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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1907)
15 EIUITHSUDE SLIDII1G UPVRD DUFFLES EUGUIEERS ' THE OREGON ' SUNDAY JOURNAi; PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNINO. APRIL' 21. 1807. tA Milliner y Thig shows tha cracks la the earth. (Special IHaeetA ta The tarsal.) .' Lewlston, Idaho, April SO. Battling against almost Ineurmonntable odd. a steam shovel la pitted egalnat a, moun tain alida at Culdeeao. while tha North ern Paolflo railroad waits to aao It tba Culdeeao oxtanaion of tha lino from there to arangervMe will ever bo avall . abla Uo far tha mountain haa won in ' tha battle, Tha light haa nettled down to a long, ateady grind, and tho en gineers amy It la simply a question of " wearing away tha mountain.. ' Tba mountain allda la a moat peculiar ona; it la not Ilka anything tba railroad haa aver had to contend . with. If It ware aimply a caeatlon of the mountain coming down from above, then the elide could be stayed. ' But It la the "Mtaaouri hogback" that bafflea the ,anglneera. Not ooly doe the mountain come down - from above, bat It cornea up from be " low. While hundreds-of tone of earth are ellpplng down the aide of the moun tain, the very earth on which the steam ," hovel a tan da la being foroed up from below, due to a curloue combination of pressure which the allde from " above axerts on the Innermost formation of 'the WO. The weight eettlea down and And Their Publishers and tha tottering trees, in tha cut Northern. Pacific, In north Idaho. forces the earth up In a eemt-clrcle from below. . When the original aurvey waa laid out there waa a grade of per cent. Now. af tar the 'team shovel haa gouged lte gTeedy mouth Into the ground for months, the grade la 1 per cent ateeper than tha first grade . flgurea showed. Even at first It waa ao steep that an engine could haul only Ova earn loaded. How long It will Uke to conquer the mountain the engineer venture not to aay. If the ellpplng la over now . the ateara ahovel may be able to reach the original grade aftei a time otherwise a year will be consumed. " ""The first trouble came when the out waa about half done. The earth aeemed to be soft at the bottom, and when the out waa made and allowed the reet tanee to be taken away, the earth kept forcing down raster from above, de scribing a kind of semicircle in ' the bowela of the earth under where the steam ahovel stood, and the flrat thing the englneera knew the whole outfit waa gradually being forced up Into the alr.-.. .. : ---'- ' :T Then the earth In the cut and on the aide, of It began to crack and at times It shivered and rocked aa though shaken on tha Culdesao extension of tha by a alight earthquake. Aa tha work progressed the eracka grew wider and ran back ttp the hillside. Some of them are 0 to IS feet long and from S to 10 feet deep. They run back np the moon tain from tha out for a quarter of . a mile. Then the treea on tha mountainalde began to ahow Mgna of swaying and toppling over. The aide of the mountain la heavily timbered, and these tall treea lie In every direction, some of them tangled and matted. . Borne of them have alid down Into the out, and have been taken oat of the way of the at earn ahov el. The earth here seems to be a broken shale and a peculiar kind of clay. Although tho bottom of thla eat la now alx feet higher than It waa a year ago, when the nrst shovelful of earth was - taken out, and the company has apent tens of thousands of dollars, an other slide which bids fair to be fully as serious haa occurred about, a. mile and a half from thla one. This la lust wbera tha Una enters the canyon, which It follows -for some time to get out' on tha prairie on the way. to Grangevllle, Five acres of land In a wheat Jeld haa broken away and haa settled so. aa to be vory noticeable. , CHRISTIAN BCDXNCJS" By Mark Twain. Several yeara ago , when the Cosmopolitan Mag ,n aalne announced an article on ; "Christian Solenc"- by Mark Twain, a. broad smile went over the face of the country, and It may be re membered that (in Portland at leaaO the edition waa exhausted inside of i hours and that nlne-tentha of the com munity bad to borrow their nelghbofa Cwith these recollections still fresh In the mind, the publlo hailed ""njj llaht the announcement that tha bril liant humorist waa about to laaua a book on tha same subject. When It ar rived It was not