RB A Gp DOWER. My great-great-great grandsire was Welsh, LLlewellyn he was called, And on Llangelan’s sloping hills, By Cambrian ranges walled, Great beasts and serfs at his command Drew bread from that unfertile land. And so it is I get from Wales My courage which no one assails. One gradnma came from London town And one from sunny France; One gave me all my soverness, My haughty arrogance, The confidence that England is The world’s great social synthesis. Yet all my French blood leaps and sings When I behold earth's loveliest things! That I might cool and canny be i had a Scotch ancestor, But once he walked Killarney’'s ways And met a merry jester— A fiddler with his violin Tucked lovingly beneath his chin. The fiddler’s daughter came dancing after— Ny little grandmother of tear and laughter! Oh Britain, you've made me sturdy and strong, By France, I am beauty-beguiled, But the heart of me is Irish, And mad and sad and wild. —Virginia McCormick. THINGS THAT ARE CAESAR’S. Lucy Birchfield took her stand be- fore the massive chimney-piece with a determined air of possession. As the new mistress of the house enter- ed she turned sharply, not caring to conceal the assertive spark in her eye. Electa let fall the out-stretch- ed hand that offered a timid hospi- tality. “Please be seated,’ ’ she said. “You must be tired. It’s a long trip out of town.” . “A trip I'm used to, thank you!” Lucy replied, the glow of owner- ship deepening as she settled her- self in a chair which was not the one Electa had softly pushed for- ward. “You seem to forget that my people lived at Thorndale long before you ever saw or heard of it.” “Oh, I understand how ‘dear the old place must be to you, and I do hope you will always feel—” “Dear to me! Why, It's home! My father was born here, and my grandfather left it to Aunt Rachel because she loved it and had always lived here. How could she let it go out of the family? How could she?” Lucy’s voice shook as she threw a loyal glance around the dim wainscot.- ed room lined with books collect- ed by generations of Thornburys. Electa paused. She wanted to be patient with this irritated soul who knew nothing of the peace that made the present atmosphere of the old house. ‘It is hard” she said at last, “But there's a larger view. We don't feel as you do about property. In our work there’s no mine and thine.” “That’s easy, after you've got it all! I'd like to know how long this ‘work,’ as you call it, would go on, or what you'd be doing with yourself, if it weren't for Thornbury money!” “I'm not helpless,” flashed the girl, with sudden spirit, her calm beauty kindling in so unexpected a way that Mrs. Birchfield felt her self-erected pedestal tremble be- neath her. “Surely you know,” Electa went on, “that I'll never use the money for personal ends. I will use it as she used it. I mean to carry out all her wishes. I am bound by the most sacred obligation, her trust in me.” “Her trust in you! It’s incredible —-putting a fortune into your hands: like that, away from her natural heirs forever!” “Why not? The house where she carried on a great work—" “Pauperizing a set of lazy men and women who ought to be out in the world making a living!” Electa’s faith in her work made her careless of the sneer, but she longed to justify the dear old friend who had trusted her. “You know,” she said, “how strongly Miss Thorn. bury felt about the right and wrong use of money.” “Oh, I suppose she told you that my husband was a gambler,” the other interrupted hardily, “because he took risks and lost money on the Stock Exchange! don’t blame him—not a bit.” “She thought that he should have been content. You had emough—" “What did she know about enough or you either? Does one ever have enough when there are five chil- dren? Oh, it’s too much; I can’t bear it!” Lucy sprang up, passion- ately striking her little hands to- gether. “You shut yourselves away from the world, you see nothing as it really is, and then you attempt to judge the rest of us; to decide what we need or don’t need. I'm not afraid to tell you what I believe! I believe a family is the best thing on God's earth, and family claims come first, every time. I want my children to take the place my father and grandfather had before them, I want them to be well-established, to live with their own sort, to be proper figures in the world they belong to, That's their birthright, and you've robbed them of it; you've schemed to get it away from them, It takes money, and lots of it too, to keep one’s place