and | scoentif is making 0o subscribe t hase of rad de 0u8s® vernt ed and and $§IP 1c0€s C€0oO K the "«tro rkey will l: the Baikam ne rOLE N nexyp Candidates aid of it and e T ~ Ta wmme radl Wednesday : that the sed ihay lea 11 l 9 i mear 1$ se ) m# 1 wunel mited i Balâ€" pe of a.M & M w i thh lagâ€" uth they 106 hey s of kenm AQ ght de A ed fie ANM § nowme Don‘ts. Don‘t ast fast. Don‘t stay up too late at night. Don‘t put tobacâ€" co in your ears to stop pain. Don‘t forget to take your toothâ€"plate out cvery night and wash it. Don‘t sleep with your window shut, and don‘t breaths with your mouth open. Don‘t use for yourselt a pr«'cription which the doctor wrote for somabody elso, Don‘t have falso tecth put in over rotten sumps; have the stumps taken out first. Doa‘t have the child‘s ears pierced in the hope that it will imâ€" prove weak ayos ; it is a silly superâ€" Nesk. D‘om‘t spend on worthless ‘ money which might be help towards a summer Don‘t wear spectacles lum-dored tor somebody »~~ but hare your eyes properly itad, The two eyes are seldom of It is unsafe to generalize on insufâ€" ficient data. Lombroso went too far, undoubtedly, but it is possible to go too far in the opposite direcâ€" only when extonded over years and many places. inz and discipline in elementary and vocational schools would save many from criminal careers. tion. The sort of measurements and comparisons made by Dr. Gorâ€" ing warants positive conclusions ‘‘natural stupidity.‘"* The thieves and burglars and thugs are defecâ€" tive in mental capacity as &a rule, and it follows that a proper trainâ€" What the world calls criminality, I)r. Goring concludes, is generally Dr. (Goring‘s _ measurements, which began in 1901, are said to show that in the mean head index criminals do nut differ from Oxford and Cambridge students ; that crimâ€" tna«!s do not vary much, except in ne respect, from the general popuâ€" lation; that perfectly respectable nmates of bospitals resemble sigâ€" nally the run of malefactors, and, finally, that criminals are not inâ€" herently wicked or brutal or perâ€" A statistical treatment of English prison facts and figures which is reâ€" xarded by some as ‘"epochâ€"making‘‘ is found in a volume published by IDr. Goring, medical officer at Parkâ€" hurst. The volume is said to overâ€" throw most of Lombroso‘s concluâ€" sions as to the existence of criminal types and the relation between crime and certai physical traits or peculiaritiesâ€"like _ short _ noses, glassy eyes, low foreheads, etc. [« was the rise of woman in indusâ€" try that has paved the way for her to social and political equality in many countries of the old world. It ba« put an ond to feudal marriages in which the woman was literally bartered to a man without regard to her _ personal _ preference. The steady rise of woman in industry is toâ€"day slowly putting an end to the loveless marriage, the marriage tor the sake of any kind of a home. What industry has done and is doâ€" ing@ to elevate the woman of Europe and America it will do for the woâ€" man of the Orient. The greaier reâ€" spect which the Japanese woman is now being shown by her husband is but the forerunner of many more advantages to come, No doubt the rise of woman labor in Japan will bring with it a train of social ills and problems as it has brought them everywhere else. Still it is to be welcomed by the women of Japan, for it will bring to them, a; it has brought to the women of Europe, a great many advantages. The ills and problems accompanying woman labor will gradually be lesâ€" sened in Japan as they are being l»ssened elsewhere, while the adâ€" vantages that go with the economic ndependence of women will remain. Over in Japan men are learning to respect their wives. It is not a «ndden wave of chivalry that is bringing about this changed attiâ€" tude on the part of the stronger sex. It is industry. The educaâ€" tional facilities which in recent vears have been extended to the women of the flowery kingdom have given rise to the employment of woâ€" men in industry. With the woman earning her livelihood in the lhop or factory a lordly attitude on the part of the husband becomes more and more out of place. NOTES ANDCOMMENT S arance make for â€" criminality incipally by closing the avenues honest employment. In other rds, the puny man finds it hardâ€" to get a job than the tall, strong in, and the ranks of the unemâ€" ad and unemployable gupply ruits to the soâ€"called criminal he criminal is, indeed, markedly ‘crior in height and weight, but â€" Goring is disposed to think that or physique and unfavorable apâ€" pOl.