V y 3 1 f i i i fl I I 1 he g SILK HAT HARRY'S DIVORCE SUIT ( WArTWOV TO C0M& TO lot-GTTH5CEN(EV ON ACr AwAV 1- -r,-p Y Inconsiderate By WIXIFUED The following letter l-.as been referred to me as orre unong many others vt like kind, deserving reply: Berkeley, Cal., Oct. 11, 19U-Slr: A mother wishes to write In reference to the article "The In considerate Moth er," by ' Winifred Black, which ap peared In your paper a few Weeks MO. I cannot under stand why any good daughter should ob ject to match a akrln of ribbon on her way to or from work for the dear mother who has devoted the best part of her life to brlnglnsr this same daughter Into the world, tending and training her -through babyhood anfl childhood. What manner of intellect has a girl that eouW lot her brain become like a waste pa.per basket bevause her mother lias called on her to do the small ser vice of buying- a bit of ribbon or yarn? Why, the greatest happiness Is found In doing for others. Open your heart, dear girl, broaden your Ideas of living. Fill your heart with little ftots of klndndBs' and others, and in so doing you will find si bettor and hap pier 'womanhood. Clutter up your handbag! Mercy, me! Let us hope there Is nothing worse In r How to Be Beautiful By MAHUAKKT HUUBAU1) AYKK. A read r of this paper writes me that she wants to grow very tall and woukl like a few rules to go by. She does not j ttate her age, which makes quite a differ ence, for while you can pull the young twig a. bit you can't alter the shape of the old branch or change the grown tree. Twenty-one used to be the age when men and women were supposed to get thetr growth, but It Is an Individual mut ter and many peopl attain their full de velopment before that and a few after It. If my correspondent Is still In her teens there are -arlouB exercises which may help her to grow taller and at all events they will give her a very good can-lag, which gives the Impression of height and which will Improve the bodily poise of the tall girl as well. First of all, be sure you are breathing properly and see that your clothing at all times to light enough and loose enough so that It neither cramps nor hinders you In any way. Here Is the first exercise: Htund erect, weight on both feet, hands bunging relaxed at the, sides. Now rotate the shoulders as you would do If your neck muscles were uncomfortable. Kotate the arms Inward, but do riot bend forward. When your shoulders and arm muscles feil relaxed take a deep breath and raise up on the balls of Uie feet, raising the arms at the same time high over the head until the yand the entire body arc stretched to the utmost. i Feel as If you were stretching your waist muscles, which Is what you should do. You can repeat this exercise as often as you like. Inhaling as you stretch and exhaling and relaxing. Most email people have very tentu musoles, and all exercises which combines relaxing and utretohing of the muscles are good. Work In a gymnasium would Us Idtul, as It Is more systematic than home work, and the apparatus, especially the bars, afford good opportunity for stretohlng and lim bering the body. An. English growing machine was on the market a few years ago which ttretched the cartilage, or was supposed to, but one hud bcuer du this work for oneself, a the violent mechanical pulling and stretching of the muscles la not last ing In Its effect and may be harmful. Children and young people who want to grow tall should always sleep with' their bodies stretched out siralglit Without pil lows. They sholild be especially purlieu tilar about having plenty pi fresh air, very simple food and no stimulants of uny kind. Onee a woman f'.nds she Is to belong to the "bhortles" let tier study the dresa queetlon with cure, for she can find all l.luds of tricks of the trade which will add to her apparent height, such uj lenj lines Instead if horlzotal ones, high hata Instead ot broad ones, Y-shaptd trim ming Instead of round, etc. As it Is now, the small woman li fash ionable, fur the modes are mcie for petite women and become her absolutely at any see. tvhile they l.,uk akard1 to say tha least, on the tall womuii un less woru with absolute taslc and discretion. A MifWlTH WE H-AS AT i-EMT- m ir. Relatives BLACK. your