tatot I eyes. n title " I nie "trand "In RY My mason to Inpply as t shop,' who}. nth to mouth. v, tongue lilo Bounce it in at Will t no". . of Pins†muse it u u. kissing MCI Christianity! other us the, unto them. n jurious to g to good onyx; ri - Who e Prize "none, to tthe I. though bl orld til?,.? lose i. . 0 '7lp')'lAh ltr net lib . cuts In. 5. he on odi I , undex-st:;"..i W ' to mako. trousers - when 1 Bo. "lled, then )ecomes tho u a past of dy finished Jed bi . n: a c " it has he†a warward .‘hineso wo- 'evity is tho a tall man M the nu- TS, pinna- f ruthless air train, stated u shire, and ' of the EST Mr. Ed "t 1fi,1t to tithe - Alfred the its t,oooth hose ful- ll. own a Because h ssip? Bo. I moni- led her y do" . proposed " ambu- Island, main mean. in m- t been hecomo world I . shoe. mcisblo we! " . It mtry Lady OLD. " res trom min- hem get it: ; Dr, mm mm Janka, m h u like": in the ttesh ol ilnraes and 22',rtll,1t pace-wot am, in PM Huh; in Lesion on eugen- .§I and war. Done 91 M! use; 'menu, though chic“! bad hmitUr, 3.9M mung; “a load chewing lb mlsrepresenutiotr. We than Ionian: - real when tut Dr. Jordan is an ativoeUe ot ma- Ioere and a foe 9f “truism and hu- mardttx for he hats aid that ttom “no atria View point of use im- provement massacre in less disasr Oroua than war, while noble and dir interested war in more harmful than Damask-e, selfish and criminal war- NOTES AND COMMENTS -'“'-I -"?"" mP.e.ei9-- --- ---- 7 . I ' ' mulls; and led them]!!! ' The felt hat new to be on otatr. 1 I. “representation; We tthall lulled gunner some“. At the _r+ursoereodr-turytu' no tune the Mien cone: tu, temu,, u " advoeW ot - fg,td't,tpt"g 'llll%'l my: . 'ttere and a ke sd ottrs.tlent and hu- met wear, the )ht'te, are ISQV- I Hahn for he be edd that trom ing mmmer felt to on this hide the min View point of race blot the see. Some of them are of women mm is les. «is»t:tzvz.*‘;z:h’:“;:12f.'zg.“.“in? it":,', than '""'. while noble and dir TLa A snow storm cheerful. But tensted war no more harmful than i some of them ere of summer: pole aggressive, "lfuhamierimioal wuu'green, yellow, pini end white, in Kre, velour; with a satin tinlsh, . Many ----. of them are bot,1,t"1a,,ea"-ia"df; fa; The nobler the war, of course; the I','),','.),',',',','":', '2,,t/?,",,'ll)' Meaghan; better the quality of the“ who rush; Tho thri/p-t'iered skirt is a mid- to the ttmnt and get km“; o? “mime ] summer style that pleases the slim ed. A war to which reason and an}! graceful. Ate? with luck eunscienmy are oppoarsd hem many skirts are especmdy pretty made of . I dawn and some of the other mater- true patriots at home, and they be- l 'saU that do not lend themselves‘ come the fathers of tho next tren-ith/l?' to drapery. One attrac- eration, Massacre is appalling, but ',tive frock tor a young girl is made it doos not select the stron-for (la-l“ lactate, each_of the three gath- " ti cred fiounees being made of several ruc 4""- It generally P"? W'lrowa of tucks running roundabout weak and defencelesa the vietieUrsi.put together with rows of in- ot its cowardly ruthlerstteaa. sertlun. Each Bounce in edged with wide lace. Wide shedow lace is. also The true friends of “memes. o/is/ft,,. effectively In three-tiered The true friends of eugenics, of nee preservation and improvement, Dr.. Jordan holds, will denounce all forms of avoidable undue. They will favor arbitration 5nd peace as a means of insuring physical, men- tal and moral progress of the hu- man race. Eugenics is a new near- science, and much nonsense is talk- ed in in name, but alike history and logical reasoning support the Jor- dan contention.. To the other arg11- lem- against needle†and avoid- able wan we may safely add that furnished by rational eugenics. Na- polcon in said to have taken an inch " the avenge French height by his destructive military operations. Other physical (has, equally un- desirable, have been noted. Hence admirers od the "hum form di- vine†may make common cause with mowing sad alumina in campaign- in against militarism tad its crush- ing burdens. . the time of his death but the wid, ows a those men who died in .2 tin service of the company we pro untod with sums, all orcnsiderabU, and we amounting to a small com A merchant. who died recently, bequeathed 0250.000 upon his em- ployes By the terms ot his will mt only the men working tor hie firm at pe tea 98. The act of this merchant is make} novel. tor it deviates from tho we- cepu-d methods ol philanthropy. A hospital founded to: the money might have perpetuated the name of the donor more eonspieeouUr Br taking can ot the widow ot his former employes the merchant be- gun with charity, when it should begin, at home. This beqnuthal of a quarter of al million dollars by t merchant to 'u',) employâ€. like the acts of so many‘ more merchants and manufacturers who are active promoters ot move“ menu which aim to make theis help Profit share“ in their concerns, are Q'mptomtic of the dam. They are at: of an awakened social con- demn. They show that may mer-. chants and midtown“ who hith- nto m vent to think only in tom! ot dalam no no: beginning to think in terms of hm. BEtrTIFUL ENGLISH WOMEN. “women Cm.