" ‘: riiiiiiiiiiiiii, I‘m: , Lora Trip by Motor. " Mullins to make the whole 0(ch 0.0"" it!“ 'otrritey by motor car, Mr. lav-Wm Ember hex set " {mm Man- 036:"? to Cut-mu. . proposal of marriagn from a man whom nho had always rmMetl as I )rmhrr rather than a hvar. ".Maritrl." ho began, "you know I in" always turned to you. that I have ulna†thought at you. May Pall“ .--wottld you er oh, hang it, Muriel. will "WM At. t Write your name and nddnso pinin- ty, giving number and dz. of Inch pitta; s as you want. Enclose Mg in lump: or rain (coin preferred; wrap " carefully) for one): number and address your order to Pattern Dept, Wilson Publishing Co., " We“ Ad. â€do St.. Toronta Fauna sent by mum mil. 'erivy rhlldl A NEW â€(OCR FOR THE JUNIOR MISS. F Thir cinrming little frock is very simply made and mid look tartttrt it fashioned n! funnel, Jersey, or velve- tem. The skirt front is planed and 3.5m d to the. bodire, while the back in tair.. Covtrast'mtt maturhl in and fur the round ro'dar patch pockets. and wrist-hands iiua'i"G the long akevei. A belt futons at the side lam. and tivs in a ehie bow " bark. No. 1310 tu in vile: 8, IO, " and " years. Sro. HI rmuirw 2% yards 32.. inch maturmi. or 2% yards 89-inch, and 'i yard mntrnstinz. 20 cents. Our mu; Nubian Book contains many M)'.-, <h4nvlng how to dress boys and mm. Simplicity is the rule for wv.'.-u'rcssril chiidwu. Clothes of "tttact.." and individuality fur the junior fink.“ are hard to buy, but easy to make with our patterns. A small alum-f “I mum-y spent on good ma- This. churning lit limp3y made and it fashioned n! funnel, teen. The skin in: Fu" d to the bodice. [1&LG Co'nrnrrthitt for the round will and wrist-bands th “town. A belt in: mm,- an-l tivs in a No. 1310 R in tsiaet years. Sro. If) requi inch material. or 2 and li yard mum‘s! Our an." Fabio many My†showh boys and aim. Sim for we.'.-u'rcsstl chi ehaoactet. and indiv junior {mks are Inn to make with our p IRVINE? of mum-y a] " 12%- Paid on Amountl from $100 to $5.000. Best of enmity. For mu informazlon address. "i0Crmtineett loud Corporation HOW To ORDER PATTERNS. 331 Bay Shut. Toronto 2 mum.»- trutod s'ortthuntttulr. tt CL Q( " m 'lDtBg.-, Finer than - Japan or China Green. MONEY '9‘ "ll M Misleading Muriel GREEN TEA m Nat Before. gm “This in tho typo ot be ttino that pays for hum; We jadiatita b- Masher her My aim merited u martian» from a man always regtmte0 as I Use the Best.' Hmpie ll prhilego you â€we m ht you tare M! man " Mun-d Ly u the rule r. Home: of lily fur the buy, but easy m. A small on good ma- mr, will give of (lanterns! . “NF wearing the book “My Murh ft my l Mm. New-x» -"Whr didn't you let “to, so we coma. both got" . i Yes, it pluck: the fruit ot courage from tho tree at detspair, and ttmis 'ttonrerg or hope growing on the mar. 'gln of life's roughest roads. It be- 'livves ht tho ham endings ot the ‘most sombre volumes or experience. her my." fu‘iu!» Art is rut-Hm. Now tlurpraeticat tettvior :..:r‘ work out the problem of harm: nietittg the": two things qrttfett may soon In: unsktem; tirnt. the My): an! sfl-rn requirements ot an and tme mum“: not-and. the tr.emrtntt of the child’s imprut in the study or wr- suit. Ill-Emu: cases tho prob)“ is pm: of solution. In others newly or ttttltr' impossible. Sometimes a real as apparent compromise will nanny at. min the dulnd and. Sum-ass in teaching magic to child- ren depends lam/Hy on getting tho children Inlet-0mm! in the music study. It goes without saying that a chlld, as “all as nu adult. will learn music or anythlng else .ttuieher and better if am HIM-rust ix amused in the study or tho pursuit. Yet it must n.ot be imag- inml that the musing of tho child In Iln- ispeHrtltrctal at which we aim. If it were we would nave:- glve the child technial exercises» and to many of them no pieces except popular airs. And it we carry the lrea to its Mica] conclusion tn other my“ the amount yt grammar. "ithmetie, geography. lllsmry and spelling that mm! chug!