13 4 "he ee' jne aazire f)a The Last Boat M CotIm,a IT The Woman's The Menace Dickens Club of Cape Eace ( 9 i Three-thirty o'clock Monday llni Gresher put in a tardy appearance at Mrs. Lecey'a, where th member of the recently organised Pickens club vera to hold their Initial meeting. "I'm afraid I'm rather late, but I hope I haven't kept you waiting." Mra. Gresher explained, apolee-etically, as 8 he entered the room. I'm perfectly crazy about our new club. I know H i going to be educa tional and and Instructive, but my laundress" ' "Better late than never. Mra. Greaher," Interposed Mra Lacy, graciously. , "I think we'd better come to order at once. It was Mrs. Porter's suggestion. I be lieve, that we form this club (or the pur pose of studying Dickens' life and worka Mrs. Potter, you will recall, knows an English woman whose niece employed the same laundress who served the Dickens family. In this way we have gathered some Interesting personal data." "I hope she waa a more dependable laundress than mine." Mrs. Grejher said. "Mine has been dissatisfied ever since Christmas because I did not give her the kind of present she wanted. 8o to day she failed to come at all. I have been hunting everywhere for another." "I'm afraid we housekeepers are born to these distressing experiences," Mrs. IjLCey commented. sympathetically. "Mrs. Porter, we are ready to hear your paper on The Personal Side of Dickens.' " . "Just a moment." interposed a plump A little woman, "My laundress, Mrs. I Greaher, Is perfectly splendid, and I 1 think I ran get her for you l( you want her, though I make It a rule never to recommend either my laundress or my dressmaker. "I hope, Mra. Jamison, I can prevail upon you to break your rule by giving me the name of your dressmaker." aaid a sallow woman dressed In snuff brown. "That's the sweetest gown you're wear ing, though a darker shade with your pale blue eyea and light complexion wouldn't make you look quite so fagged out, perhaps. John Is always wanting me to wear that delicate shsde of blue." "Husbands do show so little taste, don't you think, Mrs. Borden?" Mrs. Jameson asked sweetly. "Mrs. Porter, kindly begin," Mrs. Lacey interposed, firmly. Mrs. Porter obeyed. She had read six lines when the bosses' small son burst uncermoniously Into the room. "Mamma, can I have one of them sandwiches on the kitchen table and can Letty have an olive 7" he asked shrilly. "Isn't he the dearest thing?" Mra ' Jameson murmured enthusiastically. "So spontaneous! I love a perfectly natural child." Mra Lacey banished her offspring with a whispered promise, Mra. Porter re sumed her resdlng. When she paused to turn a leaf Mrs. Greaher lamented audibly: "I've simply got to find a laundress." "I know of a fine washing powder, Mra Borden began, eagerly. "Ladles, Mrs. Porter Is waiting," ad monished Mrs. Lacey. Mrs. Porter waa permitted to read to the end of the short paper.' At the last word Mrs. Gresher gave a sigh of re lict. "It was splendid," she cried. "I dote on Dickens. By ths way, has any one read ths . fascinating English story about the maternity or modernity of somebody or other? Margaret Ludlow told me about it. She belongs to a read ing club where every member buys a new book once a month and wben the members meet every week they exchange If this weren't a Dickens club we might do the earns, but Imagine one of his every week!" "They're so long." Mrs. Jameson com mented. "Don't forget that ws meet at my home next Monday. One la nobody these days it one Isn't familiar with Dlcken's charactera I think Mr. Pick wick was simply charmlng-always wait ing for something to turn up. don't you know." "That was Mr. Mlcawber," Mrs. Lacey observed.' ' "And dear, delightful Sam Welter always making a note of things," Mra Xresher addd. enthusiastically. "CapC Cuttle was the character who Iwaya said, "When found make a note of It," Mrs. Lacey commented. "Of course," Mra Gresher agreed, amicably. "Mr. Gresher told me he Is a Dlcken's lover, too that Sam Weller waa always advising people to bewars of widowa My sdvlca Is to beware of your laundress. If I only knew" "The coffee's ready." announced Master Lacey from the three hold. The members of the Dickens club arose and passed Into the dining room. "We've had a real Intellectual feast," Mrs. Jameson observed, as her ayes rested appreelaUngly upon (he table lades with dainties. "Very." Mra Gresher declared heart ily. "I'm so glad I Joined the