P Daddys 4 Even hf NG Fairy Tale oY MARY GRAHAM BONNER tr 2 Be, «yOU ARE VERY WELCOME." “We're going to have a dance,” said the Mountain Fairies to Lady Gray Cloud, “and so we would like to ask a favor of you. “We would be glad if you didn't go to have dinner with the King“of the Clouds and his family until a little later this afternoon. “We're sure he wouldn't mind dining a little bit later this evening.” “Ili gindly do as you ask,” said Lady Gray Cloud, “if you will let me watch your party. I will not speak to the King of the Clouds, so you needn't worry. There will be no rain until your purty is over. I will see to that.” | “Oh, thank you, thank you,” said the Mountain Fairies. “You are very welcome,” said Lady | § finally able to hypnotize the pa- Gray Cloud. “Jt is so lovely up here,” said the Mountain Fairies, so much later in the season than it “Down below it is ° is up here. Flowers are beginning to look like autumn down there and up here it still looks so summery.” what is always the way it is up here,” said Lady Gray Cloud. “The Mountain King likes to have things | later up here. The whole reason is that he is so fond of the Seasons that ‘he can’t bear to let them go and sO he begs them to stay and stay, and so every season is a bit late. “But, of course, you know all that,” . said Lady Gray Cloud after a mo- ment, “Yes, we know that)” said the Mountain Fairies. “but we have been visiting our relatives, the Woodland Fairies, who live down at the foot of the mountain, and so we notice the change. Of course, there is a differ- ence in the air, too. “Of course, too; but, then, as you say, the Moun- «You Are Very Welcome.” tain King does urge the Seasons te stay as late as they possibly can and they simply cannot refuse him. «When we were down in the woods, that accounts for it, UTILIZES ITS STORED ENERGY we saw some lovely plants with pur- ple flowers, one flower which was hid- den for its own pleasure and one which was shown to the world. “Then, too, we saw Some ferns which said their relatives lived in an apartment, for some little girl had told them she had seen some of their relatives, but then she told them that these fern relatives were very well treated. > “She said that they were put out on the fire escape every rainy day and : ing for about four days; then, ososore & SPOOF OP K 9 4 { HOW , FRENCH PHYSICIAN ENDEL: WOMAN'S LONG TRANCE. —The remarkable case of a woman who remained in a | trance five years, and the un- usual methods by which she was restored to normalcy, were related recently by Dr. Pierre Janet, leading French neurolo- gist, at the annual meeting of § the American Neurological as- sociation, This was the first time that Doctor Janet had made public the unusual case, which was extremely interest- $ ing to the neurologists because of the extraordinary period in which the woman was apparent- ly unconscious. > Doctor Janet said that the pa- tient, a woman of twenty-one, > : had first had lapses of memory * hen she was thirteen, but had 3 quickly recovered from them. ’ " During the war she suddenly became unconscious, Forced feeding was restored fo and $ for many months her mental $ faculties were apparently dor mant. Once the hospital in which she was lying -was bombed b¥ German airplanes, and a bomb exploding just outside the win- dow did not cause her to move a muscle, Doctor Janet was tient and learned that she had subconsciously retained mental impressions of some of the inci- ¢ dents of the hospital. Later she was taught to eat by leaving food beside her bed | at night. In the end Doctor ¢ Janet said, he re-established the patient's connection with the outside world by establish- ing a system of clandestine cor- ¢ respondence with her. Letters, Doctor Janet said, which he left for the woman were Soon ¢ ¢ answered with regularity. 4 From this time, he said, she ¢ began to take an interest in out- ¢ cide affairs, and in a compara- tively short period she rega'ned ¢ apparently complete mental con- trol of herself. She is now, Doctor Janet said, in apparent good mental and physical health. > rors out Food for Comparatively Lengthy Periods. Popular notion has it that the camel can go for weeks without water; but this is an exaggeration, and the camel's powers of endurance are far greater in regard to food than in regard to drink. writes “Lieutenant Burnes Chamber's Journal, A camel can continue without drink- if it can- not obtain drink, it pines and dies. It may not last as long if the heat is great. | sure in a skew direction across the How the Camel Is Enabled to Go With. in ' being the result of natural gifts. This power »f endurance lies in the peculiar formation of the sec- ond stomach, which is lined with cells in which the camel stores his water | and utilizes it when necessary. storehouse of water is known to Arabs, who, if they are in danger of dying | | as regards my body, but as regards from thirst, often kill the beast and thus save their own lives. fhe camel can endure longer with- | out food than without drink. His hump is composed entirely of fat which “he has stored away. If the time is such that he cannot obtain nourish- nient, he draws on this storehouse of | energizing fat. After a long journey, a camel's hump is very perceptibly smaller, sometimes vanishing entirely. But as soon as food is again taken into the stomach the hump again be- «comes the storehouse of fat for use that they did enjoy the change from : the hot apartment. . «The little girl also said that she was so happy now that she didn’t have to pay any attention to her teacher's watch. “She said her teacher's watch was always absolutely right, and when she thought she was only a few minutes late, her teacher's watch showed that she was later, for no one could make that watch change from doing right and keeping right ‘on time! “She said it was now vacation time go that she didn’t have to think of that watch which she really thought was very unkind. “Oh, we had a very good time visit- ing our Woodland Cousins, but now we are back on our Mountain Home and it is always nice to get home. “And we must begin our dance soon, for otherwise we’ll use up all the time in talking.” So the Mountain Fairies danced and danced, and after they had danced a long time they said : “Now we are going to have our re- freshments under yonder big tree, so if you like, Lady Gray Cloud, why don’t you dine with the King of the Clouds now?” So Lady Gray Cloud dined with the King of the Clouds and his family and there was much merry-making and such laughter up on top of the Mountain among the Mountain Fairies that the Rainbow came out to see what was going on. Then another Rainbow came, too, and the double Rainbow was seen by the earth people as it stretched across a beautiful lake and each end bent down to the water and told the water what was going on up on the Moun- tain Top, and how Mr. Sun and the King of the Clouds and Lady Gray Cloud were all laughing together, fine weather.” when another emergency shall arise. A How Cobwebs Foretell Weather. “Cobwebs in the «grass prophesy How many times we have heard that, and, hoping for 4 pleasant day after a storm, have looked eagerly in the morning for { spiders’ webs in the wet grass? If they are there, we may feel confident that the day will be fair, for the spi- der is an excellent weather prophet. Henri Fabre, the wonderful old man who found out so many of the secrets of insects and their Kin, tells us that the threads of the spider's web used for catching its prey are made use- less by too much dampness. These threads, so tiny as to be .almost in- visible, are really hollow tubes filled with a sticky fluid which oozes through the walls and holds whatever touches the thread. This fluid read- ily absorbs the moisture from the air and would soon lose its sticky nature in the rain or fog. So the wise spi- der. loath to waste precious material, waits until the wet weather is vir- tually over before weaving the en- snaring threads. How it knows what the weather is to be Is still one of the mysteries.—St. Nicholas. ee —————— Why People Laugh. Certain things in the world, wheth ar they are funny, ludicrous, or things that produce the laughing effect, cause the brain to work certain mus- cles and nerves in a combination that produces a laugh. It is like a mu- gienl instrument. When a combina- tion of notes. is struck, it produces sad or joyful tones. In the same way, the impression sent to the hrain will start the proper combination and in- stant!y the brain sends out the “laugh” order. Some things make some people laugh, while they do not affect others. That is because our brains are net always the same, in regard to re- ~orded impressions. This ! | 1 | i | | ! “4 | | i tions of the city of Venice rests on FEET MOST ABUSED MEMBERS According to English’ Writer, Only About One-Third of Humanity Walk in Natural Manner. en. Te human foot is one of the most beu..iful and useful instruments ever conceived, but, unfortunately, it is net what a motorist calls “foolproof.” | There is a great deal of misunder- standing about our feet, We treat them outrageously, as either custom or fash- ion may dictate. As a result, about one-third of the population is splay- footed, another third