THE S. s. LESSON to none, but instead they turn out only * Se sae ot brambles. ee nae all That is required is at the soil ee be of the sort Even thea the results are aie ‘ol eu aA cts latte iad of the inate a man, may bring forth a jared: Nid. cangectnre "that dis was ie hus 6) ‘The: Indians of the platus;: Whol ® ea whose Homiliee on ae ete i Saint pape are: a it a oy sea a fishing ork wetting fate i is ih ite ee “Armenians, fo to le his back, but to nee all face t ive, on the alt aiid the lighty the fowls and ae pees ad mos the lilies, the wise pad the foolish | °™5" ree pagee e s Like, va and Caleutta, mas made up| sumed daad aotnal sower and an actual field were in sight at the) \i 4, 6. ° 4. As he sowed: ie the en be tion about consume all ats - coustituents ‘cau a raed that it dies, Aa that, Micra: | 2 the waste is to be renewed only thirst for by ‘As bearing on the sesaae Se the writer, says nents all) Tommy Atkins’ jingoism, I will ele itself, few words about challenge a se sae thous and Only those Ga hearts are sin- cerely open to the truth can per-} "AS a setae at fact, a fact whic hy pane ties hear the Saaahb. of ‘the | Jo as we kno 48) rauscle is is omentially a wanton ey- f ed | putter, ee as the aimpler en- clearly ‘spon upon the nature of boats are built of steel ‘and work Tesus, Renee? a mae here He tha heareth and understandeth not is woe Thretore vastly less food of they happen to be built of steel or of protoplasm, use up their weight of fuel Lett times over before wis we: he head. is ; < |W The ovil ove-—We might have in y ith this aes that the mus- personal temptations, but Jesus Pa ai in spite of ee a pte ox: hem ties dow all Pa a here. side~ i Jewish “eon, ~ pa led through would Resets coe hard an beaten by the trampling of many This may represent a sotisth li htness ? , ateents ven n the aes of the sea havo word does not. get in ies sik the nade eth seyeral Ashes ag to jibe inculties for ost r i Laerals silent before the memory | Striking sau mae been obtained is as clear of the ti as ie it had| ¥ Meu fncite the ‘préackor of truth not to neglect even so unpromisin; ited 3 J fnto tho tank where the perch was, {Of course the normal sardines ere it was uot until hungry that the pereh mag a ten! tative mea of one of the with joy the word to which, for one reason or another, they happen ta pe cn devoured the Seardiien irre- speetive of color, thus showing not only traces of a memery but also whese nature and profession are. shallow for the truth to tal ko} § egueee compelted investigation s the shock of any a stern encoun- alt three one Shion any ait. 1 ne ue ent me be sadly pe at were then pe ug lie: “haa Nak: men of this ee ig not the ‘world; the Praantts of contact with the sea|®! nettle were shown and recogiizi o! aths Heaeh are ice site apne atcha sit growth. The tra- ntanem! 8 pea ay at gll — that’ iat. SOGIALIST ONGE SOLDIER|; BL en IN THE ARMY. —Recommends It to All Young Englishmen. x Companion Robert Blatchford vis mother and from Devizes, and yowll Bye. ts was once a Tommy Atkins. So far)! from seeking to ‘“‘palliate or deny perience ina book cal “My Ane in the Army,”’ in which he invites raudon the Nitrogen every E nglishinan to follow the ex- ample of bis own youth, It is only a few months ago that Bisa Blatch- Blatchford thought it was all rig! ford called upon | ple to subordinate eerie ve : the instrument ae el a people trained to arms. His | bcok expresses his opinion that the necessary military training woes prove to most young men a phys cal, mental and moral bench am even an age Bades Sige tone Wee and found anee and strength of the. men wete and he | gate 2 mo! Ea ‘aa = As bettey thas in his own day,. emar! ee PROUD OF THE RE! IMENT.” “Also I haye to say, emphati- BOR that a carats which pro- young soldiers, wil such results is good for ae muscular limbs; tan ra arely touah a are pone Sort and that the nation are y| oun ibe richer materially and n iC aeete euglisn Woy could ape day's before the tele-| trained. My colleagues and I were | greatly cheered and deligh' i ‘i yo | ae for the sak ed the lot of eine multitude es young Atconding to this writer ‘the ote cooped yp. i shoky torn ied a dull round of labor zi ‘TERS. | | SOL DIERS NOT FIRE Es Mr. Blatchford does not believe that military training arenes 17 in 1878 were eer caes to be sent to fight the Ru: di | start any day. \to the men about it. They oie ‘from many regiments, being re- oot eae) as