“Finely, thanks! Didn't expect me, did | | you? Be honest, Cobe; did you?” : $C ay say 4h id; ‘wat sit Gown, Hev | a bite?” : = mm “Indeed 1 will Fve sidden Jong way? | Bellsfoute, Ba, July 20, 19). ho. ye bev. WH Irumce for three] phe weeks, -shooting, and had a rat- | MODERN CHILD tling time!” ; a El pe ve i ~ him as Bow scientifically, saw the change in the mountaineer’s face. | Studied terrifically, Little was said d the meal, but | Sloe 8 ¥erg cureiany when the old mother gone to bed in’ : the wee attic above, and the two men sat | Aired systematically, across the fire from each other as of Bathed most emphatically, the Secret Service man spoke quiet- Played with quite drearily, J the while on his pipe. Punished Spencerially, " ‘ve got you this time!” Swen iantilay, “Got whut?” the other asked, with un- Steeped in gentility, usual gruffness. Santa Claus bagished, Wagstaff looked at him through the | Mother Goose vanished, blue haze of smoke. Where ate the baits. “I know that you took one hundred | "The fea hitman and forty gallons to Mitchell, that you | The olden time knew? got two a gallon for it, and that | Harnessed scholastically, you have money on you now! Is this Drilled superdrastically, news to you?" " | Cultured prodigiously, “Thar’s only one could "a""— i Leztured religiously, “Told?” W finished sentence | Classified rigidly. easily. “You're right, Cobe; and that | Reasoned with frigidly, 3s | Loved analytically, A whirlwind of shoughts ran rife in Listened to critically Nelson's simple His mother— Dosed with the “ologies.,” never! Lee?—impossible! and yet? Rushed through the colleges, Wagstaff was . Wagstaff was Crammed pedagogically. shrewd. Wagstaff had a tic per- “Finished” most logically, sonality. Cobe called him in his | Where is the childhood, ways," but it answered to the same thing. | The fresh, happy childhood, And Wagstaff had been three weeks at The olden time knew? fhe'Lee Plage, All these things he jumb- Children successively, “Yes, and if | do not mistake, the one Reared thus aggressively, will be here in an hour! You arenot ex- Posing eternally, pected to be ia the cabin, neither am I. Worried infernally, person will wake your mother, and Planned for initially, warn her that | am after you again. You ‘Formed” artificially, must listen!" Wal they abut 1g 2 “An’ll be damned 'f—" Cobe leaped to Never cry “Quits!” to it? his feet and found f staring into Wile the barrel of a revolver that ‘appeared Stop from paralysis? mysteriously in Wagstaff's hand. Till our distraction | “I don't like to do this, Cobe, and you Ends with . know it; but unless will take my Brings back the childhood, word that something will occur shortly as | The bright, careless childhood, 1 have told yon, I shall have to put these | The olden time knew? on” —clinking handcuffs. “Be reasonable, | —James F. Morton, Jr. | man: if I am wrong I will never come | here again! On the other hand, if I am | | right you must go with me! That's fair." | LONESOME VALLEY AND COBE. | Silence between the two while the fire — | crackled merrily, and their shadows were | Just where the waters of Big Lick Creek | lost in the recesses of the cabin. ! join those of Devil's Run at the foot of | “You-all cain’ be right, so ah reckon the North Carolina Mountains, Cobe Nel- | ah'll do as you-all say.” f son his mules at the fora ard | Wagstaff h his weapon. : block: There the wheels of the heavy canvas- | was no further conversation. covered schooner. . | From time to time the officer looked at | “Heu-u, boys!" he shouted, with South- | liis watch, and the other stared moodily ern drawl. The animals flopped their at the flames. ears gratefully. “Time is getting short, Cobe; let's Cobe's tall, gaunt in high boots, ' hide.” i corduroy trousers, and gray flannel shirt | The native followed into the wood- | loomed aggressively in the soft afternoon | closet that was built close to the wall. sunlight; his quick-moving gray eyes | They squatted on the tumbled mass of shone with health and the vigor of man- | splittings, and Wagstaff pulled the rickety | hood in its prime. Z | door almost shut. : “Lordy, Lordy!” he said. aloud. “Th’' Minutes passed slowly; Nelsons face | roads be suah 'nough bad!” | was very white in the faint sheen that | Red clay was plastered high on the | stoie in through the cracks. | wagon's sideboards and had spattered on | Then light steps sounded outside among | the white canvas. He filled his pipe while | the shavings. Wagstaff put his hand | the thrush and the orioles sang their lit- | warningly on the other's knee. They | tle vesper songs, fluttering gayly among | heard the outer door opened very