- the In: Noted You; him. Y1uoountetrs Canon maintains her reputation as the most beaoti- ful young matron d the 1913 sea- m. She is a superb dreamer, a fact which enhances further the charm of het slim time's aod beautifully cut featum. I Were who to live for s century Queen Alexandra would also hold I placo among beautiful women. Queen Mary is a remarkable exam- ple of the Woman whose loch are enhanced as she matures. We who recall her as a girl at that at no timoiu her history Lt she looked so strikingly “native as she does this year. m " Menestg all Policy. "Pa, why is honesty referred to u a policy t" Pm "Probably because so high a pre- lim i, placed on it," toplied the in" Wanna solicitor, I Tack ‘cullnrs and pockets of woods green land. knitted green caps are worn lwith them. Outing coats are made {in deep green chinchilla cloth, too, r,trimrnefl with large white bone but- it-ms. Of course these outing coats iare made in many other colors-- lpurple is one of the most popular. lTh~se heavy coats share the popu- llarity of velvet, felt and fur among fa:hiun's devotees. Pumps, which many And diiheult to wear because they rub and blister the heel, can be laid aside for strap- ped low shoes for walking. A pair of white buckskin shoes shows three buttoned straps over the instep that hold the shoe snugly in place. The lwckskin is seamed from the tip of the point of the toe to the foot of the ixatep, like the prunell shoes our grandmothers wore.' Creen is a popular midsumer col- or and in a cool and refreshing tone it is a, restful change from the shrdes of red and brown that have ‘lmen popular this year. Some of lthe smartest of the new outing ‘weaters have belts and Cliffs and [ Black is still popular above all other colors for belts and sashes and girdles. It is worn with frocks of every color. The cry in the spring that buek,and-white combinations were doomed did not alarm many of (the makers of cloths, for black and lwhite combinations have continued tin high favor throughout the sum- ‘mer. Hence the black sash. girdle lot belt on the white frock has had a [great popularity. Effective girdles tor summer frocks of lace or lingerie are made of ribbon of two colors or two shr.des of the same color. The rib- bon. six or eight inches wide, is arranged in two in.ter:twj,ned l An attractive double collar isl wart of a white voila blouse. Onol Icollar has a deep point at the back ot the blouse and two points in, tronr-thia is a three-pointed col-' Ilan The othtrw, which is put over {the 0130 described, has a point on (each shoulder and two points in ‘front, which come in a different flame from those of the under ool, ar. Each point is embroidered with a violet. worked in colored mercer- ized cotton, and a. straggling band of violeta is embroidered down the yfnont of the blouse. --- arranged in two inter-twined lengths so that first one shade, then the other, shows. Pale blue and pale pink, cherry and pink, tan and brown and many other good com- binations of popular summer colors are used. . Stockings with embroidered but- terfliea about the ankles are made for evening wear. Each wing of tho butterflies is spotted with rhine- stones. Other white silk stockings mow embroidered anklets, done in white, and still others show lace anklets, made of baby Irish Lace in- sertion. Tho latest "scientific" whim, a substitute for palmistry, haling from Germany, is the pastime of reading character and telling for-1 tunes by the tongue. A sensitive, quivering tongue usually is of a. Be- active nature, and likely to suc- ceed in life, either as a lawyer or as a. detective; but, although he ;may acquire money by economy ‘and cunning, ho has not the large- ncsa of mind necessary to tfr amusing of 3 great fortune. Lon tongues suggest generosity an openhandodneea. But the man with a. long, broad tunguo is apt to be a