties this was a very popular haunt for august guests anxious to see themselves on the screen. Everything you do countsâ€"see that it counts for and not against number 0 ] produced, ‘decidedly ]‘fur which ]has to son imarket. home smithy strongly reminiscent of its Black Country origin. Great Britain is no longer the best marâ€" ket, enormous quantities being ex ported, especially to halfâ€"civilized countries. The Zulu musician, for example, has taken very kindly to the jew‘sâ€"harp, «and needs a speâ€" cially large size to suit his someâ€" what capacious mouth. city, by memuers family. _ Origina came from â€" Hal« For exampl« known that Bi cipal source of sixty years th carried on in drow. a vene Birmingham Ma Supply of The preâ€"emine England, in th« guns, jowellery, is known all ove sat in it and sang, and built the nests in its branches.â€"Youth Khing George to Have a Mao ed ; but if deprived of that, even for a few minutes, life ceases. Here are some of the first rules for acâ€" quiring a correct method of breathâ€" ing, as given by a specialist, who has made an exhaustive study of the subject, says a writer in the Family Doctor. After retiring at night release body and mind from all tension, and take full and reguâ€" lar inhalations through your nos trils; h ‘ the breath about one second ; take all the time you can to exhale it ; keep this up until you If a man‘s health is impaired, or if he wants to preserve it and inâ€" creass his power to resist disease, he must, first of all, give atiention to his breathing,. Even food and drink are second in importance to this, for one can live for days withâ€" out nutrition save the air breathâ€" it seems almost cruel to some perâ€" sons to ‘"‘drive‘‘ the sick out into the open, but the wonders that fresh air works are not to be denâ€" ied. The question is still asked, ‘‘Sha‘n‘t 1 catch coldt""‘ And the answer is an emphatic ‘"No." It is the people who {’ive in houses that ‘"‘catch cofd." Arctic explorers and hunters in the wilderness have troubles of their own, but catching cold is not one of them. It is safe to say that there is scarcely a disâ€" ease or an ailment that caanot be either cured or benefited by life in the open air, both day and night. â€"Youth‘s Companion. mpan CITYV‘s ODD INDUSTRY. by me irps are still imade in n Rules for Breathing. n 11 over the worla, but a small articles are also some of which are of a curious character. and the Birmingham maker e extent created his own Germar Birmingham of the jow‘sâ€" the industry in the vicinit he vicinity able quart pens rothe y th <wen He cel l. the prin arp. Fo: generally dustry 4 the i little roma rates a it n & Joseph was the petted son of Jacob‘s favorite wife. He was charming in his disposition and marvellously endowed with talents. Moreover; he was a son of Proviâ€" dence and possessed deep religious insight. _ His story is one of the choicest idyls of the world‘s literaâ€" ture. It is fascinating in its interâ€" est and astonishingly rich in its moral lessons. Joseph‘s character, measured by the proper standards, is not merely flawlessâ€"it is exalt in perfect keeping with his later life that he alone of the patriarchs, as a ripened saint, leaves a solemn prophetic blessing to his children as he dies." more ana figu re trial. victory over self and is profoundly humbled. _ He meekly pleads for the blessing that was awaiting his surrender and is acknowledged by Jehovah as a Prince of God. Thus be enters Canaan, and this entry was a great historical event, for he bore with him the future religions destinies of the world. Abraham‘s arrival had been only the first wave of the Hebrew movement, and it had for a time receded. In Jacob‘s return it flowed back with permaâ€" nent results, Ewald compares the newcomers, contrasted with other Arab immigrants, to the Franks among the German invaders of western Europe â€"â€" the freest, shrewdest, most advanced of their race ; under a leader who reflocted in his own character at once the noblest and most imperfect traits of his descendants From naw ~.~ left Jehovah behind in Beersheba and that the divine Presonce ac companies him to biess him. He rises to this revelation and is apâ€" parently a better man. Long years afterward, at Jabbok, he comes to the moral crisis of his career. Selfâ€" confident because of the success of his past plans, he proposes to enter the promised land in his own strength and without the blessing of God. But God comes to him and shows him his weakness and his sin. In an allâ€"night struggle with his lower nature he gets the as he dev astonished has n« for evil. He, his oponents wits. Yet he hA Col two vivik markable ligious si us 1P( THE SYNDAY SCHO0. S9Y Lesson XHI. _ The YVictories of Faithâ€"Review. Gelden Text, I John 5.4. be ie purs ittle ~re men," and therefore we Supcrior and Inferier and nurse with the beasts t of prejudice against our k have no faith that there a n t} be a tim« the poor rest whic} the e We I intr The lesson of this episode is {:er- fectly plainâ€"that it is faith which is the condition of all achievement in the world, and lack of faith which is the explanation of all failure. We find it impossible to do the work of the Master today for the same reason that the disciples found it impossible in their day, namely, ‘"‘because of (our) faith.