XOUl5 x Erosion In the Prtpart br ) Nstlonil Oonpbl HovUly, Wublnstoa. D. C.) THE dainty clouds that float tn a u minor sky and their darker brothers are only mists, but they constitute nature's sharpest tool for shaping the surface of the earth. Over anil over again. In the millions of years they have been at work, they have carried all the oceans and have hurled them down upon the land bil lions of cubic miles of water. They have washed away mountains greater than the Himalayas. They have filled up oceans as broad and deep as the Atlantic. If we were to slice down through the crust of the earth -for thousands of feet a mile, five miles. In places even ten we would carve through cloud-built rocks, sediments laid down, grain upon graint each carried by drops of water that have fallen from the skies. The clouds have carved great val leys such as the Grand canyon. They bore the feathery snowfluke which built up the huge glaciers that crushed and ground their way equa torward during the Ice ages. They furnished the chief reagent for nature's laboratory, dissolving and bringing together the minerals scat tered through the rocks. The suit that savors our food, the clay that builds our bouses, the iron that has made industrialism and the age of steel to single out but three are largely gifts of the clouds. Those are the labors of the past Cut the clouds are working sow as ceaselessly as they worked eons be fore man came upon the earth. Like the tools of the sculptor, these chisels of the sun, under the great mallet of gravity are steadily shaping the earth day by day. They spend themselves to make the streams, to water the crops, to feed the world. But new cloud genera tions are ever coming on to take their places. Hew Clouds Are Formed. The birth of a cloud is a puzzle to the observer. The sky is apparently clear; then suddenly, seemingly from nowhere, a cloud patch Is floating aMl. Nature seems to be playing tricks, like a conjurer who draws kicking rabbits from an empty hat. MiiM clouds have their besinnlngs In the oceans, started by the restless ness of the Inconceivably small and Inconceivably numerous water mole cules that have fought their adven turous way to these great basins, i In the form of water, these little molecules are relatively at rest, hud dled close to their fellows, but fairly free to slip about In the crowd of wa ter particles. As they are pressed to gether, they vibrate, as do all other molecules of matter. In the delightfully ordered world ot the water molecules there is more room at the top than anywhere else, jind there the most active molecules mude more active by greater heat mnke their wny. Like flying fishes, many of the molecules fall back Into the water; but, unlike them, some can tear themselves entirely free. It Is as If, magically, the fish became a bird. The escaped molecules are In a sense no longer water; they have become transformed by this process of evapo ration Into a vnpor or gas. Vapor molecules are lighter-than the oxygen and nitrogen molecules of the nlr. The vapor-laden air there fore rises for exactly the same reason that a balloon rises. The warmer the nlr, the more vapor It can contain. If, un the other hand, warm air contain ing some vnpor Is cooled, Its capacity for vapor diminishes. This decrease In vapor capneity takes place In block of moist air as it rises Into the rooter upper regions, and If It rises Like Snug-Fitting HaU -Eecause of Lightness Anos Is responsible for a new hat medium thut looks like struw Jersey and is appropriately named vlsca Jer sey. She uses this for turbans and llttlo snug lining caps that are par ticularly re-otmneiided because of their lightness. Home of these little iliuped turbans employ two tones of a single color or contrasting shades and sometimes she uses fentherr as a decorative treatment on a little cup. v - Ill Grand Canyon. high enough to cool to the critical point, it simply drops part of Its vapor load. Thtn the Rain Falls. As more and more droplets gather, they form a great misty muss thick and dense enough to olwure the sky When water-vapor particles condense into water droplets, whether on their rise from the sea or after numerous cloud-making adventures, they not only grasp their nearest fellow mole cules, but they must And Infinitesimal bits of floating material, such as dust motes a sort of magic carpet and crowd upon them. Widely separated, the dust motet, with their vnpor passengers, at first float about like asteroids In space, but gradually the cold of the upper re gions causes more and more of the vapor molecule to Jump out of their gaseous form and attach them selves to existing droplets until the latter are built Into drops heavy enough to fall earthward. The greatest speed at which rain drop may strike the earth, no matter from how great a height It fulls. Is close to 30 feet a second a speed less than that of a pebble dropped from a fourth-story window. In the average cloud that floats on an overcast but rainless day a cloud such as those that bear most of the world's water from the sea there are not more than two tablespoonfula ot water In cloud enough to fill the big gest furniture van; and, unless you live In a mansion, your dining room could not bold balf the cloud sub stance that nature has crammed Into one glare of