ti. J"'â€"*eé But, as the bishop points out, the world has not learned how to get along without theseâ€"victims of endâ€" less crit#rém, _ and there is a point at he makes concerning his own profession that might have a litâ€" tls more serious attention than it has received. When we talk of the falling away from the churches we _ sometimes overlook a certain deâ€" â€" pendsnce upon them that makes a ‘ boldly proclaimed freedom and inâ€" dependence appear rather weak and small. ~ The preacher who is ignorâ€" ed during life is summoned to the chamber of death. He is summonâ€" | ed whether there is a fee for him * ©r not. We have seen hinxy called ou! in the worst of weather to go long distances to serve persons who had given him nothing and who ~_could give him little or nothing. He ?sfl‘expected on such occeasions to exâ€" mplify all the virtues of his proâ€" sfession, to be the minister of charâ€" _« ity, good will and hope. And the f‘ew, the very few, cases in which _"Whe independence continues to the s# grave do not encourage a spread _ of independence. They have, on the k «contrary, a most repellent and deâ€" \ â€" pressing influence. The current is collected. from the supply cable by means of a pair of ‘arheels running on top of the wirs. A similar pair of wheels transfers the used current to the return. A weighted pendulum slung from a frame carrying these two pairs of awheels keeps them well pressed %pon the wires. And the current is conveyed to the motors, not by a ‘fishing rod,"" but by a pair of eables which allow the car to pass to any part of the road in avoiding traffic. Owing to the comparative lightzness of the vehicle thessurface of the road suffers less thanm: in the case of a service of cars carrying their own petrol or other engines. "This method_ of conveyance is thought to offer considerable posâ€" sibilities as general feeders in suâ€" burban or interurban districts to tramway systems: It is quite capâ€" %;hle of supplying a sufficient serâ€" _vice for thinly populated diRtl‘iCtSi en a reasonably economical basis. .ef much from the familiar motor omnibus except that they have some means of collecting current such as a fishing rod from the roof to the electric current supply, as in the case of ordinary electric cars worked from overhead cables. BEut while the ordinary electric trolley is able to let its used up current return to earth through the metal wheels, the rubber tired trackless tram has to let that current return by means of a second overhead cable running parallel with the supâ€" ply cable. The vehicles carry twelve #o thirty, passengers, seated, alâ€" though others are allowed to stand,. even on the platforms. The enâ€" trance is at the end near the driv_ jer. who afttends also to all the du-‘ s of a conductor.. The passenâ€" Â¥ is struck wifh the smoothness and comfort of riding.. The spring base of the truck is well atrranged. The cars operate well under the seâ€" verest winter weather conditions. The motors are twenty horsepower and form the. hubs of the back’ wheels. , Trackless trolleys are a European Tuxury. The vehicles do not difâ€" support the churches by what he â€"dees for them i arey atl«r all. contributors to a fund for the r>â€" lief of the independents. The indeâ€" pendents depend on the institution that is deaintained in spite of their indif’or sneers. â€".Of course forms am@® ceremonies are. someâ€" times observed without theâ€" aid of the churehes, but we refer to those very numerous cases in which inâ€" difference and sneers are succeedâ€" ed by the call for the preacher‘s services. If logic is logic there should be a large increase in the xeceipts of church treasuries. We may add, â€"moreover, that even a big fee does not solve the probâ€" lem for those independents who finâ€" ally decide that they ; want the preacher for a day." For he cannot make his lMiving by funerals alone. He must be helped year after year in his church work if he is to supâ€" ply the demand at the grave. And though he repays the people who support the churches by what he ,dce’."f.?;)?