dangerous gossip; just as the man with a short, broad tongue is ad- dicted to craft, and even deceptive- ness. Very thin, pointed tongues may be found in people of all tem- peraments, and are indications of failure. The man with such a |tpngue, it in said, will nevgr make I success of life, Moat u the dancing girls in India belonging to the temples are called the wives of tho goiu, At an early iii; it}; irreTQiized in wgdlock tis tho imager worshipped io yy' tep; ples. This strange matrimonial connection is formed in oomgianoe with the wish“ ot the pnren ' who believe it to be tb 5t,tdigr'2t'tir, not to present db ha nl daughter in marriage to a. nameless idol, that! _ It " per cent. of the cotivictl on parole spake good they put it all over the men who new: we“ in jail. Full and Fuelâ€. What Your Tongue Tells. Wedded to Gods. ALFRED WALDRO‘S SIITEERS. hunt“: Welter: DMllon Point Named After aaa. 0mm. Right in the heart of the that fruit orchid of British Golan: u-- that pioturuquo opot known a. the Bulkley Yalur--ourverort and en- gineers nad all such am busy on a in am. l Tho iiiuutuaaersituthi on] guard {reign and pawn.†when point ban-n Prince Ru. pert and Fort 600119. The [00034 ia-Bmlthcn. Andomrfgoodrmthowm Ga for can.“ ital: by tho an» of its {IVE-Mar. Not only boon». An.. A red Waldron Swisher: in [91.5mm oi the Board of Directors w} tho Grand Think. although that {alone would gum "1orl.ettt Pe"-': DOW Not oval became. M tho high.“ othcer If tho Grand Trunk Pidtu, ho in called the council»: ot the Gram! Trunk and“ family. sun. that is not the only rm why the firat general freight and passenger division point east of the western terminus of the new rail: way should be called after the good counsellor of the official Wily. He was asked to be the godfather of many westbm towne-hom" which look oumly on huge glacier' and rushing torrent... on mighty That town has . man. cascades and forests of cedar; towns which are springing gradual- ly from canvas and tent prosperity into the more substantial forms in lumber and brick. - And now Comes the reason why the last town-and most decidedly not the Jea.sb--arame to be named after the great man who is quick to recognize good work, and just " quick to clothe criticism in silence. “Serve the others first," was his motto. And that is how they have Edson and Watrous and Biggar and Wain- wright, not to forget Melville, named after the great man, Charles Melville Hays, in whose brain the wholo Western scheme originated. It was all so characteristic of Al- fred Waldron Smithers to wish to be the last, godfather on the West- ern line. But we must speak of Smithers,‘ the man. His modesty has been) hinted at above. Forty years ago when he was a youth of 23, ho join- ed tho London Stock Exchange, and remained " member until four years ago, when he resigned, to devote his energies to the development of railroads in Canada. Being the son of the late Willie 1 Henry Smithers of the Bank of England, it seems natural that ho should be recognized aa a. financial authority throrurhout the British Empire. In 1896 he became a director of the Grand Trunk, later being elected nice-president and ptmirmnn. England still claims much of his attention, he being a director of the South Eastern and Chathnm Railway, and chairman of the Eng- lish Association u American Share and Bondholdem. And apart from all this, from his interest in things a national im, ort, he is possibly the most inter- Ming in his private life. Children are his weakness, and wherever he is, ho id seen surrounded by laugh- ing tots, all delighted to be enter- tained by the "big man of finance." Little Tommy was taken to a pie- ture palace one day and there he saw a. film depicting a. tribe of In- diam painting their faces, and so forth. A - “Why do they do that l" he asked his mother, "Oh," replied tho latter, “In- diana always paint their Gees be.. fore going on the warpath. To do so is one of their uptown." Little Tommy made no comment, but on the next day, when his moth- er was entertaining her daughter's young man, he rushed into the draw as room in a Mata of great excitement, /atotur--mothert" he cried. "Let’s an on}. o.t.this P' quickly 'ici/i JC, Hiisar'i going a this wupnthi" . Tbs surest way of losing one': own health is to he always drinking the health of others, says a wise " A. W. 8mithers. The Infant Terrible. Asthenta. "AstUnia" mun: "without strength,)' and it denlzibel I our dition of you“! dohihty. Nam mum.