- ren would ltetrn might be put into' a vent pocket. . No. tho proper Aim ot the music teacher Is to educate all his pupils in xmlah'. real music. high-toned music, and in “me dimuult. music; to train tlt.. car to distinguish tho pure from the impure. the true from the false, and the lofty from the degraded: to make the hand ot the pianist ttexiba'e and damn-nus; for the singer to make lb" Toiee sweet and pure, with pet- fect intonation and pronunciation. All this mm for mud] time and attention m :.(;.y::r;xf and Mimi work. The w-I- 'ner mu! hymns all this, whether alr~iznuzry o'.' {run onrsixht. therein “Hits iii-.mp1? " heme" down a mun- MInard'u Liniment Vor Son Back. “the slings and arrows ot outrageous fortmm" by reusing to be tmin by them; it isthe spirit that smiles even in the tace of death, And says: "Be of good cheer; WHIP there's life there’s hope'." Trouble may weaken. but it marl ‘aiso strengthen. The sturdiest oak of! an its neighbors in My the one ex-1 posed the mount to the storm. Thatl is the thought Longfellow expresses! when he mynz- I 0 tear not in a world like this, And thou shalt know ere long. Know how sublime a thin! It is I To suffer and be strong. ; Tl,at ls true "sirmutirht--"to suffer and br "trung." it is titthtiug patience,', it is calm determination, which cannot! be mum]. to win joy and inspiration} and hope from life, dispite its many di.ettoumgersnt?nts and dssintvsionments.l, When thp hero of Bunyan's allegory was tturtq down try Apoliyon, and his sword 'sn trom his hand. he did not give "1). Tlte field thought he had the p'igrlm of life at his mercy. Bat the man. though prostrate, was not beat. "tr-thour?' "down," was not "out." He stretched out his hand, e'astehed his award min, and crying: “I tau; but. I rise again!" sprang to " feet an! put the tlend to ttight. We an have to be "up nad doing, with a 1mm for any fate." it We would win through life. Resignation,'then, ht not the whining cry of the wmkling, the folded hands of the conquered. 0n the contrary, resignation detltm all Ot all there cure havens, the slum. pad the most calm and restful, la the haven ot resignation. That word do" not mean Just "akin; things lying down." " means. rather. rad; thins! serenely, mending munch: upon two Ttxmbie mar he inevitable; bat it: affect upon nerve and heart and will Jamaal: um» wholly upon the mu:- nor In which it is met, the with in which it Is endured, the courage with which it itt faced. Troublo In put at the common lot. The “and writer "and that m was born to It " “Guam n “the sparks tir upwud.†Nevertheless. I hold that " in a " mistake to ward not In a troublous sea with which we no doomed to but» without coast- tion. Then itt much respite In life. many “Invent under the hill" In which one can ttnd peace and rest. Named - "It's a mu Hoist. The Child and Music Study. Thtnmhtle" of Hlm. Mrs. Newwed--"Wttat's thin thing, Resignation. l From that moment Bill began to ylisiike him. . A full-grown, 3930- ;hcd‘ed man, walking idly along the quad in spring, when there was more ;\vork than all hands could possibly dot, in looked suspicious, to say the least. l From ail :u-vnunts in the papers, this iwas no time to pick up shabby stran- itrers on lonely roads, and Bill thought [with some grimness of that stretch of Wood road beyond the Widow La- /tttor:t,. lie wouldn't stop now and ask the man to get out, but he would heap an eye on him. . He saw her now, coming up the gar-L lien patch. She waved her hand to hint. and he s'owui down, stopping by the mail box just outside the paiing fence.' Young spears of grass were.thiek in' her front yard, and she came around) by the gravel path, betwven rows of. the spiky-'.eaved yoilow fhrwers that bloomed on each side cf it. It beat all, how she made time to fury, with them.,' Some of the gravel stuck to the thick: mud on her shoes and her skirt was: dabbled with wet at the hem. There' was something Jolly about her stout '.