THE PRINCE NAMES A BABY MlBor trl^te baT« b«Mi ezperiencMl In vUntj by the A'tne* of WalM dur- Inc bi« prolonced tour la Africa and Soucti AnMrlca, bat th»y have never In ajty way depra°eed hU good gi>lrlt8. Indeed, oome of these UtUe trials have afforded hk» royal highness a good deal of . mnsement. For «x- amp!«, at a vUIat« on the veldt In SoaA Africa, a native woman showed the Prince with aome pride her cfaUd- ren, six boys and one baby girl. The interpreter Informed the Prince of their name::. When he came to the baby gkrl he told the Prince that the child was yet unnamed and that the mother would feel deeply honored if the Prince would name her. The requM* took th. Prince com- pletely aback. He was for a moment quite unprepared with a suitable sug- gestloa But his royal highnesa was only nonplussed for the briefest space. He s>ugucoted the name Dawn; it was received wJlSi delight by the mother and the baby waa so named on the spot. It was a fairly freqii«int trial of the Prince during hio tour that the days aet apart to give him a rest from the keeping =jt public engagements, bad to .be sacrliiced in order that be might attend some entertainment got up un- expectedly. A Kls« for the Eride. Oiie of these little eotertalnments â- was a n-itlve wedding. The ceremony had been haetlly arranged to take place so as to coincide with the Prince's arrival at the village. â- -- The Prince anticipated being able to take a day off and enjoy some hours of really needed rest when, he reached the village. But on bl9 arrival be w«s presented with the invitation to the wedding; he at once agreeMi to accepit it and duly bestowed a kl8»â€" another unexpected duty â€" on the bride. At one lUtle town the Prince had agreed to play a round of golf with a local champlou. On bis arrival at the links the Prince found that an enor- mous crowj^ of all sorts and conditions of parsons had assembled on the course to witness the match. This was somewhat diaconcertlng for his royal highness, who never plays up to h1« best form before a big gallery. ' With Midget Clubs. But there was another circumstance still more disconcerting â€" ^hto royal hlghnesa found that he was expected to play not with his own clubs, but with a weird collection of "Irons" not more than a foot in length. The Prince put up with a bad de- feat with the be»t of grace, gratefully accepting the strange clubs that were presented to him after the match. The worst trial that befell waa the long delay In Chile, necessitated by the Unexpected heavy snowfall tn the Ande«. That delay meant the total upset of the Prince's program In the Argentine, which had to be rearranged by cable. This waa a necessarily difllcult task and kept the Prince's secretarial staff at work day and night. The Prince himself remained' up one entire night 8«ttllng the details with his staff. A great trial to the Prince in con- nection with all his tours has been the long train journeys. His royal high- ness' restlessness of dlopositlon makes < him detest sitting stUI^for hours in a train. He wont play cards and doeA not like reading When it la practic- . able the Prince alights from the royal I special and takes anything from a fif- teen to thirty mile walk, while the ' special la sent ahead. During his pre- sent tour the Prince in this way has ' walked several hundreds of miles. The Palace of Justice at Locarno, where the security pact waa signed It was the first time since the war that the German flag flew'bealde those of the allied nations. The Automobile WOMEN SHOW HIGH SKILL IN DRIVING AUTOS. There is considerable enjoyment for atrator from an automobile esrvict a woman in taking out the family car station and have him teach her. These during the week whil« the men folks men a;e often glad to do a Mttie «l are at business, for a little drive into this work, and one should nc* have the country and getting away from the great difficulty in finding such a pet- daily routine of housework occasion- son. ally. If a woman knows how to drive ' The best way to make a beginning she will doubtiiisa make use of the is to have the rear of the car JHcked car for errands, meeting her husband up and the front wheels blocked so at the station, if the home is in the that there is no danger of the car get- suburbs, or taking the children to ting away. When learning to operate school. A car will come in handy an automobile the first step is to be- many times. : come familiar with the engine â€" how According to statistics, one woman *<> start and stop it â€" and how to con- out of three, of those families having, trol speed, automobiles, knows how to drive. This, j fir.'JT aid to bex;inker. I believe, holds good only in the coun- 1 R^jparding starting the engine, con. tryâ€" not so much in the city. There suit the instruction book that cams is no reason why more do not drive ^jth the car, and if that is not ob- unless it is because nobody