in the world; there’s no use pretending anything different. I'm not a hpocrite; I say what I think. T want my children to have their place. That's my duty, and it's my religion, too!” Electa had risen and stood look-, ing down at the little hard, hot face and trembling hands. How could she feel anything but love and pity for this blind, starving soul? Her arms went out in a movement of tenderness. “Oh, my dear, how unhappy you must be! Don't you see how small they are, how worthless, these things that you are living for, that you want for your children?” Lucy drew back, ignoring the reac. hands. Perhaps beneath the tenderness she felt a touch of that unconscious spiritual arrogance that can see no way but its own. She faced Electa with an unflinching eye. “They may be small, they may be worthless—the things I want. But, such as they are, I mean to get them!” Six months later the case of Birchfield versus Cragin was under way. ? “Single women aren't fit to handle property,” declared Mr. Sheldon, of the law firm of Sheldon and Hollis- ter, as he and his young partner went up the courthouse steps to- gether. “They're the natural prey of the fakir, and the better they are the quicker they get fooled. Wo- men seem to lose all their common sense unless they are tied down by a husband and babies of their own. Now this Miss Rachel Thornbury, she was the salt of the earth—” “Oh, it’s a perfectly clear case,” John Hollister assented; the sort of thing that happens all the time. But I confess I'm puzzled by the other woman, this Miss Cragin, I can’t quite make her out. A fanatic, of course—" “Fanatic fiddlesticks! An adven- turess—after the money from the start. Don’t be fooled by her Fra Angelica face and skimpy dress.” “Not an adventuress,” said Hol- lister. “I can’t believe that.” “Well, wait till we get her on the stand. We'll find out what she’s made of when you begin to cross- examine her, my boy. Don’t be afraid of pricking her heart. She hasn't any. A heart means fire, and if it's there a flicker will get up to the face occasionally. These cold people who sit on the snow-bank side of life—they are the schemers, John, who get away with the goods. But we'll pull up this one all right.” It was the second - day of the trial. After calling as witnesses the family physician, and a few relatives and friends who had been frequent visitors at Thorndale, the plaintiff had rested her case. She had alleged that Electa Cragin, a beneficiary and dependent of Mrs. Thornbury, had taken advantage of her situation by exercising undue influence upon the testatrix at a time when she was not of sound and disposing mind by reason of ad- vanced age and failing health, there- by inducing her to destroy an earlier will in favor of her niece and heir-at law, Lucy Birchfield, and to devise and bequeath her entire estate to the said Electa Cragin. Mrs. Birchfield’s witnesses had produced a marked effect by their Well, it’s true. I | distinction and straightforward tes- | timony. Electa had listened with a failing heart, cut by every word— for it was all true, yet true in a way that made the words them- selves seem false. True that she had never left Miss Thornbury alone, even with the physician. How should she leave one who was so touchingly dependent upon her, who clung to her even more wistfully when oth- ers were present? And true that she had assumed control at Thorn- dale as the work dropped from her friend’s weakened hands. She had thrown herself wholly into the cause of her benefactress, sure of her own motive, oblivious to pos- sible imputations. And now! It ‘was an outrage that these worldly, goods-burdened people should think her bent on personal gain—she who, with all the Thornbury estate in her mame, felt no sense of possession. She had gone from court in dismay. Could she ever explain? Could she make them see? “No,” she told herself. “My own words will be used against me. | They cannot understand.” | So on this second day she walked into court as to an ordeal of which she alone guessed. Lucy Birchfield—very trig in a black cloth suit, calculated to delight the eye of the most exacting tailor, and touched with youth and prettiness by the unfailing cosmetic, excitement —dropped her eyes as Electa took her place at the other end of the counsel table. The two women had not met since their interview six months before. Visitors were gathering expectant- ly, and Electa, with a chill of ap- prehension, suddenly realized that it was she whom their curious eyes were