†1 strength must n badly , rever o be alraid of do to» without failure do anythiag wo‘e (:_f doi ag enemies. If they block up your path walk around them, and do your duty regardless of their spite. A man who has mo enemies is selâ€" dom good for anything; he is made of that kind of material which is so easily worked that everyone has a hand in it. A sterling character â€"one who thinks for himself and speaks what he thinksâ€"is always sure to have enemies. They aro as necessary to him as fresh air ; they keep him alive and active. A celeâ€" brated character, who was surâ€" rourded with enemies, used to reâ€" mark,; ‘‘There are sparks which, if you do not blow, will go« out by thomsolves."" Let this be your feelâ€" ing while endeavoring to live down the scandal of those who are bitter against you. â€"If you stop to dispute you do but as they desire and open the way for more abuse, Let the poor fellow talk; thoere will be & reâ€"actitn it you perform but your duty, and hundreds who were once alicnated from you will flock to you and acknowledge their error. What do you suppose Mother Bear did then? She took that lit tle feather and cried over itâ€"nor would she allow it to be replaced in Baby Redâ€"Head‘s cap. And to this day, if you care to visit the three bears, you may see that very feather under a glass tumbler on the manâ€" tel above the fireplace.â€"â€"Youth‘s Immediately on learning _ such dreadful news, all the best swimâ€" mers along the rive rstarted in purâ€" suit of the drifting boat. Father Beaver and all his brothers, Father Otter and his folks, the Mink famâ€" ily and the Muskrat tribe left their work and swam into the middle of the stream, caught the boat, turnâ€" ed it round, and tied a grapeâ€"vine rope to the bow and towed E?m up the river. $ f unusual procession. What do you suppose were the first words iittle Bear said to his Mother Bear i o _ "Here‘s the feather I wont after â€"it is for you to give to Mrs. Redâ€" Head." ce Companion. So Little Bear kept his head, and sure enough help came. Father Kingfisher, searching the river for fish, saw Little Bear sitting exactâ€" ly in the middle of the boat, holdâ€" ing an unraised oar. Father Kingâ€" fisher knew that a little way beyond was the wide, wide ocean, andv the river travelled fast. So does news. Father Kingfisher flew along, and told all the wildâ€"wood folks he met that dear Little Bear was floating out to sea in a rowboat. _ Beveral hours passed before Faâ€" ther Bear and Mother Bear saw the unusual procession. 4 Little â€" Bear became _ terribly frightened, but he remembered Faâ€" ther Bear‘s advice: "If ever you find yourself adrift in an open boat, keep your head.‘" s * If you will believe it, he untied that boat, jumped in, and away he sailed. One oar fell overboard, but Little Bear tried to paddle with the other. He thought that he knew all about boais because he had heard Father Bear tell the Beaver children many boat stories. Little Bear could not turn that boat. The wind was blowing downâ€" stream. By the time Little Bear knew that he could not get back, it was useless to shout for help. â€" Baby Bear did not answer. After being told not to go near that boat, he should have kept out of it ; but after the young man was gone, a baby Redâ€"Head flew to the willows and began talking woodpecker nonâ€" sense to Little Bear. Suddenly the wind snatched a feather from Redâ€" Head‘s new cap and sent it floating down the river. ‘Don‘t ery, Baby Redâ€"Head !" called Little Bear. "I‘ll get your feather !‘ ‘‘Now see here, sir,"‘ said the young man, as he stepped on shore, ‘‘you tell your father and your moâ€" ther that I am a butterflyâ€"collector, and I do not want you. But, sirâ€" don‘t you go near my boat!‘‘ Little Bear stood still and stared He was not afraid. ‘"Oh, ho, ho! What have we here?‘‘ exclaimed the young man, when he saw Little Bear. Upsideâ€"Down Bat, who has worâ€" derful ears, cautioned him to be quiet. "Hush!