WDE R EL THE Conâ€" NTS ARE LABEL. IT Â¥ MEDIUM~ * MADE IN MO N T R E A L IMITED YE for |F ur â€" ) NOTES ANDCOMMENT s There appeared in the London Academy not long ago a plenant‘ article on the French cure and the society that he adorns in the little country villages. Even the first families were not oppressive in their parzde of worldliness and for the rest competition in the cost of high living was never thought of. As he proceeds with his descripâ€" tion the author is driven to a comâ€" parison, and this is what he says : Â¥Here is a faithful picture of the\ simple life, than which there is no better, and the sustained and comâ€" plicated © efforts of ultraâ€"modern people to lead it are wellâ€"nigh ï¬athetic, for this reason, that they ave lost inner consciousness of the few things that reaily count and fastened upon the externa‘s. But simplicity can not be acquired by letting one‘s hair run wild and perpetually dressing in green.‘" Sorrowfully it must be confessed | that these simple ones are only pre<\ tenders. The simple life is truly admirable and probably it wou‘ld be better for us if we were to live it, but we don‘t know how. We have a thousand wants that we can‘t get rid of no matter how we try. They have become second naâ€" ture, and every man who talks about retiring is at his wit‘s end when he tries to figure out just how far he can cut down expenses. He would like an automobile in his reâ€" tirement because he would have increased ppportunities for using wne,. but an automobile in the simâ€" me life would soon lead to a genâ€" era% blowout. The little bungalow is a beautiful dream, but when we come io plan it we add all those wice little things that we have come to consider necessities till the little bungalow is equipped like one of those soâ€"called cottages that serve as the little country nests of milâ€" , @8 am8zee8se84e28e128 Y» If the man is satisfhied the woman sn‘t and contrariwise. As the plamnning goes on the simple life ooms up as a terribly complex afâ€" ‘air that makes the retiring income ook like alms for a beggar. Try t and see. Then before making »ver the bungalow be sure to make rourself? over if you can. There is no other wayr and the contract is Elizabeth stopped to listen. "I â€" wonder," continued grandâ€" mother, ‘‘what the geoese in the pond would say to a little girl who did not want to lay her curly head on a pillow made from the â€"soft down that grew on their breasts ¢" Elizabeth drew nearer grandâ€" whit e aV 1 ees%%e8eesecsee8e28 8 na‘res Eliza mother m ets t aken Us "I wonder,"" went on her grandâ€" aother, ‘‘what the silkworms on he mulberry tree would say to a ittle girl who did not care to use he pretty quilt made from the fme‘ ilken threads which took them so ong to spin ?"‘ § . ‘ )eta s CHH lainty litt "I don‘t ind Elizat "‘The lit fold,"" â€" gai aid Elizal Young Folks $ E.112 a D€ ther. the Om bâ€"bâ€"but not any WOrse wants to marty me.‘ io Martry my CTEHBAE O * Seared _ Suitor â€" "Yâ€" W ng@ Ry EW CCC C lizabeth climbed up into grandâ€"| or rheumatic . ther‘s lap. ‘Please tell me some | are still uncer re,"‘ she coaxed. ‘*You may un-‘condition real tton the buttons,""‘ she added. | ually be cured 11 get ready for bed now."‘ ‘the patient I wonder," went on grandâ€"| There are cer ‘ther‘s gentle voice, "what a cerâ€" \ tionsâ€"one is n delicate blue flower would say | painful toe"‘â€" a little girl who did not knowiï¬cult to cure at from the stalks of its plant| where. reads are obtained, and that the; When both reads make the nice, white linen | usually means â€" Elizabeth‘s pillowâ€"cover, Eliza-l beginning, or th‘s crib sheets, and Elizaboth‘s | gouty tenden inty little nightgown Â¥" When only on ©I Jon‘t mind going to bed now,"" | cause is usu{ «l1 Klizabeth laughed. As soon as th ‘‘The little lambs are safe in the| source of the 14." said grandmother. as she‘go remove it, ‘d Elizabeth down, ‘"and tLhe littlei often help hi ‘ 3 i en s ce o e N ce n ons n# g the time Of MA,MUNOLOE shout «o_ report got circulated about ie village that he had died in jail. ne day after coming out of jail is priest met him in the street. Wwell, Pat," said the clergyman, I heard you were dead."" ‘"Oh, ire, 1 heard it myself,"‘ replied .