handbag to clutter It than mother's yarn. I know scores of girls. Ood bless them! who are happy to do their mothers' er rands, and the day will come when most of them will look back to the ttmo that they were privileged to do far the mother, ahd feel no regret for things left uh- done. A RKA UKIi. Now. there's a letter that ought to mean a lot and it doesn't really mean a thing not a thing In the world. No. dear reader, you can't see why a good daughter shouldn't stop on her way to work to match a skein of worsted or to buy a yard or so of ribbon for her good mother, and you think I nm doing very wrong to hint that a really good mnthnr will show her working daughter tho same consideration she shows her working son?, I wonder why. Who ever thinks of expecting' son to get away .from the office early just to match a bit of silk for "mother," and who asks son to call up the dressmaker for Sister Mary, ' or to drop Into the mllliiu?r's' at noenttme to pee why Aunt Sarah's hat hasn't come home yet? 1 Why not? Bon has as much time and s good deal more strength than Daughter; why should he be completely exempt ? Can't do those things? Oh, yes, he could If he wanted to, but tie has sense enough not to want to, and not to let any one, even his own mother step between him and his chance to compete with some one who never matohed anything In his Ufa and who doesn't intend to learn how to do It, cither. That's one of the reason's Why Bon gets bigger" wages for the same kind of work than Daughter. When you hire John Jones to work for you, you hire John Jones, and you don't know or care whether he Is a widower Jwlth seven ch '.or with two you want of with seven children or a crusty old bache- malden aunts to support. All John Jones Is his work, and you want the best of that. When you hire Mary Jones, John Jones' sister, ' you are hiring Mary Jones, and Mary Jones' mother ahd Mary Jones' Aunt Sallle and every relative Mary Jones has who takes advantage of that relationship to Impose on poor Mary, and then expert her to keep up In the world of business where the person who Is Im posed upon gets down to the loot of the ladder und stays there. , it Mary Jones' relations let her alone she may "make good" with you and earn enough to support her relations in tnodeyt comfort. If they don't let her' alone. poor Mary is late one morning and tardy the next, and she tries to get away from work ahead of time the day after, to as How 2 i;vyiU-:-v-i Wm"-:-w -JlSflWWl--WisiWjwaisSSiwBWH" - , By GABY BKSLYS. Most women could have pretty eyes If they tried to. Hut. they are too lasy to do ko. Pardon, you do not liko my sav ing this, but Is It not true? Look about you when you are o.i tho street. I often ponder as I peep out of the windows ot my motor, what It Is that the women passing by In carriages or on font can afford to look bored, ho dull, so un Interisted, and theietore iro unintertst- Ing. ' Their eyes are dull and lulerleeg, their expression ono of worry or enmil, bot'i ugly, and thetr faces droop depreflngb . Now. with us In France It li Clfferenl. I think we have more pride about our personul appearance, more vanity than to lot 'the whole v. orld s?e us when we were not looking our best. The French woman on the ttreet dresses only quietly, though she Is very "chic," but her expression Is always on of Interest mill Ik r evt are bright and full of animation. Kvprcit'jii makes the evei beautiful and care kep them young, lint If you are not interested In anything, not even In your own looks, your eyes will lack exrrerioii, they will half close, and eventually the under eyelid will grow heavy ar.d the eye look about half Its natural site. You can make your eves look larger by training yourself to keep them open. After all, this Is a trick, and It In don.; with the lr)telllg?nce and not with ces- titi j ri:ii: fine jaga z i lie p)a 1 MM A l 1 I d I rrr f I 1 AffENT THE" oEt - UTlF THE AAA? yHtATC VNAi HAND ANt,F0CJ7 AD TKEW SETEX Wom THE. Hot J ah OS 01 THE DESepVT-VKHvLE." SBUnO H(A STVOP X rrUAN VjvA.ttp.ujM THE- ffXfiX Mei) I P r n -rOnr TO CHAm. WOOfV 6- VJ THEM iUJT NO KOA(lUf HE CHEO. HOM ( 5 T SH.N NOBOOV Cooip JOU.I FCATfON Ana Con pA? i ) LICrHTW TWPP'Ntf s .SON ft" J THftlt.US NBTH f HOST