‘"‘ said he. ‘"There is a man tying & boat to the wilâ€" lows !‘ Out in the path danced Baby Bear, ready for a pleasant fuss with his friend. ‘‘Why, Uppy,"" exclaimed Little Bear, "are you awake in the dayâ€" time?‘ He spoke like that to Upâ€" sideâ€"Down Bat because they were old friends. _ ‘"Hush, Cubby, I tell youâ€" hush | The bat called Little Bear "Cubâ€" by‘‘ to tease him. ther ‘‘What can be the matter?" whisâ€" pered Baby Bear. Go straight on und &A Man Who Has No Enemics. !l' Buspicion usually finds what it is looking for if it looks long enough. ‘"Don‘t you think pesce would be promoted if nations could be perâ€" suaded to talk things over deliger- ately before going to war?‘‘ *‘Posâ€" sibly. But sometimes the more you talk things over the more you find to fight about.‘"‘ Heâ€"No; the only time I ever knew of his going out with her was once when the gas exploded. Wauted to Know. Hallâ€"What are you doing now!! Gallâ€"Oh, I‘m making a houseâ€"toâ€" house canvass to ascertain why peoâ€" ple don‘t want to buy a new patent clothesâ€"wringer. "‘You are getting very bald, sir,‘"‘ said the barber. ‘‘You, yourself,"‘ retorted the customer, ‘"‘are not free from a number of defects that I could mention if I cared to become personal.‘"‘ Neilected'feeth will eventually put the entire human systein out of commission. The teeth should be brushed and cleaned on arising and at bedtime, as well as after each meal. Bleep is the natural means of seâ€" curing rest for the body and the mind. A renon suffering from insomnia should consult & physician and not resort to sleeping dope. _ 6 A clear conscience is the best hypâ€" notic. as well as appearance and comfort. Once. Sheâ€"Mr. Brown does not pay\his wife much attention. Walking, th® most natural exerâ€" cise, to be of benefit, must be pracâ€" ticed regularly. The best of all exercise is work. Both work and exercise should be performed where an abundance of fresh air is available. Plain, simple and easily digested food constitutes the ‘best nourishâ€" Any condition that can give rise to the inflammation of a nerve may cause shingles. In many cases, it seems to be the result of an infecâ€" tion. Rheumatism and the soâ€"callâ€" ed gouty diathesis predispose to it. It may accompany influenza or maâ€" laria, and sometimes it appears to be the result of an emotional disâ€" turbance. The treatment which a physician should direct, aims to reâ€" lieve the pain, and protect the pimâ€" ples or vescicles from rupture. It is usual to apply some soothing and healing cintments, and to build u the strength of the patient witg nourishing and easily digested food. â€"Youth‘s Companion. Exercise aids in securing good apâ€" petite, good digestion, good sleep. Shingles, like attacks of herpes in other parts of the body, follow the course of an inflamed nerve. It is very unusual for the girdle to surâ€" round the body completely, but there is no foundation for the comâ€" mon belief that such a condition leads to fatal results. The disease ordinarily runs a course of from ten days to two weeks, although with elderly persons it is sometimes more persistent. The pain of an attack also is likely to be more severe with the old than with the young, but on the other hand, old persons are less likely to suffer from the disâ€" ease. Shingles generally begin with pain, not unlike that of neuralgia, | which is often quite severe in the| parts where the eruption is to apâ€"| pear. After a time, varying from‘ a few hours to several days, groups | of large pimples appear, and the| skin all about the eruption becomes | inflamed and slightly swollen. The | pimples do not appear all at once, | but in a succession of little crops,| and they go on to form small vesiâ€"| cles that are filled with a tra.nspar-l ent fluid. As the eruption comes‘ out, the neuralgic pains generallyl diminish. Shingles is the common name for a disease known in medicine as herâ€" pes zoster ; an impressive name that comes from two Greek words, herâ€" po, I creep, and zoster, a girdle. Herpes is an eruption that may apâ€" pear on almost any part of the body ; it is properly called shingles or herpes zoster only when it comes round the trunk. The photo shows Tom Mann, the English Bocialist leader, and W. D. Haywood, the chief leading spirit in America‘s troubleâ€"making labor organization, the Industrial Workers of the World. They apâ€" pear to be enjoying each other‘s company. F;eguent bathing adds to health Healthgrams. Defects. Shingles. Thy neighbor‘s houseâ€"If the word ‘"house‘‘ be taken genericalâ€" ly, then the first clause of this comâ€" mandment may be taken to cover the entire prohibition intended, the following specific things, such as wife, servant, ox, and ass, beiag added simply as exemplifying all that which is to be understood unâ€" der the word "house.