<o "byg I didn‘t believe it." te Hier Dad (sternly)â€"*‘ on‘t want to go Elizabeth, and he: ‘kered up into a s , 11 12. 4B â€" chececbcccainihy F E:izabeth down, ‘"and the little| ngs are asleep under their m0~{ ‘s wing, the pretty blue flowers . he flaxâ€"plant have closed their; ts, and they haveâ€"all â€"goneâ€"| sleep." Grandmother‘s voice| getting softer and softerâ€"and fter. _ Elizabeth was getting pier and sleepierâ€"andâ€"sleopâ€" Now grandmother‘s voice was . _ Elizabeth was fast asleep. hiz Companion. ‘ kered up into a scow!. U. well!"‘* exclaimed grandâ€" . _ "I wonder what the little sheep on the hillside would a little girl who did not want under the fleecy white blanâ€" wat were made from the wool from their backs ?‘ ibeth stopped to listen. 5 4A Redtime Story. e time ago & notorious Cadarâ€" in the North of Ireland was o jail for two months. Durâ€" e time of bis incarceration a report got circulated about illage that he had died in jail. lay after coming out of jail * * . aat him"in the street, »@ one. Pat Still Alive. :rnly)“â€soï¬u wan; daughter, do you!‘ to bed was ‘‘Stoma‘‘ is the Greek word for‘ the mouth, and stomatitis is inflamâ€" mation of any part of the mouth in front of the soft palate. Stomatitis springs from â€" different â€" causes. Sometimes it follows mechanical irâ€" ritation, such as the â€"constant scratching of a broken tooth, the irritation of a badiy fitted toothâ€" plate, or the frequent use of a pipe. Sometimes it is a sign of insaffcient nourishment or a low condition . of the general health. 9e _ Infants who are cutting their first teeth often have little round gray patches in the mouth; these are called aphthae, and this form of the disorder is called aphthous| \stumatitis. The patch:s by and by | turn into little red ulcers, and the‘ | baby becomes feverish and fracâ€" | tious. The ulcers must not be neg-‘ \lected, but they will not give much |trouble if they are properly treat-‘ \ ed. This form of mouth trouble, \known also as the thrush, is most. |likely to attack neglected and illâ€" â€"nourished children. ' Stomatitis is often a symptom of a general illness, such as measles, 1diphtheria, smallpox, or scarlet fever ; or it may be caused by mediâ€" | cines given in the treatment of some | other trouble. Children suffer from ‘attacks of stomatitis oftener than *adu!ts, because they so oftener put | soiled fingers or germâ€"laden toys ‘into their mouths. Gangrenous stomatitis is seen most often in children. It is proâ€" bably caused by some microbe that has not yet been discovered. It starts on the inside of the cheek, eats its way rapidly through to the outside, and is generally fatal. Very prompt and thorough surgiâ€" cal treatment is essential. Happily, this form of the disease is not comâ€" mon Thc;“i;;z{ihent requires absolute cleanliness of the mouth. To this end a physician should be consultâ€" ed, and the washes he prescribes must be faithfully used. If the diet is at fault, it must be very carefully regulated. We do not realize how constantly we use our feet until something happens to interfere with their function. When that occurs, we are likely to suffer a good deal of pain, and still more inconvenience, and even to find our general health seriously affected by our inability to walkâ€"for walking is the most valuable and necessary of all forms PCO Cmesl The fibrous structures are someâ€". times painful even when the arch of the foot is neither too high nor too low, owing to & soâ€"called gouty or rheumatic condition. Physicians are still uncertain just what this condition really is, but it can usâ€" ually be cured in its early stages if the patient â€" has perseverance. There are certain neuralgic condiâ€" tionsâ€"one is known as ‘‘Morton‘s painful toe"‘â€"that are often as difâ€" moult tn cure as neuraigin elseâ€" where. ‘ When both heels are painful, it usually means either that flatfoot is beginning, or that the rheumatic or gouty tendency is declaring itself. When only one heel is affected, the cause is usually bruise or strain. As soon as the doctor discovers the source of the trouble he must try to remove it, and the patient can often help him. Something will be said on that point in another arâ€" ticle. â€"â€"Youth‘s Companion. )','*llllllubq P SP VY ;outy tendency is declaring itselâ€"| .