L TRY lethal. I...) d n pol- M d NOTES AND COMMENTS The old question, Why do we laugh! but ognin been receiving at- tention from psrtholoitUts and physioloc‘nu. Not much new light bu, however, been thrown on it. The only thinker who bu made In "icing! and interesting contribu- tion is Bunsen, who is a merta- phylicim and philosopher, but not . non of Icience. Bis essay is "ts. tle and ingenious, but it does not “plain .11 kinds of laughter. It ut- brly fails to Account to: ths laugh- ber ot joy and hearty good fellow- Ihip. At the meeting of the British As-I Iocintion nt Birmingham an Oxford professor advanced what id describ- d u I new theory of laughter. 'Wh- Baryon regn'rd: laughter at 8 mild form of social discipline, Muted to discourage swkwnrd- net" and carelessness, the Oxford scientist looh upon it an a bone- Ioent provision of nature “whereby I m of minor authrring that would omrwiu depress humanity is “and into ' stimulant, promob. ing well-being." From this point of view it is not' wrong to laugh " the midortunel of our fellowe. When we no . pompoun old gentlemen in the set ot Iprewling on n slippery sidewalk it is our duty to laugh instead of restraining our mirth. Provided, however, the misfortune is distinct- ly “minor," and no bones ere broken. Since the world he: " wan acted up to this theory with-l out knowing exactly why, it is comforting to hear that its instinct. have been sound. But do we laugh At our own minor misfortunes as cheerfully as we do nt those of other†Are the cynic. right in charging that a certain degree' of malice is present in "benefUent" and stimulating laughter? It no, there in will considerable work for tho evolutionary process. Malice in not beneficent, even in laughter excited by the slightest of soci- dents. Parent; and other: who hnve had ooeasion this bali to read the edu- eational prospectuses must have come “was A new word-'uurhr. thmies." The schools of expression are using it freely. It is the name of a hub arrived sclenco which is designed to promote general ox- pnuivencss through tho employ- ment of rhythmical gums-tics to n musicd tseeompsniment. Eurltrthmies originated . few you": Mo in gwitaerland, where a Gwen“ pmfeseor u! harmony be- Mu to put his theories into prac- tice. It advanced into Germany and now has its chic! seat in the suburb. of Dresden. From Germany it has spread to England and the United Btatest. The “School of Dal, craze Eurhrthmies" has just. been opened in London. the pupils ot the new science in its German hesadquartertr-" least the younger ones. They "realize physically the music as they hear tr." And "they translate it n om, inntinctively, into movements of the limbs." And there is a oon- ooquent heightening at once of ptty-' aieal and aesthetic wellubeing. This promotion of harmony bo- tween the mind and body, with its double beetowal of blessings, can- not but be heartily welcomed-ass long as its vutaries actively parti- cipate for their own individual good. But it the result should be merely another group of "classical deucen," with large neaemblies to witneu passively their maneuvers, lt might not he so easy to look upon the new idea of M. Dalcroze as an unmixed blessing. Father wu at an o:onomieal turn of mind. and hatod extnvsgunce with all his heart. He had since the outline gays tried to instil Cii'ariiruiiiiri, -nnture into the brain otAts small gen, Igod eight. â€III†v. ..r.__. --""'" Bis grief we: terrible to see when one day he came upon the budding economist swung himself with I dice ot bread generously covered with a layer of butter which was outmounted by a young mountain of jam. “111503," said he, eft thoug‘h sushi; Great things no reported from Domestic Economy. ii-ifijl icrr, A varicose vein is an enlarged and twisted vein, generally in the leg; it is conned by stagnation of the blood. Often the patient has an hereditary predisposition to vari- oose veins or he has a weak heart, with a consequent tendency to slug- gish venous circulation. Anything that interferes with the flow of bloc-d through the veins may bring on an attack. Pressure from a tight garter and very severe mus- cular exertion are often exciting causes. Persons who are obliged to stand for several hours at a time, like