4 4 At first the little shavers dida‘t know what to do with it, but after the it and ran off behind the black shawl!, but they peeked out, watching her all the time, and soon couldn‘t help comâ€" ing out and seeing what it was. Then they even walked on the paper when she sprinkled some more crumbs on it. The Twilight Hour Story Chapter 10 The Next Morning In the morning, I can tell you, the chicks were good and hungry. It was the first time they ever felt hungry because you may remember they had the yellow of the egsz to eat for three days in their little tummies. It was a good thing they had that, wasn‘t it? Especialiy when Mama Hen was so‘ bad to them and didn‘t care it they | bad any breakfast or not. Mama Lady‘ knew they would be hungry, so in the' morning se and Billy opened the box | and took off all the warm covers veryl early. And because the box was inl the sun it streamed all over them so‘ that when they came out they were delighted and started playing in the | straw and sunbeams until Mama Lady i had something to eat for them. Do | ; you know what she gave them ? Well,, she got some chick starter at the ‘. store that looks something like nourll and added a little bit of water until | f it looked like fine cake crumbs, lo'c they could pick it up with their um.": bills easily. Then she put down about | 3 & quarter of a piece of newspaper on |a the straw for a table cloth and sprinkâ€"| ; led some crumbs on the paper,. At?u first the little chicks were afraid of | a Mince any cold meat left over and add to it finely cut celery which has already been cooked until tender, Make a sauce of some of the stock and tomato, thickentng it with a heapâ€" ing teaspoonful of butter and one of flour rubbed to a smooth paste. When cooked to a consistency of thick cream add celery and meat, Season well. I To three cups cold mashed potato add sufficient flour to make ra!her! stiff dough. Turn out on a board and roll an inch thick. Then with mund’ cutter three inches or so in diameter, eut into rounds. With another smaller cutter cut the centres out of the rounds about threeâ€"quarters of the way through. Take out the centre with a fork and bake the cakes until . golden brown. Thenâ€"heap the cakes | with the very hot meat and serve with â€" sprigs of parsley, 1. Then, best of all, do not the properâ€" ly treated left overs reduce the meat bills most acceptably, while at the same time it makes us feel we are imiâ€" tating the great French chef himself, for the Frenchâ€"and the thrifty Canaâ€" dian housewifeâ€"never throw â€" away anything, not even a teaspoonful of vegetables. Everything is saved and transformed into something good and topped off with a fancy name. Here" is one right now : name and a new sagout is waiting for a new title. o m e o e ty a recipe is completely changed beâ€" cause, well, it calls for celery but I don‘t happen to have any toâ€"day, so I will use celery salt instead. Then I do beliove It will taste better if I add this bit of green pepper, etc., etc. So that by the time the dish is ready for the table it is stamped with your own Often they must be made out of her head for of course she has to do with what she finds in the house and many a recipe is completely changed beâ€" & _ ____ °_ "/C SCYCr call the meat loftâ€"overs "hash," but think up some fancy good sounding name. The reâ€" sult is it is hailled with acclaim by the family. In fact it is often found the leftâ€"overs are more tasty than the first appearance of the roast if you are a good cook. It is said that the proof of a good cook is judged by the goodness of the hashes she can make, Some people never call the loftâ€"overs "hash" hut thint ... _rhe most wasteful of all days is that on which one has not laughed."