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Exeter Advocate, 1908-11-26, Page 2C UkkiiN 1' -1'oi'.Ci. The German Emperor is being asked to hold his tongue ur to got out. Not long ago such A request, even when more delicately marls, would 'lave been testi majesty of the worst kind. One Gorman edi- tor calls on the emperor to abdi- cate, other editors copy his article, and still other editors protest t alpine.. imperial absolutism, but as yet there have been no prosecu- tions. Where there aro aJ many offenders, probably all wil es -ape. The interview give" by the Emperor to a retired English diplomat con- tained matter which, though not so intended, plight have offended France, Russia, Rolland, and Ja pan. It has greatly irritated Ger- mans. It has caused the Getout% conservative party to express the "reverential wish "that the osnper- ot may display "greater reserve" in snaking statements which may brine the foreign pclitics of the country into a difficult situation.. Eve:t these devotedly loyal subjects have come to the conclusion that an irresponsible, inelaereet. ruler ie II danger to be guarded against. This latest and most serious im- perial indiscretion may result, as it ought to, in the establishment of the principle cf a responsible nein affair? eternity are working. It is their istry. The emperor is not reepon-I eiblo to the re:ehstag and neither. 'WHAT IS ITS FRUITAGE ? It Is Hard to See Further Than Our Own Dusty Corner in the Struggle of Life "For the sufferinga of this pre- through all the centuries, is valu- sent time are not worthy to be able only us furnishing tools for furthc r work. The end cannot be iu tho things that we can see, for What is it all for? There come done cf them has any intrinsic days hen the heart, sinking in worth apart from the seraice they %%eeriness at the steady and often can render. dull round of tasks, asks this ques- If ell our work is but making tion. Our life gr..ws steadily more tools what is to he n►ade with the complex, we work harder than our tools? What is the product of eter- fathers did; wo accomplish ten nityl The Measure of any age will tinges as much, but do we have any be the extent to which it produces more life than they had I All life and perfects this product. The is toil ; what is its fruitage? rightness of every social form and order may bo measured by this; this is the final test of every life, There is the sumo story in the travellings of modern business, in the sweat and agony of modern liv- ing, as we read looking back through the tunes before our hands began to write history. Ll sand- stone and in granite is the story cut, in the marks of reptile and quadruped; MANKIND IN THE MAKING. compared with the glory that shall be revealed." -Romans, viii., 1H. Tho smoke of our cities rises to the heavens. The din of our indus- try sounds through the land. Life is all a story of mills and factories, offices and stores, labor and wages, tools and toil on one side and on the other caro, anxiety, sorrow and fleeting joys. It costs much to live; what duce one purchase at this price? Have wo simply acquired a habit et hustling, of hard work. which has so possessed us all that now, Geology has written the first chap - willing or unwilling, wo must keep ter. Civilization writes the second tap with the rest, wo must maintain in that story of humanity coming the pace or fall beneath the feet into ever larger living. of the on -rushing toilers? Do we Through toil and trouble, happi- know just why wo have to take life miss and love, weariness and woe, eo seriously and find it so atern an in the mills of earth, the tools of Even those who got the profits noise we hear in the city's dull roar; their keen edge we feel when of the modern pace, seem to be none the happier ; they may sit in we smart with some strange pain. i•► the chancellor whom he appoints.. more luxurious offices, but they aro here is making that which is finer German indignation is about as been more completely enslaved than than anything that can bo cut in waren against Chancellor von Bulow I marble, the glot•y of character.