} __s 2s« the word . When only one heel is affected, the sense as the word "consecrated,"‘ | â€"ause is usually bruise or syrain. | ns uile! desecration meted out tO‘{ As soon as the doctor discovers the | the plach being the' consuming as |, cource of the trouble he must try of a sacrifice or offering to Jehâ€â€œâ€™â€œ-‘ to remove it, and the patient can .Ra'e}:fb. the harlotâ€"First menâ€"| ;ften help him. Something will belm.m in chapter 2 in connection |. said on that point in another arâ€" with the visit of the two spies sent | ticle.â€"â€"Youth‘s Comq anion. by Joshua to ascertain the strength | i s.m.:l position of the besieged city.| Sermmememmmmerm Mftree ccemnaane This woman, like many others of Begging O#. her unfortunate class in ancient "Can you direct me to the best| Elmes, sttin". to have carried on the | hotel in this town!‘ asked the| trade of lo’(’lglng keeper for w‘ay-? stranger who, after sadly watching faring men.‘ â€" From the mention | the train depart, had set his satâ€" [ of the staiks of flax arranged on the ; chel upon the station platform. lflaf roof of her house for drying, | "I can,"" replied the man wholand the further mention of the was waiting for a train going the scarlet or crimson thread or yarn other way, "but I hate to do it." | in her possession, it has been inâ€" "Why ?" ferred that she was engaged also. ©Because you will think lfterlm the manufacture of fine linen,‘ you‘ve seen it that I‘m a liar." and that she practised the art of wz ~ dyeing, for which especially the His Excuse Phoenicians were early famous. In The tramp had called to ask ;,r| Matt. 1. 5 Rahab‘s name occurs in food, and the mistress of ihe |the genealogy of Jesus,. There she 8 d the mistress .9" _ 75. appears as the wife of Salmon, the $ .. a entiqr .. < t His Excuse l The tramp had called to ask for food, and the mistress of the house asked him to wash his hands in hot soap and water before she would give him anything to eat. ‘Not much!‘ said the tramp. "Why not?" asked the woman in surgrise. "I was married once and my husâ€" sus kept me in hot water all the time, and I‘ve had enough, thank you.‘"‘ Most financial disasters result from trying to make money fast. Pain in the Feet. Stomatitis. 11 TXE SUKOAY $CR091 STtUOY Lesson X.â€"The Fall of Jericho, Josh. 5. 10 to 6. 27. ° Golden Text, Mark 9. 23. Verse 8. The chapters intervenâ€" ing between this and our last lesâ€" son mention the erection of two monuments, each composed of twelve large stones taken by twelve men from the empty channel of the Jordan at the command of Joshua. The first of these was set up west of the Jordan at the place of the first night‘s encampment of Israel after crossing, the second in the riverâ€"bed itself at the place where. the priests bearing the ark had stood while the people passed over. At Gilgal, southâ€"east of Jericho, the host of Israel is commanded to pause before marching on to the actual conquest of the city. Here the covenant of circumcision, negâ€" lected during the entire forty years of desert sojourn, is reâ€"estabâ€" lished, and here Joshua is greatly encouraged by a night vision of the prince of the host of Jehovah. When Joshua had spokenâ€"The words of instruction and exhortaâ€" tion reported in verses 1â€"7. One of a Fleet of Dredges With a U# Suction Dredge No. 85, one of the fleet of dredges which is deposit of earth on the bottom, left there by slides, passing heavy vessel to pass out of the locks since the linking of the t the Gamboa Dike. Thousands of spectators gathered, oa the dredge go through the locks. Before the Lordâ€"That is, before the ark of the covenant, which to Israel represented the presence of Jehovah himself among his people. 9. Armed men went before . . .