â€" Plawa is 3 MUTT AND JEFFâ€" Marguerites living in London are of toreliznrl;l'rzl':: shavers didn'cl nearly oneâ€"sixth of them being of h sc es c w Was t 2 d ) 5 2A â€"â€" What Are They? your own concocted . MARIE amn oest Russian extraction. o n on ce en nc ,‘nsh. One would think that the habitat of this fish would protect it from inâ€" terference from anything above water, yet the great black cormorants are able to dive to a depth of as much as twentyâ€"six feet of water, and brlng‘ this frog fish to the surface. I havo‘ ascertained during the last few years that where the cormorants are able to get this fish they seem to prefer it to any other.â€""Animal Life." There is a little fish with poisonous spines that rests on the bottom of Sydâ€" ney Harbbr. It is known as the frog fish. One would think that the habitat _ "Australia has only two poisonous "sh, that is, poisi eat, and thess are not looked edible. These are the variou: of toad fish and the heavily porcupine fish, "The catfish, both fresh water and estuary, is widely known and feared for the bad wound it is able to cause with the pectoral and dorsal spine, More than 119,000 of _ and dangerous wound. | _ "The bullrout, which is very unâ€" favorably known in the higher fresh i water parts of the estuaries of New South Wales, also causes a very painâ€" ful wound. On one occasion a fisherâ€" man, who had trodden on one of these fish, was in such suffering that his ’mates, not realizing the harm they were doing, placed his foot in a bucket ,ot boiling water. The pain was so severe that he was unable to feel the' heat of the water, and in the end his ‘ foot had to be amputated. | "The little Fortescue of Pork Jackâ€"| son, which is a kind of first cousin to the bullrout, also causes a painful and dangerous wound. On the Queensiand coast a fish greatly feared by fishermen and bathâ€" ers is the stone fish, a kind of distant relation of the Australian red rock cod. It is a poisonous fish, which is likely to inflict an extremely painful | They were full of fun, theso little ", chickies, and now that they belonged to Billy and Mai i Lady they wanted ‘to give them each a name, but they _ couldn‘t. Do you know why? They looked so much alika no one could tell them apart. So we must wait until later on. It is a good thing we know' Jimmy. . We won‘t forget that, be-. one anyway, isn‘t it, and that one is , cause he was bigger. ' These little chicks wer so cute. Do you know what they did every little while? ‘They worked so hard digging away in the straw that they would get | just awfully tired. Of course Mama Lady knew this, and often she camo' over to them and put them all in their , | little bedroom on the can of warm . water to have an afternoon nap. They‘ } liked it, too, and would go right to P sleep back in there, just like you do't in the afternoon. ii Next Wabkâ€"â€"Anntha« T ikkL\ Tastos s E. | PMFdwing and shewing the . glad is first mouthful they did, and I can tell tidings of the kingdom of God.â€" â€" you it was all gone in no time. 'l'hely Luke 8: 1. ate every little scrap and hunted all £ 'over for more. _ Billy said, "Mama, ANALYSIS. give them â€"some more, they are still I. MINISTERING WOMEN, Luke 8: 1â€"3. t hungry.‘ But Mama Lady said, "No, ' II. PARABLES, Luke 8: 4â€"9. ° Billy, that woul«n‘t be good for them-i III. sowEkr aNnD s0ILs, Luke 8: 11â€"13. * They can just have a little so their & i ‘ wee tummies can get used to eating.! MINIsTERING WOMEN, Luke 8: 1â€"3, ‘ But instead of three meals they may | _ Vs. 1â€"3. We know little of these have six. Won‘t that be fun for them?», M.nistering women, no d‘:“bt their CÂ¥ + h Mama Lagy lames were familiar in the Early| Yes, every two hours Church. Magdala seems to have been _ brought a nice clean paper, and set it on the southâ€"west coast of the Sea of down among them. It didn‘t take long Galilee. The "seven" devils might for them to kzow what was coming , .efer to a particularly bad case of ; the minute she put down the paper.,’d-.mompossession, or to a number -'f’ Then after they ate up all the crumbs j relapses. It has teen suggested that | she took the ~per away so they could’ Cl}uza may P°5Jâ€l!’l’y be tge nobleman scratch and play in the straw. Someâ€"| *¢ erred to in John 4: 4 : ‘ o |__Jesus command t\ the rich man, to times they would scratch so hard and f Es ; ' | sell all his goods and give to the pooi, fast that the straw. would get into lhe‘ was a particular, not a universal, com.