pay, rations, and toba Mr. Blatchford saw service in an old “John Company” regiment just returned from India. ‘The men to spend it. They were the sort who wanted adventure spiced with : danger. CALL OF THE DRUM. Mr. voli es asked by his first cot-mate w' e had enlisted, derstand. The other explained: “When a man ae the drum call- me is remind: a ne has to e the ener in Arcola, of the peas of the Fore and Aft,’”’ and Bret Harte’s drum, which re- sc lved the doubts of the agricultur- ist who pleaded that he must stay away from the war to gather his harvest “But Ee pram Fchoed ¢ Death ails reap the braver har- he t, Solamnacundiiie deine e drill sergeant in Blateh- fan ford’s soldier days was not the Ser- | geant Whatsisname who gets ere- *| dit from Kipling for saving modern Tigypt. He-was a different bird al- together. The renowned Socialist! , gives a picturesque sample HOW THEY USED TO DRILL. ‘He was a tall man, over six feet high, and of a spare and an- gular figure. His chest was so out- Sister padded that it gave him Le appearance of a pouter pigeon. Hee. bad. high Boulter and long] legs. He ha mic face, with a ied bristly sista In the deep- est, harshest ae voice that ever sroke, and with his cheek bulged ib by a anid at tobacco, this re- taariaule warrior at once began to address us. First of all he stalked up very close to the line and glar- ,|ed down at us as though he thought hi of drawing our teeth. ‘Then ed in a sepulchral manner: ‘You miserable devils; you ‘“miser- able’ devils.’ And. we all stood mctionless, Ln with an uncomfor- | tec ite feelin: t we deserv ed the scription Average ‘Now, pay seisatian to the. You Are-raw re- cruits; raw and green. I’m here to dress you and drill -you, and frizalé you and grill you, | pep: scon sweat th eile off you. “And lee to your front, yoit poot, un- saved sinners, and learn wisdom. DRESS UP, EYES FRONT. “Here the sergeant made a rush at aman near the flank and roared —'A tailor, serggant.””—' aie tailor! ke be’ coats peseese he guts & te hang- ’g BARLY DAYS wend and te ee your tae wn ¢ es front? 5 ae straight to your €T! Served in Ranks Thirty Years Ago me ae sical ight * Ah Ae and forget your past sins and lis- tie an ost eeteao sine, unciyil and igarettes is the worst difficulty. 'd tr a a young fellow he “went ie oO the * —— AN ALD- TIME PHYSICIAN 2 it. felt ten years, youn- And we deplor- ane r ibench, or loom, or coun- growing old before their r to the ion,’ ell the other day into the hands of en the London Daily head “allowed fiitm- Se a nethey oadclehh: known wat oft jattara who. combined literstare ls a physician of neat renown in ae with crime was George Barrington, for | seventeenth centur, and, with his not| Herbal, left upward of fifty choice recipes, many of which were “aids the men via Those women who are now eager s for the too intricate macipen wanpled by here are some 1s To keep the teeth white, it is wet copi- with pet er, = wilt but) & ‘astens them and deanatuedé the oe road, says a writer in the gums. VIOLETS FOR HOARSENESS. eit pha os tans should be bathed with it. It hel; ures smi “ed ina ‘pipe as caveat is and Foe for Take t them steep| P° cne day, then boil the mixture half away and with four pounds of sugar boii it into a fragrant syrup, Take it several times a f vine branch burned and . to the! eases, Brice.” .@ pain dn the head, takes away aoa considered Sati danable t in influenza colds in wine eae inty Sasbeud bragi Jones, ‘was a eee long-distance days in a aaa glass stopped with| runner in his day. He once outran Shake twice| a horse in a twenty-mile race.’” “Jsn’t that funny?’ answered itself in two] Mrs. Smith. “We once had a horse pounds of rose water and mix both | lik 4 fea} * J spoonful in}- w Jones and Smith wonder ie them four a day, then dissolve half a Pound COMBINED CRIME AND ART, Burglar Who Managed to Keep Up Air of Respectability. Tt is alleged that Herr May the German phen none and author recently proved to have been a burglar ek bandit in early life, in addition to the improving liter: ature of which he was the eee ledged author, also published anonym otal a series of ehead and m | detrimental fiction, in which his ex- Ss as a bandit were riiize jig [ed In other respects, however, he| se ears to have wholly fors 1 don t murder you in the process Sat laie RAE NG ken his says the London Blaudatd: a this is so, and it would be kind- : to give him the benefit of any aout the case only bears a