Li t ry i 03 i Rr 0% or EPTHS, Shap] WY, 2 \ or A RELUCTANT OBEDIENCE, chapters later Tu we work HS Shcluded fo ans ; a Nebuchad ® ing nezzar,' of | with fierce beasts of prey. devoured Israel d 4 h d the latter with a dre an j : had swallowed up Zsrael him forth, 50: 17; 51: 84. The refer- -ence is unmistakably to thz captivity of Israel and Judah in Assyria and Babylonia ard to the release and re- turn of the exiles after the conquest of Babylon by Cyrus. There is an explicit prediction of such a return in 50: 18-20. It would seem that some large hearted Jewish writer of the first or second century after the re- nn used a similar figure in writing 'the book of Jonah. Jonah "we uses to represent Israel, refusing lo exercise "his .nission to xorld, the : teaching Jehovah's ways .and establishing universal peace (Isa. 2: 1-4), or of bearing the covenant blessing and the lig ht of Selivoranse 5 'oppressed nations, 42: 1- "49: 6. The eastern empires' "which conquered 33 oe oral ate: rep- resented by the great re- turn oF Jsrac} Yo his oy lund 1% he vomiting forth of Jonah u; e land. Israel's Seon ie 'see the mations which had opposed him pun- and his ction of ruin to dhol pando are well Dr rosintod hy :Jonah's preaching in Nineveh, and by 'hig: discontent and anger at tue non- fulfilment of his prediction of the de- struction of that city. The book closes a rebuke '0 the narrow spirit of r Wo 'many Jews of that period, ard of many of the Jews of New Testament times. This A Dogk. . written us a noble} : - A The rath fully revealed) Article 7--"The Daily Dozen." "The love of God is Broader | / There are many excellent exercises. measure of man's mind; Wa read of them in papers, hear them rt of the eterna over the radio. main thing is to : 'wonderfully kind." Oe be sure we do them and do them re- i. - gularly. It was thought that to re- | THE TRUTH ABOUT HENPECK | duce one must go through exceedingly - We all pity Mr. Henpeck a bit. Quite | tiring and long drawn out perform- unnecessarily, to a well-| ances. known authority on children, Dr. C.| It is found that this is not necessary, W. Kimmins, - ; : in fact it is sometimes harmful. According to him, most henpecked | One often hears of a person who husbands are really "hen-protected." | tries to reduce by exercise. Suddenly As small boys they relied entirely on | they will take a notion to walk four their mothers. When they grew up| miles every day. They do so for a and marrféd they expected their wives | While, coming home tremendously to look after them, make decisions for | hungry and quantities of foood are them, and generally act as the "pre-| eaten with great relish. This may go dominant partner." on for days but it seems a very little This may explain' a good many |is accomplished for so big an effort. cases of henpecked husbands, but does | Why? it explain them all? If there are gent-| Because you cannot reduce just by ly submissive men, who want to be | exercise alone.. What should be re- under authority. there are also master. | membered is:the fact that with the in- ful women who expect to rule. creased exercise, which should not be _ But, after all, doesn't every wife do | too strenuous, the intake of food must that? "The only difference between a not be increased, so that in this way henpecked husband and one who isn't | the body will draw on the surplus body is that the former knows his wife is | fat for fuel. Everyone knows the great running the show. The other doesn't, | value of the daily walk; or a swim, but his wife gets her own way just | When every muscle of the body is be- By Marie Ann Best- of the leg stap up on a chair and down | all it will stay normal because we will 'Besides reducing we are building up a subtle self control, for with the in- II creased exercise of the body we do not intend to eat more food. We will in this way bring back the body to its normal weight and beauty, and best of not care to eat such quantjties of high caloried foods after we understand how much they count. Keep on with your 1200 Calorie per 'day, reducing diet if your normal weight is 160 pounds, a few more than 1200 calories if you have a bigger frame, and less if it if smaller. Recipe Tuna Fish a la Newburg 1800 Calories 1 large can tuna fish 14sp. salt 3% green pepper pinch cayenne 1% pimento 1 pt. whole milk 3 stalks celery 1 tbls. cream 3 ripe olives 1 thls. butter 3 green olives 2 tbisps flour Method. --Parboil green pepper and celery till tender, then drain. Chop them up with pimento and olives. 