club. After we've finished Dickens I move that we take up Shakespeare or one of the popu lar authors or some one. Try It. It li said the Ijuean of Shaba tested Solomon's wisdom by bringing before him a equal number of boys and glrla dressed exactly alike, and asking him to decide which was which. "The father of wisdom called for wash baatna and told the group to wash Its bands. The glrla daintily rolled up their cuffs, 'but the boys splashed away without re gard to neatnesa And there yon are. There was no match trust in that early day. If there had been ny the great kmc could has enjoyed a simpler test. Jr'or the London ChronicJa oeciarea mat nea woman strikes a match she Invari ably scraces It upward and away from herself, while a man scrapes It la and toward himself. Fin tout scaueh sot and try take Cleveland Plain Dealer. rtowwj rev sail Stria. This is to be a flower year la the realm of small folks. Nothing can be more ap- mnnate to adora the frocks of llttla girls than garb&xrla of af Pee- BC 1 est warm atxs ill ac til souses! !aas Osj ear new att Jsc-a. fhssr wsTmesss -aSl cassrrsr sexx ra ska ear. reel at wf Dam esueTtr trtjsslt4ultiM. i wen. "v ak ws tm-Mximt x u , Part Played by Chance in Man's Destiny; is Evil Star Sometimes to Be Blamed By DOROTHY DI-V The question of how far we are Indi vidually responsible for our destinies, for our successes or failures, our happiness or mlssery. la one that neither science nor experience has ever answered. The for tunate swsll oat their chests and boldly proclaim: "I am the captain of my soul." They point to their achieve ments aa the result of their own energy. tbe reward of their superior judgment and acumen. They scoff at chance and say that a man Is his own luck, and he stands or falls according to his ow will. The unfortunate. the unsuccessful -the derelicts of Ufe ory out on the other hand, that they are not to blame for their failures, that they were born under an evil star, and some malign power rules their days and brings their every effort to naught. Their labor Is barren of resulta Their struggles fruit less. Their sacrifices in vain. Opportunity never knocks at their doors. Happiness passes them by. They seem to have the curious property of attracting evil ta themselves, as others draw good about them. And who shall Judgs which of these two contentions Is right? Who shall say whether we are the puipets of fate or Its master? Does not life itself begin In the greatest gamble on earth? Is not luck mothered In the cradle? Two children are bora the selfsame moment, of the same parents, as nearly alike aa humanly possible. No eye can discern any material difference between them, but in the' little hairless skull of the one Is a brain that will make hlra a great writer, a great general, a great statesman, a great financier, while the other little head contains only a feebls intellect that win never be able even to think dearly or to do anything more than to grasp a few elemental facta The wall of two new born babes heralds their oomlng Into the world. To the phy sician, to the nurse, to even the moth- err, they sound exactly alike, but one of them comes from the throat of a Caruso and the other from ths throat of one who will sever he able to carry a tune Chance settled before they were born who were to be the sTJpUngs. the Glad stones, the Napoleons, the Rockefellers, the Caruaoa. It waa luck, and not peeav llar fitness that put tbe crown on tbe head of tbe king of England and the caax of Russia and made Frans Joseph emperor of Austria and Flmmaasal ktng of Italy. And which of as, looking hack upon oar own Uvea, does not marvel at the part tint lack fats kismet call It what yoa rtll the occult sower that seems to rase ear almost effort, has had opoa aw destiny. Tow sassier vIV 5,r-, 'J ; the right and it Is ths path that leads: you straight to fortune, or an squally meaningless turning to the left takes you right to destruction. Tou seek In vain for a publisher for your book, or a manager to produce your play, or a cap italist to hack your scheme or exploit your Invention, and by chance you bump Into a Strang man on the street car, or sit next to him at dinner, or smoke a cigar with him on the train, and you find In him the good angel that opens the door to success to you. . We can not depend on luck alone for success. We must also work and strive, but beyond Industry, beyond Intelligence, beyond Judgment, there is also the ele