\f;h’;'?fl ds o nngrent onï¬ n n d t the professions, and probably the audience which heard lawyers, docâ€" tors and preachers all called paraâ€" sites enjoyed the humor of the thing. What one person may say against the members of the learned profesâ€" sions is not of critical importance, but we must remember that the kard knock to which Bishop‘ Falâ€" lowsâ€" referred recently kept a hamâ€" mer going that has been in. active use for centuries. Evidently it was time for a protest. Literature is fuli to overflowing with uncompliâ€" mentary allusions to and caricaâ€" tures of. lawyers, doctors and preachers. â€" Great masters, and their little imitators have reveled in satire on the lawyer‘s tricks, the doctor‘s learned humbug, the preacher‘s/cant. , They have furâ€" nished fun for the multitudes not in NOTES AND COMMENTS 8. The pure in heartâ€"Sincerity | C in one‘s inmost soul. not the blameâ€" l lessness of outwardly correct conâ€"| 1 duct. There â€"must beâ€" in the | i thoughts, feelings, motives no adâ€" | t 7. The mercifulâ€"This is the iman who cherishes no ill will, but pracâ€" tises a tender sympathy, toward his neigshbor.. Such a man shall win the pity and forgiveness of Godâ€" shall obtain mercey. 6. They that hunger ana thirst after the righteousness with which the teaching of the sermon is reâ€" plete shall be filled. They shall have a rich spiritual life because they have deep spiritual longings. The man who sincerely longs for a right life will, by the very force of his insincerity., obtain it. 5. The meekâ€"Who. are these ? Jesus said, "I am meek and lowly of heart."" â€" Those who before God are humble and unpresuming, and, before their fellows, are gentle and uravenging. To such, and not to men of pompous pride, skall belong the rulership of the earth. 4. They that mournâ€"No one esâ€" capes the conflict with pain and loss and sin. In possessing the lkingâ€" dom of heaven are men alone comâ€" forted. 3. Blessedâ€"Rewarded in the most felicitous way. _ â€"Poor im spiritâ€"The man of spiriâ€" tual poverty is the man who is aware of his own spiritual deficiency and of his utter dependence on God. Such a man is rich in the communâ€" ion of God, which is to possess the kingdom of heaven. § ~ His disciples=â€"The twe had already been called, followers in seneral Sat downâ€"The usual attitude the rabbis, when teaching. Chapter 5, verse 1. He went up into the mountainâ€"It is fitting that this most. serious discourse _ of Jesus‘s ministry should have been uttered on a mountain. There was ar exaltation about the theme, the cireumstances, and the Person which were in harmony with the solemn grandeur of the surroundâ€" ing hills. The traditional site is the Horns of Hattin, a low, square hill seven miles southwest. of Caperâ€" baum. § Lesson IV. â€" Trucâ€" Blessodnecss, Matt. 5. 1â€"16.. Golden Text, _ Matt. 3.â€"s. THE SUNDBAY SCHOQL Look over the richest lives the world has known and how heavy have been their loads Lincoln with the nation‘s woe upon him, Livingstone with a continent, and Jesus with a world. Who could bear more and yet who could give more than these? _ The world‘s stream flows richer because of the gift of their courage, hope, and loye. â€" Their cares were umot their own ; The shrill laughter of childho>d mellows into calmer, deeper joys c‘ later years as duty comes into on yocabulary ; we take up our woâ€"k and discover the meanings of livâ€" ing. For a moment we may envy the child‘s care free days, but who would lose for them that enriching oi our hearts that has really dropâ€" ped into them from our burdens ? while others grow sever more ereet with increasing loads because they take them up gladly, eagerly choos ing to bear them. There is a fine art in burden bear ing. Some people think it is the atrt of making â€" another carry t5e load while you carry the tag, wlule others imagine it is a matter .f blinding yourself to what is on your shoulders. But it is in neither cf these ways. Strange to say, :t is a matter of carrying the burdeas wz have by adding others to them. Many a man has died of a brokea life from the weight of one libktle burden simply because he has Man is a strange creature in this matter of burden bearing as in others. Take this man, for instance. who has been for years complain ing that his load was too much [( r him. Now, at last, his burden has been lifted ; it is gone, and what is the first thing he will do, ~hat but go forth assiduously seeking new burdens? Men cannot be hay py without them. ping in the dim nope otf a burwen es life. But to use our burdens as inâ€" spiration for poems of pessimism is to miss their purpose utterly. fully to lo and s luS W BC dens. [f Our INTERNATIONAL LESSON, Ji‘Nt ‘23- " t 1 BORNE IT AS A SLAVE, les= â€"lI‘he. twelive; who been ealled, and His general. =â€"Rewarded in the most 6 F92 ':Im:- O'O(;qffl flh.