It Buy “Diamond Dri--tso other than and an your drugs!“ whothor tho yum] you will: to cold)! 13 wool " wk. or when": it u ttnets, cotton. or mud loch. J"i'j'r2 ' or boll to dye rich, ti'-:.'.),",-,',"...':)':., pennant colon. $23.35;: Each 1Feent puck- 'diilis'v, " - contain: dino- ire/ii L----, non: no ottrttrlo any woman cu: an or tint l'ngerlo, silks. ribbons. “In... waists. drama. can. Mocha“. sweaters, drum-too. marina. hun- ttuv. everything now. lnl : ‘11 _" - mt _ In . , gag, = ' w ' t:ir.irr:ir. f Ts"" or "",htt.r:. " (“:9 r “1,? ' " - . -ev --- T tio '0 YRE amen. Tea and coffee In chased an hour- um and no not necessary for our wall-being. We do require mm uni " 1 v The housewife win thinks of M": in groups and can cluslfy the (MM coti has solved on important problou. 1†Every food con be put in one of "ci;; groups, and each of these groups 'ttl y tains some substance necessary for boil the nourishment of tho body. Soul. cm food from each of the five group horn Ihould be included in the daily diet, pm] breakfast. dinner Ind luncheon or ore Iupper odor-ding opportunities fort I u-ing foods from the various (coupe. um Group I include: foods containing new mineral substances and orpnic acids. onio In this group are spinach, lettuce, Ipm peas, string beans, tomatoes, turnip, a.†carrots, cabbage, onions, and “hr‘upit vegetables, apples, pears, canâ€. w grapefruit, berries, other fruit, and orn fruit gelatin. kit, Group ll include: foods which con- mm: min protein. Mar, meats, poultry, tttrt" tuh, oynun, milk, cheese, eggs, dried! rhuh legumes (beans, lentils And I,',',',',',',),) Bett; nuts. cocoa, custard: Ind ice cream with belong in this group. l (bah Group HI is made up of the foods) W: which contain starch, such as ttour or some meal mixtures, bread, crackers. iiri-li"i'i7, nrnni, rice, tapioca. cereal breakfnst1bgn. fonds, other canal food and â€tantalum. Group IV Includes the foods eon- crock mining gum. In this list we '2,'l Wi syrup, honey, preserves, jellies. dried mull fruits. candy, sugar and Fozen GGliriiiii " wuer-iees. aqua: Group V includes the foods contain- ed), rig furs; these are butter, cream, lard,| sauce uct. pork. bacon, chocolate Ind "elsherh duo be IV 14 MIXING FOODS WITH BRAINS, 50M. Linen, cambric, Percale aifor_tt_t is also required. tl. m silk, madras and funnel may, With roast beef serve mac†‘. W " for this design. (potatoes browned with the meat Tlu. Puttern is cut. in 11 sizes: 13%, _ ed or scalloped. and any of the i. um. 15, 1514, m, 16%, 17, 17%, ine venetables: eggplant. canli _ and ititi inches neck measure. To Brussels trprouU, tomatoes (ste uke the shirt for a 15-inch size, with scalloped) onions, squash. crew ntt sleeves will require 8 yards of beet greens. new beets, peas. or: Much material. With short sleeves Brown gravy and horseradish V. yards will be required. ‘PYOPQHY accompany rout beef, Pattern mailed to any address Ort) If a salad is served, choose [ w't-ipt of lik in silver, try the Wilson eres8, celery or lettuce with ' mashing Car., 78 West Adelaide M., dressing, or serve cole-alaw. 'r, oronto. Allow two week: for meipt aert_ahould be a light one Shell tt pat A PRACTICAL SHIRT MODEL. ‘nd 15e in lilvor for our up-to. Fall and Winter 1924-1925 Book ashions. nre sealed in air-tight JiiGiG%, foil. Their fresh fuvor" ls finer than any _ J apan or Gunpowder. Try SALADA. Young Tender Leaves IOSU E No. 6--'ar. "iii8iljllrljT)iii Woman's Sphere :BEVERAGL‘S. l With roast pork serve white or as are classed n bever-iet potatoes, squash, onions, spin- not necessary for ourjeh, creamed eahbage, tretUloped to- a do require water Indian“! or partmips, and ttpple tttMMM. Perfect homo dr- "II and that!