seeking. But she gave no sign of disquiet, and when her name was calied moved forward to the ~ wit- ness stand with the usual modest composure that made part of her quaint charm. The nun-like brown dress which she wore failed to ob- scure the youth of her figure, and the little round hat which rested on the coils of her copper-gleaming hair seemed recently to disavow its own primness, “It is very effective to be differ- rent,” Mrs. Birchfield cynically whispered to Hollister; then flushed | with annoyance at the warmth of his assent. But calm as Electa appeared, she found it hard to breathe in this at- mosphere of antagonism and resent- ment. Yet she had never once doubted her right to fight for her inheritance. All her life she had flamed with a longing to help and save, and she accepted the fortune as a mysterious fulfillment. She had the martyr's ardent moments when she felt herself chosen to uphold the life of faith before a mocking world, to fling the divine challenge to the forces of evil, and her eager imagination transformed even her attorney to an appointed instrument in this high warfare —though to the uninitiated he would seem but im- perfectly adapted to spiritual ends. This ramble jointed personage now walked back and forth in front of his client as he questioned her, his | mingling of jocularity ‘and ‘assur- ance. hands in his pockets, his manner a’ i But he soon proved his adroitness. Quickly and easily he drew forth | Electa’s story. The girl told how, some six years eariler, she had giv- en up in a public school that she might devote hereself to evangelistic work. She had always meant to be a missionary. Her very name bestowed upon her by a ‘Scotch father who had brought the : deep religion of his rugged hills to ‘a Pennsylvania farm, bad set her ‘apart for a life of service. She | spoke very simply; one could see that she was too inexperienced to realize what her own courage had . been in throwing aside a bread- ! occupation for the sakeofa : conviction and facing the world with faith as her only asset. She told of her meeting with Miss Thornbury, who had immediately urged her to help in the establishment of a mis- sion at Thorndale. At first she had hesitated. “I had to wait for a leading,” she said, and on her lips the worn phrase had no flavor of cant. Pollock, the lawyer, dexter- ously showed her throughout as the trusted adviser of her old friend, careful mever to abuse this confi- dence, never to take the initiative, Intent only upon the truth of her answers, she was scarcely aware of the court-room and of the favorable impression made by her testimony. Once she began an eager explana- tion in reply to a question con- cerning the nature of her teaching when a sudden “I object” from the counsel for the plaintiff cut sharply across her eloquence. “Irrelevant and immaterial,” John Hollister. Electa fell back, her cheeks help- lessly aflame. “There’s fire there—and a heart,” thought Hollister in an unprofes- sional instant. Electa finally testified as to the clearness of Miss Thornbury’s mind when her last will was drawn, stat- ing that she had not been present and had been told nothing whatever in regard to it. Mr. Pollock then yielded to the counsel for the plain- tiff. Electa had a wild impulse to run. She felt that a relentless ma- chine was opening to entrap her. John Hollister drew his chair forward for the cross-examination. Their eyes met, and his were as steady and candid as her own. In- stantly she felt a soul in the ma- chine. This man cared for some- thing more than the winning or losing of a case. The spirit of justice in her sprang to meet the spirit of justice in him. He was very unlike the men she had known—the missionaries, itin- erant preachers, and reformed drunkards of her little sphere. His strong figure and well-made clothes implied attention to corporeal things, but there was a clear hint of idealism in the face, marked as it was with early lines of decision and purpose, There was nothing terrifying in his deliberate manner, but the per- tinence of his queries and his inti. mate knowledge of her life astonish- ed Electa. Gradually she began to see that she was again revealing herself, but how differently! It was not herself! Or was it? The tone and wording of each question --de- termined the significance of the answer. The same story—but so different! She sat tingling, pilloried, blindly awaiting the questions. said seemed to be playing a game in which she was only a passive pawn. ther. But this grave, clear-eyed