. , , , 3* ~ , l“\ .1\f . _v li rses.UAav;a}.fi§i»_i_ .___ f"H!.=i4lf!§{,.'¥'° _*_ _ ouAigi>_ili_r_i_________ MNBE L[M;[|[ I ’“°“ i1.i°..r;:‘:.i““';;..:;‘:.:.°:: :‘;‘;..‘.2zi‘.‘.°.‘: ilillilllllllfrsrdwn _QUEENS lZOUNTY_ ISIIIII-IIII IIUKI Ill IIII IIIUIIIS ...___- F h nary 2-A deputa- 0TTI,;'¥,?;bve`I'nlment House, present- wdayg me Canadian Defence League non othe Duke of Connaught an ad- ed to sking his sympathy and inter- drfslnathe subject od that body, viz: es-ITU nwaken the public ntind to the importance of nationl defence 'el-logs nid in bringing about the a- anduoi; OI the most effective and doll mica; system to that end. ec_lll';_‘; ,curry on a non-political edn. i eemiialslh l& PHYSIUGNOMY. - For all practical pin-noses the hum- an body may he regarded as a finish- Hd. flX€<_l. and unalterable pedestal for that singularly trnctable piece of |Bl¢Hfl18l`Y»'-. the human head, which, |1ong before the hammer of cosmic limbs, was delivered over from these rough instruments to the chisel of history, the burin of intellect, and the file of moral consciousness. Frorr- cliin to forehead, man is' both sta- tuary and sculptor. 'l`he mobility of this frontal head- piece of ours to inherent mentality, or to the interaction of that mental- ity as expressed by historical in- fluences, is sufficiently patent both in history and in contemporary hap- penings. The hideoiis Hiins that in- fests the pages of Gibbon have be- come the handsomest people in |Eiu‘ope. The rigorous marriage code of the Jews has been powerless to prevent them from taking on so de- cidedly the facial characteristics of the peoples they have lived among, that there is far more difference be- Itween a Russian Jew and a Spanish Jew than between either of them and his indigenous neighbours, Two generations will see the Japanese nose and cheeks following the Europ- ean tendency already discernible in the Japanese eye. Family portraits in Britain show conclusively that within the last two centuries there have been at least three significant changes in the reposefiil facial cast of Vere dc Vere, none of them, on the male side at least, very much for the better. The comparative steadi- ness of the feminine type, through its gradual and easily explained transitions from a stiff stateliness to a voluptuous passivity, thence to a simpering prettiness,, and thence to a. wide-awake and rather hard hand- someness, is, according to anthropo- logists, a sexual rather than a class characteristic. Political ambitious probably account for the second of As I trimmed my lamp the other ring hiss (with its rumbling under- tone) of the aerial Corbrechtan in again by leaping tidal-waves of bel- lowing guests), I wondered vaguely what part this sort of thing, going on for a third oi each year through- in the formation of the Scottish cha- racter and phyeiognomy. A compari- son of the Scots with the Lamps made it Elear that the real determi- nant had not been climate, but men- tal attitude : on the one hand, s. cra- ven and makeshift passivity, express- ing itself in dull and featureless faces; on the "other, 3, grim, at times almost liuinorous defiance, expressing itself in the prow-like nose, ram-like chin, and piercing sidelights of eyes, with \-'hlch the afflicted but masterful Scot the canals of business routine or the troughs of stupid pleasure. But the swoolen-eyed, soft nosed, fiesh-pad- Ided type of city Scot will not long survive even the artificially sheltered ly smaller version of the dominant .national type represented today by ‘the average shephern, ploughmun, or gantckeeper. The physioiznomy of I that type is earnest not only of what ‘tlnuing it; and our literary and reli- gious historygfshow the price we have had to pay for moral and mental sta- tue, in increased and insidious sen- sitiveness to the moods of the slave and liandmaid of our national des- tiny. A coquettishly romantic Dell- iuh in her fleeting smiles, Nature has lured us summer after summer to bal- Ilud reveries in her lap, only to awa- |ken us with her virngo scrcechings, tear out hair out by the roots, and Imadden us with her month-long sulks innd whimperings; and her power over ,ns is vindicated bv the reflection of Iber moods in our iinsoclalilc habits, Ithe ferocity of our animals, the cal- llous' bloodiness and tender pathos of four ballads, and the nipping wintrl- ness of our religious history, whose gloom is only ‘deepened bv the