| the rearward â€" came â€" afterâ€"The priests with their trumpets, followâ€"| ed by other priests bearing the ark of the covenant. These marched in the centre of the column and were protected before and behind by the armed men who constituted the actual fighting force of the inâ€" vading army. 10. Neither shall any word proâ€" ceed out of your mouthâ€"Silence on the part of an advancing or atâ€" tacking army in open combat â€" or attack on the stronghold of an enemy was practically unknown among the ancients, who seem to have gathered courage in proporâ€" tion as their tumuit and shouting was louder than that of their enemies. 11. Going about it onceâ€"Once on the first and on each of the sucâ€" ceeding five days, until the seventh, on which the city was compassed not once, but seven times (compare verses 14, 15). 14. The campâ€"At Gilgal 15. Compassed the city a‘ter the same manner seven timesâ€"The cirâ€" cumference of the walled city may have been somewhere between three and five miles, making a total jmarch for the last day of between twentyâ€"five and thirtyâ€"five miles. & as & i ux INXTERNATIONAL LESSON, DECEMBER 7. ds abcttidu it cebetat almbr iï¬ Â»oe s\ 17. Accursed â€" Razed to the ground and utterly destroyed. The word in the original has the same 120 / aathiut udn ue en teatiaiss Boae : Sn t ult sn L son of Nason, and the mother of Boaz the grandfather of Jesse (compare Ruth 4. 20, 21; 1 Chron. 2. 11, 51, 54). The service rendered by Rahab to Israel in hiding and protecting the spies called forth the nation‘s sincere gratitude and secured for herself and ali of her family and relatives the protection of the Israelites and admission into the community of Israel doubtâ€" less on terms of equality of citizenâ€" SsUCTION DREDGE TO KEEP PANAMA CANAL 19. But all the silver, and gold, and vessels of brass and iron, which could not be destroyed, but wer*, rather, purified by fire, were to be holy unto Jehovah. _ Every man straight before himâ€" Without the necessity of seeking a gateway or other means of passing the wall, which now no longer formed an obstacle to the attackâ€" ing Israelites. ‘"And they utterly destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman, both young and old, and ox and sheep, and ass, with the edge of the sword"‘ (v. 21). ie Poincare Visits Naturalist and Post. President Poincare, of France, returning from Bpain, vieited Henri Fabre at Serigâ€" nan. The aged naturalist sat in his gu- den. The Prosident, standing, called im beloved and great maeter, and said: "You have given so paesionate attention to the study of the humblest creatures that in the smalleet things you have @hown us very great ones, and at eVery page of your work we feel a eensation of looking into the infinite." _ o4 war 2o k W w al IOORIN® INWZ RRW MUUIOCOC Fabre was so moved that he could not teply. His nephew thanked the President for him. APBP CYY mt EUE TW M. Poincare aleo visited Fredsric Mis: tral, the famouse poet of Provence, living ut the village of Maillane. The goet. read an address to the Prosident, who in reâ€" plying quoted Lamartine, who Afty years ago acclaimed Mistral as another Homer. Both Mistral and his wife wept, and when the President fAinished Mistral threw himâ€" ;gll into M. Poincare‘s arme and embraced im. won Ne c abmisd A1ZMT} Portuguese Royalist Killed. A grim incident of the rising in Portuâ€" gal was narrated by a French sculptor to a Parie paper. A peasant‘s cart filled with straw drew up at the Spanishâ€"Portuguese frontier. The officiale glanced into it; one, to satiefy himself, thrust his eword several times among the bundles. ‘"Pass on," he said carelegsly. An instant later he uttered an exclamation of horror. Blood was trickling from the etraw. The driver sprang from the cart and fled, followed by revolver shots from the customs officials. Overturning the cart, ns a®rials fannd beneath the straw A | ‘The longevity of the DMIGANIAIU 19 M 0,) posed to be associated with the eating of | "jaurt," a eort of eolidified sour milk or | \eurd, obtained by fermentation. ‘ Test for Farm Machinery. M. Clementel, the French minister . of | Agriculture, has decided to institute . a moneter agricultural competition lasting \ three years, which is to determine the ‘meriu of the various French agricultural \ machines run by steam, oil, or other enâ€" | gines. ‘ The