“ I. guaranteed with Dh- mend Dies. Just dip In cold valor to an: Bott, damn. In“... GREEN TEA V sud up. and in What to nerve for luncheon or sup- per depends upon the anon. Thick coup: and soups made with milk are ‘matoos or parrmips, and apple sauce. ll-‘or dessert serve baked Indian pud- idine, bread pudding with jelly and meringue, ginger ice cream, pumpkin pie, or steamed fig pudding with lemon sauce. Breakfast should include fresh or â€and fruit, th com], eggs alone, or bacon and eggs, or some other meat dish (not too heavy), bread, rolls, but or muffins. It grownups do. md coeee, make coco- for the ehil.. With baked fish, serve Houandaise"rUr' instance, where an sauce, or drawn butter, sliced toma-lttte following heroes 0 toes or cole-slaw. mashed potatoes and, James Smithson. the peas. Cheese souffle, crackers Indllessly admitted before; celery may follow. With creamed fuh,l, he hadn't trot a wireles: serve hot crisp rolls and olives or'lntended to hare one.. pickles. For desaert serve sliced pine-l Robert Brown, the , apple and a simple cake. With crem- Who sent In his income. ed “It cod-tUh, serve belted or boned) demand. and refused potatoes and battered been; follow! amount. with toasted crackers, cheese and let-l Thomas Jones, the ox tuce salad with French dreuing. With "ttt who is known " soup for the flrst cont-e, bread, but- thnmb, missed hits trai, tor and a well-chosen dessert. you have oollar-trtud without ttttm I perfect dinner. Rtehard Pype, a a saunas-r AND LUNCHEON. (Petr, _'rt"t '."ttmud I sauce. For dmerf sine Ice crest; sherbet, pumpkin pie or steamed pudding. With roast chicken or turkey serve mashed white potatoes, browned or candied sweet potatoes, homing, rice, squash, onions, celery (raw or cream- ed), sweet pickles, jolly or cranberry With boiled mutton serve caper sauce, and with mutton or lamb stew nerve boiled potatoes, turnips, salsify, onions, carrots, eauMower, Brussels lpmuts or string beans. Suggested desserts include rice pudding, baked tapioca pudding or fruit shortcake. l .w _ "“" -- "“"“" A short time ago W. W. Hay ot Van. 'i,1ttt 21,'t1,i,grietr,ur',t, 'Ill"; 'Sit?,":',,',';','.: who has been operating a 'l'l'ifd e, cann r a on me Ismail vessel for five years in British . . IColumbia waters, wrote to the Depart. Mm‘h "as: or braised beet! seirvei ment ot Marine Ind Fisheries appeal- e rr ta 1',',',1tfl1) JU"l)""i,e usrn pad: ing for the right of his wife to take ft'l,r,r,'e',t.','idr; Fgrpgzsswftr "if: 'lk' examinations which would qualify her . "t so app "for the position of captain of their prune or cranberry pie. '.?.e.iietglerit'Lt Mr Hay added that his wife or chocolate cake with whipped cream.! LA , 1 ' ,' . . . . - With beefsteak or lamb chops serve potatoes baked. French friend, Ger- man fried or creamed, or sweet po- tatoes baked or browned; the other vegetables should be the same as for roast beef. Suggested desserts include cottage pudding, prune whip, Dutch npple cake, canned fruit and oatmeal cookies. I If a salad is served, choose endive, tress. celery or lettuce with French dressing, or serve cole-tslam The des- sert should be a light one such as pine- apple sponge, Spanish cream, cus- tards or baked apples with cream. With beefsteak or lamb chops serve potatoes baked. French friend, Ger- With roast beef serve macaroni, or potatoes browned with the meat, mash- ed or scalloped, and any of the follow- ing vegetables: eggplant, eauMower, Brussels sprouts, tomatoes (stewed or scalloped) onions, squash, green corn, beet greens, new beets, peas, or salsify.‘ Brown gravy and horseradish quite) Variety tempts the nppetite and can wily be obtained by changing the method of preparation or by a change in the combinations with other foods. It is unnecessary to serve so many dishes at one meal. The ideal meal consists of a few well-chosen foods perfectly cooked and properly served. l PLANNING THE MEAL. The following food combinations are! suggested: With meats and fiah, serve; one starchy vegetable and one green} vegetable; the latter is often serle in the form of salad. Bread in some form is also required. i should take not less than six gloaafuls a day, in addition to watery foods, such as fruit (which provides water in its purest form), succulent vege- tables and soups. A certain