walks like a hed on hot cinders, and the remaining third may be said to walk fairly nat- ural. The foot has a graceful arch run- ning fore and aft. We take this longi- tudinal arch, turn the toes outward so that the heels meet at an angle of 45 degrees, and then put all our pres- | arch. No railway engineer would dream of building a straight arch | bridge to carry loads neither across por along the arch, but irregularly | askew over it. We ought to walk with our great toe pointed straight in the direction of progress, as Indian runners do, and “spring from the great toe.” Instead. most of us “take off” in a lumbering sort of way from the ball of the great toe. ‘Ihe arch of the foot is supported largely by the tendon which runs un- der the foot to the great toe itself, and this neglect of use renders this ten- don weak and lax, and causes depres: sion of the arch. The best care for weak arch Is the practice of raising one’s self upon the great toe, that is. doing as a penalty exercise what you should have done all along naturally. If you will try when walking to keep the feet straight, and to end each stride with a little “spring” off each big toe alternately, you will be re- warded by finding that:progress seems easier, quicker and more bnoyant.— London Daily News. pret ae SA QUALITIES THAT WIN SUCCESS Probably the Greatest Among Them ls That Subtle Something We Know as Personality. It takes more than mental ability to make a man and more than the | qualities that are supposed to make for success itself. It is not so much what a man knows, or his ability in applying it, as it is in what he is 4.age as’he went for a himself. There ‘lurks in some human beings, | in overflowing measure, that subtle | something termed personality whieb | is likely to carry them much farther than anything else. Probably charac- | ter, courage and dependability Are the three great assets. Theodore | Roosevelt in his own ree 1 writes | of the two kinds of suc , the one the other being acquired slowly, and adds: “I need hardly say that all the successes I have ever won have been of the second type. I never won any- | thing without hard labor and the ex- | ercise of my best judgment and care- | ful planning and working long in ad- | vance. 1 was as a young man at first both nervous, and distrustful of my own prowess. I had to train myself painfully and laboriously not merely my soul and my spirit.”—Exchange. City Largely Built on Piles. A considerable part of the founda- piles that were driven into the muddy shallows of the Adriatic more than 1,000 years ago. The tallest structure of the. city for many years was the campanile or bell tower of St, Mark's cathedral. It was a massive structure of brick which rose to a height of 325 feet, aud the piles for its foundation were driven in the year 874. The first campanile was built in 800. In 1329 the foundation was enlarged by driv- ing more piles, and. the tower was re- built. In 1512 an earthquake brought it tumbling down, but a new campanile was immediately erected. This fell July 14, 1902, owing to the gradual failure of the foundation. New piles were then driven and a new campanile was erected in 1905 on a reinforced concrete foundation. Ancient Navigators. The origin of the art of navigation is lost in antiquity, but it is known that it was practiced with consider- able skill by the ancient Egyptians and the Phoenicians. From the be- ginning of the historic period Tyre was the chief city of the Phoenicians, and the enterprise of that people was, from their situation, specially direct- ed to the sea, and they pushed their commerce on it with a spirit and dar- ing which, considering their opportu- nities, has never been surpassed. They are the first who are known to have steered by the observation of the stars, and who could thus venture out to sea. They ultimately adopted two distinct kinds of vessels, the gaulos or merchant vessel, with a deep hold adapted for storage. and the trireme or ship of war. Armenian Literature, Prior to the Fifteenth century Ar- menia’s literature is entirely in the form of religious verse and prose The record of secular events is en- tirely in her songs. The desire for freedom and patrictism is the theme of her many old songs, just as her modern music is the expression of in- tense struggle against oppression. The period of national greatness, when as a nation Armenia was free and pros- perous, is told in songs sung by shep- herds, and at firesides. p4 Scrap Book WETHOD IN HIS SOLICITUDE As the Poet Longfellow Has Said, “The Thoughts of Youth Are Long, Long Thoughts.” Little Billy, being at the