competition will take place at the | agricultural echool at Grriznon and will be ‘|Judnd by a jury of ‘fl ultural experts |\ from the French agricu tural sociefies. A | detailed report will be drawn up from the ;'point of view of economy, as well as reâ€" eults, which is likely to {ivo impetus to ! the movement in favor of motor agriculâ€" \ tural in France. | The use of motor machines is especially | marked in the neighborhood of Meaux and | Boissons, where fourteen eections of the ; district are using motor machines on the | coâ€"operative system. Losing Weight by Science. Ro Europe. Among her 4,500.000 psople there are 3 833 persons of at least 100 years of age Other countries return the following â€" figures: Roumania, 1.074 centenariane; Servia, 573; Spain, 410; France, 215; Italy, 197; Eng: land, 92; Ruesia, 89; Germany, 16; Nor: way, 23; Belginm, 5; Denmark, 2, and Switzerland, 0. . Th y 40 oc m eld en Lo camine Mme. Emmy Destinn, the opera einger, of Berlin, has been reducing her weight by the potato cure, by means of which a friend of hers lost fifteen pounds in _A month without injury. Their diet is the following : Tea or coffee without sugar, one dry roll and fruit ad lib. in the morning; for luncheon mo soup, light fAish, five large potatoes in their ekine, no butter, but earâ€" Doings in Europe. & With a Uscful Duty to Perform. s which is to keep the canal free from any p_nss"n_ble <I0 ARC ToRronto out of Pedro Mi~ FREE OF EARTH SLIDES. o acea‘s by the blowing out, October 10, of walls of the chamber to watch the monster The quantity of water available at the «prings is stated to be sbout 1,200 galions per eccond, or over 103,000,000 gallone every twentyâ€"four hours The cost of the work ie estimated at $25,000,000. The lengih of the main pipe line will be 125 mile«, in adâ€" | dition to which there will be ceveral hunâ€" |\ dred miles of side Jines. ‘ Saw Army of Nanotocn. |\_ The Frankfurter Zeitung, of Berlin, has unearthed at the village of Dormowo, in the district of Meeeritz, Pruseian Polind, an old wyman who can prove by undeniâ€" | able official papere that ehe was 120 yoars old on‘ October 15. She is doubtless the only living pereon in Germany who acâ€" |twally saw â€" Napoleon‘s _ army _ march through on its way to Moseow. Later she saw the Ruesian Cossacks cross the front ier chasing the French back. Hedwig Stavne was born at Pleschen, on the Rusâ€" sian frontier, on October 15, 1704, the deughter of a emall innkeeper. Hedwig | remembers, therefore, the _ passing _ of | Jerome‘s right wing of the Grand Army. _ She «ays the troops behaved very well, but "the beggars wouldn‘t eat black bread." |and her mother killed geese and chickens â€" for them. On the other hand, che remem. {bers with terror the paesing of Commacks i Her father fied with all his cattle into a lneighboring forest to eecape them, and | for days Hedwig carried food to her father | there. dines or anchovies and whatever vegeâ€" tables you like, fresh but uncooked fruit and no dessert; at 5 oclock, fruit the same ze at noon and two potatoes instead of five. After keeping this up for eight days drop it for three and then take it up @Witk .60 )805s _ e L e & .. Rap‘d procresa is being made with the wigantic Apulian aqueduet which will carry the water from the eprings of the River Sele in the province of Avellino right through the Appennines to the southern end of Italy, distributing it over n torritory of nearly 12000 sqirare miles, with about 2,500.000 inhabitants, The quantity of water available at the 4 cocdfit oi t e c 4t css e in 1 w ;\and, there was a total export trade of 8,â€" i21,370 gallone. Wedding Cifts in Miniature. A preity custom hae been introduced at recent weddings in Paris. Miniature reâ€" productions of the presents that are too big to be shown at the reception are placed among the other gifts. Thus at a recent reception there was a tiny motor icar, an accurate model of a villa which | had been presented to the bride and brideâ€" groom, and a delicate reproduction of & grand piano. The French ministry of finance has just published eome interesting etatieties eonâ€" cerning the production and uee of alcoh~l in France. The total production in 1912 was 87,440,420 gallons, as compared with 65,797,165 gallons in 1911. In spite of this enormous â€" production, France received from foreign countriea 4,913,571 gallone of pure alcohol and liquore. On thc_« other Teaching Mathematics to the .