ment of chanoe and fata, the something In human life that Ues on the knees of the gods and is given to us, or withheld. In accordance with the whim or tbe pleas use of the power that rules our destiny. And against this decree our tears and our prayers avail not. y The Idea of this omnipotent power of fate that holds us In tbe hollow of Its Its hand has been most beautifully and graphically portrayed In the picture at ths top of this page. Look at It Study it. Observe the great muscular band rising out of ths void of darkness the unknown that surrounds life. See the diverging lines of fate that meet In the great Ufa line. Take heed of the tiny He's a Pauper Today I mT ft n I lriitfuw oarv.arc- vrnt,. rtvUAjKTTSMCS TT tAMPTHw. JC4TLW. i"Mj VE-fW IT TWMPtrrj INTO VWA.I GMiyt-iXA-me vmjktrh GoJirp "A JtArTH ATfMF -- TrEH 0Avjlr-OEUA OvSU TO IFTH6 Jvfe re TtS rwtT TWT-U M AOH A MOCC IM 7MB t4SHs-W i H 00 TMT X(Jreft- IN-7WX- QchTT HEV TA WAT LW OFF HSHT TO SE THE a : tm in soft k A tAVOUr AKTrt-iT e)M A eV OCT OH TUB tfOiV AT K I turm UJMCM' AFIte WWQa - 1 v I nuaiU DVUlK'i neu cjMi-a wvwrsii, t jjv human beings, the man and woman. blindfolded, who, starting from dlffsrsnt directions, perhaps having different ends In view, stumble along until their paths meet So are marriages made. So la the rare perpetuated. So do men and women come Into the heaven of happy marriages or the purgatory of unhappy ones. They follow the line of fat. If you ask a man why he married the particular woman ha did, he will prob ably tell you that he loved her, or at least ha thought hs did when he asked her to be hla wife. If you ask him why be loved her. or imagined he did, he cannot tell you. Nine times out of ten she Isn't at all the type of woman he had always Intended to marry. Generally he had no notion at all of marrying when he did. She had no particular beauty, no special charm to attract him more than ether women, but auddenly the Una of fate brought them together, and for weal or woe the die was cast. We who believe In love and romance believe that every eoul has Its counter part, every heart Its true affinity, every man and woman their real mates. Some times these two, starting from ths ends of the earth, maybe, corns together, though they must cross seas and con tinents and break down all tbe barrier of casta and wealth on the way. That Is when the gods are kind. Then fa ths perfect marriage. But the pity of It la that the right two do not always meet The line of fste la not always In matrimony any mora than the road that leada to happiness, and perhaps no better excuse can be offered for the domeatio failures than that they were helpless In the grasp of destiny, through which they stumbled blind- A rARMCTcAMT OO A OKOrseTO Tswrstr viS vev stive HiA TkM sTuRTM 0vsOv rtWAi? m JTOMACM wAI TMOMWfielt-f JtiOpr.Uf- TrhSy p.per, A PAUICLW MtTV OUT Jf 06 7) e?JiHTv wey mpct " Aj THcrrofts 6Ep nc s'fou rourto A VkHSjTlCf. INvavlk cWsrvAstO v.ovf-0 VOW CAU. tt A HSMg fix. TDMrwy Pont tt- VOUlt ffArtO I Tt XM0AA.oe fTr-HfTR.. out a Govet- a fcm. eteeA. c-. tvweys . Taree. Ow7CoU. S-Cou CC SYNPICATtf A 7COC eoi.Ti TME.f eET (TWA Fee HeAOmwi VVMrf A PC. saAfS DeS f-AOPrtEWi. DO Aft CHAwjtv JO 91 . rAl Amo Two Z. cols tAVOtm rHCA) tTEF so-!-. jtvf at- (, rr ?J N TO rV T MrS 0 AT 7 rn. .jute fBSarawCMgirotTMe avW AH AT'- ri & 'A Sweetheart's Wit Ily BEATRICE On the morning of April L Ida Kaiser, living in St. Louis, and 1 years old, ran gaily down the steps ta meet the post- He handed her an etrvolope addrassed In the writing thst was dsarert to her. It was from the man she waa to hurry next month. Shs ran back to her room, or, rather, ehe flew, for love gives wings o those who carry what she earned In her band and who want to he alone while they read. Reaching her room, she broke the seal, and, with heart beating high with ex pectation, read the opening sentence: "I have married another." Then shs went down ths steps, hut not aa shs had come up. Crossing the street to a drug store she bought a quantity of mercury tablets, returned to her r m, swallowed them, and was soon beyond human aid. "It was aa April fool Joke." a y-ung man sobbed to her mother a few hours later. "I did It aa a Joke- I ner-r thought of marrying any one but Ida. I (ust wanted to tease her." folded, ss the man and the woman In the picture, not knowing whither they went nor whom they were to meet, nor the purpose of the high gods In deciding