seems to tainable, secure another from your find the time and patience to teach local dealer. If he cannot furnish you v. them or they are "going to some day.", with one, ^vrite to the factory and Perhaps the family housework seems give them the motor number and to postpone the start With the pres- j where you bought your ear. ent day it U not a difficult thing to Having learned to start the engine, learn how to drive. j the woman should become familiar Only a few years back if one did not with the different speeds, which vary properly manipulate the cl-utch one : with the different cars. Most ears would start with a terrific jolt almost have the standard shift â€" first speed, As to the pirate vessel, as we saw ^ A GLAD DEUVERANCE By George H. Coomer. Old Captain Bradford, with whom I; once sailed, was wont to relate an ad- venture of his with a pirate off the Isle of Pines. U happened long ago, j when the spot was the most dreadful j resort of villany to be found In the' whole world. I "I was before the mast la the brig ! Atlas," he said, "and we were lying at ; Kingston. JamaTca, when six pirates , were hung there. Some of them, as they stood under the galtows, made confessions that were enough to start one's hair on end, and after this very [ little was thought of in our forecastle but the danger we must always be sub- j ject to whllo at sea from such wretch- es as we had seen strung up with their shoes on. "At night I would He In my berth and think of It. What a horrible thing it appeared to me, as vision after vis- , ion rose up in my Imagination that such miscreants should be out on the lonely ocean, committing awful cruel- ! ties where there waa no hand to stay | them ! And sometimes, in that ner- j vousnesB which a person feels who lies ' awiake when he ought to be asleep, I would see it almost as a certainty, that, soon or late, the blood-thirsty monsters would cross my path. | "After a time, getting a freight of six hundred barrels of Jamaica rum. we sailed for Havana, and, as our course would take us around Cape St. ' Antonio, at the west end of Cuba, we would undoubtedly ,pass within sight . , of the Isle of Pines. | "There wa» much fog In the Carib- bean Sea, coming up generally at evening and hanging about us until late In the next forenoon, and - so strong with every one was the appre- henslou of pirates that, whenever to- ward nightfall we had made a vessel In the distance, even our captain seem- . ed to feel relieved as the mist came rolling over the water to shut her from eight. I "Light breezes and calms made the passage long and tedious, and it was j not until ten days after leaving Ja-j maica that one noon, as the fog left , us, we saw, off our starboard-beam, a number of mountain peaks, apparently , far Inland, while, nearer to uj, a line 1 of dark tree-tops apperrsd above the waves. " 'That's the bile of IPnes,' said the captain. 'I meant to give it a wider berth than this.' 'We looked toward it with a kind of Interest which 1 have no desire to feel again. It bore northeast about fifteen miles. 'All the afternoon we lay becalmed, though occasional breezes roughened the water at a distance, and toward night there appeared to seaward the upper canvas of a vessel, standing in, as we judged, toward the ^and. "That vessel was a pirate, we had good reason to believe, for, although her distance from us made It Impos- sible to determine her character, or even her rig, the course she was ap- parently steering caused us to look at each other with very sober faces. We could gather hope only from the ex- treme lightness of the breeze she seemed to have. "We had two sli-pounders, and these we loaded, t remember how the powder and the six-pound balls and the grape and canister looked as we brought them up from below and put i them down near the guns. That evening the fog did not set In. I The night continued clear till almost daybreak, and the anxiety with which we peered through the darkness and 1 listened made the long hours dreadful j to us. ' j "At last the fog came, and sunrise, soon followed. A faint breeze sprang ' up, and the brig moved along at the rate of two or three knots. How glad we weree to be making headway, al- though so slowly! "Pirate or not, there was hardly one chance in a thousand that the vessel we had seen, now that we were cliang- Ing our bearings, would fall in with us m that thick atmosphere. "Some of us were aloft, rigging cut the foretopmast studding-sail boom. ] How much better we felt, new lliat the | brig was moving and we could be do- 1 Ing something to help her along! But 'â- suddenly we stopped in our work and ; looked around with a start. My heart | became like ice. A confused sound o^{ voices at first reached us. and as w»' raised our heads, a topsail-schooner,-! full of men, loomed through the dense^ fog. not thirty" fathoms from us. "She was off our port bow and stand- ing athwart our