pat- tie! resemblance to that of the ce lebrated Charles Peace. That new notorious burglar was active ly practicing his real professiva pecchable antecedents. was a past master in tho art of impostare, and ‘had the} makings of a brigand in him, if he never got the chance of following the more adventurous and perhaps more picturesque. branches of house was crammed with musical | instrument’; hut Reonever allowed | p. dre], and the offences for es Some of Them of Interest To-day—| ther he really confessed that he poisoned the unfortunate Miss that she had very thick ankles, may be doubted, but quite enough se-§ Compleat maar ”? compiled | has been proved to his descredit. transported to Botany Bay pocket picking in 1790. He did re- [corer his: character, became _high| , constable of Paramatta, and was much thought of in official circles intersted to| for his good conduct. His literary mberless|fame rests mainly on the often quoted deteription, of the true pat- ricts : e it understood, we = entire” WEE brain bathe with a decoction of ca-| FAMOUS MODEL-WORKER. momile flowers, which will remove to whatever ole of London. given to few men to poss now thoroughly conversant wit ‘a half, dried|*P* history and romance of the 7 Ted| greatest capital in the world that son is Mr. Thorp. Especially ith an expressive gest exhibition as it stood i ” souvenir. ____. WHY THEY DON? SPEAK. ee dei wives don't speak. THERE WILL BE DENSE TRAP+ Heavens May Present Magie Scene Tt will be Tovey at uit to and Sees tiie phootiag ears: IN THE DAYS OF AIRSHIPS[GEORGEV.A PHILOSOPHER, OUR NEW KING LEADS A DO MESTIC LEFE. Character Study of Britain’s More arch, Who Has the Marks of a Scholar, A man who has led the domestia $ z 8 will be wonderful te th over ue it w anone the eee “dou the e Wi ith A countless miions of through the. moonlit Saude ater BS man ee falling rushing through On, under hapten cireumatanos rward Ce ais aril hie. ees pean of the heavens, will present _rirry Hhosaushenite nd Heactlgns seu itt Batored Tampa) phe ovectined pele ‘eaneprtation were the Grand Canal at Venice on 8G a police boat in nay 0 or “some un- Si gnominous fashion And each hour will grow denser tie mass of tr aie overhead, where and the pleasure into saben to be schooled in a sey tud ver It is iatareneine to ee on it o|ter, at any rate, the rudiments of hink what changes will come about| many branches of knowledge. But when we reach ones present King’s attainments are The Se Aying man is ‘ies nis super: our Ghia ae our country’s For “Grigitoning the-hair and to| 800d.” freed from ‘he cart, shall not our to reach a plane] * ‘ above the smoke| ** and heat of the city will be to reach 3 now we do, by going far afiel the region of fresh ats pe. means Ite Constructed in in Miniature the) | ‘The aa maker of models in uae iG Ate aan arth as to see its @ manner clear and: detached, getting as ait view England is John B. Thorp, and his ‘and of a workshop is in Gray’s ‘trand Magazine. Lest you oon- 2 ceive the idea of a modern Caleb 8. | Plummer, let me describe the mod- pleasing|¢}-maker. Originally, Mr. Thorp, ” = plant of Venus.” To relieve hoarse-|who is still a young man, devoted |/Anna Woodward in Chicago News. also has a deep friendship and ad-, ration for Lord Kitchener and Lord Charles Beresford. He is not: on terms of particular intimacy, Nay any of the political leaders, though he shares iis father’s speci=, al liking for Mr. John Burns. His brother-in-law, Prince Alex~ in a marked degree, and Lor r- Lert Vane Tempest, the brother of Lord Londonderry ; Lo de, the. Honorable Henry Stonor and Lord Revelstoke are others of his, friends. PHYSICALLY ALERT. Viscount Mountmorres gives am sisson character skete! King George in wok London Daily, c.| Express. He a mel nan, vate of manner, musical voice, Thneatil ‘tear -lidded eyes, and Wide, intellectual forehead, his » Vr wivesab first VERSA % a ales in yor his movements, his ykeen siast, the man of z “That same een alertnes which has made him perhaps the premier shot of Europe is brought on every matter that ap- peals to him. she extraordinary flective look, but it is there—the resistless, restless energy of hie cousin o! rmany. A GREAT READER. “Like the Kaiser, too, he is @ man of more than ordinary intel. their taste may be, they must mas- ing hare of du! 8 a younger F brother, his early i was not shaped by the Bie Sie that his acquirements ure the aniabiis of natural bent and inborn ability. He is, it