‘"‘ Hence.also the concluding phrase, "nor anyâ€" thing that is thy neighbor‘s ‘ In the Deuteronomic version of the commandment the order is siiglit)y different, the commandm=at readâ€" ing, ‘‘Neither shalt thou covet thy neighbor‘s wife ; neith=r shalt thou desire thy neighbor‘s house, his field, or his manâ€"servant, or his maidâ€"servant, his ox, or his ass, or anything that is thy neighbor‘s ‘‘ It was George Eliot who said that politeness is like an air cushion ; there may be nothing in it, but it eases the jolt wonderfully.â€" _ Frayed Phillipâ€"If dat‘s so, ~ it must of jumped clean over me. 17. Thou shalt not covetâ€"In unâ€" dertaking to regulate a man‘s inâ€" ner thought life as well as his outer life of action the Mosaic law places itself on a higher level than any other system of laws, ancient or modern. The Decalogue, â€" and especially this commandment, proâ€" ceeds on the assumption that man is actually free to control his Gritty Georgeâ€"This paper says that prosperity is advancin‘ by leaps and bounds. _ thoughts, and hence is responsible for them as well as for his actions. 16. Bear false witness The comâ€" mandment as it stands refers priâ€" marily to outright falsehood and perjury. It does not, however, exâ€" clude private calumny, or the more subtle habit of evil speaking against one‘s neighbor. Later on in the detailed legislation given by Moses to Israel tï¬o latter is speciâ€" fically forbidden in the words: ‘‘Thou shalt not take up a false reâ€" port: put not thy hand with the wicked to be an unrighteous witâ€" ness‘‘ (Exod. 23. 1). > 13. Thou shalt not killâ€"An apâ€" preciation of the sanctity of the human life necessarily precedes a sense of other duties and obligaâ€" tions to our fellow men. Hence the moral precept of this comâ€" mandment is, as we should expect, incorporated in all ethical ~codes which man has put into permanâ€" ent, written form. _ ob 14, 15. Not commit adulteryâ€" Next to one‘s regard for the life of his neighbor is his respect for family ties, and this in turn natuâ€" rally leads to a recognition of the rights of personal ownership of all things belonging to a _ family household. The next commandâ€" ment is, therefore, against stealâ€" ing. That thy days may be long in the land which Jehovah thy God giveth theeâ€"If we are to think of a simâ€" pler original form for this comâ€" mandment, this attached reason for obedience may perhaps be a later amplification. The wording of the commandment in _ Deuteronomy reads : ‘"‘Honor thy father and thy mother, as Jehovah thy God comâ€" manded theo; that thy days may be long, and that it may go well with thee, in the land which Jehoâ€" vah thy God giveth thee‘‘ (Deut. 5. 16). Here the origingd]l command of Jehovah and the laterâ€"reason of expediency are separatedâ€" by the intervening explanatory clause ‘"as Jehovah thy â€" God_ commanded thee,‘‘ which seems to point speciâ€" fically to an earlier more succinet command to filial obedience. Verse 12. Honor thy father and thy motherâ€"Since the time of Auâ€" gustine the Roman Catholic Church, and subsequently also some Proâ€" testant churches, have regarded the fifth commandment as heading the second table. The reason for this has been chiefly that this diviâ€" sion seemed to make the amount of writing on the two tables more nearly equal. It has been defendâ€" ed also on the ground that the comâ€" mandment itself is moral rather than religious, referring to a duty toward others rather tian toward God. In ancient times respect for parents was more a matter of reâ€" ligious â€" obligation. Hence the earliest grouping of the commandâ€" ments was, "I to V, religions duâ€" ties,‘"‘ and ‘"VI to X, moral duties." Lesson XI.