we". we haven't found Phttty yet. Do you know, even Rover was begin- ning to feel lonely without Fluly. Anyway. he went around poking hls noise into corners and looking around everywhere for her. Perhaps you can hardly believe it. but really and truly. Rover was growing to like Fluffy. Anyway, she often walked right under his nose now, and all he would do was to prick up his ears and look at her and, mind you. I've even soon then As a lad, Theodore Roosevelt was handicapxwd by a frail body. Admir- inq physical strengah. he proceeded to develop it by living on a ranch. He rode, boxed. lived in the open, until eretttttally he became strong in body. lie gained through perseverance, not unly strength of body but strength ot mind. will and character and accom- plished great things in his day. Bo It in not by any means just being a grnlus that has sent people far ahead ot us on the road to adult-veg Mont. but rather a dogged persever-l ance that would never allow them toi give up. ' piano permanently injured hand ~10 he could make no poarances in public. Again of compensation came in. lated his creative faculties a composed many of our line sitimw. sums» and sens“ and others thrurish. -". We have Robert Schumman, the musiclan who, while practising on the He regained his feet ttnatteiailr, paid his debts And earned the times what he had previously received. He felt proud of himself and happy in overvoming his handicap. Why could he do this? Because of the principle or compensation. " came to his rescue. Take away one This patient overcame his despond- enry when attention was centred on this man), sense of touch. Within a few weeks he learned to distinguish between various degrees ot smooth- new ot sand when rolled between the thumb and torethtger. He began to practice with ttour and became an ex. pert ttour grader by sampling it through his sense of thunk Well, we haven't found But in this day and generation there is a way out. Twenty years ago it would hare been a real tragedy, but thanks to science, which has thrown a helping hand. no handicap need ttoor one now it he possesses the courage to tare the future with con- tiiFnro. Selle years ago a man was a victim ot a gasoline explosion which cost him " eyesight. Like men in the full vigor of life he did not anticipate any such handicap and had made no provision tor the future. His black- ness of despair was more intense than the blackness of his sight. The years stretched out impossible. For encouragement read about the man or woman who has achieved things. We and in every case the iite was dimcult. not elven in keeping the vol: from the door, but in material- hing his vision. Nothing is worth having that is easy of attainment. To know this gives one courage to) keep on and teaches us to overcome} our handicaps. Chlclu and Other Little Friends NO. 23 Not one or In is tree from handicaps which - to impede progress. We strulgie with disease. even sometimes deformity. We wrestle with doubts and tears, over-unsitiveness, feelings of inferiority And " sorts ot disabili- ties. It do†" Bttod to read blographles of successful men and women and learn there that they had to contend with crest hundlcapa but conquered them. We tind very often the bundl- cap was the cause ot their success. “Keep close to duty. Never mun! the future it you only have peace of mind. so that you ought to be; the root In God's alulr" TWILIGHT HOUR STORY mentiy injured his right could make no more air. I public. Again the law Mon came in. It azimu- mive faculties and he has JTtriFeii'F'"s""'T"Wi" sense ot touch Handicap. our ttnest compo. "Liberalism is a Material mittd--- progressivism is I state ot politics." --Herbert Bayard Swope. If the scheme proves to he success- ful dufing its period of trial it will Twenty-tive per cent. of the mobile police will be disguised as ordinary motorists and they are not to deal with motoring offences but with crim- inals. Some will also be detailed to watch bridges and narrow portions of the highway in order to put I barricade acrosa the road as soon as a raid has been signalled. Their duty will be ehieity to keep a close watch upon all the shop centres in each division. For a fortnight in the near future about one-third of the uniform police on duty at night are to be on patrol in plain clothes. This is to be the outcome of one of several conferences between Lord Bynq and the "Bic Five" at Scotland Yard to deal with the problem of the car thief. London.-Plain deities Taa- po- lice are to be a new terror for the thief in the car. "I don't know, dear. We'll wait a. day or so and perhaps something will turn up. We'll let Topsy stay here. She seems more contented, doesn't she? See she's curled herself up and has gone to sleep?" New Measures c.