it . ithttlt,'le,fl) ll 'NN? 'arap why the heart does not and enough blood to the head. Nmmn are the possible reaso‘ni Too much blood. for instance, any so Micro. the heart may be weak fr? 'obonod by your breathing foul nit, or the blood may be too poor in qual- Ity to do its work properly. ;-;;litinuous supply of blood or they will cease to act. There is no kind of coll that does not quickly exhaust The heart does not send rnough blood upward. and so not only the face but the brain becomes pale and - to work. All tissues requires You can guess the reason of this if you remember that the fnee of the person who truecumbs to this state is ulwuys pale. This gives you the hint that the supply of blood to the head u defective. It is plainly seen that something has happened to stop the tissue works. Perhaps you forget that your vitality lust wary all the time. ttnd that if it 'btpped for a moment you would topple over. That is what happens when a person fainta. The switchboard brain centers which control the bninnee of the body Ind the nerves which carry orders from the senses to the muscles of the logs refuse to net. Why the "out Does Not Send En- ough Blood to the Mend. " you are in aplace where there Is n crowd and the air becomes stuffy and foul, there is generally some complaint about the ventilation-tsome one turns pale. away: and falls help- lessly to the ground. France, in Egypt, on the Gallipoli Peninsula, in Mesopotamia. Egypt, East Africa and China Indian and British troops to the number of ooo,- British troops to the number of MO,- fought valorously side by side, and the British army of occupation in India was cut down from its usual enrolment of nearly 75,000 to leu than 15.000. In view of the fact that the native population of India in more than 316.000,000, anarchy would have had one long devil's carnival in the absence of the troops, if in the levth and breadth of the country its foot- hold and mindhold had been ilrm. Lord Hardinge, progressive in his attitude and following the liberal pattern set by Morley and Minto in his administration. is qualified to speak for the patriotism of India. England's grandest eolorui1 expert- ment is Jutstihed by the fruits of it in the unwavering fidelity of the na- tive rulers who enjoy the heditage of Hastings and of Clive. no to hie hmione of the loyalty of the people of Indie. The people themselves, he nuns, have trucked down eedlioniete, like the 7000 who came back from America a your Mo, ngrparently under German impin- tion, to stir up disaifeetion. Lord Herdinge himself was the tenet of anarchists at Delhi; but he prefers to believe that the vast" majority of the Indiana repudiate the philosophy and the methods of assassins, He blues his optimism on the facts. Irs. dian "jabs and chiefs sent all the men and gave all the money they could spare, and in meny can“ re- ported in person at the front when the war broke out. Lord Hardin‘s. who has relinquish- ed his post as Viceroy and returned to England, has given tn interview We intend to do this with as much good humor on they have left us. We can still joke, still laugh in their faces end "play the game†of war cheerfully. But the long strain of the Peat months has roused in usull that inherited otutrbornnetns of rue which is not only dangerous to those who oppoee it but is unconquernble. It is not a sentiment nor on acquired habit. It in bred in the past cen- turies and is itself the history of our mem ' than guy for the misery they have wrought and deprive them of the weepons which make such misery possible. They He not fit to be trusted with power therefore it must be taken eway from them. The full menus of this Itubborn- I... of the British can be under.. stood only when it is considered from the German point of view. It in not hatred of the Germans themselves, but Iimply a determination to make win this m even if it take. them hunty nu: and ovary mm and cont they you.“ to do it, is likely to in.. “: this feeling of howls-non among the Oman: In to the ulti- lute outcome. Maximilian Harden ha already voiced this sentiment and ht due coma it will " itself in the Gemn mind. WHAT MAKES "l0PLE PAINT. Two Dollars. Plan. "What would you recommend for r.ntunbulism, doctor?†“Well, you might try insomnia" Everything therefore which can b. done to make Germany ruling that the British still are 3 most stubborn me and lave got it ttrmly Bxed in NOTES AND COMMENTS no 6a.... m nu ma. w' number My. Thu nu turning the m and than in AiiAne ,rtthtn them the Mining knowledge that; the British are bayou! nil meant. Imbborn. In humid and basin.