} THEIR OWN TOILERS. «'o cannot think that the reptiles as against the emperor. Tho for-, We have learned how to work ; we look forward to the coming man. leer has admitted that he did not have learned how to make things It takes faith for plan to look for - tut have we learned why we live, ward to the coming being. )(et he aro wo sure of securing the real catches glimpses of a glory yet to product of life? he. He feels the living is not vain, Man must be hero in time for for somehow there is more than something other than building cit- heartless, flawless nature at work ies, for something better than sim- hero. Fly making the life of those who The struggle goes on, hut because niay follow him more complex and he has a capacity for the divine, arduous. If suddenly the great because he has learned that at the wheels were all to stop, if, in a ino- heart of all beats a father's affec- ment we must take stock, what tion, man has faith to live for the would the universe have to show as goal that such love sets before him. the product of this great mill of Tho glory of the higher life is that humanity? it gives glimpses of the life yet to In a few years our cities would be and sets the goal ever clearer crumble to dust, our gold and ail- before the eyes so that men press mer would be valueless; indeed, all en for the fuller life set before that wo have made, all that our them. hands have so painfully fashioned re..d the emperor's interview when it was handed to him in manuscript. 71 a British primo minister were to have been guilty of such an over-' sight the House ot Cornmons would make short work of him. Tho reich- stag cannot turn the chancellor o►.t of office, though there is no doubt that it would like to do so so that utero might be room for a loss neg- ligent man. If the chancc'lor were responsible to the roichstag the emperor would hot bo so much of a menace to the teace of Germany and of Europe as he is now. Ho would not bo so' likely to blow up the powder maga- sine. His indiscreet words would not have so much significance as they do now. Manifestly ho has worn out the patience of many of his subjects. His latest mistake collies at a particularly bad mo- ment. Tho people aro facing in- creased taxation and that irritate; them. If the outcome shall bo the curbing of the autocratic power of the emperor or if it shall teach him discretion his extraordinary inter- Verse 1. Woe -The Hebrew word view will have been a blessing its thus translated is a simple interjoc- I tion indicating distress. t Crown of pride -Samaria, the capital of the northern kingdom, crowned the summit of a low hill the sides of which were terraced Canadian Universities now Train. with vineyards and gardens and ing forest f:ngineera.I about which lay a fertile valley. Drunkards of Ephraim --The dis- Thcre are few subjects of great- eelllte aristocracy of the capital er roil,.., tancc to -day in Canada city. than the, preservation of the conn- The fading flower of his glorious tiy's forest wealth. Never, probab- beauty- -Elements of social decay ly, has the question been brought and disintegration were already home to the people at largo more evident on every hand. emphatically than during the pre- 2. A !nighty and strong one - sent season, marked as it untortu- Referring to the Assyrian power 'lately has been by a seri's of most which was to be the instrument in destructive forest fires which have Jehovah's hand for inflicting chas- wrought set many millions of dol- tisement on his apostate people. furs worth of damage. How to pre- With the hand -Or, "with vin - sent such devastation in future, tense." how to preserve this great asset to 3. Trodden under foot -11y the in - the country and improve it for fu- vading army of the enemy at the turn gonora.ions are questions Of time of the fulfillment of Jehovah's paramount importance. It is timely, judgment against the nation. therefore, that the study of the sci- 4. Tho first -ripe fig before the erica and ort of forestry should he s,inmer--It is n familiar fact that encouraged and developed. In I'alestine, as in other fig produc- To this end a school of forestry as inaugurated a year ago in ...e University of Toronto under tho f rincipalship of 11r. B. E. Fernow, who is now assisted by a staff of two lecturers and one assistant. 1)r. Fernow is teell equipped for itis work. being a graduate of the Forest Academyat Muenden and having received additional training a- the University of Koenigsberg, Germany, of which country he is a native. For twelve years (I'+HG-Ises) hn held the position of chief of the Pivisiun of Forestry in the United Slates Department of Agriculture,! which lie left to become head of the tical experience and submit an tip - College of Forestry connected with proved thesis to the faculty. Cornell University. Later. after This fall the University of New eeveral years paned as consulting Brunswick has inaugurated a four forest engineer, he organized the years' course in forestry, leading forestry department of the Penusyl• to the degree of Bachelor of feci- ania Stege College. leaving there once in Forestry (B.S.F.). The IIENRY F. COPE. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV. 29. Lemma iN. World's Temperance Sunday. Golden Text, I. Cor. 9. 