seaside, was taken ill, and confined to his hed for a day. A timid caller came to in- quire, a small boy unknown at the house, evidently ® some playmate of d 81 the sands. Little Billy's mother was great- ly touched, and praised the caller, kissed him for his thoughtful attention, and gave him chocolate. Billy's playmate then backed ner- vously down the steps, gathering cour- final inquiry. “If . when safely on have his Billy ‘dies,” he ‘said; the pavement, “can I scooter?” er p———— In the “Good Old Times.” As far back as 100 years ago they had in the state of Ohio co-operative organization in Licking county. Prices paid by this organ- | ization ran thus: Wheat, 25 cents 8 bushel; oats, 12% cents; corm, 12 cents; potatoes, 1215 cents; flour, $1 per hundred; chickens, 37 cents a doz- en; eggs, 3% cents, and maple sirup, | 6 cents a gallon. However, these val- ues were only allowed when articles were taken in exchange for products. | The figures were taken from old rec- ords secured by the Ohio experiment station. Just think of selling a dozen chickens for 37 cents! Yum, yum! And eggs at 3% cents a dozen. Gee- whitticker! Oats. at 121 .cents. a bushel wasn’t a very low price when cognizance is taken of the fact that in 1896, when the free silver agitation was at its height, oats sold in Indi- ana at 10 cents a bushel.—Indianapo- lis Star. ————————————— Preventing Accidents. In the last five years the executives of American industry have become thoroughly convinced of the value of organized accident prevention, some because of the dollars-and-cents pos- gibilities, others because they hated to see their men killed or injured. Even made in the science of accident pre- vention. Within the last year, for in- stance, there has been enunciated the principle that every accident is the symptom of an inefficiency; that ev- erything which is really efficient is safe, and that every machine or proc- ! ess which is really safe is efficient.— Melville Nix, in the Nation's Business. WORSE She—Are you sure that we are liv- ing beyond our means? He—Worse than that, we are liv ing beyond our credit, Alaska’s Bald Eagles Vanishing. “In a very short while there will not be a bald eagle in Alaska, at the rate these birds are now being killed off,” said John B. Traintor of Sitka, in an interview at Washington. “During last summer bounties were paid to men who shot and killed bald eagles. It is said that some 15,000 birds were killed. That is a high rate, and if it continues for many more months the time will soon be at hand when Alaska will be completely rid of the bald eagle. The largest specimens of this bird come from Alaska and the North- west. First Writing Paper. The ancient Egyptians were the first people to make what today would be called real paper. They made it from a reed called papyrus, which grew abundantly in marshy places. And there is where the name paper came from. They took slices of the reed, cut them as thin as they could, and’ then laid them side by side; then they arranged another layer on top. When dried and rubbed smooth it made a kind of paper which could be written upon. : Has Surplus of Stonfachs. Two heads may be better than one, but a pair of stomachs is too much and so, when an eight-year-old girl of Bristol, Wis., complained for a year of stomach aches in her breast, the doctor investigated and discovered the second digestive apparatus right where the child claimed the pain orig- inated. After an operation the girl is getting along nicely at her home.— Exchange. Y Strange Playmates. Two odd playmates were noticed by a farmer in New Brunswick. The farmer had a cat that had made friends with a ground squirrel. They played around the fields and ran up and down the woodbine on the house. They were playmates until the cat got killed, and then the squirrel dis- appeared. a farmers’ | today discoveries are being ! Arabian Desert Storm Obscures the | SunBitter Cold is Followed by | Intense Heat. i i { In the World's Work Thomas B | Lawrence describes the action of Aa | desert storms as follows: } «There had been long rolls of thun- | der ull morning in the hills, and the two peaks of Serd and Jasim were wrapped in folds of dark blue and vellow vapor that looked motionless and substantial. A few minutes after we had marched again, I looked back at them, and noticed that part of the yellow cloud off Serd was coming slow- ly in our direction, against the wind, raising scores of dust devils before its as the hill, and as it approached it put out two dust-spouts, tight and symmetrical columns like chimmeys, one on the right and one on the left of its front. “When it got nearer, the wind, which : had been scorching our faces with its : ' hot breathing, changed suddenly, and | | colored and fitful. 