amount or, bulky food is necessary in order to? provide the roughage without which! elimination is diffleult and constipa-l tion follows. Tho fuel foods include cereals, sugar and fat. Tissue- building foods are found in Group III. turee struggle outside Messrs. Ir/iii. grove's store on their sale day. f, â€lurch for Sprain and Drum... Robert Brown. the staunch patriot who sent in " income-tax on the first demand. and refused to dispute the amount. he hadn't got a wireless set and never Intended to have one. . We are a forgetful people, and our greatest men often have no memorial. For Instance. where are the statues to the following heroes of humble lite? James Smithson, the man who tear. lessly admitted before his rrlcnds that "Pretty heavy penalty, don’t you think."' Not any for the Ottertse. “Brown wan tined several hundred dollars tor giving a girl the once over while on the street in his car." lhad assisted him in the operation of i the boat for some years. and that the [reason she sought captain’s papers l was that his eyesight was defective. ', The question of her application was _ referred to the Department of Justice F because a point ot law was raised. The {statute on this matter says: "Exam. ‘I inations may he conducted for British subjects, or tor persons domiciled itr, vCanada at least three years, who in- itend to become masters or mater." ‘Under the meaning of the law, is Mrs. Hay a person? Also, it mistress is the feminine of mate. what is the feminine of captain? I . - I a Justice Must Decide if Woman E is "Person." l Is a woman a person? This ques- 'tlon is now engaging the attention ot i the Department. of Justice. l In the same way, the study ot weath- fer reports has become of increasing ‘importance in deciding the situation iot hospitals. saunter-ta and convales- l cent homes. “treatment which is being given [frequently every year. The tremendous increase in the popularity of tea as a beverage has been such that the producing coum tries have been unable to satisfy the demand. The price of tea has been steadily increasing for a number of years. Since, however, you can make from 250 to 300 cups ot tea to the pound, even at the price of $1.00 the cost per cup is only one-third of a cent. "Not for running a girl down, no, One Dollar a Pound for Tea Predicted Before Long Another discovery made by “climw tologfsts" is that sunshine has 9. won- derful healing effect in such diseases as tuberculosis and rickets. The direct ray of the sun on our bodies forms a Our Unknown Heroes. Not only has weather a direct In- tluence on our health, but an indirect one also. Our lives are arranged to suit the weather and climate. Bad weather keeps us indoors, and conse- queutly. in winter, when darkness hampers our movements in the open air, many of us lead unhealthy lives. a "ehauge of ot scene,†and they are now learning that the benetiU of such a change are greater even than they had thought, because a change of scene usually means a change of climate " well. Temperature, the amount of moisture in the air, the height above ttea-level-ttll these things can atreet our health. 1 Different kinds ot. weather affect: different people In different ways. but) as a rule we feel better when the sunj is shining. Damp is an enemy of, health; a cool, bracing day a Mend.“ Doctors frequently order their patients Mentors are realizing more and more that changes of weather cause changes in the human body. They say that sunshine and rain, cold and heat, are important factors in our health. The study of the relations between health and weather has become a new sclence, which ls called "elimatology." Have you noticed how the weather tttreeta your health? good in cold weather, while “lads are more appetizing in warm weather. Cold menu. baked beans, dishes made from left oven, eggs in various ways; wallopod dishes, chowder-e and milk toast no excellent. Strive for variety in bread, serving rye, brown or entire wheat bread, nut or raisin bread fre- quently, and