course. And what a | crew she had! Seventy or eighty shaggy scoundrels, that looked friglit- fully murderous as we caught sight of them through fhe mist. ^^ Neither vessel was moving fastes than the ordinary walk ct a man, yet'' before the crew of either recovered from their surjcfse. the schooner pass- ed athwart our bow and we athwart her stern, while the hole that each T^m "!, ^® '""^ "'""'^ "" as If in 1 probably nev7r ri"gTted,Tut°sank with quicksand, ^1 her crew. We knew that the pirate would put _ himself In pursuit of us as speedily as I ~ ' possible, but to do this he must go In j stays or wear, and would not gather | headway for some minutes^ We heard ' his btocks creak and rattle, heard him enough to knock the driver through the windshield, but nowadays the mo- torist can almost let the clutch in without taking her foot right off the pedal and she will not receive a jolt, although this is not a good policy and will in time injure the mechanism of the car. IN3TRUCT0B ALWAYS HANDY. If the feminine driver's husband or left back toward the side; second speed is right forward; and third speed is straight back ; reverse is left forward. In other words, visualize the tetter "H." The upper left of ths letter "H" is reverse; the lower left is first speed; the upper ripht is sec- ond speed; and the lower right is third speed and tho line drawn across tha two parallel lines is neutral. If a woman will try these things she °!!^'-^..°' ''^'' *^.'«^ }^.^ ^'l"*"' ^^ ; brother will not teach her, and if she j haa made a beginning to learn how oo is still anxious to learn, and if she is i operate the family automobile. Tha not near a good autombile school, j number of women driving cars is in- which would be the best place to go, 'â- creasing rapidly. Many authoi-itiea she can engage the services of a good ' say that women make better drivers chauffeur, or, better still, a demon- 1 than men. They are more careful. Sees Taurus Companion of Sun. .„,,.„ „^,..„ „^^ ^''^ astronomer Luyten says the sun ease off the"shee~t"of his' helvy'raair- , ** nio'l°8 thrcagh space at twelve Money. sail, and square la the long yards up^ i ?"'* * ^"^^ °>''«« ^ ^«<^'"«1 '"''ard the \ M°n«y- ^°^^y- f^""'^'' '^^'- ^'"eles in on his foremast Rnf w^ tnn ,u»raH ' '^"^ «* ^"^^ ^'eea. uud is taking our! ^i' P°<=1'«'^- But we, too, altered on his foremast. „„v ^c, i^u, aiLc.c^* , --,.„,. ,j , , . our course i ^"'""^ ^^^ "»« °^^^'^ planets of the so- ' ^° ^^^ '^ golden locket fV)r half an hour the suspense was ' 'f '•'"*'" "''^ ''â- -^'easu^-ements ot\Or a. house that keeps the rain out, terrible, and then hope revived, bat.^^^"^" °""'''« ='>°^ "^ apparent Or a gown to gaily flout- It was only to be destroved by a com- T'^" '° ^^^ "^'^"'^^^ diroctlon. But But may it never bay for me a friend plete dying out of the wind. i , .^ '^"^^ °^ °°« ^^^^ '" ^^^ con^tel- Should the calm endure until the I f"°° Taurus, the bull. Dr. Luyten passing away of the fog. what could i "°'^,'' "''^ """o" '»''*«°'- The only We were eight men, .^jtn I explanation he fines for this is that this star Is moving In exactly the same di- rection and with the same apes'! as our own sun and Is a companion to our sun. Prevention of Crime. Money, money, money â€" so much will money buy â€" Tltlee, great and high. Jewels rare and olden. Pleasure fair and golden. But cannot buy a sunny day. Money, money, money that many live and die for. .\nd the weak and wistful llo for. That's after all so futile, Compared with things worth while. may it never swerve me from high heaven. " ^George Elliston. save us? two cannon, against eighty meu, with a dozen cannon. "Soon there came the sound of oara. The pirate's boats were looking for i>3. Our captain was a man who never In- vited danger, but whose nerves were steadied by it when it came. " 'Some here to the guns, men." he . '^*^* '^^'^ '*'"* ^^ -'^"^ 'he criminal â- saidâ€" "all except the two lockouts. '^ before he becomes one. You take charge of the port side, Mr. ^^ "^"^^ lessâ€" saves money, time, Greense,' he added to the mate, 'and Patience, social machinery, institu- I'U stand by the starboard. Hark! *''°"* ?^ °.'^ kinds. They are close to us!" i Prevention is always more import- â- The fog was breaking and we could ""' "'^'^ reformation, now see for a hundred fathoms. "As the captain spoke, the oars sounded very near. Then a voice cried out-ln Spanish: " 'El brlgantino! El brigantlno!" i - • !,.,,.». , "And Instantly a boat crowded with ! "^o can win boys to a good life by i ^'te is the eft^ect f '^r j^ejy !arge_ area^. , fl^st half of 1924. Nickel production men came shooting out of the mist e-^amp'e ontl companionship, astarboard cf us. l ^ I Crimo and its solution is largely a ' matter of efficiency in child-protec- tion. , ^ I The criminal was once a child. Sal- { vage should begin farther back. Turning Day Into Night. It might be supposed that a forest