found leaa pleasing ' from the fact that It Opened with a good part of the article that had pra , vloualy appeared. ' ' ' , . But some yearn have elapsed since ' the flrat article appeared and with that wonderful faculty for looking beneath the surface which bas made Mark Twain at once the moot brilliant and enduring of America -greet army of ''really fine humorists, he has again taken P the aubject. and. while In no . .bating the rich humor of the flrat article, be ha treated the aubiect front another and more Important standpoint 'He recognlae In Chrtatlan Science a rawer and a reality which apparently be ' jutle dreamed of at that time. He has "turned upen Mrs. Eddy, her book and her creed an analytical searchlight. which can aareiy do eaiu ukj t before wen auwecwa xv. - . . ..lit h.ntiv characterise - the una vui -- bcok as a critleiam ror we auuior in . . i- mm than (mlniona but Tfjp njur, . 1. bw v those facts he atrtpa naked and then- rrent a them in tueir ime iiiuu.nu. ragardleaa of which way they cut Con to many authors who 1 treat the subject aa a paaalng erase, Mark Twain sees strong enduring V qualities In ft. and while affecting none of the high and lofty oenUment Indulged In by Its friends, gives indisputable reasons for Its endurance and subatantiatea hie eon clualona with unquestionable logic. -On this point he. eays flf at quoting the portion of the scripture that haa given . . i tin A mm A tn the ntane Mrs. c-"0 "- - - ---- r she hoWa " 'And there appeared a great wonder in neavon; w. tho un and the moon under her feet.' eta. The woman clothed with the sun will be a portrayal of Mrs. Eddy.v . "IS it Insanity to believe that Chris , -i . i. AamHnAA ta make the tlnn dcibiiv ' - moat formidable show that any new re ligion ha mailt l m wui ta iitv Dirin muv w- --- end that within a century from now It stray atana eecona xwm i . ..t ntwv In Chrtstendomf nuiTiwi - . , . "It haa ita atan xu sow - phenomenally gooa one. wmwrn, ; .nM.iiiMa with pun tit n t v ia iaivri iu"s . . . acceleraUng ewlftneea It haa a better fbsnoe to stow ana prowp-r wn . i... Takes Off The Chill i "Makes R4 Elood POSTUM FOOD COFFEE "There's a Raatoo" permanence than . any other existing tarn'; for It ha mora to Offer than any other.'' s- '. -- " ' ' '"' " '-' 1 . . The past teaches as that In order to auoceed, a movement like thla must not be mere philosophy. It muat be religious; also, that It muat not claim entire orig inality; but" must content Itself with passing for an Improvement on an ex isting religion and' ahow Its hand later, when atrong and prosperous " liae mo- hAmraedanlsm. Next there must 1 be money and plenty of It Next V the power and authority and capital muse be concentrated In the grip of a small and Irresponalble clique, with nobody out- aide -privileged to aak queatlona or find fault Next aa before remarkable. It muat bait Ita hook with aom new and attractive advantages over the bait of fered by Its competitors." " Thua tba author spreads out me a map, tha enduring foundation of the Christian Selene cult He then takes up In detail these varloua phases and treats every feature in nis awn inim itable way. . ' . - ; His 'view of the mercenary ' side er Mrs, Eddy and her religion and the way he winnows her professions 'separating tha sralna of truth from - the chaff of verboatty and pretention will perhapa be tha most objectionable feature of tba book to her followers.. But In dis puting what Is said they will have to meet cold facta. He saysv "For instance, consider hie llttlt book; the little book exposed in the sky 11 centuries ago by - the flaming angel of the Apooalypee, . ' and - handed down to Mr. Mary Baker O. Eddy of New Hampahire, and translated by her, word for word. Into English (with help of a poltaher) and now published and distributed In hundreds of editions by her at a clear profit of TOO per cent a profit which clearly belongs to the angel "Of the Apocalypse, and let him collect it IX he can." By far tha strongest part af the book and where the light la thrown on with unrelenting power and discrimination Is . that portion relating to tba-church government and Mrs. Eddy's autocratlo power. Much of thla bear mora or leaa directly xin the controversy that I now being waged between Mrs. Eddy's son and the trustees of the "First Church of Christ- , - - -: . . .t After reading tha book no one could believe' for a moment that .ire. Eddy