- ---By BUD FISHER. fy's chair, which made her feel a little better and not so lonely. “I guess Billy we'll have to find a little kitty for Topsy." "But where will we get one, Mam. ma " asked Billy anxiously. V Then she went to Billy and did the same thing. on, wasn't it too bad? Mamma Lady held her up and stroked her and then even let her all in Plut. Lady would look at her, thiGtriiai7r" said, "Meow, meow, where In my baby.'" But where in the world has Fluffy gone? Topsy, too. is calling around tor her kitties. Wasn't it too had the little one left for her should get run over? Topsy even came In the house to Mamma Lady, hunting her baby. She stood up on her hind legs and caught a hold of her dress, so Mammal I or course, you know neither Rover or Fluffy would have been nearly so nice I Mamma Lady and Billy hadn't loved eT and given them such good care. iYO“ see it Momma Lady didn't take ‘such good care of Billy and laugh at his Jokes and funny ways he wouldn't be nearly " nice a little boy as he is. Love and care made Billy a tine, beautiful boy, and it is Just the same with our pets. it we love them and care for them they grow so very cute and make great playmates, don't you think so? ' You see they began to have pretty good times together. You remember. don't you, about the time Rover chased Fluffy up a tree when she was a little 1 kitty? And Mamma Lady had to pun- ilish Rover for doing it. You remember [about that, in sure. Well, Fluxy soon Ifound out that she could climb trees almost as fast as a squirrel and she 'also found out that Rover couldn't Iciimh at all, so she had lots ot fun lteasing him it she was feeling funny. “or she'd run in front ot him, real liast, right under his nose. to get him Marted, then dart up a tree. Then he'd stand under the tree and look at her and bark at her. But " soon as he looked away at something else she came down Just far enough to ’reach him and then she’d stretch out and catch the tur on his back with her paw. He'd turn around quickly, but she was always too quick for him and back she'd run up the tree again. You see she was laughing at him. Yes, they began to have pretty good times together. Rover thought Filmy a. real nice kitty. worth taking care ot. made a perinanent routiiil, touch noses sometimes. That's some thing like our kisses. I luppose. Catch Criminals The village ot Crawler. Hampshire. which Thackeray described in "Vanity Fair." calling it "Queett's Crawley," has lately come up tor sale, Thackeray otten stayed in the village. l HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or com (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern, Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto,) "The Oraylocks must have gut. fered some heavy iinaaeial re- verses." "Why do you think no?" "Mrs. Gnylock has to my knowledge worn the sums gown to three separnte and distinct ttttttmoon tattetiomt." Wool jersey, tweed anrshantun, also suitable for this interesting model. Brown flat crepe silk with white is ever so smart and wearable. Navy blue flat crepe silk with white eyelet embroidered batiste is exceed.. ingly youthful. Style No. 3436 comes in sizes 14, 16, 18 years, M, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 4 yards of 89-inch figured with 1% yards of 39-inch plain material. The skirt shows slenderizing line in pointed hip yoke treatment. The jacket is in plight hip length. Enhance your charm by wearing flattering jacket costumes. It is a season of jackets! The one sketched is in the soft green printed crepe in combination with plain green silk crepe that matches the ground. Illustrated Prenmaking Lesson Fur- nithed With Every Pattern BY ANNABELLE WOR'r'mNtrroNi What New York In Wearing ---.lt.t. I-----.--- l is the Christian character and the Christian fellowship which really matter. You cm surely compromise for the sake of the weaker brother in these affairs of the table, v. 17. Yet, unimportant as these matters really are, you may be destroying the work of God if you insist on your freedom without resyect for other men's con- sciences. v. 20. Better never to eat meat or drink wine at all, than tol hurt your brothnr's conscience. It is) not likely that thc.e were actuallyi any vegetarians, or total abstainers in the Roman Church, but Paul is taking an extreme instance, v. 21. Happy is the man who is able to follow the die, tates of his reason with a good con- science (v. 22), but remember that for,' is triod to be free in}; iiir,'Gt," Kite? all, matters oCeating and drinking fuel?! vsytstsotttioyy importance. It On the principle of the Christian man's freedom in respect of food and drink, Paul is clear (v. 14), but we are not to despise or laugh at, those who differ from us, '. 