â€"The Ten Commandâ€" ments, II.â€"Exod. 20.12â€"21. Golden Text, Luke 10.27. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY Was Lying Down Probably. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPTEMBER 14. j) i en Honesty means what thinks as well as what he a man is nothing short nowâ€"aâ€"days who is . not honest. Lewis Dawe, of Fishing Slip Harâ€" bor, Nifd., had read in a book that a bear cannot bite a man if the latâ€" ter puts his finger and thumb into each extremity of the animal‘s mouth, there being no teeth there. When a bear tackled him the other day he saved his life by rememberâ€" ing,what he had read. While he hjd the bear another man killed i6. The real and onduring greainess of a nation always has its source in the home ; patrictism dwells within the home that is happy. Little Minnie: ‘"Oh, Mamma, what‘s that dreadful noise?" Mamâ€" ma: ‘‘Hush, darling, papa‘s trying to save the price of a shave."‘ ‘‘Please don‘t bother to see me to the door!‘ pleaded the departâ€" ing visitor. ‘Really, it‘s no bother at all," the hostess assured her. "It is a pleasure." There is no royal roadâ€"to anyâ€" thing. One thing at a time, all things in succession. That which grows fast withers as rapid‘ly ; that which grows slowly endures. Mrs. James Byrne, of Ryrne Road, near Charlottetown, P.E.L., saw a little black animal walking off with one of her goslings in its mouth. She told her husband, who set a trap and caught it. It turned out to be a beautiful black min‘x. An offer of a thousand doliars oas been refused for the duck steaier. Brownâ€""Stout people, they say, are rarely guilty of meanness or crime."" . Jonesâ€"‘‘Well, you ses, it‘s so difficult for them to stoop to anything low," Police commissioners of Sydney, Cape Breton, are not satisfied with the police force of that town, but the Mayor said it was impossible to get better men unless they were paid more. In North Sydney, too, there has been trouble, and the chief of police had another member of the force fired because he said he was drunk on duty. _ _ _ _ At St. John‘s, Nlid., a gang of men were at work excavating for a sewer when they unearthed a lot of skulls and bones. It turned out that the place was formerly a miliâ€" tary cemetery, but the oldest inâ€" habitant did not remember when. The bones will all be collected and decently interred. i The body of B. F. Atkinson was found on the road near Rydney, N.S., and he was believed to have been accidentally _ killed. _ Hince then the police have found a bloodâ€" stained stone in the bushes near by, and have come to the conclusion that Mr. Atkinson was murdered. Fox breeders of Prince Edward Island have formed an association. They want the period of quarantine extended from three weeks to six. Royal black foxes, now being bred in P.E.I., sell as high as $12,000 per pair. Edward Milligan, of Freeland, P.E.I., lost 20 valuable foxes from ptomaine poisoning. They ate the flesh of a cow which had been acâ€" cidentally killed. The foxes were worth more than $1,000 a piece. Ezra D. Smith, of Phinney Cove, N.S., is dead. He was in his day one of the best known shipbuilders in the Maritimes. His ancestors came over in the Mavflower. Policemen in St. John‘s, Nlfd., are paid a dollar a day. One of them has just quit and gone to New York. He said he was slowly staryâ€" ing to death on the salary paid him. An organized gang of burglars are operating in New Brunswick, and the police of all the Maritime Provinces are warned to be on the lookout for them. Many stores and residences have been broken into. The Citizens‘ Improvement League of Halifax have taken steps to erect a memorial to Richard Power, who laid out the beautiful public gardens of that city. That more banks*are now being established in eastern â€" Canada, which means the Maritime Proâ€" vinces, than in the west, is the statement of a financial paper. DOWN BY THE SOUNDIN3 SEA Mrs. Donald Johnstone, the oldâ€" est citizen of Halifax, died in her Q95th vear. She had vivid recollecâ€" Munson Steamship _ Company boats will soon sail direct to Cuba from Halifax. Potatoes and other vegetables will be the chief freight. tions of happenings seventy ago. Halifax business men think the new terminals mooted for that port will double the population of