is quite as a King, he would rank among the best informed of his day. saree ene TASTES, “In his ta: is habits, no E cCouRAGING BIRD LIFE, arenced researches into the history ing two ounc-|o! Old London. He, himself, dis- flower tol covered fascination in the work, -|and conceived the idea of recon structing the most historical por- ie tions of the capital. It was mere- he sun claims rosemary ne 2 Wy ae gratify a whim that he re- t, in miniature, Old London bridge, but a friend to whom it was e-| shown was of a more practical turn pocioriereat i white “mine oro Building Houses 5 for Bluebirds and cial Swall dus the ee bes been demon ind. “Why not construct the whole of id _and|the more interesting eortone ol London?” he sai ge erage ps Londoner’s love of the coatitat is clear sight, the aaere theta? be-|such that a model, when replete taken all the while if blossom-| with panoramic equipment would s ring him from far and near to Every morning taken fasting vat see it.” bread and salt a conserve of 1 The models of Old London which flowers is comforting to the aie were on view at the Pranco-British auc to burn the stalls and flowers| Exhibition in 1908 were the resu the herb in houses corrects the|The prophecy of the friend was more than fulfilled. The recelnt Tn the seventeenth eno tary ‘the |during the exhibition amounted to were| nu less than $50,000, But these models of Old London. represented prodigious labor and patience that Every deatil in the structure was historically correct. Years and ti years were devoted to a search in dusty archives, and if anyone is the work, and one man from across ae Atlantic opened his sheskoook he aie Thorp, “might have beene sold 1,000 ea | times, but when a man voted K/many years of his life ie ae con: straction of anythin: ngy the affec- tion ‘that. springs ip is high above xandra was one of the most sutarestat visitors. to d the exhibition, and the sixpence) Fhisiches majesty paid at the turn- stile for admission is.a treasured 5 bird, ae in all eighteen nests, ded 300. insect | Gec destroying songsters that were not! but a source | of An profit in ae great number and worms 4 no indise; n to rBics: the ple ‘0 the structio) he birds of the Beveoreet thal In! feats he Apples i dome ore fipi Id Fall Mrs. twenty-three Sek of tne teat Yess than in sin maslenan bent, he takes after his grandfather. His cera a hi are in the serious com- 1 8 man At business rather than the be done in the en-| gay Aopen of a fashionable world, naturally migra- ‘He is better known among the to remain North| ship eyaert and merchants and | professors of Liverpool oe among of| the ‘smart set’ in Lon Hoxsie eit the last| ‘In every matter ‘that. ‘interests Winter, where a colony of eleven him he jnaiett on taking an active, and apparently hy their ths He is not pana to bi ared last “Summer, says the presses his personality and his ESE fairly plonaast a morning by the se in men of ability, Ke ex- y fly away presies himself eee and pointed- ymtl near| ly. and this habit has no doubt A! et when they return individu- eee strengthen is bird houses, training, He has the frankness of enpyene one house, and| firmly rooted convictions in advo- naling his views. In a word, he 5 reat lover of| knows his own mind and is not. birds and has ries his place twen-| afraid to express it. . 8, all of which) ENTHUSIASTIC IMPERIALIST. ‘That he is an enthusiastic ij perialist is well known, while his were. raised Titelligent and active zeal in behalf f/ of British commerce has won the barn swallows, one nest of chimney | grateful admiration of all true pat awallows and seven nests of eave|Tiots. He is a modern king who se would average reli agai as did fe grand- four young birds to each nest, the | father and as does the ser Fi | commerce is the life blood ‘ot a mod. added, would make approximately | et nation. hes as * soveleixn he were within | is determined chiefly oncern house ten robin| himself with Growing the inter- eve of British commerce is no sec: ‘act that. ane apt his best pe ob mnt Mr. oe attributes a big rele notably the whole latter. pat his famous. vee 6 up, Engla: the <yildhall, have foal % owh sole réspon- ighteen trees, and é this withanele IETS spraying. every farmer would] Mrs. Nowbride--“Boohoo! ve put up a few suitable bird houses! ry threw a cake ac ms. “Sue ta it Peed Sore make eee diffor-| {made myself, too.” ence he raising of farm pre- “the monster! He Masts. killed you oli ee