heads EC Alling DRESSES. | i ; 'employers | a8 a reference. firm telegraphed 86-inch No terial, with % yard: 18- er lace. tern No. 8985 has a ralsed th spor ; dith with stewed | * With the approach of the opening | waistline, tucked waist with shoulder nge on the top| days of the all semaster ie. Joung Fite ane ladies will & ie m er davinp 3 . a OT'O! in, nful | © a part of it His Star was. in ie March to Tmbucton and itn, belt and 20. + dusty stupidity '| Age of + | Sacrific 1| arch as any © | Islam. '| damn Germany for generations, in the face of records which cannot be b "| denied, the Emperor is willing to lie ; for thelt bravery has nit, baem, ; gallantry o tion to the provision: 'of their ward: 'with appropriate school clothes. 'two Ladies' Home Journal ge: _ shown are" excellent for for they are simple l, yet very smart an ength or horter 3 sale Skirt in four gores pockets Sizes. 14, 16 requires 5 yoke, pointed collar attached to a #| chemisette and full-length. sleeves with band and turn-back cuffs, Eight- gore plaited skirt with hip yeke and eep draped girdle. Sizes 14 to 20. BiZe 18 requires 6% yards 86-inch material, 5% yard 80-inch organdie for 0= | chemisette and collar, and % yard 40- inch contrasting material for girdle. Patterns, 16 cents each, can be pur- chased at your local Ladies' Home Journal Pattern dealer, or from the Home Pattern Company, 188-A George 'Street, Toronto, Ontario. |, 460 HORSE-POWER ZEPPELIN. d. » 9 all revi spirit of British freedom. By Set old, old method many, accumulations of ve been blown clear away and we are back ar in the and = the o of [| States which we ell the Empire has ore the sionate that ot | PTO mperor' he peg not will this. war. Yet he is| hg | the responsible Gov that | the final authority for every national or of Germany, act.» He is as much an absolute mon- ental in the history of In the face of facts that will | sus to the world and, worst of all, to lie to himself. He will find out the mean- ing of the old Carlyle treed "That a In emphasizing the Jextraordinary ) | moral flight of .Germany down the ; lie is unbelievable." - bY | steeps which lead to Avernus there is no desire to minimize very of | her soldiers. The fi Li troops energy ir dis- cipline spirit. And yet we pay them no tribute of fn touch- exploits | F4TH PC e rape still in Ant- Fury, but it was "to a -| 2,500 for Serbia. | The Frenc Three Motors Are Installed and High 1 Speed is Possible, A Zeppelin has a rigid framework » [of reinforced aluminum and eighteen "papkinring" sections, each contain- ing a gas-tight bag--a total gas ca- pacity. of 681,600 cubic feet. Over the framework 18-stretched a heavy cloth covering that is impervious to rain or Bnow. * Jobers and lower decks furnish surfaces gerye. the same purpose 23 Do.tho Wikia of a0 aeToplaie Won it is desired to drive to a higher or lower alr level. The indiyldpal gas-bags are not fully inflated before the ship starts on a voyage, Slack is left to accommodate the expansion of the gas in' the upper air, Safety-valves with indicators on ot's,desk make it almost im- for any ome of the gas-bags to. explode, but six of them might come to grief at ons time without en- dangering' the airship, so great is the sustaining power resulting from speed. The "Viktoria Luise" is just short of 486 feet in length and has a of 46 feet. It has three 6: cylinder Diesel motors with a com- bined horse-power of 460. A speed of fifty miles an hour has been made with atmospheric conditions normal. If, by some rare accident, two of its motors. should be rendered useless, the third would be sufficient to givel heallway against a pon + Captain Haecker, who commanded the "Viktoria Luise" in the trip from Dusseldorf to Berlin, has little fear of storms, while his ship Is in the air, though Germany's excellent weather forecast service makes it possible for flights to be so timed as'to avoid the ordinary wind-storm. Hach Zeppelin a wireless outfit, and from land stations obtains reports of weath- er Gonditions. od i Alii : 10,000,000 JEWS IN WAR. Zangwill Says Only Those in America Have Escaped Conflict. - Israel : Zangwill, historian of the Jewish race, points out that only the Jews who are in America have es- caped the war. Ten million Jews are engaged in the war, three million of them in Poland alone. Twenty thousand Jews are fighting for ony 50,000 for Germany, 170, 000 for Austria, 350,000 for Russia, and h Zouaves ane' twenty per Jewish soldiers and sail from Morocco and Tri New Zealand, Canada ! "his cent. Jews, also bad Eat bis discretion. When. app! or | ' berth he gave his previous' Hig old 'him an excellent character. ®A grievous mistake, how- ever,. was made by someone, as the | word "honest" in the telegram, on arrival at its d tion, read as "lowest." his completely' Tinos hia his chariosy, and drove him to his hen the head clerk of a Parisian "| Jewelle¥ 'morning, he discovered to his horror | that a window was broken, and the '| wholé place" in 'confusion. He. was, running to the telephone to call up' the police when he stumbled over a man lying flat on the flpor. Beside 'him was a bag containing a huge quantity of jewellery Which 'hed béen stolen. Investigation showed that the pro- strate man, who was the burglar, had, in climbing over some cases, in- advertently grasped an electric wire. The shock had upset his balance, He had crashed to: the 'floor, and been stunned by the fall. And this little thing led to a long term of imprison- ment. Some years ago the manager of a large tea-garden in Bengal was brut- ally murdered. The assassin disap- peared completely, and for many weeks the crime remained a mystery. The heir of the murdered man went out from England