OF OH I BlT I i&OT THE. SvfeU-rt)B no. I'M A xsntA4c in a Musers. -TMATfHg JTP-Eg. J not to ml?s the C o'clock boat and hurt Aunt Bailie's feelings, and the first thing you know you have to give poor, kind, good-hulnored Mary a blue envelope, and you never think to ask her whether she was matching samples for some one or Just wasting the time and energy you pay for some other way. And every one feels sorry for Mary's Aunt Sallie, and Mary's good mother; because 'poor Mary "doesn't get along In business." I know a man who never engages a woman to work in his office without asking her some very personal questions: "Do' you live at home?" "Will your mother be grieved if I keep you a few minutes over office hours once 1n a While?" "Do you have to run errands for Aunt Pallle, or will you be ablo to give your entire mind to your work dur ing office hours?" If the woman answers these questions the right way she gets a chance in that office; If she answers them the wrong way she never knows what Is the matter, but there Is never any vacancy Just then. Exacting, perhaps, but, then, why should he consider Mary's relations when Mary's relations do not even consider Mary hersolf at all? v One May V IT- i i iii 1 -V- ft V R ' " '.' i " '. ' : "''V' ' "'Zf K'"'V-i JO orAii., Tiirisi.v. novi;mim;i: 'j;;, inn. The Judge Takes la the Dorse Show OH YAtf - I 'Html XWh 111 1 I . . 4 A 'ill ' 1 1 .1 ii txr-mm VP CM eOAON(W AaliJ -VTI rT a A . , THE CONey litAM0 Jne CHAPjrtA, VNAJ OO'NO-MiTn. PAN.oui JNAs-C OAixcK IhTHG. iTOOiO oafi HAttOtp &OB"0 ITVASA fioT Inith T. GoEVfi AWO THEV Ct-APpetTH(t rArOi ?u,TK HGAlrtW AS in VWOUIMO Tt P-EfPTl LC AMX-HO Hl- CHOCCt-p.TE. 8R.0VMN AtCC- A MAev N rHE BAtfi VtlTH flTF-Z Vmko VvJAi K.NOVNN AS BA-ZOOE -R AHOJ An0 IN A VMItTLO OfLCfSM PlfEO . C glt)HA5H ANO MAC HotX-eo ATTHB PAlfcC of me scancs inou-p PifcNtc'. ANOTHER StH IN W5 V IWASMfMi NUWLOTtJ, CUCkiH TrtS cwpi ArvB BofTTUES. of TMfT Tt6-L- And Jvmcep ooT THOI I SminR JThoEJ, DoiT 0.CO5T0MCXJ. jcfc-pTrtt fcASirtS AENN FC S4fi003 . lUF(AU.TVe HATS AH0Tk.. CAJE THO AT 7.JO PM .1 OOif AdourtO FXTTM(sfrV ttHISM A0 AMP AFWH. HB FMC BOSS CM Mary's busy downtown. Aunt Bailie, busier than you ever . were In your life, evon at church baxxar time. She in work ing for a living, and vorkng hard; what right have you to make' it harder for her? Why won't you give Sister Mary an even chance with Brother John? Just be cause she's a girl? Do you think that's a fair way to look at It? I don't. r Tid-Bits of History JOA. OF ARC. By MILKS OVKUHOLT. Joan of Arc, or Janne d'Arc, which ever la the easier to pronounce, was a self-made man. I When Miss Arc was 13 years of age she grew tired of washing the dishes and reading proof on a pan of biscuits and the like, and shs wanted to go to war the worst way. Her parents thought she was lovesick or something, and they told tier to go tuke some quinine and forget Keep Young and Pretty ;'S'-1-'.. -.NT-. 'OWN t I F ' V, , , . ' , , L ' j .m m HA - I I .1 'I ML i i I I r 1 ' THEV 5eW THAT A CgJTtC By ilM (I ft Of" A Is. . AS sTfl If TJ A 111 M3 eouJ6 THE Am ATOM wAi t-GST h rner ciouo. Juopeu-V A OiG- irortrA CAN-ctp, jvE vWIHO HOvat-KO PlATCE-W AMD MOOMOU . THE U Crl-tlTilNi' F-t.SMD7T U.E.R-y- JUOPENt-V CUT UPON THE Ct-Ot-OJ TVtC AVAlrofi hOTJCEO A JlfrfH FAauatdr. bumped IHTD A "PHONO erf-A.PH ' UMOUi-0 H D(?ETMi THC. FAfiAAMoOi , UN CH A rl CrP NOTHlN TQ 00 TlLU nflHE 4 It, but Jo couldn't see it that way, ex actly. One day she Inserted herself In a pair of old overalls and a jumper and mounted a while horse and a sword and headed an army of 10.000 men., who stood bravely by, urging Joan on, clapping 'their hands and shouting, i'HIc, 'nn, Tlge." r some foreign college yell like that, while ahe jumped Into the fray, and licked tha Eng lish to a fratxktf' "" '. But one fell day,, ihe' English troops captured Joan arid carried her iway. Khe scratched the face of the English army and pulled its hair In great shapo, but she' was finally subdued: In ordor to feel perfectly safe, Kngland decided to burn Joan at the stoke. bo they obtained a large porterhouse stake and burned her to it. and threw what was left Into the River Heine, . proving beyond a doubt that the orglnal Idea that she