27. disguise. TE.t('HiNG FORESTRY. remnant or residue of the faithful whom Jehovah shall redeem and to whore he himself will become a source of beauty, strength and joy. 7. And even these -Tho men at Jerusalem among whole the priest and the prophet aro especially re- ferred to because of their being the spiritual leaders of the people. It was they who opposed Isaiah in the name of Jehovah, and claimed to have the authority of divine reve- lation back of them in this opposi- tion and in the support of the po- liticians. Reel with strong drink -Judah, on the whole, still contrasted fav- orably with Israel, but even hero the besetting sin had for a long time been drunkenness. Swallowed up of wine --Perhaps better "confused with wine," or 'wholly absorbed in their carous- ings." The meaning in the origin - n1 is not clear. Err in vision -Deceive themselves with regard to supposed divine re- lelations which they claim to have received. 8. Full of vomit ni cl filthiness - Literelly so, these words of the prophet reflecting vividly the aw- ful state of things existing in aria- tueratic social circles of the capital city. We are reminded, as we read these words, of the 'similar state of affairs in Rome shortly before the downfall of the empire many cen- turies later. 9. Whore will he teach knowledge -Tho prophet is here quoting the mocking retort of the nobles and priests whorl he has thus sevely re- buked. and elm apparently inter- ing countries, the main crop of figs rupt him with their scoffing replies. is preceded by a few scattered firstThe quotation continues through fruits. These "first -ripe figs" are the next verse. rtill esteemed a great delicacy. 10. Precept upon precept ; line Ilesea, Micah, Nahum, and Jere- upon line --The Hebrew if this verse mirth, as well ns Isaiah, refer to gives a series of repeated mono - this early fruit (compare ilos. 9. syllables, the exact sense of which 10; Mie. 7. 1; Nab. 3. 12; Jer. 21. is not entirely certain. They are g), intended to imitate the mocking, h. in that day --Tile day of judg- stammering words of drunken men meet and desolation. as these meek the wearisome rope - Will Jehovah of hosts become a tition of the prophet's t arning crown of glom} -:1 beautiful prospeech. The meaning of the whole mise in figurative language to the retort is: "Who nre we that we should be lectured by this man 1 Aro we newly born infants ? Is it, necessary to repeat over and over again to us this message as one would teach a child 1" 11. Nay, but by men of strnnge lips and with stammering tongue - Or, "for with stammering lips," etc. The quotation has ended and tart year to undertake the or -ani>.- department has at its head Prof. the prophet replies to the mocking ation of the Faculty of Forestry at It. iI. Miller, M.A., M.F., a gra- interruption of his hearers by Toronto. j dilate of the Yale Forest School, pointing out that his unwelcome The t'niversity of Toronto eon•' one of the foremost schools of for- and oft -repented message will be Pers the degree of Bachelor of Rel-; clary in the United States. followed by a severer word spoken enco in Forestry 11.S.F.), obtain- ' A third echeel is about to he e!- by Jell, veil hie,'.•:f to titin people able after a four }ears' course, and tablished in the Province of Q ie• in n !till wet- ' . :, , lnrr, .ag. . there is a post•grnduate degree of he', and courses in forestry or pre- intrude. the h;tr.!i ;,/ 1 her/el:emit retest Engineer F.1:.), to obtain 1'arntory thereto are offered in aeee.ite r:f t!ie .1 .a : t 1 mala rel ors. *hie?) a graduate of the forestry other universities and agricult►:ral 12 Th: - The course .'f a-sti.,n ad- co.tise must have two years' prac• colleges. COMMON-SENSE VERSUS BEAUTY MIRACLES 1111! department does not offer • loosen her corsets and buy largen short eut to physical beauty nor lower collars. If she has had her face is the wrltrr a worker of mgr- skt,.ned, her case is hopeless. I simply }cies. In tact. the days of physlral refer to this as an Instance ot the perfection and miracles •like •re past renalty some wom-n pay for submit - he present generation le trying to tint 1•3 the teauty •D.cisilst whet 15- ando the evils of modern living con- mores the upper cutlole entirelr treated by many preceding genorationa Excessive perspiration is another W• hams passed through an age of physical defect or which many women dosing and false living which has re- complain. Ti to often comes from ner- duced sadly the standard tit physical vnusnesa. end can be reached only by ttbeing. We are Just getting back to Treating the nerves. by gaining self- Itlle realisation that plenty of fresh air. control. by >ultivatl-g long sleeping of steam heat: plenty of outdoor lirahour,. and by avoiding that sense of of hothouse existence. -plenty of d-iving one's Belt every moment of the