policemen, washerwomen, and saleswomen, are often subject Lrlhiriroubu." Under ordinary eortditions, the blood in the legs must run up-hill panstaqtly, in or- der to regain the heart. In the case of those who stand most crthe day, the blood has to work hard hour after hour in order to overcome the force of gravity, ad as a result the veins gradually enlarge and harden. In mild cases of varicose, especi- ally in young and otherwise healthy people, the symptoms are very slight. There is a feeling of weigh? in the leg and a dull ache toward the end of the day. The ache is won relieved by the patient's rest- ing with the leg somewhat raised, so that the blood can flow back more easily. Sometimes painful camps complicate the tumble, and the cramp is likely to return again and again, until life become: . burden. More serious complications are thrombosis (or the clotting of the blood in the vein) and phlebitia (or inflammation of a. vein). Often I form of eczema appears in the skin of the leg, or an ulcer may arise. When varicose veins are very troublesome, surgical treatment is advisable; but the milder cases can be much relieved by rest and pro- per bandaging. Since people have learned that many physical troubles depend on some fault of the vision, they are more willing than formerly to have their eyes examined, and to wear glasses it the oculist prescribes them. The immediate relief that properly fitted glasses often bring to such ailments as headache, in- digestion, insomnia, and nervous ir- ritability makes the coat to the wearer’s unity or pockerbook seem trifling indeed. Unfortunately, eyes cannot al- ways be fitted with perfect accuracy at the first trial. The operation. in extremely delicate. The counting ls done in minute fractions, audit!“ l When you ask a responsible doc- l tor to fit your eyea with .peoteolee, remember that you ought to work with him, and remember also that it is his interest to make you oom- lfurtaihle as quickly as possible. i Many people injure their own case l in the examination chair. The doc- tor makes the examination, it is Y true, but the patient has to do al- lmost as much, for the doctor must I finally abide by the patient's de- l cision as to which degree of correc- tion best suits him. Nervousness, limpatienee, and uncertainty are very much out of place in the office chair. In helping the doctor all you can, you help yourself quite as much. Borne people find it hard to g“break in" glasses-or rather to' 1 “break in" themselves. They are l petulant and fussy, and sometimes ithey actually refuse to wear the glasses. This intolerance will soon i yield to a little patience and a Ben- .sible consideration of the necessi- l ties of the case. There is one more , point. If, after a fair trial, your iglaaees do not seem to be right, I take them back at once to the man Llwho fitted them to you, and give ' him the chance to correct them.-- l Youth’e Companion. discomfort. Sumo persom have very oad vision, whkh ll li, have-'- theleee. very easy to correct , others have eyel to which ell the chill in the world can give only an approx!- mate fit, and consequently a par- tial relief. 13in not tair bo the oo" enlist, it the patient grown discour- aged when he does not hml inetant relief, and wander: about from " Ive to olBoe. .. . . Speechless with wrath, a little man was ushered into the dock. An ornament of the police force had found him loitering about and had arrested him '33 a suspicious char- acter. . -uiriat were you doing at time of your arrest l" asked weary magistygte. prisoner. . "What were you waiting for?†"My money." "Who owed you the money t'.' . for "What did he owe it to you for r' "For waiting !," The magistrate took his glasses " and glared at the prisoner. VII - Bl-C‘r‘ --v v†. "Do not jest with me," he said. "Now tell me, have you a trader' “Of course I have!" "Then what is it l" “I earn my living waiting. You "Did you ever hear the story of the dirty window!†"No, I don't think I did." "I guess I won't tell it to you." "Why not?†"You wouldn’t be able to no through B." see, I'm 8 waiter'. 