‘" We have no faith that the Golden Rule can ‘be made to work in the world of business, and therefore we yield ourselves supinely to the law of tooth and nail. We have no faith that there can ever be peace on the earth and good will among men, and therefore we pile up our enorâ€" mous armaments on land and sea to the embitterment of nations and the impoverishment of the workers. We have no faith that "God hath made of one blood all races of ither Why could we not do this thing, said the disciples of the Nazarene, as they beheld the doing of one of His mighty works, at which they themselves had ignominiously failâ€" ed? ‘Because of your little faith," replied Jesus, ‘"for verily I say unâ€" to you, if ye have faith * * * nothing shall be impossible unto you." Great Tasks are Left Undone, Great Ideals Unifyl~ filled, Great Emancipations Unachieved Because of your little faith.â€" Matthew, xvii., 20. J ACOI BECAUSE OF LIMILE FAINH re w id INTERXATIONAT FW ivid pict m ies his « gard for Before the Clas W 1] t« anaan,. and t historical eve; im the future the world A if Cw t} U UXE 29. nen and tWe 8 rke m n oT H« career. Selfâ€" the success of poses to enter in his own our . there shall 1« 11 41 Is protfoundiy y pleads for awaiting his lowledged by { God. Thus d this entrye B« ceds by his isâ€"deeply #« â€" him. Helior of and is apâ€" [ admir Long years| the 0 e comes to ’ towns LI fir ght prate « Peoples he venom | coming of ind. We |need to b will ever|Faith in not have , to do and efore we | menâ€"in vilization l pathy, sa« d few at faith in d many. f"‘watch al 1J exl tot! w n nA it W t Mrs. Gr can break talking in Mr. hopeful help an talk m io dog pilgrin policy had recently been to draw from the hinterland and centrate upon Berbera. the na had been left at the Muliah‘s c€y, and he had burnt and s: the villages, killed the men. away the women, and left a n able remsant of mutilated <!« men ind young children who starving, and unable to rnema the docimated villages. These wrethched neonie mut fl‘()n‘ ed to troops The questi« the re |} A ternble story of atro« British Somaliland is told b tish officer who had been s this district. The British posts were wi by the Government from t n Result of the Withdrawal of Troops From Britishâ€"Somaliland. First Clubite on‘t care what some day.‘" Bah‘! Did you irst Clubiteâ€" ed the girlt" re n laith in "‘watch ab great nee« Just this that ‘"‘demands a great faith.‘"‘ An the same token, a great fait} sures the achievement of a ; task. ‘"The force of will, of « age, of selfâ€"sacrifice liberated living faith, is so incaleulable« invincible, that nothing is in sible when that power enters fheld." Give us faith and The Golden Rule could be established toâ€"morro all human relationships, war : ished, race prejudice obliters poverty extinguished, injustice hatred everywhere removed, r eousness and good will everyn brought in. Give us faith anâ€" could have the millennium toâ€" row morning. Give us faith and coming of God‘s kingdom wou‘!d t] have no faith in justice, righteounsâ€" ness and love, and therefore prac tice injustice, unrighteousness, selâ€" fishness and hate. We have no faith in God, and therefore post pone the time when His kingdom shall come and His will be done on earth as it is in heaven. We have no faith, and therefore are the great tasks left undone, the great ideals unfulfilled, the great eman cipations unachieved ! How would all this be ‘:.'n!.‘m‘.'_. transformed, however, if we but had a faith which was commensur ate in some measure with our know ledge and our reason‘! ‘"‘A groat task,‘‘ says a contemporary writer, Wns (6) (4 his wa ireq nder d, 1i ye have mustard seed, s mountain. tratio on su tJ ted A WEUI M Komaliland in 1910. and the stration is now confined to astal region, including the of Berbera, Bulhar and whose protection is entrustâ€" a small garrison of Indian § find t} and attack thes armiyâ€"1ls there Bo way ; ak yourself of that habit in your sleep i Grimly (tremulously | y)â€"â€"Do you think it wo If s7.0, ngad Dneen our enel r many years past. a: xpeditions had been dire« t him. But as the count a valumble one, and 0 imerated : lial devotion. bsolute purity a: nselfishness and illah, the Britis} said, had been . m n seek Britis} tly did this Rev postpont ourselves dare ; fai their car en 1€ n BC Helpfal. and had ss that n our ar r capa e and | hi A TROOCITHH Yes; and 1 mar the m« Sec Ing A the abd LC K6« imanit n If Re: and n 18 {a Ast n & w d k# th â€"you md 1( H ff4 n vou « H wippe 1J ibite d WIREF An LE M n« ARNV ) ¢1 &1 uU Englishs M J0