was Insane was well founded she was In deed hi Heine. Meaty Maxima, "Not how much, but how well." "One step at a time Is plenty." "A poor workman quarrels with his tools." t , , 'i K $ t ,U m c wi i NOUTlfi 1 A HAfW GOV V to By Tad .nlfnllh lllllllllllllilllllllllf MA - ma - OH FAmnIE" lfO(CjT TO J MOW VQU un ah mw 11 - HT-y 1 I J f&Af X- 1 It Am- Breeding Men By IlH. O. STANLKY HALL, rresldent of Clark University. (Excerpts from a lecture delivered No- i vember .) ! Man today knows how to breed cattle, bit he does not know, how to breed man. The trend la to lay more and more stress upon nature heredity and less upon environment. Wo cannot hope to do much good with out a good start. We must have health and vigor to fight the battles of life, and we owe It to our posterity that health and all the better qualities shall be lutnded on from one generation to the next. We are often prono to pride ourselves on our an cestors. We point to sorci one or two or three particular forebears who have been mure or less Illustrious, not tliinklng that In between us and thoso progenitors there may have been a hundred ancestors whom we might be ashamed to acknowl edge. We should not be proud of our ancestors, but of ourselves as ancestors. We should conduct our lives with a view to bettering our posterity, for It Is by our posterity thaf we will be judged and not by our anoestry. Luther Burbanlc has repeatedly startled tha world by the amaalng results of his crossing species ahd breeding. Burbank did not conduct his experiments on a purely scientific basis, any more than Edison relied up on tha sat formulas ot science to evolve the wonderful things that emanated from hi brain. But he has discovered many things In his work that he could never have found out with the did of science alone. Why, I have watched Burbank; !n his gardens patiently grafting the twig of one tree to that of another, altogether Ignorant of what the result would be. But the results of Ms experiments prove Use efficacy ot his manner of conducting them. They are none the less valuable , because science played no part In them. ""In breeding, of course, we can breed from the bottom or the top. We can breed from the best or tha worst, The future of the race, however, depends upon that which predominates. In France they discovered that the death rate and the birth rate were keep ing pace with each other. There was no progress In population. In England and Germany and other countries that also was the case. This Is most marked among the best classes. As a general rule the lower classes are found to be ttte most fertile. International business today has so advanced that a country must have an ever Increasing population to keep pace with progress. Most modern countries, too( neid men for colonisation -vr .' ifVj.Ui.-UMAri&..Mt metlcs, so that even the severest critic could nut say anything against It. I will my eyes to be wide open, to look animated and pleasant, though they could often look as bored as those of other people I see among the aeuers-by. I know of an actress In l'arls who is famous for her eyebrows, which are very arched and very high. 8he told me once that elevating her brows was a trick of hers which she had turned Into a habit and that her eyebrows were quite low naturally. So, you see with determina tion there Is little that is Impossible, and that Is why I say that the woman with ugly ryes Is laxy. In l'arls every woman outlines her eyes a very little with a black pencil, and If this la well done It cannot be de - te ted. Also the eyelashes axe made to grow as long as posxlble by rubbing them with just a little sweet oil or vaseline every night, but this oil must not touch tho eye Itself or It will be very palnfuL I bathe my eyes often with rose water, slightly wanned and poured Into an eye cup. This Is very good for the eye, especially after any strain or when one has been out In the cold air, and very gentle massage around tho tyu Is ex cellent, too, but the main thing Is the expression of the eye. Borne one told uie the eye was the shop window of the soul. All 1 tun suy Is that tne windows aie often badly trimmed vtth the oldest, stupidest wares, and would not tempt me, at least, to explore thu rest of the