young man pursued his tactics unruffled. Thornbury’s field 2” “Yes.” relative, made a later will?” “N-no, I didn’t know,” she an- swered very low. “You did not know? You had no suspicion that you were the bene- ficiary under a new will?” “I did not know it. No one ever told me.” Electa’s face whitened. “But”—she stopped a moment, then broke out suddenly—*“yes, I did sus- pect, I did know, I was sure!” The court room rippled with sur- prise. “You knew and you did not know. Please be more definite,” “No one told me,” she repeated. “You mean then that you were morally certain?” “Yes.” “And why had you this moral certainty?” “I knew her feeling about the work—about money—that her mon- ey was not her own to spend or be- queath—it was dedicated.” “Giving this money to you she, so to speak, was carrying out her purposes ?” “She believed so—yes!” lifted her head. “You shared her the use of money?” “I shared it.” “Was her conviction on this point fully settled before you went to live with her?" “I don’t know—how can I tell?” she faltered. “Her convictions grew —we talked things over—” “Her religious convictions were partly the result of her association and conversations with you?” “She woula always ask me what I thought and believed—yes?” “And your thought and belief al- ways had weight with her?” She hardly heard her own answer given blindly, stammeringly, for she was very tired. The air of the sun- ny court-room had grown stifling, steamy with needless heat, and she seemed to be trying to push her way through a substance dnvisible and baffling. A window had been opened, letting in clinging, jerky Sounds from the street which hurt her like blows. The white-haired, quizzy-eyed judge rocked in his chair ‘with “singiilar indifference. On her left sat the jury, their faces like twelve plates in row; the court Electa feeling about “You knew also that she had; Again and again her lawyer thrust the an objection to the rescue. Arguing, | point of view. What did it prove, wrangling, the opposing attorneys: this examination She had thought it so easy to speak | inward effort to find the the truth. Now she saw truth as | truth double-faced, elusive, fleeing before ; facts. | “You knew that there had been called to the stand. an earlier will in favor of Miss her Electa tried to arouse herself to Mrs, Birch- | outer things. “What can Aunty have | stenographer wrote scratchily, and she felt every stroke of his im- perturbable pen; out of the assem- bly, whiich swam before her, she could detach Lucy Birchfield’s face alone, looking back at her with nar- rowed eyes and remote smile. People began to move. It was the- noon recess and the room emptied quickly. Electa stumbled a little as she stepped down from the wit- ness stand and Pollock put out a steadying hand. “Good, Miss Cragin, good!” he said in a loud whisper. “You held your own; you're a first-rate wit- ness,” And Lucy Birchfield’s smile became less sure as she overheard. Her son, a lad of seventeen, was standing beside her. “Don’t worry, mother; it'll come out all right sure,” he said as he threw his arm about her shoulders and led her from the room. Electa suddenly felt alone, No sympathy was to be expected just then from her disciples, that was Plain, Having brought lunch bas- kets to court, they were actively concerned with hard-boiled eggs and piles of thick sandwiches. Electa turned from their homely banquet with a shiver of distaste. Struggling in the swirl of new impressions, she crossed to the open window and stood gazing out over the roofs at the ragged crest of hills beyond the river. Then earth and sky grew black and she dropp- ed to a chair, her eyes closed. Instantly some one was at ner side, holding a glass of water to her lips. “Drink this.” said the voice that had pilloried her, and she obeyed. The giddiness over, she looked up at John Hollister, and flung a quick little cry. , 4‘Oh, don’t you know that I'm in the right? Please say you believe in me!” He set the glass carefully down on the window sill before he rei plied. “I can’t discuss the case with you—you must see that it isn’t pos- sible. And I can’t say that you are in the right. But I do believe in you,” Electa lay awake that night. Something was happening, some- thing that she didn’t understand. Never before had she experienced this creeping, chilly self-distrust. She had always been sure. Ané what did this other thing mean? This aching sense of common life of the world with its warmth of | human ties? Strong, real, compelling, the