| liitle water dish in one corner and ‘r and. He warned men of the dangers then they would look all around for / and snares of riches, but he was not}| their water and wonder where it was, the enemy of private property. He )q for they liked lo*s _f drinks. Billy a]-l' taught men to make a sgiritual use 9t’¢ ways saw that there was plenty of money, but he preache no economic‘ , water for thom. fdocttme. old | w celeail Py st n ue A Poisonous Fish Weekâ€"Another Little Friend d it is able to cause and dorsal spine. only two kinds of iat is, poisonous to > not looked upon as ) the various species | the heavilyâ€"armored FISHER the people 1 lWhaus, 00 e l uEC CSCRU ~WAL _AOE : it was, the enemy of private property. He Billy alâ€"| taught men to make a sgiritual use of lenty og’ money, but he preached no economic [docttine, and we cannot quote his so little Authority for Capitalism, or Socialisn, e or Communism, but only for the doc-‘ “â€""f:g | trine of stewardship.. If you are rich. wan seels We iease L.2 112. SOWER AND So1Ls, Luke 8: 11â€"15, (]| If the church interpretation of the ) | parable is substantially right, Jesus 1| must have spoken the parable some ; time after the beginning of his min. | istry, for he seems to be looking back upon the effect of his preaching, and perhaps comforting himself and his |disciples with the reflection that, if |much of the preaching seemed to be in vain, yet, here and there, the word was falling on good soil. V. 10. By "the mystcries of the kingdom" we are not to understand abstruse theological doctrines, or some special, mysterious teaching accessibie only to apostles and ministers, but rather the deep things of the kingdom of God. The mysteries in Christianâ€" ity are all open mysteries to those who have pure eyes and Christian hearts. Vs. 11â€"1v. In these verses we have| an adaptation of the parable to the| . conditions of those who hear Chrisâ€"| j tian preaching in all ages and places;| but, whereas, of course, the soi‘ is not| ; r~sponsible for its fertility, hearors P are largely responsible for the answer they make to the preaching. In v. 13| the words, "temptation" and "fall ‘ 6 s ! . But the parabolic method of teachâ€" ; ing which was customary in the Or. ient was not familiar in Europe and ’in the early Gentile churches. Here ~| the simple parables of Jesus were ‘| taken as dark and mysterious allego»â€" | ies which required skillful and learned +| interpretation. â€" But if the disciples â€"] themiselves rould not understand the ) | parables of Jesus, much less could the | common people; then what wou‘d have | been the use of preaching which nsâ€" body unde s:ood? We are bound to asâ€" swre, thereiore, that the parab‘es of Jesus represent the simplest form into ’v.-:hirh he cw».ld put his teaching. and that tis meining would be plain at ‘Ioast to the more spiritually minded {of those who heard him. But every preacher who bases his sermon upon a parable of Jesus explains the parable, and savs, in effect. "Tesus meant so ‘ and so." The Early Church did not| draw any very clear line of distineâ€"| tion between "Jesus said" and "Jesus| meant,." + , { IIl. SOWER AND SS Tuks o. s1 48| nawahtu. _ T2 700 CC2 @Hower Wild a parable: for the parable is, as it was in Jesus‘ time, a familiar method of , conveying truth. It is a device for | teaching, not for concealing truth. it | is contrary to all historical and mora; probability that Jesus used parables ’in arder to hide his meaning from the: majority of his audience, v. 10. Even: this passage from Isaiah should not | really