then- lots. It waa kismet By Tad rnreiJH ftsm no ffwa too M&WMwcjLAfe im jam-i GtLteO CAtC PrBy Vffrn. RAVE Ao TJftroTrrej? OH A CAnAna JKa frfi Wn MAX.m rrVntCNw 3VIt-M rxay G-ACrH fuMD HIS MAf TrrBOOtM Tf tOKTItteS AAO Mktr0 rtDAAJtW. IT A VATXrl l A CLOOC AMD A tOft IS A M0UH9 IS A vtetttHPOfy a cuam MOUf0 ? VES Sit IF THAT fAAn C AJttTO TO W!AfT MtrvxOJ-D HAtVtT been vtotm a vmU-vo'- rwo 5 TOMdltMja') OteJ A n i.icswll I fitW i v r 4 J FAIRFAX. All hla lamentations and reproaches can't bring her back. He la Ilka the ms.i who rocks the boat and who is left n the boat alone, hla only msmir tint of an agonised face. The girl who was the victim of this little April fool "Joke" wsa foolleh, t s true. Only a foolish girl will decM- thst any one man's love Is all there is to life. Had she been cider, wiser and known men at their right values, her first thought would have bean gratitude that she found out hla faithlessness before It waa loo late. Discovering later that be wasn't mar ried, but was torturing ber because he thought It funny, she would have been glad to know the manner of a man he was before shs gevs him the right to torture her sll through Ufa She gave up ber life, a needless and awful sacrifice, but I claim that any woman la better off dead fan mimed to the asinine sort of a man who thinks humor Ilea In torture. The kind of men who think a laugh must be based on pain; that a cry of anguish without real causa la the moat delldous inspiration for mirth; who worry and fret and frighten, thet they may laugh, are the kind of men for all the world to avoid. They should be penned up together H al Ihey may play practical jokes on each other, and decrease their number by tormenting, worrying and scaring each other to death. They should be given limitless cipor tunltles for rocking the boat for pointing st each other with revolvers that are not leaded, for a scheme of extermina tion that will result In the wlplavg from the fac of the earth every man whose Idea of wit Is so degraded. A man demaada that the girl he loves have faith In him. This girl had It "I says she must trust In him. This gin's trust was Implicit If any one else had told her he was false, she would hare flown to his de fense with tigerish rage that ha had beea so maligned. But ha said It himself. He said he was to marry another, and, having the trust and confidence la hla word which no bad fernanded. she believed him. Her -start waa broken and aha acted harahly, and without thinking. There la a lesson In ths tragedy, ani the In mi la for glrla to learn. A man who Playa Jokes Uke thla 1st beyond rs demptkm- The glrla must saarn. and know, 'he manner of men to whom tbey give their heart. Finding there has been a ssts rake. they must not think, aa thla girl thonght that there Is nothing else left m IU. Tbey moat know that there la e-r ? Ihhsg srR. that there ta snore to tve for than before, tar asw than la the kaowl- 111 1 sea the) arts es rerent prodno ckss aT L-Arer)ea xn Tarts the ewar-youth- i rasa sheas ualtuiia as adga of a ferismaas esxsusa. Tha ImosrsedKa that a lover Is tot worth sstrrac Is a asuashal ana. bat smt of tt grass- ssrlisu. a tauajsi riaw of Ufa, szsl a asiuiliaas that has a mora stasia ftmnsavtkss. r sswaassCketflS XssDslJaW llj OKU1U.K HARDING. (Extracts from an article In Ilarper'i April magatlne made doubly Interesting by the disaster to the Titanic) Every great trade route of the world has In season some peculiar danger to navigation which brings disaster to ves-'; seis plvlng Its lanes. In the North Atlan tic for ships bound oast and west over tha ' busy southern route, tha particular mea- ace Is Caps Race. In tula neighborhood there la an extraordinary conjunction ot . n.nt c treberes. submerged rocks, ' northeasterly galea, a sheer shore and a, singularly treacherous current create er large possibility of catastrophe, i-ape , . Rsce Is a bluff, Jagged hit of coast,., scarcely provided with strand, and a mul- titiuia af submerced rocks are scatieren from the breaking water at the foot of .' the ellffa as far out to sea as the Virgin : Rocks, which outlle ninety mllea The . Polar current, which "runs use a mer -nast tha amy cane. Is so variable In the . direction of Ma flow that It may race amithweat at one time and northeast at . another. In the spring and early aummer- and often aa late as the fail of the year -Icebergs come down With the current . and He sluggishly off the coast, hidden