and examined his papers. Among them he found on the binding of an atlas a dark stain. This proved to be a thumb-mark traced in blood. It was sent to the police bureau, where the thumb im- prints of criminals are kept according to the French system, and was soon discovered to correspond with that of a noted criminal then at large. He was tracked, tried, and eventually hanged. A well-known London business man went for his annual holiday, and the fact that he had left negotiable bonds worth £18,000 in his safe, easy of ac- cess, quite Wipped his memory till his holiday had nearly ended. Hurry- ing back, he found the bonds missing, as was also ishonest clerk. His holiday brought him to the verge :of ruin. Truly trifles lead to tragedies. ! --ie LUXURY ON WHEELS. Some le Railway Carriages are Veritable * Palaces.. You have surely never seen . any railway-train which could boast of a compartment devoted solely to beauti- ful statuary! Even on our finest lux- utious Pullman car such an apartment would be regarded as quite unneces- sary and superfluous. But the Ger- man Emperor always has this addi- tion to his special train in times of peace; for his royal carriages con- tain a large vestibule, whose sole de- corations consist of most charming statues. 'Several of the expresses which tra- verse the Siberian Railway, from Mos- cow to the Pacific coast, are fitted up with one carriage built as a, chapel for divine service, There are an altar, reredos, pulpit, pews, &c., all in due order, and a priest of the Greek Church travels with the train to con- duct the services at the appointed times. The famous Diaz, as President of Mexico, possessed a special esrriage, bers unparalled in history, have moved on the railways there for his own use. This carriage had not only one of its parts/beautifully arranged as a drawing-room, but on each side of this room was a verandah decorated with flowers. Thus the "President could sit outside and enjoy the open air when travelling, being at the same time protected from dust and smoke; by overhanging wreaths of roses and other lovely plants. One celebrated railway carriage for| ai Dunst that it is » regula sus. ord | graph album. This Denmark; | be found on the ocean. "legitimate and illegitimate, their God several 12; 4.1; 6. 1; 8. 83; > Cg Without a teaching priest-- always had priests and wists sometimes these were false. The ex- pression ' heré, "a teaching of means a true priest or prophet. Without law--See Judg. 17. 6; 21.) 28. ¢ 5. No peace to him--See Judg: 5. 6i. This refers to the time when lawless- ness reigned supreme, 'when every Tad ness did what was right in his owni eyes"; that is, what he wanted to do arrived at the: shop onefgnd could do by force of his own strength. Of the lands -- The district into which Palestine was divided, such as Galilee, Gilead, the Jordan valley, Mount Ephraim, Sharon, ete, 8. Nation against nation--The other tribes against Benjamin (Judg. 20%. 33-48). City against city--Judg. 9. 45. II. Asa is Converted (Verses 8-16). 8. The Prophecy of Oded--Or Iddo Azariah's father. A prophecy not re« corded, but what Azariah doubtless remembered having been uttered by his father. 10. The third month--That is, St van, our month of June. ; 11. Seven hundred . . .-seven thou~ sand--The number seven appears of- ten (Num. 29. 82; 1 Chron. 15, 26; 2 Chron. 29. 21; Job 42. 8; Ezek. 45. 23). In the larger sacrifices the num- ber seven is not prominent (1 Kings 8, 63; 2 Chron. 30. 24; 86. 7-9). 12. Entered into the covenant-- That is, they renewed the covenant established in Exod. 24. 3-8. Three hundred years afterward, it was again renewed, following a backsliding (2 Kings 28. 8; 2 Chron. 84. 81). It was again renewed in Nehemiah's time (Neh. 10. 28-39). . 138. Be put to death--This was one of the commandments of the law (Exod. 22. 20; Deut. 13. 9-15; 17. 2-T)s 16. Rejoiced -- Because of a free conscience and a full surrender. "They had sworn with all their heart, and sought him with their whole de- sire." L COMMAND OF THE SEA. What the British Fleet Has Done In the Year of War. If any one wishes to know whethet the British Fleet has during the lasi year proved itself worthy of its tra ditions there is a very simple method of arriving at the truth, writes Mr. A. J. Balfour, First Lord of Admiralty, in the New York World. There are sev. en, and only seven, functions which & fleet can perform: It may drive the enemy's commerce off the sea. It may protect its own commerce. It may render the enemy's fleet ims potent. It may make the transfer of enemy across the sea impossible, whether for attack or defense. It may transfer its own troops where it will It may secure their atipplies and (Im fitting circumstances) it may assist thelr operations. All these functions have so far bee successfully performed by the British fleet. No German merchant ship is to Allled com- rom attack, than it was after . Trafalgar. The German high sea fleet has not as yet ventured beyond the security of its protected waters. No invasion has been attempted of these islands. British troops, in num. {merce is more secure 0 and fro across the seas and have been effectively supported on shore; The greatest of military powers has seen-its colonies wrested from it one by one and has not been able to land a man or a gun in their defense, Of a fleet which has done this we may not only say that it has done much, but that no fleet has ever done more. And we citizens of the British supine can only hope that the second r of the war will show no falling off In ts success, as it "will a8 show no relaxation of its efforts. BI eS LE Ol'LSR - BAVARIAN PRINCE DOUBTFUL ; Thinks Now That German Victory In -Not Posgible, ¥ 4