Are would turn night Into day by Its I vances among the metals were gen Canada's Natural Resources Harvest. The bountiful crops which the Can- adian farmer has this year" reaped and which have made his heart glad are, fortunately not the only harvest that has shown a materia! increase in Canada in 1925. The Fisheries Branch of the Dept. of Marine and Fisheries reports that the fisheries production for the first half of this year exceaded that of last by over $624,000, being nearly $9,780,000. The increase waa ^a^gely in cod. salmon and lobsters, the latter representing nearly one- third of the total fish caught for the first half of the year. It must be remembered, however, that the open season for salmon on the Pacific coast is not included. So much for the fisheries. The mines of Canada have also been showinjf some big production. For the first half year cf 192.T tha output was larger by over six million dollars than a year ago, or over 90 million dollars. Ad- huge Illumination, but such a tire pro- ^j.^). Gold rose to a new record. Lead duces so much smoke that the oppo- j passed the high mark attained in the "What a moment was that! Captain Brewer stooped quickly to the six- pounder and ran his eye along its top. Mr. Hall, our second mate, stood close by his side with a burning portfire and swung it to give it life. The captain elevated the breech of the gun. then lowered it Just a little. The glowing match was almost touching the pow- der. " 'Fire!' he cried. "The whole deck fell tho shock as the cannon went off. The heavy charge of round shot, grape and canis- ter struck the boat in the bow and raked her fore and aft. Scattering five or six feet wide, it swept before it every man of her crew. "Such was our sense of relief that we foremast hands cheered wildly; but the captain was not the man to crow till he was cut of the woods. .Vt once bis stout rammer was at work, and he was just sending horns the la; t of the canister when the mate, froi'.i the other side of the deck, Ci.lled hur- riedly out: " 'Here they come; Here they come." . _ " A recent big forest lire near Lake ^^^ ^^,i maintair.ed. Copper was up Huron was estimated to cost shipping^ million pounds. Silver showed in- companles JaO.OOO by reason of their , creasing values. Zinc followed tho I vessels losing so much time in the .j^^d in lead to almo.st double tho ! diuse blackness. I output recorded in the first half of ; At Portland. Oregon, some years ^904. Cobalt production continued to ago, all lights had to be on day and night for a week, although it was mid- summer, as the sun was completely 1 blotted out w^lth acrid and dense i smoke. I Even navigation thousands of miles improve. j Canada often boasts of her great . resources, and apparently with good reason. But resources lyinff fallow" ' satisfy few wants and contribute but ; little to the actual wealth of n nation. out at sea has been seriously Inter ij^ j^ ^^^ j^ ^^^ development of r^ fered with by tho black masses of smoke that have been blown from a iire ranging over many square miles of forest on the mainland. sources that prosperity comes. Ingrained Hostility. The proverb about leiiillng a horse to water is illustrated by this story of two old women, living in an English village, who had sustained a mutual qunrrel with zest for many years. I .^fter taking an immense amount of I trouble, says Sunbeams, the vicar of I the parish succeeded la reconciling I the two eld women. He even induced I them to meet u.idc the vican'.ge roof. ; In his drawlag-room they shook hands. i ktler an embarrassed silence one of q, ! .Earl qf Rohaldshay, eldest soi^ of Ahem eoid: iw.f the Marqtiis of Zetland, onetime -^^ce- ' "Well. Mrs. "We locked around, as Mr. Green, In almost insane excitement, threw .^ the Marqtiis of Zetland, onetime vice- J "Well. Mrs. Tyler. I wish you all ycu himself down to sight bl^ gun. Quick- roy of Ireland, who succeeJs Earl wishes ra: ly he gave llie order to lire, and off Keadicg as viceroy cf India. He was ; "An' who's spying na.sty things Went tKe slxpcunder. tho charge former governcr of Bengal. I row'" cnapped IWrs. Tyler. Your Mind is a Garden. Your mind Is not at all like a ma- chine â€" all ready-made and automatic. Ask any doctor and he will make this plain to you. No, ycur mind is more like a garden.. It is the use you make of It that counts. You can grow these fine plants In your mind-garden â€" courage. Initiative,, imagination, will-power, kindness and! knowledge. You can have a garden of Ideas and, skills and efficiencies. What a gardea Newton must have had! Or Darwin,' or Huxley, or Veverhulme, or Pasteur. or Carnegie! If you let your ganlen alone It wllp go to weeds and grafis. That Is tha usual crop. MUTT AND JEFFâ€" By Bud Fisher. Jeff's Rehearsal Was Indeed Realistic. t fiOe^S t AINT VTTl1S»<i pRcTT^.' rwe Becw m,Reo TO Pt.AV Trte- (.•At>IMG> »OLe rN A BWC Re€l. PlC(uR6 €MT<n6b- Jl