occasionally serve rolls of verious kinds and muffins. The Sun as Your Doctor. more And now it seemed to when he was in the gardq was nearer to him. He cot little figure in a blue Jersey along the paths with a wh It was a nice question his wife used to say before the war (when heart; were lighter and laughter easier) whether Mr. Macdonald was prouder ot his sons or his flowers, and when, as sometimes happened, he had them all with him in the garden. his cup of content had been full. The sons had worked their way with bursaries and scholarships through school and college, and now three of them were in posltlous of trust in the government of their country. One was in London. two in India-and Duncan lay in France. that Holy Land of our people. “If "She has caught It exactly. that look “in his eyes as it he were telling you of f it aws 'tair time of day' with him. Oh, rd. dear Duncan! It's tair time of day ts with him now, I am sure. wherever he in service with the Macdonalds since she was fifteen, and Mrs. Macdonald] would have added that she never could have managed without Agnes. He had been a minister in Priors- ford for close on forty yeors and had never had more than £250 for a "salary, and on this he and his wife had brought up tour sons who looked, as an old woman In the church sald. “as If they'd aye got their meat." There had always been a spare place at every meal for any casual guest, and a spare bedroom looking over Tweed that was seldom empty. And there had been no lowering ot the dig-, any of a mange. A fresh. wise-like,f middle-aged woman opened the door! to visitors. and if you had asked her) she would have told you she had been 1 Mr. Macdonald loved his garden and worked in it diligently. It was his doctor, he Bald. When his mine got stale and sermon-writing dlmeult, when his head ached and people be- came a burden, he put on an old coat and went out to dig, or plant or mow the grass. He grew wonderful fiow. ers, and in July when his lupins were at their best, he took a particular pleasure in enticing people out to see the effect of their royal blue against the silver ot Tweed. The Maedonaldis' mange stood on the banks ot Tweed, a hundred yards or so below Peel Tower. tt square house of grey stone in a charming gar- den. angel stories. And Mary's the one that's dead. . . ." Death and Duncan seem such a long way apart. Many people are so dull and apathetic that they never seem rmore than half alive, so they don't ‘leave much ot a gap when they go. But Dunean--, The Macdonaids are brave, but I think living to them is just a matter of getting through now. The end of the day will mean Dun. can. I am glad you thought about get- ting the miniature done. You do have such nice thoughts, Pamela." l "ts. . . . He was twenty-two when Pt fell three years ago. . . You've when heard Mrs. Macdonald speak of -her sons. Duncan was the youngest ’by a lot of years-the baby. The others are frighteningly clever, but Fiifiiin was a lamb. They all adored him, but he wasn’t spoiled. . . . Lite was such a Joke to Duncan. I can't even now think of him as dead. He was so full ot abounding life one can't imagine him lying still-quenched.) You know that odd little poem: I " 'And Mary's the one that never liked ' When, after a minute, she handed it back she assured Pamela that the likeness was wonderful. CHAPTER Xx.-continued. Jean took the miniature and looked at the pictured face, a laughing boy's face, fresh-colored. frank, with ftaxen hair falling over a broad brow. Let the Province of Ontario Savings Office Guard Your Savings A§%Â¥ym Province of Ontario Savings Office calculi." -iGaa, Bmnll Bor-inn, plain, plea-o. It's better VIII. tor the moan." was In the garden Duncan r to him. He Couid see the a in a blue jersey marching paths with a wheelbarrow. tntopqyut-"You may hive your choice-penny plain or twopeuco PENNY PLAIN ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Copyright by W a. Don- Co. him that BY o. TORONTO BRANCH OPFIOEO: Cor. Buy