'rsifmiiry"ulitintr y' sputtered "I Varicose Veins. Following His Trade. Fitting Glasses. e rrur may Call“ f had been waiting t" tlotta the the the The most distressiul country is at the present moment living up to its reputation in a. very terrible way, and widespread distress in Dublin's fair city is bringing ruin and starvation to a thousand homes. Trade is at a. standstill, the whole atmosphere is charged with revolt and discontent, and the conflagration grows steadily week by week. Above we see the mam whose fiery eloquence and dominating personality have held the mob together in some sort of order. Lar- kin has hitherto held a wonderful ascendancy over the men, and his prosecution and seven months' sentence for incitement and sedition is likely to cause some stirring scenes, notwithstanding the fact that he has detached the sympathy of the Irish priests. Inset is a picture of Larkin harwnguing the crowd before he shaved his moustache. The imprisonment of Larkin has alienated a. great deal of labor support from the Liberal Government, who cannot reconcile Mr. Asquith's professions with the arrest of Lurkin and the freedom allowed Sir Edward Carson, whose speeches have been just as incendiary. Last week he was released by order of the Asquith Government. Tlli SUNDAY illllllllll. SIIJDY Lesson LC-Crossing the Jordan. Josh. 3. 1-17. Golden Text, Isa. 41.10. Verse 7. Magnify thee-Won" thee by special recognition of thy office and leadership among the people. 8. The priests that bear the ark-- The law especially provided that no other persons should carry or even touch this “and emblem ol Jehovah’s presence. 9. And Joshua said-Verses 9-18 contain the substance of a. solemn address to the assembled people, in which Joshua explains more fully what has already been concisely stated in verses 7 and 8. Jehovah your God-The Hebrewal seem to have come but gradually to a clear recognition of the fact that Jehovah was the God of other nations as well as of the Jews: While they did not recognize the idols of the surrounding nations, or even the deities of Egypt and later of Aseyria, as true gods, still, they did not seem to recognize either that Jehovah was concerned about the welfare and salvation of other peoples and nations besides themselves. 10. The living God-A title ap- plied to Jehovah to indicate the outstanding difference between him and the idols of the heathen round about (compare Dent. 5. 26). Canaanite--Literally, "lowland- er," properly so called because or- iginally occupying the low coast border along the Mediterranean Sea, the valley of Esdraelon. and portions of the valley of the Jor- dan. e Hittite - Compare Lesson Text Studies for October 19 and Novem- bre 23. _ Hivite---A people sometimes omit- ted in the enumeration of the na- tions originally inhabiting Pales- tine. They are mentioned, how- ever. in connection with Joseph's return to Canaan (Gen. 34. 2). They seem to have been a. peaceful and commercial people, dwelling at the foot of Mount Hermon, in the land of Mizpah (Josh. ll, 3),'and in tho valleys of Lebanon (Judg. 3. 3', g Sam. 24. 7). Perizzite-A people of central Palestine; or more probably, as some think, simply the peasants or laboring people of the land-from perazi, meaning "country-folk" or .'rusties." Girgashite - Supposed to have been a larger family or subdivision of the Hivites, since omitted in nine out of ten places in which the orig- inal nations of Canaan are enumer- ated, while in the tenth ennumern- tion they are mentioned and the Hivitee omitted. Their home seems to have been that part ot Palestine lying just east of the Sea of Galilee. _ . _. . c. - ,,II_. 'J "‘0 o'**' _ _ Amorite - Meaning, literally, "mountaineer." The Amoritea, ac- cording to Gen, 14. 7, occupied the barren hill country west of the Dead Sea. They seem later to have "crossed the Jordan to the eastward, and to have occupied the country "beyond Jordan" from Amen to the Jabbok. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOVEMBER 30. Jebusite--A powerful mountain tribe occupying the strong fortress of Johns (Jerusalem), They areI uniformly mentioned Int in the; "JIM" LARKIN, LEADER or DUBLIN STRIKES. As lie Is Now and Before Be Shaved His Moustache. ehumerationa of the original in- habitants of Palestine. 11. The Lord of all the earth-A signifioant title of the Most High at a time when the conquest of the land was about to be undertaken. lit. Twelve men-One from each tribe. 