things she had always denied | rose to her, and the traditions—yes, even the sacrifices and services— shrank back and dwindled like the Goode Deedes in the morality play she had once seen. She tossed until the November dawn began to glim- ! mer through the bare apple boughs outside her window. Then, as she lay quiet, at last an answer seemed to shape itself out of the stillness in old familiar words: “Forego de- | sire, and thou shalt find rest.” | On the third day the pensioners | of Thorndale were called to the stand, and one after another they | offered the same testimony; the! mental competence and indepen- | dence of Miss Thornbury up to the: day of her death. The accumula- | tion of evidence brought no com-' fort to Electa. For the first time she found herself trying to realize event from Lucy Birchfield’s of witnesses?” Gradually she lost consciousnes of the progress of the case in her tense soul of in the confusing array of An old negress, for years in the service of Miss Thornbury and now | doggedly attached to Electa, was’ At sight of to tell?” she wondered. ‘Why should Mr. Pollock summon her?” Aunty smoothed out the folds of her best black dress and played consequentially with her bonnet strings. Her high cheek bones shone from the scrubbing they had reciev- ed; cunning lurked in her lean, brown face, and her beady eyes suggested some primeval creature ' intent on self.preservation. She was eager to speak, and Mr, Pollock’s question, “Did you have any talk with Miss Thornbury after she was confined to her ved?” brought a ready answer: | “Oh, yas, sir!” The lawyer seemed amused. : “Well, tell us what conversation you | had.” { “It was this way. She was speakin’ ’about the home yo’ know, | sir, an’ she says to me lak this, ! ‘Aunty, in case I die I want,’ she say this to you,’—yo’stay here right along, don’ yo’ never on no ’count | go away fur to leave Miss ’Lecta.’ | After she talk that-a-way, I says ‘I never heerd nothin’ ‘bout the way | the home when yo’ pass over Jor- dan, Miss Rachel,’ an’ she says, ‘Why I thought yo’ all knowed’ bout that. Ever’thing mus’ go on jes the same lak it is now.'” i Electa listened in amazement. Was it possible that old Aunty, the gossip of Thorndale, should have . heard such significant words from ' her benefactress and yet have kept silence? There had been much un- easy speculation in the little com- | munity during Miss Thornbury’s ill- | ness, though Electa had honestly done her best ito—suppress it. Frightened, suspicious, she dared not raise her eyes during Aunty’s cross-examination. The old woman showed a guarded shrewdness in | her grasp of the issue. Bland and | unconfused, never wavering, never contradicting herself, she stuck | persistently to ‘her statements. | Even Hollister couldn’t help joining | in the general laugh when she foil- ed him two or three times by her blank reiterations. She had been thoroughly drilled. She left the | stand, feeling her triumph, and halted for FKlecta’s approval, but the girl sat drooping. Humiliation wrapped her as in a flame. How could the lawyer think about me? Do you s’pose I've gone into this thing for charity?” He {pounded his meaning into the , did? . went up to hide her face. ‘tried persuasion. way. We'll talk it over after you've know her so little after all these ! years of her teaching? A crumbling tremor shook the foundations of her life. Somewhere there had been a fatal flaw. The court ad- journed, bustling. John Hollister was at her elbow gathering up some books from the counsel table, but she did not look at him. He made a movement as if to speak, then, respecting the silence of misery, he left the room with only a backward glance. A hand fell familiarly on her shoulder, insensible to her recoil. “Come, Miss Cragin,” said Pol- lock, “don’t be downhearted.” He bent over her. She felt his breath on her cheek and sickened. “It's all going our way. The jury is with you to a man, I'm keeping back the best witnesses for the last.” At that she found words. “No more witnesses!” she cried. “This case must not go on. I don’t know how to stop itt, I don’t know the legal method, but it must not go on!” “You didn’t like calling the old darky? Oh, I see! Well, perhaps that was a mistake. We didn’t really need her. Our case is strong enough.” Her hands wrung a “You don’t understand. It’s more than that. I'm wrong—I won't take the money! Now do you see?” “Good God, girl, you are clean crazy—that’s what I see! You won't take the money! I like that! What