“ circles tho British budget has brought positive dismay. The {net that Great Britain in quite cheerfully and con»; placently preparing for at last nn-§ other two yen-n of war has come with something of n enmlysmici shock to Germans. It was Germany herself wk "originally conceived that the war would not last more than ix months. That the British no now prepared to carry on the war for years unless Germany comes to terms In the meantime in causing much more apprehension than the poul- bility of the linen being broken. they no going to l Skirts are short, sleeves range from i the short puff, so charmingly in keep- ing with bouffant skirts of the mom- i, ent, to the three-quarter or full 1 length sleeve of organdy, net, Georg- ;ette or chiffon. Round necks are I particularly modish, although the I square peek and the V are also liked. _ " one wishes to be at the height of 1 the mode, the graduation frock must ' boast a hooped Petticoat. These are tied, both for use and ornament, (qr lane are extremely dainty tt - mgr. Feathers are being u - new fans. There are um l father Inns and plain coc _ . fans in white and colon. Net, which is such a general fav- orite for the typical summer dress,is quite as well liked for the ttradutttion dress and proves extremely practical. White cotton net, combined with tab feta, voile, or orgnndy, fashion: the mimics). of graduation frocks; one which may be worn later for summer afternoons, or the dance. so softly boned and so unobtrusive that the frock looses none of its aim- plicity but gains in grow. Shoes. Gloves and I Fm White kid pumps and white silk stockings are dainty and carry out the "all white" notion; black patent or kid pumps and black stockings, how.. ever, are in quite as ttoml form. White silk gloves, if any gloves are worn. are better than kid, being cool- er. A small white fan may be car- ingly and simply trimmed. Crepe de Chine or one of the very soft “Items or “tins may also be used, if prefer- red, but the cottons are more in vogue and daintier. W Another Dainty Model for the Graduate It is no longer commend the pro-! per thing for the graduate to be ela- borately dressed in silk or satin; many of the daintiest frocks no fashioned by the graduate herself, from the sheer voila, organdiel, netm a or from the dainty fhmneings of lace l or embroidery. The high schools} favor the idea. of the graduate fuh-' ioning her own dress; some so an far as to suggest the material and, the cut for the entire class. Per-' hape this does not appeal to the aver- I age girl, with her ideas of individ-E uality, but the notion of making her! own frock should appeal to her, for. this very reason, that she may add', little distinctive touches which bring: out her own personality. I Simplicity in Cut and Material . The very simplest, most youthful! models are chosen for the June gradu- ( ate. They are usually of ortrandy, or ( one of the sheer cottons, very spar-f For the June Graham (Nitatu" important u the June bride is the J um graduate. She must be just u daintily dressed in misty white, and her future is equally as promising. 7104 Commencement Frock of Voile J os I I @ Men} 7192 THE FASHIONS g om chi il,ii',iiiii1i'i1iij. e' viii?,) E 'ii') A) "iit',itiiii, o loll the stuff thoy would In My: trlgni it and the " 'lf1'i'.t'; " a ould be block: Receiving Stolen Property. Men who buy stolen property from boys should be Tet', dealth with. Junk dealers are um ly unset pulous god will buy brass, load 'IQ' tool- f, om children, even though they know g tf,',?,',:,' toleh. Boys hegin by 'iii t,t in) act-oz: ot iron ind cast off c o it ail in and soon tho; grow bolgiet â€dong? 'ttttttt “cant .welllng From first to last shells are made by machinery. Last year l spent a night in a hut in the forest and went out in the morning to see the runners pass. They had been going about six miles when they passed me, and I chose a nice, Ethick place on a good slope to see them go by. As they must go in sin- ttie file they are started at two- minute intervals, and a competitor who is caught up with must give his pursuer room to pass him. There were thirty or forty starters, all very young men, and they went through the thicket at full speed. I had the ill- natured satisfaction of seeing two fall who failed to clear a particularly malicious hush with the tips of their skis; they pitched on their heads, but they were up again