- neat figure and the way she’waiked. She pushed back her sunbonnet and' that red hair almost made a man', blink. Red hair and temper go to.; gather, and 'Vttbkasrtmnpdr, " right, the my»; and. the hired an} {nap into their jobs. But Pt could Lop [hired mam longer “an any-i may cite ingregn 1'aL'er.. _ t The Lathrop farm had been a run- do"wn place of a hundred wecdy mort- gaged news fourteen years ago when Jim Lathrop was killed by a runaway team, Vand she took hold. Bill Morton never came around that bend in the road without being struck again by what she had done. wars on lonely roads, and Bill thouzhti That was thsubeginninit. Exaetlsissects will on tio ttreount commit viol- with some grimness of that stretch of what oceurred immediately nftrtwurdif't""'; others, on the contrary, do no! Wood road beyond the Widow La-gnobody knew, though there was agnositato to murder. Some rob only at thyop's. lie wouldn't stop now andigrettt deal of talk about it. MandsOight; others only during the day. ask the man to get out, but he would , Simmons, the hired girl, saw the iiiiif/, These ttcotricitiest, ot muduu are keep an eye on him. {coming down the road at sunset, audit;o sttVtly observed that they have Ph- The man was about forty, hard to said to herself that Mrs, Lnthropirumtd thr. mr'"'"'..":' rites, in†are all- tell exactly; he looked wiry and maybeLwould make short work of him; shi/ttered to ttttut religiously. . carried a knife, Bill thought, awarelhnd no patience with tramps. Thai --t--+----- ' of his fat wallet whore it lay against next thing Mandy knew, there he tee) That Ntostrophet. his ribs. But if it came to that, Bi-ll_in the front room and Mrs. Lathrop Many people are worried by the Judged he could take care of himself/coming out to tell her to open straw-l posse/vo apostrophe. “my seem to For all his fifty years, he had no cause. berry preserves and cut the gini,G-1Tiii'i that it. must always be nsod ho to mistrust the muscles that sheathed bread for supper. FG; the Ott) "n,†Fhrr instanre, not his broad shoulders and bulged p.ti Driven by all the push of sprinir',tong ago a uotite in a hail road, need, on arms and Ips. lwotk, Bill Morton lizard nothing ofl"Ladie's room," instead of "Ladieu‘ Coming around the bend of road bthhc talk till he went to town the nexthxrem." the willow thicket. in sight of the; Saturday. When he drove by the La-l The general cule is to mu the apoF" Widow Lathrop's white house and red; throp place at ten o'clock in the morn-' tropho immediately after the singular barns, Bill looked for a glimpse ofiing there was that foreigner " tholtorm of the Ian-an it one person or the blue gingham mid flaming hair. liar end of the garden patch with Ellie. ', thing is meant, and after the plural "Carrot Top!†he'd called Ellen; He was holding a pan of young plantsi,when more than one is meant. When Meats when they went to school to†and she was on .her knees setting them ' the plural is formed by the with"; of gether. and though for,twenty years out. Thtrmmbpnrtet hndJnllen back"‘s" this rule is plain and any. Thus he had addressed her as "Mrs. La- on her shoulders and she kept looking; we should Buy: "My boy's school" and throp," he th tight of her as "Ellie." up at him, reaching for a plant, talk-l "A large boys' sz-honi"; "That mm. His wife, U/IK,':',',',, sixteen years, had ire m busily she didn't hear the Biv- fistt'g tail' and "Fishes tails." called her that, and the word '.'kydie"iver. Bill'saw no cream cans and did] The trouble begins when the plural meant to him that fume of hair and not tstop.- . .i'orm of the word does not end in 'ht." an impression of neat freshness, com-f About one o'clock she came driving'. But it need not. it the rule to place petence and spank. eiinto Stillwater _in heLown car-“twinge npostrophe immediately litter the The man was about forty, hard to tell exactly; he looked wiry and maybe carried a knife, Biil thought, aware of his fat walkt whore it lay against his ribs. But if it came to that, Bill Judged he eould take care of himself. For all his fifty years, he had no cause to mistrust the muscles that sheathed his broad shoulders and bulged at need, on arms and legs. Coming around the bend of road by the willow thicket. in sight of the Widow Lathrop's white house and red barns, Bill looked for a glimpse of the blue gingham mu] flaming hair. The stranger said, in surprisingly good English, that he had walked from Sti'dwater. Bill thought he must have come