care- the huge pines, darting to and fro across | fully; then stillness, save for their own the murmuring stream. | restrained breathing. | __ “Ah reckon ma’ll be kind o' anxious-| “Ma Nelecn? Ma?" like 'f ah don’t git home ter-night, an’ it's | “Lindy!" Cobe muttered. eight mile! Wall—git Spit up, boys!” | They could see the little girlish figure, | As one the four lunged ahead, the wa- masses of brown hair tumbling about her | gon creaking and swaying. Up and up | forehead aid neck, creep to the foot of | the winding, narrow road that sometimes | the attic ladder. led along steeps that fell hundreds of | “Ma Nelson?" she called again, gently. feet, and again through twisting defiles| “Thet Lindy?" the shaky voice answer- where there was barely room for the | ed, sleepily, from above. mules. “Ya.as, 'm, an’ listen, quick!” She | Now and then Cobe’s hand would al- | went up halfway. “Charlie Wagstaff’s | most unconsciously slip toward a pocket | after Cobe agin! He'll be hyah directly, that was sewed on the inside of his shirt. | an’ ah throwed th’ ‘worm’ into the crick It held a round, fat parcel. : *hind the stump at th’ old ford, and roll- | “Reckon ma'll be tickled heaps this | ed the logs over the openin.’ You-all tell | hyah trip!” he mused. “A hundred and | him o's he kin find it! Ah guess ah’ll-" fohty gallons times two dollars makes | She started down in fear as the old! | ‘ two hundred an’ Sighey doers; an’ Lindy | woman hissed: “Ye dratted fool, ye. she-all kin hev swell fixin's foh we-ail's | Lindy! Charlie's hyah!” I weddin,’ suah 'nough!” | “Whar?" The girl's eyes became trou- | Whistling and humming, he stalked along beside the team. “Haul up thar, Sambo! You all's poweh- bled like those of a hunted animal. The mother descended. “He was hyah with Cobe when ah went | ful lazy, "pears to me!” to bed! yon ye learn t’ shet up?" y And then the last ridge was crossed. Wagsta saw that nothing more was to : He applied the cumbersome wooden |be gained. He gave the door a push. : brakes and started down the long incline e girl cried out, sharply. i into Lonesome Valley. It was so named | “Oh, Cobe, honey, ah suah didn’ know!" | because for generations no one had lived | “In course ye , Lindy.” the big| there save the Nelsons, who made the | man said, softly. “Ah ain't a-blamin’ ye best Double Shot, Copper-Distilled Apple Brandy in the whole of the county. Illicit- ly, yes, but Cobe argued as his father and grandfather had before him—what was the use of paying the government $1.10 per gallon tax, anyhow? Revenue officers had been on the trail of the “still.” They were always made welcome to Lonesome Valley and asked to “kinder look round, an’ hunt 's much as you-all like!” and his mother—the only two left of a famous family—would chuckle as the Secret Service men pounded and thumped, prodded and searched walls, floors, outhouses, even the chicken-coops. There was one young fellow to whom Cobe had “cottoned"—Charlie Wagstaff. He had made four attempts to find the Nelson “still,” and each time that he came he was heartily made to feel at home; after supper he and the big moun- taineer would smoke together before a roaring fire; the native secure in the knowledge that no one save his mother, Linda Lee—the girl he was to marry soon—and he knew how to find his 2 mite!” as the 'e eyes filled with | tears, though no came. i Be i Bard and set, | r lips drawn y er. “An’ whut did ye tell Charlie when he waz to you-all’s place thet he come hyah | so quick? Answer!" she snarled. “She did not say a word!” Wagstaff in- | terrupted. “I was the one who lied to | her, and tork my chances of finding out. | I told her that I knew where the worm | was hidden, and where the works are; | that I was going to Mitchell for help first, | and then coming here. She believed me | and, as you see, tried to get ahead of me i to save Cobe.” i As he finished the girl's figure seemed | to loom taller and taller; she sp for- | ward, her face almost touching Wag- | staff's. i “You-all frum de No'th call thet fair tell her thet ye love her. Yes, he did!" —to Cobe—*“an’ he tried ter kiss me an’| —an'—My God, Cobe, don't" Wagstaff jumped, but too late; the heavy stick of wood struck him on the “works;"” and the other using all his di- | temple and turned black. Pomacy and tact in trying to locate| The girl sh gasping . “Ye've | Ss paraphernalia. . done killed him, Cobe!” she w! i “Heu—heu-u?" The mules He gazed stupidly at the inert on “Be that yeou, Cobe?” an voice | the dirty floor. “Ah reckon so," he an- called from the open door of a log cabin |swered, dully. “An’ ah've broke m which yellow beams streamed fhrough ter him. He