in a trice. Several of them avoided that particular bush with a side jump taken at the last mo- ment, which served further to increase their pace. They were all going with an easy swing, which carried them with hardly an effort over the ground. The course of the fifty-kilometre race, which takes place annually be- fore the great jumping competition at Holmenkollen, is laid right through the great forest of Nordmarken, and is covered by many of the competitors in about four hours and a quarter-- not bad going for thirty-one miles up hill, down dale, and cross lakes, with the finish no lower than the start. The track to be followed is marked by lib. tle red streamers hung to the trees at intervals. It is laid by officials of the skl club, who delight in choosing the most difficult way they can find, and the actual tracks of whose skis con- stitute the course. An Exhilarating Sight to See a Troop i of Soldiers on Skis. ' ‘ When anyone writes of skiing in) Norway, it is the purely Norwegian) aspect of the sport that is of the most _ interest, says a correspondent of the: London Times. Mountain skiing is,) with the minor variations, due to local 2 conditions, the same the world over;) forest skiing is essentially the pas-" time of Norway. Those who are no: customed to the long runs over per-, tect snow common in Switzerland find i little pleasure in following narrow and ‘ tortuous tracks through forest, and; are, of course, incapable of marking' out such a track for themselves; for forest skiing requires skill of a wholly, different order from that necessary in l the open. The paths are often hard and very bumpy, speed is quickly} gathered, and great command over the l ski is necessary to keep the balance) and take the sharp turns between the) trees. Few more exhilarating sights: can be imagined than a troop of Nor-1: wegian soldiers flitting through ther forest in Indian file, hard on each? other's heels, all going full speed,: prodding with their sticks to increase _ the pace even down the hills, never; faltering at the humps, and swinging" round the bends without a check. ’ ‘party, or summer afternoon costume. There are large hats of organdy in the dainty colorings, just the thing for the organdy frock; large black and colored wenchows, steneiled with some quaintly conceived and colored figures flower or bird; wide brimmed leghorns, with a. flower or two on their drooping brims; and many oth- ers, for the large hat is again modish. These stenciled hats, offer alluring possibilities to the girl who paints or understands the mixing of colors. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer or f mm The McCall Company. TO Bond St., Toronto, Ont. Dept. W. The Garden Party Hat. It will t'.o no harm to tell of a hat or two, which, worn with the gradua- tion frock after that wonderful day will complete a most effective garden In the second design is a particu- larly effective frock of plain and fur- ured voile. The figured material is white with a white memorized ring. The quaint neck line, puffed sleeves and full skirt, make it a very pleas- ing and youthful frock, suitable for graduation exert-ism or summer parties. The first frock illustrated here in a jumper model' adapted from one of Poiret’s designs. It is developed in net and tatteta and is acharmingly simple model for the girl who wishes to make her own frock for commence- ment. _ It is considered most Frenchy-to combine organdy and taffeta. or net and taffeta. This is usually done ln a frock which one has no idea of sending to the laundry, although there an" at the moment tattetns and “tins which wash very well. _ 't2,tg,f.thg,,,ut,fLtgt my be worn, and Colonial m or or rhine- stone buckles my union: the pumps. Very little jewelry, if any, lo permts- sible; omen brooch or atiny Laval- liere is quite enough. Sun-er Frock- of Drum], Organdy is one of the most general- ly favored of materials for the sum- mer frock. whether for granulation, garden parties, or summer dances. It comes in ttll the delicate pasted color. ings now favored and is also pattern- ed with dainty, conventionaliz'ed de- signs. on white and colored grounds. The plain and fltrured voile: are ef- fective also, and there are many at- tractive combinations of voile and taf- feta, orgarrPy and taffeta, net and organdy and the like. mangled silk fan in still favored. Any of these make most weeptgble gifts for the Waste. Although the pleiner the hair is dressed the better, RH; @113 guitar}; __ {IRE Fiii "11 the' a " thoy would lieiiiit $116133 axon†"u' new 59 legume those who take advantnto these untrained rouths.