'Make a white sauce with milk, butter flour and cream. Season. Pull fish apart in big pieces. Add to sauce, turn in other ingredients, cook together a minute and serve with toast points. Next week--Sugar and Chocolates. er MOON IS FOUND GUILTY # FOR SEVERE DROUGHT Calling the drought now existing on the North American continent an ap- palling disaster to agriculture and the severest since that of 1874, Mr. Her- bert Janvrin Browne, consulting met- eorologist of Washington, D.C., in a re- cent Bulletin of his weather forecast the same, ing exercised, 'but do not start on too reel rn. rane POLAR BEARS 'ENJOY . muscles used to it. STRONG SUN BATHS Here is a good daily sample for ex- HSympathy is wasted on them in tor ,ercise: 1. When you waken yawn and national selfishness, and a most im- .pregsive lesson of the all-embracing 'mercy of Gol. } I. REFUSING THE CALL OF GOD, chap, 1. Jonah, the son of Amitlai, is mea: tior.d clsewkere only once. In the 'brief 'account of Jeroboawm IT and his : reign, in 2 Kiigs, 14: 28:2, h. is said _to have foretold the. exteénsivi of the kingdon 'of Israel "from the entering in of Hamath (in the north) to the 'sea of the Arabah (in the south)." Of 'his call to ba o prophet and his mis- sion to Nineveh we know nothing ex- «cept what is told us here in the book of Jonah. The book is quite <vidently not written by him, but rather about shim. There may have been current in "later centuries wvwe such-stor; as is kere told which che writer of this book takes and uses for his own purpose. In his hands it becomes a parable con- taining a pointed and effective rebuke to the narrow Judaism ¢f the fifth and following centuries B.C., which desir- ed and predicted only the destruction of the nations which had been hostile to Israel. See for examples Ezekiel, «chapters 38-39; Joel, chapter 3; ete. IL A PRAYER OUT OF THE DEPTHS, chap, It is uct quite easy to understand to the British Sailors' Society, which the language of this prayer as pro- 'ceeding from a man in a whale's belly. It is true that he might hav: describad himself as in the "belly or hell," or rather Sheol (as margin R.V.), and] the sea-going- libraries. as in "the depth, in the heart of the Fl but hardly as having the| popular form of story, mystery tales ee! ds . . . wrapped about" tis head. The last clause of verse 6 and the verses that follow represent him as «delivered and his prayer as answered, | Robart Louis and declare his pur to offer a rid sumer weather, according, to stretch every muscle in the body. F. Thorne, writing An Science News- | Yawn again and feel glad you are Letter, a Science Service publication !alive. Then take hold of each side of (Washington). ~ He quotes George! op the bed with your hands, bend the Jennison, a well-known and widely ex- knees go that the feet are planted on gorienced Bwglish zoologist, ag fol- tie sheet, then lift hips while lying on ows: . your 'back and sway over to one side The' public err profoundly With re- of the bed as far as you can before gard. to polar; béars. They 'are pitied 'you let yourself down. Then litt. and in hot weather, while a severe spell of move over to thie other side. Repeat frost always calls forth the remark fifteen times. Gradually you will be that the polar bears will enjoy them- abla to do it forty times or more. This selves; actually they do not like the {3 excellent for reducing the hips and cold. They rarely enter the water be: g1g0 strengthens the back. I ct ther 304 Tebrumey: and, on, 5 paw up one leg tight to the body v 8 pleases them go, .i cle he knee with hands to draw 80 much as hot weather, when they up tighter and let go. Repeat 10 will lle flat with all four feet extended, | yimeg or more, then exercise the other enjoying the blazing sunshine. In the leg, after which try both together. Arctic, radiation from the white snow | 3g 1 in bed without using arms, y extreme and the heat terrific, Carl | jj' gown again. and repeat 15 times. agonbeck has seen polar bears : stretched out to enjoy sunshine that Now, fade, you will feet like getting gave leopards heat apoplexy." 4--To tone up the nerves and keep a cold away there is nothing quite so good as a quick cold sponge bath every morning. It is not nearly as hard to do as it sounds; many people can take a cold sponge who find the plunge into cold water hard on the system. Some prefer a quick tepid bath or shower in the morning, Afterwards the brisk rub with a rough towel also helps to remove the surplus fat. Pull the towel back and forth many times across the body in every position. It exercises the arms as well, At night, two or three times during the week, is the time for the hot bath, They help to reduce but rset ms 'WHAT THE SAILOR READS There seems to be a suggestion of the "busman's holiday" about the fav- orite reading of sailors. . According runs the Ocean Library Service for Merchant Seamen, travel books are, after fiction, the most in demand in In fiction, "thrillers" are the most of the sea being especially in demand. Among the standard authors who are strong favorites, Joseph Conrad and Stevenson, who both sacrifice of thanksgiving. The prayer wrote sea stories, have places of | yoo many turkish exhausting baths are may have come out of any occasion of honor, extreme danger or distress. IIL A RELUCTANT, OBEDIENCE, chapters | of 8 selection of books, including bio- a weakening. Everything accomplished should be gained naturally. 