13. The waters of the Jordan shall be cut off . . . they shall stand in one heap-Compare note on verse 18 below. 'r _ 14. When the people removed from their tents, to pass over the Jordan-Mb the tenth day of Nisan (or Abi-b); correrponding to our month April-Way. mi5Tuht; briukvof the water-At this time far back from the usual channel of the stream. __ For the Jordan overfloweth all its banks all the time of harvest-- In the low semitropical valley of the Jordan the harvest comes earlier than on tho higher plains to the out: and west, a the valley. The first 'intrathering of the harvest) season had already begun, while at. the same season the melting of the snow on Hermon and Lebanon caused tho narrow channel of the river to be filled to overflowing, transforming the stream into a muddy, swollen, and turbid flood, 10. The waters which came down frum above stood, and rose up in one heap, a great way off-The wording of our narrativo strongly suggests a landslide, Which tempor- arily obstructed the narrow chan- nel and dammed the waters of the ‘river until there again broke away ltlhe barrier and came rushing down with even greater force than (before (compare Josh. 4. 18). At Adam-The name tsitptifieis, lit- erally, red earth, and has been thought to lend support to the sus- gestion of a landslide as the ex- planation of the unusual phenom- ena, which clearly took place higher up in the Jordan valley where the clay banks almost overhang the river. Beside Lsrethan--A city suppos- ed by some to have been near the mouth of the Jabbok, near Buocoth (1 Kings, s. M), It has been iden- tihed by others with an ancient site some seventeen miles north of Jericho, where steep cliffs con- fine the stream within its narrow limits, almost, as it were, throwing a barrier across ita path, Wholly cut oir--Flooded away en- tirely, leaving the channel empty. He was a poor man, but had been obliged, at lent, to call in the doctor to attend his little girl. Ber ill- ness turned out to be a. notion: one and the doctor had had to ply many visits and leave a good deal of medicine for his patient. Now, however, she was well again, and her father stood in the doctor's room, waiting for the bill to be made out. When, at last, the account was presented to him, he was slmost paralysed to see the huge amount he owed. "The small amount is for the medicine, and the large one is for my calls at Four house," said the doctor. "irerhard-us, father took out his lean Pu"?, .. __. "irrrisre," he said, “is the money for the medicine. My-my wife will herself return your calls!†Needless to say, it was an Irish- man who objected to' taking an em- etic, as ht was sure he oouldu't keep it down! Twelve men-One from each Payment in Kind. TORONTO uv.v...,, ..---___. "But I can knit, sandman. Bee l." cried John. “I put those strong brads into the spool in place of slender pins." ' Dorothy] Boltkyu.m u“--- ,-__. "But who ever heard of I bos's knitting?" said Dorothy. "But boys do knit, and men, in some countries.†answered John. “Shepherds knit their winter jer- seys while they tend their sheep. I read about it." . "Who was the first, to do Imm- ting?" asked Dorothy. "No one knows juat who wan the first to loop a single threadco that it would make a web. It take: two sets of threads for weaving, you know," said their grandmother. "But when people first began to make slings out of thonga,utrtrips of leather,--and then to twist them into cords, they learned to fasten them by many queer knots and ties, ‘some of which sailors and weavers use today.