kimple food not Trench catering. are day To recur• temporary relief and heeded to develop physical teauty. •scold unpleasant odors, bathe the 'free - Twenty years of right living will re- ed parte with warm water In which belt In a new and Ane race of children belt Irg ■oda has been duscived. hall a but until that time comes. most of us tee•pountul of the powder to a quart will be seeking moans of softening et water. Physical detects which cannot De en- The woman who i.as been years ac- tlroly eradicated. Hence som. of the getting ayrinkles expects that a "real request■ which reach me by marl would beauty doctor" can fill them out In a he farcical If they wore not so pathetic. few weeks• provided the patient has the Women who have defied nature now price of the treatment. This is • cure Want remedies with which to outwit which money cannot buy. It lies In th• her. Women with physical detects patience and disposition of the patient. Ilvhleb would defy the surgeon's knife First learn what cause, your wrinkles. Want to know how to dose themselves Ti may not always be time. You may end outdo doctors and surgeons In have some other ailment which Is twenty -tour hours. digging wrinkles info a akin which Please bear In mind that this derm:I- should be Aawlees. Perhaps your feet (rent, as I Bald before. does not preach ache. That will cauaa a drawn look the working of beauty miracles. It which will end In writ.:;ies around your `Imply tries to chew you that by means mouth. Perhaps your eyesight is tall - of common-sense. a healthful life and Ing. Rquinting wilt cause wrinkles persistent use of sane. simple remedies. around the eyes and crow's fret. Have rnu can Improve your appearance. mini- your *yea examined and relieve the Miss your physical defects and be as strain. attractive as Dame Nature Intended you Try first to trace your wrinkles to 10 be. But It you are not willing to some ache or pain which ran be re- live • simpler. saner lite. and to persist lleved. If this does not exist end It 1■ for weeks or even months in the use a question of years. then p.rhap• yea of remedies auggestet you cannot •x- are using the wrong face lotion. The beet Improvement. woman with • dry skin alt. -odd never For instance. a woman writes that nee a lotion containing an astringent phe looks florid. almost apoplectic, Ilkap borax of benzoln. Her skin re- impeclally in evening gowns. She quires • cream that will soften. not wants a "bleach. Internal or external.•' draw It. If the wrinkles are very pro - A florid cemplexlon cannot be soft- flounced. the flesh can be ted with the tonedb7 any bleach. This woman ad- following cream. but thl• Fount not le Lntts that mho hu taken arsrnlc Inter- used when there le a tendency to a ally but It has had no effect on her afros-th of hair or down on the face. as Wise color. 11 she took enough arsenic lanolin will encourage this growth: to reduce a naturally florid complexion Tannin 1 -3 gramme pallor she would not lime to enjoy Lanoline 10 grammes her triumph. $he must roach the cause All of sweet slmends re gramrn.• for ago high color. which may be over- Melt th- lanolin• •nd ell In a double *sting and drinking. tight lacing or the holier with es little heat es possible. *very ootnmon practice of facial skin- Remove from the firs and beat in th• b►Ing. tannin as the mixture cools. It the writer eats very rich fond and Speaking of superfluous- hair, the drinks alcoholic liquors. she trust grad- woman who has a soft down on face Willy reduce her diet. and her color will or arms should not attempt any violent Rade as the stimulants no longer enter means ot removing th1s. The X-ray Is !ter system. It ■h• laces too tightly or used to remove the hair. but It often !wears very tight collars. she must leaves the akin as dry se parchment. is the rest, the only means of avert- Soon the trembling comes on, the ing the impending disasters; and animal is no longer able to stand, this alone is the one possible means its breathing becomes slower and ot bringing refreshing to the ox- slower, its eyes are dull and glazed, haunted nation and city. its lege cold, and death follows in claret Punch. --Tek• the Juice of twit13. Therefore -Because the warn- two or three days. Constipation is arra lemons and the grated rind. ad`' ing of the prophet has been dim- tlaually marked throughout the en- o this one small glass of sherry an4 garded the punishment and destruc- ti" course of the disease. nen one quart of claret For over yl tion foretold will surely come upon The malady prevails especially in '�ae*r art ser lapo111naret ddrle.rtnPour hntti. .rof ete marshy districts and along the or lemon verbcu bor. tliFallcity. backward -Retreat from dors of rivers with low banks. Post- mortemlock lee sprig examination of animals[ ' geranium Or their haughty position and be cast dead of the "trembles" shows a d°wit' condition cf the liver. kidaeys, Broken, and snared, and taken heart and muscles similar to that To Whiten the $'tit Defeat and capture and utter de e solation will be. the inevitable out- caused by certain poisons, namely, iffy cem1iexton le A�rl. ar.d ,w, era fatty degeneration and parader ret- • though 1 have lrirA e.'