hectic summerlngs of our Rutherfords and ilrvings. We baffled Nature on the ‘plans of the physicial, only to be overcome by her on the mountains of Vthoiight; a/nd on this night of tempest she beats us back at all points, and demoralises us with the sense of .a hostile universe rattling at our lfcebleigates. "Into the breast that fgivcs the rose shall I with shudder- ,ing ‘ii-ill ?" but one may well shudder ,at the thought of being whirled away into soaking blackness on that scree- ching blast. Biii: the heavy splash- ing on the window is succeeded by a brisk patter of hail. The wind, is veering to north-west. Our eyes mov open tomorrow on a world bathed in smiles; and we shall show our philo- sophy by responding to them-and not forgetting our waterproof and leg- gings. ' _ W. P. who realize their latent ability and seeksuc- ess in life, are invited to a ca.i'el'iiI con- sideration of the famous food. Grape- uis Brain 'Nourishmeni is essenlial io Brain Acliviiy. S ' A sluggish brain is ii .handicap---a hindrance in ihe palh cf promotion. Grape-Nuts food, made ol whole wheat and barley, containsthc tissue-builch . ,, . , . ing albii mins and the energy-making slarchcs (changed into dextrinfand grape sugar' fin ,making Grape-Nuts.) lt also contains the phosphate of potash grown in the grains---the cell-forming. mlllwal. elcmenls Nature usCS° ill' 'building brain . - l, 5 and 'nerve cells. ` f _Grape`$Nu`is, regularly for bi eakfast, will lielr ilnrw- “Tlicre’s a Reason” Ambitious Men _ No rnouaii: Promotions are Easy When Your Brains Work, A yoiuig mv: who earncd n fini: po lion falls how |`.mr.l helped him: “I \v s engaged nsal»m\kei'|icr for l.'lr|,;o publisliing lioiism in New Yoik ri xi wlicre ilu: work was-i trying and limirs fi- I-nig' I griiiliinlly lirokc slowii uiiilrr Ili- rirrili-, “Aly brain sciimeil lhlrk and I loaf lIn~ _i!o'\ vimiiife would be for thc limi. “Il look just Iwo days In vmiviii-‘ii me I Iinll liiideiinlueii ii lasik licyomI\'I\»: pmvor nf mv ovcrviorked and iuiderfcil brain, mul I decided to again res'g i, clisgusiail wllh myself and the world in general. 1`I\.|l,f|»~yl inet 2 fiieiid wliosc counsel I asked hvlore lskiiig the slep. /\I`lier I |\"¢l rf-lliiil my troubles to him he a.iI.l ‘li I Grape-Nuts my boy.` ‘ I l_\ok».d oil his is-mark as si joke i.l ibn limo, but by lliclimc I rcnchci Iionm I had lhoughl il_r~vnr alll ilcfermiiicrl io give Grape-Niils food :-i trial, and the iirxl day ll was on my table. The food seemed lo give me a new life from thc “Hut and gradually a grant power for work became eviflenl. It increased fri ni diiy lo ilay, my brain l o:ame aclive and my capacity for nwunl work unlimited. Mvdnlicn at the office, that at first ssemed bey ~nd my cap- ability, are now uccrmplilhizl wiih pri- risinn, acciirai-y #nd pleasure. “Last month I was promoted lo llie position efirasliivr amid the ccngraiulu- lions cf my‘l'ilenrl.l. I niiribuls mysucccss icllnse wonderful lltlle grains ol' food- Grspe-Nuts, and to all l repeat a mono ili it is worihy of thought ‘Edt GrapeN-ula my bov.' N»em.», given by Canadian Posium Co.. Windsor, Ont. Lock in plrgs. for the fam me lillle book. “The Road to Wellvills." Made of Canadian Grain, by Canadian Labor. , Canadian Posfum Cereal Comyeny, Limits I. Windsor. 0llllri0»_Clfll¢l" _ P __ __ _ y _JL . ._ . _*_ S * i,`c`3ROW'i`s" ARE FQRCING ,THEIR e WAY r .ational lothing Co s ' I I ` - - have secured th ' ' h .. dl to th h t L _ e services of Miss ,';;,,,’;‘;‘_‘ ‘suchrgiitafegqglxent is christina Ginis, onriieiu, ns rnnener not needed for floundering through In 915°” 0| Ml” Ye'-N "°'*’l<"”d- I ' _ I conditions that have permitted his emergence. The Scottish townsman of ‘ Th°.pl“" 0' the reserved “eats IU" Ithe future will be a darker and slight- I the B13 Gam” "1 the Afella iS llli U10. V B and rs. Mar n. A. A. Moore, Pownal, who was a| visitor to the city yesterday, pre-| sented The Guardian news stall with' t , h d .~ M ~' i lliiricsu, Loiiiloii, lilng, will _§1""" r '_ . 'I‘liin.e (‘.ninphell und Noiwmiii Lliw |uI“ii||liliI.eil iii tl-lic holy hoiiilu ol nuil.ri ther; i.‘iin;---Arnold ltntti-iihury, and nmny tn pb-iii-st lie ll. l’i-ako, llity, _ -“Y '_ 'Win (loicoraii, After ri brief dis' The couple will lic uiiiitteiiilcd iiiui ' __ eussion the rci~=ollition was lost/ Dr. the bride will be given away by hor ,I .5 _(Jig, ‘- Robertson then addressed the class. lrotlier-in~lnw, [’r