†i "Oh, I know," interrupted John. "A sailor showed me how to make "Probably the very same knots that the Phenicianl and the Egyp- tians made in their fish-nets we are using in our hammocks to-day. But knitting is different from knotting or netting, because we simply slip a raw of 10003 made of a Single some.' ' Known; and Kaila". _ "Grandma, make John give " my knittinr1spooll" c w. ":19 “V "P" "Soon a man invented a. second row of needles on a. machine for rib- bed knitting. Then cune the cir- cular knitting-machine. You’ve seen me knit round stockings on al, triangle made of three iieedus." Well, this knitted a. round stocking, only the loops were set up on a circle of needles. The most won- derful help of all, however, wad what is called a latch-needle, which holds the thread tight one second, and lets it go the next. Then came power. If you children lived in a. factory town, you would know all these things as well as you know your history lesson, for there is a wonderful peace history as well as war history." “But wevdon't, dolefully. - _ "Never mind. Some day your father will take you to see I factory where this wonderful knitting is done on hundred: of machinen that are nothing more than a, giant im- provement of tha spool in Johnny’l hand, with hundreds of pins or latch-needle- spinning . circular tube or web, and dropping it down through a. hole in the bottom; " llll\lubll I. Igu-v __ -.v- - - - "I shouldn’t wonder," continued grandma, "if, long ago, somebody took a. child’s knfttiu-spoo1 and thought about it, and thought about ir, and tried tadkl and pins and ciochet-ncedles, and other thing. And perhaps they did not succeed at first any more than Johnny did. But they kept on trying. Year after year they thought and worked, un- til they made of knitting one of the greatest industries of the world."--. Youth’s Companion. Ever since they came to school that morning two of the boys had been persistently naughty. At lust, therefore, the teacher. now thor- oughly exasperated, turned to them ungrily, and said that they must stay in during playtime until each had written his name one thousand times. Playtime duly came, and. as the rest of the cluss rose and hustened from the room to enjoy a spell of freedom, the two miscreants settled down to their irksome imposition. Five minutes later the teacher re- turned to see how they were getting on, and found a heated argument in progress. "Come, come 3" she asked. "What’s the matter now l" Whereupon one of the boys burst into tears. "Tifiiiii' fair, muml" be gasped. "Ws name's Tim Bust, and mine's Alexander O’Shaughneuy I†Proudly be walked up to his be- trothed, and drew from_his peck-ct trauma, on“ “IV" “V... ..... r"*‘" n small morocco cue. Opening it, he took out s ring--n single din, mond-and placed it on her taper- ing firttter. She looked " it. ' "Its very mull!†she “id, and paused. Then: "And not very bril- liant, either!" . . "iii'oiaioirt, His smile "nigh- ed; but, quickly recovering himself, he laughed, aryl [yids . . "1‘ng “QQ'eétheart, but love il blind I†- - _ . "iiTiiing her limpid eye! to his, she said: - -- - __- marriage. Tfii, heat, but not stone blind'." Everything', fair in love and war in other words, before and alter ihe first, to do knit- Clearly Unjust. Stone Blind. S?, said Dorothy, cried GOD BELONGS TO ALL AGES If We Do Not Hear His Voice It " We Who Are Blind and Deaf m knows not the halt of religion -nor indeed, perhaps, any religion at all in the true - of the word -.who has not a burning sense of God as a living God-a God living‘ today just as much it He has ever lived in the past and working to-l day, as always, tor the redemption of the world. To think of God as! holding converse with Abraluuni and Isaac in the deserts of Pales-i tine, to see Him revealing His pre-l sence and speaking His will toi lssiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel, lo, ’know of His close armpanionship'I with Jesus and Paul and John-all' this is important, I have no doubt. But, still, it must be admitted that even at the very most this is to us to-dsy only history and not life; only the record of spiritual reality, and not by any means the reality itself. And as much as the dried and pressed tlower differs from the full blown rose now nodding upon its stem, as much as the rusted flint- Iii! dug up from some ploughed field is less important than the bur- nished sword now leaping like a flame from its nebhard. at much u the tombs and epitaph: of kings amount to little or nothing we com- pared with The Blood and Sweet and Tens of even the humbleet of living men ---by .0 much in God's preeence here and now with u: of more eig- n'dicanee then Hie reported pre- eence at any time or in any place with the patriarch, prophets and apostles of the ages gone. What primarily concert" us, or should concern m, in our time, in not that God wu, but that He its; not what m said 3nd did yesterdAy “The living God."