“ in “amt,†and mutual“ “when in "mrksthetr-l in." I but tho word without my pre- nu whtcvor maul . gonad â€anâ€: ot tho Intern that the 1sv,tUr" bring: into lite with him. “In thte u! te, with ",tlti,i,tui', new: 0 0 pro o Inn-cu ar tltort, The not-numb "reams lultily and kicks vigoroué, but the nthgnio baby cries too ly, " il futigued, and nurses with i.ow and ieohlc movemonu. _ _ _ Such children out their first teeth late. with a good deal ot digestive disturbance; t'g catch dunge- easily, and are low to stand and walk. The motor apparatus-thet is, the name: and muscles 3nd in moving t e h'ftit", not, en pro - ably never will e, capable ot much hard work, _ __ - . WI; Gi/r-sets, upocidly during adolescence, lite 300: more ham with the “them portqn. Jt'y of stamina {:3 Gow ital! in any one of a n or of WV8--am0ntt others baekaoU, about, wok eyes, weak heart, downer: of wit, poor digestion, or undue fatigue other ordinary garden. The» Irmptorr" all indicate that the “theme person cannot work or pug like other peo- ple, but must strange his life with regard to his constitutional weak- neas. Many astheniu are potions of lu- perior intelligence and moral force and they often abet their physical limitations by an exercise of will. The ability thus to exert the will and to triumph over fatigue marks the difference between them and the neurasthenio or the simply in- dolent. - The greatest mistake a person of the asthenic type can make is t use his will-power in an "ort to tlit, up with normal people in their work and pla . m can often hold his own in the battle of life surprisingly well, but he cannot do it by “burn- ing the candle at both ends.†Suc- oess in life for the asthenic means a careful conservation of all the vital forces from hour to hour.-Youth's Companion. A clean, cool sheet is most grates ful and refreshing to a sick person in the hot summer months. The correct way to put it on-which many amateurs do not know-with practically no disturbance of the pa- tient, is first to roll the sheet even- ly on a. rolly, like a yind, _ x a " v- - --__--, -'_"_' __ Then put it at the side of the bed, tuck in, withdrew the roller, and, with help, unroll the sheet bit by bit under the patient: It is less awkward to do it from the foot of the bed, but from the side is quick- er for the sick person, as, of course, is obvious. . . _ Never tuck bedclothes in tightly. Sick persons are restless, and there should be no resistance or pull of the bedclothes. - A . These little things fret those who are ill, and, therefore, should al ways be borne in mind by folks in charges of invalids. MAKES SOME QUEER CLOCKS. "Nap of World" Shows Locomo- tire Glrdling the Globe. An interesting article on the subject of modern “Strange Clocks" appoara in The Watch- maker. A Grenoble clockmaker, Antony Jacques, is responsible tor the ingenious clock which ho has named "Les Heureo Baoehiquei' (“The Hours of Bacthtlll . J. . \ u... “w..- -- __-V,, . One of the two drunken indivi- duals is drowning in a. glass of col- ored water simulating wine, while his equally helpless companion is barely able to hold out to him, by way of stupid drunken greeting. the bottle which they have emptied between them. In the body of thin figure is secreted a magnet which is attracted by the steel hand of the ldrowning disciple of Bechy. . “mun...†___-V,,, The two figures remain station- ary, but the wine glass, with the hours painted in black on it, re- volves so that while the Boating fig- ure remains suspended in the Mr Mr, but motionless, the hours and quarters are marked off by the re- volution of the glass, which is made to turn on a. cirfular place Masked by the iruidalm sécreted in the base of this strange but attractive clock. A A _ _ "The School†clock, by M. A. Poitcl, is made to represent the old type of schoolmaster, who, with his stick in hand, used equally for teaching and chastiaement, is in- structing an urchin in what up- pears to be a. sum in arithmetic, but the figures really represent the hours, to which the teacher auto- nmtically points as tho movement impala his arm to indicate the ptMF sage of time. 1 La Mappenmonde (the map of the world) is the name of another in- genious mechanical device, the in- vention of a, modern French clock- maker of Bethune. Tho movement is in the interior ot the globe, and causes it to Tfit' no mart " the hour. on ' equworibl band bi may at a locomotive, which, y tho wsy, hu . uptake mechanism of it. own whereby, it the globe is made Mun-y it my make a. circuit on its own rails of the equator in twelve hours. The deserving ttl', no ulunlly those who don't curve to u. The real and enduring greatness of a nation alwnyl bu its source in For Summer Patients. .1; ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO “if SHINY ttlllllll. SHIN Len-on VII. Crossing the Bed Set. Esod. 18. 