in on Number Five that morning. With eight cows, and four heifers coming fresh that month, not to speak of spring pianting piling up on him, Bill badly needed a steady hiredhnan, especially since young Bill was mar- ried and had his own farm to take care of. Bill shouted above the janalc of the cream ans, "Going far?" He did not quite catch the reply, but gathered that it was vague and indefinite. He asked at once, “Looking for work?" The foreign man showed all his teeth again, saying "No" with his head, and "Thank you" with his shoul- new. "Come far'."' Bill asked, letting in the dutch, and he looked sidewise under grizzicd eyebrows at that for- eign face. He almost bit back the words as hel said them. If he hid not shouted be-!, fore he saw the soft brown eyes, the! pale dark skin and white teeth their, in: between a dark little mustache and _ a flare of loose bow tie, Bill would', have gone past in siience. He tettl something about foreigners, Young} Bill having come bark from the war, with many tales. Bill had no preiu-, dice against them, but he was by tin-r ture a cautious man. It was now too} late, however. The stranger, with a large flowing gesture of gratitude, gocl m. Bo when the flivver came up toJtim, Bill shut down the gas and shouted, "Like a lift'.'" Summer folks didn't come (in June, and Bill Morton wondered what this fellow was doing in Green Valley. Be was too wel4 dressed for a tramp, in knee pants, putties and corduroy coat; he eou'ain't be anybody": new hired man, abroad at that hour; and he wasn't a hunter, for he had neither gun nor dog. Bil! Morton saw him first. Old Bill Morton, driving home from Stillwater Farmers' Exchange in the mud-spat- tered flivvcr, with the empty cream cans ioittling each o;her'in the back of it, saw the stranger walking ahead of him down the road. From the looks of him Bil} would have thought he was one of the sum- mer folks, if it had been the season for them. But this was only April; the river was still in muddy ttood, the win- dows of the big hotel on the cliffs were boarded up, and the portable houses scattered in the woods looked as un- inhabitable as last year's birds' nests. B'ill got mil of the car' mid handed That hhigw at uhnis' PA RT I BY ROSE WILDER LANE. Bill did not remember Inter whether that foreign man hnd asked questions or whether he himself had just talked. Anyway, he told about the Lathrop farm, two hundred and forty acres of the best land in the valley, with not a cent owing on it. There'it was. lying on both sides of the road, teams plow- ing on the far forty and the alfalfa coming up green. It was natural to 'talk about it, though he Refit most or ‘his thoughts to himself. It didn't join ‘his own place; there was that wood- fland lying between. More and more, Bill resented that Wlund. If it had inot been tied up in the probate courts, lhe could have bought it. If he and Ellie ijoined up then, they' would have five hundred acres. Still. he didn’t know. iAs long as Julie was at home and ,' everything going well enough, no need ',to make a change. 7 Stinky morning they went to church together, and ntter services she iatroduccd him to a number of folks. Stiilwater {inks had seen men like that before. The. marvel was that a gain! sensible woman like Mrs. La- throp seemed to be taken in by him. Nobody knew much about him. He gave his name as John Mendoza, ' He was staying at the StiILwatcr House, bat already he had can): four meals at the Widow Lathrop's, counting that first supper. He did not hire a car, or even a horse and buggy, to go oat there. He walkt'd. . On the other hand, to hear him talk and see him strutting around, one would think he owned the earth. He had seen Ed Hailingâ€. the notary pubye, insurance and real estate man, nod had asked about prices of farm land. Said he was looking around and might buy a farm. EdHullingcr tried to pin him down, and he said he didn't care what it cost if it suitor] him. Me asked what a farm like the Lathrop place would be worth on the nurket. ther cream can: ever the fence. She nook them in her strong brown hands, I',',,',',',',?,", from the garden. and