\'n-‘ tives of New Guinea. Bishop Stoneâ€" Wigg, who was for some years in charge of the English Church Mission in New Guinea, did his share of the routine work, and sometimes took the "upper matheâ€" matical class‘‘ in the school for naâ€" tives. Arthur K. Chignell, in "‘Twentyâ€" One Years in Papua,‘"‘ deâ€" scribes some of the bishop‘s experiâ€" ences. & The phrase ‘"upper mathematical | class‘‘ is pretentious, but the class| contained some boys who could do compound long division, and long ‘me&sure, and a despatch from Bir William MacGregor to the Queensâ€" land government speaks of ‘"one \phenomenal boy who was studying: algebraâ€"probably the first Papunn? who ever did so."‘‘ They were all {taught copyâ€"writing and composiâ€" ‘tion. They read English to a cerâ€" | tain extent, and the native lanâ€" | guage fluently. They were taught icon\'ersationll English _ by the Gouin method, but they did not much like to speak it. They learnâ€" ed the outlines of geography, and could read at sight a â€" solâ€"{a tune | written on the blackboard. "I enjoy these sums,"" wrote the | bishop; "the little heads get 30| muddled, and the Jlittle faces so )4 perplexed. The wild shots at anâ€"| ( swers that they make combine deâ€"| spair and hopeâ€"despair of ever get i| 4 ting the right â€"answer, and a faint | hope that they may hit upon it by | accident. There is one splendid litâ€"| ; tle fellow, who regularly gets his . sums as wrong as they can be, and| as my pencil goes through each erâ€"| ring figure, the sounds and sighs| he emits are enough to upset my gravity. Another boy, whenever he hands me his slate, says, dispnug»\ ingly, ‘All wrong, bada‘ (mnter).‘ "It is hard work getting them to use their heads. They have never had to think, but their instincts are as keen as can be. Yet they learn wonderfully well, and though much patience and perseverance are deâ€"| manded, their teacher sees steady progress. In dictation, their spellâ€" ing is very accurate, a mistake beâ€"| ing of rare occurrence, as the lsn-‘ guage is phonetically written. But they have no idea of divisions beâ€" | tween the words, and as you dicâ€" \tate the sentence, a littie head will | bob u‘p and ask, ‘Bada, pive (5) ‘| word ? or, ‘Tiree(3) word ? And i# A BISHOP‘S EXPERIENCES. Clant Aqueduct for Italy. Use of Alcohol in France oke. This is the first THE SOUL AND THE BODY Retirement Is Dangerous and Active Life In the Quter World Always Beneficial To the end that they may bring their sacrifices in the onen field.â€" Leviticus xvil., 5. Undoubtedly one of the most saâ€" lutary discoveries of modern mediâ€" cal science is that of the value of fresh air as an agent of genenli bodily health. In the old days we used to muffle up our throats to keep out bronchitis, pad our chests against consumption and sleep behind closed windows (o‘ escape the contagion of the night atmosphere. Toâ€"day all this is changed. The victim of a bad throat or weak chest is taught to expose the affected parts to the outer air as much as possible. The fresh air treatment of tuberculos‘s is now universal. The wise man sleeps in winter as well as in sumâ€" mer with every window wide open â€"or, better still, out of doors! To keep out in the open air is in our time the first law of health. ~ Now, very impressive is it to note‘ that what is so true as regards the | body is no less true as regards the goul. In the spiritual life, as well as the physical, we are learning| the value of fresh air. No lungerj do we drive the tempted soul intoi the ways of solitude or separate the | sinner from contact with his felâ€" lows. No loager do we regard the monastery as the refuge of virtue or the dark silence of the hermit ‘cell as the *Cure of Soiritual Corraption. If a man is overweighted with cares or beset by temptations or stricken with some loathsome moral cancer let him flee from the lonely