york: g 200 be lued at cher coke a ton OSBes- was Lil and 15, i a sn oh 0 m ir Ed Le be planted this is from cked down by ya woman. I aph of the rig has been council chamber, a| queen approves for her daughter's | chamois, Native Bons' Society, truth in the report roup of copper id has been' i syndicate, claim near Mol- sof Green- il; of Victor / | twinkle in his eye. ho | and a delightful room:it is, «| turned and attacked t The New Quee: _ From an "excellent Majesty taken recently, MARY'S HAIR PUT UP. English. Princess Given: Suite! in Buckingham Palace, Being now' in 'her: seventeenth Joa Princess Mary has put up her air, though not quite in the orth: odox sense. It is made into a plait ure of Her :| and tied up with a large bow of black ribbon on her neck. 'And very charming she looks, the new style giving her the first suggestion of the young lady to be, writes a London correspondent. ~ According to all accounts Prin- cess Mary was very excited over the fresh arrangement of her beau: tiful tresses, for putting up the hair is a great event in a girl's life. It is nearly as important as putting on her first trailing dress or re- ceiving her. first love letter. fie |ittl {in Isa. 10, 9 he Immedil chamois d g the - bird 50 that he had to drop' the "animal he had seized in his claws. The momentary advantage that the chamois had gained did not last 'long; however, for the Sagle ng and tearing them| with cruel strokes of his lon ons; Now that the. fight act ually begun, the éhamois would not retreat, but bravely stood their ground. The young, trembling with fear, and bléating. piteously, erauched a unwittingly hampered their de« fence. : Every time the eagle swooped down on the group, the two older shamois, rising on their hind legs, offered their horns. The long, deep scratches and. the 'dripping blood that appeared after each attack showed that the battle was telling on them, although with each swoop, t00, a loud of feathers and the eagle's raucous cries shéwed that the chamois' little horns were also finding their mark. After each at- the eagle would return to a near-by 'rook; where he sat gazing with his beady eyes at the group be- Of all the royal family nome takes | low. Then he would swoop again. a more hearty interest in airships n the fierce encounters began and air heroes than Princess Mary, | to exhaust the chamois. The little is. to fly. 'whose great ambition, ib appears, [Ones were bleating more and more 8he made a tour of her|anxiously, and the animals were all own. of the airsheds at Aldershot|Dpressing more closely together. and was fascinated by all she saw. | The Princess Mary has her own suite of rooms now at Buckingham Pal- older: ones were clearly less alert. » Finally, after the eagle had taken ace, They are those which former-| a. particularly long. rest, he came iy re occupied by hergaunt, Prin- | swooping down 'again. * The mother gess Victoria, and have a tharming | goat struggled to get upon; her hind view up Constitution Hill, her studies. and does her reading, They | feet, but was too:weak to raise her- have been considerably altered for| self, inl her, made all As the eagle came on, how- ink and rosy with ever, the chamois buck rose to mee white walls and woodwork. There |it. ¥lis'a schoolroom where she pursues | talons. " There was a flash of clawing Then, with a sudden vi- cious. thrist, the chamois dug his with its | horns into the hreast of the great chintz covered 'chairs and 'book-|hird, With a wild beating of its cases filled with volumes all bound in rose leather with the princess' | fried own beok plate within: wings, the eagle freed itself, and to fly away. But the wound was too deep. He thrashed about Ruskin is one of the authors the | helplessly on the ground, and' the quick' to 'follow 'up their rusal, and every one of his works advantage, gored and trampled it & place ' on those | shelves. | with their horns and hoofs. Princess Mary is as fond of her camera as the rest-of the family, 'When. their enemy was quite dead, the little family, limping and and. she does not shirk developing | nursing their wounds, madg off be- her pictures herself. * In