17 to N. 81. Golden aiiiiiiTGriii, iGrii nmlhifutod itaelt in the pillar ot cloud 'ss1ltd itself in tho ter. ot cloud cum 'gdhovah" ( od. 13. 21; u. 'N And sometime- "the Angel of God, ' u hero. -- - _ . Stood behind them-Took e tixedl", position between them and the one I only during the night. ', 20. And there was the cloud and i the derkneel, yet geve it light by night-While this treneletion is the more occur-ate, the King J eme- Ver- sion, by the insertion of the phrases "to them" end "to these,†makes the intended meaning of the passage in little pleiner: "And it wee e cloud and dnrkneee to them (the Egyp- tians). but it gave light by night to these (the Isrulites)." 21. Caused the see to so back by e etronz eeet wind-Not an nnusuel phenomenon et this place. :It re quite ponible that the wetere of the Red Bea once extended an tar north or the Bitter Later; it e0, there mutt have been many point: " which it wee exceedingly shallow. A throng southeast win . therefore, by driving the waters of the lobe northwa , together with a simul- taneous ebb of the tide in the lower gulf. might eerily produce the effect oecrihed in tho text. 24. The morning watch-Between , mm. and marine. Jehovah looked forth upon the ‘hoet of the Egyptians-In Ifenlm Th vereee 18-20, where an epitome of the events here narrated learns to be siiiiii'," tTi1nGGi.nir of the words of this verse in explained as follows: The voice of thy thunder was in the INT-NATIONAL LESSON, AUGUST 17. Yer" 19. The sngel of aod-2Ns t . . - L ~-_il--6-) mun. 27. Overthrew-Literally, shook off; the hosts were scattered here and there. _ . 28, g9.-"In the morning watch, " a natural time for atmospheric changes, but in obedience to the rod of Moses, the furious wind veered or fell, and the sea returned to its accustomed limits; and first, as the sands beneath became an": ated, the chariots were overturned) and the mail-clad charioteers went‘ down ‘like lead,' and then the hiss- ing line of foam raced forward and closed around and over the shriek- ing mob which was the pride and strength of Egypt only an hour be- fore. "But, as the story repeats twice over, with a. very natural and glad reiteration, 'The children of Israel walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea; and the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand and on their left’ " (Expositor’a Bible). 31. Great work which Jehovah did .--This wonderful deliverance natur- ally made a. deep impression upon the Israelitqc. _ - . . . . M. In“: LBAuVAAuvw. Believed in Jehovah, and in his servant Moses-But when they turn- ed away from this, the scene of their marvellous deliverance, and again faced the stern realities and hard- ships of the wilderptth their faith __, Br,, --- L" h, SHAPE VI- "F.'.. w. Me-ee-e""" F was all too soon displaced by dis- trust and discontent. London Mothers Have Theories as to Care ot Babies. Remarkable revolutions concen- ing tho life of London's (England) . . . ., _____, “.15 - .-m.. v- --__e-' - _ v poor are contained in tho annual report of Dr. Thomas, the medical offioer of health for Finsbury. Their social customs, superstitions and ideas of babiea' diets make a strange chapter in the records of human ignorance, as the following extracts from the report serve to "how. _ In a. family where the father was a. casual laborer the mother had ' kept the home together for many I months by pawning things. She pawned her husband’s shirt; and trousers for 62 cents, and spent tho money as fellows: Tea. dust, 4 cents; sugar, 4 cents; condensed milk, 4 cents; oleomargarine, 4 cents; coal, 9 cents; gas, 2 canto; potatoes, 4 cents; sausages, 8 cents; bread, 11 cents; tobacco and cigarette papers, 3 oenta; borrowed money repaid, 4 cents; pawn tick- eta, 2 cents, and paid woman for pawning clothes, 1 cent. The superstitions of the poor are many and curious. Ono father wought that next to good food there was nothing like a. day in tho come market to cure a. suffering baby. He put hi. theory into proo- tl,'ie,,eg on intuit out room to market. ( A man had twins Ono died and the other wanted and.“ up pldly worn until ths mum, on tho median ot a neighbor put ohmsdollin bedridait. ra; this time. tho modul- curred, it My}, how: to improve. -- I,l,,A|. __g_. QUEER IDEAS AMONG POOR. a.",'"""""'?");?'