, ; Tim HEK? OMATTA. TUESDAY. MAY 4, 1015: ' 9 French Models at the Fair Republished by Special Arrangement with Harper's Barar 0 The Elephant in History Our Ancestors Had Strange Ideiu About This Now Well Known Animal Silent Heroes " By OA1UIETT P. SKIU1S9. To the cittxan of today an elei-linnl ex cite little trior comment than a horse, yet lha nopuisr pachyderm waa a center of fantnrtlo lewnd among our anrn-stor. They built on a few facta na ant forth In fUrebo, lltny and riutarch, a monsrter of raN Imagination. Curler accepted th exlxtonce In Cochin, China of elephants sixteen foot high, and tales of such an animal wont current In India te the end at th eighteenth cen- Itnry. The tusks of the male wore, said to be larger than those of the fcnmlo, and turned downward, hers turning upward; one waa kept aharp to avenge InJurlc, while the other rwmalned blunt to root up plants and tree for food. Rev. Edward Topaell, who collected praotloally aU that had been written on the subject In his "History of Four- ' Footed Ileastea," argued that Inasmuch as the horns of tho oik arrow out of hla t". raraawwT'TT' ssiismsssss ai ian i awa clrc'w &&) llj ADA PATTERSON. aaf '.I i at y i: 1 n haaaWsj "l i '" ri" -Mrtfci mtil mm ia aama' Elephants presented to King Alexander, from a French manuscript of the Fourteenth century. Does the clinging skirt portend a swing of the pendulum away from the very full skirt? Cer tainly Premet has selected a narrow model for this tetavde negre satin, with tuaic of cobwebby lace and , corsage of embroidered beige-colored . icouBsellne. A I curtain of brown lace falls from the straw hat. It is regal, this evening gown of cloth designed by Preset. Over the fourreau of gold cloth, and a surprisingly clinging one, is dropped a tunic cf gold tulle embroidered in blue and outlined in er mine. ' The corsage of gold tulle is embroidered in Tari-colored stones and the sleeves are of blu-j tulle. To Tell of Love or Not Khali a Man Who Love and Is Ijoved -but M ho Cannot Marry, Make Ills Ive Known? ayebrowa and thoae of the rhinoceros out of hla nose, there waa no reason why tho horns of the elephant should not grow eat of hla month. Ha says, further, "homea fall oitt and eome aguln In old beauts, but teeth do not an; and, therefore, they are homes." The reputed habit of the female elephant to bury her shed "horns", la interpreted thus: Because she kpew that she was hunted for thoae horns, ahe dug- a grave and burled them, aittinK upon the earth to proas It down: this, lest their virtues betnff discovered, elephants should enjoy less peace and security. Indians and Africans desiring thoae horns (to use as posts for house building among other purposea) were said to find them In this wlee-they set pots and bottles of water In suspected place and aat down to wait; when by "an unspeakable and secret at traction they -the tusks) draw all the water out of the bottle near them, which the watohman takes for a sure ajgn and dlggeth about hla bottle till he finds the tooth." Pltny thought the elephant's skin so hard that a aharp sword would not pierce It, the hide ,-alway hath crevices which by their savour do Invite the Utile flics to a oontlnual f easts; but when by stretching forth they have received the By DOROTHY DU. Shall a man who loves a woman, and ho haa reason to believe that the woman returns hla affectloftbut whom he cannot marry. Hell' her of his love or not? Is speech or so- , lenca best and kind- ' est under such conditions? nils (s the ques tion that a man ' asks me m a Utter written ao simply, o sincerely and with such feeling that I reproduce It here Just as It reached me. He writes: 'With a dear, sweet mother at home, and a poor ". crippled brother, too, I, as the only one to provide for them, decided long ago never to ' marry. While the little home had always. been kept in a fairly comfortable way, aUll I felt aura that to bring another Into it would only add hardships to all concerned. Bfore I , could drag a woman down fend make her companion to the heavy burdens of my position. I would remain alone ami apart. If need be. I never thought that some might be the victim between two house that night to see her, and looking down on he pale, still face, suddenly realized that the. feeling of friendship had fadded. and a new feeling had been born. Had I only had the strength then to go away, perhaps I alone would have been the one to suffer. But instead of being a man, and going away , like a man. I remained, thinking ah would never know. ''After that I mada my flans to her far between. I honestly meant that by no act of mine should she ever know the new feeling In which I held , her. But Ood made her a woman and gave her a woman'a ability to see. "Not very long ago, after quite a lengthy absence, I went to see her again. Noticing that ahe waa not looking well I commented upon the fact. h enj-l swercd my question with a question, wanting to know why I had been stay ing away so roach lately. I triad to turn the conversation away from the personal back to the common. Hhe looked at m. And in the on brief second that I held Advice to Lovelorn jrnj BWarrnea, by shrinking together again they Inclose the flies, and so kilt them; su that these rmvtcea are unto them In stead of mane, tall and hair." The Illustration shown here gives an odd conception of this trunk. .The artist may have read Pliny, who says: "Tho elephant through his ' nostrils Do You Know That The Walts la a national