18. It is good to be free, but t is much more im- tortant not to make things harder for your brother, 'ot to make him sin (v. 15), for, feeling as he does, these .thimrsptoul.d by sin to Itirtiv. 14. It; ism, and no Christian should touch it, [ Were Christians, then, to refuse to buy meat in the market and to refuse all invitations to dinner unless they were given satisfactory assurance that the meat see before them had never had the faintest connection with a heathen rite? Or, again, if a Christian was invited to dinner at the Louse of a non-Christian friend, and} if the non-Christian hast were to pour out the first glass of wine as a libs- tion or offering to his god (much as a Christian host might "say grace"). was the Christian guest to refuse to touch it It. CHRISTIAN STANDARDS, Romans M: 16-23. Such practical problems as these Paul often has in mind in his these Paul often has in mind in his correspondence. With respect to all ‘these scruples. Paul has been laying down the fundamental principle cf Christian freedom. A Christian should be free from petty scruples and super- stitious fears. But there are "weak" brethren, very iear to Christ, rhounh they seemed rather contemptible to some of their eliaw-Christidns, who could not, with a good conscience, eat meat or drink wine. unless they were assured about it. Paul tells the stronger brethren that they are not to despise the weaker nor to laugh at them. Their seruples may be foolish, but still it is, after all, a matter of conscience with hem, and men must.‘ at all costs, be lay-l to conscience. om I. PROBLEMS or THE EARLY CHURCH, Romans 14: 13-15. Many difficult food questions arose in the early Church, in particular the following two. The Chfiitian who Lad been brought up a Jew had been taught from his childhood as the Law of God that he should only eat "koisr-, er" meat, that is, meat from an uni“ mal which had oeen killed in a par- ricular way. Gentile Christians na. turally had no such scruples. What, then, was to be done at Church meals and at dinner parties to which Gentile Christians invited Jewish Christians? Was the Jewish Christian tp be made " --= ___,,. ... . I. mamus or we EARLY CHURCH, Romans 14: 13-15. Ir. minimum snuonos, Romans 14: 16-23. June 21. Lesson Xu-The Sin of Causing Others to Stumble (Tern- perance Le"on)-ttomarU 14: 13. " Golden Text-tt I: good neither to eat Huh; nor to drink wine. nor to do anything whereby thy brother 'tumttleth.-Romar" 14: 21. ANALYSIS TORONTO Dean of the announcers is Signor“): Maria Luisa Boneotnpagni of Rome. who has been at her post In the capital tor six and one-half years. be bounded by the limits ot kitchen, nursery and church. one occupntion connected with public life is complete- ly dominated by the dnughterl at sunny Italy. All of the eleven pro- fessional radio announcers in the king- dom are women. There are three in Rome, three in Turin, two In Milan and one each in Naples, Genoa and Bologna, l Although Premier Mussolini I. known to be somewhat like the ex- Kaiser in holding women’s sphere to "The studies show," said Deeds, "that the flights Are t feasible from an engineering point." Each week end a Zeppelin took off theoretically from Paris. and New York, their respective destinations the other end of the Lindbergh trail. Their chances of getting through were pitted against the government weather re- ports and their courses shifted to find the loopholes through storm belts. No ship ever was delayed more than twenty-four hours in reaching either metropolis. Women Radio Announcers Rule the Air in Italy The records were presented by Coe.- onel Edward A. Deeds, of Dayton, chairman of the board of the National Cash Register Company, who spoke a: a non-resident lecturer in engineering. He said the flights were plotted in the laboratory of the International Zeppe lin Transportation Company. The flights have been made weekly the tive years and the charts show that there has not been a single week in that period when a lighter-than-nir ship could not have made the passage. Ithaca. N.Y.