-a?sa1m, luxiv., 2. Prawn: Poincare. of Funoo. manning from tet mum noun Fibre u, Bari:- nnn. he nod mun-Hot In in his gur- don. Tho Praldut, “wading. culled 1ut bulged!“ [you mummy.“ nld: ' {g-RJJEE "iiTiTraGi another 116m". Both lung! and hits vita wept, Ind when 1110 President finUhed Him-II threw him. til,', into I. Polmm'u arms and summed Ill. "no.“ Ionlm Killed. A [rim incident of an rising in Portu- gal wu unrated by I French sculptor lo a. Pun pnper. __.. _ ... A - .-... -. A -nt's cart tiiied with IH'I' drew nan the hrattistt-Pt'rttyruts", frontier. Th. o Sill. gunned into it: one. to “may him-salt. thrust his sword â€an! “In. nmnc the bundles. "Pa. on." he laid cueleuly. An imuuu Uter ha uttered an exclamation of horror. Blood “in tric3linrtrorn the still". . A tillrluu. "um um UNI-Iv. The driver sprang from the ct1rt and Md, followed by revolver chain trom tho custom. enema. Overland“. an, out. tho ancill- loud beneath the straw a dud nun. The sword had pun-d through IP.. hoart .. he I" hlddon. He, w" a Buy-Hut loader, trying to â€mingle him- ul! “no Forms-l for the rininl. You LIV. Lon." In luluril. ofBefn1 “Hunc- Jun honed uhnw um, dunno her mull popuutton Duiznril pol-tun, by (If ung'cre‘suu Tefltf a: arituirkitknd Europe. _ Among her 1ee'u"pe than "a no: policing of at lent. t you. of no Othnr mun-ten return the [allowing "uroqt Romain“. t.0N mural-Inna; tlervia, 615; valln. 410. Pram». uh Itwlr, 171. me 13nd. 92: Equip. 'tl'riyst'T L76;- et I'll“. ll. “urn-d W’l -'e"e" -. _ V var Ill Belgium, 65 Dunn-wk. t, Bad thr taer1artd, 0. The lungvity of the Btr1gtsr0r" h nup- pond to summed with tho eattntt " 'Jlun." . sort ot oottdltu4 unm- milk or curd, obtained by formulation. Tet tor hm autumn. M, momenta. tho French mlnmer of Agriculture. nu droidod to momma u monster urkuitunl ammunition lautlnl “no. Jb6, Whig): hum 11eertie,", the: W" yen-I. "In“... - - __--,__,,, - merits of the variant French urlcullunl machine" run by "pun. oil, or other an- (inn. The competition will tau place at tho agricultunl school n Grimm and will be ridged by a Jury ot at ultunl expon- rom the French agricultural .oeiotlar.. A damned report will be drawn up from tho point of nu of economy. a well u re cult. which is likely to {in impetus to thes movement in (Ivor o motor uncul- tural in Prrnoe. . ' ' . u “mu All Kill-- Tho use of motor mnchirtrr h especially muted 1n the neighborhood of New and Boil-noun. when foul-mu IK‘WHII of the dietriot no will; newt unchar- on the cooperative tum. Loom: View: by um. limo. Emmy Datum. an open all-cor. of Berlin. bo been reducing her weight by the potato cure. by mun. of chm): I friend of hers lost Mwn M. in a month without injury. '1‘th diet k tho "luau Vlom lunar-mt um! Put. following: Tea or ootree without sun, one dry roll Ind fruit " lib. in the moral"; tor luncheon no noun. light tub. I!“ hm pontoo- In their an... no butter. but ur- dlnu or Inchovlu AM vhsuvor vege- table you like, fresh but uncooked fruit mud no den-en; " 6 o'clock. fruit the â€no In gt no“: and two mum mm ot an. Aner keeping on. up torseUht dtll drop it tor three and then aka it up nun. cum Amount in "up. Raid protra- h being a“. with the “(unto Apullln madam. which will . A - a--- .L- __-l..-. A. Oh. [II-nut nunâ€-.- -M""'"'"'" - _ __ - carry the In!" from the spring. at the liver as). in (he provlnol ot Avellino right through the ADDinIln. to the southern and ot l-uly. d'tstrittrtttrt. tt on: u tarrritor' of no"): It.†mun" miles, with .trottt 2.600.000 Inn-blunt; no annuity ot water svtllnblo I: the aprinn is "atod to be Mum m (“long not mad. or over 101.000.†gallon. 'terr twenty-(our hour. Thr com of the work h "ttaruted n 38..