German dance and waa Introduced Into Kngland by a Gerhian baron 100 years ago. It I estimated that the number of pos tal packets delivered In the United King dom during the year reached the colossal total of s,l,X,000. , An Interesting point In connection with the Garter" that was recently conferred upon King Albert of the lUilglana Is the fact that it was held for hla undo, tho late Klnif Leopold, for forty years, and previously by his grandfather for half a century. In the whole history of Tie order there Is no Instance Cf two occupants holding the dignity successively for so long a period. makes a sound Ilk the braying of a hoarse trumpet." A picture In a thirteenth century manu acrlpt shows an elephant carrying thirty fighting men In a wooden tower on hla back. About the year 1-'W the Frenoh king presented to Henry III th first elephant ever seen In England or, Mathew Pali believed, on that side of th Alps. The people, he says, ."flocked' to sea th strange sight'" . Tho arrival f that elephant must have caused a sensation. Here at last, for all to see, waa that strange creature so nearly human that (according to Bar tholomoeus) when sick Is gathered good herbs, and are eating "Jieeved up the (head and looked toward heaven and prayed for help In a certain religion"; which saluted the aun at tils rising; which vlsttad a certain river to purify himself by besprlnKlIng his body with water ere ho saluted th new moon. I Pliny said the elephant poanesaed in a degree, rat even among men.' notions of honesty, prudence and equity; that his Intellectual powers equalled 1 hla moral prlnclplca. Matanius, three times consul, and therefore a person of - probity, declared he knew an elephant who wrote. Hard eyes molHtened aa they srnnneil the three brief lines thnt announced the death of a little boy In New York. He lived on the east side. Ho had be a run over by tho motor truck. Dying, he said to the axir genn, who was about to try to atmlghten the crushed little loss: 'I will try not to cry. hut If I do don't let mamma hear me." lie died under the operation, died without a sound, ene of the world's small army of si lent horoen. I sn Id with Intent "small" army. The world haa plenty of heroes and heroine But. they make a fuss tbout It. They noise their heroism about until It oases t be heroic. ' " t know a woman w ho. turned her back upon marriage to he the support of an Invalid mother. 'That was very fine and heroic, but It would have been far finer and more heroic had she kept quiet about It But no day passed without a com plaint about her fate, a reminder to any one who would listen, of what she had foregone and how hard wan her lot. I know a man who work a as hard and continuously a a galley slave. That would he fine and his patience would de serve Its crown of recognition on our part, but that man whines ceaselessly about his large family and corresponding xpenaoa. It In good to turn from these to a man who tightens his lips as did th little hero of the hospital to keep hack his rrlea I see him often In the routine of our business lives. Always, no matter how pressing his duties, nor how an orbed In hla task, he had found time to look up and amlle. . One day last sum mer ha looked up, but he didn't smile. ' And again and again as I passed hie desk I notloed that the smile waa sons. Gray began to appear In hla hair. Finally th gray quite displaced th brown. And th months and th work went which is life. Passing him or, th way to th elevator I said to one who kaew hlmi "He Is going horn early. Isn't he wellT" "He no longer haa a heme," said the on who knew him. Didn't you know that hla wife . died suddenly last summerT He want' horn and found her dead. Heart disease. The chief of his department was In Europe at th tlm and th force waa small, Aad he had to keep right on with his work. He never spoke of his loss unless he was forced te. Tou noticed he doeant look well. Sometimes I think he Is dying In the harness. But he never complain.',' woman with a contralto 'voice, and rich, deep laughter. I know tyiat. Rhe was more sn average helpmeet and help eat. Bhe waa htf wife and sister and mother and comrade ami friend. I knew that the axe had been laid at the root of-his happiness that day she died, and that It would never grow again. But th man at th next desk had said: "He never complained." Splendid,' doubly brave army, that never complains. 1 Thin ranks of silent , heroes! Tou whe bear th pain et life with tightened Hp, whe endure Its agony without a ory. You who sorrow are silent because patient silent; because unselfish heroes who, though wounded, march en! '1 salute. day fires. "But about two years ago I became acquainted with a delightful, pretty little girl. Having been denied the pleas ure of a woman's companionship (other than my mother's), I thought and felt that I needed this gisl'd friendship. As we became further acquainted, and after I had explained my position, and made it plain that I could never marry I asked her tor tnai innue.i. ftn discuss the word v 'friendship' anyone Ve In relation to man and woman, and both fully understood that e were to i merely friends, and nothing more. In conspicuously I tried to do th Impossible, without realizing tl dangers ahead. "On numerous occasions I was invited to the girl's home. I looke forward to these meetings with great pleasure. I liked" the long walks aud talks we often bad together. I found pleasure in our discussions. 