---The logs of two imag- inary Zeppelins which have flown the north Atlantic "successfully" nearly 500 times in 3 Dayton, Ohio, labora- tory, were recently described to the Cornell University College of Engin- eating. Imaginary Zeppelin, Fly North Atlantic 500 Times r. is bound to respect the conscience: of any fellow-Christians who differ from him in this matter, and, third. that our object in life must be, not to flaunt our freedom, but to do whatever is "edifying" to our brethren or, as we might say, socially serviceable. In this passage, then, Paul is not directly dealing with what is called today the "Temperance Problem," but he lays down principles of Christian conduct which have their application to problems altogether beyond his har. izon. Three important principles seem tr arise from the present discussion: first, the Christian man is free to _etst; 9r drink what he likes. Second, that) the scrupulous, weaker brethren these things which you can do with a good conscience are really sin, for nnything in sin which we do without having I happy conscience about it. Lady Lindsay Hogs, wife ot Sir Anthony Lindsay Hogs. better known as Miss France. Doble, Canadian tetra" who sprang to fame " leading and, in "Young Woodley", returns to stage utter temporary retirement to play leading role in "The Old Man." The Census Loses An rr,v.merd,J. Colonel entirely , Mand- my many named check. "t knoi a mu: who will give us “other dog." --Powertaz. "Oh, John." nabbed the young wife. "I had baked I lovely cake, and I put it on the luck porch tor the frosting to cool. “a the d-d-dog n-a-ato it." "Wen. don't err About It. sweetheart." he consoled. with; the pretty ttttshed check. "t lum- - _... aw" in â€[190! that the pupils even contract And dilate an the “turn! an would. -Wher. at Int n reliable messenger was found he Arrived in Vienna Just after L'Aiglon's death. The set 'tt. ally passed into the possession ot Prin- cess Paleoloe who has lent it to the exhibition. After his death the Empress Marie Louise attempted many times to send these chessmen as a souvenir to Na- poleon's son, the Duke of Reichstadt (Rostand's L'Aittlont, who had been brought up at the Imperial Court in Vienna in calculated ignorance of his father's place in history. "Really? Wasn’t the nine worth the soundulr' Artutciat er; Napoleon's friends sent them in charge of a British officer who was killed by a falling spur during a storm at set on the le, so that the ex-Em- peror never knew the secret contained in the chess pieces with which he was playing. The chessmen are hollow and con- tain detailed directions for N npoleon'u esclpe from M. Helena. tridge Set is On View Praece.-A remarkable set of chess- men which nearly chmged the court" of history is to be shown at a Na. poleonic exhibition at, Austerlitz, in Czechoslovakia. l Although fur-tsears'" animals trap- ped in their netivs habitats continue to supply the - part at lulled!“ tum, there is e constantly increasing volume coming from fur-hearing sni- nisls in captivity, says a bulletin from the Dominion Bumu of Btatisties. “Csnads, which for generations has been one of the principsl sources of supply for furs of s wide variety," says the bulletin, “and still continues to be, has been one of the principal sources of supply for furs of A wide‘ , variety. and still continues to be, has in recent yesrs been augmenting the1 I catches of trappers and hunters with the products of fur farms. The fur- farming industry is followed on s commercial scale in esch of the nine provinces and in the Yukon Territory. In the past few years the industry in . Western Canada hes grown until it is now e wbstsntisl one. Official sta- stistics recently issued show that the total value of fur farm, in Manitoba. Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Jo!. l umbis and the Yukon Territory sm- _ ounts to $8,677,142. en increase of 82.- l 860,000 in one yesr. The total num- ber of fur farms is 999, of which 572 ere fox farms, 249 mink farms, 108 mush-st farms and 70 raise rsccoons. msrtens, fishers, badgers, skunks, beavers, etc. Msnitoba is the Prine!- pal centre of the industry in Western Canada, with British Columbia next, Alberta third and Sashtchewun fourth. The value of animnls on the 999 terms hut year was estimated " $5,450,000 of which silver foxes slonc sccounted for over $3,437,000. An in. temsting feature of the report is that the value of the muskrat population on the 108 farms increased in one year from $113,710 to $629,212, or over 450 per cent. I Napoleon's Chen TheFurlnduoh'y anatem Canada c jt'ol,Car,'a,, ' IVA P, f 'ata I I new l shall have Ire now so to give up perfect __“... n "mum-r Ir Berlin families. who nan prm may tttatmmen and other noun)! the courts ot the Prussian n m represented on the comm Thu Old Berlin Committee will that but pct-hm: mvomenu " .tltnt which MM In the Dot-Ila Exhibition In: your. a commute. has been (0mm! in Berlin to protect It. historic ht: li. lnu and other relics at It: 700 .1 mm of history. the tout-ht tutor-â€ion of. leo of the German Nntlonll Rxit. to“. "t"torteoa. A number of old a...