“ The length of the Inn tttoo “no will ho us all... in " dmon w vhloh than will be can"! hun- dred mile. at “In linen. ik chic! for them. Ott the on»; mud. um be" with my the pal-ml ot t Her {and led with itt bin mm hummin- but to - an Doings In Europe. Ti "a""iirraariAud at thin h in far nay Judea, but what he i. trying to say and do today right. here; not that He walked with Enoch or talkod with lose: or ro- vealed Himself in Christ, but that He is walking and talking with In and revealing Himulf in every true and pure and nelHorgettin‘ life. To try to confine God to any l A. Surely u not In God In surely in He 5 living God, and ithis mung, if it mean: anything, (that m in A: much with in ted“ in spirit and in truth u ever. He Iv“ with Monet upon Sinai. with :John on Pumas or with Jenn upon the Mount. A. June- Hartman hu so wonderfully expreued it:-- "U we cunnot find God in you! home and mine, upon the undid. or the margin of the In. in tho bursting seed or opening flower, in the dny duty and the night musing, in the genial hush and secret grief, in the procession of life, even enter- ing afresh and solemnly passing u; and dropping off, I do not think " _ should discern Him any more on s the gun of Eden or beneath the I moonlight of Gethsemane." . age or any country or may people 0: Any person it blalpllemy of the flrat order. God belong! to all Itâ€. all countries, all peoples, all per- wnl: which menu. tor m It least, this Me, this country. this people. and theo. person: which Ire our- selves'. “God is not dumb.H u Lowell bu well said, "thast. II. should speak no mores" and cer- tainly m is not dead that Ir, should reveal His glory and HI ‘puwer unto men no longer! To know-God n the living God, to nerve Him In I real pretence, (a commune with Rim u did the pro- pheta of old-this " religion '.--.Rev., John Barnes Holmes. tor a." Hedwig curl-d tood to hot It“ than on u - In "In... The French ministry ot alum. has Jul. mum-bod can. mun-ms antinuc- ooh- oernlng the production nu we or alcohol in Prune. The total production in m: wa- mums gallons. nu compact um 63,7".165 gallon in 1911. In up". ot an. anon-noun production, Irma nodal from loreicn continua 4313.671 [sun- at an nlooho‘l Ind Manon. On an at.†Il'ldh, than vu n total export and. of . mm (won. '1qu cm- In 'Httettre6 A pretty custom has been lnuo‘md u recent 1er " Pub. lintnuu'o ro- productluln o the present" tut m an " to be chm"! at the magma In planted "no". the other (in; in " a ram-m rocotttiott there In! a any motor car, In upturn; nodel of n villa which ( had been prey-mm! to the brig. tef let 2:50:16; T"iiiiiiGUGiiaikua M O (and pane. A beautiful rest robe made a white crepe de chine bu a tfudle, I jacket and . boudoir up nude d cherry silk, embroidered in blue and guy and gold. The joist. shaped much like u bolero in from, is cut with . deep, hoodlike point ill the bud. There are elbow sleeve- to the jacket, but it is cellulose. The girdle in wide and laid in Ioldl, and ends in long, folded cub end. st the bani. The cup in getbered, in mob shape, and a bend of mall grey and blue and gold roses, made of chiffon and gold tissue, encircle. French Heel Bull Papal". There are not many startling clung" in lootweer. There are fiar-lteeUd shoes, to be sun, but they ere not popular as yet. They are too odd to take the Impaler taste. The high French heel re- nnin: the popular eon. Some charming ungo clipper: of gin cloth show ribbon: of gilt which slide through chewed gold slides, it :edged with a narrow line ot vivid ignen. Their Mickie. bring. on. Idle depth of the color of the nu. New Culllu Bu. An attractive bled silk bending (ot and! proportions em â€.16. i'l'he {hp is embroidered with tiny iron: in pink and green. The bag I is large enough to hold ohnuge, s 'hmdkemhiet all ouch, Ind would be t very suitable bag for afternoon '; calling. each decorated with two or three rhinestones. The ribbons um neatly on the ankle with n no. gilt, buckle. This cart .u Iqaluit. is, perhaps, trimmer than (but. by menu of . bow and ends. But there en plenty of slippers that no laced over the instep with when. that do end in . bow. Velvet lose [or Cor-ace. A new OOIHI‘O Bower in the but. velvet role, in pink or purple or in some Bers dude of rod, with he"! of black velvet. The lave. ere Gold mesh bug! have bundle. formed of [old chin, which and in tuber ring. trig enough to clip on! the "tter. The amber and this you moth look well together, and the ring is really I safeguard and O convenience. “I Bead Ora-cl“- Tiny black or brawn tur heads no used to ornament the tronta of net or chiffon Mon-en. They are Ip- plied, like buttonu. in a row Cong _ _. ' pon'tal. They If. In: to Menard Bags. Timely Hints. A