5--At night massage your neck with A standard ocean library consists graphy, history, travel, essays, poetry, When Jonah's second chance came science, and. fiction. It is contained | C0\d cream, rubbing straight up and he went to Nineveh and proclaimed |in.an oak cabinet. Libraries can be|d0W2 vigorously with fingers from the destruction of that city--'Yet|exchanged at the principal British point of chin to chest. This prevents forty days and Nineveh shall be over- | pouts and also on the Continent and the neck from becoming wrinkled and thrown.' He represents very ect overseas. removes the fat. ly the attitude and spirit of the Jews | [ag year 203 new libraries were js.| oA fine oxercise for plumb backs after the iod of the exile toward sued and 1,084 were exchanged, They | #24 shoulders is to stand erect, feet | of them, and he suggested lunch and a thelt fic ghborg, No doubt Shere wore are the most travelled i in the together, stretch arms straight out|yigit down a mine instead of golf. 'So language of some of the Psalms, for | World.--Answers. side ways, palms up, then make &| Gown the mine they went, and then, example, 96, 100. But, like Jonah, the]. m---- e---- Jey h people a 8 whole had, lo gos. Irate Parent: "The next time that] flexing the elbows. Swing from the|; the ship. They arrived in face of pel of salvation for the Gentiles an. 2) desire ha he Ceulile Savion Daughter: "Oh, father, let me do jt!" | 5¢éms hard to do but If you persist] enough to notice the "snotties," 4 wir ore imine they believed would end the age in which they lived. But in this story the unexpected oc- large circle with your hands without young man calls, I'll sit on him |®oulders, Then reverse. At first this curred. Nineveh listened and repent-| Peen Insured on a value of $90,000,| tWenty times each way. ed of its sin , "and God repented of the evil which he said he would do unto|ered 'include sea perils, fire, partial] Stretched to left and right. . them." Jonah's prediction was not | damage, and collision, long a walk at first, get the flabby | is the moon, working through its tidal it will take off the flesh just where Shamrock V, Sir Thomas Lipton's|You Want it off. Be satisfied with four challenger for the America Cup, has|OF five times at first, working up | pean down a mine." Next morning at a rate of 150 per cent. Risks coy-| (Bend sideways with arms out- .8--Place hand on door and swing service says that the ultimate culprit attraction on the ocean. Says Dr. E. EB. Free, in his Week's Science (New York): positions of earth and moon in space have swung the moon farther to the north of the earth's equator than us- ual, Mr. Browne explains, while the moon also has been relatively near to the earth. This has increased the lunar attraction on the water of the North Atlantic, with the result of spreading | westward over that ocean the cold-s i water area which exists normally in the neighborhood of the Azores Is- lands. Around this cold-water area, Mr, Browne's explanation continues, there circulate normally a series of { winds which seldom reach this con- tinent. This summer, however, be- cause of the unusual westward exten- sion of the cold-water area, these winds are reaching this country so that hot winds blow landward from the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea, create more or less permanent has been accentuated, Mr. Browne adds, by the fact that the radiation from the sun, now measured daily by the Smithsonian Institution, has been unusually high for the past six weeks." iat Af aes An old farmer was complaining bit-| terly to the minister of the terribly bad weather for the crops, when the latter reminded him that he had much to be grateful for, all the same. "And remember," aid the good man, "Provi- dence cares for all. Even the birds of | the air are fed each day." "Aye," re- plied the farmer, darkly. "Off my corn." mare ---- A naval vessel put into a South 'Wales port, and two midshipmen, keen golfers, got shore leave. Putting on their plus-fours, and complete with golf bags, they went off for a game. But on landing they were met by a well-known coalowner, who knew one reshouldering their golf bags, returned the Admiral, who, feeling genial re marked, "Been playing golf?" "Oh, no, sir," grinned one of them; "we've they were hauled up for insolence, and it took a letter from the coalowner to persuade the Admiral that appear- ances had beer deceptive. : ¢ 1s Ww #3 BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON lustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur-| * ished With Ev Ideal to brighten your mid-summer "Dur n wardrobe for town or resort. | During recent months the relative How them gives Jatnty air to smart simple all-occasion dress of powder- blue flat crepe silk. It moulds the figure, presenting a slim, and rather straight silhouette. | The circular skirt widens toward the hem into charming rippling fulness. The seaming of joining -f the skirt and the bodice with dip at the front and the back detracts from breadth, giving the figure charming height. Style No. 2682 comes sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. printed | A batiste, tub silk prints and printed 6,000-foot metal tuba into Metanzas