.1 0.' ue .... U.•nfs, conic of the conflict whi••h their talar changes. It is believed to bo ouch es r.etorWe of hyarr•c'n l.rn,n lu:cw etc , 1 ran .e- no Im; r torment Whet apostasy from Jehovah will in the due to the action of a special bacil- end bring upon them. would y'.•t r•o.nn:enA ., n x�•A . renins las, that is, to bo a specific larch' •a -i wha.a:. 4 halon t. r Leah Leeds sad - dolls disease. race? A. A. �0�0 ,��•` �4 In man the affection is belle%cd i Clink yny seta And the tollntvl^g • to arise from drinking, the milk or re, tpe very good for so'1entng and IHEALTII .t di • g the insufficiently cooked flesh whitening your skin. et diseased animals. The symptoms Lotion for the Face. 11 the human being are loss of ap-!tat., +rre.lou,lr DotrM .n1 ettarnedl 1 , ••.rt petite, nausea and vomiting, iiitol- 1 Alcohol ly> r, .te c.atA• r • eine i •.c. erable thirst, extreme muscular; nrrnlorl•ie of mercury t e,. as • weakness, and sernet'mes tremb oiyeerrne 6"1"" ling, obstinate coa.,tipation, a pe- Apply wl'h absci:,ent cotton. !ling, • sweetish odor of the breath, A splinter can be extracted with- 1 and dull pain in the abdomen. out any pain in this manner : Near- ' ear- I Thoro is little or no fever, find of le fill a wide-mouthed bottle with ten the towperature is below nor hot eater; place the injured part, I:inl, tho body, and especially the extremities, feeling euld to the touch. The disease is more fatal in cnt- tie than in than, yet in man it is very serious, and death ie not un- ci !union. The cause of the trou- ble in cattle is unknown. although, as before mentioned, it is believed to be an infectious disease, sole• what similar to tcnt.anus. There is no special treatment, end cases hole to be managed by meting the symptor's as they grist', and trying to maintain the strength ei the patient and to increase the natural powers of resistance. -- Youth's Companion. I:levtrolyste, ur the ele.arlc needle. Is used to pi the hairs out. but It 11 painful and almn,t i,nposslbte In rasa of It.a soft down Holter tar lobica.h the tiny bolts by at, appticatien of p•rox'de f hydro(.en, rine parts; aqu• e.nmonla. ens pr t Appal• with censig hair brush until the hairs are so Wight lh..l they do not 'hoer amelaa1 the droll. Huth patehee, ort Ieh nem t to 11!!s:'re nouns hair. count among the e.tmmo.i. I t•m1riI'te trials, are utt'n du- to a tor- nld liver. Eat quantities of frult. per. Ilcularly oranges; lake •xerclae In the fresh air. and. Internally. min ,alta under the dlrectlon of your pmy.trlan or • reliable druga'Irt. It ih• prtrt•ea ere very deep •rated. while takl'•g the above treat,ernt. touet, the rut• wltb a catnel'■ hair brush di,pod .0 trio fol. lowbleach:- lt'Mtwing preclplf•te 1 dram aubnitrat• nt bismuth 1 rand Ilensolnated lard 1 ounce 11sv• this put ut, 1.y a retponslhlt druggist. and after uelrg It every night for a week. you will find the spate fading. i till•eti. red heir. mud1y 'stmt :list -se 1 air--theee all worry mtddl•-aged we. men. ')u not resort to dyes rr tle•ehes but asrerlain the shampoo bast •sited to the coloring of your hair and use that f ithfully. For halm that aheuld be golden -brown use • 11111• pereslde of hydrogen. sad a halt ttaspoontul is the rinse ,later. Never vs• ammonia or borax on dark hair. but a plata !teen soap s.haripeo with plenty of oleos rinse water. For red hair 1 haul a •peclat shampoo mixture. which It.,, ,nota I will be glad to send on receipt of st..my.d and add aaaaed •n -slope. Tinlpt ng Beverages for Afternoon Function' Fruit Punch. --into • large bowl put 010 heaping cup of mediem Cerk brow) nolosugar, and pour over .ls two cups r� MI?' )r -trong hot tea. I,et this sten 1 until lbs syrup to perfectly cold. Ad 1 to this on• cup of orange juice, on,t cup of lemon Juloe, a s:r. ,II can of prei /mo -d strawlerrles, a small eon ct shredded pineapple and a bottle r, cherries. Dile the frutt and the syr,. t writ. into the punch bowl fr.>,n ani, .t 11 la to be served put a large bl.-.k r.t Ice and then add the mired fruit N.