had ever delegated one whit of her power, or parted with on dollar of her vast aocumulatlone to any one, and a perusal of the book will create a pro frund Interest In the worldly litigation now pending between her cast-off aon and "a woman , clothed with the sun and the moon under her feet" V j In Its way the book I aa important a anything the author has ever writ ten, and will perhaps-bars mora far reaching effects. Harper 4t Brother. Prlc tl.0. , . , -., : TTllma" By William Till highest Eldrtdge. A most faacinating story of present times and conditions and mod errf conveniences and comforts, but so filled with gray old oastlea and their "dunjon keeps, - where gallant knights won fair ladles and with swords snd spurs and firearms making their en trance and exit at every chapter the reader la ram to neneve he la back In mediaeval daya where the feudal lord a played the brilliant gam of politic at the sword s point. By an odd chance a young American millionaire finds htmaelf Involved In a court intrigue a.nd deeply in love at the am time, Tha scene of the story Is the kingdom of "Scarvanla, a little country tucked away In the - hills of southern Europe; In many reapecta quite English and a- trifle American. It ia ao far away that one hardly ever hear of it nine tenth of tha world doe not know it extata." , HUma. th princess, make a beautiful and lancinating heroine, while the American hero fumlnhee an Interest that never flag from beginning to nn Ish of the book. The character sketch are all excellent and without exaggera tion, whlla th plot - la well - sustained and reaches climax after climax of com pelling Intensity, bat th most thrilling period is reached when tha princess Is rescued from th prima minister and tha vUllaa Helnrtch In the old Zergald castle. It la hardly Just however, to point to on Incident above another In pointing out tha good feature of th book, for It 1 on of the few work of fiction without weak spots to spoil th general character of the story. ' Th book 1 - handsomely bound and well Illustrated by Harriaon Fisher and Martin Justice. Dodd, Mead Co. Price Th Brass Bowf By Louis Joseph Vanoe, This Is a story, brilliant In con ception and daring In execution, with a style quite aa pleasing aa Mr. Vance's popular book, Tba Private War," more I fascinatingly Interesting and much more plausible. It la a detective, aociety and romantlo tale all In en and woven to gether with threada of both - gay. and animated humor and touching pathos, wbieh run ao closely parallel th reader does not know whether to laugh at th ridiculous er weep at the tragical, or to give way to his excitement and turn to th hack page and see how It ail end a. , , . . ' Th here 1 a wealthy New Torker who la able to, and does, go th full paoe of th Idl rich, with touring car and all th accompaniment. He fall In with a woman burglar who mistakes him for the famous crook, Dan Anlsty, whose double he seems to be. She is living a dual life and tha cause of It la the mystery of "The Brass BowL" For a while this girt sometimes the daughter of 'Judge Wentworth. and again Miss Sylvia Graeme, lead Dan or. aa hla young friends called him In admiration "Mad" Maltland, a merry and' exciting life, full of strange adven ture and animated Incident , . , It Is a book that goes through many heart throbs, however, to a . most de lightful ending and while hardly con ventional. It Is In the most modern and businesslike channel, and th wedding bells begin to chime when-"central" curtly growls "Are yon throughV The book has a number of good Illustrations by Orson Lowell. Bobbs, Merrill A Co. Priee 11.60..' . f , , .- . . , " "Congressman Pamphrey, the Peo ple's Friend" By John T. MaCutcheon. It Is rarely that the combination of a facile writer and a ready pencil are found In ona peraon, but Mr. McCutch eon has demonstrated that It can be done, and in his case done successfully and without aacrlflotng either feature. ' The publishers announce that lt Is a book of drawings by the moot famous American cartoonists, showing him In hi funniest vein and representing his happiest achievement"; also that "the ploturea are accompanied by a running commentary which forms In continuous narrative an Intensely amualng social and political satire." - All of which la none too much to say for the little book. The pictures alone might tell the tale of the western con gressman who went to Washington