1 | i i { i ! eastward at the speed _used by primitive : days, man divided the time into’ two | blew bitter cold and damp upon our | backs. It also increased greatly in vio- | fence, and at the same moment the sun disappeared, biotted out by thick mists | of yellow air over our heads. We stood in a horrible faint light, ochre- The brown wall | of cloud from the hilis was now very | near, rushing changelessly toward us, : making a loud grinding sound, wrap- ping us in a blanket of dust, with large stinging grains of sand in it, twisting and turning in most violent eddies, and meanwhile advancing of a strong feet. The cloud was nearly as high } | i 1 wale.” ee —e— OLD WAYS OF TELLING TIME Early Methods Were Primitive, but Some Sort of Reckoning Always Has Been Kept. ‘oday when Wwe glance at our watches and ascertain to the second the correct time, we do not stop to think of the first awkward. ‘methods man, - In the earlfest periods, the day and the night. The day was then separated into sunrise, noonday and sunset, and then the morning and afternoon were further divided by the lengta and position of the shadows. Our tirst sundial was 8 stick set upright in the ground and the time was told by the length and position of the shadows. Nearly all | ancient peoples of the world had sun- dials and with them the time was told to the hour and the minute. The Chi- nese had them, the Romans set up tall shadow columns with officers to watch them and report hourly on the length of the shadows. Even in the Middle ages the sundial was still used by those poor people who could not afford such luxuries as water clocks or hour glasses. ee —erae Chinese Shoes. shoes is the interminable | task of Chinese women, from youth to old age. Travelers see them busy in every moment, when necessity does not require attention to some other work, plying the threads back and forth, in and out, in their endless ef- fort to keep the men of their house- hold supplied with footwear. Where Making | there is a surplus, the shoes are sold ; to the shops. Only cloth and paper are used. Th | (thickness of the soles, of alternating | layers of cloth and paper held to | gether by paste, often indicate in varia- tions of from one-half to two inches, the wealth of the wearers. The shoes are noiseless and comfortable, but on rainy days China stays indoors he- cause the shoes readily absorb water. The women: make their own tiny shoes in the seclusion of their quar- ters, even the husband being forbidden +o watch their manufacture. Ce —— Buffalo Bill's Quick Wit. Col. Willium F. Cody, while travel- ing in Europe in 1891 with his wild West show, was on quite intimate terms with royalty. On Buffalo Bill's advent into Berlin Emperor Willlam was entertaining three kings of small- er German powers. One feature of the Wild West performance was the ex- hibition of an antiquated Deadwood coach, containing passengers who were attacked by Indians and rescued by cowboys. The kaiser asked that he and his guests be allowed to ride in this vehicle during a performance, and of course the request was granted. After the usual attack and rescue the emperor remarked : «Colonel Cody, I don’t suppose this is the first time that you have held four kings?” “No, your majesty,” replied the scout, ‘‘vou are right, but it is the first occasion that 1 ever held four kings and the royal joker at the same time.” ene Colonel Yell of Yellville. Yellville was named in honor of a gallant soldier, Colonel Archibald Yell, who went to his God like a man on he field of Buena Vista. Archibald Yell was a man of parts, a gentleman who in time of peace did his share in politics and in time or war did his | share as a soldier. He resigned as a member of cOnNgress to enlist as a private at the outbreak of the Mexi- can war. When the Arkansas troops were organized at Washington, Hemp- stead county, he was elected colonel of the regiment in which he had en- listed ag a private. Albert Pike was a captain under him. At the battle of Buena Vista Yell's command stood against a sweeping charge by a great forge of Mexican inacers. Archibald | voll died there fighting hand to hand | with the Mexicans.