naked Iwhat he had decided about setting out .tomatoes for the cannery. For her mart, she said, she wasm't going to oio it. It paid we11-2-ainy dollars an [acre she’d cleared last year. But with "omatoea taking it out of the land the iway they did, and so much trouble Wetting hired help enough to handle ', thenr--her blue glance went over Bilys "shoulder to the stranger. Bill said inothing, so she knew he was not I mew hired man. mu gave her the ,cream slip and got back into the car. About one o'cloek she came driving into Stillwater in her own car, the foreigner with her. She stopped at the bank corner to let him out, nodded to him as though they were old friends. Then she took her cream and eggs to the Farmers" Exchange. "Thank you, sir," he said, standing there on a mat of dead leaves, taking of? hie cap. "l thank you very much." Good riddance, Bill thought, and drove on. "Thanks," Bill tuned. “She'll be over." And he put away from him the thought of Julie, the only daughter left at home. The way Jeff Rogers was hanging around, it looked as though Julie would not be at home much longer, and he hated to think of it. They were coming to the wood road and Bill returned to warihess of the stranger. But to his surprise they had hardly got well among the trees before the man asked to get out. “Ten Julio I've got more ground- cherry plants than I can use. She'. welcome to 'em," she went on hurried- ly, and the engine loudly responded to the starter. That was Ellie all over, always generously thinking of the neighbors. "I don't know when Pve felt the sun so warm this time of year. And put your fingers down into the ground; seems like you can feel it coming tdive." BBt looked gt her in slow nur- prise. What did she mean "eotrf 2;: alive"? He thought of eutworms. "Sprintr's certainly here," the said. Her sleeves were rolled up and above the brown wrists her folded arms on the gate were pink and whiter as a baby’s. She had put the cream slip into-her apron pocket without a glance at it. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO IMlmrd'u Llnlment tbr Colds. I The members of one [film devote Itheir time exclusively to jewel robber. 'ies ‘n railway trains, carrying tittt their mums with almost inhuman stealth land, dexterity. Again. many ot the [sects will on no account commit. viol- §ence; others, on the contrary, do nu! {hesitate to murder. Some rob only at lnight: others only during the day. lThcse ecwnirlcitles of Hinduâ€. are ',gtt strictly observoj that thcy have m,- fsumed the mime ot rites, and are ml- ‘ghered to most religiously. _ football game." AttotherYtttrkt. The weight of a load depends upon the attraction at the want. But eup- posp the attraction ct the turn were removed? A ton on 50ml: other planet, where the attmction ot Trarity ts? less. does not weigh he!!! a ton. Now Chrls- tiantty removes the attraction ot the earth, and this is one way it diminish- es men'x burden. " makes them out. tens of another wsrid.-W. H.'nrum- Mild. in “What Yokes Are For." There are words whieh make no change for singular and plural. Thus we say. "A sheep's More" and "A thvueand sheave: Mecca" ottue words haw nu singular form. Thus vs sham! write, "My shmrs' blades" and "The swamp; edmy are duil." whether speaking of one pair or a fish'g tail' and "i-‘Mlcs tails." The trouble begine when the plural form of the word does not end In "3." But it need not. if the rule to place the apostrophe immediately after the plural ls remembered., For Instance, one would qrrtte "new: Imam," "Women‘s ham." Human nature present- ttrw more Interesting studies than the erinftnat tribes of India, says a writer in the Wide World Magazine. They number about a million and live ecu-My by or- ganized crime. Many people are worried by the possessive ametmvhe. They seem to think that it must always be and bi) tore the tttutl "tt." FYrr instance, not tone ago a notiw in a hail mad, "Link's room," Instead of "Lttdims' room." Roaming the length and breadth ot the country, they prey upon nntive and British society alike, with n clever- ness that is almost uncanny. Quite uneducated, they ure nevertheless the