--J. J. SKIING IN NORWAY. of SNTARIO for by that mean; much of the poison it envied tr m S', eyabm. The pati- tht kylgxge yen plenty of water, fot t t, dir, helps to eliminate the On the other hand, the pain is so intense, and the patient is in such dreed of a clumsy hand or a jetting foqtetep, that it is but to keep him virtually Isolated while the attark is " its height. The patient should have the largest and best ventilated room that can be spared, end he should say in bed for some time after the actual fever he: disappeared. Pure in 'ttt . good deal of sweet- ng, And . t should be encouraged, for by that mean; much of the poison The great danger in rheumatic fev- er is its tendency to attack the heart. In former days it was almost always the case that a patient rose from an attack with a permanently damaged heart. But if the salieylate treat- ment is begun early enough and pur- sued perseveringly, that unfortunate complication may usually be warded off. In other respects, the treat- ment is that suitable to any acute fever, except that since there is no fear of infection for others. it is not necessary to isolate the patient. Of course, acute attacks of diseases 'i, known to be bacterial in origin cause the modern doctor to search out the; cause, but those more obscure eotr-', ditions of "poor health" or "general debility" that are thought to be the necessary attendant of middle age; have been passed over with little I study, and medical treatment has been , limited to "Unites," rest, change of, scene, etc.. when really the cause of, such impaired physical vigor was due l to infected tonsils, Rigg’s disease ori pus foci in the roots of the teeth. Re- I m val of the cans: automatically cure: ' the effeets. Hence the necessity for i careful and regular attention to teethl and throat. l Acute Rheumatism. Rheumatic fever, although serious and painful enough, is not figured as it used to be. We have discovered that salicylate of soda has a trpecifle action in this disease; it relieves the pain, reduces the fever and shortens the attack. . The result of extensive research in- vetigations has proved beyond any doubt that direct infection is the cause of many more numerous And serious conditions, as disease of the heart muscle (myocarditis), of the structure of the kidney (nephritis, and very recently the evidence is conclusive that ulcers of the stomach and intes- tine adjacent to it, diseases of the gall bladder (even without. gallstones) are caused directly by infection. ,7 The eonunin siource of such intee- tion, the central focus, is very often in the tonsils or teeth. Many of us older ones, who have spent considerable money for dental work-fillings, bridge-work, caps, etc. --now are shown by the up-to-date dentist that there are unsuspected pockets of pus about the roots of our te eth. Muchprevio us work, thought to be so perfect, has to be undone and radical measures taken to eradicate the dangerous foci of infection. For many years the surgical pro- fession has realized the importance of germ infection in the causation and complication of surgical affections. ed: It is only within the last few years that the medical man has come to determine that in the so-called medi- cal affections infection is the causa- tive factor. notably in rheumatism, influenza, and similar diseases. I'm-om!" Appointed War Minister 0? Japan. who has submlttcd plan for the increasing of the Japanese army. The inthunmation is very likely to Tonsil: and Teeth. Aprominent physician is thus quot- Japan War; Minister m LlL-JLT.~GEN. OSHIMA. TORONTO 9. Well-doing--- See paraphrase Two different words appear for "the good": here what is seen to be good Us the emphasis, in verse 10 'the em- phtsis in on internal quality. Due 8. Flesh here is the antithesis of shirit, and includes the whole of hu- man nature when God is left out, just as spirit is man's highest nature in vital uyion with God. Corruption-- "What are men better than sheep or goats '."-destined for nothing but the grave-if they deliberately starve the one immortal part of them? 7. There is probably no immediate link with the previous vxerse, but the thought is not far away, as the return to it in verse 10 shows. Belf'tthness is the "sowing to the flesh." God is not mocked-This is the converse of such Old Testament conceptions as Pen. 37. IS, representing Jehovah as deriding the creatures of a day who dare to defy him. The New Testa- ment would never say this. but it can picture man deriding or (Rom. 2. 