—Arkansas Gazette, I — RSE THAN ANY HURRICANE J ENGINE - OF PUBLIC “SERVICE Newspaper Today Not, as of Old, the Mouthpiece of - ‘Any Individual or Party. Not sO many years 4go a newspa: per was a printing press surrounded by a group of individuals chiefly con- cerned in getting their own private theories or doctrines before their readers. Today the newspaper is an engine of public service. Its success finan- cially and morally is measured by fhe degree in which it supports not a party but the people. Those today who have a Twentieth century ideal of achievement separate the newspaper from the individual and make it first and foremost an organ of public service built by the people for the people, The journal which most aearly fulfills its highest pur- pose is that which is indistinguish- | able in policy from the patural trend of progress and march of liberty and free thought. Political prizes were the aims of the old-time editor. His policies were based on his own party interests and he discussed every public question with a ferocity and partisanship pro- portionate to the reward he expected to get out of it. The establishment of an institution, a living thing, which represents the public interest and pothing else—that should be the ideal of the editor. It is this ideal which has made newspapermen a priesthood and has separated them—some of them—from politics. For this age is not a ma- terialistic age—in spite of opinion to the contrary.—Vancouver Sun. MEANT “DIVISION WITH KING” “Royalties” in Old Days Signified Something Altogether Different From Meaning Today. Recipients of royalties from books, patents, mines. or any other thing may claim kin with kings, etymologically speaking, at least, for a royalty rep- resented. originally. the king's portion of the profits of a venture. The word entered England from France, and was sometimes called a “geignorage.” The king of England at the time was the actual possessor of all land in the domain, as he is only nominally today. All mines that were worked, all lands that were fled, directly or indirectly paid trib- ute to him. He possessed a similar ~ power, though less clearly. understood, over printing and: inventions. The payment of a .royalty to an author, inventor or other persons to- day is recognition of the ownership of the recipient to the basic right in the thing worked or produced. The pub- lisher, manufacturer or operator may have, and usually does have, the heavi- est investment, but the man who gets the royalty is the man who holds pos- session in fee simple, subject to what contracts he may make with those associated with him in the develop- ment or distribution of his property. A Lovers’ Quarrel. They stood beneath the stars, the silence of the night being only broken by the intensified sound of two hearts beating as one. For a moment he withdrew his gaze from the dazzling depths of her eyes to the diameond-stadded shirt front of | the sky. «Is that Mars?’ he whispered, as he slipped his arm around her small, slim waist, and gazed upon a glitter- ing orb in the heavenly dome. “No, it isn't,” she exclaimed an- grily, jerking herself free of his em- brace. “It’s mine, and if you can't tell the difference between my waist and mother’s after you've been court- ing me for eight years, well, you—" Her voice broke, and her head fell forward upon her arm— “We had better part!” It is pleasing to report that the mat- ter was amicably adjusted before any- thing more serious resulted. —Edin- burgh Scotsman. er ——————————————————— Unearthly Music. Oi Coleridge and “Kubla Khan” the following strange story is told. The poet had fallen asleep in his chair after reading the following lines in Purchas’'s “Pilgrimage”: “Here the Khan Kubla commanded a palace to be built and a stately garden there- unto; and thus ten miles of fertile ground were inclosed with a wall” “In my sleep,” he said, “I dreamed two hundred lines of beautiful poetry. The images rose up before me with- out any sensation or consciousness on my part. When I awoke the lines were vivid in my memory, and I be- gan to write them.” As ill-luck would have it, however, a friend called to see him before he had completed his task; and when, an hour later, he sat down to continue his work his memory was a blank. His wonderful dream-poem was thus lost to the world. ———————————————————— Solve Commuting Problem. Residents of Kalabagh, on the In- dus river in India, have solved the problem of commuting between their homes and the valley, three miles up giream, where they till a very fertile soil. The village is in a desert, ex- cept for this small valley. In the morning the villagers walk to the vailey, but in the evening they inflate goatskin bags which each man carries, and wade out into the swift stream: of the river. This carries them rapidly down stream, and steering with their hands they can reach the tank just outside the small, mud- walled houses in which they live.