__‘o §8f§ a 0 H 3 3 n 5° ye 2 U 5 To OI P mMRX OUMa y â€"_WIOL â€"10â€"exXpOort cattle. EFred Dudenhoffer of Atherley was killed _ by the cavirs in of an emâ€" bankment on the Canadian Northâ€" ern line on Monday: CGordon _ Lamotte, arrested at‘} Strathroy on the charge of burgâ€"| lary, admitted his crime to the | Chef ef Polics. f The barns of Robert Ramsay near Yorkton, Sask., were burned on Saturc}la:y, with 75 export cattle. 16. Let yur light shineâ€"This comâ€" mand is not out of harmony with the beautitude relating to the poor fta ~ spinit.~ AIf â€"a man‘se worksâ€" are gceod, then the world ougsht to get the benefit of them, and his Father who is in heaven, the glory. 15. The purpose of a light was to shine, and not to put beneath the bushel, the measure found in every Jewish house, kept for portioning off meal for bread. é A city;set on a hll=â€"Such was Jerusalem. But Jerusalem was to pass away, and Christ‘s church to replace it: The church‘s life mucst stand high above the lower living of the world. ¢ JQ Good for nothingâ€"â€"So is a Chrisâ€" tianity which retains only an apâ€" pearance after.ibt has lost Iks flavor. 14. The light of the worldâ€"Chrisâ€" tians are such because they stand before men as the representatives 6‘ the true Light; recalling Paul‘s words: ‘"Among whom ye shine as lishts in the world." Lost its savorâ€"The sort of Chris tianity which parades under name, .but lacks the purifying pow ep. 13. The salt of the earthâ€"As salt preserves food from corruption and makes it palatable, so_ Christian conduct is to purify a corrupt soâ€" cicty. 10â€"12. Persecuted for righteous.. ness‘ sakeâ€"No age has witnessed. the same kind of persecution as its predecessors or successors. The followers of Christ, who live the . ideal life_of (‘this sermon, must bear shame and, reproach and suflâ€"_‘ fer misrepresentation. _ But their| reward is great, the kingdom of| heaven, an absolute good beyond which no other is conceivable. | Eal. has e hands Eo um T3 t ky on 9. Peacemakers are properly sons of God because they show forth the likeness of their, Father, whose highest ideal, as expressed in his only begotten Son, is peace on earth among men. Rev. James Barelay, pastor of St. ral‘s PresSyterian Church. Montâ€" mixture of selfishness. This is the sanctity of the life of God, and, if one experiences it, he may be said to see God. You. will not need~to â€" hunt, for burdens; you need not become a professional uplifter. Simply keep the life hospitable to the lives of others, making living a business of sharing strength and love. â€" Never say to yourself, I have no strength to spare. Live for the life of all and vou shall find all of life. Look into the faces on the street ; you find depth, joy, light, and cheer never in those who care only for their own needs and ever in those who take into the area of their own lives the cares and needs of others. They have learned the secret of livâ€" ing, which is to share life, and the secret of lightening ourâ€"Jloads> which is to bear the burdens of others. This would be a cold and desolate, world if we never needed one an-! other ; if there were no drafts on{ sympathy, pity, teQderness. and | help these fair blooms would soon perish; the godlike in us could never be but for our human â€"needs,| our weaknesses, and our cares. Like dull slaves we would lie inert under; our own burdeas, but for the call | of another‘s need, bidding us arise| and walk with him. | This is the higher law of life, that we should find ourselves in serving others, that we should learn love through