to legislate the corporationa out of busi ness, but himself went th way of all flesh when the gilded aide of bualneea and aociety presented Itself to him and he was a thousand mtlea away from bta constituents. But In the narrative that goes with thsm the author ahows him self an adept -at painting to a nloety the political maneuvers that are practiced by the corporationa upon the unwary, and the ease with which they can oarry their purposes. i ' Th book haa a clever Introduction by Cnole Joe" Cannon, who aay In part: "I'd Ilk to know Pumphrey better. He belong to a type of statesmen that I've seen exploited frequently In the publlo press, but have never had the pleasure of laying my handa on.. So I hope hell eome around once at leaat once." , Bobba, Merrill A Co. Price f 1.JS. . Tore rone Verse." By W. W. Whit- lock. Price. ii.o. The Mermaid.'' Seattle' fcaftee HeroaatHe aasettoa -rortdaad'a Sain. ' ' , 'llif Extraordinary- Seattle's . finest retail Millinery Stock moved to Portland and placed orr the altar of sacrifice at merciless slaughter. Next to Portland, Seattle le exert enolng tba biggeet real aetata boom of any city hi America, at the present time. A evidence of thla, th brmnoh store of the "Vogue" Millinery com pany, at ' 400 Washington etreet - thla c..y, ha accepted a cash bonua of t&.OOO tit Its leas In Seattle and will remove all of Ita fine new millinery stock at once to this city, where It will be placed on forced sale at Its Portland store, 400 Washington street between Tenth and Eleventh, at aa early data. On account of - the big bonus received for their lease tha management an nounce they are - willing ..to sacrifice prices to bare cost of materlala to dis pose of - the overstock quickly. A rare chance ahead for Portland women to purchase apring millinery at wonderful reduction. Further partlcuiara aa to data of opening will follow soon. - The Massacre Starts Tomorrow- MONDAY- At 9:00 A. M. i . . , . - s . y5,0QQ WORTH OF THE WORLD'S NEWEST AND MOST EXQUISITE MILLINERY CREATIONSTHE : LATEST FANCIES OF THE BEST MILLINERS OF TWO CONTINENTS ON SALE AT LESS THAN YOU CAN BUY COMMONPLACE HATS FOR ANYWHERE IN AMERICA 1 . ' 4 t ' Owing- to the fact that we received a eah bonus of $5,000 for the leaje of our branch atone at Seattle, necesoltatina; tarnediate ewmen ation of that tore, we hive moved our magnificent stock to Portland and combined it with onr local atock at our tore: nTHEVOGUS ' MILLINERY PAJILOJIS, 409 Washington etreet. Of course, this creates a vast overstock. In order to dispose of the sanw at once, we have decided to place the combined stocks in a . ' ' 1 ; - i t GRAND SWEEPING SLAUGHTER SALE OPENINO MONDAY. . - ' Wa bare deducted $2.500-on half tha bonne wa received fof our Seattle ;itore front the actual coat vahia of the hate to their raakery and Portland women will receive the benefit of the same, thus getting their Spring and Summer Millinery at less thsn net cost of makin, but - rl ' '".'-'. '''.''. :' . ' -. . : ' ; : -,''- ':- :" ' '-''v; ':: . X7rT3 A v T7T3X7 H A VQ AMT V After a certain amount has been realised an stocks lightened to tha I UK U afV J1 Xl VV Ut X O VJ X ;nonn4 haU resume ttvx prlcea. Every hat is new this sea eon. Masterpieces of spring's own brightest millinery emblems, arranged in most attractive groupings and color schemes and blending '''of exquisite tints. v. ,,r. v ..' ' v.".. '- .' , .- : . ?-'J s : f, ':- ' ' -,: r It Will Be Your Loss if You Spend a Dollar for Millinery Outside this Great Sale This Week! " Space does not admit of quoting the full list of prices and reductions, but, merely as examples, we print this quartet of mention. : MAGNIFICENT PATTERN DATS Unmatchable values at $30 - and $35. Sale price.';...; Elegant confections, the most stunning millinery ever sold in any local store t at $10 and $12, will go in rfi a q r the sale at.,.............. ty1?? $14, The most beautiful millinery creations . ever shown in Portland at lS and $20. Sale price. . . $9a9 0 'And' hosts of others at same marvelous, value will sell like "'hot cakes at ?2.45, $1.95, ?1.45 and 08. ' 4V TASTEFULLY AND EXQUISITELY TRIMMED, READY-TO-WEAR. TAILORED AND STREET STYLES IN - y AUTHORITATIVE MODELS. SALE OPENS AT 9 A.M. TOMORROW-MONDAY AT "VOGUE" MILLINERY PARLORS All cars transfer to the tale. Plenty of .expert aalesfolk In attendance. 