from the sharpeet eyea of ship's lookouts In the dense accumulations ot log. ti la the f oa almost continuously raised by the contract of the Polar eur- j rent with the warm waters of the Gulf . Stream-whteh for centurlea has made a ' menace of this cape of evil nsma. The route of the transatlantic lines from American porta runs past, a hundred miles to sea: but tha slow- , going tramp, to save a day's steaming. follows the shorter route and seeas to nua within flaa-slanallng distance ot the cspe. Added to the- great fleet ot tramps whlth must venture near are tne . Canadian liners, which use Ins Cape Race route during tha tea season In tha : Strait ot Belle Isle, and many coastwise , ermft. aehoonsra and full-rlixed ' fish- , carriers. Altogether, thousands ot ves sels must pass within sight ot the cap every year; and It la vessels such aa . iiieaa. astray In the fog. eft the beaten track, which come to grief and give tha ' coast Its gruesome name, in a single Mnth an Ailantla liner, crowded with paasengere, and four tramp steamers totally wrecked within twenty, miles of one another. And ones ashore a craft has small chance; the stupendous -' ellffa with deep water to their Jagged edges and exposed to the swells ot th ' a. have allowed but Oris vessel of the seventy that have been wrecked ' there la the last twenty years to be re The pratt an the rocks la furiously pounded to pieces by the first,. heavy saa: tha Delta, a tramp steam .hin niiral disaooeared from eight'- three hours after going ashore; and tha ' Rea-ulua, a tramp of sear 1000 tons, ut ...iv .aniahad with tha whole ship's i company between dark and dawn, leav ing her propeller fixed In the ellffa twenty feet above sea level, where It re- : main to this day. ne wracks aa tha cana a record la - kept In a mora or leas accurals fashion; hut i the narrow escapes from wreck . ao account is taken. There must be an enormous number of these. It la nee- v for a bewildered captain, unable . to take noonday observations, and run. nlng on a dead reckoning, to locate tha Cape Rac fog-whistle. There Is. no other way to determine his position, and"', he la In haste-In desperate haste, when., h- thinks of hie owners to set alonsv-- Consequently, he takes a chanoe and goes eloas In In murky weather. Steamers' have come so close to tha cllrrs in tna , f iiuiaed. that tha fisherman an the t. heads, unable even to discern an outline of the blind craft have clearly heard tne '. ik. when the centals ' yww wm . - reversed the engine room signals and In'tf the same breath ordered the ntenoats manned. After that they have listened ', to the churning of the screw, to tha orders from the bridge, and. ta tha -gradual departure of tha vessel from her '' dangerous position. ' ' Dm at a Dolnt beyond range or tna fog whistle, a fisherman heard from tha -, fog not only the orders to reverse tna engines and man tha Ufebosta, but loud commend to one of the officers to guard tha liquor. Vessels often slip past.' In the mist themselves unseen, tneir preeenca, peril and escape from disaster told only by voices coming muffled from the obscurity at sea. Sometimes skippers , send boats ashore to Inquire tha way, but often they go by In care-free lg-' ..o without tha faintest notion that tbey have escapade eatatrophe by the" miracle of a hair's breadth. "I heard a feller go by today," said , a fisherman ot Chance Cove. "I allowed he'd fetch up on Fish Reef by tha sound of his course and waited to see, but be skipped ber, and a cloae skim, too.." A GOOD LITTLE SPORT By WIXAJM F. KIRK. "Tou see soma queer sights In a city," Bald Colonel Kraamua atcPhee, "Though few of such sights stir up pity In the heart of a rounder like me. I've gambled from Ceylon ta Nome, boy. And I think I can tall a man's worth: Well, thla morning, while walklntv up noma, boy. I met tbe best snort an thla earth. "Ha waa tiny and ragged and quivering, , In his arms waa a poor Bttla pup; I stopped when I saw tbe two shivering .. And said. WaU, young fellow, what's , ' Bpr Tha tut Be waa only a baby Came out of the hsif-beatrd shed; .U 1 thought I could stay In here, maybe, I was getting my doc warm, ha said. c Thafa all ha was getting his dog ,4 Tears are things that a gambler re- . slats. But I gaeaa that aoxor) dross beat the- When I loosed at hjw I srasasl asm Mil isotntaa; was lachmg. And arast ass aksog. for. yoa sec. A good lust apcrt Is worth barlingf Said fl sail I JUmMum hVPhar. 1.