4) despisinit the patience which man's folly mistakes for importance. Yet all the time wild oats are sown, by Gcd's inexorable law wild oats come up and ore harvested, unless the sow- er Lu grace to pull them up and sow outlier tardy crop in the enfeebled sofl. 6. Communicate-An unintelligible archaism. It means go shares with: the "eatechnmen"--for the word here got a technical meaping before long; compare especially Luke 1. 4-is to share meals and other things with him who has ben telling him the go:- pel story. Compare 1 Cor. 9. 11. tr. For his responsibility for this work he can never share-he must bear it himself before God. What then has he to do with other people's responsibilities and the possibly in. ferior faithfulness with which they shoulder theme. ' 4. Prove-To apply a rigid and impartial test to our own performance is the surcst.check to conceit. Glory- irur--The thought seems to be that when a man has really tested his own work he will feel no temptation to compare it with his neighbor's achieve- ment: he judges it by an absolute, not a relative, standard. If then he "glories" in it, it will be with no sort of pride, for he knows its faults, but only with thankfulneas to God, who has helped him. Paul very often uses this word 'boast' in quotation marks, as it were. 3. Something --So in Gal. 2. 6. The man who thinks so much of himself could, of course, not stoop to do what in India is called "eoolie work" for his brother, especially if he had been caught in some lapse. Those who have learned Christ’s law from see- ing him at “coolic work" for men (John 13. G; compare Mark 10. 45) will count it their privilege. When he is nutlting--In 2 Cor. 12. 11 Paul humbly uses this phrase (nearly) of himself. Deceiveth himself-Not other people, who can generally take tht measure of such men. 2. Burdens-A tsignificantly differ- ent word from that in verse 5, where the load is that which we must carry for ourselves. Here the thought is of times when “Mighty love doth cleave in twin The burden of a single pain, And part it, giving half to him." The law of Christ-Compare especial- ly John 13. 34. A better reading here is the future, ye will fulfil. Verse I. We seem to hear the echo of a boast that they could not be tol.. erant of "treiTtussera." The whole verse is reminiscent of the Lord's encounter with men who brought him a woman overtaken in a grievous trespass, when he bade "look to them- selves.†Resstore---'rhe idea of the verb is that of putting something in order so as to be ready for use again, like tumbled nets after anight’s fish- ing (Mark 1. 19). Note the corres- ponding noun in Eph. 4. 12, of the "fitting of the consecrated for work of serving." It is God' work to estimate and punish guilt: our only concern is that one of God's tools is out of re- pair, and we must see it in working order again. Frit---Neither here nor in verse 8 do we use the capital. It is, in fact, usually impossible to dis- tinguish in such phrases between the Divine and the human spirit, for the latter is the part of man where God dwells. in an "umrpiritutsl" nun (called psychical in 1 Cor. 2. 14-one who has nothing higher than the mind in him, the psyche, or “soul," being in this context the man on his im- material side) the "spirit" is asleep; and the sleep may deepen into death. Gent1eneas--Suprerne1y seen in Christ (Matt. 11.29; 2 Cor. 10. I). The word meek is an unfortunate rendering there, for it now suggests a man who cannot resent or repel an injury, in- stead of nstrong man who will not do so. - There is 1 single thread uniting the whole paragraph, the right relations toward "ths other man" lvermr 4), who belongs to the Christian hmily. They are all centered in the duty of using the microscope for our own faults, and looking at the other man mostly to see how we can help him. THE SUNDAY LESSON Sowing and Reaping (Temperance Lesaon9.--Gnt. 6. Golden Text Gal. 6. T. There Ire few illnesses in which it is so necesssry for the physician to be constantly wishful. The salicylste of soda should be given only under his orders, since some people take it well, whereas others mot badly. Moreover, only s trained physicisn can watch the heart intelligently and vary the treatment in mordsnce with its eRndititsn.