be understood in this way. The| prophet meant that the result rathe; | than the intention of his preaching| was the hardening of men‘s hearti,ll Isa. 6: 9, 10, [ o P en Cns "O CC sPe ‘_poor, do not envy the rich. Jesus did _ not seek hardship and discomfort for their own sakes; there was nothing â€" "ascetic‘‘ about him, as if people had no right to enjoy themselves in this | wicked world. ‘He did not refuse inâ€" | vitations to dinner, or to marriage festivals. He allowed these women to fuse their wealth to enable him and his disciples to do their work; but when the way of duty pointed to the Cross, no lure of comfort, ease or pleasure, _could turn him from the way, II. PARABLES, Luke 8: 4â€"9,. Â¥s. 4â€"15. Still, today, if an Oriental teacher is asked a religious question, it is likely that he will answer with a i par?ble:’fo.r the parable is, as it was| 2° ~ommunism, but only for the doeâ€" trine of stewardship. . If you are rich, use your money anselfishly ; if you are mpuean : akies e lc u2l tal 102 C ANALYSIS. I. ministering WOMEN, Luke 8: II. PARABLES, Luke 8: 4â€"9. III. sower anp 8OILS, Luke 8: : her is asked a relfeioc. .o ADhuif!l During the year the assets of the her is asked a religious questi0ns| Company and all investments were hk«-ly that he will answer with a subjected to th t t igid ble: for the parable is, as it w4s| FNH@CION to the tost of a rigid re. esus‘ time, a familiar method of valuat!on under present depressed eying truth. It is a device fop| COnditions. _ The assets of the comâ€" ing, not for concealing truth, it| Pany show â€" an interesting diversity, ntrary to all historical and morail viz.: Bonds and Debentures 34%, City z:lbzlz:y ’:.l:‘ath..lesus used fparnbl;;a. Mortgages and Properties 25%, Farm ger to hide his meaning from the‘ ies 2107 y Pity of his audence. “zw. Even) i\[ortgages an(l. Properties 21 %. P(zlic; . . | Loans 19%, Miscellaneouns 1%. West passage from Isaiah should not | v be understood in this way, Tmo °n Farm Mortgages have been reâ€" het meant that the result rathe, | Stricted, but by no means discontinâ€" theâ€" intention of his preachin:l“ed Applications for loans are careâ€" the hardening of men‘s hearts,) fully scerutinized, loans are restricted : 9, 10. s ’to moderate amounts and those appliâ€" t the parabolic method of teachâ€"! cants who have done something toâ€" .'-hlch was customary in the Or~,wflrds engaging in mixed farming vas not familiar in Rurope ’"‘â€meth ds favored : early Gentile churches. â€" Wars ods are favored. February â€"22. Lesson VHHlâ€"Jesus Bearing the Good Tidingsâ€"Luke 8: 115. Colden Textâ€"He went throughout every ~city and village, preaching and shewing the . glad tidings of the kingdom of God.â€" Luke 8: 1. vCsus expiains the parable, in effect. "Jesus meant so The Eerly Church did not Sunday School oh. ceg . NB Maoaet $ mt enanad OF the Toronto Convention and Tourist Association, nearly 6,000,000 tourists have visited the "Queen City" since the organization opened its bureau in 1926. The figure does not include about 550,000 convention delegates who are not tourists in the strict sense of the world. i One of life‘s finest things, as one of its most pathetic, is the tinual reassertion of Soul. _ It be trodden down, but it canno trodden out. _ It may be degr: but it cannot be destroyed.â€"G. 1 ley Austin. PSRit on e P toba, 207,531 in Saskatchewan, 520,â€" 000 in Alberta and 204,342 in British Columbia, according to the latest statistios. ow oo Pm dEnnyt sent worldâ€"wide depression as condiâ€" tions return to normal. people; it will in due time bring to them a return of brosperity. Canada can produce food at low cost and therefore will probably be one of the first countries to recover from the preâ€" A note of well based confidence in lthe future of Canada was sounded in the address of the President, Mr. G. W. Allan, K.C. Dealing particularly with the agricultural future ho