?).-.?")" sr/G/r - .9 " a the Vomit), gig,t2; XL dots um have no hopes and (in them magma} nod and weighed and their mothers advised, have to contend with the ditheultig that, in up.d' weitrhimr otnttm, {may .tre GOD AND THE REIGN OF LAW He Knows So Fully That There Can Never Be But One Thing That He Can Do With him in no urinhleneu. tft." New at tum .-o- 1., . Few thing: he“ done so much to at traditional religion. comp: in recent time: u the discov- eryotwhbtwe knowartheNign of Law. It God exiltl we must be- lieve that He is free, and that He hen the power to do whetever he my desire at any time. And yet here ere we told by those who rt', to know that the activitiel ot t is univerle no everywhere proceed- ing according to certain luvs which Iare universal in their application land nboolute in their operation. The life ot the world, in other words, is determined and permits at the intrusion of no particle of IIlriritxul freedom. And this manna, ' it man: anything, that God does not exiet; or, if m does exist, that m in not the triumpUat being to whom men have tor use: addreued their ,orahip end their ppr"'y. Such lean: the monthl oondiet between the tuologual idea. ot God end the 1seurntiho idea of law. But is the one really u bad " it ep- per" . . . . , r11; .1“ imagine by my of union that this nation is suddenly 00n- fronted by At one. we speculate on to what certain statesmen who no in posi- tions of responsibility will do. Of one man, it is promptly std. “Heaven only knows what stead he will take. You never can tell what he in going to may or do. First he’s here, and then he's there, and again he'l somewhere else. You can't lay down any law or prim ciplejgy Thic.h his actions are gn‘id- iT. m simply does as fancy strikes him at the moment." Ot a certain other public mun, however, very different things are said. "Oh, we know what he will do, all right! You can always tell where he will stand on every question. Why, it's just u sure that he will fight this measure as it is sure that the sun will rise to-morrow morning. This man can't ohootsa. He must do this 10: all. belie the unvaryiug record some instances. mothers will not bring their babies because they heve been told that it is unlucky to have a. baby weighed until it. is tb yearold. Dr. Thomas says: l “In the slums it is not uncommon to find that father. contribute little or nothing towards the support of their wives and children. An oecK sional father in found who has not given hie wife db single penny since their marriage.†The babies' diets in Finsbury, u:- oording to the report, include cur- rant cake, bath buns, patent bia- cuits, b_oiled bread, boiled potatoes: Ciii';'i'ii"Guia%', __ V dry . oatmeal gruel, fried tiatt, tomatoes, coffee and apples. - Some Leaders In Society Are Over Six Feet. Tall women are notably on the increase in the ballrooms of the English smart. set. It may be due to the modern craze for athletics or physical culture, or it may be merely an optical illusion based on the current modes in dress, but the {ant remains - tall women now queen it amongst their sex. Two particularly tall women are tho Duchess of Portland and the Duchess of Marlborough ((Jonsuelo‘ Vanderbilt), and they run to the) same number of. inches, while the Duchesses of Montrose and 8uther- land are only a; trifle lets stately. l Lady Linlithgow and her sitar, Mrs. Edward York, are both well over six feet, In is tho recently married Lady do Clifford. Among other extremely tall winner: are Lady Pembroke, the Hon. Mrs. George Lambton, the Hon. Mrs. Ferdinand Stanley, tho Hon. Mrs. Henry Brougham tsnd Miss Daphne Bourke, tho debutant» daughter of the Hon. Algernon and Mrs. Sevewl pairs of mothers and daughters suggest that. height is I. question of heredity. Lady Ripon ia said to be six feet, and her daughter, Lady Juliet Duff, is not mods shorter. Lady Galway and her only daughtcr, tho Hon. Mrs. bkeainiton-Bensth, are both ex- tremely tall, as are Lady Aberdeen mud her only daughter, Lady Pent- Bourke land Tall women certainly show to ad- vantage in the crowded room! of a London mason. There are no diminutive duehmur es, but Lady Bath makes a, '/7r","-l like marcbiontws, and Lady Tulliw bandine is of dainty proportions. Lady Carnarvon and Olive Lady Cairns are small but attractive countess“. Others who have the miniature style of beauty are Lady Inge-tn. Lady Helmley, Lady Clementine Waving, Lady Evelyn ‘Guinneaa and