most ingenious ad resourceful rogues in the world. so much so that all the fame: of law and order no incapablu ot curbing their activities. The "crimaf as they are called, con- sist of different gtets or castes, who form themselves into tribes, villages, or clans each sect pursuing its own type ot crime. There is n sect. for in- Matteo, which is addicted soloiy to housebreaking; another whoge mem. bers are minors; and neither would ever dream ct encroaching upon the province ot another tribe or clan whose special forte might be picking pockets. He smiled that gleaming smile under his mustache and did not say much. Mrs. Inthrop held that red hand of hers in the air and talked and laughed more than usual. - "What makes you so tired t" “I drained atl night that I an; siting in "no to get “can for a World’s Cleverest Thieves. I No Chemicals - No Aerial! I Q.R.S. MUSIC CO., CANADA, LTD. 590 King St. West . Toront The Rogers operates direet from any light socket on in! Mt. No batteries. cheanicaU, Wires or trttactitneeti-rmt ht--Theet Tune In." It coca than: 4c (1 week “0907319 da (ot uniform everlasting power from the day you m “I‘M Many ot the most monument and Micah: mdio patron! Canada are proud owners of Rum Sea. An trtene1 "Evidence," M! be an: you FREE upon man. m Ra will mm u net on the any payment plan. Radio irvithooe Batteries f (To be continued.) Sir-ciaoâ€. Write for Free Illustrated Booklet. " bctt can to!" ill: -te, on dllollufnxn PP"t"et"rarr'tpI-ttqrs-eo.CG'i my; VII vault!“ Lauryn». It... P11'tef.e1"Aeo'1t-tekttititoui"ii rte"Pft/t"r"-tt-wuttr.turiua" handwrio. age suns? â€can" co, new 11 Want-torn. The teacher had been temnc the children about the tarhma human mules for hem-inc, pacing, em, “a how 1th freqrtenttr {entitled er. mneously. Having f1nuttod, she asked tho clan, "Now, what are tho {no .eatt" for?" Little Marilyn, aged six, replied: n tion of tho vicclm ot motor “may to motorist» J'This' I: goin' to be Bert, our tor mu. You've broken his, Inn out his head, sprained his anhte brttMed---" . The Mo:orisrr-"Ye,e, than all very well. but have you seen that he's done to my car'.'" Not So Sorlous. Yuung M'hut, m worried. "I'm fear! I've made an turf an." he confided to M'Phrrrsos got engaged me u lass in A muchty. nu' ma I hear ghe'x a t Mrt an' has been kissed by (we: in the toon." "Ah, weed," said M'Phorr,or,, cnznfon ingly. "Authtermuehty'a no 'or, \‘r-rr; big a place at!" d!" Life mm ha. 'to do, Which tttak ' up to Write your own 11cm, young fellow. . ttnd “at. ' Your 1mm and “am“. you- birth tad an date. Bow tar would you travel. what suto would you see? What is it you're anxious to do and to bet Life's roads no all open'. Which one wilt you me? Here are all sons of unions, Come, step up and chm! Write Four own ticket! State piniufy your dram; Will you drift with the current, or pad- dtio up mm? . . Wir name or shady, good habits dr had, . Step up and pick them. They're here to be had. Where would you be when you're any, let's say? Tel) us that no“. and at Named to. any! Write your mm ticket! Me's none to '5 '5 . Your rlgm io whatever you're willing to try. Where are you (was to? What in your phn? . Wou Id you To buy th' fre Hakim cone; “it; The Real Damage. The Policeman (a'tcr the m of tho victim ot motor I) moo OTHER PRIZES No Write Your Own Ticket. I SSUE No. 49-98. Sen" of Vniue. be known on a. fool or a will yt you. often let duck in much for up smut beam Worse on annulus ettr. “nyou "Just Plug "ate all†M you I tw-Nr out man. an? e v F, slick Toronto, Ont. u lass in Auchtet hear she's in terrftrle in 0le 1:11:0th " v m mi an - new cnt, ry man It's all nus th V 9 I 'on oxpmhn. "that It mi boundâ€; a air Injunction not Sir Jama- Hill, human and "Wool Km.†and“ on the marl to rich. 'try hawking "qetarbtets through tho intros“ of Bradford. Martin: nu bar. + row. be next not “and! to learn wen- itnx and wool-stapling. He graduated ltus buyer and suenzmn. urn-med to. tmher every pound he court mam itrottt the most trtmal living. and m II! but table to Mart in buiues- tor 111de as I Wool-merchant in Brad- “out. me that time his promo-I to riches has been unbroken; and today tho oxvhnwker controls msvetal lug. empamos. employs an army at work- -hsaodumtmudtobeoaoof â€(I181 run-t men. a Man Who Made Jamaica. l Sir Donald Currie. founder of the Wanna-n castle 1.1m to South Africa, gave! his um £100 from t.ds sunny in clerk In I. Greumrk slumping "moe. ‘And Sir Alfred Jones. 