chiffon voile appropriate. It's exceptionally easy to make-- : practically a two-piece skirt to be at- | tached to two-piece bodice. It's very inexpensive too! HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain-| The tube was slowly shoved out into areas of high airpressure over the ly, giving number and size of such the bay, each 150 feet of pipe being continent and prevent, Mr. Browne patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in|gypported by four pontoons. When concludes, 'anything save showers in Stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap | the full length was in the water the the way of rainfall' The condition ii carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern ,,4 the tube sank beneath the waves. Service, 78 West Adelaide St., Toronto, mien see Apres * Our life Is just as narrow as we let If we live in a lonely country place miles from a railway, we can study the plants and animals about us to understand some- thing of the secrets of the universe. It our lot is in a great city, we have op- portunities of studying human nature --seeing with our own eyes the de- velopment of characters as strange as ever novelist put into his books. Mul- the same streets with Dickens without seeing a hundredth part of what he saw. the power to see, and not the object to be seen, that we lack, and this power may be, to a certain extent, cultivated It 1s smi a---- If this life were all, what wide horl- zons must vanish utterly! ity is a splendid challenge to man, a challenge repeated at every crisis in mortal life, ringing even through dis- appointments or failures. Immortal As Words- our heing's heart and Is with infinitude, and only there, Effort and affection and desire. You Gotta Figure Out Jeff's Opinion for Yourselves. ed by Chicago Astronomer. Albany, N.Y.--The Albany Evening News publishes a new theory of the evolution of the universe, advanced by Professor Benjamin Boss, director of | the Dudley Astronomical Observatory of this city, before the American As- tronomical Society in Chicago recent- 1 y. Working with scientific observations gathered by astronomers and geo- physicists since the beginning of as- stronomical observations, Professor Boss has placed the entire mechanics of the evolution of the universe into one scheme. The general conclusions he has reached are that: The earth is constantly pulsating, like a human heart. In these Leart- beats are born oceans, mountains, vol- canoes, earthquakes. The contraction and expansions of the earth's pulsatio t is caused by the sun's bombardment of the earth with electrons. In the electronic charges come the winds, the storms, northern lights, and other natural phenomena. Ice and tropical ages have been caused by the passage of the sun through a cosmic cust of greater or lesser potential. Iceland tropical ages have been caused by the pausage of the sun through a cosmic dust of greater lesser potential. > The stars have a distinct evolution --a life cycle. They begin in the birth of an atom and atoms form into cosmic dust which collect 'into clouds or nebulae. The clouds condense and form giant red stirs, which pass on to the yellow giant stars, and losing mass through radiation, pass to yel- low dwarf stars and from theve to the red dwarf stage. While Professor Boss has actual ob- servations to support this theories of the mechanics of the carth, he says that his theory of the evolution of the universe is somewhat speculative, al- though a vast field of investigation has been ovenel by his demonstration mes A atin Se Ocean to Provide Power In Future? Success Crowns Scientist's Efforts to Sink 6,000 Tube. Matauzas, uba.--The sinking of a Bay in connection with an experiment to create power from sea water was accomplished successfully by Georges Think of Claude, French scientist and inventor in charge of the experiment It was the bay. Divers then descended and inspected the tube, annotneing it was resting safely on the ocean floor. Prof. Claude's experiment involves bringing huge quantities of cold water from the bay to the surface, where it is pumped to large tanks on the shore. The tanks are filled partially with warm surface water from the gulf stream, which is broug ht to the boiling point when the tanks are subjected to an exhaustion of air, creating steam to operate a turbine. The cold water is used solely to cool the tanks, re- duce the steam and perpetuate the operation, If the experiment at Matanzas is successful, Prof. Claude, with the as- sistance of the Cuban Government, plans to erect a plant for commercial operation in a more suitable location he has selected. Events favor me again." (YES, MUTT, THe LAST TIME X SAW You was MUTT AND JEFF-- By BUD FISHER For A ' « MUTT JUST NOW: I HADN'T Seen Him FoR TWENTY YGARS. D Mme Fvel BETWEEN OURSELVES I DON'T THINK He's THE MAN He USED T Be! -- | © : 5 New Doctrine of Evolution Propound- Particulars of Interest In Pamphlet the early part of the nineteenth cen- tury by Robert Brown 't appears in the first six years of the ninetéenth century not less than