helpfulness and sacrifice. This is what is meant by the way of the cross, not a punishment to be borne, but a ministry to. be shared, a chance to enter into other lives by taking up their loads. Taking up the burdens of others we not only lose the sense of the weight of our own, but we turn the whole matter of burden bearing inâ€" to a process= of strengthening, sweetening, and enriching life. In this the best is developed ; here grow the fair flowers of sympathy, gentleness, forgiveness, and mercy ; all the ameliorating influences of life spring from the necessity of COMMON HELPFULNESS. Eo rcsd hi resian R2 HENRY E. COPE sSI0n *~! s ation ‘n mm S O (surance will be the work of the: Sames L |Libeml Government if returned to burned in £3t power. M â€"\Winstonâ€" â€" Churehil a"on from 0n i outlined the scheme in a speech at day. - ‘Glasgow on Wednresday might.â€" A freaon Wa-S’when he addressed two huge mestâ€"! 0a Monday °Mmâ€" | ings. Mr. Churchill_ announced of ten fam ‘th'lthat the details of the scheme had watermain |already been worked out by Uwfl‘-?lm‘f‘r("""“l i at) Board of Trade, and said that if| Mr. Ar Tg _ |the people granted the money the agent of th the ) House of Commons. would pass a . on Saturcs [Leempulsory _ and contributery unâ€"| Mr. Jose St. employment insurance bill, which I mermiber fol ntâ€" ~â€"culd deal with the affairs of ugâ€" election in ;na‘\"ards 0f, â€"2,250,000â€"adult â€"workers, ! Barmar Gire skilled and unskilled alike. tÂ¥ork City. cscaDpe. } wouldâ€" have all therein, the those su building. the extent installed f of impend wO. S _ WOTrS,. _ SIGIEatect . aADOIL C mile west of Beloeil Station, on banks of the Aichelien River,; y on Monday, at 2.05 p.in., visited an explositon which resulted in total loss of theâ€" mtroâ€"elvesm Que NITROâ€"GLYCERINXE EXPLOGDT J m Only by Bengali agitators for several months. The India offcials refuse to give out any details of the afâ€" fair, but it is generally believed that hut a very small part of the regiment is impliecated. â€" It is likely that the Jats will be transferred immediately to a distant station. Soldicrs of Tadian Roegimenot Taken Into Castody. A despatch from Calcutta says : The first instance, of dissatis‘action among the native troops in connecâ€" tion with the present agitation has occurred here and has caused a deoâ€" cided sensation. Ten soldiers of a native regiment, called the Tenth Jats, have been arrested for sediâ€" tion, which is ascribed to the proâ€" paganda which has been carried on 104 Seven C. N. R. Lines to Radiate From the City. A despaich from Edmonton says : President Mackenzie of the C. N. R is here on an important mission reélative to the extensions of his road north and south fro m here, which, when completed, will make this city the centre from which will radiate severâ€"branches of the Canadian Northern. ‘These branchâ€" es will run, respectively, to: Calâ€" gary, to Peace River, to Yellowhead Pass and the Pacific coast, and to <he grand prairiet country. Work on tboe main line west will be rushâ€" ed next season, and supplies are beâ€" ing rushed to the front now.: ‘The company is also preparing to build imit‘o the grand prairie.conatry next summer, and surveyors are now in the field running preliminary lines. The Provincial Government has guaranteed the bonds for this sec-‘ tion. PXSURLNCE Nearly $75,000 Received by the| showing the colonial revenue for Province. the halfâ€"year ending December 21 A despatch from Toronto says :| to have increased ‘$150,000 over thaft, The Province received in fishing li-‘fm' the same period last year, it censes during the year closed a toâ€"| * officially estimated that t}xe tal of $74,597., The receipts are apâ€" Cl.(:'.