1 enjoyed advising her about ih know tales pleasure fcer. ihe met with little tilings she always wanted to I itked to Dels smoolli out mr of woe. in fact there was evn md charm m Just bem near sa accident one day. and was slightly injrei. I went to the By SUTSIOS VaUBVAJC A Mutarr'a Wnruar, , Iiesr Kilns Halifax: A young man be comes engaged after two yeara' court ship, during which tlm the yourur lady has never visited the young man's mother or home. Now the young man feels it I high time that sh ahould and haa extended an Invitation to hla bride-to-be to come to his borne and meet hla mother. Bit refuses, saying that it is the mother's pUco to raU oa her first. Now which one is correct? R. G. E. It is customary for th fiance's mother to call on th bride-to-be and offer the giii whom her son Is going to marry a mother's welcome Into th family. Writ to lllaa. Iiear Mine Fairfax: I am 19 and In love with a young man six, years older than I whom I met a year aao. He said he loved me and proved a very good friend until a month ago he went away. I did not hear anything from him until today, when he aeut a letter asking me to fur- ?;ct him, as he had met another young ady. He also added insult to Iniury by offering me money for any inconvenience ha might have caused ma. Please let me know what to do? Chicago. SORROWFUL You are well rid of this man. Write and tell hlra that you conaider yourself a fortunate girl in that you hav found out Just how contemptible he is. TU him that you would never lower your self to accept anything from htm, and that no one would need any recompense to mske up for losing the friendship of a man who could so Insult a girt for whom ha had one care I. her eyes I saw I understood, I knew th whispered words sh didn't need to speak. I had to struggl hard wit tnyk. self to push her gently away (I don't know even now how I ever succeeded). I went over to the window to look out Into th night As I stood there She ca roe- over to me. and putting her arras around my neck, klseed me and then Cad into an inner room. 'Without waiting for her' te return I sneaked away from Uie house Ilk a thief, feeling like a coward and a cad, knowing what I had dene. I met bar a few nights afterward and 114 to her, telling her that I didn't love her, aad that ahe should forget me. I'm not a Washington, . but it Is the thought that I lied to her that hurts. Ene, soft little womanly woman, would never hav told me of. her love had ahe wot read mine first. ( . "As a mechanic in the building trades, my position 1a not good. I don't think It would be fair to her for ua to be- oome engaged and for me to monopol! her time, making her wait for a chance to marry that may never come, and as for deserting the ones st home, whom I love so well, and who are dependent upon me, I would rather did than do that. , "What do you think I chould do In tho matter? Should I 'tell this girl the truth about my love, depending upon her clear mind to reason and forglvw ma (or making her lov m when I cannot marry her? God knows I want to at the part of a roan." I say "yes," a thousand times tell her. In a case Ilk this, the man owea It to the girl to at least give her the consolation of knowing thst her love 1 returned, and that sh did not give her affection unsought It will also be balm to her soul to know that eh did not lov unworthily, and that the man to whom ahe gave her heart was capable of a piece cf sublime self sacrifice in giving her up. Instead of be ing that most- contemptible et, all created beings, a male flirt. Certainly no man is ever put to a crueler position .than the on who la forced to choose between lov and wit and horn and children ef hla own, and his duty to his family. Mor men than we realts are martyre en that cross, since economic conditions are such that few are able to ara with their hand enough to support two families. That Is why we shall hav to adopt th wis system of the FVench bourgeois n which the wife -is the business partner as well ss the life pertner of her bus band. ' That Is the only, way In which such tragedies aa the one that this man's letter, reveal can be avoided. '111.. ': : rl.':::--..t Via ?:; W. r rsWsfBTJfcTB0sWrtwTrt vaflf FTAs'ftkr'4AJLv?SMrslBnB -wii( aa v:-.".r. i-.. -;. 7. n J mmmmm .!'-:' si 6'i'Htii' awsisaaei il w s a " 1 he Lost or High Living is not in dollars and cents alone, but in the breaking down X. kji iuuzk; vum iuixv;uuii& ui mc LHJuy uml uring IluppincSS and long life. Neither the high cost of living nor the cpst of high living need disturb the man or woman who knows , . Ill red died WEneat , s Two of these crisp, brown loaves of Shredded Whole Wheat, served with hot milk, make a warm, nourishing, satisfying meal and the total cost is not over five cents. It supplies all the human body needs to work on or play on. Keeps the stomach sweet and clean and the bowels healthy and active Two Shredded Wheat Biscuits, heated in the oven to restore crisp nets, nerved with hot milk or cream, make a complete, nourishing, satisfying meal at a total cost of five or six cents. Alto delicious with fruits. TRISCUIT U the Shredded Wheat Wafer, eaten as a toast with butter or soft cheese, or a a substitute for white flour bread or crackers. ' mm in Made only by The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N. Y. i n !nMi. '?7 i'''iilii I' M' iliJiiiitiiij4Ukili Utliiiulii.iiiiiinnL!t.t.iiiA4siita 1 1! , ; H.l-rr K a. tnH;J.-V' ll. " - y . 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