--f-Ybuth's Companion. move from Joint to joint, and the treatment for the local train of mm move. with it. It the â€in in mate, it [my be necessary to protect the Joint by I can, so that the bedclothes shell not press upon it, or to mp the Joint in layer: of cotton wool. Some- times hot fomentations give relief. INTERNATIONAL LESSON. JUNE 11. He could always Kay. "I am ready.") Very often this quality of readiness, makes all the difference there is be-,' tween ssttieieney and inetrieiener, be} tween splendid success and abjecti failure. There was once a king of, France who was called “Charles the, Unready." You do not need a single 1 word more than that nickname to: make it clear to you that that man never achieved anything worth while. l The ancients impressed upon men the necessity of being ready by describ-' ing Opportunity as a maiden who, had no hair except a single lock on the top of her forehead. If you fail- I ed to catch her by that foreiock " she passed she was (one from on forever. bk l The man who wrote those words we: confronting one of the most trem- endous tasks in the world. He hud to go to the imperial city of Rome to preach a new religion. He knew that it meant hardship in getting there and suffering and perhaps denth when he arrived. But Paul was no faint-heart. He never quailed be.. fore anything. The Roman motto, 'Semper paruus"-"Almtyts rendy" -aptly deae6bed him. His readiness to do the will of God no matter what it might be we- his most conspicuous trait. No ddnger could daunt him, no duty dismny him. We sometimes say-- "As much as in me is, I am ready.†Romans L, xv. Holding his "maater's ticket." as seamen all a uptein's certificate, Lord Brusey hats come safely through innumerable dangers with the Sunbeam. Almost at the very stem of her first voyage round the world a huge "following" wave " nearly as possible swept half a dozen of the party overboard. Writing of the incident in her book. "A Voyage in the Sunbeam.†Lady Brassey (Lord Brauey's ftrat wife) said: Built forty-two years ago, she has taken her owner all over the world " various times, having aided up; proximately 400,000 miles on her-- and hitr-trtwela. Wins Out in Business. in Professions. in Politics and in Wonderful Record of Lord Btu-0y and the Sunbeam. Lord Brusey, who recently cele- brated his eiehtieth birthday, is al- ways associated in the public mind with the ownership of one of the most famous yachts in the world, the Sun- beam. - The Sunbeam has now been pre- sented to the Government of India for war service, and is doing duty as a hospital ship for convalescent of- fieere off Alexandria. BE READY WHEN CRISIS COMES as season. The mnrgiml while we have seems probable. Household--- An American schoiu bu intely sug- gested that here und in Mutt. 6. 47 and 1 Tim. 6. 4 there in In nllusion to a lost proverb like our "Charity begins at home" (which in Greek Wu "The shin is farther off than the And would you care if Johnnie came To supper when we're through? If Bill should pitch a dandy tune, Can't I bring him home, toot If Bill comes to the kitchen door Won't you give him some pie, Bo he'll be strong and curve 'em more? Thanks. ma! Good-by! Good-by! knee" "sason-aebukintt impatience: har- velt cannot come a month after sow- We went to use the broom to sweep The home ple€e off, you Bee. And, mother, we want you to keep Our things for John and me So we won't lose them when we play; Our knife and marbles, too- Won't you please put them all away Just as you always do? . If Billy Green should some and knock At the back kitchen door, Tell him we're in the "an: block Right next to Johnson's store. And let him have my other thoes-- My old one-oh' to plny; He can't play barefoot or we'll lose; He got to pitch to-dly. And ball the other dny? Can't Johnnie wear my other than Till his own pair you dry? Do you are. mother, if we use Your old broom by and by? If we both wipe our feet off clean The way you told who? And if we run across Bill Green Cun't Billy have one, toot 0 mother, have you seen my hut, The one I wear to play? And, my, m, where'd I put my bat o mother, can't I have some cake? Can't Johnnie have some pie? Cant we come in-just ttr-und take An npple by ind by, I‘We were all sitting or standing 400.000 MILES ON HIS YACHT. ry: 'iiiGiTfieiOrthur at reading. "Look!" they cried. "We've found 30. opsrort1ytitr--' Maurice and Rip: pn into the lib. B.Y GI s "Where duty calls or danger Be never wanting there." This Man Paul Never Was. A Story ld After School. The Tagged Neat. there." Do you want that sort of u nun for a friend or for an employee. Wouldn't you rather have one who in ready in the thing that wins out in business. in the profeuiom. in politics And in rcligiog too. But remember you cannot be ready for Anything unless you get. "ady.