and Adelaide on. 540 Damion?! Ave. Cor. UM 0THâ€! BRANCHES AT: Hamilton It Catharine. It Mary's Pomhhko Owen Bound Ottawa Ouforth Vilma-ton " It is easy to open an account by mail. Simply send money by Bank Cheque, Post Office or Express Money Order, or Registered Letter, to the Branch hen-est you and you will receive your Bank Book by return mai . The entire resources of the Province of Ontario guarantee the safety of your deposits, on which interert will be compounded half-yearlii. You can withdraw your money by cheque at any time. All hand made~they are tretuotietr--. latent tapestries and mohairs. We will save you money. Prices and samples on request. Freight prepaid. J. 8. Fuel, 516 Danforth Ave., Toronto l Her popularity was immense. Sad people came to her because she sighed with them and never tried to cheer , them; dull people came to her because she was never in otensive high spirits or In a boastful mood-not even when her sons had done something particu- larly striking 'and happy people came to her, tor, though she sighed and warned them that nothing lasted in this world, her eyes shone with plea- sure. and her interest was so keen that every detail could be told and dis- cussed and slanted over with the com. fortable knowledge that Mrs. Mm donald would not say to her next visit- "You know yourself." she would say. "what a tuttiMied feeling it gives you to come away from a place with even the tiniest gm." of the most pessimistic utterances, for she was able to see the humorous aid of her own gloom. Mrs. Macdon- ald was a born giver; everything she possessed she had to share. She was miserable if she had nothing to be. stow on a parting guest. small gifts like a few new-laid eggs or a pot of home-made Jam. an: Hypnotic nongue. I Bay. "I can still preach and visit my Th t di to t S th people, and perhaps, God will let me Id', "wk “Ty fuel: (int 'lf, a die in harness, with the sound of Amer can sun {was eecr e o It T . ". gFellows ot the Zoological Society byl weed-m my em' (Mi J P 'ttyt' Fts C tutor of: Mrs. Macdonald was, in Bible words, l a I; can! If“; d. ' ii u 1 "tnteeottrer of many." She was a lit-- "Ir, a: a I“? 11.e1, ll . ‘hi bl tle stout woman with the merry heart (3?“ 111;: th ree (20:3: l' if: l that goes all the way, combined with 30:1“1‘ 1 ltts “ d Cl r33!) ;‘heor:§ heavy-lldded, and eyes, and a habit of alt i t "ici',' at; 'IT', “I; ut out! sighing deeply. She affected to take 'll', t a u the effect is: if Jd a, t-l a and View of everything, breaking in- s on: e tr pa n ed snout itself had suddenly shot out! to irrepressible laughter in the middle int strut: e and wri ll int . of the most pessimistic utterances, I' a __ . - " " no . I CHESTERFIELD SUITES lAnd Duncan had nodded his head and Isaid, “That's it. 'Rejoiclng will re- turn.' " And he had taken another l long look at Cademuir. Many wondered what had kept such a man as John Macdonald all his life in a small town like Priorsford. He Idid more good, he said, in a little I place; he would be ot no use in a city; but the real reason was he knew his health would not stand the strain. For many years he had been a martyr to a particularly painful kind of rheu. matism. He never spoke of it if he could help it, and tried never to let it interfere with his work, but his eyes had the patient look that suffering brings. and his face often were a twist- ed, humorous smile, as if he were laughing at. his own pain. He was new sixty-four. His sons. so far as they were allowed, had smoothed the way for their parents, but they could not' induce their father to retire from the: ministry. 