the city in ten years. f ‘‘Bhe was fined $10 or 15 days in the ladies‘ apartment at the jail, said The Moncton Transcript, reâ€" porting & recent police court case. Bt. John‘s, Nfld., is preparing for its centennial celebration in 1915. It is likely that a big internaâ€" tional regatta will be one oi the features. Bo far this season the trap fishery at Labrador has been a faiiure. The hay crop in Nova Scotia will be 20 per cent. larger than that of last year. Bydney, N.S:, is to have a new motor fire truck, costing $11,000. Whales are now re];orted to be very plentiful on the Labrador coast. Items of Interest From Places Lapped by Waves of the Atlantic. Cunard liners will make Halifax a port of call next winter. BITS OF XEWS FROM °M MARITIME PROVINCES. TORONTO a. man does. And of a fool absolutely vears on se A xi 5',.' EuL f& imict A wl To the straight adge two© long straight sections of cratonne are gathered, long enough to come to the bottom of the frock. There straight picces can hbe seamed toâ€" gether or fastened with tapes or socket fasteners. White crepe negligecs, embroidâ€" ered with fine wool thremis in soft colors, are very becoming. A long rest robe of the crepe shows a loose. ly arranged bunch of «moro:.Jered flowers at the two front corners of the skirt, and a trailing little streak of embro‘dery up aach side <f the front. At the neck the embroide widens out into a yoke design. 1 For little girls figured dimity paâ€" rasols are attractive. They are inâ€" expensive and durable and really simpler and more childlike than those of silk. Very often an old evening frock can be made to serve as the foundaâ€" tion for such a petticoat. Satin and messaline and soft silk can all be used. Cretonne slips to put uver frocks that are hanging in the closet or wardrobe are convenient. They are made of two pieces cf ccetonn>s, cat in semiâ€"circular outline, a little bigâ€" ger than n dress hanger. They are seamed together about the curved edge, with a little opening lefi for the neck of the hangor. Other wide lace, with one straight and one scalloped edge, is sold at a small price for ruffles on white or lightâ€"colored china silk or crepe de chine petticoats. The tops of the petticoats are scant and are finishâ€" ed at the bottom with a little hem. The lace is side pleated and applied under or over the little hem, and the joining is covered with a narâ€" row })ius band of the petticoat maâ€" teral. The woman who can sew or who knows a capable and inexpensive seamstress can have much dainty underwear at a reasonable price. Wide shadow lace is now .ogd at prices varying from 40 cents to a dollar. It is edged on each . side with holes through which ribbon is to be run, and it is designed for under bodices. One ribbon is run through the lower edge, to gather it in about the waist. Another is run through the top edge. The ends of the ribbons are tied in front and ribbons are fastâ€" ened across the shoulders. 4 There is a new Spanish heel in the shoe shops. It is shaped almost like a crescent, and the two pointâ€" ed little tips bend in towardpewh other. The heel is scooped out so that it is a cross between a French and a Cuban heel, so far as its proâ€" file is concerned. It is shown on evening and afternoon slippers. . Patent leather shoes, always a boon to man or womankind, beâ€" cause they are so easily kept clean and bright, are made up with kid and cloth in many styles. One patâ€" ent leather shoe has cloth uppers in the form of attached spats with straps going under the arch of the foot where they are fastened in the eole. These shoes are made with spats or purple, tan, gray and black. To Guard the Soul. to fulfl the ideals <f the spirit, to be perfect as spiritual beings even as ‘"our Father which is in heaven isâ€"perfect,"‘ And yet here we are wholly absorbed with a hundred and one things of earth which have litâ€" tle or nothing to do with the faithâ€" ful performance of this duty. We are anxious about what we shall eat and what we shall drink and wherowithal~we shall be clothed. We seek money and more money still! We are taken up with busiâ€" ness which leads only to more busiâ€" ness, and lose ourselves in pleasure which gives place only to tEe quest for more pleasure. We accumulate houses and lands