---Ror. Frank M. Stallion! awfully in his sound man- hood the country he led his nrmiea Means not only willingttcss to and- ertake it but it means being prepared for it. Now and then men are tits' tonilhed by some hitherto unknown men doing some splendid piece " work so well to amen:- the world. But whenever any such almost mira. culous power is suddenly displayed you any bersure it Wes not suddenly acquired. Napoleon's career was not one of magic. While other you) men “VG themselvel to pleasure he studied strategy, and when his na- tion's crisi- cune he we: ready. He One mun aid of another, "He is a uploMid fellow. But Ittst " the time pu Qpedrhim he in lpt not to be The whole point of the widely known story, "A Message, to Garcia." was that the man who we; ordered to bear the message to the Cuban Gen- eral net at! at once to do it. There were many perils and unnumberrd diffieu1tie. in the way. but he did not put-Icy; he den-Med no special equipment; he went “night to his task nnd did it, A man so ready as that could not be held hack from eminence. bti -iiGe is only one way of making: great evils, smrul---by looking them straight in the fat--Democriuss 'utce.--Emertrott. Add faith unto 5" not fitnt.--Bpencer. If thou thy sw- do follow thou can't not full thee of Inglorious purt.-- Dante. A merely fallen enemy may rise spin. but the reconciled one is truly vanquiued.---gehilier. -...,,....-. The correct muticinl description of the Sunbeam is: "A three-man“! toptail schooner, fitted with auxiliary power"---' is to say. she is equip- ped with both soils and engines. "Capt. Lecky, being accustomed to very urge ship, had not in the lust realized how not: we were to the water In our little vesnrel"--the hon- ii'iii"oiuriGie-t is only 227 tons --"tutd was proportionately taken by surprise." Bunny children) were mind was completely flooded by the m. Provi- denthlly. however, he had taken I double turn around his wrist with a msefing point, and, throwing his oth. er arm round Mubelle. held on like grim death. “In I second the so. cum pouring over the “cm. A can of rope on which Capt. Lechy (Lord 8118621.. skipper and Bubelle (one of the - u . _ ~_-‘-A “m. about .WUN - -... -- -,,, miring the milk-om dark blue bil-. lowu follow us. A new hind w“ 'toering, And jun " the moment when an unusudly big wnve over- took us, iiiiiiriGua, allowed the usual to broaeh-to . little. "Did you lay you had It now I" liked Maurice. Uncle Arthur left the room, and when he returned he held out I neat "Here it is. nume and all." he said. to the children. The two examined it eagerly, than, when Uncle Arthur took lgdn, Maurice aid: "I'm going to try that myself, I time, and we if I can't as . "Did I ever tell you about abird's nest thlt I have?" ' "No," replied both voices. "When I we I boy," he went on, "we used to hen: out strings to help the orioles build their nests. just as you do now. One spring I thought I would like to mark one of the nests. so I wrote my name on Ismail tag and tied " to I long piece of twine. How pleased t wen when I saw an oriole take my “ring and tty off with the a; angling behind her!" "Did she put it Into her nest?" interrupted Marlee. “She flew to null elm and that was the last [saw of it then. Two or three times during the summer , climbed the tree, but, nlthough I could see the can end the young birds, I new nothing of the tut. In the fall, when the bnncheI were bore. another boy end I tried to get the empty nest. After working with ludders and poles. "Bo In I," quickly echoed Rita.--- Youth'l Companion. we finally got it. When I hold the nest in my bad, the Brat thing Iuw w“ the little as with my name still plain upon it." - Li] " -.e" A NM’I net that the wind blew down?†“111: birds In all (one, norm day?†quutioned Rita uuiouuly. "Of course,†answered Maurice. "re. . Int summer'l nest." After Uncle Arthur had looked at the nest, he uked: It is dnnzeroua to ring a bell dur- I n thunder-storm. THOUGHTS FOR THE DAY. Reulinesn For I Task llwnyn springs from ignor- of your force and do you had it now t" It tr or AUS TO AW H H " KILUNG (y, n "it M p BRITISH ALI.†the per 'ttor MAR“ “In (x 0m Th th " ttti the the tht tot CUSTOMS l SHOW BIG In often Verdun on our , he aide mm will It“ lured if; “(can Bill Allies CROWN " Ot an " "huh fr " N Wilt " It " Lu