% of the fiscal yERI} June“uo, portioned as follows :â€"From licensâ€"| * show, a surplus,of $250,000, The es in Lake Superior, $5,078.78; close of the colon‘x'.s accounts last northern channel of Lake Huron, June showed a dcï¬czt.of $]50)090 for $7,553.175; Georgian Bay, $5,057.23 ; the year. The great increase in reâ€" Lake Huron and_ LEake St. Clai,| "°""° ** due chiefly to the exploitâ€" $6mit.58: St. ‘Clais, Thames and ixtlon gf the interior lands ‘a,nd the Detrott. RBRivers, | $1â€".048.88 Lake,eXt?nSIVe pulp manufacturing recâ€" Erie and Grand River, $26,672.99 ;| entiy begun. Lake Huron and Bay of Quinte, | s aa~~ 4 $7,629.32. The prices of the licensâ€"| DAIRY EXPORTS, es range all the way from $1 to $1,â€" ‘ =â€"â€"â€"â€" 000, according to the quality of the Exportation of Cream to the United nets used. | <1a+ng, ~@ m 2A a t W a‘_ _ "In srts Ned crom \3500,â€" ; :d to I the s to Catlazaa iAcredsed ifonr 400,00,000 to about $190,000,000.. Canadian official statistics show that in 1909 60.4 per cent. of all Canadian imâ€" ports were from the United States, compared with 46.08 per cent. in 1889. it ONTARIO‘S FISHING LICEXNSES ©= M imnston â€" Chyr; Schome at 4 A despatch from 1 )10 SEDITIGN AMONG TBROOPS. gCCu] a Fow of the Workmen Wore Slightly IEnjured. l ED MONXTON THE HUB. cheimf t\ rrounrdin 2TC U W DC Ene Fromâ€" Lordon, of unemployme Cl @7 U t th n P48 {1? es s Lats+ Cervaln c Cos es 14 the E1y, IDGC xcelleat warnins {{1 a hi WOR R D had ISCO3 17 ) N2 1 F’f? M *A id 1( 1 yeR prtie ause of systeni nl 13 B 14 th E lES. aht ) A frreson Wolle stre estâ€"! o r Monday, destroyed. ced of toen fammlips.= _ â€"A Rad\ watermain that is dific thejhamm"'ml the warle of t it M+yr~ Arehber â€"Ba3kcl the agent of the C.P.14..ca s a ow Saturciay. ‘ UHâ€" | ‘L\'f t Jus‘.eph .\}r{!:‘T} i uich f mepiberfor Ea:t St P. ud cleetion in Sita‘n on â€" ipa "ffamar Cirpcoawaatl i¢3 BCX 1nâ€" the yas ring rton iade the fast mial his 18â€" ea the c sn submitted to the Legislature for the construction > of â€" the Canad:an Northern through British Columâ€" bis, were concluded on Wednsesday. Premier MeBride savs the building of the line is assured.. Ift is beliey. A ‘despatch from Victoria, B. C, says: Negofiations between Macâ€" kenzie & Mann and the Government on the terms of the contrart to be British . Columbia‘s _ Negofiations Vith C. X. R. Concladed, f nas? ‘‘Wait, I‘ll get the big atlas, and ‘ Stole Yaluable Expros . & K 22 saf Roy Calder "ml. Â¥al ;f‘)h Sxpress you can show us on the maps just Package in Manitoba. where the oilâ€"wolls. are,‘ . said A despatch from Winnipeg, says :) Mary, eagerly ; and in a few oua Roy Calder, a young C. N. R staâ€"|utes the big book with its colored tion agent who stole an express| maps was spread out on the table, package containing $8§0, which | and Mary and Constance found the was passing t!’nroug% his hands qutiD]a'CGS in China, in Japan, in Bur; at Margarct, Man., was seat to mi and ‘% usst ‘-f‘l;f:ie ;3%‘-291?‘_%1_ jail/for five months on Wednesday. | is found. Then Aunt Ethel told them He had bene drinking heavily, but |over again the list of states, and was a valuable man, and the comâ€"| tWisse they found very easily. ' pany had transferred him to a; â€" My! 1 never thought before local option district in the hope of | about what paa(le the sittingâ€"room schering him up, but without avail. | lamp burn ! exclaimed Mary, as 4 they put away the ‘big atlas. â€" V ) t 3 A PAIIRPAAMN ASSTBPNDN | YÂ¥outh‘s Companion. At the annual conventren of the Western Ontario Dairymen‘s As sociation, held at St. Thomas last week, Mr. J. F. Parsons, the Preâ€" sident, reported progress and great success all along the line. The total exports of Canadian cheese from May 1st to Dec. 30th, 1809, were reported to have been 1.916,677 boxes, an increase of 46,â€" 000 boxes over 1908. The value of the cheese at 11%, would be $17,â€" 633,336. ‘The total exports of butâ€" ter for the same period was 39,506 packages, a decrease of 53,911 packâ€" ages of 1908. The value of the butâ€" ter was $508,22%5. A new developâ€" ment of this season was the exporâ€" tation of cream to the United States since the new American tariff was put in foree~â€"â€"â€"Mary Morrison, of Newry, won a silver eup valued at $50 for September white cheese. _ N Will be $250,000 by End of the Fiscal Year. A. despatch from â€" St. Johns, Nfid., says: With revised figures showing the colonial revenue for the halfâ€"year ending December 21 to have increased $150,000 over that for the same period last year, it was officially estimated that the close of the fiscal ~year, June 80, wili show a surplus of $250,000. The close of the colony‘s accounts last June showed a deficit of $150,000 for the year. The great increase in reâ€" venue is due chiefly to the exploitâ€" ation of the interior lands and the extensive pulp manufacturing recâ€" entiy begun. Woodstock Man Wounded by Man Firing at a Rabbit. A despatch _ from Woeedsteck, Ont., says : Oscar Maldover is in the hospital and will likely loss an eye as the result of a shooting affray on the 12th line on Thursday mornâ€" ing. Thomas Stalker is under arâ€" rest, and will be charged with shooting on the public highway. Maldover twas riding along the road gathering junk when a ball from a rifle hit him in the eye. His comâ€" panion took him to the hospital. A warrant was later issued for the arrest of Stalker, who later gave himself up. He said he was shootâ€" ing at a rabbit, when* Maldover got between him and the object aimed at. NEWEOUNDLAND*‘S "TATIONX AGENXNT TO JAIL. BULLET PIERCED HIS EÂ¥CE. A RATILROAD ASSUTRED. rUSE To P )j 7 { C f ition of frright and pas s has been leff in Abey YC present. 1) 11 v/9C N{ n oRCI a th b; nm 7 10« rDCra 22e Câ€"sCascy 17} PI NJ rTE Mont SURPLTUS. nveriten: (ropean LEondon ow 1 [1 () 1( Yi Tune â€"â€"Marchin i1CbA NS JOM ‘happy N. For the li; Father b W _ ‘I guess ev®rybody knows about it?" said I\{al‘}', for her aunt had answered be&b questions. purned inâ€" lamps / ~xaskco Conâ€" stance,â€"before Aunt Ethel conld answer Mary‘s question. ‘‘Well, Constance, F will answer youtr question first, becanse it says right on this very page that no one knows who first used petroleum, 2s a thousand years before the Bible was written the Japanese were usâ€" ing itf,. andâ€" called _/ it‘ ‘burming water,‘ betause it came from the ground. And they dug wells where the oil was found to secure a supâ€" ply. And in Egypt there wete wells of oil, and the people used it for light, very much as we do now"* i5% ons oc un en _‘"Who found out Xhat bermmed in ITamps!‘~: stance,;â€"before Aunt _ answer Marv‘s anestion ~"It is â€" really â€" an oul," went on Aunt Ethel; ‘"that is found in the ground, and it is of more value to all thse people of the earth than all th»> minerals, such as silver, gold and coppser. But its réeal name 4s petroleum. Kerosene is made of e ‘‘What does kerâ€"oâ€"sene mean?‘ questioned Mary, forgetting the shadows in the corners and coming clese to the table, where she could watch the flame. : § ‘‘Dear me," feplied Aunt Ethel, "I shalk have to find that out. I don‘t, know myself,"‘ and she laid down the knitting and brought a big book from the bookâ€"shelves and began turning the leaves. ‘"Here it is,"‘ she said.. "wWwoll, it is a madeâ€"up name, partly Greoek. It means fuel,â€"that is, something that / will ‘burn,â€" â€"and. it means light." Both the little girls repsated the word over as if not quite satisfed. THE SITTING ROOM LAME: Aunt Ethel took off the shada from the lamp on the sittingâ€"room table, struck a match carefully on the little iron ‘Chinaman‘s back, and in a moment there was a pleaâ€" sant light in the room. "Aunt Ethel, what makes the lamp burn?‘ asked Constance. ‘‘Kerosene,"‘ replied Aunt Ethel, who was busy with her knitting. "Would the lamp burn if there was water in it?"" asked the little girl. Aunt Ethel shook her head, smilâ€" ingly. "Of course not, Constance," she said. ‘"The oil feeds the cotton wick in the lamp, and the wick feeds the flame." 0T cle by titten expressly for Erslaime Presâ€" byterian Church New Year‘s Serâ€" vice, 1910, and sung by the auâ€" thor, Mr. Thos. Yellowlees. s n Loo cenrroneltnmarrt mc ‘ yvouUNa L1 ntfrl th at the NS N 1} M W His * th As e AXCXEW YFEAR‘S HVMX n the 1] )1 YPS U L th {1 join in gladsome song, this Nexw Year‘s Dayv. Yi milestone has been reach ther vear has gone. Nn 1 n tavit= 203. 14 P1 LU 11 h vbody have it?"‘ ask> <Ir IGI Sn 4 journey to )1 n re FOLKkKS than [1 1 râ€" His wondrous scoâ€" corstryu won, ernded, and we r Gethsemane ; )n OJ U r=fest oh us toâ€"day, cheer us, all ough Gceorgia. Cre be 1G1€ st he wased oMUT o ling of our i1 1 glory 11 loi we renâ€" () could be 91 died rV cruel )méâ€" £44."â€" 1CSS this and