trusted me, but into the quiet star-darkness of the val- couldn’ he’p it when ye said as how . he'd made love ter ye, mah gal, mah lit- “Ya-as, back agin’ "—he lowered | tle Lindy!" his voice—*"safe 'gain!” She tried to speak, then stopped. He - n be thar when ye onhitch!” | remembered afterward that he had won- ad he spread his b ated Wh. y i€| When agstaff over . hands to the fire while a little shrunken a 5 the at hate eyes glisiened brigh tly, took in with avidity ail news, 3 her head from time to time and ch “Didn’ all kill him, Lindy; reckon an'd better git his gun, tie him, an’ light out o this hyah section Pr 1 ’ fur a while. e kin ai od un! A goed run Gobet" | CS YL SE mr word. None too gently he bound the officer's “Mmm—Mmm!" (negatively.) They sat down to eat. Heaps of corn- pone, a platter of sausage meat, dipners of coffee, and a jug of milk was the fare. “Ah suah did feel maighty glad—" he was saying when there came a rap on the door. His hand went to the money; it was there. Hello, ie) Good evening, Mrs. N " 'y » Is. el- true, son!” Charlie Wi entered ¥ 7 God!” orward, . Ho ae erly (rm Ca) a! Ween Wx ankles and wrists, then dashed water over hisface. Still the girl said nothing. “Now ah'll hide th’ worm in—" he whispered the place to the old woman, who eyed the unconscious man vi Ihe. Te mountaineer went into ni a ie Caltie back hi Bg on —know—Lindy—not: —trusted-—oh biti : |ah’s h | until his ears. ed the revenue officer's hand cordially. “He's a dyin’, Cobe!” she breathed. My fit 4 ‘88 ns if 58 25 8 25 ogether but it flowed steadily. all, fer ah’d jest’s soon be daid 's livin’. t’' think that ah did ii! Ah thet kiss- th’ leaves thet tetched her pretty liatl’ stones outen th’ . : ou-all Wagstaff Jeaned forward, took Nelson's hand. “Cobe, I have been the cause of all this misery: unwitting enough, God knows. I don’t want you or your still, and I never want to see these mountains again. I'm strong enough now, and I'l go” He t urned. The moonshiner caught his wrist. “Furgive we-uns, je,” he said, huskily. “You-all jest did yer dooty, an’ —furtively wiping the tears from his eyes—"this hyah's been our home fur gen'rations, but ma an’ me. we-all 'll leave ter-morrer, sun-up. Ah’'s got a uncle in Kaintuck’ an’ ah reckon ah cain’t b'ar it here nohow, neither.” . With few words Wagstaff mounted his horse and disappeared among the trees toward civilization, the mountaineer wav- ing him a last good-by. »e next day, all their belongings on the schooner and a rude wagon, Cobe, his The wounded man to his knees and | old mother, the few chickens, the one dragged himself owt the irl: his wits were hazy from the blow still, and things danced before his ger in the bullet-hole. “That—will—hold—a He was As from a t distance she had heard his words, “Cobe?"” *H ) mah Lindy, mah littl’ Lindy, "—the words were slow in com- ing—“ah—done—lied to—ye—ah did. Char-lie didn’—make—no—love—t'—me t'—git—mad—too—s0's—ye'd— kill —him —an’ then—ye wouldn'—hev—t' go—t' | iF pam eenpsy. Ah wuz—sorry—but— dn'—dass—tell—ye, an’ ah reckon ah's—got—whut— ah—oughter—oughter —NOW. The hard lines of the mother’s face re- laxed. She had seen many violent deaths in her long years, but this one seemed different. Cobe, his great arms holding the girl shook with sobs. “Don’—take on—so—Cobe. Think— on't—when—ah'm gone—putty—soon— thet—ah—never—loved—nobo-dy but ye an’ thet—Cbar-lie——wuz—always—kyind —an'—good ter—me.” Along pause. ah’'m—daid—ye—kin—take— take—his— finger—out’'n—th’ hole an’ take--keer—o'—Char-lie—fur mah saik?” He nodded. “Ah—reckon—thet's—all; tell—mah—love—t' mammy an’ daddy an'—an'--an"—" A deep sish passed her lips. Her hair fell in waves over his long arms as the delicate head dropped. He stared, at first unbelieving. “She's—daid, ma! Lindy's—daid!" He who had killed often and had been wounded many times was grief-stricken when death, grimly personified, took shape in the one he loved best of all the world. Slowly he raised his face to the day. There was unspeakable agony in his es. "Ma, kin ye say anythin’ laik a pray- They knelt beside the body and, as mumbled words came from the old wom- an’s lips, a burst of sunshine penetrated from beyond the great fleecy clouds and just one of its shafts fell on the brown hair, tinting it golden—causing the white forehead to be as marble in contrast. The noise of laughing waters from the creek rose quietly, and the cheerful whis- ' tle of bobolink, the metallic call of the crested woodpecker, the warble of threshes—all astir in the morning fresh- ness—seemed a bitter mockery to the sad- ness within the four log walls. He stood up. "Ah reckon ah'd best go yonder to’ th’ Lees’ an'—an’ tell 'em, ma?” With a woman's instinct, rough mother that she was, she realized the ordeal be- fore him, and she patted his big hands, a thing she had not done in years. “An?” whut ‘bout him?” “She"—he st , blinking hard— “she said ter take on him; do it.” He was gone, 3triding up the red-clay road, head bent forw broad shoulders Rg laid the girl's body on the rough bed, folded its hands, and carefully brushed the long hair, the mother turned to Wagstaff. She bathed and rubbed until he opened his eyes and sat up “Wheru is Cobe?” “Gone t' Lee's,” she answered, abrupt- ly. “Have coffee?” “My heavens! Mrs. Nelson, you— “Don’ Missus n me! Ye've miser’bleness ter we- uns, but she said—" “She? Who is she?” Wagstaff struggled to his feet. “She? Ha-ha-ha!” the old voice split, in crazy laughter. “Why, ain't nawthin’ now, but she wuz Lindy Lee!” “Was—was Linda?” He put both hands to his head. “Then my dream that Linda was shot and that I-" “Look at you-all's finger!” she grunt- play? T lie to a gal, jest a gal, an’ ter |ed. The stain had dried fast. He stagger- ed into the open air. “It’s true, then; my God! it's true! And I thought it a dream!” sunlight Mutely he sat in the growing Cobe returned with Linda’s mammy and daddy. reall they took their dead away a, Even the gray mules r ears home and Ses, but he got a fin- | i | | { i forced her brain to action. | was ig, and two turkeys bade farewell to the PE of the “Nelsons,” famed of many years, and at noon took the red-clay road to the west’ard while the faint thin ten- few—minutes,” drils of a dying fire curled in wavy “Make her talk. quick— A plumes from the chimney and the birds » uncon- | gathered up the last crumbs. The outfit slowly from sight. Lonesome Valley remained, but Cobe golle aby Lawrence Mott, in Har- per's Weekly. IN THE WORLD. The t new terminal of the Pennsyl- vania Railroad yard, with its wonderful m of tunnels under the North and t Rivers, and Manhatten Island hand- ling hundreds of thousands of passengers per day is the biggest single railroad ter- minal in the world, and with a few excep- tions the biggest building of any sort. It will be able to handle 144 trains an hour,and will be, in effect, the first real connecting link of railroad tra rtation between New England and the West. It will attach Long Island to the mainland on the Jersey side, for the Peansylvania has acquired control of the long Island Railroad and trains will be run from the farthest points on the island under the East River into the at terminal and across the Hudson to New Jersey. The exterior of the great building sug- gests the monster baths and basilicas of ancient Rome. The interior shows the most nearly perfect railroad station in the world. Its builders say that it epito- mizes and embodies the highest devslen. ment of the science of transportation. It was seven years in the building. A chasm running from Seventh Avenue to Eighth Avenue, and from Thirty-first to Thirty- third Streets, and a dozen feet deeper than the level of the river bottom, was blasted in the solid rock. In style the building is Roman Doric. It is 800 feet one way and 430 feet the other, thus allowing for extra sidewalks on all four sides. The average height above the street is sixty-nine feet, and the maximum 153 feet. The main concourse is 340 feet long and 210 feet wide. Five hundred electric arc-lights and 20,000 incandes- cents will be used in illumination. The area of the station and yard is twenty-eight acres and in this there are sixteen miles of track. The storage tracks alone will hold 386 cars. The length of the twenty-one standing tracks at the station is 21,500 feet. There are eleven passenger platforms, with twenty- five baggage and express elevators. The highest point of the tracks in the station is nine feet below sea level. More than 150,000 cubic yards of con- walls, foundations, street bridging, an supporting the station building, and the greatest weight on one of these is 1,658 tons. hour of all of the Pennsylvania tunnels is 144, though the proposed initial service will consist of about 600 Long Island Railroad trains and 400 Pennsylvania Railroad trains. The river tunnels leading to the sta- tion are 6.8 miles long, and the land tun- nels are the same. From the Bergen hill portal in New Jersey to the Long Island entrance of the tunnels it is 5.3 miles. It is 8.6 miles from Harrison to the station in New York, while from the latter to Ja- maica is 11.85 miles. The stone work of the station, inclos- ing some eight acres of ground, was com- pleted on July 31st, 1909. To inclose this exterior walls qnired 490,000 cubic feet of pink granite. In addition