Lady Gertrude Alb "a y Chub. Boredom! in one of tho smallest ot 'well-known women, and bu otgors11 the lilo-long nick- Garot m." "1 Nel u it I were going to have uppendioith." “Well, 1 mod . new gown, IQ you'll just ham to wait." A 8 link trah'nr--tmrr so; her vagina boasted description." "tph, agar, than t?ttt" 1,rifttfl" A Serious Public Crisis. um mums“ WOMEN. "iG,-iriaiiiiGd her father." LR: no Did. of tort, loan of public novice." This we speak ot then two men. he one in weak, erratic, un- priuciplod and than hopelmly un- certain. Tho other in “mug. his}! minded. media-t. end time bound. " it were, by some iron law of new tude. With human being, in other words, the fUld ot choice in pro- blelng of individual conduct. become- reetrwted a. we mount the height: of character. The clearer e man's vision the uner hie mind; the purer his heat the more he feel: himself caught in eome great law M moral neceelity which determines (or him his line of action. Certainly this " our own experience it we under- ltand ourselves night. When we are at our worst morall we are weak and irreeolute and thus liable to do anything. When we m n our best, however, we feel moved. u it were, by none greet. power not (i',GieivTi". At such e moment of - Chloe In Dolled Us. We toer--we know-that then is only one thing that we can do, and we forthwith do itl _ _ . . rupture Just here do we no how the id» of God on be reoonciled with tho idea of Law. What in purtially true of the beet men, what is true ot u: " our best momenta, in wholly true of God all the time. God knows Bis own mind. God is moved by one un- deviating purpose. And this one thing is what we “fully we going on all of the time in the manifold Traces": of the universe. Natural aw, as read And registered by the ‘ scientist. is simply the way in which llGod in His perfect wisdom always Inc“. And God always acts in this ‘way because He in God. Bis free- dom is none other than Divine Ne- doin is ce uity_ "iT"t'ii, not the solution of our doubts! It any God in urverth.r of our worship it in tho God who in u cnpricioul u a child. If buy God in worthy of our worship it in the God who it the lune yesterday, to- duy and forever. "With him in no vuriablemsl. neither shadow of turning." In Him we any put our truart.-Rev. John Haynes Holmes. Goose), (honey Geller. A miller once had l flock of geese, end he lost them ell except one old some, that for e Ion time swam round alone on the 'lhl,'o"l'i. Now, the miller'. wife placed I number of duck's egg- under a hen, end, u soon so they were hatched, ch. duckling: an to the Inter, Now, the miller’l win number ot duck'n eggs m and, an soon as they we: the duckling: an to the The old goose, seeing sud flurry of _the hey, uni we Hum-nua- u... n. -w. The old some. seeing the tright and flurry of the hen, nailed up with n noisy gebble, and took the duck- ling! in charge, and ewem about with them. When they were tired, the led them to the shore and gnve them beck to the care of the hen, who, to her great joy, found thnt they were all safe and Hound. The next day down came the duck- linge to the pond, with the hen fune- ing and fretting u before. The goose we: wnitina near the share. 1 When the duckling: had uken to (tho water, the hen, to get near them, flew upon the back of the some. and the two tailed up not down the pond after the ducklinge. Bo, day after day, “my nailed the duckling, and close behind them came the mother hen, now quite at her use on the heck of the I‘d-mm: noose. watching her gay the duckling. and man them came tho mother I quite at her use on the I): friendly goose, watching little brood. _ . A lady tells this story of I gan- der: "My grandfather was bond of pets, and he bad once I droll one, named Swnuny. This was A gmdor he had raised near the house, be-. can" he had been left alone by tho cause he In! other geese "Gihlriirnuer would about like c dog, and , angry it any one laid "At mo he t own kind. An came blind, and out. Franny t her about. and the food the n? oold.' ' "ii'iu---"Do " collect half your vile!" ugh. arrived "tsly money." _. _ ' _ A summer cottage is 1 place when the people not " the dining table the was tur'd lib to when their. at home, but don't dare. Bub--' 'i' What's no Karl. "What hue you heard from may sometimes tried to nuke 3 no home with the flock of but they always drove him and then he would r‘unLund K Sun-er Counte- A Qua-Mon. iu, Ga would be very one laid . hand upon you swim“ I ooutd mr Suwanee. deart". nnd How him with thin your