•'1 >pen two bottle• of ringer ale , t 1 lour Into It, the, two or three fart! >ottles of apn111naris venter. Mit w':1 tad serve. If not aw•et enough. •42 nor* sugsr to cult tl,• taste. HEALTH HINTS. over the mouth, and press tightly. The suction will draw the flesh down, and in a minute or two the splinter will come out. For the Convalescent. --When re- covering from sickness and about ready to sit up practice sitting straight up in bed if only for a mo- ment at a time al.d then lean back tat the pillows. 1)o this a:ery fif- teen minutes if possible and you will find when able to get out of bed that the giddiness or uncom- fc.rtable feeling in the head has en- tirely disappeared. Toys for Convalescents. - Mo- thers are often at a loss for play- things for ehildren convalescent from a contagious disease, as they must be burned later on. Cheap play materials, such as wooded beads to be strung on shoestring, colored pegs to be fitted in peg beards, paper chains, etc., may ho ebtnined at the kindergarten sup - Fly houses. MILK -SICKNESS. Within twelve miles e,f St. Paul's Cathedral, London, there were 391 1ailway-Ittati°ns. A doctor practises on his nw'n ratients, hut an amateur musician practitee on the patience of others. You'll never catch on if you don't This is a disease affecting both try ; atul after catching on, don't dairy cattle and roan. It formerly bo afraid to let go if necessary. prevailed extensively in some parts 1 what wile then called the 11'cst, "You ray the officer arrested bei -Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, -hut while you were quietly mi.)ding more particularly in the northern your own business?" "Yes, dour part of Ohio -the Western Reserve. honor. Ile caught me suddenly by The disease disappeared with the the coat collar and threatened to growth of the country, and in later strike me with his staff tlnleem 1 years doubt arose whether there accompanied him to the station- eier was such n malady. Recently, house." "You were quietly attend• however, an affection, presenting ing to your ow n buttlttcse, making the very symptoms described by the nr, name • r disturbance of an,y older medical writers as those of kind "None. whatever, sir." "It milk -sickness, has appeared in New seems very strange. What is your Mexico. business 1'' "I'm a burglar." in tattle the disease is cnlicd the "slows" or the "trembles," the I He had gone to ask her father latter name being given been ,e '•f f••r }ler hand in marriage. peculiar muscular tremor wl,rt'.i •+r, what is it?" snapped out the is a conepienous symptom. '1 be ell mann. "Remember, I am a man animal appears listless and reftise. e : few words." "I don't earn if t.- grate, but drinks eagerly If a .1u nre a man of only ono word, anter is offered, nrld keeps by it• if it's the right one," replied the vacated pr•'t iously by the prophet, self away from the rest of the herd. janitor. lie got the girl. Brilliantine for flair - Will you kindly sae me eimeth!nir to keep the end, of my hair In ti. .! Arte, 1have it flied the short ends all ,tea down over my face. MOLLIE r. 1 em giving you a recipe fora bell. Ilantlne. Put a few drops on the p':Im• of the hands and rub them togeti.er and 'sten smooth bark the hair w,th trern. It takes but a single tow h of the bril- liantine to keep the Rah- In pace. 1 see sure you will And 11 very satisfactory. Brilliantine for flair. /west almond ell 1 fluid ,",res Alcohol 4 fluid ..u. , ea rlyrertns1 null nese• 011 of rose a•ranlutn 11 drops Titin Ankles -high Forel:eaj 1 would 111.. 10 haow whit •1t1 make an• kles thin. 1 Iwl.e.• that wear!.. I.w .•,.w has mad* min• ttd-k. f hay. a ver, blab for►Mrd •, that 1 cann.-I weft my half nR my foe. t•..n you h''n roar 1'.INITr YAi. At to your Aret question, 1 can only suggest that you wear high shoes again. for they are the only things (Mt will rf•,luee your ankle. to their prep.: size. 1f course they swill when you wear low shoes. 1 could suggest nnt5lr.g for you to d) to the nlrtl'er of wearing your hair, ex- !ept to wear a tiny hang be:ow your peml+adour. Thie should be quits thin and should be about three-quarters of •n Inch long. Just a little frill of hair ✓ ound 1't. on. of this forehead. hue • pin aroma' the outer e l to of your pompadour after It Is up and pull down e 1 w hairs now and then. T),Is 1. 110 sets way In welch It 19 rntnlbin foA - prraon with • high forehead to t..0) • flornpaduut 11 was afternoon, and thus „l -tke the teileher of the village school: "Now. boys, the word. 'scan' al the end of a word means 'place of.' Thus, we have Afghanistan, the place of the Afghans; also Hindu- stan, the place of the Ilindus. Now, can anyone give me another instance!" "Yes, lir," said the smallest boy, proudly, "i can. Umhrellestan, the place for um- brella•." in 1810 the world contained only Pe me 210 miles of railway ; there are now over 350,000 miles. lits Tu•kr'}, he'ires.es do not come Into control of their private for - noes until tbty marry. 1