ten thousand people emigrated to America, chiefly to the Maritime Provinces of Canada. This was before most of the notorious clearances described by Alexander Mackenzie took place. It is true that in Glengarry there had been clear- ances in the last part of the eighteenth century and that about 1772 a few hundred Highlanders emigrated to the Mohaw: Valley in New York state, and afterwards removed to Ontario, following upon the outbreak of the Revolutionary War. They settled round about the present Glengarry district in Ontario and they and theie descendants cid yeqman' service for the Britigh Govergmgnt jn the HE tionary ow a 4 that ey writes Clanranald in the Weekly Scotsman. ! seems to h the third attempt to sink a tube into pontoons were removed one by one Every event of life, every circum- stance of our lot, is a husk containing precious food, and yet how much of life we receive as a mere husk, with- out searching for or receiving the hid- den sweetness, --Erskine of Linlathen. A emer Vienna has such a mania for po- liteness that a new automatic machine has just been produced that supplies With hope it is, hope that can never, packets of aweets in return for colns, and says sweetly: "Thank you; please hw 100 Years Old, From an old pamphlet written Again, we learn that in 1790 about 100 persons were evicted from Ard-na- fuaran, in Arisaig, but there do not seem to have been any other evictions of consequence in Arisaig and Moidart before 1810. The most of the early emigrants te Lower Canada, then, left for economie or religious reasons, chiefly the for- mer. Some year, ago, the writer, while looking over a copy of the Scots Magazine, published in 1772, came across a letter written in that year to the editor by someone whose name is forgotten, describing the Trouble caus- ed in the West Highlands by the tacksmen and better-off farmers seil- ing their lards and stock in order to emigrate to America and thus remov- ing a4 large amount of capital from the country. Up to that tine it would seem that most of the emigrants had gone to what are now the United States of America, and Lord Selkirk, writing in 1806, states that up to 1803 the peonle in Skye Lad such a bent of penetrating radiation from the sun.' for emigrating to Carolina tat no emigrant shin had left Skye except with settlers for Carolina. THRE FIRST VESSEL. The earliest vessal leaving the West Highands with emigrants for Canada e been tha Alexander, containing 210 sattlers from Sov Uist nd the adjoining mdinland, This em'gration was sponsored by the them Laird of Glenadale, Captain Johm Macdonald, and ths emigrants were Jacobites or their descendants. The vessel came to the Island of St. John (now Prince Edward Island), and the descendants of these sattlers now num- ber very many thousands. From 1772 on the movement increased rapidly. WORKED IN LUMBER CAMPS When the first settlers came out te Lower Canada almost the whole coun try was an unbroken forest, and set. tlement naturally began along the shore and the rivers. One of the tragedies of the first settlers was that, coming from a treeless country, or comparatively so, they did not know how to use ihe axe. The second gen eration mastered its use quickly, and many of the pioneer settlers in Nova Scotia around 1810 or 1820 used to yo to the Mirimachi country in New Brunswick to work in: the lumber camps. These provided the only source of ready money at that time. A good deal of lumber seems to have been imported from New Brunswick into Britain, and one reason for the low fares charged the pioneer settlers in coming out was that the vessels were obliged to come out anyway for cargoes of lumber. As is well known, certain parts of Nova Scotia are peopled largely by descendants of those who came out in the vessels mentioned above. The Gaelic language is still used consider. ably in some districts, but it seems likely that in another generation it will have largely disappeared, or be understood only by some of the older people. Obviously, except in a few cases, the Highland population in Cane ada has long ngo lost touch with ite cousins in the far-off islands and glens of Scotland. The pioneer settlers to Lower Can- ada brought out with them their loyale ty to law and established authority, and a sturdy havdibood. While many of them were followers of Prince Charlie, their descendants afterwards proved abundantly their loyalty to the British Crown. In Canada the fami- liar Scotch clan names are written in the places of highest honor. emerson. HURRAH FOR RED HEADS Belfast, Ireland.--Red-haired chil- dren may have freckled faces, but they make the best school leaders, ae- cording to Mrs, Frank Greaves, teaches er of organized games. essen Spots: "That woman has no res pect whatsoever for the law." sl: ; "What is she--a criminal?" "Neg wis iy she's a policoman's wife." } To supplement the work being dong in the regular way by the Saskate ewan educational institutions, prov sions have been made by means of ¢ of ins on Tundrad be and girls who, tor various re ) gen umablo to at 0 atten