'Tll give up when I begin) to feel myself a nuisance," he would; 1 And it was in the garden that he had said good-bye to him that last time. Pe had been twice wounded, and it !was hard to go back again. There I was no novelty about it now, no eatrer- ‘ness or burning zeal, nothing but a fdogged determination to see the thing (through. They had stood together llooking over Tweed to the blue ridge "sf Cademuir, and Duncan had broken ,the silence with a question: sheaves Rejoicing will return.' " And with " eyes fixed on the hills the old minister had repeated: " 'That man who bearing precious seed In going forth doth mourn, He, doubtless, bringing back the "What's the psalm, Father, about the man 'who going forth doth mourn'?" very important because he was help- ing his father. He had called the his clump of azaleas "the burning bush.†He had always been a funny little chap. Head office: 15 Queen's Park, Toronto I It Marya Pomhhko Brantford l Buforth Walker!“ Newark“ and Cor. University and Dundu on. The price of a thing should be A measure of its quality; more often, however, it is merely a measure of what the careless buyer can be induced to pay for it. Antelope: will not eat clover In, which has the least mold about it. This uncanny (“Maiden holds, the lizard enthralled tor the remainder of it lite-ttmst) a. matter of ucondn. From the snake“: point ot View tho result is I." that could be desired. Lizards see their foe suddenly mu. ing the most remarkable nlmacea and remain rooted to the spot. Mlnlrd'o Llnlmont'for the Grippe. "Wasn't that right, John?" she was saying as her husband came near her. (To be continued.) l The women in the congregation had no comfort in their new clothes until ‘Mrs. Macdonald had pronounced on Ithem. A word was enough. Perhaps at the church door some congregation- lrl matter would be discussed; then, " parting, a‘quick touch on the arm and -"Motst successful bonnet I ever saw you get," or "The cont’s worth all the money," or “Everything new, and you :look as young as your daughter." i Pamela and Jean found the minis- ter and his wife in the garden. Mr. ‘Macdonald was pacing up and down the path overlooking the river, with his next Sunday's sermon in his hand, while Mrs. Maedonald raked the grav- el before the front door (she liked the place kept so tidy that her sons had been wont to say bitterly, as they spent an hour ot their precious Satur, days helping. that she dusted the branches and wiped the faces St the' tlowers with a handkerchief) and car-l1 ried on a conversation with her hus-' band which was of little profit, as the, rake on the stones dimmed the sense' of her words. 1 l Mrs. Macdonald believed Jn speak- ing her mimi--it she had anything pleasant to any, and she was sane- itimas. rather startling in her trank. ness to strangers. "My dear, how ‘pretty you are," she would say to I igirl visitor, or, "Forgive me, but I Irnurt tell you I don't think I ever uw I a nicer hat." or that she had been simply cleaved with talk about So-an-so's engagement. The Hypndtic Tongue. 514 Yonge St, 1 B-Tube Bremer Tully an 5 Radiotron Tubes 1 80-Amp. 6torace Battorlcn 2 45-Volt B Battcriel 1 Ultra Loud Talker 1 Phone Plug 1 Head Phone 1 Aerial 1 Ground Equlpment Regularly $325. Our Prlce $150 Bend for our Prlco List. RI-ln-n‘ lmnx-rml mm. (u, [1,.IJJ. its follows: A 5-Tube Radio Set Cory plegouand ready for the air RADIO SHERBOURNE RADIO EQUIPMENT ' SUPPLIES $150 To ronto, Ont wucre winter sports may be why†all the year round. Ro, it the echc-m . Ices on, we my perseently nee adver (Juneau Inch In these: "Armnnia's Situahnd. Try Noah's Country fur Your Next Holiday. Winter Spam All the Year Round"; "Hotel Noah Winter Spot-trend French Crtisint .. Some ot the old attractions of 1M: plum will here gone, however. The manual-y at the foot ot the mountain. when rotten of the Ark were on show twelve hundred years ago. has bee destroyed by lightning and the Iowa tirgt they“! Ind Noah's own h..','. have been buried under a Inns of rm it brought down by an "rtttquake _ ,r --ev _....... the (mom mountain. and to make "roweiad summit a pleasure re, where winter sports may be win all the you round. Bo, it the sch! ‘008 on, we my nereaemlv Inn mi Now, however. all this In 1 tered. Plum Ire being nude a funicular railway up the s the (mom monnuln “A m We we all familiar with this moutr tun from the Bible narrative, but few ot " have ever won it or ever expect to no. it. I "Bo in " the photographiv gdence goes, it tends to show {familiarization with clusical " produces an attitude tunable tn best type of morale, when†{Ami [union with in: mah- tor a lip gamma." Iiducsuon In “(my an?! accidmat reventlon I: can“ u an“ a', was in all um. Though It I. not Among the wry highs! plum ot the earth, there are few mountain. more flmoun than Ara. rat, when, when the waters of the Flood receded, the Ark came to rest "in the "nan: month, on the seven- teenth at! at the month.