protest. table. “Why, we can’t stop! Juggle with the law like that? Make a fool of the court? Besides, the other side’s got no case. It’s you who are in the right!” He ignored the dumb shake of her head. “Of course you | are right. Undue influence! They've proved nothing! It was kindness, care, attention—nothing that can invalidate a will, She meant you to have her property. You know ity “Because down in my heart I meant to have it!” He shifted roughly. “S’pose you That's legitimate. We all get what we can. She wanted you to have it; that’s the point that con- cerns us. It was her free will.” “My will was hers. She thought what I thought. Believed as I be- lieved. And the secret wish of my heart—O, God help me!” Her hands He scowled down upon her, then “Come, come, you mustn’t give had a bit of lunch. You're all tired out now. That's what’s the matter— —you’re nervous!” And he believed he had the clew to all feminine caprice. When the case was resumed at one o'clock there was a general impression that the defendant had vindicated her position. It was ap- parent, however, that Miss Cragin was not in triumphant mood. The contest had wearied her, But her attorney’s swagger betrayed his exultance. The Birchfields were losing hope. Tom whispered dis- gustedly to his wife: “Take a pret- Ly red-headed girl with a go-to- the-spot voice and put her on the stand before twelve men, and you can bet on the verdict every time.” “Oh, you men! That’s the worst of it.” Lucy dejectedly admitted the perversities that sometimes con- trol human affairs, but she was plucky and meant that no one should suspect what the loss of the suit would cost her in disappoint- ment and actual financial worry. “You're game, Lucy,” murmured Tom with an appreciative vivacity. Electa sat in a trance-like still- ness while the remaining witnesses were called. A black-bearded apostle from Thorndale offered some conclusive evidence, and the case became so one-sided that it ceased to be interesting. People began to wonder why it had ever occurred to the Birchfields to try to set aside so unequivocal a document. The apostle acquitted himself neatly and was leaving the stand when Electa “Your honor, please. I must be heard.” Her voice rang out through the courtroom. Every eye was turned toward her. Pollock was on his feet, in- terposing quickly. our honor, I ask indulgence for my client. She is not well, May I have your permission to take her to the consultation room?” “Your honor,” said Electa, “can see that I am perfectly well. My at- torney has refused to speak for me. I ask your leave to speak for my- self.” The judge looked at her search- ingly, then bowed assent. “We will allow the defendant to be heard.” In the quivering, expectant hush of the court-room she spoke. It seemed quite simple. She had only to tell of what had passed in her mind. Now that she knew her way and could speak in utter sin- cerity, not a presence embarrassed her—not the judge, preoccupied with the difficulties in legal procedure she had thrust upon him; not Pollock, balked and non- plussed; not the plaintiff, dumb in bewilderment, nor the jury straining forward; nor the spectators, assur- ed at last of their full meed of sensation. In swift, sure words she laid bare her conflict of motive. At the end she spoke more slowly. “Everything would have been dif- ferent if I had been different,” she said. “I can see that now. I'm not so sure that I've always been right. I don’t know! I only know that I can never touch that money!” Pollock cut in with apologies to the court for her conduct. “This is what comes, your honor, from dealing with religious cranks!” Then old Mr. Sheldon arose and addressed the court. “While compelled to admire this young woman for her candor and generosity, I suggest that we make sure she realizes the import of what and in all equity, when I say that the defendant must not be permit- ted to yield her claim to a fortune on an impulse. She should let the law take its natural course and should the verdict be in her favor she must be made to see that she has a legal right to every penny. She has, it appears to me, a mis. conception of the legal significance of the word “undue.” Electa faced the old lawyer un- moved from her purpose, though her clasped hands strained at each oth- er. Her eyes had the large full look of one absorbed by the inner vision. “That's only the letter of the law,” she said softly. John Hollister, sitting at the oth- er side of the counsel table, lifted his head for the first