water on your breakfast table. Clouds Work for Man. Clouds are power for man as well ' as for nature. The clean white scrap of mist flouting la the sky and the grimy, bfack lump of coal far under ground are brothers under their sinks both children of the sun. One, born millions of years ago and locked deep In the earth, must be tollfully dug out and brought to the surface before It will yield the power It holds. The other, born yesterday, will presently mine Itself; and if Its fragments are merely guided on their dash to the sea, they seem eager to turn man's machinery. Man cannot tow bit loads of sky coal where be will. Nature sends them along definite blghwajt and dumps them with fair regularity In her chosen places. For aget man used them only near where they fell or along the channels they wore tn their slide seaward; but now be bat In effect scattered the clouds. II has learned to transmute the down hill wanderlust of their fragments Into Invisible put potent streams of elec trons that will course along wires Tar from the old limiting channels. And now, though you live In a desert where you seldom see a cloud, you may bava those of more favored lands for your servants. Tress a button and they light your house, boll your coffee, and perhaps even curl your hair. Fortunate It Is that that portion of the sea which hanii ever In the air Is scattered ; for If all the clouds should gather and dump their burdens, bow over one limited area, now over an other, man and his works and most vegetation would be uprooted . and swept from the fare of the earth. It Is no less fortunate thut rivers and glaciers and clouds are pouring water Into the real almost exactly as fust as it Is belli! taken out by the sun. If In some wny the amount which now evaporates dully were pocketed In a Gargantuan cave or flung away Into space, the oceans would lost lens than 2.7IIO years. An Interesting model has a foundation of vlsca Jersey and Is entirely covered with little white feathers dotted In navy blue. The vogue for very tiny hats that are merely cops Is even extended to the evening mode, A Lnnvln model Is featured In both gold and silver metal I'ice. Velvet Jackets Favored The short, transparent velvet Jack et, lined with chiffon and In all colors, Is very much favored. OUR COMIC SECTION THE FEATHERHEADS rti i tue ftcntoto a it. i i x ruo jP i C ? FINNEY OF THE FORCE MKT" fW I y F U. Vc6v Sf I HAfc f m ,!', FJ r IT'S HQS. ( WWfit 16 ivESfw hiTl V JCV iDfAQ.y Wat it's a veqV I IS MASK tj y OCCAStQN J ) Our Pet Peeve Rj FHIX- TUE niXONf AK I CWCKErJ. I J ( 0 Me, Too om-hmm:- im GOlMO TO HAVllr AOMADA WRVf rr voovjout Yes, Too Much Powder Receive Recognition From German Umvenuy Mr. William I. Wslis. The University of CoVKne, flermanyk bus Just paid to air. William li Welsa, of Whetdlnir, W. Va., on of th founders nnd (leliernl Manager of Storting Trodticts (Incorporated), and now Vice Trosldcut and tieneral Man ager of I'nig Iiicorporatcil, an unusual distinction by bestowing unanimously upon him tho tlllo of Poctor rhlloso phlne llonorU Causa. Mr. Weiss Is the nrat ana oniy American to be o linuorvd by this world famous German Institution. This mark of preferment came to Mr. Weiss In recognition of his efforts to further the Industrial relations that have extended over more than a decade between the Mrectors and Scientific and Chemical alnffs of (lor man and American rharmaceullcal firms that aro prominent In Interna tional Industrial affairs. IXirlng the past few years Mr. Weiss lias been a frequent visitor to Kuropo ami Is a recognised link tn Strengthening commercial friendship between the old and new continents, truth emphasised by the action at Cologne. Thert 1$ Hop Mury Mother, I'm afraid Mrs. Jones Will never visit us agulu. Mother Whut makes you thluk Sol Mary How can she If ahe keeps on staying? Not Alwayi on Surfaco "He who tells the truth," said III 1I. the sane of Chinatown, "must la bor long In patient silence to discover IC Washington Star. Only Think i H Hai "So your aon has completed his edu cation." "(Jreat Hcott, nol Why, be t Just out of college." Rarely Loit Teacher "Where are elephants usually found?" Hoy "1'lease, air, they're so big they aren't often lost!" A little love and understanding, thinks the successful wife, writing In Farm and Fireside, will rover a mul titude of sins In a husbsnd. MOST peeple know tliis absolutd antidote for pain, but are you careful to say Bayer when you buy it? And do you always give a glance to tea Bayer on the box and the word gtnuint printed In red t It isn't the genuine Bayer Aipirin without it t A drugstore always has Bayer, with the proven directions tucked in every bos: imlrtR Is IIm imfci rk of llavir IMntiftffturft ( taettisdittr of Sil!e;lllU BILIOUSNESS RELIEVED t. . . QUICKLY Ihsrtfy VHttstUMttvt I BOT the) bowttf frtM from Dl(a Aiul MfiiitMasifit aftaar fftcts. Hm? rt4lT thai tyMtm of oaMlpsv tiom polwHia whkb anf timai mun tour ntl meld GoadliLoB In ih tr(-M iinbr thmf doctor'a prcripilo and ca b Xwm with tiboiutl cnnfidtncsi to nvboslVa tl IMifgtato IU Md 79 tUd PsKkaga. CARTER'S Eli PILLS For Old Sores Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh Al lulin m wllmhrf K wImJ tt sw 1m B am SMb a m mm. mm. 13 A J IV slte-sjistsitW jk-A-.-.-.i. As BF r;Md.mumt (CARTEIG sT ITTL