†E "A comparison of the lust m :0! photognpbe presents qum _ iferent contneL Note the n! ‘erectness ot pouure. the great. lrecmees of use. and other “but Hence ot Interest definitely in fav I the cheelcel records. Ot courn, the" experlmmm: Hr 'r made on s mull scale. and with tr 1. _ enco to only a tow of music's pot-r0 bodily "sets. Cormlnly. lmumv' any merit the thoughtml considv' tion of all who would make appfnh don ot music tor curative or ot; vr ondu, ma certainly they blue the “.x) tor Mmilar experiments to caveman: contra-tin; Inn-1c ulna. Exploiting Noah’s Mountain. "A close Inspection of the l graphs reveals some Interesting trust; of unmade. In listening , “(lulu-r chutes! music th, distinctly more tendency to low new, to avert the gaze. And to m u slightly puzzled, 1utcotttpreht, unmade. --tuwttyer the same [roupi was graphed. once while listvmnx classical selections, and again hearing the jut commeming running sets ot pictures, Moore and Gilliland point out: But most Impressive was th dance from the photograph. dnced with the report in the .n of Applied Psychology. During experiment I small group of an It beume “parent that the selections had the gremer er, value. Al to the rate ot tapping an strength of grip. the advantage a was likewise with the jazz. Bu lessened with every repetition. before the last experiment Wu: l Por the purposes of these C :ments. two Jazz pieces and tw,; r [cal selections were repeatedly ,d {on tive separate occasions, to a I 70! about titty college student. each occasion. after 'he plarmy ous tests were appljsr-tesu, 1 ‘pulse beat, strength of grip, and . of tapping. Also, during the pin photographs were taken to slum posture and facial expression. Only in one respect did the pieces hold an advantage throng They qu‘lckened the pulse beat, it (mind. by 2% beats per minute than did the classical music. and remained their stems trom the test to the lat. cal. Recent expel-Imam QAmerlcan psyehologiattr -1, Ind A. R. Gilllland~suggo~ itauto that Inch u not the t Their experiments, to tstate lter In a few words, (0 to sl apart from personal prefora ‘bodily effects derivable frun. Her markedly from those I "rom classical music, trlving [vantage in the main to the ‘a On this theory, jut mun ample, would be of greater " veins than cluslcnl music, dividual preferred Jazz to l In the main. though. its but been governed by the ', {ounces cf the persons I the persons for whose bor. plied. That Is to M.tr, " Eel been tacitly assumed I values, so far as bodily em, ig concerned, iahere not chutiy In the lndivid tor this or that kind or ml MuMe, it In to-day pretty you» known. “feet: the entire huma. uni-In through It: emotions. :: It tttinttthtttm, it refreshes. " my an. Hence it In capable of M b b' ployed, and I: frequently 91111.. tor medical um other cottrtrtgtt,v, creative purrme': Oahu Education Urged, Br H. Addington Brueu, MUSIC VALUES mt, up the slopes to be eto bu on an uni lp, of 0h found ereep the pr "rain I Vita in; tt: qtontin Filth tttmit There In no mm it In more urgent th birds be maintaina- milker the can u a five months. w I prevent in the midd the milk sl mare. mm thrsfoe lootebo provide Ital m born month to Inc tng d; mum! chum over!" the w ta CARE FOR TI†THE tic, spy It he is born, of his sin Ind mama Pregnant best he 1 which in given pk It The tim prod action Efficient We d Wow " inc i with " if th, PREPARE A PM the ht mum. " If In. San " lk