409 Washington St, Between Tenth ' and Eleventh Streets. mmmmmmm"!!!!r . - -gggaBg?J?) V. 1 . a. mm Br Thomaa JtcK-ean. fn . . . ..t u.rv Isabel WTmore. U !! . ; The name et YJl Uoe Whltlock. the autnor i"- . . .t.. uttla volumee of ZTou et Richard O. Bada-r. la well known te aruuna ntf",V'r fon. and vloualr puoiianea '""'-,": ' such aa and newapaper. otth. saaM.." Life. ; a-- H-hter.,,, e Wirt-nVaraat tSiln. Wwev.'. have .Ujrlna; uanr ' T" i it.. uhiiiM well rr'a" per'pWe.n the l,ook. ,b4he Mermaid- takea tta title from the flrat noem Which oocuplee a ood por. H ofthe book which. In Ita entirety. I! of ireat propoitione. "The Mar to .lealteney. founded npon Sat fabled Inhabiunt of the sea. It la u.lca 1 !n 1U rhythm, but rather Mv.re poli: InrpretatTon of toJ th. pVe-lnV mrlt of orlrlnallt,. no't oompar. favorably wlth th. -hort.poem. that foUow It i: e,rahTmrrh.rh.v. tf but ' Sin ade famous by one of the Vt renowned mind, .f th. wor It c revokes comparisons which throw the leaaer work Into Inalgnlflcnce. "Adrlenne" ta the flrat of a doaen or mora wema and a Ivea th. book Ita title. U U oTaVaTpasee In length and la a ii is - .... .. . mnlni maiden to wbSS tn. anthor rneat-ly addr the queatlon. . . "Adrlenne. Adrtenn - , . Oh. when, oh when. . ' WUI yon wake and eeaae your dfeanv - . mr , -. t ' Adrlenne awakes when aha see. a atatdy .hip. freiahted with human Uvea. o down, and a beautiful boy. cold tn death, ta waahed to her feet ' M .(r. nnattn Imasinlna thor 11 WUUlu l-.- - wr " eufhly to enter Into AdHenne a rhapsody of love ana eaueiacnun. anu uar paaalon for tha "beautiful on. aent by the atorm." er the calm realauatlon and Joy at being, toaether. waahed Into the "briny deep." To author aeema, how ever, to have a deeper meaning than the mere tale would Imply for In her dedloatlon Of th. book "to a tm. friend." aha aayat "These poems are arranred In the order In which they wer. written, thus maklnc an unbroken ehaln In th. development of an Idea," but of Adrl anne ah.- Bay.: "Interpret the story as y. will. ' 'Tie only a simple eea-tale till.'' In tha shorter poems the author haa f ran expreaaloa to some fin. thought. ia it,. mmb Tmb Iff Talth:" but they all lack tna line pousn w m rich, vocabulary. .; One of the moat Intereatlng nina traUve feature, of the May Century wUl be th. reproduction of a group of Ideal aubjecta "A Tale of laolde," "The Bank, of Lethe," "Th. Death of tha Rose." etc. posed and produced by F. Benedict Heraog. whose work la ranked aa displaying creative and constructive facultle. of a dlatlnctly high order, and aa Introducing an entirely new note Into modern photography. It adda to tha In terest of Dr. Heraog's work te know that bla photography la only on. of many demaade he la an electrical en gineer and patent attorney; and Inventor of many electrical devtoea. a member of many eclentlflo and art aoctetlea, and, a trustee of th. Municipal Art aociety. "Oregon". Big 8tlck: The Story of th. Initiative and Referendum." by Lute Pease. Thla la the title and aubiect of an article that will appear ta the May la sue of the Paclfio Monthly. It le a moat timely and lnt.re.Ung article, and one of momentoua Import for It deaia with the very Ufa . blood of our republic. Lord Macaulay, being asked, upon hla return from America, what he thought ef a Republican government, aa prac ticed In th. . United Statea. express d hlraeelf aa very much pleased, but aald "It la too Boon to pronounce It a euc- ceae. It remain, to be Been whether Ita Institutions can - stand tha Btreas of toe fears." How that etreea baa been straining and tugging at them for. the laat - quarter of a century, everyone knowa. and alao how th. "government of th. people and for the people" has grad. ually been ellpplng out of th. hands of tha people Into th.' handa of th. political boss and .very principle of a democratic gov.rnm.nt haa been vio lated. ' , - , . It waa Oragon'a glory to take the first step toward restoring the right of gov ernment to all the people, and thereby saving tha oleaster to her Inetltutlona that Lord Macaulay foreahadowad al most a century ago. This has bean dona through th. Initia tive and referendum a phrase glibly bandied about with the vaguest Idea of ita real meaning, tta far reaching Big niflcance or Ita orirln. . In treating the Bub'ect, Mr. Peeae haa graphically handled aU theee point, and produced an article ef Intena. Intereat, which should be read by every reaident of Oregon and then paaaed on