and servants and flocks and herds, only to find ourâ€" selves possessed by our possessions. Here is a parable of the life of man, if there ever was one, especiâ€" ally in this age of exhausting conâ€" fusion and distraction! Unless we are wholly deceived in our interpreâ€" tation of existence, God has set us one task, namely, . The "servant‘‘ who is described in this text had been given a most serious task to perform, according to the story told by the prophet. In the midst of the great battle beâ€" tween Ahab and Benhadad this serâ€" vant had been ordered to stand guard over a man who had just been seized from the host of the enemy. This captive was so imâ€" portant a person that the king‘s servant had been told that ‘"if by auy means he be missing, then shall thy life be for his life, or else thou shalt pay & talent of silver.‘" And yet, in spite of the fact that this soldier was taken out of the line of battle and thus relieved of every other responsibility, in order that ‘‘this one thing‘‘ he might do withâ€" out fail, he had to make the humiliâ€" ating confession when the conflict was over that his prisoner had esâ€" caped. ‘"As thy servant was busy here and there, he was gone.‘"‘ _ No One Could Accuse the King‘s Servant of Laziness or Inertia or Indifference. SIN OF MISDIRECTED ACTION As thy servant was busy here and there, he was gone.â€"L i c f m Crepe Negligees: Fads and Fancies. Cretonne Slips. In 1874 the marquis married Lady Blanche, daughter of the eighth Duke of Beafort, by whom there were three children, his son Henry, who succeeded him, was drowned about two years ago. The latter‘s son, John Charles, born of the youngest daughter of the fAifth Marâ€" of the marriage. The claimant asserts that he was handed over to the care of a Mrs. Duncan when only a few days old. Bhe is dead, but her daughter is alive and remembers Tooth being brought to her mother as a puny infant. For sixteen years the fifth marquis, so it is said, paid $20 a month for his maintenance. The child was taken every month to the fifth marquis‘ house, when the monâ€" ey was paid to Mrs. Duncan or her "I hear you have got a new baby, Wiggins,"‘ seaid the squire to his gardener. ‘‘What are you going to call him1? Not some hi;iflown name that will make him ridiculous ‘n after life, I hope!"" ‘‘Oh, no, sir, replied Wiggins,. "If it‘s not a iibâ€" erty, sir, we thought of callinzg hiim plain Jamesâ€"after you, sir." tion that the boy was old enough to work for his living. Proil 0 in â€" The last installment was when Tooth was 16 years of age, when an allowance for three months was jury o the spine through Talling from his horse. A son was born to the marquis at Chesham Place on March 20, 1873, and according to the formal announcement in the Times, it was stillborn. Tooth conâ€" tends that the child was born alive, and that it was he. His case is that, as a newlyâ€"born infant, he was placed in the care of & Mrs. Dunoan, who brought him up at the expense of the marquis. Tooth has been gardening for f#â€" teen years, and during the whole of that time has, it is said, been collecting evidence to support his claim. It is understood that he is receiving financial support from a lady who thinks that at least it is a case for inquiry. . 1873, and there is no recorded issue Claims the Fifth Marguis of Waterâ€" ford Was His Father. George Tooth, a jobbing gardenâ€" er of Norwood, & London (Engâ€" land) suburh, tells a romantic story of his history, and promises to reâ€" tell it in the law courts, where he proposes to prosecute a claim to the peerage of, Waterford and the esâ€" Tooth says he believes himself to be the legitimate son of the fifth Marquis of Waterford, who, in 1895, shot himself following an inâ€" Plaid fabrics are returning to fayâ€" or. One of the smartest plaids is made up in chiffon and is used for bodices. It is barred with red and gold, on a blue ground, and shows a line of green here and there. This plaid chiffon is covered by the dressâ€" makers with sheer blue chiffon, the eplor of the background, and so the eolors are softened and merged inâ€" to harmony. GARDENER THE SsoNX OF PEER. dainty lingerie collar falls over and half conceals this yoke. £4 We dress and undress, eat and Plaids Are Popular. it w s about â€" 66,700