pointâ€" ed out that the bresent conditions where agricultural products do not bring reasonable prices cannot last. The law of supply and demand was now functioning to the distress of our people; it will in dusa Hima hrins i« According to The business in force increased by over twentyâ€"two millions in 1930, in spite of the financial depression which caused a number of policyholders to let some portion of their insurance lapse. e * almast technical terms. j ' “Tem‘gtgg:h" "means "persesautinnt There are 182,2;0 sheep in ;..' The splendid progress of the Comâ€" i;;pmy and its position of safety were y; revealed in the report of the Directors n and addresses of the President and kf’Genoral Manager; â€" but perhaps the t most significant outcome of the year‘s f work, from the point of view of the A!genernl public, is the convincing deâ€" : | monstration of Canada‘s tnndamental‘ ’soundness as a field of operation for y wellâ€"directed and wellâ€"managed large scale business, flntatement shows business in force of | _ Analysis of the Company‘s financial ]8614,405,447.00, Assets of $129,147,632,. not yet due, of $10,559,742.00, and Unâ€" ’05. Acerued Profits to Policyholders, | assigned Profits and Contingency Reâ€" | | serve of $4,4138,907.37. ‘The Gross Surâ€" | plus Earnings for 1930 of $6,075,327.57 | were the largest in the Company‘s hisâ€" | 1 tory, The total net surplus of the | Company, after providing for all profit | t and dividend requirements and c..er|f writing down assets is now increased | p to $3,413,907.37 exclusive of the balâ€"|g ance in shareholders ‘account. p _ ZApseriion of Soul. It may dden down, but it cannot be i out. It may be degraded, cannot be destroyed.â€"G. Bees. Directors‘ Report to Shareâ€" holders a Message of En! couragement to Genâ€" eral Public Great West Life Had Excellent Year F T mECETET E2*0C00UOIT" and "fall away" means "become aposâ€" tate," or "deny Christianity." In v. 15 "patience"‘ > means "endurance." Even those who are of an honest and good heart will have a hard time, but they ‘will hold on and bring forth a plentiful harvest at last. figures compiled by , as it is Maniâ€" + tests on fall wheat in various parts of the province showed an averâ€" agoe yield for no fertilizer of 32.8 bus. acre; raw rock pho: phosphate 35.6 and 2 acre. 6 tests on b;.rl;a}r-s-l;-O\ved an average yield for unfertilized of 36.9 bus. per 5 83% raw rock phosphate has been tested in many sections of the proâ€" vince during the past summer, Quanâ€" tities were sent fo: test purposes to several counties, We have on file letâ€" ters from 12 farmers who reported on their tests. Out of the twelve, demonâ€" stration tests conducted in several counties we have renorta an 16 tasts 0; or in 1 ton 320 Ibs. 212â€"6â€"Nitroâ€" gen, 2; Phosphoric Acid, 12; Potash, 6; or in 1 ton, 40 lbs. Nit., 240 Ibs. Phos. Ac., 120 lbs. Potash. Thus a ton of 21246 fertilizer conâ€" tains 240â€"36 or 6% times as much . available phosphoric acid as rock‘ phosphate and has, in addition, 40 lbs. of nitrogen and 120 lbs. of potash. J It is difficult to compare raw rock ~| phosphate with a mixed fertilizer such fas 2412â€"6, first, because less than 2% |in the 33% total phosphoric acid of raw rock phosphate is available while, in a 2126 fertilizer, 2% of nitrogen, 12% phosphoric acid and 6% potash is available; second, because raw rock phosphate | carries phosphoric . acid (very largely insoluble) and a porcentâ€" age of lime, while 2126 carries nitroâ€" gen and potash in addition to 12% available phosphoric acid. ‘This is how the three materials compare : Perce.:tage Amount of Available Plantfood Rock Phosphateâ€"Nitrogen, 0; Phosâ€" phoric Acid, 1.8; Potash, 0; or in 1 ton, 36 Ibs. Superphosphateâ€"Nitroâ€" gen, 0; Phosphoric Acid. 16+ Potach D. AANSWer.