- a--, - l The city adults it would be Impu- l Ilhle to exterminate the rm com. , trletetr--att they hope to do In keen '. the total down. They've trUd every- , thlng. Pol-oh an, tor Inumnce, ttpt. ted an even doeen mu. Recently. than. We lu- been nude: 1 In“ named Bulls. of tot Fifth Avenue, In " _ on the Mud with poiuou Imported tron Gtsraruttr--e brown liq. uid with the odor at mine. Rain date on it. It make. them run for Inter, end the more \nter they drink the quicker they so belly up. Mr. IM- It; ny- they choke to death. He him- Belt rather like. the 1roitrott--take,,, a leg ot It now end then to show it doesn't hurt humamt He has a mu- traet with the clty to kill run and has killed " to 3500 l tuv.prs.., " ire, Yorker, Berlin to Protect Its Relics a ma! one: rats are no joke - tho _Unlted State. Public Health Service has ontlmated that two rats. reproduc- ing over a period of tire years. will Increase from two rain to 940.369.969.- 152 rat- provided tho parent: aro healthy and fond ot each other, and no little rat. die. The when Island colony it the blunt In the world. Son. of the mu wel‘h ttve pounds. Thoy um attack dogs and human he. lnn. and make good. hish dump, is t, " everluting five mlluon rats. ed in the rubbh interruption. I rubbish (not dar. and . low each load for th The parlor to always lull ot thtw. Il'.-'":"', annual-piece and grate in ‘Iprlng quit. hidden by fresh green bought» at hone-chestnut in bloom, or with lilac, blue belitr. or will hya- clnthu In summer nodding KTIB-EQ' from the meadows. roses. 'ortrethrier; in the autumn two or three "mien, tho but of the your. put an arm: - menu among the chin. and the cor- ners ot the looking-gins. decorated with bunches ot ripe whent.--qtirhard Petrles. In "An Engllsh Village." in the when erttttroatrd-ot binNr, but I deep thny color with age Ind frequent ttoiiattlt-r be found I few pieces of old china, and on the table at teI-tlne. perhaps, other pieces, which I connolueur would tremble to see in use. lest I clumsy Inn should wetter their fragile In- thulty. Though apparently no little VIlued. you shall not be able to buy these things tor money-ttot Io much hecIuse their Irtietic beauty is were- ciated. but been" ot the instinctive clinging to everything old. character, intlc of the plIce Ind people. These the been there of old time; they shall remain otlll. Somewhere in the carbon“. too, in I curiously carved piece of iron, to in into the hand. with I front of Iteel before the lingers. like I Ikeleton "pier guard; it is the In- clent steel with which. Ind n Bint, the tinder Ind the sulphur latch were ignited. eottttrtittee his The house we: nomehow shaped and titted itself to the character of the dweller: within it: hidden and re ‘tired anon; trees. treuh and green with cherry end pear against the van, ret the brown thatch And the old brick: subdued in tone " the "other. This individuality extends to the tur- uiture: it in a little "it and angular, but solid. end there are nook. and ettrttertH the wtttdow-utteea, tire ot pin-id repose: e strange op- poeito mixture throughout of Iowerr - end silence. with on Almost total lack of modern conveniences and appliance. ot comfort-" though the alnevy vigor ot the residents disdain» ed ertiilcihl one. Hike 1 When a homestead. like this, hcrs been "OM and occupied by the aunm family for " or seven aeneratlum, it aeean to possess a dlatinot perusin- hllty at m own. A history grows up round about it; memories of the "an accumulate. and are handed down treah and green. linking todar and seventy yeara ago as it hardly any lapse ot time had intervened. The Innate. talk familiarly ot the "eotttet yen." u if it was but just over; of the days when a load of when was worth a little fortune: ot the great - and t1ooO ot the previoul our tury. They date evenla trom the year when the Forehead: were purchased and added to the patrimony. as If that transaction. which took place ninety nan before. was of such importance that ft null neceuarlly be atill known to all the world. Wick Fu- - almost every v:!', 5n in " outlying "wiee"-erta""' aim-‘- In the has. " II In ancient. yam- Illl: billing the present tom " with I. the result ot succesmvg ml am... at ditterettt dates. and in ' u- on: styles. ,iker's island, Ne, l dump. is (won: overlain; ares. million rats, and n the rubbish for The Rat Menace Wick Farm my to lull nu Ind has “00 a dar.-The New the Prussian mgr; ad, New York city'" rub. ; (enou- tor In nu. and I lm. There must be Ill, and the are bu Imm- Matt tor " yen-s without Sixteen scowloedu ot t garbage) arrive each N nu cone along wish the rule. The menace In rule In no joke - the I Public Hum: Service tho commit-ea _haes prod ut'ei It. fur- ‘uch Old u n n the an Ion tie let