fact, she regards it as the best part of the ba very, shy on the subject of rimony. Indeed, it is said of ladi : dus yond a projecting cliff. STRANGE MAEADY, New Disease Which is Epidemic England, English doctors are puzzled by a in that the less he has to do with | new disease which has appeared in the better he is pleased. He| the west country and spread with wilt » talk eloquently about war, | 8lmost the rapidity of an epidemic. seroplaning or sport of 'any The 'chief symptom &f the disease kind, but the moment the fair sex| is the appearance on the tonsils 'mentioned he is boyishly reti-| and back of the throat of a mem- ent, There is one exception, Wea. | brane resembling that of diphther- 'The. tactics: of the suffra-| is, together with a swelling of the are' said to cause a merry rince is to pass another rd and not go to ge, Cambridge; as had been contemplated by e heir apparent; wh ing 'the best of at Magdalen t 914. pre elas, swellin Trtaity heart lailure orig: | | was first thought ¢ return from Germany, Siphihwria, 'but exudate from the Yyinphatio glands in the neck, very high temperature, severe erysip- gin the joints and nd other symptoms; eart 'Weakness often persists indefinitely "affer all 'the throat symptoms 'have d ¢ It isease was The hi th as forwarded fo the Ol ua Cumtil it | Jerusalem "was destroy inst their parents; and: the northern kingdom, phet is uttering a note of to the notable men Secupy 8g tions of leadership in bo 2. Oalneh--Probably an city and possibly the e whi Calne, * A older Babylonian: city called neh is mentioned in 'Gen. 10. though the identification of yy here referred to is not ce ~ Hamath--On the Orontes' 160 miles north of Dany an i tant eity sin the 'modern 2 lation 'of approximately: 60,000, @Gath--In southwestern Palestine, near the Mediterranean, The. 8. Ye' that put far away the day--Ye that consider yourselves secure against the day of reckon ing dnd disaster. fd Beat of violence--Judgment seat jun J wie might has superseded. right. 4. Stretch themselves--In idle- neis and luxury. : The midst of the stall--The railed off central portion of the general fold reserved for lambs and calves. T6 eat the young and ténder of tha flock was itself a luxury. 6. The signs of indolence, selfs indulgence, and disregard for the serious responsibilities of life ara multiplied. + They include ' idle" songs, improvised for purposes of amusement, sung to the accompani: ment of all mannér of instrument of musie. Ca 6. Drink wine in bowls--To ex+ cess, 'out of costly vessels nsed andi narily in connection ' with diving Bervige, (Compare Zech. 9. 15; -r The chief oils--Thase that aré the most - prized | and 'expensive: All this seemed like shameful exérave aganoe 'to the frugel shepherd and prophet accustomed' to simpler has bits of life:and industry. wa Are 'not grieved for--Dae. nod: worry about the affliction of Jos- ;eph. Ephraim and Manasseh, the: 'provinces named aftef' the sons of Joseph, comprised the heart ofthe northern kingdom; and seemed af this time at the height of prosper. "ity. But although unnotieed by the eyes. blinded by .extravagance and luxury, a cloud was already gath- ering on the horizon, and the day of dire affliction was already im- pending. 7. Go captive--In 734, only a few years after the prophet had uttered his warning, Ti lath-Pileser. invad- ed Gilead and Galilee, carrying the foremost of' the inhabitants into. "eaptivity. ; of SR 8. The Lord 'Jehovah---An unus- ual combination, ied, perhaps, for emphasis, iC: OE TRE "The excellency~Or, pride. Either gia in Hos. 5. 5 and sie where, the vamglorious temper of the. people, or the things of which they with their distorted vision of ' things were proud. : a Jacob--Referring again to the southern kingdom and to teen. tal, 'Jerusalem.' Another pedm sible explanation of the phrase, the oxcellency of Jacob; isto the expression as a whole ring to the capital city, y the palaces and general symbo! pride and luxury of which are abomination unto Jehovah. :: 'Deliver up the city with all is therein--The ; northern' Samaria, was fake : zens exiled in 72 kingdom : survive | citizens carried into capt