time. His eyes met hers in a long clear look that was like the scattering of mists. The inner light seemed to come to her face in color, and with new courage she spoke in the voice that admits of no question: “I am in the full possession of every faculty, I know what I am doing. I have thought and prayed. And I beg your honor in the in. terest of justice, to instruct the jury to bring a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.” After the case had been dismissed Lucy Birchfield came swiftly across the room, her face broken and softened, and the two women clasped hands without a word. Mr. Sheldon held open the courtroom door to let them pass out together. Then he turned to John Hollister. “Well,” he said, clearing his throat of an unusual obstacle, “I was wrong. But who would expect a woman to give up a fortune for an abstract principle of justice?” “You'd have expected it of a man?” asked John. “Oh, you know bluffed Sheldon. “I suppose it is—living up to one’s principles—it’s so seldom done.” 3 “That girl’s as clear as crystal,” pursued Mr. Sheldon. “It's not enough for her to see what's right, she does it. Well she shan’t suffer. We must keep an eye on her till she gets started at something; we must make it our business to look after her, eh, John?” “Yes,” said Hollister; think we must.” : He tried to speak carelessly, but even Sheldon knew that he was making a vow.—By Elizabeth Moor- head, in Scribner's Magazine. it’s quixotic,” “I really INDIVIDUAL THINKING, URGED BY EDUCAOTORS. Over use of text books in prefer- ence to a natural, practical course was assailed by educators at the Western Pennsylvania Education Conference. Teach the boy and girls to think and let them develop their creative ability was the keynote of their ad- dresses. The speakers ridiculed the memorizing of useless facts and other ideas presented through text books. Dr. Hughes Mearns, New York University; R. G. Jones, superin- tendent of schools, Cleveland, anc Dr. Edwin H. Reeder, Columbia Uni. versity, told educators to teach boys and girls to do research work, make their own experiments, anc to seek information for themselves instead of forcing text-book in. formation on them. “Supervision has measured teach. ers for their ability to drive young people into the class of obedient verbal memorizers’”’ said Mearns. “The power to exmaine is the power to destroy, Testing childrer for what text-book facts they have retained makes easy bookkeeping for the supervisor; with it he cax keep his teachers to the mark o: text-book instruction. ‘In the light of the marvelously new things that are being descov ered in youth power, the new educa tionist is inviting the supervisor officers to measure youth-growth a: well as examination skill.” Superintendent Jones said tha custom-made education is designe: to fit the wearer, is molded to sui the mind of the individual. “Public education,” he said, “oi the other hand, may be regarded a a ready-to-wear garment. Turne: out for the masses, it follows th styles with cheaper material tha) the original models designed for up per classes.” Dr. Reeder said, “Let the childre always suggest what to do. Follov the natural interests of the boy and girls. Children dislike adul suggestions in preference to thei natural interests.” Twenty-five conferences were hel to-day. Dr. David Snedden, Columbia Uni verisity, saw great benefits result ing from education ona more scien tific basis, He addressed the ger eral meeting recently, in Syri Mosque, urging the development c education scientifically for the ber efit of the pupil. GOSHAWK NEST FOUND IN PENNSYLVANIZ Officers of the Game Commissio again have recieved postive proc that the goshawk, winged killer «¢ the far northern latitudes, som times nests in Pennsylvania. Jesse Logue, First Forks, Cam: ron county, forwarded a mothe bird and three young ones to tk Commission for payment of the § bounty on each. Logue is a brothe of Chauncey E. Logue, State traj ping instructor. Both are note for their woodcraft ability. The goshewk nest contained ti the carcass of a ruffed grous carefully stripped of all its featl ers, which the mother bird hs brought for the young. The mot] er goshawk is credited with alwa) carefully plucking the feathers fro: a bird before offering it to ti young. The Cameron county nest was tl that she would descend to dodging 'she is saying and doing before we ninth found in Pennsylvania ar and quibbling? And did Aunty go further. I speak for my client, recorded by the Commission.