chamber where he knows only dull brooding and sterile remorse and desert the towering altars where he makes confessions and does penâ€" ance. Let him take his anxiety or sin into the open air. Let him go down to the sea, and look unto the hills. Let him heed the skylark, and dance with the daffodi]s. Let him seek the company of the sun, and bow to the benediction of the stars. Let him, in a word, hold "communion with Nature in her variable forms,""‘ and lo! his cares will fall from him like a ragged gar you do not tell them, y all the words runnin other, like cars in a 1 sion." There was one promising little person, â€" nicknamed ‘"‘The _ Archâ€" bishop,"" who evolved a system of marginal notation to his eums. Against an â€" ind‘stinct â€" figure he would put *"Tuau, wei, naent‘ (This, O my friend, is a 9). Oppoâ€" site the next, perhaps, it would be, "‘Tuau, wei a terei boai‘‘ (0 friend | of mine, I have done this \\rus\g)fi and wrong assuaredly it was‘! He | then ventured on English, and | wrote a difident "rom‘"‘ across anâ€"] other sum. He meant this for| "wrong,"‘ but the sum was right ! ‘ The bishop always had an aaswer| for the critic who asked, after beâ€" | ing told about the general educaâ€" tional work of the missionaries, "‘What, after all, is the good of teaching little blacks _ to make. doilies 1 ;A "Itis not the doily that matters, â€" replied the bishop ; it is what the doily _ representsâ€"the patience, perseverance, and concentration of mind that it is so difficult and yet so necessary to teach in this tropiâ€" cal land." At His Own Frice. ‘"Bo you sold that mule for $8." "YÂ¥es," replied Erastus Pinkley. "He kept aâ€"beating me down an‘ aâ€"beating me down. till finally I jest sold him de mule at his own price. 1 didn‘t want to miss de chance of de mule‘s turnin‘ loose an‘ kickin‘ dat man‘s stingy head clean off ‘im." "Woman, °_ orated _ th gette, "is denied her gre tunity. _ She is contin strained, held in. And w cause 1 And before any to yell ‘"Man," "Corsets." Geiting Carcless, Heâ€"Your father didn‘t obje our engagement as much as I pected. _ %s _ Sheâ€"Poor papa isn lar as he used to be. Algyâ€"**You say she OMINV . tially returned your affectios Clarenceâ€"‘‘Yes ; she returned the loveâ€"letters, but retained the presents." ‘"My dwelling is bounded on the ] HWNCB 48,""""*"L 1 oo " Sak north by a gas works, on the south | ions of strings of beads. bom of an india rubber works, on the | double, some are single, som west by a vinegar factory, and on in straight and some are in ir the east by a glueâ€"boiling estabâ€"| lar outline. These tunics mw lishment.‘" "A nice neighborhood,| course, be made up over som« I must say!" ‘"Quite so, but it : ric. for the strands of beads has one advantage, 1 can always} rate with every motion. Thes tell which way the wind blows especially effective made up without looking at the weatheâ€"| satin. e eock. \ _ Gold Lace Belts on Blous :A w Ranatt. â€" hellis nc mt sid l wak digging postholes one day when ‘ the boss rambled along to size up| the job. "How are you making out, | Pat?‘ asked the bos. ‘"Foine as| silk,"" answered Pat, keeping right! on with his work,. "as yez will noâ€" tice yezsilt." ‘"The work looks all right, Pat," jokefully responded the boss, ‘"but do you think you will ever be able to get all that dirt back in the hole againt"‘ "‘No, sor, not as it is now, sor, but it‘s me intintion to dig the hole l‘ little daper." The largeâ€"hearted son His Own Price. Mean, orated â€" the one had a chance omebody shouted you will have ng into each railway colliâ€" d the suffraâ€" er great opporâ€" continually _ reâ€" And what is the of the sun, tion of the word. â€" hold he onls t as par O pure. The sun will give him light, The shining firmament will lift him to its own expanse of beauty. In the words of Mrs. Browning:â€" ment and his sin vanish away as & little thing. The air will make h‘in The little cares that fretted me I lost them yesterday Among the fields above the sea, Among the winds at playâ€" Among the husking of the corn Where drowsy poppies nod, Where ill thoughts die and good are born, Out in the fields with God. And if it is