â€"Raw rock phosphate is found in Tennessea and Florida. ‘The grade you mention contains $3% triâ€" calcieâ€"phosphate, Grades containing & higher percentage of triâ€"calcicâ€"phosâ€" phate are used in the manufacture of superphosphate. ‘The manufacture of superphosphats usually involyes the grinding of this rock to a definite flne-,‘ ness and treatment of it with sulâ€" phuric acid. This treatment produces soluble forms of phosphorie â€"acid Wwhich constitubs availakbs a c l L * Prtnlinnt i d Ah s with it? Would you think it ,buylng it at $30.00 a ton as mixed fertilizer at the same j farm 100 acres of land and . tilizer on everything I sow. that I don‘t know everythin fertilizer yet and 1 am ready ; ing to learn all I can, Answer.â€"Raw |rock phosp found in Tennessee and Florid Phosphoric acid. Is it a safe téx:tlllié; to use, as some people give it a bad name, or have you had any experience wstir sid we> P rock phqsphate 34.77;V'n::ld 2CCC ~2222,05eNn, 0; Phosâ€" 1.8; Potash, 0; or in 1 Superphosphateâ€"Nitroâ€" horic Acid, 16; Potash, 2126 38.9 bus. per _Jou think it as good .00 a ton as a 2126 at the same price? I of land and sow ferâ€" Even at God tempers ther wind to the shorn lamb.â€"Laurence Sterne. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain ly, giving number and size of sust patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ ir stamps or coin (coin preferred ; wra; it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West AdelalAa @4 m """"" Pique, cotton broadcloth prints, wool persey, woolen plaids, ginghams and novelty rayons make up attracâ€" tively. Style No. 3001 is des of 4, 6, 8 and 10 years What New Y ’ Is Wearing IUlustrated Dressma nished With E BY 1# CSpP70O¢ acld carried by raw rock“ phosphate an!t 21246 alikeâ€"the comâ€"| parison is impossible. Let 1 C017 | _ From the work alreay conducted by.l # this station up to date and at the pj; |price you indicate per ton we cannot | the frecummeud the purchase and use o(,‘ not 83% raw rock phosphate as a 80UPCG | gig, of available phosphoric acid, in vlew; the of prevailing prices quoted for superâ€" to : phosphate. As to a comparison of| .« 2124 with raw rock phosphate, the gre; former carries so much. more nvdhbbjm plant food than the latter=â€"two vato>" y able plant foods in addition to the hers phosphoric acid carried by raw rock| «hi T C m onl se oys Te be looked for in succeeding years due to the unused portion of the rock phosâ€" pate becoming available as time goes on. | ANNABELLE WORTHINGTO®X ou want. Enclose 20¢ in n (coin preferred ; wrap for each number, and order to Wilson Pattern est Adelaide St., Toronto. ’4'.'."77q L""'â€]LSU'“ very Patterm . â€" Time fAles, but qver any distance,. t L0 20 _ MSor ohrk To SAE Kelso to be provided with a foster home and when the young lady clork in questioning him about his life askâ€" ed him if he ever used bad words, he reflected a little and replied, "Well, 1 once said ‘devil,‘ but that was because another boy dared me to," n rmmmmmmmmmmzme AND KEeP it Going "It is very hard to drive a bargain," said the fellow who had bought an old Ford for $10.â€"Printatan ‘Wis.. $ "My cabin was near Five Finger *| Brook on the shore of Teal Pond, a small body of water about a half mile across and four or five miles long. I . | was delighted when I got an answer | from a long way off, over by the Alle |gash Mountains., Well, we sassed each |other back and forth for several minâ€" |utes, until I got tired and turned in. "Two hours later I was awakened by |Ja crashing and #plashing outside. It was a clear, moonlight nigt. ‘Opening the cabin door, I peered out. There, standing on the shore, shaking himself and pawing the beach, was a big bull moose. He mustâ€"have come miles to answer the call I had forgotten all about. And when he reached the pond he didn‘t go roundâ€"just took the shortest route and swam it! "He was madder than a wounded wildcat when he found that he had been fooled and he smorted and beliowâ€" ed around there for some time before hbecntocal-dwa. I shut and barred. the cabin door and dign‘t do any more moose calling that night."