store. "i SiM mlliSI Copyright, lilt National News Aii'i. f FATHEF-TOLp ME OWW I work, A declining birth rate in a coun try Is a very ominous thing. The future of the world belongs to those raoea that breed most and best. In western "Europe about one-quarter of the possible child production la lost. While the child mor-; tality Is far greater in the east, still the production of children there Is so much greater that the mortality Is overcotnpen sated for. Europe, according to these signs, appears to bo doomed. A great deal can be done for' the good of tho race by sex instruction. This should bo part of the curriculum of our schools. Fathers and mothers should ex plain to their children at least the ele mentary facta regarding sex. But there appears to be too much of the ultra con servative In our make-up today. Too much of purltanlsm. Wo fear that by talking to the youth of our country In a straightforward manner, explaining to them the things they ought to know re- 1 gardlng the question of sex, wa will bo Inculcating In their minds Information . ' which might have a tendency to lead to so-called bad thoughts. This Is all wrong.' We should make it our business' to see that 'our young men and women are fully instructed tor their own sakea In these things. Our girls should be. taught the value ot propriety, and our young men should be shown the danger of wrong acta, ' This will not make for Immorality, as some claim, But at the same time that we are In structing tho youth of our country In these things, let us Instruct them also. In literature, In art, in muslo, In ath letics. K young man or woman whoso mind is taken up with the higher things In life, and through whose veins courses the red' blood of health, and In whoso cheeks Is the bloom of tho outdoors, will have nolther the time nor the Inclination to put a wrong oonstroctlon on tho things they are taught regarding sex. . . Adolesnsnea is the time when we store up the great capital of vital force and en ergy. Our lives afterward depend upon how our early years are utilised. Wa can dissipate and lead unnatural lives, and our posterity will suffer, or Wa can conduct ourselves with a view to main taining health and higher mentality and we hand down to our children and our children's children a heritage that is in valuable. It is just like an Irrigation problem. We can permit the rain to run off in the gullies and In the canyons, or we oan divert It to the arid places that they may bear fruit. Tha greatest con tribution man can make to posterity la healthy offspring. Heredity will probably do the same for man that Burbank is doing for plant life, and thus the man of tha futura will bo more intelligent and stronger that we who have gonn before. , " " ' I A "Whlner Blleacea. "The bluff, cherry, optimism of tha late Senator Frya." said a Lewlston di vine, "could not brook a whlner. i" "Onoe, at a dinner here In Lewlston, a whlner seated opposite Senator Fry said dolefully: 'I have only one friend on earth my dog.' " 'Why don't you get another dog?, said Senator Frye." Kipling and Caine J By WILLIAM F. KIRK. Copyright, 1911, National Newa Ass'n. When a man like Rudyard Kipling draws a lot of yellow kale -For writing that the female Is mora deadly than tbe male, When old Hall Caine, the Manxman, for a time deserting prose, Tells how tbe females (bless 'em!) make men all look like Joes, Why should not I, a foot ball bard, be pardoned If I grunt That the backs of any foot ball team are dtadller than tbe front? The line If full of beefy boys, guards. tackles, centers, ends. They haven't got a thing to do except to shield their friends. They tear great holes In the defense tha hiUfbai k plunges through And flattens out some ltoman nose with his remorseless shoes. Leaving out male and female, this much I do opine: The backs of any foot ball team are deadlier than the line. When Kipling wrote of mountain bears on Himalayan peaks, I couldn't contradict him, for ha knows whereof he speuka. When Caine came back at Kipling not a farthing did I care I aeldom argue with a man who seldom cuts his hair. This Is the only claim I make, and please believe It, partis, 1 Tho halfbacks of a foot ball team are deadlier than the guards. - r - .t i