to those atatee which are still groping In th. dark while seeing their Inherited rtghte wrested from them. Largely through th. example of Oregon, several atatea hare taken th. preliminary atepa to ward reatnrlng to their cltlaena the right of eelf-govemment, aa Oregon le enjoying It: and It will be a matter of general eatiafactlon. now the aubject haa become auch a vital one and 1 more or leas, attracting the attention of the whole country, thnt It ehoul l i SO clearly and forcibly present,!, In t I popular - magaatna, and by ao elever a weetern writer aa Mr. rsase, wno naa aean the movement grow from Ita In ception and studied, with diligent at tention, tta results. REFLECTIONS ON CLOTHES ... . The Impossibility of Looking Uke ' 0 , tho Advertisements. ; "It Is quit, possible that X delude myself about a whole lot of things." observed tha unpretentious man, "but there 1. on. point upon which I make no mistake whatever I am aura. "I never try to bamboo ale myself Into tha belief that I'll aver, in this world or any other, present anything Ilk. th. aurpaaslngly perfect appearance In a new suit of clothe, that th. young fel low. In th. clothing and tailoring ad vertlaeroenta present. ' "Ton must have noticed how those fin. strapping young fallow. In th. readymad. clothing and th. tailoring advertisement, look? Leave aalda thalr toga, and In th. matter of phyalque alone they've got th. Dana Qibeon and tba Chandler Chrtaty men backed right oft tha boards, so to weak; vast ahould era. so', you'd think tb.y'd never be able to pass through any ordinary door way; leg. of herculean development, yet shapely and ornamental; beads set on their shoulders as If by th. hands of a Phidias: fine, aristocratic, perfectly chiselled, slightly bored countenance and a general graceful languor about em I certainly do wonder. always. where those fin. fellow, lire and hav. their being! "But tha extraordinary . thing about them la th. way their clothe, fit them I Everything anug, and yet with a certain neglige, looseness, all the aeama In lust the right place, the crease, pressed tight, every check or pin atrlpe tn th. goods showing, .vetv-the wrinkle, add' Ing a certain careless, grace to th. gen eral effect my. but It la faacinating to look at those plcturesl """Then again, those handsome fellow. In th. ready-mad. clothing and tailoring ad vert teem ante know how to etrtka auch picturesque yet perfectly eaay and na tural postures! Ton take the ordinary man and let mm ait on a ta Don ret, for Instance, - with hla lega crossed and there wont be a thing graceful or en gaging about him. But those foliowa In tha advertisements can ait on any old thing on a barb wire fence, I truly believe and look Just as neat and tidy and graceful, with their little swish canea resting at eflee, aa any young Narcissus examining his reflection In a pool ef water. Tve got a conG-unn or t!ioe pic ture been keeping thorn f -r a long time now. and evry time I fM fmrn. tenti with t-1 - "nv nr ci t .i.m. look I i i,l yr f!t a 1 i. 'i if !' plcf.i i s-t r " f ' ;. ' l ' I ! f ..! 1 t -t. i V v i ' t f . t i r j r. '"nil 1 l ' i : f . i i r ! ; . ' r MOTEL. AUDUDON tax ymAjroisco xumorxAV vlabt ot.t. Single nxuna er ea eirtte. Elevator, etmm Seat, !-trle tlfhte ane all aiedsra eaHT.nl entse. Strictly flrat-rUae, Coaela to mtinp ptng centers. Os dlreet ties froot earry and laird sad TewsMS. depot latss SI as. S3S Kills st, mi Via heas aveaee. C. B. OA.1TKB. Msr. my own peraon, and I am content then to go my own humble way looking an baggy and bunchy and clumsy as I know I muat hav. been Intended to look from th. beginning." Woman'. IVerod-ntlve. From th. South China Poet A young missionary In China trav elled many miles to Shanghai to m.t bis sweetheart, to whom he was to te married la the cathedral there. Quests and clergy were aasemhla I, but a few mlnutea before the hour fixed earn, a message that the brn;. having arrived In Shanghai had ehaor.. : her mind, aad decided to return to I up land. The couple had not eeen ea ; other for five years. Watering Plants. From tha Garden. No plant ahould be glveo nw-i . ment It It ahows plain elsne of at; t r talning euffiolent for Immerltat. - 'Drlbleta" are not beneficial; tue l way to water a plant la t t n th. whol. pot In a pall of en- r ; a qnertor to hlf en ho'i" L 1 -'" TBI WW ;.3i:c:n::-:r. 1hs rin-n. Ul Art h -rW l.r!!"!1- r t J rva!.'l on A ' . f,t '