* Time "I‘ve listened to perhaps a hundred moose calling," said a Maine guide re cently, "and it seemed to me that no two were exactly alike. Some were short cries, others prolonged wail ings. Others would start with a high whine and descend down the scale. "I was up in the Allegash region late last Fall before the rivers and lakes had frozen up. An old Indian had showed me how to fashion one of the most ingenious birch bark horns for moose calling I had ever seen, and one evening I tried it out. â€" Many animals are curious, and hirds, teo, for that matter. ~Onse who can imitate their natural calls with even a fair degree of accuracy is pretty sure to get a response. Veteran guides themselves do not understand why a bull moose will so frequently answer the fraudulent call of the birch bark horn in the hands of a man. Hunter‘s Fake Call Infuriated Big Moose boy of twelve "I would«suggest a school costume for girls," said the physical culture expert. "A blouse or middy and skirt. That would give them ease and free dom, of movement. . ~Nothing tight interfores. ‘They liave a middy and bioomer outit for their gymnasium work now. â€"In the private schools they have s uniform costume for the girls. In the separate schools they are adopting it also. In some of the collegiates they have form uniforms "for girls. Why not in our public schools* ‘The cost is very small, That would not be a factor. . And it they had the same costume they would not be losing time and interâ€" est byithe diversion of fixing themâ€" selves up in their own special outâ€" fits."t» _ _Some girls who wére wearing highâ€" "heeled shoes in a class recently were asked why they did it and their reâ€" piy was that the shoes were passed on th them by feminine relatives. s"‘fl'hlul the remedy for all this?" asked The Star. _ _"Just what is wrong with modern dress fashions?" asked the ignorant famd . imobservant male journatist, ~ _ Miss Archer iflustrated by puiting herself into a twisted pose, which ;she said was quite characteristic of the girls of today. "That‘s how it makes ‘em look," she said. "The tight waist is one thing that is wrong. The way dresses are cut has much to do with it. And the highâ€"hecled shoes are a source of trouble." Y| It is not so long since the governâ€" °. ment inspector reported his find ng "ltm many girls in the collegiates }‘ showed improper posture and sympâ€" 4 toms of curvature of the spine. | _"I am mnot surprised at that," said , Miss Archer when the Star recalled ‘the tenor of that eriticism. "it is | not to be wondere. at when you conâ€" sider modern modes of dress. _ And ’ the young girls in public school love to ape their elders." _ _*"We are doing our best as far as our limited opportuaities go," stated Miss Archer, "to give the girlsâ€"and the boys, tooâ€"proper ideas of physiâ€" cal development and sane ideas as to dress. _ But the modes of today are against ais. ‘They are against proâ€" per posture." Wicked Boy! Toronto, Ont.â€"*"Girl of today are in danger of becoming f!lshaped, illâ€" postured and woeakâ€"walking women by reason of present modes in dress and footwear," declared Miss Jessie Archer, supervisor of physical culâ€" ture in the Toronto Public School, in a recent interview with a reporter of the Toronto Daily Star. Teacher Advocates â€"moonlight nigt, Opening vor, I peered out, There, the shore, shaking himself the beach, was a bis bull was sent to Mr. Tight Waiz»s and High Heels can beat W #0d ° ty po bivc log fo\ the the LT J ti Ai W Ir #+ Dr ab ter C664( In Ric the lat Ww i t c the th e on« son tho int the life h th &1 Or d th th to M fo of build tions labor There eadd ic BoM po‘les gils. D lives Buch quito M #pe! ease tree #h or grub . eaterpill ereature which or fy is th «s air 4 usually « fowers eaterpilli t« W fairy tal are mak all «lay i or fish . tamorp The . found i M By P. n at