'the man who nude Janka,†lwgnn ht, str-tret,,, Farm at fifteen in tho once of the .1an t?tettmsttlp Company, where. le, has said. “small way and plenty of work were my " t. t was twonuutwo At ttres time time. ' storey-inn is nut-Seal. The Rule: of the arc-henna used to tatt the violin was at to "draw it hawk-Illa! “to (why titanium, to draw that bows ntitdly or pme over an ms And .01 to mum at. the not“. Even lb. opposite 'a. mtiol. Niger tt strong." he ' musi- cu tori. an in oquisahnot to torm- The new nary ot a bank that in China 1. about as a month. slmo on cm] tutlitml'i.v 1Nuagludo t tht, when am in the tap-mom tho vithmo hm, and thh, Mun 'itttttgthertrd by the "mauldshy palm." chore. tti "31issdventuris ",,',tiS't','At magnum ask» :‘or mud do. i. and 93am to 'lrax mm." In Gillan a tio,hor's (many-s are In; on a Malina- above hlu and“! rot, no that tsit. inttuenees may outer into them human: ot into tho and. c':a'tto in too much "any; ration (“that Wonk. and m use I pin-mm. to an» to “draw tht In carnival}: an fostielticts men ot- ten dress up as warm. and “may: n as men. The mottve for such interclzanco of ("mixing In a purely new om _ e:- ttrr-tve at (to desire to: good-teliow. "tttp and tuniability. Amoetg smi-c‘vzlizrd races. however, (mm-lump at dreee it a very serious business and is pracused marl]. In may of the bums islands In Ana-Ink. whenvvet I mm in {MM with In em "it! he [euc- hls homo matey. dons a woman'n dress, assumes a female who. and pre- to“: to be other than he really ta. In acme ot the water pans at Wales n man will am: In " wife's clothes In oeder to change a we}! of bad luck; bo Tho student Lye-ans. dreae,eiiiiem. when u when mauve:- one at molt new»: died. Pint-Rh. the ttia. tartan, on)!!!†this try sarinkiiulGt is womanly and weak to mom. Van-Ho Haukcr to Woot King. Loni Pinto, the ambush. allo- bullaer. was tifteev, wheat he is" m. 'tttttMe homo ct Chadd-aye. In County Down, to on on a Maul in loan. Har. hnd and war- 0mm in Ballast; and so dent and ddlurout did he prove himself that within six Fears he had lmduued an hestd-dmutrhttrmym "Hy that time," he said, "by swim: «wry possible penny I had mung» , u put by my tinet hundred pouudr" work were my Fct. t was Urea before I, by mucls self-denim! saved . hundred pouudn." and varied my way up awn " may totrestn-rofadrseonm't. But it in ulow ell-blag. and I had bun I irirniriiaiGoud _ i {a lumen.†At “on " Tbomu Lttttoet W“ earning half a crown. you! " M tte u . «mummy In numb of (Mano. Bevan] â€an of M Inna-Mp passe! --workirtq on a Cunn- rice - Lion and doing my Jobs he an“ on More he wu this to return to Boot- land with £100 in his pocket and on. his small shop in Stoborosa Street. tweet} shop. working enesy and In. for . - shilling and Ma keep: all ho-wu we" in the {venues be tom Inc had E100 to am " own, Mr Thoma LiWyl Mr. Canon Bettrtdeq In": “I nurt- dttmevenbotmuaboy.u Marshall Field’s greet store H: Chan: Mylo: as who In." and an: want. I]. no Euclid: VIM. Mr. Carnegie had tolled I an. ---en bottttht boy " MW 3 any. weer. alumni boy, and Emu-ow“ he m at. to - (“other ht: nut bandit! pounds out or his wag- ot 261 n wink u a runny clerk. w Leia-hum. m m. cum to mimom behind (he coartttof n ’1toundumnehmeonnho-y mad mama: than to can 'Y ttmt iiGiGt "Mn." and» was the a fusion of Mr. Andrew Carnegie. Ad it bu been tho eztterioocer ot no! China's Bank Clcrkz' small Par Men in Women's Clothes. iiaurin, 'wu a - trr, tPt WHENSSMALL Lii,, 3:}... emu-lbs the mu- "Draw It Mild." and Ulla hit-u In Ibo "lmbldlby tay. "mndmluuru u the hymn: of r! me another dmw the but . a do“ tom I pl: bor. and u “I. to It hand". 26-. I M ( MI dim!) Mu. II f.'" h In In- had I laugh worth-w} that has _ “my; tio labors a' house u 1 brea thri lot they lam and the the (In mlh is th th NR the " (1v n. th