there have been utilized in- side the concourse 60,000 cubic feet of stone. A total of 550,000 cubic feet of “Milford pink granite” has thus been freight cars to transport these 47,000 tons of stone from Milford, Mass. In addition to the tion of this building of 27,000 tons of steel. been set in place some 15,000,000 bricks, weighing a total of 48,000 tons. The first stone of the masonry work on the build- ing was laid June 15, 1908; the entire masonry was thus completed in approxi- mately thirteen months after the work was begun The tunnel extension gi at Harrison, N. J., a short distance east of Newark, N. J. Here is located a car yard for the huge electric locomotives used in aE thence, River at ter Street, to Harrison, where may transfer to trains for the vania station uptown, or continue to Jersey City and lower New York. The through trains for New York leave Harrison on rails crossing on a steel and concrete bridge over the old vania tracks. A double-track line on an embankment extends across the Hacken- eminence which is a continuation of High rocky cliffs extending along the Hudson crete were required for the retaining The maximum capacity in trains per utilized in the construction and ornamen- | darkness. tation of this building. It took 1,140 | by disease of the womanly organs, has been cured by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- te, the construc- | and other forms of nervous disease. called for theuse | is a medicine remarkable for its direct There have also | action upon the delicate female i and its wonderful healing power. It ! ulceration and inflammation, cures female River. At this hill are found the en- trances to the long tunnels which lead under the North River into the station in New York city. The construction of the Pennsylvania Railroad tunnels under the North and East Rivers into New York and New Jersey, attaining a maximum depth of 97 feet below mean high water, and built for a heavy and high-speed traffic of great volume, was an undertaking without prec- edent. i The tunnels or tub2s themselves con- sists of a series of iron rings, and the in- stallation of every ring meant an advance of two and a half feet. Eleven segments and a keypiece at the top complete the circumference, and an entire ring weighs fi‘te=n tons. The cast iron plates, or sec- tions of the ring, have flanges at right angles to the surface, and it is through thes= that the suc:essive rings are held together by bolts. The record progress in one day of eight hour; was five of these rings, or twelve and one-half feet. Hydraulic rams, placed against the flanges every few inches around the tube, were used to push forward the huge shieids with which the tunnels were bored. This tppe of shield weighed 194 tons. It had nine doors in it, and through these came the rock, or sand, or silt, or whatever ma- teriai the tube penetrated. When the two tracks emerge from the tubes under the Hudson and reach the entranc? to the station yards at Tenth avenue they begin to spread out. From Ninth avenue, and extending into the sta- tion, the number grows from two to twenty-one. The number of tracks leading out of the station yard to the east generally de- creases from twenty-one to a total of four for the main line. These pass under the city and East river to the Sunnyside yard on Long Island. From the station the Manhattan cross- town twin tunnels, containing four tracks in all, traverse a of New York city second in importance only to the fi- nancial district, and one that includes the larger hotels, retail and theatres, and many residences. ese tunnels end at the river shaft, situated in the block between Thirty-third and Thirty-fourth streets, east of First avenue. At this point the tunnels become four single- track tubes. These extend under the East river to Long Island city and Sunny- side yard—the terminus of the tunnel ex- tension, and the point of connection with the Long Island railroad. Sunnyside yard is to the New York im- provement what the West Philadelphia passenger yard is to the Philadelphia ter- mital, or the Jersey City yard to the Jer- sey City station. The new yard has many unique features, such as the provision for running all trains around a loop—doing away with the use of turn-tables—pulling them into the coach-cleaning yard at one end and departing from the other end, thus turning the entire train and avoid- ing the necessity for switching ba cars and sleeping cars to ae ends of the trains and the turning of combination cars separately. ‘The arrangement of tracks on different levels makes provision for cross-over movements, without grade crossings, and eliminates interference with high-speed traffic.