beneficial thus to bring our ills under the influence of Nature, how much more beneâ€" ficial still is it to bring them under the influence of our fellows! What unworthy thought can flourish In the Presence of a Good Man, or what ignoble motive survive the grace of a good woman! How shall we maintain our petty envies and deceits in the face of little children, or keep our selfishness alive amid the sweet inuflences of comradeship and family love! Where is there cruel passion or secret sin which is strong enough to resist the wholeâ€" some impulses of the crowd! What we need, if we would keep our souls free of all unhealthiness, is simply the open airâ€"the open air of rubâ€" bing elbows, clasping hands, makâ€" ing friends, knowing people, "going ‘with the multitudes"â€"above all, of ‘seeking the near companionship, if possible, and the distant influence, tif nothing better, of men and woâ€" \men who are stronger, braver, | purer than ourselves! To know men, to love men, to work with ‘men. to live with menâ€"to know the grace of brotherhood and the joy of fellowshipâ€"this is the first law of the spirit: Out in the open, therefore! Away from solitudes and silencesâ€"from | windows closed and doors hnrre‘d are the well as Havynes A 1 all U ,| _A charming new blouse oi Whit© chiffon is embroidered with dragon :\ fies. There are two on each side of t the front closing. They are worked with beads of silver, pale blue, a | hi‘ , mauve and irridescent green. The "dragon flies are in graceful poses, "| and form & decorative touch to the Chenile flowers are used for corâ€" sage bouquets now. They are made | of strings of chenile, in heavy, soft quality, looped into petals, and mounted on green chenile stems, stiffened with wire. Brilliant, but | at the same time, soft shades of red and blue and violet and green and yellow are used. These little flowâ€" ers have a charm all their own, and lnre especially effective worn on the dull, gloomy days for which Deâ€" cember is famous. Turnback Cufts for Gloves. against the world ! And lo! it shall be seen that strength and beauty are the sanctuary of the soul as well as of the body.â€"Rev. John Turnback Cufs for Gloves. Long white gloves are made with wide, turnback cuffs at the elbow or slightly above it. These cuffs, which f#are out and away from the arm, are made of black â€"velvet, mounted on kid, and embroidered with gold or silver beads, applied in straight lines. The stitching on the backs of these gloves is also marked with beads, to match those used on the cuffs. New Embroidered Blouse. BRead Tunics Now Shown. Bead tunics of many kinds are shown in the shops. They are not of the kind that have been on sale for several monthsâ€"tunics of net emâ€" broidered with beads. To be sure, these are still sold. But the new sort are made of strings of pearl beads, formed into tunics. For inâ€" stance, there is one, formed of many strings of beads fastened to a chain of beads that goes about the neck. The strands are caught in it at the waist, then fall loose again to form a sort of tunic which ends where they are caught in about the hips. There is a second tunic, formâ€" \ ed by a second looping up of all the \ dozens and dozens of strands of blouse i5 uds / 4 beadsâ€"there are some extra ones put in under the arms at the waist | â€"and then they bhang in a little ‘hmse tunic at the bottom. Other | tunics are made in different fashâ€" |ions of strings of beads. Rome are | double, some are single, some are \ in straight and some are in irregu ‘hr outline. These tunics must, of | course, be made up over some fab | ric. for the strands of beads sepaâ€" _ _ Gold Lace BRelts on Blouses. \ _ _On some of the new satin blouses i there are wide belts of gold lace. X'l‘he blouges are WOrn, naturally» under the skirt, and the helts ar€ so attach=d to the blouses that 'l‘h:: 1{:1‘: over the skirtband*â€" “.'}'.‘:n \is mounted over gold:’_‘__‘" Lene > atidn * straight Bpeaking < diffe rence 1 grcatut‘lt The Holmes man _® seldom + and who )’ meDb« b,t"oen ho follow® his anch® trave)s lon@ in the na rrow WAyâ€" h ‘he!-g 38 4 b.‘n?fs on Blouses. £ white hey are up over ill('li_.' vyast and