—Selected. Man’s Strength, A Inasmuch as a man’s muscles develop with use, it would appear logical that the older he gets the stronger he should be- come, but such is not the case. Experi- ments made with thousands of men show that the muscles of the average man have their period of increase and decline,wheth- er he uses them much or little. The average youth of seventeen has a lifting power of 280 pounds. By his twentieth year his power has increased to such a degree that he should be able to exert a lifting-power of 320 pounds, while his maximum power is reached in his thirtieth or thirty-first year, 365 | pounds then being recorded. At the ex- : piration of the thirty-first year his power Ba to decline, very gradually at first, falling but eight pounds by the time he is the sub-structure. There are 650 columns ' forty From forty to fifty the decrease of power is somewhat more rapid, having dropped to 330 pounds at the latter age, | the average lif ng Dower of a man of fifty, therefore, ng slightly greater | than that of aman of twenty. After fif ! the decrease in strength is usually rapid, | but the rate of decrease varies so sur- | prisingly in individuals that it has been | impossible to obtain accurate data as to ‘average strength after that age. | In the Tower of London are yet pre- ! served some of the relics of past, | when men used “the thumb-screw and | the rack for the glory of the Lord.” Some | of these instruments of torture are dyed - deep with the blood of the unfortunates | who suffered from them, and many of ' these sufferers were women. We shudder vast area has necessitated the building of | at the thought, and yet women today,are ' thrives! aggregating 2458 feet— undergoing a slow torture, incomparably weather is nearly half a mile—in length, and has re- more severe than the torments of the | his hands get warm! | torture chamber. When the nerves are | racked ceaselessly, when the day is joy- i less and the night is sleepless, many a | woman sees the gaunt, w deve phan- ' tom of insanity clutching at her in the Even insanity, when caused scription. It has cured St. Vitus's Sance t s, eals weakness, soothes pain and tones up the nervous It contains no alcohol, system. and is altogether free from opium,cocaine and other narcotics. The Subtlety of Him. “John dear,” said Mabel, as her lord and master entered the house, "I've just had a jetter from mother, Jd sho is Som to it us. It a pre expensive p for little Muddy, as wonder if we couldn't help her out a little.” “Of course we can," said John, giving generous kiss. “Just you write and tell her that I'll be only too glad to pay for her railroad ticket back home again as soon as she decides to go.” —*“Jim isn't drinking now." “Honest? Did he swear off?" “No; he really quit this time.” Character. Should one tell you that a mountain had changed its place you are at lib- erty to doubt it, but if any one tells you that a man has changed his char acter do not believe it.—Mohammaed. or —————— What is not good for the swarm is not good for the bee.~Marcus Aure- Hus. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. We love to associate with hercic persons since our receptivity is unlimited; and with the great thoughts and manners easily become great. We are all wise in capacity, though so few in energy- There needs but one wise man in a company and all are wise.— Emerson. It has been proved that our belongi are in danger from moth for six mont in the year in northern States, and ten months in southern States. This is be- cause each section has its particular spe- cies, that unfortunately does not keep it- self well within bounds. The northern or case-making moth gives his southern friends two generations a year, while the southern or webbing moth also has two generations—laying eggs in May and Oc- tober, and frequently working far north. If these horrid feeders liked food of vegetable origin, life would be indeed a burden, but as they only care for fabrics of animal ancestry, as furs, woolens, feathers and carpets, there is some hope of fighting them. This can only be done by utmost vigi- lance and the proper weapons. As t moth itself does not ruin our clothes, only the worn or larva it hatches, we must see to it that hatching is impossi- ble. No preventive will kill larvae. There are various weapons for fighting both species of moths, and many of them prove disappointing with every precau- tion, Light is the best preventative, and if we could keep all our woolen garments well brushed and constantly exposed to sunlight, they would be cally im- mune. That is out of question in this climate, where seasons are so mark- ed and the winter things must be packed “Fhe swea olen frocks ters and w f that you use on cooler days should be given frequent airings and sunnings, and at least once a week should be hung on a line in the sun and air and well brushed. If this is neglected your house may be moth-ridden before you know it. One housekeeper, instead of packing her garments away, keeps them in a sun- ny attic on lines, where there is plenty of light and air. In this room tarballs are scattered and the lines and woodwork are washed off once a week with gaso- ine. Another always has her furs and wool- ens unpacked in the middle of summer, carefully brushed off and sunned for a day, then put back until cool weather. e luxurious housekeeper has a room in her new home where she can cold-stor- age her own household belongings. The temperature never rises to a degree that is livable to the moth. These things are out of the question for the average housekeeper. Her win- ter thinge must be put away. The ques- tion is, how can it be done most safely? Everyone has her own special remedy by which she swears, but for the young housewife a list of some of the things the moth hates may prove helpful. Gasoline is one of them. If carpets must be left on the floor, wipe them off at frequent intervals during the summer with cloths wet in gasoline, putting it thickly along the baseboard. Another cure is heat. If there are sus- picious places in rugs or carpets, sweep them thoroughly, then pot over the spots wet cloths and iron dry with a very hot iron, taking care not to scorch your car- pet in your zeal to protect it from the in- . vader. Camphor is likewise abhorrent to the moth: but this remedy is costly and is less used than formerly. It also has a habit of fading delicate furs and should not be allowed to touch them. Moth balls and tar halls are good; so are various special preparations, but they should not be depended on too much. Use them, but first see that the garments are well cleaned and brushed—dirty spots left on clothes are great moth feeders. Then pack them, well encased in newspa- pers and in air-tight boxes or chests. Do not pin your faith to the cedar chest. This may cost you exorbitantly, but cedar is only effective when f i and in a few years the most expensive ' chest may surprise you with moth-eaten | contents if no further precautions be tak- en. | Moths of both species seem to hate printers’ ink, so use all the Dewspapess ‘you can find. Take the big Sunday is- sues and make of them. They can be stitched on the machine or pinned : closely in overlapping folds. | | To tell you the whole bitter truth, the | baby does not mind being made automat- | ic, says Ellis Parker Butler, in an article | in Success Magazi The baby that is | unrocked and uncradled and uncuddled, and fed patent ready-made foods, and ! sterilized, and scientifically reared, really He is put out of doors when the two notches below zero, and He is plumped in- , to bed without a pat or a lullaby, and he | drops off to sleep like a little pink log! He awakens at uncanny hours of the | night, and instead of howling, he winks a | couple of times and goes to sleep again! | He begins to teeth, and when he wails, PEE ing syrups, i supply cu down to a minimum, and he teeths with out fevers or stomach riots! He is bathed as a crocodile would be bathed, and he loves his bath! For the children there is possible a de- lightful alliance of style and a comfort in some warm-weather frocks just shown. First, they are collarless, and have short sleeves. Then they are of batiste, lawn, cotton voile, open-meshed linen and they are made on loose lines that give freedom and coolness. Many little dresses show the hems of contrasting color or of different material. Ball fringe is very much in evidence on the lower edges of little boleros, the hems and short sleevzs. Little guimpes of sheer linen, ‘some- times tucked, and sometimes trimmed with colored embroidery, are worn with some simple one-piece models. These give change, constant cleanliness and are Very goad ooking. kimono frock, cut with the seams under the arms, from wide material, is particularly attractive. When trimmed with a Supe scalloped on sleeves and fastening it gives the plichy that is demanded by good style in children’s dresses. With these frocks there should be sen- sible slippers, pumps or sandals and short Stockings, that speak of comfort. The bobbed hair, tied up from the face and relieved of all annoying strands that are enough to destroy good dispositions, is the accepted style for warm weather. is really no excuse for your child's suffering from the heat. If she should, look to clothes.